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1961
+

30
March

�The big bank that grew up
with Highland Park
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The modern way to ban
in Highland Park
At the First National, you can do your banking without even coming to the bank. All you
need is one of of our modern Bank-By-Mail envelopes, and you can do your banking at your
corner mail box. Saves you time and trouble and makes banking as easy as mailing a letter.
Try this modern way to bank. Just ask for a First National Bank-By-Mail envelope and
find out how easy banking can be.

THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
Our 62nd year—Complete Banking and Trust Services
Member

The

The

Federal

United

States

Federal

Reserve

Deposit

Insurance

System

of Flighland

and

Corporation

Depositary

WEEKEND

BANKING

HOURS:

Friday 8:30-2:00 &amp; 5:30-8:00 pm, Saturday 8:30-Noon

Park

‘
‘

�Vol. 36, No,

©

4

1961

by

Highland

Park

Thursday,

Co.

March

30,

1961

(Hold Township Election Tuesday
Drowning Boy
Dramatic

cooperation

between

» fire and police department person-

nel and two Deerfield doctors, folmouth technique of artificial respiof a five-year old
into a pool last

saved the
poy
who
Thursday.

life
fell

»

Sundamacher,

Charles

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Harold

son

C,

of water while playing
pool belonging
ming

SundaRd.,
feet

along

Flopsie,

in a swimto George

" Gardner, 442 Cumnor,

some

high

10-foot

to the

gate

the

fence which surrounds the back
yard was found open, according to
Deerfield police.
Water in the pool had come from
.snow and ice, police said. Charles
| was ellegedly reaching for a log
which

was

floating

in

the

pool

when he slipped under, police said.
His mother,
who
rushed
the
block and a half to the pool after
being alerted of the tragedy by
five-year old Barbara Zarish,
+ of Charles’ playmates, pulled

only

person

there

one
the

police

as Mrs.

called

house, the

at

the

time,

Sundamacher

continued her efforts to revive the
boy.
,
Deerfield-Bannockburn

Fire

de-

partment and Deerfield police de‘partment officers, followed by Drs.
Edward

S, Szyman

Foelsch

Jr.,

effort.
After

working

half

and

over

Charles

the

B.

rescue

in

for an hour

poolside,

a fire

the

and

boy

department

was

ambu-

Kipling Students

now

the

films

from

the

museum’s

fifth

The
among
toured
opened
is open

famous

Talking

Glass

Deerfield
visitors were
the 164,000 people who have
the health museum since it
in May, 1958. The museum
daily from 9 to 5 and Sun-

days from 1

to 5.

Welfare

preliminary

Society

of

Chicago,

plans for its annual

(right)
Easter

which

formal

Ira

is

Deerfield Jaycees will have the
assistance of a jumbo-sized Peter
Rabbit and Bugs Bunny at the annual Easter Egg Hunt,
Saturday,
at

10

1, at Jewett

Park

beginning

-a.m,

Deerfield

children,

aged

one

11, have been invited to come
pared

with

baskets

or bags

to

pre-

for the

hunt, which will take place rain or
shine. Children one through three
will meet
in the area
northeast
of the fieldhouse; children four to
six will meet west of the fieldhouse. The seven and eight year
old children and the nine through
11
year
old
children
will
have
separate events at the south of the
fieldhouse.

VOTERS SERVICE BOX
Justices Of Peace

Off Bicycles

Not Claimed
Deerfield

Police

Chief

David

bicycles which have not

been reclaimed by owners.
The sale will be held Saturday,
April 1, at the village hall. Each

bicycle will be sold to the highest
bidder.
According to Chief Peterson, the
bicycles which will be sold are currently available for public inspection.

Cancel Meeting

resident, has practiced
torney for 18 years.

April

4

county
of the
of the

election?

Answer: Under new state laws,
Illinois counties are trying to upgrade the JP system. The number

of JP’s in Lake county is being
cut from 71 to 6. The county will
now

be

tricts.

divided

Lake

into

County

five

JPs

JP

dis-

will

re-

ceive an annual salary of
plus office expenses. West

Township
which

is

in

also

the

$6000
Deer-

5th

includes

JP
the

Townships of Deerfield and Vernon. The position of justice of the
peace is now on county level instead of township.
Question:
What
were
some
of
the problems under the old JP sys-

this change

neces-

sary?
too

There

many

heard
been

JPs,

cases
four

have

For

been

every

regularly

or five

who

one

there
did

but have their names
lott at elections. The

far
that

have

nothing

on the balold JP fee

system, which required that a defendant be found guilty before the
JP could collect his judicial fee,

lead to
tice.”

abusive

“speed

trap

jus-

Now, with the establishment of
a salary JPs won’t be tempted to
find innocent persons guilty to se-

a fee.

There

were

many

un-

The hearing which is announced
on page 26 of this week’s REVIEW

will not be held as scheduled.
The notice concerns a consider-

defendant.

the

word

end

of

from

the

May,

according

county.

to

an

at-

It

is

the

parties’

re-

sponsibility to find men for this
position with
formal
legal background, who know courtroom procedure, understand
the rights of
defendants, and produce a higher

grade

of judicial performance.

a

as

serves

ently

is chief

pres-

and

Highwood

in

police

1 Precinct

Tuesday is election
Deerfield township.

for

constable

day in West.

County
and
township
officers
will be elected at the polls which
are open from 6.a.m. to 6 p.m.

In West Deerfield township there
are 11 precincts. They are:
1. Wilmot
school — Deerfield
and Wilmot Rds., Deerfield.

2. Masonic temple — 711 Wauke- |

gan Rd., Deerfield.
3. Bethlehem church

—

Deer-

field Rd. and Rosemary Ln., Deer- |
field.
4. Village hall — 850 Waukegan
Rd.,

Deerfield.

5. Maplewood
Deerfield.
6. Woodland

school —
Park

Clay St.,

school —

mot Rd., Deerfield.
7. Bannockburn school
graph

a Republican,

Benvenuti,

Rd.,

Wil-

—

Tele-

—

2356

Bannockburn.

8. Norm’s

Gutter

shop

Skokie, Highland Park.
9. Lake
Forest Fire station —
Everette Rd., Lake Forest.
10. James Meehan home — 1907
Berkeley, Highland Park.
11. Tweed stable — Lake Forest.

Deerfield township.
His opponent,
Lake Forest, is

Deerfield
tueci
is
Lake

a Democrat
presently a

from
West

township constable. Bersuperintendent
of the

Shore

Country

club.

zen’s Independent;
mann,
Democrat;

Schwartz,

an

Arthur C. Ulland
Frank
E.

independent

candi-

date.

Pittenger, Deerfield, was a deputy

On the township level. Berning,
who served full time on the county

assessor

level

He is chairman of the Lake
ty Assessors’ association.

as

chairman

of

the

Lake

County board of supervisors, has
spent seven years as a member of
the
Zoning,
Building,
Plats
and
Planning committee of the board.
He was chairman of that com-

mittee

for five years. He

didate
party.

of the

is a can-

Citizen’s Independent

Marxer, president of the Marine
Adjustment, his own firm, is a
member

Answer:

qualified JPs who did not grasp
the provision of the law nor respect
the civil rights
guaranteed
each

at

as

of

cure

ation of rezoning on Sanders Rd.
and Deerfield Rd. from R-2 to B-1.
The hearing will be rescheduled

from
attor-

Question:
Why
is Lake
establishing a new justice
peace system
effective as

tem that makes

By Owners

Republican
a practicing

Also running for posts within
the justice district are Ted Benvenuti and Adolph Bertucci, both
seeking the position of constable.

district,
In
addition
to
“all
the
foilwrapped eggs they can find,” children who
locate
special
“lucky”
eggs will win extra prizes.

a

Park,

Dropped From 71
To 6 In Law Change

field

Prizes

Singer,

to 6.
are Alvin

ney in Highland Park with Singer,
Singer and Singer. His opponent
is Robert L. Tarrel, a Democrat.
Tarrel, also a Highland Park

dinner

dance which will be held at the Lake Forest Academy in June.

spe-

“cial film library, and saw Valeda,
Hinsdale’s
Y Lady.

Infant

making

abandoned

‘ grade at Kipling school, Kipling
Rd., accompanied by their teacher
*Mrs. Agnes Block, the principal,
Frank Ventura
and four adults
+*were visitors at the
Hinsdale
Health Museum, Hinsdale.
The visitors heard special talks
on the various exhibits by one of
the museum staff biology teachers,
saw

Deerfield

Highland

of

Peterson has announced that the
village will sell at auction lost or

Visit Hinsdale
Health Museum
in the

to

Center

To Auction

ing.

pupils

came

(left), Lynn Hudson, John Parsons
(kneeling) are playing at being

a

, lance to the Highland Park hospital where an incision on his windpipe was made to ease his breath-

Twenty-seven

Peter

has been cut from 71
Running
for justice

Special

at the

taken

took

and

rabbits, their mothers, Mrs. Warren Coray of Pine St., Mrs. C.
F. Parsons and Mrs. Howard Hudson of Brierhill Rd. and Mrs.
Raymond Grashoff are working in behalf of the Deerfield

April

boy out of the water and began to
*breath into his lungs.
A maid at the Gardner

Cottontail

While Jeffrey Coray
and Holly Grashoff

other

“neighborhood children, had wandered into the Gardner’s back yard
when

Mopsie,

this week to help with the Jewett Park Easter egg hunt which
is sponsored annually by the Junior Chamber of Commerce.

police said.

with

Voting Places In
West Deerfield

eight years, will seek reover challenger
Homer

ship candidates for supervisor, assistant supervisor, clerk, assessor,
town auditors, and directors of the
library, voters will be asked to
select a justice of the peace for
the fifth justice district, which
has been formed under new state
legislation.
The fifth justice district is comprised of Deerfield, West Deerfield and Vernon townships. The
number of justices in the county

of

Warrington
and one half

1425
macher,
slipped into two

Charles,

mother

a frantic

by

efforts

ration

List

the past
election

Marxer, a former village of Deerfield Trustee, in the township elections Tuesday.
In addition to voting for town-

mouth-to-

the

on

closely

lowing

Incumbent
Karl Berning,
West
Deerfield Township supervisor for

Byte,

BerningFacesMarxer
In Supervisor Race

* Cooperation
“Saves Life Of

of

the

Chicago

Youth

commission and a member of the
Society of Appraisers. He is running

under

the

Democrat

banner.

Candidates for assistant supervisor are Bruce C. Frost and Emma
Bandemer. Both are residents of
Deerfield.

Frost

is

running

under

the Citizen’s Independent banner
and Emma Bandemer is a Demoerat candidate.
The candidates for town clerk
are Ruth Vetter, Citizen’s Independent.
and
Virginia
Gorner,
Highland Park, a Democrat.
Mrs.

Vetter

was

assistant

town

clerk for six months before becoming town clerk, a position she
has held for two and one half
years.
Mrs.

library
fare.
Three

Gorner

work

has

and

candidates

had

a career

community

in

wel-

are seeking the

post of assessor for the township.
They are William Pittenger, Citi-

elected

for

a year

township

Ullman,

before

assessor

president

field

Chamber

three

years,

of

has

of

he

was

in 1954.
Coun-

the

Deer-

Commerce
been

a

for

member

of that group for 18 years. He has
lived in Deerfield for 26 years.
He has been active in the construction of homes for more than seven
years,
Schwartz has lived in Deerfield
for 10
federal

after

years, was retired from a
government
auditor’s job

25 years

service

at the

first

of the year.

Three
elected

town

auditors

will

be

Tuesday.

The candidates for the Citizen’s
Independent party are: Eugene H.
Seyl,
Lake
Forest;
Willard
T.
Wageman, Deerfield; and Mary M.
Hedberg, Deerfield.
Candidates

on

the

Democrat

ticket are: Gerald M. Flegel, Deerfield; Chester E. Varner, Lake For.
est; and Allan J. Gerkin, Jr. Highland

Park.

Four library directors are to be
elected,
Candidates on the Citizen’s Independent
ticket
are:
Richard
Longton, Deerfield, and Keith D.
Nickoley, Deerfield, for six years;
Helen Wilson, Bannockburn,
for
four

years; Allyn J. Franke, Deer(Continued on page D 18)

—

�ss
f

i

Your Village

Civic Calendar

Government

(Prepared by the League of
men Voters of Deerfield).
Monday,

This

is in the

nature

of a short

failure

progress report on the major public

works

projects that have been un-

stalled

water
system
improvement
pro- gram and sewage treatment expansion is coming into the final stages
of completion.
made

connections

on

each

remain

project,

then

all the

vere

areas

of

no

Highland

Park

at their
with the
pumping

station, and storage tank put in by

gear

source

be

Deerfield
will
make
the
system
capable
of meeting
any
demand
placed upon it.

to be

provements

the

should

Prindle
station coupled
new
distribution
mains,

The

black

dirt dry sufficiently to allow trucks

sewage

treatment

will

overloading

eliminate
of

the

plant

im-

the

se-

treatment

in

facilities and pumping equipment
to the end that sewage backup and

Street patches will be completed
as soon as the Asphalt plants begin
operation. This will be a relief to
everyone to get these badly needed

odor complaints should become a
thing of the past. Every effort is
being made to assure that odors resulting from the cperation of the
plant are held tc an absolute mini-

and

loading

equipment

to work

them.
.

by

facilities can be placed in operation. The cleanup and tidying up of
settled trenches will move into high
as

there

water rationing of any sort necessary in the coming summer. The
additional productive capacity in-

derway for some time. Work on the

A few

occurs

mum,

improvements completed and the
streets;
parkways
and _ sidewalks
back in apple pie order again.

We plan to use additives to the
wet well and re-ordorant sprays for

Unless

the sludge beds to control odor pro-

some

type

of

mechanical

\Paid

Political

April

Wo-

3

7:30
p.m.
district
113
school
board, Highland Park High School.
8
p.m.
Bannockburn
village
board, Bannockburn school.
8 p.m. district 109, school board,
Deerfield Grammar
school.
8 p.m. Deerfield safety council,
village hall.
Tuesday, April 4
West
Deerfield
township
election.

8 p.m. Walden school PTA board,
Walden school.
Wednesday, April 5
8 p.m. Deerfield village
Thursday, April 6
8 p.m, district 110

Wilmot

board,

hall.

village

meeting

discussional

PTA

board,

school.

ducing conditions. Treatment plant
personnel have made a fine record
in operation of the equipment and
are continuing their training to attain even greater proficiency. Land-

on

(Continued

D

page

18)

BE SURE TO
VOTE
|
FOR

The

ASSESSOR

Mr. and Mrs. T. D. Woolsey, 844
Spruce St., Deerfield, Illinois.
When
the Woolsey’s
moved
to
Deerfield about a year and a half

ago

[] FRANK DANE

4—

authorized

1 Half Day Fire Station

payment

of

the

on

old

Catherine

Price,

two candidates

representing

Larry Kebchull, who lives in the

liam Gahart, Carl Roscher, George
Leikam and Raymond Schilkus follow on the official list released by
the secretary of the board, and sent
to the printers by Lydia Jesse, the

Election-Tuesday, Apr. 4

selves to take

Polls Open 6 A.M. to 6 P.M.

VOTE STRAIGHT
CITIZENS PARTY

advantage

ancial

aid

made

possible

federal

governments.

of any

SUPPORT
(Paid

Political

BE GREATLY

Advertisement)

received

badges.

Get

Citations

Citations for new patrol leaders
were presented to George Robinette and Mike Mueller; assistant patrol leader citations went to Ed-

ward

Farhenholtz,

Curtis

Chris

Lee

and

Tucker.

Citation for scribe was presented
to Patrick Emmett.
The
following
junior
were given awards:

leaders

leader;

James Schultz, Jr., assistant

senior patrol leader; Jim Nickelsen.
and Buddy Fletcher,
ant scout masters.

junior

assist-

school secretary.
The executive board of the Manor, in response to questions about
the Tuesday
township
elections,
said that the Manor is part of Justice district number 5, which also

includes

Riverwoods

and

Lincoln-

shire.
Vernon
Township,
West
Deerfield township and Deerfield
township are all within the justice
district.
Francis

J.

“Chuck”

Stancliff,

road commissioner, has announced
that the sheriff has had his men
investigate the tampering of speed
and other road
Pekara Dr.

instructions

complaints

about

teen-

school. The principal has requested
that the association see that at
least one mother is at each bus
stop. Cases of children smoking
have been reported at the bus
stops.
Di

Vencenzo

youngsters

them-

and

all fin-

State

APPRECIATED”

be

requested

prompt

in

that

meeting

the bus. The bus for unit one is at
its stop at 8:20 a.m., and for unit
two, at Walnut and Pekara Drs., at
8:30 p.m.
Mr.
and Mrs.
Emil
F. Becker

Send your soiled clothes to us regularly one day each week
— just
as you send out your laundry. This
way you'll always have a fresh,
dainty wardrobe . . . and impromptu invitations won‘t catch you unawares!

|

have announced that Michael Anthony, the latest addition to their
family,

will

be

christened

Sunday,

April 9 at St. Joseph the Worker.
The family now has three boys and
one girl.
Becker, personal relations officer

for the Manor, recently secured the

EXTRA KING KORN
STAMPS WITH ANY
PURCHASE AT

or

10—The Citizens Party operates within the annual
budget as voted on and passed at the Annual
Town Meeting.

WILL

their first class

Emmett.

already

Two boys’ names have been reported and they are under surveillance until they can be turned over
to juvenile authorities in Waukegan.

their

9—The Citizens party will work for a more fair
valuation of all property.

“Let The People Rule”

Patrick

had

reported by Michael Di Vencenzo,
principal of the Apptakisic-Tripp

8—The Citizens Party gives you complete town.
ship representation.

AND

and

scouts

Similar

pledge

through

Tucker

These

agers at school bus stops have been

ALPHA
party candidates

Chris

First class citations went to Curtis

signs
along

MAKE A rie OF

No. 3 Lincolnshire Office
Citizens

Alan Carlson,
Moore.

Chuck Farhenholtz, senior patrol

Manor, is first,,and Marie Morrison of Riverwoods is second. Wil-

All town meetings to be held at a set time
so the public will know when.

7—The

of honor at the Tuesday meeting of
troop 52.
They were:
Lee and Tom

Ad-

The bond, which has, a value of
$225, will pay off: more than $400,
according
to.
Deerfield.
Village

6—An opportunity for every taxpayer to express
his or her views on any issue under consideration by the Town Board.

Schoo!

AND

father,

bonds.

The

5—All town financial reports to be printed in
newspaper of general circulation, and copies
made available to public.

Precinct Polling Places

VOTE

her

Deerfield Manor have been placed
first and second on the official ballot for school board district 102.
The election will be held April 8.

[1] CLARENCE B. PONTIUS

“YOUR

at Christmas,

dison Brown, Rockford, slipped an
apparently
worthless
Village
of
Deerfield bond in their Christmas
stocking.
The bond had been purchased in
1924 by Mrs. Woolsey’s grandfather, Melanethon
Brown,
and
had
been found among his personal possessions.
The bond remained a joke between Mr. and Mrs. Wolsey and
her father until February,
1961,
when
the
Village
of
Deerfield

3—AIll scheduled town meetings to be held
wherever set by electors.

| [1 RAYMOND WAGNER

|

which
off for

2—AlIl town meetings open to the public.

AUDITOR
(Vote for Three)

No. 2 Aptakisic

Three boy scouts were presented
their first class awards at a court

present,
has paid

Is Elected

1—The Citizens Party is running
record for the last 4 years.

OIC. P. JANKOWSKI

No.

A
Christmas
started as a joke,

People Shall Rule if the

Citizens Party

First Class Rank

At Tuesday Meet

“Let the People Rule”

SUPERVISOR

FOR TOWN CLERK
[|] JOSEPH BREHM

|

Late,

Ends Family Joke

The Citizens Party

[ GEORGE A. STANCLIFF

FOR

BS

Deerfield Manor News

Vernon Township Election Apr. 4, 1961

(x) cinizens PARTY

Over A Year

Clerk

Advertisement)

Three Scouts Make —

Chilstnas Gift,

(Customer's

:

cooperation

CLEANERS

John

Pekara,

Sr.,

two,

which

have

now

become a

re-

ality.
Emil F. Lindstrom of Catalpa
has returned home after a five
week stage in St. Francis hospital
in Evanston. Lindstrom, a former
board member, is one of the highest award winners for safety on the

Signature)

One to a customer—Adults
only—tThis coupon
redeemable
only
for
King
Korn
Stamps.
All rights reserved
in the King Korn Stamp Co.
—Coupon
valid only when
signed by customer.

FOR THOSE WHO CARE!

of

builder of the Manor, to share the
cost of the new street signs for unit

Evanston bus line.
Fred Scherer, 1073

©

Walnut

Dr.,

will be asked to be the Manor’s
first guest speaker at the April 6
association meeting. He is expected
to explain what has to be done to
win the $100 he has offered to the
residents of unit two.
President of the Manor association, Ed Golien, has announced that

over the weekend, his brother, Walter R. and his guest,
from
Mason
City,
(Continued on

Thursday,

Gary Coats,
successfully
D18)

March

30, 1961
4

4a
Se Le aR
ee
LOR he Ur

Suse
ckLge:

:

�Contract For Junior High School
Let To Low Bidding Chicago Firm

CARRying
On

Bids were opened and contract was let for the new junior
high school for district
the board of education.

109 Thursday at a special meeting of
A Chicago builder, Kiendl Construc-

tion Co., with a low bid totaling $466,555, was awarded
contract. Eight bids were received by the board.
The second lowest bid was $5,000
higher than the Kiendl company’s
bid. High bidder for the project
was
a Franklin
Park
contractor
with a total bid price of $518,708.
Actually, each contractor turned
in four bids—the base bid, an alternate for the gymnasium, an alternate for paving and attendant
drainage and an alternate for rerouting
of the sewer
and water
mains.

The successful bidder’s
was $338,640.
For

400;

alternate

for

base

bid

alternate

two,

he

$31,500;
and
alternate
$3,015, bringing his bid

$93,-

added

three was
to its total

$466,55.
Contract
was
awarded
for the
base construction, plus alternates

The
West

board

Republican
of

of

Deerfield

the

directors

club

met

president,

Anderson,

1115

at

29.

decide

Reed,

927

Holly

Ct.;

George

M.

Scott,

The

or

not

it wants

to

at this time.

actual

contract

Mrs.
awarded

which excludes the gym, was $373,155, said superintendent William E.
Sheehan.
The
would

cost
of
be $93,400,

contractor’s
In

na

low

addition

the
gymnasium
according to the

bid.
to.

actual

construc-

tion costs, the school district will
have to pay between $12 and $15
thousand to furnish and equip ‘the
building.

Sheehan

said

that he was

“hap-

' py” with the bids for the new
school. He noted that they were almost
$75,000
below
what
he
thought they would be.
The school district has $450,000
in

approved

bonding

power

dition to approximately
building

funds,

which

in

ad-

$25,000
can

be

in

used

for the construction of the new junior high

building.

The new junior
be located on the
Brothers Nursery

high school will
former Franklin
tract which had

been purchased for $114,000 by the
Deerfield

Park

turn

six

sold

district,

acres

which

to

the

in

school

for $28,000.
The planned two-story school will
include 20 rooms,
Sheehan
said.

’ He hopes that ground will be broken by April 1.
Occupancy

of the new

building is

expected by Jan. 1, 1962.

home
Rd.

Mrs.

Conner Petzel and Debi Berggren, members of the planning committee for the Luther League Easter Breakfast, are
shown admiring a poster publicizing the event. The church

F.
on
An-

youth group will serve breakfast from 7-9 a.m. Easter Sunday, April 2. Donations will be used to defray expenses of

drew G. Bradt, organization chairman, presented the following precinct chairmen
appointments
for
1961-63:
ecinct
1, Mrs.
H.
R.
Gleason, 706 Deerpath; precinct 2,
Mrs. Arlie N. Hugunin, 1030 Brookside Ln.; precinct 3, Mrs. Fred R.
Crofoot, 1058 Kenton Rd.; precinct
4, Mrs. Karl Berning, 1006 Rose-

precinct

5, Mrs.

Richard

C.

precinct

6,

1239

the youth group’s camping

In

Four Volunteer

As Department
Heads For Sale

Park-

Four
Holy Cross
women
have
volunteered to be new department
heads in the parish rummage sale

Election

These chairmen will assist with
the election day services on April

4. According

to Mrs.

Bradt,

plans

schools will be present to receive
the Jaycee visual aids film for their
districts.
The visual aids project
describes Deerfield municipalities
and is designed for children in the

elementary

Mrs. Ray Marshall is co-chairman
of the sale.

cards, poll
Mrs. Bradt

donations in the
begin Aprli 17.

call

Collection

of rummage

parish

hall

will

As

part

Legion

hall.

of civic-affairs,

the

evening

Jaycee

members

N

SPECIALS

9

Westen Style
CHOCOLATES

for

HIM &amp; HER
from

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our Better Candy Department.

Priced from

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$1

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For THAT Man at Easter

Now... Before
Grows

Complete Selection of Men’s Toiletries
. a fragrant whiff of quiet dis.. . an

tinction

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Because pre-emergent
treatment for crabgrass
is more likely to give
control in a single
application, we can
offer you a third off the
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Using revolutionary, automatic spray equipment, GSS offers 18 professional home
owner services. Call or write:

GENERAL SPRAY SERVICE
Of Deerfield

ID
Thursday,

2-7766
March

30,

imperative final touch

in daytime grooming for a brisk “lift”
that you'll feel throughout the day.

ACT NOW...
SAVE 1/,

1961

the

gals

this affair goes to the various

proj-

spon-

sor—so

if you

are

Club

at all interested

in good fun call Doris Jacober at
WI 5-2496, she will be glad to give
you

additional

Mr.

and

information.

Mrs.

Frank

Schwartz

have
acquired
a daughter—their
son Edwin C. Schwartz was mar-

ried to Marilyn Cartel on March
11th. We are happy to know that
they are living in Deerfield at 1146
Deerfield Road. Much happiness
of you.

program

will hear
the

village

On February 6, the Highland
Park News hired two very capable
young people to work on their

and Mrs. Kenneth Eames of 254
Fairview, Deerfield—by the end
of the first week—young Steve is
dating Barbara

2.75

and to-nite they are

being married in the Parsonage
Church.
Congregational
the
of
They have purchased a home at
933 Hemlock, Deerfield, and will
be moving in right away. That is
the beauty of youth—work fast and
get things done. (By the way, Irene
Clavey of our office sold them the
house, and they are very happy
with it.) Purely incidential—but we
Scandinavians are okay!
A big Happy Birthday to a nice
young chap—Harold (Bub) Seiler—
who will be 17 years old on Friday.
Terry Walker was invited to
speak before the Junior Chamber
of Commerce about activities for
our Teenagers, as yet nothing has
been done but at least it is in the
process.
For those of you interested in
this—the Ivy League Cancer Society has
a shop—‘“Second
Act”
which is a resale project at 2212
Clark,

Chicago,

this

shop

may be reached by taking Edens to
Northwest Hi-way to Fullerton—
turn right to 2212, The members
are volunteers workers and many a
great purchase can be made there
—ask Jen Baxter or go over and

see her lovely new table.

to 8.50

Carr Realty Co.

OR
WAUKEGAN

planned,

ects that the Woman’s

North
et ab

is

are working very hard on it and
all the money that is raised from

to both

grades.
of

a speaker representing
caucus committee.

EASTER

aes

Tickets

Editor
Anderson,
sheet—“Steve”
of the Deerfield REVIEW and Barbara Westgaard, daughter of Mr.

Let the World's Largest
Professional Lawn Spray Service |
KILL YOUR

“It

regular monthly dinner meeting in

Hartman
who are

Volunteers wishing to assist with
the
phoning,
driving,
marking
may

The Deerfiled Jaycees will place
names in nomination for officers
and directors for the coming year
when they meet April 6, for their

Representatives
of school districts 109, 110, and the Parochial

in charge of books and shoes, Mrs.
Neil Salemi in charge of toys, and
Mrs. Edward Mooney who is handling
the
glassware
department.

Paris.”

ing

the American

Schroeder,

in

Nominate Officers
For Coming Year

chair-

Wm.

Evening

Deerfield Jaycees

ing to

Mrs.

“An

$12.50 per couple (where could you
go for that?) and a most interest-

to be held: April 27 and 28, accordman.
They are Mrs. Richard
and Mrs. Philip Delaney

are well under way for the club
headquarters to be set up in each
of the 7 precincts, which will be
open from 10 a.m. until 6 p.m. on
election day.

watching, etc.
at WI 5-0454.

program.

Don’t forget—The Deerfield Woman’s Club is having their annual
Benefit Buffet Dinner Danee April
15th at the Vernon Hills Country
Club (Hi-way 45, just a little past
Half Day), A real Fantasy Flight
to

side Ln.; precinct 7, Mrs. Donald
J. Dick, 2580 Telegraph Rd.
Assist

B.

Carr

the

Elmer

Warrington

March

By
lola

Women’s
the

Mrs.

mary;

whether

of

Township

two and three. However there is a
stipulation in the contract that the
school board will be given time to
build the gym

o

Precinct Chairmen
Named At Meeting
Of Republicans

Wednesday,

one, he added

the

PHARMACY
Phone: WI 5-1111
and

DEERFIELD

ROADS,

REALTORS
701

Waukegan

Road

WI

5-0984

DEERFIELD
Page

D

2-A

�tee

ae

EPRI
&gt;

ae

Beth

Ce TOR
'

tall,

Ad

sol

p

Se

TR

VeRO
4

y

eo

¥ry

ee

4)

af
vtiqgangee
;
ey

ora

Reh
Pa

“

‘Hint of Spring’
Slated By PTA

~ If Re-Elected Township Supervisor, |

- Berning Will Be County Chairman Again
According

vif

to

informed

sources,

if

Karl

Berning

The PTA of Maplewood school
will present a “Hint of Spring’ in
the school gym April 13 at 8 p.m.
The garden clubs and nurseries
of the area will have enhibits and

is revery

is

he

township,

Deerfield

West

of

supervisor

elected

County board

likely to be re-elected as chairman of the Lake
of supervisors, a position he has held for a year.

_

was

years,

eight

elected

board

county

of the

P.

after

Welch,

Se

Welch withdrew five days before
the election for the board chair- man and Berning was elected.

informed

the

1961-62,

For

sources say, Berning has no opposition for re-election as chairman of
local

on

if re-elected

—

board

the

the

level.

The township election is April 4,

and the election for head of the
county board for 1961-62 will be 20

the

days after
April 24.

election

Berning’s
platform
included construction

house

facilities,

est preserve
time finance

tion

of

which

is

for 1960-61
of court-

acquisition

of for-

and

recognition

of

i OE Bethlehem Chuch
women’s

society

of

795

Broadview

Ave.,

world
High-

land Park, for a meeting and des- sert luncheon Tuesday, April 4, at
1 p.m.

and

other

taxes

go through

improvements.

general
up

and Mrs. C. Scott. Mrs. Louis Zenko will give the final of three les-

sons, “Into All the World Together—Where Are We Going?”
Devotional leader will be Mrs.

the

obligation

courthouse.

bonds
This

to
was

Executive

to

build

the

court-

house, because of the earlier decision
to
eliminate
the
collector.

revenue

bonds

through
mission.

the

public

The

revenue

will be issued
building

bonds

will be

sold

Deerfield

Township

sored

is

Karen Arne,
among 220

who

have

will

be

when

lawn

been

care

will

be

Elected

the

township

Deerfield

West

they

re-election

for

rescued

township

the

offices
high

as

clerk,

door

from

860

Wau-

at

winds

which

in-

vaded the area Monday afternoon,
the door of the town hall came
loose from its hinges and it was
rescued

by

town

auditor

in Iowa

April

Hills Country

15,

club.

DEERFIELD
REVIEW

they
status

City,

Woman’s

Saturday,

Iowa,

Thursday,

March

30,

1961

Vol.

36, No.

4

Published Weekly every Thursday
Anne
Nottoli, daughter
of Mr.
and Mrs. V. A. Nottoli, 1520 Wilmot Rd., has been elected sports
representative of her class for the
coming term at Edgewood college
of the Scared Heart, Madison, Wis.
Miss Nottoli, who will be a junior, is majoring in mathematics.

ter
county
board
of supervisors
for
space in the county building.
Upon the retirement of the
bonds, title for the building will
revert to the board of supervisors.

that

honors

Representative

Pittenger,

William

for

Deerfield

held

Left to right are Mrs. John Cedervall, Mrs. William Mueller and
Mrs.
Locke
Rogers,
president
of
the club.

they enroll at the State Uni-

being used by Mrs. Ruth Vetter in
campaign

notified

eligible

the

at the Vernon

519 Hermitage Ave.,
high school seniors

versity of Iowa
in September.

her

by

club to be

Eligible For Honors

com-

by the public building commission
and will be retired out of monies
paid
to that commission
by the

West

Two unidentified boys received
Shine,
‘Shoe
controversial
the
are
Sir?” shoe shine kits, which

kegan Rd.
During the

obligated

of the

Shoe Shine Kits
Rewarded To Two
Who Recover Door

ject, Berning said.
However,
voters turned
proposal
down.
The
county

still

committee

Mrs. Robert Whiteside, treasurer.

when

this
was

on

A fantasy flight to “An Evening
in Paris” will be the theme of the
annual benefit dinner-dance spon-

Women’s Republican club set plans into action to get out the
vote on April 4. Left to right: Mrs. George S. Ricker, vice
president; Mrs. Louis Zessis, secretary; ;Mrs. Andrew G. Bradt,
organization chairman; Mrs. Elmer F. Anderson, president;

deemed by the board of supervisors
as the best way to finance the pro-

Thus

Hostesses will be Mrs. Cummings

- Vern Zech.

having

the county treasurer’s office would
go toward building a new eounty
building, county home, as well as
mechanization of county buildings

put

service of Bethlehem church will
meet at the home of Mrs. Pat Cum-

mings,

by

prove

To Meet On April 4
The

this program. Why?”
Berning replied that the questioner was being misled in his assumption.
Four years ago, by popular referendum,
he said, the office of
township collector was eliminated
and the basis for the elimination
of this post was that the money

film

On The Cover

county building. Yet you supported

Following the approval of this
first referendum to eliminate the
collector, voters were asked to ap-

World Service Group

A

which
Show.

shown and Deerfield’s own beautification projects will be outlined.

agencies.
Berning was asked at a recent
candidates meeting about the courthouse.
“A recent
The question asked:
referendum showed the electorate
opposed to construction of a new

saved

district land, a fulldirector and preven-

floods

among them will be some
were at the Chicago Flower

senior citizens’ needs, aS well as
independent
audits
of
county

chairman

last year

Joseph

contest with
Cuba township.

a

West
past

supervisor from
Berning,
for the
township
Deerfield

Po +
he Fi
;.
if ay

and

assisted

Mrs,

by

Mrs.

Vet-

Pittenger.

The two youths came along and
helped to complete the rescue of
the door, for which Mrs. Vetter
rewarded
kits.

them

with the

shoe

shine

PUBLICATION
OFFICE
699 Waukegan Road
DEERFIELD,
ILLINOIS
Telephone Windsor 5-4500
Ill.

MA
National Editorial Association
Illinois Press Association

Local Subscription Rates—$3.50 per year
Domestic Rate—$5.00 per year
Single Copies—15c
Foreign Rates on Application
Second class postage paid at
Illinois.

Unsolicited

are

sent

papers

at

to

manuscripts

the

the

North

sender's

or

Shore

risk.

Deerfield,

photographs

Group

The

news-

North

Shore Group
Newspapers
assume
no responsibility for the publication of such materials or their return to the
ler.

Basket

Left's Peek in Lindemann’s

HIGHLAND
PARK OFFICE
Laurel Ave., Highland Park,
Telephone ID 2-4500

608

of Easter

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Page

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All Phones: WI 5-2400
Thursday,

March

30,

1961

�NOE
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i) 8
GE Sth

�Deerfield High
School Tennis
Team Selected
Eight sophomores and six freshmen have turned out for tennis
at Deerfield High School.
The sophomores, who did not,

for Easter thoughtfulness
The Easter gift to everyone’s
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pride, confident
assortments . . .
Individually

taste is our delicious candy!

Made

in our own kitchens from the finest of chocolate
. fresh daily and so flavorful! Give them with
that they will receive a warm welcome. Boxed
$1.60 Ib.

play freshman tennis last year at
Highland Park, are: Rick Nychay,,

Sherman, John Johnson, Jim Burnett, Randy Bax and Bob Cordell,

ling, Jeff Mandel, managers Bill
Kurfirst and Jeff Lewis, Jon Shur.

SOLID

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Company’s Aviation Sales Department has completed twenty-five
years with the company. He was
honored March 3, at a luncheon
by his associates at the Blackstone
Hotel.
F, H. Staub, Division Manager
for Shell, presented him with a
25 year pin and a wrist watch for
his wife Pearl.
Hammond, a native of the Chicago area, joined Shell as an Industrial Products
Engineer
and
worked his way up
tions of increasing

through posiresponsibility

in the company’s sales organization.
He has had wide experience as
a pilot and is a personal friend of
many famous people in the aviation
field.

DRIVE CAREFULLY — THE LIFE YOU SAVE
MAY

Roger

Lee.

Wildermuth.
Opening match

G. J. Hammond

Baskets
to

and

“

Home matches this season will
be played at the Tennaqua tennis
club. Coach for the team is Carl

Delightful!

Easter

Ecker-

Mark

are:

freshmen

The

Boxed

BE YOUR OWN

The Want-Ad section is filled with
interesting facts and golden opportunities.

Don’t

miss

it!

for

will be Wednesday,
Glenbard East.

the

net

April

men

19,

at

Record High Divedends
Declared By Savings,
Loan Association

~

in

dividends

will be paid to accounts

An

all-time

high

tomorrow

at Deerfiled Savings and Loan As
sociation as earnings for the past
six months, according to J. Howard
Wolf, president of the association,
The new record set for dividends
compounded at the current rate of
four per cent reached approximately $385,000.
This also sets a new

record for the past year and brings’
dividend

months
315.00.

payments

for

the

past

up to approximately

“Approximately

10,800

12

$742,

savers

will benefit as shareholders,” said
Wolf. “While the greater per cent
of accounts are from Lake County
and
northern
Cook
County,
our
shareholders are in 36 states and a

number of foreign countries.

Spring Beckons You To The North Shore Suburbs |
And These Family Investments In More Living

c

+

af

«

DEERFIELD-BRIARWOODS:
Walk to schools, DEERFIELD: New brick and stone ranch on 2
churches and transportation from this beauti- acres. Of note are: 4 bedrooms, 2/2 baths, livfully constructed brick ranch. 3 bedrooms, 2/2 ing room w/ stone fireplace, separate dining
baths, den, living-dining room combination w/. room, driftwood finished family room, dream
fireplace, kitchen w/dining space, full base- kitchen, full basement &amp; 2 car garage. A home
ment with unusual details. Lovely landscaping. worth your inspection for details too numerous
MUNN VE OIG, nics Avdesdesceccbinna Se OU Oe SON BOTS
ss anced
sie ce wee able ry AOS

BANNOCKBURN AREA: From the cozy living
room of this compact little gem, watch and enjoy your magnolia tree burst into bloom. An
expandable brick ranch nestled on a 2 acre
wooded lot. Fireplace and screened porch add
greatly to its comfort and livability. It is a
WOME ood. iitncics slash concasdeds Orily $19,900.

NORTHBROOK: Brick Cape Cod on landscaped
half acre, complete with many colorful peren- |
_nials. A 12’ x 26’ living room-dining room,
combination, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, cabinet §
kitchen with excellent breakfast area. Large
utility

room,

and

good

qoroge. (08 sec tsss ici

storage

space

in

the

Priced in the low 20's.

¥

Colonial DEERFIELD:
Meticulously
maintained
brick
RIVERWOODS: A truly
luxurious
ranch in which the finest materials and work- split.level with 3 bedrooms &amp; den which could
manship were employed.
Marble tiled foyer, be the 4th bedroom, 2/2 baths, panelled famsunken living room, separate dining room, fam- ily room, fine kitchen, studio living rm. dining
ily room w/weathered stone fireplace. Elegant rm. combination.
Located on lovely tree-lined
Splendid kitchen with Bar-B.Q.
11 street within walking distance of all convenbaths.
MNO
GOUOS soi cidsssecedscetaceuencases Ry EO) TONIEBES is recs AE ses puke eau ecw in. the: 20'6.

©

77 YEARS
of? SERVICE
1884...
. 1961
UY

Quinlan.
and

LY SOR

Page H 20—D

Jac.

4

735° Deerfield

NORTHBROOK: Picturesque exterior and at tractive interior will appeal to both young and
old. Pretty view from living room window of a
magnificent willow tree. Sweeping corner site
with countryside vistas. A 2 bedroom home,
Large living room &amp;
but easily expandable.
kitchen, 2 car, garages .25...-25.-c aa $20,500

Quinlan. aaTys onan
Road

Deerfield Office — Open Weekdays 9 to 5 — Sundays 10 05

DEERFIELD: 414% mortgage can be assumed*
by qualified buyer of this 3 year old split level.
2 recreation areas—a 25 x 11 cypress panelled family room, plus a 20 x 15 playroom for
the children. Living room w/fireplace, 3 bed- }
rooms, 2 baths, G.E. kitchen, large concrete
Low 30’s.,
patio. Immediate possession.

WIndsor
UNiversity

5-3750
9-1112
Thursday; March 30, 1961

�Lo

HERE THEY ARE! BIG BARGAINS FOR EAST ER!

ares 1e’S je Bonanza
Ba

or

&lt;=

auf

z&gt; |

WA

oS

5

am

~ 2

NW I

So low priced because
our company bought
over 200,000 ties
for this sale.

24' TO
30° TALL

OXFORD, COTTON
BROADCLOTH*
DRESS SHIRTS
Button or Link Cuffs
$
* Fine Needle Tailoring
* Button-down, Spread Collars

9 9
Men's
preaedl

* *Wash 'n Wear Finish

‘

2-

Jacquards, Paints,
Stripes, Solids,
Embroidery Motifs
Wrinkle resistant
»

Sto 7 BLOOMS
PER siesta

linings

DN, CANDY FILLED|

BASKETS wn
977 = 977

REY”

{ Thrill

youngsters with

baskets. of

f chocolate eggs, yummy candy,toys
| plus

=
Ft

.

pgm
NOW!

Chocolate

SET OUT

BARGAIN BASKETS 39-99

Rabbits,

Chicks

Foil-Wrapped Chocolate
Marshmallow

Chicks

Cream Eggs, ea. 5¢

HOURS: OPEN DAILY
9 A.M. to9 P.M.
:
S. S. KRESGE
Shopping

Center

| Drum with Candy ...

_............. 5 for

59

' | Hat Box, Candy ...2.0...:..2::...::...1008

39¢ | Baskets to Fill

Eggs and Novelties, bag ....

Thursday, March 30, 1961

| Paddle Ball, Candy —.............. 29

10¢ - 15¢- 25¢ -59¢ - $1.09

LATER!

Deerfield Commons

a: wonderful big plush animal!

:

«|

10c

Jelly Eggs, Ib. 29¢- =

Egg

Coloring

10¢-79¢

Sets _............ 10¢-39¢

Cellophane

Grass

.................... 25¢

Cellophane

Wl

Si

ae 15¢

SATURDAYS
9 A.M. to 6 P.M.
COMPANY
722 Waukegan

Road
Page H21-—-D 5

�(Paid

Honor Bonamarte

Political A

VOTE APRIL 4th

YOUR

OR

® CITIZENS INDEPEN

WEST DEERFIELD TOWNSHIP

ENT PARTY

For His Service

With Juveniles
At a dinner meeting of the Lake
County Juvenile Officers Association, March 20 at Fort Sheridan,
Judge Minard E. Hulse presented
Sgt. Mike Bonamarte, Sr., Juvenile
Officer of the Highland Park Police
Department, with a certificate of
award

and

that he
interest
had

a bronze

plaque

put forth

great

personal

in furthering the work
ganization.”
Judge Hulse further
that

citing

had “displayed a marked
in juvenile problems and

Sgt.

Bonamarte

effort

of the

or'

announced,
was

respon-

sible for organizing the Lake County Juvenile Officers Association,
and commended him for his efforts
on behalf of all youth in Lake
County.
&lt;

WILLIAM

PITTENGER

KARL

For Assessor

For Supervisor
* Now serving as your

Lifelong

Supervisor and chairman
of Lake County
Board of Supervisors
“T pledge to continue
economical Township
Government”
* Qualified by experience

m

resident,

taxpayer

and community leader
* Always available and at
your service
* “My word is my bond”
¢ 8 years member Town
Board of Auditors

e

Chairman Lake County
Assessors’ Assn.
* Member — Committee on
Tax Proceedure
Real estate broker since 1943
Courteous and efficient service

e

x

Assessor since 1953

Gordon Palmer Brings
Glory To Ela-Vernon

EUGENE SEYL
For Auditor

BERNING

* Honest and efficient

Mark H. Hindsley, conductor and”

West Deerfield Township

Citizens’ Independent
For
BERNING

KARL

Party

director of all bands at the University, wrote, “Mr. Palmer, here
is a real place of honor for your

Supervisor

transcription!

C. FROST
For Town Clerk
RUTH E. VETTER
For Assessor
WILLIAM PITTENGER

ta

BRUCE

Town

versity,
thesis.
The

Auditors

E. VETTER

Clerk

e Capable — Conscientious
Courteous

years on-the-job training

“s J pense to home gy
:
*
Anxious to serve you
the voter
. Committed to economy
7

HELEN

Ce

Mm,

Ee
ee
Pe PR

nessman,

[|] KEITH

best for all of us
ee
I want to serve you

please vote for me”

of Library
Local busi-

Deerfield resident 5 yrs. Econ-

term

|

resident 6 yrs. Holds

g

Deerfield

degree.

Past

JAYCEES.

[1] HELEN WILSON
to fill 4 yr. unexpired

O ALLYN J. FRANKE
‘to .fill 2 yr. unexpired ‘term

€

die

¢ Sixteen years member of
‘Town Board of Auditors
Dedicated to economy in
government
Semi-retired, can devote
plenty time to office .
Loyal to West Deerfield Township
Deerfield resident 38 yrs.
Local Businessman 22 yrs.

|

KEEP

Lawyer., ‘Eminently qualified by his past
six years of service as Library Director
..and legal advisor throughout | building
peried.

LOCA

WILLARD T. WAGEMAN
For Auditor
* Successful

L

POLITICS
Political

Advertisement)

business

man

—

will insist on good sound
business practice in
township government
« Concerned about taxes

are my
that

{Paid

Page
H 22—D 6

term

, Active volunteer in library for past year.
, Wide experience in local &amp; metropolitan
civic affairs. Bannockburn resident 8 yrs.

BRUCE C. FROST
For Ass't Supervisor

Master’s

was

previous-

are

tax dollars too
spent”

LOCAL

prevented

him

from

appear

and

opportunities

not

avail-

Read them now!

NOTICE OF GENERAL ELECTION
CITY OF HIGHLAND PARK

Precinct

D. NICKOLEY

B.A.

his

mes

,

NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
that on
Tuesday, the 18th day of April, A.D. 1961
in the City of Highland Park, County of
Lake and State of Illinois, an ‘election will
be held for
TWO
COUNCILMEN
That the voting places in and for each of
the respective precincts shall be as follows:
oe
D5—Zengeler Cleaners, 2020 First
treet
Precinct D6é—Highland Park High
Schoo
Auditorium, St. Johns Avenue
Precinct D7—Administration Building, District No. 113, 1040 Park Ave., West
4
Precinct D8—American
Legion
Post,
1957
Sheridan Road

minded.

for 6 year

arrangement

able elsewhere.

term

Now
serving on Library Board.
Dedicated to library improvement. Deerfield
President

values

* Interested in local government
.
f
* Convinced home rule is

Director

Now
serving
as Treasurer
Board.
Active civic leader.
omy

of

v

ordine

[] RICHARD LONGTIN
for 6 year

part

Only the Want Ads offer amazing

¢« Qualified through school
board membership and

(2 yrs.)

for Library

Army
ing.

MARY M. HEDBERG
For Auditor

(4 yrs.)

ALLYN J. FRANKE

Candidates

Be

Directors

WILSON

as

nois band in 1955. At that time
Palmer was invited to be guest conductor, but his career in the U.S.

(VOTE FOR FOUR)
RICHARD LONGTIN
(6 yrs.)
KEITH D. NICKOLEY
(6 yrs.)
TO FILL UNEXPIRED TERM

Oo

* 2%

—

foo

RUTH

For Town

EUGENE H. SEYL
WILLARD T. WAGEMAN
MARY M. HEDBERG
Library

and

ly played by the University of Illi-

(VOTE FOR THREE)

For

Congratulations

thanks again.”
Palmer made the transcription of
the Brahms Overture from orches;
tra to band while he was studying
for his Master’s degree at the Uni-

For Assistant Supervisor

For

Ela-Vernon High School proudly
announces that its Music Director,
Gordon Palmer, has been notified
that
his
band
arrangement
of
Brahms’ ‘Academic Festival Over«
ture” will head the program when
the University of Illinois Concert
Band presents its Seventy-first Anniversary Concert on March 22
and 23.

‘“‘those

D9—Lincoln

School,

711

Lincoln

Avenue
Precinct D10
— Trinity
Episcopal
Church,
425 Laurel Avenue
Precinct
D11— Sunset
Valley
Golf
Club,
Field House, 1390 Sunset Road
Precinct D12—Villa St. Cyril Garage, 1111
St. Johns Avenue
Precinct D13—Edgewood School, 929 Edge-.
wood Road
ep ce
D14—Ravinia
School,
763
Dean
venu
Precinct D15—North Shore Sanitary District
Disposal Plant, Clavey Road
Precinct D16—Ravinia School Field House,”
Roger Williams Avenue
Precinct D17—Braeside
School, 150 Pierce
Road
¥
Precinct D18—Cross'
Roads
Barber
Shop,
197 Skokie Valley Road
Precinct D19—City Garage, McCraren Roa&amp;
Precinct D20—Ravinia
Fire
Station,
692
Burton Avenue
Precinct D22 — Highland
Park
Recreation
Center, 1850 Green Bay Road
Precinct D23 — West
Ridge
School,
636
Ridge Road
Precinct D24—Wayne Thomas School, Summit and North Avenues
Precinct D25—North
Woods
Junior
High
School, Marl Oak Dr. and North Ave.
ey
hieWD8—Mutual
Supply, 1393 Half
a
Wedetack WD10—James
Meehan
Residence,
1970 Berkeley Road
The polls of said election will be open
from six o’clock in the forenoon and congs 4 saee until six o’clock in the afternoon.
at Peg
cs Park, this 30th day
of Murch’
. 1961.

3/30-4/6/61—76

ROY

Thursday,

MILLEN,

March

7,

Clerk

30, 1961

�Easter is a Happy Time
&amp;.

jy YuMus
enticing—giant
°
e
ipe

for Children...

tall cyl.

olives

4

int

cans

$1

.00

del monte—in extra heavy syrup

fruits for salad "°.;2 49c
yfaggedy ann—in

. and

heavy syrup

pear halves 3 ":.::°$1.00
raggedy ann—made
fruits

from whole hand-picked

fruit cocktail 3°°.°°$1.00
,raagedy ann—green

food mart.

or

lege
ah

red pear halves ‘52% 29c

Tare

save’s ground

coffee

The

children

ke

You'll find everything

e

cocktail
s &amp; w—pure

tomato juice

sugar

and

in town, waiting for you at Sure Save. We know you'll want your
family’s Easter dinner to be [ust perfect so may we suggest that you

shop at your nearest Sure Save food mart right now!
P.S. Don’t forget our low prices.

“can OFC

LAND

O’ LAKES

U.S. Govt. Insp. Grade A
Strictly Fresh — All White

EGGS AD

2"..? 29¢

n’ spice—fruited

sham glaze

hunts

ae
:

4 acarters9VIC
california

their egg

from eggs and Easter bunnies

college inn—tomato juice
,

have

to old fashioned hickory smoked hams all at the lowest prices

bee 49¢

Eee

too.

be

fresh

blends better for lighter results

for grownups

Easter baskets and the grownups.
. .? Well, the grownups have
the joy of family reunions over Sunday dinner and the happy
smell of old fashioned baked ham and pineapple coming from
the kitchen. Family Sunday dinners almost seem to be a specialty of
Easter and the best and tastiest of foods for your family’s Easter
Sunday dinner are the specialty of your nearest Sure Save

rit 39¢

sugar n’ spice—fancy

sweet gherkins

mise
Ww.

pride of spain—queen

E

stuffed olives

*: jar2 39c

EASTER BASKETS

C

for the children—contain: very large

“pride of spain—plain

queenolives

bunny—yo-yo—gun—paddle

2 29¢

armour star or hormel dairy brand—fully cooked
"ready to eat—6 to 7 Ib. avg.—shank portion

Cc

HAM.....

. butt portion
y

From

uw. 45¢

Our Delicatessen

oe

Chopped
Imported—lIn

__

Liver
Natural

center cut pieces or slices .. » 98c
morrell pride—whole or half—14 to 16 Ib. avg.

semi

ae

"

boneless

ham

HEN TURKEYS ......... woave. 16. 39C

Greek Olives Ss

Best Kosher

Salami

alee SisakStcfolahal
Poseoves
Vita Pickles

=

9 8c

8" 5Qc

e
+

We have a Fine Selection of Fresh Fish
For Your Holiday Needs.
Place Your Order Now.

boneless leg o” lamb

u.s. choice—sure

».89¢

save trimmed—boneless—rolled

umn rast:

w. 89¢

fresh frozen

large shrimp

pene ». 9c

SHOPPING

30,

1961

royal—10

“a $1.09

delicious flavors

GELATIN DESSERTS

6 »«. 39¢

BULIER.
raggedy

«eee

airs. 69¢

ann—jellied

CRANBERRY SAUCE

2 «29c

brand

CREAM CHEESE... one: 25¢
Fresh Fruits and
fresh—sweet—red

Vegetables

ripe

STRAWBERRIES

california—fresh—u.s.

pint

&lt;scheviccoiggieenntileed box 29c

no.

asparagus

1—all green

dried

golden yams... 3 ws. 29¢

CENTER

716 WAUKEGAN

March

Gin:

puerto rican variety—louisiana—kiln

We reserve the right to limit quantities.
Meat and produce prices available Thursday, Friday and
Saturday only.
Sale starts Thurs., March 30th thru Wed., April 5th.

Thursday,

manor house—drip or regular

kraft—philadelphia

u.s. choice—sure save trimmed

rope

j windmill— crayons with coloring book — bouncing
4 ball—marshmallow eggs—assorted homemade choc4 olates and other assorted candies and toys — all this
set Lk
bi
inlay AND
§ DECORATED
in a big
¢ Easter basket for only
$2.49

land o’ lakes—lightly salted—93 score

ERGO a Ib. 69c

armour star—u.s. govt. insp. grade a—broadbreasted

Brine

10 inch stuffed

board
-— jumping

RD.

SPACIOUS

PARKING

FOR

Open

Mon.

thru

Fri.,

9

P.M.

Sat, : ‘til

6

400

CARS

9 A.M.

to

P.M,
Page

H 23—D

7

�Want to SAVE UP TQ "129

TURNER'S _

on financing and
- insuring: your ‘next:ca

TV-LAB
NEWS

! may be able
Ask me about
State Farm's

697

Waukegan

LIVING ROOM
J

HENRY
825

The

INSURANCE

John

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE COMPARY
Home

Office: Bloomington,

Minois

59~—29
ateeemanel

Only the Want
values
able

and

Ads offer amazing

opportunities

elsewhere.

Read

not

them

committee. This is the only position
that is salaried.
Co-chairman named by Neumayer
include
A.
G.
Sabato,
Carl
Mi-

week

by

George

Neumayer,

chaels,

campaign

so,

nominating

avail-

now!

LILAC SHOES

Whitney

for

Lindemann,

commit-

Ira

president,

Hearn,

and

James Mandler for trustees—were
approved by villagers at the town
meeting last month.

“Our

purpose

neighborhood

in

holding

meetings,’

these
Neu-

mayer explained, “is to tell how the
caucus plan works, how each villager contributes to the plan’s success, and how
selections of caucus plan candidates are carefully

determined by the qualifications
that each as an individual has to
offer the village as a member of
the Deerfield board of trustees.
“In our campaign, we will emphasize the qualifications of the
candidates which led to their selection after a probing three-month

H.

study
by the
caucus
nominating
committee from a list of more than
50 names submitted by our townspeople for consideration.
“We will also point out,’ Neumayer continued, ‘‘that each of the
24 men and women who, like myself, served on this caucus nominating committee, was elected by
the people whose district he represented. After the selections were
presented
to
the
villagers
last
month
for their approval at the
town meeting, this Caucus nomi-

nating

committee

EDWARDS
or

shoes,

. .

William

and

Hag-

Joseph

neighbors—why

a

group

of

ernment with a community divided
by partisan struggle, that the Deerfield

disbanded.

caucus

plan

is modeled

after

bring the qualifications of the can-

“Confidence

didates to
villager.”

the

attention

of

“We

each

in Caucus.”

chose

‘Confidence

in

Cau-

cus’ as our theme-slogan because
the caucus plan every other year

they can elect confident of their
qualifications
and
willingness
to
provide sound leadership. A heavy ~
vote of confidence will encourage
other civic-minded citizens to offer
their
services
to the village.
In
the past, many
qualified persons

have

been

reluctant

to enter

into,’

a partisan campaign with its bitterness or to have their candidacy ‘

marred by voter apathy.”
Neumayer has said that citizens
and groups desiring to know more

APRIL
SPECIAL

so they

dress-ups

Ford,

Kane,

will continue to search out and
bring before the voters candidates

about

all

had

. all

kids

1-HOUR

caucus

plan

David WhitJohn Linde-\
Mrs. Cathhim
at WI,
or arrange-

General

chairman

for

the

1961

caucus campaign committee is P. D.
Davis,

a member

committee

from

of the nominating

district

4.

Men’s Garden Club
Show Exhibit Wins
Award of Merit
An “Award of Merit for an Outstanding Educational Exhibit’? was

given

to

the

Men’s

of
the
North
hibit
attracted

attention,

Garden

Club”

Shore.
Their
a great
deal

with

many

favorable

MARTY
ey See ous
You'll feel and look the very picture of Luxury, wearing your MARTINIZED apparel. Our special dry, drycleaning process puts
into your apparel.
Give

your

wardrobe

LUXURIOUS
e046
service!

Complete Line of Spring and
Easter Footwear for the Family

WI

“No, | didn’t get a ‘isak at his
face—I kept admiring his suit

. . he said

5-2600

LILAC SHOES
Open
Page

H 24—D

8

Thurs. &amp; Fri. ‘til

9 P.M.

cleaned

he just had

at ONE

HOUR

TINIZING!”
Open Daily
7:30 A.M. - 6:30 P.M,
Saturdays
8:00 A.M. - 6:00 P.M.

it

MAR-

exof*

comments such as “very interesting,” “very beautiful,’
“most attractive.” The many unusual plants
exhibited on the striking arrange-_,
ment
of shelves
at their
booth
made
an exceptionally
attractive |
display.

WI 5-4466

LILAC -

Deerfield

ments for a neighborhood meeting.

ALL Bleaching
ALL Tipping

because they wear so well and feel so good. Popular styles to suit the
children; popular prices to fit your budget. Bring the children in today.

the

and its candidates—
ney, James Mandler,
mann, Ira Hearn and
erine
Price—to
call
5-3536 for a speaker

ALL Permanents
ALL Tints

#®
C
These LutlE PigGles Stayeo Home
in

Le

John

former village officials had in 1956
set up
the plan,
how
they
had¥
studied other similar and successful plans that provided good gov-¢

DISCOUNT

stay-at-homes,

Bruce

Howard

their

20%

were

Kel-

the plan in use by Glencoe and
Winnetka townspeople.
Neumayer has urged voters to”)
turn out April 18 to register their

WENT
TO MARKET

little piggies

George
Marshall

A caucus campaign committee is
formed from members of the nominating committee. The one purpose
for this campaign committee is to

LItLE PiGGIES

all the

Busch,

Leonard,

Cleary.
At a meeting with his co-chair-7
men, Neumayer distributed an informative
memorandum
to
help
them tell the caucus plan story to

Mak

lots of fun.
Run-arounds,
love EDWARDS shoes from

Kies,

gie,

PUFF hairdressers
Deorftell;

but

Robert

Robert

Sueur, Mrs. George Robinette,

caucus

—David

Rd.

STATE FARM
MUTUAL

STATE FARM

this

tee selections for this year’s board

HAKANEN
Deerfield
Deerfield

candidacy has been unanimously |
approved by the caucus nominating |

chairman.

PRODUCTS

There was a lot of publicity about
the quiz show scandals, so it’s natural
for viewers to wonder about panel shows
on T.V.
Often, the question is raised if
the panels are tipped-off beforehand.
Many
of the panel show
producers
admit that advance questions are put in
the hands of panel members before the
show, but the actual answers are never
given
out.
The
reason
for
questions
being
created
beforehand
is
to _ increase the entertainment value of the
program.
Humorous
situations can be
created
by questions
like:
‘Can
this
product be found around here?’ in the
case of quizzing
a girdle and corset
manufacturer.
We would like to be on one of these
shows
sometime.
I’ll bet that TURNER’S TV-LAB
could keep the panel
Stumped
for awhile.
We
service TV,
radio, Hi-Fi and almost any kind of electronic. And we can usually do it right
in the living room of your home. Phone
W? 54-1401 next time.

revealed

Price, 3

who seeks another term and whose. a

At Neighborhood Meetings
it was

BANK PLAN

Rd.

WI 5-1401 — DEERFIELD

lage clerk is Mrs. Catherine

The 1961 caucus party candidates for the April 18 election
for president and trustees for the village board will be discussed
at neighborhood meetings held in homes throughout Deerfield,

to help you.

By William Turner

fReview Deerfield Candidates

feeling.
no

extra

the

sparkle

self

. ., . that

garments

MARTIN-

charge

for

convenient

one-hour

NARTINILING |
the most

back

your

Ur HOUR :
NING
n DRY CLEA

your

beauty

Have

..

. and

and

708 Deerfield Rd.
Deerfield
WI

Thursday,

5-9793

March

30,

1961

�DEERFIELD

&amp; GARDEN

SPOT

HEADQUARTERS FOR ALL scorTs PRODUCTS

HAS

SPOT

&amp; GARDEN

LAWN

DEERFIELD LAWN

= for Spiing gardeningh=
&gt;&gt;
WEEK-END SPECIAL
THURS.,

FRI., SAT., SUN.

50

Ibs. PEAT MOSS
Plus 50 lbs. of
CATTLE MANURE
Combination

Offer!

4.50
Value

One-day way to
improve your lawn

FLOWERS
Beautiful

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Plants

REASONABLY
PRICED!
:
on egitim

,

In just one afternoon you can keep crabgrass from plaguing you
again this year, and plant that better lawn you want. The answer

f q
: nel... fi
2
R- TREES

to crabgrass is HALTS®, It lies in wait, kills crabgrass as it sprouts.
Yet HALTS lets good grass sprout unharmed, so you can sow all-

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Fruit Trees

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from $2.95
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HEDGE

Complete

It doesn’t take hard work or expert skill to transform a frustrating lawn into a satisfying one. It doesn’t even take a lot of time.

=o

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or

10

Line of Spring

perennial Scotts seed the same day. Non-burning TURF BUILDER®
tor 98c

completes the job, gives new and established grass the proteinbuilding nutrition it needs to thrive.

Bulbs

:

HARDWARE

Top Quality
ARMSTRONG

PET SUPPLIES

ROSES

INFORMATI

AS

meet

sda

ea

SHRUBS and

ecw

whe

kay

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tHE

MAGAZINE

OF

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Now Open 7 Days a Week!

arches Sh

INSECTICIDES

dembaganeeces

Non-Patented

Ask us about the Scotts guarantee ..
a better lawn or your money back!

IN

a

bistesssates

Potted

P

ADVERTISED

Mon. thru Sat., 8 A.M. - 9 P.M.
Sundays 8:00 A.M. — 6:00 P.M.

PLACES

DEERFIELD LAWN &amp; GARDEN SPOT
641

Deerfield

Road,

ALL EVERGREENS,

Deerfield

ROSES, SHRUBS

GUARANTEED

Thursday,

March

30,

1961

“For

TO

and TREES

GROW!

Your

Growing

Bring

&amp;

your
how

Garden

lawn

Needs”

problems

and the experience

Phone:

to our

Lawn Program

Advisors.

WI

5-3800

They have the know-

to help you achieve the kind of lawn you want.

Page

H

25—D

9

�=e
Steir1 BO
ies
Be:

Study Program for
Explorer Scouts

Deerfield Candidates Meet

Exploring, the popular and fast
growing program designed for High
School Youth will be given high
priority during 1961-1962 by the
Boy Scouts of America.

Quinlan &amp; Tyson, Inc.
Realtors
pleasure

volunteer

leaders

gathered

parts of Wisconsin and
Illinois recently at the

Hotel
Schroeder,
Milwaukee,
for
the purpose of planning and learning more about the administration °

in announcing

~

takes

Adult

from all
Northern

of the Explorer Program.

the

association

Selected district representatives
and council members of the North

of

Shore

Ardis B. Peet
with

their

Deerfield

Candidates for village president and members of the
Board of Trustees met last week with holdover trustees and
the village manager to discuss village board organization

office

and

trustee

Powell,

responsibilities.

the

candidates

Held

were

at the

home

acquainting

of Joseph

themselves

with

the information and facts upon which they could base their

735 Deerfield Road

@

Deerfield, Ill.

WI 5-3750

UN 9-1112

consultation and form their decisions after election April 18
to the board. Pictured above (from left): P. D. Davis, general chairman for the 1961 Caucus Party campaign committee; David C. Whitney, candidate for village president; John
F. Aberson, incumbent trustee; Norris Stilphen, village manager; John Lindemann, candidate for trustee; Winston S.
Porter, incumbent; Ira Hearn and James Mandler, candidates;

and Joseph
Vote

attended

Powell.
for

Equitable

and

Realistic

Property

niques

TIME

ASSESSOR

TUESDAY,

APRIL

help you on a
Qualified

sympathetic

assessor

with

VOTE

in

our

present

Explorer
School

the

Cab-

member

North

Shore

Robert Whitman of 1641 Beverly
Place has pledged Phi Sigma Epsilon fraternity at Northern Illinois «
University, De Kalb. Initiations inthe week

tunities.

of March
section

facts
Don’t

and
miss

5.
is filled with

golden

oppor-

it!

SCUTL

4th

available

Want-Ad

interesting

Scott’s

Answer

Brown

to

Spot

to

CRAFTWOOD

distinction.

Pledges REALISTIC evaluation of your property and remove
inequities

advising

Frat Member

full time basis—without conflict of interests.

to serve

of

cluded, C. L. MacAvoy
and William Fosbender, of Highland Park;
and Ed Wilson, Deerfield.

As a taxpayer, you deserve to have
a

of *

Area Council who attended are in-

Independent Candidate—West Deerfield Twp.
ELECTION

organization

to the various fraternal groups took

Valuations

FRANK E. SCHWARTZ
aed

the

inets
(the
High
governing body).
Scouters from

The

a FULL

this

in an effort to
the_
various
Administration

new Explorer Posts, the training of
Explorer
leaders,
and
the
tech-

ELECT

when

Council

of Exploring,

place

irresistible

Area

two-day conference
better
understand
phases of Council

LUMBER

system.

INDEPENDENT—MARK

EACH

COMPANY

See Page H43-D-59
SQUARE

OF YOUR

CHOICE

you!

the Easter bunny

acts like a wolf
it’s because
Hanes

you're wearing

seamless

“HEATING COMMENTS”
SUBJECT: HUMIDITY

stockings

$1.35 to $1.65

at 70-72 degrees fahrenheit, a dry house, in proportion, requires a 75 degree temperature.
A dry house speeds up deterioration of cloth
materials, causes wood to crack and furniture
joints to separate. It is possible to have too much
humidity on very cold days. In our next comment
we will explain the ratio of indoor relative humidity to outside temperatures.

Dry air absorbs moisture from the skin, producing a chilling effect. This can only be offset by
increasing the air temperature in the house several
degrees. A humidified house will be comfortable

You can depend on...
e “CARE-FREE” FUEL OIL DELIVERY,
¢ COMPLETE HEATING SERVICE

Plus

b

720

Waukegan

Rd.,

Deerfield

e DEERFIELD COMMONS
Open
Page

H

26—D

10

Thurs. &amp; Fri. ‘til 9 p.m.

WI

BRAUN BROS. OIL CO.

5-2444

e

TELEPHONE
444

CENTRAL

AVE.

—

ID

2-3804

CARL

|

ID 2-3804
CASEL, DIV. MANAGER

HIGHLAND PARK
Thursday,

March
*

30, 1961
x

�Caucus supported candidates are: |
Paul
Greenfield,
T. Allen
Gran-'
field, and Albert R. Dawe.
Two independents who have filed |

are Mrs.

Lois Mueller,

931

Oxford

Rd., and Darwin M. Rummel,
Ramsey Rd.
Greenfield,
president
of
school board since April, 1959,

Marxer To Have |
Challenged West || ed

Deerfield Budget
Homer

Marxer,

pervisor

of

candidate

West

for su-

Deerfield

town-

ship, was to have introduced six
motions at the budget meeting of
the township Tuesday night.
Marxer
following

was expected
points:

to raise the

“1. Who do we have to budget for
a Thistle commissioner?
“2. Why do
a $6,000 salary
missioner?

we plan to budget
for a highway com-

required

by

law,

telling

has worked, where he
and what he has done?

when

has

he

worked

“4, Why should we give the township supervisor $3,600 per year as

poor relief administrator?
“5. For nearly a decade the taxpayers have been paying a retirement fund for the supervisor and
other employees. How much of the

taxpayers’ money is in that fund?
“6.

What

town

officers

are the details
expense, now

of
in

preliminary budget for $10,900?

the
the

“7. How is the budget for the
township assessor accounted for?”

Closed
EASTER SUNDAY
Open Mon.,
Tue., Wed., Thu., 9-6

FRIDAY 9-9
SATURDAY 9-8

the
aid-

in the acquisition of the Walden

been

of

urged

district

to vote

April 8. Absentee
obtained from the
tion office in the
mar school. The
plications is April

109

Seeeees

i,

STRICTLY

Ib.
Can

30,

1961

Last

a.m

in the

of

daily

of studies

the

at

chureh

included

series

Week

First

850 Waukegan

devotions,

a

events

morning

of
at

9

sanctuary.

Tonight,

Maundy

Thursday,

Holy

Granfield
states and will
on their trips.

maximum

preach at all services
“Along Easter Road.”

WI
WI

Special Easter music
by three.choirs.

Mrs.

FRESH

Walter

Strub,

The

Rev.

Bernard

Briargate

will

Didier
on

the

DEERFIELD PLAN COMMISSION
By: Peter C. Weinert, Chairman
3/23-30/61—D69

be

will
topic,

The

$119

Want-Ad

interesting

will be sung

tunities.

section

facts
Don’t

and
miss

is filled with

golden

;

4

oppor-

it!

MEAT DEPT.
OPEN DURING
EVERY STORE
HOUR

WEEK-END

FOOD BUYS
MAR.

30,

31,

APR.

Ist

CLOSED ALL DAY

Bite- MOTTSersDistaactt

—

Swift's

Premium

FRANKS
For

APPLE SAUCE

BROS.

ground coverage by all buildings.)

|

breakfast.
Other services
at 9, 10 and 11:30 a.m.

Couples are asked to bring their
favorite TV snack food, which will
be served throughout the evening
with coffee. Reservations may be
made by calling the church office,

or

Deerfield, to consider

Pee

2. Map amendment to establish a proper
zoning classification
or classifications “for
the following described property:
The
vacated
subdivision
of
Villas Subdivision. a subdivision of part i
of the NE%
of the SE%
of Section’2
j Township 43 North. Range 12, East
ie
On Good Friday at 8 p.m. there
the 3rd P.M. in Lake County. Tlinois.
The
above
described
property
is
commonfi
will be Holy Communion and bap- |
ly known
as the Liebling tract, approxitism of infants.
mately 17 acres in area, and lies east of. the
Reed
Landis
Subdivision
(Ramsay
area),
Easter
services
at
the
church and is presently unzoned.
bi
At
said
public
hearing,
and
any
adjournwill include a sunrise service at 7
#
ment thereof, all persons interested are ina.m., followed by Easter morning
4
vited to be present and be heard,

Hold Baptism

5-0078
5-3475.

Road,

a
: a

proposed amendments to the Zoning Ordinance
for the Village
of Deerfield-1953,
requested by the Board of Trustees, as fol- en
lows:
\
1. Amendment
to Section XV M-Manuhe
ih
facturing District, paragraph C to provide
that the maximum ground area occupied by
hay
all buildings shall be not more than seventy
per cent (70%) of the area of the lot or
tract on which a building permit has been —
KY
issued, (Present requirements permit td

Deerfield

on the
each

the

Communion
and the reception of
new members will highlight the 8
p.m. service.

extensively in the
show slides taken

LARGE
EGGS

Reg. or Drip

March

have

T. Allen

COFFEE

Thursday,

services

GROCERLAND

HILLS

Deerfield

Week

Presbyterian

ballots can be
board of educaDeerfield Gramdeadline for ap5.

39°
RD.

NOTICE OF HEARING
DEERFIELD PLAN COMMISSION
APRIL 13, 1961
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
by the
Plan Commission of the Village of Deerfield that a public hearing will be held by
13,
said Commission
on Thursday,
April
1961 at 8:00 P.M.
in the Village Hall,

|

COSMAS

GUAR.

WAUKEGAN

Holy

have

Members
of Bethlehem
church
couples club will meet Saturday,
April 8, 8 p.m., in the Kipling
school gymnasium, to view colored
slides of a trip through the U.S.A.
with the Harold Neals.
Mr. and Mrs. Neal have traveled

Dawe

Service Planned

in the election

Bethlehem Club
To View Slides

R.

Maundy Thursday

Dawe, a member of the faculty of
several universities and colleges, is
currently chief scientist in the office of naval research. For eight
years he has been a scoutmaster.

GROCERLAND
ts

Albert

| school
property,
the |
which
was
first venture of the school board
and park board working jointly in
land use.
Granfield, a graduate of the University of Minnesota, is an assistant secretary in the trust department of the Northern Trust Co.,
Chicago.

Citizens

“3. Has
the
highway
commissioner filed his sworn statement, as

200 |

a Sop
ee hale
Dogars

Five candidates are running for
the
three
positions.
The
caucus
committee of the district has unan-

HELLMANN’S

REAL

MAYONNAISE

eS

Voters of school district 109 will
select three candidates to fill vaeancies on the board of education
April 8.

45

1-lb.
Pkg.

Your

Breakfast

Easter

..

.

JONES PORK SAUSAGE
MEAT

|

5%

LINKS

|
\
&lt;
9
6
EEF 63)
ee ee
Easter to all of our Friends
1-lb.
pkg.

.....

With

ee

Seek Three Jobs
On School Board

1-lb.

ORES

aS

This Coupon!

SO

Five Candidates

|
SCHOOL
FOR
OF ELECTION
NOTICE
DIRECTOR OF SCHOOL DISTRICT NO.
ILLINOIS
COUNTY,
106 IN LAKE
that on
GIVEN
IS HEREBY
NOTICE
Saturday, the 8th day of April, 1961, an —
election will be held at Bannockburn School,
in School District No. 106 of the County of
Lake and State of Illinois, for the purpose
of. electing one (1) school director of said
school district for the full term of three
years.
é
For
the
purpose
of
this election the
school district shall constitute one precinct
and the polling place therein shall be at the
Bannockburn School, 2165 Telegraph Road,
Bannockburn, Deerfield, Illinois.
The polls shall be opened at 12 o’clock
noon and closed at 4 o’clock p.m. the same
day.
(A Caucus will be held.at the polling
place immediately before the opening of the
polls for the purpose of nominating a candidate for school director.)
;
Board of said
By order of the School
District.
DATED
this 22nd day of March, 1961.
(signed) R. DEVENS,
President
a
(signed) BESSELAU H. DAVIES, Clerk
3/30/61—D75

imously supported three of the candidates.
The school board caucus committee consists of representatives of
Deerfield Grammar,
Kipling, Maplewood and Walden schools, the
Chamber of Commerce, the Junior
Chamber of Commerce, Deerfield
Women’s
club and the American
Association of University Women.

U.S.

Pint
Jar .

Happy

Gov.

Graded

Choice

Moet Naval Nome tn Foods.

Phone:
Windsor 5-

0707
Page

H

3—D

11

�:
ED
NT
WA
3000 PROTEST

a

te

VOTES

IF YOU'RE A DEMOCRAT: Just Vote, Brother!
IF YOU'RE AN INDEPENDENT: Now Is The Hour!
IF YOU'RE

A

WEST

REPUBLICAN:

WANTED:

Parents

ALL OF

April

DEERFIELD,

—

evaluated

by

its owners

and

‘,

Village Board members at $1,800,000 — is only assessed
at $208,000, one-ninth of its real value.
loss

This means

'

a

/

to residents of $370,000 in tax funds over the next

ten years.

If a piece of land

is worth

$1,800,000

garbage—it

is worth that much as a source of revenue

«

for

The

{ Township

to proper

2

=

&amp;

Believers

;

=

SS

=

in Planned

County

=

Community

Board—including

Supervisor—has

SS

repeatedly

the

=&lt;

—

=

Develop-

If you’ve

profes-

found

community;

This office must

be used to

insure against zoning to appease special interest groups.

between

proportions

Frustrated

regional planning

Township

Supervisor

the County

and

must

work

| business

for coordination

’ SLATE

Village governments to serve

1?

the interests of the total community.

DEMOCRATIC

TOWNSHIP

extravagant

Library

of

law:

school.

Library

ARTHUR

For Constable:

fk]

ADOLPH

perpetuation

waste-

”

BERTUCCI

in tax

assessments

have

un-

PARK

were over-assessed — while

The

result

of poorly

of

clique

qualified

rule

and

candidates

its selfand

their

own selfish interests.

lacking the books to serve a modern

{

closed

when

'

if you’ve given up and taken your library

elsewhere

—

vote

for

the

for Library Directors —- Make

INDEPENDENT
the West Deer-

)
)

Opponents of Clique Rule.

For over a half-century the same self-perpetuating group
(Republicans in Disguise) has dominated West Deerfield Township government.
Items from the 1959-60
Township expenditures: Town Supervisor collected in
addition to his per diem allowances from both County
and Township $3,600 as “Poor Relief.” Administrator
(what are his qualifications
to administer welfare
funds?)
Assessor collected $1,400 in travel expenses
(at 10c per mile that’s 14,000 miles—58 miles per day)
and spent $4,818.09 for office expenses and $1,395 for a
Deputy Assessor (who was he—or she?—neighboring
Deerfield Township with a larger population has none).
These and other questionable expenditures signal the need
for a clean sweep of the archaic Township government.

}
J
¥
¥

CANDIDATES

B.

For Town

MARXER
St. Louis U. Law

Former Village Trustee.

[x]

Deer-

GERALD
Certified

National

Auditor

(Vote

Honor

Societies.

[x]

Kala-

for Three)

M. FLEGEL
Public Accountant.

Member

Specialist

urban planning and development.
CHESTER E. VARNER
Auditor.
Specialist in construction
counting. 20 year resident of Lake
County.

For Assessor:
C. ULLMANN

Deerfield real estate broker, appraiser.
Pres. 3 terms Deerfield Chamber of
Commerce.

Clerk:

[Xx] VIRGINIA GORNER
ll years in Highland Park—Grad.
mazoo States Teachers College.

field real estate broker and appraiser for
9 years.

years.

i.

? der-assessed.

&lt;

Lake County resident since 1926.

18

practices

fairly overburdened the back of new residents — areas

industrial properties such as the “Brickyard” were un-

it

For Assistant Supervisor:
EMMA BANDEMER
for

FOREST)

New Residents with Unfair Tax Bills.

such as DEERFIELD

field Township Library Blossom this Spring.

13 year resident—LLB,

°

&amp; LAKE

Discriminatory
Z

&amp;

For Town

ROBERT
WesdtinoidL. TARREL
in practice

PARK

WANTED:

Patrons.

For Supervisor:

For Justice of the Peace:

e

HIGHLAND

INDEPENDENT LIBRARY
SLATE
HOMER

Lake County Attorney—Mature—Reliable.

eei

OF

SLATE

For Circuit Court Judge:
PHILIP W. YAGER

;

such

the Township

QUALIFIED
:

PORTIONS

&amp; WANTED:
WANTED:

should be open;

The

— 6 a.m. to 6 p.m.

*

sional counsel for the County Plan Commission and the
board.

Here!

2

incumbent

ignored

Oats—

ELECTION

fulness of your tax funds.

ES

ment.

Wild

WANTED: Citizens Who Object to Wasting $14,679.04
Annually to Maintain TWO MILES of ROAD. With
only two miles of Township roads left to supervise —
this year the Highway Commissioner’s salary appropriation is $6,000. In the fiscal year ending March 31, 1960
he spent $10,849.04 to maintain these last few feet of
roads not yet incorporated into the Village or County
in addition to $3,830 in salary. Present One-Party misrule has done nothing toward streamlining such archaic
Township offices and functions—Nothing to eliminate
or reduce

for our schools!

WANTED:

4, 1961

BANNOCKBURN,

Who Need $370,000 for Schools

The “BRICKYARD”

Your

DEERFIELD TOWNSHIP

Tuesday,
(INCLUDES

Sow

For Library Director
HELEN KING (for Six Years)
Caseworker Lake Bluff Children’s Home;
graduate training U. of C.; active civic
activities.

2

in
ac-

ALLAN GERKIN, JR.
Auditor. Born and raised in Lake County.
Bradley U. and University of Chicago.

CYRIL FRITZ (for Six Years)
BBA College of New York. Active Boys’

Baseball, Member Friends of Library.

ROGER McGUIRE (for four years)
U. of Mo., Bachelor of Journalism, Organized and served as president Park Forest
Public Library.
PAUL STEERUP (for two years)
U. of Chicago, Co-owner, Steerup Advertising Service, former member Chicago
Council on Foreign Relations.

VOTE APRIL 4 FOR GOOD TOWNSHIP GOVERNMENT —
Incumbent—efficiency and integrity.

page
H 4—D 12

#

Thursday,

March

30,:1961

�a

- DEERFIELD FORUM
The

To The

Editor:

A list of new
field

Library

VIEW

of

ook
We

fiction at the Deer-

published

March

23

‘Valhalla’
quote

by

from

in the

RE-

contains

the

Jere

the

Peacock.

review

by

Van

Allen Bradley in the Chicago Daily
News:
“If we have come a long way
ysince World War II, for
for worse, in accepting

getter

word

in

popular

fiction,

much of the credit lies with Lowney (Mrs. Harry)
Handy’s
school
for writers
at Marshall,
Illinois.
. . . The latest Handy arrival is

brash

young

Jere

Peacock,

whose

‘Valhalla” is sprinkled with almost
every conceivable kind of vulgarity
hroughout the vastly boring length
of its 509 pages.
“His

novel

is

not

only

but pointless . . . and
but pointless. ...

Editor:

Ruth Vetter, our town clerk, has
every
right
to give
away
her
“Shine Sir?” shoe shining mittens
at the town hall.
Regardless of what the opposition claims, Mrs. Vetter’s office is
not an official polling place; that a

voter

better or
the four

who

will

sell,

P.

be out

of town

on

election day can vote there now is
only because she is willing to give
that service, one of the many extra
services that Mrs. Vetter gives to
aid the citizens of West Deerfield
township.
If any such voter does not wish
to vote at the town hall they can
elect to go to any notary public or
authorized person cast their ballot
and have their signature certified.
Henry

H.

Tuttle,

725 Deerfield

mental

appaling

realism,

the Chicago Tribune:

“This

is

ceived,

a

dull

torrentially

book,

ill-con-

written,

dread-

fully edited and overpriced.”
We are proud of our new library

‘building, but can we take pride in
having

this

Shelves?

type

The

of

book

library

is

on

the

greatly

in

need of adequate
research
material.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Sandy

4

Clean

good

and

shining

campaign

shoes

symbol

are

for

a

West

is doing in her office, and I hope
@every voter will accept her offer

and

go to the Town
and

|

Like

secure
all

township

Hall

a new

thinking

I want

to meet

shine.

voters

Mrs.

of

our

Vetter

re-

she

administers

our

tax

dol-

lars. I am urging all of my friends
to do as I am going to do and vote
for her on April 4.
Very truly yours,
Bill McKee
1148 Chestnut St.

»

LEGAL

1961, which fact can be verified by

held on

January
16, 1961, in the office of

‘the Bank, Deerfield, Illinois, voted unanimously to amend the Charter of Deerfield
State Bank so as to increase the capital of

said

Bank

from

$100,000.00,

consisting

of

10,000 shares of a par value of $10.00 each
to $175,000.00, consisting of 10,000 shares
Of capital stock at a par value of $10.00
each and 750 preferred
shares at a par
value of $100.00 each, by the authorization
of 750 preferred shares at a par value of

$100.00

each,

in

accordance

with

the

pro-

visions of Sections 17 and 18 of an Act
of the General Assembly of the State of
Illinois known as The Illinois Banking Act,
&amp;pproved
May
1, 1955, in force Jan.
1957 as amended;
All Statutory Requirements having been
tomplied
with,
aforesaid
change
became
legally effective March 13, 1961.
By order of the Board of Directors of
Deerfield State Bank,
ROBERT S. RAMSAY, President
Dated at Deerfield, Illinois,
‘this Thirteenth day of March, 1961.

ty

political
polling

_ 3/16-23-30/61—D51
Thursday, March 30, 1961

of

of

Elm

Tucson,

St.,

Deer-

“@

Mrs.. Varner’s son, Cleon Varrer
and his family, live on Woodward
Ave. He is a member of the Deer-

Political

field-Bannockburn
department.

Volunteer

Fire

Advertisement)

INTRODUCING YOUR NEXT
VERNON TOWNSHIP OFFICIALS

| YOUTH + EXPERIENCE GOOD GOVERNMENT

discussion

within

or within

100 feet of

VOTE «&amp; DEMOCRATIC

any

place.

VOTE FOR QUALIFIED LEADERS

The penalty for violation of this
statute provides for a fine of not
less than $50, nor more than $500,
or imprisonment in the County Jail
for not more
than one year, or
both, for each offense.
Nowhere in the various outbursts
of righteous indignation that appeared in this column last week is
there a denial of the fact that the

law has been violated by township
Very truly yours,
Martin L. Silverman

Award Contract
To Deerfield Firm
announced

the

award

contract
to
the
Co. of Deerfield.
STATE
NOTICE

of

Judge of Circuit Court
PHILIP

W.

Klein-

OF ILLINOIS
OF LETTING

(1) Sealed proposals will be received in
the office of the Village
Manager
until
2:00 o’clock P.M. April 3, 1961, for furnishing materials required in the maintenance of arterial streets Municipality Deerae
and at that time publicly opened and
read.
(2) Proposals shall be submitted on forms
furnished by the Municipality which may
be obtained
at the office of Village of
Deerfield, and shall be enclosed in an envelope endorsed ‘‘Material Proposal, Maintenance.”
(3) The right is reserved to reject any
and all proposals and to waive technicalities.
Proposal guarantee in the amount of
not less than 10% of the bid (no minimum
amount) will be required.
A surety bond
for the full amount of the award will not
be required.
Where a surety bond is not
required,
the
proposal
guarantee
of the
successful bidder will be held until all of
his material has been delivered and accepted
by the. awarding authority unless approval is
given by it to substitute a surety bond in
lieu of the proposal guarantee.
BY ORDER OF President and Board of
Trustees,
NORRIS W. STILPHEN, Village Manager
March 15, 1961
3/23-30/61—D63

YAGER

TARREL

38 years of age, married amd has three children.
Navy
veteran of World War II and a 1950 graduate of Syracuse University with a BA degree in chemistry. Treasurer
of Towner’s Sub-division Water Association, Democratic
Committeeman for Vernon Township’s ist Precinct, president of Libertyville Toastmasters, member of American
Chemical Society, Institute of Food Technologists, American Association for Advancement of Science and president
of Certified Proteins Corporation.

Township

ROLLA

Clerk

(BONNIE)

SPORKIN

Has taken an active part in community affairs since she
moved to Vernon Township four and one-half years ago.
Member of the executive board of the Half Day Community Club, troop leader of Girl Scout Troop
157, and
treasurer and board member of the Lincolnshire Garden
Club.
Resides.
in Lincolnshire
with her husband
and
three children. She is very well qualified for the position
of Township Clerk through her training im journalism and
political
science
at Northwestern
University,
and
has
been encouraged to run for public office by the support
of her many friends in the Township.

For

THOMAS

A.

THIS AD

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Butler
Richard Cromartie
Em

Cromartie

BERTUCCI

[x] WILLIAM HARRER
Resides at 1020 Walnut Drive, Pekara Subdivision, with
his wife, Margaret. For the past 14 years he has been a
field auditor for a casualty insurance company.
He is a
veteran of World War II, serving in the South Pacific
as a member of the U.S. Navy. His business for the past
30 years has been in the clerical and auditing field,

JOSEPH

(Paid

Political

and has two children.

Joe is a

combat veteran of World War II, serving with the U.S.
Army in Europe.
Joe is the‘ Democratic Precinct Committeeman for the Second Precinct of Vernon Township.

RICHARD L. CROMARTIE
39 years of age, graduate of Duke University and University of San Francisco Law School.
As the editor and
publisher of the Lincolnshire News,
Dick has demonstrated his active interest in good government. Combat veteran of World War II, now holds the rank of Major in the

U.S. Maririe ‘Reserves.
shire with his
plus knowledge

Is a Shriner,

wife and two
of government

resides

daughters.
make him

qualified for the office of Township

SPONSORED

Marjorie Gaffney
Al Goodwin
Pat Goodwin
Joe Gora
Mildred Gora
William WHarrer
Margaret Harrer
P. C. Hougiund
Jack’s Barber Shop

S. GORA

45 years of age, married

Assessor

SEKOWSKI

148 Menna Lane, Prairie View, 34 years of age, married
and
has three children.
Served
in U.S. Navy
during
World War II. Attended Northwestern University, studied
business
and
industrial
management.
Member
of the
Vernon
Post American
Legion,
Half Day,
Community
Finance Chairman for the Boy Scouts of America, North. .
West Council.
Employed with the Wheeling branch of
American
Marrietta
Manufacturing
Environmental
and
Space Technological Test Equipment.
Vice president of
the Guardite Independent Union.

Artistic Beauty Salon
Lloyd Berg
Marie Berg
Adolph Bertucci
Bjarne Bjerga
Mary
Bijerga

ADOLPH
For Township Auditor
(Vote for Three)

C. TINKER

For

a

For Constable

Justice of the Peace

[x] ROBERT

For Supervisor

JOHN

MRS.

The procurement
office at the
U.
S.
Army
Electronic
proving
ground,
Fort
Huachuca,
Arizona
$87,600
schmidt

PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN
that
the
stockholders
of
Deerfield
State
Bank
at their forty-first
annual
meeting

Varner

Tucson.

(Paid

judges of election, challengers
AND ANY OTHER PERSON OR
PERSONS from electioneering, or
soliciting of votes, or engaging in

has

NOTICE

editor of the monthly newsletter.

Earl

formerly

to

officials.

turned to office — we need to continue
the
personal
interest
and
ervice she gives and the efficient

way

in their eagerness

polling place

Deerfield township.
The mittens
Mrs. Ruth Vetter is giving away
are a token of the excellent job she

her

point

available photographs.
Chapter 46, Section 29-14 of the
Illinois Revised Statutes prohibits

any

o The Editor:

its officers for the coming year.
Dr. Michael
Baran, Deerfield
optometrist will serve as president;
Dr. Herbert
Smith, Northbrook,
vice
president;
Dr.
Louis
Mossbauer, Elmhurst, secretary; and Dr.
Robert Balfour, Arlington Heights,
treasurer; and Dr. John Walsh, Wilmette, recording
secretary and

Virginia Decker, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Darrell D. Decker, 1335
field, was co-chairman of the re- Valley Rd., is currently attending
cent two-day African Violet show the national convention of the athheld in the Tucson Y¥.W.C.A.
letie and recreation federation of
She presented an Easter basket college women at the University of
of African violets to Mrs. Donald
Illinois which began March 29 and
Hummel,
wife
of the
mayor
of continues through April.
Mrs.

Ariz.,

cloud the basic issue by interjecting matter
which
is entirely irrelevant.
On March 6, 1961, the Town Hall
was officially designated a polling
place with a booth erected on the
premises for the use of absentee
voters. Campaign material was displayed and distributed at the Town
Hall to and including March
10,

any

648 Elder Lane

announced

To The Editor:

at in most of the novels of this
kind. I am going to be called a
prude for writing this by the usual
people who find ‘the shock of recin such

week

Jr.

It is apparent
that those who
have answered my original letter
to this column overlooked a funda-

ognition’

East Illinois Optomelast

Rd.

“Mr.
Peacock’s
book
is deliberately contrived to shock and to
sell, and the writing is inferior to

but ‘Valhalla’ is still literary garbage of the rankest kind.”
4 Also from Richard Gehman of

North
society

Attending Convention

Of Show

Your Truly,

tasteless

to

tric

‘Co-Chairman

aS Sie

To

The

have less than 300 words. They
should contain the name and address of the writer, whose name
will be withheld if requested

Officers

sowenene Nadie

Opinions expressed in these
columns do not necessarily constitute the opinions of the paper.
Letters should
be brief and

Name

in Lincoln-

Legal training
eminently well

Auditor.

BY...

Marlene Kaufman
Bernice Kolasar
George Kolasar
Thomas Mylott
T. P. Mylott, Jr.
Daniel M. Pierce

Harold J. Polzer
Dick Prescher
Patricia Risolute
Advertisement)

Mr.

&amp;

R. J. Risolute
Mrs. R. Sekowski
Ed _ Sublett
Anna Sublett
Robert Tarrel
Millie Thoma

|

John Tinker
June Tinker
John Vollbrecht
A, H. Zrimsek
gh

sti Ge

Page H 5—D 1
hi?cs

eee

�.

EGY

5 A
a A ET
aH
Cig
Vad AACS
LC haet A ee ag3 a Ree

Sal

:

oa

i

RI
j:

i

WemSe, y

\

Fachions- Go-Round
Is Spring Showing of
Highwood Women

Sorority Initiate
Initiation

zini,

of Miss

daughter

of

Beatrice

Mr.

and

Len-

Mrs.

Joseph Lenzini, 120 Maple Ave.,
into Beta Nu chapter of Sigma
Kappa sorority at Bradley University took place recently. Miss LenIt’s to be a ““Fashions-Go Round” zini is enrolled in the College of
She is
for the Highwood Women’s club Business Administration,
a member of Newman club.
Tuesday
evening, April 25, at 8 also
o’clock in the Highwood Community Center, when the women stage
a Spring style showing in a carni- Mrs. Ward Anderson, Mrs. Timo
Coske, Mrs. Richard Peterson, Miss*4
val-like setting,
Chairman is Mrs. Bill Lawler; Carol and Miss Rickie Ugolini.
Teen models will be Donna Beauin charge of decorations are Mrs.
din,
Doreen
Camporeale,
Linda
Joseph
Larusso
and
Mrs.
Dante
Brugioni and Veronica Buckles
Picchietti;
Mrs. Peter DeBartolo,
Fashions
will
be
shown
by °
refreshments;
Mrs.
Michael
O’Brien, tickets; and Miss Rickie Billie’s Fashions, a new dress shop
in Highwood; music will be proUgolini, programs.
Mrs. William Davis, Deerfield, a vided by the Lowrey Organ Stuprofessional model and club mem- dios.
Children who will be modeling
ber, will moderate and direct the
show. Club members modeling will smart togs for young fry are Lisa
be Mrs. Joseph Cervac, Mrs. Ed- Cervac, Corrine Mornini, Pamela
ward
Cervae, Mrs. James
Harty, Picchietti, Vickie Gharidini, Sheryl
Mrs,

Bernard

Bernardi,

liam

Hopper,

Mrs.

Reno

Mrs.

Wil-

Signorio,

Schoonover,

Sharon

Domenico,

Steven Mornini and Michael Santi.

qt

*

eseree

Hart,

Seaeeenessesesooooccceoce
eo cee ececceoees,

Schaffner

&amp; Marx
-—«~wwe

Suits for Spring and
Summer have now
a

arrived.
Of special notice is the dacron,
wool and mohair . . . tailored in

A
ic

the slim, trim trendway model. : .
in solid tones of brown, olive and
black. All sizes.

79.50

r

Dunlap and Stetson Hats
start at 9.95 and 11.95

USE OUR FORMAL RENTAL SERVICE.
OPEN

THURSDAY

9 — OPEN

MONDAY

K

-Little Yankees do fit growing feet just wonderfully ...
they’re designed that way! Come see sturdy styles
and exciting fashions. We’ll fit any one of them with

EVE 7-9

utmost

COMPANY

TUE:
595 CENTRAL

TILL

Lille Yankee

AVE.

HIGHLAND

PARK

THE
499

nae

Page

H

6—D

14

care.

Central,

YOUNG

Highland

POINT

Park

OF

VIEW

Highland

IN
Park

SHOES
ID

2-0172

Thursday, March 30, 1961
mvs:
Paley

�Justice of Peace,
Constable To Serve

Driver Arrested
Richard

Three Townships
Two Highland Park lawyers, Alvin

I.

Singer

and

Robert

L.

Tar-

rel, are on the April 4 ballot for
justice of the peace in the newlyformed

5th Justice

District of Lake

County.
The district includes Deerfield,
«West Deerfield and Vernon Town-

ships,

an

area

which

now

has

12

JPs serving under the fee system.
The reform reduces the number to
one, plus the police magistrates. of
Highland Park and Highwood, and

* 4 possible Deerfield magistrate. All
will be on salary.
; Both candidates are nominees of
party caucuses. Running with Sing-

&gt;

er on the

Republican

slate is Ted

Benvenuti, Highwood police chief,
who has been a constable 24 years.
| Tarrel’s Democratic running mate
is Adolph Bertucci of Lake Forest,

superintendent

at the

‘Country Club
four years.

Singer,

and

who

a

Lake

Shore

constable

for

is vice-chairman

of

the JP Study
Committee
of
Lake County Bar Association,

the
be-

_lieves the caseload will take at least
half

his

time.

He

plans

to

hold

court in both Deerfield and Highland Park. The salary fixed for the
4-year

term

is

$6,000

a year,

Walter,

21,

of

3344

AN ORDINANCE
AMENDING
HIGHLAND
PARK
CODE
nial
as’ amended.

NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
that on
the 18th day of April, 1961, the regular
election will be held in and for Deerfield
Park District for the purpose of electing
one Park Commissioner to serve for the
full term of six years.
That for the purpose of said election, the
said District -has been divided
into four
farther down the highway, tested election precincts, the boundaries of each
election
precinct
and
the
name
of
the pollhis breath at the station, and reing place designated for each election preleased
him
on
$160
bond
for cinct being as follows:
driving while under the influence. PRECINCT NO. 1: All that part of the
District lying West and South of the
West Drainage Ditch.
POLLING
PLACE:
Wilmot
School,
795
to devote all day Saturdays.
Wilmot Road, Deerfield, Illinois’
PRECINCT
NO. 2:
All that part of the
District lying South of the center line
Independent Candidates
of Deerfield Road
and
East of the
West Drainage Ditch.
A third team, Ralph J. Boches of POLLING PLACE: Masonic Temple, 711
Deerfield and Roy Dransfeldt of
Waukegan Road, Deerfield, Illinois
Highwood, filed independent peti-. PRECINCT NO. 3: All that part of the
District lying North of the center line
tions which were rejected in a seof Deerfield
Road
and
East
of the
Chicago,
Milwaukee,
St. Paul &amp; Paries of court battles.
cific Railroad right-of-way.
POLLING PLACE:
Deerfield Village Hall;
850 Waukegan Road, Deerfield, Illinois
PRECINCT NO. 4:
All that part of the
District lying North of the center line
of Deerfield Road and North and East
of the West Drainage Ditch and West
of the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul &amp;
Pacific Railroad right-of-way.
POLLING
PLACE:
Maplewood
School,
Lawn and Rose
Clay Court, Deerfield, Illinois
Voters must vote at the polling place desProducts
oo
for the precinct in which they reside.
The polls wili be opened at six o’clock
A.M. and closed at 6 o’clock P.M. on theday of said. election.
By order of the Board
of Park Commissioners of the Deerfield Park District,
Lake County, Illinois.
LUMBER COMPANY
.|
Dated this 21st day of March, 1961.
See Page H43-D-59
CATHERINE
B. PRICE
Secretary
3/30/61—D83

N.
Kenneth
Ave.,
Chicago,
was
noticed by Highland
Park police
Friday morning when he skidded
at a stoplight; failed to wait when
flagged.
They
picked
him
up

SCOTT

CRAFTWOOD

BE IT
COUNCIL

ORDAINED
BY
OF THE CITY

ae
PARK,
OIS:
SECTION I.
land Park Code

LAKE
Section
of. 1919,

THE
1919,

Mi. CHAIR

Political Advertisement)

Section 8 of Chapter XXV of said’ Code,

is

hereby amended to —, as follows:
953.
Keeping
Horses.) .
No _ person,
firm or corporation shall ae
any horse
in any
residence district. except
upon
an adequately fenced tract of not less
than three (3) acres; provided, however,
that the foregoing shall not be construed
as permitting the sale, exhibition for sale,
or the keeping
or boarding
-of horses
owned by persons other than the ‘person
so keeping or boarding any horse, Each
day upon which a violation of this section continues shalt:be a ‘separate offense.
SECTION II.
There is hereby. added to
Chapter XXV of The Highland Park Code
of 1919, as amended;
a new
Section
9,
being Section 954 of: said Code,.to: read as
follows:

954.

Penalty.) 9.

Whoever

violates

of

resilient

foam,

to

IT

viewing.

We're wasting words—you’ve
got to sit in it!

&gt;

Court

BASE

SWIV EL and

CHAIR

and

TILT

OTTOMAN

$1 9995

Mr.
CHAIR I

$15 995

CHAIR AND
OTTOMAN

He proposes to devote
more to solve this

—

Philip Yager will give you full
handling

and expe-

’’The North Shore’s Finest Center for Casual Furnishings’”

VOTE APRIL 4th FOR
PHILIP

for Circuit Court Judge
Thursday,

March

woop BASE
NON-TILT

of court cases.

YAGER
30,

1961

tonite

at the

city

and

park

elections

on

to

attend.

+

*

*

One
of the nicest events that
comes to our area each year is the
International
Basketball
Tournament of “Little Guys.” DON SKRI-

NAR,
his

originator

Highwood

‘|Thursday,
the

of the

team

Friday

Highland

are

and

Park

idea,

and

hosts

next

Saturday
High

gym

at
to

teams from all over the country
and from Mexico and Puerto Rico,
If you like basketball you'll love
watching these youngsters and be
amazed at their skill and enthusiasm.
*
*
*
near

a radio

on

Satur-

man

who

ger

stone

wants

to

than

give

he

her

could

a big-

afford

a tight budget several
styled
engagement

be

hunting

President
this

Easter

eggs

Kennedy’s

week-end.

But,

front

closer

to

have

arranged

an

Easter

egg hunt for the youngsters Saturday morning at Jewett Park.
*
a
*
Still on exhibit in our Sheridan
Road window ... 2 lovely paintings
by MILDRED PEERS. Be sure to

Special Orders Filled Promptly

the pre-trial conference so successfully used in Du Page County. He proposes a progress call
so that no cases can be unduly

ditious

the

effort

Sa

DESIGNED BY GEORGE MULHAUSER

METAL

backlog.

judicial performance

meeting

April 18th. I’ve been to them and
they are really worth making an

KANE

Philip Yager will be your full
*time Judge. He proposes use of

full time and

the

home those civic minded Deerfield
Jaycees under president HOWARD

If this happens the 4000 case
backlog will increase— not di* minish.

~ problem.

for

lawn

poses to handle two judgeships.

» delayed.

League

Recreation
Center.
An _ informal
coffee-hour
precedes
the
8:00
o’clock meeting. We’ll meet Tuesday’s candidates and the candidates

They'll

full time Judge to

IT’S TIME FOR ACTION!
Philip Yager’s opponent pro-

attend

on

clean up the present 4000 case
Circuit

the

rings priced from $39.00 to $99.00.
*
x
*

:
IS
~ JUSTICE DENIED!
need a

Tuesday...
to

of Women Voters we can make
our choice more intelligently if we

fellow with
beautifully

1025

We

next

when they got married. A beautiful traditional % carat solitaire
at only $300.00, A slim diamond
marquis weighing over % carat
at a low $500.00 and for that youn

The head pillow adjusts to sit-

JUSTICE DELAYED

to vote

first—thanks

This weeks’ Keeping Time Special. For the fellow who’s about
to “Pop the Question” or for the

its

ing action on a new torsion-ti It mechanism

T.V.

Plan
But,

If you’re

—it is beautiful, posture-com-.
fortable, a conversation piece!

reading,

Ja

with paul leeds

day at 1:00 P.M. or any Saturday
at that time tune in on LARRY
BUCHMAN,
H.P.H.S. senior, and
his weekly show over WEAW AM
and FM. He’s becoming a listening
institution for lots of people.
*
*

gleaming star base with swivel and float-

ting,

any

of the provisions. of this chapter. where
a specific fine has not been provided for,
shall, upon convictién thereof, be fined
not less than five dollars, nor ‘more than
two hundred dollars for each and every
offense or shall be ‘imprisoned for not
more than six months for each such offense.
SECTION III.
‘Alt ordinances or: parts of
ordinances in conflict herewith are ‘hereby
repealed.
SECTION
IV... This: .ordinance shall be
in full force and effect:-from and after its
passage,
approval,
recordation
and _publication as provided
‘
ROBERT: S. CUSHMAN
Mayor
ATTEST:
ROY MILLEN
.
City Clerk
Filed: March 13, 1961.
Passed: March 27, 1961
Approved: March “2, 1961
Recorded: March 28, 1961
Published: March 30, 1961
;
. 3/30/61—80

Here’s a chair that has everything! From its
flowing lines of molded waln ut and deepcushions

ILLI-

953 of the Highas amended, being

it swivels—tilts—reclines!
tufted

KEEPING
TIME

THE
CITY
OF HIGH-

COUNTY,

Brand New — See It — Try 7

iN)

plus

expense allowances up to $4,000.
Tarrel told a reporter he expects
(Paid

A.

NOTICE OF REGULAR
ELECTION
DEERFIELD PARK DISTRICT
LAKE
COUNTY,
ILLINOIS

look in at them when you’re uptown, You’ll agree they’re “lovely
to look at.”
*

*

*

Worth repeating: “Not what we
have, but what we enjoy, constitutes

our

abundance.”
*

*

If there are
your future

larger

*

Cultured Pearls in
Remember
the

selection

at

a necklace
there
strands to choose

Leeds.

If

it’s

are
over
100
from. If it’s a

pearl ring you can select from
more than 100 styles. The same
wide selection prevails in pins,
earrings,
charms
and
bracelets.
One of the reasons why Leeds have
become North Shore Headquarters

for

Cultured

Pearl

Jewelry.

LEEDS JEWELERS
ED

gc

ee Until 9
r

an

OP
rl

495 Central

DEN SHOP, Inc.

ID 3-1550

Highland Park

491

Central,

Highland

Park

Page H 7—D 15.

�Moran, Yager Seek

Crash at Stoplight

Circuit Judge Post

Mary

A ballot for judge of the 19th
Judicial Circuit (Lake and McHenry Counties)

will be given to voters

at the. township-justice
of
the
peace élections Tuesday, April. 4.
On ‘it..are
named
Republican
Thomas J. Moran,’ 40, of Waukegan
and Democrat Philip W. Yager, 53,
of

Lake

Bluff.

They have been ballot opponents
before; at the time Moran began
his political career. in Lake County
as

state’s

attorney..Moran

went

on

to become probate judge, and since
the

death

of Sidney

H.

Block

has

been sitting on:the circuit bench as
well.

He

judges
left

by

is

also

hearing

among

Cook

Governor

seven

County

Otto

cases

Kerner.

Moran proposes to go on serving
in both the circuit and probate
courts, for one salary, and points
out

that

taxpayers. will

save

Graham

of

1521

Ammer

Rd., Glenview, made a left turn in
front of Raymond Benge, 2443 Racine Ave. Chicago, when the Skokie-Deerfield
stoplight
turned
green Saturday evening, Highland
Park

police

report.

After the collision, they ticketed
her for
of-way;

failure to yield the rightand him for bad brakes.

judges, but consists of cases dropped or postponed by the litigants.
He has -dismissed a few hundred
inactive
cases
in recent months.
Last month, he set new cases for
the
September
trial
call.
(Since

there are no July or August juries,
this
is considered
a four-month
delay.) It was once as short as one
month, Judge Bernard M. Decker
recalls, but is not expected to extend into years as in Cook County.

$2300.

Moran
has the endorsement
of
the Lake County Bar Association;
fall and is listed as preferred by: the
and Deerfield Township Voters Associ.|ation—a
group
which
rated him

Yager asserts the arrangement cur-

Moran
backlog

replies
caused

that this is not
by

a

a

shortage.of

second

best

on

two

previous

Republican Women gathered this week at the home of
Mrs. Wyatt Jacobs to make arrangements for the Ninth An-

oc-

casions.

nual Easter Brunch of the Women’s

BARBER SHOP

NORTH SHORE

chairman,

Hittin:

SATURDAY—MANICURING

Phone:

OTTO
EiSENScHine

by APPT.

1D 2-9855

dren

CiMiL War:

as seen in

sain %
: NEW YORKER:
Flawless natural shoulder suits and sport coats for
the man who seeks the dual virtues of quality and
comfort in the warm weather.
SUITS
SPORT COATS

H 8—D

16

in this issue
are

courses

of
in

AN ORDINANCE
AMENDING
AN ORDINANCE
ENTITLED
“AN
ORDINANCE agg
AND DECLARING
CERTAIN
‘THINGS
TO
BE
NUISANCES;
PROHIBITING
AND
PRO.
VIDING
FOR
THE
ABATEMENT
OF
THE
SAME
WITHIN
THE
CITY
OF
HIGHLAND
PARK, PASSED AUGUST
1944,
APPROVED
AUGUST
239,

HiDDEN
FaCE Or THE »

Page

Offered

drama,
dancing
and camera
art.
Newest
course
to be offered
is
“Introduction to Music,’ a University
of
Chicago
evening
course
opening
April
10
with
Howard
Brofsky as instructor.
Topflight
artists of the
North

"hohe
\

ILLINOIS

is presented

painting, sketching, sculpture, conversational
French,
children’s

and

NORTHBROOK,

Deerfield Rd., will open
April 3, at 9:30 a.m. and

NEWS.

Cobey’s

from

478 Central
(Open

45.

__. from 35.

Thursday Nights)

Highland Park

Mrs.

Jules

Registration for the Spring quarter at the Suburban Fine Arts Cen-

ter, 654
Monday,

and

Irl Marshall,

of

Dog Attacks

Registration Opens

the

Makay. Booka to

1876 SHERMER AVENUE

Anspach,

group.

continue through
the week.
Students are to register in opening
sessions of classes.
Complete
schedule
of day and
evening classes for adults and chil-

dll
be at

) euitog

Herman

Fine Arts Center's

MEN’S (HAIRCUT) STYLIST
Ladies’ Haircutting, Shaping, Styling
ON

Mrs.

the Deerfield Township

INTRODUCING

TERRY

Club of the

April 3. Preparing for the event are (from left) Mrs. Raymond
S. Owen, ticket chairman, Mrs. Wyatt Jacobs, the hospitality

1847 Second St., Highland Park

MR.

Republican

13th Congressional District. The event, which will feature
Congresswoman Marguerite Stitt Church’s report from Washington, will be held at Chevy Chase Country Club Monday,

BE IT ORDAINED BY THE COUNCIL
OF THE CITY
OF HIGHLAND
PARK,
LAKE COUNTY,
ILLINOIS:
SECTION I. That Section I of an ordinance entitled “AN ORDINANCE DEFINING
AND
DECLARING - CERTAIN
THINGS
TO BE NUISANCES;
PROHIBITING
AND
PROVIDING
FOR
THE
ABATEMENT
OF THE
SAME
WITHIN
THE
CITY
OF
HIGHLAND
PARK,
PASSED AUGUST 28, 1944, APPROVED
AUGUST 29, 1944,” is hereby amended by
adding thereto the following:
To keep or suffer to be kept any
horse in any residence district except
upon an adequately fenced tract of not
less
than
three
(3)
acres;
provided,
however, that the foregoing shall not
be construed
as permitting
the sale,
exhibition for sale, or the keeping or
boarding of horses owned by persons
other than the person so keeping or
boarding any horse.
SECTION
II.
All ordinances
or parts
of ordinances in conflict herewith are hereby revealed.
SECTION
III.
This ordinance shall be
in full force and effect from and after its
passage, approval, recordation and publication as provided' by law.
ROBERT
S. CUSHMAN,
Mayor
ATTEST:
ROY MILLEN
City Clerk
Filed: Mjarch 13, 1961
Passed: March 27, 1961
Approved: March 27, 1961
Recorded: March 28, 1961
Published: March 30, 1961
3/30/61—81
NOTICE
OF
HEARING
Deerfield Plan Commission
April 13, 1961
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
by the
Plan Commission of the Village of Deerfield that a public hearing will be held by
said Commission
on Thursday,
April
13,
1961 at 8:00 P.M. in the Village Hall, 850
Waukegan
Road,
Deerfield,
to
consider

Epstein

of

980

Dean

Ave. |

was chased off his own front lawn
into his garage by Harry Garber’s
doberman
pinscher
from
1981
Sheridan

land

Rd.,

Park

Epstein

police

told

last

High-

Thursday

evening, He defended himself with
a hoe and was not bitten.
Children let the log out of the,

house and
down Dean
report.

were
Ave.,

Garber

walking with it
according to the

got a ticket..

Shore
and Chicago
area are instructors in the community-sponsored center for all the arts. More

information
ealling

ID

may

be

obtained

by

3-1404.

proposed
amendments
to the
Village
of
Deerfield
Zoning
Ordinance-1953,
as follows:
Section
XV
M-Manufacturing
District,
paragraph C: Proposed Amendment:
‘1.
Front Yard: There shall be a front
yard having a depth of not less than one
hundred
ninety (190) ft. firom the center
line of the street or road, wherein there
shall be no structure of any kind, or the
parking of automobiles.
On streets
or roads
having
an
eighty
(80) ft. right-of-way, with M-Manufacturing
zoning on both sides, there shall be a front
yard having a depth of not less than one
hundred twenty-five (125) ft. from the center line of the street or road, wherein there
shall be no structure of any kind, or the
parking of automobiles.
On streets or roads having a sixty (60)
ft.
right-of-way,
with
M-Manufacturing
zoning

on

both

sides,

there

shall

be

a

front

yard of not less than one hundred (100) ft.
from the center line of the street or road,
wherein there shall be no structure of any
kind, or the parking of automobiles.
.
On a corner lot, there shall be a front
yard on each street side of suich lot, as
hereinabove provided.”
**2. Side Yard: There shall be a minimum *
side yard of not less than twenty-five (25)
ft. on both sides of the building or buildings, but where
the property
is adjacent *
to an “R” district, there shall be a side
yard of not less than fifty (50) ft. on the
side nearest to the residential
lots. The
parking of private automobiles may be permitted within the said side yard areas, but
not closer than twenty (20) ft. to any lot
zoned for residential use.”
A rear yard is not required except where a lot abuts upon
an “R’’ district,
in which case there shall be a rear yard
of not less than fifty (50) ft., and no parking of automobiles shall be permitted within
the twenty (20) ft. closest to any residential
lot or lots.”
Section
XVI—Off-Street
Parking
and
Loading:
Proposed
Amendment:
Paragraph
heading:
‘‘Manufacturing
Establishments—One
parking space for each
two (2) employees, based on the greatest _
number of employees at work at one time,
to be provided on the premises or at other
thousand |
off-street
locations
within
one
(1000) ft. from the main entrance.”
At said public hearing or any adjournment thereof, all persons interested are invited to be present and be heard.
we

-

rently causes
the circuit
to
behind
61
cases.
a. month,
speaks of 4100 pending cases.

DEERFIELD
By: Peter C.

Thursday,

PLAN
COMMISSION
Weinert, Chairman
3/30/61—D82

March

30,

1961

�One Woman Show For 10th District —

For 50-Star Flag
s
The Girl Scouts of the Deerfield-

Bannockburn
area
have
thanked
the
American
Legion
Deerfield
Post 738 for the new 50-star flags
presented by the legion to all the

girl scout troops in this area.
the
27,

Sunday

afternoon,

girls of Brownie
76 and 135 and

scout

troops

62

March

19,

scout troops
intermediate

and

170

Ln.,

the annual Spring dinner meeting
of the 10th District Juniors of the
Illinois
Federation
of
Women’s
Clubs is staged in the Wilmette
Woman’s club with Wilmette Juniors as hostesses.

will be Maggie Daly, well known
fashion lecturer and columnist.
The
Juniors
will
contribute
three scholarships for teachers of

was

“You
and
depicts one

the

presentation

from

the

On

Saturday

troops

of

new

each
Tom

American

92

and

100

scout troops

183

are

scout

planning

tain their fathers
Legion

The
their

hall

on

Come

Girl Scouts
appreciation

March

have

To)

e—"

a

at

ts ace. scone

=

iP

67 and

212

troops

10,

to

GARDENIA

~
{)&gt;

Over 6,500 Kitchens

Sold and Installed

MAjestic 3-5050
ROBERTS KITCHEN MART
Free Planning
Remodeling

Formica Tops
FHA Approved

Chicago

BErkshire 7-5100

the facilities of the American Legion hall and the Deerfield Presbyterian church.

Guaranteed Work
Free Estimates
Waukegan

;

®

MAjestic

3-5050

1820 GRAND

AVE,

.. . Deep Green

&amp;

White Flowers
blooms
Yellow, Red
double flowers.
Pink &amp; Red.

arrangements ... ASK FOR “KEN.”

16.
of

|

hed

We also feature cut flowers and complete floral

enter-

use

PLANTS

LILIES . . . 3 to 12
TULIPS . . . White,
VIOLETS ... All in
ROSE BUSHES . . .

CORSAGES...

expressed
the

]

AZALEAS .. . Pink, Red, White
HYDRANGEAS .
. Pink, Blue, White
MUM PLANTS .
. Yellow, White

enter-

April

for

ae

see our greenhouse of blooming plants
and select YOUR PLANT for EASTER.

at the American
Sunday,

iE

5725 W. BELMONT

afternoon,

intermediate
and

=

The present with a future, a U. S.
Savings Bond.

Fathers

mittee of the American Legion,
presented 50-star American flags
to each troop.

19

&amp;

this. year.

Kindleins Florist
CE 4.2764

pro-

terian church. At this time, Arthur
Martin, chairman of the flag com-

Brownie

children

FROM SINKS TO COMPLETE KITCHEN: REMODELING

EASTER PLANTS

tained their fathers at a similar
function in the Deerfield Presby-

and

invited to attend.
the “one woman show”

EVERY KIND OF KITCHEN SERVICE|

_

18, the girls of Brownie
scout
troops 3 and 31 and intermediate
scout

director,

‘eee

Legion.
Entertain

District

Your
phase

50-star American
flags to
troop by sr. vice-commander
McAndrews

exceptional

10th

enter-

of the girl scout program.
Highlight of the afternoon
gram

past

has been
Giving

In addition to Junior Auxiliary
members
from
Highland
Park,
Mrs. Caryl R. Reaver, 943 Lilac

tained their fathers at a box luncheon in the American Legion hall on
Waukegan Rd.
They sang and watched the girl
scout
movie,
Home,” which

a

QV

On

It will be a “one woman fashion
show” a week from tonight when

ae

American Legion

aad

j Girl Scouts Thank

Free Delivery

. . Open 7 a.m.-9 p.m. 7 days a week.
Flowers

1390

Skokie

. $1.50 and up

Hwy.,

By

SPORTSWEAR

Wire

Lake Forest

Don't

CE

envy.

H-1-S...wear

them

4-2764

Especially lovely
... the fit and walking
ease of

PUMPS

ROPE-BELT

ISLANDERS

Beachcombers and other men who love their leisure
will love these easy, breezy loungers with vented
bottoms — imaginatively tailored by H*l*S. Tapered
to calf-length with an inner-tabbed extension
waistband for comfort .. . they sport scoop pockets

and a devil-may-care belt of rope! And they take
to washing like a duck to water! Choose yours from
an array of new fabrics and colors.
4.95

The Avila

PHONE

Open

MIKE'S

SHOE
STORE

41 HIGHWOOD

AVE., HIGHWOOD

ID 2-5293

Hours: 8:30 A.M. — 7:00 P.M.

TELE

March

30, 1961
)

WILL

Thursdays ‘til
&amp;.

ly

BE QUICKLY

9 . . . Monday

DELIVERED

Evenings 7 to 9

FELL COMPANY

Fri. Eve. ‘Til 9:00 P.M.

595
_ Thursday,

ORDERS

CENTRAL

AVE.

@

ID 2-5300

°

HIGHLAND

PARK

Page H 9—D

17

__

�Deerfield Woman
Gets

Letter

From

Richard M. Nixon
Mrs. Richard M. Harvey, 1014
Deerfield Rd., who wrote a letter
of condolence to former vice president of the United States, Richard

Nixon,

has

received

from him.
The first,

and

Mrs.

which

Nixon

two

stated

letters
that

he

appreciated

her

letter after the election, was received two months ago.
The second letter, which arrived
last week, dated Jan, 20, was
a
colored picture of all four Nixons

with the following note:
“As We leave Washington,

'

John

W.

Carlson,

right,

on

Bethlehem

church’s TV program “This Is Your Past,” recently.

The affair

was
en’s
are:
field
son,

was

honored

and I want to
ciation for the

ing

held in the Maplewood school, sponsored by the womguild of the church. From left, the others in the picture
the Rev. E. M. Wykle; Frank Whitcher, principal of DeerGrammar School; Johnny Carlson and Mrs. Carlson. A
Larry, who was seated on the right of Carlson is not

helping

us

gather

our

in-

formation,” said principal of Deerfield
Grammar
School,
Frank
Whitcher, as he walked onto the
stage

with

feted

in a ‘‘This is your Past’

hem

John

Carlson,

sponsored

Church

by

who

the

Women’s

paign

in

TV

Bethle-

re-

cently.
Carlson,

tow,
the

who

Idaho,

was

was

major

born

the

in

presentation

of

at

the

ehurch “Festival of Stars’ which
was put on at the Maplewood
school.
The “This is your past” program
brought old friends of Carlson’s up
on the stage. The script for the
show

was

written

by

Mrs.

Michael

Baran and included a booklet of
pictures from his past.
' Other parts of the program which
the guild sponsored included an

appearance

of

Bozo

the

Clown,

singing; a song and dance by Mrs.
Robert

Hall and

pianists
Mrs.

Mrs.

Robert

J. R. Welsh,

Donald

with

Block

and

Camp,

Jory

Crane,

tire

Johnny

of ceremonies

show

was

commercials

John
were

Frank and Vera
liam Mankin.
Committees

Larson

cluded:

for the

en-

Barnes

and

presented

by

Ventura and
for

skits—Mrs.

the

Wil-

affair

Michael

in-

Baran

and Mrs. Donald Larson; publicity
—Mrs. James Crane, chairman and

Mrs. Jan DeJong; refreshments—
Mrs. Oben Holt, chairman with
Mrs.
George
King,
Mrs.
Gene
Kieft, Mrs, John Liske and Mrs.

William Krucks; decorations—Mrs.
George Hedge chairman, Mrs, Gori
Sheppard and Mrs. Clifford
‘Speare.
; Music committee included Mrs.
bert Camp and John Barnes and
general chairman was Mrs. Marvin Schaid.

DOROTHY

PAUL
of

Deerfield
two-day

township,

attended
last

week

Northwestern university on
vironmental Engineering and
ropolitan

Planners,

engineers
personnel

United States
in attendance.
Page

a
at

“EnMet-

Planning.”

department

H 10—D

and
18

and
from

Canada

4,

and

Mrs.

KATHERINE

MAR-

DANIEL

Mr.

and

512

GARRETT,

Mrs.

Roscoe

Cambridge

son

H.

Gar-

Circle,

was

West

Allis,

T.

Garrett,

NANCY

Wis.

are

and

Mrs.

Milwaukee,

Wis.

DILLINGHAM,

daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Dillingham,
1301
Dartmouth
La.,
was born March
19 at Highland
Park hospital. Other children in
the family are Katherine, 4; Diane,
2; and Susan, 1. Maternal grand-

mother

is

Mrs.

Dwight

Hunting,

Racine,
Wis.
Paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. William O.

Dillingham
SUE

of Mr.

of

Short

ELLEN

and

Woodruff,

was

Highland

Park

Hills,

NYLIN,

Mrs.

Paul
born

N.J.

daughter

Nylin,

1219

March

20

hospital.

at

Other

children in the family are Steven,
6, and Cynthia, 3. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs, Marion
Hite, Chicago. Paternal grandpar-

ents

are the Rev.

Nylin,

and

Mrs.

Henry

ROBERT

of Mr.
and
1026 Oxford

STIEHR,

son

Mrs.
Daniel
Stiehr,
Rd., was born March

22 at Highland Park hospital. The
other child in the family is David,
Maternal

health
the

were

Mr. and
kegan.

grandparents

Mrs.

SHEILA
daughter

Connelly,,

Herman

EILEEN
of

Mr.

1244

born March 23
hospital.
Other

and

are

Stiehr,

Mr.

Wau-

CONNELLY,
Mrs.

Oxford

D

1)

Village Government
(Continued

from

page

D

uct,

and

the

goal

2)

of making

service as friendly
possible.

and

(Continued

Joseph

Rd.,

was

at Highland Park
children
in
the

family are Denise, 10, Joseph, 9,
Beth, 7, Kathleen, 6, and Colleen,
2. Paternal grandmother is Mrs.
Joseph Connelly, Oak Park. Ma-

Merletti, Mrs. William

that

efficient

as

Brethren

page

D

2)

New

grandfather
York

BETH

is

Joseph

Il,

City.

CHRIS'

Waukegan.

The

other

child

in the family is Daniel,
Jr., 11
months.
Maternal
grandfather
is
George Turrell, Momence. Paternal

grandparents

are

Auringer,

ANNETTE

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Harvard.

JULIE

SIMON,

daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George
P. Simon, 409 Willow, was born
March 14 at Lake Forest hospital.
she
has
one
sister,
Claire,
two
years old. Maternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Benson of
Batavia, and paternal grandmother
is Mrs. Paul Simon, Chicago.

DONNA JEAN MORAN, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Donald
Moran,
1340 Elmwood,
was born
March 13 at Lake Forest hospital.
Other children in the family include: Butchie, 8; Debbie, 6; and
David,
4. Maternal
grandparents
are Dr. and Mrs. George L. Weil,
Highland
Park.
Paternal
grandparents
are Mr.
and Mrs.
C. R.

Moran,

645

Brierhill

Rd.

on

voters

April

is

church.

“pep

meeting”

on

how

talk-revival

to

get

4, Will

Republican

out

the

Wageman

committeeman

Ira Singer, candidate justice of the
peace; Karl Berning, candidate for

M.

Wykle

will

give

Friday

services

of a secred

will

the

be

concert,

in

pre-

sented by the chancel choir under
the direction of J. Robert Welsh,
director of music. The choir will

present the oratorio, ‘‘The Redeemer,” which will tell the pre-Easter
story,

ending

H.

in

Ross

the

Crucifixion.

Finney

will

be

at

the organ. Soloists in this oratorio
are: Mrs. Robert Hall, Mrs. Robert
Camp,
Glenn
Ohman,
Walter

J.

R.

Gagne

and

Charles

Carter guest tenor from Evanston.
Service will begin at 8 p.m. Communion will be served at a sep-

service

following

the

ora-

The
Easter morn
will be heralded
by
trumpeters,
Robert
Voight and son, Roger, at 6 a.m.
A message will be given by the
Rev. Mr. Wykle and the Choristers
will provide
the
music,
singing,
Grieb’s,
‘Alleluia.’

Glorious victory services of Easter joy will be held at 8:30, 9:30
a.m. The Rev. Wykle will present
the final in a series of Lenten
messages based on theme, “Walk
with our Lord
and Know
.
.”

The

Easter

message

will be, “The

Resurrection Power in You!” The
Youth
and
Chancel
Choirs
will
present the music of the morning,
the Chancel Choir singing, Beethoven’s, “Hallelujah”? and “The Day
of Resurrection” by Matthews. The
Youth will sing “Alleluia, Christ
Has Triumphed!” by Mueller. Mrs.

Finney

will

be

at

the

organ

for

all services.
The following members will be
received into the fellowship of the
church at the 11 a.m. service: Mr.
and
Mrs.
Benjamin
Pedigo
and
daughter, Lynn; Mr. and Mrs. Clarence King
and daughter, Peggy;
Mr. and Mrs. Roland Johnson; Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Shepard; Mr. and
Mrs. Edmond S. Steege, Sr.; Mrs.
Paul Daemicke; Mr. and Mrs, Albert Breuer; all of Deerfield and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
James
Jones
and
son, James, Jr. of Highland Park.
The

traditional

Easter

breakfast

ship

three,
West
and candidate

for

The
chancel
and
youth
choirs
will lead in the music
worship.

arate

pital,

eld-fashioned

also offer

torio,

was
hos-

been
wor-

Evangelical

communion message and
the holy sacrament.

KRIMSTEIN,

Auringer,
1555
Rosewood,
born March 21 at St. Therese

local

He introduced candidates Judge
Thomas
J. Moran,
candidate for
Judge of the circuit court; Alvin

daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jordan
Krimstein, 1149 Laurel Ave., was
born Jan, 27 in Lutheran General
hospital in Park Forest. The other
child
in the family
is Kenneth
Lee,
2.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
George
Greenberg,
Chicago, are the maternal
grandparents.
Paternal
grandparents
are
Mr.
and
Mrs.

Sam Krimstein, Chicago.
DAVID VINCENT AURINGER,
son of patrolman and Mrs. Daniel

22,

Eugene

Mrs.
of deep sea divunder or in the

March

precinct
township,

the form

test here at the
can now be lithe police and
in Mason
City,

Wednesday,

On Holy Thursday, a candlelight
service of Holy
Communion
will
be offered at 8 p.m. The Reverend

Strub,
ternal

Bethlehem

C. D. O’Neal.

On

Holy Week
services have
planned for those attending

at

and

Republicans gathered at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Willard T. Wageman for coffee and rolls and an

Planned At Bethlehem

Good

from

J. Sweet

Holy Week Services

United.

Deerfield Manor
passed the Scuba
Y.M.C., and they
censed to instruct
fire
department
Iowa.
Scuba is the art
ing, plus first aid
water.

left, are: Harold Wright, W. T. Wageman, Robert George,
George Hallsteen, Donald Pioli, Jack Washburne and Harold
Riske. Seated from left are: Wesley Johnson, Mrs. Roger

ship

scaping of the treatment plant will
be carried out to provide plantings
to screen the installations and give
the area a park-like appearance.
Your
Village
Government
has
service as its most important prod-

Meyer

Bloomington.

JAMES

page

Paternal

Mr.

ANN

from

Pictured are 12 of the 36 Republican block captains of
precinct three in Deerfield, who will go from door to door to

tell residents of the township election April 4. Standing, from

Election

field, for two years.
Independent candidates for the
posts
of
library
directors
are:
Helen King, Deerfield, and Cyril
Fritz,
Deerfield,
for
six
years;
Roger McGuire, Deerfield, for four
years; and Paul Steerup, Deerfield,
for two years.

Sidney

and
Mrs,
William
Diebel,
Wilmette. Paternal grandparents are

supervisor of West

conference

Mark,

born March 15 at Highland Park
hospital.
Other
children
in
the
family are Sally, 13; Scott, 11, and
John,
5.
Maternal
grandparents
are Judge and Mrs, Nicholas Lu-

2.

Supervisor Berning
Attends Two-Day Meet
Karl Berning,

are

SHALL, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
William Marshall, 1044 Green Tree
St., was born March 13 at Highland
Park
hospital. Other children in
the family are Laurie,
5; Christine, 3; and Wendy,
2. Maternal
grandmother is Mrs, Selma Anderson,
Highland
Park.
Paternal
grandparents
are
Mr.
and
Mrs.
K. P. Hunter, Deerfield.

L.

and
Corky. Fremling
with Bob
McClellan as master of ceremonies.
Master

family

grandparents

: Sparky the magician was portrayed by Harold Sparks. School
Daze was performed by Gail Whis-

of

born March 3 at Highhospital. Other children

ents are Mr.
and
Linch, Chicago.

cas,

Perform

ler,

the

rett,

portrayed by Dave Carr; accordionist Mrs. Frank Seifried; Helen Cox

son

Steven, 2, Maternal grandparents
are Mr.
and
Mrs.
George
Newman, Chicago. Paternal grandpar-

Mos-

subject

LINCH,

the
your

of 1960.”

Township

Mr. and Mrs. Earl Linch, 518 Deerpath, was
land Park

was

guild

EVAN

in

for

friendship and support in the cam-

BIRTHS
KEITH

and

Pat

apprespend-

years

capital,

(Continued

“Little did you know that for
weeks your wife and others among
your family and friends have been

parody

memorable

nation’s

pictured.

secretly

14

express our
privilege of

Deerfield
for town-

auditor.

township
supervisor;
Bruce
Frost, candidate for assistant

pervisor;

Ruth

E.

Vetter,

C.
su-

candi-

date for town clerk; William Pittenger, candidate for assessor; Eugene H. Seyl, candidate for town-

ship

auditor.

were
made
swered.
of

Individual
and

speeches

questions

an-

This was followed by a program
how
all the workers
in pre-

cinct three—36 of them—should.
do their job in getting people to
vote. Telephone calls reminding.
folks to vote, and several personal
calls to voters‘ homes
prior to
election day with adequate literature will also be made. Literature
covering all the candidates, sample

ballots, signs, information on absentee balloting and location of
voting places is all part of a package, which was distributed to the

workers.

Local Girl Appears

In Touring Choir
Sharon

O’Shea,

2015

Deerfield

Rd.,

a freshman

studying

any

college

Lindsborg,

returns

any

in

to the

choir

area

on

its

with

at

Kan.,

the

spring

BethBeth-

concert

tour.
Miss O’Shea is majoring in applied music.
The 65-voice choir will appear in
this area at Lake Forest Academy,
Sunday evening, April 9, at 8 p.m.
Director of the choir is Elmer
Copley, a graduate of Augustana
college in Rock Island.
}
Prior
to
joining
the
Bethany
college faculty, Copley was assistant to Dr. Henry Veld, director of

the Augustana

choir.

The public is invited to the concert. Tickets at $1 per person may
be
obtained
at the
door
or by
calling
Zion
Lutheran’
church,

WI

5-2009.

will

not

the
the

lack
new

be held

this year

of facilities
construction.

Thursday,
{

March

due

to

because

of

30, 1961

�Sunset Recommends HORMEL

Canned Hams
Swift's

Premium

|b. 5°

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Fully Cooked

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SHANK

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END

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Thursday, March 30, 1961

ie

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Both Thursday

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Page H 11—D 19

�i

ENE
ae

a
PEE

hee:

¥

LERcere
ee
EROS
Pa
Tae
Oe

tee
ReES Mase
ge RTC 1

eT .

—

eM

a

Mee
iN DESC,
are POR EN

(Paid

se

P ETE Hee
e

ae

Mee

Political

Pr

ee

PPE

dae

Hore Re

Wy

ei

a

ia

aca inka

'

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ty

age :

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tg

4

RE
ETON
Way
ae seie

et

Te

anh

e

introduce Nomi

Advertisement)

For Student Council

VOTE

(«X) Citizens’ Township
TUESDAY,
FOR

APRIL

Executive

Nominees for the Highland Park
High
School
1961-1962
Student
Council Executive Board will be
introduced at assemblies Wednesday, April 12, and Friday, April 14.

Ticket

The
quaint

4

|

then

introduce

Asher,

McGregor,

and

the south end of Lake Forest) is recognized

Moses,

Bob

Zartler.

David
Vivian
Karen
Steve
Fred
Keare,

classmates in homeroom
earlier
in the
spring.

TO

badge

Council

sesTo

to

wear

indicating

and the fact that he is a
executive

April

11,

the

Board

Day

Nominee.

before

the Highland Park High School
newspaper will be published, listing each nominee’s qualifications.

for the strong leadership

Scouts Hear Talk

it has provided.

Many progressive steps have been taken as a
result of the studies and recommendations on
the part of your representatives, including
of numerous

;

At Tuesday Meeting

offices,

the

introduction of microfilm record keeping,
and the development of a tract index system
for property descriptions that paves the way
for punch card accounting. At least fifteen
other vital improvements, which our representatives will be happy to discuss with you,
have been achieved through the aggressive
research activities of your supervisors.

As Forest Preserve Commissioners, your
representatives have taken the lead in making the Forest Preserve District a reality, and
are currently studying flood plan areas and
other sites in Highland Park and vicinity that
should be acquired.

The Citizens Township Ticket consists of m2n and women who have joined forces under a
non-partisan label for the express purpose of se ving the community. The candidates represent
every facet of political, religious, fraternal and business thought in the community.

| Vote the (x) Citizens’ Township Ticket

At
day,

.their weekly meeting TuesMarch
21,
Troop
49
was

visited by Mrs. Louis A. Wagner,
formerly of Highland Park, now of
Libertyville, who talked to the
girls about personal grooming. The
girls also reported the results of
their annual cookie sale. Special
congratulations
are
due
Diana
Cliffe who led the group with the
sale of 104 boxes.
7

Alien.

.dhh

in

cin.

aie.

ake

ee

Sie

DEPEND ON

;

Henry C. Weiland

i
?

Best

Political

for the
in Flowers

es

Spt

aH

ay

H12—D 20 |

|
;
?

i

1781 St. Johns Aye.

?

5

ID 2-0600

H

‘

ID 2-0492

H
M4

4

BUGS
Chemicals To Kill
Them

CRAFTWOOD!]
LUMBER COMPANY

Advertisement)

v

Page

é

H

‘

See Page H43-D-59
(Paid

the

first assembly to introduce nominees, a special issue of Shoreline,

6 P.M.

the mechanization

a

his name

Your Township Government, under the leadership of
the members of the Citizens’ Township Party, has a
proud record of achievement.

At the County Level — On the Lake
County Board of Supervisors, where you are
represented by the Supervisor and three Assistant
Supervisors,
Deerfield
Township
(consisting of Highland Park, Highwood, and

Lynn

further acquaint the student body
with the nominees after they were
introduced at a Wednesday morning Student Council Representatives Meeting, each nominee was

CLARENCE J. SHETZLEY

receive the best of medical care at the Tuberculgsis Sanitorium, at the County Hospital,
and at the County Home for the Aged ....
Help is extended on a dignified basis to those
of us whose funds have become exhausted
because of unemployment or illness... .
Deerfield Township has one of the most uniform assessment rolls in relationship to fair
market value of all the Townships in the
County. Assessment information is placed
on permanent record cards, and qualified appraisers are being used to double check assessments when complaints are filed.

Berk-

The students were nominated by

their
sions

given

citizens

Marge

Kay Landau, Jay Levey, Bill Newmann and Charles Redman.

x} EGGERT W. CARLSEN

Level—Our

Atlas,

Sophomores nominated are
Altschul, Peggy Baldrey,
Banish,
Judy
Borinstein,
Brecher,
Kenny
Brecher,
Cohen,
Retta
Greenberg,
Gruber, Ellen Katz, Kathy

ELIZABETH BREDIN

At the Township

the

Charles Pascal, David Pepperberg,
Jim Reinish, Bob
Rigler, Peter
Shaw, Sue Siegel, Renny Werrenrath, Tom Weinberg, Rachel Weis.

TOWN AUDITORS
(Vote for Three)

6 A.M.

with

the 25 nominees.

Steve

James

One)

ALBERT LARSON

OPEN

ac-

body

son, Hope Binner, Rona Echt, Barb
Feder, Randy Gabel, Glenn Harris,
John Holder, Chris Isley, Ronnie
Joseph, Steve Kadison, Joel Lewitz,

bard

POLLS

HPHS

better

The juniors nominated are: Alice

HARRY EARHART

FOR

student

all

to

Jim Gray, this year’s Student
Council president, will remind the
students of giving careful consideration in casting their votes. He will

FOR TOWN CLERK
(Vote for One)

|x|

the

for

serve

for ten of the fifteen junior nominees and six of the ten sophomores.

ASSESSOR
for

will

nominees and as a chance to match
names and faces. After the Friday assembly, students will vote

&lt;x} SAMUEL S. SMITH
(Vote

assemblies,

students,

ASSISTANT SUPERVISOR
(Vote for One)

FOR

Board

Thursday, March

30, 1961

�me ACID TEST oF
(Paid

Political

Advertisement)

Professional Ability
The ESTEEM of his Fellow Lawyers!
This is what we, the people who are in a position to KNOW

HIM BEST—the

LAWYERS—who

daily practice ALONGSIDE and in OPPOSITION
ALVIN IRA SINGER—regardless of political affiliation.

to him, think of

ALVIN
IRA

\
‘

.

tPF

MY

CANDIDATE

L. BOYLES

Past Pres. Lake Co. Bar

LOUIS W. BRYDGES
JOSEPH F. BURNS
WILLIAM E. CALDWELL
CLAUDE R. CALLOWAY
JUDGE L. ERIC CAREY
Judge, City Court, Zion
ROBERT B. CHATZ
RICHARD C. CHRISTIAN
LEWIS D. CLARKE

Highland

J.

DADY,

FOR

EUGENE

T. DALY

W.

Past Pres.

DIVER

III. State Bar

S.

FRED H.
ADELINE
Park

Jr.

R. HOLMBERG,

WILLIAM

A.
C.

EDWARD

HOLMQUIST
HOLT

C.
E.

JACOBS

JACOBSON

JULIAN JOHNSON
BERNARD J. JURON
Past Pres. L.C. Bar

PAUL

W.

Asst.

FUQUA

OKEL S. FUQUA
Past Pres. L.C. Bar
ROBERT A. GARDNER,

L. HALL,

H.P.

EDWARD

RALPH

Jr.

GEIGER
J. GEO-KARIS

Justice of the Peace

KENNETH GLICK
SEYMOUR A. GREENBLATT

HOWARD

GROSSHANDLER

Asst. Corp. Counsel,

JACK HOOGASIAN
Asst. States Attorney
WILLIAM S. JACOB

E. FUQUA

LAVINIA

STANLEY

ARTHUR

DANIEL J. DALZIEL
Pres. Lake Co. Bar Assn.
Master in Chancery

CLARENCE

ILLINOIS”

ALBERT

Jr.

Public Defender

ELLIS

NORMAND A. COHEN
THOMAS H. COMPERE
Corp. Counsel,

RALPH

B. CRAWFORD
J. CROWLEY

Former Master in Chancery
EUGENE A. FRENCH

Past Pres. L.C. Bar

MURRAY CONZELMAN
Corp. Counsel, Waukegan

WILLIAM
WILLIAM

LAKE COUNTY,

THOMAS W. DIVER
LaVERNE A. DIXON
RICHARD J. DREW
MARK J. DROBNICK
LAURENCE M. DUNLAP
RUSSELL L. ENGBER
RICHARD S. FINN
HENRY D. FISHER

WILBUR B. BRAZELL
Asst. States Atty.
HARRY P. BREGER
Asst. States Atty.

*

“sd

KAISER,

States

Jr.

Atty.

PAUL W. KAISER, Sr.
BRUCE E. KAUFMAN
JAMES KENTON
LEON J. KETCHAM
HAROLD H. KOLBE
JOSEPH S. LAFFERTY
WILLIAM E. LANE
HOWARD W. LAUSCHE
AXEL R. LIDMAN
Past Pres. L.C. Bar Assn.

MARK R. LIDSCHIN
MAX LIDSCHIN
P. Pres. 7th Dist. Bar Assn.

DONALD C. LUNDQUIST
ROBERT McCLORY
State Senator

Election, TUESDAY,

Jr.

A. McKEE

THOMAS A. MATTHEWS
Deerfield Village Attorney
Consultant, Illinois Municipal
League

CHARLES

M.

MAY

PETER L. MELIUS
Justice of the Peace
ANTHONY J. MERCURIO
_Justice of the Peace
FRED B. MEYER

L. SMITH

EUGENE

M.

SNARSKI

ROBERT L. SNOOK
GERALD C. SNYDER
P. Pres. III. State Bar Assn.

J. NEMANICH

PETER J. NORDIGIAN

JAMES

FRANCIS J. NOSEK
Chairman H.P. Civil Service

ROBERT WOOD TULLIS
Corp. Counsel, Lake Forest

THEODORE

A. PASQUESI

LAWRENCE J. PETROSHIUS
THOMAS G. PRZYBORSKI

MICHAEL
ALEX

T.

J. PUCIN
RAFFERTY,

Il

Justice of the Peace

GEORGE L. REHLY
JACOB REUBEN
DONALD RIDGE
GLENN K. SEIDENFELD
Asst. Atty. General ('61)
ANDREW SEMMELMAN
Asst. States Atty.

APRIL 4

R. SWEENEY

DUDLEY H. THOMAS
WALTER W. ULICK
LLOYD A. VAN DEUSEN
EARL J. WASNESKI
MURAL J. WINSTIN
ALLAN |. WOLFF, Jr.
CHARLES L. WHYTE, JR.
V.P. Lake County Bar Assn.

HAROLD W. WYNKOOP
RAYMOND G. ZACK
Past Pres. L.C. Bar
ROBERT O. ZINNEN

USUAL POLLING PLACES
6 A.M. to 6 P.M.

Se

-

HARVEY

Sec. L.C. Bar Assn.

F. NADER

WILLIAM

KENNETH R. SHORTS
JOSEPH N. SIKES
ESTHER C. SINGER
MORTIMER SINGER
JOHN R. SLOAN
CARLTON A. SMITH
Justice of the Peace

MARSHALL MEYER
‘Pres. 7th Dist. Bar Assn.
JAMES P. MOORE
BURL

RICHARD B. SEYFARTH
Asst. States Atty.

en

MORTON A. ALSCHULER
DAVID K. ANDERSON
RICHARD R. BAIRSTOW
JOHN E. BAKER, JR.
GORDON BEAUBIEN
MARK H. BEAUBIEN
PAUL C. BEHANNA
WARREN C. BEHR
HAROLD P. BLOCK
Past Pres. L.C. Bar
Former County Judge

»

oat

JUSTICE 4: PEAC

JOHN

&gt;

ral

ea

5TH JUSTICE DISTRICT,

’

‘3

?

REPUBLICAN

*

2

ae

.

“WE the undersigned Lawyers Practicing in
LAKE COUNTY, ENDORSE and RECOMMEND

LAWYERS’ COMMITTEE FOR ALVIN IRA SINGER FOR JUSTICE YF THE PEACE
(Paid

Thursday,
F

ry

March
Ue

30,

196)

Political

Advertisement)

Page
H 13—D 21

�ics: Bean SS
OR Aor
nsBMYay) oP
UN sated
a trcage

“GYM-DANDY” Ideas
For SAFE PLAYING

Honors for
Red Oak Planning Dual
Karen Lauter

Hope To Standardize
Prep for E-V High
Another

children
High

step

who

School

toward

enter
the

giving

all

Ela-Vernon

same

preparation

was taken recently. About one hundred teachers from the area met
at the Brae Burn Country Club for
a buffet dinner and the meeting
sponsored by the E-V Educators’
Council.
The Educators’ Council is an organization

of

superintendents

and

principals. This was the first meeting attended by teachers.
Chairman H. L. Wesner, principal of Ela-Vernon
Consolidated
High School, said that the purpose
of the Educators’ Council is to further the educational opportunities
of students in the area by working
for closer cooperation and understanding between the grade schools
and the high school. The dinner
‘)\
% PARGAIING »

meeting

"Guaranteed by ©\ ¢
Good Housekeeping
on

was

opportunity

i]

ety

It’s a Cork: Dandy idea to keep the kids off the
street. PLAY GYM is a healthful,
full-of-fun set children just love. SDA

ganization

to

give

to hear
and

teachers

about

to

get

the

Annual Revue

The 1961 edition of “The Red
Oak Revue,” a musical satire on
Highland Park suburban life, will
be

presented

by

the

acquainted

with other teachers in the area.
Wesner said that the Council

urday

evening,

May

May

26th

and

evening,

May

27th.

A

rehearsal
May
8th

nights until the week of
will be Wednesday
and

Thursday evenings, in the Red Oak
School.
Those desiring participation contact Leonard
Elliot, 1231
RidgeIDlewood 2-8591.
hopes

to

ings

hold

between

school

departmental

the

teachers

grade
in

GLENCOE
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WILMETTE

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eRe

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ey

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O ¢.0.D.
H

4 1833 Second Street

“ Highland Park, Mlinois

C] Payment is Enclosed

daughter

Lauter,

ceramic

hank

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Excellent financing — move

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living

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SERVING THE PHYSICIANS and

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a

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‘Page
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Thursday and Friday Nights ‘til 9
OPEN ALL DAY WEDNESDAY

1833

SECOND

STREET

ID lewood 2-2600
1831

ID 2-3001

PARK

St. Johns Ave.

of

330

Beech street, has won a Woodrow
Wilson
fellowship,
the one-year
Ford Foundation sponsored grant
for graduate study. Her major is
Latin and Greek.
A senior at Pembroke college
where she recently was elected to
Phi Beta Kappa, Miss Lauter was
nominated
by the faculty as a
worthwhile prospective addition to
the academic community. This was
followed by an extensive screening by a regional committee. Wilson Fellows are expected to go on to |
teach at the college level, though
there is no stipulation that they
must
do so. Miss
Lauter
was
graduated
from
Highland
Park
High school in 1957, took her first
two years of college at Pembroke,
and spent her junior year at the
University of Edinburgh, Scotland,
before returning to take her degree at Pembroke this June.

FREE
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meet-

and

strengthen the curriculum.

Call Ahlmann

ees cide

special

Lauter,

Mrs.

BRICK RANCH $28,500

Newly decorated.

AINE

Friday

Saturday

matinee for children will also be
scheduled.
Casting is now taking place. The

room combination, attached garage.

NI

20th,

evening,

Karen

and

95

Five years old.

oe

Parent-Teach-

ers Association of the Red Oak
school Friday evening, May 19, Sat-

Mr.

LAKE BLUFF @
LAKE FOREST @
FT. SHERIDAN @
HIGHWOOD e
LINCOLNSHIRE @
HIGHLAND PARK @
BANNOCK- DEERFIELD @
BURN @
NORTHBROOK @
NORTHFIELD @

IN
THIS

|

Miss

an

or-

Assembly Charge $5.00

FREE
DELIVERY
DAILY

ibia
iss

¢ RAVINIA

DRUG

STORE

IDlewood 2-2300
493 Roger Williams
Thursday, March

30, 1961

�Cowe The Best On Eas

DELICIOUS JEWEL MEAT!
Such an important occasion calls for an
extra special dinner—and the highlight of Easter
dinner ... delicious meat from Jewel. Whether you
choose ham or turkey you can be assured it’s the
finest of its kind, the best we could find for you.

SWIFT'S

PREMIUM

Smoked

U.S. GOVT.

HORMEL

INSPECTED

10-14 LB. SIZE
FULLY COOKED

Ham fancnas

FAMILY SIZE—5 TO 9 LBS.

Turkeys

HORMEL

»,. 49¢

10-14 LB. SIZE

FULLY COOKED

Ham son nae

CHERRY VALLEY — REG. PRICE 2/39c

uae Kighitov Caan liimnew!

Cranberry Sauce ‘&lt;x 15:

Jewel brings this asparagus from Callifornia. These

are tall, straight spears

».59¢

...

and they cook up tender and beautiful. You
couldn't find a nicer vegetable for such an

U.S. GRADE ‘A’ ALL WHITE

JewelEggs

important occasion.

And it costs so little, too . . . at your
Jewel!

~=

43

sz

7:

ALL FLAVORS

Royal Gelatin

CHERRY VALLEY— REG. PRICE 37c ea.

Fruit Cocktail 3 2 89:
JEWEL MAID — REG. PRICE 39c

32 33.

5 Ibs. of Flour
JEWEL

ALL GREEN, CALIFORNIA GROWN.

~ 49¢

Fresh Asparagus

Texas Strawberries =—«- TRA FANCY.
Yellow Onions
nie ae rack
Sweet Potatoes
=
March

30, 1961

:

White

Bread 2 2. 43.

CONFECTIONERS, LIGHT OR DARK BROWN

S

ugar

Domino or

C&amp;H Sugar

MARY DUNBAR FROZEN

Strawberries

REG.

1-LB.

FRI 2 1

2.5¢

mice 40" Qe

Bint 9g
ee

GOLDEN YAM, a 'bs. DQ
FANTARGE size.
each [Qe

ay s GD Eanes
Prices Ov Your ExorydNeed
Low ay
D&gt; Loorjd
Thursday,

gs

ee

rAAWBERRIES.

BeBe

Gon

oe

Lode

0 3°

Page H 15—D

23

�a

ff
Missi
hee
sian

te
cs

PRP yb opoge soy

ae 4,

nny

yale

tog bi

f or Women
i

i Pit pes

*

| Engagements

HP Woman’s Club

Peter

Reich

speaker

for

Highland

will

the

Park

be

the

Woman’s

of

Mrs.

Miss

“The

Charm

Ladd,

Mary

who

E.

Ladd

of Old
has

speak

Pewter.”

studied

the

mess

bowls

the

from

and

Lord

of

on

Miss

program

Hostess

Due

was

anese

Bradford

immediately

by

Mrs.

_

all

Elmer

of St. Gregory’s
are crystallizing

party,

view

and

a luncheon,

style show,

_ 26 at 12:30

p.m.

ish house.

book

re-

set for April

in the

church

par-

The entire event is handled by
the women of the church who will
prepare
and serve the food
and
model the spring styles from Minna

Hart’s salon.
Even the book review will be
_ given by a former member of St.
_ Gregory’s church, Mrs. W. Dougias
Gilpin,

now

of Lake

Forest,

a pro-

fessional reviewer.
Serving at the luncheon under
the direction of Mrs. Vincent Rauner
will
be
Mesdames
_ Kussler, Ahmed
Kafadar,

Edward
Harold

LL.
Fox, Cole Williams, William
Hagan, Robert Tucker, Roger Neit—

vel,

R.

K.

Linton

and

Thomas

_ Charlton.
Mrs.

is

Monte

handling

men

Sanders,

the

WI

tickets.

of the party

5-3342,

Co-chair-

are Mrs.

Anthony

_ Nosek of Bannockburn and Mrs.
‘ey William Freeman of Deerfield.

Visit In Tucson
Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Nunn of
Heavenward,
Okla., formerly
of
Deerfield, stopped off in Tucson,
_ Ariz., recently en route to Hawaii.

The
_

ing
if

x
ao
*
a

Nunns

homa

ranch

moved to their Oklahome

_ Oil of Indiana’s

_

last fall follow-

his retirement

from

Chicago

Standard
office.

Nunn is the originator of many
_ slogans including, “Drive carefully,
the

life

own,”

and

you

save

Came tas 4
fi

; ad

be

your

“As you travel, ask us.”

_ Page H 16—D
y oe

may

24

Paul

Horst

of Milwaukee.

were
married
in a lovely late

Saturday,
afternoon

ceremony

in Bethlehem

Evangelic-

al United Brethren church with
Rev. E. M. Wykle officiating.
Wears

Ivory

Peau

de

the

framed

in Alencon

lace

and

seed

pearls. Her fingertip veil fell from
a matching Alencon lace and seed
pearl cap. She carried white orchids in her ‘bouquet.
Miss Charlotte Boysen of Lake
Forest -was
her
maid
of honor;
Bridesmaids were Miss Gloria Mlekush,
Deerfield,
and Mrs. James
Horst, Waukesha, Wis. They wore
Willow green silk taffeta sheaths
with overskirts and matching petal
hats and shoes. They carried yellow
daffodils with trailing ivy in their
bouquets.
Betsy Wolf, daughter of the J.
Howard Wolfs,
who
wore
yellow
silk organdy with a daisy circiet
for her hair, was the flower girl.
James
Horst of Waukesha
was
his brother’s best man. Ushers were
Donald Horst, Waukesha,
another
brother; Robert Stein, Milwaukee;
Daniel Pellettiere, George Mueller,
Thomas
Diener, Chicago; Richard
Rippey,
Charleston,
W.
Va.;
and

Mt.

Prospect.

A reception and champagne supper followed the ceremony at the
Thorngate Country Club. For the
ceremony and reception, the bride’s
mother wore a royal blue silk suit
with matching accessories, a navy
and royal blue mouline hat, and

white

orchid

corsage.

The

bride-

groom’s mother wore a smoke blue
two-piece frock with pink and blue
flowered
hat and
a pink
orchid
corsage.
The
bride
attended
the
State

University

of Iowa

ated from the American Academy
of Arts,
Chicago.
Mr.
Horst
received his B. S. degree from Carroll College, Waukesha, Wis.

Preceding the wedding, several
parties were given for the bride.

Soie

For
her
marriage,
the
bride
wore a chapel-length gown of ivory
peau de soie with sabrina neckline

Robert Schmitke,

_

_
_

Horsts

They
Feb. 18,

the plans for their traditional

spring

Robert

Robert P. Horst and his bride, the former Joyce T. Anderson,
daughter of the W. Theodore Andersons, 814 Woodward Ave.,
are at home at 3900 Lake Shore Dr., Chicago, upon their return
from a honeymoon in Mexico. The bridegroom is the son of the

With the close of the lenten sea-

meeting

will be

to

the

interest

in

the

Jap-

arts and the little published

before

Hill said, ‘‘many Japanese have
started a Bonsai tree, to be enjoyed

_ during April.

_ For Traditional
April Luncheon

for the

cient art that started long
Columbus came to America.

after.

~ Finalize Plans

chairman

of

the

Deerfield

and was gradu-

Among hostesses for the pre-nuptial affairs were Mrs. Fred Menig,
Deerfield and Mrs. Donald Teuber,
McHenry;
Miss
Boysen;
Mrs.
Michael
George,
Deerfield;
and
Mrs.
A
Peterka,
Whitefish
Bay,
Wis.
The bridal luncheon was given at
LeManoir restaurant in Old Orchard by Mrs.
George
W. Mueller
and
Mrs.
Albert
J. Schmit;
the
bridal
dinner
was
given
at the
Villa
Moderne
by
Mrs.
Francis
Carr, Miss Mlekush and Mrs. Milo
Koch, Highland Park.
The
rehearsal
dinner
for
wedding party and parents of
young
couple
was
given
in
Union Hotel in Wheeling.

Carol Herman
On Dean’s List
Carol

Ann

the
the
the

grandchildren

50

years

later.”

The original Bonsai trees were
brought
to the United
States in
1921 as an experiment, when arrangements were made with a Japanese nursery to send four experts

to

this

country

with

specimen

plants. These original dwarf trees
have been propagated all this time
until sufficient stock was ready for
the general public.
All Newcomers are welcomed and

if interested, can contact the chairman,
2776.

Mrs.

Leo

Rosenberger,

WI

5-

Appointed
Ellen Hussong, daughter of Dr.
E. V. Hussong, 938 Oxford Rd., was
one of 12 women appointed junior
advisors in the freshman women’s
residence halls at Denison university, Granville, O.
Applications
for
the
positions
were screened and selected by the
dean of women’s office.

Returns

From Visit

Mrs.
Emil
Fredricks
has
returned to her home at 930 Central
Ave. from a visit with her brother
and
sister-in-law,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Lincoln Pettis in Weslaco, Texas.
Pettis is a former president of
the village of Deerfield.
He was also the installer and original owner
of the Bannockburn
village water mains and service.

Name

Local Women

To Auxiliary For
'Chicago Child Care

Raymond

O.

Hosford,

Mrs.

following

winners:

Class A—(with
regular art instruction):
Sherry
Elliott,
firsty

material
on Bonsai
culture,
Hill
will bring along actual plants for
demonstration. He will discuss an-

Dr. Charlotte Lee, associate professor
of interpretation
at the
Northwestern University School of
Speech, will review a play.
The monthly Art Exhibit will
feature the works of club members

son, the women
Episcopal church

art

ed the

Mrs.
Robert
Schade,
1418
Dartmouth Ln. Her co-hostess will be
Mrs. John Tobin.

of the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
Mrs. Harry Clarke is chairman
for the noon luncheon, and Mrs.
Frederick Toof is chairman for
the

Tews

Richard H. Thompson, Jr., and William Kolbe, acting as judges, select-

Amateur
and
professional
gardeners, as well as plant lovers, will
get tips and a demonstration
on
the ancient art of Bonsai growing
from an expert at the Deerfield
Newcomers Garden Group meeting
on April 4, 1961 at 8 p.m.
Jack Hill, manager of a Dundee
nursery will speak.

Nelson’s

William

Dieterle,

Gardener Discusses
Bonsai Growing At
Newcomers Meeting

history

a charger which

property

Robert

Mrs.

of pewter
extensively,
and
has
been a collector for many years,
will identify old pieces of pewter
brought by the members. Among
the pieces she will display are
flagship,

H.

next

Tuesday, according to Mrs. Gordon C, Fowler, 825 Beverly. The
guest will be introduced by Mrs.
Howard Boysen of Lake Forest.
He will lecture on “Jets, Rockets,
Space and You.” His talk will be
supplemented by color slides.
The program will be held at 2
p.m. Earlier, at 10:45 a.m. the col_lector’s Study Group will meet to
hear

EF:

of Deerfield and Bannockburn

the

Club

sin

Woman’s Club, announced the closing of the art contest for
7th and 8th grade students of the public and parochial schools

guest

meeting

Weddings

Winners Selected F or Seventh, Eighth —
Grade Art Contest Of Woman's Club

To Hear Speakers
_ At Tuesday Meet
bf

ai

Dana
Kleiman,
second;
Marlie
Parker,
honorable
mention.
All
three are students of Wilmot Junior high

school.

Class B—(without regular
struction):
Peter
Kempf,

art in- |
first;

Donna
Wisniewski,
second;
Suzanne Mack, honorable mention. All
three are students at Holy Cross
school.
These entries, with the entries
from Judy Smoot and Cappy Pederson of Wilmot school, and Judy
Healy and William Aiston of Holy
Cross school, are to be forwarded
to the district level of the IFWC
where winners will receive awards
of paintings

The

of Illinois

judging

was

artists.

based

on orig-

inality, good
design, imagination,
use of color, and neatness.

The show was credited with being
one of the best of this type. There,
were thirty-six entries which will
be displayed
club’s April

at an exhibit
meeting. The

at the
formal

presentation
of awards
will be
made at that time.
Several
of the drawings
and
paintings were shown on the “At
Home

Show”

WGN-TV

with

Paul

Saliner

ony

on Wednesday, March 22.

Name Candidates
For Woman’s Club
of

Mrs.
the

Wessley Stryker, chairman,
nominating
committee,
of

the Deerfield Woman’s
announced the
1961-62
candidates:
Mrs. Albert

succeed

Mrs.

Dawe,

Locke

club, has
slate of

president,

Rogers;

to

Mrs.

@]

Arthur Vickerman, first vice president, to succeed Mrs. Stryker; Mrs. «
Harry Henderson, treasurer, to suc-

ceed Mrs. Donald Dick; Mrs. Harry
Ruppel, Jr., program chairman, to
succeed Mrs. Charles Lager; Mrs.
J. L. Pfeiffer,
ways
and
means
chairman, to succeed Mrs. Robert
Clendenin.
Also, Mrs. Roland R. Rentschler,
public welfare chairman,
to succeed Mrs. Albert Dawe; Mrs. Norman Erskine, fine arts chairman,
to succeed Mrs. David C. Whitney;

Mrs.

Donald

Dick,

finance

chair-

man, to succeed
Mrs.
Russell *
Sedgewick,
and
Mrs.
Hunter
L.
Johnson Jr., hospitality chairman, *
to succeed Mrs. Richard Paulsen.
The slate will be presented for

voting at the club’s regular meeting
on April 11, when Mrs. Gertrude

Herman,
Deerfield,
Two new members of the North Keil will speak on “It’s Fun to
named
to
the
dean’s Shore auxiliary of Chicago Child Arrange Flowers.”
and also has been elec- Care
society
approved
at
the
The executive board meeting of
ted to Alpha Lambda Delta, a na- March
meeting
of the
auxiliary the Deerfield Woman’s club will be
tional freshman women’s scholastic which was
held in the home
of held on Tuesday, April 4 at 9:15
society, according to an announce- Mrs. John T. Benedict, Lake Forest. a.m. in the home of Mrs. Robert
ment from the University of South
They were: Mrs. Ronald E. Bean, Malmstrom, the club’s correspondDakota, Vermillion, S. D.
‘1200 Cedarcrest Rd., Bannockburn,
ing secretary, 1224 Blackthorn PI.
Miss Herman, a freshman at the and
Mrs. C. Robert
Iseley,
1230
school, was one of 22 women stu- Elmwood PI.
dents who qualified for the nationMrs. Joan Swift, director of the
al society at the end of the first society’s day care program,
presemester of her freshman year.
sented a summary of the new proMrs. William H. Nicholls of SierA Spanish major, Miss Herman
gram, illustrating her points with ra Madre, Calif., has announced
ranked in the upper 10 per cent of examples of the types of situations the marriage of her daughter, Barher class, according to the office which the day care center tries to bara N. Porter, to C. Russell Sugof the Dean.
help parents to meet.
den of Deerfield.
has
been
honor list

Announce Marriage,

Thursday, March 30, 1961

m

�ee Iiia oe
eT CE
‘ EE
Bats cece Pie

ee

ae eS

as |

et

Ef

eT
ee© fe
Vote
eRe Te edLee Hes eee
Sy)

.

Vows Are Read in F ebruary Ceremony

Mrs. Zurcher Wil

daughter of
S. Rowe, 153

Pine Point Dr. Her husband is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Alger D. Goldfarb, 177 Indian Tree Dr.
They were married in a candlelight
ceremony
in
North
Shore
Congregation Israel, Glencoe, Sat-

urday
Edgar

evening, Feb. 4, with Dr.
E. Siskin reading the vows.

The bride wore an ivory taffeta
gown with pearl-embroidered Alencon lace bodice and court train.

Her
tiny

silk illusion veil
crystal crown.
Sister, Matron

fell

from

a

of Honor

Her sister, Mrs. Howard A. Gerstein, Rock Island, was her matron

of honor; bridesmaids were Mrs.
Bernard
Brooks,
Mrs.
Ronald
Kaatz, a sister of the bridegroom;
Miss

Judi

Polisky,

Miss

Andi

isky and Miss Lois Grosman.
wore

royal

blue

taffeta

frocks with bell shaped

Pol-

They
sheath

skirts

and

pill box hats to match. Their flowers were yellow roses.
Charles
Palmer
of Libertyville
was best man.
Ushers were Ralph

Gidwitz, Gerald Flagg, Milwaukee;
Dr. Howard A. Gerstein, Rock IsPhoto

Mrs. Ralph

by

Bronson

Coles

Studio

S. Klemperer

ROSBY’

land;
Ronald
Kaatz
and
Gerald
Goldstein.
Dinner in the Crown
room of
the temple followed the ceremony.

SUBURBAN
Pan

alte. efie.ofie.afie..sfia.sfie..siie..siie...aiia,

Rowe,
Louis

An

Be Speaker Apr. 4
Mrs.

Suzette

Morton

Zurcher,

president of the Woman’s Board of
the Art Institute, will be speaker
for the annual meeting
of the
Highland Park Associates of the
board Tuesday afternoon.
More

been

than

invited

100

to

members

attend

the

have

affair

Easter Bunny
SPECIAL!

California

Painted

DAISIES
89c¢ Doz. Cash &amp; Carry

Henry

Depend on

C. Weiland

For the Best in Flowers

1781

St. Johns Ave.
ID 2-0600
ID 2-0492

Se.

Mr. and Mrs. Ralph S. Klemperer
are at home at 510 Sheridan Rd.,
Evanston, upon their return from
a honeymoon in Mexico City and
Acapulco, Mexico.
Mrs. Klemperer
is the
former

Sheila Irene
Dr. and Mrs.

Teeee

be

which will have as setting the home
and art collection of Mr. and Mrs.

Sigmund Kunstadter, 1436 Waverly
Rd.

Tea

and

coffee

at

1:15

SEEDS

will

precede the election of officers and
board.

Vaughan and
Fredonia

Mrs. Zurcher’s topic will be
“Inside the Art Institute.”
Slate to be elected is headed by
Mrs. Saul Bernstein, co-chairman
nominee.
Mrs. Louis Haller is

CRAFTWOOD

secretary nominee;
director nominees include
Mrs.
Oliver W.
Tuthill,
Mrs.
John
Laurie,
Mrs.

Myron
Chell.

Melamed

and

Mrs.

LUMBER COMPANY
See Page H-43, D-59

Glenn

BETTER THAN EVERI
SIMPLEX
FLEXIES —
designed for growing feet.

FASHIONS
ey

:
muuenjorm:,
new from

unterpomn Lora
with exclusive Butterfly-Shaped
Vyrene* (Spandex)
elastic center section
vant
Qasr

COUNTERPOINT bra _ has a unique butterflyshaped center section that adjusts the size and fit
of each cup. This exclusive Maidenform feature
is made of Vyrene* (Spandex) longer-lasting elastic,
guaranteed to stay new longer. Two Counterpoints
to choose from — broadcloth back or elastic Vyrene*
(Spandex) back. Both styles include spoke-stitched
undercups for longer-lasting uplift. Whitest white in

A, B and

C cups,
*All

Acetate,

Cotton

Cotton,

Aa

PARENTS)
4 MAGAZINE
ven

It’s going to be a Flexies parade, all right, if
the boys and girls have anything to say about
it. For Flexies are as different from ordinary

from
Broadcloth

Vyrene

(Spandex)

shoes as Easter eggs are different from ordi-

Elastic

nary eggs. Flexies styles are the most accrable

7]
ROSBY
1835

Second

(Across from

Thursday,

S

FASHIONS
ID

St.

H.P. Jewel)

March

SUBURBAN

30,

1961

OPEN

se we

THURSDAY

2-0788
NITES

we’ve

ever

shown.

Ellangee
QUALITY FOOTWEAR
HIGHLAND PARK
G. S. Laing

FOR

hea
THE

ENTIRE

FAMILY

616 CENTRAL AVE.
Phone ID 2-0879

|
|

Page Page H 17—D 25
A

�fficial Hostess
Miss

Jill

Berkson,

daughter

Shower Is Gian
For Miss Passini

of

‘Mr. and Mrs. Nathan A. Berkson,
346 Dell Ln., was one of 13 Lake

Mrs.

Forest coeds chosen to act as offi-

_ cial hostesses during the recent an_ nual Senior Contact Day program.
of 25 different

industries

Cervi,

423144

Funston

recently
entershower for Miss

Mary Jane Passini, daughter of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
John
Passini,
Highwood, who is to be married
April 8.

A senior, Jill helped to coordinate
‘student interviews with representatives

John

Ave.,
Highwood,
tained at a bridal

and

‘brofessions.

Co-hostess with Mrs. Cervi was
young Jane Santi, daughter of the
David Santis, Highwood, who is to

The present with a future, a U. S.
_ Savings Bond.

be flower girl in the wedding.

We would like to take this opportunity to express our
sincere appreciation for the tremendous acceptance of our
Grand Opening last Saturday. We were completely overwhelmed by the crowds and look forward to seeing all of
you again, and thanking you personally, in the very near
future. It will be a pleasure to serve you.
TEEN

FASHIONS

WOMEN’S
Infant’s and

FASHIONS

Children’s Wear

Photo

Miss

by

Rita

Percy

H.

Prior

Jr.

Pieroni

Mr. and Mrs. Pietro Pieroni, 575
Bellevue Pl., announce the engage-

ment of their daughter, Rita, to
Ralph H. Hagen, 665 Vine St. Mr.
Hagen
Henry

is the
Hagen

Miss

son of Mr. and Mrs.
of Marshfield, Wis.

Pieroni

came

to

Highland

Park from Italy six years ago and
now is employed here. Mr. Hagen,
a graduate
of the University
of

See Us For The Following Brand Names:
“Bobbie Brooks”
“Carter's”
“Tiger”
“White Stag”
“Mojud”
“Kate Green-A-Way”
“Jonathan Logan”
“Ship ‘N Shore”
GRAND

DRAWING

DOOR

SAT., APRIL Ist — 5:00 P.M.
You Need Not Be Present To Win

All Merchandise

Beautifully Gift-Wrapped

WE

DELIVER

eb ll es
STORE
Mon.

thru

Thurs.,

PRIZES

9-6

52

Highwood

Ave.

HIGHWOOD
ID 2-7020

HOURS
Friday,

9-9

Saturday,

9-6

COUNTY
ZONING NOTICE
STATE
OF
ILLINOIS)
COUNTY
OF LAKE )
*®:i
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given to all
persons in the Town of W. Deerfield, Lake
County, Illinois, that a public hearing will
be held on April 21, 1961, at 1:30 P.M.,in
the Village Hall, Deerfield, Illinois, relative
to a proposal to vary the terms of the Lake
County Zoning Ordinance, or to reclassify
by amendment thereto, from the R-2 Residential District, to the B-1 Business District,
the following described real estate, to-wit:
That part of the Northwest quarter of
Sec. 31, Twp. 43 N., R. 12, East of the
3rd P.M., in Lake County, Illinois, described as beginning at the intersection
of the center line of Sanders Road and
the North line of said Northwest quarter
of Sec. 31, said point of intersection being
1192.6 feet East from the Northwest corner of said Northwest
quarter of Sec.
31; thence South 4 degrees 22 minutes
West along the center of Sanders Road,
232.16 feet; thence East parallel to said
North line 327.58 feet; thence North 4
degrees 22 minutes East 232.15 feet to a
point on said North line of the said Northwest quarter of Sec. 31 which is 1519.18
feet
East
from
the
Northwest
corner
thereof; thence West to the place of becontaining
1.74 acres, more or
ess.
As a result of the petition of JOHN J.
SHERIDAN, CHARLES
DICK, MABELA
HENDRIX
AND
HARMON
HENDRIX,
which petition is on file and available for
examination
in the
office
of the
below
named Board, 316 Washington Street, Waukegan, Illinois.
All persons interested are invited to attend and be heard.
LAKE COUNTY ZONING
BOARD
OF APPEALS
Max Pilz, Chairman Pro Tem
Dated
at Waukegan,
Illinois, this 31st
day of March, 1961.
3/30/61—79

=

Mrs.
Mr.

and

Ernest
Mrs.

J.

George

Santi
D. Rudasill

Zeloof-Stuart

of Rock Island, announce the recent marriage of their daughter,
Janet Carole, to Ernest John Santi,
son of Mrs. Ernest Santi, 334 Palmer Ave., Highwood,
and the late

Mr.

Santi.

of

Mr.

darelli,

Photo

Jacobsen

44

and
Oak

Mrs.
Ave.,

Cesare

attended Northern
sity in DeKalb.

Mr.

BE

Caldarelli,

Illinois

a

Univer-

graduate

small

brick home

with

loads of living area.

place, 2 large bedrooms and a family room.
with

living.

tall shade

trees and

evergreens.

Priced in upper twenties.
Call

BAIRD

REAL ESTATE SALES

283 E. Deerpath

&amp;
MORTGAGES’

@

Lake

A fine home

Owner

Ahlmann

Forest

Living

room

15 x 25 with

fire-

75 x 225 yard nicely landscaped

moving

for economic

right away

yet gracious

for Arizona.

Christensen.

UNDERSOLD!

WARNER
e@

MANAGEMENT
CEdar

4-1855

COLUMBIA Hi-Fi &amp; IV
Division

of Columbia

Household

Appliances,

1805 St. Johns Ave., Highland Park
®

@

Come in and SEE...

A

INSURANCE
~=BR 5-0450

OPEN

THURSDAY

AND

of

Highland Park High School, now
is a junior in Northern
Illinois.
The
wedding
will
take
place
SUL cae:

ON A SECLUDED STREET

A

Cal-

Highwood.

Miss Jacobsen is a graduate of
North Syracuse High School and

Wisconsin School of Pharmacy is
a pharmacist with Ford Drug Company in Deerfield.

WON’T

Gloria

Mr.
and
Mrs.
Earl
Jacobsen,
North Syracuse,
N. Y., announce
the engagement of their daughter,
Gloria,
to Cesare
Caldarelli
Jr.,

son

The vows were read in St. Cyprias church in Carthage.
The young couple are living in
Macomb, where both are students
at Western Illinois State University.

WE

Miss

FRIDAY

Inc.

ID 2-0725

EVENINGS

Thursday,

March

30, 1961
be

�‘

This Is How If Is, Mike--

“Alvin Seholarship
Gives Local Youth
Trip To Europe
James

Edward

Todd,

Miami

Mike’s column appeared in last
week’s issue of this newspaper, re-

Uni-

University Abroad Alumni Scholarship. He is a graduate of Highland
Park
(Illinois)
High
School.
His

and

ship

and Mrs. Edward F.
reside
at _ Bigfork,

interviews,

cover

part

of

Todd’s

ex-

column

penses on next summer’s ninth an-

officials

duate

graduate

level

also

to

NEW

devise

or under

may

be

gra-

earned

in

connection with the tour.
Todd, who will be 21 in June, is

IN TEA

them.

pictures

steps

on

a few

Flavored for you
with bits of

ORANGE

for

toes,

of importance.

AND

but

FOR YOU... YOUR FAMILY ... YOUR GUESTS
COUNTRY
896

It endeav-

CORNERS
FOOD
So. Waukegan Road
Lake Forest

MART

Police Chief Anthony Schmieg discusses teen age drivers and
driving with Mike Goodkind, Highland Park High School senior,
who, with Bruce Petesch, prepares the column “The Spectrum,”

which appears regularly in the NEWS.
No finer facilities anywhere
in the Pikes Peak Region.

brought

250 fine rooms downtown. Steps
from theaters, night clubs, shopping,
banks, train atid bus depots. Ample
Olympic size Swimming
Parking.
pool. Cocktail Lounges. Nightly
Entertainment. Excellent

tee

DSSS

Opportunity knocks every pay day
when you buy U. S. Savings Bonds.

out

our

For reservations

BEAUTY SALON
1394 Deerfield Road
Highland Park
AMPLE FREE PARKING

Chandler's
-

service

MAGIC
SCISSOR

ADDING MACHINES
SALES - RENTALS - REPAIRS

write —
THE ANTLERS)

¢

HOTEL

NM
bi

SPECIMEN

ID 3-0230

. am

el

te

COLORADO

oa

re
AA
ae

Oe?Rs
«2 ICSE

= — &amp;
i
renoe,

SPRINGS

corr.

BALLOT

JUDICIAL ELECTION

PRESTIGE

FOR

JUDGE

OF

Nineteenth

THE

CIRCUIT

Judicial

COURT

Circuit

ALL PRECINCTS

THIS EMBLEM

Lake County,
Tuesday,

Identifies your

Illinois

April 4, 1961

Garfield

WELCOME WAGON
SPONSORS...

R

cleat

County Clerk

firms of prestige in the
business
and civic life of
your community.

For information, call
Highland Park
Mrs. Mitzi Lavin
Mrs. Dorothy Darling
ID 3-2253

(9

REPUBLICAN PARTY
FOR

Deerfield-Bannockburn
Grace Clark
WI 5-0887

JUDGE

Grace Brady
of Lincolnshire

——

OF

Nineteenth

THE

CIRCUIT

e

COURT

THOMAS

J. MORAN

DEMOCRATIC PARTY
FOR

Judicial Circuit

JUDGE

OF

THE

CIRCUIT

COURT

Nineteenth Judicial Circuit
(To Fill Vacancy)

(To Fill Vacancy)

@

Eq

PHILIP W. YAGER
3/30/61—74

Thursday,

March

30, 1961

¥

expert

tinting

TYPEWRITERS

¥
hea

Dining Room.

beautifully
by the use of

WELCOME

ay ES

the peak of hospitality at PIKES PEAK

SS

sonages

a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon
fraternity and has been on Dean’s
List. He is majoring in government
and has been active in the campus
Young Democrats organization.

645 CENTRAL

TASTE

BIGELOW’)

or professors

at various European centers. Academic credit in various fields at

either the

interest

what column doesn’t?
The Spectrum
has visited teen
age hang-outs and interviewed per-

nual
Miami
University
Abroad
travel-study program. The tour of
14
nations
in
Europe
and
the
British Isles will include
special
lectures, both by Miami professors
accompanying
the
tour
and
by

government

of

BRIGHT

—

their column, and write the project
without help or prompting from the
newspaper.
Once
in a while the

by the Miami University
Association, the scholar-

will

subjects

A

Subjects are selected by Mike and
Bruce, who also set up their own

Montana.

Given
Alumni

of concern to young people, and
avoids any trend to the gossip
column. The NEWS is very proud
of Mike and Bruce, and is happy to
have them contribute the Spectrum.

porting the Police Chief’s ideas on
teen agers driving problems.
The Spectrum is designed to report teen agers ideas on problems

versity junior of Highland Park,
has ben awarded the 1961 Miami

parents, Mr.
Todd,
now

ors to cover a variety of subjects”

Page 27 __

�| Integrated Housing

“Almer

Coe

Open Budget
Bar on 75th

Frame
Birthday

In answer to the requests of eye
physicians and many friends, Almer Coe Optical Company, wellknown prescription opticians, have
opened a fantastic budget-economy
eyeglass frame bar in each of its
locations. Fantastic, because up-to-

the-minute

and

advance

styles

in

conservative or exotic frames are
available at money-saving prices

from $5 to $10. There are wide assortments; frames
-en, and children.

_Almer

Coe

for

Optical

men,

wom-

Company

was

established in 1886. Now on the
75th birthday there are stores conveniently located in the North Mall
at Old Orchard, Skokie; at 1629
_Orrington Avenue (next to Cooley’s
Cupboard) in Evanston; and at 10
Nerth Michigan Avenue in Chicago.
You are invited to come in and
browse around the new budgeteconomy
eyeglass frame
bar at
your

favorite

Almer

Coe

“Integrated Housing—Ethics and
Practice” will be subject of a panel
discussion following Congregation
Solel Sabbath eve services Friday
evening, April 7, in the Highland
Park

Woman’s

ease

|

and

lenses.”

convenience

Charge

of contact

accounts

are

in-

vited and terms can be arranged.

Luncheon Speaker

|

General William H. Wilbur, 371
Central Ave., will speak on ‘‘George

Northbrook

Taking part will be Rabbi Arnold
Jacob Wolf, Prof. James Q. Wilson,

headquarters.
Arnold
has

sociologist,
of the University
of
Chicago’s Department of Political

been

associated

Society, Children of the American
Revolution,
Saturday
afternoon,

with

electrical

Panel

of

Experts

Science and aothor of ‘‘Negro Politics’

and

Dr.

Arthur

G.

Falls,

surgeon, chairman of the Committee to End Discrimination in Chicago
Medical
Institutions,
and
founder of the Chicago Interracial
Council.

Bottled

Water

Naturally

GOOD

store.

come in or phone for bro“Almer Coe explains the

clubhouse.

versary with
Public
Service
Company March
19. He is an as.
sistant engineer
at the utility’s

Plans Card Party,
Tots’ Style Show

Washington, the World’s Greatest
Revolutionist,” for the 30th anniversary luncheon of the Blackhawk

‘Those interested in contact lenses
should
chure,

e

Panel for April 7

Opticians

Legion Auxiliary

Notes Anniversary General Wilbur Is
Anthony J. Arnold, 844 Laurel CAR’s
30th Year
Avenue celebrated his 35th anni-

|

Mineral

|X

bution

Anthony

activities

As

seed

throughout

and

the

hobby

Holy

Name

is amateur

his

and in 1950

Society.

radio

he won

an award

his
company
for
radio
interference

His

operating,
from

developing
locator.

1629 Park Ave.
IDiewoed 2-0042

Garland

dren’s Style Shop will present the
show, in which members’ children
will be models.

made by men,” Mrs. Richard R.
Wolfe, Deerfield, senior president

Regular monthly meeting of the
Highland Park auxiliary unit will

of the

be held Tuesday
at 8 o’clock in

evening, April 4,
the Legion Me-

morial

when

a

Dr.,

Deerfield.

society,

The

by

They are Michael Smith of 1388
Forest Ave., Highland Park, and
of 1659

and

pointed

luncheon

Mrs.

that the

not the
but of

Wolf

“state

out.

is

being

planned

and

Mrs.

William

Stanley Jacob, co-chairman. Invitations
are
out
to parents
and
friends of members; national and
state officers of the C.A.R. in the
Chicago area; officers and chairmen of the sponsoring North Shore
chapter, DAR; patrons and patronesses of the Blackhawk society and
mayors
and village presidents in
towns where members live,

Keith

Osterman,

Boy

Scout

bugler of Troop 52, will sound the
assembly call for the buffet; Linda

“Serving

WORLD-WIDE

NORTH

MOVING

1903”

ID 2-

Bond Sales
Lake county residents purchased
a total of $485,571, in series E and
H United States Savings Bonds in
the

LOOK!
A NEW
Wonderful

2123 Green

of

L.

February,

Speidel

est
and
John
Meade
Chicago General County

of the

Savings

in Illinois

according

of Lake

For-

of
North
Co-Chair-

Bonds

totaled

Com-

$34,928,-

the

state

for

the

first

two

months of 1961 were 7.6% higher
than the first two months of 1960.

Transfer &amp;
Storage Co.

Bay Rd., Highland

month

to Philip

in

0507

&gt; RAFFERTY

program

693, down 2.1% from sales for
February
1960, according to T.
Merle Paul, State Director of the
U.S. Savings Bonds Division. Sales

Phone

Storage

a

freshments.

mittee.
Sales

SHORE

Since

—_e_-

the

building

will be presented by the Junior
Auxiliary unit. Mrs. John Bunch
and her committee will serve re-

men

beg

Park
Chil-

Proceeds from the project will
be used for rehabilitation work at
Downey Veterans’ Hospital.

Boys

Siegel

soldier

the

in

given

be

will

affair

The

Legion Memorial building,
Ave. and Sheridan Rd. The

result of
decisions

themselves

of the world is
fate or chance,

tween them left a note last Thursday that they were on their way
to
California;
parents
phoned
Highland Park police at 2:30 a.m.

Steven

distinguished

inform

Two 16-year-old boys with a 1959
Oldsmobile and $40 and $50 be-

Co.

a

an-

president,

unit

Swatzler,

nounces.

Highland

student of foreign affairs, General
Wilbur has devoted much time as
author-lecturer to help Americans

career, which began at Morris in
1926.
A bachelor, he belongs to the
Immaculate
Conception
Church

Runaway

Spring

Water

power
production and distri-

California Bound

Delivered By...

Sparkling

April 8, at 12:30 in the
Park Recreation Center.

Its annua!
dessert-card
party
Tuesday, April 18, will be followed
by a children’s style show for High145, American
Unit
Park
land
Richard
Mrs.
Auxiliary,
Legion

Park

Lou Royer, society president, will
introduce
the general
and
other
honored guests. Prayer will be read
by Cynthia Ann Royer, the soci-

ety’s chaplain; flag salute
led by Richard Tedor.

will

Se.

Easter Present!
STARTING

APRIL 10th
SPRING CLASSES

FRE

Adults &amp; Children

is our American Golfer

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| Hubbard Woods
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Ice Skating Studio

wi

Hillcrest 6-4123
915

i

for easy care

Bide oY

Linden

at Tower

Rd., Winnetka

Mail and phone orders filled

*

OLD ORCHARD at Skokie * ORchard 6-3060
Thursday, March

30, 1961

be

4

�ere

‘new ways of selling old products.

Economy Demands

ell Trained People
~ Management Executive Tells Students
into a business econ-

will graduate
omy

1960’s

the

of

students

College

than

harshly competitive

more

it has been at any time since the
20’s and they will have to have
the kind of academic background
an
that enables them to make
a busicontribution,
aggressive
authority

de-

Whether they are properly
pared to function in this

prenew

management
ness
clared today.

on

part

in

depends

era

business

whether the liberal arts colleges
which will graduate so many of
them keep pace with the changing
demands of the business world,
according to H. E. Sommer, managing partner of Wolf Management
and a
Co. (Chicago)
Engineering

member
of

of directors

board

of the

other

several

business

major

firms.
For-

Lake

before

spoke

Sommer

est College officials and representatives of some of the country’s
and _ industrial
business
largest
firms

at

a

luncheon

the

at

The

Forest.

path Inn, Lake

Deer-

lunch-

pany officials are fighting a serious
battle to keep their business operodds,

this

nomic

dent

know

will

environment

be

operating,

in which
he

they

feels.

There will be increased pressure on the liberal arts colleges to
offer at least basic courses in management theory, social and private

accounting,
marketing,
tion, money

statistics,
economics,
elements
of producand banking, business

law and other similar subjects.
“Although in his formal state-

ments, the businessman cries for
well rounded, non-specialists, when
the chips
are down,
he wants
someone
who
can
do something
productive in his firm. He wants
someone
who
has at least been
exposed to a modicum of accounting or marketing or finance or personnel or “something”
related to

his firm’s

activities.”

The
liberal
does not go on

will find

increasingly difficult to keep its
labor force fully employed,’ Sommer said.
“The economy of the 1960’s will
expand but barring a war or deficit spending by the federal gov-

industries
will
“warring ’60's.””
of the nation
the sixties will
than have ever

himself

a similar

colleges

period

and

BUTTONS
REPLACED

now forfor most

of time

since

the

to get

the

universities

of

ating

at

a

profit

insistence

productivity

of

every

definitely

.

ONE-DAY
SERVICE

“EXTRA
CAREFUL”

the

stu-

can help

business

about

the

dollar

it

spends, he declared. Costs will be
watched and controlled with the
greatest
efficiency
possible.
creasingly frantic efforts will

Inbe

made to develop new products

and

ways

to

get

be placed upon the
characteristics
that

accomplish

this.

“Courses in literature, art, music
and history are important to ex-

pose

a student

cerning

the

to knowledge

kind

of

con-

institution

in

which he will spend most of his
working hours as it is to expose
him to the economy, the social
structure, the political framework
or the arts of the society in which
he

will

work

and

live.”

The present with a future, a U. S.
Savings

Bond.

PTL

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March

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your convenience to O’Hare
or Midway. Last week’s answer: CAK is Canton-Akron.

|:

a

Se

=

DTW.
hour
DTW.

Lh

: LEASE

BS

handi-

EXACT
. STARCHING

-

better

will
and

economy in which he will be living
and the institution for which he is
likely to be working will be intensified, according to Sommer.
U.S. business is reaching the
point where it is forced to measure
the

find

premium
abilities

that

something

to

things done more efficiently, And a

difficult

against

arts
student
who
to graduate school

Sy ORCHID

actually be the
Unless most firms
take drastic steps,
kill off more firms
been killed off in

turn of the century.”
It is up to business

trying

nation to make available to them
the kinds of young men and women who can help business
solve
the problems caused by the eco-

capped if he completely lacks busieon highlighted ‘‘Contact Day” at ness
knowledge
in the
competiLake Forest College, held annually tive economy he faces, according
so that business officials may inter- to
Sommer.
In
its
consulting
view prospective graduates about work for its hundreds of client
positions with their firms.
firms, Wolf Management Engineer“The U.S. economy is maturing ing Co. has found that the young
and, just as a human being grows men who develop the fastest start
at a decreasing rate, so does an with a grounding in business afeconomy. The U. S. is finding it fairs. In an era in which com-

ernment to a degree not
seen, the “soaring ’60’s’”

Most firms will try to improve
their “science of managing” in order to make better use of their
working force. Each firm will be

across from Highland Park Library

�: {=

Founders of Music Club Send Letters Of Congratulations
H

0

M

3

E

i M

v

RO

V

3 M

a NT

Letters of congratulations for its|
continuing

M

i

with

the

CUSTOM

The PEERLESS
:
s
Architect
Designed
CALL

of

financial

cians

of

WAY Means
*
and Supervised

arrived

the

from

country

several

AND

RECREATION

cent

sccetegageadies

PEERLESS

1550

Park

Ave.,

¢ KITCHENS

GA

for

scholarship

benefit

INC

i
Highland

schol-|

the

first members

of the

"
Park

33-year-|

appreciation” club.

Mrs.

Emma

Ford

a

you

rs

?

E ST

your

ANTS
O

e

°

against
Among the most common
large

and

small

alike,

GET

L

protects

your

ants.

One

of

damage

Park

100

their

fourth Wednesday

Berenice

reer of composing

—

Music

club,

members,

has

of the month

to

Bentley,

a|its

piano

music

talented

membership.

While
the club had given schol:
.

for | 2’Sships many

times

throughout

its

Abbott

Byfield, widow of |the iat a stg ord ye es
Byfield, sent|0M a biennial
Funds
for
the
from Neenah,
Wis. | award are raisedbasis.through
concerts
Mrs. Byfield, a well known so-| 8iven by the club and the scholarprano, was the first vocal teacher |Ship is offered on a competitive

for Gloria Lind a daughter of the| basis to talented elementary and
Domenick Linaris
of
Highwood, | high school music students of the
who returned to New York re-|Highland Park area. Next award
cently to resume her place with the | Will be given in the Spring of 1962.
Metropolitan

Opera

Lind,

who

Highland

Company.

was

Park

First

starred

Music

last month,

international

winner

has

achieved | Margulies

recognition

for

of the

award,

4

since

in|it was put on a biennial basis, was

club’s|14-year-old

Neil

Levin,

Officers

In

talented

performed

for Mollie

and Rudolph

her

beautiful mezzo soprano voice.

Ganz.

of Club

the Metropolitan, she has sung|
Officers of the Highland Park
many roles and understudies for | Music club include Mrs. Carl Hil-

top stars, including

ACQUAINTED

A member

SPECIAL

Music

e all water

Renata

of the

Tibaldi.

Highland

club for more

than

debrand,

Park|Kelly,

15 years,

president;

first

Mrs.

James

vice-president

and

program
chairman;
Mrs.
Harvey
Lloyd,
second
vice-president
and

hospitality

Finlay,

Tuan:

recording

E, Amick,

closets

sted |
checked and adju

Mrs.

secretary;

corresponding

Guy

Mrs.

secretary;

Mrs. Ambrose Cox, Ak este and
the following chairmen: Mrs. John
Irland,

coziest

membership;

Mrs.

A

Dorsey

Husenetter, choral ensemble; Mrs.
H. R. Finney, trial board; and Mrs.

refuges is around the kitchen sink where they positively revel in the moisture and warmth. Of course,
they journey to other parts of the house too. They are
frightfully unpleasant and downright dangerous, but

$

embers

Highland

|now numbering

and leaks stoppe

insect pests around all homes,

are

sent

e all faucets checked

home

insect

The

|

Miss

the club

nerves,

7

R

Feb.

1958 benefit concert and sang for| Pianist who

Stop expensive
leaks with our
T

were

the

save

4

toe

who|the
late Dr. Arthur
her greetings

;

ON

Ses.

Miss

OU

BR

meeting

iad

as

Among several others who wrote | ¢2joy varied programs planned by

Helen

Nolting,

SEHOLD

he

first

susan

to-

old “mutual musical participation | children in Claremont, Calif. Mrs. | 33-year career, it was in 1959 that
and

,

te

the

founders

1928 in her Ravinia home,

concert.

HOMEOWNERS:

ra

for

women

arship award fund, were some of | founder, who is continuing
inui
her ca-

—

BUILDERS

West

the|14,

enclosed]

checks to boost the biennial

* BATH

me peage

HOME

18 young

Highland Park Music club.
nostalgic greetings from Pasadena, | in its ranks pianists, —
rey
Occasion for the letters
was the
violinists,
cellists, “wis harpists
Bnei
barat
irae | Calif. oe
a
inbe ‘willebticne
eean

FOR:

ROOMS

°

1928 to 1930, and in fact gathered
,
;

sections | gether

recently

Among the writers, who
* FAMILY

was the club’s first president from | she is one of its most distinguished

assistance for talented young musi-|the

TOUCH!

PEERLESS

program

Erne

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�ciate
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Peer

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cei
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oe a 3 nee, ia
er
5
"
iy ie PLEX,
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Meet

1175

of the Chicago
will

be

one

Board
the

man

Shaw

room

the

The

memorial

sponsored

by
for

Six Million Martyrs.
The Yiskor Memorial choir,

un-

Chicago

is

Yiskor

Pune
‘

ex

Bis
tae V0¥

Circle Three is meeting in the
home of the chairman, Mrs, Lyle

Evangelical

church

will

United

meet

as

Dr., Mon-

Spring

:

H

aah
ry
Sea eeany NS

ap

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a
&lt;

Easter Significance Topic of Broadcast

evening, April 19, it was announced
this week by Dr. William A. Young,
minister.

Bethany

d

Dinner

Another future date of interest
to the congregation
is Sunday,
April 23, when the annual Spring
family dinner will be held with

1801

evening,

o’clock when the
the school hall.

by

her

Mrs.

a

the

“The
tion,”

Challenge
of the Resurrecwill be broadcast over Radio

special

Easter

program,

Charles Nims, noted archeologist
and Egyptologist, who spoke here
in February, as guest speaker.

The

at

9:20

a.m.

program

answers many of
frequently asked |
Christian Scientists about the sig- |
nificance of Easter. The point is —
strongly made that “in its true
meaning the resurrection was a —
questions

joyful occasion of ageless significance for all mankind,’
Young explained.

Chairman

U.

April

5, at

8

group

meets

in

Joseph

S.

Here

Council, United Synagogue of America, to be held Sunday, April 9,
in
North
Suburban
Synagogue
Beth El, 1175 Sheridan Rd.
Feature

Dr.

Millgram

Dr. Abraham E, Millgram, director of the United Synagogue Commission on Jewish Education, will
deliver the keynote address, “Education
and
Youth
in the
Syna-

gogue,” at the opening brunch.
There will be workshops sched-

Giannasi

committee.

buying

second

Harold R. Blumberg, Glencoe, is
general
chairman
of the Annual
Spring Conference of the Chicago

uled for the early afternoon for
the various committees of the local
synagogues. The officers and the

Help defeat the threat of communby

the

general memberships of all Conservative congregations in Chica-

Bonds.

goland

will

participate.

PAT PATTERSON’S
Steak House &amp; Liquor Store
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Lobster (with trimmings)
Luncheons Served from 11 a.m. to 2
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O'NEILL'S

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ACE HARDWARE
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In Conference

The installation will be combined
with
an
anniversary
party,
Mrs.
Guido
Serafini,
president,
announces.
Refreshments
will
be

served

Johns

XJ

Station WAIT
Sunday, April 2,
beginning at 9 a.m. Station WHMPEvanston will re-broadcast the pro-

United Synagogue

Plans for the installation of officers for Sacred Heart guild of St.
James church will be made Wed-

nesday

St:

i
AM;

Durrell R. Young, 71 Indian Tree
Dr., chairman
of the board
of
directors of the First Church of
Christ, Scientist, announced today

store South of the Highland Park
Savings and Loan Association.

Plan Sacred Heart
Guild Installation

ism

‘

The Women’s Guild of Redeemer
Lutheran church is sponsoring
a
Spring rummage
sale Wednesday
and Thursday, April 12 and 13, at

der the direction of Hyman Reznick, music director of the Halevi
Choral
Society,
will
sing.
More
than 50 organizations, whose membership
represents
about
95 per
cent of the Jewish population of
the Chicago area, will participate
jn the Memorial meeting.

and

nis debits

fol-

and

of

Plan Rummage

To Sing

Committee

the

Si
Lo

Presbyterians Plan
Their Annual Meet

Members o£ Circle One will meet
in the home of Mrs. John Lapp,
1300
Golf
Ave.
Thursday,
April
6, at 8 o’clock. Mrs. Joe Baruffi
is the group’s chairman.

Sher-

Saat

Hotel.
Choir

the

of

PBS

Week

Courtney, 1897 Elmwood
day at 8 o’clock.

principal speakers for the 18th anniversary memorial for the 6,000,000 martyrs Wednesday evening,
April 12, at 8 o’clock in the George
Bernard

Se

The Highland Park Presbyterian
church will hold its annual congregational
meeting
Wednesday

Brethren
lows:

Rd.,

of

Figs

arra

circles

Methodist

Syna-

Sheridan

ery

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Evening

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"

°

Bethany Circles

Memorial Speaker
Rabbi

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ID 2-1150

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�Service Arranged By Luther
ly

(
Rev.

:

|

Sea

adie

Chunk
adie

HOLY

adhe

aie

CROSS

ih

eth

a

Directory

i

CATHOLIC

ni

i

cn

CHURCH

North Waukegan Road
Rev. John
O’Mara,
Pastor
ae Edward
Reilly,

Sr ian

dsor

Masses:

Daily

5-0430

7,

Masses:

8,

6:30

9,

and

First Friday of each
6:30 a.m., 8:30 a.m.
Saturday: 4 p.m. and
:

10,

11:15

8:30

and

a.m.

month,

Masses

7:30 p.m.

at

Confes-

NORTH
SUBURBAN
EVANGELICAL
FREE
CHURCH
Rev. Vernon Olson, Pastor
200 County Line Rd.
Church Office—WI 5-4640
Parsonage—WI 5-4641

PPNDAY
9:30

a.m.

10:45

Sunday

a.m.

7 p.m.
8:15

School.

Worship

Service.

Worship Service,
PR
aaa Groups.

7:30 p.m. Bible Study.
7:30 p.m. Junior Crusaders.
6:45 p.m. Pioneer

Girls

CONGREGATION
In

8:30

=

tae

a.m.

Eve

Religious

Boys

BETH

OR

Bri-

Church
Road

eld

AY

aay

Trinity United
638 Waukegan

and

Service.

School.

and

an

On

11:15 a.m.
services.

simultaneously

with

the

School Group meet at 9:45 a.m, and

alternate

Sunday

In South Park School
1331 Hackberry Road
Rev. John S. Usry, Minister
Parsonage Telephone WI 5-0176
THURSDAY
8 p.m.
Communion service.
SUNDAY
10:30 a.m. Worship service.
10:30 a.m. Church school.
TUESDAY
8 p.m. Business meeting.
ZION
LUTHERAN
CHURCH
10 Deerfield
Road,
Deerfield
Rev, Paul V. Berggren, Pastor
George Jacobson, Intern
Telephone: Windsor 5-2009
THURSDAY, March 30—Maundy Thursday
8 p.m. Service of Holy Communion. (Bus
transportation is provided for this service.
Phone church office for schedule.)
FRIDAY, March 31—Good Friday
10 a.m.
Children’s service.
8 p.m. Meditations
on the Seven
Last
Words.
SATURDAY, April 1
There
will be no
confirmation
classes
during Holy Week.
oEPUaYs April 2—Easter Sunday
a.m.
Sunrise Service of Holy Commuon.
7-9 am.
Easter Breakfast served by the

i

SUNDAY
9:30 a.m. and 11:15 a.m. Church School
or toddlers up through 8th grade at 9:30
1m.

evenings.

a.m.

1717 Deerfield Rd.—ID

ST.

,

2-6848
Holy
month,

ComSun-

Masses:

Day

Masses:

m,

Weekdays:

0

6:30,

8, 9:30,

6:30,

6:30,

8:30

12:15

11

a.m.,

a.m.

lay and Thursday
y Fas the month: 4,

before the first
5:30, 7, 9 p.m.,

QUAKERS
SOCIETY
OF
FRIENDS
David Stickney, Clerk
Lake Forest

Y.

245 sot

_

Sunday

. 10 am. Friends
‘School Library in
For

information

Rev.
For

AY

School.

meeting
Lake

in Deer
Forest.

call WIndsor

Path

5-1774.

Russell R. Bletzer, Minister
Ferry Hall Chapel
Lake Forest
Information Call WI 5-3332

10:45 a.m.
Church School.
11 a.m.
Church Service.

ee

_ Religious

School,

AL

8:30

Saturday

p.m. Sabbath

eve

and

Sunday

services.

oe
1,
ednesday
r information call Windsor

p.m.

Martha

ae

Route

‘SUNDAY

9:30 a.m. Church

9:30

&lt;1
A

a.m.

afternoon;
5-5466.

fmt.

Worship

nursery

Telephone WI

Service.

Service

is provided

and

Church

for small

children.

5-4179 for more information.

reach

f

ion will be served.

nurseries

10:45

for

a.m.

the

young.

Worship

service.

Apul’3 Gospel

3:30 p.m.

at

7:30

p.m.

service.

Chums

Awana

Youth

Club,

Guards

Awana

Youth

Club,

p.m.

Pals
AY,

8:30 p.m.

Page 32
eS ee ee

and
April

Prayer

Choir

home

of

the
By-

PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
824 Wankegan Road
Rev. Bernard F, Didier, Minister
Rev. Hugh Jeffers,
Director of Christian Education
Manse—1218 Walden Lane
Church phone—WI 5-0560
Manse phone—WI 5-0107
THURSDAY, March 30
9 am.
Lenten Devotions.
3:45 p.m. Jr. Choir rehearsal (4th
and
| over’.
4
p.m.
Westminster
choir rehearsal
(6th, 7th and 8th graders), both
direction of Mrs. Edward Alder. under the
_ 8 p.m.
Holy Communion and the reception of new members.
FRIDAY, March 31
9 am.
Lenten Devotions.

Pioneers,
Meeting

rehearsal,

boys
and

8

p.m.

Communi
;
4
union and Baptism

Vhancel

choir

al.
rehearsal.

THURSD.
fi
_P.m.
aundy
Thursday
Hol
munion service at pacvoneas,
ib esac
SUNDAY, April 2
9:30 a.m.
Church
school, children two
= are
Sengge
Snparton
and classes
Bike Eorades
;
throu g
i
igh
school. Adult
10:30 a.m. Fellowship coffee,
pA Bg}
Morning Pra
0 service.
Renew members.
Sitte:
ildren will be provided,
as
aces
TRINITY UNITED CHURCH
OF CHRIST
638 Waukegan Road
Rev. Philip A. Desenis, Minister
Parsonage—1139 Elmwood
Ave.
Telephone WI 5-5050
THURSDAY, March 30—Maundy
Thursday
7:30 p.m.
Lenten Service—Communion.
8:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
SUNDAY, April 2—Easter Sunday
—Communion

AY, April 4

vacation,

7:45

p.m.

FIRST

Chancel

choir

CHURCH

OF
SCIEN TIST

rehearsal.

CHRIST,

155 Deerfield Road
SUNDAY—11
a.m. Services.
Children
are cared
for during
Church
service,
9:30 a.m. Sunday School.
For pupils up to 20 years of age.
WEDNESDAY
EVENING
MEETINGS—
8 p.m.
Including testimonies of healing
through Christian Science.
All are welcome to attend these services
and to use the reading room. For further
information call WIndsor 5-1626.
READING
ROOM
3 to 5 p.m. Daily.
9 to 9:30 p.m. Wednesdays,
LESSON-SERMON
The vital importance for all mankind of
the resurrection of Christ
Jesus will be
stressed Sunday at Christian Science services,
Scriptural selections will include accounts
from Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John of
incidents in the life of Jesus, including the
betrayal
in
Gethsemane,
the
crucifixion,
and his resurrection.
From. “Science and Health with Key
to
the Scriptures” by Mary Baker Eddy these
passages will be read (pp. 292, 293):
“Truth will be to us ‘the resurrection
and the life’ only as it destroys all error
and
the belief that Mind, the only immortality
of man, can be fettered by the body, and
Life be controlled by death. . . ‘
“In his resurrection and ascension, Jesus
showed that a mortal man is not the real
essence of manhood, and that this unreal
material mortality
disappears
in presence
of the reality.”

ST.

GREGORY’S
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
Wilmot and Deerfield Roads
The Rev. J. D. Parker, Rector
The Rev. E, G. Wappler, Curate
The Rev. G. W. Robinson, Assistant
Rectory Telephone—WIndsor 5-1881
Church Telephone—WiIndsor 5-1678

715
a.m.
oral Eucharist and
(Church pag
=
Nursery).
730
p.m.
outh
Con
tion.
bi oi
ah
April 4
oiae Pitas

am.

St. Anne’s

see

d,

8 p.m. St. Agnes Fe
WEDNESDAY,
April 5
8:15 p.m.
Choir rehearsal.
sep
ihtlicihctslc
iia.
THE
NORTH
SUBURBAN
BAPTIST
CHURCH
(An
American
Baptist Church)
Oak Lane School, Midway Road
Northbrook East

Rev. Donald

SUNNY

.

ona

E. theurston,
'e

Pastor

10 a.m.
Sunday School for children and
adults.
11
am.
Worship
Service
for
young
people s and
adults.
chilive
EF xtended
session for

GRACE

For
4-3060

LUTHERAN
CHURCH
(Missouri Synod)
Walters Ave. at Fourth St.
Northbrook
further information call CRestwood
or WIndsor 5-1323,

Lake County Home Bureau
To Meet Monday Evening

8-13.
Bible

Minister

To Be Used Maundy Thursday
Worshippers at Redeemer Lutheran church, 1731 Deerfield
Rd., Highland

Park,

will use the order of the Holy

THURSDAY,
1:30 p.m.
7:30 p.m.

April 6
Afternoon guild.
Choir’ rehearsal.

The Deerfield unit of the Lake
County home
bureau will meet
Monday evening April 3, at the

Communion

tonight, Maundy Thursday, which dates back to the year 1523,
The service is called the Formula Missae, and was arranged by
Martin Luther.
All the hymns used in the service were written by Luther. Other
features
of the service
that are
unique are: the sermon is at the
very beginning of the service as is
the choir anthem, the order of the
Holy Communion
is chanted,
instead of being read by the officiant,
the Rev. Robert A. Wendelin, pastor.
Continuing the church’s Lenten
theme, “The Passion Pilgrimage,”
the sermon topic is ‘In the Upper
Room.” The worship tonight commemorates
the institution of the
Lord’s Supper on the first Maundy
Thursday in the upper room in the
city of Jerusalem.
Fourteen young people who were
confirmed last Sunday will receive

the

Holy

Communion

for the first

time tonight. The church choir will
sing
‘Jesus,
the
Crucified’
by
Peery.
The
traditional
Good
Friday
Children’s morning worship will be-

gin at 10 a.m.

Children

have

been

invited to attend this worship service. The events of the first Good
Friday are remembered
and pondered. A visual presentation will be
given by Miss Sharon Tjaden, of
Lake Bluff, on the theme of the

last hours of the earthly life of the
Lord Jesus Christ.
At 8 p.m. on Good Friday evening, a Tenebrae
service will be
held. This is a traditional
Good
Friday
service held in Christian
churches for centuries. The sermon
topic is “Beneath the Cross.” The
church
choir will sing
“When
I
Survey
the Wondrous
Cross’
by
Lorenz.
On Easter, the Feast of the Resurrection of the Lord, a Sunrise
Matin will begin at 6 a.m. The choir
will chant the “Te Deum
Laudamus.”
An Easter breakfast from 7 to

8:30 a.m. will be served by the Walther League, the young people’s society of the church. A free-will offering will be taken. Proceeds from
the breakfast will be used to help

send

members

of

the

Walther

League
to the Lutheran
Service
of
Volunteer School this summer.
se
es
wi NDAY, April 2
TIALLY
At 9 a.m. the Sunday school will
a.m.
unrise
Worshi
9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Morning and Evening
i
Easter Breakfast.
meet in the nave of the church for
See
penn:
x
and 11:30 a.m.
Morning
THURSDAY ,» M March 30—Maund
Worshj
a visual presentation by Miss Sharand Church school.
Nursery
7 a.m. Holy Communion.
Si lanes 6 on
1, 2 and 3 years. Kindergarten for chiles
Tjaden of Lake Bluff, of the
6:15 p.m. Holy Communion.
and
classes
for all other grades throug
h high school
Easter story.
7:30 p.m. Boy Scouts.
10 a.m. Adult Bible class,
FRIDAY
,
March
;
31—Good Friday
At 10:15 a.m. the Easter Festival
MONDAY, April 3
2 p.m. Family service.
3:30 p.m. Girl Scout troop
11.
service will be held. The sermon
8 p.m. Evensong.
ae Spe herd a
troop 127.
SATURDAY, April 1—Easter Eve
topic will be “In the Garden
of
.m.
ult
Bi
lass,
ies
ay japtiom.
TAS,
April 4 s Biepate
SUNDAY
Hope,” the last of the Lenten sea.m., deans
Eighth
Grade Confi
Onfirmation
i
class.
: r ciation
a.m.
.
Board meetini g of the women’
s4
ries,
“The
Passion
Pilgrimage,”
a.m.
Choral Eucharist
(no Se
:30
i). from the garden of Gethsemane to
p.m. Boy Scout tro
9:30 a.m.
4
Choral
Encharia
t’
and
WEDNESDAY,
Soe
April 5
ied
ths
cane Me: Nursery).
the garden of the Resurrection. The
7:30 p.m. Tuxis choir rehears
Holy

8-10

30

the

Wykle,

1 p.m.
W.S.W.S.
dessert luncheon
at
Mrs. Pat Cummings’,, 795 Broadview, Highland Park.
7:30 p.m.
Local Conference and Council
of Administration meeting.
WEDNESDAY,
April 5
No
chorister
rehearsal
due
to
spring

Commu-

22

Crucified, Risen and Coming Again
A
AY, March 31
7:45 p.m.
Good Friday Service, com-

Mo NDAY.

Circle

M.

R. C. Grigereit, Asst. Minister

801 Rosemary Terrace
Church—W1 5-0078
Parsonage—WI
5-2221
MAUNDY
THURSDAY, March 30
)
No Boy Scout meetnig or Youth Choir
rehearsal.
8 p.m. Candlelight Service of Holy Communion.
Community
is invited.
GOOD FRIDAY, March 31
Sanctuary will be open all day for meditation.
p.m.
Chancel Choir under the direction of Mr. J. Robert Welsh will present
the oratorio
“The
Redeemer’
by
Shaw.
Following the oratorio, Communion will be
served
to those wishing
to remain.
The
community is invtied.
SATURDAY, April 1
No couples club meeting. Meeting will be
on April 8 at Kipling school.
EASTER SUNDAY, April 2
6 a.m.
Sunrise Service with Choristers
and Youth choir.
8:30, 9:30 and
10:55
a.m.
Services of
Divine
Worship.
‘Walk
With
the Lord
and Know . . . The Resurrection in You”—
Rev. E. M. Wykle.
9:30 a.m.
Church
School
for Nursery
(2-yr. old) through
6th grade
and
adult
classes.
10:55 a.m.
Church
School for Nursery
(2-yr. old) through high school, First year
Confirmation class.
No Youth Fellowship meetings.
MONDAY, April 3
No
Confirmation
class
due
to
spring
vacation. Call Church for assignment. Next
meeting April 10, 7 to 8:30 p.m.

:30

School.

Worship

Holy

FIRST

WASHBURN
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
Half Day
Rev. Lewis Wakeland, Pastor
:

hall,

Mrs.
Raymond
Bristow,
490
Broadview
Avenue,
Highland
Park.
Pastor Berggren
will speak at this meeting.
WEDNESDAY, April 5
4:30 p.m. High School Youth Instruction

8 p.m.
Infants.

NORTH SHORE
ARIAN CHURCH

B’NAI TORAH
gi Oak Street
ighland Park
Sholom Singer, Rabbi

with

p.m,
Adultult Ch oir rehearsal.
THURSDAY, Aprli 6
8 p.m.
ALCW
board
meeting
at
home of Mrs. Fred E. Drechsel, 640
ron Ct,

11,

8, 9:30,

Service

at

JOSEPH THE WORKER
CATHOLIC CHURCH

Sunday
Holy

am.
each

Easter

ion.
9 a.m.
Festive Family Worship Service.
There will be no Church school classes—
children will worship with parents.
, 10:45 a.m. Festive Family Worship service.
No Church school classes on Easter
Sunday—children will worship with parents.
Bus transportation is provided for this serv.
ice only; please contact the church office
for schedule.
MONDAY,
April 3
9 p.m.
Church bowling league.
TUESDAY, April 4
7:30 p.m. Boy Scout Troop 150.

8

Sunday
service, 10:15
munion, first Sunday of
y School, 9 a.m.

CONGREGATIONAL
CHURCH

Luther League, in fello

THE
HIGHLAND
PARK
_ PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
ID 2-1695
Dr. William Atkinson Young
Rev. J. A. Miller
Ministers

:

KINGDOM
EVANGELICAL
Woodland Park Schoo)
Stephen G. Bodony, Pastor
Preaching
the Gospel of the Kingdom
SUNDAY
10 a.m. Sunday School.
7 p.m. Evening Service.

DEERFIELD

Eugene

Rey.

Holy

Communion

will be celebrat-

ed.
The
church
choir
will
sing
“King of Kings” by Caleb Simper.
The Junior choir will sing, ‘This
Joyful Easter Tide” by Healy Willan.
The church organist is Mrs. Wilfred Johnson. The organist for the
children’s Good Friday worship will
be Mrs. Richard Eckert. Director
of the church choir is Mrs. Lisle
Hawley and the director of the junior choir is Mrs. Marvin Lawrentz,
all of Highland Park.
home of Mrs. Daniel Starck, 1320
Meadow Ln.
The hostesses for the evening are
Mrs. Harry Ludlow and Mrs. Walter Ryden.
The lesson for the evening titled
“You
are
an
Important
Person”
will be presented by Mrs. James

Berning
son.

and

Next

Mrs.

Harold

Hender-

year’s

budget

will

presented

to the

proval

the

by

members

budget

be

for ap-

committee.

Holy Cross Club
To Meet Tuesday
Altar and Rosary society of Holy
Cross church will hold its meeting

Tuesday,

April

4

at

8:30

p.m.

in

the parish hall.

A

business

meeting

lowed

by Marsh

Girl’s

choral

and

will
Mac

be

fol-

Lennon’s

group,

The

Mellow-

the

group

is Mrs.

Dears.

President
Edward

of

Moroney,

1039

Oakley.

Re-

freshments will be served following
the

meeting

and

entertainment.

Discuss Church
Constitution On

Tuesday Night
A joint meeting of the steering
and constitution committees of the

Deerfield

Congregational

church

will take place Tuesday, April 4, in
the parsonage at 26 Forestway Dr.
Beginning at 8 p.m., this will be

an open meeting.
the church have

All members
been urged

of
to

attend.
Rev.

Queen

Assists

The purpose of the meeting is to
present and discuss the proposed
church constitution, which, in turn,
will later be submitted to the total

congregation for
The Rev. John
sociate

ois

approval.
S. Queen,

superintendent

Conference

of

an as-

of the

Illin-

Congregational

churches
will participate
in the
meeting in an advisory capacity.
The
uniqueness
of each
local
Congregational church is its autonomy: each church decides its own
policies,
owns
its own
property,
and governs its own affairs.

Sunrise Service Begins
Easter Celebration
A sunrise service at 6 a.m, will
begin
the
Easter
celebration
at
Washburn
Congregational church,
Half Day, according to the Rev.
Lewis Wakeland, pastor.
The chancel cross, veiled at Good
Friday services, will be unveiled
at the beginning of the service. A
breakfast will follow the service.

Identical services of worship will
be

held
“Who

Rev.

at 9:30 a.m. and 11 a.m.
or What
Lives?” is the

Wakeland’s

Children

have

sermon
been

topic.
invited

to

worship with their parents and a
special program will be presented
during

the sermon

time for kinder-

garten and primary children.

Mail Invitations
For Holy Cross
Spring Luncheon
Mrs.

the

Carl

invitation

Alonzi,

chairman

committee,

has

of

an-

nounced that invitations have been
mailed for the Holy Cross Mothers

club spring luncheon, which will be
held April 15 at LePavillon Restaurant.
An
afternoon
of fun,
fashion,
and furs has been planned by Mrs.
Bernard O’Connell, general chairman of the affair, and Mrs. John
Washburne, co-chairman.
Mrs.
John
Streit,
who
is in
charge
of
reservations,
requests
that
reservations
be
made
by
April 7.

Thursday, March 30,

{

�B’nai Torah Women
Plan Open Meeting

“Holy Week Is Observed Here
In Ancient Solemn Rites

Walter

Ln.,

Christ’s suffering and death upon the cross will be marked
with solemn services of Holy Communion, meditation, sacred
liturgy and choral music today and tomorrow as Christian

churches observe Maundy Thursday and Good Friday with
rites that had their beginnings in the early days of Christianity.
Bethany

Methodist

THURSDAY — 8 p.m., Maundy
Thursday service with Holy Communion.
FRIDAY — 1 to 3 p.m., Sanctuary open for those who would
like to receive Communion.
“The

choir

Chancel

p.m.,

8

Last

Seven

cantata,

of Christ”

Words

by Dubois,

Dr.

Kenneth

Hildebrand,

pastor of Chicago’s Central church,
speaker,
Sponsored
by
Woman’s
Association.
FRIDAY — 8 p.m., Sacrament of
the
Lord’s
Supper,
Communion
meditation
by
Dr.
William
A.
Young, minister.
Immaculate Conception
Catholic Church

THURSDAY — 4 p.m., Solemn
High Mass followed at 5:45 p.m. by
procession to the Altar of Reposition. The Rev. Donald Runkle, celebrant.
FRIDAY — 3 p.m., Solemn Liturgy of Good Friday, the Rt. Rev.
Msgr. James V. Murphy officiating.

Stationsof the Cross,

7:45 p.m.

North

Shore Methodist
Glencoe
THURSDAY
—
8 p.m., Sacrament of Holy Communion. Medita-

tion by Dr.

G.

Clifton

Ervin,

pas-

Is It I?”

tor, “Lord,

Redeemer Lutheran
THURSDAY — 8 p.m., Formula}

—
5:30 p.m.,
Good Friday.

Trinity
a.m.,

6

p.m.,

instead

of read.

Sermon

topic,

“In

the Upper Room,” the Rev. Robert
A. Wendelin, pastor.
Worship
commemorates
the
Lord’s Supper on the first Maundy
Thursday
in the upper
room
in
Jerusalem. Confirmands to receive
Holy
Communion
for first time.
Church choir to sing.

FRIDAY — 10 a.m., Good Friday
Children’s service; all children invited. Miss Sharon Tjaden, Lake
Bluff, to give visual presentation.
8 p.m., Tenebrae
service.
Sermon, “Beneath the Cross.” Choir
will sing ““When I Survey the Wondrous Cross,” Lorenz.
St. James Catholic Church

THURSDAY

— 5:30 p.m. Solemn

High Mass, followed by procession
to Altar of Reposition. 7:30 p.m.,
Stations and Veneration of Cross.

—

7:15

Holy

will

9:30

Eucharist,

lead

Jr.,

the

1185

meeting
Temple

discussion,

that

B’nai

Torah

Sisterhood

is

For the Physician

Beech
eveopen

“life

in

surbia.”

She

vites the public to share the evening.
Gips, a graduate of Yale Univer-

ter’s executive board of the Ameriof

Christ,

Deerfield

THURSDAY
Thursday
munion.

—

8 p.m.,

service,

Maundy

Holy

Com-

Zion Lutheran Church, Deerfield
THURSDAY — 8
pm.,
Holy
Communion. Bus service provided
for

Highland Parkers.
FRIDAY — 10 a.m.,

Good

Friday

8 p.m., Meditations

Last

Children’s

service.
on The

Seven

Words.

62 Confirmands

is

Harvard

a member

of the

Chicago

for
the

of the

Fund

Also,

Penelope
Janet
Terry

Jules

3-5400

ritual

Diane

Furth,

REDEEMER

with

LUTHERAN

T regain

CHURCH

Maundy

Fos2

8:00

my health?

Holy Communion

Thursday,

celebrated,

p.m.

Good Friday Children’s worship,
10:00 a.m.

SCIENCE

Surprise
THIS

Awaits

BEAUTIFUL
Very

Green

Bay

Rd.

You

&amp;

GARDEN

Reasonable

18th

Have

SPRIPTURES

Easter breakfast, 7-8:30 a.m.
Festival worship and
Holy Communion,

10:15 a.m.

charge at any Christian Science Reading Room. The
book can be purchased in red,
green, or blue binding at $3
and will be sent postpaid on
receipt of check or money
order.

and Joy

Flowers

Thursday,

March

30,

1961

’TIL

READING

MRS.

454 Green

for Every

EDNA

EARLY—ID

Bay Road, Highwood

i
=
_
—4
— a

ROOM

Occasion

4

Reg. U.S. Pat. Off.
Marca Registrada

2-4534

1773

We

Deliver

Second

Highland

Telephone

ae

Street

Park

ID 2-0514

ee

“The Service Bank Of Highland Park”

WEEK

EVENINGS

GREAT BOOK
CAN HEAL YOU

ELENA FLOWER SHOP

FULL SERVICE BANKING
PLUS. FRIDAY

3

Science and Health free of

Howard

6-6500

:

Yes, you can be healed—no”
matter how serious the condi- |
tion or how long it has continued—ifyou will prayerfully —
seek the truth contained in
this great book, Science and —
Health with Key to the Scrip- _
tures by Mary Baker Eddy.
You may read or borrow

Wilson,

Prices
DE

A

TRUTH

it

Visited

Phone

A

THE

it

MARY,BAKEREDDY

Sunday School, 9:00 a.m.

CEMETERY

St.

6-DAYS

Not

4

| _@ || IN THIS

EASTER, The Feast of the
Resurrection of our Lord
Sunrise Matin, 6:00 a.m.

Zenko,

If You

ii|

a.

Good Friday evening worship,
8:00 p.m.

Northshore Garden of Memories
&amp;

stoff,

OW Can

Carol Schmidt, Bar-

Worcester, Herbert Young

their

reverence.

(The Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod)
1731 Deerfield Rd.
Highland Park, Ill.
The Rev. Robert A. Wendelin, pastor

Jeffrey

Wilson-Porteous,

and

EASTER «*

Pither, Katharyn

Elizabeth

L.

South Shore Chapel: 2100 East 75th Street, at Clyde Avenue

bara
Sheldon,
Ivy
Shuman
Jr.,
Dennis Skidmore, Donna Tribolet,
Thomas Vance, Timothy Vance.
Also
Mary
Jo Whitman,
John

Wiedenecht,

SERVICE

personally arrange and conduct the
entire funeral—a service of warmth
and beauty, observing customs and

Rainwater,
James
Ross
III, Douglas

Schellinkhout,

COMPANY

Complete facilities in your community
for prompt service . . . Lee J. —

Oggel.
Pontius,
Rogers,

R.Ph.

You are invited to

Lorimer,
Linda
Manahan,
John
Mauck, Barbara McCormick, Daniel

Nelson,

Newman,

dancing.

ert Kellner Jr., Karen Kellow.
Also, Sandra Kielhack, Theodore
Lillie,
Deborah
Long,
Charles
Sandra

SHORE

Call Midway

is
Raymond
Monterastelli,
ID
2-6586. Etz Lenzi ’s band will play

bender, Robert Gandy.
Also,
Charles
Goodman,
Leroy
Haas III, John Harris, Randall Helweg, Robert Henderson Jr., Susan
Herbst,
Kenneth
Hokinson,
Dale
Husenetter, Bruce Jacobsen, Rob-

McKitrick,

AND

Con-

dance for Saturday evening, April
8, at 8 o’clock in the Elks hall, 740
Laurel Ave.
Raymond
Sheahen
is chairman
of the dance. In charge of tickets

for

Mary Joyce

R.Ph.

NORTH

Raising

Immaculate

ALL PHONES
ID 2-9000

eer

Spring Dance Apr. 8

bach, William Eckmann III, Mark
Ellsworth, Judith
Eiker, Martha

Mark

J. Dray,

Artem

Funzral Directors to the
Jewish Community Since 1865

The list includes:
Bradley
Aten, Gregory
Bantin,
William Baum, Tom Becker, Richard Benassi, Barbara Bluhm, Jeffrey Boyden, Sara Cochran, John
Constable, Alice Crane
Also, Linda Danielson, Jan Dayton, Allan Dewey Jr., Frank Du-

Ferry,

M.

Fund-Raisers Plan
Volunteer

Rd.

DELIVERY

ception church is planning a Spring

Sixty-two young people were received
into
the
Highland
Park
Presbyterian church Palm Sunday

Sheridan

CY
A
M
R
A
H
ARTS PHighland
Park —
Secundum

FREE, PROMPT

chap-

Locally, he is a member of the
board of the Highland Park Civic
association
and vice-president
of
the Ravinia Civic association.

The

Received Sunday
At Presbyterian

Clara

PROFES

1895

School,

can Jewish Committee;
chairman
of the Community ‘study committee
of the AJC
and member
of the
board of Jewish Vocational Service,

committee

afternoon, with a reception
parents and friends following
ceremony.

Business

$ SIONAL

in-

the Rev. Ray Holder.
Church

Service

The topic, according to Mrs. Robert
Silverman,
Sisterhood
president, highlights the Jewish woman’s role as found in attitude sur-

on

a

Prescription

Reform

sponsoring.

sity and

United

and his Patient

“As

We
Live
Today,’
Tuesday
ning, April 4, at 8:30 for the

veys
and

Gips

FRIDAY — 12 to 3 p.m., Tre Ore
service, sermon, “The Crucifixion,”

Missae, order of Holy Communion | Erickson,
dating back to 1523 arranged by
Martin Luther. Hymns by Luther;
order of Holy Communion chanted

Solemn

Episcopal

THURSDAY

Trinity

First United Evangelical
THURSDAY — 8 p.m., Sermon,
“Peter’s Denial,” the Rev. Alfred
E. Anderson; Holy Communion.
FRIDAY — 8 p.m., Sermon, “He
Trusted in God.”
Highland Park Presbyterian
Church
THURSDAY — 10 a.m., Worship

service,

FRIDAY
Liturgy of

F.

8 P.M.

BANK? HIGHLAND
1771 Second St.

BANK—POST OFFICE BLDG.
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

PARK
IDlewood 2- nn

‘i

�Beth E! Sisterhood Conference
Approximately 300 women from
all over the Midwest attended the
annual Spring conference of the
Central branch of the National
Women’s
League
of the United

mandments
gently unto

Synagogues of America Mar. 21-22.
Honored as hostesses were members of North Suburban
Beth El
Sisterhood.

Auerbach,

Mrs.

David

White,

Hostesses

parliamentarian

Sisterhood

“Remember

Herman

Saul

pages

of

Mrs.

Lee

Winograd,

Mrs.

Bank,

Finkle

Jacobs

were

Abe
and

in

was
and

bet
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On the previous afternoon and
evening,
special
sessions
at the
Villa Moderne Motel were followed
by a reception at which Rabbi Lipis
gave a spiritual message and Cantor
Jordan
Cohen
sang,
accompanied by Arnold Miller.

and fulfill all My com-

The news is getting around

El

Weisel,

Mrs.

charge

and

UIET-as onlycan

Sons

Beth

Bernard

Mrs.

Irving

decorations

and _ speaker-con-

the
conference
and Inspiration,”

and

were

dili-

Mrs. Lawrence
Jacobs,
Mrs. Ted
Sharf, Mrs. Adolph Sperling, Mrs.
Jennie Marder, Mrs. Morton Taxy,
Mrs. Cyrus Littenberg, Mrs. Hans
Weiniger,
Mrs.
Joseph
Benson,
Mrs. Fred Beloff, Mrs. Sam Beer,
Mrs.
Saul Kahn,
Mrs.
Ben
Fox,
Mrs. Philip L. Lipis, Mrs. Lloyd
Cohen and Mrs. Louis Katzoff. Mrs.

president, presided at the plenary
session Mar. 22, after which workshops
for
officers
and
activity
chairmen were held. At the luncheon in the temple’s community hall,
addresses
were
made
by
Mrs.
Simon
Chinn,
president
of
the
Central
branch;
Mrs.
Lawrence
Kahme, Spring conference, Central
branch chairman; and Mrs. Henry
Gichner, National Women’s League
sultant.
Theme
of
“Information

and teach them
thy children.”

Sisterhood
Mrs.

Hostess

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Page

34

Thursday,

March

30,

1961

�&amp;
Fo:oi
By

Es

High School Places
Sixth in Track
Relays at Evanston
Highland
Park’s
track
team
placed sixth in a field of 12 teams
a week

ago in the Evanston

Relays

as New Trier’s thinclads won with
first place honors.
Complete scores for the meet:
New Trier 62 1/7, Morton 40 1/7,
Evanston 38, Maine West 32, Maine
East 31 1/2, Highland Park 16 2/7,
Waukegan 13 1/7, Proviso East 13,
Glenbrook
10, Prospect 8 27/42,
Niles
3 and
Arlington
Heights
2 i/%.
Placing for the Parkers were:
the two mile relay of Tom Huxley,
Chuck Redman, Joel Lewitz and
Jim Weinert, second, 8:21.3; Weinert, second, mile run, 4:38.7; Ron
Joseph, second, broad jump, 21’
%”
(new school record);
Steve
Simons and John Pettingell, tie for

fifth, 5°6”, high jump.
On

Tuesday

took

on

the

the

Giant

Morton

tracksters

Mustangs

Morton
West
and
tomorrow
Thinelads go to Oak Park for
Oak Park Relays,

at
the
the

Berkman Takes Post
With Chicago

Freshman

Agency

Allan

Mare
J. Berkman,
328 Ridge
Road, former vice-president of the
Vega International Travel Service
and since 1951 the mid-west director of the American Friends of
the Hebrew University, has accepted an executive position with the
Accredited Travel Service, Chicago. He will specialize in arranging
European and Middle East Travel.
Berkman is a vice-president of the
West Highland Park B’nai B'rith
Lodge.
In 1956 he was the tour leader
for a group of prominent business
leaders who visited Europe and
Israel and in 1959 he led a party
of Highland Parkers to Russia,
Europe and the Holy Land.

Window
A
was

Smashed

stone
found

basement

214x3%
on

floor,

inches

Jennie

under

in

size

Bergsma’s

a_

ship

of Mr.

and

Mrs.

Phi

Eta

Sigma,

national

Smith,

president

of

the north shore’s smallest discount house!
Moley

TV

e

670 Central

Ave.,

H.P.

©

ID 2-2042

the

University. Allan was graduated
from, Highland Park High School
last June.

Tufts

Dean’s

Robert
ty

Line

List

Jay Baumann,
Road,

has

50th Year of Successful Teaching
SECRETARIAL, STENOGRAPHIC,
TYPING, ACCOUNTING, AND
BRUSH-UP COURSES.
GREGG AND

621 Coun-

been

named

to

EVANSTON
BUSINESS COLLEGE

the Dean’s List at the College of
Liberal Arts in Tufts University.
A senior Chemistry-Biology major,
he has been listed on the Dean’s
List all of his semesters at Tufts.
He is the son of Mr.
and
Mrs.
Stephen S. Baumann.

$6.50
a.m.,

GAS

in

Herbert

told.

Monday

son

freshman honor society at Willamette University, Salem, Ore. Election to the society is based upon
scholastic achievement, according
to a letter to the Frosts from G.

She heard a loud noise there at 1:30

window

Frost,

Orcutt W. Frost, 1975 Elmwood
Dr., has been elected to member-

morning.

broken

Honors

Highland

DRIES

Park

police

were

1718 Sherman

Ave.

UN 4-3004

Wm.

H.

Callow,

Prin.

CLOTHES...

ANNUAL TOWN MEETING
AND ELECTION
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
to the
legal voters,
residents
of the
Town
of
Deerfieldin the County of Lake and State
of Illinois,
that
the
ANNUAL
TOWN
MEETING
AND
ELECTION
OF
OFFICERS
of said Town
will take place on
Tuesday, April Fourth, A.D.
1961, being

the first Tuesday

of said month.

The polls will open at 6 o’clock a.m., and
will close at 6 o’clock p.m. on said day in
the place or places designated as follows:
Precinct
Precinct
Precinct

Precinct
Precinct
Precinct

Precinct
Precinct

»

Precinct
Precinct

Precinct
Precinct
Precinct
Precinct
Precinct

Precinct

Precinct
Precinct
Precinct
Precinct
Precinct

Precinct

Precinct
Precinct
Precinct

1—South Park Field House, South
Park—Lake
Forest,
Ill.
2—Highwood
Community
Center,
=
Green Bay Rd., Highwood
3—Somenzi
&amp; Pottker Furniture
Co., 334 Green Bay Rd., Highwood, Ill.
4—Oak Terrace School, 240 Prairie Ave., Highwood, Ill.
5—Zengeler
Cleaners, 2020 First
St., Highland Park, Ill.
6—Highland
Park
High
School
Auditorium,
St.
Johns’
Entrance, Highland Park, Ill.

7 — Administration

Building

Dis-

trict No. 113, 1040 Park Ave.
West, Highland Park, Ill.
8—American
Legion
Post,
1957
——
Rd., Highland Park,

9—Lincoln
School,
711
Lincoln
Ave.,
Highland
Park,
II.
10—Trinity
Episc.
Church,
425
oe
Ave.,
Highland
Park,
11—Sunset Valley Golf Club Field
House, 1390 Sunset Rd., Highland Park, Ill.
12—Villa St. Cyril Garage, 1111 St.
Johns Ave., Highland Park, IIl.
13—Edgewood School, 929 Edgewood Rd., Highland Park, II.
14—Ravinia School,
763
Dean
Ave., Highland Park, Ill.
15—North
Shore
Sanitary
Dist.
Disposal
Plant, West
Clavey
Rd., Highland Park, IIl.
16—Ravinia School Field House,
Roger Williams Ave., Highland
Park, Ill.
17—Braeside
School,
150 Pierce
Rd., Highland Park, Ill.
18—Cross Roads Barber Shop, 197
Skokie Valley Road, Highland
Park, Il.
19—City Garage,
1565 McCraren
Rd.,
Highland
Park,
II.
20—Ravinia Fire Station, 692 Burton Ave., Highland Park, IIl.
21—American Legion Home, Highwood Ave., Everts Pl., Highwood, Ill.
22—Highland Park Recreation Center, 1850 Green Bay Rd., Highland Park, Ill.
23—West Ridge School, 636 Ridge
Rd., Highland Park, Ill.
24—Wayne Thomas School, Summit and North Ave., Highland
Park, Iil.
25—North
Woods
Junior
High
School, Marl Oak Drive and
North Ave., Highland Park, Ill.

The Officers to be elected are:
ONE ASSISTANT
SUPERVISOR
ONE ASSESSOR
ONE TOWN
CLERK
THREE TOWN AUDITORS
The Town Meeting for the transaction of
miscellaneous business of said Town will be
held at the hour of 2 o’clock P.M. on said
day at Supervisor’s office, 508 Central Ave.,
Highland Park, Illinois, and a Moderator
having been elected, will proceed to hear
and consider reports of officers, to appropriate money to defray the mecessary expenses of the Town
and decide on such
measures
aS may,
in pursuance
of law.
come before the meeting.
Given under my hand at Highland Park,
Illinois, this 6th day of March, A.D. 1961.
ALBERT LARSON, Town Clerk
3/30/61—44

Thursday,
aan

March

30, 1961

i atin
ie

Shion

fA ,

resh a&gt; Spr NStime :
Clothes have the “smell of Springtime”
when they're dried by Gas! They come
out so fresh, so soft, so flutty. Many
require no ironing. And because Gas
dries so fast, it's better for drying
woolens—especially blankets. And only a
Gas dryer is so economical . . . dries
clothes for less than two cents a load!
(A family of four saves at least $25.00 a
year over the cost of operating a

non-flame

dryer.)

VISIT:

Company
OR YOUR

GAS

APPLIANCE

DEALER

Page 35

�librarian

at HighPolitical

was

discussed

Lill, head of
department.

the

by

girls

National

as

Advertisement)

LAWYERS’
COMMITTEE FOR
ROBERT L. TARREL

Justice

of

the

DCE

Peace?

abilities. We

believe

his 18 successful

:

Burman,
Carman,

fully knowledgeable
of evidence.

Because

the type of man who

Gross, Lionel G.
Hattis, Russell E.
Israelstam, Alfred
Kahan, Donald A.
Kahn, Nat M.
Kahn, Richard G.

is

respects the

rights of defendants.
not least, he is an

advocate

of judicial reform.

studies

major entered
at the age of
his secondary

education in England. His parents,
Mr. and Mrs. William C. Bills, recently moved to Sudbury, Ontario,
Canada,

from

England.

His

aunt,

Mrs. Harry W. Christopherson is a
former

Highland

Park

resident.

Karon, Sheldon
Kelm, George
Kleinman, Bernard
Koenig, Bernard
Levenfeld, Milton A.
Levy, Richard

ardent

¥—numbness in hands or feet
&gt;—sacro-iliac pains
»—sciatic nerve pains

Fred

Mantynband,

$—shoulder pains
&gt;—-slipped disc
&gt;—spinal curvature
+s — stiff or wry neck
&gt;— stomach trouble
:
» When physical distress develops‘
§ following back or neck injuries,¢
yback strains or bad falls, contact4

Ralph A.

Miller, Sheldon P.
Norton, Edward H.

Novit, Sidney
Pierce, Daniel M.
Pierce, Hyman A.

Rippey, Charles P.
Ross, Richard J.
Silverman, Martin L.
Slater, Howard R.
Solomon, Jack A., Jr.
Stern, Asher

pyour Chiropractor without ‘delay.

pDR.

Walker, Daniel
Wolk, Maurice
Yaffe, Earl D.

FREDRICK

A,

MOKRASCH,

Chiropractor

#

&gt;

ROBERT L. TARREL

i

Waukegan Avenue, Highwood

Za 0125 cand wi 5-3330 od
OP Ply SpSee OR

Mn Lin Mn Ms Mn Ms

The
Neccnt-Elua Cir
BY AVENDS SEWING MACHINE CO.

The only candidate for Justice of the Peace
recommended by the Deerfield Township Voters’ Association

|

HONEST.

J HERBERT'S:
\

VOTE DEMOCRATIC

USED &amp; ABUSED CAR!

APRIL 4th FOR A VOICE IN YOUR TOWNSHIP GOVERNMENT!

Adolph Bertucci, candidate for the office of constable, is a lifelong resident
of this area, and his qualifications

are well known.

Kind,

genial,

“Bert” has—for 4 years—filled this difficult office with success.
up for re-election.
with

a man

he is

We think this office should be filled for another 4 years

of “Bert”

Vote for
ADOLPH
For Constable

courteous,
Now

Bertucci’s

“A monologue is a conversation
between a used car salesman and
@ prospect,” says Hannah.
CALL ID 2-5200 NOW
A FREE DEMONSTRATION
IN YOUR HOME,
AT YOUR CONVENIENCE!

FOR

caliber.

We

BERTUCCI

of the Fifth Judicial

District

Repair

All

Makes

ARENDS SewinG
MACHINE

servicer NECCHI

Co.

Service py

PLEIN

BM sede

SEWING ins LE

iDlewood
2-5200
WECCHI

8% CENTRAL
(4 p00kS East of GreenPay W\GHLAND PARK
a

(Paid

Page

36

Political

Advertisement)

&gt;

Workmen’s Compensation and
Sureseees Insurance cases accepted. §

Synchef, Barry M.

Vote for

¢

&gt;—nervous tension

Mandel, Sidney W.
Mandell,

eee

»Do you have?
»—backaches
»—bad posture
&gt;—grating sounds in neck
y—headaches
»—high blood pressure

Karasik, Sidney

Because,

the

D.

Alan, a chemistry

L.

Frye, Newton P. Jr.
Goldgehn, Seymour R.

and

of the rules
he

Marshall
Fred

Chesler, Morton
Coff, Morris J.
Cohn, Peter
Cook, Robert B.
Frankel, James R.
Frost, Jack P.

this position. Because we know that he is skilled
procedure

carrying

to a Ph.

ee

Charone, Sheldon M.

years

in the practice of law well qualify him for
in courtroom

year,

fees

renewable

Belofsky, Sheldon

Because, as fellow lawyers, we are familiar
with Bob’s

tuition,
is

|

Tarrel

Award.

each

through

covers

expenses,

Lake Forest College
16, after completing

on the right
L.

Quality

which

living

VVC

Robert

education

Miss Eve
education

and

CVC

Smith,

(Paid

do the men

cal

Navy.

grant,

VC

James

U.S.

ris and Robert B. Nathan, all of
Highland Park,
These men also received the 1961

i

Cappis,

Robert A. Gatzert, Stanley L. Har-

on personnel work
teaching girl physi-

i

F.

HPHS, talked
and guidance;

thru March 22.
those
invited
included

be

J-R JEWELERS

March 19
Among

VCCCOC}

Sergeant R. Miller and Sergeant S.
Harwood; and Chief Petty Officer

257 WAUKEGAN AVE.
Highwood
ID 2-2063

endorse

the
and

held at Miami Beach, Florida from

VCC

Army; from
R.
Miller

Mrs. Marjorie Swanson, Director of
Nurses at Highland Park Hospital.
J. O’Neal, Director of Guidance,

A Lake Forest College senior,
Alan M. Bills, has been awarded a
$2,200 grant to do graduate research at The Institute of Paper
Chemistry,
Appleton,
Wis,
The

Dp

Tatman.
Sergeant

by

tt

class J.
USMC,

Sergeant L.
Sergeant Ist

explained

VC

military fields were
Poston of the USAF;

pital; and nursing was

in

“Leading
Producers
Meeting”
of
the Equitable Life Assurance Society of the U. S. The meeting was

Hos-

CVC

guidance

Park

Receives Grant for
Graduate Work

VT

gave

talked

CVT

Wednesday,

chief of staff, Highland

March 22.
Those
who

Parts for All
ELECTRIC SHAVERS

School,

CCC

held

High

tp

was

Park

about his field; a talk on medicine
was given by Dr. George Wendel,

i

School

land

of career
Park High

TvVvVv—VvVvv—VvVvVvVvVvVvVveVvVVTVeVVTVeVVT

in a series
at Highland

i

third

LF College Student |

be

The

conferences

Seven members of the M. A.
Feuer Agency, including the Manaier, were invited to attend the

_»

GRANDFATHER
CLOCK REPAIRS

Why

Attend Meeting

Career Conferences Continued at H.S.

ee

Thursday, March 30, 1961

�EBs.
ge

Liat
ARUP

:

+z

Bogen

:

hs

ae.
ier

Se

FSFm4

Oe, pitas

eer

at Sai

| Highwood Hosts Little Guys _
- International Tournamentional
will play host to the 6th Internat

Highwood

games will be played in the Oak Terrace and Township
school gyms.
Teams

Mexico

from

High

Donald

C.

Skrinar,

currently
roster of

of

International

winding up
entries that

is

Guys,

Little

work on the
will be seen

in games here, Tournament chairman Bruno Bertucci and his committees are working on details for
feeding and housing of the youngsters, coaches and team followers
that will accompany
the teams

Dr. Fredrick A. Mokrasch, Highwood
chiropractor,
recently
attended a research seminar at the
Hilton Hotel, Fort Worth, Texas
conducted by the Parker Chiropractic
Research
Foundation,
organization
collecting
and _

an
re-

searching information for the advancement of the science of chiropractic.

Dr.

Mokrasch

|
Must RE-ELECT
HARRY EARHART|

oe

and Puerto Rico will take | Atton de Convention

part in the event. Indianapolis,
Ind., 1960 winner will be back to
defend the title it won last spring.
Commissioner

cited

DEERFIELD TOWNSHIP ASSESSOR

the

service to humanity of his profession and urges that any dedicated
here.
and ambitious young man or Woman wishing to learn more of the
Housed in Ft. Sheridan
opportunities in the field consult
Current plans are to house and with him as he will be glad to
feed the players. and coaches at help them get started toward a
nearby Fort Sheridan. The visiting rewarding humanitarian career.
Little
tunity

(A forthright statement by friends and neighbors of
Harry Earhart, candidate for Deerfield Township
Assessor on the Citizens’ Township Ticket)

Guys will have an opporto sleep in army barracks

and eat their meals
mess halls.
Teams

will

in the

arrive

in

army’s

Highwood

on Wednesday afternoon, April 5,
and all are expeeted to be present
at the welcoming

banquet

that will

be held in the Community Center
that evening. Games are scheduled
to start Thursday afternoon at Oak
Terrace.

All

scheduled

evening

games

in the high school

are

gym.

With the arrival of the Puerto
Rico and Mexico youngsters, local
fans
can
use
the
Spanish
they
learned in school. All of the visitors from
those
two
places
are
Spanish-speaking
guests.
A full schedule of tournament
teams is expected to be announced
early next week, along with pairings of first round games.

¢

a

a

States,

United

the

Be

hi

wn

;

ety

D

on April 6, 7 and 8. Tournament

Basketball tournament

Guys

Little

a

T

%

Attends

Conference

Herbert
Geist,
C.L.U.,
general
agent in Chicago and Mrs. Geist
attended the annual conference of

the General

Agents

Association

of

the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co. at the Santa Barbara
Biltmore in Santa Barbara, Calif.,
March 20 through 22.
Mr. and Mrs. Geist live at 1515
Cloverdale Ave,

Crash

on Walnut

Katherine McHale
cited
Rd. was
dan

of 819 Sheriby Highland

Park police for an improper start
after a collision with Yolanda Rossi, 869 St. Johns Ave., on
St. last Sunday morning.

Walnut

Harry Earhart has
ship as Assessor for 26
and fairness to every
servant is available to

served the community of Deerfield Townyears. His record has been one of honesty
taxpayer. The record of such a public
everyone.

We, the voters listed below, long-time residents of Deerfield
Township, give it as our considered opinion:
DEERFIELD TOWNSHIP MUST KEEP THIS MAN IN OFFICE.
HE HAS PERQUANTITY.
HE IS A PROVEN, KNOWN
FEAR OR FAVOR FOR
HIS DUTIES WITHOUT
FORMED
MORE THAN A QUARTER OF A CENTURY. WHY TAKE A

We,

CANNOT

YOU

CHANCE?

the following,

LOSE.

as exponents of non-partisan

’

Republicans,
you

urge

government,

local

on APRIL

EARHART

HARRY

FOR

VOTE

and

Democrats

both

to

4th as

ASSESSOR for our DEERFIELD TOWNSHIP
designed

for you

Individually prepared
;

)

laundry.

Done

just

the way you ask us to
:

do it. Try us and see.

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Herman F. Anspach
Mr. &amp; Mrs. James Antonetti
Mr.

&amp; Mrs. A.

Mr.

G. Ballenger

Mr.

Bertucci

Bruno

&amp; Mrs.

Mr.

B. Chatz

Robert

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Arthur F. Dickelman
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Harry E. Eichler
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Holland E. Engle
Mr.
Mr.

&amp; Mrs. Russell L. Engber
&amp; Mrs. Ira Frank, Jr.

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Lester E. Frankenstein

‘
°

Mr.

&amp; Mrs.

Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.

&amp;
&amp;
&amp;
&amp;

Mr.

&amp; Mrs.

Mrs.
Mrs.
Mrs.
Mrs.

Mr. &amp; Mrs.

Harold M. Florsheim
Byron Getzoff
Frederick J. Halton
David Hackman

Mr.

&amp; Mrs.

Wm.

Husenetter

Phone Today . . . ID 2-4551 or Ext. 1023 |
2226 Green Bay Rd., H.P.— AMPLE FREE PARKING
Thursday, March 30, 1961
Po

ae
iooMNee

¥

ati

Mr.

KEEP

John

Mrs.
Mrs.
Mrs.
Mrs.

Robin

A. Padorr

Ralph E. Pottker
Philip E. Ringer
Samuel R. Rosenthal
Wm. E. Rothfelder
Hugo

Mr.

&amp; Mrs.

Raymond

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Stephen

r
:

Jr.

Schneider,

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Gunter W. Schwandt

T. Jones

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Donald
Serving the North Shore Over 60 Years

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Robert Olsen
&amp; Mrs.

:
:

J. Sheahen

M. Sickle

a

;

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Wayne Thomas

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Edwin P. Keim

“4

Dr. &amp; Mrs. C. V. Nichols
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Frank Nustra

&amp;
&amp;
&amp;
&amp;

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Spencer Keare

&amp; Mrs.

&amp; Mrs.

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Arnold Mayer
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Ellsworth J. Mills, Jr.
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Elmore M. Murphy

Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Laurence S. Jones

9

S. Livingston
W. Mandel

Sydney

Mr.

Dorsey

Lausche
Liebenson

Harold

&amp; Mrs.

A. Friedlich

Herbert

Laegeler

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Frederick

Mrs. Robert Buhai
Mr.

&amp; Mrs. Julius

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Howard

Mr. &amp; Mrs. J. Fred Behn
Mr. &amp; Mrs.

M. Knox

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Edward
Mrs. Otto Kralik

|

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Frank A. Watt

H. Klein

Mr.

H. Kleine

&amp; Mrs.

Allan

1. Wolff,

; d

Jr.

|
PARTISAN

POLITICS

OUT

OF

LOCAL

(Paid Political Advertisement)

GOVERNMENT

Tl

|

a )

Page 37

oA

�t

Some
Hunter’s

Memonual

* Convenient to North Shore
and Downtown Chicago

¢ Parking adjacent to building

consultation

with

SUBURBAN

5206

North

arrangements

North

Shore

may

be

made

NUMBER—V_Ernon

or

1-4740

LOngbeach

in

Roberta

a window
at
Station,
1454

Monday

night
in,

was

last
High-

They found the pane broken just
above the latch, and a screwdriver
kept in the latch outside on the
ground.
Ther
were
muddy
footprints on a tire under the window,
obliterated by the rain, but no sign
of actual entry.

Chicago

(Just

A

of

Foster)

t

DRIVE CAREFULLY — THE LIFE YOU SAVE
MAY BE YOUR OWN

360

of

158

co-eds

Wisconsin

Sherdian,
of the

Uni-

who

were

Sigma

Epsilon

Sigma

is a national

honorary
sorority
for
freshmen
women at the University, and AWS
is the Associated Women Students

Year

Fertilizer
north

Pollack,

who attained a scholastic average
of 3.0 or better during their first
semester in the University are annually honored at the luncheon for
their high scholarship. A scholastic
average of 4.0 would mean a perfect average in University studies.

THRIVE
Once

Honor

honored recently for their high
scholarship at the annual Sigma
Epsilon Sigma-AWS Honors luncheon held on the University campus.
All freshmen
women
students

your

5-2221

among

versity

representative.

PHONE

Broadway,

for

small or large attendance

and

our

Rd.,

Scholastic

week in an effort to get
land Park police report.

¢ Perfect accommodations

home

one broke
Texaco

Deerfield

Chapels

* Most Complete Funeral Home
in Metropolitan Area

own

a

Burglar Fails

ee

* Funeral

-

organization which
matters pertaining
undergraduate

CRAFTWOOD

regulates
exclusively

women

on

the

all
to
UW

campus.

LUMBER COMPANY
See Page H43-D-59

The Want-Ad section is filled with
interesting facts and golden opportunities.

Don’t

miss

_ Theres plenty of hot water with a
Sane
|
saist

it!

George Barr, 200 Hazel Ave.,
is the new chairman of the Med-

ical Research Institute Council of
Michael Reese Hospital. He will
serve

for

a

two-year

term

as

head of the laymen’s group
which promotes scientific studies
at the Chicago hospital.
Other

John

officers elected

F. Benjamin,

Ave., and

Edward

Harry

1115

Lincoln

Mrs.

Herbert

Levy,

members

Ln.,

are

288

will serve as

man,
thorne

Linden

Marder,

N. Deere Park, who

vice-chairmen.

include

1100
E.

New-

Ave.,

and

1590

Haw-

newly-elected

of the executive

com-

mittee.
ADJUDICATION AND
NOTICE

CLAIM

DAY

25342
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
tto ail
persons
that
the first. Monday
of May,

1961,

is the claim

date

in the estate

of

MARY
THERRIEN,
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 9 A.M.
ELMER
THERRIEN,
Executor
Behanna &amp; Engber, Attorneys
1935 Sheridan Road
Highland Park, Iil.
IDlewood 2-4304

3/23-30

:

4/6/61—71

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Twin heating units in a Fast Electric Water Heater heat water so
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One electric unit heats water at
the bottom of the tank, the other
at the top. Thus, New Fast Electrics supply 150° water faster than
any other kind.
INSTALLS

ANYWHERE

New

Fast

Electric Water Heaters go anywhere you want —under the kitchen

SAFE-X-SCAPE
‘THE NEW ALL ALUMINUM
DISAPPEARING

FIRE ESCAPE

counter, in a closet or down in the
basement. Electrics are not tied to

for All Types of Homes

a chimney by a flue. They require
no long pipe runs or vents. There is
no pilot to light, no flames or fuel

@ Supports over 1500 Ibs,
@ Operates in any weather
@ Maintenance free
@ Can only be operated
from window level

to worry about.

Fast Electric Water Heaters last
longer than any other kind. You can
expect service of 15 years or more
from any electric water heater you
buy. For complete facts on the
special low rate on electric water
heating call our nearest office.

PRICED LOW FOR
EVERY FAMILY’S
BUDGET
L&amp;K ALUMINUM

O Public Service Company

PRODUCTS

Carl Konsler—ID 2-0252
Richard Lattanzi—ID 2-1316

@Commonwealth Edison Company
Page

38

Thursday,

March

30, 1961

�gees

y

ef i

agate

EXTRA

S&amp;H

With

A $10.00

Or

FOR

COUPON

THIS VALUABLE

REDEEM

100

3

BACK!

MONEY

TO PLEASE OR YOUR

GUARANTEED

Ne,

Netonal

thot

best

aant

Mast

STAMPS
Purchase

More

Excluding The Purchase Of Beer, Wine, Liquor &amp; Cigarettes
Limit One Coupon Per Customer
— Coupon Expires Apr. |

FULLY
COOKED

REDEEM THIS VALUABLE COUPCN FOR
25 EXTRA S&amp;H STAMPS

Fully

Cocked

imi
Limit

:

WHOLE!4 to 18-Ib.

Of One

I-Lb. Or 2-Lb. Can

COFFEE

— Coupon
Coupon
Coupon n Per Per Ci Customer
ap

One

Z

Purchase

NATCO

pg

The

C7,

With

Expires
Expi

Ap re

3iN)

ty

c

oizes

HAM

oe

Lb,

SS

- BUTT

Sit

PORTION
Centers

Removed

7

to

9

Beltsville

No

Centers

With

yp Rey.
Price
Lb. 4%¢

aa,

Avg.

For Frying

Removed

7

to

9

Ib.

ARMOUR

Lb.

4 to 8-Ib. Sizes

.

PE ye?

FIO0IPD

STAR

— Ham-What-Am

HAM . .

sib.

.

Purchase

BAKED
Coupon

Of

One

I4-or.

Jar

HAM

SUGAR

And

GLAZE

Per Customer
— Coupon

SPICE

Expires

Apr.

{|

Avg.

25 EXTRA

Or Bakin

CANNED

;

The

Limit One

CENTER HAM SLICES. «= 79°

Fs

turkey is what you'll serve
time and time again...
buy them at National!

Ib.

TT

BELTSVILLE

TURKEYS
Tender, delicious

Lb,

ae
No

YOUNG

45°

‘5 To 7-Lb.

WROTE

REDEEM TillS VALUABLE couroN FOR
25 EXTRA S&amp;H STAMPS

Fully Cooked

With

The

S&amp;H

Purchase

Of

CHUB

$AB9

Limit

One

Coupon

STAMPS

One

Best

Kosher

SALAMI

Per Customer-~ Coupon

Expires

Apr.

|

TERED
U SO
REDEEM

f

50

.

THIS VALUABLE

EXTRA
With

2)

The

GCUPON

S&amp;H

Purchase

Of

FOR

STAMPS
One

5-Lb.

Can

ATALANTA CANNED HAM

a

Limit

One

Coupon

Per

Customer—Coupon

Expires

Apr.

Ist

‘

fem

ES

Grade "A" Large

EGGS

0!

Doz.

ao

;
AAS

With The Purchase Of One 10-oz. Jar Plain Or Stuffed Colossal Queen

EA

DYE KIT. . &gt; 19°
Large

Size

ST

REDEEM THIS VALUABLE COUFON FOR
25 EXTRA S&amp;H STAMPS
NATCO
Limit

- 3%¢

-_

One

Coupon

Fer

Se

98

25
Bee

Everyday Low Coffee Prices!

HILLS OR NATCO COFFEE

cututownoron
EP ORIN®
Buy It Now
At National!

Always
Break

Get

Gallon

at

Of One

12-0z.

MELLODY

ey

One

Coupon

Per

Gal.

Ctn.

POTATO CHIPS

i

SY

Limit

a

Chocolate,

Customer

peob

Giant
18-oz.

43c

CAKE
39c

cake

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2)

Hawthorn Mellody
DAIRY WHIPT
8-oz. can

....

7

53c

@,

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Re Fos.ae
mee
4

The

Purchase

One

Coupon

Of

One

HOWELL
Per

Lemon

Or Butterscotch

CREMES
— Coupon

Expires

Apr.

|

LLL

8-ox,

Bottle

Famous

DRESSING

Customer—- Coupon

Expires

Apr,

ASSN

fee

SY ALISA,

neveen

|

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ee ODT
NIT a

A

avait

With

ALICE

Seit

JUG i...-2..2:...

Half

Pkg.

KING

REDEEM THIS VALUABLE GOUPON FOR
25 EXTRA S&amp;H STAMPS

' STRAWBERRIES

National.

plus deposit

THIS VALUABLE

;

COUPON

FOR

25 EXTRA S&amp;H STAMPS
NALLEY'S CHIP DIP

With Purchase One 6-07. Ctn. French Onion, Horseradish,
Bleu or Garlic

Limit

One

Coupon

oF

Per

Customer
— Coupon

Expires

Apr.

|

01,

ee

Nast sted Find, Suter tner Boatee”

T.Y.,

FIRM... FRESH... JUICY — Serve With Whip Cream — FRESH

ahh,

there's
nothing
like So Fresh Potato Chips.

Purchase

WESTON

Orchard Fresh-Frozen

FRESH MILK 7Q, ,

Lunch and Supper
er snacking...

With

Limit

Serve With A Topping Of Dairy Whipt

HAWTHORN

For watching

REDEEM THiS VALUABLE COUPON FOR
25 EXTRA S&amp;H STAMPS

be

e

|

a}

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Can
a Coffee

Apr.

nA

2-lb.
You

Evpires

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— Coupon

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ae

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Customer

ott

3

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NATCO-FRESH

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0

(HE!

REDEEM THIS VALUABLE COUPON FOR
25 EXTRA S&amp;H STAMPS
The

Purchase

Of

One

8-oz.

Can

DAIRY WHIPT

Limit

One

Coupon

Per Customer
— Coupon

Limit

One

Coupon

Per Customer — Coupon

Expires

Apr.

I

Expires

Apr.

|

AUNT NELLIE'S — Sliced Or
$

SWEET BEETS. . 2° 35°

BUTTS... 2e 49° |
HEINZ SOUP.

Cream

Of

Spey

oe
THIS

é
ay

,

a

. 3e~= 49°@

Mushroom

104-02.

COUPON
Towards

PORCELAIN

The

WORTH
Purchase

CHINA

SOUP PLATES

..4+

6 F i]

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VIC RPP
een C7 ‘&lt;&gt;

CASH

«6 CO SAVE

50¢

Of 4-

e

$ i $9

With Thi

open

Limit One Coupon Per Customer—Coupon Expires April 5th

For a dessert treat you'll serve time and time
again, surprise the family with fresh strawberry

:

short cake or pie... or serve right out of the

PEACHES
FRUIT
COCKTAIL

carton with milk or cream.

SQUIRT

;

REDEEM

ss) ie

Only

STOKELY
Elberta Freestone

iG

Vee

ie

9

Ho.

op.

303

‘

Cans

mr

25

(Wins

All Green
Favorite .
— SWEET

POTATOES

U.S.

THIS

COUPON
Towards

The

WORTH

Purchase

50¢

Of Any

PORCELAIN CHINA
COMPLETER PIECE
(Except Soup Plates)
Limit One Coupon Per: Customer—Coupon Expires April Sth

Thursday,

March

30, 1961

S$ &amp;

SEAMLESS

The Holiday
At National

oN

THIS VALUABLE

EXTRA

i}

COUPON

FOR

eg

STAMP

E

With The Purchase Of One 2-Pair Pkg, LADY abet

No.

1

Size

i

...

Limit

Picked At The

Peak Of Flavor
— FRESH
ASPARAGUS
.....

2

One

Coupon

Per

Customer
— Conpon

Expires

Apr.

:

|

tis 49:

..

“A”

New Potatoes .
We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities... Prices Effective Thru April
Calumet City, Chicago

636

zu

NYLONS

Firm...

5

ies 39°

Buy

Them

Now...

CELERY HEARTS

“bene

29°

Ist In Chicago And Illinois Suburban Stores Except Lansing, S. Holland,
Heights And

Dolton

DEERFIELD ROAD
DEERFIELD, ILL.

REDEEM

THIS VALUABLE

C

25 EXTRA S&amp;H STAMPS
With

The

Purchase Of One

VANITY

Limit One

Coupon

2 Roll Pkg.

BLUE

RIBBON

FAIR TOWELS

Per Customer
— Coupon

Expires

Apr.

Or

1

Page H 47—D

39

�a

Frosh Trackers Win

But Varsity Loses
in Morton
Highland

Meet

Park’s

Little

split a dual meet with
Mustangs
at
Morton

March

21. The

Parker

Giants
Morton’s
Tuesday,

varsity

fell

to their second dual meet loss
a lopsided 72%
to 271% score
the
frosh-soph
squad
picked
their third win of the season,
to 42.

by
as
up
57

Winners
Winners for the Parker varsity
were
Chuck
Redman
in the 880
yd, run in a 2:05.7 clocking and
Barney Olson in the mile run with
a 4:55.3 time. Several of the key
performers
for the Little Giants

could

Bill Veeck,

President

of the Chicago

White

Sox,

and

one

of the most colorful figures in the national sport, entertains
the guests who gathered at the Highland Park High School
Dad’s Club dinner last week. The event saw more than 170
young athletes receive awards for their participation in winter sports, and was highlighted by Veeck’s amusing talk on

baseball and the White Sox.

in

the

background,

Mike Gasper.

Fred

Enjoying a Veeck comment are,

Dickman,

Arnold

Wisnewski

and

not

participate

because

of

the achievement testing at the high
school.
Victors
for
the
Little
Giant
sophomores were Ken Brecher, 60
vard high hurdles and 60 yd. low
hurdles, :08.8 and :08.0; Bill Hansen, pole vault, 9’ 6’; Fred Addison,
880 yd. run, 2:20.7; Willard Hemsworth, high jump, 4’ 10”; Russell
Winters,
440 yd. run,
:56.0; and
Bill Hesse, shotput, 38’ 1014”.

Colts Still Lead
Pee Wee League
points

ahead

school

basketball

star, Steve

receive his letter from Coach Fred
ant coach Mike Gasper, right.

Kadison,

Dickman,

steps

left, and

up to
assist-

of the

Red-

skins. The Colts captured their
starts last week, while the
skins played only once and
the Eagles in that start.
The
Colts
advanced
into

two
Redbeat

vlace by beating the Packers

12 to

first

The other Colt victory was an
overtime 3 to 2 triumph over the
Bears. In this win Cantagallo shot
the winning
free throw
for the
triumph.
The Redskins kept pace with the
Colts when they beat the Eagles
8 to 3. Bobby Spero was high man
for the warpath boys while David
Weil and Stevie Borenstein scored
for the losers.
The Rams kept their first division hopes alive by stopping the
Eagles 7 to 4.
The Pee Wee league continues
vlay
thru
the
middle
of April.
Games
scheduled
each
Monday
afternoon and Saturday morning,
are open to the public.
Highwood’s Pee Wee Little Guys
League
(Boys

7

and

8

Won

Last

years)

Lost

Coeee et
18
Redskins | .............. 13
WOM:
cies
ay &amp; |
Packers.
..
EO
Bears
9?
Eagles
8

Week’s

Pts. O.P

108
94
120
89
dae.
vaan
96.439
Tae
ee
119:
103

Results

Colts 12, Packers 5; Bears
Colts 3, Bears 2 (overtime);
Eagles 5; Rams 7, Eagles 4

Coming

Pct.

8
.600
9
590
10
«323
ULs
ah
Ad
Kae
3380.

6, Rams
Redskins

5;
8,

Games

Swim Lessons Start
After Vacation

their

school.

the

part

first time,

in

promoting

cheerleaders

the

athletic

were

given

program

Cathy Stein promptly took her award

awards

at

the

for

high

to Bill Veeck

for his autograph. Watching is Miss Anne McCutchan,
coached the cheerleading squad this winter.

who

Host

High Shool Golfers
Open

three

Practice

of

March

20,

the

varsity

team,

under coach Cianchetti, played two
9-hole rounds and had three rules
meetings. This early practice will
be needed, for if the Parkers are to
win the Suburban League
crown

they will need to win their first
few meets, in which they will meet

Because
of spring
vacation
in
the schools, swimming lessons for
grade
school pupils
in the high
school district will not begin until Saturday, April 15 in the boys’
pool
at
Highland
Park
High
school.

“The

Also

Working

Last year the sophomore
team
finished second to Waukegan,
although they did win the Suburban
League
meet
with
a 323
total.
The only loss from that team is
John Fleming, who now is at Deer-

field.

Last

year’s

varsity

finished

third
in
the
league.
Returning
from
that
team
are
Joe
Hurst,
George Cimbalo
and Rick Ascher.
The

coach

sephomore

Dickman,

squad,

has

under

not yet made

an appearance on the course but
have
had
many
indoor
sessions.
They should be hurt in their early
matches due to the loss of Roger
Cimbalo
who
hurt
his
arm
in
gym
Friday.
Harvey
Kinzleberg
is only sophomore returning with
league play experience.

Rec Center Open
During Vacation

for boys

Saturday

basketball

until

daylight

comes

effective.

anapolis, Ind.,
New York.
The

ing

Page H 48—D 40

New

tournament

this

York
year

City,
is be-

teams

repre-

senting Regional winners. This will
make for a more compact tourna-

ment

and

better

competition

throughout.
Visiting teams begin arriving
Wednesday afternoon, and will

on
be

quartered at nearby Fort Sheridan.
Youngsters
halls along

will eat in army mess
with the regular sol-

diers. They will sleep in a number
of barracks set aside especially for
the visiting “little guys.”
Tournament activity gets underway
next Wednesday
evening
at
the welcoming banquet at 6 p.m.

Olympic track star, Jesse Owens,
still a holder of several outstanding Olympic records, will be the
main speaker.
Other’s scheduled for short talks
are
International
Commissioner,
Donald
C.
Skrinar,
Mayor
John
Frantonius,
and
general
tournament chairman, Bruno Bertucci. A
highlight ef the evening will be
the
introduction
of each
of the

visiting
coaches.

Little
Some

Guys

and

their

informal

enter-

tainment is planned.
Opening
at the Oak

day

day contests
Terrace gym

afternoon,

are slated
on Thurs-

starting

at

1:45.

Evening games, will be played in
the spacious Highland Park High
school gym.
Loser’s bracket con-

are

carded

on

Friday

and

be-

Ind.,

along

with

host

Highwood, which has been the international runner-up for the past
three years, are scheduled in separate brackets and each sees action

Thursday. Highwood faces the New
York entry, while the Hoosiers will
tangle with
Homestead, Penn.
Other first round games pit Mexico
against Wisconsin
and Peoria
against Puerto Rico.

Local

residents

desiring

tickets

for the International tournament,
the only worldwide
attraction of
the
kind
may
obtain
tickets
at
Fell’s Clothing or at the door any
evening.

1961 Interim League Golf Schedule
(Sophomore

Meets)

Tuesday, April 4—Deerfield at Morton West
Monday, April 10—Leyden West at Deerfield
Thursday, Avril 13—Deerfield at Proviso West
Monday, April 17—Glenbard East at Deerfield
Friday, April 21—Deerfield at Wheaton
Monday, April 24—Willowbrook at Deerfield
Thursday, April 27—Maine West at Deerfield
Monday, May 1—Prospect at Deerfield
Friday, May 5—Deerfield at Glenbrook
Monday, May 8—Leyden East at Deerfield
Monday, May 22—Frosh-Soph Conference Tournament

Service Bank

BANK—POST

Member

Guys

featuring teams
Puerto Rico; Chi-

cut in size, with

Of Highland Park’

ABANK°/HIGHLAND
1771 Second St.

provide

Little

and

Indianapolis,

program
time

will

of exciting

Saturday afternoon in the Center.
The defending champions from

will be in effect

savings

of the

huahua, Mexico; Homestead, Penn.,
Kenosha, Wis., Peoria, Ill., Indi-

tests

The
Highland
Park
Recreation
Board will keep the Highland Park
Recreation Center gymnasium open
for grade school boys from 9 a.m.
to 12 noon, and for high school
and college age boys from 1 to 4
p.m.
during
the
spring
vacation
week.
The gym will also be open
for
basketball
for
boys
above
eighth
grade
on Monday
and
Thursday evenings from 7 to 9 p.m.
regular

all parts

Highwood

days

basketball play
from San Juan,

Due
to a good
break
in the
weather,
Highland
Park
High
School
has
started
golf practice
earlier than usual. During the week

The

Sat., April 1—9 a.m. Redskins vs. Bears;
9:20 a.m.
Packers
vs. Eagles; 9:40
a.m.
Rams vs. Colts.
Mon.. Apr. 3—3:45 p.m. Bears vs. Packres; 4:05 p.m. Redskins vs. Rams; 4:20 p.m.
Colts vs. Eagles.

For

teams begin to converge on Highwood from
nation, Central America and the Caribbean.

Sophs

3,

High

The Sixth International Little Guys basketball tournament week starts next Wednesday when the eight competing

New Trier, Waukegan, and Evanston. Of these only the New Trier
meet
is
at
home.

The
see-saw
Highwood
Community
Center
Pee
Wee
basketball league saw the Colts galloping back into first place, 10 per-

centage

Little Guys Tournament
Opens Next Wednesday

Federal

OFFICE

PARK
\Diewood 2-7800

BLDG.

Deposit Insurance

Corporation
Thursday,

March

30, 1961

:

�Honor

Highwood Community Center

Suzanne

of Mr.

- Activities For The Week

871

Crash at Drive-in

Election
C.

and

Schechter,

Mrs.

Alvin

Pleasant Ave.,

activity to the already heavy program
that have
been
held
each
year.
Boys and girls do not have

Rico. Large welcoming signs have
been painted and will be placed at
entrances to the city. Staff members have also painted additional
brightly
colored
welcome
signs,
that will be spotted in store windows throughout Highwood.
*

Don’t

youngster
tle

*

XK

hesitate

up

Guys

for

Day

Registration

to

sign

your

Highwood’s

camp

this

began

last

Lit-

*

The

ok

coming

period

will

Easter

Community

capacity

of

Highwood’s Community Center for
the next 10 days. Local youngsters
will be out of school, and a host of

visitors

will

day

evening.

and

use

with demands
by

all

the
To

center

local

gym

students

are

urged to consult the bulletin board
in front

of

daily use.
The

hold

the

center

*

for

*

*

Community

its regular

possible

Center

plans

summer

to

program

ed

by

Center,

Guys
will

basketball
be

an

erected

**

baseball

past

Er

Digani,

Mary

Voli.

and

years.

*

Tamarri

*

*

and

Joline:

*

and

good

activities

and

within

their

scholastic

promi-

social

life,

sororities,

standing.

He
left
parked car
1728 Green
straightened

who

doesn’t

excited

and

to 2680

Western

Ave.

CRAFTWOOD
&gt;

$200 damage
to the
of Allan Perin, 28, of
Bay Rd. Police got it
out; issued no tickets.

'

4

LUMBER

(
COMPANY

&amp;

See Page H-43, D-59

=i
i

F RD FALCON
IN
IT’S]
WIN
CLASS |
1961 MOBILGAS|

t

at
Ae

ro:

S

|

RUN}

ECONOMY

Fs

'

i
q

Highwood Community Center
will sponsor a summer day camp
for Girls as well as the camp for
Little
Guys
this year.
Girls, in
grades one thru six may sign up
for this camp. Register Friday or
Saturday this week end or any day
next week at Highwood’s Commu-

The
give

in

for

home

25,
got

CLASS

WINNER

f
"ie

CLASS A: COMPACT

MANUAL TRANSMISSION

F()RM)

BT ~

FALCON

a
al

summer camp
local lassies a

full day’s program from nine in the
morning thru 3:15 each week day
afternoon.

and

additional

THIS AD IS FOR INDIVIDUALS WHO
HAVE NOT BEEN BRAINWASHED
BY THE HIGHLY ADVERTISED $4.95
FERTILIZER AND ARE STILL INTERESTED IN THE MOST FOR
THE MONEY

RO

LE

the

Little

Center
during

nity Center.
for girls will

as has
been
the
custom
during
past years. The Day camp, sponsor-

and

Highwood Community Center
held its final cheer leading tryouts
a short time ago, and selected eight
girls that will comprise the official
Little Guys cheering squad.
The
girls making the Little Guys cheer
squad include Nancy Bauden, Gail
Cabri, Beverly Cassai, Linda Cervetti,
Angie
D’Astici,
Jeanne

each

try to comply

on the center’s

groups,

his old building

basketball

vacation

the

down

a beauty spot that add much to
the face lifting of downtown Highwood.
The Volpendesta’s young
son,
David,
has
been
active
in

Saturday

&gt;

tax

Another new business opened in
Highwood during the past week by
fine
eating
establishment
Willie
Voli has installed in his new Inn.
Mr. Voli, having faith in the continued growth in Highwood,
tore

summer.

morning and there is still room to
send your boy to a day camp for a
four-week or an eight week session.
Staff workers have available literature at the center.
It can be obtained any day after school.

nence

leadership

*

chosen

Diana,
English,

aN MEE

Puerto

*

are

speak

drove

for upperclasswomen.

Members

Pasquali

IO

*

get

honorary

Rh

and

fun this summer, but they will
additional activity by going.

leadership

Uni-

elected

;

Drive-in
parking
lot,
Highland
Park police were told. The driver,

LES

Mexico

lot of

Pleiades,

were

FERTILIZER

e

MIRE

country,

to have a

at Indiana

recently

Gf

,

ASANTE

the

to go to the camp

to

who

gas pedal stuck and one car
hit another Friday evening at Hal’s

EI

munity Center this week revolves
around
the
approaching
International Little Guys basketball tournament. Staff workers are working
feverishly trying to get ready for
influx of visitors from all parts of

versity

outstand-

yf

A

MERLIN
IES

Com-

Schechter,

among

ing sorority women

All activity in Highwood’s

daughter

M. P. G.
This advertisement
and

the

by United

data

approved

certified

States Auto

true

Club.
The

VitoGRO is all plant food. There’s actually

20% more plant food per bag than in other
high-analysis, lightweight lawn foods, and one
bag covers up to 5,800 sq. ft. We're so sure
you'll have a lovelier lawn after feeding Vito-

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a money-back

on every bag.

guarantee

Costs only.......

above

mark

is

documentary

|

proof of the mileage potential built — j

into the FORD FALCON using Mobil. I

is

lt was scored on the 1961 Mobilgas

| :

Economy

— ;

Run

—

world’s

greatest

official proof of mileage economy. — é
This

year

tered;

from

SRASS

ALS

VitoGRO
FIRE
e
See

Our

Services

of Highland

Park,

and

Equipment

Rental

Dept.

Tool

Inc
AS ADVERTISED

IN

N.W. Corner Skokie Highway &amp;
Half Day Rd., Highland Park
THE

BUILDING
Thursday,

MATERIALS

March

30,

1961

e

MAGAZINE

SPECIALTY

traveled

were

2561

en-

miles,

Los Angeles to Chicago—over

deserts,

ID 20272

SUPPLY

of Mutual

they

cars

mountains,

crowded

—

city

streets.

e MUTUAL

Division

sixty-five

OF

PLEASANT

PLACES

HARDWARE

1909 ST. JOHNS

ID 2-8640

RHIGHLANDCO.)
PARK|
Page H 49—D 41

a

�Fells Unbeaten In

Vote for Equitable and Realistic Property Valuations

Fell’s

ELECT

halves

a FULL

TIME ASSESSOR

FRANK

ity

APRIL

¢

Guys

in the post

their

Savings,

arch

27

to

rivals,
26,

then

and

fine Fell squad.

will

wait

for

Fiore

Enter-

ID 2-0605

VErnon 5-0605

FRI. thru THURS.,
March 31-April 6
ONE

FULL

THEY TURNED A
TROPICAL JUNGLE INTO

i

POLICY

—

“THE
in

on

thru

3 WORLDS

superdynamation

Nothing

31

less than

Starring—Kerwin

and

THURSDAY,

— ONE WEEK —
our panoramic wide screen

Eastman

a miracle
Mathews,

APRIL

in motion
Joe Marrow

—

FOR

THE

6

—

WHOLE

June

Scotty

Thorburn

whipping

leaders their toughest time, and
only the lack of experience proved

Rogers,

undoing.

the

Deerfield

held

a

one point lead with a half a minute
to go, but failed to freeze the ball
long enough to let
They lost the ball

and

unnecessary

ket,

which

and

turned

ning

basket.

time run out.
on an erratic

shot

Fell’s

at the

bas-

pounced

it into the

upon

game

win-

remained

in the

by

series

eliminating

20

April 7—"THE MISFITS”

Rating

—

Children’s Class
5-12

years

ENDS
TONIGHT!

FREE PARKING!

THEATRE

“THE WORLD OF
SUZIE WONG”

HIGHLAND PARK
re

Starts Friday, March
THE

HILARIOUS

CinemaScope

&amp;

INSIDE STORY OF WHAT
SCHOOL LETS OUT!

GOES

ON

Bobby
Eugene

Voegs, Steve Sadin, Wally Nathan,
Mike Short, John Ladurini and
Howard

Eldridge.

Top

scorers were

Sadin and Nathan, They paced the
team

most

of

the

season.

Strike and Spare Badgers, the
runnerup squad, included Bobby
Ritacca,

Keith

Sherony,

Dennis

David

Gar-

Eddy

Biondi,

and

Deno

Lomoro.

Elstrem

Highwood

Mike

Ori,
American

Little Guys

(Boys 9 and
Won
Leo's: Lions * 3:3: 43
Strike &amp; Spare
Hacgere: 53... 10
Uptown Wolves ...
8
Highland Marlins
7

game,
Should Fell’s Clothing be beaten
on Thursday, another final game,

Leo’s Lions 20, Strike &amp; Spare Badgers
Uptown Wolves
11, Highland
Marlins
Leo’s Lions 20, Uptown Wolves 12.

have

to

be

played

on

Fri-

day. This will be scheduled

at 7:30

o’clock

Center.

in

the

Community
Series

Final

10 years)
Lost Pet.
6
.684
9
11
12:

Week’s

Earns Wrestling

526:
.421
368

Pts. O.P.
229
155
‘194:
169
&lt;166

459
200
182

Results

Letter

one

of nine wrestlers who received
for their participation
in
sports at Carroll College,
Waukesha, Wis. Kitazaki is a senior at Carroll.

Pet .|letters
1.00 0} winter
666

Lost’
0
1

7)
Pe

losses) | g

two

losses)

LUMBER COMPANY
See Page
TECHNICOLOR®
.
FILMED IN PANAVISION® ies ¢

ii
JOHN

DOROTHY

fom

KEVIN,

Enjoy
JAMES

JANE

Our

H-43,

D-59

Easter Sunday
In
Fabulous New

Dining Room
ce

ANOY

MALTON — LARRY

BATAAN RA ORGURAY PARKER OH I TALG
RELEASED BY BUENA VISTA DISTRIBUTION CO., INC.

©

DLP.

SPECIAL MATINEES
FRIDAY &amp; WEDNESDAY

10:10

Sun.-Wed., 1:00-3:15-5:307:45-10:00
Mon., Tue., Thurs., 6:55, 9:25

Brunch Served
8 a.m.-2:30 p.m.
Dinner from 11 a.m.
Reservations Suggested

In Our New Cocktail
Lounge

THE THREE

TWINS

Music—Vocals—-Comedy

On Edens Expressway
at Lake Cook Rd.
BR 3-4626

VE 5-3355

ny Your: Rings ond Jewelry
Tie We. Check Them: FREE.

In.

4. H. NEMEROFE.
JEWELERS - OPTICIANS :
Highland
| Park.
}
2Tel, IDlewood 2-0630.
actos from bank ‘over 35: Vears.
(edo ‘our own diamond setting,
Mave your diamonds set-in: modPern: settings.

Payments

arranged.

Where

1

:

L's | Lunch-time
Dinner

= time

=

OPEN 24
HOURS

Feature

Times

|

Week Days—7:22-9:30
Sat. &amp; Sun.—5 :30-7 :40-9:37

Please Note! This Picture is
not recommended for children!

Sat. &amp; Sun. Matinees Only Apr.

ASCOPE
CINEM
STEREOPHONIC SOUND

DAVID LADD

1-2 at 1:30 p.m|!

Conor by DELUXE

“DONALD CRISP - THEODORE BIKEL =

Chapt.

12—"SON OF GERONIMO” &amp; 3 CARTOONS
April 7th! “THE GRASS IS GREENER”
SOON—Walt Disney’s “101 DALMATIANS”

Page

H

50—D

42

HAL’S DRIVE INN
SKOKIE

3;
8;

William Kitazaki, son of Mr. and
Mrs. J. Kitazaki, 888 Burton, was

CRAFTWOOD

Fri.-Sat., 1:05-3:25-5:40-7
:55WHEN

included

Caringello,

All Types

Feature times:

31st for 7 Big Days!

W

Metrocolor

y

it

Lions

FENCES

SESSUE

ALWAYS

off the

A. Fabbri &amp; Sons, 34 to 28. Mike
Kischbaugh’s
eight
baskets
were
responsible for the triumph. They
gave Deerfield a chance to remain
in
Thursday
afternoon’s
final

Exhibit in Our

Family

Badgers,

knocking

12.

Jack

— SCHEDULE —
Weekdays-——’’3 Worlds of Gulliver’ begins at 7:30 and 9:30
Saturday &amp; Sunday—"’3 Worlds of Gulliver’’ begins at 2:00-4:00-6 :00-8 :00-10:00
By MAE TINEE—I've often noted that youngsters, perhaps because of their
defensive position in a world of big people, delight in tiny things, and I’m sure
this modern version of Swift’s satire will enchant them.
By DORIS ARDEN-——Few stories hold the kind of permanent enchantment for
people that ‘‘Gulliver’s Travels’ does. From the time you first encounter it as a
child, it remains one of the most fascinating of adventures, whether Gulliver is
towering over the iy
Lilliputians, or overpowered
by the great Brobdingnagians.
‘The Three
Worlds of Gulliver” is based on Jonathan Swift’s classic
tale, and has been produced with an eye to charm as well as adventure.

Guidepost

runnerup

by

to

Winning

rity,

however,

the

to 3 and

Wolves

their

gave

Won
Fell’s Clothing
....6..8. 2
Mike’s Shoe Store ....
Deerfield
Savings
....
Fiore
Enterprises
....
A. Fabbri &amp; Sons
1
(Eliminated,
1st National Bank, H.P. .... 0
(Eliminated,

FAMILY

Han-

Leo’s Lions captured Highwood’s
American Division Little Guys basketball league for 9 and 10 year
old boys, by winning 13 out of 19
games.
The Lions secured the championship by winning six out of
seven final games. The team completed
the
year’s
schedule
by
20

Playoff

pictures!
and

Grabar,

Leahy comprise this

In Amer. League

unbeaten

would

OF GULLIVER”
color

Phil

running

Open Daily 6:00 to 12 Midnight — Curtain at 6:30
Sunday Continuous 2 to Midnight—Doors Open 1:40

MARCH

merman,

Deerfield

WEEK

Shoes

The double elimination tournament will probably wind up this
afternoon, when Fells will tangle
with the lone survivor of the trio
of one-beaten teams.
Davie Fell, Mike Miller, Fed
Dato, Ricky Bartoni, Bruce Zimsen, and Tom

THEATRE — GLENCOE

North Shore’s Most Beautiful Theatre
Forest, Ill. — CE 4-2106 or CE 4-2107

FRIDAY,

prises, Deerfield and Mike’s
to eliminate one another.

downed a rough Mike Shoe Store
squad 41 to 29, Fells now sits back

EACH SQUARE OF YOUR CHOICE

THEATRE

Little

GLENCOE

problems.

i
7
EERPATH

both

Deerfield

DRIVE CAREFULLY — THE LIFE YOU SAVE
MAY BE YOUR OWN
Lake

of

Commun-

Deerfield

stopped

Deerfield

4th

his or her tax assessment problem with courtesy and dignity.

VOTE INDEPENDENT—MARK

National

Stop

Government auditor for 25 years before retirement — knows
precedures.
local tax

Center’s

Fell

My services will be available to every taxpayer AT ANY TIME to discuss

Understands

winner

Highwood

beaten team remaining
season playoff series.

E. SCHWARTZ

TUESDAY,

the

basketball league, is the only un-

Independent Candidate—West Deerfield Twp.
ELECTION

Clothing,
of

Lions Champions

Post Season Series

HIGHWAY AT ROUTE
HIGHLAND PARK
Thursday,

22
March

30, 1961

�THE
PERENNIAL
FAVORITE
For the connoisseur of
MONOGRAM
dresses
. superb craftsmanship in Irish Linen in a
multitude of Spring color combinations.

opening

Park
ment

round

handicap
held

last

Tuesday
courts.

Continue

Play

Parks and
second

Schneider

and

Highland

badminton

Center

Recreation

Gordon
won the

in the

V.

tournaat

the

the

trophies for second place.
Badminton play will continue at
the
Highland Park Recreation
Center on Tuesday evenings from
7:30 to 10:00 p.m. until April 25th.

tunities.

training,

March

18,

at the

Center,

Great

exercises,

mark-

Training

Lakes, Ill.
The graduation

In nine
Navy
with

weeks

recruit”

of instruction,

is

Bluejacket,
the

developed
ready

for

omith

{

CRAFTWOOD

AY

See Page H-43, D-59

duty

Pay More

for Beauty?”

SALONS

&amp;

Set

Happy

Easter

and a
Happy

Passover.

(Your

exact preference)

(Tops

(that will stand out in any group)
in Artistry)

&amp; Set)

a

All For $10.25

¢ L’Oreal Tints
* Clairol Tints
¢ Tiara Tints

ecm wee we w wetted

seweaseseeseeessawreseesae

Permanent on Tinted Hair (You will get the compliments,
SCRA UA VOUE FPWMEES icici
EES a eA anseinesel
Manicure

&amp; Set

salons

Uses only the FINEST quality hair
preparations . . . for example:

&amp; Set)

(Including Shampoo

Permanent Wave

Wave

Hair Cut

CAMEO

(to please you and others)
Blonding

Permanent

Peewee cocescccwenacsrccsueesoees

ere ree

(Including Shampoo

1.

of

On Tinted Hair .......... $11.25

(including styling)

Shampoo &amp; Set with Oil (including styling)

Combination
Consists

3.

Professional Hair Stylists.

Shampoo

Cameo

2. Shampoo

We Offer Beautiful, Modern, Highest Quality Hair Styling by

High

UNiversity 4-8460

1636 Chicago Avenue, Evanston

“Best for Less”

Tint

Ferguson

of a

LUMBER COMPANY

a

CAMEO

We wish to
extend to you
a

hatherine

fleet.

“Why

Hair Cut

|

Open 9:30 to 5 Daily

All Types

the

into

oppor-

it!

FENCES

ing the end of nine weeks of “boot
camp,” included a full dress parade
and review before military officials
and civilian dignitaries.
“raw

miss

Don’t

golden

and

facts

interesting

James T. Mowers, son of Mrs.
Frank Mowers
of 238 Everts st.,
Highwood, Ill., was graduated from
Naval

won

The Want-Ad section is filled with

Ends Boot Training

recruit

\

Charles Dahl
round. Alice

Turpe

at the

trophies to the victors, from left, Tom Ullman, Al Chiprin, Char Dahl

Al Chipren and Tom Ullman won
the

held

tournament

badminton

Dick Schneider, chairman of the recently concluded
Recreation Center, hands
and Gordon Parks.

Shampoos
° Breck
* Hartsole
© Jeary Reading

Permanent Waves * L’Oreal
¢ L’Oreal

Hair Treatments

Helene Curtis
* Jerry Reading
Rayette
¢ Wella
Carol Richards ¢ L’Oreal

ee

Visit Our Large Beautifully Appointed Salons
Don’t

Forget!

Monday through Saturday 9 a.m.—5 p.m. except Fridays 9 a.m.-9 p.m.

Open

Friday

Appointments suggested but not necessary

9 a.m. to 9 p.m.

Cameo
Ample

Thursday,

March 30, 1961

Salons
Parking in Rear

929 Linden
Hubbard Woods, Winnetka

All Phones:

HI 6-7550
Page H 51——D 43

�_ Here Are Vernon

Candidates For
ownship Election
Thomas

King, one of the overflow

the Holy Cross

Parish

St. Patrick’s

crowd

Day

party

who

attended

at Michigan

Shores Club, receives a BOAC-flown shamrock from Mrs. Paul
J. Riordan as Mrs. Robert P. Burns smiles in background.

Trinity Church

Group
The

Has

Youth

|Plans For Fashion

Breakfast

Youth

Fellowship

Show

group

Progress At

of

Trinity United Church of Christ St. Joseph Church
Joseph

4

ei

Brehm,

CI,

rsd
cand.

for

clerk

George

Stancliff,

CI,

cand.

for

supervisor

John

C.

Tinker,

D,

cand.

for

supervisor

%

is preparing
an Easter breakfast
Plans for “Everything Under the
for the congregation.
| Sun”, a fashion show sponsored by
The breakfast will be held from| the Catholic Women’s club
of St.
7:30

to

8:30

lowing
Easter

a.m.;

immediately

the
Sunrise
Communion.

fol-

Service
and
The proceeds

from the breakfast help to defray
the expense of the youth budget.
All

Are

Invited

Joseph

the

Worker

parish,

are

nearing
completion
according
to
ways
and
means
chairman,
Mrs.

| William Bangert.
Tickets for the
| available

through

show
club

are

now

members

or

The breakfast will be held in the | ticket chairmen Mrs. Anton Loyal,
hall

Fellowship

of

the

church.| Le

7-0457

and

Friends and neighbors are invited.| nell, Le
The cost of the breakfast will be|be sold

75

cents

for

for

children

adults

under

Chairman

of

and

the

Sandra

cents|

committee

2

b

( , P.

Jankowski,

ay mond

Wagner,

CI,

cand.

for

assessor

CI,

cand.

for

auditor

William

Thomas

Harrer,

D,

cand.

for

auditor

Sekowski,

D,

cand.

for

assessor

Joseph

Richard

Gora,

D,

cand.

for

auditor

Park

Vines,

and

seating

Miss

Shar-|

John

Robert

O’Con-

has

been

reached.

ae

is | ¥*

Deerfield.
committee

on Krase, Miss Nancy Root, Jean!
and
Joan
Dugo
from
Deerfield:|
Ronald
and
Sandy
Beecher
of

Highland

capacity

nine.

Miss Joyce Sticken
of
Other members of the

are Miss

50

Mrs.

7-0508. Tickets will also
at the door only until

Faken
To Show
Girls scouts, members

of

troop

162, were taken to the World Flower and Garden Show at McCormick
Place March
18 by Mrs.
Robert
David, Mrs. Thomas Nelligan and

Shipley|Mrs.

William

Corbett.

Ct.,

Riverwoods

and Robert Berning of Lake Forest.
On
March
20, the
girls filled
The parents of the young people | Easter baskets for
orphan children.
also have been appointed honorary | Treats were provided
by Nina Anmembers of the committee.
doniadis and Sharon Clements.

Cromartie,

bog

William

(Skip)

Davis

of

Farner

area,

brought honor to Ela-Vernon High School recently when he
became the first E-V student ever to receive a Scholastic Arts
award. Presenting the award is Charles Machamer, Skip’s

art instructor.

ested

A Certificate of Merit was
sented to Skip, whose work

local

sponsors.

pre- | by educators and
was |an understanding

It was

judged

artists who have
of art education

selected for exhibit in the Northin secondary schools.
eastern
Illinois
Regional
exhibiSkip wants to become a commertion, preliminary to the selection
|Cial artist and also wants a liberal
of finalists for the National High
arts education. He is hoping to at-

School
This
ank Dane,
Page

H

CI, candidate
52—D
he

44

for auditor

Clarence

Pontius, CI, cand. for auditor

lastic

Mrs. Rolla Sporkin, D, cand. for ¢lerk
"

Art exhibit.
was the 34th
Arts

Award,

| the Scholastic

annual

tend the University of Chicago and
Scho-/|the Chicago Art Institute simul-

sponsored

Magazine

and

by | taneously

inter-| graduates

beginning

next

from

in June.

Thursday,

E-V

March

Fall.

30,

1961

He

&lt;

�ee

A ete

Aen
con ©
Peiatennaras

ee

ri netae a

ET aS

‘

University Women. Seok Now Te ams For Softball League
Which Will Begin Nightly Season In May
ryouts Begin April 8 For Intermediate, Plan Activities
The Deerfield Recreation Department will sponsor a Men’s
Major Leagues, and Girls’ Softball
16 inch Softball League. This league will play on Monday
In Library Week
evenings beginning the middle of May. One team has signed
The weekend of April 8 will mark the beginning of the
me

tryouts for all boys eligible for intermediate

and major

The
Deerfield
branch
of
the
American Association of University
Women is planning a week of ac-

league

play (boys, 10 to 12 years old) and all girls in the girls’ softball
league (girls 10 to 17 years old). Weather permitting, the

tivities to aid the Deerfield Library

schedule is as follows:

and those who use its facilities.
During the week of April 17-21,
designated
as
Deerfield
Library

- BOYS:
At

Jewett

Park

'8:45 a.m., April
years old whose
with

for

letters

this

with

A

Field

group

a break

House,

8, boys 10
last names

through

will

for

O.

to 12
begin

Tryouts

last

all

day

lunch.

At Jewett Park Field House, 1:15
| p.m., April 9, boys 10 to 12 years
old whose last names begin with
letters P through Z. Tryouts for
this group will last all afternoon.

GIRLS:
At the south
Wilmot school,

softball
1 p.m.,

diamond,
April 9,

all girls 10 to 17 years old. Tryouts
for this group will last all after-

noon.
For

the

boys,

selections

for

the

intermediate league will be generally completed on the first weekend.

Further

selections

| intermediate

selections
will

be

league

for

the

made

on

weekend,

April

for

and

the

15

the

final

major
the

league

following

and

16.

All boys who have tried out ‘on
the first weekend will be asked
to report again on April 15 at the
field house at 8:45 a.m. to receive
} their league assignment or for further tryout, as the case may be.
Gets
Each

boy

Tee

Shirt

trying

out

receives

an

identifying T shirt which he wears
throughout the tryouts. These T
shirts

and

are

used

must

be

turned

in

of

a

tryout

completion

April

from

year

boy’s

to

year

at

the
on

15.

For the girls, those tryouts which
are
not
completed
on
April
9
will be scheduled for the follow-

ing Sunday, April 16. Player drafts
and
team
assignments
for
the
Girls,
intermediate
and
major
leagues
are
scheduled
for
the
weekend of April 22 and 23. Play.ers
do not have
to be present
for these drafts. Each player will
be notified of his team assignment
following the draft.
Arnold Pedersen, player agent,
is in charge
of all tryouts
and

will also conduct the various player drafts. A meeting was held last
Saturday,

and

March

managers

and

judging

discuss

procedures.

mated that a total
will be eligible for
and about 140 girls.
*
Art Flint, director

tryouts

It is esti-

of 230 boys
these tryouts
in

charge

of

personnel, has completed arrangements for the umpires school. The
first session is scheduled for April
10

at

7:30

p.m.

at

Jewett

Park

field house.
Any father who is interested
has been urged to attend, includ“ing those who may be helping in
other ways, Managing or coaching,
for instance.
The first meeting and tryout for
the minor leagues will be held on

the

weekend

more
made

of

April

15

with

announcements on this to be
in successive issues of the

DEERFIELD
REVIEW.
Minor
league presidents, Al Soule and
’ Bob Babcock, held an organizational meeting

y

. pleted
~

for fathers

of minor

leaguers (Boys 8 and 9 years old)
last Saturday with about 80 fathers
attending.
Mrs. Jeanne Coffey, president
of the women’s

auxiliary,

preliminary

for the
now
to

Advance Plans For
Village Tree After
The

crabs

spring

Day

will

that
be

bloom

available

planting,

in

for

Saturday,

has com-

arrangements

annual dance.
Plans
hold
the
dance
on

are
the

noon

the

Legion

Northbrook.
March

30, 1961

in

3 to

21

5 p.m.

and

on

from

April

7 to

17

9 p.m.

the evenings of April 17, 19 and 21.
Refreshments
will be served
for
children and adults.
All who attend the open house
are urged to bring a hard covered
book in good condition, to be contributed
to
the
library.
Those

29

persons who donate a book will become eligible for a prize to be determined by a drawing on Friday
evening, April 21. Awarded will be
a child’s book and an adult’s book,

the official tree of Deerfield, available to residents of the village.
James Mitchell, president of the
park district; members of park district; Mrs. Jerry Sayre; and Mrs.
Willard Loarie of the Community
conservation council committee discussed arrangements
at the park
board meeting, March 22. Mitchell
has announced that the trees will
be prime stock, locally grown and
suited to climate and soil conditions of Deerfield if properly planted. They
will be multiple
stem

donated

by

Mrs.

George

Haney,

librarian.

In

conjunction

with

the

open

house, members of AAUW will conduct tours through the library to
acquaint citizens of the village with

trees, three to four feet in height.
100 trees will be available.

Presents Railroading

are

among

the

He says they are a specimen type
tree which needs plenty of room
and sunshine in order to develop
fully and bear masses of beautiful
flowers.

A sophomore who won the Suburban League frosh-soph medalist
award last year will lead the Deerfield High School golf team this
spring.
John Fleming, whose best 18-hole
score last year was a 70, is the only

of the golf team with pre-

vious high school experience, according to coach
Fleaming was a member of the
Highland Park High School froshsoph golf squad last year.
Other members of the team who
hope to participate in nine golf con-

tests throughout

the

season

begins

and

ends

April

10

of

cut-out

trains,

en-

After the skits, Gordon Ommen
made announcement of the’ forthcoming
Scout-o-Rama
and
urged
the cubs to secure tickets for their
parents and friends. The cub pack
will receive fifty per cent of the
ticket money for the pack on all

that they

sell.

Chuck

Fah-

renholz
announced
a
camping
weekend
for Webbelos
at Camp
Ma-ca-ja-Wan on May 24.

Leads Deerfield
H.S. Golf Team

which
May

8

A total of $305,652 was reported
pledged to the new sanctuary building fund of the First Presbyterian
church
of Deerfield
last
Friday
night, March 24, at the final report
meeting of the campaign organization.
This will make possible the second
phase
of an over-all
major
building
program
with
the
construction of a new church sanctuary. The first phase was completed
several years ago with the building
of the new Christian education unit.
Trabert, Mr. and Mrs. William Cor-

bett, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Thompson, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Cedric Voll,
Mr. and Mrs. J. Howard Wolf, Mr.
and
Mrs.
George
Holderbaum
served as prayer chairman and Mrs.
Robert
David
was
arrangements
chairman.
Some

248 volunteer

494

in

the

workers

recent

subscriptions

was

par-

campaign,
member
total of

received

in

the active six weeks of campaigning.
Additional follow-up gifts are expected as a conservation committee
continues to work with members

were

out

of town

during

the

effort.

tickets

Sophomore Star

Goes Over The Top
In Building Campaign

who

gine
outlines
ranging
from
the
earliest cabbage head engines to
the latest diesel locomotives.

lies to pay special attention to the
location they choose for their tree.

member

Program For Parents

5-0650 for an application blank.

Presbyterian Church

with the average gift of
families being $686.06. A

clude

which

Call WI

ticipated

completely

those

All men interested in entering a team in this league have

been usged to do so.

Collection boxes will be placed
in local stores during library week
to enable all citizens of Deerfield
to contribute
to the
support of
their library.

Friday, March 24, cub pack 450
presented skits and exhibits dealing with a railroad theme,
The
skits
included
the
great
train
robbery
of yesteryear
and
also a comic skit centering around
19th
century
railroading.
One exhibit was a mobile made

most popular in this area.
Aksel Peterson, member of the
park board, who has a background
in landscaping, has cautioned fami-

up.

the facilities of the library.

The
Community
conservation
council will manage
the sales in
conjunction with assistance of the
Deerfield REVIEW. A coupon will
appear in the REVIEW next week.
Money orders or checks must accompany orders, and orders will be
honored in order of receipt. Because of the low price, purchasers
will not have the choice of variety
but may choose from colors; red,
pink, or white. Varieties will in-

Awards were announced by Dick
Dereby
and the presentations to
the parent and cub were made by
Gordon Ommen, cubmaster.
Earning their wolf awards were
Steve Schroeder, Marsh Le Seuer,
Greg
Broxham
and
John
Wise.

Gold Arrows went to S. Schroeder,

Heading the Building Fund Campaign were co-chairmen
Mr. and
Mrs. David Allen and Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Palmer, canvass chairman
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Dallas
Davis,
ad-

vanced

gifts

chairman,

Mr.

and

Mrs.
Frank
Conley,
and
division
chairmen Mr. and Mrs. L. Vernon

Legion Auxiliary
Members

Welfare Party
Mrs. Carl
Mrs. Robert

served

at

child

and Mr.
attended

welfare

and
and

party

at the Dixon State school, Dixon,
Feb. 26. Both women are members
of the American Legion Auxiliary,

Deerfield

unit

The rehabilitation chairman of
the Deerfield auxiliary, Mrs. Rob-

M. Le Seuer, Dave Baer, Bill Mac
Dougall, and George Allen. Brent
Pettit, D. Baer, G, Allen,
Steve
Biesman,
and
Alan
Lala
were
awarded silver arrows. Bear awards
were then given to N. Kidder,
John
Martin, Todd Tucker, Steve Dere-

ert Broege, reported that she and
Mrs. Carl Scheer had
helped
to

by

will

and

Stan

Silver

Gertler.

arrows

Olendorf

and

were

Tom

given

to Don

Naumann

who

also won a gold arrow. Glen La
Buda won a 1 yr. service star and

party

for

38

unit
men

patients at Downey from 7 to 9
p.m.
The Deerfield unit will select
a junior
send to

girl from high school to
Illini Girls’ State again

denner or assistant denner badges,
The formal meeting was brought
to a close and the cubs were view-

Bennett, Mrs. Marshall Pottenger
and Mrs. George Jacobs attended

Kraft,

Rew

Fargo.
The team

Clark, Bal Rei-

Godow,
will

open

and

West

at 4 p.m.

Gregg

Charles

against

Monday

Ley-

April
Thorn-

ers

of

a

Bonavitch

Le

a

Deerfield

this year.

Osterling,

M.

at

the

Seuer, R. Schmitt, S. Biesman, and
Stan
Gertler
were
given
either

Kenneth

Schroeder,

serve

27

14th
Park

Bill Daniels, John Feagan, Mark
Biega,
Bill MacWilliams,
Charlie
David, Michael Hadjiek, Dick Johnson,
Steve
Miller,
Gary
Hussar,

Jerry Christy, Don

S.

at Downey
hospital
March
with the aid of the Highland
unit.

Paul

mer,

Kay

serve and entertain 72 men patients

April

puppet

show,

by

Don

of New

York

City

and

was assisted by Bill Olendorf. A
twenty minute film was shown all

about early railroading from the
days of the Tom Thumb to the present

diesel locomotive.

Mrs.

Robert

Broege,

Mrs.

the 33rd annual Patriotic
ence at the Morrison Hotel
cago
where
an
address,

Capabilities

of

the

Albert

conferin Chi“Some

U.S.S.R.”

was

delivered by Roger A. Leestman,
instructor,
staff college,
training

and

education

and

defense

children 6 years through 9 years
of age. A letter should be sent to
the Park District office giving your
age,
address,
phone
and
reasons

the

applicant

would

be

qualified

to work in the program.
The
gymnastic
classes
7th and 8th grade students

field

will

from

April

be

held
1

Deerfield

for the
in Deer-

every

through

©

Saturday
May

Grammar

— ‘,

27

at

school

and

Wilmot
school from
9 a.m.-noon.
All that is needed is a gym suit
and gym shoes.

Story Time Sessions
Planned For Children
Beginning Tuesday, April 4 and
continuing each Tuesday through
April

25,

storybook

schoolers
Jayeee

time

for

will be presented

auxiliary

at the

pre-

by the

library.

;

The storybook time will consist
of readings, records and film strips.
The time of the program will be
from

10:30-1]

a.m.

©
.

Mothers interested in enrolling ©
their four and five year old chil-—
dren
should
call Mrs.
Michael
Baran, WI 5-3450 or Mrs. William
Zechel, WI
The only

5-4560 on April 3.
day for registration

April 3 and only
be accepted.

25 children

is

will
;

Den 11 Ranks
First Place
11

score

of

was

rated

99.83

per

tops

cent

with

at

the

a
in-

|

spection of Cub Scout Pack 350’s
dens March 17. Second was Den 9.
The pack meets at the Bannock- —
burn school.
The following

awards

were

pre-

sented:

738.

On
May
28 the Tenth district
will hold the Lake County Orphanage picnic at AdlerPark, Libertyville.
The
ennual
Pilgrimage
to
Normal, Ill., to the Illinois Soldiers
and Sailors children’s home will be
made June 11.

On

—

the summer recreation program for

Den

Scheer
Broege

a

All women
interested in a recreational-type softball game
have
been asked to call Mrs. John Ely,
WI 5-5409, to learn more about the
new Powder Puff League now in
the process of being formed.
Any girl of high sehool age or
more
may apply for positions in

In Inspection

Serve At

are:

10 on the home course, the
gate Country club grounds.

American

from

through

Arbor

at a price of $4.50 per tree, according to Mrs. Robert Winfield, president,
Community
conservation
council.
A member
of the Ornamental
Growers
association
of
Northern
Illinois
is co-operating
with the Deerfield Park district in
order to make flowering crab trees,

Post

Thursday,

field Library basement every after-

April

den

the

mem-

bers under the direction of Mrs.
Richard R. Smith, chairman, will
sponsor open house in the Deer-

Park Dist. Meeting

evening of June 30 at the Benjamin
of

Week, a committee of AAUW

25, for the judges

to

.

eye

BASEBALL

E F ELD BOYS

.

i

office

of

mobilization.

the

civil

:

Bear

and

golden

arrow

Brenner; near, golden
denner to John Kyle;
arrows

on

wolf

golden
Smoot;

arrow
silver
Ewan;

and

assistant

Dana

golden

Tom

|

arrow and
two silver

on bear
arrow on

Steve

Walters;
Bear to

to

to

—

Staats,

to Skip
wolf to

arrow

denner

on

to

bear

~

Chris
:

Bob

Walleck;

silver

and

©

gold
arrows
on
wolf
to Tom
Doetsch; silver arrow on wolf toDave Olson; silver arrow on wolf —
and
row

bear to
on bear,

Pat Hill;
lion and

silver ardenner to

Mike Hill; bear to Chris Hoff
ver

arrow

cn

wolf

to Tom

sil-

Heiden-

felder; three silver arrows on wolf |
to Greg Soule; silver and gold —
arrows on wolf to Tom Potter; denner to Casey Jones; silver arrow

on

wolf

to Jarney

Thompson;

_

sil- —

ver arrow on wolf and denner to
Chris
Willman;
silver
arrow
on
wolf to Steve Singleton; silver ar-—
row
on wolf to Scott Hamilton;
bear and service star on webelos
to Tim Evans; silver arrow on bear
to Garl Gunderson; wolf and den-

ner to Dusty Clampitt; silver ar- —
row on wolf to Steve Bensinger; —
silver arrow
on wolf
to Glen —
Weiler.
Den three had
for the evening.

the

most

awards

Page H 53—D

45

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FU
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All Precincts
West

Deerfield Township

Lake County, Illinois
Election, Tuesday, April 4, 1961
Polls Open 6 A.M.

to 6 P.M.

Kuli Co Vibe
Town

CITIZENS’ INDEPENDENT
a

INDEPENDENT

PARTY

ee

Clerk

DEMOCRATIC

(By Petition)

(By Caucus)

(By Petition)

ee

FOR SUPERVISOR

‘i

(Vote

a

FOR SUPERVISOR
(Vote

_

eg os

[] HOMER

(Vow fer One)

for

L] EMMA BANDEMER

One)
FOR

| [J BRUCE C. FROST
(Vote

[ ] VIRGINIA

for One)

ie

ef

FOR ASSESSOR

(Vote

(Vote

One)

Me

| [J WILLIAM PITTENGER
2
i

FOR

a Lae

TOWN

GORNER

aay oe

FOR ASSESSOR
for

CLERK

FOR ASSESSOR

| OU RUTH E. VETTER
ay

TOWN

ses ve Raen

FOR TOWN CLERK
s

MARXER

FOR ASSISTANT SUPERVISOR

FOR ASSISTANT SUPERVISOR
(Vote

for One)

for one)

] KARL BERNING

.

PARTY

for

One)

[] FRANK E, SCHWARTZ

AUDITORS

[1 ARTHUR C. ULLMANN
FOR

TOWN
(Vote

AUDITORS

for Three)

C] GERALD M. FLEGEL
[] ALLAN J. GERKIN

(Vote for Three)

FJ EUGENE H. SEYL

[] CHESTER E. VARNER

an WILLARD T. WAGEMAN

oO MARY M, HEDBERG
a

FOR

bby

LIBRARY

DIRECTORS

FOR

(Vote for Two)

LIBRARY

(Vote for Two)

_ [J RICHARD LONGTIN

[] CYRIL FRITZ

o

[1] HELEN KING

KEITH D. NICKOLEY

Fe ae

FOR
(To

LIBRARY
Fill

(Vote

a
i

|

HELEN

DIRECTORS

Unexpired

H 54—D 46

(To

Terms)

(for 4 years)

[IALLYN J. FRANKE (for 2 years)

Page

FOR

LIBRARY
Fill

—

[_] ROGER

DIRECTORS
Terms)

Unexpired

(Vote

for Two)

WILSON

DIRECTORS

for Two)

McGUIRE

(for 4 years)

[] PAUL STEERUP (for 2 years)

og adem
Thursday, March 30, 1961

�ES

nasannuaia Nien

Railroading Is
Subject Of Cub
March Meeting
Cub

Railroaders

was

the

HOLY

* DEERFIELD SAVINGS &amp; LOAN
BOWLING
LEAGUE

Team

After

Standing
ee

weeks
27
ee

BOWLING

Insurance.

STANDINGS
w
Lost

ia

Laat

17%

.............--+ 30%

on
Diebechtg, Liquors
-. . . - cs s- ien’s Salon
nap Slaniwaee’......2c sx

v2

Sie

RTA 54%

AIG

oe

ee

8

ee an

d

53%

20,
20%
‘

ie

&amp; Onllak aeOTE GA

26

q, 3, Baer a

[-ogetim
I

CROSS

Stackowicz_

aera
Savings

Muhlke.

Tibbitts, Mrs. P. C. Ritter and Mrs. Harry

2|Ben

Franklin

i

aaron

Title

Fe Siaers Temes oe

‘

eae

Fi yh

RS

PR eT

Veet

¥

ey ee

ee

:

ea ae

ee

al

Bary

sagas

mn

ie

Vara

Lig

In Tucson

Bannockburn,

Rd.,

graph

enter-

theme

New

City.

York

Co-hosts

the

were

party

for the

Seilers’ cousins, Mr.
liam Worthington,

and

Mrs.

Wil-

will be the annual camp outing at
Camp
Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan,
near
Antigo, Wis., the week-end of June

23, 24, 25. Any
10 by July Ist
tend,

explained

but

must

cub who will be
is eligible to atbe

accompanied

by

his dad. Reservations should be
made with Cubmaster James Corcoran, WI 5-2245.
;
received
following
boys
or other cubbing badges;
2—Gary
Krol, gold arrow

The
awards
Den

|

on wolf; Tom Roth, lion and gold
arrow; Edward Kiefer, bobcat pin:

Den

3—Mike

denner;

Jeff

Garvey,
Payne,

assistant

bear,

gold

arrow, 2 silver arrows; Dave Glickman, denner.
Den 4—Todd Sterner, bear; Tom
Weil, silver arrow on wolf; Alan
Nault, wolf, gold arrow.
Den 5—Casey Hollatz, denner,
North Shore council patch; Billy

Team Standings After 26 shor Ame nounced. Kits for construction of | Harvey, assistant denner.
| Webelos—Ken
onee Lost|the model cars
: Gustafson, ’ 2-year
;
: will besagh distributed
el) ob EARS
SS SMES UN EAS
Fh am aya re eee CARER 60% 431 |at den meetings. This is a father | service star; Richard Fellows, lion
ONC

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

skit,

eee Ue

oR ER

lion;
Jimmy
DeJong,
wood Derby April 29, in the Kip- Mankin,
council patch; , James 3
ling school playground,
, were an-|North Shore
.

DEERFIELD SAVINGS &amp;
LOAN BOWLING LEAGUE

Savings

Rettig Rug Cleaners

its

RE

tained at a party last Friday for
the Del Worthingtons of Lake Forest and the Leonard Marshalls of

the meaning
of various
railroad
whistle
toots. Den
two told the
story of Tommy Caboose, with its
moral “Get the most out of life;
just be yourself.” Den three portrayed life aboard a long-distance
passenger train.
Nineteen cubs received achievement
awards
and
other
cubbing
badges. Edward Kiefer II of 219
Ramsey
road was inducted
as a
Bobcat, and was assigned to Den
two.
Den
three
and
4 received
pennants for 100 per cent parents’
attendance.
Plans to hold the Pack’s Pine-

PTA Past Presidents were recently honored by the Deerfield Grammar School parents
and teachers. Women who have served as president of the organization include, from left:
Mrs. M. Ullrich, Mrs. C. E. Piper, Mrs. R. E. Jordan, Mrs. C. W. Boyle, Mrs. Robert O. Clark,
Mrs. James

in

NEAR
4

Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Seiler,
owners of the Bar-J-Ranch near
Tucson, Ariz., formerly of Tele-

King-size
models
of
railroad
locomotives were shown by Dens
two and four. Den five and the
Webelos each made elaborate railroad layouts.

one,

Te

Entertain

of the March
24 meeting of Cub
Pack 150, as the various dens presented original skits and displayed
exhibits at the Kipling school gymnasium.

Den

ery

a

514
chsh aes

yd

and son project, and prizes will be|and

5244

sin

2

47% 36%]

for craftsmanship and per-

me
and

2 | formance.

North

patch;

council

Shore

Schultz, Mark Lee, Fred Gahl
Fritz

North

each

Mueller,

another father and son project | Shore council patch.

|

¢

.

36 months to pay on

AKL

fencing over $100.00

a

3

&gt;

__

%

e

s

=————-s

AT

ty BAY
es

s

mt wy

8

r Td

——

‘

e

Ln

‘' dl

x)

;

\4

%

,

fa

*,°

.

. «4 e

on

———

: 7

ry

: :

SS

FREE ESTIMATES, QUICK
SERVICE AND 3 YEARS TO

=
et

=

INSTALLATION
PAY FOR WARDS

~

x?

AS

eK

Sibi

Ps

.

t

~

36” High

WARDS CHAIN LINK FENCING
FOR BEAUTY AND PROTECTION
Longer life from hot dip Galvanized

posts, gates, 9 or

gauge fabric. Sag-free construction
Available in 36 to 60 inch heights.

in

With $150.00 or more of
Chain Link Fencing.

od

Your

Nearby

Highland

Park Catalog

on

AS

=

AT

Your Nearby

Deerfield Commons

Catalog

Store:

Phone:
Wi 5-4600
Address: 714 Waukegan Rd., Deerfield, Ill.

¢
&amp;

@i' ae.

MAIL THIS TODAY FOR FREE ESTIMATE
MAIL TO MONTGOMERY WARD-—DEPT. CS

Store:

Phone:
ID 2-8830
Address: 1854 First St., Highland Park, Ill.

ee

‘4

c/o Your Catalog Store — Address Shown At Left.
Please have your personal representative telephone for
appointment regarding

March

30, 1961

an

[] FENCING
uName

Telephone

E City
SCI

Thursday,

ROGAN

GUARANTZED PRICE

concrete.

Phone ‘Round the Clock — 24 Hours a Day — 7 Days a Week for a Free Estimate

=a

Orel

A GUARANTEED
JOB AT A

WALK GATE

$06

WW douse

ns

Telephone

Page H 55—D

47

oe

&lt;a

ent

Sil

�CATERING

PARTY

MOVING
APRIL
SKOKIE

WANT

AD

50c per additional line.
(Up to 10 lines)

3 Lines .. $1.75

O
HIGHWAY &amp; CLAVEY
HIGHLAND PARK

Ads containing 11 lines or more are charged at the inch rate. Contract
rates for 4 or more consecutive insertions available on request.
1 inch
Minimum.

CLOSED

Will Appear

WOGHLAND
PARK WEWS
HIOHWOOS
THE LAKE FORESTER

Morr

In All Seven*

Wore

DEARFIMLD REVIEW
VERNON
PY. SHERIDAN TOWER

Ukour

i l, EWSPAPERS

*Fort { Sheridan Tower ' is
is published every other Friday. Ads
in which the Tower is published will appear in the Tower

f———

WANT

AD DEADLINES———_y

All Classifications Except ‘Business
Services G Supplies’’ Will Be Accepted Up To

Tuesday,
DEADLINE
Services

&amp;

“Business Services &amp; Supplies’ Classifications Will Be Accepted Up To

4:30 P.M.
FOR

CANCELLATION

Monday,

CONTRACT

DEADLINE

Supplies’

ads

—

which

ADS

NOON
may

Phone Your Want

—

IDiewood 2-4500_

be

cancelled

Ad —

in the event of an error in

advertisement,

clearly

the

fault

of

ACCOUNTING

_ €tc.

SERVICE—Taxes,

Nothing

Telephone

ID

too

small

nor

2-3369.

too

: ALTERATIONS

and

__enced. Very reasonable rates.
dressmaking,
ALTERATIONS,

WI 5-3183.
thoroughly

experienced; bring us your problems.
5-5719; if no answer WI 5-1514,
AUTO

WM.

of

Now

RUEHL &amp;

CO.

GENERAL BODY SHOP
Auto

Body

Fender

Repair

All Makes - All Models
Complete Painting,

ASK

FOR

and

Touch

JACK

187 E. Park Ave.
Highland

Ups

2-5845

Park

Expert Engine Tune-ups
And
Brake Service
At Your Home
Call Dan at 627-5156
——X—X—X—

_ USED

APPLIANCES
refrigerator, $25; used TV, $29.95;
refrigerators

new
and freezers as low as
$149.95; wholesale prices; our 25th year
in Lake Forest. Freeman’s TV and Music, 648 Western, Lake Forest.

Page H 56—D 48

financing

up

Telephone
visory

36

months

(2) 17 ft. Owens
1960
steering, windshield, bow
was $1245

runabouts,

$598

$895

(1) 1960 Crownline 1960, top curtain, battery, steering, windshield, ’61 Mercury 45
H.P. starter, generator, long shaft, remote
controls,
1960 Crownline trailer,
1200 Ib.
tilt, tie-down, winch, directional signals.
was $2298
now $1796
(1)
14 ft. Styleflite
°61
model,
steering,
windshield,
’61
Republic
trailer,
600
lb.
winch, tie-down, directional signals, ’61 Mercury 22 H.P. manual, remote controls.
was $1395
now $995
and

Service

Mercury Outboard Motors
Grady White Boats
Dorsett Boats
Starcraft Boats
Republic Trailers
CH

‘
ig
PRAIRIE ACRES
LANDSCAPING
SERVICE
eae
Black soil, fill dirt, manure,
top dressing
and rolling lawns. Evergreens, shrubs, trees.
For estimate phone WI 5-0818.
—
;
MODERN Landscaping, Jack Vena. Call me
for the best in lawn
maintenance
and
everything in garden and patio work. ID
2-5266.
NOEL
TEAGUE
LANDSCAPING.
New
lawns; black soil; evergreens; shrubs and
trees;
lawns
re-seeded
and
fertilized;
stone work; driveways; tree work; patios. —
Telephone ID 2-7619.

FRANK VENA LANDSCAPING
Call me for the finest in lawn care, tree removal, top dressing, patio work, fertilizing.
Telephone ID 2-5494 after 7 p.m.
TO HAVE A NICE LAWN ALL SEASON
is necessary
correct spring time cleanin
and seeding with the right fertilizer. Ca
landscape gardener with 30 years experience
in lawns, ALpine 1-7580 or CRestwood 2-

after 7 p.m.

GENERAL landscaping. New jobs. Gabriel
Ruffalo,
909
Half
Day
Rd.,
Highland
Park. ID 2-7817.
C. MEDINA, JR. &amp; CO.
:
For the best in spring cleaning, ioe
oe
aimansies, new lawns, etc. Call
NARCISSUS FERRARO
Landscaping,
Yard
and
Garden
Maintenance,
perienced
and
Responsible.
Call
after 5, ID 2-2652.
LANDSCAPE
GARDENER
30 YEARS EXP.
abe to take care of any kind of yard. Residential, commercial,
etc. Call ALpine
17580 or CRestwood 2-4563.
Top Soils
Manures
Tractor Work
Gravel Drives
Lawn Rolling
Tree Removal
Fill Dirt
Wreckin
JIM
BEINLICH
TRUCKING—VE
5-119
COMPLETE
landscaping
and
tree
work.
Top dressing, mowing lawns, patio work.
Mayfield Landscaping; LOcust 6-0362.
YARD maintenance, shrub planting, tree reoe
and trimming. Call C.
Kropp, ID

MAINTENANCE

Around

CONTRACTORS

&amp;

Call

e

LAUNDRY

4-1310
2927 Belvidere
(Rte. 120) just east of Green
Bay Rd., Waukegan, IIl.
Open Mon., Thurs., Fri.: 9-9
Tues., Wed., Sat.: 9-6
Sunday: 12 noon to 5 p.m.

1641

Lumber

Oakwood

LAUNDRY &amp; DRY CLEANING

at 627-5156

HORSES

&amp;

Special: Men’s Suits
Cleaning and Pressing $1.25

PONIES
5

INCOME

years,

$350

or

best

Rooms

Co.

Ave.

EXPERT
carpentry,
porches,
recreation
rooms a specialty; no jobs too small. Call
ID 2-4349.
CARPENTRY,
remodeling, repairing, Free
estimates. Telephone Jesse Wilder, EMpire 2-2571.
HOME
remodeling,
additions, TV
rooms,
repairs, free estimates, winter rates. Telephone WI 5-1511,
FOR building that new home, addition or
remodeling,
be it large
or small,
call
V &amp; F Construction Co. Telephone ID
2-5477 or WI 5-2980.
BUILDING
and _ remodeling.
Recreation
rooms and cabinets, floor and wall tile,
window awnings, door hoods and carports.
Free estimates. Telephone TRinity 2-7313.
HERB BLOMQUIST carpenter, quality cushom homes, additions, porch enclosures,
rec rooms, custom cabinets; also remodeling and repairs. Telephone WI 5-2830.
CHRISTO-CRAFT
REMODELING
CO.
WI 5-3273
ID 2-2319
Remodeling and home maintenance is our
business. Porch enclosures, basement paneled room additions, kitchen cabinets, or
just that one door that doesn’t close right.
All work guaranteed.
FOR that small repair, or larger remodeling
job, garages, porches, attics finished, dormers installed, kitchens remodeled or any
sh additions. Call H. L. Smalley, ID 27153

590 Elm Place

LIGHT

general

or ID

Remedial
Reading

READING

and Developmental

move

all

SCOOTERS &amp; BIKES
BICYCLES

FREE

Pick-Up

Complete

and

&amp; Delivery

Service,

Repairs

Parts

on All Makes

of Bicycles

Boys

&amp;

Choice

Cohen, 706 Glencoe
SUMMER PROGRAM

also

NEW

&amp; Trikes

SCHWINN

BIKES

CENTER

Specializing in study techniques, reading for
main ideas, vocabulary, skimming, rate, critical thinking. Individual attention based on
diagnostic testing; for Junior high school
thru college.

R.

We

sppliances. Call ID 2-

2-4917.

MOTOR

BRAND
SHORE

hauling.

types of household

6098

INSTRUCTION
NORTH

Highland Park

MOVING &amp; HAULING

TAX

FORMER INTERNAL REVENUE AGENT
who has prepared thousands of tax re
turns and who can obtain all possible
tax benefits will do your return for reasonable fee. Telephone ID 2-7085.
INDIVIDUAL
income tax forms prepared
in my home or yours. R. E. Landau, WI
5-0764.
INCOME
TAX
SERVICE
For Wage
Earners
and
Business people.
This is a year-round business with us. 24
hour phone service for appointments. Open
evenings
and
Saturdays.
Capital
Business
Service,
Room
111,
730
Waukegan
Rd.
Telephone WI 5-5656.

Low Bank Rate Financing!
Call Harry J. Taylor
Hines

SAM WOO

In and

the House

CHESTNUT gelding,
offer. WI 5-1343.

Dormers

Basement
© Rec.
Kitchen Remodeling
Room Additions
Porch Enclosers

Man

Dan

JOB

ID 2-3720

runabouts,

Sales

HEATING

Your

REMODELING
AND REPAIRS

Edward

(2) 15 ft. Owens
1960 custom
steering, windshield, bow light.
was $845

now

WOOD

ECONOMY HEATING
|
Conversions and service at fair
prices. 302
S Lake Shore Dr., Mundelein,
Il. LOcust
6-5709,

INFORMA-

All work fully guaranteed
on jobs small or large .. .

PURCHASE

deluxe
light.

FIREPLACE

SEASONED
ffirepiace wood, $20 per ton;
tailgate delivery. Telephone ID 3-1622.
AGED mixed hardwoods. Jim Beinlich, The
Firewood King. VErnon 5-1195.

STate 2-8791, Camp Ad-

CARPENTERS,

e
e
®
®

now

INSTALLED

\

after 7 p.m.

4563

COMPLETE
floor and wall covering service; asphalt, vinyl asbestos, linoleum, etc.
Al Richman,
ID 2-9249.

Bureau.

e Attic

1961
to

ELECTRIC

COVERING

in selecting
your child.

INSTALLED

(1) 17 ft. Owens
1960 Landau
runabout,
hardtop, steering, windshield, bow light.
was $1445
now $1098

FRECH
ID

rate

SPECIAL

OPEN

and

Undercoating

Bank

FLOOR

FREE &lt;STIMATES

Display

15 Models of
BOATS

CAMP

Edward
HINES
Lumber Co.

Waukegan

on

25 H.P. Johnson

TION, qualified advice
the proper camp for

LOANS

WI

SERVICK

NOW

RESIDENT

CEdar 4-2300

BELVIDERE
BOAT WORKS

Experi-

REPAIRS

TIME

Fruit trees, evergreens, shrubs, privot. Call
landscape gardener with 30 years of anea ¢
ence, ALpine 1-7580 or CRestwood 2-4563

FREE

BOATS

dressmaking.

WORK
atios, sidewalks, steps,
. Gulbrandsen. Phone

FOR
any
occasion
Clown-Magicians,
Pianists, Trios,
Bands,
car parkers,
anything! Call hdo productions, ID 2-1240.
MAGIC.
‘Sweet 16” Show. Special Birthday
Party
Show.
Gifts; Prizes;
Stunts.
David Echt. WI 5-0774.

HOME

It!

big—

at our New Drive In.
2020
First St., High-

SUNDAY

CAMPS

&amp; SUPPLIES

Payroll,

ALTERATIONS?
and see Eda
al Cleaners,
‘ark,
‘Taille

for ‘Business
Monday).

Park

ENTERTAINMENT

electric, remote
controls,
deluxe trailer,
fully equipped. Call CE 4-5296.
14 FOOT 1959 Admiral runabout, Tee-Nee
trailer, 30 HP electric starting Johnson.
Boat fully equipped with running lights,
eo
ac
controls, etc. Telephone iD

LOW COST AUTO LOANS
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF LAKE FOREST
LAKE FOREST CE 4-5100

ALTERATIONS

: Cc
4

TUESDAY

AUTO

with

CEMENT
EXPERT on cement
garage floors, etc.
WwW
58

BOOKS

ads)

SERVICE

FOOT Lyman

Highland
2-6333

LD

MORE than any other Encyclopedia, World
Book is planned for the home as well as
school. Phone HI 6-3848.

the publisher and which substantially
impairs the value of the advertisement,
on the advertiser’s request, the publisher will tom
the error by publishing
the corrected
ad in the next regular
issue without
additional
charge.
All
claims for adjustment must be made
within five days of the date of publication in which the error occurs.

SFFICIENT part time accounting and tax
teturn for small business, 30 years ex—Reasonable.
Telephone
WI
5-

_ ACCOUNTING

P.M.

(except
until Noon

We'll Charge

BUSINESS SERVICE

16

4:30 P.M.

Windsor 5-4500_

Advertising of any kind is accepted for
Publication in this newspaper with the
understanding
that the publisher assumes no responsibility for omission or
for errors and shall be under no obligation or liability of any kind whatsoever,
either to the advertiser or third parties.

However,

3

TUESDAY

(except situation wanted

any

run during the week
at no extra charge.

Williams,
IDiewood

CLAUSING

FOOT THOMPSON boat, 30 HP Johnson motor, Gator trailer, electric starter,
cushions, ski equipment,
life preservers.
Call ID 2-7208 after 5 p.m.
14 FOOT
runabout,
completely
equipped,
lights,
skis, radio, etc.,
horsepower
Scott motor in need of repair. Trailer included, best offer over $400. WI 5-1598.

REVIEW

Roger

ELECTRICAL

16

gs
NEWS

EASTER

651

All types of electrical work,
post lights,
wall outlets, new circuits, repairs. Reason~
able prices. Telephone ID 2-6287.

Skokie Hwy. &amp; Clavey Rd.
HIGHLAND PARK
ID 3-0880

25¢ Service Charge for blind ads

Your Ad

RD.

JOHNSON SEAHORSE
SALES AND SERVICE
BANK FINANCING AVAILABLE

Permitted)

DREAMING? Fertilizing

ASSOCIATED
RENT-ALLS

IST

Visit our new home
and see the 1961 models of:
CRUISERS INC.
LONE STAR
DORSETT
ALCORT SAILFISH
GATOR
&amp; MICHIGAN TRAILERS

RATES

(No Abbreviations

NEEDS

RENT FROM OUR NEW ASSORTMENT
of adult and children sized fine china, silver,
tables, chairs, linens and hundreds of other
items.
WE DELIVER

Rd., VE _ 5-4248
AVAILABLE

CRESCENDO ACCORDION
SCHOOL
Highland Park
ID 3-2833
Instruction on accordion and guitar. Instrument furnished free during trial program.
ID 2-4936
CE 4-1331
PIANO
INSTRUCTION
Hank
Winston,
staff pianist
at WBBMCBS. Adults mornings and evenings, children
after school. Call WI 5-0244 after 7:30 p.m.
NORTH

SHORE MUSIC STUDIOS
(formerly Garino’s)
Shore’s
finest.
Inquire
about
our
trial plan.
GUITAR-ACCORDION
Instrument furnished
ID 2-0015
Clarence Dombeck, Proprietor
JACK MOORE GUITAR SCHOOL
By teachers who have produced solo and
band
national
championships
from
1955
thru 1960. Lessons in your home or studio.
Instrument furnished. Phone HI 6-3730.
PIANO INSTRUCTION
PATRICIA ANDERSEN
ID 3-1653
North
liberal

=

JUNK

NEWSPAPERS
35c per CWT brought to our door.
Highest prices paid for all types of junk
brought to our door, such as rags, iron,
metals, etc. Or call ID 3-1466 for truck
pick-up.
Hours
daily
including
Saturday,
8:30 to 5:30 p.m. Sun. 11-2.
HIGHLAND
PARK
WASTE
MATERIAL
1466 Berkeley Rd.

Girls

Models—All

Sizes

of Colors. Famous

‘Long-As-You-Own-It’

Schwinn

Guarantee.

$29.95, $37.95, $38.95, $41.95.
WE

SERVICE

WHAT

Lay-Away

CYCLE

WE

or Easy

&amp;

HOBBY

486 Central

SELL

Terms

SHOP

at Sheridan

ID 2-1369

PAINTING

&amp; DECORATING

European

by

Craftsman

GUSTAV
PAINTING AND
MARBLEIZING

WOOD

HOING
DECORATING
—

FINISHING

2957 N. Halsted St.

STRIATING

—MURALS

Diversey 8-7409

Chicago

cone

PAINTING AND DECORATING
Thorough preparation
Clean, careful, workmen
Best materials, aplied properly
Sensible prices
BLOOM
PAINTING CO.
ID 2-5544

THE VILLAGE DECORATORS
INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR
LOCAL
REFERENCES
BAldwin

3-0954 or BAldwin

3-4636

PAINTING
and decorating; outside painting a specialty, insured; free estimates.
Call after 6 evenings, CE 4-3938.
EXTERIOR and interior painting and decorating. Hubert Johnson. Call ID 2-1770.
PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING. Interior and exterior painting. For quality
workmanship
by
experienced,
reliable
men call W. C. Varney, WI 5-0654.

Thursday,

March 30, 1961

&gt;

;

�ee

“HOMES FOR SAIEPAINTING and decorating, interior
exterior, natural or bleached
ishing; quality workmanship.

_

mating,

call

Eric

EM 2-8592.

wood
finFor esti-

Schneider,

Libertyville,

PAINTING
and paper hanging, reasonable
prices; free estimates. Telephone PETER

GALLOS, CE 4-0156.
TIRED of doing your own

decorating?

terior, exterior
painting.
free estimates. ID 2-8917.

Wall

In-

washing,

_-—s

we!
ae

ane

PIANOS

expertly

tuned,

of: satisfaction

or

with

no

the

er, musician.

Lake

Forest,

Rd. Telephone CE
9.a.m. and p.m,

$10.

PLANTS
FOR

153

44063

Tele

Atteridge

between

8 and

&amp; BULBS

sale: healthy African violet plants, old

(an

Mill Road,

aene

Lake

Forest,

CE

4-1485.

ROOFING |
CEDAR
Don’t

SUBURBAN
ALpine

Them

Days

ROTO

or Evenings

TILLING

ROTO-TILLING; garden and lawn preparation; spading and cultivation. Call EMpire 2-0472 or CE 4-2846.

NO

CHARGE

if we cannot repair your TV set
home. Service call $4.95 only when
toe your satisfaction.

NORTH

SUBURBAN TV
ID 3-0608

TREE

in your
repaired

SERVICE

SURGERY

TREE
EXPERTS.
Cutting, trimremoving,
feeding
and . repairing,
stump removing dnd power spray-

ing. Fully

insured

and

bonded;

free esti-

mates;
seasoned
fireplace
wood.
Telephone ID 3-1622 or KImball 6-2292.
@NLY a few weeks left for winter rates on
}-onuen tree. removal.
Fully insured. Jim
Beinlich, VErnon_5-1195.
G &amp; N TREE EXPERTS. Trimming, feeding, repairing, guying and removal, Fully
ID

FREE

2-8750;

ID

ESTIMATES.

Telephone

2-5481.

UPHOLSTERING

Selection of
Fabrics

ONESTI

BRICK

off

master).

Fine

FOR

ID 2-0582

vate

bath

dining
plus

2. fireplaces,

GAS

Old

WELL

BUILT

ACRE
many

in country,
closets,
2

bE

LAKE
Two

and

Sparkling

four

with

Middle

system.

heating

ri

KEMPF

REALTY,

opening

attrac-

WI 5-5552

FOR sale by owner, nearly new 3 bedroom
2 bath ranch; fireplace; carpeted, draped;
full
basement
with
finished
recreation
room; gas heat. Lake Bluff Terrace, under
$30,000. CE 4-5713.
roo m house, 311 North Ave., Lake
Bluff; price $13,000, Call CE 4-0844.

Thursday, March

_
at

Low

RED
with

WOOD RUSTIC PARADISE
circular drive, marble floors,

hanging

bathroom,

built-in

kitchen

FREEZER,

D/WASHER,

has

REFRIG.,

&amp; cabinets. Just right

for PRIVATE COUNTRY LIVING
with VIEWS
&amp; NATURE.
Just
right for business couple as it is
from

3 villages.

has

carpets

&amp;

drapes.

Olson

CE

&amp;

Mar
Woods—Brick
w/f.p., 2 BRs, nice
$18,500

1262 Arbor
w/f.p., lge.
transp.

bedroom ranch, LR
Conv. to school &amp;
$19,900

Vitae—3
scr. pch.

Woods—Cute
Mar
Del
Birchwood,
2799
brick ranch on wooded
%
acre, 2 BRs,
family rm., 2 car att. gar. ................ $21,500
1217 Wilmot—Delightful white ranch. Close
kit., 3
family
comb.,
LR-DR
to school,
$24,500
BRs, bsmt., att. gar.

Rd. N_ to
Cape Cod,

Stratford
1309 Meadow—Take
this custom built brick &amp; frame

$24,900

3 BRs, 2 baths, den

. .

30, 1961

NEW

CALL

bsmt.

large
level,

$26,

1140 Rago—Brick ranch, 3 BRs, 2 baths,
13x22 beamed
ceiling family rm., fenced
yard, full bsmt., att. gar. ~............. $29,750

1232 Warrington—Roman brick ranch. All
lge. rooms, f.p. in LR, sep. DR,
family
rm., 3 twin BRs, 2 baths, gar. ........ $31,906
800 Cedar—4 bedroom custom built ranch,
2%
baths, 2 f.p.s.,
panel.
recr.
rm.,
car gar., beaut. kit.
$35,700
912 Kenton—2 story Tackett built home in
NE section, 4 BRs, 2 CT baths, recr. rm.
Most conv. location
$37,500
833 Northwoods—2/3 wooded acre in town.
New England Col. ranch, 3 BRs, 2 baths,
LR w/f.p., sep.
DR,
bsmt.,
2 on
ee

RIVERWOODS

AREA

2665 Sunset Trail—Spacious contemp. ranch,
huge LR, fam. kit., 3 BRs, 2 baths, 2 f.p.s.
1% acres
$29,500
885 Portwine—Expandable Col. ranch. LR
w/f.p., din. L, 2 BRs, kit. w/sep. eating
area, 114 acres
$29,750
Woodland Lane
Col. ranch, lge.
fps, 2 Cat gar.

(Lempke)—Brick &amp; frame
built-in kit., full bsmt., 2
$31,900

1080 Hiawatha—Beautiful
contemp.
ranch
on wooded acre, sep. DR w/f.p., fam. rm.,
9
3 BRs, 2 deluxe baths eaeacceecsacerscenceceee

3095 Blackthorn—Custom
built split level,
huge 2 BR 2 bath suite, LR &amp; fam. rm.
W/T.p8, Oe0;: 2° Ca? GBs hectic $44,500
Our Office
all day on

Deerfield

will be closed
Easter Sunday

CE 4-1855
BR 5-0450

GROTH’S

CONSTRUCTION

CUSTOM
DOWN

TO

CO.

BUILDERS
EARTH

PRICES

You can save money by building. We help
you completely. We draw plans for you at
no
charge
or obligation
unless
you
are
completely satisfied. Our price after given
to you is firm, no extras. We help you with
financing, choosing proper house for your
lot, etc. Our homes have been chosen many
times in ‘‘Homes of the Week” for unusual
design.
For example,
our leading smaller
home sells for $17,750 with 3 bed., 1%
baths, dining room, finished family room.
We build in all price brackets. For information call WI 5-5998.
LAKE BLUFF: east on Sheridan Road in
Ravine Forest on % acre wooded lot, 3
bedroom ranch; 32’ living room; plastered
walls, fireplace, carpeting; 2 car garage.
Upper $30’s. Owner. CE 4-3669.

Construction of the finest quality
makes this lovely brick ranch one

Commons

Windsor

GRETA

ture porch

baths;

5-1670

LEDERER

678 N. Western
Lake Forest

basement

Ave.,

with

CEdar

4-0816

WILL
SELL
ON
CONTRACT—Concrete
and steel modern. 3 bedrms. Liv. rm. w/frpl.
Dining ‘L’. Cabinet kitchen. 1% baths. Sun
deck &amp; att. garage. Low 20’s.

dormitory

4th

rage,

basement.

full

RANCH

See this new 3 bedroom, 2 bath, press brick
and rough-sawn cedar ranch nearing completion at 523 Green Bay Rd., Highland
Park. Kitchen with spacious breakfast area,
attached carport, separate entry foyer, large
closets and other features. $27,500.
Al Richman, Builder
ID 2-9249
591-C Roger Williams Ave.

bedroom.

CE

4-1117

room

with fire-

re-

other

2 car

,one

ID

Ranch

cottage. —

$58

$69,:

bedroom,

two bath, Brick

charmer

Silo. Over

designed

eight and

anc

aroun

a half

ac

of property.
Three
bath

bedroom, two and ae
plus,
brick
Williamsbur

story

and

a half

Five

bedroom,

house.

four

and

a

bath, Contemporary house on.
DesPlaines
River.
Ten
acres

wooded property.

2-1484

two

plus

maid’s

- story

room

and

Williamsburg

bath,

with

magnificent stainless steel and»
kitchen. Perfection!

House

Just right for that young couple
to get

guest

Four bedroom, three bath,
ditional Virginia Farm house in
Apple Orchard setting.
&amp;

bath,

Bedroom

bath

i

ga-

ONLY $14,000
1473 DIVISION STREET
HIGHLAND PARK
2

$57,

Four bedroom, three bath,
rem
eled Coach house plus a two bh

............ $37,650

Ave.

:

4-5132

Realtors
St. Johns

modern
two

CE

Dorsey Husenetter
723

over

4-1082

place.
Den
with picture
window
overlooking
rear yard and
large
oak trees. Powder
room,
3 bedrooms and 2 baths (one new with

the

bath,

on

4-0104

Frame

and

two

house

CE

Two

started.

Beautiful twenty-three acre est
pool
swimming
house,
with
two gate houses.

Real

Estate Service
FRANK PEERS
FRANK ANDERSON

657
ID

Laurel

Ave.

Highland

2-0344

ID

Parking

Park

For

SEYMOUR
Vernon
5-4121

Ave.

Our

Available

Customers

Hart, Shaw &amp; »
Company

GRAHAM

REALTORS
655
VE

Space

2-2682

GLENCOE
QUALITY RANCH
HOME
Custom
built for present owner in 1951.
Spacious living room, separate dining room,
paneled breakfast-family room, 4 bedrooms,
3%
baths,
beautifully
landscaped.
CENTRAL AIR CONDITION.
Home perfectly
maintained, excellent value, priced in 60’s.

Realtors

111 Green Bay Road, Wilmette
1-1111 BR 3-3333 HI 6-6666 WI 5-5555

bedroom,

room,

Directions—Edens highway north to Berkeley, Berkeley west to Ridge rd., Ridge rd
south to 1284.
VE 5-0344 Sat. &amp; Sun.
Eves VE 5-0343
JUST
LISTED
SUPERB
LANNON
STONE CONSTRUCTION,
4 bedrms. 2%
baths. Liv. rm. w/frplc. Dining room. Tiled
kitchen w/brkfst.
rm. Library. Full base.
Situated on beautifully landscaped grounds
150x200. Many features. 2 car gar. Mid 50’s.

Four

chen,
dishwasher,
disposal
and
good eating area. Separate dining

vanity

Rag

yard.

delightful

CE

LISTING

living room

0:

Five bedroom, three and ae
bath, Colonial with a lovely |
dining room with a fireplace and

a half wooded acres.

Brick
Colonial
on
beautifully
wooded deep lot. New modern kit-

large

and a
Colonial
oy

Four bedrooms ,two
bath, three-year old
lovely lot.

two-story

EVENINGS CALL
M. C. Lackie CE 4-1380
W. Paul LeRoi
N. Starosselsky CE 4-1181
Donald Kelley
Mary Griffis CE 40339
Geraldine Moyer
Frances Rutgers CE 4-1075
June Enos
Nancy Appleton CE 4-3974

NEW

$47,

Four bedroom,
air - condition
Brick
and
Stone
Contempor
with two hobby rooms.

12 Scranton Ave.
Lake Bluff

4-0485

ha

a

and

two

bedrooms,

Four

bath, completely remodeled hot
_
in excellent eastern location.

(founda-

John Griffith, Inc.
2 OFFICES TO SERVE YOU
LAKE FOREST &amp; LAKE BLUFF

AT $29,950.00

CONTEMPORARY

enormous

double

4 bedrooms,
2 tile baths,
walnut
family
room, large living room with bay, dining
room,
Provincial kitchen with dishwasher.
disposal,
oven
and
range
top,
separate
utility room, carpeted living room, dining
room
and master
bedroom.
Vinyl
in all
Other rooms included. 2 car garage. Over
1850 square ft. living area.

AL

room

fireplace. Located in finest East
area on quiet wooded lane. Priced
right—in the 30’s.

PRESENTS WITH PRIDE
FOR THE FIRST TIME
EXECUTIVE RANCH HOMES
INCLUDING 100 FT. LOTS

HOMEFINDERS,

or family

tion already in). Unlimited cabinet
space in kitchen plus cozy family
eating area. 3 bedrooms; 2 full

cently modernized). The third floor
is heated and now used as a large

HIGHLAND PARK
SURREY RIDGE
OPEN DAILY

LISTING

Baird &amp; Warner

BLUFF

CEdar

Piersen Realty

TYSON

LAKE

place in living room; separate dining room with French doors to fu-

Ill.

CHARLOTTE

ed and landscaped setting on dead
end street. $21,950.00.

1209 Hazel—Terrific value. Colonial brick
&amp; frame split level, 4 BRs, family rm.,
bsmt., att. gar.
$26,900

kit.,

the
split

Co.

Nicest wooded
%
acre in Eastern
area.
Brick
and
frame
ranch.
Delightful living
room
with
fireplace.
Family
room
with
pass-thru to complete kitchen including refrigerator freezer.
Patio with the privacy
of the Northwoods.
3 bedrooms, 2 baths.

EASTER SPECIALS

Very impressive brick traditional
split level on wooded half acre. 3
Three bedroom, one bath, Redw
bedrooms, 214 baths, separate dinfami
a wonderful
with
Ranch
ing room, modern kitchen, fabulous
:
room and screened porch!
family room, 2 car attached garage.
Attractively landscaped, spacious,
and well planned. $59,500.00.
Four bedroom, two and a half
Cozy
2 bedroom
frame
cottage New England farm house w
among tall trees. Attractive wood- paneled TV room!

of our proudest
offerings. Every
room is spacious, sunny and tastefully decorated. Crab orchard fire-

4-0969

Forest Office

FOREST

family.
built-in

Castlewood—For
1028
Modern 4 BR, 2 bath

1855 Strenger Lane—off Duffy Lane. Stone
&amp; cedar ranch, 2400 sq. ft. of living space,
fam. rm., 3} BRs
$37,500

mo.—$150—

Lindenmeyer,

D.

30’s.

RENTALS

LEASE—$135

Mrs.

Low

ARE PROUD TO OFFER
THESE FINE HOMES

1090
Oakwood,
Del
ranch, LR-DR comb.
kit., tile bath

tax.

... See this amazing offer. $27,500.

20's.

tive new section, 3 bedrooms, family room,
air-conditioned; $6000 income; live in one
—rent other, or two family at $28,750 each;
rent or buy.

THE

on1

bedrooms,
baths,
2

h/water

shower;

Maywood.

duplex;

...

lg.
full

283 E.. Deerpath
Lake Forest

INVESTMENT

South

Georgian

3

kitchen, full base,

AT

FOREST

RANCH

f/places, DREAM

Mill Rd.

Large 7 room 2 story all brick house, attached brick 2 car garage; front and back
porches; living room, dining room, kitchen,
sitting room and 1% bath on Ist floor; 3
bedrooms, full bath on 2nd floor with 4
lot.

ga-

ing. $59,500.

BRAND

SPACIOUS LIVING
IN MUNDELEIN AREA

large

base-

2 car

rage. This is an exceptionally fine
offering (with space) for family liv-

—

excellent condition;
LOcust 6-7524.

DRY

att.

A NEW
LISTING—An
excellent buy! A
brick ranch with spacious rooms, large closets.
3
(or
4)
bedrooms,
ceramic
tile
baths, 2 fireplaces, carpeting, FULL BASEMENT,
30x22
attached
garage, large lot.
5 yrs. old and like new. $52,000.
Call ’Nita Lesney

in

basement

full

HEAT,

room,

kitchen,

LAKE

REALTORS

North Shore &amp; Lake County
Real Estate—Over 35 Years

full

Living

equipped

WE

Hart, Shave

REALTORS

DEERFIELD

Realtors

Carl E. Rudolph

closets;

facilities.

Waukegan,

PROPERTY
MANAGEMENT

large

liv-

FOREST

room,

H.

PROPERTIES

Lake

dining

DECORATED

LAKE

WILL

and

CE 4-1485

room,

DELIGHTFUL BRICK, slate entry
hall, 4 BEDROOMS each with pri-

Lake

695 W.
Forest

(one

with 3 bedrooms, livbath. In good condi-

SALE

Specializing

bed-

BATHS,

ing room,
18x20
f/place,
dining
room,
kitchen,
BASE,
h/water
heat. . . . Immed sale desired!

For

~~ CITY

generous

Living

$21,750 NEWLY

$225

Upholsterers

HOMES

dining

room,
family
sized
kitchen,
full
basement, GAS heat. ($23,000 mort-

~~ REAL ESTATE

:

3

SPRING

&amp; SON

Experienced

1753 2nd St.

kitchen,

family

2 CERAMIC

minutes

ea

range,

rooms,

SLIP COVERS
Custom Made
Full

cheery

$27,500

ment,

TELEVISION

insured.

d/washer,

ROOF TREATING SERVICE

1-0377

WING’S
ming,
wer

STUDY,

$17,000 GEM
ing room, 1
tion.

SHINGLES
Neglect

$31,000 — BRICK
FOUR
BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, 29 ft. living
room, f/place, dining room, with
alcove,

John Griffith, Inc.

Piersen Realty

BUYS

gage available at 514%).

and new varieties, also rooted leaves. Call
for appointment, Carl Rudolph, 695 West

Old

SPRING

guarantec

charge.

phone ID 3-0608.
PIANOS
exactly
TUNED
and
REGULATED by KARL LANGER, piano tun-

oe

BLUFF

area. Basement, gas h/water heat,
2 car gar. Tall Trees. ... This home
is in most immaculate condition.

PIANO TUNING
|

LAKE

fe,

Glencoe
HO 5-0655

TWO
apartment
brick
duplex in a new
Lake Forest area; air conditioned; recreation room; 3 bedrooms in each unit; full
basement; good mortgage available. Call
Ted Gabanski, CE 4-3737.
LAKE BLUFF East: 4 years, 3 twin) bedrooms,
oak floors, 2-way
lannon stone
fireplace, built-in range, basement of tremendous
possibilities
with
separate
entrance, priced below cost, $26,500. CE
4-1928

Richard

B.

Howard

ReQua,

C.

Mrs.
Ruth

Hart,

Stuart R. French
E.

Henderson

260 E. Deerpath

President
Vice

President

Milton

MeN.

Kenmore

Thor

135 S. La Salle St.

Lake Forest, CEdar 4-1000 RAndolph 6-7
Members o fthe Evanston-North Shore
Multiple Listing Service

Page H 57—D

:

�HOMES FOR SALE —

SALE

am

Lake Forest Listings
established East location. Modern
kitchen, screened summer house,
bedroom,
annon

LARGE
Well

house

on

1%

acres.

spacious

6 bedrm.,

314

ly $34,750.

COLONIAL
Of

wooded

ON

1%
4

bedrms..,

3% bath, porch. White brick and
frame, 2 car attached garage. In
estate

area,

1

ing. House
500.

cl nservatory, in 60’s.
FALL

3

OCCUPANCY—Will

cate in Lake

Forest on your lot or

_ ours—gorgeous

spacious
;—

dupli-

4 bedroom,

white

2-story,

Colonial

built

in

Hill Estates, Wilmette. $39,-

REAL
ryn

Berenice
Burgess Olson

place,

studio

LISTING

On
delightful deadend street in
_ street in east Braeside, this 6-year
old white brick is perfect for small
_ family. Living room has wood pan‘led
fp.
wall;
walnut
paneled

ily bedrooms each with own fine
bath, plus maid’s room and bath.

screened

patio.

Gas

FA

heat, and full air-cond. For details

eled

den,

brkfst.

modern

room.

kitchen,

Owner

low 40’s.

NOW IS THE
YOUR HOME

wants

TIME
FOR

RENTAL.

sep.

offer in

TO LIST
SUMMER

‘A and R. Anspach
Ns

«

463 Central Ave.
—_—_—

BEDRM.,

ID 2-1212

344

and

Anderson

Win-

oilMid

SCHWANDT REALTY CO.
REALTORS

Milwaukee
bertyville

2-2015

Ave.
LO

TRUST LIQUIDATION
down payment will rent or

6-6720
buy

this

desirable Cape Cod 2 bedroom home on
wooded site in South Highland Park. Full
basement, gas heat, 2 car attached garage,
ly decorated. Immediate occupancy. Un2nd floor may be completed now
or later. Only $27,900. Call Bamburg at VE

5-2600 for details.
LAKE FOREST:
3 bedroom
ed living and
full basement,

Gas

baths,

LOCATION

porch,

2

car

at-

Rd.

ID

dining room
2 car garage

ranch,

combination,
on % acre.

heat. $26,500. Call CE 4-1223.

: Page H 58—D 50

carpet-

Hillcrest

Real

6-2900

good

buys.

For year-round comfort and exceptional summer beauty. Again at re-

markable low prices!
510 Deerfield—3
bdrms., 2%
baths, LR,
separate
DR,
paneled
den,
full
bsmt.
w/finished
rec.
room.
Completely
air
conditioned, beautifully landscaped, patio.
&gt;

This custom built Field stone Ranch on a
wooded % acre is an outstanding example
of
Colonial
style
blended
with
winding
streets amongst tall trees. Carpeted living
room
with bay window;
carpeted
3 bedrooms; 2 baths; one bath off master bedroom;
Family room with fireplace; 2 car
attached garage. $41,500.
of Evanston - North
Multiple Listing Service

Woodland Lane, Riverwoods area—4 bdrms.,
2 baths, wood paneling in almost every
room,
3 FP’s,
kitchen
w/blt.-ins,
full
bsmt. On % wooded acre.
$39,500
644 Westgate—3
bdrms., LR
w/FP,
separate DR, sun room, kitchen w/bit.-ins,
attic, full bsmt.
Beautifully
landscaped
wooded lot, grape arbor.
$32,500
In observance of Easter our office
closed all day Sunday, April 2.

Shore

THE NAME WITH
THE TRADE-IN PLAN
Deerfield

Road

PRICE
SLASHED
$1,000 down, no closing
rated 3 bedroom ranch,
lovely kit., gar.

WI

5-5100

will

VErnon

5-0236

Estate Co.
2-5540

EAST

HIGHLAND
PARK: must sell; best offer.
Brick 5 room ranch, attached garage, 134
acres, landscaped and fenced, greenhouse
and fruit trees, including utilities. Low
20’s.
Southeast
corner
of
Buena
and
Skokie Valley Road. ID 3-0922.
HIGHLAND
PARK’S finest East area, 3
bedrooms, 2 ceramic luxury baths, 214
car garage, 1800 square feet of living in
this new custom. designed ranch, engulfed
in maples and oaks, 30’s. Call ID 2-8453.

PARK

1-3430

VE

2-6776

OWNER, builder offers new deluxe ranch,
4 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2 car attached gaoe,
full basement, asking $39,500. WI
5-0108.

BRICK

and

plastered

3 bedroom

Suddenly

ranch,

Ins.

Hillcrest
SHeldrake

6-1855
3-1855

It’s Summer

This home has a 16x34 ft. SWIMMING POOL with filtering system;
it is fully AIR CONDITIONED, has
fireplace in recreation room, 2 full
baths and 3 bedrooms.
far the
best
buy
on

457

ID

wall,

with

dining

house

large

has

room, warm

many

kitchen

bedrooms,

2

closet space, utility

Features:

and_

plaster
to wall

3

air gas heat.

Special

storms

modern

area,

baths, excellent

screens

aluminum

throughout,

walls, parquet floors,
carpeting, patio.

wall

Can be bought in the 30’s.

PAUL

PHELPS,

Sheridan

INC.

Rd.

ID

2-4580

Drive by and then call for an appointment
if this artistic English brick appeals to you
in its country-like setting on a semi-private
lane, living room with stone fireplace, large
dining. room,
1st floor bedroom,
pow

Provincial

kitchen,

2 bedrooms

ceramic tile bath on 2nd, paneled game

with

stone

fireplace.

tiled

roof,

windows

copper

...

A

Lot

and

room

62x215,

fenceg

real charmer

in im-

gutters,

metal

case-

maculate condition at $31,500.
To reach property take Green Bay Road
to County Line Road, west 2 blocks, turn
right. Just 4 blocks to Braeside transportation.

move

|2 bedroom bungalow with living room, dining room, kitchen, utility room and garage
on nice lot, good location, priced to sell.

IN

GOOD
3

2

car garage, rec room in basement, fenced
in yard. WI 5-5301.
LAKE
FOREST,
8 room
white
shingle
house, excellent cendition;
3 large bedrooms and sleeping porch 2nd floor; living room, dining room, kitchen and den
1st floor; 1144 baths, full basement, 2 car
garage; next to large City Park; close to
transportation; $30,500. CE 4-1804.

each,

VACANT
houses for

from 8 5 &lt;r
low

taxes.

BUSINESS
income.

Baracani

to

sell.

CORNER

Real
ID

rm, 2 and

Priced

plus

2

Estate

2-8077

CONVENTIONAL MORTGAGES
HOME IMPROVEMENT LOANS
LAKE FOREST
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN ASS’N

ID

2-6600

HIGHLAND PARK—Older 1 story, 3 bedroom stucco, full basement, hot air oil heat,
immediate possession, convenient to shops,
etc., priced for quick sale.

600 N. Western
CE
BY

HALF
DAY—3
bedroom frame Ranch, 2
car attached garage, 1%
acres. Priced for
quick sale, $18,000.
Call agent WI 5-0254 or ID 2-0474.

rooms,

2

baths,

oil

car garage. Woodland
phone WI 5-2390.

Forest

heat,

in Deerfield.
floors, 3 bed-

fireplace,

Park

vicinity.

144

Tele-

MORTGAGE LOANS
CONVENTIONAL OR FHA
For prompt,
personal,
service when
you
buy—build or refinance in the Lake Forest
Lake Bluff area—See us.

FIRST NATIONAL BANK
LAKE FOREST CE 4-5100

OWNER

East location adjoining golf course, close
to schools, shopping and train. Lovely Cape
Cod with large living-dining combination and
Colonial fireplace. Kitchen with eating area,
large bedroom, full tile bath on first floor.
2 large bedrooms, 1 cypress panelled, and
full tile bath on second. Wonderful closet
space.. Full basement, knotty pine panelled
with
built-in
bar.
Carpeting
and
drapes,
aluminum storms and screens, 1% car garage. Anxious to sell. Asking $27,500. Telephone WI 5-3308.

Lake
4-4200

owner:
brick
bi-level
Plastered walls, hardwood

DUFFY
LANE—Lovely
1 year old owner
built Brick &amp; Stone Ranch. Fireplace, patio,
gas heat, carpeting, 1 car attached garage,
on half acre. Available May Ist, $24,600.

DEERFIELD—BY

INCOME

rooms

This is by
the
North

in tomorrow.

Central

HIGHWOOD

INCOME
PROPERTY—2
family | stucco
plus 5 room house on large lot, all in good
condition, close to schools and transportation.

L. Ringer

GLENCOE

Williams

Tax,

ranch

place

ment

Baird &amp; Warner

Glencoe
5-1971

REALTORS
Roger

Int.,

a

Sadler &amp; Hultman

576 Lincoln Avenue
Winnetka, Illinois

TODAY,

Idlewood Realty
653

prin.,

traditional

yard,

MORTGAGE

incl.

e

charming features with its 32x17
living room with full paneled fire-

room,

5-5700

Shore. Priced in the low 30’s. CALL

RARE
INDEED—a
truly spacious home
of superb design, exquisite ranch type home
on one of Glencoe’s most beautiful streets.
It consists of 4 bedrooms, 3% baths, large
family
room
and
panelled
den,
separate
dining
room,
completely
air-conditioned,
magnificent landscaping. This elegant house
is priced for the executive.

GARDENER’S
DELIGHT,
a ranch
with
everything
done
to perfection;
mew paneled family room 14x22, new carpeting and
decorating; 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2; deluxe
baths, gas heat, patio, all this for $39,500.

GLENVIEW REALTY CO.
PArk 4-0600

5-5300

Lang Real Estate
R oad
AL

PM

&amp;

HIGHLAND PARK
31 VALLEY ROAD

Realtors

WI

with 2 cer. t.

Close to L. F. high school on %
acre of well wooded ground, this

1925

Service

Rds.

3 bdrms.

Inc.

Attractive crab orchard stone and redwood
ranch in lovely East location. 3 bedrooms,
2 ceramic tile baths, TV room, beautiful
paneling and many extras. Gas heat. 2 car
att. gar. In the 40’s.

Glencoe
2-7873

Deerfield

of

are

Bedrooms
2% Baths
Fireplace
recreation room
plus sep. play rm.
Basement
fenced patio
% Acre
REALTORS
2 car garage
514 Davis St.
ALpine 1-1500
In perfect condition thruout. Built in 1958
and figures to prove price of $37,250 is
below cost. Loads of features incl. alum. '
storms and screens, all around-birch cab.
IN HIGHLAND PARK
built-in kitchen. Built on knoll at end of
Lannon stone and brick ranch, air condicul-de-sac
street just perfect for children
tioned, 3 bedrooms, 2% baths, living room
and so close to schools. IMMEDIATE POS-.
with dining area, carpeted, fireplace, kitchSESSION—INSPECT TODAY.
en, full basement with rec, room, att. gar.,
on
corner lot. Priced in mid 30’s.
Call LIONEL WATSON

Inviting
attractive
brick
and
frame _ trilevel
just
5 years
old.
Separate
dining
room, pine paneled family room on first
floor,
all electric
kitchen with
breakfast
area. 4 bedrooms (including maid’s room
on lower level), 3 baths, gas heat, fully airconditioned. Att. gar., large grounds with
many fruit trees. In the 40’s.

712
AM

&amp;

Listing

There

baths, lge. L-shaped liv.-din. comb.
w. frpl. and thermopane pic. windows; patio. The kitch. is unusually large and well equipped incl.
Barbecue, combining fam. rm. and
eat. area. Full bsmt. has lge. rec.
rm. w. bar, sep. laundry, gas heat.
An excellent buy in the mid 40’s.

4

PARK

HIGHLAND

MAY

AMbassador

WI

HIGHLAND

Board

444%
$199

Viking Realty
Rd.

Shore

On 11% acres of partially wooded
well landscaped
ground,
this 5
year old brick ranch features good
sized rooms and many interesting
details.

be

YOU CANT BEAT THIS!

TO $17,950
costs, newly decocarpeted liv. rm.,

A BEAUTY
ON
WOODED
LOT
New 7 room deluxe bi-level in Northeast
Deerfield, 2 car att. gar., reduced to mid
"Ss.

Deerfield

of

Multiple

LOOK! A BEAUTIFULLY
WOODED ACRE ONLY $3,000.

826

Members
Evanston-North

FOR QUICK
SALE
Contemporary
3 bedrm.
ranch
on
a %
acre including 4 major appliances, $15,900.

HOUSE

Will soon be upon us—BLOSSOM
out in
this beautiful
WHITE
BRICK
home
on
grounds 5 acres large enough to build a
SWIMMING
POOL as well as a TENNIS
COURT! Six 2nd floor bedrooms, 314 baths,
gun room, library, and one of the SHORE’S
most
inviting
screen
porches.
Executive
price range. See

Sears

ANY

1130 Knollwood—S
bdrms.,
3 CT
baths,
LR, Separate DR, paneled family room
w/FP, full bsmt., 2-car gar., wooded lot,
excellent construction,

2-0880

Tired of a large home?
Easy living will
be yours in this 3 bedrm.
Town
House
near school and train. Pleasant living rm.
with
large
dining
L,
excellent
kitchen.
Full basement. See at $16,950.

Bldg.

IN

101 Willow—4 bdrms., LR w/FP, separate
DR,
kitchen w/blt.-ins, breakfast room,
2%
baths,
full
bsmt.
w/finished
rec.
room &amp; FP, many extras.
33,950

Waukegan

JUST WHAT YOU’VE BEEN SEEKING.
Lannon Stone RANCH
in woodsy setting,
choice EAST location, 4 bedrms., 3 baths.
PANLD.
DEN. Separate dining rm. Ideal
kitchen
with
bit.
in oven,
range,
dishwasher.
Large
eating
area.
Panld.
game
rm. AIR CONDITIONED. NO COMPETIseb FOR
THIS
LOVELY
HOME
at

Theater

ceptionally

A spacious tiled center hall invites you into
this
gracious
Colonial.
3
bedrooms,
family room or 4th bedroom, 2 .full baths,
playroom, kitchen with built in oven, range
&amp; matching refrigerator, dishwasher &amp; disposal. One car attached garage. Other fine
extras included at $29,500.

Member

FIND

Why take the time to build? See
these newly constructed homes! Ex-

CENTER HALL

623

LISTING

TOWN

IMPOSSIBLE TO
OTHER AREA!

WEEK!

REALTORS

J-H Kahn Realty

RAVINIA,

THE

DEERFIELD

John Coons, Realtor ZANDER-OMMEN

Inter-City

REALTORS

NEW

OF

LAKE FOREST

REALTORS

INDEPENDENT!

Earhart &amp; Company
1899 Sheridan

LITTLE!

OUTSTANDING!

BLOOMING

On
¥% acre in Mundelein area
rame ranch
(built in °54), full basement,
large
living rm., cabinet kitchen-dining comaa
tion, 15x13 family room. Bedrooms are
_
2—15x13, 1—12x9, oil forced air heat, 220
in.
Urgent sale requested, $17,400
or reasonable
offer. Contact
Mr.
Denee

:
Small

family

In a crystal vase, this shrimp colored brick
RANCH on ¥% acre truly SPARKLES. Interesting
fireplaces
in
.the
COUNTRY
KITCHEN,
the
LIVING
and
paneled
GAME rooms, in addition are 3 twin size
bedrooms, 2 baths, a large patio and a 2
car att. gar. 5 years
old. AIR-CONDITIONED
and only $59,500!

‘

EM

deluxe

2%

Realtor Referral
Service

Staff of

wall,
attached 26x20 brick garage,
water
baseboard heat, plastered.

N.

detail,

LAKE FOREST
LIKE A RAINDROP

_ In choice section of Libertyville
1353
Square ft. of living area in this 3
_bedrm. brick ranch. Fireplace in 22 x 15 ft.
ted living rm., 12x10 dining L, custom
3
et kitchen,
18x14
heated
breezeway

602

every

Member

Glencoe

(Deerfield Oldest)
REALTORS
A
WI 5-0984
Member of the Evanston-North Shore
Multiple Listing service.
Office will be closed Sunday

te

BILEVEL

REALTORS

Carr Realty Co.

floors

BATH

tached garage, in spotless condition, located in finest neighborhood on a deadend street. $57 500.

Easter

with hardwood

in

room,

SO

Here is a delightfully styled Redwood Ranch
that has a separate office with an outside
entrance. Ideal for the business man that
has his office in his home. Well constructed
7 room Ranch with 3 bedrooms, carpeted
living room and separate dining room, one
and a half baths, custom built kitchen, overone garage. % of an acre of ground. $22,-

to commuter
kitchen with

J-H Kahn

Happy
the

2

~COLONIAL—S.E.

A
From

living

full basement, 3 blks
NW trains. Equipped
eating area, $29,950.

rms.,

Stunning

ceiling

fire-

Superb white Colonial with 4 bed-

—

NEW

RANCH

air conditioning,

car garage, porch,
room, $26 900.

Ressinger

$41,-

FOR

Owner
has moved
and will sacrifice this
beautiful traditional two story Colonial. 3
bedrooms;
2%
baths;
2 fireplaces;
Fully
equipped Muetschler cabinet kitchen; Lovely
wooded
lot. Don’t
miss
this outstanding
value. $38,500.

zon-

1940.

2 BATH

central

Immaculate

ESTATE

Jaicks
Carmen

With

minimum

built about

BEDRM.,

3

Gilbert Rayner

acre

MUCH

3 bedroom
Ranch
with
quality construction; Full basement, light and dry; Bright
good sized rooms; 2 apple trees; Carpeting,
draperies, stove and refrigerator; Convenient location. $21,500.

HOME

ACRES

property,

SO

FOR SALE

ZANDER-OMMEN

JOHN COONS, Realtor

HOME

bath home 1 blk. from lake in east
central location has TV rm., card
room, 2 porches, 2 car garage. On-

21% bath Clapboard and

stone

kept

FAMILY

HOMES

NEW
$24,500!

ONLY

Attractive

lar first
room,

rooms,

white

floor

dining

114

TV

room,

KING’S
Spanish

or

with

sunroom

cabinet

that

popu-

plus

kitchen,

—

3

baths. Full basement, 2 car ga-

rage. A lot of house

936

LISTING!
:
:
Colonial

for this price!

COURT
Ct.

Wilmette

CORP.
AL 6-0750

Thursday, March 30, 1961 :
athe

�he |

ce

Yio

5 YEAR OLD 7 ROOM BRICK RANCH
lush
iandscaped
90x190
lot,
2%
baths,
fireplace,
attached
garage,
paneled
21x12
den, full basement with paneled rec. room,
air conditioned.
Loads of extras.
Price
$37,900.
J. Kruger Co.
CO_ 7-4500
6252 Lincoln
Chicago

Park

Lake

TOO MANY

REAL

THREE
or four
Forest for cash
CE 4-3737.

Cut some for living room fireplace in this
luxury remodeled
barn. 4 bedrooms,
3%
baths,
%
acre Ravine site, sharing own
beach; $49,500.

SP

OFFICES,

7-4030

PARK

east,

English

cottage,

beamed
ceilings, fireplace, 3 bedrooms,
family room-bar),
12
baths, basement,
car garage, gas heat, appliances, $24,500, many extras, must sell. ID 2-7967.
HIGHLAND
PARK
—
BY OWNER
5 room house, excellent condition, panelled
fireplace wall, large rooms,
18,000.
down payment. ID 2-4718.
:
uses
HIGHLAND PARK—BY OWNER

5

room

home

on

deadend

street.

Living

tte
ranch,

in low $20’s. WI 5-3419,
HIGHWOOD:

os omg

at

2

res,
Catholic
agoerene

bedroom

frame,

an

BANNOCKBURN

lot,

School.

near
Call

PARK

YOUR

PARK

LOT

BY OWNER

3 bedrooms, 114 baths, basement, screened
porch, garage, near shopping, schools, transhres
Built 1949, Ravinia area, priced
for immediate sale at $20,500. ID 2-4478,
{NCOME Property: one piece in High
=, Go ad J gg
Park. Both yo ee
ches, schools,
shopi
:
tation. Call ID 28785.
ere

CAPE Cod: on wooded acre, in Riverwoods,

living room, dining room, bath, den or
bedroom, fireplace, breezeway, 2 car gaal fy Po
ae ia
bath on second.
Wr isic
orest Glen Trail.
HIGHLAND
PARK:
On lovel
a
finest construction, many leciewcine a
tures, 3 bedrooms, one 15x22, 2 baths
kitchen with dining area, utility room adjacent, full basement.
Priced
low
30’s.
ig
north to Berkeley, west to Ridge to
LAKE BLUFF East, by owner, 3 bedrooms,
Ah oxgag Wopeiace a
room, dining
yay
asement;
,
kitchen;
fu
e
ae in $20’s"Ss.

VACANT

2 bedroom

apartments,

ly controlled

PROPERTY

PROBABLY THE
DESIRABLE VACANT
ON THE NORTH

MOST
PROPERTY
SHORE

11/3 acres, located alongside a lovely, little
200x150 foot lake. Beautifully wooded with
pines
and
willows,
property
contains
a
unique
stone
bridge
across
a_ bubbling
stream. Now offered for the first time by
the owner, this property is located in Arbor Vista Estates, about 2 miles north of
Mundelein, just off Rt. 45.
Will sell outright or on contract. Priced
in the very low five figure range. Agents
invited. Cail WI 5-2315 for appointment to
see this truly wonderful buy.

Modern

Air Conditioned

TOWN HOUSE
2 bedrooms, 1%
fully
equipped
room,

room,

tiled

floors,

central TV antenna, indv. dryer and
washer,

private

garage,

and shopping.
6791.

ID

near

trains

2-6790,

ID

2-

HIGHLAND PARK
COUNTRY CLUB APARTMENTS
OPEN SUNDAY 1-5
AVAILABLE AT
EXCELLENT VALUE
680 Roger Williams
Convenient to schools, shopping,

train

2 floor townhouse layout combines the best
features of your own home with the convenience of an apartment. Two bedrooms,
1% baths, living room, dinette, kitchen, private basement. Newly decorated.
VErnon

5-0344,

Sat.,

TERRACE

Sun.,

Eves.

VE

5-0343

APARTMENTS
Ravinia

L. J. SHERIDAN

14 block to train. $165.

RA 6-7743

Draper &amp; Kramer

ID 2-504]

Deerfield

Garden

Deerfield,

30 W. Monroe

Glencoe—4

FInancial

Giant

6-8600

Rooms

Ist Floor, Heat Furnished
PRIVATE
ENTRANCE
AND
PORCH
Natural fireplace, 26 foot living room,
1
bedroom 24 feet long. Other can be either
bedroom
or
dining
room.
New
electric
kitchen with Frostfree
refrigerator-freezer.
Tremendous closets, 1 block C &amp; NW sStation, bus and shopping. Like living in a
park. Parking amd janitor service included.
May 1, $235. IDlewood 2-3607.

Apartments
Illinois

5 ROOM apartment, stove, refrigerator, first
floor,
$100,
Central-Green
Bay
area,
Highland Park. ID 2-8785.
AVAILABLE
immediately,
newly
decorated 2 bedroom apartment, modern kitchen with
electric
stove,
dining
room,
living room with fireplace, close to transportation and shopping. Call ID 2-5909
or ID 2-6453.
HIGHLAND
PARK: 5 rooms, 2nd floor,
with garage, near hospital and schools,
stove, refrigerator, heat, water, garbage.
Available May 1st. No pets. ID 2-4005.
LAKE
BLUFF,
23 E. Washington
Ave.,
new 2 bedroom town house apartment for
rent; full basement; stove and refrigerator
furnished;
available
April
1; $150 per
a
CE . 4-0468, inquire south apart-

ment.

HIGHLAND PARK:
4 ROOMS DELUXE
Southeast corner Sheridan Road and Park
Avenue, Elevator Building. $155 per month.
May 1 lease.

WH

4-4318

VE

5-2559

766 N. WESTERN AVE.
LAKE FOREST
5 room apartment near shopping and transportation,
$115.
For
inspection
call Mr.
Swethko, DE 6-8502 or Baird &amp; Warner,
Inc., Evanston.
GReenleaf 5-1855
524 Davis St.
2 BEDROOM duplex apartment, near town
and tarnsportation, newly decorated, $135
per month including heat. ID 2-5254.
LAKE
FOREST:
3 room apartment, full
bath, first floor in quiet, convenient location. Special consideration given to retired
people

or those

on limited budget.

Leon-

Hokanson &amp; Jenks
CE

‘Thursday, March 30, 1961

Modern 2 bedroom apartments and townhouses.
Excellent location,
convenient
to
schools, shopping and transportation. Ceramic tile baths. Cabinet kitchen with refrigerator, disposal, built-in oven and range
Off-street parking. Decorate to suit.

QUINLAN &amp; TYSON, Inc.
735 Deerfield

Road

WI

5-3750

HOWUSES

BEL-AIR

5-2565.

Eves.

&amp; week

ends VE

DEERFIELD:
2 bedroom apartment, $145
per month, including heat, gas and hot
water. Near schools, shopping and transportation. WI 5-2419.
GLENCOE:
343 Park Avenue, 2%
rooms
modern apartment, decorated, new refrigerator, cabinet sink, gas range. Light, airy
third floor, $97.50. VErnon 5-3300 or if
no answer VErnon 5-1901.
NICE 6 room apartment and mo a near
town, fenced in yard, second
floor, available April 1. ID 2-5796.
HIGHLAND PARK, located near shopping,
church and schools. Available immediately.
3 Oversized
bedrooms,
1%
baths,
built in oven and burners. For details,
Guy Viti, Realtor. ID 2-3933.
GLENCOE:
5 rooms (available April ist)
will decorate; ALSO
3%
rooms, newly
decorated,
AVAILABLE
NOW.
Near
railroad station at Park Avenue and Green
Bay. 310 Tudor Court, phone VE 5-2043.
IN Highwood, 3 room, 2nd floor apartment,
Private entrance, basement for laundry.
ID 2-2755.
adults
SIX
room
apartment
and_ garage;
only. Telephone CE 4-0134.
Highin
apartment
ground level
3 ROOM
land Park, own basement, garage, close
to transportation, reasonably priced. Telephone ID 2-7477.
3 ROOM apartment in Highland Park close
to transportation. Telephone
ID 2-2330;
after 6 p.m. ID 2-7233.
DEERFIELD:
6 rooms,
3 bedrooms;
garage, heat included; near schools, shopping,
transportation,
$125.
Call WI
5‘
cd

APARTMENTS

FOR

RENT

(Furnished)

Theater

Glencoe

ROOM
furnished
apartment,
available
immediately. Telephone ID 2-3802.
3 ROOM
furnished apartment, all utilities
i
bay newly decorated. Phone ID 2HALF
DAY:
furnished,
modern,
Mobile
home convenient to Fort Sheridan. Telephone ID 2-8917.
apartbasement
kitchenette
room
TWO
ment, walking distance to town;
single
person only; available now. CE 4-3555.
Small attractive East side 2 room garage
apartment, everything furnished, rent $90 a
month, 2 months in advance.

ANCHOR REAL ESTATE
1896 Sheridan Rd.
ID 2-0093
Res. Ph. ID 2-0037
5 ROOM partly furnished first floor
ment, garage, full basement; near
land Park Hospital. ID 2-3593.

apartHigh-

RAVINIA

HIGHLAND

5-0236

home,
room,

PARK: 3 bedroom, house for
Genes

2-9484.

ID

HIGHLAND PARK: 6 room house for rent,
located at 1745 Second St. Apply Ha
Auto Supply. ID 2-0391.
2 bedroom frame, full t
HIGHWOOD:
pref
ment, oil heat, garage, adults
A
Immediate occupancy, $85. Call
son, ID 2-0474.
6 large — OOT
duplex,
FOREST:
LAKE
excellent condition, convenient neighb
hood, gas heat, 1 garage space optional

HOUSES

&amp; APARTMENTS

WAN

WANTED: 3 or 4 bedroom apartment
divinity student, can pay up to $90
month. WI 5-5301.
student wants small, furnis
COLLEGE
accomm
apartment, quiet, clean; must
date 2 persons. WH 3-0027 after 6.
WANT
TO RENT: furnished 3 or 4 b
room
home,
5 adults (1 family)
neec
home from May Ist to September ;
or May ist to 30th, or what have
Have Deerfield, Lake Forest, Park Ri
references. Will pay $150 to $200 mont
Write: H. Concessions, P.O. Box No.
North Miami Beach, Florida.
ri
WANT
three
or
four
room_
furn
house with basement and possible dout
garage near Lake
Forest;
couple
onl
Phone after 6 p.m. CE 4-1155.
;
DO you have a house to rent, with possib!
option to buy, to a family that would tal
care of it better than yourself
wou
There are 4 of us—father, mother, 14
old son and an obedience trained be

Deerfield

high

school

district.

APARTMENTS

&amp;

HOUSES

fO

Ave.

&amp;

COMPANY
Forest

CE

parking,

free

week,

ID 2-9862.
Motel, 500

Highwood.
VEL-WOOD

Waukegan

for rent near transportation.

Ill. °
Highwood,
Bay Road,
Green
;
phone ID 2-7000.
aloe
rent,
for
room
sleeping
HIGHWOOD:

to transportatio
pe rach

close

living conditions,
Call ID 2-6682.

EAST Park Avenue; very central, cor
w
able front room for one employed

could

also

be

used

for

price.

ID

offices or other business, available immediately. Telephone ID 2-0685.
PARK: 5 room house, large
HIGHLAND
and _ restove
drapes,
carpets,
rooms,
frigerator furnished, near Lincoln school,

fer é

month.

$18,000

selling

18.
LAKE FOREST, attractive cottage on beautern Two baths. Now vacant. CE
ee
~4263.
5 room bungalow with 2 bedRAVINIA:
rooms, garage. No children, very reasonable. 781 Pleasant Avenue.
HIGHLAND PARK, 1250 Ridgewood Drive.
2 bedroom cottage in choice setting, furnished or unfurnished, $135. Also sell unpayment.
der $15,000 with small down
J-H Kahn, VE 5-0236, AM 2-2223.
3 ROOMS, gas heated, country home, west
Teleoccupancy.
immediate
Deerfield,
phone ID 2-1841.

:

|
Usual privilege, weekly rate $10.50.
\

kitchen

pleasant

times.

and

ID

ey
district. ,

business
preferred.

suitable

room

laundry,

Telephone

co

for

at”

water

hot

RIES:

2-3694.

OR BUSINES:

ie

LIKE ao
YOU
WOULD
YQVOMAN:
HON
OWN ROOM, BATH AND FULL
LOVELY
IN MY
PRIVILEGES
2
ID
one
Teleph
HOUSE?
RANCH
between 9 and 11 A.M.
bath, kitchen privileges,
private
ROOM,
preferred, $10 per week. Telephone
}
2-1745.
ROOM, for rent, gentleman preferred,

available. Telephone

street parking

4-1000

HIGHLAND
PARK, well built 3 year old,
6 room ranch, corner lot, gas heat, will
rent with option to buy or sell with small
down payment. 413 Ridge. WI 5-2419.
LAKE FOREST, compact 4 bedroom house
newly painted, screened porch, separate
dining room; $175 CE 4-3221.
stone
bdedroom_
2.
PARK,
HIGHLAND
patio, 5 years
attached garage,
Ranch,
available
only,
adults
town,
near
old,
April 1st, $175, ID 2-4422.
house, full basement, 2 car
room
NINE
garage, large yard, close to town, could
be used for residence and business, references required. ID 2-0118.
PARK, 6 room bungalow in
HIGHLAND

district,

S

rooms, by day |
PARK HOTEL sleeping
A
511 Waukegan

LARGE
6-6720

Two-story frame Cottage on large estate on
North Telegraph Road west of North Chicago. Living room,
powder
room,
dining
room and kitchen first floor. Upstairs are
three bedrooms and bath. Rent on one year
lease $125. References required. Ask for Mr.
Thorsen.

Lake

:

ROOMS TO RENT

‘NG GRANDMOTHER

SHAW

Phone

5-1066 after 6:30.
WANTED:
garage apartment, coach
or gardener’s cottage by married
student. Write Box 114, West Bend,

1173.

LO

HART,

weekend

or

evenings

4-0971,

CE

Call

A
2phone ID
ROOM within 4 blocks of
Telephone ID 2-3527.
ROOM for rent; gentleman

CO.

2-2015

260 E. Deerpath

;

~

rent, central location, $250. Available June.

5328.

SCHWANDT REALTY
REALTORS
602 N. Milwaukee
Libertyville

5-16

2 bedrooms
Living room, cabinet kitchen
and bath. Basement and space for 1
$160
or,
refrigerat
and
Including stove
utilities. Available immediately.. CE

ROOMS

Mundelein: Nice 5 room, 2 bedroom
large lot, trees, full basement, play
2 car garage, lease, $130 per month.

EM

WI

kit
Air-conditioned,
Highwood.
rooms for overnight guests and trave
e ID
Telephon
TV and shower baths.

VErnon

Bldg.

ence

to share an apartment in
WOMAN
land Park. Call ID 2-7172 after 6 p.m.

REALTORS

business

3

(Unfurnished)

J-H Kahn

TOWN-

5-0343.

RENT

CONVENIENT

HOUSE—5 rooms, 1% baths, living room,
dining area, equipped kitchen and full basement. Beautiful garden. $225 yer month.
VE

HOUSES

per

RENT

FOR

HOUSE

DUPLEX

IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE. Air Conditioned SPLIT LEVEL 3 bedrms., 12 baths.
Family
rm.
w/frpl.
Breezeway.
Garage.
Pink kitchen, Dishwasher, large eating area.
$300 monthly for 2 years.

APARTMENTS

AIR-CONDITIONED

TO

location ..........-. $155
PIERSEN REALTY
Realtors
Commons

Good

Deerfield

HIGHLAND
PARK, 2 new deluxe units, 2
bedroom apartments, 1 floor, 1%
Ceramic
tile baths, fully equipped
kitchens with
dining area, full basement, garage, close
to shopping and transportation. Call ID
2-3426 or ID 2-9049,
5 more dePHYLLIS KADISON is buildin
luxe townhouses at 370 Park
Avenue (East
2%
bedrooms,
Road)—3
Sheridan
of
baths, air-conditioned; ONLY
2 UNITS
SeptemOccupancy
AVAILABLE.
STILL
ber 1, 1961. Call ID 2-4115.
1! baths,
4 rooms,
PARK:
HIGHLAND
full basement, stove and refrigerator. 1647
Green Bay Road, ID 2-6650 or ID 30316.

GLENCOE

DELUXE

bsmt.,

and shopclose to Fe, aaa
Phone WI 5-0602.
4 room apartment. Call ID
HIGHWOOD,
3-1396.
apartment,
3 room
PARK:
HIGHLAND
newly decorated, large living room. with
furnished.
utilities
carpeting,
fireplace,
ID 2-0348.
near Fort
apartment
furnished
2 ROOM
Telephone
transportation.
and
Sheridan
ID 2-3971.
IND FLOOR, newly decorated, 14x20 livbath,
and
kitchen
cabinet
room,
ing
quiet, 1 block to town, prefer single elder or working couple. 1951 Green Bay
Rd., after 6.
4 OR 5 ROOMS ready to move in; heated,
2 or 3 bedrooms, 2 blocks business. Telephone ID 2-1636.
LAKE FOREST: large furnished 3rd floor;
living room, bedroom, bath; complete privacy;
3 blocks
from
Market
Square;
available to couple or single woman in
return for house and yard work;
man
could hold other full time job; meals also
available. CE 4-3825.
cottage completely furnished ex3 ROOM
cept light and
gas. $90 per month
in
Highwood.
ID 2-0885 or ID 2-3485 or
ID 2-9787.

&amp; CO.

$225 per

area. Sublease

bath,
ping.

TOWN

2 car garage, 1

full basement,

hospital. Telephone ID 2-7136.
baths,
California ranch, 3 BR, 1%
rm., kit. w/built-ins, 2400 sq. ft. of

studio apartment, kitchenette,

DEERFIELD:

AGENTS

parking.

HIGHLAND PARK, 5 room
closed porch, 2 large be
room with fireplace, dining room,

kitchenette apartment located in
MODERN
rooms;
business district, 24%
Highwood
1 or 2 adults. Phone CE 4-0136 after
5:30 Qam.
1 room bachelor apartment,
DEERFIELD:
kitchenette, bath with shower, all utilities
included, $85 per month. WI 5-0550.
2 OR 3 room furnished apartment, utilities
included, hot water at all times. Employed
y couple preferred. ID 2-2230.
apartment, %
furnished 5 room
NICELY
bedrooms, near downtown, available immediately. Telephone ID 2-4646.
24 Washington, luxurious
BLUFF:
LAKE
3 room furnished apartment, private patio,
CE 4-4972.
dryer.
and
washer

2 room apartments, modern elevator building, available May Ist.

individual-

heat, private

dining

baths, gas heat,
kitchen,
living

730 Judson

ardi Agency, ID 3-1000.
FOR RENT:
HIGHLAND
PARK
5 room
apartment 2nd floor. Newly decorated. Excellent
location.
$115
garage
included.
JOHN COONS, Realtor WI 5-5100; EveHOME BUILDERS OPPORTUNITY
nings WI 5-0645.
LAKE FOREST, new duplex, 3 bedrooms,
DEERFIELD—S.W. Cor. Hackberry &amp; Wil14% baths, fully equipped kitchen, baselow Aves. 200x120 ft. (2 home sites) fully
ment, gas hot water heat, excellent locaimproved. Ideal location for model house.
tion, near South Park, $200 per month.
Opposite new 25 acre park and Junior
High School site, within 34 mile of everyCE 4-3180
thing. Special price.
FIVE room apartment, third floor; stove,
refrigerator,
heat, hot water furnished;
Also 120x300 ft. cor. (3 or 4 sites). Ful
\two blocks from town; no children; ideal
operation to brokers. ‘
:
pity
for working couple, $115. Call CE 4-0337.
seal Walker, 4554 Broadway, Chicago
FIVE
room
apartment, Deerfield, 2 bedrooms, heat, water, garage and baseLO 1-1612
or
BR 4-5509
ment. Call WI 5-1530.
IN
HIGHLAND
PARK
WE
HAVE
18 LAKE FOREST: 4 rooms, 2nd floor, heat
acres zoned 1 acre residential, with sewer
and water, stove, refrigerator, $100. Sepaand water along the front. Very reasonable
rate entrance. Call ID 2-2568.
terms, to a responsible purchaser, and a 3 ROOM apartment near Highwood busisurvey is available in our office.
ness dis rict, garage if. desired. Call after
6 p.m., ID 3-1699.
BRAND
new, centrally located, air conditioned apartments, 580 Bank Lane, Lake
Forest. Studios, one bedroom, two bedrooms, elevator, modern in every respect.
HArrison 7-0616.
513 Davis Street
GReenleaf 5-1617
LARGE 6 room apartment, 3 bedrooms, 2nd
floor, near business district, heated, $150,
LAKE FOREST lots, 50, 60. 75, 100 feet,
available April 1st. ID 2-3271.
all improved. Telephone
4-3737,

ey

HIGHLAND PARK
Ravinia Area

(Unfurnished)

PARK

TO RENT (Unfurnished.

©

Spacious 3 bedroom, 2 bath
press bri
and cedar ranch, 523 Green As Hightoad
Park. Al Richman, builder, ID 2-9249,

HIGHLAND

RENT

AREA

5 room, 2 bedrooms, full basement, excellent condition, garage, greenhouse, 2 lots,
orchard, gas heat, mile to business district.
Write:
Walter Borg, 212 West
Mulberry
Normal, Illinois.
‘

$19.900 ON

STUDIOS

Braeside Area
28-42 Blackhawk Road

:

Fabulous ranch in country setting. 4 bedrooms, 2 ceramic tile baths, 2 car attached
garage, full basement. Only $39,500 from
owner-builder. WI 5-9108.

HIGHLAND

TO

HIGHLAND

excellent

oem’ pete

c urch

corner

sage:

bedroom house in Lake
buyer. Call Ted Gabanski

STORES, &amp;
TO RENT

APARTMENTS

room with fireplace, dining room, kitchen,
2 bedrooms, bath, full basement, oil heat,
combination windows, garage, $16,000. Low
down payment. ID 2-8396.
HIGHLAND PARK
413 RIDGE
Pa gpid custom built 6 room
fu
asement,
gas heat,

WANTED

OFFICE, 27x12,
located at 666 Waukegan
Rd., Deerfield, $125 a month with good
lease. Telephone WI 5-9841.
STORE,
1931 Sheridan Road in the_heart
of
Highland
Park’s
Shopping
Center.
Laser &amp; Company, WHitehall 4-4318.
INDUSTRIAL building, 1000 or 2000 square
feet in Waukegan. Call DElta 6-9363 or
MAjestic 3-9450.
STORE 18x40 heated; Offices 1 to 6 room
suites; paved parking for tenants and _customers. 460 Central Ave., Phones ID 20150—ID 2-2358.
DEERFIELD:
803 Waukegan
Road,
2nd
floor, office or shop, heated, electricity
furnished, $60 per month. Viking Realty,
WI 5-5300.

DEERFIELD:
Lovely
American
Colonial
home, reduced to Mid 20’s. Fully landscaped, within walking distance to stores,
schools, and train. 3 bedrooms, 1% baths.
aor
anxious to sell. Telephone WI 5-

HIGHLAND

ESTATE

WANTED: Lake Forest buildable lot under
$6000, UNiversity 9-1266. Light Builders,
Carl F. Wagner.

Area

TREES

ID 2-0212

PROPERTY

EAST LAKE FOREST IMPROVED
City wooded lot, $6500, UN 9-1266.
Light Builders, Carl F. Wagner.
HIGHLAND
PARK:
110x150 foot vacant
lot on Bloom
Street. Reasonable price.
ID 2-5266.
DEERFIELD: 90 foot lot in finest section,
900 Beverly. Many trees. Terms to suit.
HI 6-1646.
SUNSET
PARK
subdivision,
Yale
Lane,
50x150’ landscaped
lot; by owner. Call
after 6 P.M. CE 4-9544.

Highland Park—Just |
Listed

Highland

VACANT

APARTMENTS

2563.

sleeping

pleasant

LARGE

Gentleman

near T ecagennsaeeatas
4-4690.

ROOMS

WANTED

by

room

ID
¥

TV

with
only
,

WANTED

age

man

65 furnished

ro

with use of hot plate, after April 1
Box B-85,
Write
Forest preferred.
Highland Park News.

HELP

WANTED

FEMALE

COUNTER
girl, 44 hour week; exce
working conditions. Murrie Cleaners, ©
N. Western Ave. CE 4
;
i
REGISTERED
NURSES
For
obstetrical department,
all shifts.
conditio;
working
excellent
week,
hour
living quarters available on grounds.
personnel department, Lake Forest He
CE 4-5600.
aK
wan
WOMAN with travel office experience
ed for afternoon work in Deerfield offi
Call Mrs. Boches, WI 5-1385.

WOMAN

for all around

counter work.

Steady work,
perienced preferred.
pay. John rig wert 2020 First St.,
:
2-2800
land Park. ID

WAITRESSES

College girls needed for summer ¢€
ment, private North Shore Club. Experie:
"
preferred. ID 3-1131.
COMPANION or practical nurse for €
lady, to stay on premises. Phone
0549.
WAITRESS
wanted,
full time,

and

salary.

taurant,

1846

Apply

in_

person, Bob’

Ist St., Highland

Page

Park.

H 59—D

�PROOFREADER
5

!
IN AFTER WORK.
ENING INTERVIEWS BY APINTMENT.
_ EMPLOYER

PAYS

ID

1899 Second Street
Highland Park

POLICE Magistrate Court Clerk—part time.
Thursdays 7 to 9 p.m. Saturdays 1 to 5
p.m. Contact Mr. Jungherr, The City of
er
Forest, 220 E. Deerpath,
CE 4-

2-4461

= 215 NORTH SHORE BLDG.
1866 SHERIDAN ROAD
Highland

APPLY IN PERSON
SINGER PRINTING
COMPANY

FEE

FITZGERALD
PERSONNEL
Park

WANTED,
middle
aged woman
who
is
willing to take on very minor responsibilities, for nominal room rent. Call ID 20675, weekdays 9 to 5.

HELP

SECRETARY
;

- work | in Purchasing Department.
skills needed, light shorthand,
for clerical detail essential.

Top
High

SECRETARY
R

top

sarch of
rine.

executive

ersonable,

in

poised

and

re-

films. Good skills
essential. Must be

with

week, excellent
PERSONNEL

F aed

production

educational
dictaphone

some

college

back-

fringe benefits.
OFFICE.

CON-

ENCYCLOPAEDIA
— BRITANNICA
FILMS
Wilmette Ave.
i)

ALpine

Wilmett

GIRL

Our

research

and

lopment division, located in
and Park is in need of a wide
gal who enjoys working in a
essional atmosphere.
Typing
red, shorthand helpful. Paid
italization, life insurance, pen-

teach selected men

Deerfield

our business.

Men

OPERATIONS
ASSISTANT
To supervise office services and the maintenance of office equipment and facilities.
Knowledgeable
background
and/or experience essential in: maintenance of building
and equipment, operation of office machines,
blue prints and inventory control. Age and
Salary open.

week, excellent fringe benefits.
PERSONNEL OFFICE.

CON-

1150

Wilmette

Ave.

ALpine

ilmette

HOSPITAL
NEEDS

:

Junior draftsman to work
improvement plans, etc.

JAMES

USES

“Bxperiesced, full time, all shifts,
resting

work

in

pleasant

nment.
Why
commute
can work close to home?

en-

SITUATION

SITUAIIUN

WOMAN
work

Or

time.

part

in

- VOGUE
Fi

_

Roger

cleaning

store,

CLEANERS

Williams,

ID
KEY

dry

Highland

Park

2-3710

PUNCH

OPERATOR

anent,. full time assignment for young
han experienced in operation of No. 024
chine.
Minimum
of 1 year’s experience,
be
neat appearing.
Good
starting
and
full range of fringe benefits.

, 37% hour week.
fERICAN HOSPITAL
.

SUPPLY

Evanston

UN

CORP.
4-6050

SEAMSTRESS
repairs in cleaning plant, experiY work and good salary.

:

BE CLEANERS

ED

ID

2-3710

for next fall, qualified nursery
teacher,
full and/or
half
day.
write Box C-10, c/o Highland Park
Stating age, educational background
experience.

se H 60—D 52

work

survey

WANTED—MALE

in

plats,

1825

DEPOT

Shore’s only Curtain
Laundry
Green Bay Rd., Rear

All work done by hand; | linens,
curtains, blankets, drapes, ete.

TELEPHONE

COMPANY

Engineers and Surveyors
596 North Western Avenue
Lake Forest, Illinois
CEdar 4-0039

WANTED—DOMESTIC

THE CURTAIN

1-8700

ID 2-8615

INVENTORY

CONTROL

Opportunity
for young
college grad with
year
experience
in inventory
control.
Orders
and maintains
at optinum
levels
Nationwide finished goods inventory. Must
understand inventory and associated costs.
Familiarity with other distribution costs and
IBM desirable.

NEED HELP?
LIVE

IN

NO FEE
DAY

WORKERS

ALPINE 1-5511
SAPPHIRE DOMESTIC SERVICE
413 Linden Ave., Wilmette

DAY
workers, cooks, maids, couples, experienced. Mrs. Baker, Shoreline EmployATT i Winnetka. Telephone Hlllcrest 618.

HANDYMAN
or yard man or day work.
Houseman. Telephone DE 6-6415.
AMERICAN HOSPITAL SUPPLY CORP.
AN experienced young lady with reference
desires day work. Call ONtario 2-6692.
2020 Ridge
Evanston
UN 4-6050
TWO
High School graduates wish summer
work; experienced in light housekeeping,
child care;
prefer work
close together;
write or phone, Kathleen McConnell CO
MALE
HELP WANTED
7-6373; Alice Lindner, CO 7-6326, GreenGeneral factory work, steady emwood, Wisconsin.
ployment. Starting rate depends on EXPERIENCED worker would like 5 days.
MA 3-5659.
person and ability.
EXPERIENCED laundress would like work
in Highland Park area. Call ON 2-8254
ALUMINUM
MILLS
INC.
after 5:30, ask for Arthurdell.
1660 Deerfield Rd.
Highland Park EXPERIENCED day worker wants 4 days
work. TR 2-5551,
2 blocks west of Rt. 41
WILL do home ironing and alterations. Call
ID 2-3946,
ENGINEER
I do cleaning, help with
DAYWORKER.
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF
children. Telephone ATlantic 5-7299,
BUILDING AND
ZONING
man will work on estate in
EMPLOYED
Minimum 3 years experience in building inexchange for living quarters for self and
spection, construction, or allied fields. Regfamily. EMpire 2-7639.
istered professional engineer or eligible for
|}
WILL
launder and/or iron in your home
registration in Illinois. Salary, $550 to $700
or mine
1 day per week.
Call Jeanne
per month. Send resume to
Bergsten,
CE 4-5540.
E. R. Shields, City Engineer
EXPERIENCED
cleaning lady wants work
THE CITY OF LAKE FOREST
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday,
Saturday.
220 Deerpath,
Lake Forest, Ill.
References, car. Call -CH 4-0353.
CEdar 4-2600
WOMAN
wants work; stay or go; experiYOUNG
enced. Telephone CHerry 4-2267.
man to learn dry cleaning business; Murrie Cleaners, 866 N. Western
Ave., Lake Forest. CE 4-0040.

MONTANA:

missile base construction, long

new
project,
top
pay,
stamped
envelope
for
VNCO, Box 132, Medina,

send
“Job
Wash.

30c
and
News.”

FINEST
Emba natural white
Acca
capelet, like new,

8250.

HOUSEHOLD

BABY

SITTING

WE want a pleasant companion for our 9
year old girl every Saturday night and
occasional Fridays. Call ID 2-2588.

mink
$400.

tiered
BU 1-

GOODS FOR SALE

ALL
IN GOOD
CONDITION
2 maple end tables, 1 shelf, $12 each; blond
step table, 1 shelf, $15; maple wing chair,
$18; green plastic arm
chair and
cover,
$22.50;
green
plastic
armless
chair
and
cover, $20; ventilated ironing board, metal,
$6.50;
cement
laundry
tub, $5; Westinghouse roaster and 2 shelf cabinet, $24.50;
Kenmore wringer washer, $49.50; aluminum
sliding window with screen and storm windows, 71x35, $59; toy box, $3.50. Call CE
4-4924.
HIDEABED
heavy duty, covers; compressor type paint sprayer; tables, chairs. ID
3-2944 after 5 and weekends.
HOLLYWOOD
bed, twin size, practically
new. ID 3-1037.
2 PIECE living room suite, $50; mahogany
end tables; baby buggy, $20; play pen,
high chair, cedar chest. Telephone ID 22611.
BEAUTIFUL custom built 2 piece sectional
sofa.
Originally
$600,
like new,
$120.
Telephone ID 3-0608.
ANTIQUE
exceptionally
beautiful,
large
carriage
lamp,
price
$45
worth
much
more. Telephone ID 2-2119,
GRANDFATHER’S
clock,
75
years
old,
good condition. Call AUstin
7-8969,
FRENCH
end tables, Zenith console TV
and
phonograph
combination,
vacuum
cleaner,
Dresden
lamps
and
figurines,
miscellaneous
vases,
drapes,
curtains,
bedspreads,
rugs
and
luggage.
CE
43585.
FINAL moving sale. Sofa, twin beds, small
pool table, 3 boy’s 26 inch bikes, pictures,
TV,
miscellaneous,
ladies clothes,
sizes
7 and 10, ladies shoes 41% and 7%, all
occasion greeting cards. Very reasonable.
Telephone ID 3-0867.
PERSIAN rugs; GE 8 cu. ft. refrigerator,
excellent
condition,
reasonably
priced;
sewing machine $5; firescreen $2; Hoover
vacuum $5; Call after 6 P.M. ID 2-6674.
9 PIECE
18th Century mahogany
dining
room set $150. WI 5-3429.
ROPER gas range for sale, $30. Good condition. Telephone CE 4-2492,
6 gee
maple crib and mattress, $10. WI

80 GALLON Lawson electric hot water heater, $50 or best offer, excellent condition;
byt
stove, $10; butcher block, $25. CE
GE

UPRIGHT vacuum, Model U-1, attachments, like new, less than one year old.
Make offer. ID 2-8092.
8 FOOT
pool table, like new, $50, white
twin headboard, $5, Persian coat, size 1214. ID 2-8529.
WOOD table with 4 chairs, $20; Provincial
coffee table, $10; repairable 17 in. T
$10; upholstered chair, $10; large window
fan, $20; 80 in. sofa, $20; lamp, $2; ladder back chair, $5. ID 3-0823, evenings
7 to 9 p.m.
PICKLED pine credenza with leather lined
desk
drawer,
Duncan
Phyfe
mahogany
drop leaf table, seating 14. Call after 6:30,
ID 2-7666.
COLONIAL
cupboard.
drop leaf table, 4
Hitchcock chairs, heirloom maple finish.
CR 2-2556.
REMODELING: draw drapes, so forth, various pieces of furniture. Evenings and Sundays only. ID 2-5833.
DOUBLE size box spring and mattress, $40;
maple rocking chair, with gold print cushion, $30; stainless steel 5 gallon aquarium
with a full stainless steel reflector, $11.
ID 3-1928.
FURNITURE:
large couch, leather chair,
Simmons
twin
hide-a-bed,
upholstered
Trundel bed, 3 tables and curtains, upholstered pieces beautifully slip-covered, must
sell, best offer. ID 3-0841.

2 LOUNGE

HSWK.—CHILD CARE—REFS.—EXP,

when

PERSONNEL OFFICE
ID 2-8000 FOR APPT.

counter

ANDERSON

on

to

WANTED—FEMALE

EXPERIENCED gardener will do gardening,
landscaping,
fast and
dependable.
Own
Soe
Call ID 2-6668 or
ID 2-7698 after
p.m.
I FIX:
repair locks, hinges, doors, glass,
build
shelves,
many
home
repairs;
22
years serving North Shore. ID
2-1636.
RELIABLE, white young man will do painting, wall, window washing and paper hanging. Telephone ID 2-8917.
EXPERIENCED
administration,
purchasing, production quality, inventory control.
Age 44. Desire opportunity with growing
firm.
Excellent
all-around
assistant
to
busy executive. Now employed. Can type.
Call collect Crystal Lake 459-5054.
FALL
college freshman desires gardening
and landscape work on large estate, exSaturdays through mid June,
perienced.
in summer. Call Dale Smith, ID
Hy —

North
Experienced chainman-rodman
survey party.

AGENCY

EXPERIENCED
Jamaican man would like
time job; 3 to 8 p.m., Monday to
ae
riday; Saturday, all day; willing, handy.
GR 5-3686 after 3 p.m.

ENCYCLOPAEDIA
BRITANNICA
FILMS

5-1000

EMPL.

VACATION
bound parents, do you need
a capable proxy mother to care for your
children while you are away? Good driver,
excellent references. Telephone ID 2-8152
or ID 2-7597.
EDUCATED
mature woman
available for
part time receptionist. Phone ID 2-0337
between 9 and 11 a.m.

com-

pleting our program will manage our future offices.
$500 GUAR. SAL. INC. MO.
to start. Car necessary. For personal interview call Mr.
Mondain
at Waukegan,
Pb
odd 4-2030 or CHerry 4-2070 10 to 2
aily.

5 day
TACT

WANTED

SITUATION

We are a large national corporation expanding our offices in the midwest. We are looking for neat eraeering and ambitious young
men who have the
drive and desire to be
in the $10 to $15,000 income bracket. College students desiring summer
work with
possibility
of future
connection
with the
Corp. are being considered too.
We have a complete training course to

-KLEINSCHMIDT
WI

MALE

WE ARE EXPANDING
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY

plus many other benefits.

e Cook Rd.

WANTED

HELP

APPLICATIONS
being
accepted.
Kathryn
Dowse Employment Agency &amp; Secretarial
Service.
273
E.
Market
Square,
Lake
Forest. CE 4-1148.

HELP WANTED~—MEN
TRAINEES AND BEGINNERS

1-8700

FRIDAY

commute?

Full Time
Days—8 to 5

MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE _

CLOTHING FOR SALE

HELP WANTED—DOMESTIC
WANTED:
couples,
cooks,
maids
and
nurse-maids, all good jobs, all free. Mrs
Baker, Shoreline Employment,
525 Lin
re gb
Winnetka. Telephone Hllicres
6-5818.
CAPABLE,
EXPERIENCED
WOMAN
wanted for general household duties, live
in, references. Telephone ID 2-2113.
GENERAL,
cook,
light housework;
four
in family; own room, bath, T.V.; current
wages, recent references. CE 4-3241.
WOMAN
for
general
housework,
white;
Wednesday or Friday, some ironing; own
transportation. CE 4-1475.
GENERAL
housework,
live-in, own
room
and bath, plain cooking, no laundry, recent local references required. ID 2-5830.
CLEANING
woman
wanted, Tuesday and
Friday preferred, hours 9 to 5, must be
reliable,
pleasant,
references
required.
Telephone ID 2-9473,
EXPERIENCED,
neat;
cook
and
downstairs;
best
references;
must
live
in:
other help kept; free Thursday and alternate Sundays.
Telephone ID 2-3270.
WANTED:
white woman for cleaning, references required. Phone CE 4-1632.
COOK
AND
ALSO
SECOND
MAID,
white, live in, own room, TV, bath; adult
family. Telephone ID 2-0386.

chairs, $45 for pair; china cab-

ROOFING
WINDSTORM
DAMAGE
PROMPTLY
REPAIRED
¢ free estimates
* immediate service
e insurance claims

PHONE

NOW

EMpire 2-315]

Libertyville Roofing Co.
Established

1926

HOME
MODERNIZATION
SERVICE
KITCHENS, RECREATION ROOMS,
SUMMER PORCHES
ROOM ADDITIONS, DORMERS,
FENCES,

GARAGES,

ETC.

COMPLETE INSTALLATION,
OR MATERIALS
ONLY
(All Labor By The North Shore’s
Finest Contractors—Fully
Guaranteed In Writing.)

LOW FHA FINANCING
FREE ESTIMATES

Northbrook Lumber
Company
(Skokie
Northbrook, I].
11.

&amp;

Dundee

—,

2-3000

RENT EVERYTHING FOR THE HOME
FROM YOUR ASSOCIATED STORE
Portable TV Sets
Foldaway Beds
High Chairs
Reducing Machines
Hospital Beds
Heavy Duty Vacuums
Floor Waxers
Power Tools
Wall Paper Equip.
Moving Equipment
Wheel Chairs
Rug Scrubbers
Floor Machines
Ladders.
WE DELIVER

ASSOCIATED
RENT-ALLS

651 Roger Williams,
Highland Park
inet, $35;
chrome
dinette table
and
4
IDlewood 2-6333
chairs, plus leaf, $25; tea cart and side
half table. ID 2-5622.
FORMICA
dinette set with 4 chairs, $40;
FORMICA TOPS
kitchen set with 4 chairs, $20, both excellent condition. WI 5-0550.
Old
kitchen
counter tops made
WESTINGHOUSE
refirgerator and Universal gas stove with waist-high broiler, best sparkling new with formica; all coloffer. Telephone ID 2-4646.
ors. One day installation with writConsole desk, ladder back chair, pair large
guarantee. 25 years on the
lamps,
English
china
service,
pedestal ten
planters,
FRENCH
HORN,
upholstered North Shore.
chair, twin bed, books. CE 4-3245.
SNAZELLE KITCHENS CE 4-3237
SOFAS,
lounge
chairs.
draperies,
lamps,
dishes, silverplate coffee set and serving
pieces, miscellaneous. ID 2-4777.
FENCES
GENERAL ELECTRIC 36 inch range, about
3 years old, in perfect condition, clean.
Must sell immediately, $90. Call WI 5“YOU
SELECT—WE
ERECT”
WOOD
OR WIRE
2726.
STANDARD
OR
CUSTOM
MAYTAG
automatic washer, deluxe model,
CABANAS - PATIOS
about 5 weeks old, in immaculate condiGARDEN
UTILITY BUILDINGS
tion, must sacrifice because we’re moving,
For Estimates Call
$200; also 5 year old electric dryer in exNorb
Mike
cellent condition, $25. Must be seen. Call
EM 2-1625
Estate Fencing
CE 4-1283
ID 2-7692.
ANY
reasonable offer for sofa, 2 chairs,
and
breakfront,
must
sell, no
dealers.
FERTILIZER,
SEED, MOWERS,
BLACK
Telephone ID 2-1098.
dirt, driveway stone, etc. Order it all at one
stop.
SPRING
cleaning time? Donate your disMUTUAL SUPPLY
cards to Kenwood Center of Infant WelRtes. 41 &amp; 22
ID 2-0272
fare for our Spring Rummage Sale. We
need furniture, bric-a-brac, furs, jewelry.
FREE
CAR
WASH
if your name
starts
clothing, toys and miscellany. Free pick- |: with A. Just fill your tank with gas and
up. Call Mrs. Gary, ID 2-2818, or Mrs.
show driver’s license to attendant. Good
Unger,
ID
2-4266.
Donations
tax
deMonday thru Friday until April 7th. Only
ductible.
3 minutes at LAKE CAR WASH.
REASONABLE,
beautiful antique white 2
to
7 year size canopy bed, organdy spread
"MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE
set, mattress, spring included. Girl’s large
tricycle; beginner’s 2 wheeler; 24 in. 2
Ae
DO IT YOURSELF
wheeler; high chair and pad. Call WI 51883.
RENT TOOLS &amp; EQUIPMENT
GO-CART,
new
Clinton A-400, complete,
Chain saws, rug shampooers, sanders, ro$75; or frame only. ID 2-3449,
tary tillers, etc. You name it.
ALUMINUM
windows, doors, siding, awnings and
screen houses;
special Spring
MUTUAL
SUPPLY
prices. Call Coalume, CE 4-1750.
Rtes. 41 &amp; 22
DRAPERIES,
slip covers made to order.
Interior design consultation; let us serve
Dom
Nando
you. WI 5-5719 or WI 5-1514.
:
ID 3-1268
ID .2-4132
HOME SERVICE: You name it, we will do ‘1 YEAR old Burroughs cash register. ID 28208.
it.
Carpenter,
concrete,
painting,
floor
cleaning and
waxing.
Light hauling. Call
RELAXACIZOR, excellent condition. Teleus for free estimates. Night or day.

ID 2.0272

phone ID 2-0325.

Thursday, March

oy

�MUSICAL “INSTRUMENTS FOR SALE

NORTH
OF

P.M. Daily
of Coffee

BASEMENT LEAK?
full line of repair material.

MUTUAL
- Rtes. 41 &amp; 22

MUST

SACRIFICE;

ID

2-0272

Of Highland

- GIRL’S 20°? trainer bicycle; Culligan Culo-Matic
Water
Softener;
both
slightly
_used. CE 4-3396 after 6 P.M.

TWEED rug, 11 foot 6 inches by 10 foot,
1 year old, very good condition, 100%
wool, selling for half price. ID 2-3069.
KELVINATOR
air-dryer; studio couch; 11
folding chairs (9 slat type); new set of
floral dishes; oval braided
rug 10x10, grey
wool jhe
10x12; miscellaneous. Telephone
ID 2
WOODY’S
LAWN
MOWER
SERVICE
ene, repair and sales. New location: 1749
Green Bay. Pick up and delivery. ID 29029 or ID 2-9202.

REE
THERE'S. NO CATCH
Special mix potting soil. 4 bushels per famiily limit. Brin1 BAyour own container.

Rtes. 41 &amp; 22

UTUAL

SUPPLY

D 2-0272

~ GARDEN
tractor, practically new,
7
ets
reasonably
priced.

- HO
‘

GAUGE

train

worth

$400;

with 6
ID
2

RACK
facilities.

install

NOW

on enameled
with this ad

all

INSTRUMENTS

new

colored

windows.
any door

PIANOS wanted: bonus prices for Steinway
and Baldwin. VErnon
5-1640 eves. and
%¥
Sunday. AMbassador 2-2023 days.

y

grand,

INSTRUMENTS

MOVING

stick,

on

AUTOMOBILES

SHOP

FOR

1909

any

con-

FOR SALE

SALE

ne
are moving to larger quarters
‘+ Must dispose of 90 new and used rom
New spinets, 88 note .................s.0 from $395
Used spinets and consoles ............from $295
15 used
grand pianos ..............
...from $295
Used player uprights .......
from $195
rR
EDPIGITS
ooo
ca iecneoeens from $ 79
See the new Hardman Duo Player pianos
Mon.. Thurs. 9-9—Sunday 11-5
FIELDS PIANO CO.

_ 2921 W. Touhy
AMbassador 2-2023
Thursday, March 30, 1961

1766

First

Street
pews
Sat.

MOTORS
Highland
Wate
9-9
Sun. 10-4

Park,

Ill.

JAGUAR
XK120
roadster, recently
overhauled;
top
notch
running
condition,
1000. Can be seen at Pete’s Sinclair Station, Lake Bluff.
1956 FORD two door, excellent condition,
best offer. WI 5-4079.
FORD, 1955, red convertible, Fordo, power
steering, $375. Telephone ID 2-0086.
1960 CHEVROLET
4 door sedan, power
glide and steering, $2100. Call evenings at
ID 2-4663.
1956
FORD
Club
sedan,
automatic,
low
mileage, clean, immediate sale, offer. One
wheel trailer, Allstate. Call ID 2-8828, 531
Barberry Road, Highland Park.
1948 JEEP pick-up truck with 536 cylinder
engine, equipped with boom, winch, and
snow blade. Phone ID 3-2940
CADILLAC,
exceptional
1960
sedan DeVille, under 5,000 miles, perfect car, full
power, private party in Northbrook, no
tax, will consider older car in trade. Call.
CRestwood 2-4260 after 6 p.m.

do

it

4
4

dr.,

straight

dr.,

good

Got

local

1766

First

taxes,

if any,

Reconditioned.

CYCLE &amp; HOBBY
486

Central

at Sheriaan

BIKE

SHOP
ID

2-1369

Among

Ned

and

Robertson

Larry

Rosen

heimer,

&amp; Delivery
|
ID 2-1750

INCH Schwinn boy’s bicycle with large
basket, in good condition; has large reflectors. Call WI 5-2485.
TWO
girls bicycles, one 20 in., $10; one
eae
light weight, like new, $25. WI 5-

PETS
BEAUTIFUL
Bedlington
terrier
puppies,
AKC
registered,
champion
stock,
look
like lambs, don’t shed. ALpine 1-6134.
URSAFELL
KENNELS
BOARDING AND TRIMMING
Expert grooming, all breeds, individual runs,
country kennel. Telephone WI 5-503 5.
IF YOU
VALUE
YOUR
DOG
and he is well, board him with us. Woman
owner operated. Brand new, tile walls,
gas
heat, individual protected cement runs. "You
choose the feeding. Adjoining country Bg
pa
Grove. Mrs. Huck, Creekside, LE

EASTER

PUPPY

Poodle,
Silver
Toy,
female,
lovable,
5
months; all shots; housebroken; AKC
registered. Home
raised;
sacrifice for $150.
Call ID 2-7794.
BABY
EASTER
BUNNIES,
CE 4-3689.
POODLES, toy, silver, 2 male, 1 female, 8
aoa
AKC registered. Telephone ID 3-

insurance,

extra.

state

LAKE MOTORS
Park,

Ii.

1954 CHEVROLET Bel-Air, 2 door, power
glide, radio, heater, excellent condition,
very low mileage, $395. Call after 4 p.m.,
ID 2-1413.
1959
CHEVROLET
Impala _ convertible,
white with black top, red interior, power
steering, power brakes, power windows.
ID 2-4861.

Topper

Sabine
Eyles

Yost,

Matten- —

and

Robert

Jan

Slater,

Susan

Steinberg.

Carole Miller, and Patsy Kulp and
many other envied ones will spend &gt;
their vacation in Florida’s tranquil
atmosphere.
has
know

sprung
it,

and

don’t

we

Vacation’s near and we all show it.

Kids all shout and teachers scream,
Mr.

Yes,

Stunkel

doesn’t

Spring has sprung
we know it,

beam.

SIAMESE kittens for sale, would make excellent Easter gifts; reasonable. Telephone
ID 2-3692.
MUST find good homes for 2 eight week
old kittens, 1 female, 1 male. Telephone
ID 2-5098.
LABRADOR Retriver puppy, 11 weeks old,
pedigreed, AKC, $75. CE 4-5297.
PEDIGREED Siamese kittens, 7 weeks old,
Sealpoint. Call ID 2-5000, Extension 2279
after 6 p.m.
TRAINED 9 week old male toy Collie mixture, $10. ID 3-0620 after 6.
NEWFOUNDLAND
female 7 months old,
loves
children, unfortunately
must
sell;
also, altered male cat to give. WI 5-3418.
EASTER PETS
German shepherd 4 month old puppies. AKC
papers, price reasonable. WI 5-1871.
PUPPIES, 3 weeks old, reasonable. Call CE
4-0855 after 4 o’clock P.M.

and

don’t

But we quit cause we ain’t no poet.
Henry

Wadsworth

Longfellows

Jr.

—

firemen

|

House In Highwood,
Yacht Club
Highwood

Burn

volunteer

saved a burning house at 126 High
St.

by

fast

action

Monday

building

burn

noon.

Highland Park firemen let the old
yacht

club

ground

the

following

to

the

afternoon;

it was due for demolition, an
they had spent the morning practicing putting it out.
No one was in the Highwood

home

It!

Street
Highland
Hours—Weekdays
Sat. 9-6
Sun. 10-4

New &amp; Used Bikes
Ranger Bicycles
Guaranteed during your ownership

Free Pickup
1844 First St.

and

these were &gt;

Angela

Owen Ruder, Annette Gamm and
Harold Slovic, Joanne Lebow and
Chuck Redman, and Barb Gurnick —
and Bill Newman.
Milt Gaebler, Lolly Harmon, Jim —
Ramsey and Kenny Cousens all —
helped make the party for Gigi
tons of fun,

SHOP

26

*Price comparisons based on manufacturers’
suggested factory delivered prices for lowest-priced models of the 5 major U.S. car
makers, including compact cars. Optional
transportation,

and

“BIG WHEEL”

@ Lowest-priced
U.S. convertible
by at least $185* @© 125 HP Six—
most power per pound of any 6cylinder convertible
@ Top economy—powered
by the first-place
compact engine in 1960 Mobilgas
Economy
Run
®@
Quietest
with
rattle-free
Single-Unit
construction.

and

cuse us, Hades).

Vacation’s here to rest us all,
So let’s go to Fla. and have a ball.

Good selection of Boys or Girls 16
in., 20 in. or 24 in. Many Schwinns
—completely
re-built—some
like
new.

runner

AUTHORIZED
FACTORY
FORD DEALER
St. Johns
Highland Park
Call Used Car Dept.—ID 2-8640
Open 8 A.M. to 9 P.M. Daily

equipment,

BIKES—Used

,

Go White
Sox Go Cubs!
me
H.P.H.S.!—Well anyway, Hi!
Josh White and Eve Lill were a
huge success as many Highl
Park patrons viewed the proceedings. The next night many of those |
same viewers were seen in
(ex-

MOTORCYCLES

BICYCLES

NEWEST!
SMARTEST!
LIVELIEST
LAKE'S
RAMBLER
AMERICAN
CONVERTIBLE

For your shopping convenience, 50 choice
used cars available for your inspection in
our HEATED SHOWROOM. SOME SAMPLE BARGAINS.

LAKE

6,

&amp;

BICYCLES

We've

IN COMFORT

OC ah oes—

And

Value $ Value

SALE

Chrysler 2 dr. H.T., auto. trans.
pow. steer., R &amp; H, W.W.
all
vinyl interior, etc.—Sharp!
........ $1695
1959 Lark sta. wgn. 6 cyl. compact,
auto. tran., heater, W.W.,
etc.
BHOWLOOR:
“FROM tosis ohsconavacdinss see $1295
1956 Chevrolet, 4 dr., H.T., V-8, auto.
tran. KK &amp; Fi, W-W.5: ete, ice... $
1955 Chevrolet
Bel-Air,
4 dr.,
sed.
ctCo Re ag ts! Rt : Be 2a 2 ee conpe sae aneeeeei
395
1954 Buick Special, 2 dr., sed. stand.
rans:
det Ote. hectic $

SPECIALS

dr.,

TRUCKS

FOR sale: 1956 Ford F250 tow truck, plow
attachment, hoist in rear, 4 wheel drive,
19,000 miles, new motor. Any one interested call ID 2-8208.

Holmes Motor Co.

LOST: black kid glove in Market Square
March 18; reward. CE 4-4721.
STAUFFER
reducing table; state age and
price. Write box D-60, ‘c/o Lake Forester.
THREE year or % size crib in good condition. Telephone CE 4-5277.
RED
maple
bookcase
and
desk
suitable
for boy’s room. Phone WI 5-2635.

WANTED

CHICAGO ah
GALLERIES WILL PAY
CASH
FOR
PIANOS,
ALL
MAKES,
STYLES. BONUS FOR STEINWAYS AND
.R GOOD
MAKES. CALL LONGeT
eeig
EVENINGS
ROGERS

MUSICAL

Guarantee
Cars.

1954 Ford, 2 dr., hardtop.
1953 Cadillac, 2 dr. hardtop.
1953 Cadillac, coupe DeVille $ 475
1947 Chevrolet,
4
dr.
6,

1959

doors
and
$10 off on

NEED piano, large, small
dition. JUniper 8-1020.

Park

LOST: small gray tiger kitten, child’s pet,
vicinity of Osterman and Jonquil Terrace.
Please call WI 5-3563.
black
LOST;
male
Beagle,
named
Taco;
studded collar. Reward.
CE
4-440 4.

THERMO-TITE WINDOW CO.
~ 708 WAUKEGAN RD
DEERFIELD
WI 5-1198
ID 2-1553
MUSICAL

Highland

Hol-

SAFE-X-SCAPE, 16 foot all aluminum fire
ladder. Any child can operate in 10 seconds.

to

Johns

Happ’s

_ Jim Beinlich, VErnon 5-1195.

Ford, 4
yourself

Holmes Motor Co.

LOST &amp; FOUND

POWER LAWN ROLLING-FERTILIZING
Let us take the humps out. Save your back.

Easy

MOTOR

PRICED

1955

St.

HPHS

Spring

Oldsmobile,

Kelly—ID

VOLKESWAGEN
1961,
sun roof, whitewalls, radio, washers, 2 months old; red
color; price right. CE 4-5160 anytime.
CHEVROLET,
1958 station wagon, Brookwood V8, full power, etc. One owner,
$1295. Standard Station, West Lake Forest.
VOLKSWAGEN, 2 door sedan, 1957; used
and owned in Lake Forest; whitewalls and
radio,
$895.
(Possible
trade),
1045
S.
Waukegan Rd., Lake Forest.
1955 VOLKSWAGEN
convertible only 40,000 miles, excellent condition; unrecognizable from 1958 model; why not make
an offer? Call CE 4-3289.
BEL
AIR
Chevrolet,
1959,
22,000 miles,
just
driven
around
Lake
Forest,
like
new. Telephone CE 4-1674.
AUTO
INSURANCE:
we write everybody.
Under 25, over 65, or in between. Tickets
or cancellations »re no concern to us. Up
to 32% discount for safe drivers. Lauren
R. Januz, CE 4-5670.
1955
PONTIAC
convertible,
full
power,
rer a
nylon top, for quick sale, $450.

176

trans.
Oldsmobile,
stick,

in-

ONLY a few weeks left for winter rates on
tree removal. Fully insured. Jim Beinlich,
VErnon 5-1195.

baked
oe

895

Ford, 4 dr. V-8, stick .$ 795
Pontiac, 4 dr. sta. wgn.
Ford, sta. wgn., stock

1955.

(Mr.

CHICAGO ART GALLERIES WILL PAY
CASH FOR ee
2
ae 9 hee re 3 s
FURNITURE.
TIQUES
CALL
LO
1-5092, EVENINGS
ROGERS
PARK
1-4400.
LET ME HANDLE THE SALE OF YOUR
HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS
Personal Following
ROCHELLE KAGAN
AL 1-7639
WANTED:
used red common
bricks. CE
4-4787.
SLIGH “Cross Country” furniture in driftwood finish, especially buffet. HI 6-3808.
AQUARIUM,
with or without accessories;
wireless intercom. ID 2-7146.

600 professional iape recorder. ExAMPEX
_ cellen
t condition. WI 5-250
“4

2 dr., sta. wgn.,

fo
es cre $ 995
dr. sed.,
stock
Te, Laces $ 995
4 dr., hardtop $1195

2-8640

Call

1909

1956

offer

ie
FOR COLLECTORS
Buy and
Sell
i asso Store, 1783 St. Johns Ave., High-jand Park; Saturday and Sunday only.

y

wgn.,

Buick Special, 4 dr., sedan,, extra clean ............
Ford, sta. wgn., V-8, 6
6 Aghia ae ce tas aces Re ne os $

LOW

BUY

best

will take, or separate to 3 or more
dividuals, leaving town. WI 5-1610.

HAY
_ Sleigh were * aia
“low, CR 2-31

TO

CASH FOR YOUR CAR
ANY MAKE OR MODEL

P.M.

ummage
sale at store building 1801 St.
Johns
Avenue,
Highland
Park,
Illinois,
Wednesday, April 12th from 3 to 9 P.M.,
Thursday, April 13th, 9 A.M. to 2 P.M.
- Furniture, toys, dishes, etc. will be sold.
Rummage Sponsored by Redeemer Guild

/

1955 MERCURY 2 door V-8, stick; 4 barrel; gray, white top; good condition; best
offer over $395. CE 4-2218

prices.

sta.

low

1957 FORD, new tires, battery, Fordamatic,
radio, heater; A-1 condition. Make offer.
WI 5-0732.

strg. ................ $1695

No. 195
‘A-1 Used Car
Above

ID 2-2510

WANTED

- 200
200 EVERGREENS:
Taxus Yews, 1 to 2
feet in ay 40
Reasonable. Call ID 2-

after 6 o’clock

psgr.

Rambler

No.

Park

1795 St. Johns Ave.

6

SALE

MUST
sell 1960 Austin Healy 3000, wire
wheels, 4 peer, radio and heater. CRestwood 2-5302

Internationa:

sterling flatware, will serve 6 or 12; man’s
_ is as with three % ct. diamonds. CE

- 5679

1957
1957
1957

Organ Studios

Water

Ford

V-8, pwr.

1957

LOWREY

SUPPLY

Heirloom

1959

1957

AUTHORIZED
DEALER
World’s Finest Organs - Pianos

a Cup

Fords—Clearance

FOR

1956 MERCURY convertible, new tires, power steering, radio and heater, automatic
drive;
second
car,
excellent
condition,
__™ust see. WI 5-4009, after 6 p.m.

1960 Thunderbird .................... $3895
1959 Chevrolet Impala, 4 dr.,
ist tae ite "2. ger Spa renee Romar ye $1795

Oy Ati
1959 Ford, 4
NES OB
1958 Chrysler,

LOWREY—MASON &amp; HAMLIN
KIMBALL—KNABE—CABLE

——
—_——

carry

1960

Call Us Now Or Come In
For More Information

From

plug, Thoroseal.

FREE

1959

In

Peaceful Quiet
Atmosphere

‘We

HOME

RENT ANY NEW SPINET ORGAN OR
PIANO FOR ONLY
$25 PER MONTH
NOW AND SIX MONTHS LATER HAVE
A_FULL $150 EQUITY EARNED TO BE
Sie
TOWARD
THE
PURCHASE

Dine

“This Ad Is Worth

YOUR

For Six Months!

| NOW OPEN
8 A.M. —10

IN

RENT

ILL.

Can

QUALITY

FURNISHED

“AUTOMOBILES

1958 VAUXHALL 4 door, very ‘clean,
mileage, 1 owner. Call ID 2-8664.

Value $ Value
HIGHLAND PARK
USED CAR
HEADQUARTERS

Organs — Pianos

648 DEERFIELD ROAD

You

SHORE’S

Largest Dealer

CAVALIER
RESTAURANT
DEERFIELD,

AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE

of Sam

Corso when

neigh-

bors noticed smoke pouring out
the back windows. Firemen broke

in the second floor, raced the fire
to the attic, and won.
It started in a downstairs closet
right over the gas furnace; wen

up the stairwell, and did an esti
mated $14- or $15,000 damage.
‘
High winds that day blew down
a billboard just south of the High.
wood fire station, briefly blocking
the driveway.
Highland Park men helped in

the house fire. Saturday, eee
stood by in case Highland Park
needed help with a grass fire.

Horses Banned;

Ice

Made Legal in HP
passed ordinances making horses
a nuisance on Jess than three acres
Monday
evening;
legalized
ice —

vending machines

if licensed; but ¢

did not act on their pending Hone
plain ordinance.

A memorandum

on flood soning

effects on his subdivisions
was
presented
by George
Goldnvan,
president of Manilow Construction

Co.,

and

one

was

promised

by

Greta Lederer, The council will
read both before taking action,

Sorority Initiate

Alpha

Phi Pledge

Miss Anne Fordtran, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. Fordtran
of 441
Lakeside
Manor
Rd. was
initiated into the Beta Zeta chapter of Alpha Xi Delta sorority at
Lake Forest College recently. She
was also installed as Marshall and
Secret Officer. Anne is a freshman.

Alpha Phi sorority added ten
new members to its active chapter
last weekend. Among those initiated was Martha Graham, daugh- &gt;
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Sydney P,

\

�bi

rat

TY
Pye

eee ee Pit
rr

ifs

Car Hits Bicyclist

[

i

EASTER SPECIAL
2 Symbidium

Orchids

CORSAGE

$4.95

ite?
ie
a

Henry C. Weiland

a

By

For the Best in Flowers

Fos
4

1781

e

¢

St. Johns Ave.

proceeding, Highland Park police
were told. The corner is “blind,”

ID 2-0600
ID 20492

Call Meeting Of
P.T.O. April 10

i

David Enstrom, 10, of 328 Bloom
St., suffered a bruised left arm
and leg Monday evening. He was
hit by a car while riding his bike.
Aldo Biagi of 307 Waukegan
Ave., Highwood, the driver, was
backing out of an alley between
429 and 430 Temple Ave., and
stopped
at the sidewalk before

Depend on

y

e

A

&amp;

Sat.,

Assortment

of FISHING

TACKLE

.........

Repsholdt, Dudley
Henry Staats.

—Shrubs,

9-6

on

Rte. 83, one

block

MUNDELEIN,

South

social

students

88c

and Mrs.

studies

and

mathe-

Irland
will serve
in the Teachers Din-

who

are

not

members,

may join by contacting Mrs.
Thomas Wands, the membership
chairman,

at

WI

5-2270.

Completes Training
tive of J. B. Roerig

and Company,

today successfully completed an intensive advanced training and re-

view

class at the firm’s New

City

headquarters.

Sandlin,

who

joined

York

Roerig

ILLINOIS

and

We buy factory surplus and store stocks.

other

members

of the

William

After Vacation
Highland

thinclads

Park’s

took

Little

ninth

Giant

in a field

of

18 teams in the class A division
of the Oak Park Relays last Saturday at Oak Park. New Trier ran
off with the meet crown.

Complete scores for the Class A
portion of the meet:
New Trier
5142, Lyons
27, Maine
West
24,
Alton 2214, Oak Park 22, Moline
22, Phillips 17, Morton 14, High-

land

Park

Evanston

12,

Austin

8,

6, Waukegan

York

7,

4, Glenbard

West 3, Marshall 3, Lane Tech
Proviso West 114, Proviso East

2,
1.

Parkers pulled down
second
place in two events to come off
with their total of 12. The Distance

Relay

of Bob

Picker,

Joel

Lewitz,

Chuck Redamn
and Jim Weinert
took second place behind
a fine
New
Trier team.
Weinert
came
back
later in the meet
to take
another second in the mile run be-

Weymouth

Kirkland

of

New

Trier in 4:29.6.
The thinclads open their outdoor
season on April 10 with an encounter at Waukegan with the Bulldogs.

health

profession.

The

oil furnace

at Willie

Vole’s

My Favorite Inn, Highwood, backed
up Monday morning and filled the
basement
with
smoke.
Firemen
used smoke ejector blowers there

A

“The Door To Creative Living”

SUBURBAN FINE ARTS CENTER
A Not-For-Profit Community
Highland

ID 3-1404
1961

SPRING

CLASS

SCHEDULE

DAY

CLASSES

DRAMA

GROUP

Nina

. . . Call
.

Call

William

Laurie

Howard

Brofsky

of

sets

William

TUESDAY

Chi

a

.

.

Mandel

Laurie

ID

2-9207

(1st

Floor)

(2nd

Floor)

1:30-4:30
12:30-3 :30
7:30-10:00
(starts

Apr.

7:30-10:00

Life Sketching

(2nd Floor)

9:30-12:30

Life Painting
(2nd Floor)
Sculpture in metal, clay,
stone (1st Floor)
Life Sketching,
Painting (2nd Floor)
Painting (2nd Floor)
Painting (2nd Floor)
Painting (2nd Floor)
Adv. Conversational
French (1st Floor)
Beg. &amp; Adv. Painting, Sketching

1:00-4:00

Schwartz

Taxay-Weinger

Michel

(2nd Floor)

Jovin

Beg. Conversational French
(1st Floor)
Call Center for Information
(2nd Floor)

Camera Club
Workshop

2nd Floor Studio available without charge

for use of members
,
Sydney Price Berz
Janet Maas

SATURDAY

4-4206

Carl Schwartz

Joan

FRIDAY

CE

TIME

Introduction to Drawing

Sidney Rafilson
Sidney Rafilson
Sidney Rafilson
Michel Jovin

_ THURSDAY

,

Ceramic Sculpture
(Ist Floor)
Painting—Water Color
and Oil (2nd Floor)
“Introduction to Music’’

Henry Gamson

WEDNESDAY

Shepherd

Mrs.

Carl Schwartz

Carl
'

Alta

COURSE

Turner

Univ.

oy

APRIL 3 TO JUNE 23

INSTRUCTOR

MONDAY

,

DANCE

Hilda

who

wish to wag

Rubin

REGISTRATION

10)

7:30-10:00
7:30-10:00
9:30-12:30
1:30-4:30
7:30-10:00
7:00-8:00

a ¢ LEN

RONEN
Page

H

62—D

54

CLASSES,

CALL

MRS.

week.

ASAI

Earlier

automobile
by

in

the

fire

month,

calls

Highwood

during

EARS

TSE

were

volunteers.

SPECIAL ASSESSMENT
Special Warrant No.

NOTICE
372

CONSTRUCTION
OF LATERAL
SANITARY
SEWERS
IN GRANGE
AVENUE, CLOVERDALE
AVENUE,
SUNNYSIDE AVENUE, SPRUCE AVENUE,
PARTRIDGE
LANE
AND _ HOLLY
ROAD,
IN HIGHLAND
PARK, LAKE
COUNTY,
ILLINOIS.
All of which will more fully appear from
the certified copy of the judgment on file
in my office; that the warrant for the collection of this assessment is in my _ possession, All persons interested are hereby
notified to call and nay the amount assessed
at the Collector’s Office in the City Hall,
Highland Park, Illinois, within thirty (30)
days from the date hereof.
Notice is further given that the said assessment is divided into ten (10) installments. That the amount
of the first inStaliment is $20,916.36, and that each of
the
remaining
installments
is $19,100.00.
That all installments draw interest at the
rate of six per cent (6%) per annum. The
first installment is payable on the 2nd day
of January,
A.D.
1962,
and the second
and
subsequent
installments
are payable
annually thereafter.
Dated this 30th day of March, A.D. 1961,
FRANK
U. KOEHLER
Acting City Collector
3/30/61—84

7:30-10:00

3

30
230-5:
3:00

ROY
DRANSFELDT

registration week,

dent
the

Bramlage,
for

10

Hines

Born

a Highwood

years,

died

Veterans

in

resi-

Mar.

24

at

Hospital.

Carthage,

O.,

Mar.

9,

1896, he was a veteran of World
War I. He was employed by Fansteel Corporation in North Chicago.
He

leaves

one

his widow,

daughter,

Risdon,
Carl,

Mrs.

1373

brothers,

Cecile,

John

and

(Marilyn)

Division

Byron,

Pekin,

St.;

three

Springfield,

Ill.; and

Walter,

O.;
Santa

Monica,
Calif.; one sister, Miss
Catherine Bromlage, Omaha, Neb.

Miss Catherine

Nolan

Miss Catherine A. Nolan, 86, who
came to Highland Park as a child
of nine, died Mar. 23 at Villa St.
Cyril, St. Johns Ave., where she
had lived for the past three years.
Mass

was

at Immaculate

offered

Miss

Nolan

Mar.

Conception

church and burial was
cemetery, Evanston.
was

in

born

Calvary

in Chicago

Aug. 12, 1874, the daughter of the
late Mr. and Mrs. James Nolan,
pioneer residents of Highland Park.
She was well known
as a dressmaker here.
She maintained her own home
in the 500 block of Central Ave. for
many years; before moving to the
Villa St. Cyril, she lived with her
niece, Miss Margaret Nolan at 1776
First St. She was a member of the
Tabernacle
Guild
of Immaculate

Conception church.
She leaves in addition to her
niece, Margaret, a brother, Edward,
Burlington, Wash.; a nephew,
Thomas H., Tacoma, Wash.; and a
niece, Mrs. Claude (Hazel) Dahlman,

Burlington,

Wash.

Suspend Licenses
Eight local names are on the
current list from Springfield of
drivers’
licenses
suspended
for
three moving violations: Carl C.
Benson of 1018 Ridge Rd., Richard
FE. Conner of 527 Ridge Rd., Richard J. Goldwach of 165 Maple Ave.,
Harold Greenspon of 51 Sheridan
Rd.,

Robert

keley

R.

Mazer

of

1906

Ber-

Rd., Irving Rosenberg

Riparian

Rd.,

Cornelius

of 197
Hazel
Powers of 238
Highwood,

of 21

C.

Weed

Ave.
and
Larry
S. Central Ave.,

Three were issued probationary
permits, according to the report:
Warren P. Brown of 1300 Lincoln

Ave.,

Jerome Hayman

of 736 Green

Bay Rd. and Hortense
of 1115 Lincoln Ave.

10:00-12:00

High
10:00-12:00

Would

Police Officer
School District
like

Only

values
able

I.

Newman

or Monday,

Tuesday

REE RN

SS

the

and

Want

Ads

offer

opportunities

elsewhere.

Read

amazing

not

them

avail-

now!

113

his friends to

VOTE

ID 3-1404

at

last

INFORMATION

RUUD,

St.

Mr.

4:30-5:30

You may register at the Suburban
Fine Arts Center on dates
indicated above.
You may also register later during the
term if the class is not filled.
Fees will be pro rated if class is entered late.
COST: $33.00 for term of 12 weeks. For new registrants who have not previously paid the yearly
membership fee of the Suburban
Fine Arts Center, a charge of $5.00 will be made for a half-year membership to June,
1961.
Membership
entitles you and
your family to admission to all lectures, demonstrations and exhibits at the Center.
In classes where models are used, the fee paid to the model will be pro rated among
class members.
Special tuition for the University of Chicago Fine Arts Course, “Introduction to Music” is $50.00
for 10 weeks.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION ABOUT
and Thursday afternoons from 1 to 4. .

shorted

9:30-12:30

1:00-4:00

6

reative
Dramatics
Boys and girls ages
7 to 10 (Ist Floor)
Creative Art
Boys and girls ages
7 to 10 (1st Floor)
Fundamentals of Painting.
Boys and girls ages 11 to 17:
(2nd Floor)

Satz

motor

Publication
is
hereby
given
that
the
County Court of Lake County, Illinois, has
rendered
judgment
for
a_ special
assessment upon property benefited by the following improvement:

Beginning

MONDAY,

furnace

George Economus residence,
N. Central, Wednesday noon

answered

654 Deerfield Road

Park

gas

the
410
two

Art Foundation

Second

Requiem

and on the first floor, but found
no smoke in apartments upstairs.

[SUBURBAN FINE ARIS CENTER|

H. Bramlage

Funeral services for William
Henry Bramlage, 65, of 338 Ashland Ave., Highwood, were held
Mar. 28 from the chapel at 1848

'|25

in

August,
1958, brings
information
on the company’s ethical drug products and research discoveries to
physicians,
dentists,
pharmacists,

45

e

hind

Ray L. Sandlin 1161 Waukegan
Ave., a medical service representa-

Prices!

of Rte.

Dewey

This meeting is open to PTO
members
only; but parents and
teachers of Deerfield High School

Phone LOcust 6-7325
Located

in

Mrs. John
refreshments
ing Room.

NOW 2.88
3 for 10¢
30% Discount
9’ x 12’ 100% Viscose Rayon Pile CARPET rubber padding back 25.95
PATIO LIGHT, Large Aluminum Reflector...
tw
y Bi)
me
mT IrIGIAL PRUNT SOT. i...
i
719¢
2 gallon GAS CAN, with breather cap
....................................... 1.15

CENTER
at Discount

Deer-

matics, to be employed next fall.

3.75 to 5.50
Children 33¢ pr.

— COMPLETE GARDEN
Trees, Plants, etc., ALL

of the

high school cafeteria.
The main object of the meeting
is to adopt the by-laws presented
by the by-laws committee, Theodor

Iy

BOAT CUSHIONS, U.S.C.G. Approved
-2...-----.cceeccccccecceeeeceececcee $2.98
ADULT LIFE JACKETS, U.S.C.G. Approved .......................... 2.98
Large

meeting

Harlan Philippi,
principal
of
Deerfield High School, will explain
new teaching methods, particular-

Illinois Railroad
Salvage &amp; Discount Store
HOURS: Tuesday, Friday 9-9—Wed., Thurs.
CLOSED MONDAYS.
Sunday 10-9.

special

al qe
eee

Track Team Opens
Outdoor Season

field High School PTO
has been
called for April 10 at 8 p.m. in the

they noted.

STORE

PERT
i
y

SCUTL
Scott’s

Answer

Brown

to

Spot

for him by write-in

FOR

CONSTABLE

Deerfield,

and

West

Vernon

ELECTION

CRAFTWOOD

Deerfield

Townships
APRIL

4

LUMBER

COMPANY

See Page H43-D-59

_

Thursday, March 30, 1961

|

�Men

A

ril

p

4

Shore

will meet

April

Chamber Music Group | Sig" Taken
Features

‘
will

Men’s Garden Club of the North|

Highland

Ravinia PTA Plans
The

To Discuss Flowers

Dance
We

Ravinia

held

be

Saturday,

4 in the ginning

Park Recreation

PTA

;
in

Spring

The next Chamber Music Semi-|
gym,|nar session at The Music Center,

evening,

April

be-

300

Green

by

Quarterbacks.

cg

a

at 9 p.m. Music

Center,|furnished

Dance

school

the

the

Cellist

22,

will be ego

Bay

Road,

held on Monday,

season.

Nathan

are

chairmen

of the

ogg Bee 2g alae

event.|woman

Pasterresident Ed Englebrecht is Tickets and additional information|
Seaitman

of

the

program

which

at

will offer several unusual talks.
Color

ee

be had by calling Mrs. Nathan|

cellist,

who

has

stage

of three

Raya

played

on

oe

ee

the

or

night

last

Forever

week,

concert|by
Accom-|

eS

has not been found.

Garbousova,|ter

continents.

evening

HALTS
F
Kills Crabgrass

April 3/ Highland Park police were told. It

panying her will be the Music Cen-|

ah 2-6313.

A wooden sign two feet square,
valued at $100, was torn from a
post in front of Butterworth Anian Hospital, 1940 Park Ave., Sun-

Winnetka,|qay

and the [Mie 208 Frank and Mrs. Joseph |No. 2, featuring a distinguished
Toa eeey tring

Mabirie

=

Spring

Chamber

Herbert

Orchestra,

Zipper.

Single Admis-

sions can be arranged

Students

directed

LUMBER COMPANY,

at the door.

See Page H43-D-59

are given a special rate.

Slides

A series of hand-painted kati
slides of wild flowers will be shown

Carl

part

Dietz

Company

of the

of

the

about

new

by

talk

Vaughan

Seed

and improved

annuals, accompanied
tive slides. “Color in

all summer”

program

interesting

a very

by illustrathe garden

is his theme.

Following

will

discussion

of

a

round-table

garden

be

questions,

€)
YO4

moderated
by
Ed _ Engelbrecht.
Bring
your
garden
problems
or
questions and will receive expert
advice from Everett Inman,
rose

NWONMdNdsd

second

3DV3d

The

will be

ALUWd

open.

ZOILSNF

the
the
prethe

JO

a prelude to
planned for
local forest
breakfast in

FHL

portion

(Pa32313 8q 0} AUC)

of the program is
wild flower walk
near future, in a
serve, including

This

YAONIS Val NIATV.

slides.

photo-

of

days

the

color

Od

before

graphic

JFIAVLSNOD

made

was principal of the Elm Place
school, are priceless, having been

L_]

will also talk

(pa3}29]9 8q 0} UC)

who

slides,
The
flowers.
wild
L.
Jesse
by
made
were
naturalist, who at one time

[|

Leech,

about
which
Smith,

LLANSZANag aa

by Bert

expert, John Fiore, expert on trees,
shrubbery

Slepyan,

and

landscaping;

expert

on

Dr.

tuberose

Al

be-

gonias; Clayton Sandel, expert on
perennials. Irving Stein, expert on
dahlias; Carl Carani, professional

gardener

and

Ray Klingler,

expert

on vegetables.

Hop

over

3HL JO FDILSNE
LOTIVd NAWID3dS
JOVad

GNV
JIGVLSNOD
NOILD313

JDILSNE
LOWLSIC
JAld YIIWNN

TIV
SLONID3Iad

sioulj|] ‘AjuNO&gt; e407

LO6L ‘bp [dy ‘Appseny

PT ATO

DILVADOWAAG
ALYVd

3HL

JO

(P2329]3 8q 0} BUQ)

F0ILSNE

YOd

C7

[]
qauuvi “1 Lyagow

FIAVLSNOD

UYOd

(P2322]9 ©q 0} ed)

3OV3ad

“Maybe you'd like this Peter
Rabbit book, Kilroy."

plelyieeq pup pyeljieeg yseyy ‘UOUIZA JO SUMO]

COUNTRY CORNERS .

[|

.

Meet

IDonyaa Hatoay

.

Gardeners

-

ry

TS

Ee

Nee

RNa

.

igs

Ae

als

i wat

f

(or

to Country

Corners for all your
Easter Food Needs.
We treat you right!
Open

daily 8 a.m, to 9:30 p.m.
Including Sun. &amp; Holidays

County Corners
FOOD
|

"MART i

LAKE FOREST
WAUKEGAN

ROAD.

QUALITY

SERVICE ECONOMY

CEdar 4-0854

Thursday, March 30, 1961

3/30/61—73

Page H 39—D 55

�ies more
D
n
O
k
r
o
W
r
e
DeMolay ‘Monb

Cle
n Named |
Advertising Counsel

GRASS
Turf Builders for
Fine Lawns

Robert G. Clendenin, 3069
field
Rd.,
Riverwoods,
has

March 16 a total of 66 DeMolay
members worked toward degrees
for the Northern Jurisdiction of
Illinois at the Scottish Rite Temple
in Chicago.

Deerbeen

named advertising counsel for the
Klasing Hand Brake Co., Joliet, according to C. L. Klasing, Jr., president. The firm produces
railway

CRAFTWOOD

the Excalabar chapter of Deerfield.
They were: Roger Bahnsen, Richard Folger, Peter and Richard Meldahl, Roy Pfieffer, John Tatman,
Richard Wagner and Tom Wands.

Nine

of the candidates

were from

Advisory

LUMBER

devices.

COMPANY

Also

Ad

Man

In addition to being president of |

(Paid

Tabernacle GuilIsd
Topic for Monday
“Birth

Control!

Political

Advisory board members attending were: Frank Seifried, chapter
advisor; Howard Wrickson, Robert
Rothschild,
Harold
Gamso,
Earl

the Village of Riverwoods,
Clendenin has for the past two years
had his own free-lance advertising
business.

Paul and Harold Perrin.

and

Population

Explosion” will be topic of Dr.
Richard J. Westley, associate professor of philosophy at Barat College, when

car hand brakes and load retarding
See Page H43-D-59

Board

| Birth Control

he

speaks

to the Taber-

nacle Guild of the Immaculate
evechurch Monday
Conception
ning at 8 o’clock in the school
cafeteria.
Dr. Westley received his B. A.
degree from Marquette University
in 1950, his M. A. from the University of Toronto in 1951. He was
awarded the Licentiate degree in
Medieval
Studies,
cum
laude,
in
1953; and received his Ph. D. de-

Advertisement)

gree in 1954 from the University of
Toronto.
In 1958, he was elected president of the Barat chapter of the
American Association of University
Professors. He is also a writer for
scholarly journals, his most recent
study
appearing
in The
Modern

FOR A CLEAN SLATE
OF COUNTY AND TOWNSHIP OFFICES

Schoolmen, titled
of Concreted and

Crash

VOTE |x| DEMOCRATIC
TUESDAY,

On

Nancy

Russell

of

1337

Bob-O’-

Link Rd. got a ticket for negligent
driving

APRIL

March

18

afternoon

in the

1300 block of Deerfield Rd., Highland Park police report, after colliding from
the rear with the

4, 1961

stopped car of
948 Forest Ave.,

Michael
Schnarr,
DesPlaines.

&amp; YACHT

INSURANCE
LOW-LOW-LOW RATES

JUDGE

No extra charge for outboard or swimming pool liability, if we write the fire

PHILIP, W. YAGER

x

Philosophy
Concrete.”

Deerfield

BOAT
FOR CIRCUIT

“A
the

on your home.

DAVID A. BEATTY
FOR JUSTICE

OF THE

INSURANCE

PEACE

ROBERT L. TARREL

x

ASK US ABOUT

FOR CONSTABLE

If you live in

If You

DEERFIELD

If You

in

DEERFIELD

TOWNSHIP

Live in

VERNON

HOMER

J. BLOSTEN

B. MARXER

JOHN TINKER

For Assistant Supervisor

For Township Clerk

ARLINE

EMMA

PAUL

ROLLA

For Township Clerk

For Township Assessor

STAUNTON

BANDEMER

VIRGINIA

O.

GORNER

For Township Auditors
(Vote for Three)

For Township

ACTUAL

THOMAS

RICHARD CROMARTIE
JOSEPH GORA
WILLIAM HARRER

GERALD M. FLEGEL
CHESTER E. VARNER
ALLAN GERKIN, JR.

The Democratic Party also recommends the
following four candidates running as independent candidates for WEST DEERFIELD
TOWNSHIP LIBRARY DIRECTORS:
HELEN

CYRIL
ROGER
PAUL

KING,

FRITZ,

6-yr.

6-yr.

McGUIRE,
STEERUP,

Term

THE DEMOCRATS

term
4-yr.

2-yr.

This Advertisement Sponsored

term

H

40—D

56

LAKE COUNTY,

inc.

Phone for appointment.

Che

ee

House of Vision *
Craftsmen in Opties

(Paid

Page

Let’s talk about it]

by:

OF SOUTH

term

SIZE

We have all of the newest
types. H.0.V., you know, was
one of the two pioneers in
the successful development
of contact lenses in this country,
Here your contacts are
custom made, especially
for you, from start to finish
in our own laboratory by
expert technicians. And with
your House of Vision
contact lenses go unlimited
service and genuine solicitous
attention for as long as
you wear them.

SEKOWSKI

For Township Auditors
(Vote for Three)

Auditors

(Vote for Three)

PHILIP A. KAL
RAYMAND A. ZANARINI
FRED SPANIER

ge

For Township Clerk
SPORKIN

For Township Assessor

For Township Assessor
ARTHUR C. ULLMAN

FLANDERS

TOWNSHIP
For Supervisor

For Supervisor

For Assistant Supervisor

[x] GEORGE

Live

WEST

TOWNSHIP

contact

ADOLPH BERTUCCI

x

AGENCY

ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE
500 S. Genesee, Waukegan, Ill.
ON 2-0240
Weekdays Till 9 p.m.,
Sat. Till 3 p.m.

Political Advertisement)

1691 SHERIDAN RD., HIGHLAND PARK
610 CHURCH ST., EVANSTON
188 NORTH WABASH AVE., CHICAGO
OH.0.v,

Thursday,

March

30, 1961

�Scholastic

Named Vice Pres.
Of Rolled Steel
1101

Rueven
Platt,
has been named
charge of marketing
at
the
Rolled
Steel

Golf

vice

Ave.,

president

in

operating

T.

Robert

Ridgewood

Wylde

of

the

Dean

of

throughout

Students.
the

president.

states

galvan-

oO

(Formerly Garino’s)

about

liberal

our

Clarence Dombeck, proprietor

trial

for accordion—guitar

pian

Instrument furnished
Franchised dealer Gibson Guitors
Dallape — Scandalli — Camerano Accordions
Evanston Studio
Highland Park Studio
UN 4-4888
iD 2-0015

of

Michigan.

saler of women’s

mH
sad
oS
-NORTHSHORE MUSIC STUDIOS

inquire

Before joining Rolled
Steel in
1952, Platt was a buyer for S. P.
Platt and Company, Chicago whole-

The
company
distributes
hot
and cold rolled

sheets,

of

Illinois and

Skokie,
it was
announced
by
Seymour
Wald-

;

157 Northland,

was one of the 87 University of
Missouri students who had perfect
4.0 scholastic averages for the fall
semester of 1960, according to the
office

Corporation,

man,

Honor

Eric Jon Engberg,

apparel.

oe

ized and stainPlatt
less steel, and aluminum in sheets,
as well
as bar
coil,
and
plate,
size structurals.

1086

Drive has been ap-

In

pointed commercial and industrial
loan
representative
for
Great Lakes Mortgage Corporation, Chicago. The Great Lakes
Mortgage Corporation is loan
correspondent for Metropolitan
Life Insurance Company.

his

be

new

capacity

responsible

for

Platt

Rolled Steel’s advertising
uct

programs.

pointment,
sales

Prior

Platt

manager

and prod-

market

development

search

will

coordinating

was
for

to

a
the

re-

his

ap-

regional
company

DRIVEWAY CONSTRUCTION
Old

Parking Areas—
Drives Refinished

@
@

BLACK TOP
CONCRETE

@

CRUSHED

ae

STONE

Call for

FREE

l

Estimate

%&amp; Metered

24

Hour

FUEL

SILJESTROM

OIL

Highland

Forget

WASHDAY?

+

FUEL CO.

ID 2-0065

1930 First St.

Service

have

it!
to

X

You

Park

don’t

Mondays

if

you send your laundry to
us. Relax and enjoy your
former

washday

BAUM'S PASTRY SHOP
“Where

The

Aroma

Tells

You

It’s

Baked

In

Kitchen”

Our

ID 2-0815

620 Central Ave.

just as

any other day.

Let

SKOKIE

VALLEY

LAUNDRY help you take
eare of that!

TRUCK

AT
SKOKIE VALLEY
LAUNDRY

ATTENTION
OWNERS
Ist, 1961

NEW TESTING PERIOD STARTS APRIL

We Will Be Open from 8 A.M. to 12 O'clock Noon
on the Following Saturdays

..

CALL
ID 2-3310

SAT., APRIL

TRUCK

8th &amp; SAT., APRIL

15th

INSPECTION

Official Inspection Station

VALLEY

KOKIE
LAUNDRY

&amp;

DRY

CLEANERS,

INC.

Main Office and Plant:
— Deerfield Call Enterprise
2-3310
IDiewood
512-518 Waukegan Ave., Highwood
Thursday,

March

30, 1961

1616

OPEN

DAHL
i| 2058 FIRST ST.

No. A-479
DAILY 8:00 TO 4:30

AUTO
RECONSTRUCTION
[D 2-0077
Page

H 41—D

57

�GOOD

PRICES

“Easter—a

ON

other

drug

day. Worship

needs?

MONROE
521

W.

Chicago

BUY

PHARMACY

Monroe

St.,

5th

6, Ill. ST 2-0075,

Renewal’

service is held

a.m. in Ferry
Lake Forest.

Call or Write
PROFESSIONAL

of

will be sermon topic for the Rev.
Russell R. Bletzer, minister, at the
North Shore Unitarian church Sun-

PRESCRIPTIONS
and

Time

Hall

school

U. S. SAVINGS

chapel,

BONDS.

Park

Floor

ST 2-5880
Two

Highland

seniors,

Judith

daughter

Complete

&amp;y Laundry

NEW MODERN
FACILITIES

SINCE 1926

of

Park

E.

Mr.

Also

for

pictured

are

(left),

Mrs,

Laurie

Robert

Moe

of

Chicago and Betsy Bryant of Framingham,

I Day Laundry Service

Club Activities
Fashion Shows

Driver Injured

Call For and Deliver

6 Private Diaing Rooms
Accommodations 15 to 500

BR 3-4626

VE

Mass.

5-3355

As
from

she drove
her street,

police

were

told.

Anthony Viti, 18, of 1715 Lake
Ave., Wilmette, and Robert Vogel,
18, of 354 Woodland Rd., Glencoe, led police through the kitchen
to the basement, and showed how
they pried the hinges off the winecellar

door,

Knapp
mette,

They

named

Donald

of 540 Illinois Rd., Wilas the third participant.

While driving around with other
boys and girls, they were picked
up by
Glencoe
police.
Viti
and

Vogel were released on $50 bond.
The senior Dinsdales are still
on

vacation,

A Mrs.

according

Liska,

upstairs

to

police.

at the time

the youths
came
in, told police
there
had
been
teen
parties
in
the previous four days,
and she

thought

Tracy Stevens of 591 Clavey Ln,
was taken to Highland Park Hospital from a crash last Thursday
afternoon, with injuries to her left
leg and knee, head and mouth.

On EDENS EXPRESSWAY
at LAKE COOK RD.

1873 St. Johns Ave.
Highland Park

School

and

Banquets
Weddings

ID 2-0305

High

Russell

D.
Russell
of
1188
Ridgewood
Drive, and Lynne Kulieke (second
from left), daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Warren H. Kulieke of 3365
Old Mill Road, North, were among
the 152 prospective college students who visited the campus of
Lake Forest College on March 4.

eS

First Downtown

Three North Shore youths expected to find a party at the David
Dinsdale residence, 76 S. Deere
Park Dr., March 12, and helped
themselves to eight or nine bottles
of
Scotch
whiskey
when
they
found no one at home, Highland

at 11

Catal
EB —

Bank Building Is _

Teens Seek Party;
Find Winecellar

Renewal

onto Clavey Rd.
Marguerite Buch-

anan

this

of

was

68

another.

Ridge

Rd.

passed

a

stopped car from the opposite direction, Highland Park police report. They collided head-on in Mrs.
Stevens’ lane. Mrs. Buchanan was
ticketed for negligent driving.

Over Twenty Years
The first new building in Highland
Park’s
downtown
area
in
many years, and the first on Central Ave, in over 20 years, the
Bank of Highland Park is a dramatic departure in design and construction, not only in the banking
field but among other commercial
buildings as well.
It is the first
drive-in bank in Highland Park.

Organized just five years ago,
the Bank purchased the site at
First St. and Central Ave. from
the Chicago, North Western Railroad, and the old time freight
house on the property was presented to the Highland Park Fire
Department to be destroyed in a
“practical”

roof,

which

feet,

is

shape.

In

IT CAN

Washing

BE DONE

ESTATE

TREE

EXPERTS

WILLIAM PITTENGER
REAL ESTATE
1084 W. EVERETT ROAD
LAKE FOREST, ILLINOIS

INSURED

WING’S TREE EXPERTS
Licensed by the State
Introducing a new power stump

Now

Sales-A ppraisals
Mortgages
4-0249

DEERFIELD—Windsor

5-0308

From A Stump

at

is the

time

to

BE SAFE

order

NOT

TREE REMOVAL
POWER SPRAYING
FEEDING
TRIMMING

Linens,

EXPERTS

Sweaters,

Shirts,

Pleating —
Buttons —

etc.

Belts

Hand Bound

&amp; Machine Button Holes

SORRY
TREE

SERVICE

Blouses,

Towels,

FIREPLACE
woop

WING’S

Vogue

Fabric Shop

722 Main

Phones:
ID 3-1622 &amp; KI 6-2292

CABLING
PATCHING

A Sevings

On

cutter

DORMANT
SPRAY
and
DUTCH
ELM CONTROL

To Shavings

TELEPHONES:
FOREST—CEdar

SERVICES

DISPOSAL SERVICE

Evanston

UNiversity

Tape Transcriptions
Fast
Dependable
Neat
ID 2-0650
* Secretarial
* Bookkeeping
* Notary Public @ Mimeographing

Service

With

* Septic Tanks
¢ Catch Basins
Pumped
454

Ave.

Office

TELEPHONE

- Commercial

H

42—D

58

West

Central

4-3034

lay-

and

instead

contains

of
ap-

are of special alloy steels.

1885

ID

for the

developing

for the Bank

be

the

A

the

GARAGE

DOOR

main

as

room

RCA

Road

SERVICE

the

most

floor

vault.

equipped

with

kitchen

facili-

ties. The

lobby will be completely

carpeted

and

fully
type

the

whole

air-conditioned
of

system

building

by

where

a

new

all

duct

work and servicing are beneath
the floor. Two drive-in tellers windows will be provided and there
is a large parking lot north of
the building for additional customconvenience.

COMPANY

HI 6-5080

Co.,

Inc.

BURGLAR
ALARMS

OPERATORS

¢ FCC Approved
¢ U.L. Approved
¢ 1 Yr. Guarantee

5-0035

of Highland

customers

customer lounge is planned,
well as an employees’ lunch-

RCA
RADIO CONTROLLED

Nursery

Deerfield

and

General Contractor on the Bank
of Highland Park building is Keno

ELECTRONICS

Deerfield

Protect
your
family and
home
with new approved
electronic alarm.
Call for
FREE demonstration.

OR

4-3656

REPAIR

HIGHLAND

BEST BUY ON

ILL.

in

Highland

Park,

Highwood,

Deerfield

and

Vernon

SIDING

Township.

REPAIRS
REMODELING

2-2028

*This is the circulation that your ad on this page

North

Western

KAISER

ALUMINUM

Who w.!l work 24 hours a day 7 days a week canvassing all homes
PARK,

Leading Watch Repair Craftsmen
and Jewelry Designers

Page

and

WI

Vielen

SHERIDAN

Inspector

Established

Refuse
Rubbish

%

Watch

more,

offering

FOR SALE: 11,786 SALESMEN*

Leeds
Officlal

Inc.

ID 2-2883

JEWELER — WATCH

&amp;

F. D. CLAVEY
RAVINIA NURSERIES

a Smile
¢
¢

Residential

Pick-up &amp; Delivery
Williams

LANDSCAPING

HIGHLAND REFUSE
SERVICE

BUSINESS SERVICES

CENTRAL

or

Construction

HIGHLAND

| CORNER.

of the

up to date and convenient banking services, and now completely
automated. To be ready for occupancy in May, the new buiiding
will increase customer capacity by
150%, with ten tellers windows
replacing the present four, An unusual and appreciated feature will

er

Roger

language

ports to only 4 columns

housing

MONOGRAMMING

BONDED

at

591A

square

paraboloid

front is a straight line.
This interesting and functional
roof resulted in reducing the sup-

Park,

DRESSMAKERS’

oy

BUSINESS

6,000

one story building, the architects
have provided appropriate modern

ID 2-8917

LAKE

the

In planning

Estimates

REAL

covers

hyperbolic

man, it is a curve made of straight
lines, any section parallel to the

members

® Reasonable Rates
@ Excellent References
Wall

a

proximately 4% the amount of concrete and % of the reinforcing
steel in the concrete, normally
used in a structure of this size.
The
high
tensile
steel
tension

INTERIOR
EXTERIOR
PAINTING
Free

exercise.

Designed by Friedman, Alschuler &amp; Sincere, Chicago architectural firm, this building is an outgrowth of the natural expression
of the very latest in scientific,
artistic and engineering skills. The

eight

@

in

will receive.

NO SALESMEN
R.R.

For Space

Reservation

Phone:

ID

2-4500

Call

for

free

OR
Thursday,

estimate

and

sketch

4-3656
March

30, 1961

a

Easter—for

Looking For

�i

pee

Sag

ees

] Autographing Party
For Civil War Book

By Dr. Eisenschiml
Two proud

Highland

Park

resi-

dents will be present when their
famous
fathers,
Dr.
Otto
Eisenschiml
autographs
copies
of his

latest

book

at

Makay

Bookstore,

1876 Shermer, Northbrook,
urday, April 8.

Gerald

Ejisenschiml,

Forest

Ave.,

schiml,

of

and

200

on

Sat-

of

1458

Ralph

LEisen-

Braebourn

Lane,

successful
businessmen
in
their
own right, have grown accustomed
to seeing their father acclaimed for

he

is also

widely

As

The North Shore Congregation
Israel Nursery School, now in its
fourth year, has been very successful again this year with capacity attendance of over 60 pupils
according
Isserman,

to Mr, and Mrs. Fred
458 Sumac, chairmen of

community
the

NSCI

|§

Club.

the Robert Paris Walkers, 60 Cen-||

already has stirred up considerable

tral

among

this

of

period

authorities

American

history,

particularly for his appraisal

generals
armies,

who

led

on

the

of the

opposing

Helen

Ave.,

Alpha
sity

Phi
of

Pledges

has

daughter

been

pledged

at

Miehigan,

will

members
‘Downgrades’

Walker,

sorority

there

the
Ann

be

or

of

Margaret

daughter

of

Dannenbaum,
land

Park,

vacation

sume

Dannenbatiiii,

and

Mrs.

Laurel
will

from

for Women,

Thursday,

A.

Mr.

begin

High-

her

spring

Centenary

Hackettstown,

March

classes

George

Ave.,

30.

She

on Tuesday,

College
N.J.,

on

will

re-

April

11.

Lynn
Teplinski,
CR
2-0708,
enrollment chairman, or Mrs. Helen
Ritter, Director of the School, VE
5-0724.

Directed by Teachers—Program Fitted to Child
All activities conducted on our Country Estate
in Northbrook, Illinois
Ultra Modern Outdoor Swimming Pool
Swimming, Horseback Riding (2 Corrals),

amd §

to

Arbor.

full-fledged
in initiation rites this

generals,

is one

of the

Dr.

“Rather

he resembles

high

of whom

writes.

the little girl

it was said that when she

was

good,

but

when

she

was

she

very,

was

very

bad

good,

she

was

horrid.” Grant, he says, never consistently demonstrated his ability
as a great general.
To his many admirers, who are
expected to attend the autographing party at Makay Bookstore, Dr.

Eisenschiml

issued

“Unless

are

you

this

in

all preconceived

wonderful products for outdoor living.

opinions

and

let yourself be guided solely by the

FENCES

Plans,

evidence as it will evolve through
the unbiased judgment of facts as

presented

FERTILIZER

Chairman Of Cancer

Group In Highwood
7

Joe

$43,592.50,

A complete

e

steel.

Baruffi,

215

of which

Print—$10.00 Gift Certifi-

lawn and

cate.
First Prize—Color Print—
$25.00 Gift Certificate

garden department.

Evolution,

Highwood, has beén named chairman of the 1961 Cancer Crusade in
Highwood, it has been announced
by Dr. Jacob Halper, Lake County
Crusade chairman for the American Cancer Society.
The educational and fund-raising
crusade begins April 1. Lake County quota this year has been set at

Highwood

has

been asked to contribute $400. The
month of April has been set aside,
by
Congressional
resolution,
as
Cancer Control Month.
Mrs. John McLaren
will assist
Mrs.
Baruffi
as co-chairman,
in
launching April’s Cancer Crusade.

First Prize—Color Slide—

$15.00 Gift Certificate

Vaughan

SEEDS

ef SCOTT

We

&amp; Fredonia

are dealers

Nineteen additional prizes in

in Scott lawn and rose

products. Save on spreads and multiple
purchases.

CRAFTWOOD

“Prescription

“Park
Thursday,

Service”

COMPANY,

LUMBER

Park Ave. at Sheridan Rd.
24 Hr. Phone Service
Free Delivery

means

additional

prizes in

as to the camera wsed and lo-

Call Morrie!
Pharmacy

prizes in

the Color Print Division will
consist of one roll of film in
the size used to take the
picture.

cation

He Prescribes

at ID 3-2525

Fourteen additional

Entry deadline will be April
17th. Each énfry must be accompanied with
full details

you are ill

Park-Sheridan

Black &amp; White Division
consist of one roll of
in the size used to take
picture.

the
Color
slide
Division
will consist of one roll of
film in the size used to take
the picture.

Call your Doctor

When

the
will
film
the

Fourteen

Only the Want Ads offer amazing
values and opportunities not available elsewhere. Read them now!

When

stockade,

First Prize—Black &amp; White

é

Mrs.

Redwood,

Value—$110.00

installation.

in the book,”

Mrs. Baruffi Named
r

materials,

all

Polaroid Highlander
Camera Kit

the

truth about the Civil War, do not
read this book. It may shock you.
Shed

Grand Prize—covering
three categories:

warning:

interested

r}

WINNETKA STORE
847 Elm «© MI G-5T4)

EASTER
PICTURES

Robert

Eisenschiml

STORE

10 2.8559

CONTEST
for

E. Lee’s record as a general does
not emerge on a par with his char-

acter,’

«

Weekends available to organizations for parties

federate generals he listed, and|}
Ulysses S. Grant as “erratic, but
with a high average,” also considerably
below
lesser
known
spots of the book.
“Disregarding tradition,

PARK

569 Centrol

Camp Season: June 26 thru Aug. 18, ‘61
Phones: OR 4-9789 or OR 4-3829

become

His rating of Robert E. Lee as
sixth in ability of the seven con-

Union

HIGHLAND

Fishing, Boating, All Sports, Crafts, Golf, Hot
Lunches, Teacher-staff, Transportation, etc.

Univer-

Spring.

Lee

will

« RAIL BLAZER DUDE RANCH
| AN EXCLUSIVE DAY CAMP FOR BOYS AND GIRLS—5 thru 12
7 wre.

Dr.
Ejisenschiml’s
new _ book,
“The Hiden Face of the Civil War”
controversy

Miss

past,

Reservations are being taken for
both the summer and fall sessions.
Interested parents should contact

Pledges Alpha Phi

known.

the

eight weeks—Monday through Friday—from
9 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.

under the direction of
Couples

in

for Vacation

Miss

an outstanding staff of teachers to
guide the children. The activities,
both
outdoor
and
indoor,
are
planned
so that each
child will
have the closest possible individual
care and supervision.
The
summer
session
will last

the Nursery School Board. The
school is under the direction of
Mrs. Helen Ritter.
On June 26, the Summer Nursery School session will begin its
session. The school is operated for
3, 4 and 5 year old children of the

his work in the field of Civil War
history, as well as in chemistry, for
which

Home

Nursery School Opens For Fourth Summer

Just west

of Route 41

—

Phone

IDlewood

1590 Deerfield Road, Highland

2-0140

Park,

Ill.

of shot.

INC.

Hours—Monday
8-5:30

thru’ Safarday,

Thurs. and Fri:, unt 9
Sunday, 9-1

Sheridan”

March

30, 1961

‘Page H 43—D

59

�New
We are happy to announce the

Commerce

Chicago,

expansion of our plumbing and
heating services in the North Shore
Area.

sistant

specializing

ID 2-5561-62

that

Company

President

NIGHTS:

ID

Own

Agency

For the past ten years, he has
been engaged in insurance sales
and operated his own general inagency.

He

education at Illinois
western
Universities,
completed his degree

3-2475

ID 2-2078

received

his

and Northwhere
he
in business

administration.

THE BETTER
COMPACT CAR

CELEBRATES ITS FIRST BIRTHD
y cs

SS

PRICED!
WITH OR BELOW
THE COMPACTS
OF OTHER MAKERS

At the March Board meeting of Family Service of Highland

Had

surance

Family Service Sets Record _
In February Counseling Help

Ira

Harold Kammerer

Plbg. &amp; Htg. Co., Inc.

| 595 Roger Williams

announced

Mendelson, 2678 Marl
has been
named
As-

In his new position, Mendelson
will be engaged in coordination and
liaison between the Company and
its financial public.

in repairs to all makes and models of washing machines, dryers, dishwashers, disposals and other kitchen appliances.

Ravinia

to

Company,

Lipshutz.

have our own full-time APPLIANCE
DEPARTMENT

Insurance

has

Warren G.
Oak
Drive,

With the addition of
Harold
Kammerer to our staff, we now
REPAIR

Position

Park,

Mrs.

Martha

Winch,

Director,

reported

Feb-

—

Lake Forest and Lake Bluff.
Sixty
applications
for
service
were received during February. A
total of 229 cases were open during
the month. The number of counseling hours provided by the agency
came to 400.
Mrs.
Winch
recently
also
released a quarterly report on counseling hours used by the various
communities served by the agency.

This

revealed

Highland

that

Park

used

residents

of

754 counseling

hours the first three months of the
agency’s present fiscal
vember, December 1960

year (Noand Janu-

ary

Deerfield-

1961);

residents

of

Bannockburn used 244 counseling
hours; Highwood 75, and Lake For-

est-Lake Bluff 169.
Family Service depends for its
support mainly upon the Highland
Park
Community
Chest
and
the
Deerfield Area United Fund. Fees
are charged dependent upon family income and size.

Questions

as to why she thought

there has been a marked increase
in requests for counseling help offered by the agency Mrs. Winch

¥

said, “We

es

do not know why this is.

It is true, however,
that as the
community
becomes
better
informed about our work, increasing
use of the agency will be made.

ciijelcdsiaaneadeae
re

HIGH RESALE

Additionally,

more

our own clients
us to others.”’

$160 TO $511 MORE
THAN OTHER COMPACTS

that

ruary established a record in all ways with respect to the family
counseling help being given to the communities the agency
serves, Highland Park, Deerfield, Bannockburn, Highwood,

PROUD OWNERS
IN JUST ONE YEAR

are

and

more

of

recommending

No matter what you want to buy
or sell you’ll find the Want-Ad section your best market place.
Report of Condition of “BANK OF HIGHLAND PARK” of City of Highland Park
in the State of Illinois at the close of
business on March
20, 1961. Published
in Response to Call of Conrad F. Becker;
Director of shee Institutions,
IT;
1. Cash,
balances with other
banks,
including
reserve
balances, and cash items in

process of collection ............ $

487,455.98

2. United
States
Government
obligations, direct and guaranteed
. 2,122,532.42 4. Other
bonds,
notes,
and

debentures

wicca

400,009.19

6. Loans
and
discounts
(including
$9,271.74
overdrafts)
2,065,568.70
7. Bank premises owned none,
furniture
and
fixtures
SAS SOS
fii sakeee
45,865.58
9. Investments and other assets
indirectly representing bank
premises or other real esTARR
i ig ie arnt
tse de
75,000.00
Th, Other apeete i. ci uid frac
30,303.71

Se eS
13.
14.
15.
16.
18.
19.
23.:

It’s the first family-size compact Longer wheelbase—up
to 7.5” longer than other compacts—means more Comet room,
not only in comfort-for-six seating but in over 28 cu. ft. of trunk
space.
Comet’s big-car ride is the comfort difference
Extra
length also contributes to Comet’s road-leveling ride. The
refined new suspension gives Comet a better ride than many
standard cars. And Comet handles almost as easily as a tricycle.
Talk about economy and you’re talking Comet To save
on gas, choose either of Comet’s two thrifty engines. You change
Comet oil only every 4,000 miles, get better tire mileage, save on
licenses and insurance. And Comet’s Super-Enamel finish
never needs waxing!
Lasting quality, even where it doesn’t show Comet is
quality, inside and out. Unit-built to keep quiet, stay sturdy and
durable, Comet also has rustproofed vital underbody parts,
thorough soundproofing and an aluminized muffler.

Both two- and four-door sedans and wagons Take your
pick from sedans or wagons. With cargo space you’d expect
from larger-size wagons (up to 30% more space behind the
front seat than most other compacts) and a convenient rolldown rear window for easier loading, Comet offers you the
better compact wagon!
Lowest net cost of ownership
From one model year to
the next, Comet’s net cost of ownership (initial cost less resale
value) is the lowest of all six-passenger compacts. Latest Auto-

motive Market Reports of used car auction prices for 1960
models show that Comet is worth from $160 to $511 more than
the others. After adjustment for differences in manufacturers’
suggested new car retail prices, Comet’s net cost of ownership
ranges from $57 to $543 less than the other compacts.

These are a few of the reasons 198,000 proud owners con-

gratulate Comet... and themselves ...on Comet’s first birthday
this March. And also they’re reasons why you should see Comet
«+. the value-packed compact... at your Mercury-Comet dealer.

LINCOLN-MERCURY

DIVISION

ArdMelorGompany,

HIGHLAND PARK LINCOL
- MERCURY
N, Inc.
1890 First St.
Highland

Page H 44—D 60

Park

ID

2-6300

24.

litical subdivisions

............:...

Other
deposits
(certified
and officers’ checks, etc.)
TOTAL DEPOSITS ...........,
ciedolayl ibs was malin $4,858,736.70
Other “Habilities. as

368,111.26

52,295.39
115,625.26

TOTAL LIABILITIES (not
including subordinated obligations shown below ............ $4,974,361.96

CAPITAL
20.

$5 226,735.58

LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corPOCAMONE
Sin diciiiniecae $1,872,110.87
Time
deposits
of individuals, partnerships, and corTOV ORO
ocho gutta i tl
2,485,280,15
Deposits of United
States
Government (including postad SAVINGS). chaihiiee nese
80,939.03
Deposits of States and
‘

IYI.

2

27. Undivided
29. TOTAL
COUNTS

ACCOUNTS

sds aveieaapeinetneere ga seus $
ics

shied a

profits

«0.000...

CAPITAL’

150,000.00
000.
50,000.00
52,373.62

AC-

Shed inomvashnyeanh ast nee aaieg $

252,373.62

30.T OT A L LIABILITIES
AND
CAPITAL
ACORIN TS *..35 4c ee $5 226,735.58
MEMORANDA
Assets pledged or assigned
to secure liabilities and for
other
purposes:
..,...00.00004 $ 775,000.00
32. Loans as shown above are
after deduction of reserves
fe
61,085.13
I, H. H. Homberger, Vice President and
Cashier, of the above-named bank, do solemnly affirm that the above statement is
true, and that it fully and correctly represents the true state of the several matters
herein contained and set forth, to the best
of my knowledge and belief.
H. H. HOMBERGER
Correct—aAttest:
SAM FELL
)
; Directors.
HARRY
J. LAZARUS
State of Illinois, County of Lake, ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me this
24th day of March, 1961,
My commission expires August 9, 1962
(SEAL)
ROSE ANN KERKORIAN
Notary Public
3/30/61—77
31.

Thursday,

March 30, 1961
Papaatag,

_
Be
ot eg
tasers
fare!
oy

�Offer Summer Class In Special Reading
The
Illinois Institute
of Technology Reading Program will be ofat The
fered again this summer
North Shore Country Day School,
310 Green Bay Rd., Winnetka.
The program will be given during
the eight-week period from June
19 to August 11 for those who wish
to overcome their reading difficulties and also for students who wish
to improve their reading abilities

and skills. Designed for students of
high school and college level, the
program
covers not only reading
speed but comprehension, vocabulary development and study techniques.

Students

may

enroll

for

two

hours a day, five days a week, in
classes that are scheduled from 9

Children

King

Mark

Baker,

Lauter, Jimmy

Katz,

(Paid

David Burman, Alan Metcoff, Andrea Kennedy, Peter Finder.
Standing, from left, Amy Mattes, Marcy Glass, Jonny Warsaw

Children of the North Suburban Synagogue Beth El
Nursery recently observed Purim with a masquerade party
during their kindergarten session. Teachers read the story
of Esther to the boys and girls, and colorful costumes of the

identified characters from the story that marks

the holiday.

Festivities consisted

of story-telling,

songs

dances, and refreshments, traditional pastries shaped
three corners and filled with poppy seed or jelly.

under

the

of

direction

George

S. Speer, director of the Institute
and
Services,
Psychological
for
Mrs. Elizabeth A. Simpson, director, Reading Services, at the Illinois Institute of Technology.
For further information
call Miss J. Mowell at CA

please
5-9600,

Ext. 767.

The Want-Ad
interesting
tunities.

facts
Don’t

section is filled with
golden

and
miss

oppor-

it!

Political

Advertisement)

| WE ENDORSE
GEORGE J. BLOSTEN

and Mitchell Berger.

youngsters

is

f

dressed as kings or queens are (seated from

left) Larry Goldberg,

a.m. to 4 p.m. Individualized reading programs will be designed to
meet students’ needs. The program

and

with

for Assistant

Township Supervisor
Deerfield Township
for Election on April 4
Because

of his character,

business

experience, judgment, and integrity—
1)—4or

his interest in the financial and fiscal matters

of the County
quire

a

questionable

2)—for

Jeff Meltzer and
for the photographer.

Ilene Weisberg

model

Board

and

of

mature

person

Township,

which

re-

and

un-

judgment

integrity.

his concern

in

reducing

taxes

by

effecting

savings in personnel and disbursements by the
possible future consolidation of several townof the outmoded
the re-vamping
ships and

their costumes

township

system.

3)—for his acceptance of social and civic responsibility in the supervision of county welfare projects

and

institutions,

tions, flood-plain
zoning

of

forest

zoning,

unincorporated

preserve

acquisi-

as well as interest in
areas

in

all

of

Lake

County.

Children

in

the

circle

are

David

rodick, Jamie

Ross, Jonny Warsaw,

Berger,

Glass,

Marcy

Steven

Lewis,

Burman,

Jimmy
Mark

Robert

Na-

Baker, Mitchell

Katz,

Jeff Meltzer,

King Lauter, Ilene Weisberg, Mrs. Perle Herzog, Cathy Chambers. Teachers are Mrs. Marian Steele and Mrs. Sarah Reif.

Lois Conarchy Wins
Second Scholarship

Bowling Award

The
Woman’s
Library
Club
of
Glencoe has awarded a $500 scholarship to Lois Conarchy, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Kyran P. Conarchy,
1538 Oakwood Ave., a junior at Na-

tional College of Education, Evanston.
This is the second year that Miss
Conarchy has received the Glencoe
club’s scholarship. She is a gradu-

ate of Holy

Angels

Academy,

waukee.

Thursday, March 30, 1961

Mil-

The
match
Shore

third
and
final
bowling
of the Evanston-North
Board
of Realtors’
annual

three-match tourney, brought the
winners to the front. Trophies were
awarded

March

to

the

bowlers

at

the

16 corned beef and cabbage

dinner at Orchard Twin Bowl.
Ephriam Sayad, L. Ringer Realty,
Highland
Park and Robert N.
Chatain, Jr., Baird &amp; Warner,
Evanston

were

awarded

trophies

Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Armbruster
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick
Ascher
Dr. and Mrs.
Donald Atlas
Mrs. Maurice Berkson
Mr. and Mrs. C, Randolph
Binner
Mr. and Mrs. Donald F. Carey
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur C. Chapman
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Checchin
Mr. and Mrs. Perry Cohen
Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Cook
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Dawe
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin G. Dempsey, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. Edelman
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Ederheimer, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Willard Eliel
Mr. and Mrs. Lester K. Fleischmann
Dr. and Mrs. Piero Foa
Mr. and Mrs. James R. Frankel
Mayor and Mrs. John Frantonius
Mrs. Grace M. Freeman
Mr. Robert S. Frey
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Friedman
Mr. and Mrs. Tom R. Friedman
Mr. and Mrs. Orcutt W. Frost
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Gans
Dr. and Mrs. Jules Gelperin
Mrs. Herbert S. Goldberg
Mrs. Clarence M. Goldman
Mr. and Mrs. B. K. Goodman
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur I. Grossman
Mrs. Gail I. Gould
Dr. and Mrs. Walter S. Guthmann
Mr. and Mrs. Myron S. Gutman
Mrs. Michael S. Halperin

Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mrs.
Mrs.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mrs.
Mr.
Mrs.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.

and Mrs. Walter Hammel
and Mrs. Irving Hanig
David J. Harris
and Mrs. James M. Hart
and Mrs. Hugo Hartmann
and Mrs. Arthur A. Heineman
and Mrs. James Hirsch
Joseph W. Hirsch
Julian E. Hirsch
and Mrs. Morris Hirsch
William R. Hirsch
and Mrs. Jack Jones
and Mrs. Bernard Joseph
and Mrs. Robert L. Kahn
David M. Klein
and Mrs. Elmer Klein
Orray T. Knight
and Mrs. William T. Krause
and Mrs. Edwin Kuh, Jr.
and Mrs. Jules Ladany
and Mrs. A. Edward Lamson
and Mrs. David R. Lawrence
and Mrs. Samuel T. Lawton
and Mrs. John O. Levinson
and Mrs. Herschell Gordon Lewis
and Mrs. Leon H. Lewis
and Mrs. Robert P. Lieberman
and Mrs. Clifford M. Lind
and Mrs. Albert S. Lowe
and Mrs. Sidney W. Mandel
and Mrs. Alvin F. Mecklenburger
and Mrs. Elmer E. Mills
Christ Mornini
and Mrs. Ben Myers
and Mrs. Joseph E. Nathan
(Paid

Political

Mr. and Mrs. Don Paul Nathanson
Mr. and Mrs. Walter R. Neisser
Mr. and Mrs. Harold L. Newman
Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Newman
Mr. and Mrs, Myron G. Nussbaum
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel M. Pierce
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald L. Price
Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Price
Mr. and Mrs. William F. Price
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Richland
Mrs. Leonard Rieser
Mr. Dominic Rizzolo, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Rose
Mr. John T. Ross
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Rosenberg
Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Rosenberg
Mrs. James X. Ryan
Mr. and Mrs. James F. Sachs
Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Salinger
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Sanford
Mr. and Mrs. William S. Schram
Dr. and Mrs. Steven C. Schwartz
Mr. and Mrs. Harold W. Shaw
Mrs. Madelein Sheahen
Mr. and Mrs. Irving M. Shepard
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Spanier
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Spencer
Mrs. Grace Mary Suber
Dr. and Mrs. Arnold D. Tobin
Mrs. Barbara C, Waldman
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Wein
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Weinress
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Wolf
Mrs. Ralph D. Zimmer

Advertisement)

for series, scratch.

Page

H

45—D

61

�KILL CRABGRASS
\

Bejow

{

Old Elm Civic Group Names Officers
New

have

IT STARTS TO GROW! |

Elm

surely. Just use in a fertilizer
spreader. Also protects your
lawn against chickweed, knotweed and certain harmful
+

insects.

and board

named

Civic

Association

Your

Distributed by

Local

Pollock,

recent

meeting

secretary;
2586

GEORGE

Mrs.

Summit,

and Daniel

3268

treasurer.

Summit,

at

Lewis

correspond-

ing secretary,
Board

Halpern,

or

A. DAVIS,

INC.

within

Highland

2—Communica-

the

Highlands;

3—in-

for

Committees

tion and Park Board, Russell Kiefer

and

Richard

bership,

Sullivan;

Thomas

Crews;

Mem-

Mosquito

Program, Gordon Kohand Neighborhood, Mrs.

Ralph Pottker; Maintenance
Beautification, Daniel Halpern
George

and
and

Goldberg.

Next meeting of the Board will
be held April 5, at the home of
Marvin Freeman, 2777 Marl Oak.

consideration:

The Want-Ad section is filled with
interesting facts and golden oppor-

between

tunities.

future

city

Don’t

miss

it!

THOMAS J. MORAN

treats

Hardware

the

VOTE FOR

45ib.boorest $10) OB

Store

tions

and

Highlands;

Abatement
ler; Safety

Members

New board members are Walter
Becker, 2870 Idlewood Ln., Jerry
Brody, 2742 Marl Oak, Mrs. Ralph
Pottker,
3240
University
and
Charles Wenk, 3063 Summit.
General aims of the Association
were discussed, and it was agreed
that the following would be of im-

45 |b. bag

Garden

com-

government
Park

Committees and chairmen for the
year
are:
Communications,
Jerry
Brody and Charles Wenk; Publicity,
Mrs. H. J. Merzdorf; City Government,
Marvin
Freeman;
Recrea-

A

1—Communication

At

for the

Old
the

year.

portance

begneat $A QB

the

home of the new president, O. Dean
Kanouse, 3504 Dato, revealed the
new slate for the year.
Officers are: O. Dean Kanouse,
president;
Marvin
Freeman,
2777
Marl Oak, vice-president; Mrs. Jerrold Solovy, 2895 Arlington Ave.,

recording

aon

18 Ib. bag treats

members

to head

terest in school problems; and 4—
Committees and their functions.

ing

Davis B4 does the job quickly,

officers

been

Dealer

CIRCUIT COURT

Chicago 30, Ill.

JUDGE

TUESDAY, APRIL 4th

DRIVE CAREFULLY
— THE LIFE YOU SAVE
MAY BE YOUR OWN

We the undersigned

attorneys, practicing in the Courts

of Lake County, recommend for the position of Circuit Court
Judge, Thomas J. Moran.

We have known

him as an active

attorney, prosecutor, and Judge in both Probate and County
Courts, and at the present time as Acting Circuit Court Judge.
We have always found him to be fair, impartial, hardworking

and a man

of the highest moral character.

We heartily recommend him to the voters in the forthcoming Judicial election, Tuesday, April 4th.
Harold H. Kolbe
Donald M. Lonchar, Jr.
Alfred W. Lewis
Max Lidschin
Mark R. Lidschin
Joseph S. Lafferty
Donald Lundquist

David K. Anderson
Morton A. Alschuler
Louis W. Brydges
J. Logan Boyles
Harry P. Breger
Wilbur B. Brazell
Clarence L. Brown
Richard R. Bairstow
V. William Briddle

Charles M. May
Marshall Meyer
Peter Melius
Charles E. Mason

Ralph J. Boches
J. Kenneth Baird
Richard C. Christian
Murray R. Conzelman
Lewis D. Clarke
Thomas W. Diver
LaVerne Dixon

Fred B. Meyer
Peter J. Nordigian
Thomas Nelson
William J. Nemanich
E. R. Parnass

Frank M. Daly

Michael J. Pucin
Lawrence J. Petroshius
Thomas A. Pojunas

Daniel J. Dalziel
Ralph J. Dady

Thomas G. Przyborski
Alex Rafferty Ill

Ralph J. Dady, Jr.
Richard J. Drew
Richard S. Finn
Eugene A. French
Henry Fisher

Found in the Pockets

Kanev,

Heruened

olay

bah

4

5

thy oXhis, clay Aw

goat

oer

Fe Kao

You can drop your cleaning off at one of our
. . . or phone

and

our.

nearest

routeman

stop and pick them

we’ll
to

Joseph N. Sikes

Okel S. Fuqua

of A. W. ZENGELER cleaned clothes .. . before cleaning of course!

Be

E. M. Runyard
Donald Ridge

Viegad

:

Se

4 WINNETKA

Stanley Grosshandler
Seymour A. Greenblatt
Albert L. Hall, Sr.

rs

ES

Stores,

have

ZENGELER
CLEANERS

ID.2-7444

Albert L. Hall, Jr.
Edward R. Holmberg, Jr.
Jack Hoogasian

William A. Holmquist
Julian Johnson
Bernard Juron
Bruce Kaufman
Paul W. Kaiser, Sr.
Paul W. Kaiser, Jr.
James Kenton

you,

up today.

Robert L. Snook

Richard Seyfarth

Ellis E. Fuqua
Lavinia S. Fuqua
Fred H. Geiger
Walter M. Givler

Gerald C. Snyder
Donald J. Swanson
Harold Tallett
Walter Ulick

Lloyd Van Deusen

Paul C. Kilkelly

Earl Wasneski

Charles L. Whyte
Raymond G. Zack

Adeline J. Geo-Karis

lome of LUFE-PRESERVICE#;DRAPERIES
CQUR
. yRage:;H

EXCLUSIVE,
46—D

62

26

STEP,

TAKE-DOWN

AND

RE-HANG

DRAPERY

CLEANING

Joseph Kaufer

BE SURE

John R. Sloan
Mortimer Singer
Bruno W. Stanczak
Alvin Singer
Carlton Smith
Glenn Seidenfeld
Harry Strouse
Andrew A. Semmelman
W. Howard Swanson
Eugene M. Snarski
John E. Schulz

AND

VOTE

APRIL 4th

SERVICE
Thursday,

March

30, 1961

}

�DIVIDEND
AYMENTS
HIT
NEW HIGH
at

DEERFIELD
SAVINGS
AGAIN!

Happy

smiles tell the story at

Lake County's Largest Savings and Loan
where dividends add up to a new record.

sre 385,000.00
Approximately

will

be

distributed

to

10,800 savers tomorrow.

the

accounts

of

This also sets a

WAGs 742,315.00
record of approximately

ee

.

paid

in dividends

period.

pictures by Milton Merner

re Vou

igh

in Wbse

Sharing

Drividindsl

Open an Account ... or add to your Savings at DEERFIELD SAVINGS ... where you earn

HIGHER

DIVIDENDS with GREATEST

SAFETY

Waatglanlll YOUR MONEY IS ALWAYS AVAILABLE
SAV

in the last

ly ( .

745 DEERFIELD ROAD,

Hours:

&amp; LOAN ASSOCIATION

Phone: Windsor

DEERFIELD, ILLINOIS
Sat. —

Mon.,
8:30

Tues.,
to

Thurs.,

Fri.
— 8:30

teens hoe
12:00;

Fri.

eve. —

6:00

to
to

4:00
8:00

5-2550

12-months

�|

finishing touches

\

for your Easter Parade

oe
eee eee
SE Baie
le

\

Se

i

.
epee:
te Se —S
ps

:

™
acess
ER

ene

stockings

;

“4

are

:

seamless
subtle,
fashionable
to complete
your

from

hats are pillboxes
flowered

crown

or

and

plain,

jaunty

big

or

velvet

little.

bow,

1.50

shades
costume

ae

pr.

(Hosiery)

Flowered

...

10.95

'

beads are colored
every
color
of the
rainbow,
to
match
your costume.
Beads
shown,
2.00;
earFO
hn is
OS
eis Pb es . 2.00

bi

‘

;

girls hats

4
“

are pretty with
flowers

3

i Bette! 5. 2 2.95

ie

2. Broad

|

|

Qe

BO

FP
Z
—

3. Ripple brim, .... 2.95

i

Pd

Fe

sailor,

=

Ki

enero

brimmed

be ccees 1.95

icons,

r Vv
;

ONO

purses

|

\

i

soft
ti Gem

H

i

2. With

{

or

WRUNG

are

leather
SS.

8.50

without

chain,

ey
cs eh das

are

4.95

a

are

:

on}

gloves

ae
4

are
h

Pe

ee

ied

ee

We

/

j

Short

ny that cries,

t

AVIONS.

S0e:34*s

cottons

«5 6i..

°

Easter

Satinette

1. Cuddly plush bun-

long

re

loan

for

i
3.50

ee

f

..

2.95

2. Musical metal
ee
ere
- Musical metal

egg,
et
bun-

|
ny

by

2.95

;

/

{

:;

/ 4

f

/
,

(Accessories)

\
\

\
\

iB

“nis

bi

eth

ei

PASO

You might win $500 or
Pick

in
up

Thursday
need

to

merchandise!
a

TNT

night
buy

ticket

—

no

anything!

A.
Nc

Lorraine

with

rose

lace

applique. 32-40 Petticoat to
match S-M-L, ...... 3.95

2

f

more

trimmed

\

tricot

5.95

¢

|

‘
on

OO

emg WT? ”

get your TNT ticket in Highland

Park at

Gamett =CLo,
Enjoy

2 Hours

Free

Parking

in Our

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ID 2-4700

�</text>
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                    <text>Thursday, April 13, 1961

7

LF

ae

A

worticld Keview’

.
:

/

,
*

4

Library
-

Fe

tours

start here

�The big bank that grew up
with Highland Park

He brings the First National
right to your front door
Many folks who bank at the First National do it without ever leaving home. It’s part of the
convenience of using our modern Bank-By-Mail service. All you need is one of our
Bank-By-Mail envelopes and a mail box. Your mailman and the First National do the rest. Ever
heard of a more modern, easy way to bank? Try it next time. Just call ID 2-1800 and
ask for a First National Bank-By-Mail envelope.

THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
Our

62nd

year—Complete

Modern

e

Banking

and

Trust Services

O

Hh

hland

Member The Federal Reserve System and
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
United States Depositary

WEEKEND

BANKING

HOURS:

Friday 8:30-2:00 &amp; 5:30-8:00 pm, Saturday 8:30-Noon

Park

|,

�mn

Vol.

36, No.

ant

Ye

eR

ears

6

©

Village

Evident In “No Contest” Districts Here
Approximately 800 voters went to the polls in district 109
Saturday to insure victory for the caucus candidates by a
two-to-one majority.
Five candidates sought the three
vacant spots on the district 109
board
of education which
serves

eastern

part

of Deerfield

and

the western part of Highland Park.
Three of the candidates were sup-

ported

by the caucus.

Paul
Greenfield,
candidate
for
president of district 109 board of
education, received 523 votes and
was
re-elected
president
of the
school district.
He
has been
president
of the
board since April, 1959.
Albert Dawe, who holds a PhD
from the University of Wisconsin,
received 586 votes and was elected
a board
member
along with the
other
caucus
candidate
T. Allen
Granfield who polled 548 votes.
The
two unsuccessful
independent
candidates
were
Mrs,
Lois
Mueller with 245 votes and Darwin Rummel with 240 votes.
Upset

Caucus

Candidate

In

Bannockburn,
district
106,
the caucus candidate for the one
open spot on the board of trustees
of the
district
was
upset
by
a

write-in ballot for Robert

Keno.

Keno, who polled 63 votes, 10
more
than
the
caucus
candidate
David
Allen
with
53,
replaces
Richard
Devins
on
the _ school
board. Board members who carry
over are Henry Thullen and Mrs.

- Walter

Davies,

Jr.

te

1961

Board

Caucus Candidates Win In 109; Apathy

ithe

on

Keno,
incidently,
polled
17
write-in votes from Bannockburn
in the election for members
for
the high school board
of education.
There
were
41
miscellaneous
write-in votes in the school board
district, which
includes Highland
Park and Deerfield areas.
No

Election

Contest

There was
actually
no contest
in the high school board election.
A surprisingly low total vote of
967
was
registered.
Mrs.
James
Tibbetts and Harry W. Knell were
elected,
Mrs.
Tibbetts,
who
was
president
of
the
school
board,
was
re-elected with 918 votes and Knoll
was elected with 904 votes.
In

district 110, where the smallest number of voters went to the
polls per capita, Warren Jackman
was re-elected with 44 votes; Walter Hardy
was
elected
with
42
votes and Kenneth
Griffiths was
elected with 44 votes.
A total of 47 votes were cast
in ail,
In district
102, the Aptakisic-

Tripp consolidated
Prairie View area,

school in the
six candidates

sought
election.
The _ successful
candidates
were
George
Liekam,
William Gahard and Carl Roscher.
Also a referendum which would

by

Highland

Park

Thursday, April 13, 1961 __

Co.

Elections Tuesday
President, Clerk,
Three Trustees Seek
Riverwoods Posts

Deerfield Caucus Candidates — 4
Unopposed In Quest For Office

Three
trustees,
the
president
and the clerk of Riverwoods will
seek
re-election
Tuesday
when
voters of the newly incorporated
village go to the polls.

by

Balloting, will be held at the
home of the John Davenports, 3065
Blackthorn, from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Seeking re-election as president
will be Robert G. Clendenin, Candidate for clerk is Russell A. Bene-

dict,

who

is

the

All

present

clerk.

Incumbent

The three candidates for trustees
are all incumbent. They are: Mrs.
Robert Billeter, Sigurd Haugland
and Clarence Pontius.
Pontius was recently elected an
auditor for Vernon township.
Remaining
on
the
board
are
trustees Henry Conedera, Vernon
Rutter and C. Gunnar
Sundvahl.
The officers of the village began
their terms in February of 1960,

shortly

after

village

in

incorporation

December

of

of the

1959.

have raised the transportation levy
in the district from .02 to .10 was
defeated.

In the Half Day school district,
number 103, two candidates were
elected to the board. Four were
running.
Successful candidates were William D, McCulloch with 357 votes;
and Reino Cook with 263 votes.
Unsuccessful candidates were John
R. Lamping
with 237 votes
and

Joseph

Vaska,

Jr.

with

252

votes.

Five unopposed caucus candidates will seek voter appro

Deerfield

Books

Lent

By West Deerfield
Township Library
During the past fiscal year, 55,974 books were borrowed from the
West Deerfield Township
library,
according to librarian Mrs. George
Haney.
This total number of books circulated was 10,500 more than were
circulated in the previous year.

There

are a total

tered borrowers,
number of books
about 10.
During

were
Candidates

night,

sponsored

by

the

League

tions

during

the

past

two

weeks.

Informal
gatherings
in private
homes
and meetings of local organizations have provided the opportunity for these meetings. Residents of Deerfield have taken this
opportunity to discuss village prob-

lems with candidates David Whit' ney, James Mandler, Ira Hearn,

Hold

make

manager,
the

at

necessary

WI

5-3536

to

the

Special

Meeting

John
Lindemann,
and
Katherine
Price.
They
have
also
learned
more
about
the
caucus
system
of selecting candidates.
Candidate
meetings
will
continue to be held until the village
election
on
Tuesday,
April
18.
Anyone
interested in having this
type
of
program
may _ contact
George
Neumayer,
caucus
cam-

paign

the year, 2,343

added

new

library

books

collec-

tion. This total is more than three
times the number added in the previous year.

of Women

Voters of Deerfield, was held last Friday evening in the village hall. Talking with candidate for trustee James Mandler are, from
left:
Mrs. Marshall
LeSueur, Mrs. William
Zechel, and Mrs. Leo Sazanoff.
Candidates for the village board
and village clerk have been
appearing
at many
Deerfield func-

of 5,300 regis-

and the average
per borrower was

to

arrangements. i

Board

On Saturday

The board of trustees of the village plans to conduct an adjourned
meeting on
Saturday morning,
April 15, to act on work that is
before the board.
This
held to
plete as
so that
for the

unusual
meeting
is being
enable the board to commuch business as possible
the slate can be left clean
new board.

The meeting
a.m, to noon.

The

clean-up

hours

meeting

are

Sriixn: 9

will wind

Tuesday

The candidates, proposed by the
caucus nominating committee, were
approved at the annual town meet-

ing

in

February.

meeting,

Longtin

the

At

names

and Harold

the
of

town

Richard

Peterson

were

also placed in nomination from the
floor for the position of trustee of
the village, but they were defeated
in an insuing ballot.
For president, David C. Whitney
has been selected as the caucus
candidate. The candidates for trustee are Ira Hern and James Mandler and John A. Lindemann.
Mrs.
Catherine
Price
is the candidate
for re-election as clerk of the vil
lage.
Presently one vacancy exists on
the board
and
trustees Peterson
and Arnold Wehle, in addition to
president Joseph Koss are ending
their terms.
Holdovers for the board of trustees are: John Aberson,
Winston
Porter and Maurice Petesch.

Whitney,
field

for

who

eight

has lived in Deeryears,

editor of the World

is

managing

Book

Encyclo-

pedia. Before that he was a news
editor for the United Press in New
York.
A former officer of the Wilmot
PTA, Whitney is presidently president of the board of education for
district 110.
Mandler has been a director of
the United
Fund,
a PTA
board

member,

chairman

committee

55,000

residents

when

the

election

of village

officers is held from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. at four polling places.

and

of a boy

currently

scout

is a trus-

Unopposed Slate
Seeks Election
In Bannockburn
An

unopposed

caucus

slate will

seek election in the Village of
Bannockburn
elections
Tuesday. —
Polling will be at the Bannockburn —
school between 6 a.m. and 6 p.m.
9a
Incumbent E. L. Hall will seek ©
his second term as president of |
the village, and incumbents Frank- A
lin O. Mann and E. R. Nielsen will |
seek re-election to the board of ©
trustees, each for four years.
coe
Also

seeking

a

four

year

term

is Percy Wilson.
There are three trustee opediniem
on the board. Retiring trustee who |
is not running again is ‘Walter
Bischoff.

Running

a

for clerk of the village; |

four-year

Davies, Jr.,
spot which

term,
who
will

is

seeks
open

Walter

H.

to fill the |
as Ce

Bolton ends his term.

J. S. Krakauer has
ated
for the
post

been nominof police |

magistrate.

Caucus

ee#

Committee

Prepares Booklet —

tee of the Bethlehem church. He
has lived in Deerfield 11 years.

About Candidates

Lindemann, a partner in a pharmacy in Deerfield, is a director of
the
Chamber
of Commerce
and
chairman of its parking committee.
Lindemann is a member of the

The publicity committee of tte!
Deerfield caucus plan _ will dis- —
tribute
copies
of a four page
pamphlet describing the plan and

Deerfield

Investment

club and Ro-

tary International.
Ira Hearn, Jr., is vice president
in charge of operations for Celotex Corporation.
Before
that he
was an assistant general manager.
Mrs.
Price, village
clerk since
1953, has been drive secretary for
the Community Fund and was the

its candidates.

The distribution will take pine
on Friday and Saturday before the

April 18 election.

up problems that have been under
study for some months.
New members would have

a dif-

ficult

back-

ground

time

obtaining

information

tion including Deerfield Commons
and various train stations
the Deerfield area.

the present
lar items.

board

the

The

by

on these particu-

Includes
pamphlet,

|

servicing

Pictures

which

includes

:

pictures of the caucus candidates, —
is the result of extensive research —

and fact finding on the part of the,

publicity committee.
It includes information

of inter-

est to all Deerfield citizens, including a study of the growth pattern of Deerfield population over
the past twenty years, an explanation of the workings of the caucus
plan, and a survey of current village problems.

Village Manager Stilphen
Promoted to Lt. Colonel
of

Norris Stilphen, village manager
Deerfield, a reserve commis- —

sioned

possessed

Several locations —

have been selected for the distribu- —

first secretary of the Citizens’ committee.
The four polling places are:
Precinct 1—the area south and
west of the drainage ditch: Wilmot
School.
Precinct
2—the
area
south
of
Deerfield Rd., east of the drainage
ditch: Masonic Temple, Waukegan
Rd.
Precinct
3—the
area
north
of
Deerfield Rd., east of Milwaukee
Rd. tracks: Village Hall, 850 Waukegan Rd.
Precinct
4—the
area north
of
Deerfield Rd., east of the drainage
ditch: Maplewood School.

|

officer

of

the

Army,

has |

been
promoted
from
major
to
lieutenant
colonel,
according
to
word
received
from
the
head-

quarters of the Fifth United States
Army.

�Your Village Government
The board of trustees of the village will hold a unique meeting this
coming Saturday for the purpose of

clearing the agenda of items which
they have had under study.
The meeting, which will be an
adjourned meeting of the regular
meeting and therefore official, will
start at 9 a.m. and run until noon.
This will enable trustees who fully
familiar with the problems to act
upon them and not pass them along
to the new Board. Background information is very difficult to acquire in some of the complicated
problems of the village and it will
be a great service to the incoming
members
to have these problems
resolved.
Every new board needs a period
of time to organize and become acquainted with the many aspects of

village operation.
Recently a letter was received
from a lady who was deeply concerned about youngsters playing in
the streets. Since she signed it “A
Worried Mother,” I will have to
answer her here and hope that she
will read it.
After
reading
the
letter,
I
thought back over the years to my
youth to see what my attitude had
been
regarding
playing
in
the
streets. To my
great surprise, a
flood of memories came to mind of

tin can alley, scrub, red light, and
run sheep run, all played in, or far
too close to, the street.
Even refreshment on a blistering
hot day was to be found on the tailgate of the ice wagon in the street,
provided
you
didn’t
get
caught.
Times change, traffic increases in
volume and speed, and playing in
the street can no longer be permitted.
Conducts Campaign
The
police
department
of the
village conducts a continuing campaign to warn children of the dangers of playing in the street. Every
group of youngsters who tour the
police station and pistol range are
given a lecture on the dangers inherent in street play. School programs put on through the cooperation
of
the
police
and_
school
authorities stress the need for safe
play habits, and the safety council
in their bicycle safety and licensing program work toward the same
goal,
Despite the work of these governmental agencies, the final and ultimate responsibility is with the parents. If they know where their children are playing and see to it that
the proper
degree
of force
and
logic is applied when
youngsters

play

in

will

cease

the

street,

to

the

problem

exist.

Pictured above at the ground-breaking ceremony at Zion Lutheran church, 10 W. Deerfield Rd., are William Pavlecic, a representative of the architects, Pavlecic and Kovacevic;
Carl Running, vice chairman of the board of deacons; Marwood Rupp, chairman of the board
of trustees; and the Rev. Paul V. Berggren, pastor; and William Duguid, chairman of the
building committee. The ceremony took place between services on Palm Sunday before a
crowd

OBITUARIES

PROCLAMATION
WHEREAS, we live in a world
which
demands
a rededication
to the enduring intellectual and
spiritual values essential to the
progress of a free people in a
free society; and
WHEREAS, our libraries make
accessible the accumulated experience
of all mankind
from
which present and future generations may derive the wisdom
and understanding vital to our
survival; and
WHEREAS,
the development
of lifetime reading habits are
necessary for individual fulfillment and for the achievement of
the highest use of our capabilities; and
WHEREAS,
THE freedom to
read is the responsibility
and
privilege of all people in a democracy;
NOW, THEREFORE, I, Joseph
W. Koss, hereby proclaim the
week of April 16, 1961, through
April 23, 1961, to be NATIONAL
LIBRARY WEEK, and do urge
all citizens to unite in this national effort to achieve a better
read and better informed Ameri-

ca to the end that we realize the
full potential
purpose.

of

our

national

Herbert

Whittier, Cal.

Daughter of First
Daughter Mayor Dies
Miss
Clara
Ender,
88,
of 731
Westgate, died April 5 at the home
of her niece, Mrs.
Eva
Dondanville, with
whom
she made
her
home. Daughter of Deerfield’s first
mayor, the late John Ender, she
had been a local resident for more
than 50 years.
Requiem Mass was offered April
7 at Holy Cross church.
The late John Ender was Deerfield’s mayor from
1903 to 1915.
He had been Cook County commissioner from 1872 to 1881.
Miss Ender’s former home now is

a convent for the Holy Cross Cathchurch.

Deerfield Manor News
Although
many
residents
of
Deerfield Manor have criticized the
Aptakisic-Tripp school for its treat-

ment

of

manor

votes were

children,

only

cast in the school

37

board

election on Saturday. There are 93
homes in the manor.
The executive board congratulated the winners,
however.
They
were George Liekam, William Gahart and Carl Rosher. Candidates
for the manor, Kebschull and Morrison, received 51 and 52 votes in
that order.
The Lake county health department sent two representatives into
e manor recently to further verify
the conditions as to water standing
on various lawns. Of special note
was the rear of Joe Ravagnis’ home.
He has dumped more than 100
loads of dirt at his own expense
without solving the standing water
problem.
Page

2

Both the problem of standing water and the problem of the flooding
creek will be turned over to the
county engineers for study.
Marge Rainey, president of the
ladies auxiliary of the AMVETS
Post 66 on Milwaukee
Ave. who
graciously for the past five years

have

donated

the use of their hall

to the association, has announced
the annual community dance to be

held Saturday, April 29.
Proceeds Aid Projects
The proceeds will go to help the
many projects in this area such as

the boy and girl scouts, little league
baseball, plus their own assistance
to the needy veterans.
Wilber Henneman, of troop 18,
and Eugene Downar, of troop 112,

with the Northwest council of boy
scouts, have invited the parents to
set

aside

the

dates

of April

at

for

250.

Actual

immediate

21,

22

and 23 to attend the annual Scout-

Student

Wins Honors As
College Freshman
Named to the Teresan honors at
entrance program this week at the
College of Saint Teresa, Winona,
Minn. was Miss Louise Landreth,
freshman,
Miss Landreth
is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis B. Landreth, 1360 Indian Trail Dr., and
a graduate of Highland Park high
school.
Twenty
students
were
elected
to the
Program
and
seven
students
earned
honorable
mention.
The freshmen honored came from
five states and constitute about ten
per cent of the freshman class.
The
election
to
the
Teresan

honors

at
on

entrance
the

basis

program
of

high

is

school

performance, rank in class, college
board scores, and the results of

Volunteers in the Moraine Girl
Scout organization will have Mrs.
Martha Winch as their speaker at
the regular monthly neighborhood
meeting, April 19.
As executive director of the family service, Mrs.
Winch
has had
many years of experience in the
field of guidance.
The
title of her talk will be,
“Growing
Girls and Their
Problems.” It will be concerned with
the behavior patterns of children

Named

soon

as possible.

educational

unit of the

church

at
various
age
levels
of
their
participation
in
group
activities
and
the
development
of
good
character traits through this participation.
The meeting will be held in the

west

room

of

the

First

Presby-

terian
church
of Deerfield
from
9:30-11:30 a.m. Guests have been
invited.
Family service and the Moraine
Girl Scout council are supported
by the Deerfield area United Fund.

Coupon

Available

Again To Residents
For Crab Trees
The
Deerfield
REVIEW
again
publishes a coupon below for Deerfield residents who wish to participate in the “Plant a Flowering Crab
Tree in Your Garden” offer. Since
there are only 100 trees available,
the community conservation council has urged residents to clip the
coupon
immediately
and send in
their order.
The Deerfield park district is cooperating
with
the
conservation
council
to make
available
these
trees at $4.50.
Trees will be multiple stem and
three
to four feet in height,
of
prime stock, and will be burlapped
and
balled.
Purchasers
will
not
have the choice of variety but may
choose from these colors: red, pink.
or white,
Varieties
will
include
those which are most popular in
this area.
Trees will be available
at the
Milwaukee Station parking grounds
on Saturday,
April 29, after the
Arbor
Day
tree
planting
ceremonies at ten in the morning.

,

1. Offer limited to Deerfield residents only.

held
past

day, April 16. He also said that the
county health department has requested that the much needed pest
control plan be put into action as

President

given
on
the
campus
after
the
freshmen arrived.
The Teresan honors at entrance
program was initiated in the summer of 1959. The purpose of the
program is to give the college an
opportunity to honor the freshmen
from whom
it expects a distinct
academic contribution and by this
recognition to spur the student to
the full realization of her ability.

O-Rama.
Sunday. He outlined general plans
for the meeting this coming Sun-

Vice

Willard
B.
Allen,
1125
Hazel
Ave., was appointed vice president
of Long-Kogen
Inc.,
Chicago,
a
real estate firm.
Allen is in charge of the management department. He has been
employed the past 19 years by the
firm.
Allen is a director of the North
Side
real estate
board
and
also
a member
of the board
of governors of the management division
of the Chicago real estate board.

other standardized tests including
the Ohio psychological which was

The president, Ed Golien,
his first board meeting this

$180,000

On Growing Girls

The first meeting for the 196162
drive
of the
Deerfield
area
United
Fund,
Inc., will be
held
Tuesday, April 18, at 8 p.m. at the
Walden school, according to an announcement by chairman Alex A.
Briber.
United Fund directors from all
the 16 districts have been asked to
be present
as committee
assignments
will be announced
at the
meeting.
The Deerfield area United Fund,
Ine.,
covers
Lincolnshire,
Riverwoods, Bannockburn and Del Mar
Woods as well as Deerfield.

made

for the

Contractor is Arnold Pederson of Deerfield.

Volunteers Hear
Mrs. Winch Talk

Of Deerfield Area
United Fund, Inc.

Deerfield

construction

future.

Plan First Meeting

C. Cramer

Herbert C. Cramer, 82, of Sunland, Cal., died April 4 in Veterans
Hospital in Tuscon, Ariz., where he
had been for one month.
He is survived by his wife, Nellie,
a daughter, Mrs. Julia Ann Roberts
of Deerfield; three sons, six grandchildren
and
14 great grandchildren,
Funeral
services
were
held in

olic

estimated

is scheduled

=&gt;

2.

Money

3.

Mail order to Community Conservation Council—Box

order of check must accompany

order.

115,

Deerfield.
Please print:
FULL NAME

ADDRESS

SENN
Thursday,

April

13, 1961

�PRSt OREee
TORRESPee
$
a

ee
a
ears
eek See ee

oe

ee

AAUW Conducts Drive To Collect
Books For West Deerfield Library
An opportunity for all residents of Deerfield to help their
public library will be afforded citizens during the week of
April

17-21, designated

During

Library

Week

as Deerfield Library
the

Spring

training

for Den

From

left, the

cubs

held.

4 in Jewett

are:

Mike

Park

Grohe,

was

Steve

Local

Jeff

Ferguson, Skip Smoot, Roy Johnson, Randy Sarton. Missing
from the picture were Steve Geuder and Bill Paulson.
Cub

scouts

of

(Bannockburn)

Select Nominating
Committee For PTO

Den

held

4,

a

Pack

350

picnic

re-

cently
at Jewett
Park, following
a tour of the Deerfield
Bakery.
The
bakery
tour was
part of a
series of trips to become
better
acquainted with Deerfield.

The nominating committee which
will select a slate of candidates for
officers and members of the executive board for the Deerfield Parent‘Teacher
Organization
has
been
chosen.
Serving on the committee
will

Visit

Police

nesday

Station

icy Sage See :
Chestnut
St.,

to donate

evenings

Exhibits

Park

the direction of Mrs.
Smith,
chairman,
will

By

Bank

Richard R.
hold open

house at the library and will serve
refreshments for adults
dren. Members of AAUW

duct

tours

of

the

and chilwill con.

library

to

ac-

quaint
all with the library’s facilities.
In
order
that
all
citizens
of
Deerfield
may
contribute
to the
support of their library, local merchants have agreed to the placement of collection boxes in stores
during Library Week.

from

BERNING — RUTH
on

Additional

information

concern-

ing the AAUW book collection may
be obtained by phoning Mrs. Richard R. Smith at WI 5-1320.

lola

behalf

of the

B.

Carr

Welcome home, Ruth
are so glad that you
among us again.

Pettis, we
are back
:

David Mitchell, son of the James ©
C. Mitchell’s, flew by Jet to visit
Gari

Hertel.

son

tel’s, formerly
returned
Don’t

of

the

Les

home

day

Nite

Club.

Doris

David

Sunday.

forget

try

Her-

of Deerfield,
the

Deerfield

en’s Club Dinner Dance
at the Vernon

Better

Wom-

on SaturHills Coun-

hurry

and

call

Jacober.
(the youngest

=e

member of the Phil Johnson clan)
celebrated her 13th Birthday April

Carol Ann

_

9th,

VETTER — BILL PITTENGER

her

Johnson

brother

21—and

Phil

just

a few belated

turned

Greetings

to

Barbara Picchietti, Fred VanSickle

CITIZEN’S INDEPENDENT

PARTY

and

others

Have

Home

Hagerman, Waukegan, took a trip
through Southern Illinois and Kentucky during the Easter holidays.
Mrs. MacPherson teaches in the
Half Day school and Mrs, Hageman
is a faculty member of Spaulding
school in Waukegan.

| [BUTTON , BUTTON
| WHOS GOT THE

Friday

KARL

Easter Leave

MacPherson,
755
and
Mrs.
Mildred

and

Artist

Highland

Water colors by Henrietta, Mrs.
Raymond O. Hosford, are currently
on display at the Bank of Highland
Park.
The water colors will be on display for the month of April.

7-9 p.m. during the week of April
17-21.
During
those
hours,
the
library committee of AAUW under

Other
recent
trips
have
been
to
the
Deerfield
Police
station,
Highland Park fire station, and the
be: Mrs.
Edward
Zimmer,
Mrs. ' Deerfield State bank.
Den mothers for the pack are
John Eisenger, Mrs, Robert Sandy, |
Mrs.
William
Johnson
and
Mrs.
Albert
Dawe
and
Mrs.
William
Fleming.
Jack Ewan.

Teachers Travel On

At

one used hard cover book in good
condition. All types of books are
welcome — reference,
adult
and
children’s fiction and non-fiction.
The only type of book not desired is the children’s little golden
book series. Each book contributed
and
placed
in the AAUW
book
barrel in the library basement will
entitle
the
contributor
to
one
chance in a drawing to be held
Friday evening, April 21. Awarded
at that time will be a child’s book
and an adult’s book donated
by
Mrs. George Haney, librarian.
Books will be collected in the
library
basement
each
afternoon
from 3-5 p.m. and Monday, Wed-

recently

Ewan,

are asked

Week.

Deer-

field Branch of the American Association of University Women will
conduct a drive to collect books
for the shelves of the West Deerfield Township library.

All persons

CARRying
On

wishes to thank all of its loyal supporters for their
part in the success of the Township election
on April 4th.

that

a

I missed.

year

old

Split

Level

on Central Ave., with built-

in range

and oven in the cutest —

kitchen, has a
where you can
large

window

—good
level

size
has

(could

be

nice dining area
look out of the

and

enjoy

living

family

the

room;

room

a third

view —

lower —

and

bath

bedroom)

—

and

~

nice laundry with outside entrance,

lots of storage space. Upper

a

level

has two nice bedrooms and C. T. _

Niitee-Jonie”
permanent

Jeodlara
No

worrying

—tiny

about

missing

rips in the seams

ing when

you

send

detail

and

buttons

We

For

back ready for you to WEAR!

Limited

FORD
|
i
E
f
i}

ALPHA CLEANERS

}

Signature)

One to a
only—This
able
only

i

u
i

customer—Adults
coupon
redeemfor
King
Korn

—Coupon
signed by
2 BE OPE BES LOM) eve ore aoe

|

valid only
customer.

LPHA

|

&lt;i?

THALE

WHO

va)
keane,

nas

FARS

preg

“yi

_ Thursday,
oe

|

VS! TAILORS. TE
VPLE
I

Auth,

Ne

CARE

COAM

re PLANT

13, 1961

with your natural hair shade to produce customized colors that
are yours alone! » Use COLORCHROME after each shampoo...your
hair is always beautiful! No weeks of waiting while hair grows
and dye fades. Change colors instantly —with no fadeout, no ruboff!

»

HOW

LIFE

COLORCHROME®

WORKS:

Nutri-Tonic’s

exclusive COLORPLATE process uses the static electricity present in
all hair. Each shaft of hair acts as a magnet to attract the coloring to its surface...only the LIFE LOTION HAIR TREATMENT actually
penetrates the hair.

FORD ; HARMACY
DEERFIELD

local

Police

Field.

Bakeman

So sorry,
and

honest!

family

are

on

ROADS,

of these

days!

DEERFIELD

;

|

dresses. I understand that this will |
be the first time that the Deerfield

with color magic in 12 exciting shades! COLORCHROME combines

3 Squeeze-Bottle Sizes

and

of our

School has resumed and the 8th
Grade Students are busy getting
ready for Graduation, some of the
girls have already selected their

LIFE COLORCHROME is an entirely new, totally
different semi-transparent hair coloring...

* Restores Natural Beauty

WAUKEGAN

one

home,—but—one

bing

wy ep 2S 3
DEERFIELD Road |

April

HAIR COLORING
with NO BLEACHING, NO DYEING!

3 oz., 75¢ 6 oz., $1.25 12 oz., $2 (plus tax)

.

(off duty)

Officers was given a Parking ticket

for Spring Vacation, Milt Merner_
took his little tribe East and then
there are those of us that are at

NEW! A MAGICAL

¢ Eliminates Tangles

|

This is off the record—while doing a very nice Deed for a friend |

Bill Nelson family was in Florida

PHARMACY

* Counteracts Damage

when

Ts AED SK WAS BEA ee ee

at...

Wilec- Tent

Stamps.
All rights reserved
in the King Korn Stamp Co.

Mr. and Mrs. Leo Seiler celebrated their 12th Wedding Anniversary this past Sunday with many
members of the family.

Jack

HAIR TREATMENT

t
I
|
t

Interested?—priced in the low 20’s,

vacation for a couple of weeks, the *

Life LOTION

f
t

(Customer's

Time

and shaker shingle exterior. Deep :
lot with loads of raspberry bushes.

at O’Hare

NoW b

suits

EXTRA KING KORN
STAMPS WITH ANY
PURCHASE AT

®@ Customized for all types of hair.

regularly $1.00

take care
your

® Gives you prettier, softer
curls that last and last!
Waves deep down in as little
as 10 minutes!

all Tussy Deodorants

or the lin-

send

®@ The permanent with
patented 14 oil creme base!

Take your pick:
cream
roll-on-stick. But hurry,
This sale has a very
short life!

your things to

us for dry cleaning.
| of every

CHALLENGES THEM ALL!

Bath. Easy maintenance with brick —

Grammar
School will not have
—
Graduation
from
the
Grammar ©
School but will be held at the New |
High School.
a
We need more listings—give us a wg
call. We have homes in any price
range that suits your budget.
!

Carr Realty Co.
Phone WI

5-1111

REALTORS
701

Waukegan

Road

Bes
WI

5-0984

Page 2-A

|

�/

Civic Calendar

:

Thursday, April 13

os

On

Rak

Our

yard

Cover

8

;
ssi anee

Lib
cere,

of the American

Associa-|

e

pial

p.m.

_ Week, which begins April 17, are} p74

members
-

tion

of

University

project currently

f and

money

township

Women

8 p.m.

whose

Maplewood

Maplewood
8

Deerfield

to

merchant

John

Lindemann,

a

candidate

for

:

p.m.

School

nee

j

Highland

P.T.A.

Park

general

P.T.A.,
:
High

meeting,

7 p.m. District

:

Bannockburn

g

school.

Philippi

prepare

to serve coffee

to

the tour of the li-

who pri

beginning

Monday.

;

a

E

ny Fi

Re E V

ge

ee

ursday,

ggpe

Ap

E

L D

W

i a

naerg

,

yar

mm

o"_*;

“°-_*

yam copra
OFFICE
699 Waukegan Road

Tolorte ne Windsne 304500
Laurel

on

ptane

ae

MEMBER

Park,

mre

pemage:

paid
or

( par ers at the, Base
ore Group
oe ghee le

ot Oeertield,
photographs

Spue

Newspapers
age age

8 p.m.

West

8

p.m.

allay

U R S E a F

H OW

YOU

CA

N

‘

* TIME

Deerfield

Deerfield

Highland

* MONEY
* WORK

Township

Park

LOCALLY OWNED
AND OPERATED*

High

Highland

Park

Pere

\

Noth

ae
BS

Saisie

°

S

\

4,

AX

4

SS

S

SS

Warren

AUNDROMAT

'

For

Vacation

H.

Dick,

son

of

Mr.

DEERFIELD

and Mrs. Donald Dick, 2580 Tele!
:
;
graph Rd., + rogenengge
a senior
student at Southern I[linois unireturned

has

versity,
| week’s

vacation.

cently named

home

Warren

for

was

LOWER

\

psychology

(WEST) TERRACE

Bi

a
OSTERMAN

SSS

AVE.

*JEAN

NOTE:
ALL STORES

&amp; BILL OTTER

IN COMMONS OPEN THURS.@ FRI. TILL 9:00 PM

COSMAS

MEAT DEPT.
OPEN DURING
EVERY STORE

9-6

Tue., Wed., Thu., 9-6

SATURDAY 9-8

HOUR

LAND 0’ LAKES
SWEET

SI

’

Lo

and

:
=

=.

sathncneil

re-

:

COMMONS

PN

to the school’s honor

is studying

OPEN
f

YO

=o wy py

halos

ij

assume no re-|roll. He
ng ag ma- history.

SUNDAYS

LESS/

OR

| Library board, library building.

Home

Rates—$3.50 per year
:
a eee
Application

manuscripts

meeting,

Grammar school

oie medina idee

Unsolicited

general

Ill.

Editorial Association

Local Subscription
i
Single Copies —15¢
oreign Rates on

R

high school.
8 p.m. Deerfield village board,
discussional meeting.
8 p.m. Deerfield
Park District
board, Jewett Park field house.
Thursday, April 20

8 p.m. Deerfield Grammar School

PARK OFFICE

Ave., Highland

TO

P.T.A. regular meeting, Deerfield

fiber rion

HIGHLAND

HOU

WASH

GOMEINAND PROVES

}

og 7 ee

School P.T.A. board,
:
high school.

PUBLICATION

yapncond

D RY

7:30 p.m. Deerfield High School

Published Weekly every Thursday

608

a

[ SHAG RUGS UP TO 9X12, BEDSPREADS, DRAPES, TABLECLOTHS, ETC. |

inli

Sigg

sn
P.T.O.

Dp

y

School

High

Deerfield

pm.

a eat "alrite,
Spople

WAS

ENW//RE

AN

IN

8 p.m. District 106 school board,

‘

for Cocations/®.2.. regular mepting, Deettield

eeene

brary

CAN

YOUR

113 school board,

this week. In the other picture, | high school.
: from left, Mrs. Walter Benn, Mrs,| Tuesday, April 18

_

Y 0 U

the | Highland Park high school.

will be in various}

boxes

The

field.

A.|

ih’ Deve

af truatees:

inks

vill

hall.
School

library. In the first pic-| HWishland Park high school.

box

coin

commis-

School

school.
:

ture, Mrs. Richard R. Smith gives| Monday, April 17
a

plan

board, Deerfield Grammar

school.

is to collect books

for the West

Deerfield

sion, public hearing, village
8 p.m. Deerfield Grammar

FOOD

BUYS

MEAT

CRE

THU., FRI., SAT. APR.

13-15

TIDE
DETERGENT

EVERBEST STRAWBERRY

~ PRESERVES

Se Off Each Pack — Reg. Pkos.

erent

ns 27

COLLEGE INN
TOMATO COCKTAIL
26-oz.
Dec.

waoscems
Page

2-B

1 9

Cc

57¢

ror

neaill

PORK ROAST

xe"

ehliaiMal aig aha hirwiee
3,” anay’
Pbrnertsottin’ |.° J

Apple
24-02.

Pie

-.........----- 3

9-

jarncurstarBACON

ww pin 59%

JOHN STARCK IS NO LONGER AFFILIATED
WITH

OUR

MEAT

DEPT.

Nawd in foodt. sisi
Apa t attyra
Phone:

Thursday,

April

13,

1961

�Week - End Sale! Big ae

for Thrifty Gardening!
Everblooming

CR

oo

LR
LE

Ae

| ome

err

est,
£-yr.

Exhihitien-Sixe

PERENNIALS

“GLAD” BULBS

itty, 296k SIC
Poppies, Mums,
Pinks, Delphinium, Phlox,
Daisies, Iris, Sweet Williams,
many others at this low price!

Ga rden

10-25

Petunias,

Radishes,

Variety Pkgs.

19-59
or in

one

doz.

Guaranteed to bloom! First class

2-24” bulbs. Choose pink, yellow, scarlet, purple, white, dark
red — now at Kresge’s!

Bulbs

.++...each, 29¢
Peony Roots. . .each, 69¢
Lily Bulbs ..... each, 49¢
Plastic

Coated

FEN

. e Red, Yellow, Pink, Two-Tones

CE

#

10" x 4’ section,18" x 10’ section

69:

e Hardy! Grown for this climate!

*1.98

¢ Continuous blooms all summer!

= Start Garden Early Indoors! ,

Seed

Buy border, cut-flower, or window box seeds in individual envelopes

Gg.

4 Dahlias

Tomatoes, etc.

OY an
Be

Lettuce,

Special
Price!

Seeds fe Roots

Big selection! Asters, Delphinium, Larkspurs, Marigolds,

sss

bn,

LE

Carnations,

owe

field-grown

Hardy-Blooming

BARGAIN

collection pkg.

f° Plonting instructions included!

Starter

Ready planted flower
or vegetable seeds in
hotbed container:

JumeBU #1 Size Rose busines
f

15 Famous-Name Varieties

Transplant later.

NEW!

LOWEST PRICES
IN TEN YEARS!

i

|

GRASS
SEED

3;

400 Sq. Ft.

HOURS:

Deerfield
April.

13,

1961

Ve
oe

¢

balanced amounts for vigorous

Covers

“FINEST QUALITY” Grass Seed for Sun or Shade 4 Ibs. $2.99,
50-LB. BAG MICHIGAN PEET ............ Gig ucts piaeh aNhotch da dcddnshdd iaecnceainaeehe
ee
ee
50-LB. GOLDEN VIGORO ......... ee fot oer
ee
ee
50-LB. PINK VIGORO ................. Sonia

Thursday,

3

Richer formula gives grass and
plants every-food they need in

fe or 69.
Covers
1000 Sq. Ft.

te

covers 150 sq. ft.
3 lbs.

|

ow Sete
teen
teen

LIGHTWEIGHT

J

'3" Pre- nelle
Peat Pots
Plant the pot, too!

©
Nutri-Peat:

Pots

roots, flowers, leaves.

116.8
heat

$3.95

:

|
A

HROSE FOOD. . 39%
c

$2.95

MBONE

MEAL.

. 45¢fM

COW MANURE, 29:

OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.

Start seices,

vecvors in nutrient |

treated pots thie eliminate shock,

melt

into soit when

transplanted,

SATURDAYS 9 A.M. to 6 P.M.

~§. S. KRESGE COMPANY—

Conimons Shopping

Center

Y fy

Waulicocn

Road:
Page

H

19—D

3

�Curiae Fy
haben

iain 6 a gestae
Phd SATE aaTae
Sey fa sd eo
tt ee

Both High SchoolsOffer
oe Bly

AP e Bel
PONE GRage
SE ee 4 Yee
NUMAN AE a
cient
eS
y
ay

enges

SEMAN:

Want to SAVE

UP

JO

*]

29

on financing and
insuring your next car?

Fathers will have a chance to in.
spect the new boys’ gymnasium on
the

1 may be able
to help you.
Ask me about
State Farm's

{

Gym at NS School
campus

at

The

dinner,

“HENRY HAKANEN
:

825

Deerfield

eats

Rd., Deerfield

Office: Bloomington, Mlinols

sponsored

by

JEWEL
INSTANT
PAINT

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE COMPANY
Home

Shore

makes painting
so easy!

NEWI

STATE FARM
MUTUAL

caem

North

there,

BANK PLAN

ae

The

Country Day School with an eye to
their own future athletic program

59~29

is rt

an

Open

House.

The athletic program for fathers,
under the direction of coach Martin J. McCarty, is being planned
for

their

spare

time.

Games

and

sports will be organized for their
convenience and instruction. The
program is scheduled to begin next
fall.
The

new

appear
a

building,

in

School’s

two

years

Development

two-story

built

the

into

the

second

under
Program,

red

brick

side

of a hill on

to

the
is

structure
the

campus at 310 Green Bay Rd., Winnetka.
A _ regulation
basketball

flat finish for walls and ceilings

No
matter what you want to buy
. or sell you'll find the Want-Ad section your best market place.

the

The first official public inspection of the newly-completed building will come at 3 p.m. Sunday,
April 16, when parents and students of the School will be joined
by members of the community at

For nearest Jewel dealer, see
Phone Book Yellow Pages,
or phone SEeley 3-2430.

a ts
2

netka,

=

1-ITOUR

MARTY

BR

Driver Training Course
Highland Park High School and Deerfield High School
will offer a Driver Education and Training program during
the summer session, from Monday, June 19 through Friday,
August 11.
because the high schools participate in the Illinois Driver Edu-

cation Reimbursable

has attained

hind-the-wheel
gram.

the
six

students

and

Gay”

can

soon

become

“old and

ee

ge:

Open Daily

ae

7:30 A.M. - 6:30 P.M.

ie

8:00 A.M. - 6:00 P.M.

‘
708 Deerfield Rd.
'

|

§

|

|

|
|

|

|

$52,500
Deluxe custom bit. 9 room home, slate entr,
Four bedrooms, 21/2 baths, jalousied porch
Fireplace in living room, FP in pan. study
Lovely landscaping, wooded lot, fine location

HIGHLAND PARK
§

@

Brick and

@

Brick

@

Red

fe Three

ek
ia

of):

and

brick

wood

Now $32,500
contemporary on 34 ac.

we ccewowceoncceccces

redwood

interior,

fireplace,

bedrooms,

oak

plumbing

salesman

in

cathedral

cabinet

ceiling

kitchen

in for 2nd

bath

DEERFIELD

$38,500

@
@
@

Seven room, 2 bath home, plus recr. room
Lovely LR, sep. DR, cabinet kitchen
2 bedrms. on Ist, 2 (both pan.) on 2nd fir.

@

Basement rec. rm. and well planned storage

RIVERWOODS

office.

Runnfeldt

was

promoted

|

and LY SONInc.

children

if the

Highland

Park

high
15

at

schools
10

on

pointment with the driving instructor.

Saturday,

a.m.

Parents

Interested

Registration Areas
Highland Park High

School

may

register

student

Page H 20—D 4

for their

is

on April

not

in

15.

students

are

assured

of
obtaining
the
classroom
struction.
The possibility of

ting the behind-the-wheel

inget-

training

is contingent upon the availability
of automobiles and, of more im-

portance, the availability of trained
and qualified teaching personnel.

contemp.

Only $30,900
ranch

nestled

on

2 wd’d

RIVERWOODS
$29,800
@ Beautifully wooded 2 2 acs. Ind. limestone
@ Raised h'rth, stone FP wall in liv.-din. comb.
@ Screened porch easily conv. to 3rd bdrm.

$32,900
DEERFIELD
@ Four bdrms., 212 baths, fine fam. flr. plan
@ Sep. dining rm., Colonial LR with fireplace
@

Cab.

@

@

Full bsmt. Close to schools, Fine neighbors

Immaculate

inside and out. Low taxes, too

RIVERWOODS
brk. and

In the 60’s
true elegance.

Cust.

kitch.

HIGHLAND

with

PARK

bit.

in

appl.,

eating

Deerfield

area.

$33,500

..

Brk

acs.

@

Mble.

blt. rch.

@

Classic.8-rm.

@
@
@

Spacious LR overlooks beautiful rear prop.
Fam. kitch.-din, comb. makes fine liv. space
Excel. constr., thermopane, storms G&amp; scrns

@
@
@

38 ft. liv. rm., fireplace, lovely Ige. kitchen
3 unusually Ige, bdrms., 2 cer. tile baths.
Jalousied pch. or den. 32 car gar. 2 acs.

@
@
@

Breakfast rm. in fully equipped, light kitch.
Fireplace in Ige. LR, separate din. room
Basement, too. Located across from park.

Quinlan. ana Tyson, tn
735

to

@

YEARS
SERVICE
Quinlan.

In

his present post in 1955.

WIndsor

Colonial. 4 bdrms.,

5-3750
4

4

1934.

pia

DEERFIELD-BRIARWOODS
@
@
@
@

at

been in-

classroom part. Classes will be held

PAS

|

in attendance

registration will be held in the bus
foyer;
at Deerfield
High
School,
inside the main entrance.
Students may register for both
parts of the program or only the

5-9793

WI

work.

and other interested

currently

to

1942, he became service manager
and in 1948 was named appliance
sales supervisor of the Winnetka

public

At

Deerfield

Saturdays

ig

promoted

for 1%
hours daily for the first
four weeks of the summer session,
from Monday, June 19 through Friday, July 14. The behind-the-wheel
training will be scheduled by ap-

just

ie

is

formed
of the program
in their
homerooms.
Eligible
residents
of
the township who are not in attendance at the two public high
schools
(parochial
and_
private
school students) will have an opportunity to register for this summer program at each of the two
April

dat et

profee

class for
to attend

the two high schools have

drab”

by restoring life to the fabric . . . brings back its
sparkle and color.
°
Try our exclusive system and see for yourself how
Martinizing can keep your wardrobe looking new
and gay!

phone
NE HOUR MARTINIZING and they don’t have a branch
store on the Moon!"

the
no

behind-the-wheel sessions for
clock hours. The behind-the-

Sophomores

unless you give your wardrobe proper care.
The special MARTINIZING Process provides this care

Bs

to attend
hours and

by the classroom

WW

ee
oe
Bta

of

students

wheel instruction must be preceded
me.

es
Me
BeA
os
a:

birthday

Enrollment in the complete Driver
Education
program
requires

yy

of

parts

these

the student
thirty clock

school.

|
“New

For

students

the

his fifteenth

Paul A. Runnfeldt, 942 Forest
Ave., recently was honored for 30
years service with North Shore
Gas Company.
Runnfeldt, who is District Manager of the gas company’s Winnetka office, received recognition and
a service
award
during
a gas
company
meeting
at
Deerfield
March 28.
A native of Winnetka, Runnfeldt
was graduated from New
Trier.
High School. He started with the
gas company as a clerk in the
Winnetka office in 1931 and was

by the first day of training, who
resides in Township High School
District 113, and who promises to
complete
the
classroom
and
be-

charged.

at

Deerfield Man Honored
For 30 Years Service

program, they

observe the regulations set by the
State.
An eligible student is one who

The public is invited to attend
the Open
House on Sunday. A
number of Highland Parkers are

e

SL ERPhee tePACEaeRAE OE Fe Sek
gree
a dai

Road

Deerfield Office —

Open

Weekdays

9 to 5 —

Sundays 10 to 5

UNiversity

9-1112
Thursday,

\y

2%

baths.

~WEMBER
CHICAGO
\ RE AL ESTATE
~ BOARD

\

—

April

13, 1961
ha

of

;

ey MS

A, poe

ae

�for

inventory

purposes.

None

of the furniture that you see in the illustration is
left for sale—but you'll find enough food bargains in our stores to fill every drawer in your
pantry.

Shades of Robert E. Lee: Each Sure Save food
mart will have many closeout specials of its very
own that you won’t want to miss, so may
we
Suggest that you sachet over right now.
HEINZ—Concentrated—Makes

Tomato Juic° e

OLD FASHIONED
ONCE A YEAR

|

THIS

a

a

WORTH

on

a

le

40c

COUPON

Land O’ Lakes — Grade A — Strictly Fresh

|

Qc

i
|

.

ONLY

i

:

Pints

Offer

chase only.

i

RAGGEDY ANN—Sliced or Halves—in Heavy
Syrup
303
T 9 c

good

Monday,

17th, 18th and 39th
customer. Offer good

i

,°4°.°™

HUNTS—California

a

i

6%-0z.

Freestone Peaches

WITH

I

‘=. INVENTORY
CLEARANCE SALE

12

ef

ee

warehouse

a

VALUABLE COUPON

ee

our

=

Tuesday

and

Wednesday,

ee

out

==

April

only. Limit one Coupon per adult
with $5.00 or more minimum pur-

VALUABLE

COUPON

WORTH

en

Buckets of beer, it’s our old-fashioned-once-ayear-Inventory-Clearance-Sale_ time again, and
you haven't seen bargains like these in many. a
year.
Our fiscal year is ending and we must clear

40c

L.

*,

300
Tomato Juice e y,;. they
last 1Ole
KRAFT’S

Fresh

Fruit Good—Pare

Preserves sy
SOFT-WEVE—2-Ply

STRAWBERRY

12-02. jar 2YC

for Twice the Luxury

Toilet Tissue sss"
SPECIAL

Available

Only

20¢

OFFER

at Sure

Save

Lady Evelyn
Automatic
Electric

CASSEROLE

LT

Lady Evelyn
Automatic
Electric

FRYPAN
$19.95

o— 4.0CHISON Ete”
2

Value

The Lady Evelyn Fry-Pan or Casserole with their
gracious design and lustrous, life-time finish
will give you many years of unexcelled cooking
and eating pleasure.
A completely sealed-in
heating unit with removable thermostat control

allows

it to be completely

convenient
heat—just

immersed

“‘Master-Chef”
construction.

results.
Many

Sturdy

uses

cast

indoors

en, dining room or patio—cooks,
or bakes.

for truly

cleaning ease.
Uniform, controlled
dial the proper
temperature
for

Made

aluminum

or out,

kitch-

braises, broils

in U.S.A.—complete

one

a" BQ5

year

guarantee.

YOUR

CHOICE

(Includes Control
and Cover)

Fresh

EACH

Fruits

and

Vegetables

solid—crisp—ice berg

LETTUCE

Seiten,

lovisiana—fresh

n’ crisp—stringless

ees

large
eet head

WEBB’S

==

*

Ste

qemmemmeeny

0°",

2

BUTTERNUT

BLEND—DRIP

COrree: .os
TOMATO KETCHU
HEINZ—SO

AUNT

RICH

IT GOES

eyes

orange juice... carton 39C

SAVE

:

a

19¢

OR

pork or vegetarian

TRIMMED—WHOLE

LAST

baked beans

chunktuna

12°.12c

= °°" 25¢

old colony—assorted

a

an

beverages 2.11: wes) 29¢
qt.

kraft’s—chock-full

HALF

save trlinindd-cheulder
blade cut
round bone

lamb chops;, 69c1, 59¢
u.s. choice—sure save trimmed—easy to
carve—whole or half
yee

BONELES S

Ss.

of milk nutrients

velveeta cheese 2". 75c¢

raggedy ann—alaskan

u.s, choice—sure

OR

LB. 59.

Lamb

0’

Leg

red

sockeye salmon %.49c
can

—

leg

°’

RATH

lamb

ae Ca

Ib,

89c

Our Delicatessen Dept.

—

BLACKHAWK

HARD SALAMI ~~~ 2 89¢

PIPING

GENUINE YOUNG N’ TENDER SPRING LAMB

U.S. CHOICE—SURE

2 no dep. qt. btls. 35c
Are

eee

WHILE THEY

tuna time—perfect for light Spring lunches

your

From

PINEAPPLE-ORANGE brink 15c

sure save’s—fresh—chilled
before

FURTHER

NELLIE—PINEAPPLE-GRAPEFRUIT

green beans... w. 19¢
squeezed

REGULAR

ee

heinz—-with

on ice

OR

HOT—READY

Barbecued

TO

EAT

Chickens ™: 98c

FRESH—HOMEMADE

Kidney Bean Salad ~~~ © 39¢
Fresh

Fish

|

FRESH

LAKE PERCH ------~ 196

FRESH SMELTS ~~ 2% 29¢
U.S. GOVT.

INSP. GRADE A

CORNISH
HENS
Net Wt.

14 Oz.

CO

Sie

p

C

u.s. choice—sure save trimmed—easy to
carve boneless lamb

shoulder roast
u.s, choice——sure

» 69¢

save trimmed
loin por,

Dozen

rib por.

lamb chops, *1":,. 95¢

We reserve the right to limit quantities.

SHOPPING CENTER
716 WAUKEGAN RD.

SPACIOUS

April

13,

1961

Friday and Saturday only.

PARKING FOR 400 CARS’

Open Mon.
9 P.M.
Thursday,

"Meat and produce prices available Thursday,

thru Fri., 9 A.M.
Sat., ‘til 6 P.M.

to

.

Sale starts Thurs., April 13th
thru Wed., April 19th.

oS

;

Page H 21—D 5

-

�'To Participate in
Publications Panel
Dr.

John

A.

Munski,

newspaper

adviser
at Highland
Park
High
School, will be one of the featured
speakers at the sixth annual High

Harry

Davis

Harry
C. Davis, 10 Essex Ln.,
Lincolnshire,
has
ben
appointed
(Continued on page 24)

BE A TWO-CAR

Dr. John
School

HERTZ

How to make mowing
more satisfying
If you’re fed up with the mess, the smell and the racket of that
hard-to-start gasoline’ mower, it’s time you discovered the joys

every time — plus the real satisfaction of rolling through the job
quickly and quietly. And service problems are a thing of the past.

The SILENT scorts is désigned, engineered and guaranteed by
Scotts, the people who know lawns best, to make cutting lawns

car!

similar
High

IT’S EASY ... a phone call
reserves a clean, fully
equipped new Chevrolet or
other fine car here or anywhere in the world!
IT'S ECONOMICAL . . . only
$10 for a full 24-hr.day plus
10 cents a mile. And Hertz
always pays for all gas, oil
and insurance.

the

A

Old Orchard Sta.

join

which

Workshop

is

Ohio,

Munski

will

in

concenof

news-

sponsored

operation with the Missouri
scholastic Press Assn.

by

Inter-

The
Highland
Park
instructor
holds four degrees from the University of Missouri—B.J., in 1940;
B.S.
in
Education,
1941;
M.Ed.,

1947

CAR

and

Ed.D.

in 1952.

undergraduate, he was
team and won the mile
Sugar Bowl meet in
Orleans.
For the past eight

advised
book

Phone: OR 6-2110
GR

Sky Harbor Airport
Palwaukee Airport

CR 2-1900
LE 7-1200

Weiller’s

NI

Lodge

will

workshop,

The

Evanston

Motor

post in the Norwalk,
School

the University School of Journalism and University College of Education
and the University
Continuing Education Service, in co-

HERTZ
RENT

Workshop

trate on the production
papers and yearbooks.

fet HERTZ put you in the driver's seat!

of the sILENT scotts. Nothing to get ready, no fumes, no noise.
‘You get the smooth, even cut that makes your lawn look its best

Publications

June
26-30 at the University
of
Missouri School of Journalism.
Kendall L. Falke, who holds a

Rent a dependable
No noisy ‘click’ as you mow

Munski

5-8500

7-8450

at

years

he

the newspapers and
at Highland
Park

School.

was

While

Before

adviser

coming

for

both

Marshalltown,

an

on the track
event in the
1940 at New
has

yearHigh

here,

he

publications

Ia.

sO easy and so rewarding you'll actually be glad you mowed!
The

New

Silent Scotts

Handmower

The 5M cuts 5000 sq ft in 40 minutes 39.95
The

10M cuts 10,000 sq ft in an hour

—Now Available—

Scotts.
FIRST

49.95

IN

Top Civil Service Jobs

LAWNS

in Highland Park

PREFER POWER? Discover the Silent Scotts Electric. No messy fueling, no
smelly fumes, no engine roar — instant starting every time! The safest power mower
ever designed — for the best crew cut your grass ever had. 119.95.

|

” Mon. thru
0 P E HM .

:

Sat. 8 A.M. — 9 P.M.

pas ics

A.M. — 6:00 P.M.

LAWN &amp; GARDEN SPOT
641

Deerfield

Road,

Your Growing

Deerfield

&amp; Garden

WI

5-3800

Bring your lawn problems to: our Lawn Program Advisors. They have the
know-how and the experience to help you achieve the kind of lawn you want.

May

4, 1961,

at 8:00

P.M.

written

and

Civil Service positions

will be held at the City Hall to establish an eligible list for
each of the following classified services.
Applicants must be between

the ages of 21

and

35 years of age and pass medical, physical fitness tests, as
well as a psychiatric test. Salary $4,940.00—Top $6,240.00.
Fireman. Applicants must be between the ages of 21 and 35
years of age and pass medical, physical fitness tests, as well
as a psychiatric test. Salary $4,940.00—Top $6,240.00.
Police Lieutenant. All sergeants who have been in that position for one year or more are eligible to take this examination.

Starting

salary

$5,564.00—Top

$6,410.00.

Application blanks and furthe r information may be obtained
from the City Clerk’s Office, City Hall. All applications must
be filed with Mr. Roy Millen, City Clerk, by 4:00 P.M. April
21, 1961.

Needs”

Phone:

Thursday,

Patrolman.

DEERFIELD
“For

On

oral examinations for the following

Paul
Civil

J. McLaughlin,
Service

Highland

Sec.

Commission

Park,

Ill.
4/16-13-20/61—A

Page H 22—D 6

Thursday,

April

13,

1961

�SUPER- SPECIAL!

=’ FLOWERING
CRAB TREES
Deerfield’s

Official

Flowering

Tree

6’ to 8’
HOPA
ELEY!
ALMEY

Balled

and

Burlapped

e Japanese Yews ® Pfitzers ©
© Pfitzer Junipers ¢ Greek Junipers
Golden Arbor Vitae

e

THURS., FRI., SAT., SUN. SPECIAL
8’ to 10’ SILVER MAPLES
$4.95 ea

or

3 for $12.00
or 2 for $25.00

16 ft size $12.95

also

=

A half-hour well spent

3

(all balled and burlapped)

PRIVET HEDGE

Don’t let crabgrass

HONEYSUCKLE

‘ :

JUST RECEIVED !!

bully

your

lawn

et
=
aS
3 ps 4%. bY =

oe
RHODODENDRONS

Why wait till crabgrass has come up and ruined your lawn to do
something about it? One application of HALTS® before crabgrass

j

Balled

SPECIALLY

: A . :

: 1,

sprouts will spare your lawn a repetition of last summer’s disaster.

deeoes

PRICED!

“Deg

i,

Tiny HALTS granules blanket the lawn, lie in wait, then pick off
crabgrass sprout by sprout. HALTS is death to crabgrass—yet

it lets good grass grow unharmed. In fact, HALTS is so compatible

50: the. o pete oa qe ‘are
50 Ibs. MATTLE MANURE $a 30
SHADE
FRUIT
TREES
Dwarf

&amp;

with grass, you can actually seed the same day. With the accurate Scotts Spreader, you protect 5000 sq ft against crabgrass in

$2.98

BOTH
TREES

ALL SPECIALLY PRICED!
Reg.

All Varieties

Norway

from

&lt;

ae

Maple
Win
Oaks

&amp; Red

half an hour!

‘

* Mountain
Ash .
k

e

Corkscrew

us about the Scotts guarantee

eee
a vig

HARDWARE

PET SUPPLIES

WE'RE...
ae

STONES
ar Giles

SHRUBS and
TREES

and

FERTILIZERS

noe

INSECTICIDES

INFORMATION

. . .a

better: lawn

or your money

back!

Willow

0 p

—7 DAYS A WEEK—

nN .

Mon. thru Sat., 8 A.M. - 9 P.M.

5:

Sundays 8:00 A.M. — 6:00 P.M.

Bring your lawn problems to our Lawn

Program: Advisers.

have

They

the

know-how and the experience to helpyou achieve.the kind of lawn you want.

DEERFIELD LAWN &amp; GARDEN SPOT
641

Deerfield

Road,

Deerfield

ALL EVERGREENS, ROSES, SHRUBS and TREES
GUARANTEED

Thursday,

April

13, 1961

TO

GROW!

“For Your Growing &amp; Garden Needs”

Phone:

WI

5-3800

|

Phone

YO

5-4977

|

Also Available at ...NICK’S GARDEN CENTER

Golf

and

Waukegan

Rds.,

Morton

Grove

Page

H 23—D.

|

7%

�Addresses Kiwanis
On Communism
Elmer

Lane,

L.

Csaba,

Highland

1270

Park,

the Kiwanis Club of
Tuesday, April 11.

The

subject

of

Arbor

addressed

Evanston

Csaba’s

on

address

was “Americanism versus Cemmunism.”
Pointing out those things
that make America a great nation,

he

mentioned

ways

in

which

we

can preserve our strength in the
face of the undermining influence
of Communism.
Csaba came to the United States
from Hungary with his family in
1949. He became a United States

citizen in 1955. He is a design engineer

with

the

Zenith

Corp.

contact

Say...

Student-Teacher
Exchange Day Is
New HS Project

Administrators will work with the
principal and superintendent guidanee director, deans, etc., and
carry on the functions of those offices for the day. Students holding
executives may eat in the faculty

Teachers and administrators of
Highland
Park
High
school
are
looking forward to a holiday not
listed on the school calendar when
a selected group of students will
take over the classes and the many

experimental

administrative

problems

of the

school.

Yesterday,

April

12,

classes

elected
a
candidate
from
each
group to take over the classes on
the first Student-Teacher Exchange
Day
that the school
has undertaken.
The
students
selected
by
their
classmates
will
work
with
administrators and teachers.
The
Day was devised as a means
to
promote
school
unity, together
with
a further understanding
of

the functioning of the school.
The student teacher will follow
the
course
outline
for the
day.

pees

TURNER'S
TV-LAB
NEWS

ACTUAL SIZE

Ask us about the different
kinds of contact lenses.
H.0.V. contact lenses
are safe because they are
fitted under the supervision of your eye
physician. Get the
benefit of our 27 years of
contact lens experience.

By William Turner
WI!

SUPERCEPTION

Phone for an appointment

the

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a

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you can make yourself
-— no special equipment
required
— just put an
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MAKE

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OWN

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lets you move

it with

FRAGASSI TV &amp; APPLIANCES, Inc.
DEERFIELD

RD., DEERFIELD
Open

Page

H

24—D

8

Mon.

e

been

set

program,

sponsoring

the

for

this

and

those

idea

hope

that it will become an annual event.
Candidates who have been select-

ed

for

Day

Student-Teacher

Exchange

are:

For Superintendent Wolters;
Larry Bloom,
George Cimbalow
and Bob Wolfe; for Principal
Stunkel; Elliot Baim, Buddy Friedman
and
Bob
Rosen;
for
Dean
Panther; Ed Gamson, Ron Helman
and Jeff Lechie; for Guidance Di-

rector

O’Neal,

Bill

Cargill,

Dave

Klorfine
and
Randy
Petzel;
for
Student Council Sponsor Spencer,
Mary
Hexter,
Joyce
Holler
and
Nancy Neal; for Librarian Smith,
George
Bollenbacker,
Richard

Henninger, and Pete Sande.
Candidates
for Advisor chairmen include; for senior girls’ advisor, Joanne Austin, Judy Hammerman and Claudia Harris; senior
boys’ advisor, Alan Exelrod, Bill
Price and Carl Trexler;
junior
girls; Mary McComb,
Lynn Mar-

cus and
Dennis

and

Ann

Neil

Ellen

Shapiro;

Giangiorgi,

Stone;

Falkof,

Kathy

Ragir,

sophomore

Lynn

McGuire;

junior boys,

Marshall

girls

Goodman

sophomore

and

boys,

Stephen Baim, Harvey Kinzelberg
and Ned Robertson; freshman
girls, Babs Gunther, Nancy Hexter

and Sue Shapiro; freshman boys,
Brian Leahy, Gary Ross and Dan
Wagner.

Harry Davis
(Continued from page 22)
at

the

Evanston

branch

Connecticut
General
ance Company. Davis,

the

company

with

office

Phone: Wi

of

Life
Insuran agent for

the

Evanston

office since 1956, has earned membership
to the company’s
Honor
Roll and vice president’s club for

leading agents. He is a graduate of
Elmhurst College and the University of Chicago.

ALL
SMILES !
OH, Mr. Duffy...
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hate to boast but our buttons are continu-

ally busting with the kind, unsolicited words of gratefulness we receive. Our drapery cleaning customers
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kindness and attention given by...

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There is only ON E

&amp;D., HIGHLAND

Scientists are predicting. the. possibility
of broadcasting messages and
pictures
to a person’s inner consciousness, bypassing the eye, ear and other sensory
nerves.
Now, this might seem “‘way out” to
most folks, but it is already possible to
stimulate the brain by electronagnetics
without touching the human body. It is
just a matter of learning how to control
the magnetic field for human reception.
So, if you think you’re bombasted by
advertising now, can you imagine what
it will be like with superception transmission.
And, if you’re aware that this
unusual news is a lead-in to a TURNER’S TV LAB announcement of their
fine TV
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you have been receptive, too.
Phone
WI
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room.

April

measure: the water --e-

to yourself that
Amana is your
best buy to

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home

CHURCH

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Make your own side by

SEE

ae

Craftsmen in Opeies

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how Amana
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bese e

House of Vision

697 Waukegan Rd.
5-1401 — DEERFIELD

dining

MR. DUFFY
duffy cleaners ® across from H.P. Library e ID 2-1820

5-1800

&amp; Fri.—‘til 9 P.M.
Thursday,

April

13,

1961

�| :

Pre-Season

eee

Sale

YOU'RE ALWAYS WELCOME AT

ry

|

Walgreens

Ore

ue

y

emma SG

ICE CREAMY
1 Fiabe

DRUGS witha REPUTATION
:

eS97

Highland { Deerfield | Northbrook
Park

Commons

'

| Meadows

Self-eaten

GON Conia | ironapan ae 1975 ChdtryLan Lower Prices!

49c HoNEV'C Ai

horas

14-02. Foil Wrapped

Only

6-foot diameter
sae BRELLA,a domessbaly.
19.9%

58 calories per

a3.

Loaf

servin

'

:

harin =,
Sa1, cc
GRAIN TABLETS

minum top.
TABLE. 33 inch alu
y 13.88
$20 quality. Separ ratel

REGULARLY 89¢

Handsome
coppertone finish.
3-ply ap &amp; vinyl fabric.

7) Yds. Chix

PANTS

Seed

Lawn
quality

Cc

walnut fale

ad
Or iginally $7, *

£° 98 quality.

29

Chrome-Plated

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|.

Trowel,

reine

—

co

,]

;

:

save on' Choiee Tex"

t

a

c

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zenui

Bs

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29

4

|

Garden Tools

Food

$2.95

$1 49

qual.

LAMP

Colorful 5

2

“

9 Pounds | 40 P ounds
Grass

BUBBLE

Sizes 10.20, pro.
Portioned Ieengths,

We

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&gt; °dish Style

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ae

ght

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BUT

:

Li

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25c

fas Ret

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ummer Cotton fm

“All-Green”

}

:

2

Z

A rate frais

fm

»

$5.95
BUT

7

photo- finishing wicielas

... EXTRA: COST!
4

3 30- Foot Hose :
100%
BR ite

3

; ‘Walacets

REE NOZZLE
Oversize,

‘

vy iny

16-Inch LAWN

WHITE

$8.95e
quality
pen

Pick: up your prints

"white,

120- 620-127)

;

All- Purpose. Film, same

white

unce bottle

at Walgreens low

15-YEAR MONEY
BAC
WALGREEN
GU
SUARANTEE

“Worthmore”

eS

Odorless

brand.

all-purpos

.

a

3 3.

Mot 67c but only .

$3.25 Vista Car Wax
By

.

“wt, ROSE §' 9 game

at

Walgreens

price.

ime

&amp;

ere

black &amp;.-

TD:

aitplae

F

ses st carton

reg

ss

SS
erreccee
EE
D

OY

=
Paravi

;

Hoag

;

Bs

Pclnac'a Pra

Pipe Tohacco

—

|

3

Morr

Brand

7

—_—

Seconds:

. CIGAR BUY! rn

E *Rosenons

,

0X 0

1°
"50 -

49

a

FIFTY

LITTLE Cigars J9: |

Veu aN

-0 Gallon of .

|.)
&amp;

for less!

ay
tert

©

Gan

BUDWEISER

east
{

.

of

VODKA
80 proof. 5th

\

&amp; me
ae

&amp;

Tr

Ree

8 YEARS OLD

_

Piaman
j

=

Ses

ie

SounBON

iquor Not Sold Sun. at Deerfield

aerey 23

Paint Tray
and Roller

CY

CA
ij

$3-69 OM coun
BOURBON

Try
quart—return unopened
gaalibe hore full refund if
you're not 100% s atisfied!

s LADDER

5-Foot Wood

.

SEP

Ye

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ae

//m
4

C

Compares with $1.39

wy

Sellers!

your

akg

Drug

Store

4

- ¥|

aS

UR DOLLAR BUYS MORE
bur Walgreen

4

|

ae

ed steps.

I

_ eg ia ae $1.29 sellers!’

62799

GUCKENHEIMER 7] $4.99 arVarloff

all @

Gallon of Paint WALGREENS......
Theor 98- |]|}

THE KING OF BEERS

86 pr. blend. 5th

shop size at low

When

Bluevienan rine
&amp; white shades
wich bax s &amp; white finish pole.

WHISKY

18-ounce

152

a

BUSHES

at

Simoniz.

ite

My

|

19-

&amp; tasteless. Only.

Bon Ami Liquid Cleaner
Quart

(6 or, imote, black

13:

we

ah

NO

sizes,” at PO:
eageire reat, ‘

pr

iale-tFpial arFlakes
GNS ipataMothsg Polaco
NN. 39¢ Pint of Mineral Oil

FENCE

| 52.56 tise

¥:

eye

ei ‘et

and ‘get: roll, of: Walgreens

iB Reg. 29¢ Tincture lodine

BORDER

fresh

ae

Se

‘

Ls© a

ml

Ld re oe foe
—na
,

Co

y

Fairy

Helena Rubinstein

Princess

Bath Powder Mitt

[Per Bc
WAS

(Discontinued)

.

COLOGNE
Blossom, Heave

| was” 5
Apple

$425

Qe":

n Sent

eK

�:

are

Wei ecotaas: mats

— LET US DO IT —
We

Hadassah

Storm

Keys Made

Windows

and

OPEN

To Order While You Wait.

SUNDAYS

GARDEN

NEEDS

Williams

—

9 A.M. — 1 P.M.

HOUSEWARES

—

discuss ‘Developmental
Children

Park

and

hold its April open meeting, a des-

urbia’s
with a

sert

problems

tea,

Lane,

on

Wednesday,

Riverwoods,

The
ert

guest

Youth.”

Aspects
This

will

of
be

April

19,

TOYS

Goodman,

2-4387

(Paid

will

assistant

with

be

Robof

Service.

psychiatric

a master’s

Political

children

encountered
in

our

so-

degrec

National

Slated
the

also

election

reclamation

“affluent

society.”

lands

board

of

Park

for
of

this

meeting

officers

and

directors

Hadassah,

Fund,

growing

Officers

and

for

is
the

Highland

the election

of

ee

x

sah
Advisory
and
Coordinating
Council.
This month, Highland Park Hadassah is highlighting the Jewish

by

Elect

pie

personnel for North Shore Hadas-

of

dedicated

waste

are

working

to

and

in Israel. American

women
To

director

Park Family

a trained

cial worker

“coddled
children,”
along
discussion of some of the

Deerfield.

speaker

Goodman,

the Highland

ID

Hadassah _ will

at 12:30 p.m., at the home of Mrs.
Allen
Dorfman,
1001
Hoffman

Wed. ‘til Noon

RAVINIA
HARDWARE
YOUR ONE STOP STORE
Roger

from the University of Chicago, will

a presentation of his views on subHighland

Doors

Store Hours Daily 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. —

In

Deerfield April 19

Repair Screen Doors and Windows
Replace Broken Windows
Fix

Meets

3

i

with

the

desert

Hadassah

the JNF

to form a new community in the |
wastes of Adullam, Tzur Hahassah,

which will provide housing for hundreds of homeless families. Mrs.
Allen Dorfman is the JNF chairman for Highland Park Hadassah.

Advertisement)

All of us urge you to help elect
FRANCES M. ARENBERG
Highland Par
City Council
Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Adler
‘Mr. and Mrs, Bernard F. Alchon

Mr. nd Mrs. Edmund L. Andrews,

;

Mr.
Mr.
rr.
r.
Mr.

Jr.
and Mrs,
and Mrs.
Henry X.
Milton K,
and Mrs.
Jr.

William R. Anixter
Albert L. Arenberg
Arenberg
Arenberg
Alfred S. Alschuler,

Mr. and Mrs. William W. Baker
r. and Mrs. Stuart

|

Bernstein

Dr. and Mrs. Ralph B. Bettman
Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. Bolle
Mr. and Mrs. William E. Bond
Mrs. Douglas Boyd
Mrs. Jane Bresnehan
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Buchanan, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. James Buhai

_ Mr. and Mrs. Paul S. Burg
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Cameron
Mr.
r.
Mr.

and Mrs. Sam Carani
and Mrs. Frank V. Cargill
Samuel M. Chaimson
and Mrs, Thomas P. Clark

_ Mr. and Mrs, William B, Cope

Mrs. Betty Colacicco
Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Corwith
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Crimo
Mr, and Mrs. Robert L. David

.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.

Mr. and Mrs. Alvin G. Dempsey, Jr.
Mr, and Mrs. Frank J. Dinelli
Mr. and Mrs. John Eddileman
Mr. William F. Einbecker

Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Ettlinger
Mr.
Mr,
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.

and
and
and
and
=
r.
Mr, and
Mr. and
Mr. Jack

Mrs.
Mrs.
Mrs.
Mrs.
Mrs.

and
and
and
and
and
and
and
and
Alan

Mrs, Arthur |. Grossman
Mrs, Michael Gutman
Mrs. Louis P. Haller
Mrs. Jess Halsted
Mrs. Alden T. Harris
Mrs. Vernon H. Heins
Mrs. E, Donald Heymann
Mrs, Eugene Hotchkiss
J. Jacobs

. and Mrs. J. Sigurd Johnson

Emil Faust
Milton Fisher
Marion B. Fiore
Harold M, Florsheim
Harold E. Foreman,

Mr. and Mrs. William T. Jones
Mr. and Mrs. James F. Kahnweiler
Mr. and Mrs, Richard L. Kahn

Mr,
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mrs.

Mrs. J. S. Friedman
Mrs. Tom R, Friedman
P. Frost

and Mrs.
and Mrs.
and Mrs.
and Mrs.
Orray T.

Frank S, Karger
Lester J. Kelly
William M. Kelly, Jr.
Henry C. Kerulis
Knight

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Geraci

Mr. and Mrs.

Mr. and Mrs.

Mr, Lesley Kodner
Mr, and Mrs. Sigmund Kunstadter

Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mrs.
Mr.

Richard

F. Gibbs

Edward L., Gilroy
and Mrs. Walter F, Gips, Jr.
and Mrs. Edward H. Glover, Jr.
Joseph C. Green
and Mrs. Edward A.

Edward

M.

Knox

Mr. Nafe Larson, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Lauesen
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lawton

Mr. and Mrs. Samuel T. Lawton, Jr.
Mrs, Scott Leonard

Greenwald, Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. David Levinson
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lieber
Mr, and Mrs. Theodore R. Locb
Mrs. Richard J. Loewenthal

Mr. and Mrs. Seymour N. Logan
.
.
.
.

and Mrs.
and Mrs,
and Mrs.
and Mrs.
McComb
. and Mrs.

Matt J. Maiman
Charles David Maley
Sidney W. Mandel
Hamilton W.
James

H. Moses

. and Mrs. Edward Murphy
Mrs. Howell
Mr. and Mrs.
Mr, and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Baldwin

W. Murray
Bernard Nath
Thomas Nathan
Walter R. Neisser
Newman

Dr. George Olander
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Onesti
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur M.

Oppenheimer
Mr. Robert P. Palmer
Mrs. Robert F. Patton
Mr. and Mrs. Alfonso Picchietti
Mr, and Mrs. Albert Pick, Jr.

Mrs. Ralph E. Pottker

Mr. ond Mrs. Percy H. Prior, Jr.
Mr, and Mrs. Alan L. Reinstein
Mrs. Leonard M. Ri-ser

. and Mrs. John A. Riggio
. and
. and
. and

Mrs.
Mrs.
Mrs.

Peter Rossi
Harold Rudolph
Louis A. Santi

. and Mrs. Robert M. Schrayer

.
.
.
.

and Mrs. Bowen
and Mrs. Milton
and Mrs. Edward
Herbert L. Stern,

E. Schumacher
H. Schwartz
Sonnenschein
Jr,

. and Mrs. Samuel Tepper

. Oliver W.
. and Mrs.
. and Mrs,
. and Mrs.
. and Mrs.

Tuthill
Frederick G. Uhimann
Arthur J. Vallez
Battista Vanoni
Philip Wallerstein

. and Mrs. George M. Webster
. Francis

D. Weeks

. and Mrs. Robert L. Weinberg
.
.
.
.
.

and Mrs. William W. White
and Mrs, John S. Wineman
and Mrs. Ted Winter
Allan I. Wolff, Jr.
and Mrs. Solomon Zeloof

You Can Help:
- — Remember to cast your

ballot on Tuesday, April 18
- — Urge your friends and

neighbors to vote!
MATURE,
IBLE

EXPERIENCED,

. . . Fran

RESPONS-

Arenberg

has

the

energy, time, and ability to serve
with distinction on the City Council. Vote Tuesday, April 18, for
Frances

M.

Arenberg

—

and

tell

your friends to vote for her, too!

CIVIC COMMITTEE

FOR FRANCES ARENBERG
(Paid

Page
H 26—D 10

Political

Advertisement)

Thursday, April 13,
io

aed

�eames ig hosCentral

ic,

ee

at Highland Park hospital. Mr. and
Cotulla,
Ramirez,
Manuel
Mrs.

ANDREW
SLOAN
MICKELS,
son of Mr, and Mrs. Gilbert Mickchild

in the

is Lisa,

William

and

Mrs.

Ind.

Paternal

Sloan,

Mr.

are

grandparents

Maternal

2.

family

Munster,

grandmother

is Mrs.

Helen Mickels, Chicago.
LISA BEISSWENGER,

daughter

of

J,

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Erich

Beiss-

wenger, 1232 Wilmot Rd., was born
April 1 at Highland Park hospital.
Other children in the family are
Linda,
6, and
Roy,
2. Maternal

grandmother is Mrs. Emilea Reihardt, Germany. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Beisswenger, also of Germany.
ANDREW
ALEXANDER
SAVAGE, son of Mr. and Mrs, Wendell
was

Park

Apri

ogist
the

and

an

day’s

educator,

discussion

at

This

will be followed

eon.

In

the

cussion
by

staff

will

members

start
a.m.

by

afternoon,

groups

will
10:30

a lunchsmall

be
of

dis-

conducted
the

associa-

tion and its’ clinic, the Irene Josslyn

clinic.
The Rev. Russell R, Bletzer, of
the North Shore Unitarian church,
will talk on ‘Adolescents and their
Values.” Rev. Bletzer is a resident
of Deerfield and lives at 426 Pine

St.

Dr.

Henry

Fineberg,

Glencoe

psychiatrist,
has
chosen
‘Understanding
the
Adolescent”
as his
topic.
Dr.
Ernest
Haggard,
professor

of Psychology at the University of
Illinois college of medicine, will
discuss “Social Pressure on Adolescents,” and Dr. Norman T. Watson, superintendent of the Glenbrook
high
school,
will
analyze
“The Adolescent In School.”
The cost of the entire day’s program is $1.75, For those wishing

to attend

only

the

discussion

may

attend

of

fifty

to

attend

cents.
only

sion. Tickets
the

door.

luncheon
the

the

may

possible

afternoon

ses-

be purchased

Reservations

may

panel

for a charge

It is also

for

be made

by

Office

at

Association

6412

morning

or by phoning

ID

at
the

calling
HI

6-

2-4900.

Local Man

In Charge

Of Alumni

Function

Dr. Miller Upton, president of
Beloit college, Beloit, Wis., will de-

scribe

the

“State

of

the

College’”’

to Chicago area alumni at a men’s
alumni dinner, Friday, April 21 at

the

Como

Inn,

546

N.

Milwaukee

Avenue, Chicago.
John Turner, 1240 Hackberry, is
in charge of the program.
The affair is sponsored by the

Chicago Beloit College club.
Among directors of the Chicago
club are Bob McGuire, 822 Warrington, and Turner.
\

child

at

Highland

Park

grandmother

RAUL

RONNIE

April

14

the

the family are Judy,

the

Scouts

500 Indian Hill address.
daughter of
PEPOON,
JANET
Mr. and Mrs. Harry B. Pepoon,
1405

7

are

guild

of the Beth-

bread and rolls, will

be

on sale from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Mrs. James Ferch and Mrs. Clarence Scott are co-chairmen for this

event.
charge

Mrs.

McClellan
Various

Herbert

of pricing

will

circle

and

do

Wenger
Mrs.

the

members

Harry,

maternal

are

the

The

paternal

B.

New

Pepoon,

grandparents.

grandmother

KAY RAGLAND,

NANCY

son

Outstanding Pair
e

.

Cre

—

h

%

Edwin Avery, president, and M
Robbins,

Sidney

Parent

Teac
hig!

Deerfield

of the

Organization

chairm

program

Deerfield

the

for

school have invited parents, students and friends to attend the pro“Fine Arts In Educatio ‘
gram
April

Wednesday,
7:30 p.m.

at

beginning

19,

a

Herbert S. Bull, chairman of the | 3
is
fine arts committee, has secu
Robi
person,
outstanding
two
will discuss ““Promot

Pearce who

and
of the Fine Arts in Education”
Mr. Franklin McMahon whose subhe
you
what
ject is “Using
learned.”

8:50 p.m. Introduction

of Frank.

lin McMahon.

9:20 p.m. Adjournment.
The

program

follows:

7:30 p.m. Visit art class room
and music practice and rehearsal
ee
area.
7:50

p.m.

Call to cafeteria.

8 p.m. Introductions of fine a
teachers: Chester Kyle, music 2
William Kolbe, art, by Bull.
8:30 p.m. Introduction of Ro
Pearce.

eral

daugh-

2,

Nugent A.
and Mrs.
ter of Mr.
Ragland, 1420 Chippewa Path, was

Arts

Committee Presents

is Mrs.

York.

Fine

hospital,

Park

Ridge.

and

Mrs.
are

Mary

G.
the

M.

Darlyne,

Raupp,

maternal

O

are Gera

children in the family

1.

Des

Mr.

é

Plaine:
—

grandparents.

DEERFIELD

VILLAGE OF
LAKE

COOK

AND

COUNTIES,

Election April
ALL

ILLINOIS

18, 1961

PRECINCTS

CAUCUS SLATE 1961
For Village
DAVID

President

C. WHITNEY

For Village Clerk

lehem church will hold an election
day bake sale Tuesday.
The sale will be held at the former town hall which is located cn
the church property at 602 Deerfield Rd. The baked goods, includ-

ing homemade

are

family

the

in

April

Other

Jr., 6, and Daniel, 4. Mr. and
Mrs. William Eckenroth, Chicago,

eli-

Hold Election Day
Bake Sale At Church
Women’s

Forest

at Lake

born

was

hospital.

.T.O.

Specimen Ballot

gible to hike the twenty mile Blackhawk Trail along the Rock River
will begin their hike.
They will stop at Lowden Historical Park to have lunch near the
famed
Lorado
Taft
Blackhawk
monument. At the end of the hike
the Scouts will be driven back to
the state park to spend the night
with the rest of their troop. All the
scouts will return on Sunday.
The Cubs for whom Mike Ganger
serves as den chief were visitors
at the meeting.
Three
new
‘Tenderfoot
Scouts
have been admitted to the troop;
Pete Johnson, Richard Mosse, and
Dick Hanson.

The

Ave.,

Central

children

Mrs.

Scouts

who

are

Liebler,

grandmother
Maternal
Rinck, who lives at the

Pa,
York,
is Mrs. R.

will drive to White Pines Forest
state park, near Oregon, and camp
there for the night. On Saturday

morning

and

Mr.

William

A.

Mrs.

10, and Mary

grandparents

4. Paternal

Beth,

hospital.

At the Tuesday meeting of Boy
Scout troop 52 plans were made for
their Blackhawk
hike and campout.

Friday,

LIEB-

son of Mr. and Mrs. RayLER,
mond E. Liebler, 500 Indian Hill
1 at Lake
born April
Dr., was
Forest hospital. Other children in

is

Hike Over Famed
Blackhawk Trail

On

Roesch,

ANTHONY

WILLIAM

in the

RAMIREZ,

A.

Robert

Mrs.

and

son

ROESCH,

7; Donald, 5; and James, 4. Maternal grandparents are the Rev. and
Mrs. J. E. Jolly, Cuba, New York.
Paternal grandmother is Mrs. A.
Roesch, Buffalo, New York.

Thomas L. McRaith, Evanston. Paternal grandparents
are Mr. and
Mrs. Stephen Maday, Evanston.

Boy Scouts Plan

North Shore Mental Health association, will be held at the Winnetka Community
House, located
at 620 Lincoln Ave. in Winnetka.
“Adolescence In Suburbia” is the
theme of the meeting.
A panel discussion featuring a
minister, a pychiatrist, a psychol-

3

Maternal

of the four panelists for the day-long meeting.

to discuss the problems of teenagers in “Suburbia.”
The seminar, sponsored by the

Other

JOSEPH

1057 Kenton Ave., was born March
31 at Lake Forest hospital. Other
children in the family are Robert,

MARY
MAUREEN
MADAY,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd
F, Maday, 100 Forestway, was born

Deerfield Board memNielsen, and
Howard

Theodore Repsholdt. The other two board members from
Deerfield not shown in the picture are Mr. Kenneth C. Crowell
and Mrs. David C. Whitney. The Rev. Bletzer will serve as one

A
large
number
of Deerfield
residents plan to attend a day-long
conference in Winnetka next week

of Mr.

family is Ann, 2. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Charles
O’Donnell, Grenock, Scotland. Mr.
and Mrs. Andrew E. Savage, 1010
Hazel Ave., are the paternal grandparents.

Shown discussing the forthcoming seminar on “Adolescence in Suburbia” to be sponsored next week by the North
Shore Mental Health Association are
bers: the Rev. Russell Bletzer, Mrs.

grandparents.

T. Savage,
1030 Hazel Ave.,
born
April
3
at Highland

hospital,

Mrs. Alex Garza,
are the maternal

ents. Mr. and
Cotulla, Texas,
DANIEL

grandpar-

paternal

the

are

Texas,

els, 1401 Dartmouth Ln., was born
Mar. 12 at Evanston hospital. The

other

4

April

was born

Ave.,

is in

CATHERINE

B. PRICE

For Village Trustee
(Three

IRA

to

be

elected)

K. HEARN,

JR.

Robert

publicity.
have

vol-

unteered to do the selling.

JOHN

Barbara Isley Pledged
To Lawrence Sorority

JAMES

Miss Barbara Lynn Isely, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Isley,
Deerfield,
was
recently
initiated
into Psi chapter of Kappa Delta
social sorority, one of six national
panhellenic sororities on the campus of Lawrence college, Appleton,
Wis.
Miss Isley was appointed representative
to the student
government organization of the college.

A. S. LINDEMANN
E. MANDLER

(ieee

B

Pics

.

Village Clerk
Village of Deerfield,

Lake and Cook Counties, Illinois

‘

�FRE eRe
A RI
gs
Lo

ek On SAR

bn

cL

SLL or

OC

§

AMIN

CRT

EVES
PAE TRIED D: VERIM
Oo BENOyMET ae
UTD
cere ay aL

RENE Gee

ELA

=),

ee
Meee ee

Ae,

: Deerfield Residents To Get Use
_ Of Garbage Disposal Units Inside
Following State’s 0.K. Of Plant

Ue,atie

ca

Bie:

De
a NAT

ree
pt

‘

Has

evening,
be

first-run,

will
showing

of a color

film

on

care.

of

|

Sage of the ordinance in 1959 fol-

|

that the Deerfield sewerage treat-

_

ment

The

Deerfield

|

the

voters

gave

ap-

to a $525,000 referendum
spring of 1960 to enlarge

sewerage

treatment

facilities.

| This money was increased by a
_ $97,000 federal grant to $622,000.

_

Not under construction present-

| ly, but part of the general
of the sewerage
plant
be geted into the cost of

| is

a

pickup

station

| part of town
An

another

_

scheme

and
the

in

which

budplant

the

east

will be built

year.

Plans and ramifications for this

_ station are now being worked

|

The

addition

to

the

on.

treatment

| plant will bring the capacity of
| the operation to a village of 24,000

population which includes the normal
amount
| dustry.
:

Manager

_
_
_
_
|

of

business

Stilphen

and

has

said

inthat

the plant is capable of handling
Deerfield’s ultimate growth which
is expected by planners to reach
the 24,000 population figure.
The plant was inspected by state

| Officials and action was taken to
_ lift the

ban

on new

| divisions.

mains

to sub-

__
The state said that even though
_ the plant isn’t completed yet, it felt

| assured

that

the

facilities

be
in operation
| sub-divider could

would

by the time a
hook up to the

_ system and increase the load.
_

Manager

Stilphen noted that the

lifting of
_ additional
_ within

the ban
house_

may lead to
construction

the Deerfield

area. He

| that now

that sub-dividers

_ that

situation

the

_ solved, they
_ to construct

|

has

been

will be more
homes in the

Construction

had

been

said

know

re-

ready
area.

down

_ from last year within the village,
he said.
_
The site of the treatment plant,
| located in the southwest part of
| Deerfield, will be landscaped once

| construction has been completed.
| There are no sizeable odors which
issue

from

the

plant

to

_ field REVIEW.

|
After being chewed upon first
entering the plant, the sewerage

| goes into a series of settling wells
| where the sediment falls to the
| bottom. The water is taken off
| the top and the sewerage taken
| out of the bottom and shipped to
a digester where it is heated in
large vats before being put out to

- dry.

While

age

heated,

the

sewer-

is acted upon by various bac-

| teria
and

_

being

so that
smells

food

stuffs

dissolved

disappear.

The water is purified in a pro-

cess

where

the

water

is

solids

which

are

in the settling tanks.

not

removed

_ Once the water is purified, it
it sent into the West Fork of the
pee Page

H

4—D

12

,

CLANGARST R
NCW

ney

ate RON EUSsya TR.Beat
mE ke!
sah CERIO
:
z
i

in

the

8

p.m.

at

first-

and

sound

World

Flower

the

area,

was

featured

at the

Garden

show

and

including

at

Thomas F. Kehr, seaman apprentice, USN, son of Mrs. Wallace D.
Kehr of 901 Sunset
Ct., serving
aboard the attack cargo ship USS
Merrick
operating
out
of
Long
Beach, Calif.

McCormick
Place.
Preceding the program the usual
PTA business meeting will be held,
Election of officers will also take
place.
Nominations
will
be
accepted
from the floor.

Plans Finalized For Bicycle Safety

Inspection At Deerfield Grade Schools
Deerfield’s Safety council, assisted by Lt. George Hall of
the

police

department,

the

Boy

Scouts

and

the

Jaycees,

conduct a bicycle safety inspection and registration
April 22, from

9 a.m. to noon.

The inspection and registration
will be conducted at grade schools
in districts 109 and
110 and
at
Holy Cross school.
Plans for the event were formalized at the April 3 meeting of the
Safety council.
Thomas
Wolf,
Safety
council
chairman,
has appointed
Howard
Grossenheider
as
coordinator
of
the bicycle safety program, assisted by Brewster Freifeld, Mrs. Elmer F. Anderson and Mrs. L. R.
Inglis, comprising the five-member
Deerfield Safety council.

to

will

Saturday,

The council has called attention
the following safety rules for

bicycles
issued by the
Deerfield
Police department.
1. Observe all traffic regulations,
red
and
green
lights,
one
way
streets, and stop signs.
2. Keep to the right and ride in
a single file. Keep a safe distance
behind all vehicles.
3. Have white light on front and
danger
signal
on rear for night
riding. Wear white or light-colored
clothing at night.
4. Always ride at a safe speed.
5. Give pedestrians the right of
way. Children under 10 years of
age are to ride on the sidewalk.
6. Look out for cars pulling out
into traffic and don’t ride out from
behind parked vehicles. Keep sharp

Cornell, Shodron
Place First In

lookout
doors.

for sudden

opening

of auto

7. Never hitch on other vehicles,
stunt or race in traffic. Never ride
two on a bicycle.
8. Carry
no packages
that obstruct vision or prevent control of
cycle.
9. Be sure that your brakes are
operating efficiently and keep your
bicycle in perfect running condition.
10. Slow down at all street intersections and look to right and left
before crossing. Walk your bicycle
across all intersections in the business district.
11. Always use proper hand signals
for
turning
and_
stopping.

Park

your

bicycle

in a safe

place.

12.

Ride in a straight line. Do
not weave in or out of traffic or
swerve from side to side.

Completes Course
James W. Parker, 2085 N. Robin
Wood
Rd., received
a certificate
for completing an eight-week, University of Illinois class in “Grievance Handling and Steward Training”
March
20 at the last class
meeting.
Parker
is a member
of Local
1441, International Brotherhood of
Electrical
Workers.
The
classes
were sponsored by the IBEW and
conducted
on
eight
consecutive
Monday evenings in Maywood
by
the U. of I. Institute of Labor and
Industrial Relations
and Division
of University Extension.

Cub Scout Eugene Thrasher sends his coupon to be sure
he gets a flowering crab tree to plant in honor of his mother,
Mrs.

Glen

Thrasher,

at

the

conservation

council.

watches as Mrs.
aids Eugene.

Mrs.

Louella

Thrasher’s

Gallo

Mrs. Thompson Aids
Direction Of Show
For Winnetka

Club

The memorable
music
and the
lighter side of the great events of
the 1940’s will be brought back to
life
tomorrow
evening
Friday,
April 14 when the Junior Auxiliary
of the
Winnetka
Woman’s
club
presents its annual talent show.
The
curtain
will
ring
up
on,
“The
Unforgettable
’Forties’,
at
8:15 p.m. at the Winnetka Woman’s
club,
485
Maple.
The
show
is
being directed by Mrs. Victor A.
Walter, Jr. of Northbrook with the
assistance
of
Mrs.
James.
H.
Thompson
of
Deerfield.
Mrs.
Thompson is also a member of the
Deerfield
Stagers.
The ten skits, ranging in subject
matter from the comic aspects of
the draft and rationing to the first
days of TV wrestling, will be interspersed with music by the band
and chorus. The audience will be
able to visit with members of the
cast during a refreshment period
at intermission time. Tickets will
be available at the door.

Custom Contest

Railroad

station

daughter,

of the

on

the first prize
the community

Deerfield

Glynis,

Post

2,

Office

Deerfield Woman Aids
Benefit Announcement
Mrs. Edgar Crilly, president two
years ago, active on the board and
a member of the advisory committee,
participated
in the
Service
Club
of Chicago’s
announcement
of a July benefit.
The
Service
Club
announced
March 21 that they will sponsor a
benefit July 3 of “Take Me Along,”
starring
William
Bendix
at the
Melody Top theater, Hillside.

Schultz Selected
To Attend Course
For

Executives

James B. Schultz, 533 Longfellow St., has been selected by IIlinois Bell Telephone company to attend the Northwestern university
program
for Bell system
executives.
Schultz,
a graduate
of
Wesleyan university joined

Illinois
Illinois

Bell in 1946 as a traffic supervisor
in Alton. He was promoted to assistant district traffic manager in
Peoria in 1948, and later served
Danville, Joliet and Champaign
the same capacity.

Bud Cornell and Tom
Shodron
were first place winners in their
respective groups of a custom car
model
contest
held
by
the
Toy
Castle of Deerfield.
Cornell won the age 11 and under classification and Shodron won
the 12 and over age group.
Judges for the contest were village
president
Joseph
Koss
and
president of the Deerfield Savings
and Loan association, Howard Wolf.
Placing in the 11 and under contest
were:
Dick
Marks,
second:
Mike
Brown,
third;
J.
Kroegel,
fourth; and Bud Cornell, fifth.
Placing in the 12 and over contest were: Jim Murtfeldt, second:
Dick Smith,
third; Mark
Hardin,
fourth and Len Kraske, fifth.
North Branch of the Chicago river
and empties
into the Mississippi
river eventually.
After
a
drying
process,
the
treated sewerage
is used
as fertilizer.

Milwaukee

April 28, Arbor Day. Mrs. Thrasher was
winner in the green contest, sponsored by

in
in

Joins Department
In 1951,
engineering
cago where

he joined
the traffic
department
in
Chihe served until 1953.

After assignments in Hammond
and Joliet, he was appointed district traffic manager in Waukegan.

Since

then,

he

has

served

as

di-

vision supervisor of the company’s
North Shore Division where he is
currently assigned.
Was

Navy

Commander

Following graduation from IIlinois Wesleyan, he was in the Navy
as a patrol plane commander
in

the South

Pacific

theater

of oper-

ations.

sprayed

into the air and let sink into layers
| of rock where bacteria work on
any

a

bother

_ neighboring houses, he said.
|
Ona
trip to the treatment plant,
_ Manager
Stilphen explained
the
_ operation of the unit to the Deer-

|

a

lawn

that

- proval
- in the

RE. mel CAEN

Shown
with
the
film
will be
exhibits from the garden clubs and

nurseries

Aboard Ship

Thursday,

there

a display

_

e

Film

time

Garbage disposal units have not
been allowed within the village

to

TSR
Oe

gym

Stilphen.

insufficient

es

LaF staat

school

Hf
_

was

aii

Maplewood

|

plant

Ae
aaa

First-Run

This

e
With the State Sanitary Water board’s lifting of a 19_ month long ban on sewer extensions in the village of Deerfield,
| the ordinance on use of garbage disposal units in homes is ex.
_ pected to be repealed, according to village manager, Norris

ee=) handle village needs.
However,
with the expenditure
of $622,000 the treatment plant,
| which is currently nearing com_ pletion, is expected to meet Deer_ field’s need for waste disposal indefinitely.

a,

Tonight At School

sis

_ lowing the state edict which said

a

i Mapleood Sahieal

al.

_ sanitary sewer district since pas-

reVa

ibe

SS

a seven day cruise through
Mr.

and

pictured
recent

Mrs.

on

cruise.

Eugene

th, sailing from Miami

the West

Bergmark,

the swimming

pool

1327

deck

Indies and
Carlisle

Nassau
Pl.

of the ship

They

before

on

are
are

its

Schultz is active in
church
activities,
League.

Boy Scouts,
and
Little

He and Mrs. Schultz are the parents of three
and
Robert,
garet.

sons: James, William
and
daughter,
Mar-

Thursday, April 13, 1961

|

�DEERFIELD BOYS’ BASEBALL

Weatherman’s Curve Postpones Action
In Intermediate, Major League Tryouts
The weatherman threw a low curve in the form of a snow
storm last Sunday, causing the Deerfield Boys Baseball association to postpone the second day of intermediate and major
league tryouts as well as the first tryout session for the girls

softball league.

Minor

The

for Sunday

League

minor

aft-

Tryouts

league

ball

players

just

south

With over 55 teams of both boys |
and girls playing in the D, B. B. A.
program alone, besides those that

use

the

through

of the

ball

diamond

the

Park

Recreation

District,

grounds are put
busy throughout

Appears

facilities
program

all available

to use and kept
the summer.

In Jazz

Ballet At College
Dorinda Bolton, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. George W. Bolton, 1405
Valley Rd., was one of three women who appeared in ‘Fancy Free,”
a jazz ballet which was presented
recently
at
Denison
university,
Granville, 0., in conjunction with
an opera workshop program.
Miss Bolton is a junior at the
school.

An old plantation scene bathed in moonlight is the romantic setting for “Spring Fever,”
the barbershop harmony show to be presented by the Deerfield-Melodeer Chapter of Sweet
Adelines, Inc. Saturday, April 29 at 8:30 p.m. A scale model of the stage of the Highland

Park High School, where the show will be held, is shown
staging

and

scenery

chairman,

boys

will meet

at 9 a.m., the bal-

at

Each

1

notified

p.m.

by

card

boy

or

will

phone

to do so.
Colt League

be

call |

“Spring

play

Forming

Adeline

Colt

+

baseball

organized

North

in

the

Earl

Sundberg,

president

be made

of the

reports
league

up of 16 teams

section’s

season

with two

play

Mrs. Earl McGrath shows the village treasurer’s records
to village treasurer and collector for government day, Susan
Dexter, and superintendent of public works, Charles David,
both freshmen at Deerfield High School.

from
field
field

blanks

are

will

Ridge,

Dr.;

Ben

Highland

Johnson,

712

La

Park;

Warwick

and

J.

April

13,

be

brief

|
a

Letter

Varsity letters awarded for winters sports
at Shattuck
School, —

Faribault,

Minn.,

include

15

for

the Editor:

that

will

have

innumerable

spaced
and
dug
by two
skillful
young men operating a wicked-looking tool that must have a capacity
of several hundred man-power and
the shrubs were dumped at convenient locations.
The final and perhaps crucial act
of cooperation on the part of vil-

Checking
Hall from

ment

over

police

left, are: Jim

day; Sherry

fire chief for today.

department
Patterson,

records

with

Lt. George

police chief during

Rubin, the village clerk; and

Steve

govern-

Kerns,

lage

officials

was

a fine

boost

—

basketball, 16 for wrestling, 14 for eh
hockey, and 12 for swimming.
Ke
Among

those

receiving

letters

wasgwere: Jim Street, son of Mr.
and Mrs. J. M. Street, Woodland
Lane, Deerfield, for swimming.

Marchant

Contract

An Army Signal Corps contract
for $64,880 has been awarded to 4
Kleinschmidt Division, of SmithCorona Marchant, Lake-Cook Rd., —
Deerfield, for an electronic printer

system.

The

award

was

made

by

the Fort Monmouth Procurement
Office, U.S. Army Signal Supply

|
—

Agency.

Broadview

Robert

a

er, 370 Barberry, are other
land Park Sweet Adelines.

,and Mrs.

High-

ee
—

q
—

will be withheld if requested

and

G.

Rd.

1961

To

should

right of way was graded, holes were

and a little league size
at the new recreation

- Thursday,

Letters

1050

to participate with the Deerfield
park district in the purchase
of
backstops for a full-size bascball

Gets Swim

of North-

dress of the writer, whose name

benefits for the area.
I think we are unanimous in our
appreciation of the cooperation and
efficient
assistance
we
received
from Mr. Stilphen and the other
village officials who made the project possible.
_ Several days before the shrubs
were
to be
planted,
the
village

the DEERFIELD REVIEW.
The D. B, B. A. expects this year

diamond
diamond

stitute the opinions of the paper.

hedge

More
information
about
the
Pony
and Prep League
activities
will appear in next weeks edition

of

by the

have less than 300 words. They
should contain the name andad-

Opinions expressed in these
columns do not necessarily con-

we
spent
planting
shrubs
along
Chestnut St. on April 8.
The chances are good we'll see
the shrubs grow into a beautiful

available

Buda,

Melodys.”

Ave and Telegraph Rd. will be
ambly rewarded for the few hours

Richard Baldrini at the Deerhigh
school,
Jewett
Park
house,
Earl
Sundberg,
925

Hiawatha

“The

Those of us who live near the
railroad tracks between Greenwood

meet
the
winner
of the
South
section for the league championship at the end of the season in
August,
Because the association was not
able to obtain lists of boys attending high
schools
for mailing of
applications, boys in the age group
13. through 18 who are eligible for
play in the Pony, Colt and Prep
Leagues may still register.

Application

photograph

DEERFIELD FORUM

that
will

sections
of 8 teams
each.
Deerfield’s team
will play 21
games
against the North section of the
| North Suburban League.
;
This will pit Deerfield’s players
against teams from McHenry, Waukegan,
North
Chicago,
Highland
Park,
Wheeling,
Glenview
and
Northbrook.
The
winner
of the

North

quartet,

trict Medalists, will.also be on the
program.
Mrs. Henry
Sonderman,
650

Suburban

League.

Deerfield colt league,
the North
Suburban

also will feature

A men’s quartet from the County
Line Chapter of the Society for the
Preservation
and
Encouragement
of Barber Shop Quartet Singing in
America,
Inc.—‘‘The
Fire-House
Four,” who were 1959 Illinois Dis-

the natioinally orLeague,
Inc., will

inter-city

newly

Fever”

the
1951
Sweet
Adeline
International
Quartet
Champions,
‘The
Quarternotes,”
who
are
now
renowned for their hilarious comedy
renditions
and
costuming.
Also
appearing will be another Sweet

A
new
addition
to
the
Boys
Baseball association program this
year is the colt league for boys |
15 and 16 years old. This league,

a member of
ganized
Colt

in the above

J. McDonough of Deerfield to (left to right): show

The
Deerfield-Melodeer
chorus
will sing several songs in four-part
harmony
under
the
direction
of
Mrs. Lee Thorsen of Rockford, who
travels
the 90 miles from
there
every Tuesday
evening
to direct
rehearsals at the Deerfield American Legion Hall.

as to the time he is to report.)
There will be a registration table
set up at the field both morning
and afternoon so that any 8 or 9
year old who still wants to play,
but who has not sent in a registration sheet, will have the oppor-

tunity

Francis

chairman Mrs. Kenneth R. Bodle and publicity chairman Mrs. William Bordwell
brook, and program chairman, Mrs. Billy Prag, 1417 Eastwood, Highland Park

will
meet
for tryouts
Saturday,
April
15
at Deerfield
Grammar
school.
Approximately
one-half
of the
ance

Mrs.

é.

to

the morale of the insecure gardeners who did the planting.
Fire Chief Jan DeJong and some

of the volunteer firemen spent several tedious hours giving the shrubs
a professional soaking that chouye
make them flourish.
With so much assistance from so
many people, Nature, one would

think,

could

do

no

less

that

|

be |

equally cooperative.
Sincerely
Mrs. Otto Almasy

a
_

To the Editor:

eet

Any

thinking

and

fair

person

whether

Democrat

minded
or

|

Re-

|

publican could only be outraged by

|

pea

draft is scheduled
ernoon, April 23.

Road,

the insidious, small-minded
and
completely
unwarranted
attacks
levelled against our township of-

|

ficials

—

during

the

campaign.
The question of
and the deliberate

recent

gi

All boys who were tried out last
Saturday, as well as all boys who
tryout next Saturday, are to report
again on Sunday afternoon, April
16 at Jewett Park at 1:15 p.m.
At that time, those players who
have been definitely assigned to
the
intermediate
league
will be
told
so
and
will
turn
in their
tryout shirts. Further tryouts for
the major league will continue on
Sunday
afternoon,
April
16 and
Saturday
April 22, weather
permitting. The major league player

park on Wilmot
of Greenwood.

ae

Those boys 10 to 12 years of
age, who were scheduled to try out
April 9 at 1:15 p.m.
have
been
rescheduled at 8:45 a.m. Saturday,
April 15 at
Jewett Park. The girls
tryouts have been rescheduled for
Sunday afternoon, April 16, 1 p.m.
at Wilmot field.

election

a
the brick yard ~
efforts to con- —

fuse newcomers to our village over —
the zoning of the brick yard property and to attempt to discredit Mr.
Berning is a deplorable example of
how ill-advised and misguided persons can do only irreparable harm
to our little community and those
who seek to serve.
Mrs. W. D. Sherman Jr.
111

Plumtree

Rd.

Page H 5—D

_
—
E
|
Ne

13

�Now

FREE
SUNDAY PAPER

Army

Leopardi,
wood,

SUNRAY
Skokie

Michael

23

N.

Leopardi,

and Mrs, Anthony
Prairie

recently

Ave.,

arrived

High-

in Germany

and is now a member of the 50th
Infantry. A rifleman in the infantry’s Company D in Wildflecken,
Leopardi entered the Army in September 1960 and received basic

with purchase of 10
gallons of gas or more.

D-X

Pvt.

22, son of Mr.

8 A.M. — 3 P.M.

3088

Pack 134’s Pinewood Derby

In Germany

training

He

Highway

at Fort

Riley,

is a 1956

land Park

High

Kan.

graduate

of High-

School.

SPORTSWEAR
Don't envy H-I'S... wear them

Thank You!
Many thanks to all of
the citizens of Deerfield

Township

for your sup-

port in the recent election.

| shall continue to attempt to merit the vote

of confidence

that you
Above,

have given to me.

lich

Deerfield Township
Assessor

Look

this

Slacks!

way

this Spring

. ...

sliver-slim

in

No matter what you want to buy
or sell you'll find the Want-Ad section your best market place.

ignore

a belt (new

hold-up).

Front is pleatless; bottoms are cuffless.

collection

of smart

Spring

hidden

colors.

side-tabs

for

winning

their parents attended the annual
Pinewood Derby, David Jacobson
won first with the fastest car, and
second

Pack

134’s

Richard
first

Pinewood

Derby,

and

Tom

Hamilton

receives

first

place

man.

and

third

spots

Sangerman
Following

place

for

Tom

the

went

and

Cary

to

Zig

Hamilton’s

best

made

Some

50

The

Cubs

of Pack

Aroma

Tells

134

and

You

evening.

It’s

Baked

In

Our

Kitchen’

WEEK- END
H*!*S

Piper

handle

the

In a great

$4.95

BUTTERSCOTCH
PECAN

Ph

pes
NASTA

Chocolate
CAKE

Reg. 90c

79%

COFFEE CAKE
Reg. 90c

SOUR DOUGH
FRENCH BREAD
PHONE

Open

THE

ORDERS

Thursdays

WILL

BE

YE TL. COMP :

@ 595 CENTRAL AVE

‘til

BAUM’S

QUICKLY DELIVERED

9 . . . Monday

Evenings

7 to 9

° ID 2-5300

« HIGHLAND

Bakery

Delights Are Available ONLY

in Our Own

Shop

BAUM S PASTRY SHOP

PARK
=.

Page

H

6—D

14

car

were David Johnston, second and
Michael Wrenn, third.
Ralph Wooster, District Commis-

for designing the best looking
car in the derby.
Below
is
action at the annual Pinewood sioner, and John Cole, Scoutmaster
Derby of pack 134, held “March of Scout Troop 134 conducted the
29 at the West Ridge School. annual Pack inspection during the

“Where

Smooth and snug, they’‘re tailored to set low on the

hips and

David Jacobson

receives the first place trophy
from Cubmaster Charles Gram-

HARRY EARHART

61
SLACKS

Cub

Thursday,

April

13,

1961

�KEEPING
TIME

You'll Find It

with paul leeds

at

If you’re
will be

or

— SHERONY’S

miss

the

a High School parent
cne next year don’t

PTA

tonite at
PRICE,
NEUMAN
chairman
discussion

“At

Random”

panef

the High School. BILL
student
chairman
and
“RED”
FELL,
adult
will lead a round-table
by members of the Stu-

dent Activities Committee on important
teen-age
problems.
This

GRASS SEED SPECIAL
MERION BLUE GRASS $1 69

Shore

Group

Photo

by

Edith

Grass

remedial

school

reading

here,

work

Maureen

at

leaves

the

Immaculate

Saturday

for

and from there to the Fiji Islands enroute
near Wellington, New Zealand.
“There may be different languages
spoken,
different
clothing
worn, different customs to be observed
in daily living—but
children are the same the world over,”
says Miss Keegan.
She
found
the
young
second
graders at Immaculate Conception
school very much
like the mischevious
boys
and
girls in New
Zealand and England. While she
was
“remedying”
their
reading,
they
were
teaching her how
to
speak the ‘American
Slanguage”
and laughing at her English-Irish
accent.
Gives

“Maybe
ested

in

Some

Travel

Tips

people

would

be

inter-

how

we

girls

knowing

from New Zealand figured out how
to travel as cheaply
and yet packed our

full

with

the

as_ possible
days to the

maximum

of

rich

travel experiences,” she said.
Leaving New Zealand, Maureen
went
directly
to
Ireland
where
she met almost all of her 57 first
cousins, then traveled on to London, and took a job teaching in
‘junior’ school in Reading, Berk-

shire

County.

“First, traveling light was of utmost importance,
We
found that
blouses and skirts were best; the
dacron blouses needed no ironing
and always looked fresh.

“We

stayed in youth hostels, but

Francisco,

“home”

which

is

Caucus

candidates

were

some

250

bothered

high

school

Large

same

time

and

Walter
107,

only

in the

election

at

There
was
no
contest
on the
high
school
ballot.
Mrs.
James
Tibbetts
polled
918;
Harry
W.

Knoll 904. With 41 scattered writeins and 22 spoiled ballots, the high
vote

totalled

Seventeen

of

the

pated

bike from

number

of

place

people

to place,
that

way.

Instead we used cheapest
class
public
transportation
— buses
or
trams,
boats.”

trains
and
even
river
Another
New
Zealand

teacher was her travel companion.
Maureen spent Christmases in
Ireland and one Easter holiday in
Rome.
“These
were
two
things
I had wanted to do all my life,”
she
said.
“There
are
no
words
to describe
the
thrill
of either
one!”’
Miss
Keegan
is
returning
to
Wellington
in
time
to
see
her
brother ordained as a priest, and
to spend the ‘‘Winter’” (which has

already

set

younger

seminary

in

there)

with

her

brother

who

enters

the

for

training

in

the

Spring (our Fall.)
She finds the New Zealand ‘‘welfare state’ a great boon for young
people.
“Because
New
Zealand
needs so many teachers, our education is completely financed by
the state,” she said. Parents receive
payments
for
each
child
(higher than in England); old folks

Thursday,

April

13, 1961

in

the

Mavericks

Darwin

Dist.

Mrs.

Rummel

Lois

got

109

and

245

240

and

Dist.

cast.

108,

Louis

190

ballots

Kahnweiler

well

are

given

father.

cared

the

only

for,

and

subsidies

farmers,

such

as

as
4

near

NOW $3.50.

low

BUSHEL

as

$59.95

BURNER

EVER

CART

aie

WHEELS

engage-

*

2:

HERO

For Lawn and: Garden Use '

Highwood

Tuesday

*

recaptured
ketball

Little

the

title

to DON

SKRIN-

Guys

who

international

bas-

last

Saturday

nite

Rico.

|

*

Talking

*

*

about

:

Basketball—The

members
of the Fell sponsored
Little Guys team and the Prep
League champs who won in their
respective classes were
honored
at a banquet last nite at Phil
Johnsons

restaurant.

*
*
*
Hey Mom!—Don’t bother to cook
this Sunday, They'll all love the
old-fashioned smorgasbord at the

Moose Home on Green Bay. RUTH
CARDINA
and
her
committee
have planned quite a spread and
the public is invited. From 3 to 6.
*
*
*
Still on display in Leeds Sheridan
Road
window.
2 beautiful
by

one

Park’s
famous
VALLEZ. Worth
to

of

MHishland

artists
— JERRY
coming up town,

enjoy.
Some

*

of Leeds

are worn

by

*
Jewelers best a

hundreds

of won

on the North Shore who had us)
re-style and re-mount their older.
jewelry in new modern
settings.
The cost is surprisingly low.

LEEDS JEWELERS

HARDWARE
Rd.,

Res-

north-

*

*

*
WE of

Bay

next

*

Highwood

Extra: Large Size

We Carry Everything

Hills

minutes

Half-Day

paintings

BLOOMING

ROSE BUSHES -

Green

the

with a thrilling 4 point victory over

GARDEN AND..LEAF RAKES — LAWN
ROLLERS — GARDEN AND FLOWER, .
SEEDS — FENCE— ALL KINDS . ©
OF TOOLS

314

of

It’s not too early! To select and
layaway that important graduation
gift now while the choice is greatest at Leeds. This weeks’ Keeping
Time Specials include a selection
of shock-proof 17 jewel watches
for him or her at a low $24.50 including taxes. And—it’s engraved
free when bought at Leeds.

ARS’

Rubbish and Leaf Burner .........-.- ‘$18.95

op-

her

west
nite.

Vernon

just a few

*

ROTARY MOWERS (4 cycle)...

184,

were

one

extended

Congratulations

WHEELBARROWS
LEAF SWEEPERS as low as ........ $29.95

Forty-seven total votes were cast
in Dist. 110: 44 for Warren Jackman,
42 for Walter
Hardy,
and
44 for Kenneth
Griffiths.
Three

are

Lots!

GARDEN TOOLS.

Harry Lansman 181, and Eli Olech,
163. All were elected.

write-in votes
position.

SPECIAL!

Be in 5 Bag

FT
Reg $4.50

were

got

*

of

an

beautiful

Puerto

votes respectively, but lost to caucus
candidates
Allen
Granfield,
Paul Greenfield and Albert Dawe.
Only about 230 of the voters cast
a high
school
ballot.
Slightly
more
than
100
votes
were cast in uncontested Dist. 111.
Aldo
Croveiti
of Highwood
led
with 104 votes, followed by Mrs.
Harold
Bluhm’s
102 and Donald
Klein’s 98.

In

Price Must

HOSE

election.

Mueller

*

*

with

taurant

Call or Ask for Information!

as the choice of a caucus held just
prior to the election there. Keno

mum

didn’t

Reduced

write-ins
were
in
Bannockburn
precinct for Robert Keno, a writein candidate for elementary Dist.
106.
Keno
won,
63 to 53, over
David Allen, who was on the ballot

since one does not meet the maxi-

we

&gt; BAGS

Assorted
Delivered

school

is a resident
of unincorporated
Delmar Woods
subdivision,
More
than
800 voters
partici-

to

ment close to home. His trio opens

967.

high

*

friends

Canada

FERTILIZERS

GARDEN

and

North Shore’s favorite singers and
pianists will be happy to know that
IKE COLE winds up a 30 week
tour of the U.S.A., Mexico, and

e VERTAGANIC
e MILORGANITE
e VERTAGREEN
@ LIME
@ ORGANIC FERTILIZER
PLUS MANY OTHERS...
SAVE!
SAVE!

place.

Saturday

*

Bale

For

last

SAVINGS!

at the

the

*

Quote: “There are two ways of
being rich. One is to have all you
want, the other is to be satisfied
with what you have.”

elected

Mrs,

aisle’

*

PEAT MOSS

to vote

board

the

Many

Winners were the three caucus
candidates: L. M. Scott 446, Robert

in

for SCOTT’S

*

year.

JOAN MARIE WINTERS and TOM
BURROWS who will be saying “I
Do” this Saturday.

on SCOTT'S Fertiziler and Seed
SCOTT'S Halts and Turf and
Seed Builder.

Ask

to all school board vacancies
in
Highland
Park,
Highwood
and
Deerfield Saturday; but Arthur S.
Hansen Jr.’s campaign claim—that
it takes a contest to get the vote
out—was substantiated.
Hansen polled 350 votes in the
District
107
election,
but
lost.

S. Berger
414, and
Neisser 481.
Of the 703 voters

(Bulk)

SAVE $5.00

Ballot Contests
increase School
Election Turnout

school

Her travel to almost every country in Europe was sandwiched in
during school holidays.

Save

Conception

San

Mixture

of the

Our warmest good wishes to the
former
DIANE
GOLDMAN
and
PHIL
SIBR who “walked down

res. 9749 Now $3.95

two years in a British-European teach-and-travel tour, tells
her cousin, Mrs. Patrick Burke, Burton PI. After several weeks

of

*

Quality
5-LB. SUN OR SHADE MIX
With 50% Top Blue

Thompson

programs

PTA

cksesioea

North

“Here’s my next place to visit,” Maureen Keegan, 27year-old New Zealand elementary teacher who has spent

one of the most interest-

ing

Digit

Best

Lb.

is always

_

ID 2-2041

491 Central Ave., Highland Park
Page H 7—D

15

�eran
oy COP

AR RE RUT
Ge CaN ga De Nom ats Oi)
:
I; Rea yey ¢
,

a

Ars. P iolter's Art
n Exhibit Now
pi P tutte

hi

i - Stotter,

exhibiting

EC School

Guild

760

the

A

David

W.)

is currently

Lincolnwood

in Lincolnwood,

the Art

of

at

(Mrs.

Marion,

Crash

Appreciation

|besponsored by the PTA.

a part

as

program

a Mrs. Stotter interprets and ex| presses herself in both abstract
and realistic techniques in paint| ing, She has exhibited at Theobold

| Galleries,

Chicago

Women’s

Aid,

gave

734

6 RaSERREef
:
v

ss

im

i

*

cme
mie
MSeeris 11
Age .
;

rs

x

a

ticket

Central

a crash

Park
to

police

Alice

Ave.

squad

Batteau

of

after

witnessing

Ave.

and

at Central

Green

Old

High

a
WAS1 UM eat
antig
iy

bi

es
#

aAe cuNg

oe

;

rae

RN
tt Pa
; WOU
t
i

e
4

Pye
aNrea BaanBRET coreLege
oe oneet Ft AU
,
i
ae
;
¥

Ci

3

a

OR en

abana eyR

1 he

Chee oe TRU
eh
zy /

ay

¥

Art

Fair

and

| Director

April

19

at 1:15

George

Johnson,

New

Tickets

may

be

ways

obtained

oes eae

Hours

Mrs. Marjorie Ruud, newly-appointed executive director of the

from

1

from

9:30

p.m.

and

means chairman and her co-chairman
Mrs.
Peter
Fabbri
are
in
charge of the event.

School.

Bah

Suburban Fine Arts Center, 654
Deerfied Rd., will be on duty at
the Center Mondays. and Tuesdays

Announces

Art Center

Oak
Terrace
School
PTA
will
be hosts to ‘Luncheon Is Served,”

Mrs.

of Milwaukee.

Orchard

E

in the schoo! auditorium. This is
a special luncheon featuring unusual foods,

lowed them in a left turn; collided
with the oncoming car of Ralph

Trier

a

Wednesday,

Bay Rd. Monday evening.
According to the report, she folSchlieve

eae
PR Cede
Pee TA

‘Luncheon Is Served’
At Oak Terrace PTA

on Central
Highland

aS

i

my :

from

to

4

Call
Mrs.

Johnson

at

“Beauty

ID

2-6532.

and the Beast”

The Oak Terrace School PTA
will also present the Cole-Marionettes,

in

Beast”

Thursday,

Oak

the

“Beauty

Terrace

and

April

p.m.,

and

Thursdays

a.m. to 12 noon.
for

Information

People
wishing
information
about classes, exhibitions and other
activities at the Center are advised

the

20 for the

children.

to call during those hours. Spring
quarter classes opened last week,

but

there

several

still

are

openings

classes.

pe

Parana

Ballot

ALL WARDS
CITY OF HIGHWOOD-LAKE COUNTY,

ILLINOIS

Election—Tuesday, April 18, 1961
EDGAR

C. BENSON
City Clerk

PEOPLES TICKET

CIVIC IMPROVEMENTS
PARTY

PARTY
- FOR

MAYOR

(Vote

JOHN

for

FOR MAYOR
(Vote for One)

One)

LEO

FRANTONIUS
FOR

CITY

(Vote

FOR

FOR

FOR

POLICE
(Vote

4

PETER A. CARANI
FOR

ALDERMAN

WARD

FULL

FILL
(Vote

SECOND

WARD

FOR

for

(Vote

for

FIRST WARD

WARD

FULL

TERM

One)

WARD

for One)

ALDERMAN
(Vote

FIRST WARD

for

One)

BERNARDI

WARD

FOR

One)

ALDERMAN
(Vote

THIRD

for

WARD

One)

RENO SIGNORIO

BRUGIONI
ALDERMAN
(Vote

FOR

One)

THIRD

for

P. MASTRANGELO

ANGELO

ALDERMAN

SECOND

(Vote

One)

STEVE MOCOGNI

One)

ALDERMAN SECOND
TO FILL VACANCY

VACANCY
for

MAGISTRATE
for

J. ANTONETTI

FRANCO

(Vote

FOR

ALDERMAN

MARIO

FOR ALDERMAN

JOHN

FOR

(Vote

SHELTON

FOR

TERM

One)

ORI

One)

MAESTRI

TO

POLICE
(Vote

NELLO

FOR ALDERMAN

JOHN

FOR

One)

for

for

LOLLI

MAGISTRATE

SECOND
(Vote

MARINO

JOSEPH

for

One)

TREASURER

(Vote

One)

JOSEPH W. McCLORY

CLERK

for

PIACENZA

TREASURER
for

CITY

(Vote

One)

LOUIS

(Vote

i.

MORDINI

CLERK

for

EDGAR C. BENSON
FOR

PAUL

FOURTH
for

WARD

FOR

One)

ARMONDO R. UGOLINI

ALDERMAN
(Vote

CHARLES

FOURTH
for

WARD

One)

H. ELSTROM
4/13/61—101

Page

H

8—D

16

Thursday, April 13, 1961

in

�Be

3

|

MONTGOMERY WARD

SAVE! HOME
IMPROVEMENT
NO MONEY

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HIGHLAND PARK — 1854 FIRST STREET

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fence

$149

INSTALLATION INCLUDES:
¢ Heavy 9 Ga. Fabric
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¢ Top Rails

e Expert Installation

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extra-strong

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locked together for greatest weather resistance, Beautifully embossed
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44

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HA striking combination of heavy-gauge
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styling. New vent cap prevents accumulation of heat under awning.
Your choice of 8 new baked-enamel

~ MAINTENANCE-FREE
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peel, crack or blister due to weather exposure. Dirt rinses off with a
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MATCHING VENT-STYLE
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a wide selection of

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WARDS REG. 44.95

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at a Guaranteed

Nearby Wards Catalog

Your Nearby

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DOWN—UP

For a Guaranteed

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PAY

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Price

Stores:

® Pre-hung,

Park Catalog Store:

pHonE
| Phone:
ID
2-8830
HOURS
Address: 1854
First St., Highland

‘round the

clock

Your Nearby

Deerfield Commons

Phone: WI

Address: 714 Waukegan

Park, III.

Catalog

Store:

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Rd., Deerfield, III.

SIZES

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© Built-in piano hinge
® All-aluminum screen
Inserts raise or lower instantly—never need to

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with pneumatic
door
closer, wind chain, colo-

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Sardware.

�Mostly for Women

Engagements

Helene Meyer,
Rev. Kettelhut
To Wed Apr. 15

Deerfield Woman’s Club
In Department Activities
Invites Members To Participate
Deerfield

The

club

Woman’s

has

invited

its

members

to

participate in the activities of the department of fine arts and
civic. The following meetings are scheduled:
Bridge
will
be
played
in tne
home of Mrs. Charles Lager, 1451
Northwoods Dr. today. Dessert will

be served at 12:45 p.m. Mrs. Albert
R.

Dawe,

reports

An advance look at the summer’s
styles is the treat in store for the
dozen women
from St. Gregory’s
Episcopal church who are prepar-

ing

to

be

models

show April 26
the traditional

the women
year.

in

the

which
spring

fashion

is a part of
party which

of the church give each

Mrs Norman
Shellman of Bannockburn will be the commentator.

St.

Agnes

Guild,

headed

by

Mrs.

Richard Fellows, will have charge
of the fashion
show, which
will
feature styles from Minna Hart of

Newcomers Group
To Hold

Luncheon

With Art Display
The April 19 luncheon of the
Deerfield Newcomers will be held
at the Charcoal House in Waukegan

at

12:45

crafts

p.m.

group

The

will

be

arts

in

and

charge

of

Highland Park.
The
models
will be Mesdames
Fellows, Frank Hanscom,
Ray
S.
Dau, Willis B. Conner, III, G. William Robinson, Ned Mitchell, Stephen Cornell, Leslie Green, John
D. Austin and James Street, and

the Misses

Susan

Shellman.
Mrs. Monte

assisted

by

Sanders,

Mrs.

The. annual
the

Garden

be

Thursday

at

the

water

color

graduate

stitute

of Fine

the

Chicago

Arts,

teaching

both

painting

groups

the past seven
Mrs. James

paintings.

of

In-

she has been

adult

and

in

children’s

the

years.
Carter,

area

chairman

for
of

the arts group, will work in watercolor to show another painter’s
medium.
Both
Mrs.
Girkin
and
Mrs.
Carter
will
describe
their
paintings
and
answer
questions
from the audience.

Club
work

members

will

join

doing

the

ceramic

painters

in

ex-

hibiting their work at this meeting.
Mrs.

Joseph

er president,
vitation

to

Deerfield,
shire and
the club.

Cadieux,

has
all

newcomers

Bannockburn,
Riverwoods

Transportation
Morris Milner, WI
she will provide
comers,
Reservations for
Page

H

Newcom-

extended

10—D

an

in-

in

the

Lincoln-

area

to

join

chairman,
Mrs.
5-2845, has said
rides for new-

18

the

affair

may

Babcock

chairman,

Deerfield

Woman’s club for the fund to benefit the Park Ridge school for girls
was successfully met through donations and card parties given by
the members.
“Springfield Highlights” will be
the subject
of the Round
Table
meeting Monday, April 17, in the
home
of
Mrs.
Norman
Erskine,
1525 Oakwood Pl. Dessert will be
served at 1 p.m. According to Mrs.
Elmer
F. Anderson, chairman
of
the club’s civic department, sponsoring the Round Table series, the
monthly get-to-gethers are planned
for the benefit of club members
who want to keep abreast of important
current
events
through
group participation.
The
72nd
Illinois General
Assembly now in session in Springfield
will
be
discussed
at this
meeting. Guests are invited. Members are asked to call Mrs. Erskine
WI 5-2257 or Mrs. Anderson WI 53521.

The

garden

department

will

meet Tuesday, April 18, at 1 p.m.
in the home of Mrs. Robert C. David, 932 Rosemary Terr.
Dessert
will be served before the group
goes on a tour of the Kolbeck Tulip farm on Route 22. Please make

reservations with Mrs. David,
5-0552. Guests are invited.

WI

April

fresh

vegetables

chapeau
flowers—or

emphasis

on

home will meet Thursday, April 20,
at 1 p.m. at the residence of Mrs.
Howard
Board,
1306
Warrington
Rd. Please call her for reservations, WI 5-3038.
Members and guests are looking
forward to attending the Deerfield
Woman’s club annual benefit dinner dance this Saturday night, April 15th, at the Vernon Hills Country club.

McDonald
of Adult

bedecked

Joliet

Township

junior

college,

is Millinery
high

made

through

Mrs.

John

The
board
will
discuss
for a large general meeting
held in the near future.

The

membership

plans
to be

committee,

WI

Han-

©

call
or

Mrs.
Mrs.

Anderson
Slater: at

5-2659.

Arden Shore Group
To Discuuss Bazaar

and

5-3918

presi-

that all board

Those planning to attend

are asked to
at WI
5-3521

In-

Mrs. Robert O. Clark of Brierhill Rd. will be the fashion commentator. Prizes will be awarded
for originality,
beauty
and
style
of
the
millinery
creations
and
there will be a special guest prize.

be

Republican club will meet at 8
p.m. April 19 at the home of the
membership
chairman,
Mrs.
George O: Slater, 1651 Pear Tree
Rd.

members.

There will be a style show of the
hats trimmed with garden material
by club members and their guests.
Mrs. Arthur F. Vyse, Jr. of Juneberry Lane will be in charge of
arrangements.

rahan, 1125 Oxford Rd., WI
by April 15.

The board
of directors
of the
West Deerfield Township Women’s

meetings are open to the general
membership
and
any
interested
members are invited to attend this
meeting and to bring prospective

at the

school

In Slater Home

dent, has announced

perhaps,

Education

Meet

Club

454 Margate Terr.
Mrs. Elmer F. Anderson,

be

Mrs.
Martha
McDonald,
Joliet,
will
give
a
dissertation,
“Trim
Your
Hats with Fresh Flowers.”
This will be a unique program for
the garden lover with step by step
instructions, as well as interesting
and entertaining demonstrations.

Mrs.

Of Directors

the home of Mrs. Andrew G, Bradt,

will

fruit.

structor

Board

Of Republican

p.m.

of

1

guests

with

Mrs. Charles H. Carman, press
and publicity chairman, and Mrs.
Herman
Pack,
scrap
book. chairman, have entered the press book
of the Deerfield Woman’s club in
the press book contest of the Tenth
district of the Illinois Federation
of Women’s clubs.
“Publicity used in the press book
was given to activities of the Deerfield Woman’s Club through news
items
and
pictures
with
the cooperation of the Deerfield Review,”
said Mrs. Carman.
Mrs. Joseph C. Roper, bulletin
chairman, mails publicity directly
to members
of the club
in the
monthly
Bulletin
that
she
edits.
Through
the
Deerfield
REVIEW
and the bulletin all events of interest are recorded.
Mrs. Elmer F. Anderson, press
and
publicity
chairman
of
the
Tenth district of the Illinois Federation
of Women’s
clubs
will
have
press
books
entered
from
clubs in that district on display
at the Tenth district annual meeting to be held Wednesday, April 26,
at 10:30 a.m. in the Highland Park
Woman’s club. The address is Elm
Pl.
and
Sheridan
Rd.,
Highland
Park.

will

Country

their

and

at

studied

By Woman’‘s Club

club.

luncheon
20

be

Matisse and Picasso. Mrs. Norman
Erskine will lead the discussion.
Phone Mrs. Dieterle for reservations, WI 5-3326.
The
department
of
American

Press Book Entered
In District Contest

The
Trinity United
Church
of
Christ will be setting for the wedding of Helene Meyer, daughter of
Mr.
and Mrs. LeRoy
Meyers,
of
Hazel Avenue, and the Rev. Robert Lee Kettelhut of Oak Lawn,
Saturday
afternoon
at 3 -o’clock.
The
Rev. Philip A. Desenis will
read the vows.
The bride is a graduate of Elmhurst
College
and
received
her
Master’s degree in religious education
at Northwestern
University.
She has been serving as Religious
Education director at Friedens
Evangelical and Reformed church,
in St. Louis.
The Rev. Mr. Kettelhut, a graduate of Elmhurst College
and
Edens
Theological
Seminary,
St.
Louis,
is
pastor
of
St.
Mark’s
United Church
of Christ in Oak
Lawn.
The
bride
has
been
guest
at
several showers.
Last Friday evening, Mrs. Norval Rather and Mrs.
Archie Antes were hostesses at a
miscellaneous shower in the Rather
home. Friends in Oak Lawn also
showered
Miss
Meyer
with
gifts
at a party.
The rehearsal dinner Friday will
be given in Phil Johnson’s restaurant.

which
met
with
Mrs.
Slater
on
April 12 to map an intensive membership
campaign,
will
present
their plans. Mrs. Herbert E. Tucker, legislation chairman, will submit
plans
for
the
round
table
meeting to be held on April 27 at

of Deerfield

McHenry

Mrs. Charles

with

spring

Club

gay

A

Richard

the

will

wearing

and

5-3342,

of

Garden Club Plans
Spring Luncheon
At Country Club

program.

a demonstration
in
oil
starting
with a fresh canvas and working
toward
a finished painting,
Mrs.
Girkin is known for both her oil

WI

Sara

welfare

The palette and chisel, art appreciation
study
group,
meets
Wednesday, April 19, in the residence of Mrs. H. Robert Dieterle,
1218 Warrington Rd.
Modern art

and

Girkin will present

and

goal

and Mrs. C. L. Walton, is handling
the
tickets.
Co-chairmen
of the
event are
Mesdames
Anthony
Nosek and William Freeman.

Members

the

Dexter

public

the

Tess

Club

—

Weddings

—

Several members at a recent meeting of the Palette and
Chisel art study group sponsored by the Deerfield Woman's
Club,

ar,

left to

right,

Mrs.

Arthur

Neyendorf,

Mrs.

Charles

Girkin, Mrs. Charles L. Healy and Mrs. Norman Erskine.
Modern art with emphasis on Picasso and Matisse is being
studied under the direction of Mrs. Norman Erskine, graduate
of the Art Institute of Chicago.

The Deerfield-Bannockburn committee of Arden Shore will meet at
the home of Mrs. William E: Casselman,
1885
Hilltop,
Bannockburn,
on Thursday, April 27 at 10 a.m. to
discuss plans for the fall bazaar on
Oct. 10.
The present benefit activity of
the committee is a series of bridge
lessons being conducted
by Mrs.
Josephine
Walters
Smith
at the
Highland
Park Recreation
center
on Friday mornings.
Tomorrow, April 21, will be guest

day at the bridge lectures and each
member of the class will be able to
take one guest.
Thursday,

April

13,

1961

;

�SAVE During Sunset's FROZEN FOOD WEEK!
Look What 10&lt; Buys
At Sunset!
SLICED

10-0z. pkg.

“Sun-Fresh”’ Head

STRAWBERRIES 5 ror *1
FAST FROZEN

10-0z. pkg.

RASPBERRIES

5 ror *1

TENDER &amp; GREEN SPEAR

10-0z. pkg.

BROCCOLI
CRINKLE CUT FRENCH

{—-

5 or *f
FRIED

16-0z. pkg.

4 ror $1

RADISHES — 9. bn
GREEN

ee

ee

y ae bunches
or

CHOPPED

|

10-0z. pkg.

SPINACH
LEAF

SPINACH
LI

Assorted

CREAM
“ aaaanecit
CREAM

ICE

Flavors
Redemea)
HALF
GAL.
CHEESECAKE
69:
BIRDS EYE ONION RINGS .......
Northern
TOWELS

oe——J ey Ff
\=—
®

SUNSET’S FRESHEST

heivoness

FRYERS
hole,
Vienna

59c

nee

3

pases.

29.

@ = Oe
12-oz.

C
.

lb

p&gt;
..

**

SUNSET

1-lb.
pkg.

ee

HELPRA

33

CHOCOLATE
DRINK

agation

STRAWBERRY

Lb

Skinless

FRANKS

9

HANDY

%2

“
Sorry, No Freezer Wrapping

at these

1812

Open

GREEN

BAY

ROAD

Both Thursday

PLENTY

OF

FREE

—

and

A

CENTRAL

Friday

PARKING

FOOD

STORE

Nights ‘Til 9 P.M.

-——- ALWAYS

Very Low Prices.
Thursday,

April

13,

1961

Page

H

11—D

19

�(Paid

Political

Advertisement)

Set Up Telescopes

Takes

For Star Gazers

Miss Flora Shriver, who is attending
Cornell
College,
Mount
Vernon, Ia., is a member of the
cast of approximately 100 students
which will present Shakespeare’s

Two

Lake

scopes

Forest

will be set up

courts on Middle
Wednesday

(April
the

use

on clear

during

April

19, 26)

at 7:30

p.m,

for

both

students

and

in-

of

“Twelfth

April

21

and

a crescent on the 19th and not quite

constellations will be on view.

staging

will be

to create

22.

used

in an

an authentic

When Norma A. Barts presents
a program on “Africa Today” for
the North Suburban chapter, Delta
Zeta

Sorority

Alumnae,

four High-

land Park members will be assisting the hostess, Mrs. Thomas O’Malley,

Wilmette.

attempt

Elizabethan

theatre

atmosphere.

Miss

and a number

of

Mr.

Shriver

and

Central

is the

Mrs.

E.

J.

daughter

Shriver,

Ave.

of

941

The foursome includes Mrs. John
Burgess of Euclid Avenue; Mrs.
Sidney Frisch of Ivy Lane; Mrs.
Kennety Peer of Huntington Lane
and Mrs. Frederick O. Toof of
Linden

Ave.

Miss Barts, a Skokie member of
Delta Zeta, will tell of her recent
travel to Africa, She had wanted
to follow the same trek of Stanley
and Livingston, but due to the
Congo situation, was forced to return home

sooner than

planned.

Announcing

A NEW FAMILY SPOR TS CLUB
C2.

Advertisement)

Hold on to your
You'll get $4 for $3

Night”

Madgri Madrigal singers, groundlings, a period costumes
and

full on the 26th,

eae
Political

tele-

terested members of the community, according to Dr. Lindley J.
Burton, head of the College astronomy department. The moon will be

If | were old enough
| would vote for
WILLIAM S. KARGER
for Park Commissioner.

(Paid

Campus

evenings

12,

College

on the tennis

‘Africa Today’ Topic For Delta Zetas

Part in Play

Savings Bond.
if held to ma-

beth. Shbre

turity.

Notes
from

j

Music
|

eee

7

t

the

Arts

Studios
Ps

T

Of the exquisitely designed instruments for real musical mastery,
the violin and the piano are the
superior choice for our outstanding children.
Of course, the home
and good
parents
are
the
strongest
moti-

vation for right directions—the
best teachers can command only
limited amounts of a youngster’s
time. And

only the most

efficiently

scheduled daily practice can dovetail with the many other activities and interests.
But we

must

also remember

that

social musical activities rank high
among the greatest joys of learning:

the

youngest

pupil

SHAWNEE

treasures

his early experiences in sharing
music with his contemporaries, and
later

on

in

his

music

study

asso-

ciation with
larger
groups
can
lead to ensemble and concerto performance which offer new dimensions

of

enjoyment.

We
spread ourselves so very
thin in our present society! But do
we not lose sight of the most enduring values of all—of living in
a truly distinguished way—and in
the dictates of a most uncompromising area of study—the art of
music?
Let
those
who
have
“gifted
children” with sensitive ears and
abilities
face
this
dilemma—
whether to follow the social custom
of superficial exposure
to
what
is beautiful
and
uncompromising, or to guide and encourage them
into the difficult
pathway of instrumental study—
violin,
the
keyboard — whatever
their talent indicates, and to allow a mature attitude toward perseverance and accomplishment to
dominate
throughout
their first
years of effort.
“Discipline” is the magic word
which governs the entrance to the
Elysian field of music, and it not
only defines the fine process of
real education but also insists upon
the development of control and
habits of obedience to what is
right and true. Certainly the wise
parent realizes that discipline is
not invoked by command, but must
be encouraged to grow,
1811

ST. JOHNS AVE.
‘ID 2-8474
HIGHLAND PARK, ILL.

Page

H

12—D

20

SW
LOCATED

TENNIS

CLUB

AT

SWIM and SUN
THIS SUMMER

While swimming is the
heart of the activity at
Shawnee,
the
ample
grounds provide room for
Tennis Courts, Badminton,

Shawnee will provide a
42’x75’ pool this July, with
spacious sun lounge decks,
diving boards, and play
pool for the youngsters.
Instruction in Swimming

Trampoline, Shuffleboard,
Ice Skating, and Tobog-

ganing. Future plans
clude a Gymnasium.

in-

and Diving

5

teams,

PLAYGROUND
Shawnee

will

look

evenings,

the very
fenced-in

young with a
play _ ground,

sand box
pool.

and

Shawnee

own

a

MEMBERSHIPS

will have a spa-

family

dinner.

and

Picnic

outdoor

place on our

fire-

seven

skin

acres,

too.

too,

for a relax-

SWIM ALL
WINTER

Shawnee has seven beautiful acres to be developed for fun and sports,

BAR

cious screened restaurant
for the Children’s lunch or
tables

ballet,

ing dip after work.

15 minutes from almost anywhere on the North Shore.

SNACK

water

diving &amp; water polo. Open

after

their

for the novice,

competitive boys and girls

Shawnee is a non-profit corporation made up of family equity memberships with full
voting rights. Dues are only $125.00 per year for year around family sports and fun. A
$500.00 equity membership is an investment in your families.
Shawnee membership is
limited to 300 families approved by Board of Directors. The entire membership fee can be
repurchased by the club if you move away from area. Money is being put into an escrow
account until sufficient funds are available to complete the project.

Shawnee will provide a
full winter program for
women and men. Lessons
for pre-schoolers this winter, as well as continuing
the summer program.

For Additional Information
and
Mr.

and

Mrs. William
Mr.

or write

Burson,

and

Mrs.

CH AWNEE

AL

application blanks

call or write

1-3109

Adolph

Kiefer

SWIM

Mr.
Daytime

CLUB

PA

us today!

and

Mrs.

Kenneth

4-3420—Evenings

804

FOREST

Pettigrew,

VE

5-0856

HI 6-1763

WILMETTE
Thursday,

April

13,

1961

�Geraci Cites Advantages o

“r

ee

fttr

baat ¥
(

x

help

The nine hole par three golf course, advanced for Highland Park by Park Commissioner candidate Ray J. Geraci, will
serve several important community needs.
First, and according to Geraci, most important,

The

par three

latively

new

Although

golf course

in

the

United

there

are

over

of

construct

course

land,

including

facilities.

like

a

on 25 to 30

adequate

He

said

he

to see a small

area

on

the course fenced in to be used as
a play
area
for
pre-school
age

par

children

three courses in America today, as
late as 1948 there were none in the }
Chicagoland area. Today there are
12
in the
Chicago
metropolitan
area (the newest will open in July
in Winnetka
under Park District
supervision.)

Low

acres
would

States.

360

could

par three

parking

is re-

Park

model

construction cost of the par

three has been the biggest factor
in its growth.
A regulation golf
course
may
cost from
$5,000
to
$10,000 per hole, exclusive of land
cost.
A 9-hole par-3 golf course
can be built for around $1,000 to
$3,000 per hole, exclusive of land
cost.
The land requirement is another
major factor.
Geraci
estimates

who

could

be

cared

for

while their parents are enjoying a
round of golf. Geraci said this is
not
only
possible,
but
desirable
because the average time required
for a round of golf on a par three

is only

Political

@

SALE!

material

an

adjunct

to

YOU

all

in

family

an

enviable

recreation

district

program

greatest

number

ticipate,’’

position

and
of

more

a

the

to

have

the

residents

par-

is

concluded

as

certainly

KEEP

YOUR

CAR

SPOTLESSLY

CLEAN WITHOUT ANY EXTRA COST TO
YOU! By the purchase of 15 gallons of gas or ;

Highland Park schools
physical
education programs as a training
ground for the elementary and high
school student.
“The
compartively
low
greens
fee (average $1 to $1.25) will place

golf

CAN

(reg. or ethyl).
A PERFECT CAR

WASH

....

FREE!

WITH PURCHASE OF

Geraci.

CAR WASH ~

12 gals. of gas -_.............. WHINE sisson
cide sete
10 goles Of gas

nc.

:

COANE siccsc Ltda

8 gals. of gas ................ ONY

6s
ine

ee

6 gals. of gas ................ WHI Sin aitiiiieee
4 gals. of gas ................ GAL

fiisxdpimidiccecoueie

Cities Service Products

‘ -

Skokie Car Wash, Inc.|
DE 6-8255
21st and

Commissioner.

North

Sheridan

Chicago,

7
Rd.

Illinois

&amp;
(Paid

material

competitive

ideal

billy Kargep

fences

(Rail

is

for Park

installed.

Rustic Fence
Stockade).

© Quality

or

ners learn the game more quickly
and old players are able to enjoy
physical activity without the heavy
exertion demanded by the longer
distance
courses;
the
par
three

If | were old enough
| would vote for
WILLIAM S. KARGER

Time!

completely

‘FREE CAR WASH!! |

non-revenue

Advertisernent)

Fence

Fence

other

Another
attractive
feature
to
be considered, according to Geraci
are the low maintenance cost and
the low operating cost. The average nine hole par three course can
be maintained by one man using
equipment already available to the
Park ‘District.
Geraci points out these specific
advantages to Highland Park from
a new
nine hole par three
golf
course: It would provide the Park

Spring

@

ae

60 to 90 minutes.

(Paid

CARLOAD

maintain

course

it would

be a substantial revenue producer which would help maintain
Highland

ue

producing parks; it is ideal for beginners and older players. Begin-

Nine Hole Par 3 Course

other Park District property and
possibly
reduce
taxes.
Also,
it
would provide a recreational facility designed to encourage participation at all age levels and from the
very good golfers to the beginners.

Th

District with substantial revenue to

Political

Advertisement)

at

prices.

e FHA terms available.
e FREE ESTIMATES.

If | were old enough

NORTHBROOK
LUMBER CO.

| would vote for
WILLIAM S. KARGER
for Park Commissioner.

CRestwood

“Why

co era
te

Skokie &amp; Dundee Rds.
Northbrook, Ill.

K Bobby Karger

2-3000

(Paid

Political

for

Advertisement)

MAY BE YOUR OWN

Salvage
STORE

HOURS: Tuesday, Friday 9-9—Wed., Thurs.
CLOSED MONDAYS.
Sunday 10-9.

ALL MOSAIC

TILE

Men’s SUMMER

REDUCED!

Our

LIMED

B10

OAK

PICTURE

te FAT O

ee

reg.

$1.00

&amp;

Sat.,

........ NOW

9-6

ee

2” &amp; 3” wide,

i hk

$1.19 to $1.65

Beauty?

PERMANENT WAVE

Less”

Plus

Shampoo and Set

IN ADVANCE!
We

suggest you

specify

(including styling)

$975

the permanent of your
choice when you make
your

(Tops in Artistry)

$7.00

YOUR

PERMANENT

80c

............ $2.39
values to $4.00 _........... $1.98

FRAMES,

for

SELECT

........ values to $6.00

JACKETS

Boy’s SUMMER JACKETS ........
NEW

“Best

Railroad
Discount Store

&amp;

appointment!

Haircut .... $1.50
Manicure .. $1.50

Tuck Cellophane TAPE, %4” x 150” ..................- 4 rolls 29c
NEW SHIPMENT OF LAMP SHADES, all sizes &amp; styles 25% OFF
THONG SANDALS,
Children’s 35¢
Men’s &amp; Women’s 39c
2 DRAWER 4x6 CARD FURS onc ieics inns
$2.50
OPT IER os science ap teligigcaic ta deka Raeeshachnce $10.50 to $21.95
A COMPLETE

LINE

OF

NURSERY

on

Rte. 83, one

MUNDELEIN,

block

South

of Rte.

ILLINOIS

We buy factory surplus and store stocks.

|

Thursday, April 13, 1961

use

quality
vertised

only

the

finest

nationally adpreparations.

Visit Our Large Beautifully Appointed
Salon Monday through Saturday 9 a.m.5 p.m.

45

Ample

except

Suggested

but

Fridays 9 a.m.-9
not

p.m.

required.

Salons

Cameo

Phone LOcust 6-7325
Located

We

Appointments

STOCK

Tee

CAMEO
SALONS

DRIVE CAREFULLY — THE LIFE YOU SAVE

Illinois

P ay

Parking in Rear

929 LINDEN, HUBBARD
All Phones:

WOODS,

WINNETKA

HI 6-7550

Page H 13—D 21

�¢

- Spring Luncheon, Musicale
— Closes Woman's Club Year
Annual

Spring

luncheon

of the Highland

Park

Woman's

Club

Tues-

day will bring not only the introduction of new officers and the annual
business
Guest

ler,

session
artists

but

baritone;

cellist;

and

Known

as

be

Louis

Dudley

Rhea
the

a delightful

will

musical

Powers,

Shelters,

Musical

for program.

Mrs.

Fowler

Mrs. Gordon
field, will pass

pianist.

Arts

treat

Sud-

Trio,

Ends

Term

C. Fowler, Deerover the gavel to

Mrs. Howard Boysen, Lake Forest,
the program chairman, Mrs. Fowler is completing a two-year term
at the club’s helm, previously having
served
as
budget
chairman

and treasurer. She also is well
known in Highland Park in Presbyterian

church

circles,

where

she
Pe

has served as church treasurer.
Mrs. Jack Dowdall, Deerfield,
will

be

inducted

president;
nancial

Mrs.

as

second

John

secretary;

vice-

Gibaon,

Mrs.

for the

pitality

and

chairman;

Ricketts,

and

press

Mrs.

and

Ro-

publicity

Three new members will be welcomed into the club. They are
Mrs. Lowell Byland, Mrs. Harvey
Homberger, Mrs. Frank Logan.
Final

‘the

group

‘light

the

will

classical

artists

give

a program

selections.

is

of

Each

pursuing

of

his

and

her own career and each is
known in the Chicago area.

well

Final even of the current club
calendar will be the party for the
Golden Circle Thursday, April 27
from 3 to 5 p.m. with the Junior
Auxiliary of the club in charge
of entertainment.
Mrs. Robert Black, philanthropy
chairman,

and

her

committee

will

be hostesses. She is inviting all
club members to join the party.

party,

Kathy

are

Issel,

from

left,

two.

(Flowers

Nancy

Monson,

are

by

five;

Bahr

Karen

Issel,

engagement

daughter,

Daniel
his

Judith

Offer,

who

residency

Michael

Psychiatric
Miss

in

Reese

of

is

to

psychiatry

Institute,

Baskin

Dr.

at

the

at

the

Sor-

Junior Year in France program.
She was graduated from the Uni-

versity

He

of

Educational
ing Michael

awarded

at the Uni-

Research

Hospital before
Reese. He has
for
two

joinbeen

young

Research in Psyyears
beginning

couple

plan

married in early Summer
den

and

a fellowship by the Foun-

dation Fund
chiatry
for
July 1.
The

interned

Illinois

wedding

at the

to

be

in a gar-

Baskin

home,

There'll

Highland Parkers who are lending art treasures to the “Treasures
of Chicago Collectors” show opening at the Art Institute Saturday

include the following:
The Albert L. Arenbergs,
Photo

by

James

Wahiman

ship drive chairman for the Highland Park YWCA.

the

of

drive

is a total

approximately

of 800

250

members;

newcomers

this

on

means

the

“Y”

Goal for

an

increase
Mrs.

roll.

Billeter is vice-president of the Highland Park-Ravinia Center
of the Infant Welfare
community

council,

Society,
serves

on

a member
the

of the

Deerfield

Riverwoods
United

Fund

executive board and is active in both Ravinia and Highland
Park Women’s clubs. She’s most enthusiastic about the Y’s
program for girls, women and men of all ages and interests.
Page

H

14—D

22

the

Herbert
Bakers,
the
Stanley
M.
Freehlings, the Henry Getzes, the
Edwin E. Hokins, the junior Stan-

ley

Korshaks,

stadters
thals.

and

the
the

Sigmund

Samuel

R.

KunRosen.

The Highland Park collectors will
be attending the preview of this
event tonight.
Of
interest
here,
too,
is the
showing of Mrs, Abel E. Fagen’s
portrait
done
by
Salvador
Dali.
Hers is the most recent painting in

the

exhibition.

Miss

Judith

Lynn

Baskin

are much

in the fore

Shore

as

Junior

each §

Dates for the 27th Annual Antiques exhibit and sale have been
set, according to Mrs. Dale Patterson of Broadview
Avenue,
cochairman of publicity for the event
in the Evanston Woman’s club, 1702
Chicago Ave., Evanston.

The sale will open Monday,

go

to a scholarship

be

a galaxy

of

hors

d’

ing an active part are Mrs. Gordon

Evanston Antiques
Sale Dates Are Set

will

To Art Institute

three;

oeuvres, as well as flowers.
Each
Chi Omega is to bring 100 to the
festive refreshment table. |
Following the party, there’ll be
several late suppers
in homes
around town.
In addition to Mrs.
Issel and Mrs. Monson, others tak-

May

15, and continue through Thursday,
May 18, she said. The annual show
is sponsored by the Rockford College Club of Chicago. All proceeds

Lend Objets d‘Art

Monson,

table
will be
graced
by comely
French
damsel
who’s
beautifully
fabricated
of ribbon,
net,
crepe
paper and flowers.
White flower
carts will be filled with daffodils
and hyacinths.

Chicago.

studied

of the University of Chicago Medi-

Group

Zeloof-Stuart

All in the Parisian theme,

and

bonne
in Paris under
the sponsorship of the Sweet Briar College

cal School.

Shore

by

Alumnae of Chi Omega plan their
sixth annual benefit cocktail party
a week from Saturday night. Receiving proceeds of the festive
Spring party in the Highland Park
Woman’s Club will be the Illinois
Children’s Home and Aid Society.

completing

Psychosomatic

Douglas

Children

their

Lynn,

one;

Chicago-North

spanancononcances

cae

Mr. and Mrs, Samuel J. Baskin
of Moraine Rd., have announced

Dr, Offer, a former commando
of the Israeli Army, is a graduate
of the University of Rochester and

North

Photo

Florists.)

versity of Michigan and was a student
at
the
Harvard-Radcliffe
Graduate School of Philosophy.

Taking over a new assignment in her busy career next
week is Mrs. Robert Billeter, who has been named member-

Group

a gay one in Highland Park, too—as members of the Chicago-

Miss Judy Baskin to Wed Early in Summer
the

Party

Shore

North Shore Junior Alumnae of Chi Omega plan their sixth annual cocktail dance at the
Highland Park Woman’‘s Club Saturday evening, April 22. Getting into the act as their mothers, Mrs. Lloyd Monson, and Mrs. Kenneth Issel preview carts spilling with Spring flowers

L.

Wolf,
corresponding
secretary;
Mrs.
James
Reilly,
Fine
Arts
chairman; Mrs. George Brady, hosbert

C. Fowler

It’s “April in Paris’—and

fi-

Carl

chairman.

Mrs. Gordon

North

fund

for

Rockford College students.
Mrs.
John
Easterberg
of Winnetka is show chairman; Mrs. Ellis
Muther
of Northfield
is on the
general
planning
committee
as
chairman of one of the projects.

Miss Molly Mason Is
Winner at Wellesley
Miss Molly Mason, daughter of
the Barrett K. Masons
of Hazel
Avenue,
recently
was
named
a
Wellesley College Scholar and received the Davenport Prize for Excellence in Oral Interpretation. A
senior majoring in Greek, Molly is
president of the college’s theater
group, The Barnswallows.
Shortly after graduation, she will
become the bride of John A Gardiner in a June ceremony here.

B. Anderson, Mrs. Harry Smedley
Jr.,
and
Mrs.
John
Lindemann.
Mrs. Ray Orr, Glenview, is benefit
chairman; Mrs. Lawrence I. Smith
of Northbrook is in charge of
reservations.

Delta Gammas

Give

Party for ‘Ex-es’
Past presidents of Delta Gamma
Alumnae of Evanston-North Shore
will be guests
of honor
tonight
when the women meet for buffet
supper in the home of Mrs. H. H.
Adams Jr., Winnetka.
Mrs. W. Stanley Strong of Baldwin Road, one of the past presidents, will be among them. Also,
graduating seniors of the chapter
at Northwestern will be honored.

Mrs. L. Morgan Yost of Kenilworth,
the president, will present four $25
class scholarship awards.

Home

from Aspen

The Everett L. Millards of Sylvester Pl., returned Monday from
a two weeks’ holiday at their Aspen,
Colo. resort where they entertained
at an “all Highland Park’ dinner.
On Tuesday evening, they opened
their home to fellow beach property
owners who are seeking to solve
some of the major Summer problems with which private beaches
are now plagued.

Thursday,

April

13, 1961

�Constance

Round Robin Bridge

Weiland,

At Woman's

Douglas Emenecker

Round

To Wed Saturday
Miss
ter

of

Constance
the

Weiland,

Henry

C.

daugh-

Weilands

Second

Street,

and

Douglas

necker,

son

Mr.

and

of

be
of

Eme-

Mrs.

Isa-

matron

of

honor,

Sanders

of Central

have

as

her

Gregory

Ave.

Miss

Mau-

reen Carney of Central Avenue will
be

maid

of

younger

honor

sister,

and

the

Pamela,

bride’s

will

be

junior bridesmaid,
Mrs. Sanders and Miss Carney
entertained for the bride with a
miscellaneous
shower
with many
also

was

honored

co-workers

at a party

at

Public

at

the

the

will

bridge

Highland

Club, 1991
afternoon,
Announce

Park

Sheridan Rd.,
April 25, at

RAndolph 6-3332
30 N. MICHIGAN AVE.
Suite 1511

Winners

Mrs. Glenn M. Harris and Mrs.
E. Wolters, who have been in

charge

of

games of
charge of
Attending
played in
the

the

scores
party.

round

robin

bridge

the club this year, are in
plans for the luncheon.
will be women who have
the tourney throughout

season.

will

Winners

be

of

final

announced

at

No

matter

what

or sell you'll

high

you

to buy

find the Want-Ad

tion your best market

the

want

sec=

place.

DRIVEWAY CONSTRUCTION

given

Service

Company. The bridegroom’s bachelor dinner is tonight, and tomorrow evening the bridal rehearsal
dinner will be given by the bride’s
parents.

games

for

12:30.

of her friends as guests. The bride
by

bridge

agenda

luncheon

A.
Mrs.

robin

the

Woman’s
Tuesday

dore Emenecker of Antigo, Wis.,
will repeat their wedding vows Saturday
afternoon
in Immaculate
Conception church.
Miss Weiland will

on

Club

Old

Parking Areas—
Drives Refinished

@

BLACK

@

CONCRETE

TOP

@

CRUSHED

il

STONE

LX

Call for

FREE

Estimate

% Metered
Photo

Mrs.

Lewis

Rosenau

Northwood Country club was
setting for the wedding
of Miss
Patricia
Heinsimer,
daughter
of

the

William R. Heinsimers of ComFla.,

and

the

late

Mr.

The vows were read late Tuesday
afternoon, April 4, by Dr. Edgar E.
Siskin.

South,

Both

Following

orchid

cor-

honeymoon

young

in Coral

couple

trip

will

Gables,

be

Fla.

Eastern Star

Mrs.

Meyer

FUEL CO.

ID 2-0065

Highland

Park

New Garrard TYPE A

Pinsof

Mrs. Meyer Pinsof, 428
view Ave., newly
elected

OIL Service +

Broadto the

board of directors of Children’s
Aid of La Rabida Sanatarium, has
been named North Shore chairman
of the Aid’s fourth annual “Talk
of the Town” Spring bazaar,
The bazaar will be staged in the

RECORD CHANGERS out perform anything
you've ever seen...

newly - remodeled
Pick - Congress
Hotel Thursday, April 20, through

Campbell Chapter 712, Order of
Eastern
Star, will meet Wednesday evening, April 19, at 7:30 in
the
Hundley
Memorial
Masonic
Temple, Laurel Ave. with Mrs. J.
Llewellyn,
Worthy
Matron,
and
Erwin
Jordan,
Worthy
Patron,
serving in the East.

PM—Prin.,

1930 First St.

his brothwas Peter

wore

a

the

at home

The bride wore a white taffeta
~ gown
designed with chapel train
and
trimmed
with
alencon
lace.
She
carried
phalaenopsis
and
stephanotis in her bouquet.
She was attended by Miss Toni
Smith of Cedar Street as maid of
honor
and Miss Cecile Klein
of
Pensacola, Fla., as bridesmaid.
They wore aqua peau de soie gowns
and carried tangerine toned carnations and matching aqua veils.

SILJESTROM

Studios

The bride’s mother’s gown was
of pale blue chiffon;
the senior
Mrs. Rosenau
wore dusty pink

raw silk.
sages.

Mtge. $199

Coies

Jr.

Rosenau.

412%

Bronson

Richard Rosenau was
er’s best man; ushering
Herman.

stock
Place,
and Lewis
Rosenau
Jr., son of Mrs. Lewis Rosenau of

Pensacola,

by

24 Hour FUEL

Sunday,

April

23.

It will

feature

all types of merchandise including
furniture, antiques, clothing, toys,

housewares

and

foods

at

special

low prices, Mrs. Pinsof said.
Proceeds
of the
“Talk
of

Town”
La

bazaar

will

go

directly

the

to

Rabida,

Int., Tax., Ins.
POPULAR SECTION
OF DEERFIELD
¢ 4 bedrooms

¢ Plus Playroom

¢ 22

© Basement

Baths

¢ Fireplace

¢ Fenced Patio

@

Recreation Room

®@ %

Acre

. . . tastefully decorated.

Better

than

aE

PLUS

FEATURES

ARE:

ever (built 1958).

In perfect condition

Black top parking area.

avoids

unsightly appearance

at end

of

cul-de-sac

street,

when
adds

2 car garage at side of home which

garage
to

Most attractive birch cabinet kitchen.

doors

appearance

are

left open.

and

is a

Built on

haven

for

knoll

children.

A wonderful floor plan — the ideal family

home. Figures to prove price of $37,250 under cost. How can one go wrong?
And with a 44% mortgage! Reason for such a genuine offer is OWNER HAS

BOUGHT

A LARGER

HOME.
Call

BAIRD
REAL

576

ESTATE

Lincoln

SALES

Avenue

@

&amp;

April

13, 1961

@

e

MANAGEMENT

INSURANCE

Hillcrest 6-1855

Winnetka
SUNDAYS

@

11

a.m.

to

5

COLUMBIA Hi-Fi &amp; V
A Division of Columbia

WARNER

MORTGAGES

OPEN
Thursday,

LIONEL WATSON

WE WON’T BE UNDERSOLD!
Household Appliances, Inc.

1805 St. Johns Ave., Highland Park
OPEN

THURSDAY

AND

FRIDAY

ID 2-0725

EVENINGS

p.m.
Page H 15—D

23

�Jewel Fryers arefresher
You can actually taste the difference!
You'll be proud to serve a Jewel chicken—
they're

fresher,

more

three big reasons why:

tender!

And

pass

meatier

inspection,

and

another

3. Then these top quality fryers are rushed to

1. Jewel fryers are raised to be delicious—bred

scientifically to insure a plump,
With sweet-flavored meet,

U.S. Government

rigid inspection by Jewel Meat Buyers.

here are

Your Jewel... fresh
from the farm. . “3 times

bird

:
tens
Discover for yourself
chicken

2. Jewel fryers are twice inspected—they must

weekend!

is...serve

how

ps
delicious

a fried chicken

Jewel

dinner this

U. S. GOVT. INSPECTED

REC&gt;
M04

=F gto
eh
OF
AGRICULTURE

|

MAYER

A9¢

Ib.

YELLOWBAND

ai ie OFF LABEL”

AQ

Ib.

OSCAR MAYER YELLOWBAND

| Bologna

Manor House
in
wir.
ee
ff
Co

3

Braunschweiger
7
} OSCAR

MAYER—SLICED

| Bologna
HORMEL—COUNTRY

oz.

a
STYLE

Bs

can

59S

Sausage
2
JEWEL

ALL

MEAT—SKINLESS

\

b.

“5c OFF

LABEL’ —REG.

PRICE

Giant Tide

Green oe

LAUNDER

74c

MAID

regular
price

Broccoli

em

MARY

DUNBAR

ELBERTA—REG.

Peaches
MARY

DUNBAR

FROZEN

35c EACH

3 =
SLICED —REG. 2/49c

Strawberries: 19°

a

ALL

FLAVORS—YUMMY

—REG.

2/49c

reams
We

pint

reserve the right to limit

quantities. No sales to dealers.

: HBERTA

RTA HEAVY.nS

4Ewer

Page H 16—D

24

tea co. ™

: eS o

Gi

Thursday,

April

13,

1961

�RADIOEAR

Miss Carole Baruffi To Wed April 22
Bethany Methodist and Evangelical United

setting

for

Brethren

the

church

wedding

will be

of

Miss

Carole Jean Baruffi, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Baruffi, of
Evolution Avenue, Highwood, and

Donald

L.

Henze,

also

of

High-

wood, and the son of Mrs. Gladys
Harvey of Sunnyslope, Ariz., and

the late Clarence Henze.
The vows will be read by the
Rev. Darrell D, Sample Saturday

afternoon, April 22.

of honor, John McLaren will be the

by

Miss

Bronson

Rita

Coles

Studios

Shorr

Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ralph
Shorr
of
Glencoe, formerly of Montgomery
Ave., announce the engagement of
their daughter, Rita, to James L.
Ballew, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Ballew of Galesburg.

Miss
both

Shorr

and

students

sity where
degree
June.

at

her

fiance

Bradley

Univer-

he will graduate
in

Civil

are

Madeline
Mr.
of

and

Mrs.

Elmwood

Charles

Drive

engagement
Madeline,

Starcevich

of
to

Starcevich

announce
their

Robert

Lenzini,

of Mr. and Mrs. Adolph

the

daughter,
son

Lenzini of

with a| Highwood.

Engineering

in

They are planning
in the Autumn.

to be married

Up

best man.
Among

pre-nuptial parties given

esses;

and

a

party

given

by

ie

y

aun)"

y

RAndolph 6-3332
30.N. MICHIGAN AVE.

for Miss Baruffi was a miscellaneous shower with Mrs. Robert Magnani and Mrs. Robert Issel as host-

-

Suite 1511

co-

workers with Mrs. Eugene Belmont
as hostess at Ted’s Restaurant,
(Paid

Photo

«)

Miss Baruffi will have her sister, Mrs.
John McLaren as matron

Political

Advertisement)

LET’S RE-ELECT THIS MAN
to the Highland Park City Council:

Bill Hutchinson

SPECIAL
PURCHASE

PLAYHOUSES

QUALIFIED

by training and broad

Conversion of Police Magistrate compensation from fee to present salary basis.
Provision of 200 additional off-street parking spaces.
Adoption of a Fire Code, Electrical and
Plumbing
Codes,
and
a_ performance
Building Code.
Development of programs for a Public Safe-

experience:
Resident 12 years. Graduate Civil Engineer.
Further training in law and finance.
Consultant with Booz, Allen and Hamilton,
management consultants.

MASONITE FRAMED WITH PINE
5 FEET WIDE — 6 FEET LONG
5 FEET, 6 INCHES HIGH
2 OPEN DOORS, 2'x4’
2 OPEN WINDOWS, 18”x24"
UNFINISHED ONLY

e.
82.5
EXPERIENCED in Highland Park school
and civie affairs, including:

Civic

a

Open

RECORD

OPEN

1833
Highland
Thursday,

eaven

Friday Nights ‘til 9

t

STREET
2-3001

1961

of key

replacement
t

connecting
of

unsafe

e

Active.
informed
citizen
participation
in
government.
Public actions to promote the general welfare,
with
consideration
for individual
rights and feelings.
Efficient public service and administration.
Maximum coordination of our public safety
departments for economy and improved
service.
Close
cooperation
between
local
governmental units.
Preservation
of
the
spacious
residential
character of the city.
Vitalization of the central business district.
Adequate public transportation.
Sound, long-range planning.

e

ACCOMPLISHMENTS

Hutchinson works for

LET HIM AND HIGHLAND PARK KNOW
Vote Tuesday, April 18 for

IT

B. HUTCHINSON
Polls
(Paid

13,

of

(’57-present)

WILLIAM

WEDNESDAY

SECOND

City

paving

the
e

If you want the kind of government Bill

ID

Park
April

ALL DAY

OF

Councilman,

the

and

HIS OBJECTIVES CONTINUE TO BE:

As a councilman he has actively worked
with others to solve the problems of rapid
growth. Here are a few achievements:
Completion of major sewer and water programs.
Re-Zoning of 950 acres to larger lot requirements.
Provision of districts zoned for office and
research buildings and similar uses.
Establishment of a Finance Department for
better control of funds and to qualify for
lower rates.

ai

Thursday and

(55-57);

Park

*

$3195

Lge

Assn.

Highland

While Supply Lasts
oT

streets,
bridges.

Member Bd. of Education, School Dist. 108
(?54-’57); Chmn.
Citizens for Council-Mer.
Govt. (54-’55); First Pres. Highland Park

ONLY

ERECTED ON
YOUR SITE

ty Center,

Open

Political

6 A.M.
Advertisement)

Page H 17—D

25

�wt

nee

AA

PS

at

oe

aa

TEMS,

ved
}

To Hold District
Women Golfers
Science Show
Tee Off Season At Next Saturday
Dessert Luncheon

100 FT. LONG RANCH WITH OVER 100 TREES

The

Sunset Valley Women’s
league will hold its annual

Golf
pre-

"
@
@
@

f
;

IS A GEM”

y ft. long Ranch built 1954
acres, over 100 trees
Circular Drive over 400 ft.
9 rooms, 2 fireplaces
The best 9 room offering

@
@
@
@
@

Call

BAIRD
REAL

576

ESTATE

SALES

Lincoln

@

LIONEL

&amp;

WARNER

«¢

OPEN

@

MANAGEMENT

11

INSURANCE

Hillcrest 6-1855

Winnetka
SUNDAYS

@

a.m.

to

(Paid

5

p.m.

Political

North

Suburban

All
interested
in
joining
the
league
are invited
to attend.
Booklets
describing
the
golfing
events of the coming season and
stressing rules changes since last

be paid by April 30 to Mrs. Robert
Weinberg, 1235 Linden, treasurer.
Dues
cover purchase
of trophies

of Deerfield who is an Evanston
High School
teacher, explained
that the fair is not to be compete-

year will be distributed. Co-chair-|ics, electronics and
men of the event are Mrs. Lee|
H. E. Hanson,
Lamson, 1158 Glencoe, and Mrs.| physics teacher at
Harry Kinzelberg, 841 Marion.
High School, and
Dues of $12 for the season must | the exposition with

WATSON

MORTGAGES

Avenue

Family Room 20x20
Sep. den with fireplace
2 beautiful baths
Fabulous kitchen, cost $10,000
Priced in low, low 60's

annual

Junior Academy of Science

Exposition is to be held Saturday
April 15 at Highland High School
from 7:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Over 1,000 students, seventh
graders
to
high
school
seniors,
from schools in Lake, DuPage, and
the northern part of Cook County,
will
display
their
scientific
endeavors
at the exposition.
The
fields covered will run the gamut
from Aeronautics through Zoology,
and the greatest number
are expected to be in the classifications
of math, biology chemistry, phys-

season dessert luncheon at 1 p.m.
Monday
(April
17)
in a private
room at Strike ’N Spare Bowling
Lanes.
Earlier plans to hold the
event at the Saratoga restaurant
have been canceled due to remodeling.

“THIS

35th

District

astronomy.
chemistry and
Highland Park
co-chairman of
Guenther Kolb

and other prizes, as well as a final

tive, but honorary

luncheon.
The
season
opens
May
2 and
18-hole play will be held each succeeding Tuesday through October
3, except for Memorial Day, Fourth
of July and September 5, the first
day of school.
Highlights will be

second, third place and honorable
mention will be given. Judges who
will
be
qualified
men
in
their
fields, will work in teams of three
and are headed by Robert J. Carmichael, chief of judges and science
teacher
at Highland
Park
High.
The exhibits will be open to the
public from 12 noon until 2:30 p.m.

Advertisement)

DANIEL A. VETTER

awards

of first,

the June match play tournament;
the
Club
Championship
tournament
and
the
new
‘President’s
Cup” tournament, both in July; the
August
match
play
tournament,
and
the
September
medal
play

competition.

For Councilman

The
season will wind up with
a “last
chance’
tournament
for
non-winners in previous events.
Membership in the league is on
a_
first-come,
first-served
basis,
with
a maximum
of 80 players.
Priority on the roster is given to
past members.

e Pledged to fight EXCESSIVE

Mrs.

Joe

Hurst

of

983

Harvard

court, president, said she expects
this season’s
membership
list to
be filled by the start of play.

TAXATION

RADIOE

e Pledged to stop EXCESSIVE SPENDING
RAndolph 6-3332
30 N. MICHIGAN AVE.
Suite 1511

e Pledged to represent ALL of
Highland Park

SAVE 20%
ON

Highland

Park’s ‘’Man-of-the-Year”’

President of the Jaycees ... would
perience

in 1959... and

now

ALL TUBES

retiring

be the only Councilman with ex-

in building and construction.

VOTE Tuesday, April 18
For a Working Councilman for THE PEOPLE

(Paid

Political

Advertisement)

Your

Own

Tubes
rwvvyYvW)

DANIEL A. VETTER

FREE...Test

4
;

Radio Dispatched
TV

&amp; Radio

Service

GRANT &amp; GRANT
708

Central,
ID

Highland

2-7222

Park

t

Page H 18—D 26

Thursday,

April

13,

1961

�'Program April 19
Devoted to Magic

Miss

An evening of magic and comedy
will
greet
the
members
of the
North
Suburban
League
of the

Jewish
Children’s
Bureau.
they meet Wednesday, April
8:30 p.m.,
Center.

in the Northbrook

sudden

ance

when
19, at
Youth

appearance

things hapwill be the

and

of a live white

disappear-

dove,

predic-

tions of events come true and the
amazing and unexpected discovery
of magical powers of members of
the audience,

Responsible
happenings

for

will

be

these
Edward

strange
Seder,

Margaret

McComb,

daugh-

ter of the Hamilton W. McCombs,
1852 Dale Ave. recently returned
from Fargo, N. D., where she attended the 16th biennial province
convention of
ma sorority.
who

Among
surprising
pening that evening

|

Attend ‘Kappa’ Meet
In Fargo Recently

Children’s Bureau

has

throughout

Kappa

appeared

his

Gam-

professionally

native

and New Jersey
nalism
student

University,

Kappa

New

York

El lange

area. Now a jourat
Northwestern

Seder

performs

widely

around
Chicago
and
the
North
Shore.
Arrangements
for the program
were
made
by
Mrs.
Lawrence
Tayne, 543 Clavey Ct., and Mrs.
, Bernard Peskin of Northbrook.

Shae
Quality Shoes for the Family
616 CENTRAL AVE.
ID 2-0879
G. S. Laing

Gene Meyer, 7-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
Meyer, 584 Hyacinth Pl., proudly holds Herky, an award for
a prize winning letter sent to the Totem Club program on
Chicago’s educational TV station WTTW.
The contest is a
part of the program featuring Dr. Andrew Merrick (left),
Brookfield veterinarian, who gives youngsters information
on the proper care of their pets. Gene is in the second grade
at Wayne Thomas school.

=

TEST
Question:

YOUR I.Q.
ON R. H.
What

is R.H.?

hwn

Question: What brand names does Random
. Question:

How
Can

Question:

Does

House’s

prices?

i set terms at Random

House?

Random

ou

Question:

are Random

House offer?

. Question: Will Random
decorating problems?

House

House

deliver?

answer

7. Question: What nights are Random

my

interior

House open?

8. Question:

What

is Random

House's: address?

9. Question:

What

is Random

House’s

. Question:

Are there any

more

Start your lawn off right

telephone

Doom crabgrass the

number?

questions?

same day you seed

ANSWERS TO I. Q.
ON R. FH.
*noA 405 9104 Bulyjyowos s as0yy
“punoiD 3sMoiq puD ‘suajqoid
Buijosov0p owioy anoA Burg
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“JOA 19}9q 10 ‘AOquINU sUOYd|]a} JOY} {]0D ‘d4D 9494) yy SABMSUY

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*9DUdIUDAUOD ANOA 204 ‘SyyGiu ADpiag

puo ADpsanyy

saoMsuy

HALTS® creates an mmvisibie barrier that destroys crabgrass as it
sprouts—
yet it lets good grass sprout unharmed. Apply HALTS
the same day you sow all-perennial, weed-free Scotts seed, and
crabgrass won’t get a chance to spoil your success later on. TURF
BUILDER® is the all-important third step in your one-day spring
program. It supplies the protein-building nutrition new and
established grass needs to thrive. Do all three jobs easily

*

°
°g
°/

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WiOsy ‘20409 0} STIS WIO’y “JIDJOP UT Susdj;qQold ANOA SsNdsIpP 0} pD|6 aq
[}!4 CYA

PoOdxe

Bulyoso2ep s019}UI

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WopubY

s4aMSUY

and accurately with the Scotts Spreader. You’ll never spend a
more rewarding afternoon on your lawn.

‘9

‘ougAup ‘quoymAuy s4omsuy
*wojd guowAnd YNOA UNS oy ‘pobuoiD 9q UD Sud] S4OMSUY

“Y

*Ayjonb ayy so ybiy so
you

asp saad

-y9y20d

Al9A9

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405

sy}

OSNO},

y! ynd $407

WOPUDY

“y05pnq

yO bulYyjoWOS

Ai2Aa

puo

Sau0y]

Save

yo0qG

s4aMSUY

*

Scotts

*(4gnujOA 10 10}02—o1Nn}
“huang woospeg doy s1ys0jd) ajAyg-jo&gt;D ‘AjjOeg “oIxiq-uopNg ‘sow
-Apy ‘anoswoy ‘woybuijig ‘201;034617 “pay 907 ‘spuosy usopow
“uy
‘sowoe ‘w6605 sahnyy ‘yyoyrswanN-uospspyriy ‘ (SHodull)

Ippoaow

‘(syodui)

‘woos

Buray

ayy

40g

49jU0D JSOUlY S,21045 YON

Thursday,

April

13, 1961

U01}D91904

BuryzAsoaq

24j—OSNOY,

10

USP

‘sBurysiuany

WopUdY

‘1Dq

‘WOO1

jonsod

104

Ss! “"H'Y :4aMSUY

Spreader

SHERONY

Byes so yons ‘spuosq LUIpoay 944 j|V :4oMsSUY
"woos

Bump

5.00

*

314

Green

Bay

Rd.,

Highwood

—turt Builder (req. 4.95) plus
(reg.

16.95)

both

only

16.90

HARDWARE
OPEN

SUN.

10-12

°

ID 2-2041
Page

26-A

�RAVINIA

SUMMER

PLAY

GROUP
*

bus transportation

* gardening
¢

excursions
once-a-week

picnics

¢ water play

farm animals

June

*
*

26th

thru

4th
PA 4-3355

enrollment

James Smith, head librarian at
Highland Park High School, who is
treasurer of the Illinois Association
of School Librarians, attended the

11th

8.
The
“Meeting
Smith,
from

spring

conference

of

convention
theme
was
Changing Times.”
who has a B.S. degree

New

done

York

University

graduate

work

in

and

has

library

science at the University of Chicago, has been at Highland Park
High
School
for two
years.
He
taught one year at the laboratory
school at the University of Chicago

DRIVE CAREFULLY — THE LIFE YOU SAVE
MAY

annual

the
Association
at
the
LaSalle
Hotel in Chicago on April 7 and

oq

Qa morning
program
for pre-schoolers
limited

August

Attends ALA Spring
:
Conference In Chicago

ep A So Sp Sn A Sa Sn J So J So Si fo, So SS Sn Sn Si i Son
VuvuVvVvVvVvVvVvVvVvVvVvVvVvVvVvVvVvVVvUVCVVVVVS

MARILYN STRAUS’

BE YOUR OWN

and was head librarian at the high
school

in

Ottawa,

IH.

Robert Wolfe and Larry Bloom,
seniors at Highland
Park High
School, will appear on WBBM-TV
Saturday, April 15, at 12:30 p.m. to

debate the negative side of the
Question
“Federal
Income
Tax
Should be Reduced” against Morton High School of Hammond, Ind.

Anyone who wishes to see the
live telecast maY write Jerry Levin
at the television station to request
tickets. If more than 20 students
indicate a desire to make the trip,
the school will furnish bus transportation, according to Charles B.
MoGivern, debate team coach and
social studies teacher at the high
school.

Tongue

and

the

world’s

potato

sal-

ad or cole slaw.
Take your choice

two

of our

out-of-this-world

of our pickles,

too.

WE

TO

CATER

HOURS—8:30

A.M.

to

Midnight:

—

WHO
Friday

LOVE
and

We cater to Bar Mitzvahs and sales meetings.

TO

Saturday

EAT —
to

Ave.

David

2

A.M.

THE
—

told

po-

de-

molished 1954 car for steering linkage failure.

Stoned

30%
OFF
CHILDREN’S

PATENT LEATHER
SHOES
Thursday,

If you haven’t got the message yet,
just come
in and look around.
We'll
guarantee
that you'll agree that The
Steer is the best delicatessen you've ever
shopped!

THOSE

Groveland

Mrs.
Bernard
Fiedler
of 1238
Lincoln Ave. found a stone in her
sink under a broken $50 Thermopane window Tuesday morning last
week, Highland Park police were
told. No noise was noticed during
that night’s high winds.

If yeu’re @ lex ‘mn begel devotee, we've
got the best. Heme mede Chopped Chicken Livers are a Steer specialty.

finest

of

lice the steering ‘‘gave out.”
Police
will
examine
the

Fred Haslach of 1834 Richfield
Rd. found the convertible top of
his 1960 Buick cut in three places

Come To Us For Food To Go’
Salami,

suffered multiple facial lacerations
and
a possible
fractured
right
knee, Highland Park police report.
Their car was eastbound on Lambert Tree Ave. when it ran off the
road and hit a utility pole just east

Window

ID 2-9586

cheeses head the list. But don’t stop
there, for you'll want to buy a pint or

Highland
Park
Hospital
Sunday
evening for treatment of a bruised
elbow and knee. Stuart Kaplan, 14,

Delicatessen

Crossroads Shopping Center

Teke your pick from the world’s best
delicecies.
Mot Corned Beef, Pastrami,

David Kaplan, 17, of 1700 Happ
Rd.,
Northbrook,
was
taken
to

Car Top Slashed

when
he returned
from
walking
his dog last Thursday evening.
It
will cost $150 to replace, he told
Highland Park police.

ve

and

Teen Brothers Hurt
In Crash with Pole

Debate on TV

Friday and Saturday

Only

BEST
Closed

Tuesday.

The ultimete in Western dining plecoure.

on HOOVE!
cleaners

&lt;a

* + /7

feature

&amp;

RPA

Little “lankeoo Shoes
a

oe

$5 950

©

Light and easy
to use
King size throwaway bag .

®
COME

IN

TRY

20—FACTORY

AND
IT!

©

TRAINED

NO

EXCHANGE

NO

REFUND
Open

50°o more suction with
attachments

TECHNICIANS

TO

SERVE

1%

WAUKEGAN

Blocks North of Moraine
For

Page

26-B

AVE.,
Rd.—East

HIGHLAND

PARK

of Tracks

your convenience we are open: Thursday

ID
AMPLE

and

Frida

Evenings—7

FREE
to 9.

PARKING
All Day

AT

THE

2-6260
ALL

TIMES

SALES
FINAL

Thursday

and

Friday

Nights

elitr Sthoes

YOU—20

Highwood Radio &amp; Appliance Co.
2631

ALL

499

YOUNG

Central, Highland

POINT

OF

VIEW

IN

SHOES

Park

ID 2-0172

Wednesday.
Thursday,

April

13,

1961

�Three Cars Collide

Crash at Old Mill

Mary Hojnoski, 24, of Quarters
1530, Ft. Lewis, Wash., got a ticket

Fred Kinn of 127 Clyde Ave.,
Evanston, got a ticket for failure

for

to

driving

Saturday

too

fast

morning

for

on

conditions

Skokie

Val-

ley Rd. at Berkeley Rd.
Highland
Park
police say
she
skidded on slick pavement
at 45
miles per hour into the rear of
a car driven by Ruth Isely of 1230
Elmwood PIl., Deerfield.
The Isely car was pushed into

the rear

of one

driven

by

George

yield

the

right-of-way

after

collision on Skokie Valley Rd.
Old Mill Rd. Saturday night.

a

wha

at

the way

—

clothes g°
n Lines

American Va
via North
move,
“Wife-Approve a’?
in a
dustcloset into
m
fro
t
straigh
wardrobes.
ing
vel
tra
proof
Rafferty

Highland Park police say he hit
the car of Joan Cassidy, 796 Old
Trail Rd., while he was making a
left turn.

@

service!
Complete
e Co., 2123
Transfer &amp; Storag
k, «
Highland Par
,
Rd.
Green Bay
ID 2-0507.

Luczanich of 348 Jocelyn Pl., Highwood. Both were waiting to turn
left.

NEW
BUSINESS in Highwood opened recently with
Mayor John Frantonius cutting the ribbon while Mrs. Bob
Turelli looks on. She's Billie. The shop carries women’s and
children’s clothing. It is located on Highwood Ave. next to
the dime store; a block which includes several new storefronts.

Truck

Windows

Hits Car

Eugene

Joseph Innocenzi of 1912 Elmwood Dr. got a ticket for negligent driving after a crash Friday
morning: with
the
car
of
Jack
Randles, 16th Artillery, Fort Sheridan.
Highland Park police say Innocenzi backed a GMC
truck from
the Bloom St. viaduct to Waukegan
Ave., turned north from the wrong
lane, and hit the passing car,

Gone
Orrico

returned

to

his

home
at 781
Pleasant
Ave.
last
week to find five greenhouse window sashes, 2x6 feet, missing from
the greenhouse
in back. He left
them
there in December;
values
the loss at $50.

No matter what you want to buy
or sell you'll find the Want-Ad section

your

best

market

place.

after
nost people
Get the results of an expert

Kills crabgrass
as it sprouts
a

i
)

Just as the body
muscles age with the
years — won't let you do some things you did when
you were younger—so do the muscles that control the lens of the eye become less elastic. When
they do, your eyes gradually lose their ability to
focus on near objects. That’s why, after forty,
most folks need glasses—or a change in the ones

:

The seed from last year’s crabgrass is in your lawn—just waiting
for warm weather to sprout. In half an hour this weekend you can
make sure it will never come up. Just fill the accurate Scotts
Spreader with HALTS®, set the dial, and take

a walk. HALTS

creates an invisible barrier over the entire lawn, lies in wait, then
strikes when crabgrass sprouts. HALTS doesn’t harm good grass—
in fact, HALTS is so compatible with grass you can actually seed
the same day!

they are wearing. Yes, glasses can help cancel out
many flaws in vision that come with middle age.
So see your eye physician (M.D.) for eye examination. And don’t cringe if he says you must wear

Ask us about the Scotts guarantee...

a better lawn or your money back!

glasses or bifocals for the first time. Hore at H.O.V.
we know all the tricks for making them attractive
as well as comfortable.
:
CONSULT AN EYE PHYSICIAN

(M.D,) FOR EYE EXAMINATION

che Lloyse of Vision ™
Craftsmen

1891

in Optics

SHERIDAN ROAD, HIGHLAND PARK
610 CHURCH STREET, EVANSTON
135 NORTH WABASH AVENUE, CHICAGO
@H.O.V,

Thursday, April 13, 1961

O'NEILL'S
1746 SECOND ST.

ACE HARDWARE

,

|

ID 2-1150

Bring your lawn problems to our Lawn Program Advisors. They have: the
know-how and the experience to help you achieve the kind of lawn you want.
Page 22

�Northwood Student
Wins First in State
Mary

Mr.

Ann

and

wood,

won

Warren,

yyy

i,

j

Fabulous

ce

at

Moderate

Prices”

was

in the

another

Fort

DINING

a

a

y
AY

ROOM

RATHSKELLER

In Our New Cocktail Lounge

HUNGRY FOUR

Ray, Len &amp; Doug

SINGING WAITERS

Music — Vocals — Comedy
6 Private Bisin Booms |

‘

On

EDENS

Reservations

Fi

(Just

for

Ann
her

school

Bowie,
essay

on

Deans

to

Lis
Pictured taking orders for Arbor Day trees at recent Park
District Night at the Recreation Center are Civic Beautification

Conn., " recently y were Louise Rosenthal, daughter of the L. R. Ro-

:
:
Committee
officers
Mrs. Albert E. M. Lover and Mrs. Harold
Burnstei
‘
R.
Burnstein (seated). Background shows trees offered in

sunihaia, 810 Baldpin’ RA, dod Ann

Fdehen

6-8080

14 W. RANDOLPH

e

Mary

Sheridan,

amed

50-250 people

EXPRESSWAY

Northwood.

grader,

Named to the dean’s list at Connecticut College, New London,|

accommodating

vv at LAKE ooOK Ly morn

Revolutionary

John Marshall.

Tues, Thru Set.
a: kvtvate Saves: Neti)

hadommeaetioes 16 te

of

High-

first prize in the Illinois

American

eighth

i

Bai!

daughter

Fabbri,

War patriot.
She had previously won first in
the North Shore chapter, DAR contest. Winning honorable mention

HEIDELBERG
ee
‘International Cuisine

New

Peter

Division Daughters of American
Revolution,
historical essay contest for her essay on Dr. Joseph

;

atVilla Moderne
e
Visit Our

Fabbri,

Mrs.

ava

west of State)

tanita

Camas

Of Vis. ahd Ae

3434

Ola

Mill

sale.

Rd.

at

Both are juniors.

the

Deadline for orders is April 15. Blanks may be secured
Park

District

office,

1801

Sunset,

Recreation

Center

or public library.

Boy Hurt by Truck
Darrel
mour

fered
bow

bx

Your clothes come
Pt)

m

)

Bh:

Unrein,

Ave.,

an

13, of 1734

North

abrasion

and

Sey-

Chicago,

to the

complained

suf-

right el-

of a sore

hip

after colliding, on foot, with a
panel truck driven
by Clifford
Boose of 1237 Ridgewood Dr.
The accident occurred at the
corner of Deerfield and Skokie
Valley

Rds.

week.

Tuesday

Highland

damage

to

the

afternoon

last

Park police list $5
right

front

fender.

Nab Water Bombers

out as Sweet as

nny, bom, whe tren, aon
running in and out of the Ravinia
Northwestern station and the out-

y

:

ia4%

a

4
‘

:

mr

;
ee

:

peat

ee

7

“4
1S

4
Wl

side phone booth there, were made
to clean up the mess Tuesday

d

morning last week.
Howard

pe
rs

rs

ce

ome

ig

.

p

_

aHANY

Bs

a

:

3

j

{la}

eles

ale

cITIC

dryer

5

station

agent,

old and

the

other

release names.

-

14, but did not

The present with a future, a U. §.

(Only electric drying

|_|

Erickson,

called Highland Park police. Police
said one of the boys was 13 years

PRESTIGE

FLAMELESS
ELECTRIC DRYING

So Clean, So Safe, So Modem

.

J

identifies

TRY AN ELECTRIC DRYER IN YOUR HOME FOR 60 DAYS

|

a

~ MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE

sd
z
M

There’s nothing like the fresh,
sweet smell of really clean clothes
—completely free of fumes and

100% clean electrically heated air
| ever mixes with your clothes.
Electric dryers have no pilot

?

you get this kind of clothes drying every time. They make sure

A 60-day home trial will prove
_ that flameless electric drying is

fumes or fuel dirt never creep in

the cleanest, freshest, fastest way

because electric dryers use no

to dry clothes—or

fuel, have no flame. Only gentle,

back.

ig

odors.
Electric dryers see to it that

!
‘fl

;

your

WELCOME WAGON

SPONSORS...

firms of prestige in the

waning

are

For information,
eal

to light, no fuel pipes to get in
the way.

Highland Park
Shia: aid ei

ie iD 3-2253 pe
Deerfield-Bannockburn

Grace Clork
WI 5-0887
Groce Brady

every penny

of Lincolnshire

See your appliance dealer today

WELCOME WAGON

O Public Service Company
EI

|

3

_ Page 28)

FEB, 5-11, 1961

©Commonwealth Edison Gounany

Thursday, April 13, 1961

�~ Landlubbers
and

Seafarers!

Last weeks’ TNT prize went to $580 because Mrs. Lawrence Peddle,

689

Homewood

Ave., was

a current TNT ticket last week
Schooley

of Garnett

&amp; Co.

when

unable

to produce

called upon

As a consolation

by Jack

prize

We Are Happy to Announce

she was

awarded a $10 gift certificate from Sunset Foods.

SALES on the NORTH SHORE

The prize in merchandise awaits any shopper who
picks up a free TNT ticket at any of the seven participating

‘

stores.

rs &amp;
Mibgactat hepels
© Most Complete Funeral Home

and Downtown

Underwater Breathing Apparatus

%

Swimming

%
*

for

Masks and Fins

* Parking adjacent to building

3

Chicago

¢ Funeral consultation and arrangements may be made
own home with our North Shore representative.

Spear Guns
Depth Gauges

_

,

K

%&amp; Watches
s ¢ Compasses

COMPLETE INFORMATION

smal] or large attendance

* Convenient to North Shore

%

te Dry and Wet Suits

¢ Perfect accommodations

in Metropolitan Area

Pa: eae

Seis

Air Fills - Books — Pamphlets

in your

SUBURBAN PHONE NUMBER—VErnon 5-2221 |
or
5206

North

LOngbeach

Broadway,

1-4740

Chicago

(Just

north

of

Foster)

|

SPRING ICE SKATING
Classes Beginning

DRIVE CAREFULLY — THE LIFE YOU SAVE
MAY

BE YOUR OWN

ICE TIME AVAILABLE
Our Sport Shop Corries:a' Full Line of
Skates , Blades, Skirts &amp; Accessories
i

Pf oustroww

Pp:

ANTS

protects your home
against insect damage
Among the most common insect pests around all homes,
large and small alike, are ants. One of their coziest
refuges is around the kitchen sink where they positively revel in the moisture and warmth. Of course,
they journey to other parts of the house too. They are
frightfully unpleasant and downright dangerous, but
now

you

can

get

rid

of

them

easily,

quickly.

Pest Control, division of Aerosol Exterminators.
end

to your

waterbugs,

ants,

but

carpet

insect pests that

their

beetles,
invade

HPC

spiders

our homes.

Plan

and
HPC

Just

phone

Household

They'll not only put an

will

get

rid of

moths,

all

the

other

damage-dealing

chemicals

are safe

roaches,
for people

. . . murder for insects. The HPC Plan is inexpensive, too—as low as
$20.00 per year for two complete treatments inside and out for most
ad iy
homes . . . $2.00 for each additional room, Don’t delay, call
today!

HOUSEHOLD
Thursday,

April

13,

PEST CONTROL
7 DAYS A WEEK
1961

—

HI 6-6173

bar
ICE SKATING

.

:

oN

Hillcrest 6-4123

}

g
4

j

915 Linden et Tower Road
Winnetka
Page 29. .

�Plan Summer Camp Programs for Area
Volunteer

and

Hair

Cutting

Specializing

in

High Blonding
In All Shades

Permanent

of Beauty

Council,

Boy

are

putting

an

estimated

North

Scouts

plans

in

1,500

and

staff

Shore

Area

of
shape

boys

America,
to

give

the

op-

and Deerfield units are included in

Waves

All

of the

portunity to attend camp this summer.
Highland
Park,
Highwood
this council.
Tilden Batchelder,
Council
Camping Chairman, said a 17 per
cent increase
in the
number
of

Hair Cutting
Featuring

leaders

members

Branches

Culture

St.

Johns

Avenue

ID

EXPERIENCED

moved

2-1603

June

better!

ADDING MACHINES
SALES - RENTALS - REPAIRS

NEW LOCATION SPECIAL!

Chandler's

MEN'S &amp; LADIES’
RAINCOATS — TOPCOATS

645 CENTRAL

Beautifully Dry Cleaned
and Made

¢

of

Council

Purpose
of the
camping
program, Batchelder explained, is to
provide the opportunity for those
institutions which sponsor. Boy

Scout troops (churches, PTAs, civic
and fraternal groups)
boys
in their
units
character

perience

to
an

give the
outdoor

in self-reliance

building

which

—.

the

might not otherwise
vide for the boys.

an

ex-

institutions

be able to pro-

Camp
Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan,
with 720
acres located, on an inland lake, is

owned

and

operated

Shore

Area

Council.

valued

at

for two

weeks

$500,000.
per boy

by the
The

The

North

camp

$45

is

cost

(paid by the
costs

are

Authors Article
Mrs.

Ruth

Esserman,

chairman

of the art department at Highland
Park High School, is the author of

an article entitled ‘“‘Towards a New
Appreciation of Art” which ap-

For nearest Jewel dealer, see
Phone Book Yellow Pages,
or phone SEeley 3-2430,

City of Highland

Area

gram.
Transportation
additional.

INSTANT
PAINT

SPECIMEN

Shore

boy) include room, board, and pro-

flat finish for walls and ceilings

ID 3-0230

the
North
staff.

and

JEWEL

AND

Libertyville, a full-time member

training experience

29

makes painting
50 easy!

NEW!

TYPEWRITERS

their store in Crossroads

to serve you

Opens

The
boys who
will attend the
camp will be supervised by a camp
staff of 68 headed by Camp Administrator Charles Gribble
of

OPERATORS

SHORE LINE CLEANERS
has

Camp

The first camping period begins
June 29 and the last period ends
August 23.

LASSIOUE peauty Nihon
815

boys attending the Council’s Camp
Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan
near Antigo, Wis.,
is expected this year. Early registrations also have seen a strong
tendency of Boy Scout troops to
register for camp periods as units,
he said.
To date 45 Scout troops
from throughout the Council area
already have registered for camp
as units.

Boy Scout Troops

peared in the March issue of the
North Shore Art League News.

BALLOT
Park, Lake County,

Illinois

GENERAL

Dry Cleaned
by Shore Line's

TUESDAY, APRIL

New

FASHION

ELECTION
18, 1961

FINISH

A textile finishing agent
that renews the original

Nominees

feel and drape of your

for

Councilmen

garment.

Of The City of Highland

Park

at the

General

ESTABLISHED
“Where
Complete

Craftsmen
Quality

1913

Clean
Dry

Your
Cleaning

Clothes”
tervies

Election

FOR COUNCILMEN
(Vote

for

Two)

Located in the “Island” at the Main Entrance of

: CROSSROADS SHOPPING CENTER

FRANCES

HIGHLAND PARK
e
ACRES OF FREE PARKING
_ GET ACQUAINTED OFFER—SAVE KING KORN STAMPS
—USE THIS COUPON

JAMES

This

coupon

redeemable

for

IRETS

100

IIDILDLLSD

PEER RRARE ESOT

KING KORN STAMPS |
with any $5.00 dry. cleaning order.

All rights reserved,:
April 29, 1961.

This Coupon Good at Our Crossroads Store Only
SHORE LINE CLEANERS
Bring this coupon with your order.

SM MIOA

AID

AAI ATOM

OOD:

Sess

&amp; This coupon redeemable only for King Korn stamps.
;
n the King Korn Stamp Co.
Coupon void after

BOROWITZ

WILLIAM.
DANIEL

M. ARENBERG

B. HUTCHINSON
A. VETTER

Roy Millen
City Clerk
4/6-13/61—85

Thursday,

April 13,1961

�side

extends

an

electric

cabie

capped with a’stainless steel “son-

ic head”

that

resembles

flavins

a radid

Trouble ‘Gnas

CAR: INSURANCE?

microphone.

The sonic head is placed against
the affected part of the body (see

Regardless
write

of

the

HIGH

LIMITS

DAVID

we

can

LIABILITY,

MEDICAL

photo) or an ailing foot or hand
is placed under water and the sonic
head
is moved
slowly
back
and
forth about a half-inch from the
skin.

reason,

COLLISION,

“for

—

LOW

A.

and

you”

RATES

BEATTY

SUNSHINE
BRIGHT!

INSURANCE
AGENCY
ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE
500 S. Genesee, Waukegan, II.
ON 2-0240

Dr. Aldes explained that inside
the sonic head there is a piece of
(Continued on page 32)

Weekdays Till 9 p.m., Sat. Till 3 p.m.

50th Year of Successful Teaching
SECRETARIAL, STENOGRAPHIC,
TYPING, ACCOUNTING, AND
BRUSH-UP COURSES.
GREGG AND

EVANSTON
BUSINESS COLLEGE

SPCLONTHANY suormanp
J

Day and

Evening

1718 Sherman

Ave.

Classes
UN 4-3004

Wm.

H.

Callow,

Prin.

That’s why all men
like our laundering
William Berger, Director of Phiysical Therapy at Highland
Hospital demonstrates the Ultra Sound Generator, the hos-

Park

tf.

pital’s “Silent Machine.”

The “Silent Sound’ machine in
the physical therapy department of
the Highland Park Hospital is an
unfamiliar piece of equipment to
most people. Its real name is Ultra
Sound Generator and it has been
used successfully in Germany since
1930 and was brought to this country in 1950, according to William
Berger, Director of Physical Therapy at the Highland Park Hospital.
In the past five years, research
with
ultrasonics—in
New
York,
Washington, Chicago, Los Angeles,
Denver—has surged ahead. Today,

ultrasonic therapy is coming out of
the laboratory and into hospitals,
clinics and doctors’ offices.
Exactly what is ultrasonics? It

can

best

be

described

sound”—that

highpitched

is, sound

for the

as

“silent

too shrill or

human

ear

to

detect. But even the experts aren't
sure
how
this
inaudible
sound
works
on aching muscles
or inflamed tissues.
There
are
three
theories,
(1)

Sound waves

verted

to

heat

(which

cannot

Fun3ral

be

Jewish

felt) and thus benefit affected tissues; (3) The waves creat subtle,
beneficial chemical changes in cells
themselves.

Treatment with ultrasound is remarkably simple. Dr. John H. Aldes,
the
how

of Los Angeles,
field,
recently
it works.

a pioneer in
demonstrated

“AND

NORTH

Community

SHORE

South Shore Chapel:

to

Jules

2100

L.

Since 1865

and

prefer

because

ing

SERVICE
Furth,

Men

our

we

laundering

do

a

job on each shirt.

the

their

stoff,

your

gently

Complete facilities in your community
for prompt service .. . Lee J Furth,

Call Midway
3-5400

The instrument that produces ultrasound is about as large as a portable dishwasher. It is covered with
levers, dials and lights. From one

Directors

COMPANY

will

shirt

but

we

wash

it

..

.

mend it... sew on any missing

buttons

. . . and

week

East 75th Street, ct Clyde

improvement!

SALE
PRICES
EVERY DAY ON EVERY ITEM

On receiv-

thoroughly

personally arrange and conduct
the
entire funeral—a service of warmth
and: beauty, observing customs and
ritual with reverence,
Avenue

complete

expertly.

iron it

Try our service this

and

you'll

notice

the

AT
SKOKIE VALLEY
LAUNDRY

“massage’”’ body cells,

increase blood supply and stimulate
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fy

4

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oS

of

be

be

he

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hp

Ml

he

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Main Office and Plant:
IDlewood 2-3310

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FREDRICK A. MOKRASCH,
Chiropractor
524 Waukegan Avenue, Highwoods

ARLINGTON

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NORTHBROOK
PARK RIDGE

Thursday,

April

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When physical distress develops¢,
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y—headaches
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CALL
ID 2-3310

13, 1961

HTS.

°¢

Arlington Market, Dryden and Foundry
¢ Northbrook Meadows, 1941 Cherry Lane
¢ Village Green, 678 N. Northwest Hwy.

512-518 Waukegan Ave,
Highwood

Page

31

�Silent Machine
‘Bar

on

Budget

Frame

75th

quartz

physicians and many friends, Al‘mer Coe Optical Company, wellknown prescription opticians, have
opened a fantastic budget-economy
eyeglass frame bar in each of its

locations. Fantastic, because up-toand

conservative

advance

or exotic

styles

frames

in

are

available at money-saving prices
| from $5 to $10. There are wide as‘sortments; frames for men, women, and children.
-Almer Coe Optical Company was
established in 1886. Now on the

75th birthday there are stores con-veniently located in the North Mall
at Gid Orchard, Skokie; at 1629
| Orrington Avenue (next to Cooley’s
Cupboard) in Evanston; and at 10
North Michigan Avenue in Chicago.

You

are invited

to come

in

and

browse around the new budgeteconomy
eyeglass frame
bar at
your favorite Almer
Coe
store.
‘Those interested in contact lenses
should come in or phone for brochure, “Almer Coe explains the
@ase and convenience of contact.

lenses.”
vited

Charge

and

terms

accounts
can

be

are

crystal

about

the

size

in-

arranged.

—

rent is passed

through

of

a

the crystal,

it contracts and expands at the rate
of 1,000,000 times per second, producing sound waves at the same

rate.

sound to treat sprains, bruises and

. Ultrasonic waves pass through
skin, muscle, blood and bone. But

silver dollar. When alternating cur-

Birthday

In answer to the requests of eye

the-minute

‘fracted like rays of light.

‘(Continued from page 31)

Opticians

.

air stops

uneven

them

cold.

surface,

That’s

like

why

a hand

an

or

a

leg, often must be treated under
water.
The course of treatment, says Dr.

Aldes,

usually

consists

of a series

of 12 ultrasound radiations, daily
or every other day. Each treatment

This is called the “Piezo-electric
effect.” These sound waves pene-

lasts three to 10 minutes.

trate to a depth of about two inches

England back in 1883, but it wasn’t
till the 1920’s that doctors in the
U.S. expressed interest in ultra-

and can be beamed,

reflected or re-

Work

with

ultrasonics

began

in

sound for medical treatment.
At
that time there were skeptics in
the medical world. There still are

Conbal

ccc

Open

Coe

some.
Since

Chane

the

1950,

lead

the

over

U.S.

European

has

taken

research-

ers in the field of ultrasonics.

éx cLaundry

Aldes

1 Day Laundry Service

himself

ID 2-0305
1873 St. Johns Ave.
Highland Park

treated

more

horses,”

suffered

by foot-

ball players.
In dentistry, ultrasonic drills are
being used experimentally to determine whether they can do the
job more efficiently than standard
drills.
Thus, used alone, ultrasound is
proving its value. New tests indicate that it may be even more effective when used in conjunction
with certain drugs.
Dr.
Aldes
has
already
experimented with cortisone-family drugs
along with ultrasonics in animal
studies, and in a few people. Preliminary results are hopeful. The
patients reported considerable relief from joint pains for several
months.
Ultrasonics has been criticized in
some quarters as being a “‘dangerous” form of treatment. So it is—

ul-

in unskilled hands, just as the friv-

with

olous use of any ordinary therapy
is dangerous.
But,
doctors
say, safe
dosages
have been worked out for all parts
of the body. Careful analysis of
each of his 3,000 treated patients

doctor

has assured Dr. Aldes that none ex-

has
experimented
with
the
new
treatment technique to relieve pain
and spasm among certain aged patients.
Last fall, team physicians of four
Big Ten
universities
used
ultra-

perienced a harmful chemical
or
physical change.
Understandably, doctors shudder
when a single treatment is labeled
a
“cure-all.”
Doctors
who
have
used
ultrasound
make
no_
such

3,000

physician
hand

selected

has
In

cases

treated

conditions

ultrasound.

Call For and Deliver

has

Dr.

“charley

trasound. He notes success in about
four cases out of five.
At the Columbia University (New
York)
medical
school,
another

than

SINCE 1926

HN

Almer

|

with

crippling

successfully

Chicago,

a

TRAIL BLAZER DUDE RANCH —
AN EXCLUSIVE DAY CAMP FOR BOYS AND GIRLS—5 thru 12

|

| CARPET

in Northbrook,

A Large Selection Of

]

heating services in the North Shore
Area.

|

In The Smartest Styles

a

Newest Colors — Reasonable Prices

— DeSitte
r

Bro

Carpet

Harold

Hillcrest

Bay

Road,

No harsh

1920

Hillcrest

6-6120

Monday and Thursday 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.
Daily 9 A.M. to 5 P.M.

Chicago
_ CARPET

Page 32

chemicals

of SPOT REMOVING

Winnetka

6-3336

NIGHTS:

Kammerer

ID

Metallurgi-

the annual banquet of the or-

ganization held
in St. Louis,
McCulloch, a
20-year resident
of
Highland

‘
:

Park,

also

serving

on

is
the

advisory committee
of the

ee

McCulloch

Illinois

State

Geological Survey. In addition, he
is a member of the Coal and Coke
D-5
committee
of the American
Society of Testing Materials.
He received Master’s degree in

coal

mining

University

was

engineering

from

of Washington

a fellowship

the

where

student

he

working

with the U.S. Bureau of Mines in
Seattle.
Locally, McCulloch is a member
of the Highland Park Kiwanis club

and

the

den

club.

North

Shore

Men’s

Gar-

‘greats’—like the X-

CLAIM

DAY

CLAIM

DAY

ID 3-2475
2-2078

Of Out-of-Season Garments Cleaned by Us.
¢ Not Box Storage. Each Garment Individually
Stored on a Hanger by Itself.

SAVE

120 Green

and

cal Engineers in

FREE STORAGE
1

Specialists Since

Mining

25360
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
to all
persons that
the first Monday
of May,
1961, is the claim date in the estate of
IDA
M.
SHERIDAN,
Deceased
pending
in the
Probate
Court
of
Lake
County,
Illinois, and that claims may be filed against
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 9 A.M.
ALBERT
BORK
Executor
Behanna &amp; Engber, Attorneys
1935 Sheridan Road
Highland Park, Ill.
IDlewood 2-4304
4/6-13-20/61—91

Ravinia Plbg. &amp; Hig. Co., Inc.
ID 2-5561-62

of

i

ADJUDICATION AND
NOTICE

in repairs to all makes and models of washing machines, dryers, dishwashers, disposals and other kitchen appliances.

595 Roger Williams

stitute

25343
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
to all
persons that
the first Monday
of May,
1961, is the claim date in the estate of
CLARILDA
BAKER,
Deceased
pending
in the
Probate
Court
of
Lake
County,
Illinois, and that claims may be filed against
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 9 A.M.
EVANGELINE MECHAM
Executor
Behanna &amp; Engber, Attorneys
1935 Sheridan Road
Highland Park, II.
[Dlewood 2-4304
4/6-13-20/61—90

available to organizations for parties

With the addition of
Harold
Kammerer to our staff, we now
have our own full-time APPLIANCE
REPAIR DEPARTMENT specializing

Chicago, recent-

ly was installed chairman of the
Coal Division of the American In-

ADJUDICATION AND
NOTICE

We are happy to announce the
expansion of our plumbing and

INotitelstol mm sigelsloks

Schaefer Company,

ray and antibiotics.”

Pool

Camp Season: June 26 thru Aug. 18, ‘61
Phones: OR 4-9789 or OR 4-3829
Weekends

William C. McCulloch, 303 Sheridan Rd., president of Roberts and

other medical

IIlinois

Swimming, Horseback Riding (2 Corrals),
Fishing, Boating, All Sports, Crafts, Golf, Hot
Lunches, Teacher-staff, Transportation, etc.

a

Of Coal Division
Of Mining Engineers

claims for this therapy.
But one distinguished physician
has this to say: “Ultrasonics may
one day take its place alongside

Directed by Teachers—Program Fitted to Child
All activities conducted on our Country Estate
Ultra Modern Outdoor Swimming

Appointed Chairman

—. La Grange

EXPERTS AGREE THAT CLEAN CARPET WEARS LONGER!
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ROESSLER’S EXCLUSIVE CLEANERS
727

ST. JOHNS AVENUE,
ID 2-0352

HIGHLAND
ID 2-0312

PARK

Thursday,

April

13, 1961

�|

h

—Ny

SS
NORTHSHORE MUSIC STUDIOS
o~.

ij

(Formerly Garino’s)

Inquire about

our

Clarence Dombeck, proprietor

liberal trial

Instrument

Franchised

for accosdion—guitar

dealer Gibson Guitars

Dallape — Scandalli
Highlond Park Studio
1D

pian

furnished

— Camerano

Accordions
Evanston Studio

2-0015

UN

4-4888

ORIGINAL

In time
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itginsteln
and SONS inc.

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io

minutes

Mrs. J. J. Friedler Jr., 327 Marshman, Highland Park, Chairman of the Alcove Gift Shop
Service, a part of the Woman's Auxiliary program at the Highland Park Hospital, checks plans
for a new doctors lounge. A gift of $10,000 has been given by the Alcove Gift Service for
the construction of the lounge. The room is used by doctors for relaxation and also contains
their mailboxes and bulletin board.
Fraerman and Dr. M. Glickstein.

The

doctors

shown

are

Dr.

J.

H.

Lundstrom;

Dr.

S.

85

women

from

Highland

of

Volunteers

is

and

members|

Partments

tive

committee.

Creative

hand

made

both

order.

in

the

A

groups

gifts
shop

cart

provide

of

goes

by

special

to

patients

rooms three days weekly carrying
gift and drug items. Television
service to patients is offered. The

and

gifts

of

Th

all kinds. Co-chairman
i Mrs. Robert Bachle,
is

Sa

eR

£f

G

a

€ NECCHI-E
GIRL
git Slee Dh omlua
y
rigs

te

BY APENKCS SEWING MACHINE Ca,

John

Barr,

Park

infants

Mrs.

are:

1-1890

Adjacent
i

HERSHEY WEINSTEIN, President
LAURIE WEINSTEIN, Funeral Director

parking

for

over 200
cars...

Mrs.

Sheldon,

575

Park

and

in

items.

1005
charge

Wade,
of

Mrs.

toys

Neisen

Sahn
ane *. Deere Park E.,
|*72 land Park; Mrs. C. V. Stew(Continued on page 34)

WAIT

!
Featured in the shop are unus-

ual

shop

Highland

Lyman

Highland

Industrial
group
does
personal
shopping
for
businesses
sending
Christmas
gifts
and
for conventions and meetings.

of the shophop

Mrs.

Groveland,

distinction|M?8..

and

the

Road

H. Harris Jr., 1372 Sunnyview,

Winnetka;

art

of

Shore

:

Park, Glencoe, Deerfield and other | Robert Ruhl, 617 Rice, Highland
North Shore suburbs includes the | Park.
shop workers, buyers, creative art|
The Buyers for the various degroups, cart workers

North

Peterson

LOngbeach

Chairman

of the Industrial group and execu-|S.

West

the

H.

The volunteer group of approx-| 2313 Sheridan Rd., Highland Park.
imately

8019

from

‘TIL YOU

HEAR

THIS!

The reason | look so neat here at the plate is
because | send my uniforms to
o
é

ad

RELIABLE

g

He may miss many a close one, but he’s
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@ Thorough, gentle dry-cleaning

@

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@

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@

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right

a

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Te \ibo Thiol
Our mine of imported treasures

“Spring,” says Hannah, “is the

yields this elegant four

time of year when a 3 man’s
fancy turns to what the girls have
been thinking about all winter!"

piece coffee service of Sheffield
silver plate... perfect idea
from our complete collection of
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$38.50, including federal tax.

Call us today! We’ll arrange to
bring the machine of your choice
to

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a

free

demon-

stration!
We

Repair

All

Makes

ARENDS
Sewing Jy
MACHINE _ CO.
‘

fe]

Servceot?
Goh...

aa *

NECCHI
\ IDiewco
Yat
9-5 60

NEC

The Gift and Bridal Registry

3 Serving the
i

North Shore Over 60 Years

Wi. PLS

Pst

662 CENTRAL

NA

eenent 3

GF Bucs fast oF GreerBoy HVGHLAND PARK
Thursday,

April

13, 1961

Phone

Today

...

ID

2-4551

2226 Green Bay Rd., H.P.— AMPLE FREE PARKING

OAK DS RTE
Page

33

�Meeps

5

Gidwitz Heads 1961

B. M.

ORI

ir

See:

,

be

TUCKPOINTING—Masonry

‘

CHIMNEY—FIREPLACE

i

Repair—Cleaning

2

FLAT ROOF
hot tar recoating

fl

Call

a

DRAPERIES

you

Gidwitz,

405

$200,000

want

goal

May

to buy

15 to

Draperies

‘ ©

Slip Covers

* Custom

/ ae
2 Dy,

:

890 Linden Ave.

a

‘

and

Leon.Sherman,

1675

Bell Ringer

Cam-

wood

Lane,

for personal

to

reach
the

Society’s

21.

Deerfield

Robin-

items in the shop.
Other

the

IT CAN

Furniture

4

j
;

Deerfield,

Personnel

Mrs.
Edward
Heinsimer,
646
Melody, Highland Park; Mrs. Robert Berger, 114 Laurel, Highland
Park; Mrs. Robert Logan, 340 N.
Deere
Park
Dr.,
W.,
Highland
Park
purchase
household
items.

Mrs.
Frederich Livingston,
1391
Sheridan Rd. Highland Park and
Mrs. Robert Sorg join in jewelry
selection. Mrs. Nelson Culver, 688
Deerpath, Deerfield, chooses cards,
candies and paper goods and Mrs.

123 Timber

receives

special

Lane,

orders.

Mrs.
Bennett
Goodman,
100
Belle,
Highland
Park
and
Mrs.
Daniel Gutmann, 246 Beach Lane,
Highland Park head the Creative
Art Divisions, while Mrs. Robert

ID 2-3430

dustrial

James

B.

Assistant

Deerfield

is Promotional

Director,

Mrs. George
Coston, 1533 Woodbine Ct., Deerfield is treasurer of
the group and Mrs. Edgar Heyman,
1233 Lincoln S., Highland Park is
secretary.

BE DONE

Warner

Reasonable

Rates

CORNER

Excellent References
Free Estimates

Wall

CENTRAL

Washing

Leading

ID 2-8917

Official

ELECTRONICS

¢ Septic Tanks

FCC Approved
U.L. Approved
1 Yr. Guarantee

¢

Inspector

COMPANY

Residential

HI 6-5080

454

PARK,

Pee)

appointed
Chairman
of
the Fuel’
and
Autom
otive Section of
the
Industry

7 and

Vogue

Western

722

R.R.

acai

Established

Office and

1885

West

Central

AUTO RADIATORS
MIDWAY

AUTO RADIATOR

by experienced

Alterations, fittings and
repairs to all types
of clothes.
Reasonable Rates

GULIA CROSS
Walnut St., H.P.

ESTATE

Delivered

1084 W. EVERETT ROAD
LAKE FOREST, ILLINOIS

Sparkling

4-0249
5-0308

VALUES

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cooler specialist . . . using

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For

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Call or Write

1883

ID 3-1484

Second Avenue, Highland Park, Illinois
A DIVISION OF MIDWAY LIMOUSINE SERVICE
IDlewood

TREE

GOOD

sy
PITTENGER

PRESCRIPTION

Water

Naturally

ESTATE

TELEPHONES:
LAKE FOREST—CEdar
DEERFIELD—Windsor

Park,

Monday, June 12.

Bottled

4-3034

Mortgages
Road

Highland

the college, will premeeting. Her co-chair-

mencement,

Sales-A ppraisals

Deerfield

ID 2-2883

SEWING

REAL

National

cussed
are
the
Spring
Festival
Pageant, Sunday, May 7; Alumni
Day, Saturday, June 10; and Com-

Holes

,

Nursery

Deerfield

of
the

Evanston

WILLIAM

WI 5-0035

- Commercial

Bound

Fabric Shop

REAL

at

man is Arthur C. Allyn, Jr., Evanston, a trustee,
Among future events to be dis-

Belts

Main

of the Executhe 75th An-

celebration

Goodman,

trustee
side at

etc.

Button

UNiversity

F. D. CLAVEY

cone

Manufac-

turing Division,
Business DiviJames Ash
sion, during the
1961 April Crusade of the American Cancer Society. The fund-raising goal of the Industry and Manufacturing Division is $157,400; and
of the entire
Business
Division,
$369,000. The state-wide
goal
stands at $1, 60,000.
Two million
volunteers throughout
the nation
will distribute life-saving literature
on cancer and take contributions
during the April Crusade.
Ash-also worked as a volunteer
for the American Cancer Society
in 1958 when he served as assistant
public relations chairman of Chester County, Pa.

dict K.

Sweaters,

Shirts,

Buttons —- Hand

LANDSCAPING

Refuse
Rubbish

Blouses,

&amp; Machine

North

has been

College
of
Education,
Evanston,
will be held at 7:30 p.m., Thursday,
April 13, at the college. The chairman of the committee, Mrs. Bene-

SERVICE

Pleating —

ILL.

Designers

for the

Linens,
Towels,

2-2028

a Smile
¢
©

Catch Basins
Pumped

On

HIGHLAND

ID

REFUSE

With

DRESSMAKERS’

Repair Craftsmen

Jewelry

SERVICE
Service

650

Watch

SERVICE

HIGHLAND

RADIO CONTROLLED

SERVICE

Watch

DISPOSAL

RCA

RCA

SHERIDAN

and

BERNARDI

©
°
°

&amp;

REPAIR

ewe bors

TELEPHONE

Rd.,

RelaCorpo-

ration,

The final meeting
tive Committee for

MONOGRAMMING

Leeds

PAINTING

Ridge

Public

‘tions and Advertising, Borg-

niversary

JEWELER — WATCH

729

Plan Anniversary

Hubbard Woods

| PAINTING &amp; DECORATING

Ash,

Director,

Division.

Mrs. John Barbee,
1016 Sheridan
Rd.,
Highland
Park
is
in
charge
of the Alcove Cart, Mrs.
Kerwin Knoelk, 1327 Warrington,

lee
‘

2

Aids Cancer Drive

Sorg, 1307 Warrington, Deerfield,
and Mrs. Howard Kahn, 1469 Sheridan Rd. Highland Park, are In-

WHERE

* Upholstery

* Carpets

|] * Bed Spreads

Sanders,

Mrs.

As
general
chairman,
he
will
head the entire campaign consisting of special gifts and the Bell
Ringer March for Mental Health.
More than 30,000 volunteer workers throughout Chicago and suburban areas in Cook, Lake and DuPage counties will participate in
the door-to-door Bell Ringer March.

We Custom Make

_*

1960

page 33)

chair-

during

May

INTERIORS

i a

art,

fund-raising drive, to be held from

‘

:

Sheridan

from

Glencoe

general

efforts

&amp; FABRICS

|
:

named

of the 1961

spearhead

=
what

Willard

(Continued

paign of the Mental Health Society
of Greater Chicago.
Gidwitz will

ID 2-4553

matter

Drive

man

ie

_No

Health

Rd., has been

BASEMENT leaks repaired

5

Mental

Walter Hiller,

Hospital Auxiliary

INSURED

BUSINESS

WING’S TREE EXPERTS
Licensed by the State
Introducing a new power stump

BUSINESS SERVICES
Tape Transcriptions

cutter

Now is the time to order
FIREPLACE
DORMANT
SPRAY
and
woop
DUTCH
ELM CONTROL
BE SAFE
NOT SORRY
TREE REMOVAL
POWER SPRAYING
WING’S TREE EXPERTS
FEEDING
TRIMMING
Phones:
CABLING
ID 3-1622 &amp; KI 6-2292
PATCHING

Fast

Dependable

¢ Bookkeeping
© Mimeographing

Pick-up &amp; Delivery
591A

Roger

Monroe

PHARMACY
St.,

5th

6, Ill. ST 2-0075,

Williams

Want

Floor

ST 2-5880

MAKE

To

MONEY?

Neat

ID 2-0650
¢ Secretarial
* Notary Public

W.

SERVICES

HIGHLAND

BONDED

521

Chicago

3-0833

EXPERTS

MONROE
PROFESSIONAL

Advertise on

This Page
CALL ID 2-4500

Ave.

CELLOPHANE?

PROTECTED

©

DIV.
RAINBOW

WEEKLY
OF
LAUNDRY

ORCHID CLEANERS
NEXT

TO
1862

SUPERMART PARKING
FIRST STREET

�MEY User Cate Important
ey

"

ae

=

Gee oecpt
oer ne CeBien
MPC TONY
ife seat
Pale 4
a ey

sete ye

pals, *

AR

To Assure Healthy Grass
Just as a carpet adds a finishing touch to a well-furnished
room, so a healthy lawn adds a thing of beauty to your outdoor
setting. Here are some tips from lawn experts to help you start

your lawn off on the right foot this season:
A
spring
number one

including

clean-up
should
be
on your list of chores,

Garage Clutter?
Try Wall Storage

a thorough raking to re-

move dead grass, leaves and other
debris.
Rolling is another essential at
this time
of year. If your lawn
seems rough or bumpy as you walk
over it, there could be several reasons for this condition.
The winter “heaving” of the soil
may have raised some of the individual grass plants. This can be
solved by using a roller just heavy
enough
to press the loose grass

You can gain storage room
in
your garage for a suprisingly large
amount of tools and equipment by
putting your walls to work. Merely

place sturdy %4 inch panels of per-

Or the bumps could be caused by
night crawlers (those large earth
worms that are great for fishing

forated hardboard over the studs.
With heavy-duty fixtures inserted in the perforations,
you
can
hang
up
ladders,
wheelbarrows,
bikes, hand or power mowers, garden hose, rakes and shovels.
Both hardboard and a wide va-

bait,

riety

back into the soil.

but

not

so

desirable

for

a

smooth lawn). Correct this condition by applying a heavy rate of
chlordane. This chemical kills off
the night crawlers and also wipes

out grubs
other

the

of Japanese

sub-surface

lawn

to level

beetles

and

soil

insects.

Roll

out

the

in the

spring,

When

these

steps

are

lift out without

by

control

cluded

in

also should

your

spring

available

at

Your Home and

Garden Section

of any

So that

the storage

you

may

make

this your

most

successful

gardening season ever, the newspaper is offering this
section with news, hints, tips and places to get the things

kind,
pat-

you

need

to

get

growing!

2,4-D.
One
solution,
the
Antrol
Hose-Spray Weed and Brush Killer,
combines this ingredient with 2,4,5-

T—a

powerful

poison
—and
ment.

be in-

lawn

tools

you can re-arrange
tern in a minute.

finished

you can do any re-seeding that is
necessary. Before applying the seed
loosen the top % inch of soil lightly with a rake. Rake lightly again
after the seeding.
Then roll very

lightly.
Weed

are

Shelves for storage of paint cans
and other small items are easy to
make with the fixtures and boards.
Because the fixtures lock in and

too, being

sure to get uniform coverage
avoiding skips or overlapping.

fixtures

use.

mounds

after applying the chlordane.
It’s good to apply a commercial

fertilizer

of

lumber yards.
In fact, some manufacturers have
introduced pre-finished boards or
perforated boards with a built-in
wainscotting especially for garage

care

chemical

lethal

to

ivy and other woody plants
a handy hose-spray attach-

To combat crabgrass before it
program. The best material discovered to kill broadleaved
weeds riddles your lawn, use a chlordane
without
damaging
the
grass
is treatment early in the season,

SPRING
PLANTING
Beautify Your Grounds

j.+a seed

PLANT NOW!

to suit

EVERGREENS - SHRUBS
TREES
This is our own stock—
grown in our own fields—
in Lake Forest.
We
WARREN’S

@

KAY-BEE

@

COMPLETE

@

WARREN

WARRANTED

ROSE

hhh’

&amp;

BONE

LANDSCAPE

SERVICE

@

PERMIER

SOD

hpphr—or4444h4h-h4444'r
vv

6 yYVVUVVUVVY
*
4

FOOD

LAWN

44-444

FOOD
MEAL
PEAT

Every Davis seed blend is the result

MOSS

of constant testing for best results
in climatic conditions and soils peculiar to five mid-west states. Davis

44r'h
4
q

VWrVUVVYYUYY

@

also feature:

otted

€
q
&lt;

.

poh

4
&lt;

WE INVITE YOU

&lt;
¢
&lt;
&lt;
&lt;
¢
q
4
.
©
€
«

TO VISIT OUR GROUNDS

SEE THIS TRULY

Lawn Seed has gained in reputation

@

4
»

€

3
4
@
€
4
&lt;
«
4
&lt;
s
4
i.
4
¢
¢

4

4
&lt;

e

4

HIGH-QUALITY

and esteem for each of the past
30 years. Good reputations are
EARNED—Davis has the VERY BEST!

AND

STOCK

Special Price For Cash &amp; Carry
Sales office open daily and Sunday

JOHN FIORE NURSERIES
840

S. Waukegan,

Thursday,
#

April

Pics ae ae
bea

Sus.

as

tasted

te

i

Ns

.

Ber

"

Oye

¥i

A

eer

13, 1961

Lake

Forest

CE

4-0476

OTHER

FINE

DAVIS

B4

DACO

KILLS CRABGRASS
BEFORE IT STARTS

PLANT FOOD FOR
LAWNS, TREES, SHRUBS

At

Your

Distributed by

Local

HI-LITE

DACO-SOL

HIGH ANALYSIS, LIGHT
WEIGHT FERTILIZER

WATER SOLUBLE
FERTILIZER

DACO

Garden

GEORGE

PRODUCTS

Store

A.

or

DAVIS,

Hardware

INC.

Dealer

Chicago 30, Il.

�K| I]

SPIMPORARTY ANNOT WIN
North Shore Area
Spray before May 8
After that date, crab grass seeds will
germinate and it’s too late. Apply
ORTHO-KLOR Chlordane Spray now,
nip seeds and seedlings in the bud, put

stops

crab grass

before

it starts—nips

seedlings in the “bud.”

controls

grubs

and

season.

lawn

insects too—all

crab grass seeds and
through

the growing

lasts all summer,
easy

to apply!

your hose.

lingers in your turf to protect it all season.
spray with ORTHO Lawn Sprayer attached to

cheap

to use!— costs less than ¥ cent per square foot of lawn.
results tested, proved!—leading colleges find Chlordane gives
§|.
=
excellent control of crab grass seeds and seedlings.

Page

36

{fm

cum

pm

eee eee eee
Thursday,

April

13, 1961

�herself, and color
opportunity.
The
trend
to

affords

her

latex

an

few
outdoor

living

everywhere has surmounted regional color preferences so that today,
the same paints are called for in
California and Massachusetts, New
Jersey and Colorado.
Climate
as
a factor
in
color
choice becomes less important as
Americans travel and product distribution
becomes
broader
and
more rapid. Our advanced communication tends to make the entire
nation one in spirit and desire for
color.
The
building
material
you’ve
chosen for your home is also a clue
to your color preference. Owners
of wood houses prefer white, gray,
green, ivory, while stucco and concrete houses—growing in popularity—use a higher ratio of pink, yellow, aqua... the livelier colors.

Aiding the demand

Still going up as the number one paint for the exteriors

of houses is charcoal.
and turquoise
consultant.

color!
today

according

by those who

prefer

Fifty per cent of all
are in painted colors.

homes

Three out of four of these wear
a fashionable coat of light green,
yellow, pink, blue, beige or—gaining fastest of all—charcoal.
From
last place
as a roofing
choice in 1951, white has climbed
to first place and is way ahead of
runners-up
light green and light
gray.

to Faber

Birren,

SEE

OUR

Turquoise, pink, bright coral and
other lighter, daring shades, brighten house
trim—shutters,
window
frames and doors.
Why the nationwide trend toward
bright exteriors? A survey of your
own
family’s
habits
can
answer
that question . . . even give a hint
as to the most suitable shade for
your dream cottage.
Take
the
little
woman.
She’s
more active outside the home than
ever before. She’s broadening her
social activities—the
theatre, the
PTA exhibit, the club outing. She
has a growing desire to be creative

GREENHOUSE

OF

BLOOMING

POTTED

SHADE

TREES

GRASS

FRUIT

TREES

FERTILIZERS

feature

cut flowers

CORSAGES
. . . Open

Skokie

Hwy.,

Lake

and

. . « ASK

drying—two requirements
of
America’s
mushrooming
army
of
do-it-yourselfers — exterior
latex

years.

With

new

and

being

developed

and

popularity

of charcoal,

paints are today offered in a wider

turquoise,
grow.

off-white

and

relaxing

colors,

colors

that

laugh and colors that whisper. People who crave diversion and excitement, who delight in parties and
many
friends are sure to prefer
bright yellows, pinks.
If you, on the other hand, like

peace

and

quiet

as

colors.

Your

home

to be traditional,

itself

rather

is likely
than

hues

sought,
beige,

and

the
aqua,

blue

will

makes painting
so easy!

NEW!

JEWEL
INSTANT
PAINT

a rule—enjoy

entertaining
in
a
limited
way,
you’re
probably
drawn
to softer
greens
and
blues,
more
gentle

lighter

flat finish for walls and ceilings
For nearest Jewel dealer, see
Phone Book Yellow Pages,
or phone SEeley 3-2430,

mod-

ern.

for cheerful-

The face of residential America
is changing . . . it’s smiling in gay,
adventurous color. What of the fu-

ONE DAY
CARPET SALE
Room-Size
Remnants

50%

OFF
Sunday,

LEWIS
Edens,

We are equipped to assist you with your gardening

“ Top Soils
“ Lawn Rolling
“ Gravel Drives

“

and More
April

16th

CARPETS

near Tower—VE

5-2400

prob-

MAGIC

lems quickly, courteously and efficiently.

LIFE
GRASS

Manures

“ Tractor Work
~“ Dirt Fill

FERTILIZER

“ Tree Removal

ONLY $399

Jim Beinlich
TRUCKING

PLANTS
SEED

complete

FOR

. . . $1.50

&amp; WRECKING

VErnon

5-1195

floral

VINYL BASE
FLAT
WALL FINISH

“KEN.”

and

up

7 a.m.-9 p.m. 7 days a week.

Flowers
1390

ture?
From
all indications, the
‘pastel era’ is here to stay for many

SEEDS

arrangements

Free Delivery

past

quick

PERENNIALS

GROUND
COVERING
also

and

range of colors than any other type.
Science has made
us aware of
color and its emotional effects. We
know that there are exciting colors

ly bright house colors is the supply of cheerfully
bright
durable

PLANTS

EVERGREENS

SHRUBS

We

in the

to use

color

LAWN»! Kindleins Florist
GARDEN
CE 4-2764
COME

introduced

Easy

Other top favorites are beige, aqua

in that order,

Women who once yearned for a
white ivy-covered cottage are being

out numbered

paints

years.

by

¢

%

Webosy.. PASE Flot Wall Fimeh

Ly
ME
Rar. T

Wire

CE 4-2764

Forest

Let magic LIFE do your
lawn work! Apply light

VA PEX

4 vy:

PRATT

e Wing --Odorions

YELLOW
&amp; LAMBERT inc,

weight bag of LIFE anytime of year. Grasses

Typed

srs

#

&amp; LAMBERT

require what LIFE supplies . . . 20-10-5. Faster
results, deeper greening,
healthier lawn in less time.

&lt;3

a

Don’t Swelter this Summer
Install Quiet, Dependable

‘EASY CLEAN-UP

WITH WATER

Mueller Climatrol
AIR CONDITIONING

with brush or roller. Covers well,
has no objectionable odor, dries

quickly

__, FREE!
“ane

CANBE
SCRUBBED

Thursday,

April

13, 1961

Lambert

Vapex.

From $6.40 gal.

PRATT &amp; LAMBERT PAINTS
—- Glass — Wallpaper —- Window Shades —- Drapery Rods
Shutters and Picture Framing
ID 2-1418
Waukegan Ave., Highwood

Mirrors

=

velvety

BREAKWELL'S

Call for your copy.

poce-E xalsituetehiad
Phone: SP 4-3300

to a full-bodied,

finish. Let us show you modern,
colorful, scrubbable Pratt &amp;

You deserve the comfort, the heart-easing relaxation
of the finest in home air conditioning.
And Mueller Climatrol Central Air
Conditioning is considerate of your
aya
ef
lif
neighbors. Outdoor unit purrs, never
roars...quiet—as only quality can be.
Get our estimate now—no obligation.
Conditioning.”

tape

Beautiful colors, decoratively correct. Exceptionally easy to apply

251

1 bag covers 5,000 sq. ft. |
SPECIAL
10-Bag

Price $35.00

CLAVEYS
Treeland
Skokie Blvd. &amp; Clavey Rd.
Highland Park
ID 2-4664
Page

37

�Stretch Your Family's Food Dollars!

ONE DAY
CARPET SALE

Food

OFF
Sunday,

LEWIS
Edens,

and
April

a

major

part

of

As a conscientious home maker,
you want to make more and more
dollars available for all the things
that go into better living.
And yet, you certainly don’t want

More
16th

CARPETS

near Tower—VE

is

every family’s budget.

Room-Size
Remnants

50%

money

5-2400

aside a small plot of
vegetable garden.
Start Now

land

Space, Grace Big Reasons
for

a

For Return to ‘Colonials’

You'll have fun growing your
own vegetables from seed and home

to scrimp on foods, which keep
your family in good health.
You can slash high food bills all

canning them with modern accessories. You’ll also get a special feeling of achievement when you serve

them.
But, in order to enjoy these bene-

fits, you should start planning your

year around and at the same time
improve family nutrition by setting

vegetable

garden

now.

Lasting Barrier Against Crabgrass
Restored
17th
century
home?
Early American house in New England? Not at all. It’s a brand new
house complete with air conditioning and all-electric kitchen, typical

of Colonial style houses being built
all over

country this year.
Rich Woods
This
design
gets
much
of. its
beauty and Colonial dignity from
double-hung windows of ponderosa
pine plus an authentic Early American entranceway with rich panel

Same as weuse screens to keep bugs out of the house,
we'll use HALTS°to keep crabgrass out of the lawn. By
spreading HALTS properly with the Scotts Spreader
now, we'll be laying down an overall protective
blanket on every bit of the lawn.
Later, when crabgrass sprouts—bing!
_-—HALTS nips it, shoot by shoot. It’s
the best answer to crabgrass, ever.

PERSONAL

NEIGHBORHOOD

Scotts:

OPEN

SUNDAYS

Our

Complete

POWER
All Rotary

HARDWARE

and

—

Reel

MOWERS

Models

447 Roger Williams Ave.

as modern

in performance

Your

Authorized

POWER

MOWER

V2 MILE

Line of

LAWN

—

as

:=

W iV

The Complete Lawn Food

M. §S. S. Inc.

ID 2-4387

JACOBSEN

38

9 A.M. — 1 P.M.

— TOYS

See

Page

LAWNS

HARDWARE
GARDEN NEEDS — HOUSEWARES

447 Roger Williams

RAVINIA

IN

er living, dining, and kitchen space
on the first floor. Many
leading
builders and architects agree these
advantages, as well as a trend toward
more
gracious
living,
will
make Colonial-style homes of this
type the most popular design in
1961 and for years to come.

today’s cars. High in nitrogen (22%)
for swifter, greener growth response
plus sustained deep-feed action for
longer-lasting lawns. Rich in potash
and phosphate too, Viva is the complete compact lawn food.
Come in today for Viva
RESULTS
GUARANTEED
— another money-back
with any IMC product
OR YOUR
guaranteed product from
MONEY BACK!
IMC.

SERVICE

Store Hours Daily 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. — Wed. ‘til Noon

RAVINIA
YOUR ONE STOP STORE —

Viva

FIRST

four or more bedrooms at lower
cost on the second floor, plus larg-

MOST POWERFUL
LAWN FOOD
i
s YOU CAN BUY
viva

More and more folks are coming to us for advice on improving their
lawns through an easy-to-follow Scotts Program. Come in anytime.
We'll be glad to prescribe the correct Program for your lawn.

Save *5.00! Scotts Spreader (16.95)
plus Halts (9.95) together only 21.90

the

door. This style is popular with
new home buyers because its center-hall, two-story design provides

2210
OUR

Skokie

SOUTH
Valley

Sales &amp; Service

&amp;

OF

GARDEN

RTE.

Rd. (U.S. 41)

Dealer

CENTER

22 ON

Highland

SPECIALTY—Small
We

USS.

41

Park,

Engine Repair * Sales * Parts *
sharpen and repair all makes and models of mowers
Bring in your old mower for a TOP TRADE-IN.

Ill.

Service

ID 3-2210

Thursday,

April 13,

1961"

�Prices Slashed ...You
Save 22% to 48% mor

MORE

APPLIANCES

AND

FURNITURE

QUALITY

ON

SALE

MOVING

e
J. Blumberg, Lake county's oldest, largest and most reliable furnitur
ings

now.

is licensed

This sale

of the sav-

advantage

Take

Park store.

store is closing its Highland

.

..

Park

City of Highland

by the

Permit No. 1.

FANTASTIC VALUES! COSTS DISREGARDED! EVERYTHING MUST BE CLEARED!
EASY CREDIT! FREE DELIVERY! TREMENDOUS SAVINGS! UP TO 3 YEARS TO PAY.
MANY ONE OF A KIND! HURRY ...SHOP TODAY!
LIMITED QUANTITIES!
FLOOR SAMPLES!
EARLY

BIRD

$3.95 Pacific
Gtr COVC? BOU

SPECIALS

Ironing Board
6.4 aaa ceed

TT¢

$21.95 Universal
Steam-Dry
fron plus adjustable ironing 5]
SaNig 2 Sp ORGIES Sp ene ae ge RN eae mn ee

Se

$6.95. Twist-o-matic Wax Applieator with pint of floor wax

$] V7
$ D Age

$7.98 Electric Alarm Clock
famous Sunbeam brand ........
$24.95

3-Pc.

Patio

Set,

ecg

Y segs

num, 2 chairs and chasie -.......

SMALL

APPLIANCES

$15.95 SUNBEAM
FRY PAN
extra large, square design ....

$17.95

SUNBEAM

STEAM

$Q77

and

DRY

IRON, easy to use,
$
97
NW TOT UR hoa ocs sussceaceCoducenndecceseud
I 2
$24.95 GE CAN OPENER,
automatic,
5] 8 ha
works electrically ....................
$37.95 SHETLAND
FLOOR
POLISHER, scrubs too,
ZF ! 5
PGCE s oe
a i ae
$49.95 DORMEYER
FOOD
MIXER,
famous Mixmaid model,
$ 2 8”
PONTOEO oi) siiienc nee ectedueodns
$49.95 GE VACUUM
CLEANER,
cannister deluxe model
ow enna ee
ee Bert *3 4°

JUVENILE

NEEDS

$12.95 FAMOUS
MAKE
STROLLER,
lightweight,
$ 8 88
POIGING: ‘MmOdGL 36
to
$14.95 STORKLINE
PLAY YARD,

40x40

inch size,

PRACT DPOOR

sk

$1 GO”
rus

daca la

$34.95 STORKLINE CRIB,
six year size with
$ 2 4%
adjustable: spring i acs...
$69.95 MAPLE BUNK BED,
everything
included,
$
9*

8 pieces complete

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

OCCASIONAL

WASHERS

CHAIRS

and

$29.95 EDDYSTONE. CHAIR, smart,
new occasional piece .... .... 3] 1?

$99.95 SPEED QUEEN
safety wringer,

WAH

dees: big
$199.95

$89.95

ADINE

foo as

PAUL

McCOBB

CHAIR,

elegant arm style,
$ 3 9*
decorator fabric &lt;i:
$98.50 DEARBORN
ROCKER,
Maple
wing style,
*5 9*
reversible cushions ................
$129.95 STRATOLOUNGER CHAIR
easy-view, TV
$ 8 gg
recliner: feature &lt;3 ke cas
$189.95 PULLMAN LOUNGE CHAIR,
deep comfort foam
TUDO DOW sce
*] 3 9”

peat Ee
OR, 11 cu. ft.

$

freezer,”

Crisper &gt;is. 308,

$499.95

PHILCO

ai

proof,

99

12 cu.

27

DRYER,
two speeds
two cycles, a
Rites

5-PIECE

9”

5] 49*

set‘3

29”

SETS

DINETTE

$59.95 BRONZETONE
30x40x48 size,
D ICOCS. 25.5

I 88

' 29”

a,

DINETTE

539

ROUND

DINETTE,
$5 ae

FREEZER,

14

cu.

Supermarketeer

ft

aa i

BEDROOM
$149.95

een *29

SUITE,

double

dresser, chest,
bogkease “Ded io
oe
kt
triple

WALNUT

dresser,

$

47
99

SUITE,

chest

re ia heh eo
bocktase:

bed.

$399.95 PAUL

chest,
GRORI

$529.95
triple
panel

McCOBB

95
229

SET,

bed, night stand,
$
Svce, Se ea ee ce eek 299

AMERICAN
dresser,
bed

chest,

88

SUITE,
$
aa 3 99

leaf,

95

and

with

95
99
SET,
29%

$139.95 SERTA
TRESS, finest

STEREO

PORTABLE
$
80

stand

1 68

$249.95 CURTIS-MATHES
STEREO
HE-FI with AM/FM
$
95
radio

quilt-top

style

LIVING

MAT95

HOLLYWOOD
$

............-......-..

ROOM

89

SUITES

$299.95 VALENTINE-SEAVER

SOFA,

$] §8*
Traditional, foam “T”
cushions
$349.95 KROEHLER 4-Pc. SECTIONao haat ator
$2 29 95

I 99

$599.95 CURTIS-MATHES COMBINATION, 23-in. TV,
$3 99”
Stereo, AM/FM ....................$49.95 GE PORTABLE STEREO
with $9.95 record
$ 3 9”
stand

SPEED

$] 9*

comfort .......
SEALY
INNERSPRING MATTRESS
or box spring
88
529
choice, each
FREE MATTRESS
SEALY BUTTON
or box spring,
$ 3 9*
choice, each
$69. 95 SERTA HOLLYWOOD
ENSEMBLE,
innerspring
$ 4 §*
GONISUPUG TROT ois ccsenieces
ees ase

$199.95
CAPEHART
19-inch PORTABLE, compact, ..............-- $
717
137
quality TV .

19-inch

MATTRESS,

sleeping

cost

low

SET,

$

TE MUTOCRIE acts. ess detiinantawn
genie
$169.95 DOUGLAS DINETTE
giant 36x48x60x72 table,
$]
B GHAR ihe
ea, Senne

$209.95 PHILCO
TV, complete

*] 79”

$319.95 BROYHILL SET,
triple dresser, chest,
$

storing

TELEVISION

SUITES

SEAMIST

$239.95

8 =

self

INNERSPRING

SERTA

SET,
95

acca ae

379, 95 DOUGLAS
5-piece

CHESTS

MATTRESSES—
BOX SPRINGS

SET,

extension table ........-:.......
$134.50 DAYSTROM
DINETTE
ERATOR, 2-door,
$
99
automatic defrost eS SOR 25 8
$499.95 PHILCO
REFRIGERATOR-

77

68
DRYER,

5] 8 oe
WASHER-

big pi Sp eee saad a
$549.95 WESTINGHOUSE

smart ebony frame,
ce
COMDPICLE: cic

REFRIGERATOR,

2-door,

automatic electric

and

$14.95 UTILITY
CABINETS,
double
door,
sg
assorted sizes
$24.95 MAPLE
CHESTS,
odd styles,
1 6*
assorted sizes, now ...............$29.95 UTILITY CABINETS,
all steel
5] 9”
5 large shelves, white ............
$39.95 UTILITY CABINETS,
giant, 36 inches wide
$ 29*
all’ steak &lt;i
$39.95 WARDROBE CABINETS,
30 inches wide, lock and
ROY) BROU au cc uecccacvanac scenes 529%

model
$249. 95 PHILCO-DEXTER Ti
eres
two cycle
SUCOMIG
LIC 5.1 4’, 20 sstakieinsesciSeens “| 97
$249.95 PHILCO ELECTRIC RANGE,
automatic clock-timer

$49.95

al

WASHER,
$

kk
lords sic iss
QUEEN
SPEED

DINETTE

REFRIGERATORS
$189.95 PHILCO REFRIGERATOR,

CABINETS

RANGES

$499.95

3-pc.

HOWARD

SECTIONAL

bumper end,
$
95
3 49
PORT: TUDDET foils int
$599.95 KARPEN 3-Pc. SECTIONAL,
Modern, foam
$ 4 4 4
“T” cushions

SPECIAL

QUEEN
Famous

Automatic

Electric Dryer
Orig.

149%:with

199.95

You

save

$50

trade

now

at

this

low

Moving

2
=
"
x
2
S
R
U
O
H
SPECIAL SHOPPING
Sale price.

Buy with easy credit.

Take up

to 3 years to pay.

Model 110

UNTIL

5:30

Thursday,

April

13, 1961

9 P.M.

OTHER

DAYS

TILL

P.M.

Page

39

�|'Use New Material
In Garage

Doors

Hardboard, that versatile do-ityourself
material
of a thousand
home uses, is no stranger to the
family garage.
Made of quarter-inch sections—
four or five to a door—garage doors

NURSERY
ANDO
GARDEN
SHOP

of hardboard are proving to be exceptionally durable and long-lasting as well as easy to construct and
maintain.

ACROSS FROM
EDENS PLAZA

No

Sanding

Needed

If
installed
unfinished,
hardboard doors are unusually easy to
paint or varnish and do not require filling or sanding.
Grain swelling, the bugaboo of
other wood product doors, isn’t a
problem because this reconstructed wood fiber material is grainless. Because the panels are moisture resistant, they will not warp

or separate from the framing.
Once
up, the panels
proof and dent-resistant.
Easily

are

mar-

Worked

The
well-known
workability
hardboard, even after the door

installed,

is

another

popular

of
is

fea-

ture.
Because of its composition and
method of manufacture, it is impossible for the single-ply hardboard panels to delaminate.
Hardboard ‘is used for any purpose requiring
a combination
of
. Strength, hardness, density and uniform surface,” according to a re-

port

by

the

U.S.

Department

| Commerce.

As Advertised

Suburbia

on Page 29 of

merry

Mildew
Resistant

THE FRONT-LAWN

LAWNFOOD

NOW...
A lawn food guaranteed to be
the finest you can buy! It's Thrive
from IMC.
Covers
5,000 Sq. Ft.

HALET NURSERY
GARDEN SHO
SKOKIE

NURSERY
ANS
GARDEN SHOP

Page

40

BLVD.

&amp;

Open

OUR

REPUTATION

LAKE

AVE.,

Mon.,

Wed.,

GROWS

WILMETTE
Thurs.,

Sun. 9 to 5.—Closed
Suburban Phone AL 6-0562—Chicago

(Across from
Fri., Sat.,

Edens

9 to 6

Tues.
Phone BR 3-2250

Plaza)

Vitolized
Oil®

RAVINIA
HARDWARE
Your One

Stop Store

GARDEN NEEDS
HOUSEWARES

447

Roger

Williams

ID 2-4387
Thursday,

April

13, 1961

of

�y

eye

‘

A Hobby For The Muscle-Bound
What’s

the

trouble,

friend?

muscles), the Platysma Myoides and
Splenius (of the neck), or is it just
that your waistline protrudes
to
the point where you can’t see your
own shoes?
Here’s a tip. Get out the old rake
and
shovel,
purchase
packets
of
garden seed, head for the outdoors,
and your worries will be over.
Enough

Is Enough

While your first day on a horse
. . - or covering nineteen holes of
golf ...may leave you a physical
wreck, gardening is one hobby that
will set you up, not knock you out.

When

your muscles notify you that

they’ve had enough for the day,
then so have you.
As you work along at your own
speed in your garden, think how
lucky you are that you’re not involved in one of those do-or-die,
see-it-through-if-it-kills-you
hob-

bies that people

are told they “en-

joy.”

While
you’re
chugging
along
there, turning the soil and breaking
it into fine pieces preparatory to
planting the seeds, feel the sun on
your
back
warming
up
the
old
bones
and helping
to loosen
up
those
tight
office-desk
muscles

you’ve acquired during the week.
Get

Fresh

Air

Try stretching your body and filling
your
lungs
with
fresh
air.
Get a little philosophical and take
to looking at and thinking of the
wonders of creation to be found in
your garden.
Get close to that old soil, friend,
and you'll find you have the most
inexpensive, relaxing and yet productive hobby in the world. Also,

you'll have

quite

a time

“Sleep
late,
MIDWAY
LIMOUSINE SERVICE

Are

you muscle bound in the Rhomboideus Major and Minor (back

for your-

Some Tips On Care
Of Garden Plants

and

your

pores

get all clogged

are you getting

to

will pick

the airport in the morning, Dear?”

“Why weed?” is the first question the new gardener asks. “‘Because,’ says the old pro, “weeds
are hardy plants and they’ll practically strangle tender little seedlings in their struggle to grab all
the good food in the ground and the
refreshing
water
which
trickles
down to their roots. Let’s just say
they’re tough and they’re greedy
and not very polite when it comes
to sharing with the more civilized
planted seeds. So, be as ruthless as
they are and wage war on them by
pulling them out every time you
see one turn up.”
When do we water, wonders the
new gardener. ‘‘Take a tip on how
you'd like your own hide treated,”
laughs the old boy, “if you don't
take enough water into your system, you’ll dry up ... too much,
and you'll drown. Then again, if
you don’t take a bath often enough

MIDWAY

LIMOUSINE

of time
flight.”’

is a “wife-saver.”

late model limousines, and our REASONABLE

know

your

soil and the

amount

may

It’s always nice when your neighbors
admit you were absolutely right. Which
is just what happened recently when
two neighbors in the automobile business came out with what the newspapers called Volkswagen-type station
We thought it quite a compliment.
It means that the VW Station Wagon
is now Officially a trend.
The VW Station Wagon is a new

type of automotive animal—the

RADIO

equiv-

alent of a steer that's all steak.
It's 4 feet shorter than a regular
wagon yet holds more: 9 passengers

plus 28 cubic feet of luggage.

1848 FIRST STREET
We stand solidly back
of every repair job
done by our skilled
TV technicians.
Your
satisfaction is assured
guarantee.
by
our
Modest rates.

THE

Its air-cooled

engine is in the recr,

NUMBER

Television

Taine

Thursday,

April

13,

1961

rates provide the perfect beginning
1-5878

AUTO
RADIO
SERVICE
and SALES

Sales

and

type” wagon. The Standard VW Station
Wagon is $0,000.00.
Both VW models have a

bumper

overriders,

third seat,

heater/defroster,

4-speed fully synchronized transmission

and

type” wagons these are optional extras.

The VW wagon has been in production 11 years. Continuity means quality.
Doors fit properly. Rattles were

Hours

Daily:

fully finished interior, On

“VW-

The VW Station Wagon was introduced in 1950—11 years ahead of its
time.
Its time has now come.

Come in and drive the VW
Wagon today. The original.

9 a.m. to 8 p.m.

Sunday—1!I

Station

p.m. to 5 p.m.

Scott-Kronn, Inc. @&amp;

Service

FOR

ID 2-8120

silenced years ago. The finish is a labor
of love: four coats of paint and two
complete hand-sandings.
And only the VW wagon has the guts
of a VW: the engine that can run at top
speed without strain and deliver the
legendary Volkswagen mileage.
But here's the clincher.
The Deluxe VW Station Wagon with
sun roof and skylight windows costs
only $0,000.00—about the same as or
less than the standard model “VW-

greater traction in mud or snow.
But remember: a "Volkswagen-type”
station wagon is not a Volkswagen.

20th Century TV &amp; Radio

MAGIC

our

will never boil over or freeze, gives
You can see why it's being followed.

and

drivers,

need.

ADDRESS—

Radio

uniformed

of

CENTURY

:

courteous,

water it needs and you won’t have
any problems.
Ah, I know the next question,
too. What do we spray? There are
a number of good all-purpose insecticides on the market that will
take care of most of your bugs.
Some of them also contain plant
food to give your plants that extra

wagons.

=.

in plenty

up

. . jUst 2 doors south

NEW

up

and end to a modern executive’s business trips. CE 4-4550—HI 6-2620—RO

We've Moved!

AND

Our

me

for that 7 A.M.

with
dirt,
it’s a trifle
hard
to
breathe.
Test the soil now and again and
if it’s dry and grainy, you know you
should
water
right
away.
If its
damp
enough to make a
ball in
your
hands,
don’t
water.
Your
plants have enough for the time
being. In other words, use common
sense about your watering. Get to

bit of lift they

self.

“How

AUTHORIZED

211

S.

Milwaukee

Ave.,

Libertyville, III.

EMpire 2-0320
Page

41

.

�|YWCA Membership

as,

Sinolyesbord ‘Binnby
April

A

Surprise

Awaits

THIS

BEAUTIFUL

Very
Rd.

&amp;

GARDEN

Reasonable

18th

Have

Not

Visited

CEMETERY

Prices

St.

Phone

DE

6-6500

Miss

Barbara

daughter
462

of

Ridge

Mrs.

Kay

Betterman,

Valv.

Betterman,

Road,

Highland

Park,

has been selected to be in the Colorado

choir

Woman’s

and

will

them.
The
Denver.

Tickets,
adults

able

and

from

purchased

College

on

tour

college

is

located

nominally
children,
the

with

priced
will

members
at

concert

go

or

door.

be

in

for
avail-

may

be

Campaign Opens
‘61 Goal Is 800
Highland
Park
YWCA’s
1961
membership
campaign
will
open
Monday with a goal of 800 members, Mrs. Robert Billeter, chair-

man announces.
Currently, the

YWCA

has

568

members, Mrs. Billeter said. However, during the past year, more
than 48,000 persons passed through
the doors of the “Y” at 494 Laurel
Ave, taking part in the many activities it offers, she added.
“Look Ahead with the YWCA in
the 60’s’ is theme
for the campaign. The “Y” is inviting women
and girls of the community to look
ahead with the local association as

it keeps in the forefront the development

of its program

and

services

to meet the needs of the times and
the area, the chairman
Need

Living

pointed

out.

Quarters

ia |

“One of the greatest needs in
this area is living quarters within
the economic
range of girls and
young
women
coming
into
the
community to work,’ Mrs. Billeter
said.
“The ‘Y’ residence is filled
at all times with these young people. The YWCA’s concern for their
welfare goes beyond just supplying
a room in which to live; every ef-

mi |

Bay

If You

Chapter
806,
Women
of
the
Moose, is planning a smorgasbord
dinner Sunday, April 16, from 3 to
6 p.m. in the Moose home,
1799
Green Bay Rd., Mrs. B. M. Cardina,
chairman, announces.
The
dinner,
sponsored
by the
Academy of Friendship degree of
the chapter, will be open to the
public. Mrs, Cardina will be assisted by 29 members in planning
the affair.

Elected Choir Member

i

| Green

You

16 for Public

fort is made

by the staff to make

the residence a home away from
home.”
Girls and women
who work in
homes, factories, and offices come
to the “Y” for clubs and informal

activities. Through the
classes they find that

x PRN

OMe

clubs
they

and
can

grow in mind, body; and spirit.
To demonstrate
some
of these
activities
Mrs.
Billeter
and
her
committee
are setting up an exhibit in one of the windows of the

ains

Larson

Stationery

Ave.

The

window

Store, St. Johns

display

will

throughout

be

in

next

the

week.

Mrs. Billeter has been assisted in
her preparation for the drive by

Mrs.

Robert

Ruhl,

Mrs.

Lindell

Peterson,
Mrs.
George
Postels,
Mrs. Harry Wolters and Mrs. Chester Jones.

Help your

HEART
slow down with

oh
FREE YOURSELF FROM TRAFFIC TENSION—USE
YOUR
COMMUTING TIME TO DO AS YOU PLEASE ON NEW
NORTH
WESTERN COMFORT-CONDITIONED STREAMLINERS
88 new

double-

deckers added

since August, 1960
172 now in

service—and more
coming every
week to replace
all old coaches!

Get away from those screeching brakes, blaring horns and driving
hazards—commute in the quiet,
safe comfort of one of the many new North Western double-d
eck streamliners. Relax, read or plan
your day in climate-controlled comfort ... under daylight-clear
fluorescent lighting. Wide, tinted
picture windows let you view the pass ing scene free of sun glare.
And, you move at express speeds,
regardless of weather or traffic. So commute with your eyes on
your newspaper, instead of the road...
go new North Western streamliners for fast, comfortable, tension-fr
ee commuting —every day!

GO

iW NORTH FESTERN

COMMUTER

STREHEAMLINERS

A Sam Oe

Mueller Climatrol
AIR

CONDITIONING
Ask your doctor if it isn’t wise to
let central air pe penis wa take hot
weather strain off your
y.
And you’re wise to choose Mueller
Climatrol.
For instance, service will never be
a problem. Mueller units need less,
for one thing. They deliver all the
cooling you'll ever want ...smoothly,
quietly. And if you want service, our
expert factory-trained mechanics are
just a phone call away.

Parts? Mueller Climatrol has three

huge exclusive Chicago warehouses,
The factory is only 80 minutes away,

“Longer Life through
Air Conditioning”
Call for your copy.

H.

H.
Box

OLSEN
164,

Phone:

CH

CO.

Gurnee

4-0010

Thursday, April 13, 1961
Ma
3

ts

�Legion Junior

Rec Center Adult
Sports Continue

Crowd Models
At Tea Apr. 19
Children
of
Highland
Park
Legionnaires
and
auxiliary
members are modeling in the tots’ style
show which follows the auxiliary’s
des sert-tea Wednesday afternoon,
April 19, at 1 p.m. in the Legion
Memorial
building,
Sheridan
Rd.
and Park Ave.
Models for the children’s fashion

showing will be John and Kathleen
Crowley, son and daughter of Commander and Mrs. Edmund Crowley
Jr.
Laura,
Janet,
Joan
and
Daouglas Van Arsdale, children of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Van Arsdale.
Also, Peggy Garrington and
Christopher Cameron, children of
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Cameron;
Douglas,
Phyllis
and
Mary
Lou
Haberkamp,
children of Mr. and
Mrs.
Louis
Haberkamp;
Patricia
and Carla Jean Hargreaves, daughters of Mr.
and Mrs.
Carl Hargreaves; Michael Harrison, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Alan J. Harrison and
Laura Ann Geraci, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Geraci.
Music will be provided by Mrs.
Robert McArdle of Green Bay Rd.
Tickets may
be obtained from

Frank

ard

Swatzler.

Waggett

or Mrs.

Shore

Business

Women’s

Club

and

Pro-

will

hear

two American
Field Service foreign students at the meeting this
evening, April 13, in the Community House in Winnetka. The dinner

is set

for

2:

6:30

p.m.

The

students

who will speak are attending
Trier High School and living
families
in Wilmette.
One
Japanese boy and the other a
from Uruguay.

Shepherd

Bites

Walter

Altholz,

$e:

Opportunity

knocks

every

pay

day

when you buy U. S. Savings Bonds.

in HIGHLAND

PARK

KILL
CRAB
GRASS
With
Your

Ortho

Dealer

Second,

of upkeep.

3 bedrooms,

baths, beautiful

House

beautiful

kitchen,

recreation

room

with

lot. Soapstone entrance floor, many

New
with
is a
girl

NOW...
Lawn Spray Company
Offers You a Professional

FERTILIZING
SERVICE

Call

Is:

Highland

Ahlmann

BAIRD

72

REAL

ESTATE
283

SALES

e

E. Deerpath

@

&amp;

Christensen

WARNER

MORTGAGES

@

Lake Forest

CEdar 4-1855

KILL
CRAB
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With

THE LIFE YOU SAVE—MAY

ORTHO-KLOR

Your

Ortho

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72
Is:

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Dealer

72
Is:

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is

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ws

GUARANTEED RESULTS proven in over
14-billion sq. ft. of lawn treatments yearly.
ACT NOW
1. Electronic Soil Test
GET FREE
2. Liming or Acidifying

GENERAL

OF

in the

SPRAY

hands

5-0864

NO,

Honey

NO

NO,

e e ethat's for Mommy's furs &amp; woolens

ID 2-7766
Thursday,

April

13,

of

With

1961

CRTHO-KLOR

Your

Ortho

Dealer

You can drop your cleaning off at one of our

72

and we'll

have

nearest

you,

routeman

Highland

Park

to

up today.

4 WINNETKA

Stores,

VAAN CLAD
CLEANERS

ID.2-7444

Is:

794

2-0124

. .. or phone

stop and pick them

GARDEN &amp;
PET SUPPLY

ID

ganged. Cg asne,!

Oe Cheanel auk stored with Wile »

our

|

wth Lithing cnet (ring uty

CKomepe ene Cnagh clube, teil

FVAN
Central,

boxes .. . TODAY)

PARK

KILL
CRAB
GRASS

SERVICE

DEERFIELD

BE YOUR OWN!

in DEERFIELD

With

fully planned combinations throughout the
season. Your lawn grows healthier, greener
— stays that way through summer heat
and into late fall.

Put your lawn problems
experts. Write or call:

BR 5-0450

DEERFIELD Gorden spot

in HIGHLAND

mation—as little as

@

INSURANCE

DRIVE CAREFULLY

(Pick up Your BOX STORAGE

1

e

ID 2-1150

WI

auto-

MANAGEMENT

Park

817 Deerfield Rd., Deerfield

scientific

sloping

Priced to sell middle

Dale

The World’s Largest

to

is on

641 Deerfield Rd., Deerfield

Ave., was bitten on the left thigh
Saturday
morning
by a German
Shepherd dog belonging to Robert
Marshall of 313 Laurel Ave., Highland Park police were told. Marshall was ticketed for not having a
dog license,

due

bar.

nice features.

1'%

thirties.

ACE HARDWARE
1746

This 6 room brick ranch built to have a minimum
wooded

ORTHO-KLOR

WI
16, of 1865

AMAZINGLY ‘aber
LOW COST

Construction

At the Highland Park Recreation
Center the adult badminton classes
held on Tuesday evening, and the
men’s volleyball held on Wednesday evening, will continue during
the spring months.
Highland Parkers are invited to
take part in these activities.

in DEERFIELD

Business Women
North

Good

Rich-

AFS Students Talk
At Meeting of N.S.
fessional

BLUFF—Except‘onally

.a

Mrs.

LAKE

Home of LUFE-PRESERVICE7-DRAPERIES
OUR

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26

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Nothing triggers so much

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AT
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ID 2-4500
Page

26-D

fa

PARK NEWS
THE LAKE FORESTER

HIGHWOOD

Whore
.

yA

NEWS
LAKE BLUFF

AT

DEERFIELD REVIEW
REVIEW
FT. SHERIDAN

Uour
WI 5-4500

VERNON
TOWER

REVIEW

! lV: WSPAPERS
:

CE 4-2300
Thursday,

April

13, 1961

�Billie’s Fillies
‘The P.O.’s

Ladies

489
Kutner
|B. Stern
469 | G.

Men

Mayer

$77

Klemperer

571

Game

High

Ladies

J. Hess

F, Cohn

185

Soe

NORTH

SHORE

High

Kutner

B.

23

40

30

Series

Gert

9

Lost |

Won

Cats

15

6

14

7

oe

High Series

. Neiman

Bleck

se

Lost}
34 | Mickie
36

45

1.0

40%

pty

hak

M. Smith
Block

apo,

Pts.

Team
No
een8

45

INo. . 12

93g5 || Ethel
S¥byl Roth
Uretz
272 | Trudee Mahru
2

97 | Lois

5

RU

Lois

Schatz

GER ye"

187 | Lorraine

184 | Adeline

RU

180

LEAGUE

Pts.

....
wy,

62
=

.

Car

Rovert’s Gulf Service ...0i01...-.03h..1
184 | Ravinia Auto 5
a
Soaps owen

177

Berkenstadt

B

175 Esthe; yu yt
172 | 5 5 vol Ss oe

See

Esther Balikov

382

Game

High

Esther Madian

Vi, SORE

OF UO

Be Bs

is.

Ry IE
Dem

6.

Coronet

Vendors

7.

Bergmann’s

8.

Globe

i

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OUR
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OPENING

227

220
216

Th

nas

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Fri.

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Sat.

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20-2

1 By

di

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| SHERWIN-WILLIAMS PAINTS

20

High Series

Central

482

23

Splits

155

TESTING
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Highland

Avenue

Park, Hl.

ID 2-3553

561
556
543

BEGAN

e

Official

OPEN

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ON

i
t)

Station

e

Inspection
No.

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C

il ISI

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PERIOD

FOR:

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West

OWNERS

We Will Be Open from 8 A.M. to 12 O'clock Noon

WAY Means
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and Supervised

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April

194

on the
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llowi
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PEERLESS HOME BUILDERS INC.

Thursday,

SUNDAY

TOUCH!

* FAMILY AND RECREATION ROOMS

Ave.,

Beckman

765

203
soe

149 | J. Schulman
149 |S. Nudelman
147K. Feigenbaum

NEW

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The PEERLESS
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°
Architect Designed

Park

99

198

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with the CUSTOM

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piers &gt; De

TRUCK

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a

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ame

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ches

HOME

le

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Fil

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i,

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3

cscs ep cectuniices 1001-1036-1122—3159
an halt

PNG

ie

33

High Game
‘odes

‘Coleen

166 | 1¥tkevs

Doris Lawson
Dina Field
Bernadine Riskin

A

yi
2#Lost | Joyce

Mon

oi (aneee,

Field

36
3

Sitz

Bob Rion Sr.
| Gordon Buck
i s’

Won

,
Ladies

Ralph_Pottker

re

pee
pi

Series

Men

High

407
397

172 | Dora Koenig
Dina

aan

polly

es

an

asterson re
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oi

Series

a

Series

igh

woe

oa

Se
50

igh

68
4

ae
igh

Pauline Tognarelli

Ferrari

184

RIT AN SON

“T”

458 | Earl Gsell &amp; Co.
447 Have d of re yrs

443 | Business

191] Rita Lenhard

RR IE

ORT

479
463 | Team

Game

soem
“ ran

196] Fer
176 an

FRIDAY NITE MIXED

452 | Arch: Ferrari

........

Lost | Martian Borden
1

High Series

Roth

Sybyl

pea

JOHANNA

Ball

High

ce og Bec

Game

170

wah

Anspach

Sin

: ary

Pie
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raps.

Standa

Ravinia

174 | Ru
173 Re

472
465 | Andy Seiler .......
462 | Ralph Pottker

Schatz

Washington
ret erabimaate
Teed g ES Gardens

472 |

SPARE

feiss

464 | Sleebure
sbaieitr
451 | 4

ae

474

205 | Bernice Frankel

UOTS

54

age

495

Riggio

32:
50

Marilyn Epton

High Game

% -

Series

High

544

tie mig agnn wR
ag
°N
THURSDAY—STRIKE

Hoit

&amp; R
465. | HWicote

High

Mary

55

344 | Aetna Distributors

Shriver

18C | M. Abrahams
180 |S. Sonn

Ee al

LEAGUE

“R”

‘

180|Fran Scheskie
Mabel Sordyl

tale

en

ORT

| Team

Temple

| Elyizabeth O’Neil
202
181 | Margo Temple

Sunset
Foods
3U
583
564 || Pierre
Andre
Sun Valley Dairy

Carlson

G. Greenspun
469 | T. Baron

181 | L.

Stiglitz

57

High Series

207

Fy

A. Grossberg

Neiman

Game

R.

ens
Picchietti
Sordyl

Laura
Mabel

oan

abe

Wallerstein

57

497 | Fiizabeth O'Neil
493 | T ouise Dal Ponte

Ruby’s Delicatessen

Berkenstadt High Game
456/11.
450

Game

Claire Rosenberg

Won
50
48

4651S. Sonn
462 D. Epstein
High

533

517

High

.

Re
ree

.

Samuel

M.

P.

64%

| Sputniks

553 | argo

Sally Garretson
Bev Silverman

Te

Lieutenant

| Jets

Baker

222 | Natalie Rosenberg
176 | Sylvia Goldgehn. ....
nS

or

54

46

RosenbergHigh Series

Pts.

—,
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=

Saratoga Club

St
| Claire

| Hepcats

452 | Sally Garretson

Doug Spinner

Black Balls
Metzger

| Strike N’ Spare

183 | Hap Odem
173 | Silent Sherony

NO.

JOHANNA

Game

AL &amp; JANE

pat BillPOELaing
189 | Wally Evans

enrensenetin

UOTS

36

Skidmore

Fatboy

Game

48

60

High Game

LADIES

CONCEPTION

IMMACULATE

fan | Cogent
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Shop

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455

Electric

Bob

486

Schloss
L. Sternfield

High

‘
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Team
223 | Al &amp; Jane
213|H.P. Fuel _

Lam
Chumpions
i
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182

Men

J. Lelewer
J. Smoler

’s

Retreads

High Series

Cohn
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31

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Won

Belles

| Whiz

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Lost | Team

Won

ORT “O” LEAGUE

AID

MOTHERS’

NORTHMOOR
Team

Northbrook,

III.

Cuneo

«© AMF PINSPOTTERS INC.
SUBSIDIARY OF AMERICAN MACHINE &amp; FOUNDRY COMPANY

6500 N. LINCOLN AVE.
CHICAGO 45, ILL.
Page H 51—D

43

=—s

me
|

�Highwood Little Guys Are
International Champions

Hole-in-One Club
New Feature for
Tee Club Golfers
Sunset

Valley

Tee

Club

The International Championship of Little Guys basketball
returned home last Saturday night, when Highwood captured

has

set

the stage for its nine tournaments
at Sunset Valley Golf Course in
1961, with the announcement of a
‘“Hole-In-One” Club and a, jackpot
prize to the first Tee Club member
scoring
a hole-in-one
while
participating in a Tee Club event.

Open

to any Sunset

Valley

Golf

Club member, a Tee Club membership includes
a full schedule
of
Club
events
beginning
May
3-14
with an “Early Bird’ tournament
and
concluding
with
the
North
Shore Amateur next September 910,
a C.D.G.A.
handicap
rating,
and a year end Goodfellowship Day
and banquet—plus
the newly inaugurated
‘‘Hole-In-One”
Club.
Ray
Sheahen,
Tee
Club
president and chairman of the membership committee, has issued a call
to all male members of Sunset Vailey Golf Club to join the Tee Club
prior to the year’s first event. ““No
golfer need worry about his golf
score to join the Tee Club,” said
Sheahen.
‘Our
membership
includes
golfers
who
consistently
break 70, and others who shoot in
the 100’s.
His handicap will enable him
to compete
in all our
tournaments—and
by
competing
will be an incentive to play more
and better golf,” he concluded.

cena eT

Officers for
meet
tonight

the new season
(Thursday)
in

will
the

Elks Club to complete plans for all
events

throughout

1961.

Tee

Club

officers for the year are: Ray Sheahen,
1491
St.
Johns,
president;
Jack O’Malley, Chicago, vice president; Robert Weinberg, 1235 Linden, vice-president; Joe Cameron,
1312 Ridgewood. Dr., treasurer; Joe
Cummings, Highwood, secretary.

Golden Sundance, nine-month old male Doberman puppy owned by Mrs. Robert E. Brain, Waukegan, won “best in
match” at the recent All-Breed Dog Match staged by the Skokie Valley Kennel club in the Highland Park Recreation Center. A high of 288 dogs were entered in the Sunday show.
This was

the first win

for Sundance,

who

is son of Kirk Von
Brain.
President W. C.

Directors are—Tommy

Hoytt CBX, also owned by Mrs.
McCullough, Highland Park, presents the trophy to the proud
winner in this photo.

Spring Sports Get

On

Underway For All
High School Teams
Spring sports at Highland Park
were launched in earnest this week
as all four sports
had teams
in
action.

The Little Giant baseballers took
on Glenbrook in a non-league contest at home as the freshman and
sophomores
played
at Glenbrook
on Monday.
Then, on Wednesday,
the Indians of New Trier came to
Highland Park as the underclassmen played in Winnetka. Saturday,
the Giants take on the Pirates of
Proviso in a doubleheader at home
as the frosh and sophs played in
Maywood.
Then on Tuesday, April
17, the varsity
plays
a rematch

with

the

Spartans

at

Glenbrook

as the underclassmen play at home.
The golf team opened its season
Tuesday with a meet at Waukegan.
Then on Wednesday, April 19, they
meet the Bulldogs again, this time

in

a

home

meet.

The

next

day

Barrington will meet the Parkers
in a practice meet.
Tennis opens at HPHS tomorrow
afternoon with an exhibition
against Lake Forest on the local
court.
The track teams move outdoors
with a meet against Waukegan Saturday at the Bulldogs’ track and

Basketball

Team

Toby Aaron, son of Mr. and Mrs.
W. H. Aaron, 1900 Sunnyside, former Highland Park High athlete,
is beginning his third varsity baseball season at Ohio Wesleyan.
The junior southpaw is again being
counted
upon
to
head
the
Bishop
pitching
staff. Last year
Aaron led the team in wins and

ERA.
But with only two seniors graduated from last year’s squad and
‘with several
promising
freshman
prospects,
Coach
Les Michael
is
looking for an improvement on last
season’s
mark
and
the
Bishop’s

sixth-place
Ohio

finish in the

Conference,

In Ski Club

H

52—D

44

Makes

Hole-in-One

On Chilly Golf Day
Although
temperatures
were
hovering in the early 40’s, Irwin R.
Ware, 1099 Ridgewood Dr., made
his first hole-in-one
a week
ago
Sunday at the Greenacres Country
club in Northbrook.
Ware,
who’s
as enthusiastic
a

Barbara L, Freeland, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Milton H. Freeland,
699 Lotus Place, is among 35 members
of
the
Indiana
Memorial
Union Skiing Club at Indiana University. She is a junior.

iron for the
173-yard
hole.
tally for the 18 holes was 84.

In cooperation with the Central
United
States Skiing Association,
the University’s Skiing Club, has

Two fencers from Highland Park
were awarded minor letters at the
University of Chicago. The two are

been formed this spring to have an
organized basis for membership before the skiing season next fall.
follow next Tuesday with
meet
at
Highland
Park
Morton’s Mustangs.

MORTGAGE LOANS from
Page

14-college

Thomsen,

673 Glenview (winner of the 1960
North Shore Amateur)
and Dave
Lawrence, 1163 Ridgewood.
Chairmen of committees include:
Tournaments—Carroll Snyder, 910
Pleasant;
Rules— Wally
Glader,
1735
Green
Bay;
Publicity—Bob
Hahn, 1756 Sunset, and Ray Geraci,
375
Dell
Lane;
Handicap
— Joe
Cummings,
Highwood;
Membership—Ray Sheahen;
and the Tee
Club’s
representative
for
the
Northern
Illinois Men’s
Amateur
Golf Association
is Joe
Libman,
643 Hillside.
Applications for Tee Club membership are available through Ray
Sheahen, ID 2-4227.

a dual
against

fairways

man

Received

as Ike, used

a No.

8

His

Mike Resnick, son of William Resnick, 1068 Hillcrest, and Marshall
Wais, son of Mrs. Lola Joffee, 546
Green Bay Rd. Resnick is a graduate of Highland Park High and
Wais is a New Trier alumnus. Both
are sophomores.

1771 Second St.

to

The high honors in Little Guys
basketball have eluded Highwood
for the past three years. This year
the local team defeated New York
City, Homestead, Pa., and San Juan
to bring the championship back to
the sport’s birthplace.
Highwood was the underdog
thruout the tournament. The local
players gained momentum against
New York, defeating the big city
boys
42
to 39,
after
that
they
weren’t to be denied the tournament championship.
Highwood faced Homestead, Pa.,
in its second start.
For three periods the ball game was in doubt,
even though Highwood gained the
lead
midway
thru
the
second
period. A 20 point fourth quarter
completely demoralized Homestead,
and Highwood
won
43 to 27 to
advance into the championship.
Facing
a tough Puerto
Rico
squad Highwood had the desire to
win.
The team came up with an
excellent
zone
defense
that
was
constantly moving.
Puerto Rico
was so closely guarded
with the
zone that their top three scorers
failed to live up to their previous
two game offensive showings.
In this title game Highwood
jumped off to a 10 to 6 lead, and
led at halftime 19 to 10. This was

the biggest edge Highwood

had, as

Puerto Rico cut the gap down to
25 to 22, as the teams went into
fourth period play.
The
final
quarter
saw
Puerto
Rico go into an all court press, but
the
new
champs
outscored
the
visitors in the period and brought
the
title back
to Highwood
for
another year.
Two of Highwood’s players were
named
to
the
Little
Guys
AlAmerican
team.
Ronnie
Ori and
Steve
Lunardi
were
singled
out
for their fine defense, and other
all-around
team
work.
The
two
bore the burden of rebounding,
along with Tommy
Digani.
Both
were excellent scoring shots.
Ori
was
also
selected
as Mr.
Little
Guys for 1961, a title bestowed on
the tournament’s most outstanding
player. Ron is the third Highwood
player ever to receive the Mr. Little Guys
award.
Bobby
Palmieri
was
named
in
1956,
and
Geoff
Gluck received the honor in 1958.
New York, Homestead,
Pa.,
Kenosha, Wis., Indianapolis, Ind.,
Racine, Wis., Highwood, Peoria,
and San Juan, Puerto Rico took
part in the tournament.
Highwood
succeeds Indianapolis as International Champion.
The latter was
eliminated
from
title
contention
when the Hoosiers were beaten by
Puerto Rico in the semifinals.

international

cham-

pionship team included Ron Ori,
Steve Lunardi, Mike Miller, Peter
Cantagallo, Freddy Kilkenney, Phil
Grabar,
Eddie
Wormser,
Jack
Bertucci, Tim Rogan, Dave Campagni,
Bruce
Zimmerman
and

Tommy

Digani.

Jerry

Digani

and

Dave Fell were the student managers. The squad was selected by
Don Skrinar, who worked with the
team
to
tournament
time,
The
squad
was
then
turned
over
to

"The Service Bank

30

Federal

OFFICE

a

colorful

San

Juan,
Digani

Sunday afternoon a large turnout of Little Guys boosters turned
out to honor the Little champs.
A
horn
blowing
motorcade
toured
Highwood and Highland Park. Following the long parade,
which
stretched from one end of Highwood to the other, the team was
taken back to the Community
Center.
Highwood’s
Mayor,
John
Frantonius, thanked the boys for returning the championship to Highwood. Other
speakers
included
Commissioner Don Skrinar, Bruno
Bertucci, and co-coach Ossie Digani.
Championship Game
Highwood (34)
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BEG WOOO
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9 6 9—34
Piette “Rind: Skee
6 412
8—30
Officials—Tony
Sacco
(Oak
Park);
Tony
Tortorello (Chicago)

Evans

Scholars

Among

Are

Top Students

Three
Highland
Park
who are attending college

Scholars,

are

students
as Evans

maintaining

high

scholarship and are active in campus projects.
Evans scholarships are awarded
young men who have been caddies
before
their college
years.
They
are made
possible by the Chick
Evans caddy scholarship. The Highland Park boys are sponsored by
the Western Golf Association. Each
scholarship
provides
full
tuition
and room
at the Evans
Scholar
house.
John A. Fox, 19, son of Mr. and
Mrs. A. J. Fox, 1883 Elmwood Dr.,

recently was selected for the University of Illinois Commerce Council, which serves as a liaison between the commerce faculty and
the student body, and also publishes a newspaper for commerce
students, Additionally, he compiled
a 3.5 on a 4 seale grade average

in electrical engineering. John was
a caddy at Exmoor Country Club.
Dan Demichelis, 18, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph Demichelis, 947

Harvard

Ct., who is a business ad-

ministration
major
at the
University
of
Wisconsin,
has
compiled a 3.33 grade average, on a
4.00 scale. He was a caddy at Bob-

O-Link

Country

Club.

John Farr, 20, son
Mrs, C. E. Farr, 1265

of Mr. and
Taylor, an-

other Bob-O-Link caddy, has maintained

an

A-minus

average

for

his

full college career to date at Northwestern University, where he is a
sophomore
maintained
scale.

Of Highland Park”

BLDG.

Deposit Insurance

from

Tommy
Russell and Ossie
for tournament handling.

HIGHLAND

BANK—POST

Member

34

A near capacity throng witnessed Saturday’s title game in which
Highwood scrapped its way into the
championship.

Highwood’s

Letters

BANK?e*

the championship game
Puerto Rican entry.

in
physics..
a 3.5 average

He
has
on a 4.00

PARK
IDiewood 2-7800

Corporation
Thursday,

April

13,

1961

�Scholarship Uses

A Check From Jet

The Shoreline German

further
Shepherd

Dog
Club,
for the
second
consecutive year, has given the Highland
Park
High
School
PTA
a

check

for

the

scholarship

fund,

education

is supported

by

sincerity
of purpose and conscientious
endeavor.
Scholarship
aid recipients will attend colleges
and universities, schools of nursing, schools specializing in the fine
arts and other institutions of spe-

cial education.

These

plans

are

a

of which Mrs. Dubach is co-chairman,
The
club
uses
the
indoor
track located in the basement of
the
high
school for
its
weekly
training
sessions.
Already,
more
than 300 German Shepherds have
been trained in the school. Now,
the club also has undertaken an
all-breeds training class as a part

mittee.
Mrs, Leonard
Rieser, of Highland
Park,
established
the
first
committee in 1938 and has maintained
an active
interest
in the
Fund
throughout
the
years.
In

of the High

1945

School

adult program.

Any
senior
in Highland
Park
High school may apply for scholar-

ship

assistance

from

the

PTA

Scholarship Fund. He lists the contribution he hopes to be able to
make
toward
his college
educa-

large

part

of

the

basis

for

con-

sideration by the High School com-

the

High

School

sumed

responsibility

funds.

Letters

are

for

PTA

as-

soliciting

mailed

to

all

wood and Deerfield. The excellent
response
is the best indication
that people in the area are sincerely interested in this program
to give young people opportunity

to develop

their potentials.

As evidence of the
of those who receive

appreciation
aid, are the

many letters received from graduates who have received help.
The 1960-61 Committee is hopeful that letters mailed in March
will produce results which will
enable

this

year’s

graduates

to re-

ceive assistance where needed. The
current
Frank

committee
includes
E,
Dubach,
Mrs.

Leonard,

co-chairmen,

Mrs.

Mrs.
Scott

Ed

parents
of Highland
Park
High
school students, to clubs and organizations, business and professional

Stern, Mrs. William O. Steele, Mrs.
BE. G. Piacenza,
Mrs.
T. bo 7Oge
borne,
Jr.,
Mrs.
H.
M.
Landau,
Mrs. Milton Gray and Mrs. Lester

people

V. Marks.

in

Highland

Park,

High-

tion through summer work, outside
jobs during the school year and
other sources. He explains his ambitions for the future and activities which will be helpful to him
in achieving those
ambitions.

“Thank

you

very

much,

and

here

is a

little

something

express our appreciation,” Jet is telling Mrs. Frank
2354 St. Johns, as he hands her a check for $50.
H. Aaron,

1900

Sunnyside,

a member

of the Board

to

Dubach,
Mrs. W.
of District

113 is shown with Mrs. Dubach, and small Misty, owned by
the Arthur Baums, 243 Linden Park Pl., watches her grandfather make the important presentation.
For those who
father make the important presentation. Jet’s official name

is Ch. Denney’s Jet Pilot, CDXTD.

Some applicants, because of high
scholastic records, receive outside
scholarships
and
need
but little
extra
to help
toward
room
and

board or purchase of books. Others,
whose outside work pressures May
have affected their academic standing, may not be eligible for outside
scholarship
help.
The
pur-

pose of the PTA

Scholarship Fund

is to give aid, in so far as it is possible to all those whose need is
imminent
and
whose
wish
for
As seen

THIS IS THE DART PHOENIX:

RESTAURANTS

in

Suburbia

~ Today

PHOENIX 2-DOOR
6 or V8

HARDTOP

THE DART PHOENIX looks expensive but costs no more than low price cars . . . and, it’s much
more car in room, in performance and in pure richness of appointments.
Phoenix is in every way a
full-size luxury Dodge and offers you the choice of three superbly crafted V8 engines including the
sizzling D-500
Ram-Induction.
See the Phoenix TODAY
plus the excellent sales and service
facilities at Sorensen Motors.

ONE

122

OF

LAKE

COUNTY’S

N. Sheridan

OLDEST

Rd., Waukegan,

DODGE

A pleasant place to

DEALERSHIP

MAjestic 3-1107

Illinois

A ‘}€eystone

dine out, often

A tempting menu, the warmth and charm

FUND

of early American decor and the ease-of-

Investors Capital Exchange

Fund

A diversified investment company organized
to enable holders of substantial blocks of individual securities to obtain diversification and

professional management

through a tax-free

exchange of securities for shares of the fund.

Offering period ends May 1, 196i
For Prospectus call, write or stop in

parking close to the door are good reasons
for dining out often at the Crabapple in

Old Orchard. Stop in when you’re shopping
or drive out for luncheon, cocktails or
dinner, any day including Sunday. North
end of the Mall, Old Orchard in Skokie

cany &amp; Geay
MUTUAL

FUNDS

CE 4-2435
P.O.

Thursday,

April

13,

Box

1961

150

—

566

Oakwood

Avenue

— Lake

Forest, Illinois

Page

H 53—D

45

�Present Swim

Drive
565

“Really Fine Cleaning’
In — No Parking Problem

Roger
2061

Williams

Avenue

Green

Bay

487

Roger

NY od AD

Road

Williams

Avenue

Varunas,

iD 2-3710

club.

well

repaid

to drive
(Paid

here!

Political

recently.

This week's TNT prize jumps to $660 in merchandise for
someone who

Advertisement)

We Enthusiastically

ENDORSE

-

swim

Swimming
lessons
for grade
school pupils in the high school
district will begin next Saturday,
April 15, in the boys’ pool at Highland Park High school.
Registration for the classes was completed

Prepare For lt!!
will be

the University’s

Swimming Lessons
Start Saturday

Spring Is Bound To Come!

You

Show

Penny Berning,
1006 Rosemary
Terr.,
Deerfield,
and
Connie
Schroederus,
832 Park
Ave., W.,
Highland Park, are participating in
the fourth annual water show to
be presented at Illinois
State
Normal
University, April 21 and
22. The show is being presented by

PAT PATTERSON’S
Steak House &amp; Liquor Store
Chickens (with trimmings) .............---...-..-- $1.25

T-Bone Steak (with trimmings)
Lobster (with trimmings)

&gt;

Luncheons

Served

Commissioner

he

from

11

BOCK

.....................--.0c0--000-- $1.25
$1.25

a.m. to 2 p.m.

BEER

IS

75¢ per plate

HERE!

Deliveries made to Highland Park, Deerfield, Northbrook
or Glencoe with orders of $10.00 or more.

He is the only candidate with an extensive horticultural knowledge, which should be possessed by at
least one member of the Board. He is past president
of the Men’s Garden Club of the North Shore, winner

_

of the Bronze medal of the Men’s Garden Clubs of

é

America

and lecturer on horticulture,

chairman

Edens,

FREE Ice Cubes with
Each Liquor Purchase

|

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur M. Adler, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman F. Anspach

Mr. and Mrs. V. Edward Lawrence
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Leonard

Mr. and Mrs. Pau! Behanna

Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Leopold

Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Birkemeier |
Mr. and Mrs. C. Randolph Binner

Mr. and Mrs. Albert M. Louver
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Lubke

Mr. and Mrs. Harold A. Burnstein

Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. McLaughlin
Mrs. Harry A. Muhlike

Mr. and Mrs. Edwin P. Engelbrecht
Mr. and Mrs. John Fiore

hy

Mr. and Mrs. Lyle D. Fordham
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Friedler, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Frisch

:

Mr. Lyle Gourley

Ha
“3

Mr. and Mrs. Herman Hirsch
Mr. and Mrs. C. Gordon Holland

Mrs. Robert Nelson
Mrs. Graham Newey
Dr. and Mrs. C. Vigo Nichols
Mr. and Mrs. Herman R. Pomper
Mrs. Percy Prior

Dr. and Mrs. Albert Slepyan
Mr.
Mrs.
Mr.
Mr.
Mrs.
Mr.
Mrs.
Mr.

Harold KaDell
and Mrs. Ed. P. Keim
Melvin Kendrick
and Mrs. R. W. Kiefer
and Mrs. J. W. King, Jr.
and Mrs. Elmer Klein
and Mrs. Al Kloos

and Mrs. Edward P. Stein
Frank Straight
and Mrs. Edward E. Strauss
and Mrs. Alfred Turner
Marvin Wallach
and Mrs. Walter Wecker
Morton Weil
and Mrs. Wallace Weinress

VOTE ~* &amp;] CLAYTON J. SANDEL
(Paid

‘Page H 54—D 46

County

Line

Rd.

VErnon 5-1611

We invite you to see our

complete selection

Mr. and Mrs. Allen 1. Simon

Mr. and Mrs. S. Parker Johnston, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Alan J. Joyce

\

&amp;

Mr. and Mrs. Raymond J. Ryan

Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Hunter

Mrs.
Mr.
Mrs.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.

Skokie

Fine EVERGREENS

of

the civic beautification committee and past supervisor of youth recreation. He has been an active
citizen of Highland Park for 18 years and is a licensed professional engineer with a broad business
experience.

2

5
L

Last Friday, when Otto Joerger of Powell's

Camera Mart, 589 Central Ave., called upon Mrs. Jerome
Kohn, 1349 Arbor Ave., she was unable to produce a current,
TNT ticket. She was awarded a $10 gift certificate as a consolation prize.

Barbecued

for Park Board

picks up a free TNT ticket at any participating

store this evening.

Political

ROSES

Tea

Roses, Climbers,

EVERGREENS
’ SHADE

ROSES

etc. Most

Colors—Most

ROSES

Varieties.

e VINES

TREES

SHRUBS

Open

¢ GRASS

Daily &amp; Sundays

—

SEEDS

8 to 5

Waukegan Nurseries
220

N. Green

DElta 6-0030
Bay Rd.

Waukegan

Advertisement)

Thursday,

April

13,

1961

�fabulous
homes
to
be
given
away in the Midland Enterprises
Development
in
Glendale
Heights, Illinois.

"

°

The Luxurious "CAMELLIA
i
abe : oe

iag
Res song
ef hah

3

PRIZE!

BONUS

‘

dh 6 Na dieen aed dees 8 weal
The
The "Princess" (CAU)hewesmodel.
you ant

.

id

an

HOME

PINK,
turnis ed
complete ly y furnish
terior decor by ak

be

and

iin-

new

i

z

is

will

GUARANTEED

ae

Excluding The Purchase Of Beer, Wine, Liquor &amp; Cigarettes
Lintit One Coupon Per Customer
— Coupon Expires April 15th

ca

i

a

o ps1

CERTIFICATE

=

al

|
|
|
|

4

s

:

Full Page of S&amp;H Green Stamps

#¢

Give this Entry Blank to your friendly Cashier
at your nearby National Food Store and
receive a prize of 30 S&amp;H Green Stamps.

2

:

NATIONAL’S

Ready

Oven

:

5¢ Mailed

Beef—NEW

ic Gefdkcenr. . = 59
8c Mailed

With

YOUR

3cf

TASTE

a

EXTRA

TOP

OWN

$

Lb.

.

i

Uniform

Lean

$969

:

LED

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99

SLICED

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With The Purchase Of One
Coupon

One

— Coupon
Customer

Per

ee

Orchard

pone

wn

a

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Delicately Seasoned

Buy ee

.

(AV

Serve For Breakfast!

Peng: Boa ge dy a

oe At

April

Expires

Expires

— Coupon
Per Customer

Coupon

One

Limit

é

April’ 15th

REDEEM THIS VALUABLE COUPON FOR i ie

fae

f

oz.

One

st

Can

Per

Customer— Coupon

en

vy,

toe miaers

Sn

Coupon

Purchase

EEA

April

SAD

— 5c Off Label
Tireless_.. . Buy Now At National!
Box

@

| are Size

(

HEAD LETTUCE
,

Limit

One

Coupon

bbd

Per Customer
— Coupon

p

RSENS
&lt;&gt;

Expires

}

?.

Mellody

IS

April

SS

15th

50¢
We

/ ‘

Tonics the’ Pubchare Of
PIECE
ANY

4

. 2

25

The

¢

Ea.

KE

Ave

C
a

se

i

Test »

c

Salad favorite . . . red ripe
beauties just waiting to be the
taste
start of a oage

for 29

y

R\

“REDEEM THIS VALUABLE COUPON FOR

s)

25 EXTRA

B}

One

Limit
:

i)

%

BORDO

Coupon

Pineapple-Grapefruit

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Expires

— Coupon
Customer

Per

iar

ry

Cans

gi

NATIONAL

&lt;

C

STAMPS

S&amp;H

Of Three 6-oz.

Purchase

With

»

WksPp’

St

S)
z

Corer

Or Orange

15th

April

we

‘

-. Tray

DEERF

REDEEM THIS VALUABLE ¢

“

VANITY

Limit One

Coupon

G
Qe

€

‘

25 EXTRA S&amp;H STAMPS

9 vas

isl

isic sana

FAIR

NAPKINS

Per Customer
— Coupon

‘
TIONAL per

Expires

April

15th

seeeNe

tempting crisp salad.
Buy them today at National

Right To Limit Quantities . . . Prices Effective Thru Sat., April I5th In Chicago and Ilinois Suburban
Holland, Calumet City, Chicago Hts. and Dolton,

636

e

ted.°

SALAD TOMATOES

a

CHINA

— Coupon Expires April 19th
Limit One Coupon Per Customer

Reserve

H

VOUIIZL

C66

$ coe AY.

is

“

,

GRAPEFRUIT

1961

Li

Wants

Syst cant Find, Hresher Finer Bodice”

:
#4

i

Firm .. . Crisp
CUCUMBERS
RUBY RED

er

KS
15th

WHIPT

DAIRY

O

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wv

£

7

,

Bal

rd

Gni.

F

¥

15th
Customer— C Coupon Expires
Expires April
Api
OneOne C Coupon Per Per Cust

PORCELAIN

WEES

nga%,

aa

Expires April

25 EXTRA S&amp;H STAMPS

&lt;

canon NCICLOMOA, @ Le veerres 3m |
WORTH

Jars

JELLY

With The Purchase Of One 8-oz. Can Hawthorn

3

4 S

15th

TH

50 EXTRA S&amp;H STAMPS

COUPON

10-oz.

‘REDEEM THIS VALUABLE source FOR

;

:

{§

BINDER

Expires

S) &gt;

Of Two

GRAPE

Per Customer
— Coupon

ODA

.

C

rt

Qua

One

sii
28 TLASEESESSVSS

Sy

ae

The

NATCO
Limit

é

Jar

(&amp;

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13,

01.

Can

Kraft’s Kitchen. Tested

=f]

REDEEM THIS VALUABLE COUPON FOR

April

a

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Deluxe

Encyclopedia

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THIS

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75, NATIONAL

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With The Purchase Of One Complete

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oO,

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ey

ae

15th

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Y

100 EXTRA
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REDEEM THIS VALUABLE COUPON FOR

Thursday,

15th

April

er

hd

aya

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od

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] :

NATIONAL tee
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ps4

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April

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CREAM | CANNED | TOMATO| GRAPE — 9 - "2S

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FOR

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— Coupon
Customer

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po

&lt;

S&amp;H

mix on marten 4, @ CHEESE | MILNOT | SOUP | DRINK § ,

@ KRINKLES

Limit

COUPON

With The Purchase Of One I-Lb. Box
PRINCE'S MOSTOCCIOLI

2)

ihe :

MICKELBERRY‘S—Old Farm

YORK

on™

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DAISY

|

ate

Mr

For Your Automatic

— Boneless
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STEAKS

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ANDY...

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é

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THIS

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xia
20 Lb. Avg.

:

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Detergent

SH5e9

ne

3.

i
:
:

Good this week only... nothing to buy.
Limit one per Family... expires Saturday, April 15, 1961.

|

¥
REDEEM

25

This Certificate is good fora

oO

3

@ With A $10.00 Or More Purchase

|
|

&amp; 1

STAMPS

S&amp;H

EXTRA

100

Z

2

Tis

aes

:

ey

r

ADDRESS

I

y every

Ao

al

Gt

Big.

weeks! (Employees of National Tea Co., their
advertising agencies, and their immediate families are not eligible to enter.)

&lt;

3

Wee,
BACK!

MONEY

READY — Young... Tender —

OVEN

in
.. Home
Ellyn). 4

ae

Netonal

that

TO PLEASE OR YOUR

Geet Entry Blanks at your “Friend of the Fam
Food Store or at the Model
ily" National
Glendale Heights (just North of Glen

ce

sy’

Princess p

Lindsay

best

cant

ust

BLANK

ENTRY

Pri

Lindsay

have to hide your water softener in
corner.
some dark
Not Included)
Notion
‘

md

$

THE COTTAGE
pie
eats?
For You
Designed
Interiors
VICTOR M. TURCO, Interior Designer

CLIP Re

— eee

|
|

.

entry

your

the

A CONTEST!

NOT

BUY!

SS

SOFTENERS

WATER

So enter

EASY TO WIN! NOTHING TO

g

24 LINDSAY

:

:

al Food Store
able S&amp;H Green Stamps.
now ... enter often,

a Priva “4
mile of vacationland in all America.
(Vgcations MustBe Token

:

Visit the Model Home and pick up a PINK Entry Blank and deposit
at your "Friend of the Family” National Food Store. If you are the
winner

S&amp;H GREEN STAMPS

Two winners from every store every
2 weeks! Winners‘ from; every Nationin Serene: bes

§ = Two to be given away every 2 weeks!
the SHORE.
A _wn-filled week atsituated
in the
Hotel-Motel,
MEDE
6 Berg tr

ce

doors, brick trim, Lindsay water softener, paved driveway, lot
with city y water and sewers. The homes are located
tely improved
imp
pletely
in Glendale Heights (north of Glen Ellyn).

SPECIAL

AT MIAMI BEACH, FLA.

1840 WINNERS OF 1000

oe

ssi

8 VACATIONS FOR TWO

;

d
ith
ivi
ath : diding ‘patie
com-

i
bee aleyy

port

Giveaway “ssxss%"

CE’

Se

=

:

9

NATIONAL

ROAD

I ELD

DEERFIELD,

ILL.

Stores Except Lansing, S.

)

SS
=3

REDEEM THIS VALUABLE
S &amp; H
EXTRA
25

COUPON FOR
STAMPS

With The Purchase Of One 8-Inch
wi
,

-

PIE
WAGNER
— Coupon Expires April 15th
Limit One Coupon Per Customer

Page

H 55—D

47

�re
iMusic Theat

lighwood Community Center

Summer Program

“Activities For The Week
Highwood’s
_ present

Community
Center
a “Hobo Hop” for

h, seventh
ents of the

and
city

lines.

This

will

be

the

only

e school dance this month.
*
*
*
| Highwood Community Center
ks all the local and nearby
dents that did so much to help
e

the

6th

International

basketball

Little

tournament

the

sss it was.
The many women
made sandwiches, coffee and
r refreshments
for the visit-

layers, coaches, followers
ts

accompanying

the

and

teams,

@ ladies deserve special thanks.
hat is tipped to the Senior
perity
Club,
the
Highwood
nen’s Club, and the Little Guys

etball mothers.
The three
ips took separate evenings to
ging

ci

eighth
grade
and surround-

areas.
The event, scheduled
2m
7:30 thru 10:30 Friday, will
an informal affair. Boys may
ar blue jeans but girls must apin dresses or skirts. No slacks,
1udas and jeans may be worn
girls. The dresses, or sweaters
skirts may be decorated along
0

ceptions.

refreshments

for
(Paid

the

re-

Political

and

Chairman

Commissioner

especially

want

to

connected

with

all

tournament.

To

|

Bruno

Bertuc-

Don

Skrinar

thank

everyone

phases

name

of

the

everyone

would
have
to provide
space
in
more than one newspaper column,
but everyone involved knows that
their help was truly appreciated.
A kind thanks also goes to Red Fell
for providing space in his Highland
Park show window.
There on display for a week were all the team
trophys
given
away,
along
with
other tournament publicity. Strike
&amp; Space
Bowling
Lanes
deserve
high praise for giving
visiting
coaches and players a morning of
free bowling.
*

*

Tony Bennett

Class 3

Mrs. Gary Meyer, instructor of
the weaving class at the Highland

Four musicals and a Mort Sahl
“Concert” make up the 1961 season at Herb Rogers Chicago Music
Theatre.

Park Recreation
Center,
nounced
that there are

in

will open the Chi-

the

spring

term

has anopenings

which

starts

on

April 19.
The class meets on Wednesday
mornings from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m.

cago Music theatre season in the
hit-musical
comedy
“Guys
and
Dolls” on June 20 for a three week
engagement.
Genevieve follows in Cole Porter’s
spicy
musical
“Can
Can,”
July 11 through the 23rd.
Hollywood’s Kathryn
Grayson
stars
in Franz
Lehar’s
operetta
“The Merry
Widow?”
for two
weeks, July 25 through August 6th.
And
popular
Patrice
Munsel
returns to Chicago Music theatre in
Rogers and Hammerstein’s
“King

and will continue for eight weeks.
Looms
are available for beginners or others who do not have
their own.
Anyone
interested
in
joining the class should register at
the Highland Park Recreation Of-

fice, ID 2-2442.
and I” from August 8 through 27th.
A week of ‘Mort Sahl — in Concert,” August 29 through Septem-

ON

20%

:

t

:
ILLINOIS
April 10, 1961
Bids for the sale of the $400,000 bond
issue recently authorized by the voters of
School District No. 111 for an addition to
Northwood
Junior
High
School,
were
opened at an adjourned session of the regular School Board meeting held on April
6, 1961.
Barcus, Kindred and Company were the
low bidders at an average net interest cost
to the District of 3.94564 per cent.
This
bid is slightly lower than the 4%
interest
rate forecast by the school attorney before
the bond referendum.
Working drawings of the new construction are being prepared by A. Epstein and
Sons, architects for the addition to Northwood,
It is expected that construction will
Start this spring and that pupils will occupy
the new classroom about next February.
Submitted by:
WAYNE
A. THOMAS,
Superintendent
4/13/61—98

|.

Opportunity

knocks

every

pay

day

when you buy U. S. Savings Bonds.

THEATRE — GLENCOE
ID 2-0605

LP's

VErnon 5-0605

FRI. thru THURS., April

ONE

14-20

FULL WEEK

OFF

1.99 s36"%9.50 }ssi

Ist Capitol
3.98—2nd

ok

CHOLL DISTRICT NO. 111
|
HIGH OOD HIGHLAND PARK

GLENCOE

ALL

CAPITOL

Advertisement)

ro
A

ber 4, completes the season.

Discounts

*

The Community Center’s director, Don Skrinar,
hopes to get
away early next week on his annual vacation.
All free play activity ceases in the Center.
Other
scheduled classes will continue to
be held during his absence.
Persons desiring use of the Community Center for meetings or receptions can contact Highwood’s City
Clerk for available dates.

ELECT

Open Weaving
On April 19

Ist Capitol

2.99

RALPH E. KAYE, Jr.
PARK

COMMISSIONER

eEL

CEE

REG?

ere

US

PATS

OFF.»

ERECO-ROS

“START
PLAY
WE

AN
GIVE

scruples!

NOW"

oo

INSTRUMENT
GUITAR

ales :

INSTRUCTIONS

Feature Times:
Fri—6:15-8:15- 10: 1
Sat.—4:45-6:35Sun.—2 :40-5:0
Mon.-Thurs.—7:

Bongo Drums
Guitars

Saxophones

SAT.

Trumpets
Banjos

CHILDREN’S

Trap Drums
Trombones
Ukes

i sre’s what

cleaning

©

Boat

launching

ramp

@¢

Five

play

golf

Commission

¢

Beautification

Committee.

he'll do next:

Cooperative
driving

Civic

development of Forest Trailway

range

©

More

beach

consolidated with Park District
Winter sports playground.

area

@

°@

°¢

Recreation

Additional

Golf

2:00

p.m.

252 DEERPATH
LAKE FOREST
CE 4-0658

Plus

Cartoons

KAYE

has a

(Paid

and

Comedy

Delightful
Gourmet Dining

648

DEERFIELD

RD.,

DEERFIELD

(Y% block East of Waukegan

Rd. stoplight)

Dept.

parks

Breakfast

¢

Luncheon

Performance Counts!
action on his pledges!

only

COMING:
“THE APARTMENT”

708 CENTRAL
HIGHLAND PARK
ID 2-7222

Afternoon

RALPH

MATINEE

“TARZAN THE
MAGNIFICENT”

GRANT&amp;GRANTu«.

ticket for residents
¢ Intergovernmental Committee
®@
Worked with school board for NW-side park
e
Plan

e’s what

at

he’s done:

Annexation of Northwest Highland Park
¢ Combined
elections © Increased beach parking @ Machine beach

April 15

Tea

Dinner

Late Snacks

solid record of successful

Political

WIndsor
Advertisement)

5-9751

OPEN DAILY
Including Sundays)
8:00

A.M.

to

10:00

P.M.

Thursday, April 13, 1961

�NS Congregation’s

At LF College
Two events scheduled for next
week at Lake Forest College are
open to the public and may be attended without reservations.
“A disenchanted View of Modern
Art” will be discussed by Franz
Schulze April 18, at 8:15 in Hixon
Hall, and a symposium ‘‘What Constitutes Greatness in Art” will be

moderated by Dr. Marvin C. Dikley
on April 21, also at 8:15 p.m. Six
members
of the
faculty
of the
Humanities division of the College
will participate in the symposium.

fBring Your Rings and
fi! We Check Them

Jewciry
FREE.

In.

+

Tel.

Sank

We do our own diamond

ALWAYS

“THE

GRASS

setting.
|

recently

returned

from

the

North

Shore

by

Jewish

the

forego

meeting

ence

to

day

and

coand

Community

will

in

Seniors,

Sisterhood

the
be

Centers

their

Monday

Older
held

to

particconfer-

Chicago

Mon-

Tuesday.

THEATRE:
* 4% pa 1D, 2-2400
Feature Times:

Week Days—6 :55-9:45
Sat. &amp; Sun.—1

:30-4:22-7:14-10

5 other Academy

Awards

NU

£0-Sta0

served by the

exciting

new

SUNDAY

APRIL

&amp;

16th

on the

Cont.

North

1:30

,

P.M.

Shore!

PLANO

WALT DiSNEy’S

One Hundredan One

BAR

NEW

‘ BUFFET FOOD SERVICE
No cover—No

minimum

EDGEWATER
BEACH
“Ae
HOTEL
KOMEN Kola(ammo ial-iaier-lammader-le.

ALL-CARTOON

Reteased by BUENA VISTA DistributionCo. Inc

| Lunch- time
Dinner-time

WALT

51,

Raymond

Laurel
Browning

of Wheeling

got a ticket for improper backing
after a collision
on Laurel Ave.
near St, Johns Friday afternoon.

Highland
came

hit

out

the

Park

police

say

the

parking

lot

of

stopped

car

of

Cowan,
440
Ellridge
the other side of the

of

595

Rds. Friday
Highland

On-

wentsia Ave., was booked for driv-

turned

ing while under the influence after
a collision at Skokie and Half Day

Robert
Mich.

he
and

Gertrude
Circle,
street.

evening.
Park
police

on

say

he

left in front of northbound
McLeod

of

Menominee,

GETFINEST
THE

SHREDDED
TOP SOIL

SPECIALLY

PREPARED

BY MACHINE.

—Improves Growing.
Most
soil obtainable . . - at no

MANURE

Phone
MUTUAL

Easier to Spread

uniform, perfectly
extra cost.

—

processed

FERTILIZER

ID 2-0027

SERVICES

OF

HIGHLAND

PARK

Shore’s Most

Beautiful Theatre

ie

&amp;

4

4h:

NEERPATH

71

Open Daily 6:00 to 12 Midnight — Curtain at 6:30
Sunday Continuous 2 to Midnight—Doors Open 1:40

Friday, April

(;

14 thru

— ONE
OPEN 24
HOURS

On

I

%Z@

HIGHWAY AT ROUTE
HIGHLAND PARK

Our

Thursday,

April

20

WEEK —

Panoramic

Wide

Screen

“CRY FOR HAPPY”
in Eastman
Starring—Glenn

Color
Ford,

and

CinemaScope

Donald

O’Connor

Co-Starring—James Shigeta, Miiko Taka and Myoshi Umeki
Four U.S. sailors take over a Geisha House . . . geisha girls

and all!

— SCHEDULE —
Weekdays—"’Cry for Happy’’ begins at 7:30 and 9:40.
Saturday—"’Cry for Happy’ begins at 5:00 - 7:30 and 9:40
Sunday—"’Cry for Happy”’ begins at 2:29 - 4:53 - 7:07 - 9:30

HAL’S DRIVE INN
1961

Wagner,

Marder,

on

Kenneth

Driver Arrested
After Skokie Crash

€

DISNEY PRODUCTIONS

is PIZZA TIME

13,

Crash

The
Highland
Park
Student
Council will present a dance entitled ‘‘Dig-Me-Pygmy.”’ It will take
place in the boy’s gym, April 22,
from
9 p.m. to 12. Preparations
have already begun to make this
a ‘wild’ dance.

Frank

Edward

Perlman and Merwin Shurberg.
For directors to serve one-year
terms, Robert S. Rosenfels, James
L. Salzenstein and Alan D. Whitney were nominated. Co-chairmen
of the nominating committee are
Harold L. Newmann
and Richard
E. Simon.

‘Dig-Me-Pygmy’

North

=

(ur

April

mel,

Wisc., on Lake Geneva

April
23,
W.
E.
Peley
and
C.
Powell will direct the cruise.
The sailing course is a project
of R. Hall and H. Petersen, Haskins
reports. The sailing fleet is still
land-bound,
but
actively
preparing for the season, he writes.

Lake Forest, Ill. — CE 4-2106 or CE 4-2107

vw

Thursday,

at Fontana,

FEATURE

4

SKOKIE

for

@ MUTUAL SERVICES @

CREWMATES

RONNIE ORLAND
atthe

guniont

PLUS CARTOON ‘sa;

15th

Ist Showing

anti

babu

et

“3°

plans

completion
of the clubhouse
remodelling
begun
last year.
The power fleet will rendezvous

| @ MUTUAL SERVICES

“es

21st!

and

HIGHLAND PARK

DAY!

eg

APRIL

along with

in
the
Highland
Park
Woman’s
club
Sunday
evening, May
28.
Nominees include: For president,
Bert
M.
Wallenstein;
vice-presidents, Seymour I. Burton and Mrs.
Janet Freund; secretary, Harry J.
Levi;
treasurer,
Lee
J.
Loventhal II.
Nominees for directors for threeyear terms include: Jules J. Abler,
L. M. Goldman
Jr., Jay Janson,
Edward
J. Kann, J. Myron Kim-

regular

Adult

in

of

in the sixth annual dinner meeting

shakedown

be discussed,

IT TOOK YEARS TO MAKE . . . IT COST $12,000,000!
. . . IT WILL BE REMEMBERED FOREVER!

* KING-SIZE. DRINKS

the

Mrs. Trevor Weiss, president of
the Sisterhood, and Mrs. Nathan
T. Rosenberg and Mrs. I. Robert

IS GREENER”

&amp;

Thursday,

will be followed by the first general membership
meeting
of the
season. Events for the year will

for “Best Picture of the Year’’ and

SATURDAY

next

p.m. in the Recreation Center,

ipate

FRIDAY, APRIL 14th FOR
ONE EXCITING WEEK!
Nominated

open

of songs presented by Helen Alter,
Her “Journey in Song” will feature
the folksongs of many lands.

FREE PARKING!

LAST

new

an

in

Lakeside
Congregation for Reform Judaism has nominated the
following officers for the 1961-62
temple year. Election will be held

tea, will be followed by a program

weekly
‘vears

Have your diamonds set in modern settings. Payments: arranged.

directors

Shore

elect

Three
events in the month of
April are reported by R. W. Haskins
of the
North
Shore
Yacht
Club; the annual pot-luck supper

meeting
at the
Temple
Monday
afternoon, April 17, at 1 o’clock.
The meeting, opening with dessert-

the

2-0630
55

North
will

Lakeside Nominates
New ‘61-’62 Officers

cruise
of
the
Power
Fleet
the
following weekend, and a six-week
class in sailing fundamentals.
The pot-luck will begin at 6:30

Chicago,

over

of

Israel

and

The

Park

1Dlewood

from

officers

sponsored

| JEWELERS - OPTICIANS
' Across

Sisterhood

annual convention of the Mid-West
Federation of Temple Sisterhoods
and will make their convention report at this meeting.

|. H. NEMEROFF
Highland

The

Congregation

Levy

)

DIAMONDS

Sisterhood Will
Elect New Officers

Yacht Club Plans
Fete, Cruise, Class

SDIANIS TWALNW

Public Events

MUTUAL SERVICE

Two

22

Children’s Matinee Saturday 2 to 4—’’TOM

THUMB”

with Russ Tamblyn and Alan Young

Guidepost
Rating

Adults

and

M.Y.

| P*hibit in Our
| April 21—”ELMER GANTRY”
Lobby by
T”
and “THE APARTMEN

April 283—”THE GREAT

Children’s Class
5-12

IMPOSTER”
Page

H

years
57—D

49

�Modenesé Society

SEORET

‘

of the 20th century

Offer Sketch Class}

Holds Dance on
Saturday Evening

Introducing the significant skin care discovery

The

a

Modenese

dance

at

Society

the

For Children At
will

Highwood

HP Rec Center

hold

Com-

An outdoor painting and sketching class for children is offered

munity Center this Saturday evening, April 15. A half-hour musical program will start at 7:30 to
precede the dancing. Music for the
evening will be furnished by Virgilio
Lenzini
and
his
orchestra.

the

Refreshments

By Dorothy Gray

are

by the
Center

The
of

Highland Park
this spring.

class, under

Mrs.

Gary

planned.

the

in

Car

will meet

Recreation

Crash

&lt;a eatnga Somes
Mrs.

Park
police
began
a hit-and-run car Fri-

evening,

front

after Milton

of

119

Laurel

VanWeld

cast

Ave.

beauty cream that eminent dermatologists have praised its effectiveness
in treating serious skin cases. No matter what climate you live in, regu-_

lar use of SECRET OF THE SEA is guaranteed to keep your skin softer,
fresher, smoother or your money back! Try it today. $5, $8.50, $15.

GRAY

@eeepeeeoeoeeeeeoeaeaeeeeeeeseeaee
eee
eee
eee
eee
@

Hes
ty

:

Tuesday,

May

2,

1961 at 7:30

o’clock P.M., C.D.S.T.
Said Public Hearing will be conducted by the Board
of
Appeals of the City of Highland Park, for
the purpose of considering the applications
for the following variations of the zoning
ordinance:
Appeal No. 328
Sam &amp; Rose Leshtz
321 Hedge Run
Lot 8 in Ravinia Dells Sub.
Request for a variation of the intensity of
use requirements of the ‘‘C” Single Family
Dwelling District to allow a single family
dwelling to be constructed on a portion of
lot 8 in Ravinia Dells Sub. A portion of
the garage attached to the dwelling at 321
Hedge Run extends onto said lot 8.
Appeal No. 329
Peerless Home Builders Inc.
Lots 1, 2, 3 &amp; 4 in Samijo Rokapa Sub.
Request for a variation of the intensity of
use and the lot of record requirements of
the ‘B-1” Single Family Dwelling District
to allow the construction of a single family
dwelling on each of lots 1, 2, 3 &amp; 4 in
Samijo Rokapa Sub.
Said lots are located
on the southwest corner of Sheridan Road
and Maple Avenue.
Appeal No. 330
Highland Park United Evangelical Church
657 Laurel Ave.
Request for a variation of the front and
rear yard requirements of the ‘‘F’’? Multiple
Family Dwelling District to allow the construction of an Educational Building addition to the Highland Park United Evangelical Church
at 657 Laurel Avenue.
Said
property is located on the northeast corner
of Green Bay Road
and Laurel Avenue.
BOARD OF APPEALS
John N. VanderVries, Chairman

Now, Dorothy Gray research scientists bring you those blessings of

DOROTHY

OF

on

EARL W. GSELL &amp; Co.
—PHARMACISTS—
Highland Park Store
e
Ravinia Drug Store
ID 2-2600
ID 2-2300
Free Delivery Service Always

Ruhman

in

the

title

Bernard Shaw’s
The play, one

HIGHLAND
PARK, ILLINOIS
BOARD
OF APPEALS
Notice is hereby given that a public hearing will be held in the Council Chamber of
the City Hall in the City of Highland Park,

Illinois

Don

class

indoors

at the

Center.

would

sheuld

like to join

call

the

Recrea-

tion office, ID 2-2442, at once as

of 678 Roger | there will be a lesson on Tuesday,

Williams, Highland Park, has been | April 18.

BY

CITY

the sea that delicately soften and moisten the skin! So vital is this

on

Seek

the class

of Oak
Park reported
his left
front door smashed while parked

climates}

meet

Tuesday
afternoon
right
after
school until five o’clock, and there
will be eight lessons in the series.
When
the weather
is inclement,

day

Captured from the sea...those very benefits that, century after century,
have blessed the famed complexions of women who live in misty sea

instruction

will

Members of the Society indicate
that the dance will be open to the
public.
Tickets
will be available
at the door.

Highland
looking for

even to skin that has seemed hopelessly dry

the

Meyer,

Children who

The first formula of its kind
to help bring back nature’s own soft smoothness, ,

Recreation

comedies,
20,

21

Players

will

role

of

George

5

“Major Barbara.”
of Shaw’s finest
be

presented
the

April

Junior

and

22

and

Winnetka

Drama

Club

|tained

Shore

Country

Day

ae

at the North

by

i

Juniors Entertain
|For Auxiliary Unit

Threshold

members

American

Legion

seniors

of

Unit

Auxiliary,

at

the

pretaigo

145,
enter-

monthly

‘

G

School, 310 Green Bay Road, Winnetka, Both theater groups will be
represented in the cast and crew

BE sei aha me i "ilteer Caran’
Saabs ‘ verona
Santi
alicia
aa os; Mary Sy Haberkamp piano

of

solo; Linda

the

play,

;

:

Mrs. Ruhmen, niece of actor Vin-|

cent Price

(who’s

solos:

and

Phyllis

trying to make|Dawn

Moore,

Anita

Iovino, vocal

Haberkamp

and

solos.

opening night) is a member of the/
[pn addition, a toy band concert
Executive Committee of Threshold|was presented by members
and
and has appeared in their Drama/ aj] members
sang
their junior
Festival
presentation
of
‘“Decision.” She has had three years of
summer stock experience, appearing
with
such
stars
as
Sylvia

song.

Sydney,
Carroll.

Edward Laing of 941 Woodward,
Deerfield, got a ticket for negli-

Peggy

Wood

and

Leo

Crash

G.|

on

The production is being directed | gent
by Burr Lee, well-known TV and
radio
actor
and
director.
Other!

Highland

Parkers

in

the

cast

driving

after

a rear-end

col-

|lision with Roger Sheahen Sunday
evening, while Sheahen was turn-

of

the play are Mike Nussboun,
Mrs. Rhoda Perlman.

Central

and

|ing into his driveway

at 985

/|tral Ave.,
report.

Park

Highland

Cenpolice

4/13-20/61—99

&amp;

ae
ws

wens i,
*

hoe

FAX

weg
anh\
,

| You can depend on... BRAUN
¢ “Care-Free”

Fuel Oil Delivery

HEATING

4

Select from alternate
your needs.

Budget

OIL AND

heating
payment

BRAUN

SERVICE

oil and

‘

H 58—D 50

NOW

Heating

ae

Service

AVAILABLE

. . . one of which

is tailored to

:

RES

é

} rot
ary

¥¢

;

‘ %

2‘ oe ee
the
ht
%.

©

ER

NG

ess,

‘eae

He

%

,
ted

I, mpeccable ;
natural
shoulder
clothing. In
a superb tropical
fabric of 55% “Dacron’* polyester
and 45% rayon.
$ 4 ‘

plan available too.

BROS.

444 CENTRAL AVE. -—— ID 2-3804

Page

§° Complete

service agreements

TELEPHONE
Ue

plus

AGREEMENTS

BROS.

Res.
|

LAMAR
i
if @ eRe
23 fe &amp; le et

2
5

ced

%

LLLae SA

s

ww

QV

T

** eaihies ‘oe

Pernceorengne?

Sy
esssaeed
af

wey

|

Ay

CARL

OIL

CO.

Cobey’s

Highland

Park

(Open Thursday Nites)

ID 2-3804
CASEL, DIV. MANAGER

478 Central

HIGHLAND

PARK
Thursday,

April

13,

1961

�BOAT HOUSE
New

SKOKIE

convenient

EXPERT

SALES

WANT

AD RATES

(No Abbreviations

Skokie

Permitted)

50c

3 Lines .. $1.75

per additional

(Up to 10 lines)
25c¢ Service Charge for blind ads

AT
HIGHLAND

Will Appear
ca

Uhore

AL

Uroue

[Vewspapers

*Fort Sheridan Tower is published every other Friday. Ads
in which the Tower is published will appear in the Tower

r——

WANT

Tuesday,

“Business Services &amp; Supplies’ Classifications Will Be Accepted Up To

Monday,

4:30 P.M.

DEADLINE

run during the week
at no extra charge.

AD DEADLINES———

All Classifications Except ‘Business
Services &amp; Supplies’’ Will Be Accepted Up To

FOR

CONTRACT

ADS

—

3

Phone Your Want

Ad —

(except situation wanted

Advertising of any kind is accepted for
publication in this newspaper with the
understanding
that the publisher assumes no responsibility for omission or
for errors and
shall be under no obligation or liability of any kind whatsoever,
either to the advertiser or third parties.
However, in the event of an error in
any advertisement, clearly the fault of

the

RFFICIENT
return for

pecgace:

part time.
small

ACCOUNTING
etc. Nothing
Telephone ID

CEdar 4-2300

publisher

and

accounting and
Ss,
years

Telephone

WI

‘5-

ALTERATIONS

of

Now

SERVICE

Body and Fender Repair
All Makes - All Models

Complete

Bank

rate

SPECIAL

Touch

t8Y E. Park

JACK

AUTO

PURCHASE

deluxe
light.

now

now

$598

$895

(1) 1960 Crownline 1960, top
curtain, battery, steering, windshield, ’61 Mercury 45
H.P.. starter, generator, long shaft, remote
controls,
1960 Crownline trailer, 1200 Ib.
tilt, tie-down, winch, directional signals.
was $2298
now $1796
(1)
.14 ft. Styleflite
°61
model,
steering,
windshield,
’61
Republic
trailer,
600
Ib.
winch, tie-down, directional signals, ’61 Mercury 22 H.P. manual, remote controls.
was $1395
now $995
Sales

ID

Highland

months

runabouts,

Ups

CH

FRECH

Ave.

to 36

(2) 17 ft. Owens
1960
steering, windshield, bow
was $1245

2-5845

Park

LOANS

LOW COST AUTO LOANS
FIRST ‘NATIONAL BANK
OF LAKE FOREST
LAKE FOREST CE 4-5100

Thursday, April 13, 1961

17

and

Service

Mercury Outboard
White Boats

Starcraft
FOR

1961

runabouts,

Grady

ASK

up

Boats

ALpine

Motors
Dorsett

Republic

CONTRACTORS

Aarnos &amp;
Homes Our
Remodeling
ONtario

(2) 15 ft. Owens
1960 custom
steering, windshield, bow light.
was $845

Painting,
and

Display

financing

Garber

1-9088

OUTPOST DAY CAMP
Uniqueness designed for boys and girls 5
to 12. Have your children’s dreams come
true. Let them join our rolling FIRE DEPARTMENT,
LE
NURSE
CORPS,
blast off at our CAPE
CANERVAL,
set
up COMMUNICATIONS,
live in TENTS
and INDIAN
VILLAGE.
Sports, different
CAMPING
activities and TRANSPORTATION are provided. A thrill packed memorable summer is in store. Teacher directed. Brochure on request. CRestwood 2-4422.

(1) 17 ft. Owens
1960 Landau
runabout,
hardtop, steering, windshield, bow light.
was $1445
now $1098

WM. RUEHL &amp; CO.
GENERAL BODY SHOP
NOW OPEN

Undercoating

George

CARPENTERS,

15 Models of
BOATS

ALTERATIONS?
Come and see Eda at our New Drive In.
Zengeler
Cleaners,
2020 First St., Highland Park.
ALTERATIONS
done
with
that
“extra
touch”? which
assures. extra satisfaction.
Call Mrs. Hansen, ID 2-2459.
ALTERATIONS,
dressmaking
by
experienced, competent seamstress. Reasonable
rates. Call any time. ID 2-5086.
ALTERATIONS, © dressmaking,
draperies,
slipcovers; interior design consultation. WI
5-5719, if no answer WI 5-1514.
EXPERT dressmaking and alterations, any
kind
including
uniforms,
very
reasonable. Call after 5. P.M. ID. 2-8791.

Camp

Register now. Call

Waukegan

on

Day

All camping activities. Hot lunches.
Excellent swimming instructions on
the grounds. Experienced counselors. 13% beautiful acres with pool.

BELVIDERE
BOAT WORKS

tax
ex-

ALTERATIONS expertly done in my home,
reasonable. For appointment, ID 2-4553.
2528 Green Bay Road, Highland Park.

Auto

substantially

BOATS

SERVICE—Taxes, Payroll,
too
small
nor too
ae
2-3369.

AUTO

which

Cloud

Boats

FOOT
long, 7 foot beam, ‘“‘Glen L.”
runabout convertible top, 40 horsepower
Mercury electric starting motor with two
gauge tanks, Elgin deluxe trailer, bilge
pump,
floor mats, foam
seats,
anchor,
lines,
and
accessories
included.
$1100.
Phone DE 6-6000, days, WI 5-3547 evenings. Ask for Harold.

30!-

Sorensen
Specialty
- Finishing
2-6812

16”

Show.

HERB

BLOMQUIST

carpenter, quality cus-

hom homes, additions, porch enclosures,
rec rooms, custom cabinets; also remodeling and repairs. Telephone WI 5-2830.
CHRISTO-CRAFT
REMODELING
CO.
WI 5-3273
ID 2-2319
Remodeling and home maintenance is our
business. Porch enclosures, basement paneled room additions, kitchen cabine
or
just that one door that doesn’t close right.
All work guaranteed.
FOR that small repair, or larger remodeling
job, garages, porches, attics finished, dormers installed, kitchens remodeled or any
new additions. Call H. L. Smalley, ID 2MoE EF

CATERING

PARTY
RENT

FROM

OUR

NEEDS
NEW

ASSORTMENT

of adult and children sized fine china, silver,
tables, chairs, linens and hundreds of other
items.
WE DELIVER

ASSOCIATED
RENT-ALLS
651

Roger

Williams,
IDilewood

Special

Birth-

COVERING

INSTALLED

&amp;

VITO

Special: Men’s Suits
a
Cleaning and Pressing $1.25 ba
590 Elm

Highland
2-6333

SUMMER

Glencoe

PROGRAM

Rd.,

Park

Place

Highland P.

LAWNMOWERS
SHARPENING
or ID 2-9202.

and

repairs.

MOVING

NORTH SHORE READING CENTER
Remedial and Developmental
Reading
Specializing in study methods, comprehension and speed. Individual attention based
on diagnostic testing; for Junior high school
thru college.
706

VE

LANDSCAPING

SAM WOO

TAX

INDIVIDUAL
income tax forms prepared
in my home or yours. R. E. Landau, wl
5-0764.
INCOME
TAX
SERVICE
people.
Business
and
Earners
For Wage
This is a year-round business with us.
hour phone service for appointments. Open
Capital Business
Saturdays.
and
evenings
Service,
Room
111,
730
Waukegan
Rd.
Telephone WI 5-5656.

Cohen,

ele.
Ork.

LAUNDRY

PONIES

BOARDING STABLES
Horses
boarded,
box stalls aavilable;
exceptionally clean and well kept stables; 2
outdoor rings; approximately 75 to 80 miles
of open and woodland trails. CE 4-3045.
Basil’s Boarding Stables.
WANTED
to buy, single or double horse
trailer in good condition, reasonable price.
Phone WI 5-2475.

R.

TRUCKING—

MARIANI

WOOD

INCOME

Ren

vi

in lawn
or yard
an
Everything
2
maintenance. New Jobs, excellent refere
Call after 8 p.m., ID 2-1774

SEASONED
firepiace wood, $20 per ton;
tailgate delivery. Telephone ID 3-1622.
AGED mixed hardwoods. Jim Beinlich, The
Firewood King. VErnon 5-1195.

HORSES

Manu
Tractor W

and tree w
COMPLETE
landscaping
Top dressing, mowing lawns,
Mayfield Landscaping; LOcust 6-0

5-4248

AVAILABLE

ID

HAULING

-

LIGHT general hauling. We also move
types ot household appliances. Call ID
6098 or ID 2-4917.

MOTOR SCOOTERS &amp; BIKES —
BICYCLES
FREE Pick-Up &amp; Delivery |
Complete Service, Parts

and

Repairs

on All Mak

of Bicycles

&amp; Trikes

BRAND

NEW

SCHWINN

BI

Boys &amp; Girls Models—All Sizes
Choice of Colors. Famous Schv
‘Long-As-You-Own-It’ Guarant
$29.95,

SHORE MUSIC STUDIOS
(formerly Garino’s)
North
Shore’s
finest.
Inquire
about
our
liberal trial plan.
GUITAR-ACCORDION
Insrtument furnished
ID 2-0015
If no answer, ID 2-1498
PIANO
INSTRUCTION
Hank
Winston,
staff pianist
at WBBMCBS. Adults mornings and evenings, children
after school. Call WI 5-0244 after 7:30 p.m.
LEARN
TO PLAY THE
GUITAR!
Folk
music, blues. Private or semi-private lessons. ID 3-0084 after 4 o’clock.
JACK MOORE GUITAR SCHOOL
By teachers who have produced solo and
band
national
championships
from
1955
thru 1960. Lessons in your home or studio.
Instrument furnished. Phone HI 6-3730.

&amp;

Call

$37.95,

$38.95,

$41.95.

NORTH

WE

SERVICE

WHAT

Lay-Away

or

486

ID

saan’

WI 5-5117.
Topsoil
Manure
New lawns—seed or sod
NELSON LANDSCAPE

TOP

&amp; DECORATING
by

Craftsman

@
e
2

Halsted

St.
Chicago

INTERIOR

YOUR home is your castle; complete lawn
and garden service that is fit for a Queen.
Evergreens, trees, shrubs, 24 hour service;
all work
and material guaranteed.
References furnished;
rate $2.50 per hour.
Call MAjestic 3-8141. Pat Corcoran, Landscaping.

Diversey

PAINTING
ID 2-5544

VILLAGE

CO.

|

:

DECORATO

&amp; EXTERIOR

LOCAL
REFERENCES
FULLY INSURED

work
work

NOEL
TEAGUE
LANDSCAPING.
New
lawns; black soil; evergreens; shrubs and
trees;
lawns
re-seeded
and
fertilized;
stone work; driveways; tree work; patios.
Telephone ID 2-7619.
GENERAL
landscaping. New jobs. Gabriel
Ruffalo,
909
Half
Day
Rd.,
Highland
Park. ID 2-7817.
C. MEDINA, JR. &amp; CO.
For the best in spring cleaning, a
209
peer
ete new lawns, etc. Call
WI

DECORATL

PAINTING
AND
DECORATING
Thorough preparation
Clean, careful, workmen
Best materials, aplied properly
Sensible prices

BLOOM

PRAIRIE ACRES
LANDSCAPING
SERVICE
Black soil, fill dirt, manure,
top dressing
and rolling lawns. Evergreens, shrubs, trees.
For estimate phone WI 5-0818.
MODERN Landscaping, Jack Vena. Call me
for the best in lawn
maintenance
and
errs
in garden and patio work. ID

HOING

AND

MARBLEIZING — STRIATING
WOOD FINISHING —MURALS
2957 N.

THE

SERVICE—
WI 5-5117
7 DAY GARDENING SERVICE
$2.25 per hour, gardening, landscaping, cultivating,
pruning,
trimming,
limb
sawing,
yards cleaned. ALpine 1-4636.
YARD maintenance, shrub planting, tree removal and trimming. Call C. Kropp, ID
2-3227.
LAWN
care, mowing and hedge trimming.
Seas George after. 3:30 p.m. EMpire 2-

Terms

at Sheridan

GUSTAV

SOIL
Tree
Tractor

S!

2-1369

PAINTING

PAINTING

LANDSCAPING
bi atid

Easy

Central

European

NEWSPAPERS

WE

CYCLE &amp; HOBBY SHO

JUNK

35c per CWT brought to our door.
Highest prices paid for all types of —
brought to our door, such as rags,
n,
metals, etc. Or call ID 3-1466 for truck
pick-up.
Hours
daily
including
Saturday,
8:30 to 5:30 p.m. Sun. 11-2.
HIGHLAND
PARK
WASTE
MATERIAL
1466 Berkeley Rd.

EXPERT
carpentry,
porches,
recreation
rooms a specialty; no jobs too small. Call
ID 2-4349.
HOME
remodeling, additions, TV
rooms,
repairs, free estimates, winter rates. Telephone WI 5-1511.
FOR building that new home, addition or
remodeling,
be it large
or small, call
V &amp; F Construction Co. Telephone ID
2-5477 or WI 5-2980.
BUILDING
and
remodeling.
Recreation
rooms and cabinets, floor and wall tile,
window awnings, door hoods and carports.
Free estimates. Telephone TRinity 2-7313.

Trailers

4-1310
2927 Belvidere
(Rte. 120) just east of Green
Bay Rd., Waukegan, Il.
Open Mon., Thurs., Fri.: 9-9
Tues., Wed., Sat.: 9-6
Sunday: 12 noon to 5 p.m,

&amp;

GARDENER

Tree

Fill Dirt
JIM BEINLICH

INSTRUCTION

On the North Shore. Boys and girls,
ages 4 to 12. Transportation to and
from the home.

&amp; SUPPLIES

SERVICE

Reasonable.

White

impairs the value of the advertisement,
on the advertiser's request, the
publisher will rectify
the error by publishing
the correct
ad in the next regular
issue without
additional
charge.
Aill
claims for adjustment must be made
within five days of the date of publication in which the error occurs.

BUSINESS SERVICE
ACCOUNTING

It!

:

Rolling

Lawn

COMPLETE floor and wall covering service; asphalt, vinyl asbestos, linoleum, etc.
Al Richman, ID 2-9249.

CAMPS

ads)

Windsor 5-4500

IDlewood 2-4500

for ‘Business
Monday).

We'll Charge

9

BOOKS

TUESDAY

CANCELLATION
DEADLINE
—NOON
TUESDAY
(except
Services &amp; Supplies’ ads which may be cancelled until Noon

’TIL

MORE than any other Encyclopedia, World
Book is planned for the home as well as
school. Phone HI 6-3848.
BEFORE you buy an Encyclopedia you owe
it to your children to see Compton’s Pictured Encyclopedia. ID 3-1910.

4:30 P.M.

P.M.

“Sweet

FLOOR

Rd.

FOOT sailing dinghy, double fiber glass
hull. Fast and sporty. Call ID 2-7346.
FOR sale: Thompson Sea Lancer outboard,
17 ft.; steering
wheel,
remote
control,
compass,
speedometer,
automatic
bailer,
50 H.P. Evinrude motor, generator, electric starter, heavy duty tip-up; Gator trailer. Call CE 4-2960 or CE 4-0562.
14
FOOT
aluminum
runabout,
fully
equipped, 25 horsepower motor and heavy
duty trailer, ski or cruise, perfect condition, $695. Call WI 5-4110.
$200 FOR package of (1) 15 ft. Grumman
aluminum
CANOE,
(2) 2%
horsepower
Johnson, (3) side motor bracket. All in
excellent condition. WI 5-1985.
16 FOOT
Fleetwind Arrow, class boat. of
North Shore Yacht Club, 2 sails, stainless
steel centerboard,
many
extras. Reasonable. Call ID 2-5857.

PARK NEWS
HIGHWOOD NEWS
OERFIELD REVIEW
VERNON REVIEW
THE LAKE AORESTER
LAKE BLUFF REVIEW
PY. SHERIDAN TOWER

lVorrs

Clavey

M

Responsible.

Top Soils
Gravel Drives

day
Party
Show.
Gifts;
Prizes;
Stunts.
David Echt. WI 5-0774.
MUSIC,
Magic, Clowns, Artists, anything!
Call hdo
Productions,
ID 2-1240, your
entertainment specialists.

9

In All Seven*

‘a

MAGIC.

AVAILABLE

&amp;

ID 2-6287.

FIREPLACE

Ads containing 11 lines or more are charged at the inch rate. Contract
rates for 4 or more consecutive
insertions available on request.
1 inch
Minimum.

Your Ad

Hwy.

arden

and

LANDSCAPE

REPAIRS

ENTERTAINMENT

SERVICE

HIGHLAND PARK
ID 3-0880
MON., THURS. &amp; FRI.,
SUNDAYS 10 TO 4

OPEN

line.

AND

NARCISSUS FERRARO __
Landscaping,
Yard
ance.
Experienced
after 5, ID 2-2652.

ELECTRIC

able prices. Telephone

SEAHORSE

FINANCING

Phone

30 YEARS EX P.
abe to take care of any kind of yard.
etc. Call ALpine
commercial,
dential,
post_lights,
All types of electrical work,
‘em
Reason- | 7580 or CRestwood 2-4563.
wall outlets, new circuits, era

ALCORT SAILFISH &amp; SUNFISH
GATOR &amp; MICHIGAN TRAILERS

BANK

L. Gulbrandsen.

CLAUSING

INC.

JOHNSON

patios, sidewalks, steps,

etc.

ELECTRICAL

RD.

Featuring
CRUISERS
DO RSETT

on cement

garage floors,
WI 5-4458

location

HIGHWAY &amp; CLAVEY
HIGHLAND PARK

LANDSCAPING:

CEMENT WORK

CALL COLLECT

BAldwin 3-0954 or BAldwin
EXTERIOR and interior pantiog

orating. Hubert

Johnson.

Oe

Call

2-

AA

PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING. -.
terior and exterior painting. For
quali

workmanship

by

experienced,

ial

men call W. C. Varney, WI 5-0654
MARSHAL
BJORNSON
DECORA’
Paper hanging our speciality. Interior
exterior.
Neat, honest, dependable
manship. No job too small. Pro
estimates.
Reasonable
rates.
0737, PEnsacola 6-0461.
interior
PAINTING
and _ decorating,

exterior,

natural

or

bleached

wood

ishing;
quality
workmanship.
For
mating, call Eric Schneider,
LIbe
EM 2-8592.
PAINTING
and paper hanging, re
prices; free estimates. Telephone
GALLOS, CE 4-0156.
r

PIANO TUNING
PIANOS expertly tuned,
of satisfaction or no

phone ID 3-0608.

PLANTS
FOR

&amp;

with the
charge.

$10,
y

BULBS

sale: healthy African violet plants,

and new varieties, also rooted leaves.
for appointment, Carl Rudolph,
69:
Old
Mill Road, Lake Forest, CE 4-

REMOD.
HALL

&amp; HOME
PAINTED

MAIN.
FREE

|

6 rooms painted with your paint, $195
washed

free,

$60, ALpine

6 rooms,

1-4636.

washed

and

Page H 59—D !

Rit

�ROOFING

QUALITY

HOMES

ROOFING
CO.

1-0377

Them

Days

ROTO

O-TILLING;

or Evenings

TILLING

garden and lawn _prepara-

on; spading and cultivation. Call EM:
: 26472 or CE 42846.
'O-TILLING and light grading; ground
Bos or
for seeding. Telephone
ID 2-

or ID 2-9202.

NO CHARGE
we cannot mee your TV set in your
me. Service call $4.95 only when repaired
your satisfaction.

_ NORTH SUBURBAN TV SERVICE
a
ID 3-0608
eae wna

&amp; TRAILER

SPACE

USTOM
built all aluminum single horse
trailer; ball bearing wheels; excellent con-

dition.

Call Antioch
TREE

1458.

SURGERY

ING’S TREE
EXPERTS.
Cutting, trimMing,
removing,
feeding
and
repairing,
_ power stump removing
and power spray. Fully insured and
bonded; free estimates;
seasoned
fireplace
wood.
Tele-

one ID 3-1622 or KImball 6-2292.

Y a few weeks left for winter rates on

e
h,

removal.
Fully insured.
Jim
BeinVErnon 5-1195,
N TREE EXPERTS. Trimming, feedng, gg
guying and removal. Fully
red. FR
ESTIMATES.
Telephone
ID
2-8750; ID 2-5481.
a

FOR

Inc.

sized landscaped

ALpine

1-1500

CONTRACT

_ Steel modern

SALE

home.

on

this

3 bedrms.

irplc. Dining ‘L.’ Cabinet
hs. Sun deck &amp; att. garage.

OMEFINDERS,

FOREST

fronting

on a

vil-

lage green in New England instead
of 213 wooded acres in Illinois. Of
top construction, there are 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, sep. dining room,
knotty pine kitchen, laundry room
&amp; bsmt. plus 2 car garage. A bid of
$1,750
is in to complete
family
room w/fireplace off living room.
One of a kind for
$38,500
For the relaxed,
that wants
the

fun loving family
least
amount
of

maintenance inside &amp; out, don’t
miss this custom built redwood
ranch.
Because
of
the
natural
beauty of its 1 acre wooded setting,
it requires
a minimum
of yard

interior is breathtaking.

w/maple

trim

set

against

dining room
2 car garage.

Inside this home

you will be more

than
pleased
with
the
spacious
rooms, fine detailed cabinet work
&amp;
the
best
construction.
Living
room has a raised hearth stone f.p.
Panelled
kit.
with
built-ins
&amp;

large eating space. Master bedroom
w/bath,
2 other twin sized bedrooms &amp; bath. A fourth bedroom or
den with panelling &amp; % bath has

sep. outside

entrance.

Basement

is

completely tiled &amp; conveniently divided into panelled rec. rm. w/f.p.,
laundry rm. &amp; workshop, 2 car gaA very
have

kitchen.
1%
Low 20’s.

Realtors

INVESTMENT

1 to 5, two

special

home

specialized in this area
for 11 years.

and four

South

ood.

ing Georgian duplex; opening attracnew section, 3 bedrooms, family room,
nditioned; $6000 income; live in one
it other, or two family at $28,750 each;
or buy.
{ KEMPF REALTY,
WI 5-5552
HHLAND
PARK:
new brick ranch,
3
drooms (1 paneled), large kitchen, livdining room, 1% baths, basement, gare, decorated, near schools, transportaion. $27,900. Builder, ID 2-1338.

Commons

LAKE

WI

5-1670

FOREST

Excellent location close in—4 bedrooms, 214
baths, living room with fireplace, full dining
room, study, 2%
car garage, shade trees.
House in excellent condition. Owner transferred. A buy at $31,500.
Call Ahlmann Christensen

VACANT
Lot with all improvements in close to Lake
Forest shopping and trains. $6500.
Call Ahlmann Christensen

KNOLLWOOD
6 rooms, 2 car garage, plus $3000, all electric kitchen. Nice location—Full ge
$18,000. Owner retiring—wants offer.
. 2Taay.

Baird &amp; Warner
283 E. Deerpath
Lake Forest

52

than

$20,000

but

located

in the

cen-

bE

FOR

HOMES

SALE

~ZANDER-OMMEN
REALTORS

LAKE

DEERFIELD
BRAND
NEW
TWO-STORY
COLONIAL
w/4 bdrms., 2% baths, LR w/FP, separate
DR,
kitchen
w/built-ins
and
breakfast
room; full bsmt. w/paneled rec. room &amp;
FP. Att. gar. Many extras.
$33,950
BEAUTIFUL
COLONIAL
RANCH
in desirable Briarwoods area. 3 bdrms., 2 full
baths,
LR
w/FP,
DR,
lovely’
kitchen
w/plenty of eating area, family room, att.
gar.
36,000
CHARMING
TRADITIONAL
COLONIAL
home
in beautiful wooded
area close to
schools, transportation &amp; shopping. Fencedin back yard, screen house, grape arbor,
perennial garden. Large LR w/FP, separate
DR, sun room. Kitchen w/blt.-ins, 3 twinsize bdrms., many closets, floored attic, full
bsmt. 2-car gar.
i
3 BEDROOM SPLIT-LEVEL. 2 baths, LRDR
comb.,
kitchen
w/blt.-ins
and eating
area, finished family room, nicely landscaped
corner lot, central air conditioning. Att. gar.
29,900
ALMOST NEW BI-LEVEL close to schools.
Finished family room w/crab orchard FP,
LR, kitchen w/blit.-ins &amp; plenty of eating
area,
3 bdrms.
Downstairs
powder
room
roughed in.
28,500

Looking for that quality built home with
room to grow? This spacious brick Ranch
with 22x12 finished family room, full basement,
attached
garage,
fireplace in large
living
room,
large
kitchen,
all for
just

OWNER BUILT. Immaculate 2 bdrm. ranch
on beautiful wooded lot. Large family kitchen,
w/thermopane
window,
over-sized
breezeway could be made into family room.
Plastered walls, Bella windows.
$21,500

ZANDER-OMMEN

Move in and enjoy a vacation at home in
this immaculate
3 bedroom
split-level designed for outdoor living at its best. Delightful 22x24
jalousie
porch,
patio
with
built-in barbecue, lovely fenced yard. Basement for future family room and bath, 2
car attached garage.
$27,500
Charm
and
economy
in this face _ brick
Ranch with 3 extra large bedrooms. Carpeted living room with stone fireplace, family sized kitchen, full basement with finished
recreation
room,
patio, located
on
tree lined street.
$24,000

Evanston-North

Waukegan

For the budget conscious executive with expanding
family;
4 bedroom
Split-level, 2
baths, recreation room, kitchen with builtins and eating space. 434% mortgage may
be assumed. Owner transferred.
$28,500
This has everything—including a basement
with work benches for Dad; lovely kitchen
with built-in oven and range for Mom; family room for the kids; attached garage for
the car; living
room and separate dining
room for V.I.P.’s. Besides all this—3 bedrooms and 2 baths at only
$30,500
Brick Contemporary located in Riverwoods
on about 2%
acres of wooded property.
Large panelled living room with wood burning fireplace, 3 bedrooms with 114 baths,
huge family type kitchen with built-ins, wonderful entrance hall, attached 2 car garage.
Nothing can compare to this at the price
of
29,500

HIGHLAND

PARK

For the growing family, these 8 rooms of
comfortable living in choice East Highland
Park location. 3 bedrooms, plus room on
first floor as 4th bedroom, plus enclosed
sleeping porch. Separate dining room, den,
spacious kitchen, basement, 2 car
garage,
lot 85x195. Close to everything.
28,900

Shore

Multiple
&amp;

Deerfield

OPEN

Built-ins

in bedrooms.

?

$28,500
Radical reduction on this charming
brick Bi-level. Living room overlooks wooded ravine. Separate din-

ing room.

Lot 75x180.

3 bedrooms,

2 full baths. Attached 2 car garage. Basement rec. area. 2 blocks
from grade school. Now offered at

$34,500

LAKE

FOREST
old

modified

frame

room,

on

%4

Colonial

acre

panelled

brick

corner.

library,

and breakfast

In-

dining

area in kitch-

en. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths on second
floor. Excellent location. Offered at

Board

of

Realtors

Service

Rds.

WI

Evanston-North
Listing service.

Appletree

$56,500
Brick split level on 34 acre in wood-

5-5700

ed

section.

Includes

dining

room,

panelled family room, lav. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Stone patio, and
glazed breezeway. Available now at

$59,500

John Griffith, Inc.
2 OFFICES TO SERVE YOU

Shore

SUNDAY
604

disposal.

car att. garage with storage. Love
ly patio. Carpeting, draperies, re
frig., stove, washer &amp; dryer includ
ed. Far below replacement cost at

cludes

Carr Realty Co.
Member of the
Multiple

BLUFF

Well maintained Brick Ranch. Liv
ing room-dining room comb. 30x1«
Streamlined kitchen with d.w. ant

and

of

Listing

SALE

3 bedroom Ranch built in 1956. Excellent modern kitchen with builtin oven.
Unusual
daylight
basement. Immediate
occupancy. Low
taxes.
Area
of newer
homes.
A
good value at
$26,900

Year

REALTORS
Members

FOR

John Griffith, Inc.
Realtors

Roman brick with seven delightful rooms.
3 bedroms, 1% baths, den, spacious kitchen with picture window overlooking yard,
attached garage, patio with awning, large
professionally landscaped yard. Located in
Briarwoods—walk
to
trains,
shops
and
schools. Owner will help to finance. $29,500

678 N. Western
Lake Forest

Lane

CEdar

Deerfield
It will be our pleasure to show this home
to you. It could not be in better condition.
This
split level artistically decorated
has
3 bedrms., Liv.-din. “L,’’ Kit. w/eating area
w/built-in G.E.
range/oven.
Many
extras:
Built-in TV, Radio &amp; record player, LR.
Draperies included. Nicely landscaped yard.
(rear fenced-in)
A: YALGE. @t ix
$26,500
This 3 bedrm. home is in excellent condition. Liv.-din. comb. w/frpl. Kit. w/eating
area. Full basement
w/man’s
ideal work
shop, also rec. rm. Nicely landscaped yard.
Back fenced in.
$24,500

Ave.,

12 Scranton Ave.
Lake Bluff

40485

CEdar

EVENINGS CALL
M. C. Lackie CE 4-1380
W. Paul LeRoi
N. Starosselsky CE 4-1181
Donald Kelley
Mary Griffis CE 4-0339
Geraldine Moyer
Frances Rutgers CE 4-1075
June Enos
Nancy Appleton CE 43974

LAKE

4-0816

CE

4-0104

CE

4-1082

CE

4-5132

CE

4-1117

BLUFF

John Coons, Realtor

Do you need a 3 bedrm. home under $20,000? 3 bedrms., Liv.-din. “L,’? Kit. w/eating area, C.T. bath are ready to be moved
into.
$19,950

THE NAME WITH
THE TRADE-IN PLAN

SUPERIOR
LISTING
IN BRICK
with 4
bedrooms,
2 baths,
29
ft. living
room,
f/place,
dining
room,
activity
area,
and
STUDY, GAS h/water heating. Basement, 2
car garage. SPIC &amp; SPAN
home with a
FAMILY sized kitchen, d/washer, RANGE,

Close to Schools, Transportation and shopping is where this home is located. It offers
3 bedrms., Liv. rm., Din. rm., Kit., bath
and pwd. rm. Hardwood floors and black
top drive too! A Truly nice hse. ...... $18,750

TERS,
and
other fine features. TRANSFERRED owner desires quick sale. Offered
at $31,000. Near village &amp; walking to transportation, school and beach.

623 Deerfield Road

WI 5-5100

This 3 bedrm. brick veneer ranch has many
features. Entrance hall, LR, DR, Brierhill
Stn. frpl., Kit. w/birch cabs., also pantry.
2 bdrms. have 7 ft. closets, one walk-in. 2
C.T. bath. Full bsmt., 2 car garage. Many
trees on lot 100x200.
$36,000

LAKE FOREST

Carr Realty Co.

Nearf West Park, 2-story French
Brick. 2 bedrooms, 21% baths, enclosed heated sun room, full basement, gas heat. $24,500.

Off South Green Bay Road, Stone
and Frame Ranch on % acre. 3
bedrooms, 1% baths, open porch
and

patio.

Waukegan

OPEN

Road

SUNDAYS

WI

12 TO

A GOOD
ist home with 3 bedrooms, lg.
FAMILY
KITCHEN,
lg. closets. Truly a
little GEM. $17,000 and financing available.
EARLY
AMERICAN
home
with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, f/place, dining
room, and family room, base, GAS heat.
This house has something of the UNUSUAL
a family living. Do put this on your list.
"Ss.

LAKE

DEERFIELD’S OLDEST
REALTORS
701

double sink, self turned FORMICA COUN-

5-0984

5:30 P.M.

$29,500.

FOREST

LUXURY
RED
BRICK
with 4
BEDROOMS, 3 baths, living room, dining room,
country family kitchen, f/place, wet bar.
Many lg. closets &amp; walk in closet. Full basement, 2 car garage. Wide lot wooded yard.
Carpeting &amp; drapes may remain in this custom: built home. Bedroom sizes (19, 21, 14,

br)

Near

Lake

Forest

High

School,

Contemporary Brick 1-story house
on % acre, wooded. 4 bedrooms, 2
baths,

full

tion room.

basement

with

recrea-

$37,500.

Near Lake Forest College, 2-story
Brick house on attractive fenced
corner lot. 5 bedrooms, 4 baths, library and powder room
on first
floor. $53,500.

Gilbert Rayner
5-0450

HIGHLAND PARK
Owner:
brick
bi-level
in Deerfield.
3391 Summit Avenue
er
tered walls, hardwood floors, 3 bed- |
Bo rooms,
2 baths, oil heat, fireplace, 114
Brick ranch, 3 bedrooms, 214 baths, family
garage. Woodland Park vicinity. Teleroom, fireplace, central air-conditioning, mid
r
5-2390.
30’s, owner. ID 3-0235.

ge H 60—D

Less

CE 4-1855
BR

COONS, Realtor
DEERFIELD

ter of the village is this 5 room quality
constructed Ranch built 6 years ago. Lovely
wooded lot, full basement, attached garage,
patio. Out of town owner anxious ie? fae

PIERSEN REALTY
Deerfield

HOMES

2 story Colonial with superb wooded location. Seven good sized rooms. 3 bedrooms
and
1%
baths, family room
overlooking
yard,
birch
wood
cabinets
and_ breakfast
space
in kitchen.
Separate
dining
room,
stone fireplace in living room. Full basement, attached 2 car garage.
$37,500

for _.$35,500

concrete

111 Green Bay Road, Wilmette
-1111 BR 3-3333 HI 6-6666 WI 5-5555

E

be

Liv. rm.

D NEW—BRICK &amp; FRAME COLOL Well Constructed. 7 large rooms. Liv.
Aid ee Dining room. Deluxe kitchen.
ed
brkfst. room. 3 bedrms. 214 baths.
ng thermopane doors to
patio. Full base.
Car att. gar. Large lot. $38,500.

Sunday

it should

on this well built solid

nry
Colonial
Ranch.
NOW
$29,500.
tadiant heat in floors including garage with
lividual controls for each room. Liv. 1m.
pic., dining
‘L,’ large kit. 2 bedrms. &amp;
Storms
screens. Lovely picturesque
SY

$19,900

up this wooded lane of beautiful
homes in town to reach our black
shuttered Colonial ranch. It looks
like

SALE

Brick and frame Bi-level—freshly decorated.
3 bedrooms with 2 baths (master bedroom
with bath). Wonderful kitchen with builtins, space for future family room, landscaped
Y% acre. 44%%
mortgage can be assumed.
Wonderful neighborhood of fine homes. Near
schools.
$26,900

rage.

REALTORS

PRICE

lot.

If you are from the east, you’ll feel
sure you’re back home as you drive

We
LOW

plus util-

See this lovely home at ___$36,500

Sadler &amp; Hultman

NEW

eating space

&amp; larger scr. porch. Good

CT walls. Large sep.
with f.p., family room,

e by and then call for an appointment
artistic English brick appeals to you
country-like setting on a semi-private
living room with stone fireplace, large
ig room,
ist floor bedroom,
powder
Provincial kitchen, 2 bedrooms and
c tile bath on 2nd, paneled game room
stone
fireplace.
Lot
62x215,
fenced
tiled roof, copper gutters, metal casewindows . .. A real charmer in imate condition at $31,500.
sneer nrrery
take Green
Bay Road
ty Line
Road, west 2 blocks, turn
Just 4 blocks to Braeside transporta-

ie

with

ity room

walnut

SALE

this

PH

&amp; entertaining. 3 nice sized bedrooms — one panelled, attractive

Both baths are a beautiful blend of
dark panelling &amp; colored CT tile.
The custom built kit. cabinets are

IGHLAND PARK
31 VALLEY ROAD

: Davis St,

school
&amp; transportation?
A cozy
fireplace in the large living room
with dining area is ideal for family

work. The

REAL ESTATE
HOMES

in a friendly neighborhood close to

kitchen

FOR

Wonderful 7 room Colonial—all rooms with
a little more space than you would expect
at this price. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, carpeted
living and dining combination. Built-ins in
kitchen with breakfast area, family room,
den or 4th bedroom.

INVESTMENT
OF YOUR OWN

All this for

TELEVISION

TRAILERS

JOHN

Are you a young couple with or
without a small family &amp; would
like a charming custom-built home

BURBAN ROOF TREATING SERVICE
Din

BEST
HOME

A

SHINGLES
Neglect

HOMES

Deerfield

LEhigh 7-1464
Don’t

SALE

PIERSEN REALTY

FREE ESTIMATES
ALL TYPES ROOFING
24 HR. PHONE SERVICE

CEDAR

FOR

REAL

ESTATE

Jaicks
Carmen

Berenice
Burgess Olson

WORTH
WHILE BUYS IN
LIBERTYVILLE
3
bedroom
brick
ranch,
full
basement,
knotty pine recreation room with extra bath,
carpeted living room with fireplace, beautiful 80x200 foot lot, breezeway and garage,
close to schools. $27,500.
2%
acres with 4 bedrooms, tri-level, 2 full
baths, living room with fireplace, breezeway,
2 car garage, transferred owner has reduced
price to $28,500.
Brick two
apartment,
3 bedrooms
and 2
bedrooms plus enclosed sleeping porch, full
basement with extra kitchen facilities, 3 car
brick garage, $31,500 or offer.
Purchase
this brick split level for $1000
down. If you are transferring here and have
not sold your house this is an ideal arrange-

SIX
room
house,
311 North
Bluff; price $13,000. Call CE

and

h/water

Mrs.

heat BASE

BOARD

Lindenmeyer,

H.

CE

TYP.

4-0969

D. Olson

&amp; Co.

Waukegan,

Il.

Realtors

ment.

INQUIRIES INVITED.
Many fine listings.
Kathryn

RANCH
home with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
living
room,
f/place,
(2) dining,
built-in
range, oven, hood &amp; fan, double sink. 19
ft. master bedrooms. FULL basement, touch
type electrical breaker
and
h/water
heat
BASE BOARD TYP. Situated on lg. property. $27,500—

Ressinger

Ave., Lake
4-0844,

FRED
344

N.

Milwaukee

B. WHITE
REALTY
Ave.

EMPIRE

Liverytville,

2-0200

Ill.

CONTEMPORARY RANCH
See this new 3 bedroom, 2 bath, press brick
and rough-sawn cedar ranch nearing completion at 523 Green Bay Rd., Highland
Park. Kitchen with spacious breakfast area,
attached carport, separate entry foyer, large
closets and other features. $27,500.
Al Richman, Builder
ID 2-9249
591-C Roger Williams Ave.
7

Thursday, April 13, 1

1

k
i

pi

�HOMES

HOMES FOR SALE

LAKE

FOREST

LAKE

On 11% acres of partially wooded
well
landscaped
ground,
this
5
year old brick ranch features good
sized rooms and many interesting
details.
There are 3 bdrms. with 2 cer. t.
baths, lge. L-shaped liv.-din. comb.
w. frpl. and thermopane pic. windows; patio. The kitch. is unusual-

ly

large

and

Barbecue,
eat. area.

well

equipped

incl.

combining fam. rm.
Full bsmt. has lge.

and
rec.

rm. w. bar, sep. laundry, gas heat.
An excellent buy in the mid 40’s.
oe

e

school on %
ground, this

traditional ranch house has many
charming features with its 32x17
living room with full paneled fire-

place wall, large
with dining area,
cellent

closet

utility

plaster walls, parquet floors,
to wall carpeting, patio.
Can be bought in the 30’s.

HIGHLAND
Williamsburg

white

wall

bsmt.,

gas

Down—Will Buy Any
of These!

Brick

Ranch:

Completely

ets;

Ige.

Bath;

lower

rm.
rm.

w. frpl., gas heat.
A combination of charm and spaciousness makes this house an outstanding buy in the mid 50’s.

PHELPS,

Sheridan

INC.

Rd.

ID

2-4580

HEIGHTS

down—Move

IN

like rent

Frame
Ranch:
combination _ living-dining
room, large tiled cabt. Kitchen, 2 twin bedrooms,
double Closets, Utility Room,
Oil
Hot
Air
Heat.
FULL
PRICE
Bey

Arthur C. Ullmann
Member of
Waukegan

2

IT

Living Room
with fireplace, sep.
dining room, 2 twin size bedrms.,
plus sleeping porch, can be used as

tile bath with shower.

Large family kitchen and pantry.
Stove included. Enclosed porch. 2
car garage.
Walking
distance
to

old

ranch

on

back

yard.

beautifully

Carpeting

ESTATE

included

*

®

up

to

ranch

Member

1-7300

CONVENTIONAL MORTGAGES
HOME IMPROVEMENT LOANS
LAKE FOREST
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN ASS’N
4-4200

Thursday, April 13, 1961

2

acre

car

garage

of heavily

Inter-City

REALTORS
Rd.

PARK

VACANT

‘houses’

BUSINESS

for

income.’

CORNER

Real

ID

2 and
sell.

plus

2

Estate

2-8077

3%

baths,

modern

All large

rooms,

plus sep.

2-car garage with pan.
attached.
Immediate

Lake

Forest

modern

kitchen,

FA

$27,500.

heat.

screened

residence shows
for the best tra-

but en-

Joys an attractively landscaped 5 acre setting of tall trees, many shrubs, a formal
garden and surrounded by a broad expanse
of meadow.
The beautiful separate living
and
dining
rooms
and_
the
exceptionally
large screened porch offer ample spaciousness for extensive entertaining as well as
the joy of pleasant family living. There are
4 master bedrooms, 2 maid’s rooms, 3%
baths, library, gun room and a 2 att. gar.

Real

6-2900

Estate Co.
AMbassador

ID

PARK

2-0880

GRACIOUS

Idlewood Realty

Forest
ID

2-6776

Central

Can

Show

You

Meeting

Several

Your

Houses

Requirements

residence designed around

NPy

Pena

a

silo. Over eight and a half woode

ID

2-1212

acres.

LISTING

arate

dining

Charles

bath,

room,

kitchen,

full

modern

2 bedrooms,

basement,

new

St.
1 C.T.

Mueller

furnace, basement apartment with
paneled,
tiled-floor
living
room,
twin-sized bedroom, kitchen, powder room.
Nice
landscaping,
detached
garage,
low
taxes,
good

neighborhood.

Realtors
St. Johns

Ave.

ID

ABSENTEE OWNER
SACRIFICES
5 MILES NORTHWEST OF DEERFIELD
Contemporary 3} bdrm. ranch on a % acre
including 4 major appliances, $15,900.

Viking Realty
Realtors Since
Deerfield Rd.

Farm house, lovely views
of apple orchard.

in midst
$69,50

ONE

OF

Five

bedroom,

three

and

Colonial

with

a

bath,

17

FIVE

dining room
derful yard.

BEDROOM

with

HOU; SE

one

ha

lovely

fireplace.

big

Won$55,00

privileged

of

to

ONE OF 10 SIX BEDROOM HOUSES
Lovely
six bedroom,
five bat!
stone residence. Easily maintaine
but with large general living area
U

a:

5-5300

ONE, OF 16 SEVEN PLUS BEDROOM
HOUSES
:
Entrancing older home in exce
laces
east location. Lovely firep

DO YOU PREFER
STRAVINSKY TO CHOPIN?
PICASSO TO REMBRANDT?
are

ho

location.

‘ $85,0

1946
WI

L. Ringer
We

remodeled

eastern

LAKE FOREST
acre
178x245—$3,000

4 BEDROOMS — 2 BATHS — MID 30’s
Owner
transferred offers much below reproduction cost his multi-level 1958 home.
Landscaped half acre, beautiful rec. rm., 2
car att. gar., covered patio, E-Z terms.

masterpiece

completely

excellent

2-1484

IN DEERFIELD
ON
1% ACRE
SITE
PRICE WAS
$24,500—NOW
IS $21,500
3 bdrm. brick and frame ranch, 20’ kitchen,
separate din. rm., bsmt., att. gar.

826

in

$22,900.

Dorsey Husenetter
723

bath,

offer

this

contemporary

ar-

¢ nee

chitecture in a magnificent setting
of century-old trees. See this 5 bed-

room, 34

bath home designed by a

foremost
architect
modern living.

for

gracious,
Parking

L. Ringer
457

Central

For

ID

Space
Our

Available

Customers

2-6600

REAL

OPPORTUNITY

Roomy
and handy to schools, no chauffering necessary. Ranch with 3 bedrooms,
1% baths. 16x22 living room with fireplace
and large dining area, attached garage and
professionally landscaped. Aluminum storms
and screens.
Quick possession.
Call Mrs.
ROESING, CE 4-2665.

BEAUTIFUL

STONE

LEONARDI
ID 3-1000

John

F.

6-1855
3-1855

Hart, Shaw &amp; 4
Company

WORK

On this artistic 2 bedroom
home
at 809
Broadview, Ravinia. Tile bath, living room
with fireplace; separate dining room. Finished
basement,
gas
heat,
combination
storms and screens, 1 car garage, beautifully
landscaped.

AGENCY
1927
Leonardi

Richard

Mrs.
Ruth

B.

Hart,

President

C. Howard ReQua, Vice President
Stuart
E.

R. French

Milton

Henderson

McN.

Kenmore

T:

Tho:
\

260 E. Deerpath
Lake Forest, CEdar

135 S. La Salle”
4-1000

RAndolph

6-71

ID 2-0596

MORTGAGE
LOANS
CONVENTIONAL
OR FHA
For prompt,
personal,
service
when
you
buy—build or refinance in the Lake Forest
Lake Bluff area—See us.

Baird &amp; Warner

f

COMBINED
BUSINESS AND
RESIDENTIAL USE. Comfortable 4 bedroom home,
large living room, dining room and kitchen
at 838
Central
Avenue,
Highland
Park.
New oil hot water heat, very good basement. Perfect location to operate business in
your home.

x

Members

of the Evanston-North

Multiple

Listing

Shore

Service

FIRST NATIONAL BANK
LAKE FOREST CE 4-5100

Page H 61—D 53.
/

ORCA

—

porch.

frame

Ave.

Est.

Hillcrest
SHeldrake

That

Deerfield—2 story brick and stucco,
detached garage, living room, sep-

A

LIVING

An
acre
of
grounds
beautifully
landscaped with a house to match.
Main
floor has all the accoutrements
of gracious
living with
3
wood
burning
fireplaces.
Master
bedroom, 27 ft. x 24 ft. with fireplace and dressing area and private bathroom, 3 other bedrooms
with 2 baths, maid’s quarters on
3rd floor. Garage
apartment.
All
this in northeast Highland
Park.
Low 70’s. Call ID 2-2567 or agent.

576 Lincoln Avenue
Winnetka, Illinois

Excellent

2-5540

RANCH

All this for less than $20,000
3 bedrooms
Aluminum storms and screens
Wood burning fireplace
Carpets on tiled floors throughout
T.V. Aerial
Tiled kitchen

Are

H. and R. Anspach

SEE

Sears

Odds

HART SHAW &amp; COMPANY

studio apt.
possession.

A well maintained
6-room
home
in convenient central location with
3 bedrooms,
1%
baths, cer. tile

Find!

architecture,

The

$47,500.

WEST OF
Choice
wooded

DEERFIELD
OPEN SUNDAY 2 TO 5
1540 CRABTREE LANE
(West on Deerfield Road to Wilmot, north
to Woodland,
east to Crabtree.)
Custom
built NEW ENGLAND COLONIAL with 4
LARGE BEDROOMS. This lovely one owner home features a 25 foot cherry panelled
living room with fireplace, separate dining
room,
country
kitchen
with
knotty
pine
cabinets, range, refrigerator and dishwasher.
Huge
panelled recreation room
with fireplace, large utility room
with appliances,
outside entrance, professional dark rm. This
homeis of superb construction and has been
beautifully maintained. A completely charming home with Early American decor. Wooded lot 75x202. Priced at $42,500 including
like new carpeting.
STORM REALTORS
HI 6-7180

bedrm.

Earhart &amp; Company
HIGHLAND

AL

Lake

with

one

1899 Sheridan

REALTOR
ID 2-5222

on

Glencoe
5-1971

GOOD INCOME from 8 a artments,
3 rooms each, low taxes. Priced to

Hillcrest

or 3rd

property.

$48,50

Ann Andruss

600 N. Western
CE

wooded

den

Realtor Referral
Service

LIBERTYVILLE

prices

plus

porch

©

We have several countryside homes in the
beautiful area just east of town. They vary
in style and size, are located on an acre or
more of select property. One has swimmin

pool;

Colonial

and

find all
$19,500.

AREA—$26,500

2 bedrms

VE

HIGHWOOD

This white brick quality
not only a genuine feeling

in price. Where can you
CS TOP GOI oc.

810 East Illinois Road
$49,500
207 North Maple Court
56,000
161 North Sheridan Road
57,500
120 North Sheridan one
63,500
also
Choice % acre vacant home-site in aera of
finest homes. Wooded, convenient to everything including the Lake
$24,000

1-3430

ditions of COLONIAL

year

in

LAKE FOREST
Spring Selections

bedrooms,

NEW

Market

HIGHLAND

IN

public and parochial schools, shopping and transportation. Price

5

SUNDAY

4

kitchen.

463

3 bedroom house with living room, kitchen,
full basement and 2 car garage. Close to
schools. Priced $18,500.

Service
WI 5-3200

PARK

3rd bedrm.,

Road
AL

Baracani

REALTOR
Multiple Listing
Road
Deerfield

BRICK RANCHES
JUST LISTED!

HIGHLAND

On

PARK

INCOME
PROPERTY—2
family
stucco,
plus 5 room house on large lot, ail in good
Soe
close to schools and transportaion.

COME OUT AND
SEE THESE TODAY.

216

Glencoe
2-7873

in

1582 Arbor St. (Corner Berkeley-Arbor). Ex% acre corner lot. 3 twin
quisite brick ranch home, ideal for couple wooded
wishing luxury, charm, convenience. There size bedrooms,
1 ceramic tile bath
are 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, a very attractive
family room, screened porch, attached ga- with shower. Modern kitchen with
rage,
everything
modern
and
immaculate
large breakfast area. Circular turn
lus central air conditioning. Owner relocato9|around driveway. Brick barbeque
ing, will sell well below coat at
$37,5

SEE

5-0236

Lang Real Estate
712
AM

DEERFIELD

HIGHLAND PARK
Open Sunday Afternoon

VErnon

A home
with charm
and personality.
10
room brick with 5 bedrooms,
3%
baths,
near
lake,
schools,
transportation,
lovely
grounds. Exceptional value. In the 30’s.

Slashed

Balance

in-

urious master suite w. dressing
and bath. Spacious pnld. rec.

Bldg.

HIGHLAND

Brick
Ranch;
Comb.
living-dining
room,
cabt. Kitchen, 2 twin bedrooms, plenty of
Closets, full basement, 14% car gar. on Landscaped 65x155 ft. lot. Near school. ALL
THIS MAY BE YOURS FOR ........
,000.

$1000

incl. lux-

Theater

New

Central

3 cer. baths,

Glencoe

PRICE REDUCED on this beautiful home in best East location with

INC.

Prices

Price

REALTORS

Rec-

Here is the
buy of the month!

on 78 ft.

heat.

J-H Kahn

NORTHBROOK

Colonial

frame

2 FOR |

EASY TO KEEP
SPLIT LEVEL.
3 good
bedrms., 244 baths. Unusually large dining
L with slidewall to lovely patio. Family
rm. Family size kitchen with eating area
and bit.-in oven and range. $33,500.

Face
Brick
Ranch:
Living
room;
Dining
room; lge. Family Kitchen; 3 twin Bedrooms;
lots of Closets; full Basement; Oil Hot air
Heat} Tat TOOKSO Fes ata
cis cciecinad: $19,400

sunny din. rm., mod. kitch., pan.
brkfst. rm., scr. porch, 2 car gar. On
2nd floor are 4 spacious
family

1925

level, unfinished

FOR SALE

12 CLOVER

has entr. hall, lge. liv. rm. w. frpl.,

PAUL

conditioned,

Brick &amp; Frame Bi-Level: Insulated Aluminum siding; Living room; Birch cabt. Kitchen-Dining;
3 twin Bedrooms; plenty Clos-

PARK

Beautiful brick Colonial on 100
ft. well landscaped lot. 1st. floor

and

Air

HOMES

SALE

NEW LISTING. YOUNG
AND
BEAUTIFUL white brick Colonial home on a lovely
wooded lot. 1ST FLOOR DEN, pwdr. rm.
adjoins. NEW G.E. KITCHEN, 3 bedrms.,
2 baths. Screened porch. Forced air heat.
Be sure to SEE at $39,500.

8 CLOVER

An excellent buy in the 30’s.

bdrms.

AVE.

Gas Hot air Heat. Living &amp; Dining room;
lge. birch cabt. Kitchen; 3 twin Bedrooms;
lots of Closets; 120x135 ft. Lot. PRICED
AT
$18,500

cludes carpeting, drapes, stove.
This home has all the charm and
livability of Williamsburg Colonial.

East

SPECIALS”

714 QUASSEY

FOR

J-H Kahn Realty

AREA:

ARLINGTON

lot; large trees, patio and stockade
fence. 3 bedrms., 2 baths, lge. liv.
rm. w. frpl., din. rm., spac. fam.
rm. and mod. kitch.

Full

$1,500

room,

warm air gas heat.
Special
Features: aluminum
storms
and
screens
throughout,

Attractive

“SPRING

modern kitchen
3 bedrooms, ex-

space,

BLUFF

HOMES

reation Room; 4th Bedroom and 2nd Bathroom roughed in. Oil Hot air Heat. $18,450

®

Close to L.F. high
acre of well wooded

FOR SALE

.

ve

te

�bah:

tay

HOMES

NEW

DEERFIELD-BRIARWOODS

LISTING

right

in.

Newly

decorated.

Open Sunday 1 to 5—900 Westcliffe. Stun:
ning ranch in exclusive section; close to
everything;
3 bedrooms,
2 baths,
family
room;
immaculate condition. Owner
retiring—wants offer.

ly 2814’ living room and dinroom with beautiful butternut
lace wall. 2 large bedrooms
excellent
ss
stove,

fast

closets. Kitchen inrefrigerator
and

nook.

Screened

THE

KEMPF

Lin-

Want
GROTH

Low

upkeep.

Near

Ave.

THLAND
ay

ID

PARK
OPEN

INDIAN
38

$29,950.00

Provincial

kitchen

with

family
dining

dishwasher,

» oven
and
range
top,
separate
ility room, carpeted living room, dinin;
and
master
bedroom.
Vinyl in all
x rooms included. '2 car garage. Over
square ft. living area.
ons—Edens

highway

north

to

CO.

50 Yrs.

PARK

Green

HILL

Bay

REALTY,

Winnetka

INC.
HI

6-0900

HIGHLAND PARK HIGHLANDS
for the executive with limited cash. Now
you can own a deluxe 7 room bi-level with
family room and, fireplace, 2 baths, 2 car
attached
garage,
large
wooded
lot, with
payments less than rent.
$1,000 down
Edens to 22, right to Summit, left to Hill,
right to:
3267 Western Avenue
Open Saturday and Sunday 11 to 6.

per month

‘ooms, 2 tile baths,
walnut
large living room with bay,

Home?

LIKE YOUNG
2 year old bi-level. Landscaping is in. 7
rooms. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths.
test kitchen
has built-in oven and eating area. Lower
level has family room. A well cared for
home. Many playmates on quiet cul-de-sac.

RIDGE

LEDERER

$4500 down—$178.53

a

Co. For Over

HIGHLAND

FOR THE FIRST TIME
EXECUTIVE RANCH HOMES
INCLUDING 100 FT. LOTS

AT

Build

CONSTRUCTION

2-1484

SURREY
DAILY

GRETA

5-5552

We
help you completely.
We
draw your
plans, price them and help with financing.
Unless you are thoroughly satisfied, there
is no obligation to you. Homes from $18,000
to $80,000.
For information call WI 5-5998.

Realtors
Johns

to

Reputable

Dorsey Husenetter
;

WI

porch

and Immaculate
Conception
ools. Low, low price .... $19,500.

garage.

REALTY

Berke-

lerkeley west to Ridge rd., Ridge rd.
84.

LO

Sat. &amp;

Highland

Eves VE 5-0343

Sun.

TOO

COMMERCIAL
RESIDENTIAL
;
VACANT
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
CALL

ID

stone,

lerwood

values

Dutch

Forest.

easant living
om, separate

nd powder

in the

Colonial

Park

The

ist

market

in

floor

2nd

floor

today

popular
has

has

a

3

bed-

yoms
and a bath including a master’s room
ha fireplace. There is a full basement,
‘Screened
porch, oil heat andi a 2 car
garage.
e house is vacant and the

f town

UO,

owner

OELZER

is anxious to sell. Price

and WILDE

REALTORS
iim

Street

HI

NCOLNSHIRE—NEW

6 5544

LISTING

mporary with 4 bedrms., 2 baths. Fam.
fpl. has built in bar-B-Q. Huge liv.
with
cathedral
ceilings.
Thermopane
ows throughout. Exquisite draperies &amp;
uc
ting Lovely wooded lot. A dream
priced in the 40’s,

INLAN &amp; TYSON. Inc.
rfield Rd.

Deerfield

750

Sundays

HIGHLAND

10

to

5

PARK

ou’ll feel right at home in this brick Coin
fine neighborhood.
3 bedrooms,
baths, living room with fireplace, sepdining room, large screened porch facely yard.
Only $29,900

~ SEYMOUR GRAHAM
REALTORS
rity

Ave.

HO

Glencoe

5-0655

]
PARK:
3 bedroom house on
wooded acre in quiet area. 1% baths, full
ment,
gas heat, low 20’s. 2222 Higho0r
Road. ID 2-3829.

PageH 62—D 54
"

74030

KIMBALL ROAD
possession. Brick

and

314

baths,

large

kitchen with built-ins; a
lot 80x200
feet. $60,000.
2-7281 for appointment to

see.

room with a, fireplace, sundining room, modern kitchen

room,

SP

5 bedrooms,

modern
wooded
Call ID

rman’s fabulous showplace. Built in
of cedar and crab orchard stone, with
on space.
step-down
living room
is
immering
antique
walnut
floors,
d ceiling, handsome fireplace, 4 bed, 3 full and % baths, 3 car garage,
; meceered porch with stone barbeque
colorful tile patio, louvered breezeway,
ed kitchen. 1 floor living with exn of 1 bedroom 23x23 and bath on
oor offering utmost privacy. 257 foot
, approximately 1 acre ground maslandscaped. Additional land availcluded country living, city conveni1 block to bus, 5 minutes to Northexpressway at Cumberland
and Hig10 minutes to O’Hare National, Price
00.
Call
owner’s
representatives,
- oy
maa
3-7703,
Mrs.
Cella,

best

TREES

2-0212

851
Immediate

ID 2-2682

brick

MANY

Area

family room, attached 2 car garage,

Highland

the

Lake

Cut some for living room fireplace in this
luxury remodeled
barn. 4 bedrooms,
3%
baths,
%
acre Ravine site, sharing own
beach;
$49,500,

Real Estate Service
FRANK PEERS
FRANK ANDERSON

this

Park

EXCEPTIONAL BUY
IN DEERFIELD
Executive
offers charming 4 year old, 6
room brick ranch home on 1/3 acre wooded
corner
lot in exclusive
Briarwoods;
very
near primary school. 3 Bedrooms, separate
dining room,
large picture window
living
room, 114 baths, many closets, full parquet
flooring, unique
3 way fireplace, covered
patio, 2 car garage; kitchen equipped with
washer, dryer, built in oven and range, dishwasher,
disposal,
16 cubic
foot
estinghouse refrigerator-freezer. Low 30’s. Can assume 5% mortgage. WI 5-5874.
DEERFIELD:
Lovely
American
Colonial
home, reduced to Mid 20’s. Fully landscaped, within walking distance to stores,
schools, and train. 3 bedrooms, 1% baths.
ad
anxious to sell. Telephone WI 5HIGHLAND PARK—BY OWNER
5 room
home
on deadend
street. Living
room with fireplace,
dining room, kitchen,
2 bedrooms, bath, full
ment, oil heat,
combination windows, garage, $16,000. Low
down payment. ID 2-8396.

HIGHLAND PARK
413 RIDGE
Owner offers custom built 6 room corner
ranch, full. basement, gas heat, $1500 down;
in low $20’s. WI 5-2419.
$19,900 ON YOUR LOT
Spacious
3 bedroom,
2 bath press _ brick
and cedar ranch, 523 Green Bay, Highland
Park. Al Richman, builder, ID 2-9249.
HIGHLAND PARK BY OWNER
3 bedrooms, 1% baths, basement, screened
porch, garage, near shopping, schools, transportation. Built 1949, Ravinia area, priced
for immediate sale at $20,500. ID 2-4478.
CAPE Cod: on wooded acre, in Riverwoods,
living room, dining room, bath, den or
bedroom, fireplace, breezeway, 2 car gatage; 2 large bedrooms,
bath on second.
Owner. $27,500. 2735 Forest Glen Trail.
WI 5-1511.
LAKE
FOREST;
proud
Norman
home.
Built of imperishable
stone and beam;
needs interior decorating. Must be sold.
Open Sunday 2 to 5, 580 Greenvale. Sudolnik Realty, MAjestic 3-1302.
FOR sale by owner, nearly new 3 bedroom
2 bath ranch; fireplace; carpeted, draped;
full
basement
with
finished
recreation
room; gas heat. Lake Bluff Terrace, under
$30,000. CE 4-5713.
NEW brick bi-level, 3 bedrooms, 144 baths,
panelled
family
room,
fabulous
closet
space, modern kitchen, walking distance
to trains, shopping and schools, mid 20’s.
Telephone ID 2-8597.
SOUTHEAST Lake Forest; new 7 room 2
story COLONIAL: 4 bedrooms, large family room;
ready in 4 months,
$39,500.
Light Builders, Carl F. Wagner, UN 91266 or call Gilbert Rayner Real Estate,
CE 40382.
LAKE
BLUFF
East: by owner,
excellent
buy in low 20’s; 3 bedroom frame, basement,
hot water heat, modern
paneled
kitchen, built-ins, carpeted living’ and dining room, large wooded corner lot. CE
4-3638.
HIGHLAND PARK SHERWOOD FOREST
Attractive 3 bedroom bi-level, paneled Tec.
room, 1% baths, gas heat, carpeting, appliances, patio. Beautifully landscaped wooded
lot. Exceptional value. In 20’s. ID 2-9007.

FOR

SALE

VACANT PROPERTY_

—

HIGHLAND
PARK,
2 bedroom
ranch,
stone and brick, in Sunset Terrace, near
town, well built; patio, carport,
5 years

Nice sized lots availab
sirable locations in

_ | APARTMENTS
TO RENT (U

immediately in deHighland Park, from

$3000 to $6500.

MORE THAN
AN APARTMENT

old; good buy. $18,900 ID 2-4422.

LOVELY
spacious 7 room brick English
Tudor, 3 extra large bedrooms, 2% baths,
full
basement,
attached
garage,
near
trains and schools, wall to wall carpeting
included, a terrific buy. Call owner, ID2-4387 or ID 2-5914 after 5.
HIGHLAND
PARK
Highlands,
bright
3
bedroom, 2 bath ranch, basement, garage,
storm
windows,
doors;
unusual terracepatio;
close
to school,
transportation;
owner transferred, $30,500. ID 3-1579.
OWNER will sacrifice 3 bedroom Highland
Park ranch, 2%
baths, air conditioned,
gas heat, completely
carpeted,
built in
kitchen,
basement,
panelled
recreation
room, garage. Must be seen to be appreciated. Mid 30’s. ID 2-8368.
EAST
LAKE
BLUFF
LUXURY
SHRIMP
BRICK
COLONIAL
RANCH. 2 car brick garage, finest appointments, large entry hall, 22 foot living room,
13 foot dining room, 2 full baths, 1 off master bedroom, 2 large bedrooms, large den
or 3rd bedroom, family size kitchen, dishwasher, 220 wiring, baseboard heat, carpeting, custom drapes, large closets, storage.
Available now. Call CEdar 4-5237.
HIGHLAND
PARK’S'
FINEST
EAST
AREA.
3 bedrooms,
2 ceramic luxury
baths, 214 car garage, 1800 square feet of
living in this new custom designed ranch
&gt;
a
in maples and oaks. 30’s. ID 2HOUSE
for sale by owner;
3 bedroom;
large wooded lot; Northmoor subdivision.
By appointment, CE 4-0247.
RAVINIA
New 3 bedroom, 2 bath, brick and cedar
ranch, conveniently located
at 523 Green
Bay Road. Kitchen with spacious breakfast
area. Attached carport. Open. $27,500. Al
Richman, Builder, ID 2-9249.
;
HIGHLAND PARK
Brick ranch on corner lot, gas heat, large
living, dining room, fireplace, 2 large bedrooms, 1%
baths, equipped kitchen, utility
room, enclosed breezeway, attached 114 car
garage, patio. By owner, ID 2-8849—1690
Midland Avenue.
COACH
house, by lake, French Provincial
8/10ths wooded acre, private road, slate
roof, copper gutters, modern kitchen, 5
bedrooms,
greenhouse,
attached,
natural
gas heat, best East Ravinia section, in the
40’s, immediate occupancy, sacrifice, appointment only. ID 2-8074.
HIGHLAND PARK Elm Place District. 1768
4
Clifton,
Sunset
Terrace.
ID
2-4853.
year old tri-level, 2100 sq. ft. living area,
3 bedrooms, 17x30 family room, 2% baths,
2 fireplaces, 11 closets, gas heat, air-conditioned, thermopaned.
STERLING
silver flatware. Beautiful pattern, service for 12. Many serving pieces.
Valued $800. Like new. ID 3-0196.
DEERFIELD: Ideal 2 bedroom brick ranch,
attached
garage,
well
worth
inspection.
Carpeting, fireplace, screen porch, base\ ment, gas heat, stove, refrigerator. Reasonable. 927 Woodward.
WI
5-0531.
LINCOLNSHIRE-—1% year old, 3 bedroom
Colonial ranch, den, electric kitchen, two
baths, attached two-car garage, one-half
acre, low forties. WI 5-4290.

VACANT

PROPERTY

Highland Park
BUILDING

THIS

Guy
226

Green

tracts;

black

top

price.

drive.

Only

REAL

For further

BUSINESS

HIGHLAND

PARK

5-3650
Realtors

LOCATION

6%4 ACRES, 1 ACRE ZONING,
PRICES, HEAVILY WOODED,
SCHOOLS.

REALTORS

Williams

EAST

LAKE

2

bedrooms,

fully

2-6776

FOREST

&amp; TYSON,

1571 Sherman Ave.,
UNiversity 4-2600
BRoadway

Inc.

Evanston
ALpine 1-6700
3-3750

(Unfurnished)

HOUSE

114

equipped _

baths,

gas

heat,

kitchen,

living

room,
dining
room,
tiled floors,
central TV antenna, indv. dryer and
washer, private garage, near trains
and
shopping.
ID
2-6790,
ID
2-

6791.

HIGHLAND PARK
OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 1-5

ESTATE
BUS TO

ID

RENT

Modern
Air Conditioned

Braeside

28-42

Area

Blackhawk

Road

2 bedroom apartments, individually controlled heat, private parking.

Y block to train. $165.

A very choice piece of vacant property. 2
plus acres or 4-¥% acre lots. Nicely wooded
and in an excellent area.
Call Mrs. Ludwig.

QUINLAN

TO

HIGHLAND PARK
Ravinia Area

Idlewood Realty
Roger

STUDIOS

GLENCOE: store, 343 Park, AA-1 location,
heated, 11x68 or will remodel to 22x68.
Telephone VE 5-3300.
UNIQUE
and
quaint
shop
near Market
Square in Lake Forest; also living quarters if needed. CE 4-0425.
OFFICE, 27x12,
located at 666 Waukegan
Rd., Deerfield, $125 a month with good
lease. Telephone WI 5-9841.
STORE,
1931 Sheridan Road in the heart
of
Highland
Park’s
at
a
Center.
Laser
Company, WHitehall
44318.
STORE 18x40 heated; Offices 1 to 6 room
suites; paved as
for tenants and customers. 460
ntral Ave., Phones ID 20150—ID 2-2358.
DEERFIELD:
803
Waukegan
Road.
2nd
floor, office or shop, heated, electricity
furnished, $60 per month. WI 5-5300.

the

You may select from one of 5 lots on a
beautiful
dead-end
city maintained
street
with all underground utilities. This property
is about a block from the lake and is heavily wooded. Some Ravine lots.

653

STORES, &amp;
TO RENT

Draper &amp; Kramer
30 W. Monroe

Financial

6-8600

GLENCOE
Wooded lot in one of Lake Bluff’s most
desirable areas, just a half block from the
lake. 100x125 or can be divided. Priced for
immediate sale at $11,000.

GOELZER
790 Elm

Street

and WILDE

REALTORS

HI

6-5544

BEL-AIR

—

DEERFIELD,
900 Beverly, 90 foot lot in
finest section of Briarwoods subdivision.
Terms or will trade towards house. HItlcrest 6-1646.
IDEAL home site, approximately 3 acres;
Onwentisa
road
near Green
Bay.
CE 4-2672.

APARTMENTS

DELUXE
AIR-CONDITIONED
TOWN.
HOUSE—5
rooms, 1% baths, living room
dining area, equipped kitchen and full basement. Beautiful garden. $225 ~er month.
VE

5-2565.

Eves.

&amp; week

ends

VE

5-0343.

=

Small
3 room
unfurnished,
English basement, very close in, rent $75 a month, 2
months in advance. For further information
call:
1896

ANCHOR REAL ESTATE
Sheridan Rd.
Res. Ph., ID 2-0037

Deerfield

Garden

Apartments

Deerfield
Modern 2 bedroom apartments. Excellent location, convenient to schools, shopping and
transportation. Ceramic tile baths. Cabinet
kitchen with refrigerator, disposal, built-in
oven and range. Off-street parking. Decorate
to suit.

QUINLAN

High volume gallonage modern 2 bay station in Highland Park, Illinois. —
Telephone SPring 4-4836; evenings HEmpsted 7-0588.

OFFICES,

IRVIN A. BLIETZ
ALpine 1-7800

735

STANDARD OIL
WILL LEASE

TOWN
WI

EAST

OPPORTUNITY

Presently operating major oil, 2 bay service
station for lease in Highland Park actual
inventory. Dealer has to give up location
due to health.
For information telephone DElta 6-0701

details call:

Rd.

WANTED

OPPORTUNITY

L. Ringer
666 Waukegan
Deerfield, Ill.

ESTATE

Enjoy your breakfast on your own
private patio and garden. Spacious
rooms and closets. Ideal for couple
or small family desiring maximum
freedom
from_
responsibility.
3
blocks to lake, transportation and
shopping. $225 per month, including
garage.
PARKWOOD
VILLAGE,
Linden and Central Avenues, Highland Park. Cali for an appointment.

2-3933

NEEDED
6-10 acres of VACANT
property, or with
house on it for a day school (zoning permitted).
Please
call Ann
Caraway,
HIIlcrest 6-7100.

a few

for

ID

HIGHLAND
PARK:
Northwest improved
wooded lot, 100x400. Ready for building
with 2 car garage included. Reasonable.
ID 2-3829.
HIGHLAND
PARK:
110x150 foot vacant
lot on Bloom Street. Reasonable price.
Best offer over $5,000. ID 2-5266.
LAKE
FOREST,
WHISPERING
OAKS;
choice wooded 100 ft. x 200 ft. lots on
Linden or Cherokee, $99.50 a foot; will
build 7 room 2 story COLONIAL
on
above lots, $45,000. Light Builders, Carl
. Wagner,
UN
9-1266 or call Gilbert
Rayner Real Estate, CE 4-0382.

APARTMENTS

SPRING?

comparable

REALTOR
Highwood

Bay

See this beautifully wooded property on a PRIVATE road. ACRE
left—nothing

Viti

©

Deerfield

&amp; TYSON,

Road

WI

HIGHLAND

COUNTRY

CLUB

Inc.
5-3750

PARK

APARTMENTS

OPEN
SUNDAY
1-5
AVAILABLE AT
EXCELLENT VALUE
680 Roger Williams
Convenient to schools, shopping, train
2 floor townhouse layout combines the best
features of your own home with the convenience of an apartment. Two bedrooms,
1% baths, living room, dinette, kitchen, private basement. Newly decorated.
VErnon 5-0344, Sat., Sun., Eves. VE 5-0343

VICTORIAN—GLENCOE—4 HUGE RMS.
Ist FLOOR, HEAT FURNISHED
PRIVATE ENTRANCE AND PORCH
Natural fireplace, 26 foot living room. Foyer. 1
room 24 feet long, other can be
either bedroom or dining room, new electric
kitchen. with
Frostfree
refrigerator-freezer,
tremendous closets, 1 block C &amp; NW
station, bus and shopping. Like living in a park.
Parking
and
anitor
service
included.
May 1. $200 range. ID 2-3607.
DEERFIELD,
cozy 1 bedroom, tile bath,
large
living
room,
combination
dinin
room and kitchen, front and rear encl
entrances, automatic gas heat, stove, refrigerator, garage; couple. WI 5-0167 evenings.
HIGHLAND PARK: 3 room apartment with
a
private
entrance,
near
schools.
’ Prefer couple. 614 Onwentsia.
LAKE FOREST, 5 room, bath and garage,
$100. Call CE 4-2687.
1 BEDROOM,
4 room deluxe apartment,
available May
1, couple only, no pets,
$150 per month, includes heat, enclosed
porch, and garage. WI 5-5122.
3144 ROOM
second floor apartment
with
garage, woman preferred. Call after 5:30
p.m. ID 2-4334.
5 ROOM
flat in Highwood near business
district. Telephone ID 2-6975.
HIGHWOOD:
adult family, 4 bedrooms;
large, modern, attractive, cabinet kitchen,
built-in stove; spacious dining area; living
room; ceramic bath with shower; second
floor flat; references required. Write Box
C-50,
c/o
Highland
Park
News.
MODERN
3 room
apartment, all utilities
furnished, garage included. ID 2-7002.
DEERFIELD: Large 5 room apartment on
1st floor of 2 flat building, heat furnished, garage included.
Apartment
adjoins Jewett
Park,
1 block from town
be train, rent $150 per month. WI 5ONE and two room apartments in convenient Highwood location. Leonardi Agency,
LAKE BLUFF, new 2. bedroom townhouse
apartment; ceramic tile bath with shower;
individual basement
with shower;
stove
and
refrigerator
furnished;
$150
per
month. CE 4-0468.
VERY
pleasant
5
room
apartment,
2nd
floor, living room, dining room, kitchen,
2 bedrooms, bath. Large screened porch,
basement.
Attic storage space, close in
location. Available about June Ist. Adults
only, please. Call CE 4-1174.
ROOM
apartment
near transportation,
private entrance, $125, stove, refrigerator,
2 car garage, heat and gas included, adults,
no pets. ID 2-5229,
3 BEDROOM apartment in Deerfield, living
room, dining room, kitchen, bath, stove,
garage,
basement,
heat
included,
near
transportation, shopping; $125. WI 5-0654.
GARAGE
APARTMENT
3 room garage apartment in northeast Highland Park. Paneled room and kitchen Ist
floor; 2 rooms and bath 2nd floor. Partially furnished,
including stove, refrigerator,
beds, couch and breakfast set. Heat, hot
water,
gas and electricity included.
$125.
Telephone ID 2-4580.
6 ROOM
apartment, 2nd floor, large cabinet kitchen, tile bath, garage, yard, near
town, schools and parks. ID 2-5796.
LAKE
FOREST,
modern
2 bedroom
duplex, 1%
baths, garage, range, refrigerator. CE 4-1083.
DEERFIELD:
well maintained Townhouse.
2 bedrooms, ceramic tile bath and powder
room,
living room,
kitchen with eating
space, full basement, ideal location, $155
a month.
PIERSEN
REALTY,
agents,
WI 5-1670.
Duplex apartment: Deerfield, 2 story livingdining “L.’’ 3 bedrooms,
bath, full basement. 1 block from town. $175.
CARR REALTY
701 Waukegan Road
Deerfield
WI 5-0984

IN_Highwood,

3 room, 2nd floor apartment,

Private entrance,
ID 2-2755.

basement

for

Thursday, April 1

laundry.

�SC

ox

FA

Se n

ft

ARTMENTS TO RENT (Unfurnished)

DEERFIELD:

1st

floor,

heated,

2

bed-

rooms, living room, dining L, cabinet kitchen, tile bath, modern 2 year old building,
basement storage room, parking area. Available May 1, $145.
DONALD
N. ANDERSON
665 Vernon Ave.
VE 5-2113
Glencoe
HIGHLAND
PARK:
5 room 2 bedroom
duplex apartment, near town and transportation,
newly
decorated,
$135
per
month including heat. ID 2-5254.
GLENCOE:
343 Park Avenue, 2%
room
modern apartment, no bedroom, decorated,
new refrigerator, cabinet sink, gas range.
Light, airy third floor, $97.50. VE 5-3300
or if no answer VErnon 5-1901.
GLENCOE, 310 TUDOR COURT, 5 rooms,
will decorate, May
1st occupancy, near
Northwestern station at Green Bay Road.
VE 5-2043.
HIGHWOOD:
3 room unfurnished
apartem available immediately. Telephone ID
DEERFIELD:
2 bedroom apartment, $145
per month, including heat, gas and hot
water. Near schools, shopping and transportation. WI 5-2419.
LAKE FOREST
766 N. WESTERN AVE.
5 room apartment near shopping and transportation,
$115.
For
inspection
call Mr.
Swethko, DE 6-8502 or Baird &amp; Warner,
Inc., Evanston.
GReenleaf 5-1855
524 Davis St.
LAKE FOREST, new duplex, 3 bedrooms,
14% baths, fully equipped kitchen, basement, gas hot water heat, excellent location, near South Park, $200 per month.
CE 4-3180.
LARGE 6 room apartment, 3 bedrooms, 2nd
floor, near business district, heated, $150,
available April 1st. ID 2-3271.

APARTMENTS

FOR

RENT

(Furnished)

HALF
DAY:
furnished,
modern,
Mobile
home convenient to Fort Sheridan. Telephone ID 2-8917.
MODERN
Kitchenette apartment located in
Highwood
business district, 214
rooms;
1 or 2 adults. Phone
CE 4-0136 after
5:30 p.m.
HIGHWOOD:
3 room furnished apartment,
ei
immediately.
Telephone
ID 2een
2 room Ln ga
apartment,
private
entrance,
utilities
paid, laundry
space. ID 2-2840.
.

LAKE

FOREST:

first floor,

bedroom,

sit-

ting room, bath; own entrance; complete
privacy;
meals
available.
Available
to
couple or single woman with other job or
in exchange for housework and some yard
work; man hold other job. CE 4-5398.
HIGHWOOD:
2
room
furnished
apartment, near transportation, for 2 persons
or couple. ID 2-6682.
THREE rooms nicely furnished apartment;
also garage, suitable for employed couple.
Available May 1. ID 2-1128 evenings.
3 ROOM furnished apartment in Highwood.
geror
preferred.
Call ID 2-3544
after
p.m.

DEERFIELD:

attractive modern

apartment,

kitchenette, bath with shower, immediate
occupancy, $95 per month includes all utilities. WI 5-0550.

ge

aac

4 room apartment. Call ID 3-

TWO room cottage, furnished, suitable for
couple or gentleman. Can be seen at 246
North Ave., Highwood.
DEERFIELD:
2 room furnished apartment
for one or two adults, no pets. Utilities
included, also garage, $85. WI 5-0485.
enprivate
rooms,
furnished
3 LARGE
trance, good location, heat, fight, water
furnished. ID 2-3786.
3% ROOM, partly furnished apartment, rechildren
utility room,
cently decorated,
welcome. WI 5-5606.
EFFICIENCY
apartment,
private kitchen,
bath and entrance, utility room. WI
55606.
2 ROOM
furnished apartment in Highland
Park, private entrance, bath. Telephone
ID 2-2319.
THREE
room fully furnished coach house
apartment,
West
Lake
Forest,
$115
a
—
plus utilities. Couple only. CE 4GARAGE APARTMENT
3 room garage apartment in northeast Highland Park. Paneled room and kitchen ist
floor; 2 rooms and bath 2nd floor. Partially
furnished, including stove, refrigerator, beds,
couch and breakfast set. Heat, hot water,
gas and electricity
included.
$125. Tel
ID 2-4580.
,
sadhana
Small attractive East side 2 room garage
apartment, everything furnished, rent $90 a
month, 2 months in advance.
1896

ANCHOR
Sheridan Rd.

REAL

ESTATE
ID

2-0093

Res. Ph. ID 2-0037

HOUSES

TO

RENT

(Unfurnished)

HIGHLAND PARK, 2 bedroom stone ranch,
ggh Poe 2 years old, near
rene mere gr
Own, adults only.
Immediate occupancy.
gots
$175. ID 2-442.”
HIGHLAND
PARK, well built 3 year old,
6 room ranch, corner lot, gas heat, will
rent with option to buy or sell with small
down payment. 413 Ridge. WI 5-2419.
room house, full basement, 2 car
NINE
garage, large yard, close to town, could
be used for residence and business, references required. ID 2-0118.
Like new ranch, modern kitchen with builtins and large eating area. 3 bedrooms, 2
fireplaces. Available July 1, 1961. $250 per
month.
DORSEY HUSENETTER
REAL ESTATE
723 St. Johns
ID 2-1484
AIR CONDITIONED SPLIT LEVEL. Convenient to Ravinia school, train, shops. 3
bedrooms FAMILY ROOM
with fireplace.
Lovely kitchen, dishwasher, eating area. 114
baths. $300 monthly.
J-H KAHN
REALTORS
Glencoe Theater Bldg.
VErnon 5-0236
LAKE
FOREST:
duplex,
6 large rooms,
excellent condition, convenient neighborhood, gas heat, 1 garage space optional.
Call CE 40971, evenings or weekend,

_ Thursday, April 13, 1961

HELP WANTED FEMALE

\

DANISH

country

house

in

beautiful

HOUSES

&amp;

APARTMENTS

WANTED

WANTED: 3 bedroom house near Highland
Park. Responsible couple, 2 girls, June 7
occupancy. CE 6-9200. Extension 883.
YOUNG couple, teachers, desire reasonably
priced 1 bedroom apartment near Highland Park High
School
and downtown
after June 1st. Call ID 2-8799 after 5 p.m.
RESPONSIBLE
couple
wish _ furnished
apartment or home for 2 or 3 summer
months; and would like to earn part of
rental by caretaker or maintenance duties.
Write Mr. Robinson, M.S.M., Physics Department, Rolla, Mo. References.
PROFESSIONAL man and family want to
rent 3 r 4 bedroom house or apartment
in Highland Park or Deerfield. DElaware
7-5108.
DO you have a house to rent, with possible
option to buy, to a family that would take
care of it better than yourself would?
There are 4 of us—father, mother, 14 year
old son and an obedience trained beagle;
Deerfield high school district. Phone WI
5-1066 after 6:30.
RESPONSIBLE
couple would like to rent
comfortable 3 bedroom home with basement; preferably in Lake Forest or Lake
Bluff; no pets, children grown and away
from home;
excellent references. CE
44035.
YOUNG
couple with baby desire 2 or 3
bedroom furnished house or apartment in
or near Highland Park starting May 1st
until October 1st. Call ID 2-4952 or ID
2-4877.

ROOMS

TO

WE OFFER

Ra-

vinia neighborhood
of estate
and
fine
homes. Large woodland lot. Walking distance to schools, station and beach. Spacious 2 story panelled living room, leaded windows, unusual fireplace. Large dining room, 3 bedrooms. All on 1 floor.
Flagstone patio. Furnished, including 21%
horsepower
air-conditioner,
dishwasher
and appliances. One of the North Shore’s
most charming homes. $325 a month or
$1,000, June 15 to August 31st. Write Box
C-60, c/o Highland Park News.
HIGHLAND
PARK,
2
bedroom = stone
ranch, patio, attached garage, 5 years old,
near town, adults only. Immediate occupancy, $225 or part furnished. ID 2-4422.
SUMMER
rental:
charming
4
bedroom
house,
studio
living
room,
all modern
conveniences,
ideally located. Telephone
ID 2-5715.
HIGHWOOD:
3 bedroom furnished house
available now and for four months. Call
ID 2-4976 after 5 p.m.
NORTHMOOR _ subdivision,
2
bedroom
house,
June, July, August;
couple preferred. CE 4-2663.

RENT

PARK HOTEL sleeping rooms, by day or
week, free parking, 511 Waukegan Ave.,
Highwood. ID 2-9862.
VEL-WOOD
Motel, 500 Waukegan
Ave.,
Highwood.
Air-conditioned,
kitchenette
rooms for overnight guests and travelers.
in
shower baths. Telephone ID 25328.
ROOMS
for rent near transportation. 214
Green
Bay Road,
Highwood,
Il, Tele-

pnone JD 2-7000.

A DISTINCTIVE OFFICE PLACEMENT SERVICE. IT IS DESIGNED
TO REPRESENT YOU IN SELECTING A POSITION
THAT YOU
WILL ENJOY.
EMPLOYER

PARK:

Highland

350

COUNTY
DEERFIELD,

CLERK

Statistical
typing,
bookkeeping
experience
and figure aptitude essential. Knowledge of
NCR bookkeeping No. 3,000 desirable.

SECRETARY
To. work in Purchasing Department.
typing skills needed, light shorthand.
aptitude for clerical detail essential.

Top
High

SECRETARY
To Educational Film Producers. Must have
goed skills in typing and dictaphone. Some
shorthand required, experienced background
in office procedure essential. Age to 35.

ASSISTANT
In Film Print Control Department. Experienced background in inventory control and
purchasing
preferred.
Good
typing
skills
essential, shorthand helpful. Age and salary open.
fringe benefits.
OFFICE.

CON-

ENCYCLOPAEDIA
BRITANNICA
FILMS
ALpine

1-8700

LINE ROAD
ILLINOIS

REAL
ESTATE
SALESPERSON
WANT:
ED. Male or female. Earhart &amp; Co. Realtors has an opening in their sales staff
for an experienced person. We would like
a chance to discuss the opportunities with
you. Ask for Bob Earhart, ID 2-0880.

Ridge

Evanston

week.

CORP.

UN

4-6050

Pleasant

disposition

essential.

WANTED

MALE

Field Supervisor

Commercial

Intangible

Bookkeeper

Low

THE FIRST
NATIONAL BANK
HIGHLAND PARK

ADMINISTRATIVE
SECRETARY
Full time, 40 hour week, typing and

shorthand required, starting salary
depending upon qualifications. Liberal benefits. Write Box C-65, c/o

Park

SUPPLY

SECRETARY
wanted for general office work. No shorthand required. Telephone ID 2-6543.
BOOKKEEPER: Part time, steady, Doctor’s
office,
Ravinia.
Experience
and _ references required. ID 2-5755.
PART
time secretary for Saturdays. Must
take shorthand, good pay, work in Highland Park. Call ID 2-2099.
TEACHER or substitute teacher needed for
special summer assignment in local territory. Phone HI 6-3848 after 5 and on
weekends.
YOUNG
woman for inspecting and checking, will train, full or part time. Wayne
Cleaners, 454 Waukegan
Avenue, Highwood. Telephone ID 3-0460,
WOMEN: Telephone work, spare time from
your home, profitable. HOllycourt 5-6288.
TARA Fifth Avenue has opening for women to work part time; no collecting or
delivering. Call BAldwin 3-4614.
PART
time girl for general office work
mornings. The Boat House, Inc., Skokie
Hwy. &amp; Clavey Rd., Highland Park. ID
3-0880.
EXPERT
EXPERIENCED
STATISTICAL
TYPIST FOR LOCAL ACCOUNTING OFFICE. ID 2-5700.
DAY workers, cooks, generals, couples, experienced
with references.
Lingren
Employment Agency, 811 Elm St., Winnetka.
Telephone Hillcrest 6-1047.
EXPERIENCED
hostess and waitress for
private North Shore Club, from May 15th
until September 15th. Call ID 3-1131.
HELP wanted: waitress, Saturdays, Sundays;
Sandwich-salad maker,
11 to 2, 5 to 6

day

News.

Sales

Deerfield

Iilinois

SALES

Full time.

744 Waukegan Rd.
Chicago

an

expert

area

educational

secretary

to

institution

assist

an

needs

admin-

istrative officer. She should be 30 or over,
settled in this area and interested in a career
position.
Expert
typing,
shorthand,
some bookkeeping or accounting experience,
poise, tact necessary. All modern employee
experience.
Salary depends upon
benefits.
Personnel
University,
Northwestern
Apply
Department, 1815 Orrington, Evanston.
BANK. TELLER
For our Great Lakes facility, 5 day week,
excellent opportunity, good starting salary,
free life insurance and pension plan. Apply
in person or call, CE 4-5100.

FIRST
OF

NATIONAL BANK
LAKE FOREST

BOOKKEEPER,
experienced, full or part
time, small office in Highland Park, some
clerical duties. Call OR 3-7678.

for

an

interview.

in

strictest

ing

PERSONNEL ©
ID 2-4461
SUITE 215 NORTH SHORE B
1866 SHERIDAN ROAD
Highland Park

MANAGEMENT TRAINEE
Excellent opportunity for College grad
10 hours Accounting. 1 year experien
Inventory
Control
desirable.
Orders
maintains at optimum levels nationwid
ished goods inventory. Must understan
ventory
and
associated
costs.
al
with other distribution costs and I
sirable. Good starting salary, liberal
f
benefits and many promotional possib
Ext. 220.

AMERICAN

Perma-

Deerfield, Il.

' MONEY
nee
Earn as much as you want; see profit in
first hour; take home pay from start; no
investment; see if you can meet these qualifications;
if so, call CE
4-1360 between
and 7 p.m.
Have ‘car.
Ai CANOE 2A
3. Neat in appearance.
4. Aggressive.
5. Must be white.

HAVE JOB
WILL TRAIN
CALL

ORCHARD

HOSPITAL

2020 Ridge

SUPPLY
¥

UN

Evanston

The City of Lake Forest will accept
pp]
tions for appointment to the Police Dey
ment, Fire Department, and as Call
unteer) Fireman.
Applicants for appointment as P
trolman or Fireman must be over
under 35 years of age; at least 5 ft.
but not more than 6 ft. 3 in., tall ¢
must
be in proportion
to height);
School education is required.

:

Applicants for appointment as Call (Vv.
teer) Fireman must be over 21 and un
45 years of age, and in good physice
dition.
E

Apply at City Hall, 220 East Deerpath,

Forest,

Illinois,

CE

4-2600.

se

NEW
CAREER
a
POLICEMAN—FIREMAN
VILLAGE OF GLENCOE
Permanent,
interesting,
challengin;
career job performing both police
duties. Retire at half pay after 20 yea
be physically fit, between 21-35, high
grad, excellent sick leave, disability,

sc
1

WARDEN

6-0332

o

dog control.
Excellent sick leavé, d
vacation benefits. Uniform furnishée
Village Hall, VErnon 5-4111.
Handyman for hardware store, ca)
repairing screens, glazing windows an
ing deliveries; must be steady, reli
furnish good references.
RAVINIA HARDWARE
447 Roger Williams
ID
RELIABLE white man wanted ten
to wash walls, woodwork, and
y
Call CE 4-3187 in the afternoon or
ning.
eS
HOTEL NIGHT CLERK

Full time,

11 p.m.

to 7 a.m. Good

salary plus board and room. Deerp
Lake Forest, CE 4-2280.
PERMANENT
position with exce
ture for reliable clean-cut man in
pet cleaning service. Previous exp
helpful but not required, good sala
profit sharing plan for right man,
Mr. Lewis, VErnon 5-2400.

GARDENER’S helper wanted, white, si
all

summer.

Telephone

ID

|

Gardener: Gus Johnson.
;
WAREHOUSEMAN,
Highland Park
transportation, good job for able
retired man; $1.75 an hour. ID 2
BOY to do lawn and garden work; 4 h
Saturdays. Telephone CE 4-1475.

I NEED

a young

to help

me

married

in my

man,

business.

2:

Clean

ing work, no experience required.

pointment call
ORchard 6-0330.
EXCITING NEW
PRODUCT |
Full and part time sales with very hig!
come potential. Ideal position and s
job for college and high school
also retired or semi-retired people. —
formation and appointment, call (Dee!
Windsor 5-0152.
6
$75 TO $150 WEEK
Permanent,
service
apparel
customers
Realsilk this area. FRanklin 2-0797.

HELP
RELIABLE

WANTED—DOMESTIC
person for light housework, ]

day morning through early Sunday
ing. Telephone ID 2-6167.
ha
GENERAL housework, cooking, liveroom, 3 in family, 5 day week.
ID 2-0726.
Dk,

CLEANING
references

COOK

good

woman,

required.

wanted,

wages.

1 day

Please

white;

Call

CE

Page
4

All

confidence.

will be glad to arrange an eve
or weekend appointment.
"

work

LIQUOR

WALGREENS

SECRETARY

us
held

ANIMAL

nent. Good salary, many employee
benefits. Apply to store manager.

ADMINISTRATIVE

Regardless of your field or wh
er you are currently employed,

Permanent, full time job, 40 hours
Villages of Glencoe and Winnetka,
new radio equip: ed vehicle prima

Pressure

Duraclean Co.
21 or over.

he

tion benefits. Uniform furnished. A
rector of Public Safety, Glencoe
Hall. Applications ¢lose April 30th.

Outstanding
advancement
opportunity
for
sincere, low-presure sales executive. World’s
largest organization specializing in care of
home furnishings (for 31 years) is creating
national field sales program to assist in selling franchised service dealerships. Also work
with established dealers. Franchise or intangible sales experience required. Able to develop national program
and supervise it.
Considerable travel at start, less as program
develops. Compensation commensurate with
ability and
development.
Please reply by
mail only, giving age, education, complete
experience resume, present salary, salary desired.
Qualified
applicants
will be interviewed. Irl B. Marshall, Jr., President,

Age

ha

Chemistry
Product Design
Accounting
Systems and Procedures
Drafting
2

4-6050

MOTHERS

le"

OPERATOR

HOSPITAL

HELP

(We Will Train)

Engineering

CORP.

UN

Apply in person, 2 to 4 p.m., Cavalier
Restaurant,
Deerfield
Shopper’s
Court,
Mrs. McDermott.

Clerk-Typist

Highland

PUNCH

AMERICAN

To TEMAC
Administrator.
Top
skills in
shorthand
and
typing
essential.
Must
be
personable, poised with some college background, mature and able to work on own.

1150 Wilmette Ave.

AND

We have openings for college
men in the following fields: |

Permanent, full time assignment for young
woman experienced in operation of No. 024
machine. Minimum of 1 year’s experience.
Must
be
neat appearing.
Good
starting
salary and full range of fringe benefits.
5 day, 37% hour week.

2020

5 day week, excellent
TACT
PERSONNEL

SUPPLY

Evanston

KEY

Park

ACCOUNTING

HOSPITAL

Ridge

Part time work,
3 evenings
per
week, 3 hours per evening, average
$40,
interesting
and
enjoyable
work. Call ID 2-8785.

SECRETARY

GENERAL OFFICE
TYPING

DBA PRODUCTS
COMPANY, INC.

2020

HOUSEWIVES

FEMALE

Ideal working conditions. For appointment call Windsor 5-4300.

AMERICAN

FEE

SUITE 215
NORTH SHORE BLDG.
1866 SHERIDAN ROAD

close to shopping and

WANTED

Excellent salary for young woman who likes
responsibility and variety in her daily work.
Interesting
position
available
immediately.
Typing speed of 50 WPM
required, shorthand
not necessary. Congenial
office
atmosphere and liberal company benefits make
an association with American both profitable and pleasant. Ext. 220.

ID 2-4461

Wilmette

transportation, nice large room, man preferred. ID 2 0133.
ROOM
for rent; private bath; near transportation. Call Mrs. D. H. Moore, 317
E. Wisconsin, Lake Forest; CE 4-9175.
ROOM for gentleman, 1 block from _ business district. 1910 2nd Street, Highland
Park.
LARGE sleeping room, suitable for 1 or 2.
possible kitchen privileges, 1 block from
Milwaukee station, Deerfield. WI 5-5599,
LARGE
room suitable for couple, kitchen
and laundry, hot water at all times, off
street parking. Telephone ID 2-3694,

HELP

PAYS

FITZGERALD
PERSONNEL

AVAILABLE
May ist, 1 room and bath,
light housekeeping permitted, located in
Highland Park business district, $70 per
month,
1 year
lease
required.
ID
28117.
1 LARGE
room,
kitchenette,
completely
furnished, close to business and transportation. Telephone ID 2-1229.
LARGE
sleeping
room,
private
entrance,
parking
available,
downtown
Highland
Park. Telephone ID 2-9492.
FURNISHED
room
in Braeside,
private
bath, kitchen privileges, beautiful
view,
mature woman or couple, ID 3-1330.
LARGE room with private bath and kitchen, privileges if desired. Call ID 3-1073
ROOM,
private
bath,
kitchen
privileges.
Woman only. $10 per week. Phone ID 21745.
REASONABLE
combination living sleeping
room, some housekeeping privileges, close
in. Telephone ID 2-1749.
PLEASANT
room with private bath. Suitable for one or two employed men. Near
transportation. Parking space off street.
References. Phone ID 2-7053.

HIGHLAND

DEPARTMENT SECRETARY

a week,
phone

recent

49473.

refe:
:

H 683—D

:

�“

SITUATION
FREE—NO FEE
; General Maid Jobs
smaids and second maids
_A-1 COUPLE JOBS $450-500
a: BAKER SHORELINE AGENCY
ncoln, Winnetka
Hillcrest 6-5818
OOD woman, Tuesday and Friday,
) 7 p.m. Laundry, clean stove and re.
erator, cook dinner. Own transportaOi
a
- Call ID 2-8262.

, 2 ADULTS IN FAMILY, OTHER
EXPERIENCE AND REFERENCES
ISSARY. ID 2-0113.

WALLWASHING,
room and ceiling, 8x10,
$10. Phone Al Williams, DA 8-6669.
EXPERIENCED gardener will do gardening,
landscaping,
fast and
dependable.
Own
truck. ID 2-7698 or ID 2-6668 after 5.
MAN desires work: heavy duty house-cleaning and lawn work, janitor, etc. Telephone
DExter 6-7813.

SITUATION

j
all around girl, stay or go, prefer
colored lady, should have pleasant voice.

lop salary. ID 3-1241.
INERAL housework, 5 days, own room.
hool aged children. $40. References required. Call ID 2-7406.

IABLE

woman,

cleaning and child care,

steady work, 4 days, 1 or 2 nights,
neces
required.
ID
3-2842.

9ERIENCED
ite, 2 in
4-0063.

ANING

chamber

family;

woman,

ref-

maid-waitress:

near

town.

Telephone

two days; small home;

erences
required;
own
transportation
eferred. CE 4-0859.
ORTABLE room and salary in good
in exchange for light duties for one.
oman only, Phone ID 2-1745.
EH woman
who will take interest in
neat, thorough cleaning, 1 day a
» must provide own
transportation.
pay to the right person. Call ID 3, after 6 p.m.
a4 with small ranch house near transation will give lovely room and bath
white woman in exchange for 1 day’s
sework. ID 2-6353.
PLE,
woman
for general housework
d cooking,
husband
to be employed
ewhere and give 1 day for room and
d, other help, references. VE 5-1401.
a DREN’S
nurse or very experienced
tse maid for 3 months starting June 1
hile Our nurse is in Europe. Experience
references required. Call ID 2-3521.
(
ERAL
housework,
pleasant
modern
Glencoe home, own room, 2 school age
:
is,
good
salary,
references.
VE
5-

YUSEWORK
Monday,
Wednesday,
Friy, Saturday, good with children, referah must have own transportation. ID
RAL
housework,
stay,
own
room,
TV;
every
Monday,
every
other
nday
free;
references
required.
Call
pecay after 4, all day Friday. ID 2-

N to live in, will have
bath, 1 child, references.

own
Call

toom
ID 2-

KING
and
general
housework.
Stay
hildren ages 5, 8, and 10. Call CE 4housework and cooking, recent
Nees required,
must like children.
ID 2-6484.
NING woman wanted, white, 2 days
een
erences
required.
Telephone

teen age “‘mother’s
night until Monday
asportation. WI 5-3149.

1LP WANTED

helper”
morning.

EMPL.

from
Own

AGENCY

ATION WANTED—FEMALE
TION
bound parents, do you need
vapable prosy mother to care for your
dren while you are away? Good driver,
ent references. Telephone ID 2-8152
ID 2-7597,

‘LE white woman free to travel as comor

to adults or children or to care
dren
in your
home
while
you
by week or month; own transporta-

el;

'best

references.

KImball

6-1703

or

Tite Box D-65, c/o Lake Forester.
R needs are my interests, desire part
job,
surburban housewife, 2 years
liege, sales experience, likes people, cre&gt; handwork or receptionist for doctor.

ID 2-6405 after 6.
IENCED
cleaning
ay, Wednesday,

woman

Thursday

5 p.m. MAjestic 3-8636.

work.

wants

Call

ER employment desired by University
&lt;r
flute student, age 21; experiwith children, dependable, can drive;
ul give flute instruction, also beginning
ano. (Home allowing practice during free
hours
pr eerable).
Contact
by
writing
Karen
J. Hill, 1212 Minnesota Ave., Han_Michigan. Will be available early

tion

G

lady

majoring

in

elementary

tuehe,

Pembine,

Wisconsin.

edu-

needs summer work. Prefer child
live in. A-1 references. Write San-

EGE

sophomore

desires

full

time

d care during summer months. Write
55, c/o Highland Park News.

O

SACHER

seeks

half

day

summer

em-

ment; in Lake Forest; secretarial, genoffice,
tutoring;
sales;
companion,

ffeur;
TS;

social

SE
free
y geste

_

baby

News.

sitting;

assistant to prof-

Secretary.

Call

CE

4-

April
14th, hourly
or day
to Box C-70, c/o Highland

_ SITUATION WANTED—MALE
repair locks, hinges, doors, glass,
shelves,
many
home
repairs;
22
ng North Shore. ID 2-1636.
yy
CED
houseman
desires
yard
odd
jobs,
etc.;
best
references.
one MaAjestic 3-3060.

ENER and landscaper, part time. Call
before 4 p.m. EMpire 2-0144.
DENER
and greenhouse grower, 25
Pe

%

DELIVERED

TO

Reasonable

Service

By Day

YOUR

Charges

or Month

Exp. Male Day Workers
$12.00 Per Day
®
@
@

Storm windows
Yard cleaning
General spring

BROWNSKIN SERVICE
DE 6-8314
CURTAIN

DEPOT

North

Shore’s only Curtain
Laundry
1825 Green Bay Rd., Rear
All work done by hand;
linens,
curtains, blankets, drapes, etc.

TELEPHONE

ID

NEED HELP?

8 experience. B. Peterson. MU 5-3525.
D or house work, year round. Good
rences.
Call DExter
66312
after 6

IF you have unexpected happenings such as
going away, illness, no cook, or ward
robe in need of alterations, rest assured
bic
gs help. Best references. Call MA
-8778.
MAN
and wife want 2 days work, Monday,
Tuesday
or
Wednesday.
Call
at
5:30 P.M., MA 3-6473, Evelyn Glenn, or
call 3:30 P.M.
DE
6-3500,
Ext. 2609,
Sylvester Glenn.
WOMAN
would like cleaning or laundry
for Monday
and
Tuesday.
Experienced
a
aa aaean
Call after 5
P.M:.,. ON

CLOTHING

NO FEE

LIVE IN
DAY WORKERS
HSWK.—CHILD CARE—REFS.—EXP.
ALPINE 1-5511
SAPPHIRE DOMESTIC SERVICE
413 Linden Ave., Wilmette

REFERENCES CHECKED
NO FEE!
Girls, Women—Live

General
Housework,
enced, all ages.

Child

UNIVERSITY

In Only

Care,

Experi-

9-1467

COOPER EMPLOYMENT SERVICE
1310 Chicago Avenue, Evanston.

UNIVERSITY

9-1467

COOPER EMPLOYMENT SERVICE
1310 Chicago Avenue
Evanston
EXPERIENCED
woman wants day work.
References. Call after 6 p.m. or Friday
anytime. DE 6-4977.
WOMAN wants day work; general cleaning;
no heavy work, no Saturdays; references;
own transportation. TRinity 2-8177.
GIRL desires day work. Experienced, refpranees, own transportation.
ONtario 2high school colored girl
EXPERIENCED
job,
weekend
references.
wishes
Call
MAjestic 3-9664 after 6 p.m.
EXPERIENCED colored woman would like
day work, Tuesday and Wednesday. RA
3-7616.
EXPERIENCED lady would like day work;
cleaning, child care; references. Call DExter 6-7928.
HOUSEKEEPER,
companion;
reasonable;
live in; references. Write P.O. Box 925,
Lake Forest.
WOMAN
desires day work Monday, Tuesday,
Saturday;
references;
Lake
Forest
area; DExter 6-5932 after 5:30 p.m.
WHITE
woman wishes day work Tuesday
and Wednesday, in Lake Forest or Lake
Bluff. TRinity 2-8062.
MAN wants yard work, housecleaning, window washing; references. Call DE 6-7781.
EXPERIENCED colored woman wants general housework, child care, ironing, references, and own transportation provided.
KEystone 3-7735.
DAY workers, cooks, maids, couples. Mrs.
Baker, Shoreline Employment. Phone HIIicrest 6-5818, Winnetka.
COLORED LADY
If you are going on a vacation or coming
home with a new baby and want some one
to care for your children, call GR 5-7119.
I have A-1 references.
LADY
wishes baby
sitting or housework
every Thursday. Good references. Call ID
2-5362.
HOUSEWORK
or laundry Monday, Thursday, Friday by experienced, reliable woman. References. LA 1-3273.
DAY worker. I do cleaning, help with children every other Wednesdays.
Braeside,
Ravinia. ATlantic 5-7299.
WOMAN
wants work 4 P.M. through dinner. Call after 4 P.M. Friday and all Saturday and Sunday. References. MAjestic

3-8076.

SALE

GOODS

FOR

SALE

SUNDAY, APRIL 16
AT 9:00 A.M.
To Our Customers and Friends: Once again
we repeat our highly popular, money saving
One Day Sale of over 250 Carpet Remnants. 100%
Wool—Wool
Nylon Blends—
and 100% Nylon ... All name brand carpets from the leading mills of America.

From 40%

to 60%

Off

Please bring your room measurements
come early for best selection!

and

Lewis Carpets

EXPERIENCED
REFERENCES CHECKED
NO FEE

FOR

One Day Only
CARPET
REMNANT SALE

2-8615

Edens

near

Table
lamps,
switches

Tower
all

VE

5-2400

with

3

way

$12.88 to $19.88
Pole lamps

$12.88

Formica
top
living room
tables;
walnut, oak or mahogany finished

$18.88
Danish

modern

chairs

from

$27.88

John R. Whalen
Furniture
808

Sold

Home—Must
HOURS

Sacrifice!

10-4

Chickering spinet piano, like new; Fruitwood
double bed, 4 piece suite; upholstered small
settle sofa; downfilled lounge chair; 4 Bodart card or dining chairs; permanent card
table, 4 chairs; Zenith console TV; Magnavox 3 speed phonograph and radio console;
luggage; odd tables; antiques galore. 1136
Linden, Highland Park. ID 2-1112.

ee

Waukegan Rd.
WI 5-1915

Pate

uate

eg

eda

Deerfield

COMPLETE
household
furnishings,
appliances,
and
baby
furniture,
reasonable.
Hales, 1920 Sheridan Road, North Chicago, DExter 6-2353.
22 CU.
ft. Carrier upright freezer; Kenmore deluxe double oven electric range;
barbeque with electric spit; Lane cedar
chest. Must sell. Reasonable. ID 2-5768.
NEW clothing; lounge chair; tables; lamps;
aquarium;
set of dishes; kitchen tools;
jewelry; toys; miscellaneous. ID 2-1944.
DEHUMIDIFIER,
like new; complete set
of dishes for 12, reasonable. ID 2-9377.
MOVING!
Must sell by Saturday;
heavy
duty
riding mower,
self
starter,
good
condition;
Magnavox
consolette
Hi-Fi.
perfect shape; Granco FM tuner; mobile
leaf burner;
complete
Lionel train setup, excellent condition, mounted on two
4x8 panels; passenger train, freight train,
switch engine,
many
accessories,
heavy
transformer. Please no calls after Saturday noon. CE 4-3767.
LOVELY rosewood antique desk, originally
a melodian, converted in Europe, 55”x
24’, $250. Telephone CE 4-4101.
ANTIQUES:
mahogany Colonial sofa; mahogany square table, pedestal base; miscellaneous items. EMpire 2 1690.
NEW
electric
stove
with
grill,
sacrifice
price; 24”? TV, used, $69.95; new refrigerators and freezers as low as $149.95;
wholesale prices; our 25th year in Lake
Forest. We give
S &amp; H Green Stamps.
Freeman’s TV and Music, 648 Western,
Lake Forest,

SPRING

CLEANING

SALE

WORLD BOOK, 1954 edition with all yearly
supplements;
ditto
machine.
Call
after
4:30 ID 2-7404.
ANTIQUES; harvest table, pine double leaf,
5 ft. long; burly walnut Victorian table
and other side tables and chairs in pine
and cherry; all beautifully refinished. Telephone CE 4-2559.
RCA TV, 21 INCH, low boy model, walnut
finish, like new. Call ID 3-0173.

FOR

SALE

HOME
MODERNIZATION
SERVICE

Donate your discards to Kenwood
Center
of Infant Welfare for our Spring Rummage
Sale. We need: Furniture, Bric-a-brac, Furs,
Jewelry,
Clothing,
Toys,
and
Miscellany.
FREE
PICK-UP.
Call Mrs. Gray, ID 22818, or Mrs. Unger, ID 2-4266. Donations
tax deductible.

RED
Lawson sofa, excellent condition; 2
matching home-spun linen oversize easy
chairs. Call all day weekends. ID 2-9125,
KENMORE stove, 40 inches, Crosley Shelvadore refrigerator, very good condition,
$120 for both. ID 2-9880.
GARAGE SALE-SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY
Terrific bargains in furniture, draperies and
misc.
appliances
including
washer,
dryer,
TV, floor polisher. 1318 Sunnyside, High
land Park.
TWIN
bed
stand with
spring
and Serta
mattress, $25; blond 5 drawer chest, $10;
standing
20
garment
metal
wardrobe,
$10. ID 2-8436.
LAWSON
sofa, black and yellow tweed,
$40. ID 2-2286.
OVAL
drop leaf dining table with pads,
4 chairs, extends to seat 10. Like new
condition, $75. ID; 2-3268.
WHIRLPOOL gas dryer, 5 years old, needs
minor repair. $50. ID 2-0845.
BROWN wool rug and pad, 9x12 ft., $50.
Call CE 4-2687.
CUSTOM made bed by Quigley, including
box
spring
and
mattress;
perfect
for
bachelor apartment, $45. CE 4-1739.
SEE the things for sale here; dining table
and
chairs;
buffet;
chest
of
drawers,
lounge; electric stove; Hotpoint refrigerator, 9 cu. ft. like new. Friday evening and
Saturday, April 14, 15. CE 4-4124 after 4
p.m.
REDWOOD
porch furniture; couch, chair,
picnic table and occasional tables; new
seat pads, $60. Call CE 4-4191.
WEIMAN commode, $50; Crest and Stiffel
table lamps, $35 and $20; satin drapes
and spread, $25. WI 5-4205.
KENMORE
dishwasher, portable, excellent
condition, must sell, $50. WI 5-4396.
MAPLE six year crib and mattress, $20. WI
5-3585.
DINING room set, dinette set, girl’s 24 in.
bike, wardrobe
trunk,
desk
and
chair,
aluminum door canopy, youth chair, training chair. WI 5-2573.
BEDROOM
set; double bed, spring, innerspring mattress,
dresser, highboy,
dressing table and bench, night stand, excellent condition, $45. WI 5-3738, mornings.
SMALL
washer, crib set, baby items, pictures, mirror, decorator birdcage, plants,
odds and ends; 2 to 5, Sunday, 1342 Dartmouth, Deerfield. WI 5-4342.
MOVING
to California; entire furnishings
8 room house; appliances, garden tools,
porch furniture, etc. 301 Oakdale Ave.,
Lake Forest, CE 4-2196.
HIDE-A-BED,
Sealy, good condition,
red
cover, double
bed size, $25. Telephone
ID 3-0768.
MODERN
dinette set, table and 4 chairs,
$30; General
Electric waffle baker, $8;
telephone ID 2-3822.
GRAY modern sofa, living room and bedroom drapes, TV set, pictures, mirrored
cornice, bookcase, clothes, etc. ID 2-2905.
20 INCH boy’s bike. $5; child’s desk and
chair, $3; metal Hollywood
bed frame,
$2;
baby
wardrobe
chest,
$3; 4 metal
dinette chairs, 50c each. WI 5-0932.
DINING room suite, custom made, by Rway
of Sheboygan.
Table
with
4 concealed
leaves is 51% ft. closed, 81% ft. extended;
china cabinet—sliding glass doors with 2
large drawers. Large buffet with plenty of
storage; 6 side chairs, 2 arm chairs. Light
honey colored mahogany. Will sacrifice.
ID 2-0762.
MOVING;
twin beds, bedspreads,
ruffles,
desk, buffet, mirror, lamps, TV
stools,
tables, pots, pans, Persian lamb coat, garden tools; cheap. ID 2-8365.
ANTIQUES,
Giftwares,
Bric-A-Brac,
Collector’s Items, Furniture, Odds and Ends,
Beer Steins and Junque. We buy and sell.
The Fullers, 803 Waukegan Road, Deerfield.
PAIR
flowered
lined
draw
drapes,
$6
pair; 1 pair Army field phones, $10; 1
metal fluorescent desk lamp, $5; 1 gooseneck lamp, $1; wood typewriter table, $2.
ID 2-1642.
CARPETING used. Bigelow beige firm-twist.
Approximately 100 yards and padding. $90.
ID 2-0762.

Ue

FOR

BEIGE Kroehler davenport, ag
chair,
4 Sean _
$125 or best offer. Telephone

TIME?

ROOM full of rattan, den or family furniture, sofa, 2 lounge chairs, dining room
table, 4 dining chairs, cocktail table, end
table, large corner table and lamp. $100
for everything. ID 2-9116.
FOR sale, 1958 Frigidaire refrigerator, excellent condition,
very reasonable.
Call
WI 5-5992.
EXECUTIVE
desk, dark green steel construction, with or without typewriter; with
swivel chair, and desk accessories. Original price, $450, will sell for $250 with
typewriter. ID 2-1912.
GARAGE SALE
Frigidaire refrigerator,
13 cubic foot, TV
set, table model; 1 portable, 1 walnut console Singer sewing machines; 1 down comforter; assorted luggage; miscellaneous items;
943 Osterman, Deerfield, WI 5-3495.
MAPLE youth bed with Kantwet mattress,
Thayer baby buggy, boy’s tweed topcoat,
size 16. WI 5-4496,
SECTIONAL,
2 piece, new, brown,
very
Nh
will sell at cost. Hales, DExter

,

GOODS

MISCELLANEOUS

NATURAL RUSSIAN SABLE, 4 skins, excellent
condition,
reasonably
priced
to
sell. VErnon 5-3634,
NEW
SPRING
AND
SUMMER
MERCHANDISE
now
on
sale
at Lincoln
School Clothing Exchange, 711 West Lincoln, Highland Park. Open every Friday
8:45 to 11:30, 3 to 4.
SELLING
wardrobe—designer clothes, size
10-12,
like new,
very
reasonable;
also
some boy’s clothes. HI 6-1922.
SILVER
Blu mink stole, latest style, like
new, cost $1000, sacrifice for $300. Telephone VE 5-2624.

HOUSEHOLD

Ne

HOUSEHOLD

HOUSEHOLD GOODS FOR SALE

SITTING

WILL baby sit in my home by day or week.
Have nice yard. Call ID 2-4406.
LONELY 4 year old boy needs friend 3 to
4 hours a day. Call WI 5-4479.
WANT
to baby sit in my home, I am a
young mother and reliable. Call after 6,
WI 5-5606.
WHILE
you golf, shop, spring clean, or
work day or week, your children can play
here. CE 4-0251.
RELIABLE woman wanted to baby sit with
6 young children, 3 or 4 afternoons a
month. Riverwoods area. WI 5-3797.

Cleaning

Women Day Workers
$10.00 per day

THE

_ SITUATIONS WANTED—DOMESTIC

BABY

DOOR

DAY WORKERS

ICATIONS
being
accepted. Kathryn
dow!
Sent
Agency &amp; Secretarial
rvice.
273
E,
Market
Square,
Lake
CE 41148.

ion

WANTED—DOMESTIC

WE SUPPLY
DAY WORKERS

white, experienced, recent references
required, other help, permanent position,
salary open. Collect VE 5-0080 or CE 4-

OE

=

WANTED—MALE

KITCHENS,
RECREATION
ROOMS,
SUMMER
PORCHES
ROOM ADDITIONS,
DORMERS,

FENCES,

GARAGES,

ETC.

COMPLETE INSTALLATION,
OR MATERIALS
ONLY
(All Labor By The North Shore’s
Finest Contractors—Fully
Guaranteed In Writing.)

LOW FHA FINANCING
FREE ESTIMATES

Northbrook Lumber

Company
(Skokie
Northbrook, Ill.

&amp;

Dundee

Rds.)
CR

2-3000

Half Day Plywood
Discount
S.W.
Day,

@

corner

Mart

Rtes.

45

&amp;

21

Half

III.
Grand Opening
Lumber
Mahogany Doors
Ceiling Tile
Pegboard
Plywood Panelling
Mosaic Tile
Underlayment

Grand

opening

sleeve

sport

2-for:

special

shirts,

.. . short

$5.95

value

$5.

YOUR

REPRESENTATIVE
for the
ENCYCLOPEDIA
AMERICANA,
BOOKSHELF
for BOYS
and
GIRLS, LANDS and PEOPLE, etc.,
is now in this area. If interested in
the
WORLD’S LARGEST
REFERENCE LIBRARY
under our promotional
offer and
BOOK-A-MONTH
PLAN
write: Mr.
J. SKALA, 706 De Tamble, Highland Park, or call
Office:
Home:
CHerry 4-2030
ID 2-0858
RENT EVERYTHING FOR THE HOME
FROM YOUR ASSOCIATED STORE
Portable TV Sets
Foldaway Beds:
High Chairs
Reducing Machines.
Hospital Beds
Heavy Duty Vacuums.
Floor Waxers
Power Tools.
Wall Paper Equip.
Moving Equipment
Wheel Chairs
Rug Scrubbers.
Floor Machines
Ladders.
WE DELIVER

ASSOCIATED
RENT-ALLS
651

Roger

Williams,
IDlewood

Highland

Park:

2-6333

SHOP AND SAVE AT
STOCKADE TRADING POST
WHEELING, ILLINOIS
516

N.
WE

MILWAUKEE
SELL

Open

ON

AVE.

TERMS

Daily incl. Sun.
Fri., 9-9

9-6

T.V. tables, all brass, $6.95; double well!
stainless steel sinks, $12; cartop carriers,
$4.95; Recliner chairs, $54.50; 5 pc. Danish
modern bedroom set, value $350, for $200;
8x4 knotty pine room dividers, $25 ea; mahogany
drop leaf tables, $39.50; Formica
bar,
35x42,
$37.50;
chair
and
sofa bed,
$124.50' a set.

FENCES
“YOU

_SELECT—WE_
ERECT”
WOOD OR WIRE
STANDARD OR_ CUSTOM
CABANAS - PATIOS
GARDEN UTILITY BUILDINGS
Mike

For Estimates Call
Estate Fencing

CE 4-1283

Thursday, April
yg

ee ea

A Ba

tia

hay

Bint

dey gs

‘

©

�MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE
DO

|MUSICAL

IT YOURSELF

RENT TOOLS &amp; EQUIPMENT
Chain saws, rug shampooers,
tary tillers, etc. You name it.

MUTUAL
Rtes. 41 &amp; 22

sanders,

SUPPLY

ro-

ID 2-0272

WINCHESTER 410, extension 4 arm; excellent; other guns. CE 4-2868.
ALUMINUM
windows, doors, siding, awnings and
screen houses;
special Spring
prices. Call Coalume, CE 4-1750.
HAY
RACK
Sleigh rental, party facilities. Happ’s Hollow, CR 2-3131.
COINS FOR COLLECTORS
Buy and Sell
Larson’s Store, 1783 St. Johns Ave., Highland Park; Saturday and Sunday only.
ONLY a few weeks left for winter rates on
tree removal. Fully insured. Jim Beinlich,
VErnon 5-1195.
POWER
LAWN
ROLLING-FERTILIZING
Let us take the humps out. Save your back.
Jim Beinlich, VErnon 5-1195.
Cedar ewe
table, park type. Unbeatable
price, $12.50.
MUTUAL SUPPLY
Rtes 41 &amp; 22
ID 2-0272
MONTGOMERY
WARD 7 _ horsepower,
power tractor, practically new; disc harrow, tiller, sickle bar, plow, riding
seat;
original cost $700, make
offer.
1%
EXCEPTIONAL
value for anyone wanting
a deluxe ride-em lawn mower; also child’s
electric tractor, 3 MPH; each $35. ID 2COLDSPOT refrigerator-freezer, set of golf
clubs
including
3
matched
woods,
8
matched irons, all reasonable. ID 2-5648.
GARDEN
furniture; buggy wheels; antique
plows. Saturday and Sunday only, 440 E.
Illinois Rd., Lake Forest.
G.E. ELECTRIC blanket, brand new, $20;
reel type mower, good condition, $20. Call
CE 4-2555 after 6 p.m.
REPLACE
your worn out sink tops with
sparkling Formica or Ceramic tile. Also
cabinets,
sinks,
wall
and_
floor
tiling.
25 years on North Shore. Free estimates.
Snazelle, CE 4-3237.
WATCH for B’ nai Torah’s annual “‘bazarre
of bargains.”’ Bigger this year, Saturday,
April 22, 6 to 11 p.m., Sunday, 23rd,
10 a.m. on. Highwood Community Center,
428 Green Bay Rd.
O’DAY
DAYSAILER,
hit of show, fiber
glass, used one month, 16 ft. 6 in. sloop,
stainless
rigged
with
dacron
sails
and
nylon spinnaker, auxiliary outboard and
fine trailer,
excellent
for launching
in
—Park. EXTRAS.
$1900. ID 21004.
BEAUTIFUL hand made quilts; patchwork
and applique, $50 and up. Call ANtioch
1458.
CONTAX
IIA with accessories, $100; also
Viewlex Project-O-Matic 2x2 projector, 7
trays, 40x40 screen, $50. Call ID 3-1047
after 6 P.M.
FLAG HEADQUARTERS
3x5 flags available, $3.95 complete. Others
can be ordered. Office open 6 to 9 Wednesday and Friday evenings. VFW,
667 Central Avenue. Telephone ID 2-9774.
TWIN stroller for sale, reclining seats, sun
shades, in good condition, purchased 1%
years ago, $20. CE 4-5477.
STAUFFER
Reducing Couch, almost new,
with stretch bar and leg attachments. Reasonable. ID 2-1912.
ALTERATIONS,
dressmaking,
draperies,
slipcovers;
interior
design
consultation.
WI 5-5719; if no answer WI 5-1514
14 FOOT runabout with steering, windshield,
running lights and other accessories, plus
trailer, $500. Call WI 5-3856.
12 FOOT custom made swing set, 3 place,
with
glider,
$50;
also fireplace screen,
andirons, basket, and tools. 1341 Carlisle
Place, Deerfield. WI 5-1584.

RUMMAGE

SALE

MUSICAL

INSTRUMENTS

USED LOWREY

FOR

USED

down

$ 695
695
$ 795
995

PIANOS
$ 595
$ 495
$ 565
$1125

36 months

to pay

LOWREY—MASON &amp; HAMLIN
KIMBALL—KNABE—CABLE
AUTHORIZED DEALER
World’s Finest Organs - Pianos

LOWREY
Organ Studios
Of a
1795

St.

Johns

Park

Ave.

ID

2-2510

UPRIGHT
Marshall Wendell
Ampico
reproducer
with
about
400
recordings;
classical and semi; including such artists
as Rachmaninov
and Grieg, $500. TRinity 2-8317.

|

Thursday, April 13, 1961

Conn, high quality instrument
condition.
Telephone
ID
2-

MUSICAL

INSTRUMENTS

MOVING

AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE

SALE

HAMMOND
CHORD
ORGANS: | floor
models and trade ins; only $795 with neworgan guarantee! Easy terms. Lyon-Healy,
1843 Second St., Highland Park. ID 23434.
NEW
full sized Roth violin, will sacrifice.
WI 5-3197.
WANTED

SALE

We are moving to larger quarters
Must dispose of 90 new and used pianos
New spinets, “88 Mote... ube
from $395
Used spinets and consoles ............ from $295
45. used ‘grand: pianos “cco from $295
Used player Uprights. ...-250. 4c. from $195
Practic€
peignts:
coscasose from $ 79
See the new Hardman Duo Player pianos
Mon.. Thurs. 9-9—-Sunday 11-5
FIELDS PIANO CO.
2921 W. Touhy
AMbassador 2-2023

CHICAGO ART GALLERIES WILL PAY
CASH
FOR _ PIANOS,
ALL
MAKES,
STYLES. BONUS FOR STEINWAYS AND
OTHER
GOOD
MAKES.
CALL LONGBEAC
1-5092,
EVENINGS
ROGERS
PARK. 1-4400.

NEED piano, large, small grand, any condition. JUniper 8-1020.
OWNER
forced to dispose 26 foot greenhouse
equipped
Arco
boiler,
2
B&amp;G
pumps, automatic ventilators, stocked with
orchids and camellias, free for removal
from premises. Call A. N. Schinler, VE
5-0797 after 5 p.m.

WANTED

TO

BUY

CASH FOR YOUR CAR
ANY MAKE OR MODEL
Call

(Mr.

Kelly—ID

Holmes
1909

St.

2-8640

Motor Co.

Johns

Highland

Park

CHICAGO ART GALLERIES WILL PAY
CASH FOR ORIENTAL RUGS, FRENCH
FURNITURE.
ANTIQUES
ETC,
CALL
LO
1-5092, EVENINGS
ROGERS
PARK
1-4400.
ENLARGER
for size 620 film or bigger.
Call George Thorne, CE 4-0189.
6 WALNUT Queen Anne style dining room
chairs. Telephone DOrchester 3-7693.
1956, °57 OR ’58 Chevrolet or Plymouth 6
cylinder 4 door sedan. Standard shift from
private owner.
Good
condition.
VIllage
8-7259

A-1

1960

LOST: black kid glove in ant
Square
March 18; reward.
CE 4-4
LOST, charm bracelet CGeandnther discs)
on ‘Dean Ave. near school ground last
week, reward, Mrs. Helm, ID 2-5472.

AUTOMOBILES

CLEAN

1956

1959

dere, atito, heater. -....... $
Ford conv. R &amp; H, auto.
pow. steer. Ready to put

the top

USED

Evenings

4-5770

1953 CHEVROLET, bad cylinder needs fixing, is
aa
Princeton, Highland Park.
MERCEDES-BENZ,
190-SL Roadster, 1960
ultra-deluxe
sports
car.
Straight
shift,
whitewalls,
$200 FM-AM-Shortwave
Radio, many extras. Beautiful condition, very
low mileage, Buy from original for’ only
$3,800. For appointment to see this fine
car, call ID 2-6905.
1954 CHRYSLER
New Yorker, full power
4 door, low mileage, excellent condition,
$395. ID 2-1413.
CHRYSLER
station wagon,
1954, original
Owner,
needs
some
motor
work,
good
tires and body, unusual car. ID 2-4390.
1957 PORSCHE coupe, 1600N; black with
red leather interior; new battery, tires,
clutch; radio, heater, reclining seats; good
mechanical condition. $1600 or best offer.
CE 4-5323,
1956 VAUXHALL 4 door sedan, only 9500
miles; will consider car in trade. Telephone CE 4-2617
PONTIAC
1961 Temptest,
black 4 door;
stick shift; radio, heater, whitewalls; purchased new 3/12/61; hasn’t had 1000 mile
inspection; private, $1950. CE 4-3747.
1957 MGA ROADSTER, excellent condition,
low mileage, wire wheels. Call EMpire 24364 after 5 p.m.
FOR sale or trade, 1953 Chevrolet and 1953
Buick. WI 5-5107.
AUTO
INSURANCE:
we write everybody.
Under 25, over 65, or in between. Tickets
or cancellations ate no concern to us. Up
to 32% discount for safe drivers. Lauren
R. Januz, CE 4-5670

995

................ $1795
dr.

H.T.,

$1045

1958
1957

Ford, 2 dr, auto., R&amp;H $
Mercury
Monterey,
2
dr.,
H.T.,
R&amp;H,
auto.

1957

Ford,
9 pass.
country
sed., R&amp;H, overdrive ....$1045
Plymouth, 4 dr., 6‘cyl.,
R&amp;H,
auto.
Ford conv., 6 cyl., R&amp;H,
BUOY ct
ie eee $ 695

trans.,

1956
1956

LOW
1955
1953

pow.

PRICED

steer.

2

dr.

1952

Ford,

1952

stand (rans, oes
$
Chevrolet
Carryall
(Handy man’s special) $

295

R&amp;H,
125

IN COMFORT

For your shopping convenience, 50 choice
used cars available for your inspection in
our INDOOR SHOWROOM.
SOME SAMPLE BARGAINS.

1956
1956

Plymouth, 2 dr., 6 cyl.,
car. etc. Full price
Ford V-8, 4 dr., sed. auto. trans.
pow. steer, pow. brakes, heater,
etc. Perfect clean transportation. ’$
Chevrolet V-8, 4 dr. H.T., auto.
trans., etc. The cleanest car inside and out you can imagine .. 0
Chrysler
Windsor,
4 dr.
sed.,
auto. trans., R&amp;H, etc. Fine family car.
$
Ford 4 dr. auto. trans., etc., low
mileage
$

695

795
645
195

MOTORS

Authorized Chrysler Corp. Dealer
First Street
Highland Park, Ill.
Hours—Weekdays 9-9
Sat. 9-6
Sun. 10-4
1766

1950 CHRYSLER station wagon, 6 passenger, $200; 1955 9 passenger Mercury, fully
equipped, whitewalls, $650. CE 4-1143.
FOR SALE, 1959 TR-3
Mint condition, new paint, extras.
PRIVATE
PARTY.
MOHAWK
4-1036.
1957 CADILLAC
62 coupe, power brakes,
steering; power antenna; white with blue
interior;
beautiful
condition.
$1695,
no
Sales tax. ID 2-3607.
1957 OLDSMOBILE
Super 88 convertible
gold metallic finish, new black nylon top,
power brakes and steering, excellent condition, tremendous
buy, original owner.
Call FI 6-0670 weekdays 9 to 5, or ID
2-4001 after 6:30.
1960 RAMBLER
American,
2 tone,
like
new, 2 door automatic transmission, 8.700 miles, 22 miles per gallon, $1,395.
CR 2-3148.
1953 CHEVROLET Bel Air, 2 door, radio,
heater,
automatic
transmission,
$195.
Telephone ID 2-6288.
1959 PONTIAC Bonneville sport coupe, low
ply A * ipoacap condition, $2100. Call
1960

PLYMOUTH

steering,

Fury

automatic

4 door

V-8,

transmission,

SHOP

at Sheridan

ID

2-1369

power
radio,

heater, oversized, white wall tires. A host
of other extras. My own personal demonstrator, full new car warranties 1 year or
12,000 miles. Will accept car in trade.
Call Mr. Fitzsimmons
at Lake Motors,
ID 2-2500.
CHEVROLET
1960 Biscayne 2 door sedan,
348 engine, stick shift; excellent condition, $1875. Knauz Motors, CE 4-2800.
BEL
AIR
Chevrolet,
1959,
22,000
miles,
just driven around Lake Forest, like new.
Telephone CE 4-1674.
1955 FORD Victoria, automatic, radio, heater, excellent
condition,
best
offer.
821
Woodward, Deerfield. WI 5-4009.
CADILLAC
1960; 6 windows, 6 way seat;
blue sedan Deville; low mileage, proved
by Cadillac service invoices; full power,
tinted glass. Immaculate. Blue leather and
fabric interior; $4495;. no tax. Call original owner, CE 4-9501.

For Cancer Drive
Highland Parkers are receiving
a letter from Perry Cohen, Highland Park Chairman for the current cancer crusade, seeking support for the campaign.
Cohen’s
says,

Society

in

This

St.

ID

war

against

cancer

amount

of

at a cost
amount

of less
raised.

than

This

5%

mone

is now being used both here
Lake County and throughout
United

effort

States

for

against

this

Make

the

disease.

Cancer’

is regularly

being

Society

made

against this disease. For exampl
a few years ago only one out ¢
four

persons

with

cance

was saved. Due to the developments through research, this f
gure has now dropped to one in
every three.

“None

PETS
BEAUTIFUL
Bedlington
terrier
puppies,
AKC
registered,
champion
stock,
look
like lambs, don’t shed. ALpine 1-6134.
URSAFELL
KENNELS
BOARDING
AND TRIMMING
Expert grooming, all breeds, individual runs,
country kennel. Telephone WI 5-5035.
WANTED:
good home
for 8 month
old
spayed female shepherd-collie, housebroken, good with children. WI 5-5465.
BABY
kittens to be given away, weaned
and pan trained. Telephone CE 4-0861.
SEAL POINT Siamese kitten, 9 month old
female. CE 4-0624.
AFGHAN hound, male, 3 years old, illness
necessitates loving home. ID 2-1321.
4 KITTENS
to give away to very good
homes. 5 weeks old. $D 2-5427.
WEIMARANER,
female
10 months
old,
AKC
registered. LOcust 6-5792, Mundelein.

continu

dread

Progress

American

progress
every

Bailey? It’s
‘‘bazarre of
p.m., April
Community

the

i

“In the three-pronged attack by

2-1750

GIRL’S 20 in. and 24 in. ard
bicycles,
perfect condition. WI 5-319
24 INCH
Schwinn boy’s a
in good
condition, $15. Telephone ID 2-8733.

WON’T you come home Bill
almost time for B’nai Torah’s
bargains,”’ April 22nd, 6 to 11
23rd, 10 a.m. on. Highwood
Center, 428 Green Bay Rd.

the

money was collected by the volunteers of the Lake County Chapter of the American Cancer So-

Guaranteed during your ownership
Free Pickup &amp; Delivery
First

part:

tremendous

of the

New &amp; Used Bikes
Ranger Bicycles

1844

in

“Last year the citizens of Lake
County contributed over $65,000
to support the American Cancer

ciety

“BIG WHEEL”
BIKE SHOP

195

AUTHORIZED
FACTORY
FORD DEALER
1909 St. Johns
Highland
Park
Call Used
Car Dept.—ID
2-8640
Open
8 A.M.
to 9 P.M.
Daily

1960

&amp; HOBBY

Central

Seeks Support

letter

PERSONAL
345

Holmes Motor Co.

SHOP

CYCLE
486

Local Chairman

MOTORCYCLES

BIKES—Used
and Reconditioned.
Good selection of Boys or Girls 16
in., 20 in. or 24 in. Many Schwinns
—completely
re-built—some
like
new.

........ $ 895

SPECIALS

V-8,

&amp;

1957
TRUCK,
%
ton Dodge
with
side
boxes,
15,000 miles, excellent condition,
$1,100. Call ID 2-2682.
1957 CHEVROLET ¥% ton pick up truck in
fair shape, can be seen at 2005 St. Johns
or call ID 3-1254.

995

Olds., 4 dr., R&amp;H, stand.
TRAPS
is oS ig ae $
Ford, 9 pass. sta. wgn.,
R&amp;H,
overdrive: sxx... $

LAKE

Until 9

2

Belvi-

V-8, stand. trans., R&amp;H

CARS

WENBAN BUICK
589 N. Oakwood
Forest
CE

down.

Chevrolet,

TRUCKS

BICYCLES

Plymouth,

1958

dr.,

SALE

BICYCLES

1959

1953

SALE

Plymouth suburban wagon, auto. trans., R &amp; H,
w/walls
$ 795
4 door
hardtop
Buick
Roadmaster
30. 7
$ 795
Open

Lake

FOR

MOTOR

Ford
Fairlane
500,
2
dr., 6 cyl. R &amp; H, Fordomatic, pow. steer.
Ford demonstrators. Only 3 left. Huge savings.

2

FOR

TWO
Mercedes-Benz
300SL,
coupe-roadsters, 1957 and 1959, 3
and $7500.
Knauz Motors, CE 4-2800
1956 OLDSMOBILE
4 door hardtop, immaculate
condition, $995 or best offer.
ID 2-2606
1957 V-8 FORD hardtop, new tires, radio,
heater, A-1 shape, reasonable. WI 5-0732.

USED CAR GUARANTEE ON
‘57 OR NEWER MODELS

1960

1957

LOST &amp; FOUND

AUTOMOBILES

HIGHLAND PARK
USED CAR
HEADQUARTERS

PIANOS wanted: bonus prices for Steinway
and Baldwin. VErnon
5-1640 eves. and
Sunday. AMbassador 2-2023 days.

ORGANS

Knabe Console, mahogany
Whitney spinet, Fruitwood
Kimball Console, mahogany
Mason &amp; Hamlin, Console, demonstrator
$25

TROMBONE,
in perfect

SALE

3 Lowrey Holidays, limed oak
Lowrey Holiday, walnut
Lowrey Holiday, French Provincial
Lowrey Brentwood, limed oak

FOR

ACCORDIONS
STRADAVOX Crown Imperial Black (with
Twin-Flow
Sound-Chamber)
13
TrebleSwitches
and 7 Bass-Switches, 41 TrebleKeys, 120 Bass 4 Sets of Treble Reeds and
5 Sets of Bass Reeds. None finer made for
the
professional
or
concert
Accordionist.
CAMERANO
Blue 24 Treble-Keys and 120
Bass 2-Treble-Switches.
Phone WI 5-2038

1957

RUMMAGE
Sale: North Shore Methodist
Church,
Hazel
and
Greenleaf
Avenues,
Glencoe. Wednesday, April 19th, 7 p.m.,
Thursday, ee
20th, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. 1
block East, 1 block "South of Northwestern Railroad.

INSTRUMENTS

of us

can

sit back

an

say that this is not a problem

us

to

worry

about,

for

for

at

the

present time cancer will strike approximately two of every three
American
families.
We
can all
help

by

in

this

fight

contributing

against

as

cance

much

as

pos-

sible to the support of the Ameri
can Cancer Society.”

Rescinds Suspension
Of Drivers’ Licenses

_

Secretary of State Charles
pentier’s

office

the Drivers

has

License

advised

Division has

Local Rifle Group

rescinded

Places in Tourney

One of those is Pati H. Gerber
200 S. Deere Park, whose license
was suspended following receipt

The

Sheridan

Junior

Rifle

of

Club

placed 15th in the Milwaukee Sentinel Sports Show
Rifle Tournament ‘held last month. The team

was

qualified

to

participate

by

of

three

suspension

Car-

Lake

erroneous

of licenses

county

residents.

information

of

licenses

of

Benjamin

Gay

of 198 out of a possible 200 earned
him fourth place of the 131 Junior
Shooters participating. Other mem-

To Be Presented

Students To Hear
IRS Speaker on
Tax Problems
Jerry Weinstein,
Chicago
Revenue

of

High

April

14

at

Highland

discussing

with

students and teachers problems and
the program of the Internal Revenue Service. Weinstein will attend various
classes between
9
a.m. and 3:30 p.m. to talk.
Vacation

At

Home

a member

Lake

Zurich,

‘Gay Adventures’

at

Temple

Emanuel,

in

Chicagi

April 15, at 8:30 p.m. and April 1
at 2:30 p.m. The play is sponso1
ed by the Men’s Club of Temp’
Emanuel, and is presented by &lt;¢
cast of about 100 people. Mrs

of the bowling

team which won the co-recreational
bowling championship at the University.

producing

show,
and

which

and

directing

the

is a series of scenes

skits.

Special Training
John P. Flahavin, local representative of the Metropolitan Life
Insurance Company, has returned
from New York City where h

participated in a special advanced
training course relating to
planning and business life
ance

Sidney Frisch, Jr., spent Easter
vacation at the University of IIlinois in Urbana, with his parents,
the senior Sidney Frisches of Ivy
Lane.
The
student
recently won
the Psi Upsilon Scholarship fund,

and was

Yee,

is

a member of the

School,

Patch,

Maxine Berman of Highland Park

staff
of
the
Internal
Service, will spend most

Friday,

Park

a

2760 Deerfield Rd., Deerfield, and

placing 16th in a field of 150 entrants from three states. Outstanding team member was Irwin Wengieski, Jr. of Deerfield whose score

bers
of the team
were
Stephen
Hennessy, Tony Levy, Josh Orkin,
and Howard Worcester, all of Highland
Park.

from

Cook county police magistrate.
Also rescinded were suspension

estate
inser

underwriting.

Flahavin, who lives at 340 Grant
Ct., recently was appointed to th
position

of Metropolitan

Insurance

Consultant, in which capacity he
will continue his insurance sales
and
service activities from the
Metropolitan’s Sheridan office a’
816 Central Avenue, The office is.
under the direction of Manager Alfred

Simons.

Page H 65—D

57

.

‘
—

�Spring Adult Class
Sessions Open at Y|

COMING

Registration is open for Spring
adult education classes at the Highland Park YWCA, 494 Laurel Ave.,
Miss Musa I. DeMouth, executive
director, announces.
Two
bridge
classes, under the
direction
of
Isabelle
Garn,
are

IN

scheduled

JULY

to start April 25 and 26.

A class for intermediate bridge
players will be held Tuesday evenings from 8 to 10 p.m. and will be
open to both men and women. The
Wednesday afternoon class will be
“play of the hand” instruction in
advanced
play.
The
Wednesday
class will be held from 1 to 3:15
p.m.; both clases will continue for

eight weeks.

|"GET
AQUAINTED"

Classes in oil painting, with Hilda Rubin as instructor, will start
Tuesday
morning
and
afternoon,
April 11 and Friday morning, April
14.
The classes will last for 12
weeks.
The
Duplicate Bridge club for

beginning duplicate
continue Wednesday

players will
evenings

throughout May and June. It then
will be discontinued until September.
The
fourth
Wednesday
of
each month is master point night.

Persons

interested

“YY”? classes

may

call

in
ID

any

of

the

2-0675

for

further information, Miss DeMouth
said.

PUBLICATION

in your

AL
LAKE
aoe

Worn

Hy

0

mee

wo

Uroup

7

aimee PEE

NOTICE

STATE
OF
ILLINOIS,
COUNTY
OF
LAKE,
SS:
IN THE
CIRCUIT
COURT
OF
LAKE
COUNTY,
ILLINOIS.
IN
CHANCERY:
ANITA
MARIE
GREGORY,
Plaintiff,
vs
HAROLD
THOMAS
GREGORY, Defendant, General No. 75143.
Affidavit,
showing
that
the
defendant,
Harold Thomas Gregory, is concealed within this State or resides out of this State so
that process cannot be served upon said
defendant, Harold Thomas Gregory, having
been filed in the office of the Clerk of this
Court, NOTICE IS, THEREFORE, HEREBY GIVEN to said Harold Thomas Gregory that the plaintiff in the above-entitled
cause filed her praecipe for summons in
suit for divorce on April 4, 1961; that summons was duly issued out of the said Court
against you as provided by law, and that
said suit is; still pending.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE ADVISED that
the Complaint for Divorce has been filed
against you on the 4th day of April, 1961,
in accordance with the statute in such case
made and provided.
NOW, THEREFORE, unless you, Harold
Thomas
Gregory, the said defendant, file
your appearance and answer to the Complaint on or before the 30th day of May,
1961, as provided by law, a default may be
entered against you at any time after that
date and a Decree entered in accordance
with the prayer of said Complaint.
YTEPHANIE SULTHIN, Clerk
JAMES P. MOORE
Attorney for Plaintiff
9 South County Street
Waukegan, Illinois

pe

l A WSPAPERS

Telephone:

McDONALD

ON

2-5665

4/13/61—97

OBITUARIES

Alfred Olsen, 84, of Waverly
Rd., life-long resident of Highland
Park, died in Anaheim, Calif,,

Mrs. Fred Cuscaden

April
Mrs.
685

Fred

Vine

A.

Ave.,

Cuscaden,
died

early

79,

of

Friday

afternoon

copal Church,
Shore Garden

at

Wednes-

Trinity

5 while

visiting his daughter,

Mrs. Frederick Wendling.
Funeral services were held April
9 at the chapel at 1913 Sheridan
Rd., with the Rev. Paul V. Berggren, pastor of Zion Lutheran
church, officiating.
Interment was
in Rosehill, Chicago.

day morning last week at Highland
Park Hospital. The funeral was
Epis-

and burial in North
of Memories.

Mr. Olsen, a retired auditor, was
born in Highland
Park Aug. 26,
1876, the son of Hans Johan Olsen
and Anna Hansen Olsen, who had
come here from Norway.
His father was
a well known
pioneer
blacksmith in Highland Park.

Mrs. Cuscaden, nee Maude Macomber,
lived
in Highland
Park
since 1922 with her husband, who
is a retired vice president of the

Northern Trust Co.
She was the great-grandmother
of five children. Her son, Henry
J., lives on Sanibel Is., Fla.; his
sons are R. R. Cuscaden of Chica-

He leaves two daughters, Mrs.
Wendling,
and Mrs.
Raymond
Osborne, with whom he lived. One
sister, Miss
Jennie
Olsen,
Highland
Park,
survives
him.
One
brother,
Ole
Laurence
Olsen,
a
Highland Park contractor, and one
sister, Mrs. Emily Elfstrom, Highland Park, preceded him in death.

go and Michael Cuscaden of Cleveland.
Mrs.
Cuscaden’s
daughter
is
Mrs. Charles Perrigo of 230 Cary
Ave. The Perrigos’ daughter, Jean,
married
Basil Paschall
and
now

lives in Tucson, Ariz,

Harry L. Appelman

Fine Arts Quartet

Funeral
services
for Harry
L.
Appelman,
145 Oak Knoll
Terr.,
were held April 6 from a Chicago
chapel.
Interment was in Sholom

Sets Two Operas
When the Music Center of the
North Shore presents an evening
of two one-act operas as part of
its
Fine
Arts
Quartet
concert
series, it will mark still another
instance
in a recent
trend,
the

inclusion of opera
of

instrumental

Memorial Park. Mr. Appelman died
April

on the schedule

groups.

Kansas

New

City;

Matt,

Issahr, New York;
Gordon, Portland,

zetti’s
“Il
Campanello,”
will
be
presented April 26 and May 3 at
the Studebaker Theatre, Chicago,

and on April 25 and May 2
the Howard School, Wilmette.

5.

He leaves his widow, Molly; one
son, Evan H., Downers Grove; one
daughter, Leta Griffin and one
grandchild.
He also leaves three
brothers
and
one sister, Hyman,

The operas, both in a comic
vein, Ernst Toch’s “The Princess
and the Pea,” and Gaetano Doni-

Los

Smorgasbord Apr.

at

Feature

the orchestra
bert Zipper.
Outstanding

Other singers
Emma
as the

include Catherine
Princess,
Richard

Knoll,

Nazarian,

conducted

by

the

professional

singers

is

soprano

Chookasian,

Lilli

cently
claim

Her-

won
in

cast

Hasmick
Michael

re-

APPLIANCE

GAS WATER HEATERS

DAYS—ID
NIGHTS—ID
2236

Skokie Valley Rd.

Page H 66—D

58

Disposals

Everhot

Rheem

|

3-2270

Park

WORTH

$2
ON

ANY

APPLIANCE

Offer

2-0268

rab

THIS COUPON

Psa

SERVICE
Highland

-

CALL OR CHECK

Expires June

1, 1961

ac-

Edward

Bondon,

HEATING

Permaglas

critical

Hall.

Jordan Bard, Ardis Krainik,
ward Rodriguez and Robert
kin.

of

mezzo-

who

unanimous

Carnegie

Pierson,

among

We Service All Makes of
Washers - Dryers

24 HOUR

16

806, Sunday, Apr. 16, from 3 to
6 p.m. Mrs. B. M. Cardina is chairman. Tickets will be available at
the door.

JAMES J. CAROLLO
-

Helen

The
Moose
home,
1799
Green
Bay Rd., will be setting for the
smorgasbord
dinner to be given
by Women of the Moose, Chapter

INTRODUCING

Dishwashers

Angeles;

and Mrs.
Ore.

During the last decade or so,
symphony
orchestras increasingly
have
presented
operas,
usually
those seldom
produced
in opera
houses. But whereas the orchestras
have given the works in concert
form, the Music Center’s productions
will be fully staged,
with
settings,
costumes
and
a choral
and
dance
ensemble
augmenting

PLUMBING
AND

Alfred Olsen

UP

Anita

EdZal-

�ee
NEwe esate

Some Ideas on How
To Saw Hardboard
The beginning hobbyist will find
that it’s easy to saw the hardboard
he uses for home fix-up and workshop projects.
No special skill or
needed when working
satile material.

equipment is
with this ver-

Standard
woodworking
saws,
either hand or power, can be used,
according to the American Hardboard Association.
The industry group offers these
tips:
In handsawing hardboard, a slow
stroke at a shallow angle and a soft
touch produce smooth edges. The
cut should be taken on the downstroke, with the teeth disengaged
on the up-swing.

Repairing Old Roof
May Start New Leaks
Repairing an old roof generally
is a waste of time, says Andrew C.
Lang, authority on home maintenance.
“Walking on an aged, weathered
roof to make repairs here and there
may open up new leaks,” says Lang,
“that will show up at the first rainstorm.”
That’s why roofers generally reccommend applying a complete new
roof of asphalt
shingles
directly
over the old material. This is the
most
economical
measure
in the
long run, since an asphalt shingle
roof will give years of protection
from all kinds of weather.

If the floor of your station wagon
is taking a beating, try this: Cut a
pattern of the floor area and transThis assures clean edges on the fer it to a piece of % inch tempered hardboard. The rugged and
face of the board.
Cut with the exposed surface up durable hardboard will protect the
when using a hand or table saw, floor from scuffs and damage. It
and the reverse with a power saw, ean be easily removed and stored
so that the teeth hit the exposed | when not needed.
side first.
A
10-point
crosscut
saw
with
medium
set gives good hand results. Remove
saw marks, if any
with a plane, file or sandpaper as
you would with natural wood.
When
power sawing
hardboard
avoid “crowding”. the saw beyond
its normal capacity; otherwise saw-

ing

will

be

edges may
Per

difficult

and

Tree
‘
f

ee
eee
ft
Orne saee

.

pei

Fa

7

eRe

oR tae

yet

Less Mess When

J+

oe

f}—+

ea

bop
|

bak

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4

Spring Cleaning
There are probably many homemakers who are convinced that the
word “spring” is always followed
by the word “cleaning.”
And it’s
true that spring usually. does signal |
the start of projects to spruce up|
he home after winter has left its
}
mark.
Cleaning

Windows

If winter’s mark happens to be |
smudges on walls and windows at}
your house, cleaning these areas is
sure to be on your list of “things to
do.” You'll probably be using paper towels to dry your windows
after washing, so try this: fold two |
pieces of Kleenex
towel in half,
wrap one around each wrist and secure with rubber bands. The paper |
towel
will make
absorbent
wrist |
cuffs to keep water off your arms
and clothing when you’re reaching|
up to do wall areas near the ceiling, or the top window panes.

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Page H 43—D 59
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«HOLY
CROSS
CATHOLIC
CHURCH
te
North Waukegan
Road
;
Rev.
John
O’Mara,
Pastor
i)
Rev.
Edward
Reilly, Assistant
i
Rectory, 724 Elder Lane
Windsor 5-0430
hy
a
Masses:
7, 8, 9, 10, 11:15 and
_ Daily Masses: 6:30 and 8:30 a.m.
_
First Friday of each month, Masses at
6:30
a.m., 8:30 a.m
ConfesSaturday: 4 p.m. ‘and 7:30 p.m.
NORTH
SUBURBAN
EVANGELICAL
FREE
CHURCH
Rev.
Vernon
Olson,
Pastor
200 County Line Rd.
Church Office—WI 5-4640
Parsonage—WI 5-4641
UNDAY
9:30 a.m. Sunday School.
10:45 a.m.
Worship Service.
7 p.m. Worship Service.
8:15
p.m.
Youth Groups.
WEDNESDAY
7:30 p.m. Bible Study.
7:30 p.m. Junior
Crusaders.
&gt;, ‘

THURSDAY

%

ye

6:45

p.m.

Pioneer

Girls

Boys

and

Bri-

ce.

CONGREGATION
BETH OR
In Trinity United Church
638 Wankegan Road
Deerfield

“ey
bi,
_
.

FRIDAY
:30 p.m.

SA
Ne

Sabbath

RDAY

9:30

a.m.

Eve

Religious

— 9:30 a.m. and 11:15 a.m. Church School
for toddlers up through 8th grade at 9:30
.m. and 11:15 a.m. simultaneously with the
lurch services.
High School Group meet at 9:45 a.m. and
ternate Sunday evenings.
REDEEMER

LUTHERAN
CHURCH
Highland
Park
(Missouri Synod)
Rev. Robert A. Wendelin, Pastor
1717 Deerfield Rd.—ID 2-6848
y service,
10:15 a.m.
Holy Com.
union, first Sunday of each month.
Suny School, 9 a.m.
JOSEPH
THE
WORKER
CATHOLIC CHURCH
W. Dundee Rd., Wheeling
George J. Mulcahey, Pastor
Raymond Nugent, Assistant

181
Rev.
Rev.

;

Rectory,

a

171

W.

Dundee

Rd.,

CHURCH
OF CHRIST,
SCIENTIST
155 Deerfield Road
SUNDAY—11
a.m. Services.
Children
are
cared
for during
Church
service,
9:30 a.m. Sunday School.
For pupils up to 20 years of age.
WEDNESDAY
EVENING
MEETINGS—
8 p.m.
Including testimonies of healing
through Christian Science.
All are welcome to attend these services
and to use the reading room. For further
information call WIndsor 5-1626.
READING
ROOM
3 to 5 p.m. Daily.
9 to 9:30 p.m
Wednesdavs
LESSON—SERMON
The oneness and supremacy of God will
be emphasized
at Christian Science services this sunday.
“Doctrine of Atonement’? is the subject
of the Lesson-Sermon. The Golden Text is
from the first chapter of II John: ‘He that
abideth in the doctorine of Christ, he hath
both the Father and the Son.”
The opening selection to be read from
“Science
and
Health
with
Key
to
the
Scriptures”
by Mary
Baker
Eddy
states:
“Jesus taught but one God, one Spirit, who
makes man in the image and likeness of
Himself,—of Spirit, not of matter’ (p. 94).
From the Bible will be read this verse
from Psalm 143: “Teach me to do thy will;
for thou art my God: thy spirit is good;
lead me into the land of uprightness.”

Wheeling

LEhigh 17-2740
Masses: 6:30, 8, 9:30, 11, 12:15
Day Masses: 6:30, 8, 9:30, 11 a.m.,

eendey
Holy
p.m.
eekdays: 6:30, 8:30 a.m.
turday and Thursday before the first
ay in the month: 4, 5:30, 7, 9 p.m.,

nfessions.

QUAKERS
SOCIETY
OF
FRIENDS
David Stickney, Clerk
Lake Forest

UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIS1
638 Waukegan
Road
Rev. Philip A. Desenis, Minister
Parsonage—1139
Elmword
Ave.
Telenhone WI 5-5050
THURSDAY.
April 13
7:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
9:09 p.m. Report meeting.
SATURDAY, April 15
9 a.m. Advanced confirmation.
10 a.m. Beginners confirmation.
9:09 p.m. Report meeting.
SUNDAY,
Anopril 16
9:30 a.m. Family Worship.
9:30 a.m. Church
School
Nursery
thru
Juniors.
11 a.m. Worship.
11 a.m. Church School Junior and Senior High Nursery provided.
7:44 p.m. Victory night.
MONDAY,
April 17
4 p.m. Cherub choir.
TUESDAY, April 18
9:30
a.m.
Regional
women’s
Guild
at
Crystal Lake.
8 p.m, Circle 3.
THURSDAY, April 20
9 am. to 3 p.m. 6 p.m. to 9 vo.m. Repel
shop,
church
annex
and
fellowship
Choir

Friends peering, in Deer Path
ool Library in Lake
Forest.
or information call Windsor 5-1774.
NORTH SHORE
UNITARIAN CHURCH
Rev. Russell R. Bletzer. Minister
Ferry Hal! Chapel
Lake Forest
sa Information Call WI 5-3332

10:

45 a.m.
Church School.
a.m.
Church Service.

Bol

B'NAT
TORAH
2789 Oak Street
Highland Park
Sholom Singer, Rabbi
School,
Saturday
and

i
} oes

Sunday

SUNDAY
:

9:30 a.m.

Church

am

Worship

A

a.m.

nursery

Worship

lephone WI

School.

Service.

Service

is provided

for

and

Church

small

children

5-4179 for more

information.

THE
(An
Oak
4
Rev.
Panay
“3
a.m,
Wie,

NORTH
SUBURBAN
BAPTIST
CHURCH
American
Baptist
Church)
Lane School, Midway Road
Northbrook
East
CR 2-4623
Donald E. Thurston, Pastor

11
am.
people and

| children.

Sunday

School

for

Worship
Service
adults.
Extended

PRESBYTERIAN

CHURCH

824 Wankegan Road
Bernard F. Didier, Minister
Rev. Hugh Jeffers.
Director of Christian Education
Manse—1218 Walden
lane
Church phone—WI 5-0560
Manse nhone—WI 5-0107
THURSDAY,
April 13
9:30 a.m.
Meeting of Circle 6.
3:45 p.m.
Jr. Choir rehearsal (4th and
5th graders).
4:30
p.m.
Westminster
choir rehearsal
(6th. 7th and 8th graders,) both under the
direction of Mrs. Edward Alder.
9 p.m.
Mixed bowling league at Strike
N’ Svare Lanes, Northbrook.
SUNDAY,
April 16
9, 10, and 11:30 a.m.
Morning Worship
and Church school.
Nursery for children
1, 2 and 3 years. Kindergarten and classes
for all other grades through high school.
10 a.m. Adult Bible class.
7 p.m. Tuxis group for senior highs, supper and program following.
MONDAY, Aopril 17
3:30 p.m.
Girl Scout troop 11.
3:30 p.m.
Girl Scout troop 127.
8 v.m.
Adult Bible class.
TUESDAY, April 18
7:30 p.m. Boy Scout troop 52.
WEDNESDAY, April 19
9 am.
Prayer group.
9:30 a.m.
Bible study.
10 a.m. Girl Scout neighborhood meeting.
7:30 p.m. Tuxis choir rehearsal.
8 p.m.
Chancel choir rehearsal.
Rev.

WASHBURN
CONGREGATIONAL
CHURCH
ee
Half Day
Rev.
Wakeland,
Pastor
Route 22

9:30

METHODIST
CHURCH
Maplewood School
Clay and Alden Cts.
Rev. Richard F. Mellor, Interim Pastor
Parsonage—1652 Pear Tree Rd.
Membership—WI
5-5203
SUNDAY,
April 2
9:30 a.m.
Church school,
children
two
and three years, kindergarten
and classes
for all grades through high school. Adult
Bible class.
10:30 a.m. Fellowshin coffee
11 a.m. Morning
Worshin
service.
Reception of new members. Sitters for children will be provided.
FIRST

Y
730 p.m. Sabbath eve services.
lebrew
School,
Wednesday
afternoon;
or information call Windsor 5-5466.

|

Rev,

children

and

for
young
session
for

Robert

Humrickhouse,

church chairman, at dedication service March 19. The Rev.
Vernon E. Olson is pastor of the church, which was organized

Pastor
5-0708

KINGDOM
EVANGELICAL
Woodland Park Schooi
Stephen G. Bodony, Pastor
Preaching
the Gospel of the Kingdom
SUNDAY
10 a.m. Sunday School.
7 p.m. Evening Service.
GRACE

For
4-3060

in May 1958.
Charter membership included 24 people.
Ground was broken for the new church just a year ago on
ground purchased, with the present parsonage, in 1959.

Again

ZION
LUTHERAN
CHURCH
10 Deerfield
Road.
Deerfield
Rev. Paul V. Berggren. Pastor
Genrrge Jacohson, Intern
Telephone: Windsor 5-2009
THURSDAY, April 13
1 p.m.
Spring Luncheon
sponsored
by
ALCW.
Guest will be Sadie Stern Merel,
who will interpret the play, “A Majority
of One.’’
SATURDAY,
April 15
9:30 a.m.
Confirmation classes.
SUNDAY, April 16
Second Sunday after Easter
8 a.m.
Ceebration of Holy Communion.
9 a.m.
Family
Worship
service
with
church school for children three vears old
through
7th grade; eighth graders to attend worship service.
Cry room
facilities
available during this service.
10:45 a.m.
Family Worship service with
church school for children three years old
through
7th grade;
eighth
graders attend
worship service.
Bus transportation is provided for this service only.
Please contact
the church office for schedule.
5:30 p.m.
Family Night supper and _ program sponsored by the Luther League.
MONDAY, April 17
7:30
p.m.
Bible
study
course
of the
School for Christian Living.
9 p.m.
Church Bowling league.
TUESDAY,
April 18
7:30 p.m.
Boy Scout Troop 150.
8 p.m.
Altar Guild at the home of Mrs.
Arthur Juhl, 1302 Deerfield Rd., Deerfield.
WEMNESDAY. April 19
4:30 p.m.
HP Youth Instruction classes.
8 p.m.
Adult Choir rehearsal.
THURSDAY,
April 20
8 p.m.
Meeting of Board of Deacons.

rehearsal.

Erling Kasperson, contractor, presents the key to the new
North Suburban Evangelical Free Church to Harold Hedstrom,

COMMUNITY
BAPTIST CHURCH
1250 Waukegan Road

FRIDAY, April 14
8 p.m.
Berean Class meeting to be held
at the parsonage, 1250 Waukegan Rd.
Mr.
E. Neyer, manager of Scrivture Press Bock
Store in Wheaton. will bring a program on
Christian books
Co-hostesses for the meeting are Mrs. William Lindholm
and Mrs.
R. Humrickhouse.
SATURDAY,
Aopril 15
8 p.m. Four Grand Piano concert is presented
bv the
Awana
Youth
association,
3859 North Central
Chicago.
Tickets are
available at the church.
SUNDAY, April 16
&amp;
9:30 a.m.
Sunday School classes, Bible
studv for all aves.
10:45 a.m.
Worshiv service.
7 p.m.
Evening Gosvrel service.
8:15 p.m.
Deacons meeting.
MONDAY, April 17
3 p.m.
Opening
sessiom of the II-Mo
Association
of
Regular
Baptist’
churches
spring
conference.
Pastor
Humrickhouse
and other delegates will he attending these
sessions. The three dav Conference will be
occunied with inspirational Bible messages,
Associational reports, and Association business.
3:30 p.m.
Chums
Awana
Youth
club,
girls 8-10.
TUESDAY, April 18
3:45 p.m.
Guards, Awana
Youth
club,
girls 11-13,
6:30 p.m.
Pals and Pioneers, boys 8-13.
WEDNESDAY.
April 19
7:30
p.m.
Prayer
meeting
and
Bible
study.
8:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.

TRINITY

p.m.

16

Tetephone:
Windsor
We Preach Christ
Crucified. Risen and Coming

CONGREGATIONAL
CHURCH
In South Park School
1331 Hackberry Road
Rev. John S. Usry, Minister
Porsonage Telephone WI 5-0176
THURSDAY
7:45 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
SUNDAY
10:30 a.m. Worship
Service.
10:30 a.m. Church School.
7 o.m. Pilgrim Fellowship.
TUESDAY
8 p.m. Constitution Committee.

7:30

April

8:30, 9:30 and
10:55 a.m.
Services
of
Divine Worship.
Rev. R. C. Grigereit will
give the sermon.
9:30 a.m.
Church
School
for
nursery
(2-yr. old) through
6th grade,
and adult
classes.
10:55
a.m.
Church
School for nursery
(2-yr. old) through high school First year
Confirmation class.
:
6:30 p.m. Youth Fellowship—program of
recreation.
MONDAY, April 17
3:30 p.m. Girl Scout troop. 172.
7 p.m.
Second Year Confirmation class.
8 p.m.
Fireside Club at Mr. and Mrs.
Ted
Johnson’s.
1145
Elmwood.
ESDAY, April 18
“
a.m. -3 a
Guild Etection Day Bake
Sale in old town hall, 602 Deerfield Rd.
WEDNESDAY.
April 19
(
6:30 a.m.
Men’s
Bible Study meeting.
Coffee and rolls are served—dismissal 7:10
a m.
9:30
a.m.
Women’s
Bible
study—“In
Him Was Life.”
Coffee and rolls will be
served.
Dismissal
time
about
10:45
a.m.
7 p.m.
Chorister (Grades 4, 5, 6 and 7)
rehearsal.
d
7:45
pm.
Chancel
Choir
rehearsal
(adults).

Office

CHRIST

ei

SUNDAY,

DEERFIELD

Service.

School.

THE
HIGHLAND
PARK
PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
ID 2-1695
Dr. William Atkinson Young
Rev. J. A. Miller
Ministers
UNDAY

ST.

FIRST

THE BETHLEHEM CHURCH
(Evangelical United Brethren)
Rev. Eugene M. Wykle, Minister
Rev. R. C. Grigereit, Asst. Minister
801 Rosemary
Terrace
Church—WI 5-0078
Parsonage—WI1
5-2221
THURSDAY,
April 13
7 p.m. Youth Choir rehearsal. Boy Scout
troop 51.
7:30 p.m.
board of trustees.

LUTHERAN
CHURCH
(Missouri
Synod)
Walters Ave. at Fourth St.
Northbrook
further information call CRestwood
or WIndsor 5-1323.

Sisterhood
For

Bazaar

Prepares

At Highwood

Magic And Comedy

In April

Greet Members At
League’s Meeting

Center

The Sisterhood of B’nai Torah
Reformed
Temple
of
Highland
Park is getting ready its Annua!
“Bazaar of Bargains’
which will

An

Community Center, 428 Green Bay
Rd.,
Saturday,
Aprik
22, 6 p.m,

11

p.m.

and

Sunday,

April

23,

10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Funds raised are used to suppert
free
religious
services
for
military men, youth group activities and
the Temple’s
Religious
School.
Deerfield
residents
who
are
helping
to
make
the
Bazaar
a
success
are:
Mrs.
Melvin
Koral,
131 Forest Way Dr., Mrs. Stephan

amazing
of

and

comedy

of the

North

and

unexpected
powers

audience,

of

and

discovery

members

the

of

prediction

of an event which has just occured
found in a letter given to a member of the group at the beginning

of

the

evening.

Responsible
for
these
strange
happenings will be Edward Seder,
who
has
appeared
professionally
throughout his native New York

Lip-

and New

Jersey area. Now

a jour-

nalism
student
at
Northwestern
University, Seder performs around
Chicago and the North Shore. Sup-

Sponsor Luncheon
The Afternoon circle of Trinity
United Church of Christ will sponsor a post
Easter
Luncheon
on
April 11, 12:30 p.m.
The price of this ‘Luncheon Is

plementing magie with other aspects of show business, he has
worked with five summer stock
companies, and three broadcasting
stations.
Arrangements for the fun program were made by Mrs. Arnold
Cohn,
1425
Central,
and
Mrs.
Bernard
Peskin
of Northbrook.

Served” will be $1. Tickets may be
purchased from the circle members
or by calling Mrs. Paul Shipley,
CE 4-3272.
The circle plans to have an exchange student speak on his impression of America.
GREGORY’S
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
Wilmot and Deerfield Roads
The Rev. J. D. Parker, Rector
The Rev. E. G. Wappler, Curate
The Rev. G. W. Robinson, Assistant
Rectory Telephone—WiIndsor 5-1881
Church
Telephone—Windsor
5-1678
DAILY
9 am. and 5 p.m.
Morning and Evening
Prayer.
THURSDAY, April 13
7:30 p.m. Boy Scouts.
SATURDAY,
April 15
11 a.m. Eighth Grade Confirmation class.
SUNDAY, April 16
8 a.m.
Holy Communion.
9:30
a.m.
Holy
Communion,
Church
school and Nursery care.
11:15
a.m,
Morning
Prayer,
Church
school and nursery care.
12:30 p.m.
Adult Confirmation and Inquirers class.
p.m.
Youth
Congregation—leave
church for trip to Chicago.
MONDAY,
April 18
Afternoon—Girl Scouts.
TUESDAY,
April 18
9:30 am.
St. Anne’s Guild—baby sitter.
WEDNESDAY,
April 18
8:15 p.m. Choir rehearsal.

of magic

members

magical

the

Demain, 1319 Charing Cross Rd.,
Mrs.
Bernard
Eisenstein,
1232
Deerfield
Rd.,
Mrs.
Henry
schultz, 1429 Deerfield Rd.

greet

Suburban
League
of the Jewish
Children’s Bureau when they meet
Wednesday, April 19, at 8:30 p.m.,
in the Northbrook Youth Center.
Among
the
surprising
things
happening
that
evening
will
be
the sudden appearance and disappearance of a live white dove, the

be held this year at the Highwood
to

evening

will

Deerfield Darlings
Under Leadership Of
Mrs. Ray Ferguson

ST.

The Deerfield Darlings, a new
4-H club has been
organized
in
Deerfield, under the leadership of
Mrs. Ray Ferguson and Miss Penny
Jorat.
The eight members of the group
are: Katherine Bueger, president;

Julie

Walker,

vice

president;

Jo-

anne
Sobato,
secretary-treasurer;
Sandra
Wolske,
publicity;
Elizabeth
Solie,
recreation
chairman;

Jane

Clarke,

Susan

Ducey

and

Joanne Ferguson.
The
girls are learning
to use
the
sewing
machine
currently.

Their

immediate

making

of

project

is

scarfs.

Lj

“The Service Bank Of Highland Park”

BANKs* HIGHLAND

1771

Second St.

BANK —POST

Member

Page H 44—D 60

Federal

OFFICE

Deposit

BLDG.

Insurance

PARK
IDlewood 2-7800

Corporation
Thursday, April 13, 1961

the

�ONE FEEDING
LASTS. MONTHS
ed

Gives your grass
a complete diet
with every nutrie
ent grass needs

a

Nae
AS

ADVERTISED

tHE

MAGAZINE

OF

IN

PLEASANT

S7
PLACES

ee

Now, just one full-season feeding
lication of New

VitoGRO

asts all summer—and
or needs watering

for

8 ioGinog
apGrass

it never burns

in!

Peon RO’s timed release of nutrients
sudden surges of excess

growth,

i eeds evenly for 6 months.
ot just
the top, thin layer. either. VitoGRO

Donald

Mrs.

Lindsey,

880

Hiawatha

Ln.,

left,

joined

with

Miss

Wanda

Paul,

Evanston,

western.

WWeStO

Jack D. Ewan, account executive
of Fuller,
Smith
and
Ross
Inc.,
has been named
public relations
consultant to the 1961 Crusade of
Mercy
for the Community
Fund
and the Red Cross.

Ewan,

1523

Woodbine

Ct.,

will

serve with seven other executives
on the Crusade’s public relations
committee.
It meets
every
week

over

a

six-month

period

to

plan

the general strategy of the campaign.
Ewan has been in public relaions
since
he
graduated
from
Northwestern
university
Medill
school of journalism in 1948.
He
is also
an advisor
to the
Booth
Memorial
hospital
of the

Salvation
League

Army
of

and

Women

the

Chicago

Voters.

Contest

Medal winner, John
W. Dwyer
of Deerfield, led a group of 199
successful CPA candidates who received professional certificates at
the semi-annual awards dinner of
the
Illinois
Society
of Certified
Public Accountants recently.
Dwyer, 35, assistant controller of
Oliver
Corporation,
Chicago,
received the society’s gold medal for

placing

first in the

state

CPA

Deerfield Women
Win Show Prizes

“Tllinois
State
Parks
and
Memorials,” the Department of Conservation’s motion picture in sound
and color will be shown as illustration for the talk by Miss Vivian
Rankin, for North Shore chapter,
Daughters of the American Revo-

At
the
recent
World
Garden
show held at McCormick Place in '
Chicago,
Mrs.
Reinhard
E. Lutz.
and Mrs. Leon Sherman won second
place
in
the
Class
called
“Faith” for the Garden
Club of
Deerfield.

lution,

Mrs.
Robert
O.
Clark
placed
second in the Class called ‘‘Crafts.”’
Also winning a second place were
Mrs.
Robert
O, Clark
and
Mrs.
Thomas Z. Hayward in the Garden
Club
of
America
Class.
called
“Music.”

Thursday

13, in the
Sked,
800
Forest.

afternoon,

April

home of. Mrs. Wilson
Longwood
Dr.,
Lake

Miss Rankin is a representative
of the Conservation Department’s
Education division.
Essay

Winners

Guests

Mary L. Bowie, Fort Sheridan, who
mention,

will

ex-

Y ana

amination last November.
A graduate of the University of
Connecticut in 1948, he is currently working on his master’s degree
at Northwestern university’s school
of business administration.
Dwyer
was
also
named
silver
medal winner, emblematic of sec-

ond

Sells award

sored

by

the

of Certified

competition

American

Public

Accountants.

brought out
beautifully

use of
service

:
Thursday,

aS
April

MAGICI"
13, 1961

Mower Sharpening

&amp; Repair

FERRARO
Garden Spot
826

Skokie

Blvd.

Northbrook, Ill.
FREE DELIVERY

(South

of Dundee

Rd.)

CR 2-1840

to

$4

your

for $3

Savings

Bond.

if held to ma.

DRIVE CAREFULLY — THE LIFE YOU SAVE
MAY BE YOUR OWN

COSMOPOLITAN®

Mail and phone orders filled

MAGIC
SCISSORS
BEAUTY
1394

Lawn

expert

tinting

ID 2-3814

per bag

just glides over the figure
for that stem-slim look
(with no distractions)
which junior sizes
cultivate for compliments.
In linen-look spun
rayon. Black, string
beige, grass green,
Riviera blue or
Paris pink.
Sizes 5 to 15. 14.95

spon-

Institute

HAIR
TONES
by the

***'"$4.75

summer sheathing

N IATURAL

our

on

get

YOUNG

place nationally, in the Elijah

Watt

bag covers up

BEST
Hold

You'll

Mary
Ann
Fabbri,
Highwood,
who won first place in the Illinois
DAR historical essay contest, and
won state honorable
read their essays,

treatment for grass.

to 5,800 sq. ft. Money-back
=
on every bag.

le @ trademart of dwitt &amp; Company

By

State Parks, Essays
Topics for the DAR

Hostesses for the afternoon will
be
Mrs.
Frank
Sorg,
chairman;
Mrs. Robert Herbst, Mrs. William
Jacob,
Highland
Park;
and Mrs.
Harold O. Sudbrink, Deerfield.

Deerfield Man
Awarded Medal
In CPA

Arrangements

actually builds deeper root systema
that help
grass stay greener with
fewer waterings.
VitoGRO is a complete, nutritional

VitoGRO FOR CRASS

to present an unusual form of recital at Northwestern university April 9. The two women
played four hands on one piano. Both women are associate professors of music at North-

‘Jack D. Ewan
Is Consultant
For Fund Drive

gumer=

SALON

Deerfield

Road

Highland Park

AMPLE ERES

PARKING

|
Mn

OLD

ORCHARD

at Skokie

© ORchard 6-3060
Page H 45—D

61

�NEW!

saueug ls 5

makes Painting
"35 easy!

INSTANT
PAINT

Winter’s still with us, it’s true,
but as the saying goes ...
can
spring be far behind?
It
won’t
be
long
before
the
skates, sleds and snow shovels go
into storage and the garden equipment will be brought out. This be-

flat finish for walls and ceilings
For nearest Jewel dealer, see
Phone Book Yellow Pages,
or phone SEeley 3-2430.

ing

ing

Room-Size
Remnants

Sunday,

LEWIS
Edens,

16th

CARPETS

near Tower—VE

case,

there’s

no

time

like

the

spring,

when

the

grass

is

tender and growing rapidly. You’lJ
want to clean and oil the mower,
too.
Give the same attention to lawn
clippers, rakes, hoes and other outdoor tools.

and More
April

the

now to make sure your lawn and
garden tools are ready for use.
First, check the lawn mower. If
the blades need sharpening, you’ll
beat the rush by having it done
ahead of time. It’s especially important to have a good “cut” dur-

ONE DAY
CARPET SALE
OFF

tt --

Check Outdoor Tools and Grills

JEWEL

520%

us

And
how
about
the
barbecue
grill? You’ll be ready for that first
cookout day if you’ll take a few

5-2400

minutes
now to give the grill a
thorough cleaning. Kleenex towels
are especially handy for drying the
grids, and you can toss them away
as they become soiled—no laundering needed.
While you’re busy with springtime preparations, you may as well
make
sure the skates, sleds and
snow
shovels
are _ thoroughiy
cleaned and dried before they’re
packed away for the season. Have
the skate blades sharpened, if they
need it, and scour sled runners to

remove

any

traces

of

rust.

way, you'll be all set for
snowfall of next winter.

the

This
first

| Landscaping Adds
Value to Property
When
home

it

the

landscaping

grounds

can

value

substantially
of the

of

is properly

the

planned,

increase

property.

How do you plant
be more liveable

windows

your property
and valuable?

The purpose of landscaping is to
blend the home into the landscape,
making it more pleasing to look
at, and to afford extension of the
living area from indoors to outdoors.

A

garden

planted

living

for

room

privacy

may

and

be

beauty,

affording a delightful area in which
More than one billion square feet
of hardboard was channeled into
new home construction and home
improvement during 1960, according to the American Hardboard Association.

In

landscaping,

we

think

facing

the

street,

which

planted

house

con-

to

the

Trees

may

corners

form

part

of

of

be
the

the

land-

scape “frame.”
We need to connect these with a flowing line of
plants,
or “foundation”
planting.
Low-growing plants are placed

along the front of the house
foundation.

in flowing

TOOLS

line.

25%

SAVE
ON

off

DURING

On

These

lines than
each

side

a higher-growing
to accentuate

the

straight
entrance

is planted

doorway.

living”

cleaned

These

area

RIGHT

“ps

NOW

Sl) NY Nt Wr

aX N Ws

Sins
Ne
oe
us

do away

with

dangerous
ladder-climbing
bucket-hauling.
By
making

and
win-

washing

1590 Deerfield Road,

Phone

COMPANY,

[Dlewood

Highland

2-0140

Park,

Ill.

the

kitchen

Page

H 46—D

62

Thursday

&amp; Friday

also

en-

lives. Usually it
the house, close

door,

for

conven-

In

the

garden

living

room

home owner can indulge his
with roses, camellias or any
plants that will grow well
soil and climate. Since this

designed
decorated

the

wants
otherin his
area is

for living, it can
be
with any of the lovely

plants found at nurseries. Nurserymen
can
advise
what
will best

thrive, what plants te use to screen
off the area, and give other valuable

“tips”

that will save

time

and

money.
The

third

Is.

area

is the

fruits
other

THE BEST

“working”

of your choice,
plants may be

Vito IGROAs"a

ts asomay kot

Nae

atse

Fi ay

Swult

and

Until 9 P.M.

Fri., until

earn

Brava
im
Pre
( cetintines

&amp;5Coomen

TO

afi

&lt;c]| he

tN: dl

4s wi

an
J PREVENTER

ti

|

a

“KILLS ‘SEEDLINGS

AS ‘THEY

SPROUT

| COVERS 3,000 SQ. FT. |

ANT
Panne
printed

MOST
EFFECTIVE

on every bag

CONTAINS

a

GIVES 90% to 100%

APPLICATION
PREVENTS
CRABGRASS

CONTROL

ALL SUMMER

.

DACTHAL W-50

COSTS LESS

Henry C. Wienecke, Inc.

Hours—Monday thru Saturday,
8-5:30
Thurs.

TIME

T fo

Wdaanoae ji ltinaos
hee

VitoitoGR

INC.

Sunday, 9-1

Open

they

ience.
Planted shrubs and at. least one
shade
tree
can
be
arranged
to
provide ‘‘privacy’ and coolness in
the hot summer months.

SAFE FOR ESTABLISHED GRASS

—

easier,

where the family
is at the rear of

ja

eae ei.

CRAFTWOOD

of Route 41

inside.

KILL
ya amg:

MONEY-BACK

Just west

old

APRIL.

MITRE BOXES
HAMMERS, BRACES,
BITS, BLADES
SAWS
DRILLS and BITS
SOLDER, GUNS
HAMMERS
FILES
VISES
TORCHES

LUMBER

from

innovations

area, where
berries and
is) grown.

Area

“garden

All Nationally Advertised Brands!

STANLEY
DISSTON
IRWIN
WEN
TRUE TEMPER
NICHOLSON
CRESCENT
COLUMBIAN
BERNZ
SQUARES

in a

of the

plant

Living

The

at its

are better placed

an

so that both sides of the glass can
be

to

tinuously on view to neighbors and
passersby.
Here we usually like to see a

patch of open lawn.

remodeling

courage
cleaning
windows
more
often, resulting in a better, neaterlooking house inside and out.

of

is

for

future winyou
choose

house or building a new one.
Windows of ponderosa pine are
available today in many styles and
types that make washing windows
less of a chore and much safer.
Some models have sash that can
be
lifted
out
of the
frame
for
easy
washing
inside
the
house.
Others—-such
as many
casement,
awning
and
hopper
styles—open

dow

to relax, entertain and play outdoors. Evergreen trees and shrubs,
roses and fruits and other plants
are
arranged
for more
gracious
living for family and friends.
planting
a picture
to frame
the
house. There are three main areas
of any property.
First,
comes
the
front
area,

ALE

Give a thought to
dow
washing
when

the

Trees
and
shrubs
increase
in
value as they grow, in contrast to
many things
purchased which
deteriorate in value as time passes.
to

Wiidows Today '
Easier To Wash

9

HARDWARE

— HOUSEWARE

680 VERNON
GLENCOE

—

— TOYS

AVENUE

VErnon

5-3060

AS

SEEN

IN

“Suburbia
Today”
THE MAGAZINE

Thursday,

OF PLEASANT

April

13,

PLACES

1961

�the
announced
Association,
the
meeting would be held Thursday
evening, April 13, at 8:15 p.m. at
Wayne Thomas School auditorium,

3
®
Candidates To Meet
ee
4
Civic
P ubl ic At

oe

DAY
S ALE

remain-

Room-Size

In keeping with its purpose of|ing before the election, the Assoresponsibility to the citizens of its | ciation feels. that this meeting will
area, the Old Elm Civic Associa- | give interested citizens an oppor-

Sa cannnie

Group

=

Avenues.

North

and

Summit

e

i

ONE
Cc ARPET

Ss

only

With

Meeting

to

tion will present at its first general | tunity

meeting

public,

Board

of

the

open

the

year,

City

Council

candidates

and

running

April 18 election.
O. Dean Kanouse,

Park

for informal

we

Political

If we were old enough

LEWIS

con-

Edens,

More

and

OFF
Sunday,

will be

versation with the candidates at a
of | coffee hour following the meeting.
(Paid

April

16th

CARPETS

near Tower—VE

5-2400

a
eRe
FREE

Advertisement)

we would vote for
for park

S. KARGER

WILLIAM

There

There

She eaerdates,

sheet,

50%

and

question,

to,

listen

in the |@% opportunity

president

days

few

didates.

th

the

to

a

North Shore Group Photo by Percy Prior

Preparing for the panel which will be presented as part
of the Highland Park High School PTA meeting at the high
school this evening (Thursday), are from left, Newman “Red”

Fell, Bob Sandy, Mrs. Donald Sims and Bill Price.

Gail Platt

and Jim Gray, also members of the panel, were away when

the NEWS’
chairman

picture was taken.
of

the

will

Raymond

present

the

Perlman,

panel

The

will act as moderator.

Sandy

Bob

PTA

program

members,

group

will

and

discuss

three issues of most concern to high school students and their
parents—drinking, driving and dating.

Wood
Air

Resists Heat
conditioning

Kite Flies Higher

engineers

have

Last week’s story of a kite that
took a mile of string was topped
Friday
when
four boys
reported
using ten 25-cent rolls of 750-foot
string—closer to a mile and a half.

less of a “heat gain’ problem when
a house has wood windows. Frames
and sash of windows of ponderosa
pine
are natural
insulators.
The
wood resists the flow of heat from

outside instead of conducting it into the
frames

house,
do.

as

sash

Start

and

at School

Ralph Koransky, Scotty Ring and
Alan
Lazarus,
all
15,
and
Jim
Reinach, 14, unreeled it all after

a kite flown from Lincoln School.
When they phoned at 4 p.m. it was

Away

Folds

Range

metal

Ever hear of folding up a kitchen | still up.
range? That’s just what you can do
with some of the new electric cooking elements, designed to give ex-| alive who can’t use more counter
her
big
how
matter
no
tra counter space when they’re not|space,
in use. There’s hardly a housewife | kitchen.

Political

Advertisement)

SS

a

SSS

aS

Ro

(Paid

ote

ote

=

ote

oc.

62

SALE

POST-EASTER

2°

“":

important reductions

s,°
a's

i:

e

“:

“e
ee

“d

e

4

&lt;:

ss

oe

oe
ee

“te

SPORT SHOP.

LAKE FOREST

=

CHILDRENS SHOP

=

ne

“

Ine.

.

ae

-

se
's

Ro

and

ate
as

ae

Y

ge!

SUITS

$35

up

ns ye

aeote
*

SKIRTS $6.95 up
WOOL

SPRING SUITS $14.95 up

s

sizes 7—subteen 14

DRESSES

COTTON

$20

DRESSES

a:
ote

up

ad
*

$10 up

ate

os

oe

os

WOOL FLANNEL

se

&amp; TWEED SPRING COATS $14.95 up

ote
ote

sizes 3—subteen 14

ot

os

se

EVENING DRESSES $25 up

“os

BLOUSES

ote

$3.95

ate

up

ots

BELTS—JEWELRY $1.00 wp

DRESSES $3.95 up

e

a

sizes 3—subteen 14

ote
fe

“"

oe
ote

WOOL &amp; COTTON SLACKS $2.95 up

se

one

sizes 3—-subteen 14

all sales final, all sales cash

ate

&lt;

LJ

s

x

eve

ons

be

oung i] | girls sho Pp

=

§:

es

ce
2

Thursday,

eta

April

aa

ta Meme

13, 1961

anette

te

ete

ee

ete

enters

ete

sete

ate

ee

ne

ene

a ee

ee

ss

ne

ee

ee

ee

8

58

6 685

8/66

8 /5.6)5)6.0.8" eo" ctetetstctete

se" em at ee” sofa

Page H 47—D

63

�Crash on Half Day
Kathryn

Loomis

Phone

of 1360 Old Mill

Rd., Lake Forest, collided from the
rear with the car of Jennie Werhane, 1515 Bowling Green, Lake
Forest, Wednesday
morning last
week on Half
Valley Rd.
The

for
Park

Day

Werhane

the

car

traffic

police

Rd.
was

light,

report.

Mrs.

at

Skokie

Clings

Crash at Driveway

The outdoor public pay telephone at Half Day and Skokie Valley

Rds.

is

still

there,

despite

Harriet

ef-

forts Tuesday or Wednesday last
week to pry it loose, Highland Park
police

Loomis

told them the brakes failed on her
1949 Chevrolet, and no ticket was

slippery

ruptured
blame.

master

3409

Mary

Sum-

of

collision
118

S.

with

collision

Sandra

Central,

Rds.
land

High-

or

pavement

cylinder

was

a

to

Hurt

Kay

was taken
pital with

wood.

issued; although it was not decided
whether

rear-end

Ohlwein

stepped

Highland

of

mit Ave. got a ticket for failure to
have her car under control after
a

report.

Paroubek

Passenger

of

Ft.

B’nai Torah
Wayne,

at

Skokie

and

at 3:15 a.m. April
Park police report.

Olden

Ind.,

to Highland Park Hosa back injury after a

Ray

The crash occurred Wednesday
morning last week, as Mrs. Ohl-

traffic

wein was turning into a driveway
at 2356 Skokie Valley Rd., Highland Park police report.

his car from
Sathe gut a

light

was

when

Half
7,

stopped

for

Chester

of 2948 Arlington Ave. skidded

driving.

Day
Highthe

Sathe
into

the rear, police say.
ticket for negligent

Funds to Aid Youth
Funds from B’nai Torah Reform
temple’s Spring bazaar April 22-23
will

be

used

services

youth

group

temple’s

We

need Jim

activities

and

the

Robert Silverman, president
sponsoring Sisterhood, said.

of the

Initial
and

plans

for

Sunday

the

bazaar

Saturday

were

made

Tuesday evening when the commitThe

annual

convictions.

Borowitz

on our

will

be

bazaar

Mrs,

of

“most

are

being

said,

merchandise

with

already

received,
Among
bcoths to be featured
will be housewares, men’s, women’s and children’s wear, millinery,
gifts, toys,
drugs,
jewelry,
rum-

mage,
bakery,
“kiddyland.”

snack

bar

HIGHLAND

PARK STORE

City

Council because he has shown initiative,
integrity, intelligence, vigor, energy
and the desire to do an effective job.

589

Central

*

1D 2.8550

9.

WINNETKA STORE
847 Elm + HI 6-5141

new

idea!
PLATED

GOLD

22-KT.

Our Family TreeSP

Plaque
Holds 8 Family Snapshots
We

Jim

Borowitz

is

a

graduate

of

the

University

Sorbonne and the Paris Conservatory of Music.
Bradley Mfg. Co.

of

Chicago

and

has

He is a director and general

studied

at

manager

of the

FOR
ELECTION

TUESDAY,

APRIL

H

48—D

Ne

only 4%

inches

high

Insert snapshots of those
you love in the 8 Floren«
tine 22-Kt. gold plated
frames and create a pricee
less family treasure that
generations will cherish,
Plaque
is easel backed,
gift wrapped.

COUNCILMAN

18
(Paid

Page

CITY

AAAS

the

JIM BOROWITZ
Political

in

Center.

and

all

Silverman

BerAve.

held

Community

for the biggest

outstanding

of thought and the

sale

Highwood

made,

to elect men with

re-

men,
Mrs.

Plans

of their

free

military

Religious

exciting”

courage

support

for

school,

the

independence

to

ligious

tee met in the home of Mrs.
tram Schwartz, 885 Virginia

(Paid Political Advertisement)

It is essential

Bazaar

Advertisement)

64
Thursday,

April

13,

1961

and

�a

bar

oat Sal

sss

ENC

aaa
ei Rare
a aacae etine ae
eS

Xs

a

Hi Fi Gone
A man
graph
able

who

repairmen

took

a $125

port-

stereo

hi-fi

from

Mr.

Dean’s
M.

Pee
+.

‘

Park

Burnham,

and Mrs. W.

Crash

List
son

M. Burnham,

of

Ave.

Hahn,

week.

Berkeley

Rd.,

were

a light
blue
and
white
1958
Chevrolet.
Highland
Park
police
phoned all the other Edelmans in

the
had

book, but found no
requested service.

one

(Paid

Oneea

RE
CA, ae

of 1029

ticketed

the

collision

Park

1633

Claypool

was

yield

105

Hiawatha
Trail, and
Frederic
L.
Hahn, son of Mr. and Mrs. Max

EO
:
i

for

Green

Ay ay Bieat a)

stays
Seen

Ave.

Thursday
Stop

proaching

from

land

police

Park

to

a

Rd.

and

evening

last

e ee.

Room-Size
Remnants

50%

Sign

the

i

ONE DAY
CARPET SALE

Central
after

Bay

Claypool
pulled
out
stop sign while Richard
of
865
Pleasant
Ave.

Political

N aedOR

failure

right-of-way

at

Leaves

who

ORC e

at Park

Haven

students,
Jr.,

with grey hair and glasses, driving

Sunday,

from
the
Innocenzi
was
ap-

north,

OFF and More

LEWIS

April

16th

CARPETS

(,

5-2400

Edens, near Tower—VE

High-

report.

Advertisement)

LET IT PAY FOR ITSELF
S-T-R-E-T-C-H YOUR TAX DOLLAR

¥

Pat Fawcett (Mrs. Gene) of
3064 Greenwood, Highland
the

eee

included on the Dean’s List of Cornell University’s College
of Arts
and Sciences for the fall semester,
1960. Both boys are juniors.

pa

of

ae

Highland

Willets

Elizabeth Edelman, 12, let him in
and led him to the den.
He is
described as 45 to 55 years old,

member

MS

Two

a phono-

Richard S. Edelman’s, 525 Pleasant
Ave., Thursday afternoon last week.

Park,

i

‘Cornell

said he was

Traveller

j

North

Shore Harmonizers Women’s 70-

voice Barbership Harmony Cho-

HK

rus, and their director and arranger, Earl Baumgarten, invite

you to their annual

Spring Con-

cert this month.
Mrs.

Fawcett,

a member

of the

HY ¥

North
Shore
Harmonizer’s
fourpart
harmony
chorus,
affiliated
with
the
Wilmette
Recreation
Board
will be singing with this
popular group in their ninth annual Spring Concert Friday evening, April 21, in the Wilmette Jr.

High School. The concert begins
at 8:15 p.m., but doors will be open

ushers”
Valley
will en-

Women Bowlers Hold
Awards Luncheon

HH

at 7:30 when 12 “singing
from
the
men’s
Skokie
Chapter of the SPEBSQSA
tertain until curtain time.

Members of the Sunset Valley
Women’s Bowling League held an
awards luncheon Monday (April 10)
in the Gold Room of the Villa
Moderne,

celebrating

the

windup

XH

of their first season of league play.
The group is composed of mem-

Trophies
Wien,

Mrs.

went

(233)

to

1222

Richard

Mrs.

Robert

Crofton

Ruhman,

HY KH

bers of the Sunset Valley Women’s
Golf League, who formed the bowling group last fall after play on the
links ended. The first bowling season produced enough enthusiasm to
assure
the
league’s
becoming
a
permanent winter group.
Ave.;

(228)

608

Hillside, and Mrs. Norman
Levy,
(225) 1322 St. Johns Ave., for first,
second and third individual high

games

with

NH ¥

den Ave.,440 603,
Rd., HighGreenandBay Mrs.
Fiocchi,

place

first

trophies.
Glueck,

also

team,

Mrs.

are

They

165

“Mulligans,”

the

of

Mrs.

Clavey

Rd.,

ans we
Miller,

Harold

1791

¥

Fred Stoddard, 657 Rice St.; Mrs.

¥

“Most improved bowler” trophy
went to Mrs, Wesley M. Neff, 2144
Linden Ave.

revenue

a

Unification

and

Recreation

of effort and

wood,

Burtis

Ave.,

High-

x

109

secretary.

Honors

List

x

On

Vole,

x

Included in the academic honors
list for the Winter term at Shattuck School,
Faribault,
Minn., as
announced
by Gerald L. Kieffer,
director
of
studies,
is
Douglas
Cushman,
son of Mr.
and
Mrs.
Robert S. Cushman,
739 Kimball

Road, Highland Park.
Thursday,

April

13, 1961

Park

District.

Call

Him

|
|
i
|

committee
Beach

of Park

Owners

Board,

to work

out

City
solu-

Boards

ee

Establishment of multiple purpose parks of five to ten
An

7;

er

“walking”

.

aot

distance of all neighborhoods, for

to elim-

Work

with

Lake Forest Col-

educaStation

ABILITY

3

ie

.

BY

all age groups.

Rt

County

Forest

Preserve

Commission

to

=

EDUCATION

Innovated for first time in Chicago Professional sports, a family plan
whereby parents brought their youngsters to Sunday football games without
charge.

School,
Conception
Immaculate
Highland Park High School, Lake Forest College, B.A., (Minor in physical

Assistant
Advertising
Manager,
Telephone Engineer Publishing Corp.

Ray, his wife Ann, and their three
children live at 375 Dell Lane.

education with courses
and administration.

in

e

2

locate a county forest preserve in Highland Park.

EXPERIENCE

VOTE
TUESDAY,
APRIL 18

Owners,

tion to current lake front problems.

to utilize to fullest extent,

Moderator and writer of
tional sports TV show, for
WTTW, 1958-1959.

John

Mrs.

permanent

Boat

acres within

of Park

Publicity Director,

up

Council,

producer.

Oakland

and

Set

land, while vacant
to be revenue pro-

par three golf course as

of nine-hole,

Construction

lege. Public Relations Director—Chicago Cardinals Football Club. 195460.

treasurer,

The

Vote for RAYMOND J.GERACI
TRAINED AND QUALIFIED
TO SERVE AS
PARK COMMISSIONER OF HIGHLAND PARK

First year officers were Mrs.
Robert Jordan, 929 Marion Ave.,
president; Mrs. Harry Reisman, 451
Ave.,

garding

At ID 2-5691.

all Park District Property.

Samuel

Ray Would Welcome A Call If You
Have Questions or Suggestions Re-

Raymond J. Geraci, Speaking Before League
of Women Voters Meeting, March 30, 1961.

inate duplication

received
Rd.;

Bay

Green

After a careful study I would recommend the construction of a
nine-hole, par three golf course to alleviate Sunset Valley Golf Course;
to provide substantial revenue to help maintain other Park District nonrevenue producing property and to provide an additional recreational
facility for youngsters and adults... 99

ducing to help maintain other parks.

Frank

Members

to help reduce taxes.

Acquisition of 100 acres of
property is still available—portion

handicap.

Other trophies were awarded to
the
first
three
individual
high
series winners: Mrs. Ruhman, 618;
Mrs. Robert Weinberg of 1235 Lin-

wood, 598.

“I believe it is vital to the future of Highland Park that we
xX acquire a minimum of 100 acres of land for park-playgrounds as quickly as possible while land is still available. To provide
this land for future generations of Highland Parkers is our obligation.
If elected Park Commissioner I would recommend that a portion
of any new lands acquired be designated as a revenue producing area

‘

recreation

FOR PARK COMMISSIONER

RAYMOND
(Paid

Political

J. GERACI

Advertisement)

Page H 49—D 65.
hy

�Bowling Chatter .
Hi, another banner week, and a few more
scores, for all our bowters. Our Bowler of
e Week
will have to be Bud Schaibly
Old
Fitzgerald
of the Cyjassic League
ho had a terrific 759 on games of 224-257-

29.

Nice

siness
ith 659

: aS

shooting

Bud.

From

the Glencoe

Men’s League we had John
and a 249 game followed by

and

Andy

Seiler

632.

Gieb
Arch

I think

that

ndy
Seiler is probably the hottest bowler
’N
Spare
at the
bowii ng
at the
Strike
resent time. In the Wed. Nite League Andy
d 647 and Friday nite he had a 622 plus
tears six hundreds
last week, how many

can

a

man

knock

down

before

he

era

J everyone thinks about

the

ABC

and

it is

4 our turn to go. On Tuesday the Strike ’N
‘Spare team will make its usual trek to the
C at Detroit and for the first time since
(952 I wijl not have my doubles partner
ed Day bowling with me. Ned has not

Basel

arial

lalla

lalla 4

THUNDERBIRDS
FALCONS

HOLMES
MOTOR

CO.

1909 ST. JOHNS
Highland Park, tif.

ID 2-8640
. [ LL

Ty

bowled at all this year due to a very bad
hand,
so I will have
another
very
fine
bowler
as my
partner,
Leon
Woodman.
Something
very interesting was called to
my attention and this is very simple—the
ABC has all kinds of ‘‘specs’’ pertaining to
pins, size and weights, how thick the plastic has to be, the pins must have an ABC
decal on them, but will someone explain to
me why the ABC has never come out with
specs pertaining to a Plastic bowling ball?
This ball could be made out of lead and if
it weighs so much and was balanced everything would be OK. I think its about time
the ABC grew up and got together with the
proprietors so that some of these problems
could be ironed out and everyone would
be satisfied.
As the league season nears its finish I
want to take this opportunity of thanking
all of our patrons, men, women, children
who have made it possible to operate one
of the
outstanding
establishments
in
all
the country, and its peopje like you whom
we have to thank.
Ill see you all when I
get back from the ABC.
I may not win
any titles but I’ll bet you no one will try
any harder, and to you Mr. Arthur Bogeaus, just remember that the ball you are
throwing
is only
thirteen
and
one
halt
pounds and if you bow! 640 every week, like
you did last week, keep on using it.
H.P.

ELKS

Team
1. Oak Terrace Blatz
2. Mr. Duffy’s Tavern
3. Acme
Liquor .....
4.

4
.
74 .
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.

Del-Rio

Restaurant

Braun Bros. Oil Co.
Ace Hardware
Singer Printing Co.
Moran Plumbers
Goldini’s Aces
Mutual Coal Co.
Frontier Inn
Ame’s Shel! “&gt;-:'

Mr. Duffy’s Tavei..
Oak Terrace Blatz
Ace Hardware
R. Shethen
Carani
Krenek
High
Ace Hardware
Oak Terrace Blatz
Mr. Duffy’s Tavern
Goffo
C. Snyder
Azzi &amp; Carani

&amp;

‘

pins

cools off?
It
is my pleasure to announce that the
Strike ’"N Spare will have a very unusual
tournament starting May ist. It will be a
‘Singles tournament with men bowling five
a
and
women
bowling
three games.
andicap
will
be
seventy
five
percent
Scratch will be 200. Entry fee for the men
‘six dollars and
women
five dollars. This
omrenent
will be open to bowlers who
ve an average at the Strike ’N Spare
LY. We want you to know that this is
sua, because of the demand that we have
a,
for such an event. We would also like
to advise the youngsters
of our area to
atch for a big announcement about our
+ summer program for them.
_ This is about the time of the year that

By Charlie Crovetti

Game

GREAT LAKES LEAGUE:
1. Henry C. Wienecke. Inc.
2. Schwartz- ay a Insurance
3. Plasto Mfg.
High Series
M. Greenfield
A. Wolf
R. Rosen
High Game
D. Gottlieb
M. Greenfield
A. Wolf

SUBURBAN
B’NAI
B’RITH
LEAGUES
NATIONAL LEAGUE:
1. U.S. Auto Leasing
2. Lubin &amp; Lubin
3. Frankel Packing Co.
High Series
E. Krinn
H. Friedman
Robert Cole
High Game
H. Friedman
H. Ellman
Harry Cooper

BOWLING
Tony Porco
Wm. Lake
Fred
Sacco
Joe Vole
Harold Mathe

High

PUBLIC
Team
Little Bills
Meter
Dept.
Sub-Station
Maint.
Sub-Station
Little Amps
High
Sub-Station
Mackie
High
Sub-Station
P. Kassel

Team
R. O. Jordan
Glencoe
Nite -N-Gale
Porco
Hunters

AMERICAN
LEAGUE:
1. Bennett &amp; Kahnweiler
2. Abbott Construction Co.
3. Alan Construction Co.
High Series
H. Winkelman
I. Addis
J. Miller
High Game
H. Winkelman
R. Kittner
B. Exelrod

Mel Mailfald
Howie Cole
Paul Hollister
Hank Schotanus
Gene McDermitt

CLASSIC
LEAGUE:
1. Sherman Industries
2. Mayer Paving Co.
3. Lake Car Wash &amp; Siecel
High Series
H. Berg
L. Zagel
A f MIO cis

Team

High

Series

High

Game

39’ers
Screwballs
Clowns
Eightballs
In Laws

Lumber

“High Seas

High

ae

High

MIXED

Series

ALL STAR LEAGUE:
1. Lake Motors, Inc.
2. K. Schlanger Co.
3. Adelman &amp; Brott
High Series
W. Adelman
L. Kleinfeld
S. Dolin
High Game
W.
Adelman
J. Crusin
S. Dolin
MOOSE
446
Team
Manhattan
Lighting Products
Rehns Drugs
Hiland Paint
Able-Trucking
High Series
Fred Sacco
Dan Switalski
Tony Porco
Joe Vole
Arnold Gotaas

GLENCOE
BUSINESS
Team
Glencoe Yellow Cab
Rav’s Snort Shop
Quinto &amp; Bruno
High Series
John Geib
Arch Ferrari
Andy Seiler
High Game
John Geib
Andy Seiler
Lynn Beecher

GREEN

Team

.

sky blue waters,
gy

gy Naseer
woe

mel ie

taunt

FARMER BEVERAGE CO., Inc.
_ HIGHLAND

PARK

WAUKEGAN

ID 2-0850

the

greatest

bowling

season ever under way
roll your best with the greatest
bowling accessories by AMF!
Page H 50—D

66

C.

w

MEN’S
Ww

Lake Motors
DX Sunray Oil Co.
Rosby’s
Richard Gilmore Inc.
Sunset Food
High Series
Betty Johnson
Darlene Field
Rosemary Johnson
Dorothy
Pershing
Loretta Kozlowski
High Game
Dorothy Pershing
Betty Johnson
Jackie Hanson
Darlene
Field
Rosemary Johnson

SUNSET

Mulligans
Gimmies
Scramblers
Birdies

Kanow
Weinberg
or oc 11 Net:

204
203-201
201

VALLEY

High Series
ert en apap ee Mattie:
High Game

ROLL 271?

Piled)

Hwy., Highland

C.

HI-LADIES

Come

MENONI &amp; MOCOGNI
2200 Skokie

ACRES

Men

. Masser

CALL.

Step out in style
with AMF
Now—with

Stock

Game

Drell

M. Kanow
N. Weinberg
B. Jordan

(Screened,

1049
241-10-251

. Masser

M.
N.
[GE

the BEER refreshing
from the land of

3095
611-48-659

Game

Julius Boros ....
Tommy Armour
Byron Nelson
Ben Hogan
Gene
Littler
sate
MAM DhOad. wash
oa fe
High Series
Ladies
. Drell
. Masser
. Stone .
Men
. Mascer
. Wolfe
as WV GLORY oksess eich cs ealbvciad ho higscaoersn AL Ae So
Hizgh Game
Ladies
. Stone

,
Game

MOOSE
446
Team
Manhattan
Lighting Products
Rehns Drugs
Hiland
Paint
Able Trucking
High Series
Dan
Switalski
Joe Brooks
Fred
Sacco
Paul Anhalt
Don. Stohrer
High Game
Hal Henderson
Wally Lange
Dave Eklund ....
Dan Switalski
Fred Sacco

High

a Bae a g
H. Yormark
E. Bazelon
S. Pizer
A. Kaplin

Fred Coleman
Tony
Porco
Ed Wachsning
Frances Porco
Lorain Jahnigen

MAJOR LEAGUE:
1. Grand Electric
2. Paul Safran Metals
3. Active Specialty
High Series
M. Goldstein
H. Handler
L. Kaplan
High Game
&gt;. Shapiro
. Levy
- Goldstein

Series

High Series

A. Kaplin
L. Shapiro
H. Lustigson
S. Pizer
J. Wasserman

Joe Brooks
Fred Coleman
Ed Wachsning
Lorain Jahnigen
Frances Porco

SERVICE

B’NAI
TORAH
BROTHERHOOD
Team
Pt
Lewis Carpets
Carroll’s Standard Serv.
Green Bay Cleaners
Ruby’s Delicatessen
Strike N’ Spare

Gene McDermitt
Mel Mailfald
Paul Hollister
D. Z. Redfield
Ed Tead
MOOSE

A.
G
I

Game

Park

(with

Powell’s
589

this

ad

signed)

Camera

Central

Ave.,

for a roll of Black

&amp;

FILM...

to

Mart
H.P.
White

Still

FREE!

Must
be
league
series
total.
Have your league secretary sign
te date in space provided beOW, 6.

AMF

Bowling Bags—

Starring

the

smart,

all-new

Hat-

box models, the AMF Fashion
Line of bowling bags is truly a
fashion first in 1961.
AMF
Bowling
Shoes—Tops
in_ style,
tops in comfort,
AMF
bowling
shoes
fit
you perfectly,
No
cramping,
no
chafing,
no crowding.
They
give you
sure-footed fit for extra comfort, higher
scores.
See them now in all styles and
prices!

AMF

bowl-

ing bags give you the perfect
combination of rugged beauty
and distinctive design. See these
exciting bowling bags and order
yours now... you'll be buying
the best.

Thursday, April 13, 1961.

�re

_"

.

va

: me

3

; ; ;

ar

me

a :

¥

#.

r

ae}

ek

el

*

sal

4%

j ? ¥

i

ad

2

"2

saa

we

:

"

ny

:

oP

a

a

—

.

IF YOUR NEST EGGS ARE
AT DEERFIELD SAVINGS
FERFIELD

HIGHER DIVIDENDS with GREATEST SAFETY
745 DEERFIELD ROAD,

. A\

DEERFIELD, ILLINOIS

Phone: Windsor 5-2550

ly [

Hours:

&amp; LOAN ASSOCIATION

Sat.

Mon.,
— 8:30

Tues.,
to

Thurs.,

12:00;

Fri.
— 8:30

Fri. eve. —

Closed Wednesday

6:00

to

4:00

to

8:00

�CHINA
LAMPS
add sparkle
to any decor

is
with

ee

gh

moreso

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un
in the sun

irresistible
dinates

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in

irresistible,
ee

and

V,

2.

knit

colors
too.

patterns,

Cardigan.
MOR BRU

coor-

that
Solid

are
colors

10-16.

oe. dase eee
eck)has 7.95

Round

collared

Lined

Jamaicas

shirt

....

5.95

3.

Band
Lined

Collared t-shirt
slim pants
..

3.95
5.95

4.

Sleeveless

stripe

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2.95

cardigan,

ee

. Button front shirt .... 3.95
Lined cabin boy pants, 5.95
(Fashion

white

china

designs

Corner)

with
soft

(Gift Shop)

ol
oe

$660
in merchandise is the TNT
prize! You'll have a chance
to win if you get a TNT

44
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Enjoy

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Parking

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fine white silk shades. 30" tall.

eS
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ticket Thursday
night need to buy anything.

in

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                    <text>Thursday, April 13, 1961

7

LF

ae

A

worticld Keview’

.
:

/

,
*

4

Library
-

Fe

tours

start here

�The big bank that grew up
with Highland Park

He brings the First National
right to your front door
Many folks who bank at the First National do it without ever leaving home. It’s part of the
convenience of using our modern Bank-By-Mail service. All you need is one of our
Bank-By-Mail envelopes and a mail box. Your mailman and the First National do the rest. Ever
heard of a more modern, easy way to bank? Try it next time. Just call ID 2-1800 and
ask for a First National Bank-By-Mail envelope.

THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
Our

62nd

year—Complete

Modern

e

Banking

and

Trust Services

O

Hh

hland

Member The Federal Reserve System and
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
United States Depositary

WEEKEND

BANKING

HOURS:

Friday 8:30-2:00 &amp; 5:30-8:00 pm, Saturday 8:30-Noon

Park

|,

�mn

Vol.

36, No.

ant

Ye

eR

ears

6

©

Village

Evident In “No Contest” Districts Here
Approximately 800 voters went to the polls in district 109
Saturday to insure victory for the caucus candidates by a
two-to-one majority.
Five candidates sought the three
vacant spots on the district 109
board
of education which
serves

eastern

part

of Deerfield

and

the western part of Highland Park.
Three of the candidates were sup-

ported

by the caucus.

Paul
Greenfield,
candidate
for
president of district 109 board of
education, received 523 votes and
was
re-elected
president
of the
school district.
He
has been
president
of the
board since April, 1959.
Albert Dawe, who holds a PhD
from the University of Wisconsin,
received 586 votes and was elected
a board
member
along with the
other
caucus
candidate
T. Allen
Granfield who polled 548 votes.
The
two unsuccessful
independent
candidates
were
Mrs,
Lois
Mueller with 245 votes and Darwin Rummel with 240 votes.
Upset

Caucus

Candidate

In

Bannockburn,
district
106,
the caucus candidate for the one
open spot on the board of trustees
of the
district
was
upset
by
a

write-in ballot for Robert

Keno.

Keno, who polled 63 votes, 10
more
than
the
caucus
candidate
David
Allen
with
53,
replaces
Richard
Devins
on
the _ school
board. Board members who carry
over are Henry Thullen and Mrs.

- Walter

Davies,

Jr.

te

1961

Board

Caucus Candidates Win In 109; Apathy

ithe

on

Keno,
incidently,
polled
17
write-in votes from Bannockburn
in the election for members
for
the high school board
of education.
There
were
41
miscellaneous
write-in votes in the school board
district, which
includes Highland
Park and Deerfield areas.
No

Election

Contest

There was
actually
no contest
in the high school board election.
A surprisingly low total vote of
967
was
registered.
Mrs.
James
Tibbetts and Harry W. Knell were
elected,
Mrs.
Tibbetts,
who
was
president
of
the
school
board,
was
re-elected with 918 votes and Knoll
was elected with 904 votes.
In

district 110, where the smallest number of voters went to the
polls per capita, Warren Jackman
was re-elected with 44 votes; Walter Hardy
was
elected
with
42
votes and Kenneth
Griffiths was
elected with 44 votes.
A total of 47 votes were cast
in ail,
In district
102, the Aptakisic-

Tripp consolidated
Prairie View area,

school in the
six candidates

sought
election.
The _ successful
candidates
were
George
Liekam,
William Gahard and Carl Roscher.
Also a referendum which would

by

Highland

Park

Thursday, April 13, 1961 __

Co.

Elections Tuesday
President, Clerk,
Three Trustees Seek
Riverwoods Posts

Deerfield Caucus Candidates — 4
Unopposed In Quest For Office

Three
trustees,
the
president
and the clerk of Riverwoods will
seek
re-election
Tuesday
when
voters of the newly incorporated
village go to the polls.

by

Balloting, will be held at the
home of the John Davenports, 3065
Blackthorn, from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Seeking re-election as president
will be Robert G. Clendenin, Candidate for clerk is Russell A. Bene-

dict,

who

is

the

All

present

clerk.

Incumbent

The three candidates for trustees
are all incumbent. They are: Mrs.
Robert Billeter, Sigurd Haugland
and Clarence Pontius.
Pontius was recently elected an
auditor for Vernon township.
Remaining
on
the
board
are
trustees Henry Conedera, Vernon
Rutter and C. Gunnar
Sundvahl.
The officers of the village began
their terms in February of 1960,

shortly

after

village

in

incorporation

December

of

of the

1959.

have raised the transportation levy
in the district from .02 to .10 was
defeated.

In the Half Day school district,
number 103, two candidates were
elected to the board. Four were
running.
Successful candidates were William D, McCulloch with 357 votes;
and Reino Cook with 263 votes.
Unsuccessful candidates were John
R. Lamping
with 237 votes
and

Joseph

Vaska,

Jr.

with

252

votes.

Five unopposed caucus candidates will seek voter appro

Deerfield

Books

Lent

By West Deerfield
Township Library
During the past fiscal year, 55,974 books were borrowed from the
West Deerfield Township
library,
according to librarian Mrs. George
Haney.
This total number of books circulated was 10,500 more than were
circulated in the previous year.

There

are a total

tered borrowers,
number of books
about 10.
During

were
Candidates

night,

sponsored

by

the

League

tions

during

the

past

two

weeks.

Informal
gatherings
in private
homes
and meetings of local organizations have provided the opportunity for these meetings. Residents of Deerfield have taken this
opportunity to discuss village prob-

lems with candidates David Whit' ney, James Mandler, Ira Hearn,

Hold

make

manager,
the

at

necessary

WI

5-3536

to

the

Special

Meeting

John
Lindemann,
and
Katherine
Price.
They
have
also
learned
more
about
the
caucus
system
of selecting candidates.
Candidate
meetings
will
continue to be held until the village
election
on
Tuesday,
April
18.
Anyone
interested in having this
type
of
program
may _ contact
George
Neumayer,
caucus
cam-

paign

the year, 2,343

added

new

library

books

collec-

tion. This total is more than three
times the number added in the previous year.

of Women

Voters of Deerfield, was held last Friday evening in the village hall. Talking with candidate for trustee James Mandler are, from
left:
Mrs. Marshall
LeSueur, Mrs. William
Zechel, and Mrs. Leo Sazanoff.
Candidates for the village board
and village clerk have been
appearing
at many
Deerfield func-

of 5,300 regis-

and the average
per borrower was

to

arrangements. i

Board

On Saturday

The board of trustees of the village plans to conduct an adjourned
meeting on
Saturday morning,
April 15, to act on work that is
before the board.
This
held to
plete as
so that
for the

unusual
meeting
is being
enable the board to commuch business as possible
the slate can be left clean
new board.

The meeting
a.m, to noon.

The

clean-up

hours

meeting

are

Sriixn: 9

will wind

Tuesday

The candidates, proposed by the
caucus nominating committee, were
approved at the annual town meet-

ing

in

February.

meeting,

Longtin

the

At

names

and Harold

the
of

town

Richard

Peterson

were

also placed in nomination from the
floor for the position of trustee of
the village, but they were defeated
in an insuing ballot.
For president, David C. Whitney
has been selected as the caucus
candidate. The candidates for trustee are Ira Hern and James Mandler and John A. Lindemann.
Mrs.
Catherine
Price
is the candidate
for re-election as clerk of the vil
lage.
Presently one vacancy exists on
the board
and
trustees Peterson
and Arnold Wehle, in addition to
president Joseph Koss are ending
their terms.
Holdovers for the board of trustees are: John Aberson,
Winston
Porter and Maurice Petesch.

Whitney,
field

for

who

eight

has lived in Deeryears,

editor of the World

is

managing

Book

Encyclo-

pedia. Before that he was a news
editor for the United Press in New
York.
A former officer of the Wilmot
PTA, Whitney is presidently president of the board of education for
district 110.
Mandler has been a director of
the United
Fund,
a PTA
board

member,

chairman

committee

55,000

residents

when

the

election

of village

officers is held from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. at four polling places.

and

of a boy

currently

scout

is a trus-

Unopposed Slate
Seeks Election
In Bannockburn
An

unopposed

caucus

slate will

seek election in the Village of
Bannockburn
elections
Tuesday. —
Polling will be at the Bannockburn —
school between 6 a.m. and 6 p.m.
9a
Incumbent E. L. Hall will seek ©
his second term as president of |
the village, and incumbents Frank- A
lin O. Mann and E. R. Nielsen will |
seek re-election to the board of ©
trustees, each for four years.
coe
Also

seeking

a

four

year

term

is Percy Wilson.
There are three trustee opediniem
on the board. Retiring trustee who |
is not running again is ‘Walter
Bischoff.

Running

a

for clerk of the village; |

four-year

Davies, Jr.,
spot which

term,
who
will

is

seeks
open

Walter

H.

to fill the |
as Ce

Bolton ends his term.

J. S. Krakauer has
ated
for the
post

been nominof police |

magistrate.

Caucus

ee#

Committee

Prepares Booklet —

tee of the Bethlehem church. He
has lived in Deerfield 11 years.

About Candidates

Lindemann, a partner in a pharmacy in Deerfield, is a director of
the
Chamber
of Commerce
and
chairman of its parking committee.
Lindemann is a member of the

The publicity committee of tte!
Deerfield caucus plan _ will dis- —
tribute
copies
of a four page
pamphlet describing the plan and

Deerfield

Investment

club and Ro-

tary International.
Ira Hearn, Jr., is vice president
in charge of operations for Celotex Corporation.
Before
that he
was an assistant general manager.
Mrs.
Price, village
clerk since
1953, has been drive secretary for
the Community Fund and was the

its candidates.

The distribution will take pine
on Friday and Saturday before the

April 18 election.

up problems that have been under
study for some months.
New members would have

a dif-

ficult

back-

ground

time

obtaining

information

tion including Deerfield Commons
and various train stations
the Deerfield area.

the present
lar items.

board

the

The

by

on these particu-

Includes
pamphlet,

|

servicing

Pictures

which

includes

:

pictures of the caucus candidates, —
is the result of extensive research —

and fact finding on the part of the,

publicity committee.
It includes information

of inter-

est to all Deerfield citizens, including a study of the growth pattern of Deerfield population over
the past twenty years, an explanation of the workings of the caucus
plan, and a survey of current village problems.

Village Manager Stilphen
Promoted to Lt. Colonel
of

Norris Stilphen, village manager
Deerfield, a reserve commis- —

sioned

possessed

Several locations —

have been selected for the distribu- —

first secretary of the Citizens’ committee.
The four polling places are:
Precinct 1—the area south and
west of the drainage ditch: Wilmot
School.
Precinct
2—the
area
south
of
Deerfield Rd., east of the drainage
ditch: Masonic Temple, Waukegan
Rd.
Precinct
3—the
area
north
of
Deerfield Rd., east of Milwaukee
Rd. tracks: Village Hall, 850 Waukegan Rd.
Precinct
4—the
area north
of
Deerfield Rd., east of the drainage
ditch: Maplewood School.

|

officer

of

the

Army,

has |

been
promoted
from
major
to
lieutenant
colonel,
according
to
word
received
from
the
head-

quarters of the Fifth United States
Army.

�Your Village Government
The board of trustees of the village will hold a unique meeting this
coming Saturday for the purpose of

clearing the agenda of items which
they have had under study.
The meeting, which will be an
adjourned meeting of the regular
meeting and therefore official, will
start at 9 a.m. and run until noon.
This will enable trustees who fully
familiar with the problems to act
upon them and not pass them along
to the new Board. Background information is very difficult to acquire in some of the complicated
problems of the village and it will
be a great service to the incoming
members
to have these problems
resolved.
Every new board needs a period
of time to organize and become acquainted with the many aspects of

village operation.
Recently a letter was received
from a lady who was deeply concerned about youngsters playing in
the streets. Since she signed it “A
Worried Mother,” I will have to
answer her here and hope that she
will read it.
After
reading
the
letter,
I
thought back over the years to my
youth to see what my attitude had
been
regarding
playing
in
the
streets. To my
great surprise, a
flood of memories came to mind of

tin can alley, scrub, red light, and
run sheep run, all played in, or far
too close to, the street.
Even refreshment on a blistering
hot day was to be found on the tailgate of the ice wagon in the street,
provided
you
didn’t
get
caught.
Times change, traffic increases in
volume and speed, and playing in
the street can no longer be permitted.
Conducts Campaign
The
police
department
of the
village conducts a continuing campaign to warn children of the dangers of playing in the street. Every
group of youngsters who tour the
police station and pistol range are
given a lecture on the dangers inherent in street play. School programs put on through the cooperation
of
the
police
and_
school
authorities stress the need for safe
play habits, and the safety council
in their bicycle safety and licensing program work toward the same
goal,
Despite the work of these governmental agencies, the final and ultimate responsibility is with the parents. If they know where their children are playing and see to it that
the proper
degree
of force
and
logic is applied when
youngsters

play

in

will

cease

the

street,

to

the

problem

exist.

Pictured above at the ground-breaking ceremony at Zion Lutheran church, 10 W. Deerfield Rd., are William Pavlecic, a representative of the architects, Pavlecic and Kovacevic;
Carl Running, vice chairman of the board of deacons; Marwood Rupp, chairman of the board
of trustees; and the Rev. Paul V. Berggren, pastor; and William Duguid, chairman of the
building committee. The ceremony took place between services on Palm Sunday before a
crowd

OBITUARIES

PROCLAMATION
WHEREAS, we live in a world
which
demands
a rededication
to the enduring intellectual and
spiritual values essential to the
progress of a free people in a
free society; and
WHEREAS, our libraries make
accessible the accumulated experience
of all mankind
from
which present and future generations may derive the wisdom
and understanding vital to our
survival; and
WHEREAS,
the development
of lifetime reading habits are
necessary for individual fulfillment and for the achievement of
the highest use of our capabilities; and
WHEREAS,
THE freedom to
read is the responsibility
and
privilege of all people in a democracy;
NOW, THEREFORE, I, Joseph
W. Koss, hereby proclaim the
week of April 16, 1961, through
April 23, 1961, to be NATIONAL
LIBRARY WEEK, and do urge
all citizens to unite in this national effort to achieve a better
read and better informed Ameri-

ca to the end that we realize the
full potential
purpose.

of

our

national

Herbert

Whittier, Cal.

Daughter of First
Daughter Mayor Dies
Miss
Clara
Ender,
88,
of 731
Westgate, died April 5 at the home
of her niece, Mrs.
Eva
Dondanville, with
whom
she made
her
home. Daughter of Deerfield’s first
mayor, the late John Ender, she
had been a local resident for more
than 50 years.
Requiem Mass was offered April
7 at Holy Cross church.
The late John Ender was Deerfield’s mayor from
1903 to 1915.
He had been Cook County commissioner from 1872 to 1881.
Miss Ender’s former home now is

a convent for the Holy Cross Cathchurch.

Deerfield Manor News
Although
many
residents
of
Deerfield Manor have criticized the
Aptakisic-Tripp school for its treat-

ment

of

manor

votes were

children,

only

cast in the school

37

board

election on Saturday. There are 93
homes in the manor.
The executive board congratulated the winners,
however.
They
were George Liekam, William Gahart and Carl Rosher. Candidates
for the manor, Kebschull and Morrison, received 51 and 52 votes in
that order.
The Lake county health department sent two representatives into
e manor recently to further verify
the conditions as to water standing
on various lawns. Of special note
was the rear of Joe Ravagnis’ home.
He has dumped more than 100
loads of dirt at his own expense
without solving the standing water
problem.
Page

2

Both the problem of standing water and the problem of the flooding
creek will be turned over to the
county engineers for study.
Marge Rainey, president of the
ladies auxiliary of the AMVETS
Post 66 on Milwaukee
Ave. who
graciously for the past five years

have

donated

the use of their hall

to the association, has announced
the annual community dance to be

held Saturday, April 29.
Proceeds Aid Projects
The proceeds will go to help the
many projects in this area such as

the boy and girl scouts, little league
baseball, plus their own assistance
to the needy veterans.
Wilber Henneman, of troop 18,
and Eugene Downar, of troop 112,

with the Northwest council of boy
scouts, have invited the parents to
set

aside

the

dates

of April

at

for

250.

Actual

immediate

21,

22

and 23 to attend the annual Scout-

Student

Wins Honors As
College Freshman
Named to the Teresan honors at
entrance program this week at the
College of Saint Teresa, Winona,
Minn. was Miss Louise Landreth,
freshman,
Miss Landreth
is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis B. Landreth, 1360 Indian Trail Dr., and
a graduate of Highland Park high
school.
Twenty
students
were
elected
to the
Program
and
seven
students
earned
honorable
mention.
The freshmen honored came from
five states and constitute about ten
per cent of the freshman class.
The
election
to
the
Teresan

honors

at
on

entrance
the

basis

program
of

high

is

school

performance, rank in class, college
board scores, and the results of

Volunteers in the Moraine Girl
Scout organization will have Mrs.
Martha Winch as their speaker at
the regular monthly neighborhood
meeting, April 19.
As executive director of the family service, Mrs.
Winch
has had
many years of experience in the
field of guidance.
The
title of her talk will be,
“Growing
Girls and Their
Problems.” It will be concerned with
the behavior patterns of children

Named

soon

as possible.

educational

unit of the

church

at
various
age
levels
of
their
participation
in
group
activities
and
the
development
of
good
character traits through this participation.
The meeting will be held in the

west

room

of

the

First

Presby-

terian
church
of Deerfield
from
9:30-11:30 a.m. Guests have been
invited.
Family service and the Moraine
Girl Scout council are supported
by the Deerfield area United Fund.

Coupon

Available

Again To Residents
For Crab Trees
The
Deerfield
REVIEW
again
publishes a coupon below for Deerfield residents who wish to participate in the “Plant a Flowering Crab
Tree in Your Garden” offer. Since
there are only 100 trees available,
the community conservation council has urged residents to clip the
coupon
immediately
and send in
their order.
The Deerfield park district is cooperating
with
the
conservation
council
to make
available
these
trees at $4.50.
Trees will be multiple stem and
three
to four feet in height,
of
prime stock, and will be burlapped
and
balled.
Purchasers
will
not
have the choice of variety but may
choose from these colors: red, pink.
or white,
Varieties
will
include
those which are most popular in
this area.
Trees will be available
at the
Milwaukee Station parking grounds
on Saturday,
April 29, after the
Arbor
Day
tree
planting
ceremonies at ten in the morning.

,

1. Offer limited to Deerfield residents only.

held
past

day, April 16. He also said that the
county health department has requested that the much needed pest
control plan be put into action as

President

given
on
the
campus
after
the
freshmen arrived.
The Teresan honors at entrance
program was initiated in the summer of 1959. The purpose of the
program is to give the college an
opportunity to honor the freshmen
from whom
it expects a distinct
academic contribution and by this
recognition to spur the student to
the full realization of her ability.

O-Rama.
Sunday. He outlined general plans
for the meeting this coming Sun-

Vice

Willard
B.
Allen,
1125
Hazel
Ave., was appointed vice president
of Long-Kogen
Inc.,
Chicago,
a
real estate firm.
Allen is in charge of the management department. He has been
employed the past 19 years by the
firm.
Allen is a director of the North
Side
real estate
board
and
also
a member
of the board
of governors of the management division
of the Chicago real estate board.

other standardized tests including
the Ohio psychological which was

The president, Ed Golien,
his first board meeting this

$180,000

On Growing Girls

The first meeting for the 196162
drive
of the
Deerfield
area
United
Fund,
Inc., will be
held
Tuesday, April 18, at 8 p.m. at the
Walden school, according to an announcement by chairman Alex A.
Briber.
United Fund directors from all
the 16 districts have been asked to
be present
as committee
assignments
will be announced
at the
meeting.
The Deerfield area United Fund,
Ine.,
covers
Lincolnshire,
Riverwoods, Bannockburn and Del Mar
Woods as well as Deerfield.

made

for the

Contractor is Arnold Pederson of Deerfield.

Volunteers Hear
Mrs. Winch Talk

Of Deerfield Area
United Fund, Inc.

Deerfield

construction

future.

Plan First Meeting

C. Cramer

Herbert C. Cramer, 82, of Sunland, Cal., died April 4 in Veterans
Hospital in Tuscon, Ariz., where he
had been for one month.
He is survived by his wife, Nellie,
a daughter, Mrs. Julia Ann Roberts
of Deerfield; three sons, six grandchildren
and
14 great grandchildren,
Funeral
services
were
held in

olic

estimated

is scheduled

=&gt;

2.

Money

3.

Mail order to Community Conservation Council—Box

order of check must accompany

order.

115,

Deerfield.
Please print:
FULL NAME

ADDRESS

SENN
Thursday,

April

13, 1961

�PRSt OREee
TORRESPee
$
a

ee
a
ears
eek See ee

oe

ee

AAUW Conducts Drive To Collect
Books For West Deerfield Library
An opportunity for all residents of Deerfield to help their
public library will be afforded citizens during the week of
April

17-21, designated

During

Library

Week

as Deerfield Library
the

Spring

training

for Den

From

left, the

cubs

held.

4 in Jewett

are:

Mike

Park

Grohe,

was

Steve

Local

Jeff

Ferguson, Skip Smoot, Roy Johnson, Randy Sarton. Missing
from the picture were Steve Geuder and Bill Paulson.
Cub

scouts

of

(Bannockburn)

Select Nominating
Committee For PTO

Den

held

4,

a

Pack

350

picnic

re-

cently
at Jewett
Park, following
a tour of the Deerfield
Bakery.
The
bakery
tour was
part of a
series of trips to become
better
acquainted with Deerfield.

The nominating committee which
will select a slate of candidates for
officers and members of the executive board for the Deerfield Parent‘Teacher
Organization
has
been
chosen.
Serving on the committee
will

Visit

Police

nesday

Station

icy Sage See :
Chestnut
St.,

to donate

evenings

Exhibits

Park

the direction of Mrs.
Smith,
chairman,
will

By

Bank

Richard R.
hold open

house at the library and will serve
refreshments for adults
dren. Members of AAUW

duct

tours

of

the

and chilwill con.

library

to

ac-

quaint
all with the library’s facilities.
In
order
that
all
citizens
of
Deerfield
may
contribute
to the
support of their library, local merchants have agreed to the placement of collection boxes in stores
during Library Week.

from

BERNING — RUTH
on

Additional

information

concern-

ing the AAUW book collection may
be obtained by phoning Mrs. Richard R. Smith at WI 5-1320.

lola

behalf

of the

B.

Carr

Welcome home, Ruth
are so glad that you
among us again.

Pettis, we
are back
:

David Mitchell, son of the James ©
C. Mitchell’s, flew by Jet to visit
Gari

Hertel.

son

tel’s, formerly
returned
Don’t

of

the

Les

home

day

Nite

Club.

Doris

David

Sunday.

forget

try

Her-

of Deerfield,
the

Deerfield

en’s Club Dinner Dance
at the Vernon

Better

Wom-

on SaturHills Coun-

hurry

and

call

Jacober.
(the youngest

=e

member of the Phil Johnson clan)
celebrated her 13th Birthday April

Carol Ann

_

9th,

VETTER — BILL PITTENGER

her

Johnson

brother

21—and

Phil

just

a few belated

turned

Greetings

to

Barbara Picchietti, Fred VanSickle

CITIZEN’S INDEPENDENT

PARTY

and

others

Have

Home

Hagerman, Waukegan, took a trip
through Southern Illinois and Kentucky during the Easter holidays.
Mrs. MacPherson teaches in the
Half Day school and Mrs, Hageman
is a faculty member of Spaulding
school in Waukegan.

| [BUTTON , BUTTON
| WHOS GOT THE

Friday

KARL

Easter Leave

MacPherson,
755
and
Mrs.
Mildred

and

Artist

Highland

Water colors by Henrietta, Mrs.
Raymond O. Hosford, are currently
on display at the Bank of Highland
Park.
The water colors will be on display for the month of April.

7-9 p.m. during the week of April
17-21.
During
those
hours,
the
library committee of AAUW under

Other
recent
trips
have
been
to
the
Deerfield
Police
station,
Highland Park fire station, and the
be: Mrs.
Edward
Zimmer,
Mrs. ' Deerfield State bank.
Den mothers for the pack are
John Eisenger, Mrs, Robert Sandy, |
Mrs.
William
Johnson
and
Mrs.
Albert
Dawe
and
Mrs.
William
Fleming.
Jack Ewan.

Teachers Travel On

At

one used hard cover book in good
condition. All types of books are
welcome — reference,
adult
and
children’s fiction and non-fiction.
The only type of book not desired is the children’s little golden
book series. Each book contributed
and
placed
in the AAUW
book
barrel in the library basement will
entitle
the
contributor
to
one
chance in a drawing to be held
Friday evening, April 21. Awarded
at that time will be a child’s book
and an adult’s book donated
by
Mrs. George Haney, librarian.
Books will be collected in the
library
basement
each
afternoon
from 3-5 p.m. and Monday, Wed-

recently

Ewan,

are asked

Week.

Deer-

field Branch of the American Association of University Women will
conduct a drive to collect books
for the shelves of the West Deerfield Township library.

All persons

CARRying
On

wishes to thank all of its loyal supporters for their
part in the success of the Township election
on April 4th.

that

a

I missed.

year

old

Split

Level

on Central Ave., with built-

in range

and oven in the cutest —

kitchen, has a
where you can
large

window

—good
level

size
has

(could

be

nice dining area
look out of the

and

enjoy

living

family

the

room;

room

a third

view —

lower —

and

bath

bedroom)

—

and

~

nice laundry with outside entrance,

lots of storage space. Upper

a

level

has two nice bedrooms and C. T. _

Niitee-Jonie”
permanent

Jeodlara
No

worrying

—tiny

about

missing

rips in the seams

ing when

you

send

detail

and

buttons

We

For

back ready for you to WEAR!

Limited

FORD
|
i
E
f
i}

ALPHA CLEANERS

}

Signature)

One to a
only—This
able
only

i

u
i

customer—Adults
coupon
redeemfor
King
Korn

—Coupon
signed by
2 BE OPE BES LOM) eve ore aoe

|

valid only
customer.

LPHA

|

&lt;i?

THALE

WHO

va)
keane,

nas

FARS

preg

“yi

_ Thursday,
oe

|

VS! TAILORS. TE
VPLE
I

Auth,

Ne

CARE

COAM

re PLANT

13, 1961

with your natural hair shade to produce customized colors that
are yours alone! » Use COLORCHROME after each shampoo...your
hair is always beautiful! No weeks of waiting while hair grows
and dye fades. Change colors instantly —with no fadeout, no ruboff!

»

HOW

LIFE

COLORCHROME®

WORKS:

Nutri-Tonic’s

exclusive COLORPLATE process uses the static electricity present in
all hair. Each shaft of hair acts as a magnet to attract the coloring to its surface...only the LIFE LOTION HAIR TREATMENT actually
penetrates the hair.

FORD ; HARMACY
DEERFIELD

local

Police

Field.

Bakeman

So sorry,
and

honest!

family

are

on

ROADS,

of these

days!

DEERFIELD

;

|

dresses. I understand that this will |
be the first time that the Deerfield

with color magic in 12 exciting shades! COLORCHROME combines

3 Squeeze-Bottle Sizes

and

of our

School has resumed and the 8th
Grade Students are busy getting
ready for Graduation, some of the
girls have already selected their

LIFE COLORCHROME is an entirely new, totally
different semi-transparent hair coloring...

* Restores Natural Beauty

WAUKEGAN

one

home,—but—one

bing

wy ep 2S 3
DEERFIELD Road |

April

HAIR COLORING
with NO BLEACHING, NO DYEING!

3 oz., 75¢ 6 oz., $1.25 12 oz., $2 (plus tax)

.

(off duty)

Officers was given a Parking ticket

for Spring Vacation, Milt Merner_
took his little tribe East and then
there are those of us that are at

NEW! A MAGICAL

¢ Eliminates Tangles

|

This is off the record—while doing a very nice Deed for a friend |

Bill Nelson family was in Florida

PHARMACY

* Counteracts Damage

when

Ts AED SK WAS BEA ee ee

at...

Wilec- Tent

Stamps.
All rights reserved
in the King Korn Stamp Co.

Mr. and Mrs. Leo Seiler celebrated their 12th Wedding Anniversary this past Sunday with many
members of the family.

Jack

HAIR TREATMENT

t
I
|
t

Interested?—priced in the low 20’s,

vacation for a couple of weeks, the *

Life LOTION

f
t

(Customer's

Time

and shaker shingle exterior. Deep :
lot with loads of raspberry bushes.

at O’Hare

NoW b

suits

EXTRA KING KORN
STAMPS WITH ANY
PURCHASE AT

®@ Customized for all types of hair.

regularly $1.00

take care
your

® Gives you prettier, softer
curls that last and last!
Waves deep down in as little
as 10 minutes!

all Tussy Deodorants

or the lin-

send

®@ The permanent with
patented 14 oil creme base!

Take your pick:
cream
roll-on-stick. But hurry,
This sale has a very
short life!

your things to

us for dry cleaning.
| of every

CHALLENGES THEM ALL!

Bath. Easy maintenance with brick —

Grammar
School will not have
—
Graduation
from
the
Grammar ©
School but will be held at the New |
High School.
a
We need more listings—give us a wg
call. We have homes in any price
range that suits your budget.
!

Carr Realty Co.
Phone WI

5-1111

REALTORS
701

Waukegan

Road

Bes
WI

5-0984

Page 2-A

|

�/

Civic Calendar

:

Thursday, April 13

os

On

Rak

Our

yard

Cover

8

;
ssi anee

Lib
cere,

of the American

Associa-|

e

pial

p.m.

_ Week, which begins April 17, are} p74

members
-

tion

of

University

project currently

f and

money

township

Women

8 p.m.

whose

Maplewood

Maplewood
8

Deerfield

to

merchant

John

Lindemann,

a

candidate

for

:

p.m.

School

nee

j

Highland

P.T.A.

Park

general

P.T.A.,
:
High

meeting,

7 p.m. District

:

Bannockburn

g

school.

Philippi

prepare

to serve coffee

to

the tour of the li-

who pri

beginning

Monday.

;

a

E

ny Fi

Re E V

ge

ee

ursday,

ggpe

Ap

E

L D

W

i a

naerg

,

yar

mm

o"_*;

“°-_*

yam copra
OFFICE
699 Waukegan Road

Tolorte ne Windsne 304500
Laurel

on

ptane

ae

MEMBER

Park,

mre

pemage:

paid
or

( par ers at the, Base
ore Group
oe ghee le

ot Oeertield,
photographs

Spue

Newspapers
age age

8 p.m.

West

8

p.m.

allay

U R S E a F

H OW

YOU

CA

N

‘

* TIME

Deerfield

Deerfield

Highland

* MONEY
* WORK

Township

Park

LOCALLY OWNED
AND OPERATED*

High

Highland

Park

Pere

\

Noth

ae
BS

Saisie

°

S

\

4,

AX

4

SS

S

SS

Warren

AUNDROMAT

'

For

Vacation

H.

Dick,

son

of

Mr.

DEERFIELD

and Mrs. Donald Dick, 2580 Tele!
:
;
graph Rd., + rogenengge
a senior
student at Southern I[linois unireturned

has

versity,
| week’s

vacation.

cently named

home

Warren

for

was

LOWER

\

psychology

(WEST) TERRACE

Bi

a
OSTERMAN

SSS

AVE.

*JEAN

NOTE:
ALL STORES

&amp; BILL OTTER

IN COMMONS OPEN THURS.@ FRI. TILL 9:00 PM

COSMAS

MEAT DEPT.
OPEN DURING
EVERY STORE

9-6

Tue., Wed., Thu., 9-6

SATURDAY 9-8

HOUR

LAND 0’ LAKES
SWEET

SI

’

Lo

and

:
=

=.

sathncneil

re-

:

COMMONS

PN

to the school’s honor

is studying

OPEN
f

YO

=o wy py

halos

ij

assume no re-|roll. He
ng ag ma- history.

SUNDAYS

LESS/

OR

| Library board, library building.

Home

Rates—$3.50 per year
:
a eee
Application

manuscripts

meeting,

Grammar school

oie medina idee

Unsolicited

general

Ill.

Editorial Association

Local Subscription
i
Single Copies —15¢
oreign Rates on

R

high school.
8 p.m. Deerfield village board,
discussional meeting.
8 p.m. Deerfield
Park District
board, Jewett Park field house.
Thursday, April 20

8 p.m. Deerfield Grammar School

PARK OFFICE

Ave., Highland

TO

P.T.A. regular meeting, Deerfield

fiber rion

HIGHLAND

HOU

WASH

GOMEINAND PROVES

}

og 7 ee

School P.T.A. board,
:
high school.

PUBLICATION

yapncond

D RY

7:30 p.m. Deerfield High School

Published Weekly every Thursday

608

a

[ SHAG RUGS UP TO 9X12, BEDSPREADS, DRAPES, TABLECLOTHS, ETC. |

inli

Sigg

sn
P.T.O.

Dp

y

School

High

Deerfield

pm.

a eat "alrite,
Spople

WAS

ENW//RE

AN

IN

8 p.m. District 106 school board,

‘

for Cocations/®.2.. regular mepting, Deettield

eeene

brary

CAN

YOUR

113 school board,

this week. In the other picture, | high school.
: from left, Mrs. Walter Benn, Mrs,| Tuesday, April 18

_

Y 0 U

the | Highland Park high school.

will be in various}

boxes

The

field.

A.|

ih’ Deve

af truatees:

inks

vill

hall.
School

library. In the first pic-| HWishland Park high school.

box

coin

commis-

School

school.
:

ture, Mrs. Richard R. Smith gives| Monday, April 17
a

plan

board, Deerfield Grammar

school.

is to collect books

for the West

Deerfield

sion, public hearing, village
8 p.m. Deerfield Grammar

FOOD

BUYS

MEAT

CRE

THU., FRI., SAT. APR.

13-15

TIDE
DETERGENT

EVERBEST STRAWBERRY

~ PRESERVES

Se Off Each Pack — Reg. Pkos.

erent

ns 27

COLLEGE INN
TOMATO COCKTAIL
26-oz.
Dec.

waoscems
Page

2-B

1 9

Cc

57¢

ror

neaill

PORK ROAST

xe"

ehliaiMal aig aha hirwiee
3,” anay’
Pbrnertsottin’ |.° J

Apple
24-02.

Pie

-.........----- 3

9-

jarncurstarBACON

ww pin 59%

JOHN STARCK IS NO LONGER AFFILIATED
WITH

OUR

MEAT

DEPT.

Nawd in foodt. sisi
Apa t attyra
Phone:

Thursday,

April

13,

1961

�Week - End Sale! Big ae

for Thrifty Gardening!
Everblooming

CR

oo

LR
LE

Ae

| ome

err

est,
£-yr.

Exhihitien-Sixe

PERENNIALS

“GLAD” BULBS

itty, 296k SIC
Poppies, Mums,
Pinks, Delphinium, Phlox,
Daisies, Iris, Sweet Williams,
many others at this low price!

Ga rden

10-25

Petunias,

Radishes,

Variety Pkgs.

19-59
or in

one

doz.

Guaranteed to bloom! First class

2-24” bulbs. Choose pink, yellow, scarlet, purple, white, dark
red — now at Kresge’s!

Bulbs

.++...each, 29¢
Peony Roots. . .each, 69¢
Lily Bulbs ..... each, 49¢
Plastic

Coated

FEN

. e Red, Yellow, Pink, Two-Tones

CE

#

10" x 4’ section,18" x 10’ section

69:

e Hardy! Grown for this climate!

*1.98

¢ Continuous blooms all summer!

= Start Garden Early Indoors! ,

Seed

Buy border, cut-flower, or window box seeds in individual envelopes

Gg.

4 Dahlias

Tomatoes, etc.

OY an
Be

Lettuce,

Special
Price!

Seeds fe Roots

Big selection! Asters, Delphinium, Larkspurs, Marigolds,

sss

bn,

LE

Carnations,

owe

field-grown

Hardy-Blooming

BARGAIN

collection pkg.

f° Plonting instructions included!

Starter

Ready planted flower
or vegetable seeds in
hotbed container:

JumeBU #1 Size Rose busines
f

15 Famous-Name Varieties

Transplant later.

NEW!

LOWEST PRICES
IN TEN YEARS!

i

|

GRASS
SEED

3;

400 Sq. Ft.

HOURS:

Deerfield
April.

13,

1961

Ve
oe

¢

balanced amounts for vigorous

Covers

“FINEST QUALITY” Grass Seed for Sun or Shade 4 Ibs. $2.99,
50-LB. BAG MICHIGAN PEET ............ Gig ucts piaeh aNhotch da dcddnshdd iaecnceainaeehe
ee
ee
50-LB. GOLDEN VIGORO ......... ee fot oer
ee
ee
50-LB. PINK VIGORO ................. Sonia

Thursday,

3

Richer formula gives grass and
plants every-food they need in

fe or 69.
Covers
1000 Sq. Ft.

te

covers 150 sq. ft.
3 lbs.

|

ow Sete
teen
teen

LIGHTWEIGHT

J

'3" Pre- nelle
Peat Pots
Plant the pot, too!

©
Nutri-Peat:

Pots

roots, flowers, leaves.

116.8
heat

$3.95

:

|
A

HROSE FOOD. . 39%
c

$2.95

MBONE

MEAL.

. 45¢fM

COW MANURE, 29:

OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.

Start seices,

vecvors in nutrient |

treated pots thie eliminate shock,

melt

into soit when

transplanted,

SATURDAYS 9 A.M. to 6 P.M.

~§. S. KRESGE COMPANY—

Conimons Shopping

Center

Y fy

Waulicocn

Road:
Page

H

19—D

3

�Curiae Fy
haben

iain 6 a gestae
Phd SATE aaTae
Sey fa sd eo
tt ee

Both High SchoolsOffer
oe Bly

AP e Bel
PONE GRage
SE ee 4 Yee
NUMAN AE a
cient
eS
y
ay

enges

SEMAN:

Want to SAVE

UP

JO

*]

29

on financing and
insuring your next car?

Fathers will have a chance to in.
spect the new boys’ gymnasium on
the

1 may be able
to help you.
Ask me about
State Farm's

{

Gym at NS School
campus

at

The

dinner,

“HENRY HAKANEN
:

825

Deerfield

eats

Rd., Deerfield

Office: Bloomington, Mlinols

sponsored

by

JEWEL
INSTANT
PAINT

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE COMPANY
Home

Shore

makes painting
so easy!

NEWI

STATE FARM
MUTUAL

caem

North

there,

BANK PLAN

ae

The

Country Day School with an eye to
their own future athletic program

59~29

is rt

an

Open

House.

The athletic program for fathers,
under the direction of coach Martin J. McCarty, is being planned
for

their

spare

time.

Games

and

sports will be organized for their
convenience and instruction. The
program is scheduled to begin next
fall.
The

new

appear
a

building,

in

School’s

two

years

Development

two-story

built

the

into

the

second

under
Program,

red

brick

side

of a hill on

to

the
is

structure
the

campus at 310 Green Bay Rd., Winnetka.
A _ regulation
basketball

flat finish for walls and ceilings

No
matter what you want to buy
. or sell you'll find the Want-Ad section your best market place.

the

The first official public inspection of the newly-completed building will come at 3 p.m. Sunday,
April 16, when parents and students of the School will be joined
by members of the community at

For nearest Jewel dealer, see
Phone Book Yellow Pages,
or phone SEeley 3-2430.

a ts
2

netka,

=

1-ITOUR

MARTY

BR

Driver Training Course
Highland Park High School and Deerfield High School
will offer a Driver Education and Training program during
the summer session, from Monday, June 19 through Friday,
August 11.
because the high schools participate in the Illinois Driver Edu-

cation Reimbursable

has attained

hind-the-wheel
gram.

the
six

students

and

Gay”

can

soon

become

“old and

ee

ge:

Open Daily

ae

7:30 A.M. - 6:30 P.M.

ie

8:00 A.M. - 6:00 P.M.

‘
708 Deerfield Rd.
'

|

§

|

|

|
|

|

|

$52,500
Deluxe custom bit. 9 room home, slate entr,
Four bedrooms, 21/2 baths, jalousied porch
Fireplace in living room, FP in pan. study
Lovely landscaping, wooded lot, fine location

HIGHLAND PARK
§

@

Brick and

@

Brick

@

Red

fe Three

ek
ia

of):

and

brick

wood

Now $32,500
contemporary on 34 ac.

we ccewowceoncceccces

redwood

interior,

fireplace,

bedrooms,

oak

plumbing

salesman

in

cathedral

cabinet

ceiling

kitchen

in for 2nd

bath

DEERFIELD

$38,500

@
@
@

Seven room, 2 bath home, plus recr. room
Lovely LR, sep. DR, cabinet kitchen
2 bedrms. on Ist, 2 (both pan.) on 2nd fir.

@

Basement rec. rm. and well planned storage

RIVERWOODS

office.

Runnfeldt

was

promoted

|

and LY SONInc.

children

if the

Highland

Park

high
15

at

schools
10

on

pointment with the driving instructor.

Saturday,

a.m.

Parents

Interested

Registration Areas
Highland Park High

School

may

register

student

Page H 20—D 4

for their

is

on April

not

in

15.

students

are

assured

of
obtaining
the
classroom
struction.
The possibility of

ting the behind-the-wheel

inget-

training

is contingent upon the availability
of automobiles and, of more im-

portance, the availability of trained
and qualified teaching personnel.

contemp.

Only $30,900
ranch

nestled

on

2 wd’d

RIVERWOODS
$29,800
@ Beautifully wooded 2 2 acs. Ind. limestone
@ Raised h'rth, stone FP wall in liv.-din. comb.
@ Screened porch easily conv. to 3rd bdrm.

$32,900
DEERFIELD
@ Four bdrms., 212 baths, fine fam. flr. plan
@ Sep. dining rm., Colonial LR with fireplace
@

Cab.

@

@

Full bsmt. Close to schools, Fine neighbors

Immaculate

inside and out. Low taxes, too

RIVERWOODS
brk. and

In the 60’s
true elegance.

Cust.

kitch.

HIGHLAND

with

PARK

bit.

in

appl.,

eating

Deerfield

area.

$33,500

..

Brk

acs.

@

Mble.

blt. rch.

@

Classic.8-rm.

@
@
@

Spacious LR overlooks beautiful rear prop.
Fam. kitch.-din, comb. makes fine liv. space
Excel. constr., thermopane, storms G&amp; scrns

@
@
@

38 ft. liv. rm., fireplace, lovely Ige. kitchen
3 unusually Ige, bdrms., 2 cer. tile baths.
Jalousied pch. or den. 32 car gar. 2 acs.

@
@
@

Breakfast rm. in fully equipped, light kitch.
Fireplace in Ige. LR, separate din. room
Basement, too. Located across from park.

Quinlan. ana Tyson, tn
735

to

@

YEARS
SERVICE
Quinlan.

In

his present post in 1955.

WIndsor

Colonial. 4 bdrms.,

5-3750
4

4

1934.

pia

DEERFIELD-BRIARWOODS
@
@
@
@

at

been in-

classroom part. Classes will be held

PAS

|

in attendance

registration will be held in the bus
foyer;
at Deerfield
High
School,
inside the main entrance.
Students may register for both
parts of the program or only the

5-9793

WI

work.

and other interested

currently

to

1942, he became service manager
and in 1948 was named appliance
sales supervisor of the Winnetka

public

At

Deerfield

Saturdays

ig

promoted

for 1%
hours daily for the first
four weeks of the summer session,
from Monday, June 19 through Friday, July 14. The behind-the-wheel
training will be scheduled by ap-

just

ie

is

formed
of the program
in their
homerooms.
Eligible
residents
of
the township who are not in attendance at the two public high
schools
(parochial
and_
private
school students) will have an opportunity to register for this summer program at each of the two
April

dat et

profee

class for
to attend

the two high schools have

drab”

by restoring life to the fabric . . . brings back its
sparkle and color.
°
Try our exclusive system and see for yourself how
Martinizing can keep your wardrobe looking new
and gay!

phone
NE HOUR MARTINIZING and they don’t have a branch
store on the Moon!"

the
no

behind-the-wheel sessions for
clock hours. The behind-the-

Sophomores

unless you give your wardrobe proper care.
The special MARTINIZING Process provides this care

Bs

to attend
hours and

by the classroom

WW

ee
oe
Bta

of

students

wheel instruction must be preceded
me.

es
Me
BeA
os
a:

birthday

Enrollment in the complete Driver
Education
program
requires

yy

of

parts

these

the student
thirty clock

school.

|
“New

For

students

the

his fifteenth

Paul A. Runnfeldt, 942 Forest
Ave., recently was honored for 30
years service with North Shore
Gas Company.
Runnfeldt, who is District Manager of the gas company’s Winnetka office, received recognition and
a service
award
during
a gas
company
meeting
at
Deerfield
March 28.
A native of Winnetka, Runnfeldt
was graduated from New
Trier.
High School. He started with the
gas company as a clerk in the
Winnetka office in 1931 and was

by the first day of training, who
resides in Township High School
District 113, and who promises to
complete
the
classroom
and
be-

charged.

at

Deerfield Man Honored
For 30 Years Service

program, they

observe the regulations set by the
State.
An eligible student is one who

The public is invited to attend
the Open
House on Sunday. A
number of Highland Parkers are

e

SL ERPhee tePACEaeRAE OE Fe Sek
gree
a dai

Road

Deerfield Office —

Open

Weekdays

9 to 5 —

Sundays 10 to 5

UNiversity

9-1112
Thursday,

\y

2%

baths.

~WEMBER
CHICAGO
\ RE AL ESTATE
~ BOARD

\

—

April

13, 1961
ha

of

;

ey MS

A, poe

ae

�for

inventory

purposes.

None

of the furniture that you see in the illustration is
left for sale—but you'll find enough food bargains in our stores to fill every drawer in your
pantry.

Shades of Robert E. Lee: Each Sure Save food
mart will have many closeout specials of its very
own that you won’t want to miss, so may
we
Suggest that you sachet over right now.
HEINZ—Concentrated—Makes

Tomato Juic° e

OLD FASHIONED
ONCE A YEAR

|

THIS

a

a

WORTH

on

a

le

40c

COUPON

Land O’ Lakes — Grade A — Strictly Fresh

|

Qc

i
|

.

ONLY

i

:

Pints

Offer

chase only.

i

RAGGEDY ANN—Sliced or Halves—in Heavy
Syrup
303
T 9 c

good

Monday,

17th, 18th and 39th
customer. Offer good

i

,°4°.°™

HUNTS—California

a

i

6%-0z.

Freestone Peaches

WITH

I

‘=. INVENTORY
CLEARANCE SALE

12

ef

ee

warehouse

a

VALUABLE COUPON

ee

our

=

Tuesday

and

Wednesday,

ee

out

==

April

only. Limit one Coupon per adult
with $5.00 or more minimum pur-

VALUABLE

COUPON

WORTH

en

Buckets of beer, it’s our old-fashioned-once-ayear-Inventory-Clearance-Sale_ time again, and
you haven't seen bargains like these in many. a
year.
Our fiscal year is ending and we must clear

40c

L.

*,

300
Tomato Juice e y,;. they
last 1Ole
KRAFT’S

Fresh

Fruit Good—Pare

Preserves sy
SOFT-WEVE—2-Ply

STRAWBERRY

12-02. jar 2YC

for Twice the Luxury

Toilet Tissue sss"
SPECIAL

Available

Only

20¢

OFFER

at Sure

Save

Lady Evelyn
Automatic
Electric

CASSEROLE

LT

Lady Evelyn
Automatic
Electric

FRYPAN
$19.95

o— 4.0CHISON Ete”
2

Value

The Lady Evelyn Fry-Pan or Casserole with their
gracious design and lustrous, life-time finish
will give you many years of unexcelled cooking
and eating pleasure.
A completely sealed-in
heating unit with removable thermostat control

allows

it to be completely

convenient
heat—just

immersed

“‘Master-Chef”
construction.

results.
Many

Sturdy

uses

cast

indoors

en, dining room or patio—cooks,
or bakes.

for truly

cleaning ease.
Uniform, controlled
dial the proper
temperature
for

Made

aluminum

or out,

kitch-

braises, broils

in U.S.A.—complete

one

a" BQ5

year

guarantee.

YOUR

CHOICE

(Includes Control
and Cover)

Fresh

EACH

Fruits

and

Vegetables

solid—crisp—ice berg

LETTUCE

Seiten,

lovisiana—fresh

n’ crisp—stringless

ees

large
eet head

WEBB’S

==

*

Ste

qemmemmeeny

0°",

2

BUTTERNUT

BLEND—DRIP

COrree: .os
TOMATO KETCHU
HEINZ—SO

AUNT

RICH

IT GOES

eyes

orange juice... carton 39C

SAVE

:

a

19¢

OR

pork or vegetarian

TRIMMED—WHOLE

LAST

baked beans

chunktuna

12°.12c

= °°" 25¢

old colony—assorted

a

an

beverages 2.11: wes) 29¢
qt.

kraft’s—chock-full

HALF

save trlinindd-cheulder
blade cut
round bone

lamb chops;, 69c1, 59¢
u.s. choice—sure save trimmed—easy to
carve—whole or half
yee

BONELES S

Ss.

of milk nutrients

velveeta cheese 2". 75c¢

raggedy ann—alaskan

u.s, choice—sure

OR

LB. 59.

Lamb

0’

Leg

red

sockeye salmon %.49c
can

—

leg

°’

RATH

lamb

ae Ca

Ib,

89c

Our Delicatessen Dept.

—

BLACKHAWK

HARD SALAMI ~~~ 2 89¢

PIPING

GENUINE YOUNG N’ TENDER SPRING LAMB

U.S. CHOICE—SURE

2 no dep. qt. btls. 35c
Are

eee

WHILE THEY

tuna time—perfect for light Spring lunches

your

From

PINEAPPLE-ORANGE brink 15c

sure save’s—fresh—chilled
before

FURTHER

NELLIE—PINEAPPLE-GRAPEFRUIT

green beans... w. 19¢
squeezed

REGULAR

ee

heinz—-with

on ice

OR

HOT—READY

Barbecued

TO

EAT

Chickens ™: 98c

FRESH—HOMEMADE

Kidney Bean Salad ~~~ © 39¢
Fresh

Fish

|

FRESH

LAKE PERCH ------~ 196

FRESH SMELTS ~~ 2% 29¢
U.S. GOVT.

INSP. GRADE A

CORNISH
HENS
Net Wt.

14 Oz.

CO

Sie

p

C

u.s. choice—sure save trimmed—easy to
carve boneless lamb

shoulder roast
u.s, choice——sure

» 69¢

save trimmed
loin por,

Dozen

rib por.

lamb chops, *1":,. 95¢

We reserve the right to limit quantities.

SHOPPING CENTER
716 WAUKEGAN RD.

SPACIOUS

April

13,

1961

Friday and Saturday only.

PARKING FOR 400 CARS’

Open Mon.
9 P.M.
Thursday,

"Meat and produce prices available Thursday,

thru Fri., 9 A.M.
Sat., ‘til 6 P.M.

to

.

Sale starts Thurs., April 13th
thru Wed., April 19th.

oS

;

Page H 21—D 5

-

�'To Participate in
Publications Panel
Dr.

John

A.

Munski,

newspaper

adviser
at Highland
Park
High
School, will be one of the featured
speakers at the sixth annual High

Harry

Davis

Harry
C. Davis, 10 Essex Ln.,
Lincolnshire,
has
ben
appointed
(Continued on page 24)

BE A TWO-CAR

Dr. John
School

HERTZ

How to make mowing
more satisfying
If you’re fed up with the mess, the smell and the racket of that
hard-to-start gasoline’ mower, it’s time you discovered the joys

every time — plus the real satisfaction of rolling through the job
quickly and quietly. And service problems are a thing of the past.

The SILENT scorts is désigned, engineered and guaranteed by
Scotts, the people who know lawns best, to make cutting lawns

car!

similar
High

IT’S EASY ... a phone call
reserves a clean, fully
equipped new Chevrolet or
other fine car here or anywhere in the world!
IT'S ECONOMICAL . . . only
$10 for a full 24-hr.day plus
10 cents a mile. And Hertz
always pays for all gas, oil
and insurance.

the

A

Old Orchard Sta.

join

which

Workshop

is

Ohio,

Munski

will

in

concenof

news-

sponsored

operation with the Missouri
scholastic Press Assn.

by

Inter-

The
Highland
Park
instructor
holds four degrees from the University of Missouri—B.J., in 1940;
B.S.
in
Education,
1941;
M.Ed.,

1947

CAR

and

Ed.D.

in 1952.

undergraduate, he was
team and won the mile
Sugar Bowl meet in
Orleans.
For the past eight

advised
book

Phone: OR 6-2110
GR

Sky Harbor Airport
Palwaukee Airport

CR 2-1900
LE 7-1200

Weiller’s

NI

Lodge

will

workshop,

The

Evanston

Motor

post in the Norwalk,
School

the University School of Journalism and University College of Education
and the University
Continuing Education Service, in co-

HERTZ
RENT

Workshop

trate on the production
papers and yearbooks.

fet HERTZ put you in the driver's seat!

of the sILENT scotts. Nothing to get ready, no fumes, no noise.
‘You get the smooth, even cut that makes your lawn look its best

Publications

June
26-30 at the University
of
Missouri School of Journalism.
Kendall L. Falke, who holds a

Rent a dependable
No noisy ‘click’ as you mow

Munski

5-8500

7-8450

at

years

he

the newspapers and
at Highland
Park

School.

was

While

Before

adviser

coming

for

both

Marshalltown,

an

on the track
event in the
1940 at New
has

yearHigh

here,

he

publications

Ia.

sO easy and so rewarding you'll actually be glad you mowed!
The

New

Silent Scotts

Handmower

The 5M cuts 5000 sq ft in 40 minutes 39.95
The

10M cuts 10,000 sq ft in an hour

—Now Available—

Scotts.
FIRST

49.95

IN

Top Civil Service Jobs

LAWNS

in Highland Park

PREFER POWER? Discover the Silent Scotts Electric. No messy fueling, no
smelly fumes, no engine roar — instant starting every time! The safest power mower
ever designed — for the best crew cut your grass ever had. 119.95.

|

” Mon. thru
0 P E HM .

:

Sat. 8 A.M. — 9 P.M.

pas ics

A.M. — 6:00 P.M.

LAWN &amp; GARDEN SPOT
641

Deerfield

Road,

Your Growing

Deerfield

&amp; Garden

WI

5-3800

Bring your lawn problems to: our Lawn Program Advisors. They have the
know-how and the experience to help you achieve the kind of lawn you want.

May

4, 1961,

at 8:00

P.M.

written

and

Civil Service positions

will be held at the City Hall to establish an eligible list for
each of the following classified services.
Applicants must be between

the ages of 21

and

35 years of age and pass medical, physical fitness tests, as
well as a psychiatric test. Salary $4,940.00—Top $6,240.00.
Fireman. Applicants must be between the ages of 21 and 35
years of age and pass medical, physical fitness tests, as well
as a psychiatric test. Salary $4,940.00—Top $6,240.00.
Police Lieutenant. All sergeants who have been in that position for one year or more are eligible to take this examination.

Starting

salary

$5,564.00—Top

$6,410.00.

Application blanks and furthe r information may be obtained
from the City Clerk’s Office, City Hall. All applications must
be filed with Mr. Roy Millen, City Clerk, by 4:00 P.M. April
21, 1961.

Needs”

Phone:

Thursday,

Patrolman.

DEERFIELD
“For

On

oral examinations for the following

Paul
Civil

J. McLaughlin,
Service

Highland

Sec.

Commission

Park,

Ill.
4/16-13-20/61—A

Page H 22—D 6

Thursday,

April

13,

1961

�SUPER- SPECIAL!

=’ FLOWERING
CRAB TREES
Deerfield’s

Official

Flowering

Tree

6’ to 8’
HOPA
ELEY!
ALMEY

Balled

and

Burlapped

e Japanese Yews ® Pfitzers ©
© Pfitzer Junipers ¢ Greek Junipers
Golden Arbor Vitae

e

THURS., FRI., SAT., SUN. SPECIAL
8’ to 10’ SILVER MAPLES
$4.95 ea

or

3 for $12.00
or 2 for $25.00

16 ft size $12.95

also

=

A half-hour well spent

3

(all balled and burlapped)

PRIVET HEDGE

Don’t let crabgrass

HONEYSUCKLE

‘ :

JUST RECEIVED !!

bully

your

lawn

et
=
aS
3 ps 4%. bY =

oe
RHODODENDRONS

Why wait till crabgrass has come up and ruined your lawn to do
something about it? One application of HALTS® before crabgrass

j

Balled

SPECIALLY

: A . :

: 1,

sprouts will spare your lawn a repetition of last summer’s disaster.

deeoes

PRICED!

“Deg

i,

Tiny HALTS granules blanket the lawn, lie in wait, then pick off
crabgrass sprout by sprout. HALTS is death to crabgrass—yet

it lets good grass grow unharmed. In fact, HALTS is so compatible

50: the. o pete oa qe ‘are
50 Ibs. MATTLE MANURE $a 30
SHADE
FRUIT
TREES
Dwarf

&amp;

with grass, you can actually seed the same day. With the accurate Scotts Spreader, you protect 5000 sq ft against crabgrass in

$2.98

BOTH
TREES

ALL SPECIALLY PRICED!
Reg.

All Varieties

Norway

from

&lt;

ae

Maple
Win
Oaks

&amp; Red

half an hour!

‘

* Mountain
Ash .
k

e

Corkscrew

us about the Scotts guarantee

eee
a vig

HARDWARE

PET SUPPLIES

WE'RE...
ae

STONES
ar Giles

SHRUBS and
TREES

and

FERTILIZERS

noe

INSECTICIDES

INFORMATION

. . .a

better: lawn

or your money

back!

Willow

0 p

—7 DAYS A WEEK—

nN .

Mon. thru Sat., 8 A.M. - 9 P.M.

5:

Sundays 8:00 A.M. — 6:00 P.M.

Bring your lawn problems to our Lawn

Program: Advisers.

have

They

the

know-how and the experience to helpyou achieve.the kind of lawn you want.

DEERFIELD LAWN &amp; GARDEN SPOT
641

Deerfield

Road,

Deerfield

ALL EVERGREENS, ROSES, SHRUBS and TREES
GUARANTEED

Thursday,

April

13, 1961

TO

GROW!

“For Your Growing &amp; Garden Needs”

Phone:

WI

5-3800

|

Phone

YO

5-4977

|

Also Available at ...NICK’S GARDEN CENTER

Golf

and

Waukegan

Rds.,

Morton

Grove

Page

H 23—D.

|

7%

�Addresses Kiwanis
On Communism
Elmer

Lane,

L.

Csaba,

Highland

1270

Park,

the Kiwanis Club of
Tuesday, April 11.

The

subject

of

Arbor

addressed

Evanston

Csaba’s

on

address

was “Americanism versus Cemmunism.”
Pointing out those things
that make America a great nation,

he

mentioned

ways

in

which

we

can preserve our strength in the
face of the undermining influence
of Communism.
Csaba came to the United States
from Hungary with his family in
1949. He became a United States

citizen in 1955. He is a design engineer

with

the

Zenith

Corp.

contact

Say...

Student-Teacher
Exchange Day Is
New HS Project

Administrators will work with the
principal and superintendent guidanee director, deans, etc., and
carry on the functions of those offices for the day. Students holding
executives may eat in the faculty

Teachers and administrators of
Highland
Park
High
school
are
looking forward to a holiday not
listed on the school calendar when
a selected group of students will
take over the classes and the many

experimental

administrative

problems

of the

school.

Yesterday,

April

12,

classes

elected
a
candidate
from
each
group to take over the classes on
the first Student-Teacher Exchange
Day
that the school
has undertaken.
The
students
selected
by
their
classmates
will
work
with
administrators and teachers.
The
Day was devised as a means
to
promote
school
unity, together
with
a further understanding
of

the functioning of the school.
The student teacher will follow
the
course
outline
for the
day.

pees

TURNER'S
TV-LAB
NEWS

ACTUAL SIZE

Ask us about the different
kinds of contact lenses.
H.0.V. contact lenses
are safe because they are
fitted under the supervision of your eye
physician. Get the
benefit of our 27 years of
contact lens experience.

By William Turner
WI!

SUPERCEPTION

Phone for an appointment

the

~ DEHUMIDIFIERS

1691 SHERIDAN
610

a

side test. Here's a test
you can make yourself
-— no special equipment
required
— just put an
Amana Dehumidifier in

905, deere seaip.

ture from the alr! YOur
yourself Amana’s
big capacity$

moved

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and save you maintenance costs!

WAY

with any

competitive: dehumidifier. Run them “side
by side’’ under
the
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from

the

10 stop moisture damage to

your home and only one Dehumidifier does it best...
:
more
BIGGER

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You get
performance
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BIGGER

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AREA —up

‘

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a gentle push!

MAKE

YOUR

and

OWN

handle

lets you move

it with

FRAGASSI TV &amp; APPLIANCES, Inc.
DEERFIELD

RD., DEERFIELD
Open

Page

H

24—D

8

Mon.

e

been

set

program,

sponsoring

the

for

this

and

those

idea

hope

that it will become an annual event.
Candidates who have been select-

ed

for

Day

Student-Teacher

Exchange

are:

For Superintendent Wolters;
Larry Bloom,
George Cimbalow
and Bob Wolfe; for Principal
Stunkel; Elliot Baim, Buddy Friedman
and
Bob
Rosen;
for
Dean
Panther; Ed Gamson, Ron Helman
and Jeff Lechie; for Guidance Di-

rector

O’Neal,

Bill

Cargill,

Dave

Klorfine
and
Randy
Petzel;
for
Student Council Sponsor Spencer,
Mary
Hexter,
Joyce
Holler
and
Nancy Neal; for Librarian Smith,
George
Bollenbacker,
Richard

Henninger, and Pete Sande.
Candidates
for Advisor chairmen include; for senior girls’ advisor, Joanne Austin, Judy Hammerman and Claudia Harris; senior
boys’ advisor, Alan Exelrod, Bill
Price and Carl Trexler;
junior
girls; Mary McComb,
Lynn Mar-

cus and
Dennis

and

Ann

Neil

Ellen

Shapiro;

Giangiorgi,

Stone;

Falkof,

Kathy

Ragir,

sophomore

Lynn

McGuire;

junior boys,

Marshall

girls

Goodman

sophomore

and

boys,

Stephen Baim, Harvey Kinzelberg
and Ned Robertson; freshman
girls, Babs Gunther, Nancy Hexter

and Sue Shapiro; freshman boys,
Brian Leahy, Gary Ross and Dan
Wagner.

Harry Davis
(Continued from page 22)
at

the

Evanston

branch

Connecticut
General
ance Company. Davis,

the

company

with

office

Phone: Wi

of

Life
Insuran agent for

the

Evanston

office since 1956, has earned membership
to the company’s
Honor
Roll and vice president’s club for

leading agents. He is a graduate of
Elmhurst College and the University of Chicago.

ALL
SMILES !
OH, Mr. Duffy...
They‘re Beautiful!
hate to boast but our buttons are continu-

ally busting with the kind, unsolicited words of gratefulness we receive. Our drapery cleaning customers
KNOW there's a difference and appreciate the extra
kindness and attention given by...

SIDE BY SIDE TEST

Better Deals — Better Service

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17

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See for
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There is only ON E

&amp;D., HIGHLAND

Scientists are predicting. the. possibility
of broadcasting messages and
pictures
to a person’s inner consciousness, bypassing the eye, ear and other sensory
nerves.
Now, this might seem “‘way out” to
most folks, but it is already possible to
stimulate the brain by electronagnetics
without touching the human body. It is
just a matter of learning how to control
the magnetic field for human reception.
So, if you think you’re bombasted by
advertising now, can you imagine what
it will be like with superception transmission.
And, if you’re aware that this
unusual news is a lead-in to a TURNER’S TV LAB announcement of their
fine TV
and clectronic services, then
you have been receptive, too.
Phone
WI
5-1401 for guaranteed satisfaction.

room.

April

measure: the water --e-

to yourself that
Amana is your
best buy to

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home

CHURCH

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Make your own side by

SEE

ae

Craftsmen in Opeies

OUTPERFORM
ALL OTHERS

how Amana
removes up to

bese e

House of Vision

697 Waukegan Rd.
5-1401 — DEERFIELD

dining

MR. DUFFY
duffy cleaners ® across from H.P. Library e ID 2-1820

5-1800

&amp; Fri.—‘til 9 P.M.
Thursday,

April

13,

1961

�| :

Pre-Season

eee

Sale

YOU'RE ALWAYS WELCOME AT

ry

|

Walgreens

Ore

ue

y

emma SG

ICE CREAMY
1 Fiabe

DRUGS witha REPUTATION
:

eS97

Highland { Deerfield | Northbrook
Park

Commons

'

| Meadows

Self-eaten

GON Conia | ironapan ae 1975 ChdtryLan Lower Prices!

49c HoNEV'C Ai

horas

14-02. Foil Wrapped

Only

6-foot diameter
sae BRELLA,a domessbaly.
19.9%

58 calories per

a3.

Loaf

servin

'

:

harin =,
Sa1, cc
GRAIN TABLETS

minum top.
TABLE. 33 inch alu
y 13.88
$20 quality. Separ ratel

REGULARLY 89¢

Handsome
coppertone finish.
3-ply ap &amp; vinyl fabric.

7) Yds. Chix

PANTS

Seed

Lawn
quality

Cc

walnut fale

ad
Or iginally $7, *

£° 98 quality.

29

Chrome-Plated

~—.

|.

Trowel,

reine

—

co

,]

;

:

save on' Choiee Tex"

t

a

c

_

~ i

zenui

Bs

Compareto 79c

29

4

|

Garden Tools

Food

$2.95

$1 49

qual.

LAMP

Colorful 5

2

“

9 Pounds | 40 P ounds
Grass

BUBBLE

Sizes 10.20, pro.
Portioned Ieengths,

We

.

&gt; °dish Style

CAPR]

g

ae

ght

- Cheesecloth

BUT

:

Li

- NOT
25c

fas Ret

Misses'

ummer Cotton fm

“All-Green”

}

:

2

Z

A rate frais

fm

»

$5.95
BUT

7

photo- finishing wicielas

... EXTRA: COST!
4

3 30- Foot Hose :
100%
BR ite

3

; ‘Walacets

REE NOZZLE
Oversize,

‘

vy iny

16-Inch LAWN

WHITE

$8.95e
quality
pen

Pick: up your prints

"white,

120- 620-127)

;

All- Purpose. Film, same

white

unce bottle

at Walgreens low

15-YEAR MONEY
BAC
WALGREEN
GU
SUARANTEE

“Worthmore”

eS

Odorless

brand.

all-purpos

.

a

3 3.

Mot 67c but only .

$3.25 Vista Car Wax
By

.

“wt, ROSE §' 9 game

at

Walgreens

price.

ime

&amp;

ere

black &amp;.-

TD:

aitplae

F

ses st carton

reg

ss

SS
erreccee
EE
D

OY

=
Paravi

;

Hoag

;

Bs

Pclnac'a Pra

Pipe Tohacco

—

|

3

Morr

Brand

7

—_—

Seconds:

. CIGAR BUY! rn

E *Rosenons

,

0X 0

1°
"50 -

49

a

FIFTY

LITTLE Cigars J9: |

Veu aN

-0 Gallon of .

|.)
&amp;

for less!

ay
tert

©

Gan

BUDWEISER

east
{

.

of

VODKA
80 proof. 5th

\

&amp; me
ae

&amp;

Tr

Ree

8 YEARS OLD

_

Piaman
j

=

Ses

ie

SounBON

iquor Not Sold Sun. at Deerfield

aerey 23

Paint Tray
and Roller

CY

CA
ij

$3-69 OM coun
BOURBON

Try
quart—return unopened
gaalibe hore full refund if
you're not 100% s atisfied!

s LADDER

5-Foot Wood

.

SEP

Ye

TR

ae

//m
4

C

Compares with $1.39

wy

Sellers!

your

akg

Drug

Store

4

- ¥|

aS

UR DOLLAR BUYS MORE
bur Walgreen

4

|

ae

ed steps.

I

_ eg ia ae $1.29 sellers!’

62799

GUCKENHEIMER 7] $4.99 arVarloff

all @

Gallon of Paint WALGREENS......
Theor 98- |]|}

THE KING OF BEERS

86 pr. blend. 5th

shop size at low

When

Bluevienan rine
&amp; white shades
wich bax s &amp; white finish pole.

WHISKY

18-ounce

152

a

BUSHES

at

Simoniz.

ite

My

|

19-

&amp; tasteless. Only.

Bon Ami Liquid Cleaner
Quart

(6 or, imote, black

13:

we

ah

NO

sizes,” at PO:
eageire reat, ‘

pr

iale-tFpial arFlakes
GNS ipataMothsg Polaco
NN. 39¢ Pint of Mineral Oil

FENCE

| 52.56 tise

¥:

eye

ei ‘et

and ‘get: roll, of: Walgreens

iB Reg. 29¢ Tincture lodine

BORDER

fresh

ae

Se

‘

Ls© a

ml

Ld re oe foe
—na
,

Co

y

Fairy

Helena Rubinstein

Princess

Bath Powder Mitt

[Per Bc
WAS

(Discontinued)

.

COLOGNE
Blossom, Heave

| was” 5
Apple

$425

Qe":

n Sent

eK

�:

are

Wei ecotaas: mats

— LET US DO IT —
We

Hadassah

Storm

Keys Made

Windows

and

OPEN

To Order While You Wait.

SUNDAYS

GARDEN

NEEDS

Williams

—

9 A.M. — 1 P.M.

HOUSEWARES

—

discuss ‘Developmental
Children

Park

and

hold its April open meeting, a des-

urbia’s
with a

sert

problems

tea,

Lane,

on

Wednesday,

Riverwoods,

The
ert

guest

Youth.”

Aspects
This

will

of
be

April

19,

TOYS

Goodman,

2-4387

(Paid

will

assistant

with

be

Robof

Service.

psychiatric

a master’s

Political

children

encountered
in

our

so-

degrec

National

Slated
the

also

election

reclamation

“affluent

society.”

lands

board

of

Park

for
of

this

meeting

officers

and

directors

Hadassah,

Fund,

growing

Officers

and

for

is
the

Highland

the election

of

ee

x

sah
Advisory
and
Coordinating
Council.
This month, Highland Park Hadassah is highlighting the Jewish

by

Elect

pie

personnel for North Shore Hadas-

of

dedicated

waste

are

working

to

and

in Israel. American

women
To

director

Park Family

a trained

cial worker

“coddled
children,”
along
discussion of some of the

Deerfield.

speaker

Goodman,

the Highland

ID

Hadassah _ will

at 12:30 p.m., at the home of Mrs.
Allen
Dorfman,
1001
Hoffman

Wed. ‘til Noon

RAVINIA
HARDWARE
YOUR ONE STOP STORE
Roger

from the University of Chicago, will

a presentation of his views on subHighland

Doors

Store Hours Daily 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. —

In

Deerfield April 19

Repair Screen Doors and Windows
Replace Broken Windows
Fix

Meets

3

i

with

the

desert

Hadassah

the JNF

to form a new community in the |
wastes of Adullam, Tzur Hahassah,

which will provide housing for hundreds of homeless families. Mrs.
Allen Dorfman is the JNF chairman for Highland Park Hadassah.

Advertisement)

All of us urge you to help elect
FRANCES M. ARENBERG
Highland Par
City Council
Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Adler
‘Mr. and Mrs, Bernard F. Alchon

Mr. nd Mrs. Edmund L. Andrews,

;

Mr.
Mr.
rr.
r.
Mr.

Jr.
and Mrs,
and Mrs.
Henry X.
Milton K,
and Mrs.
Jr.

William R. Anixter
Albert L. Arenberg
Arenberg
Arenberg
Alfred S. Alschuler,

Mr. and Mrs. William W. Baker
r. and Mrs. Stuart

|

Bernstein

Dr. and Mrs. Ralph B. Bettman
Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. Bolle
Mr. and Mrs. William E. Bond
Mrs. Douglas Boyd
Mrs. Jane Bresnehan
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Buchanan, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. James Buhai

_ Mr. and Mrs. Paul S. Burg
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Cameron
Mr.
r.
Mr.

and Mrs. Sam Carani
and Mrs. Frank V. Cargill
Samuel M. Chaimson
and Mrs, Thomas P. Clark

_ Mr. and Mrs, William B, Cope

Mrs. Betty Colacicco
Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Corwith
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Crimo
Mr, and Mrs. Robert L. David

.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.

Mr. and Mrs. Alvin G. Dempsey, Jr.
Mr, and Mrs. Frank J. Dinelli
Mr. and Mrs. John Eddileman
Mr. William F. Einbecker

Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Ettlinger
Mr.
Mr,
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.

and
and
and
and
=
r.
Mr, and
Mr. and
Mr. Jack

Mrs.
Mrs.
Mrs.
Mrs.
Mrs.

and
and
and
and
and
and
and
and
Alan

Mrs, Arthur |. Grossman
Mrs, Michael Gutman
Mrs. Louis P. Haller
Mrs. Jess Halsted
Mrs. Alden T. Harris
Mrs. Vernon H. Heins
Mrs. E, Donald Heymann
Mrs, Eugene Hotchkiss
J. Jacobs

. and Mrs. J. Sigurd Johnson

Emil Faust
Milton Fisher
Marion B. Fiore
Harold M, Florsheim
Harold E. Foreman,

Mr. and Mrs. William T. Jones
Mr. and Mrs. James F. Kahnweiler
Mr. and Mrs, Richard L. Kahn

Mr,
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mrs.

Mrs. J. S. Friedman
Mrs. Tom R, Friedman
P. Frost

and Mrs.
and Mrs.
and Mrs.
and Mrs.
Orray T.

Frank S, Karger
Lester J. Kelly
William M. Kelly, Jr.
Henry C. Kerulis
Knight

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Geraci

Mr. and Mrs.

Mr. and Mrs.

Mr, Lesley Kodner
Mr, and Mrs. Sigmund Kunstadter

Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mrs.
Mr.

Richard

F. Gibbs

Edward L., Gilroy
and Mrs. Walter F, Gips, Jr.
and Mrs. Edward H. Glover, Jr.
Joseph C. Green
and Mrs. Edward A.

Edward

M.

Knox

Mr. Nafe Larson, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Lauesen
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lawton

Mr. and Mrs. Samuel T. Lawton, Jr.
Mrs, Scott Leonard

Greenwald, Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. David Levinson
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lieber
Mr, and Mrs. Theodore R. Locb
Mrs. Richard J. Loewenthal

Mr. and Mrs. Seymour N. Logan
.
.
.
.

and Mrs.
and Mrs,
and Mrs.
and Mrs.
McComb
. and Mrs.

Matt J. Maiman
Charles David Maley
Sidney W. Mandel
Hamilton W.
James

H. Moses

. and Mrs. Edward Murphy
Mrs. Howell
Mr. and Mrs.
Mr, and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Baldwin

W. Murray
Bernard Nath
Thomas Nathan
Walter R. Neisser
Newman

Dr. George Olander
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Onesti
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur M.

Oppenheimer
Mr. Robert P. Palmer
Mrs. Robert F. Patton
Mr. and Mrs. Alfonso Picchietti
Mr, and Mrs. Albert Pick, Jr.

Mrs. Ralph E. Pottker

Mr. ond Mrs. Percy H. Prior, Jr.
Mr, and Mrs. Alan L. Reinstein
Mrs. Leonard M. Ri-ser

. and Mrs. John A. Riggio
. and
. and
. and

Mrs.
Mrs.
Mrs.

Peter Rossi
Harold Rudolph
Louis A. Santi

. and Mrs. Robert M. Schrayer

.
.
.
.

and Mrs. Bowen
and Mrs. Milton
and Mrs. Edward
Herbert L. Stern,

E. Schumacher
H. Schwartz
Sonnenschein
Jr,

. and Mrs. Samuel Tepper

. Oliver W.
. and Mrs.
. and Mrs,
. and Mrs.
. and Mrs.

Tuthill
Frederick G. Uhimann
Arthur J. Vallez
Battista Vanoni
Philip Wallerstein

. and Mrs. George M. Webster
. Francis

D. Weeks

. and Mrs. Robert L. Weinberg
.
.
.
.
.

and Mrs. William W. White
and Mrs, John S. Wineman
and Mrs. Ted Winter
Allan I. Wolff, Jr.
and Mrs. Solomon Zeloof

You Can Help:
- — Remember to cast your

ballot on Tuesday, April 18
- — Urge your friends and

neighbors to vote!
MATURE,
IBLE

EXPERIENCED,

. . . Fran

RESPONS-

Arenberg

has

the

energy, time, and ability to serve
with distinction on the City Council. Vote Tuesday, April 18, for
Frances

M.

Arenberg

—

and

tell

your friends to vote for her, too!

CIVIC COMMITTEE

FOR FRANCES ARENBERG
(Paid

Page
H 26—D 10

Political

Advertisement)

Thursday, April 13,
io

aed

�eames ig hosCentral

ic,

ee

at Highland Park hospital. Mr. and
Cotulla,
Ramirez,
Manuel
Mrs.

ANDREW
SLOAN
MICKELS,
son of Mr, and Mrs. Gilbert Mickchild

in the

is Lisa,

William

and

Mrs.

Ind.

Paternal

Sloan,

Mr.

are

grandparents

Maternal

2.

family

Munster,

grandmother

is Mrs.

Helen Mickels, Chicago.
LISA BEISSWENGER,

daughter

of

J,

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Erich

Beiss-

wenger, 1232 Wilmot Rd., was born
April 1 at Highland Park hospital.
Other children in the family are
Linda,
6, and
Roy,
2. Maternal

grandmother is Mrs. Emilea Reihardt, Germany. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Beisswenger, also of Germany.
ANDREW
ALEXANDER
SAVAGE, son of Mr. and Mrs, Wendell
was

Park

Apri

ogist
the

and

an

day’s

educator,

discussion

at

This

will be followed

eon.

In

the

cussion
by

staff

will

members

start
a.m.

by

afternoon,

groups

will
10:30

a lunchsmall

be
of

dis-

conducted
the

associa-

tion and its’ clinic, the Irene Josslyn

clinic.
The Rev. Russell R, Bletzer, of
the North Shore Unitarian church,
will talk on ‘Adolescents and their
Values.” Rev. Bletzer is a resident
of Deerfield and lives at 426 Pine

St.

Dr.

Henry

Fineberg,

Glencoe

psychiatrist,
has
chosen
‘Understanding
the
Adolescent”
as his
topic.
Dr.
Ernest
Haggard,
professor

of Psychology at the University of
Illinois college of medicine, will
discuss “Social Pressure on Adolescents,” and Dr. Norman T. Watson, superintendent of the Glenbrook
high
school,
will
analyze
“The Adolescent In School.”
The cost of the entire day’s program is $1.75, For those wishing

to attend

only

the

discussion

may

attend

of

fifty

to

attend

cents.
only

sion. Tickets
the

door.

luncheon
the

the

may

possible

afternoon

ses-

be purchased

Reservations

may

panel

for a charge

It is also

for

be made

by

Office

at

Association

6412

morning

or by phoning

ID

at
the

calling
HI

6-

2-4900.

Local Man

In Charge

Of Alumni

Function

Dr. Miller Upton, president of
Beloit college, Beloit, Wis., will de-

scribe

the

“State

of

the

College’”’

to Chicago area alumni at a men’s
alumni dinner, Friday, April 21 at

the

Como

Inn,

546

N.

Milwaukee

Avenue, Chicago.
John Turner, 1240 Hackberry, is
in charge of the program.
The affair is sponsored by the

Chicago Beloit College club.
Among directors of the Chicago
club are Bob McGuire, 822 Warrington, and Turner.
\

child

at

Highland

Park

grandmother

RAUL

RONNIE

April

14

the

the family are Judy,

the

Scouts

500 Indian Hill address.
daughter of
PEPOON,
JANET
Mr. and Mrs. Harry B. Pepoon,
1405

7

are

guild

of the Beth-

bread and rolls, will

be

on sale from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Mrs. James Ferch and Mrs. Clarence Scott are co-chairmen for this

event.
charge

Mrs.

McClellan
Various

Herbert

of pricing

will

circle

and

do

Wenger
Mrs.

the

members

Harry,

maternal

are

the

The

paternal

B.

New

Pepoon,

grandparents.

grandmother

KAY RAGLAND,

NANCY

son

Outstanding Pair
e

.

Cre

—

h

%

Edwin Avery, president, and M
Robbins,

Sidney

Parent

Teac
hig!

Deerfield

of the

Organization

chairm

program

Deerfield

the

for

school have invited parents, students and friends to attend the pro“Fine Arts In Educatio ‘
gram
April

Wednesday,
7:30 p.m.

at

beginning

19,

a

Herbert S. Bull, chairman of the | 3
is
fine arts committee, has secu
Robi
person,
outstanding
two
will discuss ““Promot

Pearce who

and
of the Fine Arts in Education”
Mr. Franklin McMahon whose subhe
you
what
ject is “Using
learned.”

8:50 p.m. Introduction

of Frank.

lin McMahon.

9:20 p.m. Adjournment.
The

program

follows:

7:30 p.m. Visit art class room
and music practice and rehearsal
ee
area.
7:50

p.m.

Call to cafeteria.

8 p.m. Introductions of fine a
teachers: Chester Kyle, music 2
William Kolbe, art, by Bull.
8:30 p.m. Introduction of Ro
Pearce.

eral

daugh-

2,

Nugent A.
and Mrs.
ter of Mr.
Ragland, 1420 Chippewa Path, was

Arts

Committee Presents

is Mrs.

York.

Fine

hospital,

Park

Ridge.

and

Mrs.
are

Mary

G.
the

M.

Darlyne,

Raupp,

maternal

O

are Gera

children in the family

1.

Des

Mr.

é

Plaine:
—

grandparents.

DEERFIELD

VILLAGE OF
LAKE

COOK

AND

COUNTIES,

Election April
ALL

ILLINOIS

18, 1961

PRECINCTS

CAUCUS SLATE 1961
For Village
DAVID

President

C. WHITNEY

For Village Clerk

lehem church will hold an election
day bake sale Tuesday.
The sale will be held at the former town hall which is located cn
the church property at 602 Deerfield Rd. The baked goods, includ-

ing homemade

are

family

the

in

April

Other

Jr., 6, and Daniel, 4. Mr. and
Mrs. William Eckenroth, Chicago,

eli-

Hold Election Day
Bake Sale At Church
Women’s

Forest

at Lake

born

was

hospital.

.T.O.

Specimen Ballot

gible to hike the twenty mile Blackhawk Trail along the Rock River
will begin their hike.
They will stop at Lowden Historical Park to have lunch near the
famed
Lorado
Taft
Blackhawk
monument. At the end of the hike
the Scouts will be driven back to
the state park to spend the night
with the rest of their troop. All the
scouts will return on Sunday.
The Cubs for whom Mike Ganger
serves as den chief were visitors
at the meeting.
Three
new
‘Tenderfoot
Scouts
have been admitted to the troop;
Pete Johnson, Richard Mosse, and
Dick Hanson.

The

Ave.,

Central

children

Mrs.

Scouts

who

are

Liebler,

grandmother
Maternal
Rinck, who lives at the

Pa,
York,
is Mrs. R.

will drive to White Pines Forest
state park, near Oregon, and camp
there for the night. On Saturday

morning

and

Mr.

William

A.

Mrs.

10, and Mary

grandparents

4. Paternal

Beth,

hospital.

At the Tuesday meeting of Boy
Scout troop 52 plans were made for
their Blackhawk
hike and campout.

Friday,

LIEB-

son of Mr. and Mrs. RayLER,
mond E. Liebler, 500 Indian Hill
1 at Lake
born April
Dr., was
Forest hospital. Other children in

is

Hike Over Famed
Blackhawk Trail

On

Roesch,

ANTHONY

WILLIAM

in the

RAMIREZ,

A.

Robert

Mrs.

and

son

ROESCH,

7; Donald, 5; and James, 4. Maternal grandparents are the Rev. and
Mrs. J. E. Jolly, Cuba, New York.
Paternal grandmother is Mrs. A.
Roesch, Buffalo, New York.

Thomas L. McRaith, Evanston. Paternal grandparents
are Mr. and
Mrs. Stephen Maday, Evanston.

Boy Scouts Plan

North Shore Mental Health association, will be held at the Winnetka Community
House, located
at 620 Lincoln Ave. in Winnetka.
“Adolescence In Suburbia” is the
theme of the meeting.
A panel discussion featuring a
minister, a pychiatrist, a psychol-

3

Maternal

of the four panelists for the day-long meeting.

to discuss the problems of teenagers in “Suburbia.”
The seminar, sponsored by the

Other

JOSEPH

1057 Kenton Ave., was born March
31 at Lake Forest hospital. Other
children in the family are Robert,

MARY
MAUREEN
MADAY,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd
F, Maday, 100 Forestway, was born

Deerfield Board memNielsen, and
Howard

Theodore Repsholdt. The other two board members from
Deerfield not shown in the picture are Mr. Kenneth C. Crowell
and Mrs. David C. Whitney. The Rev. Bletzer will serve as one

A
large
number
of Deerfield
residents plan to attend a day-long
conference in Winnetka next week

of Mr.

family is Ann, 2. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Charles
O’Donnell, Grenock, Scotland. Mr.
and Mrs. Andrew E. Savage, 1010
Hazel Ave., are the paternal grandparents.

Shown discussing the forthcoming seminar on “Adolescence in Suburbia” to be sponsored next week by the North
Shore Mental Health Association are
bers: the Rev. Russell Bletzer, Mrs.

grandparents.

T. Savage,
1030 Hazel Ave.,
born
April
3
at Highland

hospital,

Mrs. Alex Garza,
are the maternal

ents. Mr. and
Cotulla, Texas,
DANIEL

grandpar-

paternal

the

are

Texas,

els, 1401 Dartmouth Ln., was born
Mar. 12 at Evanston hospital. The

other

4

April

was born

Ave.,

is in

CATHERINE

B. PRICE

For Village Trustee
(Three

IRA

to

be

elected)

K. HEARN,

JR.

Robert

publicity.
have

vol-

unteered to do the selling.

JOHN

Barbara Isley Pledged
To Lawrence Sorority

JAMES

Miss Barbara Lynn Isely, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Isley,
Deerfield,
was
recently
initiated
into Psi chapter of Kappa Delta
social sorority, one of six national
panhellenic sororities on the campus of Lawrence college, Appleton,
Wis.
Miss Isley was appointed representative
to the student
government organization of the college.

A. S. LINDEMANN
E. MANDLER

(ieee

B

Pics

.

Village Clerk
Village of Deerfield,

Lake and Cook Counties, Illinois

‘

�FRE eRe
A RI
gs
Lo

ek On SAR

bn

cL

SLL or

OC

§

AMIN

CRT

EVES
PAE TRIED D: VERIM
Oo BENOyMET ae
UTD
cere ay aL

RENE Gee

ELA

=),

ee
Meee ee

Ae,

: Deerfield Residents To Get Use
_ Of Garbage Disposal Units Inside
Following State’s 0.K. Of Plant

Ue,atie

ca

Bie:

De
a NAT

ree
pt

‘

Has

evening,
be

first-run,

will
showing

of a color

film

on

care.

of

|

Sage of the ordinance in 1959 fol-

|

that the Deerfield sewerage treat-

_

ment

The

Deerfield

|

the

voters

gave

ap-

to a $525,000 referendum
spring of 1960 to enlarge

sewerage

treatment

facilities.

| This money was increased by a
_ $97,000 federal grant to $622,000.

_

Not under construction present-

| ly, but part of the general
of the sewerage
plant
be geted into the cost of

| is

a

pickup

station

| part of town
An

another

_

scheme

and
the

in

which

budplant

the

east

will be built

year.

Plans and ramifications for this

_ station are now being worked

|

The

addition

to

the

on.

treatment

| plant will bring the capacity of
| the operation to a village of 24,000

population which includes the normal
amount
| dustry.
:

Manager

_
_
_
_
|

of

business

Stilphen

and

has

said

inthat

the plant is capable of handling
Deerfield’s ultimate growth which
is expected by planners to reach
the 24,000 population figure.
The plant was inspected by state

| Officials and action was taken to
_ lift the

ban

on new

| divisions.

mains

to sub-

__
The state said that even though
_ the plant isn’t completed yet, it felt

| assured

that

the

facilities

be
in operation
| sub-divider could

would

by the time a
hook up to the

_ system and increase the load.
_

Manager

Stilphen noted that the

lifting of
_ additional
_ within

the ban
house_

may lead to
construction

the Deerfield

area. He

| that now

that sub-dividers

_ that

situation

the

_ solved, they
_ to construct

|

has

been

will be more
homes in the

Construction

had

been

said

know

re-

ready
area.

down

_ from last year within the village,
he said.
_
The site of the treatment plant,
| located in the southwest part of
| Deerfield, will be landscaped once

| construction has been completed.
| There are no sizeable odors which
issue

from

the

plant

to

_ field REVIEW.

|
After being chewed upon first
entering the plant, the sewerage

| goes into a series of settling wells
| where the sediment falls to the
| bottom. The water is taken off
| the top and the sewerage taken
| out of the bottom and shipped to
a digester where it is heated in
large vats before being put out to

- dry.

While

age

heated,

the

sewer-

is acted upon by various bac-

| teria
and

_

being

so that
smells

food

stuffs

dissolved

disappear.

The water is purified in a pro-

cess

where

the

water

is

solids

which

are

in the settling tanks.

not

removed

_ Once the water is purified, it
it sent into the West Fork of the
pee Page

H

4—D

12

,

CLANGARST R
NCW

ney

ate RON EUSsya TR.Beat
mE ke!
sah CERIO
:
z
i

in

the

8

p.m.

at

first-

and

sound

World

Flower

the

area,

was

featured

at the

Garden

show

and

including

at

Thomas F. Kehr, seaman apprentice, USN, son of Mrs. Wallace D.
Kehr of 901 Sunset
Ct., serving
aboard the attack cargo ship USS
Merrick
operating
out
of
Long
Beach, Calif.

McCormick
Place.
Preceding the program the usual
PTA business meeting will be held,
Election of officers will also take
place.
Nominations
will
be
accepted
from the floor.

Plans Finalized For Bicycle Safety

Inspection At Deerfield Grade Schools
Deerfield’s Safety council, assisted by Lt. George Hall of
the

police

department,

the

Boy

Scouts

and

the

Jaycees,

conduct a bicycle safety inspection and registration
April 22, from

9 a.m. to noon.

The inspection and registration
will be conducted at grade schools
in districts 109 and
110 and
at
Holy Cross school.
Plans for the event were formalized at the April 3 meeting of the
Safety council.
Thomas
Wolf,
Safety
council
chairman,
has appointed
Howard
Grossenheider
as
coordinator
of
the bicycle safety program, assisted by Brewster Freifeld, Mrs. Elmer F. Anderson and Mrs. L. R.
Inglis, comprising the five-member
Deerfield Safety council.

to

will

Saturday,

The council has called attention
the following safety rules for

bicycles
issued by the
Deerfield
Police department.
1. Observe all traffic regulations,
red
and
green
lights,
one
way
streets, and stop signs.
2. Keep to the right and ride in
a single file. Keep a safe distance
behind all vehicles.
3. Have white light on front and
danger
signal
on rear for night
riding. Wear white or light-colored
clothing at night.
4. Always ride at a safe speed.
5. Give pedestrians the right of
way. Children under 10 years of
age are to ride on the sidewalk.
6. Look out for cars pulling out
into traffic and don’t ride out from
behind parked vehicles. Keep sharp

Cornell, Shodron
Place First In

lookout
doors.

for sudden

opening

of auto

7. Never hitch on other vehicles,
stunt or race in traffic. Never ride
two on a bicycle.
8. Carry
no packages
that obstruct vision or prevent control of
cycle.
9. Be sure that your brakes are
operating efficiently and keep your
bicycle in perfect running condition.
10. Slow down at all street intersections and look to right and left
before crossing. Walk your bicycle
across all intersections in the business district.
11. Always use proper hand signals
for
turning
and_
stopping.

Park

your

bicycle

in a safe

place.

12.

Ride in a straight line. Do
not weave in or out of traffic or
swerve from side to side.

Completes Course
James W. Parker, 2085 N. Robin
Wood
Rd., received
a certificate
for completing an eight-week, University of Illinois class in “Grievance Handling and Steward Training”
March
20 at the last class
meeting.
Parker
is a member
of Local
1441, International Brotherhood of
Electrical
Workers.
The
classes
were sponsored by the IBEW and
conducted
on
eight
consecutive
Monday evenings in Maywood
by
the U. of I. Institute of Labor and
Industrial Relations
and Division
of University Extension.

Cub Scout Eugene Thrasher sends his coupon to be sure
he gets a flowering crab tree to plant in honor of his mother,
Mrs.

Glen

Thrasher,

at

the

conservation

council.

watches as Mrs.
aids Eugene.

Mrs.

Louella

Thrasher’s

Gallo

Mrs. Thompson Aids
Direction Of Show
For Winnetka

Club

The memorable
music
and the
lighter side of the great events of
the 1940’s will be brought back to
life
tomorrow
evening
Friday,
April 14 when the Junior Auxiliary
of the
Winnetka
Woman’s
club
presents its annual talent show.
The
curtain
will
ring
up
on,
“The
Unforgettable
’Forties’,
at
8:15 p.m. at the Winnetka Woman’s
club,
485
Maple.
The
show
is
being directed by Mrs. Victor A.
Walter, Jr. of Northbrook with the
assistance
of
Mrs.
James.
H.
Thompson
of
Deerfield.
Mrs.
Thompson is also a member of the
Deerfield
Stagers.
The ten skits, ranging in subject
matter from the comic aspects of
the draft and rationing to the first
days of TV wrestling, will be interspersed with music by the band
and chorus. The audience will be
able to visit with members of the
cast during a refreshment period
at intermission time. Tickets will
be available at the door.

Custom Contest

Railroad

station

daughter,

of the

on

the first prize
the community

Deerfield

Glynis,

Post

2,

Office

Deerfield Woman Aids
Benefit Announcement
Mrs. Edgar Crilly, president two
years ago, active on the board and
a member of the advisory committee,
participated
in the
Service
Club
of Chicago’s
announcement
of a July benefit.
The
Service
Club
announced
March 21 that they will sponsor a
benefit July 3 of “Take Me Along,”
starring
William
Bendix
at the
Melody Top theater, Hillside.

Schultz Selected
To Attend Course
For

Executives

James B. Schultz, 533 Longfellow St., has been selected by IIlinois Bell Telephone company to attend the Northwestern university
program
for Bell system
executives.
Schultz,
a graduate
of
Wesleyan university joined

Illinois
Illinois

Bell in 1946 as a traffic supervisor
in Alton. He was promoted to assistant district traffic manager in
Peoria in 1948, and later served
Danville, Joliet and Champaign
the same capacity.

Bud Cornell and Tom
Shodron
were first place winners in their
respective groups of a custom car
model
contest
held
by
the
Toy
Castle of Deerfield.
Cornell won the age 11 and under classification and Shodron won
the 12 and over age group.
Judges for the contest were village
president
Joseph
Koss
and
president of the Deerfield Savings
and Loan association, Howard Wolf.
Placing in the 11 and under contest
were:
Dick
Marks,
second:
Mike
Brown,
third;
J.
Kroegel,
fourth; and Bud Cornell, fifth.
Placing in the 12 and over contest were: Jim Murtfeldt, second:
Dick Smith,
third; Mark
Hardin,
fourth and Len Kraske, fifth.
North Branch of the Chicago river
and empties
into the Mississippi
river eventually.
After
a
drying
process,
the
treated sewerage
is used
as fertilizer.

Milwaukee

April 28, Arbor Day. Mrs. Thrasher was
winner in the green contest, sponsored by

in
in

Joins Department
In 1951,
engineering
cago where

he joined
the traffic
department
in
Chihe served until 1953.

After assignments in Hammond
and Joliet, he was appointed district traffic manager in Waukegan.

Since

then,

he

has

served

as

di-

vision supervisor of the company’s
North Shore Division where he is
currently assigned.
Was

Navy

Commander

Following graduation from IIlinois Wesleyan, he was in the Navy
as a patrol plane commander
in

the South

Pacific

theater

of oper-

ations.

sprayed

into the air and let sink into layers
| of rock where bacteria work on
any

a

bother

_ neighboring houses, he said.
|
Ona
trip to the treatment plant,
_ Manager
Stilphen explained
the
_ operation of the unit to the Deer-

|

a

lawn

that

- proval
- in the

RE. mel CAEN

Shown
with
the
film
will be
exhibits from the garden clubs and

nurseries

Aboard Ship

Thursday,

there

a display

_

e

Film

time

Garbage disposal units have not
been allowed within the village

to

TSR
Oe

gym

Stilphen.

insufficient

es

LaF staat

school

Hf
_

was

aii

Maplewood

|

plant

Ae
aaa

First-Run

This

e
With the State Sanitary Water board’s lifting of a 19_ month long ban on sewer extensions in the village of Deerfield,
| the ordinance on use of garbage disposal units in homes is ex.
_ pected to be repealed, according to village manager, Norris

ee=) handle village needs.
However,
with the expenditure
of $622,000 the treatment plant,
| which is currently nearing com_ pletion, is expected to meet Deer_ field’s need for waste disposal indefinitely.

a,

Tonight At School

sis

_ lowing the state edict which said

a

i Mapleood Sahieal

al.

_ sanitary sewer district since pas-

reVa

ibe

SS

a seven day cruise through
Mr.

and

pictured
recent

Mrs.

on

cruise.

Eugene

th, sailing from Miami

the West

Bergmark,

the swimming

pool

1327

deck

Indies and
Carlisle

Nassau
Pl.

of the ship

They

before

on

are
are

its

Schultz is active in
church
activities,
League.

Boy Scouts,
and
Little

He and Mrs. Schultz are the parents of three
and
Robert,
garet.

sons: James, William
and
daughter,
Mar-

Thursday, April 13, 1961

|

�DEERFIELD BOYS’ BASEBALL

Weatherman’s Curve Postpones Action
In Intermediate, Major League Tryouts
The weatherman threw a low curve in the form of a snow
storm last Sunday, causing the Deerfield Boys Baseball association to postpone the second day of intermediate and major
league tryouts as well as the first tryout session for the girls

softball league.

Minor

The

for Sunday

League

minor

aft-

Tryouts

league

ball

players

just

south

With over 55 teams of both boys |
and girls playing in the D, B. B. A.
program alone, besides those that

use

the

through

of the

ball

diamond

the

Park

Recreation

District,

grounds are put
busy throughout

Appears

facilities
program

all available

to use and kept
the summer.

In Jazz

Ballet At College
Dorinda Bolton, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. George W. Bolton, 1405
Valley Rd., was one of three women who appeared in ‘Fancy Free,”
a jazz ballet which was presented
recently
at
Denison
university,
Granville, 0., in conjunction with
an opera workshop program.
Miss Bolton is a junior at the
school.

An old plantation scene bathed in moonlight is the romantic setting for “Spring Fever,”
the barbershop harmony show to be presented by the Deerfield-Melodeer Chapter of Sweet
Adelines, Inc. Saturday, April 29 at 8:30 p.m. A scale model of the stage of the Highland

Park High School, where the show will be held, is shown
staging

and

scenery

chairman,

boys

will meet

at 9 a.m., the bal-

at

Each

1

notified

p.m.

by

card

boy

or

will

phone

to do so.
Colt League

be

call |

“Spring

play

Forming

Adeline

Colt

+

baseball

organized

North

in

the

Earl

Sundberg,

president

be made

of the

reports
league

up of 16 teams

section’s

season

with two

play

Mrs. Earl McGrath shows the village treasurer’s records
to village treasurer and collector for government day, Susan
Dexter, and superintendent of public works, Charles David,
both freshmen at Deerfield High School.

from
field
field

blanks

are

will

Ridge,

Dr.;

Ben

Highland

Johnson,

712

La

Park;

Warwick

and

J.

April

13,

be

brief

|
a

Letter

Varsity letters awarded for winters sports
at Shattuck
School, —

Faribault,

Minn.,

include

15

for

the Editor:

that

will

have

innumerable

spaced
and
dug
by two
skillful
young men operating a wicked-looking tool that must have a capacity
of several hundred man-power and
the shrubs were dumped at convenient locations.
The final and perhaps crucial act
of cooperation on the part of vil-

Checking
Hall from

ment

over

police

left, are: Jim

day; Sherry

fire chief for today.

department
Patterson,

records

with

Lt. George

police chief during

Rubin, the village clerk; and

Steve

govern-

Kerns,

lage

officials

was

a fine

boost

—

basketball, 16 for wrestling, 14 for eh
hockey, and 12 for swimming.
Ke
Among

those

receiving

letters

wasgwere: Jim Street, son of Mr.
and Mrs. J. M. Street, Woodland
Lane, Deerfield, for swimming.

Marchant

Contract

An Army Signal Corps contract
for $64,880 has been awarded to 4
Kleinschmidt Division, of SmithCorona Marchant, Lake-Cook Rd., —
Deerfield, for an electronic printer

system.

The

award

was

made

by

the Fort Monmouth Procurement
Office, U.S. Army Signal Supply

|
—

Agency.

Broadview

Robert

a

er, 370 Barberry, are other
land Park Sweet Adelines.

,and Mrs.

High-

ee
—

q
—

will be withheld if requested

and

G.

Rd.

1961

To

should

right of way was graded, holes were

and a little league size
at the new recreation

- Thursday,

Letters

1050

to participate with the Deerfield
park district in the purchase
of
backstops for a full-size bascball

Gets Swim

of North-

dress of the writer, whose name

benefits for the area.
I think we are unanimous in our
appreciation of the cooperation and
efficient
assistance
we
received
from Mr. Stilphen and the other
village officials who made the project possible.
_ Several days before the shrubs
were
to be
planted,
the
village

the DEERFIELD REVIEW.
The D. B, B. A. expects this year

diamond
diamond

stitute the opinions of the paper.

hedge

More
information
about
the
Pony
and Prep League
activities
will appear in next weeks edition

of

by the

have less than 300 words. They
should contain the name andad-

Opinions expressed in these
columns do not necessarily con-

we
spent
planting
shrubs
along
Chestnut St. on April 8.
The chances are good we'll see
the shrubs grow into a beautiful

available

Buda,

Melodys.”

Ave and Telegraph Rd. will be
ambly rewarded for the few hours

Richard Baldrini at the Deerhigh
school,
Jewett
Park
house,
Earl
Sundberg,
925

Hiawatha

“The

Those of us who live near the
railroad tracks between Greenwood

meet
the
winner
of the
South
section for the league championship at the end of the season in
August,
Because the association was not
able to obtain lists of boys attending high
schools
for mailing of
applications, boys in the age group
13. through 18 who are eligible for
play in the Pony, Colt and Prep
Leagues may still register.

Application

photograph

DEERFIELD FORUM

that
will

sections
of 8 teams
each.
Deerfield’s team
will play 21
games
against the North section of the
| North Suburban League.
;
This will pit Deerfield’s players
against teams from McHenry, Waukegan,
North
Chicago,
Highland
Park,
Wheeling,
Glenview
and
Northbrook.
The
winner
of the

North

quartet,

trict Medalists, will.also be on the
program.
Mrs. Henry
Sonderman,
650

Suburban

League.

Deerfield colt league,
the North
Suburban

also will feature

A men’s quartet from the County
Line Chapter of the Society for the
Preservation
and
Encouragement
of Barber Shop Quartet Singing in
America,
Inc.—‘‘The
Fire-House
Four,” who were 1959 Illinois Dis-

the natioinally orLeague,
Inc., will

inter-city

newly

Fever”

the
1951
Sweet
Adeline
International
Quartet
Champions,
‘The
Quarternotes,”
who
are
now
renowned for their hilarious comedy
renditions
and
costuming.
Also
appearing will be another Sweet

A
new
addition
to
the
Boys
Baseball association program this
year is the colt league for boys |
15 and 16 years old. This league,

a member of
ganized
Colt

in the above

J. McDonough of Deerfield to (left to right): show

The
Deerfield-Melodeer
chorus
will sing several songs in four-part
harmony
under
the
direction
of
Mrs. Lee Thorsen of Rockford, who
travels
the 90 miles from
there
every Tuesday
evening
to direct
rehearsals at the Deerfield American Legion Hall.

as to the time he is to report.)
There will be a registration table
set up at the field both morning
and afternoon so that any 8 or 9
year old who still wants to play,
but who has not sent in a registration sheet, will have the oppor-

tunity

Francis

chairman Mrs. Kenneth R. Bodle and publicity chairman Mrs. William Bordwell
brook, and program chairman, Mrs. Billy Prag, 1417 Eastwood, Highland Park

will
meet
for tryouts
Saturday,
April
15
at Deerfield
Grammar
school.
Approximately
one-half
of the
ance

Mrs.

é.

to

the morale of the insecure gardeners who did the planting.
Fire Chief Jan DeJong and some

of the volunteer firemen spent several tedious hours giving the shrubs
a professional soaking that chouye
make them flourish.
With so much assistance from so
many people, Nature, one would

think,

could

do

no

less

that

|

be |

equally cooperative.
Sincerely
Mrs. Otto Almasy

a
_

To the Editor:

eet

Any

thinking

and

fair

person

whether

Democrat

minded
or

|

Re-

|

publican could only be outraged by

|

pea

draft is scheduled
ernoon, April 23.

Road,

the insidious, small-minded
and
completely
unwarranted
attacks
levelled against our township of-

|

ficials

—

during

the

campaign.
The question of
and the deliberate

recent

gi

All boys who were tried out last
Saturday, as well as all boys who
tryout next Saturday, are to report
again on Sunday afternoon, April
16 at Jewett Park at 1:15 p.m.
At that time, those players who
have been definitely assigned to
the
intermediate
league
will be
told
so
and
will
turn
in their
tryout shirts. Further tryouts for
the major league will continue on
Sunday
afternoon,
April
16 and
Saturday
April 22, weather
permitting. The major league player

park on Wilmot
of Greenwood.

ae

Those boys 10 to 12 years of
age, who were scheduled to try out
April 9 at 1:15 p.m.
have
been
rescheduled at 8:45 a.m. Saturday,
April 15 at
Jewett Park. The girls
tryouts have been rescheduled for
Sunday afternoon, April 16, 1 p.m.
at Wilmot field.

election

a
the brick yard ~
efforts to con- —

fuse newcomers to our village over —
the zoning of the brick yard property and to attempt to discredit Mr.
Berning is a deplorable example of
how ill-advised and misguided persons can do only irreparable harm
to our little community and those
who seek to serve.
Mrs. W. D. Sherman Jr.
111

Plumtree

Rd.

Page H 5—D

_
—
E
|
Ne

13

�Now

FREE
SUNDAY PAPER

Army

Leopardi,
wood,

SUNRAY
Skokie

Michael

23

N.

Leopardi,

and Mrs, Anthony
Prairie

recently

Ave.,

arrived

High-

in Germany

and is now a member of the 50th
Infantry. A rifleman in the infantry’s Company D in Wildflecken,
Leopardi entered the Army in September 1960 and received basic

with purchase of 10
gallons of gas or more.

D-X

Pvt.

22, son of Mr.

8 A.M. — 3 P.M.

3088

Pack 134’s Pinewood Derby

In Germany

training

He

Highway

at Fort

Riley,

is a 1956

land Park

High

Kan.

graduate

of High-

School.

SPORTSWEAR
Don't envy H-I'S... wear them

Thank You!
Many thanks to all of
the citizens of Deerfield

Township

for your sup-

port in the recent election.

| shall continue to attempt to merit the vote

of confidence

that you
Above,

have given to me.

lich

Deerfield Township
Assessor

Look

this

Slacks!

way

this Spring

. ...

sliver-slim

in

No matter what you want to buy
or sell you'll find the Want-Ad section your best market place.

ignore

a belt (new

hold-up).

Front is pleatless; bottoms are cuffless.

collection

of smart

Spring

hidden

colors.

side-tabs

for

winning

their parents attended the annual
Pinewood Derby, David Jacobson
won first with the fastest car, and
second

Pack

134’s

Richard
first

Pinewood

Derby,

and

Tom

Hamilton

receives

first

place

man.

and

third

spots

Sangerman
Following

place

for

Tom

the

went

and

Cary

to

Zig

Hamilton’s

best

made

Some

50

The

Cubs

of Pack

Aroma

Tells

134

and

You

evening.

It’s

Baked

In

Our

Kitchen’

WEEK- END
H*!*S

Piper

handle

the

In a great

$4.95

BUTTERSCOTCH
PECAN

Ph

pes
NASTA

Chocolate
CAKE

Reg. 90c

79%

COFFEE CAKE
Reg. 90c

SOUR DOUGH
FRENCH BREAD
PHONE

Open

THE

ORDERS

Thursdays

WILL

BE

YE TL. COMP :

@ 595 CENTRAL AVE

‘til

BAUM’S

QUICKLY DELIVERED

9 . . . Monday

Evenings

7 to 9

° ID 2-5300

« HIGHLAND

Bakery

Delights Are Available ONLY

in Our Own

Shop

BAUM S PASTRY SHOP

PARK
=.

Page

H

6—D

14

car

were David Johnston, second and
Michael Wrenn, third.
Ralph Wooster, District Commis-

for designing the best looking
car in the derby.
Below
is
action at the annual Pinewood sioner, and John Cole, Scoutmaster
Derby of pack 134, held “March of Scout Troop 134 conducted the
29 at the West Ridge School. annual Pack inspection during the

“Where

Smooth and snug, they’‘re tailored to set low on the

hips and

David Jacobson

receives the first place trophy
from Cubmaster Charles Gram-

HARRY EARHART

61
SLACKS

Cub

Thursday,

April

13,

1961

�KEEPING
TIME

You'll Find It

with paul leeds

at

If you’re
will be

or

— SHERONY’S

miss

the

a High School parent
cne next year don’t

PTA

tonite at
PRICE,
NEUMAN
chairman
discussion

“At

Random”

panef

the High School. BILL
student
chairman
and
“RED”
FELL,
adult
will lead a round-table
by members of the Stu-

dent Activities Committee on important
teen-age
problems.
This

GRASS SEED SPECIAL
MERION BLUE GRASS $1 69

Shore

Group

Photo

by

Edith

Grass

remedial

school

reading

here,

work

Maureen

at

leaves

the

Immaculate

Saturday

for

and from there to the Fiji Islands enroute
near Wellington, New Zealand.
“There may be different languages
spoken,
different
clothing
worn, different customs to be observed
in daily living—but
children are the same the world over,”
says Miss Keegan.
She
found
the
young
second
graders at Immaculate Conception
school very much
like the mischevious
boys
and
girls in New
Zealand and England. While she
was
“remedying”
their
reading,
they
were
teaching her how
to
speak the ‘American
Slanguage”
and laughing at her English-Irish
accent.
Gives

“Maybe
ested

in

Some

Travel

Tips

people

would

be

inter-

how

we

girls

knowing

from New Zealand figured out how
to travel as cheaply
and yet packed our

full

with

the

as_ possible
days to the

maximum

of

rich

travel experiences,” she said.
Leaving New Zealand, Maureen
went
directly
to
Ireland
where
she met almost all of her 57 first
cousins, then traveled on to London, and took a job teaching in
‘junior’ school in Reading, Berk-

shire

County.

“First, traveling light was of utmost importance,
We
found that
blouses and skirts were best; the
dacron blouses needed no ironing
and always looked fresh.

“We

stayed in youth hostels, but

Francisco,

“home”

which

is

Caucus

candidates

were

some

250

bothered

high

school

Large

same

time

and

Walter
107,

only

in the

election

at

There
was
no
contest
on the
high
school
ballot.
Mrs.
James
Tibbetts
polled
918;
Harry
W.

Knoll 904. With 41 scattered writeins and 22 spoiled ballots, the high
vote

totalled

Seventeen

of

the

pated

bike from

number

of

place

people

to place,
that

way.

Instead we used cheapest
class
public
transportation
— buses
or
trams,
boats.”

trains
and
even
river
Another
New
Zealand

teacher was her travel companion.
Maureen spent Christmases in
Ireland and one Easter holiday in
Rome.
“These
were
two
things
I had wanted to do all my life,”
she
said.
“There
are
no
words
to describe
the
thrill
of either
one!”’
Miss
Keegan
is
returning
to
Wellington
in
time
to
see
her
brother ordained as a priest, and
to spend the ‘‘Winter’” (which has

already

set

younger

seminary

in

there)

with

her

brother

who

enters

the

for

training

in

the

Spring (our Fall.)
She finds the New Zealand ‘‘welfare state’ a great boon for young
people.
“Because
New
Zealand
needs so many teachers, our education is completely financed by
the state,” she said. Parents receive
payments
for
each
child
(higher than in England); old folks

Thursday,

April

13, 1961

in

the

Mavericks

Darwin

Dist.

Mrs.

Rummel

Lois

got

109

and

245

240

and

Dist.

cast.

108,

Louis

190

ballots

Kahnweiler

well

are

given

father.

cared

the

only

for,

and

subsidies

farmers,

such

as

as
4

near

NOW $3.50.

low

BUSHEL

as

$59.95

BURNER

EVER

CART

aie

WHEELS

engage-

*

2:

HERO

For Lawn and: Garden Use '

Highwood

Tuesday

*

recaptured
ketball

Little

the

title

to DON

SKRIN-

Guys

who

international

bas-

last

Saturday

nite

Rico.

|

*

Talking

*

*

about

:

Basketball—The

members
of the Fell sponsored
Little Guys team and the Prep
League champs who won in their
respective classes were
honored
at a banquet last nite at Phil
Johnsons

restaurant.

*
*
*
Hey Mom!—Don’t bother to cook
this Sunday, They'll all love the
old-fashioned smorgasbord at the

Moose Home on Green Bay. RUTH
CARDINA
and
her
committee
have planned quite a spread and
the public is invited. From 3 to 6.
*
*
*
Still on display in Leeds Sheridan
Road
window.
2 beautiful
by

one

Park’s
famous
VALLEZ. Worth
to

of

MHishland

artists
— JERRY
coming up town,

enjoy.
Some

*

of Leeds

are worn

by

*
Jewelers best a

hundreds

of won

on the North Shore who had us)
re-style and re-mount their older.
jewelry in new modern
settings.
The cost is surprisingly low.

LEEDS JEWELERS

HARDWARE
Rd.,

Res-

north-

*

*

*
WE of

Bay

next

*

Highwood

Extra: Large Size

We Carry Everything

Hills

minutes

Half-Day

paintings

BLOOMING

ROSE BUSHES -

Green

the

with a thrilling 4 point victory over

GARDEN AND..LEAF RAKES — LAWN
ROLLERS — GARDEN AND FLOWER, .
SEEDS — FENCE— ALL KINDS . ©
OF TOOLS

314

of

It’s not too early! To select and
layaway that important graduation
gift now while the choice is greatest at Leeds. This weeks’ Keeping
Time Specials include a selection
of shock-proof 17 jewel watches
for him or her at a low $24.50 including taxes. And—it’s engraved
free when bought at Leeds.

ARS’

Rubbish and Leaf Burner .........-.- ‘$18.95

op-

her

west
nite.

Vernon

just a few

*

ROTARY MOWERS (4 cycle)...

184,

were

one

extended

Congratulations

WHEELBARROWS
LEAF SWEEPERS as low as ........ $29.95

Forty-seven total votes were cast
in Dist. 110: 44 for Warren Jackman,
42 for Walter
Hardy,
and
44 for Kenneth
Griffiths.
Three

are

Lots!

GARDEN TOOLS.

Harry Lansman 181, and Eli Olech,
163. All were elected.

write-in votes
position.

SPECIAL!

Be in 5 Bag

FT
Reg $4.50

were

got

*

of

an

beautiful

Puerto

votes respectively, but lost to caucus
candidates
Allen
Granfield,
Paul Greenfield and Albert Dawe.
Only about 230 of the voters cast
a high
school
ballot.
Slightly
more
than
100
votes
were cast in uncontested Dist. 111.
Aldo
Croveiti
of Highwood
led
with 104 votes, followed by Mrs.
Harold
Bluhm’s
102 and Donald
Klein’s 98.

In

Price Must

HOSE

election.

Mueller

*

*

with

taurant

Call or Ask for Information!

as the choice of a caucus held just
prior to the election there. Keno

mum

didn’t

Reduced

write-ins
were
in
Bannockburn
precinct for Robert Keno, a writein candidate for elementary Dist.
106.
Keno
won,
63 to 53, over
David Allen, who was on the ballot

since one does not meet the maxi-

we

&gt; BAGS

Assorted
Delivered

school

is a resident
of unincorporated
Delmar Woods
subdivision,
More
than
800 voters
partici-

to

ment close to home. His trio opens

967.

high

*

friends

Canada

FERTILIZERS

GARDEN

and

North Shore’s favorite singers and
pianists will be happy to know that
IKE COLE winds up a 30 week
tour of the U.S.A., Mexico, and

e VERTAGANIC
e MILORGANITE
e VERTAGREEN
@ LIME
@ ORGANIC FERTILIZER
PLUS MANY OTHERS...
SAVE!
SAVE!

place.

Saturday

*

Bale

For

last

SAVINGS!

at the

the

*

Quote: “There are two ways of
being rich. One is to have all you
want, the other is to be satisfied
with what you have.”

elected

Mrs,

aisle’

*

PEAT MOSS

to vote

board

the

Many

Winners were the three caucus
candidates: L. M. Scott 446, Robert

in

for SCOTT’S

*

year.

JOAN MARIE WINTERS and TOM
BURROWS who will be saying “I
Do” this Saturday.

on SCOTT'S Fertiziler and Seed
SCOTT'S Halts and Turf and
Seed Builder.

Ask

to all school board vacancies
in
Highland
Park,
Highwood
and
Deerfield Saturday; but Arthur S.
Hansen Jr.’s campaign claim—that
it takes a contest to get the vote
out—was substantiated.
Hansen polled 350 votes in the
District
107
election,
but
lost.

S. Berger
414, and
Neisser 481.
Of the 703 voters

(Bulk)

SAVE $5.00

Ballot Contests
increase School
Election Turnout

school

Her travel to almost every country in Europe was sandwiched in
during school holidays.

Save

Conception

San

Mixture

of the

Our warmest good wishes to the
former
DIANE
GOLDMAN
and
PHIL
SIBR who “walked down

res. 9749 Now $3.95

two years in a British-European teach-and-travel tour, tells
her cousin, Mrs. Patrick Burke, Burton PI. After several weeks

of

*

Quality
5-LB. SUN OR SHADE MIX
With 50% Top Blue

Thompson

programs

PTA

cksesioea

North

“Here’s my next place to visit,” Maureen Keegan, 27year-old New Zealand elementary teacher who has spent

one of the most interest-

ing

Digit

Best

Lb.

is always

_

ID 2-2041

491 Central Ave., Highland Park
Page H 7—D

15

�eran
oy COP

AR RE RUT
Ge CaN ga De Nom ats Oi)
:
I; Rea yey ¢
,

a

Ars. P iolter's Art
n Exhibit Now
pi P tutte

hi

i - Stotter,

exhibiting

EC School

Guild

760

the

A

David

W.)

is currently

Lincolnwood

in Lincolnwood,

the Art

of

at

(Mrs.

Marion,

Crash

Appreciation

|besponsored by the PTA.

a part

as

program

a Mrs. Stotter interprets and ex| presses herself in both abstract
and realistic techniques in paint| ing, She has exhibited at Theobold

| Galleries,

Chicago

Women’s

Aid,

gave

734

6 RaSERREef
:
v

ss

im

i

*

cme
mie
MSeeris 11
Age .
;

rs

x

a

ticket

Central

a crash

Park
to

police

Alice

Ave.

squad

Batteau

of

after

witnessing

Ave.

and

at Central

Green

Old

High

a
WAS1 UM eat
antig
iy

bi

es
#

aAe cuNg

oe

;

rae

RN
tt Pa
; WOU
t
i

e
4

Pye
aNrea BaanBRET coreLege
oe oneet Ft AU
,
i
ae
;
¥

Ci

3

a

OR en

abana eyR

1 he

Chee oe TRU
eh
zy /

ay

¥

Art

Fair

and

| Director

April

19

at 1:15

George

Johnson,

New

Tickets

may

be

ways

obtained

oes eae

Hours

Mrs. Marjorie Ruud, newly-appointed executive director of the

from

1

from

9:30

p.m.

and

means chairman and her co-chairman
Mrs.
Peter
Fabbri
are
in
charge of the event.

School.

Bah

Suburban Fine Arts Center, 654
Deerfied Rd., will be on duty at
the Center Mondays. and Tuesdays

Announces

Art Center

Oak
Terrace
School
PTA
will
be hosts to ‘Luncheon Is Served,”

Mrs.

of Milwaukee.

Orchard

E

in the schoo! auditorium. This is
a special luncheon featuring unusual foods,

lowed them in a left turn; collided
with the oncoming car of Ralph

Trier

a

Wednesday,

Bay Rd. Monday evening.
According to the report, she folSchlieve

eae
PR Cede
Pee TA

‘Luncheon Is Served’
At Oak Terrace PTA

on Central
Highland

aS

i

my :

from

to

4

Call
Mrs.

Johnson

at

“Beauty

ID

2-6532.

and the Beast”

The Oak Terrace School PTA
will also present the Cole-Marionettes,

in

Beast”

Thursday,

Oak

the

“Beauty

Terrace

and

April

p.m.,

and

Thursdays

a.m. to 12 noon.
for

Information

People
wishing
information
about classes, exhibitions and other
activities at the Center are advised

the

20 for the

children.

to call during those hours. Spring
quarter classes opened last week,

but

there

several

still

are

openings

classes.

pe

Parana

Ballot

ALL WARDS
CITY OF HIGHWOOD-LAKE COUNTY,

ILLINOIS

Election—Tuesday, April 18, 1961
EDGAR

C. BENSON
City Clerk

PEOPLES TICKET

CIVIC IMPROVEMENTS
PARTY

PARTY
- FOR

MAYOR

(Vote

JOHN

for

FOR MAYOR
(Vote for One)

One)

LEO

FRANTONIUS
FOR

CITY

(Vote

FOR

FOR

FOR

POLICE
(Vote

4

PETER A. CARANI
FOR

ALDERMAN

WARD

FULL

FILL
(Vote

SECOND

WARD

FOR

for

(Vote

for

FIRST WARD

WARD

FULL

TERM

One)

WARD

for One)

ALDERMAN
(Vote

FIRST WARD

for

One)

BERNARDI

WARD

FOR

One)

ALDERMAN
(Vote

THIRD

for

WARD

One)

RENO SIGNORIO

BRUGIONI
ALDERMAN
(Vote

FOR

One)

THIRD

for

P. MASTRANGELO

ANGELO

ALDERMAN

SECOND

(Vote

One)

STEVE MOCOGNI

One)

ALDERMAN SECOND
TO FILL VACANCY

VACANCY
for

MAGISTRATE
for

J. ANTONETTI

FRANCO

(Vote

FOR

ALDERMAN

MARIO

FOR ALDERMAN

JOHN

FOR

(Vote

SHELTON

FOR

TERM

One)

ORI

One)

MAESTRI

TO

POLICE
(Vote

NELLO

FOR ALDERMAN

JOHN

FOR

One)

for

for

LOLLI

MAGISTRATE

SECOND
(Vote

MARINO

JOSEPH

for

One)

TREASURER

(Vote

One)

JOSEPH W. McCLORY

CLERK

for

PIACENZA

TREASURER
for

CITY

(Vote

One)

LOUIS

(Vote

i.

MORDINI

CLERK

for

EDGAR C. BENSON
FOR

PAUL

FOURTH
for

WARD

FOR

One)

ARMONDO R. UGOLINI

ALDERMAN
(Vote

CHARLES

FOURTH
for

WARD

One)

H. ELSTROM
4/13/61—101

Page

H

8—D

16

Thursday, April 13, 1961

in

�Be

3

|

MONTGOMERY WARD

SAVE! HOME
IMPROVEMENT
NO MONEY

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FESTIVAL

HIGHLAND PARK — 1854 FIRST STREET

— 36 MONTHS

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TO PAY

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chain-link

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fence

$149

INSTALLATION INCLUDES:
¢ Heavy 9 Ga. Fabric
e Line Posts
¢ Top Rails

e Expert Installation

SSS

aes a

dli-cliinine

ROR

extra-strong

Enhance patio, trailer or use asa
carport. Special interlocking sys-

WARDS PATIO OR
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tem insures tight, rigid construction.
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wide

aluminum

panels

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0

locked together for greatest weather resistance, Beautifully embossed
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44

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NEW! WARDS VENT-STYLE
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ot a 9 89

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HA striking combination of heavy-gauge
aluminum construction and modern

styling. New vent cap prevents accumulation of heat under awning.
Your choice of 8 new baked-enamel

~ MAINTENANCE-FREE
INTERLOCKING
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Baked-enamel
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won‘t
chalk,
peel, crack or blister due to weather exposure. Dirt rinses off with a
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In your choice of
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pastel

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20% OFF
SELF-STORING

MATCHING VENT-STYLE
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vent-style awnings. Choose

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matching or complementary

color combinations,

a wide selection of

comme,

WARDS REG. 44.95

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Call These

|

TO 3 YEARS

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24

TO

at a Guaranteed

Nearby Wards Catalog

Your Nearby

mH;
&lt;a

LNG

DOWN—UP

For a Guaranteed

Highland

PAY

6 STANDARD

Price

Stores:

® Pre-hung,

Park Catalog Store:

pHonE
| Phone:
ID
2-8830
HOURS
Address: 1854
First St., Highland

‘round the

clock

Your Nearby

Deerfield Commons

Phone: WI

Address: 714 Waukegan

Park, III.

Catalog

Store:

5-4600

Rd., Deerfield, III.

SIZES

pre-drilled

© Built-in piano hinge
® All-aluminum screen
Inserts raise or lower instantly—never need to

be removed. Complete
with pneumatic
door
closer, wind chain, colo-

nial style latch and all
Sardware.

�Mostly for Women

Engagements

Helene Meyer,
Rev. Kettelhut
To Wed Apr. 15

Deerfield Woman’s Club
In Department Activities
Invites Members To Participate
Deerfield

The

club

Woman’s

has

invited

its

members

to

participate in the activities of the department of fine arts and
civic. The following meetings are scheduled:
Bridge
will
be
played
in tne
home of Mrs. Charles Lager, 1451
Northwoods Dr. today. Dessert will

be served at 12:45 p.m. Mrs. Albert
R.

Dawe,

reports

An advance look at the summer’s
styles is the treat in store for the
dozen women
from St. Gregory’s
Episcopal church who are prepar-

ing

to

be

models

show April 26
the traditional

the women
year.

in

the

which
spring

fashion

is a part of
party which

of the church give each

Mrs Norman
Shellman of Bannockburn will be the commentator.

St.

Agnes

Guild,

headed

by

Mrs.

Richard Fellows, will have charge
of the fashion
show, which
will
feature styles from Minna Hart of

Newcomers Group
To Hold

Luncheon

With Art Display
The April 19 luncheon of the
Deerfield Newcomers will be held
at the Charcoal House in Waukegan

at

12:45

crafts

p.m.

group

The

will

be

arts

in

and

charge

of

Highland Park.
The
models
will be Mesdames
Fellows, Frank Hanscom,
Ray
S.
Dau, Willis B. Conner, III, G. William Robinson, Ned Mitchell, Stephen Cornell, Leslie Green, John
D. Austin and James Street, and

the Misses

Susan

Shellman.
Mrs. Monte

assisted

by

Sanders,

Mrs.

The. annual
the

Garden

be

Thursday

at

the

water

color

graduate

stitute

of Fine

the

Chicago

Arts,

teaching

both

painting

groups

the past seven
Mrs. James

paintings.

of

In-

she has been

adult

and

in

children’s

the

years.
Carter,

area

chairman

for
of

the arts group, will work in watercolor to show another painter’s
medium.
Both
Mrs.
Girkin
and
Mrs.
Carter
will
describe
their
paintings
and
answer
questions
from the audience.

Club
work

members

will

join

doing

the

ceramic

painters

in

ex-

hibiting their work at this meeting.
Mrs.

Joseph

er president,
vitation

to

Deerfield,
shire and
the club.

Cadieux,

has
all

newcomers

Bannockburn,
Riverwoods

Transportation
Morris Milner, WI
she will provide
comers,
Reservations for
Page

H

Newcom-

extended

10—D

an

in-

in

the

Lincoln-

area

to

join

chairman,
Mrs.
5-2845, has said
rides for new-

18

the

affair

may

Babcock

chairman,

Deerfield

Woman’s club for the fund to benefit the Park Ridge school for girls
was successfully met through donations and card parties given by
the members.
“Springfield Highlights” will be
the subject
of the Round
Table
meeting Monday, April 17, in the
home
of
Mrs.
Norman
Erskine,
1525 Oakwood Pl. Dessert will be
served at 1 p.m. According to Mrs.
Elmer
F. Anderson, chairman
of
the club’s civic department, sponsoring the Round Table series, the
monthly get-to-gethers are planned
for the benefit of club members
who want to keep abreast of important
current
events
through
group participation.
The
72nd
Illinois General
Assembly now in session in Springfield
will
be
discussed
at this
meeting. Guests are invited. Members are asked to call Mrs. Erskine
WI 5-2257 or Mrs. Anderson WI 53521.

The

garden

department

will

meet Tuesday, April 18, at 1 p.m.
in the home of Mrs. Robert C. David, 932 Rosemary Terr.
Dessert
will be served before the group
goes on a tour of the Kolbeck Tulip farm on Route 22. Please make

reservations with Mrs. David,
5-0552. Guests are invited.

WI

April

fresh

vegetables

chapeau
flowers—or

emphasis

on

home will meet Thursday, April 20,
at 1 p.m. at the residence of Mrs.
Howard
Board,
1306
Warrington
Rd. Please call her for reservations, WI 5-3038.
Members and guests are looking
forward to attending the Deerfield
Woman’s club annual benefit dinner dance this Saturday night, April 15th, at the Vernon Hills Country club.

McDonald
of Adult

bedecked

Joliet

Township

junior

college,

is Millinery
high

made

through

Mrs.

John

The
board
will
discuss
for a large general meeting
held in the near future.

The

membership

plans
to be

committee,

WI

Han-

©

call
or

Mrs.
Mrs.

Anderson
Slater: at

5-2659.

Arden Shore Group
To Discuuss Bazaar

and

5-3918

presi-

that all board

Those planning to attend

are asked to
at WI
5-3521

In-

Mrs. Robert O. Clark of Brierhill Rd. will be the fashion commentator. Prizes will be awarded
for originality,
beauty
and
style
of
the
millinery
creations
and
there will be a special guest prize.

be

Republican club will meet at 8
p.m. April 19 at the home of the
membership
chairman,
Mrs.
George O: Slater, 1651 Pear Tree
Rd.

members.

There will be a style show of the
hats trimmed with garden material
by club members and their guests.
Mrs. Arthur F. Vyse, Jr. of Juneberry Lane will be in charge of
arrangements.

rahan, 1125 Oxford Rd., WI
by April 15.

The board
of directors
of the
West Deerfield Township Women’s

meetings are open to the general
membership
and
any
interested
members are invited to attend this
meeting and to bring prospective

at the

school

In Slater Home

dent, has announced

perhaps,

Education

Meet

Club

454 Margate Terr.
Mrs. Elmer F. Anderson,

be

Mrs.
Martha
McDonald,
Joliet,
will
give
a
dissertation,
“Trim
Your
Hats with Fresh Flowers.”
This will be a unique program for
the garden lover with step by step
instructions, as well as interesting
and entertaining demonstrations.

Mrs.

Of Directors

the home of Mrs. Andrew G, Bradt,

will

fruit.

structor

Board

Of Republican

p.m.

of

1

guests

with

Mrs. Charles H. Carman, press
and publicity chairman, and Mrs.
Herman
Pack,
scrap
book. chairman, have entered the press book
of the Deerfield Woman’s club in
the press book contest of the Tenth
district of the Illinois Federation
of Women’s clubs.
“Publicity used in the press book
was given to activities of the Deerfield Woman’s Club through news
items
and
pictures
with
the cooperation of the Deerfield Review,”
said Mrs. Carman.
Mrs. Joseph C. Roper, bulletin
chairman, mails publicity directly
to members
of the club
in the
monthly
Bulletin
that
she
edits.
Through
the
Deerfield
REVIEW
and the bulletin all events of interest are recorded.
Mrs. Elmer F. Anderson, press
and
publicity
chairman
of
the
Tenth district of the Illinois Federation
of Women’s
clubs
will
have
press
books
entered
from
clubs in that district on display
at the Tenth district annual meeting to be held Wednesday, April 26,
at 10:30 a.m. in the Highland Park
Woman’s club. The address is Elm
Pl.
and
Sheridan
Rd.,
Highland
Park.

will

Country

their

and

at

studied

By Woman’‘s Club

club.

luncheon
20

be

Matisse and Picasso. Mrs. Norman
Erskine will lead the discussion.
Phone Mrs. Dieterle for reservations, WI 5-3326.
The
department
of
American

Press Book Entered
In District Contest

The
Trinity United
Church
of
Christ will be setting for the wedding of Helene Meyer, daughter of
Mr.
and Mrs. LeRoy
Meyers,
of
Hazel Avenue, and the Rev. Robert Lee Kettelhut of Oak Lawn,
Saturday
afternoon
at 3 -o’clock.
The
Rev. Philip A. Desenis will
read the vows.
The bride is a graduate of Elmhurst
College
and
received
her
Master’s degree in religious education
at Northwestern
University.
She has been serving as Religious
Education director at Friedens
Evangelical and Reformed church,
in St. Louis.
The Rev. Mr. Kettelhut, a graduate of Elmhurst College
and
Edens
Theological
Seminary,
St.
Louis,
is
pastor
of
St.
Mark’s
United Church
of Christ in Oak
Lawn.
The
bride
has
been
guest
at
several showers.
Last Friday evening, Mrs. Norval Rather and Mrs.
Archie Antes were hostesses at a
miscellaneous shower in the Rather
home. Friends in Oak Lawn also
showered
Miss
Meyer
with
gifts
at a party.
The rehearsal dinner Friday will
be given in Phil Johnson’s restaurant.

which
met
with
Mrs.
Slater
on
April 12 to map an intensive membership
campaign,
will
present
their plans. Mrs. Herbert E. Tucker, legislation chairman, will submit
plans
for
the
round
table
meeting to be held on April 27 at

of Deerfield

McHenry

Mrs. Charles

with

spring

Club

gay

A

Richard

the

will

wearing

and

5-3342,

of

Garden Club Plans
Spring Luncheon
At Country Club

program.

a demonstration
in
oil
starting
with a fresh canvas and working
toward
a finished painting,
Mrs.
Girkin is known for both her oil

WI

Sara

welfare

The palette and chisel, art appreciation
study
group,
meets
Wednesday, April 19, in the residence of Mrs. H. Robert Dieterle,
1218 Warrington Rd.
Modern art

and

Girkin will present

and

goal

and Mrs. C. L. Walton, is handling
the
tickets.
Co-chairmen
of the
event are
Mesdames
Anthony
Nosek and William Freeman.

Members

the

Dexter

public

the

Tess

Club

—

Weddings

—

Several members at a recent meeting of the Palette and
Chisel art study group sponsored by the Deerfield Woman's
Club,

ar,

left to

right,

Mrs.

Arthur

Neyendorf,

Mrs.

Charles

Girkin, Mrs. Charles L. Healy and Mrs. Norman Erskine.
Modern art with emphasis on Picasso and Matisse is being
studied under the direction of Mrs. Norman Erskine, graduate
of the Art Institute of Chicago.

The Deerfield-Bannockburn committee of Arden Shore will meet at
the home of Mrs. William E: Casselman,
1885
Hilltop,
Bannockburn,
on Thursday, April 27 at 10 a.m. to
discuss plans for the fall bazaar on
Oct. 10.
The present benefit activity of
the committee is a series of bridge
lessons being conducted
by Mrs.
Josephine
Walters
Smith
at the
Highland
Park Recreation
center
on Friday mornings.
Tomorrow, April 21, will be guest

day at the bridge lectures and each
member of the class will be able to
take one guest.
Thursday,

April

13,

1961

;

�SAVE During Sunset's FROZEN FOOD WEEK!
Look What 10&lt; Buys
At Sunset!
SLICED

10-0z. pkg.

“Sun-Fresh”’ Head

STRAWBERRIES 5 ror *1
FAST FROZEN

10-0z. pkg.

RASPBERRIES

5 ror *1

TENDER &amp; GREEN SPEAR

10-0z. pkg.

BROCCOLI
CRINKLE CUT FRENCH

{—-

5 or *f
FRIED

16-0z. pkg.

4 ror $1

RADISHES — 9. bn
GREEN

ee

ee

y ae bunches
or

CHOPPED

|

10-0z. pkg.

SPINACH
LEAF

SPINACH
LI

Assorted

CREAM
“ aaaanecit
CREAM

ICE

Flavors
Redemea)
HALF
GAL.
CHEESECAKE
69:
BIRDS EYE ONION RINGS .......
Northern
TOWELS

oe——J ey Ff
\=—
®

SUNSET’S FRESHEST

heivoness

FRYERS
hole,
Vienna

59c

nee

3

pases.

29.

@ = Oe
12-oz.

C
.

lb

p&gt;
..

**

SUNSET

1-lb.
pkg.

ee

HELPRA

33

CHOCOLATE
DRINK

agation

STRAWBERRY

Lb

Skinless

FRANKS

9

HANDY

%2

“
Sorry, No Freezer Wrapping

at these

1812

Open

GREEN

BAY

ROAD

Both Thursday

PLENTY

OF

FREE

—

and

A

CENTRAL

Friday

PARKING

FOOD

STORE

Nights ‘Til 9 P.M.

-——- ALWAYS

Very Low Prices.
Thursday,

April

13,

1961

Page

H

11—D

19

�(Paid

Political

Advertisement)

Set Up Telescopes

Takes

For Star Gazers

Miss Flora Shriver, who is attending
Cornell
College,
Mount
Vernon, Ia., is a member of the
cast of approximately 100 students
which will present Shakespeare’s

Two

Lake

scopes

Forest

will be set up

courts on Middle
Wednesday

(April
the

use

on clear

during

April

19, 26)

at 7:30

p.m,

for

both

students

and

in-

of

“Twelfth

April

21

and

a crescent on the 19th and not quite

constellations will be on view.

staging

will be

to create

22.

used

in an

an authentic

When Norma A. Barts presents
a program on “Africa Today” for
the North Suburban chapter, Delta
Zeta

Sorority

Alumnae,

four High-

land Park members will be assisting the hostess, Mrs. Thomas O’Malley,

Wilmette.

attempt

Elizabethan

theatre

atmosphere.

Miss

and a number

of

Mr.

Shriver

and

Central

is the

Mrs.

E.

J.

daughter

Shriver,

Ave.

of

941

The foursome includes Mrs. John
Burgess of Euclid Avenue; Mrs.
Sidney Frisch of Ivy Lane; Mrs.
Kennety Peer of Huntington Lane
and Mrs. Frederick O. Toof of
Linden

Ave.

Miss Barts, a Skokie member of
Delta Zeta, will tell of her recent
travel to Africa, She had wanted
to follow the same trek of Stanley
and Livingston, but due to the
Congo situation, was forced to return home

sooner than

planned.

Announcing

A NEW FAMILY SPOR TS CLUB
C2.

Advertisement)

Hold on to your
You'll get $4 for $3

Night”

Madgri Madrigal singers, groundlings, a period costumes
and

full on the 26th,

eae
Political

tele-

terested members of the community, according to Dr. Lindley J.
Burton, head of the College astronomy department. The moon will be

If | were old enough
| would vote for
WILLIAM S. KARGER
for Park Commissioner.

(Paid

Campus

evenings

12,

College

on the tennis

‘Africa Today’ Topic For Delta Zetas

Part in Play

Savings Bond.
if held to ma-

beth. Shbre

turity.

Notes
from

j

Music
|

eee

7

t

the

Arts

Studios
Ps

T

Of the exquisitely designed instruments for real musical mastery,
the violin and the piano are the
superior choice for our outstanding children.
Of course, the home
and good
parents
are
the
strongest
moti-

vation for right directions—the
best teachers can command only
limited amounts of a youngster’s
time. And

only the most

efficiently

scheduled daily practice can dovetail with the many other activities and interests.
But we

must

also remember

that

social musical activities rank high
among the greatest joys of learning:

the

youngest

pupil

SHAWNEE

treasures

his early experiences in sharing
music with his contemporaries, and
later

on

in

his

music

study

asso-

ciation with
larger
groups
can
lead to ensemble and concerto performance which offer new dimensions

of

enjoyment.

We
spread ourselves so very
thin in our present society! But do
we not lose sight of the most enduring values of all—of living in
a truly distinguished way—and in
the dictates of a most uncompromising area of study—the art of
music?
Let
those
who
have
“gifted
children” with sensitive ears and
abilities
face
this
dilemma—
whether to follow the social custom
of superficial exposure
to
what
is beautiful
and
uncompromising, or to guide and encourage them
into the difficult
pathway of instrumental study—
violin,
the
keyboard — whatever
their talent indicates, and to allow a mature attitude toward perseverance and accomplishment to
dominate
throughout
their first
years of effort.
“Discipline” is the magic word
which governs the entrance to the
Elysian field of music, and it not
only defines the fine process of
real education but also insists upon
the development of control and
habits of obedience to what is
right and true. Certainly the wise
parent realizes that discipline is
not invoked by command, but must
be encouraged to grow,
1811

ST. JOHNS AVE.
‘ID 2-8474
HIGHLAND PARK, ILL.

Page

H

12—D

20

SW
LOCATED

TENNIS

CLUB

AT

SWIM and SUN
THIS SUMMER

While swimming is the
heart of the activity at
Shawnee,
the
ample
grounds provide room for
Tennis Courts, Badminton,

Shawnee will provide a
42’x75’ pool this July, with
spacious sun lounge decks,
diving boards, and play
pool for the youngsters.
Instruction in Swimming

Trampoline, Shuffleboard,
Ice Skating, and Tobog-

ganing. Future plans
clude a Gymnasium.

in-

and Diving

5

teams,

PLAYGROUND
Shawnee

will

look

evenings,

the very
fenced-in

young with a
play _ ground,

sand box
pool.

and

Shawnee

own

a

MEMBERSHIPS

will have a spa-

family

dinner.

and

Picnic

outdoor

place on our

fire-

seven

skin

acres,

too.

too,

for a relax-

SWIM ALL
WINTER

Shawnee has seven beautiful acres to be developed for fun and sports,

BAR

cious screened restaurant
for the Children’s lunch or
tables

ballet,

ing dip after work.

15 minutes from almost anywhere on the North Shore.

SNACK

water

diving &amp; water polo. Open

after

their

for the novice,

competitive boys and girls

Shawnee is a non-profit corporation made up of family equity memberships with full
voting rights. Dues are only $125.00 per year for year around family sports and fun. A
$500.00 equity membership is an investment in your families.
Shawnee membership is
limited to 300 families approved by Board of Directors. The entire membership fee can be
repurchased by the club if you move away from area. Money is being put into an escrow
account until sufficient funds are available to complete the project.

Shawnee will provide a
full winter program for
women and men. Lessons
for pre-schoolers this winter, as well as continuing
the summer program.

For Additional Information
and
Mr.

and

Mrs. William
Mr.

or write

Burson,

and

Mrs.

CH AWNEE

AL

application blanks

call or write

1-3109

Adolph

Kiefer

SWIM

Mr.
Daytime

CLUB

PA

us today!

and

Mrs.

Kenneth

4-3420—Evenings

804

FOREST

Pettigrew,

VE

5-0856

HI 6-1763

WILMETTE
Thursday,

April

13,

1961

�Geraci Cites Advantages o

“r

ee

fttr

baat ¥
(

x

help

The nine hole par three golf course, advanced for Highland Park by Park Commissioner candidate Ray J. Geraci, will
serve several important community needs.
First, and according to Geraci, most important,

The

par three

latively

new

Although

golf course

in

the

United

there

are

over

of

construct

course

land,

including

facilities.

like

a

on 25 to 30

adequate

He

said

he

to see a small

area

on

the course fenced in to be used as
a play
area
for
pre-school
age

par

children

three courses in America today, as
late as 1948 there were none in the }
Chicagoland area. Today there are
12
in the
Chicago
metropolitan
area (the newest will open in July
in Winnetka
under Park District
supervision.)

Low

acres
would

States.

360

could

par three

parking

is re-

Park

model

construction cost of the par

three has been the biggest factor
in its growth.
A regulation golf
course
may
cost from
$5,000
to
$10,000 per hole, exclusive of land
cost.
A 9-hole par-3 golf course
can be built for around $1,000 to
$3,000 per hole, exclusive of land
cost.
The land requirement is another
major factor.
Geraci
estimates

who

could

be

cared

for

while their parents are enjoying a
round of golf. Geraci said this is
not
only
possible,
but
desirable
because the average time required
for a round of golf on a par three

is only

Political

@

SALE!

material

an

adjunct

to

YOU

all

in

family

an

enviable

recreation

district

program

greatest

number

ticipate,’’

position

and
of

more

a

the

to

have

the

residents

par-

is

concluded

as

certainly

KEEP

YOUR

CAR

SPOTLESSLY

CLEAN WITHOUT ANY EXTRA COST TO
YOU! By the purchase of 15 gallons of gas or ;

Highland Park schools
physical
education programs as a training
ground for the elementary and high
school student.
“The
compartively
low
greens
fee (average $1 to $1.25) will place

golf

CAN

(reg. or ethyl).
A PERFECT CAR

WASH

....

FREE!

WITH PURCHASE OF

Geraci.

CAR WASH ~

12 gals. of gas -_.............. WHINE sisson
cide sete
10 goles Of gas

nc.

:

COANE siccsc Ltda

8 gals. of gas ................ ONY

6s
ine

ee

6 gals. of gas ................ WHI Sin aitiiiieee
4 gals. of gas ................ GAL

fiisxdpimidiccecoueie

Cities Service Products

‘ -

Skokie Car Wash, Inc.|
DE 6-8255
21st and

Commissioner.

North

Sheridan

Chicago,

7
Rd.

Illinois

&amp;
(Paid

material

competitive

ideal

billy Kargep

fences

(Rail

is

for Park

installed.

Rustic Fence
Stockade).

© Quality

or

ners learn the game more quickly
and old players are able to enjoy
physical activity without the heavy
exertion demanded by the longer
distance
courses;
the
par
three

If | were old enough
| would vote for
WILLIAM S. KARGER

Time!

completely

‘FREE CAR WASH!! |

non-revenue

Advertisernent)

Fence

Fence

other

Another
attractive
feature
to
be considered, according to Geraci
are the low maintenance cost and
the low operating cost. The average nine hole par three course can
be maintained by one man using
equipment already available to the
Park ‘District.
Geraci points out these specific
advantages to Highland Park from
a new
nine hole par three
golf
course: It would provide the Park

Spring

@

ae

60 to 90 minutes.

(Paid

CARLOAD

maintain

course

it would

be a substantial revenue producer which would help maintain
Highland

ue

producing parks; it is ideal for beginners and older players. Begin-

Nine Hole Par 3 Course

other Park District property and
possibly
reduce
taxes.
Also,
it
would provide a recreational facility designed to encourage participation at all age levels and from the
very good golfers to the beginners.

Th

District with substantial revenue to

Political

Advertisement)

at

prices.

e FHA terms available.
e FREE ESTIMATES.

If | were old enough

NORTHBROOK
LUMBER CO.

| would vote for
WILLIAM S. KARGER
for Park Commissioner.

CRestwood

“Why

co era
te

Skokie &amp; Dundee Rds.
Northbrook, Ill.

K Bobby Karger

2-3000

(Paid

Political

for

Advertisement)

MAY BE YOUR OWN

Salvage
STORE

HOURS: Tuesday, Friday 9-9—Wed., Thurs.
CLOSED MONDAYS.
Sunday 10-9.

ALL MOSAIC

TILE

Men’s SUMMER

REDUCED!

Our

LIMED

B10

OAK

PICTURE

te FAT O

ee

reg.

$1.00

&amp;

Sat.,

........ NOW

9-6

ee

2” &amp; 3” wide,

i hk

$1.19 to $1.65

Beauty?

PERMANENT WAVE

Less”

Plus

Shampoo and Set

IN ADVANCE!
We

suggest you

specify

(including styling)

$975

the permanent of your
choice when you make
your

(Tops in Artistry)

$7.00

YOUR

PERMANENT

80c

............ $2.39
values to $4.00 _........... $1.98

FRAMES,

for

SELECT

........ values to $6.00

JACKETS

Boy’s SUMMER JACKETS ........
NEW

“Best

Railroad
Discount Store

&amp;

appointment!

Haircut .... $1.50
Manicure .. $1.50

Tuck Cellophane TAPE, %4” x 150” ..................- 4 rolls 29c
NEW SHIPMENT OF LAMP SHADES, all sizes &amp; styles 25% OFF
THONG SANDALS,
Children’s 35¢
Men’s &amp; Women’s 39c
2 DRAWER 4x6 CARD FURS onc ieics inns
$2.50
OPT IER os science ap teligigcaic ta deka Raeeshachnce $10.50 to $21.95
A COMPLETE

LINE

OF

NURSERY

on

Rte. 83, one

MUNDELEIN,

block

South

of Rte.

ILLINOIS

We buy factory surplus and store stocks.

|

Thursday, April 13, 1961

use

quality
vertised

only

the

finest

nationally adpreparations.

Visit Our Large Beautifully Appointed
Salon Monday through Saturday 9 a.m.5 p.m.

45

Ample

except

Suggested

but

Fridays 9 a.m.-9
not

p.m.

required.

Salons

Cameo

Phone LOcust 6-7325
Located

We

Appointments

STOCK

Tee

CAMEO
SALONS

DRIVE CAREFULLY — THE LIFE YOU SAVE

Illinois

P ay

Parking in Rear

929 LINDEN, HUBBARD
All Phones:

WOODS,

WINNETKA

HI 6-7550

Page H 13—D 21

�¢

- Spring Luncheon, Musicale
— Closes Woman's Club Year
Annual

Spring

luncheon

of the Highland

Park

Woman's

Club

Tues-

day will bring not only the introduction of new officers and the annual
business
Guest

ler,

session
artists

but

baritone;

cellist;

and

Known

as

be

Louis

Dudley

Rhea
the

a delightful

will

musical

Powers,

Shelters,

Musical

for program.

Mrs.

Fowler

Mrs. Gordon
field, will pass

pianist.

Arts

treat

Sud-

Trio,

Ends

Term

C. Fowler, Deerover the gavel to

Mrs. Howard Boysen, Lake Forest,
the program chairman, Mrs. Fowler is completing a two-year term
at the club’s helm, previously having
served
as
budget
chairman

and treasurer. She also is well
known in Highland Park in Presbyterian

church

circles,

where

she
Pe

has served as church treasurer.
Mrs. Jack Dowdall, Deerfield,
will

be

inducted

president;
nancial

Mrs.

as

second

John

secretary;

vice-

Gibaon,

Mrs.

for the

pitality

and

chairman;

Ricketts,

and

press

Mrs.

and

Ro-

publicity

Three new members will be welcomed into the club. They are
Mrs. Lowell Byland, Mrs. Harvey
Homberger, Mrs. Frank Logan.
Final

‘the

group

‘light

the

will

classical

artists

give

a program

selections.

is

of

Each

pursuing

of

his

and

her own career and each is
known in the Chicago area.

well

Final even of the current club
calendar will be the party for the
Golden Circle Thursday, April 27
from 3 to 5 p.m. with the Junior
Auxiliary of the club in charge
of entertainment.
Mrs. Robert Black, philanthropy
chairman,

and

her

committee

will

be hostesses. She is inviting all
club members to join the party.

party,

Kathy

are

Issel,

from

left,

two.

(Flowers

Nancy

Monson,

are

by

five;

Bahr

Karen

Issel,

engagement

daughter,

Daniel
his

Judith

Offer,

who

residency

Michael

Psychiatric
Miss

in

Reese

of

is

to

psychiatry

Institute,

Baskin

Dr.

at

the

at

the

Sor-

Junior Year in France program.
She was graduated from the Uni-

versity

He

of

Educational
ing Michael

awarded

at the Uni-

Research

Hospital before
Reese. He has
for
two

joinbeen

young

Research in Psyyears
beginning

couple

plan

married in early Summer
den

and

a fellowship by the Foun-

dation Fund
chiatry
for
July 1.
The

interned

Illinois

wedding

at the

to

be

in a gar-

Baskin

home,

There'll

Highland Parkers who are lending art treasures to the “Treasures
of Chicago Collectors” show opening at the Art Institute Saturday

include the following:
The Albert L. Arenbergs,
Photo

by

James

Wahiman

ship drive chairman for the Highland Park YWCA.

the

of

drive

is a total

approximately

of 800

250

members;

newcomers

this

on

means

the

“Y”

Goal for

an

increase
Mrs.

roll.

Billeter is vice-president of the Highland Park-Ravinia Center
of the Infant Welfare
community

council,

Society,
serves

on

a member
the

of the

Deerfield

Riverwoods
United

Fund

executive board and is active in both Ravinia and Highland
Park Women’s clubs. She’s most enthusiastic about the Y’s
program for girls, women and men of all ages and interests.
Page

H

14—D

22

the

Herbert
Bakers,
the
Stanley
M.
Freehlings, the Henry Getzes, the
Edwin E. Hokins, the junior Stan-

ley

Korshaks,

stadters
thals.

and

the
the

Sigmund

Samuel

R.

KunRosen.

The Highland Park collectors will
be attending the preview of this
event tonight.
Of
interest
here,
too,
is the
showing of Mrs, Abel E. Fagen’s
portrait
done
by
Salvador
Dali.
Hers is the most recent painting in

the

exhibition.

Miss

Judith

Lynn

Baskin

are much

in the fore

Shore

as

Junior

each §

Dates for the 27th Annual Antiques exhibit and sale have been
set, according to Mrs. Dale Patterson of Broadview
Avenue,
cochairman of publicity for the event
in the Evanston Woman’s club, 1702
Chicago Ave., Evanston.

The sale will open Monday,

go

to a scholarship

be

a galaxy

of

hors

d’

ing an active part are Mrs. Gordon

Evanston Antiques
Sale Dates Are Set

will

To Art Institute

three;

oeuvres, as well as flowers.
Each
Chi Omega is to bring 100 to the
festive refreshment table. |
Following the party, there’ll be
several late suppers
in homes
around town.
In addition to Mrs.
Issel and Mrs. Monson, others tak-

May

15, and continue through Thursday,
May 18, she said. The annual show
is sponsored by the Rockford College Club of Chicago. All proceeds

Lend Objets d‘Art

Monson,

table
will be
graced
by comely
French
damsel
who’s
beautifully
fabricated
of ribbon,
net,
crepe
paper and flowers.
White flower
carts will be filled with daffodils
and hyacinths.

Chicago.

studied

of the University of Chicago Medi-

Group

Zeloof-Stuart

All in the Parisian theme,

and

bonne
in Paris under
the sponsorship of the Sweet Briar College

cal School.

Shore

by

Alumnae of Chi Omega plan their
sixth annual benefit cocktail party
a week from Saturday night. Receiving proceeds of the festive
Spring party in the Highland Park
Woman’s Club will be the Illinois
Children’s Home and Aid Society.

completing

Psychosomatic

Douglas

Children

their

Lynn,

one;

Chicago-North

spanancononcances

cae

Mr. and Mrs, Samuel J. Baskin
of Moraine Rd., have announced

Dr, Offer, a former commando
of the Israeli Army, is a graduate
of the University of Rochester and

North

Photo

Florists.)

versity of Michigan and was a student
at
the
Harvard-Radcliffe
Graduate School of Philosophy.

Taking over a new assignment in her busy career next
week is Mrs. Robert Billeter, who has been named member-

Group

a gay one in Highland Park, too—as members of the Chicago-

Miss Judy Baskin to Wed Early in Summer
the

Party

Shore

North Shore Junior Alumnae of Chi Omega plan their sixth annual cocktail dance at the
Highland Park Woman’‘s Club Saturday evening, April 22. Getting into the act as their mothers, Mrs. Lloyd Monson, and Mrs. Kenneth Issel preview carts spilling with Spring flowers

L.

Wolf,
corresponding
secretary;
Mrs.
James
Reilly,
Fine
Arts
chairman; Mrs. George Brady, hosbert

C. Fowler

It’s “April in Paris’—and

fi-

Carl

chairman.

Mrs. Gordon

North

fund

for

Rockford College students.
Mrs.
John
Easterberg
of Winnetka is show chairman; Mrs. Ellis
Muther
of Northfield
is on the
general
planning
committee
as
chairman of one of the projects.

Miss Molly Mason Is
Winner at Wellesley
Miss Molly Mason, daughter of
the Barrett K. Masons
of Hazel
Avenue,
recently
was
named
a
Wellesley College Scholar and received the Davenport Prize for Excellence in Oral Interpretation. A
senior majoring in Greek, Molly is
president of the college’s theater
group, The Barnswallows.
Shortly after graduation, she will
become the bride of John A Gardiner in a June ceremony here.

B. Anderson, Mrs. Harry Smedley
Jr.,
and
Mrs.
John
Lindemann.
Mrs. Ray Orr, Glenview, is benefit
chairman; Mrs. Lawrence I. Smith
of Northbrook is in charge of
reservations.

Delta Gammas

Give

Party for ‘Ex-es’
Past presidents of Delta Gamma
Alumnae of Evanston-North Shore
will be guests
of honor
tonight
when the women meet for buffet
supper in the home of Mrs. H. H.
Adams Jr., Winnetka.
Mrs. W. Stanley Strong of Baldwin Road, one of the past presidents, will be among them. Also,
graduating seniors of the chapter
at Northwestern will be honored.

Mrs. L. Morgan Yost of Kenilworth,
the president, will present four $25
class scholarship awards.

Home

from Aspen

The Everett L. Millards of Sylvester Pl., returned Monday from
a two weeks’ holiday at their Aspen,
Colo. resort where they entertained
at an “all Highland Park’ dinner.
On Tuesday evening, they opened
their home to fellow beach property
owners who are seeking to solve
some of the major Summer problems with which private beaches
are now plagued.

Thursday,

April

13, 1961

�Constance

Round Robin Bridge

Weiland,

At Woman's

Douglas Emenecker

Round

To Wed Saturday
Miss
ter

of

Constance
the

Weiland,

Henry

C.

daugh-

Weilands

Second

Street,

and

Douglas

necker,

son

Mr.

and

of

be
of

Eme-

Mrs.

Isa-

matron

of

honor,

Sanders

of Central

have

as

her

Gregory

Ave.

Miss

Mau-

reen Carney of Central Avenue will
be

maid

of

younger

honor

sister,

and

the

Pamela,

bride’s

will

be

junior bridesmaid,
Mrs. Sanders and Miss Carney
entertained for the bride with a
miscellaneous
shower
with many
also

was

honored

co-workers

at a party

at

Public

at

the

the

will

bridge

Highland

Club, 1991
afternoon,
Announce

Park

Sheridan Rd.,
April 25, at

RAndolph 6-3332
30 N. MICHIGAN AVE.
Suite 1511

Winners

Mrs. Glenn M. Harris and Mrs.
E. Wolters, who have been in

charge

of

games of
charge of
Attending
played in
the

the

scores
party.

round

robin

bridge

the club this year, are in
plans for the luncheon.
will be women who have
the tourney throughout

season.

will

Winners

be

of

final

announced

at

No

matter

what

or sell you'll

high

you

to buy

find the Want-Ad

tion your best market

the

want

sec=

place.

DRIVEWAY CONSTRUCTION

given

Service

Company. The bridegroom’s bachelor dinner is tonight, and tomorrow evening the bridal rehearsal
dinner will be given by the bride’s
parents.

games

for

12:30.

of her friends as guests. The bride
by

bridge

agenda

luncheon

A.
Mrs.

robin

the

Woman’s
Tuesday

dore Emenecker of Antigo, Wis.,
will repeat their wedding vows Saturday
afternoon
in Immaculate
Conception church.
Miss Weiland will

on

Club

Old

Parking Areas—
Drives Refinished

@

BLACK

@

CONCRETE

TOP

@

CRUSHED

il

STONE

LX

Call for

FREE

Estimate

% Metered
Photo

Mrs.

Lewis

Rosenau

Northwood Country club was
setting for the wedding
of Miss
Patricia
Heinsimer,
daughter
of

the

William R. Heinsimers of ComFla.,

and

the

late

Mr.

The vows were read late Tuesday
afternoon, April 4, by Dr. Edgar E.
Siskin.

South,

Both

Following

orchid

cor-

honeymoon

young

in Coral

couple

trip

will

Gables,

be

Fla.

Eastern Star

Mrs.

Meyer

FUEL CO.

ID 2-0065

Highland

Park

New Garrard TYPE A

Pinsof

Mrs. Meyer Pinsof, 428
view Ave., newly
elected

OIL Service +

Broadto the

board of directors of Children’s
Aid of La Rabida Sanatarium, has
been named North Shore chairman
of the Aid’s fourth annual “Talk
of the Town” Spring bazaar,
The bazaar will be staged in the

RECORD CHANGERS out perform anything
you've ever seen...

newly - remodeled
Pick - Congress
Hotel Thursday, April 20, through

Campbell Chapter 712, Order of
Eastern
Star, will meet Wednesday evening, April 19, at 7:30 in
the
Hundley
Memorial
Masonic
Temple, Laurel Ave. with Mrs. J.
Llewellyn,
Worthy
Matron,
and
Erwin
Jordan,
Worthy
Patron,
serving in the East.

PM—Prin.,

1930 First St.

his brothwas Peter

wore

a

the

at home

The bride wore a white taffeta
~ gown
designed with chapel train
and
trimmed
with
alencon
lace.
She
carried
phalaenopsis
and
stephanotis in her bouquet.
She was attended by Miss Toni
Smith of Cedar Street as maid of
honor
and Miss Cecile Klein
of
Pensacola, Fla., as bridesmaid.
They wore aqua peau de soie gowns
and carried tangerine toned carnations and matching aqua veils.

SILJESTROM

Studios

The bride’s mother’s gown was
of pale blue chiffon;
the senior
Mrs. Rosenau
wore dusty pink

raw silk.
sages.

Mtge. $199

Coies

Jr.

Rosenau.

412%

Bronson

Richard Rosenau was
er’s best man; ushering
Herman.

stock
Place,
and Lewis
Rosenau
Jr., son of Mrs. Lewis Rosenau of

Pensacola,

by

24 Hour FUEL

Sunday,

April

23.

It will

feature

all types of merchandise including
furniture, antiques, clothing, toys,

housewares

and

foods

at

special

low prices, Mrs. Pinsof said.
Proceeds
of the
“Talk
of

Town”
La

bazaar

will

go

directly

the

to

Rabida,

Int., Tax., Ins.
POPULAR SECTION
OF DEERFIELD
¢ 4 bedrooms

¢ Plus Playroom

¢ 22

© Basement

Baths

¢ Fireplace

¢ Fenced Patio

@

Recreation Room

®@ %

Acre

. . . tastefully decorated.

Better

than

aE

PLUS

FEATURES

ARE:

ever (built 1958).

In perfect condition

Black top parking area.

avoids

unsightly appearance

at end

of

cul-de-sac

street,

when
adds

2 car garage at side of home which

garage
to

Most attractive birch cabinet kitchen.

doors

appearance

are

left open.

and

is a

Built on

haven

for

knoll

children.

A wonderful floor plan — the ideal family

home. Figures to prove price of $37,250 under cost. How can one go wrong?
And with a 44% mortgage! Reason for such a genuine offer is OWNER HAS

BOUGHT

A LARGER

HOME.
Call

BAIRD
REAL

576

ESTATE

Lincoln

SALES

Avenue

@

&amp;

April

13, 1961

@

e

MANAGEMENT

INSURANCE

Hillcrest 6-1855

Winnetka
SUNDAYS

@

11

a.m.

to

5

COLUMBIA Hi-Fi &amp; V
A Division of Columbia

WARNER

MORTGAGES

OPEN
Thursday,

LIONEL WATSON

WE WON’T BE UNDERSOLD!
Household Appliances, Inc.

1805 St. Johns Ave., Highland Park
OPEN

THURSDAY

AND

FRIDAY

ID 2-0725

EVENINGS

p.m.
Page H 15—D

23

�Jewel Fryers arefresher
You can actually taste the difference!
You'll be proud to serve a Jewel chicken—
they're

fresher,

more

three big reasons why:

tender!

And

pass

meatier

inspection,

and

another

3. Then these top quality fryers are rushed to

1. Jewel fryers are raised to be delicious—bred

scientifically to insure a plump,
With sweet-flavored meet,

U.S. Government

rigid inspection by Jewel Meat Buyers.

here are

Your Jewel... fresh
from the farm. . “3 times

bird

:
tens
Discover for yourself
chicken

2. Jewel fryers are twice inspected—they must

weekend!

is...serve

how

ps
delicious

a fried chicken

Jewel

dinner this

U. S. GOVT. INSPECTED

REC&gt;
M04

=F gto
eh
OF
AGRICULTURE

|

MAYER

A9¢

Ib.

YELLOWBAND

ai ie OFF LABEL”

AQ

Ib.

OSCAR MAYER YELLOWBAND

| Bologna

Manor House
in
wir.
ee
ff
Co

3

Braunschweiger
7
} OSCAR

MAYER—SLICED

| Bologna
HORMEL—COUNTRY

oz.

a
STYLE

Bs

can

59S

Sausage
2
JEWEL

ALL

MEAT—SKINLESS

\

b.

“5c OFF

LABEL’ —REG.

PRICE

Giant Tide

Green oe

LAUNDER

74c

MAID

regular
price

Broccoli

em

MARY

DUNBAR

ELBERTA—REG.

Peaches
MARY

DUNBAR

FROZEN

35c EACH

3 =
SLICED —REG. 2/49c

Strawberries: 19°

a

ALL

FLAVORS—YUMMY

—REG.

2/49c

reams
We

pint

reserve the right to limit

quantities. No sales to dealers.

: HBERTA

RTA HEAVY.nS

4Ewer

Page H 16—D

24

tea co. ™

: eS o

Gi

Thursday,

April

13,

1961

�RADIOEAR

Miss Carole Baruffi To Wed April 22
Bethany Methodist and Evangelical United

setting

for

Brethren

the

church

wedding

will be

of

Miss

Carole Jean Baruffi, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Baruffi, of
Evolution Avenue, Highwood, and

Donald

L.

Henze,

also

of

High-

wood, and the son of Mrs. Gladys
Harvey of Sunnyslope, Ariz., and

the late Clarence Henze.
The vows will be read by the
Rev. Darrell D, Sample Saturday

afternoon, April 22.

of honor, John McLaren will be the

by

Miss

Bronson

Rita

Coles

Studios

Shorr

Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ralph
Shorr
of
Glencoe, formerly of Montgomery
Ave., announce the engagement of
their daughter, Rita, to James L.
Ballew, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Ballew of Galesburg.

Miss
both

Shorr

and

students

sity where
degree
June.

at

her

fiance

Bradley

Univer-

he will graduate
in

Civil

are

Madeline
Mr.
of

and

Mrs.

Elmwood

Charles

Drive

engagement
Madeline,

Starcevich

of
to

Starcevich

announce
their

Robert

Lenzini,

of Mr. and Mrs. Adolph

the

daughter,
son

Lenzini of

with a| Highwood.

Engineering

in

They are planning
in the Autumn.

to be married

Up

best man.
Among

pre-nuptial parties given

esses;

and

a

party

given

by

ie

y

aun)"

y

RAndolph 6-3332
30.N. MICHIGAN AVE.

for Miss Baruffi was a miscellaneous shower with Mrs. Robert Magnani and Mrs. Robert Issel as host-

-

Suite 1511

co-

workers with Mrs. Eugene Belmont
as hostess at Ted’s Restaurant,
(Paid

Photo

«)

Miss Baruffi will have her sister, Mrs.
John McLaren as matron

Political

Advertisement)

LET’S RE-ELECT THIS MAN
to the Highland Park City Council:

Bill Hutchinson

SPECIAL
PURCHASE

PLAYHOUSES

QUALIFIED

by training and broad

Conversion of Police Magistrate compensation from fee to present salary basis.
Provision of 200 additional off-street parking spaces.
Adoption of a Fire Code, Electrical and
Plumbing
Codes,
and
a_ performance
Building Code.
Development of programs for a Public Safe-

experience:
Resident 12 years. Graduate Civil Engineer.
Further training in law and finance.
Consultant with Booz, Allen and Hamilton,
management consultants.

MASONITE FRAMED WITH PINE
5 FEET WIDE — 6 FEET LONG
5 FEET, 6 INCHES HIGH
2 OPEN DOORS, 2'x4’
2 OPEN WINDOWS, 18”x24"
UNFINISHED ONLY

e.
82.5
EXPERIENCED in Highland Park school
and civie affairs, including:

Civic

a

Open

RECORD

OPEN

1833
Highland
Thursday,

eaven

Friday Nights ‘til 9

t

STREET
2-3001

1961

of key

replacement
t

connecting
of

unsafe

e

Active.
informed
citizen
participation
in
government.
Public actions to promote the general welfare,
with
consideration
for individual
rights and feelings.
Efficient public service and administration.
Maximum coordination of our public safety
departments for economy and improved
service.
Close
cooperation
between
local
governmental units.
Preservation
of
the
spacious
residential
character of the city.
Vitalization of the central business district.
Adequate public transportation.
Sound, long-range planning.

e

ACCOMPLISHMENTS

Hutchinson works for

LET HIM AND HIGHLAND PARK KNOW
Vote Tuesday, April 18 for

IT

B. HUTCHINSON
Polls
(Paid

13,

of

(’57-present)

WILLIAM

WEDNESDAY

SECOND

City

paving

the
e

If you want the kind of government Bill

ID

Park
April

ALL DAY

OF

Councilman,

the

and

HIS OBJECTIVES CONTINUE TO BE:

As a councilman he has actively worked
with others to solve the problems of rapid
growth. Here are a few achievements:
Completion of major sewer and water programs.
Re-Zoning of 950 acres to larger lot requirements.
Provision of districts zoned for office and
research buildings and similar uses.
Establishment of a Finance Department for
better control of funds and to qualify for
lower rates.

ai

Thursday and

(55-57);

Park

*

$3195

Lge

Assn.

Highland

While Supply Lasts
oT

streets,
bridges.

Member Bd. of Education, School Dist. 108
(?54-’57); Chmn.
Citizens for Council-Mer.
Govt. (54-’55); First Pres. Highland Park

ONLY

ERECTED ON
YOUR SITE

ty Center,

Open

Political

6 A.M.
Advertisement)

Page H 17—D

25

�wt

nee

AA

PS

at

oe

aa

TEMS,

ved
}

To Hold District
Women Golfers
Science Show
Tee Off Season At Next Saturday
Dessert Luncheon

100 FT. LONG RANCH WITH OVER 100 TREES

The

Sunset Valley Women’s
league will hold its annual

Golf
pre-

"
@
@
@

f
;

IS A GEM”

y ft. long Ranch built 1954
acres, over 100 trees
Circular Drive over 400 ft.
9 rooms, 2 fireplaces
The best 9 room offering

@
@
@
@
@

Call

BAIRD
REAL

576

ESTATE

SALES

Lincoln

@

LIONEL

&amp;

WARNER

«¢

OPEN

@

MANAGEMENT

11

INSURANCE

Hillcrest 6-1855

Winnetka
SUNDAYS

@

a.m.

to

(Paid

5

p.m.

Political

North

Suburban

All
interested
in
joining
the
league
are invited
to attend.
Booklets
describing
the
golfing
events of the coming season and
stressing rules changes since last

be paid by April 30 to Mrs. Robert
Weinberg, 1235 Linden, treasurer.
Dues
cover purchase
of trophies

of Deerfield who is an Evanston
High School
teacher, explained
that the fair is not to be compete-

year will be distributed. Co-chair-|ics, electronics and
men of the event are Mrs. Lee|
H. E. Hanson,
Lamson, 1158 Glencoe, and Mrs.| physics teacher at
Harry Kinzelberg, 841 Marion.
High School, and
Dues of $12 for the season must | the exposition with

WATSON

MORTGAGES

Avenue

Family Room 20x20
Sep. den with fireplace
2 beautiful baths
Fabulous kitchen, cost $10,000
Priced in low, low 60's

annual

Junior Academy of Science

Exposition is to be held Saturday
April 15 at Highland High School
from 7:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Over 1,000 students, seventh
graders
to
high
school
seniors,
from schools in Lake, DuPage, and
the northern part of Cook County,
will
display
their
scientific
endeavors
at the exposition.
The
fields covered will run the gamut
from Aeronautics through Zoology,
and the greatest number
are expected to be in the classifications
of math, biology chemistry, phys-

season dessert luncheon at 1 p.m.
Monday
(April
17)
in a private
room at Strike ’N Spare Bowling
Lanes.
Earlier plans to hold the
event at the Saratoga restaurant
have been canceled due to remodeling.

“THIS

35th

District

astronomy.
chemistry and
Highland Park
co-chairman of
Guenther Kolb

and other prizes, as well as a final

tive, but honorary

luncheon.
The
season
opens
May
2 and
18-hole play will be held each succeeding Tuesday through October
3, except for Memorial Day, Fourth
of July and September 5, the first
day of school.
Highlights will be

second, third place and honorable
mention will be given. Judges who
will
be
qualified
men
in
their
fields, will work in teams of three
and are headed by Robert J. Carmichael, chief of judges and science
teacher
at Highland
Park
High.
The exhibits will be open to the
public from 12 noon until 2:30 p.m.

Advertisement)

DANIEL A. VETTER

awards

of first,

the June match play tournament;
the
Club
Championship
tournament
and
the
new
‘President’s
Cup” tournament, both in July; the
August
match
play
tournament,
and
the
September
medal
play

competition.

For Councilman

The
season will wind up with
a “last
chance’
tournament
for
non-winners in previous events.
Membership in the league is on
a_
first-come,
first-served
basis,
with
a maximum
of 80 players.
Priority on the roster is given to
past members.

e Pledged to fight EXCESSIVE

Mrs.

Joe

Hurst

of

983

Harvard

court, president, said she expects
this season’s
membership
list to
be filled by the start of play.

TAXATION

RADIOE

e Pledged to stop EXCESSIVE SPENDING
RAndolph 6-3332
30 N. MICHIGAN AVE.
Suite 1511

e Pledged to represent ALL of
Highland Park

SAVE 20%
ON

Highland

Park’s ‘’Man-of-the-Year”’

President of the Jaycees ... would
perience

in 1959... and

now

ALL TUBES

retiring

be the only Councilman with ex-

in building and construction.

VOTE Tuesday, April 18
For a Working Councilman for THE PEOPLE

(Paid

Political

Advertisement)

Your

Own

Tubes
rwvvyYvW)

DANIEL A. VETTER

FREE...Test

4
;

Radio Dispatched
TV

&amp; Radio

Service

GRANT &amp; GRANT
708

Central,
ID

Highland

2-7222

Park

t

Page H 18—D 26

Thursday,

April

13,

1961

�'Program April 19
Devoted to Magic

Miss

An evening of magic and comedy
will
greet
the
members
of the
North
Suburban
League
of the

Jewish
Children’s
Bureau.
they meet Wednesday, April
8:30 p.m.,
Center.

in the Northbrook

sudden

ance

when
19, at
Youth

appearance

things hapwill be the

and

of a live white

disappear-

dove,

predic-

tions of events come true and the
amazing and unexpected discovery
of magical powers of members of
the audience,

Responsible
happenings

for

will

be

these
Edward

strange
Seder,

Margaret

McComb,

daugh-

ter of the Hamilton W. McCombs,
1852 Dale Ave. recently returned
from Fargo, N. D., where she attended the 16th biennial province
convention of
ma sorority.
who

Among
surprising
pening that evening

|

Attend ‘Kappa’ Meet
In Fargo Recently

Children’s Bureau

has

throughout

Kappa

appeared

his

Gam-

professionally

native

and New Jersey
nalism
student

University,

Kappa

New

York

El lange

area. Now a jourat
Northwestern

Seder

performs

widely

around
Chicago
and
the
North
Shore.
Arrangements
for the program
were
made
by
Mrs.
Lawrence
Tayne, 543 Clavey Ct., and Mrs.
, Bernard Peskin of Northbrook.

Shae
Quality Shoes for the Family
616 CENTRAL AVE.
ID 2-0879
G. S. Laing

Gene Meyer, 7-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
Meyer, 584 Hyacinth Pl., proudly holds Herky, an award for
a prize winning letter sent to the Totem Club program on
Chicago’s educational TV station WTTW.
The contest is a
part of the program featuring Dr. Andrew Merrick (left),
Brookfield veterinarian, who gives youngsters information
on the proper care of their pets. Gene is in the second grade
at Wayne Thomas school.

=

TEST
Question:

YOUR I.Q.
ON R. H.
What

is R.H.?

hwn

Question: What brand names does Random
. Question:

How
Can

Question:

Does

House’s

prices?

i set terms at Random

House?

Random

ou

Question:

are Random

House offer?

. Question: Will Random
decorating problems?

House

House

deliver?

answer

7. Question: What nights are Random

my

interior

House open?

8. Question:

What

is Random

House's: address?

9. Question:

What

is Random

House’s

. Question:

Are there any

more

Start your lawn off right

telephone

Doom crabgrass the

number?

questions?

same day you seed

ANSWERS TO I. Q.
ON R. FH.
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Buijosov0p owioy anoA Burg
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puo ADpsanyy

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crabgrass won’t get a chance to spoil your success later on. TURF
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*

°
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°/

*yuawarDjd 0} U01;&gt;D9]9S
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s4aMSUY

and accurately with the Scotts Spreader. You’ll never spend a
more rewarding afternoon on your lawn.

‘9

‘ougAup ‘quoymAuy s4omsuy
*wojd guowAnd YNOA UNS oy ‘pobuoiD 9q UD Sud] S4OMSUY

“Y

*Ayjonb ayy so ybiy so
you

asp saad

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405

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WOPUDY

“y05pnq

yO bulYyjoWOS

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Save

yo0qG

s4aMSUY

*

Scotts

*(4gnujOA 10 10}02—o1Nn}
“huang woospeg doy s1ys0jd) ajAyg-jo&gt;D ‘AjjOeg “oIxiq-uopNg ‘sow
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‘sowoe ‘w6605 sahnyy ‘yyoyrswanN-uospspyriy ‘ (SHodull)

Ippoaow

‘(syodui)

‘woos

Buray

ayy

40g

49jU0D JSOUlY S,21045 YON

Thursday,

April

13, 1961

U01}D91904

BuryzAsoaq

24j—OSNOY,

10

USP

‘sBurysiuany

WopUdY

‘1Dq

‘WOO1

jonsod

104

Ss! “"H'Y :4aMSUY

Spreader

SHERONY

Byes so yons ‘spuosq LUIpoay 944 j|V :4oMsSUY
"woos

Bump

5.00

*

314

Green

Bay

Rd.,

Highwood

—turt Builder (req. 4.95) plus
(reg.

16.95)

both

only

16.90

HARDWARE
OPEN

SUN.

10-12

°

ID 2-2041
Page

26-A

�RAVINIA

SUMMER

PLAY

GROUP
*

bus transportation

* gardening
¢

excursions
once-a-week

picnics

¢ water play

farm animals

June

*
*

26th

thru

4th
PA 4-3355

enrollment

James Smith, head librarian at
Highland Park High School, who is
treasurer of the Illinois Association
of School Librarians, attended the

11th

8.
The
“Meeting
Smith,
from

spring

conference

of

convention
theme
was
Changing Times.”
who has a B.S. degree

New

done

York

University

graduate

work

in

and

has

library

science at the University of Chicago, has been at Highland Park
High
School
for two
years.
He
taught one year at the laboratory
school at the University of Chicago

DRIVE CAREFULLY — THE LIFE YOU SAVE
MAY

annual

the
Association
at
the
LaSalle
Hotel in Chicago on April 7 and

oq

Qa morning
program
for pre-schoolers
limited

August

Attends ALA Spring
:
Conference In Chicago

ep A So Sp Sn A Sa Sn J So J So Si fo, So SS Sn Sn Si i Son
VuvuVvVvVvVvVvVvVvVvVvVvVvVvVvVvVvVvVVvUVCVVVVVS

MARILYN STRAUS’

BE YOUR OWN

and was head librarian at the high
school

in

Ottawa,

IH.

Robert Wolfe and Larry Bloom,
seniors at Highland
Park High
School, will appear on WBBM-TV
Saturday, April 15, at 12:30 p.m. to

debate the negative side of the
Question
“Federal
Income
Tax
Should be Reduced” against Morton High School of Hammond, Ind.

Anyone who wishes to see the
live telecast maY write Jerry Levin
at the television station to request
tickets. If more than 20 students
indicate a desire to make the trip,
the school will furnish bus transportation, according to Charles B.
MoGivern, debate team coach and
social studies teacher at the high
school.

Tongue

and

the

world’s

potato

sal-

ad or cole slaw.
Take your choice

two

of our

out-of-this-world

of our pickles,

too.

WE

TO

CATER

HOURS—8:30

A.M.

to

Midnight:

—

WHO
Friday

LOVE
and

We cater to Bar Mitzvahs and sales meetings.

TO

Saturday

EAT —
to

Ave.

David

2

A.M.

THE
—

told

po-

de-

molished 1954 car for steering linkage failure.

Stoned

30%
OFF
CHILDREN’S

PATENT LEATHER
SHOES
Thursday,

If you haven’t got the message yet,
just come
in and look around.
We'll
guarantee
that you'll agree that The
Steer is the best delicatessen you've ever
shopped!

THOSE

Groveland

Mrs.
Bernard
Fiedler
of 1238
Lincoln Ave. found a stone in her
sink under a broken $50 Thermopane window Tuesday morning last
week, Highland Park police were
told. No noise was noticed during
that night’s high winds.

If yeu’re @ lex ‘mn begel devotee, we've
got the best. Heme mede Chopped Chicken Livers are a Steer specialty.

finest

of

lice the steering ‘‘gave out.”
Police
will
examine
the

Fred Haslach of 1834 Richfield
Rd. found the convertible top of
his 1960 Buick cut in three places

Come To Us For Food To Go’
Salami,

suffered multiple facial lacerations
and
a possible
fractured
right
knee, Highland Park police report.
Their car was eastbound on Lambert Tree Ave. when it ran off the
road and hit a utility pole just east

Window

ID 2-9586

cheeses head the list. But don’t stop
there, for you'll want to buy a pint or

Highland
Park
Hospital
Sunday
evening for treatment of a bruised
elbow and knee. Stuart Kaplan, 14,

Delicatessen

Crossroads Shopping Center

Teke your pick from the world’s best
delicecies.
Mot Corned Beef, Pastrami,

David Kaplan, 17, of 1700 Happ
Rd.,
Northbrook,
was
taken
to

Car Top Slashed

when
he returned
from
walking
his dog last Thursday evening.
It
will cost $150 to replace, he told
Highland Park police.

ve

and

Teen Brothers Hurt
In Crash with Pole

Debate on TV

Friday and Saturday

Only

BEST
Closed

Tuesday.

The ultimete in Western dining plecoure.

on HOOVE!
cleaners

&lt;a

* + /7

feature

&amp;

RPA

Little “lankeoo Shoes
a

oe

$5 950

©

Light and easy
to use
King size throwaway bag .

®
COME

IN

TRY

20—FACTORY

AND
IT!

©

TRAINED

NO

EXCHANGE

NO

REFUND
Open

50°o more suction with
attachments

TECHNICIANS

TO

SERVE

1%

WAUKEGAN

Blocks North of Moraine
For

Page

26-B

AVE.,
Rd.—East

HIGHLAND

PARK

of Tracks

your convenience we are open: Thursday

ID
AMPLE

and

Frida

Evenings—7

FREE
to 9.

PARKING
All Day

AT

THE

2-6260
ALL

TIMES

SALES
FINAL

Thursday

and

Friday

Nights

elitr Sthoes

YOU—20

Highwood Radio &amp; Appliance Co.
2631

ALL

499

YOUNG

Central, Highland

POINT

OF

VIEW

IN

SHOES

Park

ID 2-0172

Wednesday.
Thursday,

April

13,

1961

�Three Cars Collide

Crash at Old Mill

Mary Hojnoski, 24, of Quarters
1530, Ft. Lewis, Wash., got a ticket

Fred Kinn of 127 Clyde Ave.,
Evanston, got a ticket for failure

for

to

driving

Saturday

too

fast

morning

for

on

conditions

Skokie

Val-

ley Rd. at Berkeley Rd.
Highland
Park
police say
she
skidded on slick pavement
at 45
miles per hour into the rear of
a car driven by Ruth Isely of 1230
Elmwood PIl., Deerfield.
The Isely car was pushed into

the rear

of one

driven

by

George

yield

the

right-of-way

after

collision on Skokie Valley Rd.
Old Mill Rd. Saturday night.

a

wha

at

the way

—

clothes g°
n Lines

American Va
via North
move,
“Wife-Approve a’?
in a
dustcloset into
m
fro
t
straigh
wardrobes.
ing
vel
tra
proof
Rafferty

Highland Park police say he hit
the car of Joan Cassidy, 796 Old
Trail Rd., while he was making a
left turn.

@

service!
Complete
e Co., 2123
Transfer &amp; Storag
k, «
Highland Par
,
Rd.
Green Bay
ID 2-0507.

Luczanich of 348 Jocelyn Pl., Highwood. Both were waiting to turn
left.

NEW
BUSINESS in Highwood opened recently with
Mayor John Frantonius cutting the ribbon while Mrs. Bob
Turelli looks on. She's Billie. The shop carries women’s and
children’s clothing. It is located on Highwood Ave. next to
the dime store; a block which includes several new storefronts.

Truck

Windows

Hits Car

Eugene

Joseph Innocenzi of 1912 Elmwood Dr. got a ticket for negligent driving after a crash Friday
morning: with
the
car
of
Jack
Randles, 16th Artillery, Fort Sheridan.
Highland Park police say Innocenzi backed a GMC
truck from
the Bloom St. viaduct to Waukegan
Ave., turned north from the wrong
lane, and hit the passing car,

Gone
Orrico

returned

to

his

home
at 781
Pleasant
Ave.
last
week to find five greenhouse window sashes, 2x6 feet, missing from
the greenhouse
in back. He left
them
there in December;
values
the loss at $50.

No matter what you want to buy
or sell you'll find the Want-Ad section

your

best

market

place.

after
nost people
Get the results of an expert

Kills crabgrass
as it sprouts
a

i
)

Just as the body
muscles age with the
years — won't let you do some things you did when
you were younger—so do the muscles that control the lens of the eye become less elastic. When
they do, your eyes gradually lose their ability to
focus on near objects. That’s why, after forty,
most folks need glasses—or a change in the ones

:

The seed from last year’s crabgrass is in your lawn—just waiting
for warm weather to sprout. In half an hour this weekend you can
make sure it will never come up. Just fill the accurate Scotts
Spreader with HALTS®, set the dial, and take

a walk. HALTS

creates an invisible barrier over the entire lawn, lies in wait, then
strikes when crabgrass sprouts. HALTS doesn’t harm good grass—
in fact, HALTS is so compatible with grass you can actually seed
the same day!

they are wearing. Yes, glasses can help cancel out
many flaws in vision that come with middle age.
So see your eye physician (M.D.) for eye examination. And don’t cringe if he says you must wear

Ask us about the Scotts guarantee...

a better lawn or your money back!

glasses or bifocals for the first time. Hore at H.O.V.
we know all the tricks for making them attractive
as well as comfortable.
:
CONSULT AN EYE PHYSICIAN

(M.D,) FOR EYE EXAMINATION

che Lloyse of Vision ™
Craftsmen

1891

in Optics

SHERIDAN ROAD, HIGHLAND PARK
610 CHURCH STREET, EVANSTON
135 NORTH WABASH AVENUE, CHICAGO
@H.O.V,

Thursday, April 13, 1961

O'NEILL'S
1746 SECOND ST.

ACE HARDWARE

,

|

ID 2-1150

Bring your lawn problems to our Lawn Program Advisors. They have: the
know-how and the experience to help you achieve the kind of lawn you want.
Page 22

�Northwood Student
Wins First in State
Mary

Mr.

Ann

and

wood,

won

Warren,

yyy

i,

j

Fabulous

ce

at

Moderate

Prices”

was

in the

another

Fort

DINING

a

a

y
AY

ROOM

RATHSKELLER

In Our New Cocktail Lounge

HUNGRY FOUR

Ray, Len &amp; Doug

SINGING WAITERS

Music — Vocals — Comedy
6 Private Bisin Booms |

‘

On

EDENS

Reservations

Fi

(Just

for

Ann
her

school

Bowie,
essay

on

Deans

to

Lis
Pictured taking orders for Arbor Day trees at recent Park
District Night at the Recreation Center are Civic Beautification

Conn., " recently y were Louise Rosenthal, daughter of the L. R. Ro-

:
:
Committee
officers
Mrs. Albert E. M. Lover and Mrs. Harold
Burnstei
‘
R.
Burnstein (seated). Background shows trees offered in

sunihaia, 810 Baldpin’ RA, dod Ann

Fdehen

6-8080

14 W. RANDOLPH

e

Mary

Sheridan,

amed

50-250 people

EXPRESSWAY

Northwood.

grader,

Named to the dean’s list at Connecticut College, New London,|

accommodating

vv at LAKE ooOK Ly morn

Revolutionary

John Marshall.

Tues, Thru Set.
a: kvtvate Saves: Neti)

hadommeaetioes 16 te

of

High-

first prize in the Illinois

American

eighth

i

Bai!

daughter

Fabbri,

War patriot.
She had previously won first in
the North Shore chapter, DAR contest. Winning honorable mention

HEIDELBERG
ee
‘International Cuisine

New

Peter

Division Daughters of American
Revolution,
historical essay contest for her essay on Dr. Joseph

;

atVilla Moderne
e
Visit Our

Fabbri,

Mrs.

ava

west of State)

tanita

Camas

Of Vis. ahd Ae

3434

Ola

Mill

sale.

Rd.

at

Both are juniors.

the

Deadline for orders is April 15. Blanks may be secured
Park

District

office,

1801

Sunset,

Recreation

Center

or public library.

Boy Hurt by Truck
Darrel
mour

fered
bow

bx

Your clothes come
Pt)

m

)

Bh:

Unrein,

Ave.,

an

13, of 1734

North

abrasion

and

Sey-

Chicago,

to the

complained

suf-

right el-

of a sore

hip

after colliding, on foot, with a
panel truck driven
by Clifford
Boose of 1237 Ridgewood Dr.
The accident occurred at the
corner of Deerfield and Skokie
Valley

Rds.

week.

Tuesday

Highland

damage

to

the

afternoon

last

Park police list $5
right

front

fender.

Nab Water Bombers

out as Sweet as

nny, bom, whe tren, aon
running in and out of the Ravinia
Northwestern station and the out-

y

:

ia4%

a

4
‘

:

mr

;
ee

:

peat

ee

7

“4
1S

4
Wl

side phone booth there, were made
to clean up the mess Tuesday

d

morning last week.
Howard

pe
rs

rs

ce

ome

ig

.

p

_

aHANY

Bs

a

:

3

j

{la}

eles

ale

cITIC

dryer

5

station

agent,

old and

the

other

release names.

-

14, but did not

The present with a future, a U. §.

(Only electric drying

|_|

Erickson,

called Highland Park police. Police
said one of the boys was 13 years

PRESTIGE

FLAMELESS
ELECTRIC DRYING

So Clean, So Safe, So Modem

.

J

identifies

TRY AN ELECTRIC DRYER IN YOUR HOME FOR 60 DAYS

|

a

~ MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE

sd
z
M

There’s nothing like the fresh,
sweet smell of really clean clothes
—completely free of fumes and

100% clean electrically heated air
| ever mixes with your clothes.
Electric dryers have no pilot

?

you get this kind of clothes drying every time. They make sure

A 60-day home trial will prove
_ that flameless electric drying is

fumes or fuel dirt never creep in

the cleanest, freshest, fastest way

because electric dryers use no

to dry clothes—or

fuel, have no flame. Only gentle,

back.

ig

odors.
Electric dryers see to it that

!
‘fl

;

your

WELCOME WAGON

SPONSORS...

firms of prestige in the

waning

are

For information,
eal

to light, no fuel pipes to get in
the way.

Highland Park
Shia: aid ei

ie iD 3-2253 pe
Deerfield-Bannockburn

Grace Clork
WI 5-0887
Groce Brady

every penny

of Lincolnshire

See your appliance dealer today

WELCOME WAGON

O Public Service Company
EI

|

3

_ Page 28)

FEB, 5-11, 1961

©Commonwealth Edison Gounany

Thursday, April 13, 1961

�~ Landlubbers
and

Seafarers!

Last weeks’ TNT prize went to $580 because Mrs. Lawrence Peddle,

689

Homewood

Ave., was

a current TNT ticket last week
Schooley

of Garnett

&amp; Co.

when

unable

to produce

called upon

As a consolation

by Jack

prize

We Are Happy to Announce

she was

awarded a $10 gift certificate from Sunset Foods.

SALES on the NORTH SHORE

The prize in merchandise awaits any shopper who
picks up a free TNT ticket at any of the seven participating

‘

stores.

rs &amp;
Mibgactat hepels
© Most Complete Funeral Home

and Downtown

Underwater Breathing Apparatus

%

Swimming

%
*

for

Masks and Fins

* Parking adjacent to building

3

Chicago

¢ Funeral consultation and arrangements may be made
own home with our North Shore representative.

Spear Guns
Depth Gauges

_

,

K

%&amp; Watches
s ¢ Compasses

COMPLETE INFORMATION

smal] or large attendance

* Convenient to North Shore

%

te Dry and Wet Suits

¢ Perfect accommodations

in Metropolitan Area

Pa: eae

Seis

Air Fills - Books — Pamphlets

in your

SUBURBAN PHONE NUMBER—VErnon 5-2221 |
or
5206

North

LOngbeach

Broadway,

1-4740

Chicago

(Just

north

of

Foster)

|

SPRING ICE SKATING
Classes Beginning

DRIVE CAREFULLY — THE LIFE YOU SAVE
MAY

BE YOUR OWN

ICE TIME AVAILABLE
Our Sport Shop Corries:a' Full Line of
Skates , Blades, Skirts &amp; Accessories
i

Pf oustroww

Pp:

ANTS

protects your home
against insect damage
Among the most common insect pests around all homes,
large and small alike, are ants. One of their coziest
refuges is around the kitchen sink where they positively revel in the moisture and warmth. Of course,
they journey to other parts of the house too. They are
frightfully unpleasant and downright dangerous, but
now

you

can

get

rid

of

them

easily,

quickly.

Pest Control, division of Aerosol Exterminators.
end

to your

waterbugs,

ants,

but

carpet

insect pests that

their

beetles,
invade

HPC

spiders

our homes.

Plan

and
HPC

Just

phone

Household

They'll not only put an

will

get

rid of

moths,

all

the

other

damage-dealing

chemicals

are safe

roaches,
for people

. . . murder for insects. The HPC Plan is inexpensive, too—as low as
$20.00 per year for two complete treatments inside and out for most
ad iy
homes . . . $2.00 for each additional room, Don’t delay, call
today!

HOUSEHOLD
Thursday,

April

13,

PEST CONTROL
7 DAYS A WEEK
1961

—

HI 6-6173

bar
ICE SKATING

.

:

oN

Hillcrest 6-4123

}

g
4

j

915 Linden et Tower Road
Winnetka
Page 29. .

�Plan Summer Camp Programs for Area
Volunteer

and

Hair

Cutting

Specializing

in

High Blonding
In All Shades

Permanent

of Beauty

Council,

Boy

are

putting

an

estimated

North

Scouts

plans

in

1,500

and

staff

Shore

Area

of
shape

boys

America,
to

give

the

op-

and Deerfield units are included in

Waves

All

of the

portunity to attend camp this summer.
Highland
Park,
Highwood
this council.
Tilden Batchelder,
Council
Camping Chairman, said a 17 per
cent increase
in the
number
of

Hair Cutting
Featuring

leaders

members

Branches

Culture

St.

Johns

Avenue

ID

EXPERIENCED

moved

2-1603

June

better!

ADDING MACHINES
SALES - RENTALS - REPAIRS

NEW LOCATION SPECIAL!

Chandler's

MEN'S &amp; LADIES’
RAINCOATS — TOPCOATS

645 CENTRAL

Beautifully Dry Cleaned
and Made

¢

of

Council

Purpose
of the
camping
program, Batchelder explained, is to
provide the opportunity for those
institutions which sponsor. Boy

Scout troops (churches, PTAs, civic
and fraternal groups)
boys
in their
units
character

perience

to
an

give the
outdoor

in self-reliance

building

which

—.

the

might not otherwise
vide for the boys.

an

ex-

institutions

be able to pro-

Camp
Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan,
with 720
acres located, on an inland lake, is

owned

and

operated

Shore

Area

Council.

valued

at

for two

weeks

$500,000.
per boy

by the
The

The

North

camp

$45

is

cost

(paid by the
costs

are

Authors Article
Mrs.

Ruth

Esserman,

chairman

of the art department at Highland
Park High School, is the author of

an article entitled ‘“‘Towards a New
Appreciation of Art” which ap-

For nearest Jewel dealer, see
Phone Book Yellow Pages,
or phone SEeley 3-2430,

City of Highland

Area

gram.
Transportation
additional.

INSTANT
PAINT

SPECIMEN

Shore

boy) include room, board, and pro-

flat finish for walls and ceilings

ID 3-0230

the
North
staff.

and

JEWEL

AND

Libertyville, a full-time member

training experience

29

makes painting
50 easy!

NEW!

TYPEWRITERS

their store in Crossroads

to serve you

Opens

The
boys who
will attend the
camp will be supervised by a camp
staff of 68 headed by Camp Administrator Charles Gribble
of

OPERATORS

SHORE LINE CLEANERS
has

Camp

The first camping period begins
June 29 and the last period ends
August 23.

LASSIOUE peauty Nihon
815

boys attending the Council’s Camp
Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan
near Antigo, Wis.,
is expected this year. Early registrations also have seen a strong
tendency of Boy Scout troops to
register for camp periods as units,
he said.
To date 45 Scout troops
from throughout the Council area
already have registered for camp
as units.

Boy Scout Troops

peared in the March issue of the
North Shore Art League News.

BALLOT
Park, Lake County,

Illinois

GENERAL

Dry Cleaned
by Shore Line's

TUESDAY, APRIL

New

FASHION

ELECTION
18, 1961

FINISH

A textile finishing agent
that renews the original

Nominees

feel and drape of your

for

Councilmen

garment.

Of The City of Highland

Park

at the

General

ESTABLISHED
“Where
Complete

Craftsmen
Quality

1913

Clean
Dry

Your
Cleaning

Clothes”
tervies

Election

FOR COUNCILMEN
(Vote

for

Two)

Located in the “Island” at the Main Entrance of

: CROSSROADS SHOPPING CENTER

FRANCES

HIGHLAND PARK
e
ACRES OF FREE PARKING
_ GET ACQUAINTED OFFER—SAVE KING KORN STAMPS
—USE THIS COUPON

JAMES

This

coupon

redeemable

for

IRETS

100

IIDILDLLSD

PEER RRARE ESOT

KING KORN STAMPS |
with any $5.00 dry. cleaning order.

All rights reserved,:
April 29, 1961.

This Coupon Good at Our Crossroads Store Only
SHORE LINE CLEANERS
Bring this coupon with your order.

SM MIOA

AID

AAI ATOM

OOD:

Sess

&amp; This coupon redeemable only for King Korn stamps.
;
n the King Korn Stamp Co.
Coupon void after

BOROWITZ

WILLIAM.
DANIEL

M. ARENBERG

B. HUTCHINSON
A. VETTER

Roy Millen
City Clerk
4/6-13/61—85

Thursday,

April 13,1961

�side

extends

an

electric

cabie

capped with a’stainless steel “son-

ic head”

that

resembles

flavins

a radid

Trouble ‘Gnas

CAR: INSURANCE?

microphone.

The sonic head is placed against
the affected part of the body (see

Regardless
write

of

the

HIGH

LIMITS

DAVID

we

can

LIABILITY,

MEDICAL

photo) or an ailing foot or hand
is placed under water and the sonic
head
is moved
slowly
back
and
forth about a half-inch from the
skin.

reason,

COLLISION,

“for

—

LOW

A.

and

you”

RATES

BEATTY

SUNSHINE
BRIGHT!

INSURANCE
AGENCY
ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE
500 S. Genesee, Waukegan, II.
ON 2-0240

Dr. Aldes explained that inside
the sonic head there is a piece of
(Continued on page 32)

Weekdays Till 9 p.m., Sat. Till 3 p.m.

50th Year of Successful Teaching
SECRETARIAL, STENOGRAPHIC,
TYPING, ACCOUNTING, AND
BRUSH-UP COURSES.
GREGG AND

EVANSTON
BUSINESS COLLEGE

SPCLONTHANY suormanp
J

Day and

Evening

1718 Sherman

Ave.

Classes
UN 4-3004

Wm.

H.

Callow,

Prin.

That’s why all men
like our laundering
William Berger, Director of Phiysical Therapy at Highland
Hospital demonstrates the Ultra Sound Generator, the hos-

Park

tf.

pital’s “Silent Machine.”

The “Silent Sound’ machine in
the physical therapy department of
the Highland Park Hospital is an
unfamiliar piece of equipment to
most people. Its real name is Ultra
Sound Generator and it has been
used successfully in Germany since
1930 and was brought to this country in 1950, according to William
Berger, Director of Physical Therapy at the Highland Park Hospital.
In the past five years, research
with
ultrasonics—in
New
York,
Washington, Chicago, Los Angeles,
Denver—has surged ahead. Today,

ultrasonic therapy is coming out of
the laboratory and into hospitals,
clinics and doctors’ offices.
Exactly what is ultrasonics? It

can

best

be

described

sound”—that

highpitched

is, sound

for the

as

“silent

too shrill or

human

ear

to

detect. But even the experts aren't
sure
how
this
inaudible
sound
works
on aching muscles
or inflamed tissues.
There
are
three
theories,
(1)

Sound waves

verted

to

heat

(which

cannot

Fun3ral

be

Jewish

felt) and thus benefit affected tissues; (3) The waves creat subtle,
beneficial chemical changes in cells
themselves.

Treatment with ultrasound is remarkably simple. Dr. John H. Aldes,
the
how

of Los Angeles,
field,
recently
it works.

a pioneer in
demonstrated

“AND

NORTH

Community

SHORE

South Shore Chapel:

to

Jules

2100

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Since 1865

and

prefer

because

ing

SERVICE
Furth,

Men

our

we

laundering

do

a

job on each shirt.

the

their

stoff,

your

gently

Complete facilities in your community
for prompt service .. . Lee J Furth,

Call Midway
3-5400

The instrument that produces ultrasound is about as large as a portable dishwasher. It is covered with
levers, dials and lights. From one

Directors

COMPANY

will

shirt

but

we

wash

it

..

.

mend it... sew on any missing

buttons

. . . and

week

East 75th Street, ct Clyde

improvement!

SALE
PRICES
EVERY DAY ON EVERY ITEM

On receiv-

thoroughly

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iron it

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the

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“massage’”’ body cells,

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oS

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Chiropractor
524 Waukegan Avenue, Highwoods

ARLINGTON

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CALL
ID 2-3310

13, 1961

HTS.

°¢

Arlington Market, Dryden and Foundry
¢ Northbrook Meadows, 1941 Cherry Lane
¢ Village Green, 678 N. Northwest Hwy.

512-518 Waukegan Ave,
Highwood

Page

31

�Silent Machine
‘Bar

on

Budget

Frame

75th

quartz

physicians and many friends, Al‘mer Coe Optical Company, wellknown prescription opticians, have
opened a fantastic budget-economy
eyeglass frame bar in each of its

locations. Fantastic, because up-toand

conservative

advance

or exotic

styles

frames

in

are

available at money-saving prices
| from $5 to $10. There are wide as‘sortments; frames for men, women, and children.
-Almer Coe Optical Company was
established in 1886. Now on the

75th birthday there are stores con-veniently located in the North Mall
at Gid Orchard, Skokie; at 1629
| Orrington Avenue (next to Cooley’s
Cupboard) in Evanston; and at 10
North Michigan Avenue in Chicago.

You

are invited

to come

in

and

browse around the new budgeteconomy
eyeglass frame
bar at
your favorite Almer
Coe
store.
‘Those interested in contact lenses
should come in or phone for brochure, “Almer Coe explains the
@ase and convenience of contact.

lenses.”
vited

Charge

and

terms

accounts
can

be

are

crystal

about

the

size

in-

arranged.

—

rent is passed

through

of

a

the crystal,

it contracts and expands at the rate
of 1,000,000 times per second, producing sound waves at the same

rate.

sound to treat sprains, bruises and

. Ultrasonic waves pass through
skin, muscle, blood and bone. But

silver dollar. When alternating cur-

Birthday

In answer to the requests of eye

the-minute

‘fracted like rays of light.

‘(Continued from page 31)

Opticians

.

air stops

uneven

them

cold.

surface,

That’s

like

why

a hand

an

or

a

leg, often must be treated under
water.
The course of treatment, says Dr.

Aldes,

usually

consists

of a series

of 12 ultrasound radiations, daily
or every other day. Each treatment

This is called the “Piezo-electric
effect.” These sound waves pene-

lasts three to 10 minutes.

trate to a depth of about two inches

England back in 1883, but it wasn’t
till the 1920’s that doctors in the
U.S. expressed interest in ultra-

and can be beamed,

reflected or re-

Work

with

ultrasonics

began

in

sound for medical treatment.
At
that time there were skeptics in
the medical world. There still are

Conbal

ccc

Open

Coe

some.
Since

Chane

the

1950,

lead

the

over

U.S.

European

has

taken

research-

ers in the field of ultrasonics.

éx cLaundry

Aldes

1 Day Laundry Service

himself

ID 2-0305
1873 St. Johns Ave.
Highland Park

treated

more

horses,”

suffered

by foot-

ball players.
In dentistry, ultrasonic drills are
being used experimentally to determine whether they can do the
job more efficiently than standard
drills.
Thus, used alone, ultrasound is
proving its value. New tests indicate that it may be even more effective when used in conjunction
with certain drugs.
Dr.
Aldes
has
already
experimented with cortisone-family drugs
along with ultrasonics in animal
studies, and in a few people. Preliminary results are hopeful. The
patients reported considerable relief from joint pains for several
months.
Ultrasonics has been criticized in
some quarters as being a “‘dangerous” form of treatment. So it is—

ul-

in unskilled hands, just as the friv-

with

olous use of any ordinary therapy
is dangerous.
But,
doctors
say, safe
dosages
have been worked out for all parts
of the body. Careful analysis of
each of his 3,000 treated patients

doctor

has assured Dr. Aldes that none ex-

has
experimented
with
the
new
treatment technique to relieve pain
and spasm among certain aged patients.
Last fall, team physicians of four
Big Ten
universities
used
ultra-

perienced a harmful chemical
or
physical change.
Understandably, doctors shudder
when a single treatment is labeled
a
“cure-all.”
Doctors
who
have
used
ultrasound
make
no_
such

3,000

physician
hand

selected

has
In

cases

treated

conditions

ultrasound.

Call For and Deliver

has

Dr.

“charley

trasound. He notes success in about
four cases out of five.
At the Columbia University (New
York)
medical
school,
another

than

SINCE 1926

HN

Almer

|

with

crippling

successfully

Chicago,

a

TRAIL BLAZER DUDE RANCH —
AN EXCLUSIVE DAY CAMP FOR BOYS AND GIRLS—5 thru 12

|

| CARPET

in Northbrook,

A Large Selection Of

]

heating services in the North Shore
Area.

|

In The Smartest Styles

a

Newest Colors — Reasonable Prices

— DeSitte
r

Bro

Carpet

Harold

Hillcrest

Bay

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No harsh

1920

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Monday and Thursday 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.
Daily 9 A.M. to 5 P.M.

Chicago
_ CARPET

Page 32

chemicals

of SPOT REMOVING

Winnetka

6-3336

NIGHTS:

Kammerer

ID

Metallurgi-

the annual banquet of the or-

ganization held
in St. Louis,
McCulloch, a
20-year resident
of
Highland

‘
:

Park,

also

serving

on

is
the

advisory committee
of the

ee

McCulloch

Illinois

State

Geological Survey. In addition, he
is a member of the Coal and Coke
D-5
committee
of the American
Society of Testing Materials.
He received Master’s degree in

coal

mining

University

was

engineering

from

of Washington

a fellowship

the

where

student

he

working

with the U.S. Bureau of Mines in
Seattle.
Locally, McCulloch is a member
of the Highland Park Kiwanis club

and

the

den

club.

North

Shore

Men’s

Gar-

‘greats’—like the X-

CLAIM

DAY

CLAIM

DAY

ID 3-2475
2-2078

Of Out-of-Season Garments Cleaned by Us.
¢ Not Box Storage. Each Garment Individually
Stored on a Hanger by Itself.

SAVE

120 Green

and

cal Engineers in

FREE STORAGE
1

Specialists Since

Mining

25360
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
to all
persons that
the first Monday
of May,
1961, is the claim date in the estate of
IDA
M.
SHERIDAN,
Deceased
pending
in the
Probate
Court
of
Lake
County,
Illinois, and that claims may be filed against
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 9 A.M.
ALBERT
BORK
Executor
Behanna &amp; Engber, Attorneys
1935 Sheridan Road
Highland Park, Ill.
IDlewood 2-4304
4/6-13-20/61—91

Ravinia Plbg. &amp; Hig. Co., Inc.
ID 2-5561-62

of

i

ADJUDICATION AND
NOTICE

in repairs to all makes and models of washing machines, dryers, dishwashers, disposals and other kitchen appliances.

595 Roger Williams

stitute

25343
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
to all
persons that
the first Monday
of May,
1961, is the claim date in the estate of
CLARILDA
BAKER,
Deceased
pending
in the
Probate
Court
of
Lake
County,
Illinois, and that claims may be filed against
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 9 A.M.
EVANGELINE MECHAM
Executor
Behanna &amp; Engber, Attorneys
1935 Sheridan Road
Highland Park, II.
[Dlewood 2-4304
4/6-13-20/61—90

available to organizations for parties

With the addition of
Harold
Kammerer to our staff, we now
have our own full-time APPLIANCE
REPAIR DEPARTMENT specializing

Chicago, recent-

ly was installed chairman of the
Coal Division of the American In-

ADJUDICATION AND
NOTICE

We are happy to announce the
expansion of our plumbing and

INotitelstol mm sigelsloks

Schaefer Company,

ray and antibiotics.”

Pool

Camp Season: June 26 thru Aug. 18, ‘61
Phones: OR 4-9789 or OR 4-3829
Weekends

William C. McCulloch, 303 Sheridan Rd., president of Roberts and

other medical

IIlinois

Swimming, Horseback Riding (2 Corrals),
Fishing, Boating, All Sports, Crafts, Golf, Hot
Lunches, Teacher-staff, Transportation, etc.

a

Of Coal Division
Of Mining Engineers

claims for this therapy.
But one distinguished physician
has this to say: “Ultrasonics may
one day take its place alongside

Directed by Teachers—Program Fitted to Child
All activities conducted on our Country Estate
Ultra Modern Outdoor Swimming

Appointed Chairman

—. La Grange

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727

ST. JOHNS AVENUE,
ID 2-0352

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ID 2-0312

PARK

Thursday,

April

13, 1961

�|

h

—Ny

SS
NORTHSHORE MUSIC STUDIOS
o~.

ij

(Formerly Garino’s)

Inquire about

our

Clarence Dombeck, proprietor

liberal trial

Instrument

Franchised

for accosdion—guitar

dealer Gibson Guitars

Dallape — Scandalli
Highlond Park Studio
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furnished

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io

minutes

Mrs. J. J. Friedler Jr., 327 Marshman, Highland Park, Chairman of the Alcove Gift Shop
Service, a part of the Woman's Auxiliary program at the Highland Park Hospital, checks plans
for a new doctors lounge. A gift of $10,000 has been given by the Alcove Gift Service for
the construction of the lounge. The room is used by doctors for relaxation and also contains
their mailboxes and bulletin board.
Fraerman and Dr. M. Glickstein.

The

doctors

shown

are

Dr.

J.

H.

Lundstrom;

Dr.

S.

85

women

from

Highland

of

Volunteers

is

and

members|

Partments

tive

committee.

Creative

hand

made

both

order.

in

the

A

groups

gifts
shop

cart

provide

of

goes

by

special

to

patients

rooms three days weekly carrying
gift and drug items. Television
service to patients is offered. The

and

gifts

of

Th

all kinds. Co-chairman
i Mrs. Robert Bachle,
is

Sa

eR

£f

G

a

€ NECCHI-E
GIRL
git Slee Dh omlua
y
rigs

te

BY APENKCS SEWING MACHINE Ca,

John

Barr,

Park

infants

Mrs.

are:

1-1890

Adjacent
i

HERSHEY WEINSTEIN, President
LAURIE WEINSTEIN, Funeral Director

parking

for

over 200
cars...

Mrs.

Sheldon,

575

Park

and

in

items.

1005
charge

Wade,
of

Mrs.

toys

Neisen

Sahn
ane *. Deere Park E.,
|*72 land Park; Mrs. C. V. Stew(Continued on page 34)

WAIT

!
Featured in the shop are unus-

ual

shop

Highland

Lyman

Highland

Industrial
group
does
personal
shopping
for
businesses
sending
Christmas
gifts
and
for conventions and meetings.

of the shophop

Mrs.

Groveland,

distinction|M?8..

and

the

Road

H. Harris Jr., 1372 Sunnyview,

Winnetka;

art

of

Shore

:

Park, Glencoe, Deerfield and other | Robert Ruhl, 617 Rice, Highland
North Shore suburbs includes the | Park.
shop workers, buyers, creative art|
The Buyers for the various degroups, cart workers

North

Peterson

LOngbeach

Chairman

of the Industrial group and execu-|S.

West

the

H.

The volunteer group of approx-| 2313 Sheridan Rd., Highland Park.
imately

8019

from

‘TIL YOU

HEAR

THIS!

The reason | look so neat here at the plate is
because | send my uniforms to
o
é

ad

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Our mine of imported treasures

“Spring,” says Hannah, “is the

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piece coffee service of Sheffield
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Call us today! We’ll arrange to
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We

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Makes

ARENDS
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fe]

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aa *

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NEC

The Gift and Bridal Registry

3 Serving the
i

North Shore Over 60 Years

Wi. PLS

Pst

662 CENTRAL

NA

eenent 3

GF Bucs fast oF GreerBoy HVGHLAND PARK
Thursday,

April

13, 1961

Phone

Today

...

ID

2-4551

2226 Green Bay Rd., H.P.— AMPLE FREE PARKING

OAK DS RTE
Page

33

�Meeps

5

Gidwitz Heads 1961

B. M.

ORI

ir

See:

,

be

TUCKPOINTING—Masonry

‘

CHIMNEY—FIREPLACE

i

Repair—Cleaning

2

FLAT ROOF
hot tar recoating

fl

Call

a

DRAPERIES

you

Gidwitz,

405

$200,000

want

goal

May

to buy

15 to

Draperies

‘ ©

Slip Covers

* Custom

/ ae
2 Dy,

:

890 Linden Ave.

a

‘

and

Leon.Sherman,

1675

Bell Ringer

Cam-

wood

Lane,

for personal

to

reach
the

Society’s

21.

Deerfield

Robin-

items in the shop.
Other

the

IT CAN

Furniture

4

j
;

Deerfield,

Personnel

Mrs.
Edward
Heinsimer,
646
Melody, Highland Park; Mrs. Robert Berger, 114 Laurel, Highland
Park; Mrs. Robert Logan, 340 N.
Deere
Park
Dr.,
W.,
Highland
Park
purchase
household
items.

Mrs.
Frederich Livingston,
1391
Sheridan Rd. Highland Park and
Mrs. Robert Sorg join in jewelry
selection. Mrs. Nelson Culver, 688
Deerpath, Deerfield, chooses cards,
candies and paper goods and Mrs.

123 Timber

receives

special

Lane,

orders.

Mrs.
Bennett
Goodman,
100
Belle,
Highland
Park
and
Mrs.
Daniel Gutmann, 246 Beach Lane,
Highland Park head the Creative
Art Divisions, while Mrs. Robert

ID 2-3430

dustrial

James

B.

Assistant

Deerfield

is Promotional

Director,

Mrs. George
Coston, 1533 Woodbine Ct., Deerfield is treasurer of
the group and Mrs. Edgar Heyman,
1233 Lincoln S., Highland Park is
secretary.

BE DONE

Warner

Reasonable

Rates

CORNER

Excellent References
Free Estimates

Wall

CENTRAL

Washing

Leading

ID 2-8917

Official

ELECTRONICS

¢ Septic Tanks

FCC Approved
U.L. Approved
1 Yr. Guarantee

¢

Inspector

COMPANY

Residential

HI 6-5080

454

PARK,

Pee)

appointed
Chairman
of
the Fuel’
and
Autom
otive Section of
the
Industry

7 and

Vogue

Western

722

R.R.

acai

Established

Office and

1885

West

Central

AUTO RADIATORS
MIDWAY

AUTO RADIATOR

by experienced

Alterations, fittings and
repairs to all types
of clothes.
Reasonable Rates

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1084 W. EVERETT ROAD
LAKE FOREST, ILLINOIS

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Call or Write

1883

ID 3-1484

Second Avenue, Highland Park, Illinois
A DIVISION OF MIDWAY LIMOUSINE SERVICE
IDlewood

TREE

GOOD

sy
PITTENGER

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Water

Naturally

ESTATE

TELEPHONES:
LAKE FOREST—CEdar
DEERFIELD—Windsor

Park,

Monday, June 12.

Bottled

4-3034

Mortgages
Road

Highland

the college, will premeeting. Her co-chair-

mencement,

Sales-A ppraisals

Deerfield

ID 2-2883

SEWING

REAL

National

cussed
are
the
Spring
Festival
Pageant, Sunday, May 7; Alumni
Day, Saturday, June 10; and Com-

Holes

,

Nursery

Deerfield

of
the

Evanston

WILLIAM

WI 5-0035

- Commercial

Bound

Fabric Shop

REAL

at

man is Arthur C. Allyn, Jr., Evanston, a trustee,
Among future events to be dis-

Belts

Main

of the Executhe 75th An-

celebration

Goodman,

trustee
side at

etc.

Button

UNiversity

F. D. CLAVEY

cone

Manufac-

turing Division,
Business DiviJames Ash
sion, during the
1961 April Crusade of the American Cancer Society. The fund-raising goal of the Industry and Manufacturing Division is $157,400; and
of the entire
Business
Division,
$369,000. The state-wide
goal
stands at $1, 60,000.
Two million
volunteers throughout
the nation
will distribute life-saving literature
on cancer and take contributions
during the April Crusade.
Ash-also worked as a volunteer
for the American Cancer Society
in 1958 when he served as assistant
public relations chairman of Chester County, Pa.

dict K.

Sweaters,

Shirts,

Buttons —- Hand

LANDSCAPING

Refuse
Rubbish

Blouses,

&amp; Machine

North

has been

College
of
Education,
Evanston,
will be held at 7:30 p.m., Thursday,
April 13, at the college. The chairman of the committee, Mrs. Bene-

SERVICE

Pleating —

ILL.

Designers

for the

Linens,
Towels,

2-2028

a Smile
¢
©

Catch Basins
Pumped

On

HIGHLAND

ID

REFUSE

With

DRESSMAKERS’

Repair Craftsmen

Jewelry

SERVICE
Service

650

Watch

SERVICE

HIGHLAND

RADIO CONTROLLED

SERVICE

Watch

DISPOSAL

RCA

RCA

SHERIDAN

and

BERNARDI

©
°
°

&amp;

REPAIR

ewe bors

TELEPHONE

Rd.,

RelaCorpo-

ration,

The final meeting
tive Committee for

MONOGRAMMING

Leeds

PAINTING

Ridge

Public

‘tions and Advertising, Borg-

niversary

JEWELER — WATCH

729

Plan Anniversary

Hubbard Woods

| PAINTING &amp; DECORATING

Ash,

Director,

Division.

Mrs. John Barbee,
1016 Sheridan
Rd.,
Highland
Park
is
in
charge
of the Alcove Cart, Mrs.
Kerwin Knoelk, 1327 Warrington,

lee
‘

2

Aids Cancer Drive

Sorg, 1307 Warrington, Deerfield,
and Mrs. Howard Kahn, 1469 Sheridan Rd. Highland Park, are In-

WHERE

* Upholstery

* Carpets

|] * Bed Spreads

Sanders,

Mrs.

As
general
chairman,
he
will
head the entire campaign consisting of special gifts and the Bell
Ringer March for Mental Health.
More than 30,000 volunteer workers throughout Chicago and suburban areas in Cook, Lake and DuPage counties will participate in
the door-to-door Bell Ringer March.

We Custom Make

_*

1960

page 33)

chair-

during

May

INTERIORS

i a

art,

fund-raising drive, to be held from

‘

:

Sheridan

from

Glencoe

general

efforts

&amp; FABRICS

|
:

named

of the 1961

spearhead

=
what

Willard

(Continued

paign of the Mental Health Society
of Greater Chicago.
Gidwitz will

ID 2-4553

matter

Drive

man

ie

_No

Health

Rd., has been

BASEMENT leaks repaired

5

Mental

Walter Hiller,

Hospital Auxiliary

INSURED

BUSINESS

WING’S TREE EXPERTS
Licensed by the State
Introducing a new power stump

BUSINESS SERVICES
Tape Transcriptions

cutter

Now is the time to order
FIREPLACE
DORMANT
SPRAY
and
woop
DUTCH
ELM CONTROL
BE SAFE
NOT SORRY
TREE REMOVAL
POWER SPRAYING
WING’S TREE EXPERTS
FEEDING
TRIMMING
Phones:
CABLING
ID 3-1622 &amp; KI 6-2292
PATCHING

Fast

Dependable

¢ Bookkeeping
© Mimeographing

Pick-up &amp; Delivery
591A

Roger

Monroe

PHARMACY
St.,

5th

6, Ill. ST 2-0075,

Williams

Want

Floor

ST 2-5880

MAKE

To

MONEY?

Neat

ID 2-0650
¢ Secretarial
* Notary Public

W.

SERVICES

HIGHLAND

BONDED

521

Chicago

3-0833

EXPERTS

MONROE
PROFESSIONAL

Advertise on

This Page
CALL ID 2-4500

Ave.

CELLOPHANE?

PROTECTED

©

DIV.
RAINBOW

WEEKLY
OF
LAUNDRY

ORCHID CLEANERS
NEXT

TO
1862

SUPERMART PARKING
FIRST STREET

�MEY User Cate Important
ey

"

ae

=

Gee oecpt
oer ne CeBien
MPC TONY
ife seat
Pale 4
a ey

sete ye

pals, *

AR

To Assure Healthy Grass
Just as a carpet adds a finishing touch to a well-furnished
room, so a healthy lawn adds a thing of beauty to your outdoor
setting. Here are some tips from lawn experts to help you start

your lawn off on the right foot this season:
A
spring
number one

including

clean-up
should
be
on your list of chores,

Garage Clutter?
Try Wall Storage

a thorough raking to re-

move dead grass, leaves and other
debris.
Rolling is another essential at
this time
of year. If your lawn
seems rough or bumpy as you walk
over it, there could be several reasons for this condition.
The winter “heaving” of the soil
may have raised some of the individual grass plants. This can be
solved by using a roller just heavy
enough
to press the loose grass

You can gain storage room
in
your garage for a suprisingly large
amount of tools and equipment by
putting your walls to work. Merely

place sturdy %4 inch panels of per-

Or the bumps could be caused by
night crawlers (those large earth
worms that are great for fishing

forated hardboard over the studs.
With heavy-duty fixtures inserted in the perforations,
you
can
hang
up
ladders,
wheelbarrows,
bikes, hand or power mowers, garden hose, rakes and shovels.
Both hardboard and a wide va-

bait,

riety

back into the soil.

but

not

so

desirable

for

a

smooth lawn). Correct this condition by applying a heavy rate of
chlordane. This chemical kills off
the night crawlers and also wipes

out grubs
other

the

of Japanese

sub-surface

lawn

to level

beetles

and

soil

insects.

Roll

out

the

in the

spring,

When

these

steps

are

lift out without

by

control

cluded

in

also should

your

spring

available

at

Your Home and

Garden Section

of any

So that

the storage

you

may

make

this your

most

successful

gardening season ever, the newspaper is offering this
section with news, hints, tips and places to get the things

kind,
pat-

you

need

to

get

growing!

2,4-D.
One
solution,
the
Antrol
Hose-Spray Weed and Brush Killer,
combines this ingredient with 2,4,5-

T—a

powerful

poison
—and
ment.

be in-

lawn

tools

you can re-arrange
tern in a minute.

finished

you can do any re-seeding that is
necessary. Before applying the seed
loosen the top % inch of soil lightly with a rake. Rake lightly again
after the seeding.
Then roll very

lightly.
Weed

are

Shelves for storage of paint cans
and other small items are easy to
make with the fixtures and boards.
Because the fixtures lock in and

too, being

sure to get uniform coverage
avoiding skips or overlapping.

fixtures

use.

mounds

after applying the chlordane.
It’s good to apply a commercial

fertilizer

of

lumber yards.
In fact, some manufacturers have
introduced pre-finished boards or
perforated boards with a built-in
wainscotting especially for garage

care

chemical

lethal

to

ivy and other woody plants
a handy hose-spray attach-

To combat crabgrass before it
program. The best material discovered to kill broadleaved
weeds riddles your lawn, use a chlordane
without
damaging
the
grass
is treatment early in the season,

SPRING
PLANTING
Beautify Your Grounds

j.+a seed

PLANT NOW!

to suit

EVERGREENS - SHRUBS
TREES
This is our own stock—
grown in our own fields—
in Lake Forest.
We
WARREN’S

@

KAY-BEE

@

COMPLETE

@

WARREN

WARRANTED

ROSE

hhh’

&amp;

BONE

LANDSCAPE

SERVICE

@

PERMIER

SOD

hpphr—or4444h4h-h4444'r
vv

6 yYVVUVVUVVY
*
4

FOOD

LAWN

44-444

FOOD
MEAL
PEAT

Every Davis seed blend is the result

MOSS

of constant testing for best results
in climatic conditions and soils peculiar to five mid-west states. Davis

44r'h
4
q

VWrVUVVYYUYY

@

also feature:

otted

€
q
&lt;

.

poh

4
&lt;

WE INVITE YOU

&lt;
¢
&lt;
&lt;
&lt;
¢
q
4
.
©
€
«

TO VISIT OUR GROUNDS

SEE THIS TRULY

Lawn Seed has gained in reputation

@

4
»

€

3
4
@
€
4
&lt;
«
4
&lt;
s
4
i.
4
¢
¢

4

4
&lt;

e

4

HIGH-QUALITY

and esteem for each of the past
30 years. Good reputations are
EARNED—Davis has the VERY BEST!

AND

STOCK

Special Price For Cash &amp; Carry
Sales office open daily and Sunday

JOHN FIORE NURSERIES
840

S. Waukegan,

Thursday,
#

April

Pics ae ae
bea

Sus.

as

tasted

te

i

Ns

.

Ber

"

Oye

¥i

A

eer

13, 1961

Lake

Forest

CE

4-0476

OTHER

FINE

DAVIS

B4

DACO

KILLS CRABGRASS
BEFORE IT STARTS

PLANT FOOD FOR
LAWNS, TREES, SHRUBS

At

Your

Distributed by

Local

HI-LITE

DACO-SOL

HIGH ANALYSIS, LIGHT
WEIGHT FERTILIZER

WATER SOLUBLE
FERTILIZER

DACO

Garden

GEORGE

PRODUCTS

Store

A.

or

DAVIS,

Hardware

INC.

Dealer

Chicago 30, Il.

�K| I]

SPIMPORARTY ANNOT WIN
North Shore Area
Spray before May 8
After that date, crab grass seeds will
germinate and it’s too late. Apply
ORTHO-KLOR Chlordane Spray now,
nip seeds and seedlings in the bud, put

stops

crab grass

before

it starts—nips

seedlings in the “bud.”

controls

grubs

and

season.

lawn

insects too—all

crab grass seeds and
through

the growing

lasts all summer,
easy

to apply!

your hose.

lingers in your turf to protect it all season.
spray with ORTHO Lawn Sprayer attached to

cheap

to use!— costs less than ¥ cent per square foot of lawn.
results tested, proved!—leading colleges find Chlordane gives
§|.
=
excellent control of crab grass seeds and seedlings.

Page

36

{fm

cum

pm

eee eee eee
Thursday,

April

13, 1961

�herself, and color
opportunity.
The
trend
to

affords

her

latex

an

few
outdoor

living

everywhere has surmounted regional color preferences so that today,
the same paints are called for in
California and Massachusetts, New
Jersey and Colorado.
Climate
as
a factor
in
color
choice becomes less important as
Americans travel and product distribution
becomes
broader
and
more rapid. Our advanced communication tends to make the entire
nation one in spirit and desire for
color.
The
building
material
you’ve
chosen for your home is also a clue
to your color preference. Owners
of wood houses prefer white, gray,
green, ivory, while stucco and concrete houses—growing in popularity—use a higher ratio of pink, yellow, aqua... the livelier colors.

Aiding the demand

Still going up as the number one paint for the exteriors

of houses is charcoal.
and turquoise
consultant.

color!
today

according

by those who

prefer

Fifty per cent of all
are in painted colors.

homes

Three out of four of these wear
a fashionable coat of light green,
yellow, pink, blue, beige or—gaining fastest of all—charcoal.
From
last place
as a roofing
choice in 1951, white has climbed
to first place and is way ahead of
runners-up
light green and light
gray.

to Faber

Birren,

SEE

OUR

Turquoise, pink, bright coral and
other lighter, daring shades, brighten house
trim—shutters,
window
frames and doors.
Why the nationwide trend toward
bright exteriors? A survey of your
own
family’s
habits
can
answer
that question . . . even give a hint
as to the most suitable shade for
your dream cottage.
Take
the
little
woman.
She’s
more active outside the home than
ever before. She’s broadening her
social activities—the
theatre, the
PTA exhibit, the club outing. She
has a growing desire to be creative

GREENHOUSE

OF

BLOOMING

POTTED

SHADE

TREES

GRASS

FRUIT

TREES

FERTILIZERS

feature

cut flowers

CORSAGES
. . . Open

Skokie

Hwy.,

Lake

and

. . « ASK

drying—two requirements
of
America’s
mushrooming
army
of
do-it-yourselfers — exterior
latex

years.

With

new

and

being

developed

and

popularity

of charcoal,

paints are today offered in a wider

turquoise,
grow.

off-white

and

relaxing

colors,

colors

that

laugh and colors that whisper. People who crave diversion and excitement, who delight in parties and
many
friends are sure to prefer
bright yellows, pinks.
If you, on the other hand, like

peace

and

quiet

as

colors.

Your

home

to be traditional,

itself

rather

is likely
than

hues

sought,
beige,

and

the
aqua,

blue

will

makes painting
so easy!

NEW!

JEWEL
INSTANT
PAINT

a rule—enjoy

entertaining
in
a
limited
way,
you’re
probably
drawn
to softer
greens
and
blues,
more
gentle

lighter

flat finish for walls and ceilings
For nearest Jewel dealer, see
Phone Book Yellow Pages,
or phone SEeley 3-2430,

mod-

ern.

for cheerful-

The face of residential America
is changing . . . it’s smiling in gay,
adventurous color. What of the fu-

ONE DAY
CARPET SALE
Room-Size
Remnants

50%

OFF
Sunday,

LEWIS
Edens,

We are equipped to assist you with your gardening

“ Top Soils
“ Lawn Rolling
“ Gravel Drives

“

and More
April

16th

CARPETS

near Tower—VE

5-2400

prob-

MAGIC

lems quickly, courteously and efficiently.

LIFE
GRASS

Manures

“ Tractor Work
~“ Dirt Fill

FERTILIZER

“ Tree Removal

ONLY $399

Jim Beinlich
TRUCKING

PLANTS
SEED

complete

FOR

. . . $1.50

&amp; WRECKING

VErnon

5-1195

floral

VINYL BASE
FLAT
WALL FINISH

“KEN.”

and

up

7 a.m.-9 p.m. 7 days a week.

Flowers
1390

ture?
From
all indications, the
‘pastel era’ is here to stay for many

SEEDS

arrangements

Free Delivery

past

quick

PERENNIALS

GROUND
COVERING
also

and

range of colors than any other type.
Science has made
us aware of
color and its emotional effects. We
know that there are exciting colors

ly bright house colors is the supply of cheerfully
bright
durable

PLANTS

EVERGREENS

SHRUBS

We

in the

to use

color

LAWN»! Kindleins Florist
GARDEN
CE 4-2764
COME

introduced

Easy

Other top favorites are beige, aqua

in that order,

Women who once yearned for a
white ivy-covered cottage are being

out numbered

paints

years.

by

¢

%

Webosy.. PASE Flot Wall Fimeh

Ly
ME
Rar. T

Wire

CE 4-2764

Forest

Let magic LIFE do your
lawn work! Apply light

VA PEX

4 vy:

PRATT

e Wing --Odorions

YELLOW
&amp; LAMBERT inc,

weight bag of LIFE anytime of year. Grasses

Typed

srs

#

&amp; LAMBERT

require what LIFE supplies . . . 20-10-5. Faster
results, deeper greening,
healthier lawn in less time.

&lt;3

a

Don’t Swelter this Summer
Install Quiet, Dependable

‘EASY CLEAN-UP

WITH WATER

Mueller Climatrol
AIR CONDITIONING

with brush or roller. Covers well,
has no objectionable odor, dries

quickly

__, FREE!
“ane

CANBE
SCRUBBED

Thursday,

April

13, 1961

Lambert

Vapex.

From $6.40 gal.

PRATT &amp; LAMBERT PAINTS
—- Glass — Wallpaper —- Window Shades —- Drapery Rods
Shutters and Picture Framing
ID 2-1418
Waukegan Ave., Highwood

Mirrors

=

velvety

BREAKWELL'S

Call for your copy.

poce-E xalsituetehiad
Phone: SP 4-3300

to a full-bodied,

finish. Let us show you modern,
colorful, scrubbable Pratt &amp;

You deserve the comfort, the heart-easing relaxation
of the finest in home air conditioning.
And Mueller Climatrol Central Air
Conditioning is considerate of your
aya
ef
lif
neighbors. Outdoor unit purrs, never
roars...quiet—as only quality can be.
Get our estimate now—no obligation.
Conditioning.”

tape

Beautiful colors, decoratively correct. Exceptionally easy to apply

251

1 bag covers 5,000 sq. ft. |
SPECIAL
10-Bag

Price $35.00

CLAVEYS
Treeland
Skokie Blvd. &amp; Clavey Rd.
Highland Park
ID 2-4664
Page

37

�Stretch Your Family's Food Dollars!

ONE DAY
CARPET SALE

Food

OFF
Sunday,

LEWIS
Edens,

and
April

a

major

part

of

As a conscientious home maker,
you want to make more and more
dollars available for all the things
that go into better living.
And yet, you certainly don’t want

More
16th

CARPETS

near Tower—VE

is

every family’s budget.

Room-Size
Remnants

50%

money

5-2400

aside a small plot of
vegetable garden.
Start Now

land

Space, Grace Big Reasons
for

a

For Return to ‘Colonials’

You'll have fun growing your
own vegetables from seed and home

to scrimp on foods, which keep
your family in good health.
You can slash high food bills all

canning them with modern accessories. You’ll also get a special feeling of achievement when you serve

them.
But, in order to enjoy these bene-

fits, you should start planning your

year around and at the same time
improve family nutrition by setting

vegetable

garden

now.

Lasting Barrier Against Crabgrass
Restored
17th
century
home?
Early American house in New England? Not at all. It’s a brand new
house complete with air conditioning and all-electric kitchen, typical

of Colonial style houses being built
all over

country this year.
Rich Woods
This
design
gets
much
of. its
beauty and Colonial dignity from
double-hung windows of ponderosa
pine plus an authentic Early American entranceway with rich panel

Same as weuse screens to keep bugs out of the house,
we'll use HALTS°to keep crabgrass out of the lawn. By
spreading HALTS properly with the Scotts Spreader
now, we'll be laying down an overall protective
blanket on every bit of the lawn.
Later, when crabgrass sprouts—bing!
_-—HALTS nips it, shoot by shoot. It’s
the best answer to crabgrass, ever.

PERSONAL

NEIGHBORHOOD

Scotts:

OPEN

SUNDAYS

Our

Complete

POWER
All Rotary

HARDWARE

and

—

Reel

MOWERS

Models

447 Roger Williams Ave.

as modern

in performance

Your

Authorized

POWER

MOWER

V2 MILE

Line of

LAWN

—

as

:=

W iV

The Complete Lawn Food

M. §S. S. Inc.

ID 2-4387

JACOBSEN

38

9 A.M. — 1 P.M.

— TOYS

See

Page

LAWNS

HARDWARE
GARDEN NEEDS — HOUSEWARES

447 Roger Williams

RAVINIA

IN

er living, dining, and kitchen space
on the first floor. Many
leading
builders and architects agree these
advantages, as well as a trend toward
more
gracious
living,
will
make Colonial-style homes of this
type the most popular design in
1961 and for years to come.

today’s cars. High in nitrogen (22%)
for swifter, greener growth response
plus sustained deep-feed action for
longer-lasting lawns. Rich in potash
and phosphate too, Viva is the complete compact lawn food.
Come in today for Viva
RESULTS
GUARANTEED
— another money-back
with any IMC product
OR YOUR
guaranteed product from
MONEY BACK!
IMC.

SERVICE

Store Hours Daily 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. — Wed. ‘til Noon

RAVINIA
YOUR ONE STOP STORE —

Viva

FIRST

four or more bedrooms at lower
cost on the second floor, plus larg-

MOST POWERFUL
LAWN FOOD
i
s YOU CAN BUY
viva

More and more folks are coming to us for advice on improving their
lawns through an easy-to-follow Scotts Program. Come in anytime.
We'll be glad to prescribe the correct Program for your lawn.

Save *5.00! Scotts Spreader (16.95)
plus Halts (9.95) together only 21.90

the

door. This style is popular with
new home buyers because its center-hall, two-story design provides

2210
OUR

Skokie

SOUTH
Valley

Sales &amp; Service

&amp;

OF

GARDEN

RTE.

Rd. (U.S. 41)

Dealer

CENTER

22 ON

Highland

SPECIALTY—Small
We

USS.

41

Park,

Engine Repair * Sales * Parts *
sharpen and repair all makes and models of mowers
Bring in your old mower for a TOP TRADE-IN.

Ill.

Service

ID 3-2210

Thursday,

April 13,

1961"

�Prices Slashed ...You
Save 22% to 48% mor

MORE

APPLIANCES

AND

FURNITURE

QUALITY

ON

SALE

MOVING

e
J. Blumberg, Lake county's oldest, largest and most reliable furnitur
ings

now.

is licensed

This sale

of the sav-

advantage

Take

Park store.

store is closing its Highland

.

..

Park

City of Highland

by the

Permit No. 1.

FANTASTIC VALUES! COSTS DISREGARDED! EVERYTHING MUST BE CLEARED!
EASY CREDIT! FREE DELIVERY! TREMENDOUS SAVINGS! UP TO 3 YEARS TO PAY.
MANY ONE OF A KIND! HURRY ...SHOP TODAY!
LIMITED QUANTITIES!
FLOOR SAMPLES!
EARLY

BIRD

$3.95 Pacific
Gtr COVC? BOU

SPECIALS

Ironing Board
6.4 aaa ceed

TT¢

$21.95 Universal
Steam-Dry
fron plus adjustable ironing 5]
SaNig 2 Sp ORGIES Sp ene ae ge RN eae mn ee

Se

$6.95. Twist-o-matic Wax Applieator with pint of floor wax

$] V7
$ D Age

$7.98 Electric Alarm Clock
famous Sunbeam brand ........
$24.95

3-Pc.

Patio

Set,

ecg

Y segs

num, 2 chairs and chasie -.......

SMALL

APPLIANCES

$15.95 SUNBEAM
FRY PAN
extra large, square design ....

$17.95

SUNBEAM

STEAM

$Q77

and

DRY

IRON, easy to use,
$
97
NW TOT UR hoa ocs sussceaceCoducenndecceseud
I 2
$24.95 GE CAN OPENER,
automatic,
5] 8 ha
works electrically ....................
$37.95 SHETLAND
FLOOR
POLISHER, scrubs too,
ZF ! 5
PGCE s oe
a i ae
$49.95 DORMEYER
FOOD
MIXER,
famous Mixmaid model,
$ 2 8”
PONTOEO oi) siiienc nee ectedueodns
$49.95 GE VACUUM
CLEANER,
cannister deluxe model
ow enna ee
ee Bert *3 4°

JUVENILE

NEEDS

$12.95 FAMOUS
MAKE
STROLLER,
lightweight,
$ 8 88
POIGING: ‘MmOdGL 36
to
$14.95 STORKLINE
PLAY YARD,

40x40

inch size,

PRACT DPOOR

sk

$1 GO”
rus

daca la

$34.95 STORKLINE CRIB,
six year size with
$ 2 4%
adjustable: spring i acs...
$69.95 MAPLE BUNK BED,
everything
included,
$
9*

8 pieces complete

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

OCCASIONAL

WASHERS

CHAIRS

and

$29.95 EDDYSTONE. CHAIR, smart,
new occasional piece .... .... 3] 1?

$99.95 SPEED QUEEN
safety wringer,

WAH

dees: big
$199.95

$89.95

ADINE

foo as

PAUL

McCOBB

CHAIR,

elegant arm style,
$ 3 9*
decorator fabric &lt;i:
$98.50 DEARBORN
ROCKER,
Maple
wing style,
*5 9*
reversible cushions ................
$129.95 STRATOLOUNGER CHAIR
easy-view, TV
$ 8 gg
recliner: feature &lt;3 ke cas
$189.95 PULLMAN LOUNGE CHAIR,
deep comfort foam
TUDO DOW sce
*] 3 9”

peat Ee
OR, 11 cu. ft.

$

freezer,”

Crisper &gt;is. 308,

$499.95

PHILCO

ai

proof,

99

12 cu.

27

DRYER,
two speeds
two cycles, a
Rites

5-PIECE

9”

5] 49*

set‘3

29”

SETS

DINETTE

$59.95 BRONZETONE
30x40x48 size,
D ICOCS. 25.5

I 88

' 29”

a,

DINETTE

539

ROUND

DINETTE,
$5 ae

FREEZER,

14

cu.

Supermarketeer

ft

aa i

BEDROOM
$149.95

een *29

SUITE,

double

dresser, chest,
bogkease “Ded io
oe
kt
triple

WALNUT

dresser,

$

47
99

SUITE,

chest

re ia heh eo
bocktase:

bed.

$399.95 PAUL

chest,
GRORI

$529.95
triple
panel

McCOBB

95
229

SET,

bed, night stand,
$
Svce, Se ea ee ce eek 299

AMERICAN
dresser,
bed

chest,

88

SUITE,
$
aa 3 99

leaf,

95

and

with

95
99
SET,
29%

$139.95 SERTA
TRESS, finest

STEREO

PORTABLE
$
80

stand

1 68

$249.95 CURTIS-MATHES
STEREO
HE-FI with AM/FM
$
95
radio

quilt-top

style

LIVING

MAT95

HOLLYWOOD
$

............-......-..

ROOM

89

SUITES

$299.95 VALENTINE-SEAVER

SOFA,

$] §8*
Traditional, foam “T”
cushions
$349.95 KROEHLER 4-Pc. SECTIONao haat ator
$2 29 95

I 99

$599.95 CURTIS-MATHES COMBINATION, 23-in. TV,
$3 99”
Stereo, AM/FM ....................$49.95 GE PORTABLE STEREO
with $9.95 record
$ 3 9”
stand

SPEED

$] 9*

comfort .......
SEALY
INNERSPRING MATTRESS
or box spring
88
529
choice, each
FREE MATTRESS
SEALY BUTTON
or box spring,
$ 3 9*
choice, each
$69. 95 SERTA HOLLYWOOD
ENSEMBLE,
innerspring
$ 4 §*
GONISUPUG TROT ois ccsenieces
ees ase

$199.95
CAPEHART
19-inch PORTABLE, compact, ..............-- $
717
137
quality TV .

19-inch

MATTRESS,

sleeping

cost

low

SET,

$

TE MUTOCRIE acts. ess detiinantawn
genie
$169.95 DOUGLAS DINETTE
giant 36x48x60x72 table,
$]
B GHAR ihe
ea, Senne

$209.95 PHILCO
TV, complete

*] 79”

$319.95 BROYHILL SET,
triple dresser, chest,
$

storing

TELEVISION

SUITES

SEAMIST

$239.95

8 =

self

INNERSPRING

SERTA

SET,
95

acca ae

379, 95 DOUGLAS
5-piece

CHESTS

MATTRESSES—
BOX SPRINGS

SET,

extension table ........-:.......
$134.50 DAYSTROM
DINETTE
ERATOR, 2-door,
$
99
automatic defrost eS SOR 25 8
$499.95 PHILCO
REFRIGERATOR-

77

68
DRYER,

5] 8 oe
WASHER-

big pi Sp eee saad a
$549.95 WESTINGHOUSE

smart ebony frame,
ce
COMDPICLE: cic

REFRIGERATOR,

2-door,

automatic electric

and

$14.95 UTILITY
CABINETS,
double
door,
sg
assorted sizes
$24.95 MAPLE
CHESTS,
odd styles,
1 6*
assorted sizes, now ...............$29.95 UTILITY CABINETS,
all steel
5] 9”
5 large shelves, white ............
$39.95 UTILITY CABINETS,
giant, 36 inches wide
$ 29*
all’ steak &lt;i
$39.95 WARDROBE CABINETS,
30 inches wide, lock and
ROY) BROU au cc uecccacvanac scenes 529%

model
$249. 95 PHILCO-DEXTER Ti
eres
two cycle
SUCOMIG
LIC 5.1 4’, 20 sstakieinsesciSeens “| 97
$249.95 PHILCO ELECTRIC RANGE,
automatic clock-timer

$49.95

al

WASHER,
$

kk
lords sic iss
QUEEN
SPEED

DINETTE

REFRIGERATORS
$189.95 PHILCO REFRIGERATOR,

CABINETS

RANGES

$499.95

3-pc.

HOWARD

SECTIONAL

bumper end,
$
95
3 49
PORT: TUDDET foils int
$599.95 KARPEN 3-Pc. SECTIONAL,
Modern, foam
$ 4 4 4
“T” cushions

SPECIAL

QUEEN
Famous

Automatic

Electric Dryer
Orig.

149%:with

199.95

You

save

$50

trade

now

at

this

low

Moving

2
=
"
x
2
S
R
U
O
H
SPECIAL SHOPPING
Sale price.

Buy with easy credit.

Take up

to 3 years to pay.

Model 110

UNTIL

5:30

Thursday,

April

13, 1961

9 P.M.

OTHER

DAYS

TILL

P.M.

Page

39

�|'Use New Material
In Garage

Doors

Hardboard, that versatile do-ityourself
material
of a thousand
home uses, is no stranger to the
family garage.
Made of quarter-inch sections—
four or five to a door—garage doors

NURSERY
ANDO
GARDEN
SHOP

of hardboard are proving to be exceptionally durable and long-lasting as well as easy to construct and
maintain.

ACROSS FROM
EDENS PLAZA

No

Sanding

Needed

If
installed
unfinished,
hardboard doors are unusually easy to
paint or varnish and do not require filling or sanding.
Grain swelling, the bugaboo of
other wood product doors, isn’t a
problem because this reconstructed wood fiber material is grainless. Because the panels are moisture resistant, they will not warp

or separate from the framing.
Once
up, the panels
proof and dent-resistant.
Easily

are

mar-

Worked

The
well-known
workability
hardboard, even after the door

installed,

is

another

popular

of
is

fea-

ture.
Because of its composition and
method of manufacture, it is impossible for the single-ply hardboard panels to delaminate.
Hardboard ‘is used for any purpose requiring
a combination
of
. Strength, hardness, density and uniform surface,” according to a re-

port

by

the

U.S.

Department

| Commerce.

As Advertised

Suburbia

on Page 29 of

merry

Mildew
Resistant

THE FRONT-LAWN

LAWNFOOD

NOW...
A lawn food guaranteed to be
the finest you can buy! It's Thrive
from IMC.
Covers
5,000 Sq. Ft.

HALET NURSERY
GARDEN SHO
SKOKIE

NURSERY
ANS
GARDEN SHOP

Page

40

BLVD.

&amp;

Open

OUR

REPUTATION

LAKE

AVE.,

Mon.,

Wed.,

GROWS

WILMETTE
Thurs.,

Sun. 9 to 5.—Closed
Suburban Phone AL 6-0562—Chicago

(Across from
Fri., Sat.,

Edens

9 to 6

Tues.
Phone BR 3-2250

Plaza)

Vitolized
Oil®

RAVINIA
HARDWARE
Your One

Stop Store

GARDEN NEEDS
HOUSEWARES

447

Roger

Williams

ID 2-4387
Thursday,

April

13, 1961

of

�y

eye

‘

A Hobby For The Muscle-Bound
What’s

the

trouble,

friend?

muscles), the Platysma Myoides and
Splenius (of the neck), or is it just
that your waistline protrudes
to
the point where you can’t see your
own shoes?
Here’s a tip. Get out the old rake
and
shovel,
purchase
packets
of
garden seed, head for the outdoors,
and your worries will be over.
Enough

Is Enough

While your first day on a horse
. . - or covering nineteen holes of
golf ...may leave you a physical
wreck, gardening is one hobby that
will set you up, not knock you out.

When

your muscles notify you that

they’ve had enough for the day,
then so have you.
As you work along at your own
speed in your garden, think how
lucky you are that you’re not involved in one of those do-or-die,
see-it-through-if-it-kills-you
hob-

bies that people

are told they “en-

joy.”

While
you’re
chugging
along
there, turning the soil and breaking
it into fine pieces preparatory to
planting the seeds, feel the sun on
your
back
warming
up
the
old
bones
and helping
to loosen
up
those
tight
office-desk
muscles

you’ve acquired during the week.
Get

Fresh

Air

Try stretching your body and filling
your
lungs
with
fresh
air.
Get a little philosophical and take
to looking at and thinking of the
wonders of creation to be found in
your garden.
Get close to that old soil, friend,
and you'll find you have the most
inexpensive, relaxing and yet productive hobby in the world. Also,

you'll have

quite

a time

“Sleep
late,
MIDWAY
LIMOUSINE SERVICE

Are

you muscle bound in the Rhomboideus Major and Minor (back

for your-

Some Tips On Care
Of Garden Plants

and

your

pores

get all clogged

are you getting

to

will pick

the airport in the morning, Dear?”

“Why weed?” is the first question the new gardener asks. “‘Because,’ says the old pro, “weeds
are hardy plants and they’ll practically strangle tender little seedlings in their struggle to grab all
the good food in the ground and the
refreshing
water
which
trickles
down to their roots. Let’s just say
they’re tough and they’re greedy
and not very polite when it comes
to sharing with the more civilized
planted seeds. So, be as ruthless as
they are and wage war on them by
pulling them out every time you
see one turn up.”
When do we water, wonders the
new gardener. ‘‘Take a tip on how
you'd like your own hide treated,”
laughs the old boy, “if you don't
take enough water into your system, you’ll dry up ... too much,
and you'll drown. Then again, if
you don’t take a bath often enough

MIDWAY

LIMOUSINE

of time
flight.”’

is a “wife-saver.”

late model limousines, and our REASONABLE

know

your

soil and the

amount

may

It’s always nice when your neighbors
admit you were absolutely right. Which
is just what happened recently when
two neighbors in the automobile business came out with what the newspapers called Volkswagen-type station
We thought it quite a compliment.
It means that the VW Station Wagon
is now Officially a trend.
The VW Station Wagon is a new

type of automotive animal—the

RADIO

equiv-

alent of a steer that's all steak.
It's 4 feet shorter than a regular
wagon yet holds more: 9 passengers

plus 28 cubic feet of luggage.

1848 FIRST STREET
We stand solidly back
of every repair job
done by our skilled
TV technicians.
Your
satisfaction is assured
guarantee.
by
our
Modest rates.

THE

Its air-cooled

engine is in the recr,

NUMBER

Television

Taine

Thursday,

April

13,

1961

rates provide the perfect beginning
1-5878

AUTO
RADIO
SERVICE
and SALES

Sales

and

type” wagon. The Standard VW Station
Wagon is $0,000.00.
Both VW models have a

bumper

overriders,

third seat,

heater/defroster,

4-speed fully synchronized transmission

and

type” wagons these are optional extras.

The VW wagon has been in production 11 years. Continuity means quality.
Doors fit properly. Rattles were

Hours

Daily:

fully finished interior, On

“VW-

The VW Station Wagon was introduced in 1950—11 years ahead of its
time.
Its time has now come.

Come in and drive the VW
Wagon today. The original.

9 a.m. to 8 p.m.

Sunday—1!I

Station

p.m. to 5 p.m.

Scott-Kronn, Inc. @&amp;

Service

FOR

ID 2-8120

silenced years ago. The finish is a labor
of love: four coats of paint and two
complete hand-sandings.
And only the VW wagon has the guts
of a VW: the engine that can run at top
speed without strain and deliver the
legendary Volkswagen mileage.
But here's the clincher.
The Deluxe VW Station Wagon with
sun roof and skylight windows costs
only $0,000.00—about the same as or
less than the standard model “VW-

greater traction in mud or snow.
But remember: a "Volkswagen-type”
station wagon is not a Volkswagen.

20th Century TV &amp; Radio

MAGIC

our

will never boil over or freeze, gives
You can see why it's being followed.

and

drivers,

need.

ADDRESS—

Radio

uniformed

of

CENTURY

:

courteous,

water it needs and you won’t have
any problems.
Ah, I know the next question,
too. What do we spray? There are
a number of good all-purpose insecticides on the market that will
take care of most of your bugs.
Some of them also contain plant
food to give your plants that extra

wagons.

=.

in plenty

up

. . jUst 2 doors south

NEW

up

and end to a modern executive’s business trips. CE 4-4550—HI 6-2620—RO

We've Moved!

AND

Our

me

for that 7 A.M.

with
dirt,
it’s a trifle
hard
to
breathe.
Test the soil now and again and
if it’s dry and grainy, you know you
should
water
right
away.
If its
damp
enough to make a
ball in
your
hands,
don’t
water.
Your
plants have enough for the time
being. In other words, use common
sense about your watering. Get to

bit of lift they

self.

“How

AUTHORIZED

211

S.

Milwaukee

Ave.,

Libertyville, III.

EMpire 2-0320
Page

41

.

�|YWCA Membership

as,

Sinolyesbord ‘Binnby
April

A

Surprise

Awaits

THIS

BEAUTIFUL

Very
Rd.

&amp;

GARDEN

Reasonable

18th

Have

Not

Visited

CEMETERY

Prices

St.

Phone

DE

6-6500

Miss

Barbara

daughter
462

of

Ridge

Mrs.

Kay

Betterman,

Valv.

Betterman,

Road,

Highland

Park,

has been selected to be in the Colorado

choir

Woman’s

and

will

them.
The
Denver.

Tickets,
adults

able

and

from

purchased

College

on

tour

college

is

located

nominally
children,
the

with

priced
will

members
at

concert

go

or

door.

be

in

for
avail-

may

be

Campaign Opens
‘61 Goal Is 800
Highland
Park
YWCA’s
1961
membership
campaign
will
open
Monday with a goal of 800 members, Mrs. Robert Billeter, chair-

man announces.
Currently, the

YWCA

has

568

members, Mrs. Billeter said. However, during the past year, more
than 48,000 persons passed through
the doors of the “Y” at 494 Laurel
Ave, taking part in the many activities it offers, she added.
“Look Ahead with the YWCA in
the 60’s’ is theme
for the campaign. The “Y” is inviting women
and girls of the community to look
ahead with the local association as

it keeps in the forefront the development

of its program

and

services

to meet the needs of the times and
the area, the chairman
Need

Living

pointed

out.

Quarters

ia |

“One of the greatest needs in
this area is living quarters within
the economic
range of girls and
young
women
coming
into
the
community to work,’ Mrs. Billeter
said.
“The ‘Y’ residence is filled
at all times with these young people. The YWCA’s concern for their
welfare goes beyond just supplying
a room in which to live; every ef-

mi |

Bay

If You

Chapter
806,
Women
of
the
Moose, is planning a smorgasbord
dinner Sunday, April 16, from 3 to
6 p.m. in the Moose home,
1799
Green Bay Rd., Mrs. B. M. Cardina,
chairman, announces.
The
dinner,
sponsored
by the
Academy of Friendship degree of
the chapter, will be open to the
public. Mrs, Cardina will be assisted by 29 members in planning
the affair.

Elected Choir Member

i

| Green

You

16 for Public

fort is made

by the staff to make

the residence a home away from
home.”
Girls and women
who work in
homes, factories, and offices come
to the “Y” for clubs and informal

activities. Through the
classes they find that

x PRN

OMe

clubs
they

and
can

grow in mind, body; and spirit.
To demonstrate
some
of these
activities
Mrs.
Billeter
and
her
committee
are setting up an exhibit in one of the windows of the

ains

Larson

Stationery

Ave.

The

window

Store, St. Johns

display

will

throughout

be

in

next

the

week.

Mrs. Billeter has been assisted in
her preparation for the drive by

Mrs.

Robert

Ruhl,

Mrs.

Lindell

Peterson,
Mrs.
George
Postels,
Mrs. Harry Wolters and Mrs. Chester Jones.

Help your

HEART
slow down with

oh
FREE YOURSELF FROM TRAFFIC TENSION—USE
YOUR
COMMUTING TIME TO DO AS YOU PLEASE ON NEW
NORTH
WESTERN COMFORT-CONDITIONED STREAMLINERS
88 new

double-

deckers added

since August, 1960
172 now in

service—and more
coming every
week to replace
all old coaches!

Get away from those screeching brakes, blaring horns and driving
hazards—commute in the quiet,
safe comfort of one of the many new North Western double-d
eck streamliners. Relax, read or plan
your day in climate-controlled comfort ... under daylight-clear
fluorescent lighting. Wide, tinted
picture windows let you view the pass ing scene free of sun glare.
And, you move at express speeds,
regardless of weather or traffic. So commute with your eyes on
your newspaper, instead of the road...
go new North Western streamliners for fast, comfortable, tension-fr
ee commuting —every day!

GO

iW NORTH FESTERN

COMMUTER

STREHEAMLINERS

A Sam Oe

Mueller Climatrol
AIR

CONDITIONING
Ask your doctor if it isn’t wise to
let central air pe penis wa take hot
weather strain off your
y.
And you’re wise to choose Mueller
Climatrol.
For instance, service will never be
a problem. Mueller units need less,
for one thing. They deliver all the
cooling you'll ever want ...smoothly,
quietly. And if you want service, our
expert factory-trained mechanics are
just a phone call away.

Parts? Mueller Climatrol has three

huge exclusive Chicago warehouses,
The factory is only 80 minutes away,

“Longer Life through
Air Conditioning”
Call for your copy.

H.

H.
Box

OLSEN
164,

Phone:

CH

CO.

Gurnee

4-0010

Thursday, April 13, 1961
Ma
3

ts

�Legion Junior

Rec Center Adult
Sports Continue

Crowd Models
At Tea Apr. 19
Children
of
Highland
Park
Legionnaires
and
auxiliary
members are modeling in the tots’ style
show which follows the auxiliary’s
des sert-tea Wednesday afternoon,
April 19, at 1 p.m. in the Legion
Memorial
building,
Sheridan
Rd.
and Park Ave.
Models for the children’s fashion

showing will be John and Kathleen
Crowley, son and daughter of Commander and Mrs. Edmund Crowley
Jr.
Laura,
Janet,
Joan
and
Daouglas Van Arsdale, children of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Van Arsdale.
Also, Peggy Garrington and
Christopher Cameron, children of
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Cameron;
Douglas,
Phyllis
and
Mary
Lou
Haberkamp,
children of Mr. and
Mrs.
Louis
Haberkamp;
Patricia
and Carla Jean Hargreaves, daughters of Mr.
and Mrs.
Carl Hargreaves; Michael Harrison, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Alan J. Harrison and
Laura Ann Geraci, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Geraci.
Music will be provided by Mrs.
Robert McArdle of Green Bay Rd.
Tickets may
be obtained from

Frank

ard

Swatzler.

Waggett

or Mrs.

Shore

Business

Women’s

Club

and

Pro-

will

hear

two American
Field Service foreign students at the meeting this
evening, April 13, in the Community House in Winnetka. The dinner

is set

for

2:

6:30

p.m.

The

students

who will speak are attending
Trier High School and living
families
in Wilmette.
One
Japanese boy and the other a
from Uruguay.

Shepherd

Bites

Walter

Altholz,

$e:

Opportunity

knocks

every

pay

day

when you buy U. S. Savings Bonds.

in HIGHLAND

PARK

KILL
CRAB
GRASS
With
Your

Ortho

Dealer

Second,

of upkeep.

3 bedrooms,

baths, beautiful

House

beautiful

kitchen,

recreation

room

with

lot. Soapstone entrance floor, many

New
with
is a
girl

NOW...
Lawn Spray Company
Offers You a Professional

FERTILIZING
SERVICE

Call

Is:

Highland

Ahlmann

BAIRD

72

REAL

ESTATE
283

SALES

e

E. Deerpath

@

&amp;

Christensen

WARNER

MORTGAGES

@

Lake Forest

CEdar 4-1855

KILL
CRAB
GRASS
With

THE LIFE YOU SAVE—MAY

ORTHO-KLOR

Your

Ortho

Dealer

72
Is:

5-3800

KILL
CRAB
GRASS
ORTHO-KLOR

Your

Ortho

Dealer

72
Is:

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is

f

ws

GUARANTEED RESULTS proven in over
14-billion sq. ft. of lawn treatments yearly.
ACT NOW
1. Electronic Soil Test
GET FREE
2. Liming or Acidifying

GENERAL

OF

in the

SPRAY

hands

5-0864

NO,

Honey

NO

NO,

e e ethat's for Mommy's furs &amp; woolens

ID 2-7766
Thursday,

April

13,

of

With

1961

CRTHO-KLOR

Your

Ortho

Dealer

You can drop your cleaning off at one of our

72

and we'll

have

nearest

you,

routeman

Highland

Park

to

up today.

4 WINNETKA

Stores,

VAAN CLAD
CLEANERS

ID.2-7444

Is:

794

2-0124

. .. or phone

stop and pick them

GARDEN &amp;
PET SUPPLY

ID

ganged. Cg asne,!

Oe Cheanel auk stored with Wile »

our

|

wth Lithing cnet (ring uty

CKomepe ene Cnagh clube, teil

FVAN
Central,

boxes .. . TODAY)

PARK

KILL
CRAB
GRASS

SERVICE

DEERFIELD

BE YOUR OWN!

in DEERFIELD

With

fully planned combinations throughout the
season. Your lawn grows healthier, greener
— stays that way through summer heat
and into late fall.

Put your lawn problems
experts. Write or call:

BR 5-0450

DEERFIELD Gorden spot

in HIGHLAND

mation—as little as

@

INSURANCE

DRIVE CAREFULLY

(Pick up Your BOX STORAGE

1

e

ID 2-1150

WI

auto-

MANAGEMENT

Park

817 Deerfield Rd., Deerfield

scientific

sloping

Priced to sell middle

Dale

The World’s Largest

to

is on

641 Deerfield Rd., Deerfield

Ave., was bitten on the left thigh
Saturday
morning
by a German
Shepherd dog belonging to Robert
Marshall of 313 Laurel Ave., Highland Park police were told. Marshall was ticketed for not having a
dog license,

due

bar.

nice features.

1'%

thirties.

ACE HARDWARE
1746

This 6 room brick ranch built to have a minimum
wooded

ORTHO-KLOR

WI
16, of 1865

AMAZINGLY ‘aber
LOW COST

Construction

At the Highland Park Recreation
Center the adult badminton classes
held on Tuesday evening, and the
men’s volleyball held on Wednesday evening, will continue during
the spring months.
Highland Parkers are invited to
take part in these activities.

in DEERFIELD

Business Women
North

Good

Rich-

AFS Students Talk
At Meeting of N.S.
fessional

BLUFF—Except‘onally

.a

Mrs.

LAKE

Home of LUFE-PRESERVICE7-DRAPERIES
OUR

EXCLUSIVE,

26

STEP,

TAKE-DOWN

AND

RE-HANG

DRAPERY

CLEANING

SERVICE
Page

26-C

�GONE

mm

10 GET THE BUYS
SHE SAW
IN THIS
PAPER !

Here’s Why the North Shore Group Is the
Most Powerful Selling Force in the
Fabulous, North Shore “Money Belt”
Nothing triggers so much

shopping

action so fast as a good

value ad-

vertised in the North Shore Group.

The reasons are simple . . . blanket

circulation plus big buying power!

Here’s where the smartest shoppers

get the most buying information in the shortest time.

stasg

tch the ads;it
to
etrquesy
pelts:
noesA specu

advertise
inthe North
tee emiel nights.

BLAN

KET

CIRCULATION

. . . Of the North
before

Here’s where the

smartest stores advertise to get the best results for the least money.
t

*

more

than

Belt” homes.

It

Shore Group
70,000

e BIG BUYING

Shore Group!
eo

readers

puts your

message

in 19,292

“Money

POWER

. . . is what makes the “Money Belt” so fabulous!
“Money Belt” families have both the desire and the
means to buy what you have to sell.

AT
HIGHLAND

Worrt
ID 2-4500
Page

26-D

fa

PARK NEWS
THE LAKE FORESTER

HIGHWOOD

Whore
.

yA

NEWS
LAKE BLUFF

AT

DEERFIELD REVIEW
REVIEW
FT. SHERIDAN

Uour
WI 5-4500

VERNON
TOWER

REVIEW

! lV: WSPAPERS
:

CE 4-2300
Thursday,

April

13, 1961

�Billie’s Fillies
‘The P.O.’s

Ladies

489
Kutner
|B. Stern
469 | G.

Men

Mayer

$77

Klemperer

571

Game

High

Ladies

J. Hess

F, Cohn

185

Soe

NORTH

SHORE

High

Kutner

B.

23

40

30

Series

Gert

9

Lost |

Won

Cats

15

6

14

7

oe

High Series

. Neiman

Bleck

se

Lost}
34 | Mickie
36

45

1.0

40%

pty

hak

M. Smith
Block

apo,

Pts.

Team
No
een8

45

INo. . 12

93g5 || Ethel
S¥byl Roth
Uretz
272 | Trudee Mahru
2

97 | Lois

5

RU

Lois

Schatz

GER ye"

187 | Lorraine

184 | Adeline

RU

180

LEAGUE

Pts.

....
wy,

62
=

.

Car

Rovert’s Gulf Service ...0i01...-.03h..1
184 | Ravinia Auto 5
a
Soaps owen

177

Berkenstadt

B

175 Esthe; yu yt
172 | 5 5 vol Ss oe

See

Esther Balikov

382

Game

High

Esther Madian

Vi, SORE

OF UO

Be Bs

is.

Ry IE
Dem

6.

Coronet

Vendors

7.

Bergmann’s

8.

Globe

i

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&amp; Mirror

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OUR
AND

Game

OPENING

227

220
216

Th

nas

MORNING

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APRIL

BOWLING

Fri.

- Sat

Sat.

Fri. -

20-2

1 By

di

Pts.

| SHERWIN-WILLIAMS PAINTS

20

High Series

Central

482

23

Splits

155

TESTING
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Highland

Avenue

Park, Hl.

ID 2-3553

561
556
543

BEGAN

e

Official

OPEN

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ON

i
t)

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Inspection
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il ISI

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13, 1961

PERIOD

FOR:

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West

OWNERS

We Will Be Open from 8 A.M. to 12 O'clock Noon

WAY Means
e
and Supervised

PEERLESS

ADDITIONS

April

194

on the
Saturdays
h Following
llowi
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PEERLESS HOME BUILDERS INC.

Thursday,

SUNDAY

TOUCH!

* FAMILY AND RECREATION ROOMS

Ave.,

Beckman

765

203
soe

149 | J. Schulman
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High Game
‘odes

‘Coleen

166 | 1¥tkevs

Doris Lawson
Dina Field
Bernadine Riskin

A

yi
2#Lost | Joyce

Mon

oi (aneee,

Field

36
3

Sitz

Bob Rion Sr.
| Gordon Buck
i s’

Won

,
Ladies

Ralph_Pottker

re

pee
pi

Series

Men

High

407
397

172 | Dora Koenig
Dina

aan

polly

es

an

asterson re
ig
ae

cers

oi

Series

a

Series

igh

woe

oa

Se
50

igh

68
4

ae
igh

Pauline Tognarelli

Ferrari

184

RIT AN SON

“T”

458 | Earl Gsell &amp; Co.
447 Have d of re yrs

443 | Business

191] Rita Lenhard

RR IE

ORT

479
463 | Team

Game

soem
“ ran

196] Fer
176 an

FRIDAY NITE MIXED

452 | Arch: Ferrari

........

Lost | Martian Borden
1

High Series

Roth

Sybyl

pea

JOHANNA

Ball

High

ce og Bec

Game

170

wah

Anspach

Sin

: ary

Pie
a78

raps.

Standa

Ravinia

174 | Ru
173 Re

472
465 | Andy Seiler .......
462 | Ralph Pottker

Schatz

Washington
ret erabimaate
Teed g ES Gardens

472 |

SPARE

feiss

464 | Sleebure
sbaieitr
451 | 4

ae

474

205 | Bernice Frankel

UOTS

54

age

495

Riggio

32:
50

Marilyn Epton

High Game

% -

Series

High

544

tie mig agnn wR
ag
°N
THURSDAY—STRIKE

Hoit

&amp; R
465. | HWicote

High

Mary

55

344 | Aetna Distributors

Shriver

18C | M. Abrahams
180 |S. Sonn

Ee al

LEAGUE

“R”

‘

180|Fran Scheskie
Mabel Sordyl

tale

en

ORT

| Team

Temple

| Elyizabeth O’Neil
202
181 | Margo Temple

Sunset
Foods
3U
583
564 || Pierre
Andre
Sun Valley Dairy

Carlson

G. Greenspun
469 | T. Baron

181 | L.

Stiglitz

57

High Series

207

Fy

A. Grossberg

Neiman

Game

R.

ens
Picchietti
Sordyl

Laura
Mabel

oan

abe

Wallerstein

57

497 | Fiizabeth O'Neil
493 | T ouise Dal Ponte

Ruby’s Delicatessen

Berkenstadt High Game
456/11.
450

Game

Claire Rosenberg

Won
50
48

4651S. Sonn
462 D. Epstein
High

533

517

High

.

Re
ree

.

Samuel

M.

P.

64%

| Sputniks

553 | argo

Sally Garretson
Bev Silverman

Te

Lieutenant

| Jets

Baker

222 | Natalie Rosenberg
176 | Sylvia Goldgehn. ....
nS

or

54

46

RosenbergHigh Series

Pts.

—,
y

=

Saratoga Club

St
| Claire

| Hepcats

452 | Sally Garretson

Doug Spinner

Black Balls
Metzger

| Strike N’ Spare

183 | Hap Odem
173 | Silent Sherony

NO.

JOHANNA

Game

AL &amp; JANE

pat BillPOELaing
189 | Wally Evans

enrensenetin

UOTS

36

Skidmore

Fatboy

Game

48

60

High Game

LADIES

CONCEPTION

IMMACULATE

fan | Cogent
oiffure
Shop

og
455

Electric

Bob

486

Schloss
L. Sternfield

High

‘
Billa L SBIne

ee

pr

a

| Perry &amp; Marie

——

458 | Muggins Sehgi

Gottlieb
Gottlieb

Series

Font | Acme
:

Won
47

Fell

V.

Stern
Izen

:

High

Nite-N-Gale

COUNCIL

Sternfeld

Alley

|G.
R.

H.P.

nS ears Wer Rea

BE

Five

Furious

Izen

Team
223 | Al &amp; Jane
213|H.P. Fuel _

Lam
Chumpions
i
Kitt-Kats

R.

182

Men

J. Lelewer
J. Smoler

’s

Retreads

High Series

Cohn
Wolff

Hi

paw
ucky

rH

pe

31

pa

Team

Pts.

Lost | Team

Won

Belles

| Whiz

29

62

oo.s..4..1-sstes-0s00

Wonders

Weakly,

Lost | Team

Won

ORT “O” LEAGUE

AID

MOTHERS’

NORTHMOOR
Team

Northbrook,

III.

Cuneo

«© AMF PINSPOTTERS INC.
SUBSIDIARY OF AMERICAN MACHINE &amp; FOUNDRY COMPANY

6500 N. LINCOLN AVE.
CHICAGO 45, ILL.
Page H 51—D

43

=—s

me
|

�Highwood Little Guys Are
International Champions

Hole-in-One Club
New Feature for
Tee Club Golfers
Sunset

Valley

Tee

Club

The International Championship of Little Guys basketball
returned home last Saturday night, when Highwood captured

has

set

the stage for its nine tournaments
at Sunset Valley Golf Course in
1961, with the announcement of a
‘“Hole-In-One” Club and a, jackpot
prize to the first Tee Club member
scoring
a hole-in-one
while
participating in a Tee Club event.

Open

to any Sunset

Valley

Golf

Club member, a Tee Club membership includes
a full schedule
of
Club
events
beginning
May
3-14
with an “Early Bird’ tournament
and
concluding
with
the
North
Shore Amateur next September 910,
a C.D.G.A.
handicap
rating,
and a year end Goodfellowship Day
and banquet—plus
the newly inaugurated
‘‘Hole-In-One”
Club.
Ray
Sheahen,
Tee
Club
president and chairman of the membership committee, has issued a call
to all male members of Sunset Vailey Golf Club to join the Tee Club
prior to the year’s first event. ““No
golfer need worry about his golf
score to join the Tee Club,” said
Sheahen.
‘Our
membership
includes
golfers
who
consistently
break 70, and others who shoot in
the 100’s.
His handicap will enable him
to compete
in all our
tournaments—and
by
competing
will be an incentive to play more
and better golf,” he concluded.

cena eT

Officers for
meet
tonight

the new season
(Thursday)
in

will
the

Elks Club to complete plans for all
events

throughout

1961.

Tee

Club

officers for the year are: Ray Sheahen,
1491
St.
Johns,
president;
Jack O’Malley, Chicago, vice president; Robert Weinberg, 1235 Linden, vice-president; Joe Cameron,
1312 Ridgewood. Dr., treasurer; Joe
Cummings, Highwood, secretary.

Golden Sundance, nine-month old male Doberman puppy owned by Mrs. Robert E. Brain, Waukegan, won “best in
match” at the recent All-Breed Dog Match staged by the Skokie Valley Kennel club in the Highland Park Recreation Center. A high of 288 dogs were entered in the Sunday show.
This was

the first win

for Sundance,

who

is son of Kirk Von
Brain.
President W. C.

Directors are—Tommy

Hoytt CBX, also owned by Mrs.
McCullough, Highland Park, presents the trophy to the proud
winner in this photo.

Spring Sports Get

On

Underway For All
High School Teams
Spring sports at Highland Park
were launched in earnest this week
as all four sports
had teams
in
action.

The Little Giant baseballers took
on Glenbrook in a non-league contest at home as the freshman and
sophomores
played
at Glenbrook
on Monday.
Then, on Wednesday,
the Indians of New Trier came to
Highland Park as the underclassmen played in Winnetka. Saturday,
the Giants take on the Pirates of
Proviso in a doubleheader at home
as the frosh and sophs played in
Maywood.
Then on Tuesday, April
17, the varsity
plays
a rematch

with

the

Spartans

at

Glenbrook

as the underclassmen play at home.
The golf team opened its season
Tuesday with a meet at Waukegan.
Then on Wednesday, April 19, they
meet the Bulldogs again, this time

in

a

home

meet.

The

next

day

Barrington will meet the Parkers
in a practice meet.
Tennis opens at HPHS tomorrow
afternoon with an exhibition
against Lake Forest on the local
court.
The track teams move outdoors
with a meet against Waukegan Saturday at the Bulldogs’ track and

Basketball

Team

Toby Aaron, son of Mr. and Mrs.
W. H. Aaron, 1900 Sunnyside, former Highland Park High athlete,
is beginning his third varsity baseball season at Ohio Wesleyan.
The junior southpaw is again being
counted
upon
to
head
the
Bishop
pitching
staff. Last year
Aaron led the team in wins and

ERA.
But with only two seniors graduated from last year’s squad and
‘with several
promising
freshman
prospects,
Coach
Les Michael
is
looking for an improvement on last
season’s
mark
and
the
Bishop’s

sixth-place
Ohio

finish in the

Conference,

In Ski Club

H

52—D

44

Makes

Hole-in-One

On Chilly Golf Day
Although
temperatures
were
hovering in the early 40’s, Irwin R.
Ware, 1099 Ridgewood Dr., made
his first hole-in-one
a week
ago
Sunday at the Greenacres Country
club in Northbrook.
Ware,
who’s
as enthusiastic
a

Barbara L, Freeland, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Milton H. Freeland,
699 Lotus Place, is among 35 members
of
the
Indiana
Memorial
Union Skiing Club at Indiana University. She is a junior.

iron for the
173-yard
hole.
tally for the 18 holes was 84.

In cooperation with the Central
United
States Skiing Association,
the University’s Skiing Club, has

Two fencers from Highland Park
were awarded minor letters at the
University of Chicago. The two are

been formed this spring to have an
organized basis for membership before the skiing season next fall.
follow next Tuesday with
meet
at
Highland
Park
Morton’s Mustangs.

MORTGAGE LOANS from
Page

14-college

Thomsen,

673 Glenview (winner of the 1960
North Shore Amateur)
and Dave
Lawrence, 1163 Ridgewood.
Chairmen of committees include:
Tournaments—Carroll Snyder, 910
Pleasant;
Rules— Wally
Glader,
1735
Green
Bay;
Publicity—Bob
Hahn, 1756 Sunset, and Ray Geraci,
375
Dell
Lane;
Handicap
— Joe
Cummings,
Highwood;
Membership—Ray Sheahen;
and the Tee
Club’s
representative
for
the
Northern
Illinois Men’s
Amateur
Golf Association
is Joe
Libman,
643 Hillside.
Applications for Tee Club membership are available through Ray
Sheahen, ID 2-4227.

a dual
against

fairways

man

Received

as Ike, used

a No.

8

His

Mike Resnick, son of William Resnick, 1068 Hillcrest, and Marshall
Wais, son of Mrs. Lola Joffee, 546
Green Bay Rd. Resnick is a graduate of Highland Park High and
Wais is a New Trier alumnus. Both
are sophomores.

1771 Second St.

to

The high honors in Little Guys
basketball have eluded Highwood
for the past three years. This year
the local team defeated New York
City, Homestead, Pa., and San Juan
to bring the championship back to
the sport’s birthplace.
Highwood was the underdog
thruout the tournament. The local
players gained momentum against
New York, defeating the big city
boys
42
to 39,
after
that
they
weren’t to be denied the tournament championship.
Highwood faced Homestead, Pa.,
in its second start.
For three periods the ball game was in doubt,
even though Highwood gained the
lead
midway
thru
the
second
period. A 20 point fourth quarter
completely demoralized Homestead,
and Highwood
won
43 to 27 to
advance into the championship.
Facing
a tough Puerto
Rico
squad Highwood had the desire to
win.
The team came up with an
excellent
zone
defense
that
was
constantly moving.
Puerto Rico
was so closely guarded
with the
zone that their top three scorers
failed to live up to their previous
two game offensive showings.
In this title game Highwood
jumped off to a 10 to 6 lead, and
led at halftime 19 to 10. This was

the biggest edge Highwood

had, as

Puerto Rico cut the gap down to
25 to 22, as the teams went into
fourth period play.
The
final
quarter
saw
Puerto
Rico go into an all court press, but
the
new
champs
outscored
the
visitors in the period and brought
the
title back
to Highwood
for
another year.
Two of Highwood’s players were
named
to
the
Little
Guys
AlAmerican
team.
Ronnie
Ori and
Steve
Lunardi
were
singled
out
for their fine defense, and other
all-around
team
work.
The
two
bore the burden of rebounding,
along with Tommy
Digani.
Both
were excellent scoring shots.
Ori
was
also
selected
as Mr.
Little
Guys for 1961, a title bestowed on
the tournament’s most outstanding
player. Ron is the third Highwood
player ever to receive the Mr. Little Guys
award.
Bobby
Palmieri
was
named
in
1956,
and
Geoff
Gluck received the honor in 1958.
New York, Homestead,
Pa.,
Kenosha, Wis., Indianapolis, Ind.,
Racine, Wis., Highwood, Peoria,
and San Juan, Puerto Rico took
part in the tournament.
Highwood
succeeds Indianapolis as International Champion.
The latter was
eliminated
from
title
contention
when the Hoosiers were beaten by
Puerto Rico in the semifinals.

international

cham-

pionship team included Ron Ori,
Steve Lunardi, Mike Miller, Peter
Cantagallo, Freddy Kilkenney, Phil
Grabar,
Eddie
Wormser,
Jack
Bertucci, Tim Rogan, Dave Campagni,
Bruce
Zimmerman
and

Tommy

Digani.

Jerry

Digani

and

Dave Fell were the student managers. The squad was selected by
Don Skrinar, who worked with the
team
to
tournament
time,
The
squad
was
then
turned
over
to

"The Service Bank

30

Federal

OFFICE

a

colorful

San

Juan,
Digani

Sunday afternoon a large turnout of Little Guys boosters turned
out to honor the Little champs.
A
horn
blowing
motorcade
toured
Highwood and Highland Park. Following the long parade,
which
stretched from one end of Highwood to the other, the team was
taken back to the Community
Center.
Highwood’s
Mayor,
John
Frantonius, thanked the boys for returning the championship to Highwood. Other
speakers
included
Commissioner Don Skrinar, Bruno
Bertucci, and co-coach Ossie Digani.
Championship Game
Highwood (34)
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BEG WOOO
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9 6 9—34
Piette “Rind: Skee
6 412
8—30
Officials—Tony
Sacco
(Oak
Park);
Tony
Tortorello (Chicago)

Evans

Scholars

Among

Are

Top Students

Three
Highland
Park
who are attending college

Scholars,

are

students
as Evans

maintaining

high

scholarship and are active in campus projects.
Evans scholarships are awarded
young men who have been caddies
before
their college
years.
They
are made
possible by the Chick
Evans caddy scholarship. The Highland Park boys are sponsored by
the Western Golf Association. Each
scholarship
provides
full
tuition
and room
at the Evans
Scholar
house.
John A. Fox, 19, son of Mr. and
Mrs. A. J. Fox, 1883 Elmwood Dr.,

recently was selected for the University of Illinois Commerce Council, which serves as a liaison between the commerce faculty and
the student body, and also publishes a newspaper for commerce
students, Additionally, he compiled
a 3.5 on a 4 seale grade average

in electrical engineering. John was
a caddy at Exmoor Country Club.
Dan Demichelis, 18, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph Demichelis, 947

Harvard

Ct., who is a business ad-

ministration
major
at the
University
of
Wisconsin,
has
compiled a 3.33 grade average, on a
4.00 scale. He was a caddy at Bob-

O-Link

Country

Club.

John Farr, 20, son
Mrs, C. E. Farr, 1265

of Mr. and
Taylor, an-

other Bob-O-Link caddy, has maintained

an

A-minus

average

for

his

full college career to date at Northwestern University, where he is a
sophomore
maintained
scale.

Of Highland Park”

BLDG.

Deposit Insurance

from

Tommy
Russell and Ossie
for tournament handling.

HIGHLAND

BANK—POST

Member

34

A near capacity throng witnessed Saturday’s title game in which
Highwood scrapped its way into the
championship.

Highwood’s

Letters

BANK?e*

the championship game
Puerto Rican entry.

in
physics..
a 3.5 average

He
has
on a 4.00

PARK
IDiewood 2-7800

Corporation
Thursday,

April

13,

1961

�Scholarship Uses

A Check From Jet

The Shoreline German

further
Shepherd

Dog
Club,
for the
second
consecutive year, has given the Highland
Park
High
School
PTA
a

check

for

the

scholarship

fund,

education

is supported

by

sincerity
of purpose and conscientious
endeavor.
Scholarship
aid recipients will attend colleges
and universities, schools of nursing, schools specializing in the fine
arts and other institutions of spe-

cial education.

These

plans

are

a

of which Mrs. Dubach is co-chairman,
The
club
uses
the
indoor
track located in the basement of
the
high
school for
its
weekly
training
sessions.
Already,
more
than 300 German Shepherds have
been trained in the school. Now,
the club also has undertaken an
all-breeds training class as a part

mittee.
Mrs, Leonard
Rieser, of Highland
Park,
established
the
first
committee in 1938 and has maintained
an active
interest
in the
Fund
throughout
the
years.
In

of the High

1945

School

adult program.

Any
senior
in Highland
Park
High school may apply for scholar-

ship

assistance

from

the

PTA

Scholarship Fund. He lists the contribution he hopes to be able to
make
toward
his college
educa-

large

part

of

the

basis

for

con-

sideration by the High School com-

the

High

School

sumed

responsibility

funds.

Letters

are

for

PTA

as-

soliciting

mailed

to

all

wood and Deerfield. The excellent
response
is the best indication
that people in the area are sincerely interested in this program
to give young people opportunity

to develop

their potentials.

As evidence of the
of those who receive

appreciation
aid, are the

many letters received from graduates who have received help.
The 1960-61 Committee is hopeful that letters mailed in March
will produce results which will
enable

this

year’s

graduates

to re-

ceive assistance where needed. The
current
Frank

committee
includes
E,
Dubach,
Mrs.

Leonard,

co-chairmen,

Mrs.

Mrs.
Scott

Ed

parents
of Highland
Park
High
school students, to clubs and organizations, business and professional

Stern, Mrs. William O. Steele, Mrs.
BE. G. Piacenza,
Mrs.
T. bo 7Oge
borne,
Jr.,
Mrs.
H.
M.
Landau,
Mrs. Milton Gray and Mrs. Lester

people

V. Marks.

in

Highland

Park,

High-

tion through summer work, outside
jobs during the school year and
other sources. He explains his ambitions for the future and activities which will be helpful to him
in achieving those
ambitions.

“Thank

you

very

much,

and

here

is a

little

something

express our appreciation,” Jet is telling Mrs. Frank
2354 St. Johns, as he hands her a check for $50.
H. Aaron,

1900

Sunnyside,

a member

of the Board

to

Dubach,
Mrs. W.
of District

113 is shown with Mrs. Dubach, and small Misty, owned by
the Arthur Baums, 243 Linden Park Pl., watches her grandfather make the important presentation.
For those who
father make the important presentation. Jet’s official name

is Ch. Denney’s Jet Pilot, CDXTD.

Some applicants, because of high
scholastic records, receive outside
scholarships
and
need
but little
extra
to help
toward
room
and

board or purchase of books. Others,
whose outside work pressures May
have affected their academic standing, may not be eligible for outside
scholarship
help.
The
pur-

pose of the PTA

Scholarship Fund

is to give aid, in so far as it is possible to all those whose need is
imminent
and
whose
wish
for
As seen

THIS IS THE DART PHOENIX:

RESTAURANTS

in

Suburbia

~ Today

PHOENIX 2-DOOR
6 or V8

HARDTOP

THE DART PHOENIX looks expensive but costs no more than low price cars . . . and, it’s much
more car in room, in performance and in pure richness of appointments.
Phoenix is in every way a
full-size luxury Dodge and offers you the choice of three superbly crafted V8 engines including the
sizzling D-500
Ram-Induction.
See the Phoenix TODAY
plus the excellent sales and service
facilities at Sorensen Motors.

ONE

122

OF

LAKE

COUNTY’S

N. Sheridan

OLDEST

Rd., Waukegan,

DODGE

A pleasant place to

DEALERSHIP

MAjestic 3-1107

Illinois

A ‘}€eystone

dine out, often

A tempting menu, the warmth and charm

FUND

of early American decor and the ease-of-

Investors Capital Exchange

Fund

A diversified investment company organized
to enable holders of substantial blocks of individual securities to obtain diversification and

professional management

through a tax-free

exchange of securities for shares of the fund.

Offering period ends May 1, 196i
For Prospectus call, write or stop in

parking close to the door are good reasons
for dining out often at the Crabapple in

Old Orchard. Stop in when you’re shopping
or drive out for luncheon, cocktails or
dinner, any day including Sunday. North
end of the Mall, Old Orchard in Skokie

cany &amp; Geay
MUTUAL

FUNDS

CE 4-2435
P.O.

Thursday,

April

13,

Box

1961

150

—

566

Oakwood

Avenue

— Lake

Forest, Illinois

Page

H 53—D

45

�Present Swim

Drive
565

“Really Fine Cleaning’
In — No Parking Problem

Roger
2061

Williams

Avenue

Green

Bay

487

Roger

NY od AD

Road

Williams

Avenue

Varunas,

iD 2-3710

club.

well

repaid

to drive
(Paid

here!

Political

recently.

This week's TNT prize jumps to $660 in merchandise for
someone who

Advertisement)

We Enthusiastically

ENDORSE

-

swim

Swimming
lessons
for grade
school pupils in the high school
district will begin next Saturday,
April 15, in the boys’ pool at Highland Park High school.
Registration for the classes was completed

Prepare For lt!!
will be

the University’s

Swimming Lessons
Start Saturday

Spring Is Bound To Come!

You

Show

Penny Berning,
1006 Rosemary
Terr.,
Deerfield,
and
Connie
Schroederus,
832 Park
Ave., W.,
Highland Park, are participating in
the fourth annual water show to
be presented at Illinois
State
Normal
University, April 21 and
22. The show is being presented by

PAT PATTERSON’S
Steak House &amp; Liquor Store
Chickens (with trimmings) .............---...-..-- $1.25

T-Bone Steak (with trimmings)
Lobster (with trimmings)

&gt;

Luncheons

Served

Commissioner

he

from

11

BOCK

.....................--.0c0--000-- $1.25
$1.25

a.m. to 2 p.m.

BEER

IS

75¢ per plate

HERE!

Deliveries made to Highland Park, Deerfield, Northbrook
or Glencoe with orders of $10.00 or more.

He is the only candidate with an extensive horticultural knowledge, which should be possessed by at
least one member of the Board. He is past president
of the Men’s Garden Club of the North Shore, winner

_

of the Bronze medal of the Men’s Garden Clubs of

é

America

and lecturer on horticulture,

chairman

Edens,

FREE Ice Cubes with
Each Liquor Purchase

|

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur M. Adler, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman F. Anspach

Mr. and Mrs. V. Edward Lawrence
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Leonard

Mr. and Mrs. Pau! Behanna

Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Leopold

Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Birkemeier |
Mr. and Mrs. C. Randolph Binner

Mr. and Mrs. Albert M. Louver
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Lubke

Mr. and Mrs. Harold A. Burnstein

Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. McLaughlin
Mrs. Harry A. Muhlike

Mr. and Mrs. Edwin P. Engelbrecht
Mr. and Mrs. John Fiore

hy

Mr. and Mrs. Lyle D. Fordham
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Friedler, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Frisch

:

Mr. Lyle Gourley

Ha
“3

Mr. and Mrs. Herman Hirsch
Mr. and Mrs. C. Gordon Holland

Mrs. Robert Nelson
Mrs. Graham Newey
Dr. and Mrs. C. Vigo Nichols
Mr. and Mrs. Herman R. Pomper
Mrs. Percy Prior

Dr. and Mrs. Albert Slepyan
Mr.
Mrs.
Mr.
Mr.
Mrs.
Mr.
Mrs.
Mr.

Harold KaDell
and Mrs. Ed. P. Keim
Melvin Kendrick
and Mrs. R. W. Kiefer
and Mrs. J. W. King, Jr.
and Mrs. Elmer Klein
and Mrs. Al Kloos

and Mrs. Edward P. Stein
Frank Straight
and Mrs. Edward E. Strauss
and Mrs. Alfred Turner
Marvin Wallach
and Mrs. Walter Wecker
Morton Weil
and Mrs. Wallace Weinress

VOTE ~* &amp;] CLAYTON J. SANDEL
(Paid

‘Page H 54—D 46

County

Line

Rd.

VErnon 5-1611

We invite you to see our

complete selection

Mr. and Mrs. Allen 1. Simon

Mr. and Mrs. S. Parker Johnston, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Alan J. Joyce

\

&amp;

Mr. and Mrs. Raymond J. Ryan

Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Hunter

Mrs.
Mr.
Mrs.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.
Mr.

Skokie

Fine EVERGREENS

of

the civic beautification committee and past supervisor of youth recreation. He has been an active
citizen of Highland Park for 18 years and is a licensed professional engineer with a broad business
experience.

2

5
L

Last Friday, when Otto Joerger of Powell's

Camera Mart, 589 Central Ave., called upon Mrs. Jerome
Kohn, 1349 Arbor Ave., she was unable to produce a current,
TNT ticket. She was awarded a $10 gift certificate as a consolation prize.

Barbecued

for Park Board

picks up a free TNT ticket at any participating

store this evening.

Political

ROSES

Tea

Roses, Climbers,

EVERGREENS
’ SHADE

ROSES

etc. Most

Colors—Most

ROSES

Varieties.

e VINES

TREES

SHRUBS

Open

¢ GRASS

Daily &amp; Sundays

—

SEEDS

8 to 5

Waukegan Nurseries
220

N. Green

DElta 6-0030
Bay Rd.

Waukegan

Advertisement)

Thursday,

April

13,

1961

�fabulous
homes
to
be
given
away in the Midland Enterprises
Development
in
Glendale
Heights, Illinois.

"

°

The Luxurious "CAMELLIA
i
abe : oe

iag
Res song
ef hah

3

PRIZE!

BONUS

‘

dh 6 Na dieen aed dees 8 weal
The
The "Princess" (CAU)hewesmodel.
you ant

.

id

an

HOME

PINK,
turnis ed
complete ly y furnish
terior decor by ak

be

and

iin-

new

i

z

is

will

GUARANTEED

ae

Excluding The Purchase Of Beer, Wine, Liquor &amp; Cigarettes
Lintit One Coupon Per Customer
— Coupon Expires April 15th

ca

i

a

o ps1

CERTIFICATE

=

al

|
|
|
|

4

s

:

Full Page of S&amp;H Green Stamps

#¢

Give this Entry Blank to your friendly Cashier
at your nearby National Food Store and
receive a prize of 30 S&amp;H Green Stamps.

2

:

NATIONAL’S

Ready

Oven

:

5¢ Mailed

Beef—NEW

ic Gefdkcenr. . = 59
8c Mailed

With

YOUR

3cf

TASTE

a

EXTRA

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OWN

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Lb.

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Uniform

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LED

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With The Purchase Of One
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One

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Customer

Per

ee

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(AV

Serve For Breakfast!

Peng: Boa ge dy a

oe At

April

Expires

Expires

— Coupon
Per Customer

Coupon

One

Limit

é

April’ 15th

REDEEM THIS VALUABLE COUPON FOR i ie

fae

f

oz.

One

st

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en

vy,

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Purchase

EEA

April

SAD

— 5c Off Label
Tireless_.. . Buy Now At National!
Box

@

| are Size

(

HEAD LETTUCE
,

Limit

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Coupon

bbd

Per Customer
— Coupon

p

RSENS
&lt;&gt;

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}

?.

Mellody

IS

April

SS

15th

50¢
We

/ ‘

Tonics the’ Pubchare Of
PIECE
ANY

4

. 2

25

The

¢

Ea.

KE

Ave

C
a

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c

Salad favorite . . . red ripe
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start of a oage

for 29

y

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“REDEEM THIS VALUABLE COUPON FOR

s)

25 EXTRA

B}

One

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:

i)

%

BORDO

Coupon

Pineapple-Grapefruit

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Expires

— Coupon
Customer

Per

iar

ry

Cans

gi

NATIONAL

&lt;

C

STAMPS

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Of Three 6-oz.

Purchase

With

»

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St

S)
z

Corer

Or Orange

15th

April

we

‘

-. Tray

DEERF

REDEEM THIS VALUABLE ¢

“

VANITY

Limit One

Coupon

G
Qe

€

‘

25 EXTRA S&amp;H STAMPS

9 vas

isl

isic sana

FAIR

NAPKINS

Per Customer
— Coupon

‘
TIONAL per

Expires

April

15th

seeeNe

tempting crisp salad.
Buy them today at National

Right To Limit Quantities . . . Prices Effective Thru Sat., April I5th In Chicago and Ilinois Suburban
Holland, Calumet City, Chicago Hts. and Dolton,

636

e

ted.°

SALAD TOMATOES

a

CHINA

— Coupon Expires April 19th
Limit One Coupon Per Customer

Reserve

H

VOUIIZL

C66

$ coe AY.

is

“

,

GRAPEFRUIT

1961

Li

Wants

Syst cant Find, Hresher Finer Bodice”

:
#4

i

Firm .. . Crisp
CUCUMBERS
RUBY RED

er

KS
15th

WHIPT

DAIRY

O

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wv

£

7

,

Bal

rd

Gni.

F

¥

15th
Customer— C Coupon Expires
Expires April
Api
OneOne C Coupon Per Per Cust

PORCELAIN

WEES

nga%,

aa

Expires April

25 EXTRA S&amp;H STAMPS

&lt;

canon NCICLOMOA, @ Le veerres 3m |
WORTH

Jars

JELLY

With The Purchase Of One 8-oz. Can Hawthorn

3

4 S

15th

TH

50 EXTRA S&amp;H STAMPS

COUPON

10-oz.

‘REDEEM THIS VALUABLE source FOR

;

:

{§

BINDER

Expires

S) &gt;

Of Two

GRAPE

Per Customer
— Coupon

ODA

.

C

rt

Qua

One

sii
28 TLASEESESSVSS

Sy

ae

The

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Limit

é

Jar

(&amp;

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01.

Can

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=f]

REDEEM THIS VALUABLE COUPON FOR

April

a

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Deluxe

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THIS

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75, NATIONAL

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With The Purchase Of One Complete

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oO,

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ey

ae

15th

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REDEEM THIS VALUABLE COUPON FOR

Thursday,

15th

April

er

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] :

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ps4

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April

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CREAM | CANNED | TOMATO| GRAPE — 9 - "2S

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FOR

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— Coupon
Customer

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po

&lt;

S&amp;H

mix on marten 4, @ CHEESE | MILNOT | SOUP | DRINK § ,

@ KRINKLES

Limit

COUPON

With The Purchase Of One I-Lb. Box
PRINCE'S MOSTOCCIOLI

2)

ihe :

MICKELBERRY‘S—Old Farm

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on™

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|

ate

Mr

For Your Automatic

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STEAKS

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é

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THIS

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Detergent

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ne

3.

i
:
:

Good this week only... nothing to buy.
Limit one per Family... expires Saturday, April 15, 1961.

|

¥
REDEEM

25

This Certificate is good fora

oO

3

@ With A $10.00 Or More Purchase

|
|

&amp; 1

STAMPS

S&amp;H

EXTRA

100

Z

2

Tis

aes

:

ey

r

ADDRESS

I

y every

Ao

al

Gt

Big.

weeks! (Employees of National Tea Co., their
advertising agencies, and their immediate families are not eligible to enter.)

&lt;

3

Wee,
BACK!

MONEY

READY — Young... Tender —

OVEN

in
.. Home
Ellyn). 4

ae

Netonal

that

TO PLEASE OR YOUR

Geet Entry Blanks at your “Friend of the Fam
Food Store or at the Model
ily" National
Glendale Heights (just North of Glen

ce

sy’

Princess p

Lindsay

best

cant

ust

BLANK

ENTRY

Pri

Lindsay

have to hide your water softener in
corner.
some dark
Not Included)
Notion
‘

md

$

THE COTTAGE
pie
eats?
For You
Designed
Interiors
VICTOR M. TURCO, Interior Designer

CLIP Re

— eee

|
|

.

entry

your

the

A CONTEST!

NOT

BUY!

SS

SOFTENERS

WATER

So enter

EASY TO WIN! NOTHING TO

g

24 LINDSAY

:

:

al Food Store
able S&amp;H Green Stamps.
now ... enter often,

a Priva “4
mile of vacationland in all America.
(Vgcations MustBe Token

:

Visit the Model Home and pick up a PINK Entry Blank and deposit
at your "Friend of the Family” National Food Store. If you are the
winner

S&amp;H GREEN STAMPS

Two winners from every store every
2 weeks! Winners‘ from; every Nationin Serene: bes

§ = Two to be given away every 2 weeks!
the SHORE.
A _wn-filled week atsituated
in the
Hotel-Motel,
MEDE
6 Berg tr

ce

doors, brick trim, Lindsay water softener, paved driveway, lot
with city y water and sewers. The homes are located
tely improved
imp
pletely
in Glendale Heights (north of Glen Ellyn).

SPECIAL

AT MIAMI BEACH, FLA.

1840 WINNERS OF 1000

oe

ssi

8 VACATIONS FOR TWO

;

d
ith
ivi
ath : diding ‘patie
com-

i
bee aleyy

port

Giveaway “ssxss%"

CE’

Se

=

:

9

NATIONAL

ROAD

I ELD

DEERFIELD,

ILL.

Stores Except Lansing, S.

)

SS
=3

REDEEM THIS VALUABLE
S &amp; H
EXTRA
25

COUPON FOR
STAMPS

With The Purchase Of One 8-Inch
wi
,

-

PIE
WAGNER
— Coupon Expires April 15th
Limit One Coupon Per Customer

Page

H 55—D

47

�re
iMusic Theat

lighwood Community Center

Summer Program

“Activities For The Week
Highwood’s
_ present

Community
Center
a “Hobo Hop” for

h, seventh
ents of the

and
city

lines.

This

will

be

the

only

e school dance this month.
*
*
*
| Highwood Community Center
ks all the local and nearby
dents that did so much to help
e

the

6th

International

basketball

Little

tournament

the

sss it was.
The many women
made sandwiches, coffee and
r refreshments
for the visit-

layers, coaches, followers
ts

accompanying

the

and

teams,

@ ladies deserve special thanks.
hat is tipped to the Senior
perity
Club,
the
Highwood
nen’s Club, and the Little Guys

etball mothers.
The three
ips took separate evenings to
ging

ci

eighth
grade
and surround-

areas.
The event, scheduled
2m
7:30 thru 10:30 Friday, will
an informal affair. Boys may
ar blue jeans but girls must apin dresses or skirts. No slacks,
1udas and jeans may be worn
girls. The dresses, or sweaters
skirts may be decorated along
0

ceptions.

refreshments

for
(Paid

the

re-

Political

and

Chairman

Commissioner

especially

want

to

connected

with

all

tournament.

To

|

Bruno

Bertuc-

Don

Skrinar

thank

everyone

phases

name

of

the

everyone

would
have
to provide
space
in
more than one newspaper column,
but everyone involved knows that
their help was truly appreciated.
A kind thanks also goes to Red Fell
for providing space in his Highland
Park show window.
There on display for a week were all the team
trophys
given
away,
along
with
other tournament publicity. Strike
&amp; Space
Bowling
Lanes
deserve
high praise for giving
visiting
coaches and players a morning of
free bowling.
*

*

Tony Bennett

Class 3

Mrs. Gary Meyer, instructor of
the weaving class at the Highland

Four musicals and a Mort Sahl
“Concert” make up the 1961 season at Herb Rogers Chicago Music
Theatre.

Park Recreation
Center,
nounced
that there are

in

will open the Chi-

the

spring

term

has anopenings

which

starts

on

April 19.
The class meets on Wednesday
mornings from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m.

cago Music theatre season in the
hit-musical
comedy
“Guys
and
Dolls” on June 20 for a three week
engagement.
Genevieve follows in Cole Porter’s
spicy
musical
“Can
Can,”
July 11 through the 23rd.
Hollywood’s Kathryn
Grayson
stars
in Franz
Lehar’s
operetta
“The Merry
Widow?”
for two
weeks, July 25 through August 6th.
And
popular
Patrice
Munsel
returns to Chicago Music theatre in
Rogers and Hammerstein’s
“King

and will continue for eight weeks.
Looms
are available for beginners or others who do not have
their own.
Anyone
interested
in
joining the class should register at
the Highland Park Recreation Of-

fice, ID 2-2442.
and I” from August 8 through 27th.
A week of ‘Mort Sahl — in Concert,” August 29 through Septem-

ON

20%

:

t

:
ILLINOIS
April 10, 1961
Bids for the sale of the $400,000 bond
issue recently authorized by the voters of
School District No. 111 for an addition to
Northwood
Junior
High
School,
were
opened at an adjourned session of the regular School Board meeting held on April
6, 1961.
Barcus, Kindred and Company were the
low bidders at an average net interest cost
to the District of 3.94564 per cent.
This
bid is slightly lower than the 4%
interest
rate forecast by the school attorney before
the bond referendum.
Working drawings of the new construction are being prepared by A. Epstein and
Sons, architects for the addition to Northwood,
It is expected that construction will
Start this spring and that pupils will occupy
the new classroom about next February.
Submitted by:
WAYNE
A. THOMAS,
Superintendent
4/13/61—98

|.

Opportunity

knocks

every

pay

day

when you buy U. S. Savings Bonds.

THEATRE — GLENCOE
ID 2-0605

LP's

VErnon 5-0605

FRI. thru THURS., April

ONE

14-20

FULL WEEK

OFF

1.99 s36"%9.50 }ssi

Ist Capitol
3.98—2nd

ok

CHOLL DISTRICT NO. 111
|
HIGH OOD HIGHLAND PARK

GLENCOE

ALL

CAPITOL

Advertisement)

ro
A

ber 4, completes the season.

Discounts

*

The Community Center’s director, Don Skrinar,
hopes to get
away early next week on his annual vacation.
All free play activity ceases in the Center.
Other
scheduled classes will continue to
be held during his absence.
Persons desiring use of the Community Center for meetings or receptions can contact Highwood’s City
Clerk for available dates.

ELECT

Open Weaving
On April 19

Ist Capitol

2.99

RALPH E. KAYE, Jr.
PARK

COMMISSIONER

eEL

CEE

REG?

ere

US

PATS

OFF.»

ERECO-ROS

“START
PLAY
WE

AN
GIVE

scruples!

NOW"

oo

INSTRUMENT
GUITAR

ales :

INSTRUCTIONS

Feature Times:
Fri—6:15-8:15- 10: 1
Sat.—4:45-6:35Sun.—2 :40-5:0
Mon.-Thurs.—7:

Bongo Drums
Guitars

Saxophones

SAT.

Trumpets
Banjos

CHILDREN’S

Trap Drums
Trombones
Ukes

i sre’s what

cleaning

©

Boat

launching

ramp

@¢

Five

play

golf

Commission

¢

Beautification

Committee.

he'll do next:

Cooperative
driving

Civic

development of Forest Trailway

range

©

More

beach

consolidated with Park District
Winter sports playground.

area

@

°@

°¢

Recreation

Additional

Golf

2:00

p.m.

252 DEERPATH
LAKE FOREST
CE 4-0658

Plus

Cartoons

KAYE

has a

(Paid

and

Comedy

Delightful
Gourmet Dining

648

DEERFIELD

RD.,

DEERFIELD

(Y% block East of Waukegan

Rd. stoplight)

Dept.

parks

Breakfast

¢

Luncheon

Performance Counts!
action on his pledges!

only

COMING:
“THE APARTMENT”

708 CENTRAL
HIGHLAND PARK
ID 2-7222

Afternoon

RALPH

MATINEE

“TARZAN THE
MAGNIFICENT”

GRANT&amp;GRANTu«.

ticket for residents
¢ Intergovernmental Committee
®@
Worked with school board for NW-side park
e
Plan

e’s what

at

he’s done:

Annexation of Northwest Highland Park
¢ Combined
elections © Increased beach parking @ Machine beach

April 15

Tea

Dinner

Late Snacks

solid record of successful

Political

WIndsor
Advertisement)

5-9751

OPEN DAILY
Including Sundays)
8:00

A.M.

to

10:00

P.M.

Thursday, April 13, 1961

�NS Congregation’s

At LF College
Two events scheduled for next
week at Lake Forest College are
open to the public and may be attended without reservations.
“A disenchanted View of Modern
Art” will be discussed by Franz
Schulze April 18, at 8:15 in Hixon
Hall, and a symposium ‘‘What Constitutes Greatness in Art” will be

moderated by Dr. Marvin C. Dikley
on April 21, also at 8:15 p.m. Six
members
of the
faculty
of the
Humanities division of the College
will participate in the symposium.

fBring Your Rings and
fi! We Check Them

Jewciry
FREE.

In.

+

Tel.

Sank

We do our own diamond

ALWAYS

“THE

GRASS

setting.
|

recently

returned

from

the

North

Shore

by

Jewish

the

forego

meeting

ence

to

day

and

coand

Community

will

in

Seniors,

Sisterhood

the
be

Centers

their

Monday

Older
held

to

particconfer-

Chicago

Mon-

Tuesday.

THEATRE:
* 4% pa 1D, 2-2400
Feature Times:

Week Days—6 :55-9:45
Sat. &amp; Sun.—1

:30-4:22-7:14-10

5 other Academy

Awards

NU

£0-Sta0

served by the

exciting

new

SUNDAY

APRIL

&amp;

16th

on the

Cont.

North

1:30

,

P.M.

Shore!

PLANO

WALT DiSNEy’S

One Hundredan One

BAR

NEW

‘ BUFFET FOOD SERVICE
No cover—No

minimum

EDGEWATER
BEACH
“Ae
HOTEL
KOMEN Kola(ammo ial-iaier-lammader-le.

ALL-CARTOON

Reteased by BUENA VISTA DistributionCo. Inc

| Lunch- time
Dinner-time

WALT

51,

Raymond

Laurel
Browning

of Wheeling

got a ticket for improper backing
after a collision
on Laurel Ave.
near St, Johns Friday afternoon.

Highland
came

hit

out

the

Park

police

say

the

parking

lot

of

stopped

car

of

Cowan,
440
Ellridge
the other side of the

of

595

Rds. Friday
Highland

On-

wentsia Ave., was booked for driv-

turned

ing while under the influence after
a collision at Skokie and Half Day

Robert
Mich.

he
and

Gertrude
Circle,
street.

evening.
Park
police

on

say

he

left in front of northbound
McLeod

of

Menominee,

GETFINEST
THE

SHREDDED
TOP SOIL

SPECIALLY

PREPARED

BY MACHINE.

—Improves Growing.
Most
soil obtainable . . - at no

MANURE

Phone
MUTUAL

Easier to Spread

uniform, perfectly
extra cost.

—

processed

FERTILIZER

ID 2-0027

SERVICES

OF

HIGHLAND

PARK

Shore’s Most

Beautiful Theatre

ie

&amp;

4

4h:

NEERPATH

71

Open Daily 6:00 to 12 Midnight — Curtain at 6:30
Sunday Continuous 2 to Midnight—Doors Open 1:40

Friday, April

(;

14 thru

— ONE
OPEN 24
HOURS

On

I

%Z@

HIGHWAY AT ROUTE
HIGHLAND PARK

Our

Thursday,

April

20

WEEK —

Panoramic

Wide

Screen

“CRY FOR HAPPY”
in Eastman
Starring—Glenn

Color
Ford,

and

CinemaScope

Donald

O’Connor

Co-Starring—James Shigeta, Miiko Taka and Myoshi Umeki
Four U.S. sailors take over a Geisha House . . . geisha girls

and all!

— SCHEDULE —
Weekdays—"’Cry for Happy’’ begins at 7:30 and 9:40.
Saturday—"’Cry for Happy’ begins at 5:00 - 7:30 and 9:40
Sunday—"’Cry for Happy”’ begins at 2:29 - 4:53 - 7:07 - 9:30

HAL’S DRIVE INN
1961

Wagner,

Marder,

on

Kenneth

Driver Arrested
After Skokie Crash

€

DISNEY PRODUCTIONS

is PIZZA TIME

13,

Crash

The
Highland
Park
Student
Council will present a dance entitled ‘‘Dig-Me-Pygmy.”’ It will take
place in the boy’s gym, April 22,
from
9 p.m. to 12. Preparations
have already begun to make this
a ‘wild’ dance.

Frank

Edward

Perlman and Merwin Shurberg.
For directors to serve one-year
terms, Robert S. Rosenfels, James
L. Salzenstein and Alan D. Whitney were nominated. Co-chairmen
of the nominating committee are
Harold L. Newmann
and Richard
E. Simon.

‘Dig-Me-Pygmy’

North

=

(ur

April

mel,

Wisc., on Lake Geneva

April
23,
W.
E.
Peley
and
C.
Powell will direct the cruise.
The sailing course is a project
of R. Hall and H. Petersen, Haskins
reports. The sailing fleet is still
land-bound,
but
actively
preparing for the season, he writes.

Lake Forest, Ill. — CE 4-2106 or CE 4-2107

vw

Thursday,

at Fontana,

FEATURE

4

SKOKIE

for

@ MUTUAL SERVICES @

CREWMATES

RONNIE ORLAND
atthe

guniont

PLUS CARTOON ‘sa;

15th

Ist Showing

anti

babu

et

“3°

plans

completion
of the clubhouse
remodelling
begun
last year.
The power fleet will rendezvous

| @ MUTUAL SERVICES

“es

21st!

and

HIGHLAND PARK

DAY!

eg

APRIL

along with

in
the
Highland
Park
Woman’s
club
Sunday
evening, May
28.
Nominees include: For president,
Bert
M.
Wallenstein;
vice-presidents, Seymour I. Burton and Mrs.
Janet Freund; secretary, Harry J.
Levi;
treasurer,
Lee
J.
Loventhal II.
Nominees for directors for threeyear terms include: Jules J. Abler,
L. M. Goldman
Jr., Jay Janson,
Edward
J. Kann, J. Myron Kim-

regular

Adult

in

of

in the sixth annual dinner meeting

shakedown

be discussed,

IT TOOK YEARS TO MAKE . . . IT COST $12,000,000!
. . . IT WILL BE REMEMBERED FOREVER!

* KING-SIZE. DRINKS

the

Mrs. Trevor Weiss, president of
the Sisterhood, and Mrs. Nathan
T. Rosenberg and Mrs. I. Robert

IS GREENER”

&amp;

Thursday,

will be followed by the first general membership
meeting
of the
season. Events for the year will

for “Best Picture of the Year’’ and

SATURDAY

next

p.m. in the Recreation Center,

ipate

FRIDAY, APRIL 14th FOR
ONE EXCITING WEEK!
Nominated

open

of songs presented by Helen Alter,
Her “Journey in Song” will feature
the folksongs of many lands.

FREE PARKING!

LAST

new

an

in

Lakeside
Congregation for Reform Judaism has nominated the
following officers for the 1961-62
temple year. Election will be held

tea, will be followed by a program

weekly
‘vears

Have your diamonds set in modern settings. Payments: arranged.

directors

Shore

elect

Three
events in the month of
April are reported by R. W. Haskins
of the
North
Shore
Yacht
Club; the annual pot-luck supper

meeting
at the
Temple
Monday
afternoon, April 17, at 1 o’clock.
The meeting, opening with dessert-

the

2-0630
55

North
will

Lakeside Nominates
New ‘61-’62 Officers

cruise
of
the
Power
Fleet
the
following weekend, and a six-week
class in sailing fundamentals.
The pot-luck will begin at 6:30

Chicago,

over

of

Israel

and

The

Park

1Dlewood

from

officers

sponsored

| JEWELERS - OPTICIANS
' Across

Sisterhood

annual convention of the Mid-West
Federation of Temple Sisterhoods
and will make their convention report at this meeting.

|. H. NEMEROFF
Highland

The

Congregation

Levy

)

DIAMONDS

Sisterhood Will
Elect New Officers

Yacht Club Plans
Fete, Cruise, Class

SDIANIS TWALNW

Public Events

MUTUAL SERVICE

Two

22

Children’s Matinee Saturday 2 to 4—’’TOM

THUMB”

with Russ Tamblyn and Alan Young

Guidepost
Rating

Adults

and

M.Y.

| P*hibit in Our
| April 21—”ELMER GANTRY”
Lobby by
T”
and “THE APARTMEN

April 283—”THE GREAT

Children’s Class
5-12

IMPOSTER”
Page

H

years
57—D

49

�Modenesé Society

SEORET

‘

of the 20th century

Offer Sketch Class}

Holds Dance on
Saturday Evening

Introducing the significant skin care discovery

The

a

Modenese

dance

at

Society

the

For Children At
will

Highwood

HP Rec Center

hold

Com-

An outdoor painting and sketching class for children is offered

munity Center this Saturday evening, April 15. A half-hour musical program will start at 7:30 to
precede the dancing. Music for the
evening will be furnished by Virgilio
Lenzini
and
his
orchestra.

the

Refreshments

By Dorothy Gray

are

by the
Center

The
of

Highland Park
this spring.

class, under

Mrs.

Gary

planned.

the

in

Car

will meet

Recreation

Crash

&lt;a eatnga Somes
Mrs.

Park
police
began
a hit-and-run car Fri-

evening,

front

after Milton

of

119

Laurel

VanWeld

cast

Ave.

beauty cream that eminent dermatologists have praised its effectiveness
in treating serious skin cases. No matter what climate you live in, regu-_

lar use of SECRET OF THE SEA is guaranteed to keep your skin softer,
fresher, smoother or your money back! Try it today. $5, $8.50, $15.

GRAY

@eeepeeeoeoeeeeeoeaeaeeeeeeeseeaee
eee
eee
eee
eee
@

Hes
ty

:

Tuesday,

May

2,

1961 at 7:30

o’clock P.M., C.D.S.T.
Said Public Hearing will be conducted by the Board
of
Appeals of the City of Highland Park, for
the purpose of considering the applications
for the following variations of the zoning
ordinance:
Appeal No. 328
Sam &amp; Rose Leshtz
321 Hedge Run
Lot 8 in Ravinia Dells Sub.
Request for a variation of the intensity of
use requirements of the ‘‘C” Single Family
Dwelling District to allow a single family
dwelling to be constructed on a portion of
lot 8 in Ravinia Dells Sub. A portion of
the garage attached to the dwelling at 321
Hedge Run extends onto said lot 8.
Appeal No. 329
Peerless Home Builders Inc.
Lots 1, 2, 3 &amp; 4 in Samijo Rokapa Sub.
Request for a variation of the intensity of
use and the lot of record requirements of
the ‘B-1” Single Family Dwelling District
to allow the construction of a single family
dwelling on each of lots 1, 2, 3 &amp; 4 in
Samijo Rokapa Sub.
Said lots are located
on the southwest corner of Sheridan Road
and Maple Avenue.
Appeal No. 330
Highland Park United Evangelical Church
657 Laurel Ave.
Request for a variation of the front and
rear yard requirements of the ‘‘F’’? Multiple
Family Dwelling District to allow the construction of an Educational Building addition to the Highland Park United Evangelical Church
at 657 Laurel Avenue.
Said
property is located on the northeast corner
of Green Bay Road
and Laurel Avenue.
BOARD OF APPEALS
John N. VanderVries, Chairman

Now, Dorothy Gray research scientists bring you those blessings of

DOROTHY

OF

on

EARL W. GSELL &amp; Co.
—PHARMACISTS—
Highland Park Store
e
Ravinia Drug Store
ID 2-2600
ID 2-2300
Free Delivery Service Always

Ruhman

in

the

title

Bernard Shaw’s
The play, one

HIGHLAND
PARK, ILLINOIS
BOARD
OF APPEALS
Notice is hereby given that a public hearing will be held in the Council Chamber of
the City Hall in the City of Highland Park,

Illinois

Don

class

indoors

at the

Center.

would

sheuld

like to join

call

the

Recrea-

tion office, ID 2-2442, at once as

of 678 Roger | there will be a lesson on Tuesday,

Williams, Highland Park, has been | April 18.

BY

CITY

the sea that delicately soften and moisten the skin! So vital is this

on

Seek

the class

of Oak
Park reported
his left
front door smashed while parked

climates}

meet

Tuesday
afternoon
right
after
school until five o’clock, and there
will be eight lessons in the series.
When
the weather
is inclement,

day

Captured from the sea...those very benefits that, century after century,
have blessed the famed complexions of women who live in misty sea

instruction

will

Members of the Society indicate
that the dance will be open to the
public.
Tickets
will be available
at the door.

Highland
looking for

even to skin that has seemed hopelessly dry

the

Meyer,

Children who

The first formula of its kind
to help bring back nature’s own soft smoothness, ,

Recreation

comedies,
20,

21

Players

will

role

of

George

5

“Major Barbara.”
of Shaw’s finest
be

presented
the

April

Junior

and

22

and

Winnetka

Drama

Club

|tained

Shore

Country

Day

ae

at the North

by

i

Juniors Entertain
|For Auxiliary Unit

Threshold

members

American

Legion

seniors

of

Unit

Auxiliary,

at

the

pretaigo

145,
enter-

monthly

‘

G

School, 310 Green Bay Road, Winnetka, Both theater groups will be
represented in the cast and crew

BE sei aha me i "ilteer Caran’
Saabs ‘ verona
Santi
alicia
aa os; Mary Sy Haberkamp piano

of

solo; Linda

the

play,

;

:

Mrs. Ruhmen, niece of actor Vin-|

cent Price

(who’s

solos:

and

Phyllis

trying to make|Dawn

Moore,

Anita

Iovino, vocal

Haberkamp

and

solos.

opening night) is a member of the/
[pn addition, a toy band concert
Executive Committee of Threshold|was presented by members
and
and has appeared in their Drama/ aj] members
sang
their junior
Festival
presentation
of
‘“Decision.” She has had three years of
summer stock experience, appearing
with
such
stars
as
Sylvia

song.

Sydney,
Carroll.

Edward Laing of 941 Woodward,
Deerfield, got a ticket for negli-

Peggy

Wood

and

Leo

Crash

G.|

on

The production is being directed | gent
by Burr Lee, well-known TV and
radio
actor
and
director.
Other!

Highland

Parkers

in

the

cast

driving

after

a rear-end

col-

|lision with Roger Sheahen Sunday
evening, while Sheahen was turn-

of

the play are Mike Nussboun,
Mrs. Rhoda Perlman.

Central

and

|ing into his driveway

at 985

/|tral Ave.,
report.

Park

Highland

Cenpolice

4/13-20/61—99

&amp;

ae
ws

wens i,
*

hoe

FAX

weg
anh\
,

| You can depend on... BRAUN
¢ “Care-Free”

Fuel Oil Delivery

HEATING

4

Select from alternate
your needs.

Budget

OIL AND

heating
payment

BRAUN

SERVICE

oil and

‘

H 58—D 50

NOW

Heating

ae

Service

AVAILABLE

. . . one of which

is tailored to

:

RES

é

} rot
ary

¥¢

;

‘ %

2‘ oe ee
the
ht
%.

©

ER

NG

ess,

‘eae

He

%

,
ted

I, mpeccable ;
natural
shoulder
clothing. In
a superb tropical
fabric of 55% “Dacron’* polyester
and 45% rayon.
$ 4 ‘

plan available too.

BROS.

444 CENTRAL AVE. -—— ID 2-3804

Page

§° Complete

service agreements

TELEPHONE
Ue

plus

AGREEMENTS

BROS.

Res.
|

LAMAR
i
if @ eRe
23 fe &amp; le et

2
5

ced

%

LLLae SA

s

ww

QV

T

** eaihies ‘oe

Pernceorengne?

Sy
esssaeed
af

wey

|

Ay

CARL

OIL

CO.

Cobey’s

Highland

Park

(Open Thursday Nites)

ID 2-3804
CASEL, DIV. MANAGER

478 Central

HIGHLAND

PARK
Thursday,

April

13,

1961

�BOAT HOUSE
New

SKOKIE

convenient

EXPERT

SALES

WANT

AD RATES

(No Abbreviations

Skokie

Permitted)

50c

3 Lines .. $1.75

per additional

(Up to 10 lines)
25c¢ Service Charge for blind ads

AT
HIGHLAND

Will Appear
ca

Uhore

AL

Uroue

[Vewspapers

*Fort Sheridan Tower is published every other Friday. Ads
in which the Tower is published will appear in the Tower

r——

WANT

Tuesday,

“Business Services &amp; Supplies’ Classifications Will Be Accepted Up To

Monday,

4:30 P.M.

DEADLINE

run during the week
at no extra charge.

AD DEADLINES———

All Classifications Except ‘Business
Services &amp; Supplies’’ Will Be Accepted Up To

FOR

CONTRACT

ADS

—

3

Phone Your Want

Ad —

(except situation wanted

Advertising of any kind is accepted for
publication in this newspaper with the
understanding
that the publisher assumes no responsibility for omission or
for errors and
shall be under no obligation or liability of any kind whatsoever,
either to the advertiser or third parties.
However, in the event of an error in
any advertisement, clearly the fault of

the

RFFICIENT
return for

pecgace:

part time.
small

ACCOUNTING
etc. Nothing
Telephone ID

CEdar 4-2300

publisher

and

accounting and
Ss,
years

Telephone

WI

‘5-

ALTERATIONS

of

Now

SERVICE

Body and Fender Repair
All Makes - All Models

Complete

Bank

rate

SPECIAL

Touch

t8Y E. Park

JACK

AUTO

PURCHASE

deluxe
light.

now

now

$598

$895

(1) 1960 Crownline 1960, top
curtain, battery, steering, windshield, ’61 Mercury 45
H.P.. starter, generator, long shaft, remote
controls,
1960 Crownline trailer, 1200 Ib.
tilt, tie-down, winch, directional signals.
was $2298
now $1796
(1)
.14 ft. Styleflite
°61
model,
steering,
windshield,
’61
Republic
trailer,
600
Ib.
winch, tie-down, directional signals, ’61 Mercury 22 H.P. manual, remote controls.
was $1395
now $995
Sales

ID

Highland

months

runabouts,

Ups

CH

FRECH

Ave.

to 36

(2) 17 ft. Owens
1960
steering, windshield, bow
was $1245

2-5845

Park

LOANS

LOW COST AUTO LOANS
FIRST ‘NATIONAL BANK
OF LAKE FOREST
LAKE FOREST CE 4-5100

Thursday, April 13, 1961

17

and

Service

Mercury Outboard
White Boats

Starcraft
FOR

1961

runabouts,

Grady

ASK

up

Boats

ALpine

Motors
Dorsett

Republic

CONTRACTORS

Aarnos &amp;
Homes Our
Remodeling
ONtario

(2) 15 ft. Owens
1960 custom
steering, windshield, bow light.
was $845

Painting,
and

Display

financing

Garber

1-9088

OUTPOST DAY CAMP
Uniqueness designed for boys and girls 5
to 12. Have your children’s dreams come
true. Let them join our rolling FIRE DEPARTMENT,
LE
NURSE
CORPS,
blast off at our CAPE
CANERVAL,
set
up COMMUNICATIONS,
live in TENTS
and INDIAN
VILLAGE.
Sports, different
CAMPING
activities and TRANSPORTATION are provided. A thrill packed memorable summer is in store. Teacher directed. Brochure on request. CRestwood 2-4422.

(1) 17 ft. Owens
1960 Landau
runabout,
hardtop, steering, windshield, bow light.
was $1445
now $1098

WM. RUEHL &amp; CO.
GENERAL BODY SHOP
NOW OPEN

Undercoating

George

CARPENTERS,

15 Models of
BOATS

ALTERATIONS?
Come and see Eda at our New Drive In.
Zengeler
Cleaners,
2020 First St., Highland Park.
ALTERATIONS
done
with
that
“extra
touch”? which
assures. extra satisfaction.
Call Mrs. Hansen, ID 2-2459.
ALTERATIONS,
dressmaking
by
experienced, competent seamstress. Reasonable
rates. Call any time. ID 2-5086.
ALTERATIONS, © dressmaking,
draperies,
slipcovers; interior design consultation. WI
5-5719, if no answer WI 5-1514.
EXPERT dressmaking and alterations, any
kind
including
uniforms,
very
reasonable. Call after 5. P.M. ID. 2-8791.

Camp

Register now. Call

Waukegan

on

Day

All camping activities. Hot lunches.
Excellent swimming instructions on
the grounds. Experienced counselors. 13% beautiful acres with pool.

BELVIDERE
BOAT WORKS

tax
ex-

ALTERATIONS expertly done in my home,
reasonable. For appointment, ID 2-4553.
2528 Green Bay Road, Highland Park.

Auto

substantially

BOATS

SERVICE—Taxes, Payroll,
too
small
nor too
ae
2-3369.

AUTO

which

Cloud

Boats

FOOT
long, 7 foot beam, ‘“‘Glen L.”
runabout convertible top, 40 horsepower
Mercury electric starting motor with two
gauge tanks, Elgin deluxe trailer, bilge
pump,
floor mats, foam
seats,
anchor,
lines,
and
accessories
included.
$1100.
Phone DE 6-6000, days, WI 5-3547 evenings. Ask for Harold.

30!-

Sorensen
Specialty
- Finishing
2-6812

16”

Show.

HERB

BLOMQUIST

carpenter, quality cus-

hom homes, additions, porch enclosures,
rec rooms, custom cabinets; also remodeling and repairs. Telephone WI 5-2830.
CHRISTO-CRAFT
REMODELING
CO.
WI 5-3273
ID 2-2319
Remodeling and home maintenance is our
business. Porch enclosures, basement paneled room additions, kitchen cabine
or
just that one door that doesn’t close right.
All work guaranteed.
FOR that small repair, or larger remodeling
job, garages, porches, attics finished, dormers installed, kitchens remodeled or any
new additions. Call H. L. Smalley, ID 2MoE EF

CATERING

PARTY
RENT

FROM

OUR

NEEDS
NEW

ASSORTMENT

of adult and children sized fine china, silver,
tables, chairs, linens and hundreds of other
items.
WE DELIVER

ASSOCIATED
RENT-ALLS
651

Roger

Williams,
IDilewood

Special

Birth-

COVERING

INSTALLED

&amp;

VITO

Special: Men’s Suits
a
Cleaning and Pressing $1.25 ba
590 Elm

Highland
2-6333

SUMMER

Glencoe

PROGRAM

Rd.,

Park

Place

Highland P.

LAWNMOWERS
SHARPENING
or ID 2-9202.

and

repairs.

MOVING

NORTH SHORE READING CENTER
Remedial and Developmental
Reading
Specializing in study methods, comprehension and speed. Individual attention based
on diagnostic testing; for Junior high school
thru college.
706

VE

LANDSCAPING

SAM WOO

TAX

INDIVIDUAL
income tax forms prepared
in my home or yours. R. E. Landau, wl
5-0764.
INCOME
TAX
SERVICE
people.
Business
and
Earners
For Wage
This is a year-round business with us.
hour phone service for appointments. Open
Capital Business
Saturdays.
and
evenings
Service,
Room
111,
730
Waukegan
Rd.
Telephone WI 5-5656.

Cohen,

ele.
Ork.

LAUNDRY

PONIES

BOARDING STABLES
Horses
boarded,
box stalls aavilable;
exceptionally clean and well kept stables; 2
outdoor rings; approximately 75 to 80 miles
of open and woodland trails. CE 4-3045.
Basil’s Boarding Stables.
WANTED
to buy, single or double horse
trailer in good condition, reasonable price.
Phone WI 5-2475.

R.

TRUCKING—

MARIANI

WOOD

INCOME

Ren

vi

in lawn
or yard
an
Everything
2
maintenance. New Jobs, excellent refere
Call after 8 p.m., ID 2-1774

SEASONED
firepiace wood, $20 per ton;
tailgate delivery. Telephone ID 3-1622.
AGED mixed hardwoods. Jim Beinlich, The
Firewood King. VErnon 5-1195.

HORSES

Manu
Tractor W

and tree w
COMPLETE
landscaping
Top dressing, mowing lawns,
Mayfield Landscaping; LOcust 6-0

5-4248

AVAILABLE

ID

HAULING

-

LIGHT general hauling. We also move
types ot household appliances. Call ID
6098 or ID 2-4917.

MOTOR SCOOTERS &amp; BIKES —
BICYCLES
FREE Pick-Up &amp; Delivery |
Complete Service, Parts

and

Repairs

on All Mak

of Bicycles

&amp; Trikes

BRAND

NEW

SCHWINN

BI

Boys &amp; Girls Models—All Sizes
Choice of Colors. Famous Schv
‘Long-As-You-Own-It’ Guarant
$29.95,

SHORE MUSIC STUDIOS
(formerly Garino’s)
North
Shore’s
finest.
Inquire
about
our
liberal trial plan.
GUITAR-ACCORDION
Insrtument furnished
ID 2-0015
If no answer, ID 2-1498
PIANO
INSTRUCTION
Hank
Winston,
staff pianist
at WBBMCBS. Adults mornings and evenings, children
after school. Call WI 5-0244 after 7:30 p.m.
LEARN
TO PLAY THE
GUITAR!
Folk
music, blues. Private or semi-private lessons. ID 3-0084 after 4 o’clock.
JACK MOORE GUITAR SCHOOL
By teachers who have produced solo and
band
national
championships
from
1955
thru 1960. Lessons in your home or studio.
Instrument furnished. Phone HI 6-3730.

&amp;

Call

$37.95,

$38.95,

$41.95.

NORTH

WE

SERVICE

WHAT

Lay-Away

or

486

ID

saan’

WI 5-5117.
Topsoil
Manure
New lawns—seed or sod
NELSON LANDSCAPE

TOP

&amp; DECORATING
by

Craftsman

@
e
2

Halsted

St.
Chicago

INTERIOR

YOUR home is your castle; complete lawn
and garden service that is fit for a Queen.
Evergreens, trees, shrubs, 24 hour service;
all work
and material guaranteed.
References furnished;
rate $2.50 per hour.
Call MAjestic 3-8141. Pat Corcoran, Landscaping.

Diversey

PAINTING
ID 2-5544

VILLAGE

CO.

|

:

DECORATO

&amp; EXTERIOR

LOCAL
REFERENCES
FULLY INSURED

work
work

NOEL
TEAGUE
LANDSCAPING.
New
lawns; black soil; evergreens; shrubs and
trees;
lawns
re-seeded
and
fertilized;
stone work; driveways; tree work; patios.
Telephone ID 2-7619.
GENERAL
landscaping. New jobs. Gabriel
Ruffalo,
909
Half
Day
Rd.,
Highland
Park. ID 2-7817.
C. MEDINA, JR. &amp; CO.
For the best in spring cleaning, a
209
peer
ete new lawns, etc. Call
WI

DECORATL

PAINTING
AND
DECORATING
Thorough preparation
Clean, careful, workmen
Best materials, aplied properly
Sensible prices

BLOOM

PRAIRIE ACRES
LANDSCAPING
SERVICE
Black soil, fill dirt, manure,
top dressing
and rolling lawns. Evergreens, shrubs, trees.
For estimate phone WI 5-0818.
MODERN Landscaping, Jack Vena. Call me
for the best in lawn
maintenance
and
errs
in garden and patio work. ID

HOING

AND

MARBLEIZING — STRIATING
WOOD FINISHING —MURALS
2957 N.

THE

SERVICE—
WI 5-5117
7 DAY GARDENING SERVICE
$2.25 per hour, gardening, landscaping, cultivating,
pruning,
trimming,
limb
sawing,
yards cleaned. ALpine 1-4636.
YARD maintenance, shrub planting, tree removal and trimming. Call C. Kropp, ID
2-3227.
LAWN
care, mowing and hedge trimming.
Seas George after. 3:30 p.m. EMpire 2-

Terms

at Sheridan

GUSTAV

SOIL
Tree
Tractor

S!

2-1369

PAINTING

PAINTING

LANDSCAPING
bi atid

Easy

Central

European

NEWSPAPERS

WE

CYCLE &amp; HOBBY SHO

JUNK

35c per CWT brought to our door.
Highest prices paid for all types of —
brought to our door, such as rags,
n,
metals, etc. Or call ID 3-1466 for truck
pick-up.
Hours
daily
including
Saturday,
8:30 to 5:30 p.m. Sun. 11-2.
HIGHLAND
PARK
WASTE
MATERIAL
1466 Berkeley Rd.

EXPERT
carpentry,
porches,
recreation
rooms a specialty; no jobs too small. Call
ID 2-4349.
HOME
remodeling, additions, TV
rooms,
repairs, free estimates, winter rates. Telephone WI 5-1511.
FOR building that new home, addition or
remodeling,
be it large
or small, call
V &amp; F Construction Co. Telephone ID
2-5477 or WI 5-2980.
BUILDING
and
remodeling.
Recreation
rooms and cabinets, floor and wall tile,
window awnings, door hoods and carports.
Free estimates. Telephone TRinity 2-7313.

Trailers

4-1310
2927 Belvidere
(Rte. 120) just east of Green
Bay Rd., Waukegan, Il.
Open Mon., Thurs., Fri.: 9-9
Tues., Wed., Sat.: 9-6
Sunday: 12 noon to 5 p.m,

&amp;

GARDENER

Tree

Fill Dirt
JIM BEINLICH

INSTRUCTION

On the North Shore. Boys and girls,
ages 4 to 12. Transportation to and
from the home.

&amp; SUPPLIES

SERVICE

Reasonable.

White

impairs the value of the advertisement,
on the advertiser's request, the
publisher will rectify
the error by publishing
the correct
ad in the next regular
issue without
additional
charge.
Aill
claims for adjustment must be made
within five days of the date of publication in which the error occurs.

BUSINESS SERVICE
ACCOUNTING

It!

:

Rolling

Lawn

COMPLETE floor and wall covering service; asphalt, vinyl asbestos, linoleum, etc.
Al Richman, ID 2-9249.

CAMPS

ads)

Windsor 5-4500

IDlewood 2-4500

for ‘Business
Monday).

We'll Charge

9

BOOKS

TUESDAY

CANCELLATION
DEADLINE
—NOON
TUESDAY
(except
Services &amp; Supplies’ ads which may be cancelled until Noon

’TIL

MORE than any other Encyclopedia, World
Book is planned for the home as well as
school. Phone HI 6-3848.
BEFORE you buy an Encyclopedia you owe
it to your children to see Compton’s Pictured Encyclopedia. ID 3-1910.

4:30 P.M.

P.M.

“Sweet

FLOOR

Rd.

FOOT sailing dinghy, double fiber glass
hull. Fast and sporty. Call ID 2-7346.
FOR sale: Thompson Sea Lancer outboard,
17 ft.; steering
wheel,
remote
control,
compass,
speedometer,
automatic
bailer,
50 H.P. Evinrude motor, generator, electric starter, heavy duty tip-up; Gator trailer. Call CE 4-2960 or CE 4-0562.
14
FOOT
aluminum
runabout,
fully
equipped, 25 horsepower motor and heavy
duty trailer, ski or cruise, perfect condition, $695. Call WI 5-4110.
$200 FOR package of (1) 15 ft. Grumman
aluminum
CANOE,
(2) 2%
horsepower
Johnson, (3) side motor bracket. All in
excellent condition. WI 5-1985.
16 FOOT
Fleetwind Arrow, class boat. of
North Shore Yacht Club, 2 sails, stainless
steel centerboard,
many
extras. Reasonable. Call ID 2-5857.

PARK NEWS
HIGHWOOD NEWS
OERFIELD REVIEW
VERNON REVIEW
THE LAKE AORESTER
LAKE BLUFF REVIEW
PY. SHERIDAN TOWER

lVorrs

Clavey

M

Responsible.

Top Soils
Gravel Drives

day
Party
Show.
Gifts;
Prizes;
Stunts.
David Echt. WI 5-0774.
MUSIC,
Magic, Clowns, Artists, anything!
Call hdo
Productions,
ID 2-1240, your
entertainment specialists.

9

In All Seven*

‘a

MAGIC.

AVAILABLE

&amp;

ID 2-6287.

FIREPLACE

Ads containing 11 lines or more are charged at the inch rate. Contract
rates for 4 or more consecutive
insertions available on request.
1 inch
Minimum.

Your Ad

Hwy.

arden

and

LANDSCAPE

REPAIRS

ENTERTAINMENT

SERVICE

HIGHLAND PARK
ID 3-0880
MON., THURS. &amp; FRI.,
SUNDAYS 10 TO 4

OPEN

line.

AND

NARCISSUS FERRARO __
Landscaping,
Yard
ance.
Experienced
after 5, ID 2-2652.

ELECTRIC

able prices. Telephone

SEAHORSE

FINANCING

Phone

30 YEARS EX P.
abe to take care of any kind of yard.
etc. Call ALpine
commercial,
dential,
post_lights,
All types of electrical work,
‘em
Reason- | 7580 or CRestwood 2-4563.
wall outlets, new circuits, era

ALCORT SAILFISH &amp; SUNFISH
GATOR &amp; MICHIGAN TRAILERS

BANK

L. Gulbrandsen.

CLAUSING

INC.

JOHNSON

patios, sidewalks, steps,

etc.

ELECTRICAL

RD.

Featuring
CRUISERS
DO RSETT

on cement

garage floors,
WI 5-4458

location

HIGHWAY &amp; CLAVEY
HIGHLAND PARK

LANDSCAPING:

CEMENT WORK

CALL COLLECT

BAldwin 3-0954 or BAldwin
EXTERIOR and interior pantiog

orating. Hubert

Johnson.

Oe

Call

2-

AA

PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING. -.
terior and exterior painting. For
quali

workmanship

by

experienced,

ial

men call W. C. Varney, WI 5-0654
MARSHAL
BJORNSON
DECORA’
Paper hanging our speciality. Interior
exterior.
Neat, honest, dependable
manship. No job too small. Pro
estimates.
Reasonable
rates.
0737, PEnsacola 6-0461.
interior
PAINTING
and _ decorating,

exterior,

natural

or

bleached

wood

ishing;
quality
workmanship.
For
mating, call Eric Schneider,
LIbe
EM 2-8592.
PAINTING
and paper hanging, re
prices; free estimates. Telephone
GALLOS, CE 4-0156.
r

PIANO TUNING
PIANOS expertly tuned,
of satisfaction or no

phone ID 3-0608.

PLANTS
FOR

&amp;

with the
charge.

$10,
y

BULBS

sale: healthy African violet plants,

and new varieties, also rooted leaves.
for appointment, Carl Rudolph,
69:
Old
Mill Road, Lake Forest, CE 4-

REMOD.
HALL

&amp; HOME
PAINTED

MAIN.
FREE

|

6 rooms painted with your paint, $195
washed

free,

$60, ALpine

6 rooms,

1-4636.

washed

and

Page H 59—D !

Rit

�ROOFING

QUALITY

HOMES

ROOFING
CO.

1-0377

Them

Days

ROTO

O-TILLING;

or Evenings

TILLING

garden and lawn _prepara-

on; spading and cultivation. Call EM:
: 26472 or CE 42846.
'O-TILLING and light grading; ground
Bos or
for seeding. Telephone
ID 2-

or ID 2-9202.

NO CHARGE
we cannot mee your TV set in your
me. Service call $4.95 only when repaired
your satisfaction.

_ NORTH SUBURBAN TV SERVICE
a
ID 3-0608
eae wna

&amp; TRAILER

SPACE

USTOM
built all aluminum single horse
trailer; ball bearing wheels; excellent con-

dition.

Call Antioch
TREE

1458.

SURGERY

ING’S TREE
EXPERTS.
Cutting, trimMing,
removing,
feeding
and
repairing,
_ power stump removing
and power spray. Fully insured and
bonded; free estimates;
seasoned
fireplace
wood.
Tele-

one ID 3-1622 or KImball 6-2292.

Y a few weeks left for winter rates on

e
h,

removal.
Fully insured.
Jim
BeinVErnon 5-1195,
N TREE EXPERTS. Trimming, feedng, gg
guying and removal. Fully
red. FR
ESTIMATES.
Telephone
ID
2-8750; ID 2-5481.
a

FOR

Inc.

sized landscaped

ALpine

1-1500

CONTRACT

_ Steel modern

SALE

home.

on

this

3 bedrms.

irplc. Dining ‘L.’ Cabinet
hs. Sun deck &amp; att. garage.

OMEFINDERS,

FOREST

fronting

on a

vil-

lage green in New England instead
of 213 wooded acres in Illinois. Of
top construction, there are 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, sep. dining room,
knotty pine kitchen, laundry room
&amp; bsmt. plus 2 car garage. A bid of
$1,750
is in to complete
family
room w/fireplace off living room.
One of a kind for
$38,500
For the relaxed,
that wants
the

fun loving family
least
amount
of

maintenance inside &amp; out, don’t
miss this custom built redwood
ranch.
Because
of
the
natural
beauty of its 1 acre wooded setting,
it requires
a minimum
of yard

interior is breathtaking.

w/maple

trim

set

against

dining room
2 car garage.

Inside this home

you will be more

than
pleased
with
the
spacious
rooms, fine detailed cabinet work
&amp;
the
best
construction.
Living
room has a raised hearth stone f.p.
Panelled
kit.
with
built-ins
&amp;

large eating space. Master bedroom
w/bath,
2 other twin sized bedrooms &amp; bath. A fourth bedroom or
den with panelling &amp; % bath has

sep. outside

entrance.

Basement

is

completely tiled &amp; conveniently divided into panelled rec. rm. w/f.p.,
laundry rm. &amp; workshop, 2 car gaA very
have

kitchen.
1%
Low 20’s.

Realtors

INVESTMENT

1 to 5, two

special

home

specialized in this area
for 11 years.

and four

South

ood.

ing Georgian duplex; opening attracnew section, 3 bedrooms, family room,
nditioned; $6000 income; live in one
it other, or two family at $28,750 each;
or buy.
{ KEMPF REALTY,
WI 5-5552
HHLAND
PARK:
new brick ranch,
3
drooms (1 paneled), large kitchen, livdining room, 1% baths, basement, gare, decorated, near schools, transportaion. $27,900. Builder, ID 2-1338.

Commons

LAKE

WI

5-1670

FOREST

Excellent location close in—4 bedrooms, 214
baths, living room with fireplace, full dining
room, study, 2%
car garage, shade trees.
House in excellent condition. Owner transferred. A buy at $31,500.
Call Ahlmann Christensen

VACANT
Lot with all improvements in close to Lake
Forest shopping and trains. $6500.
Call Ahlmann Christensen

KNOLLWOOD
6 rooms, 2 car garage, plus $3000, all electric kitchen. Nice location—Full ge
$18,000. Owner retiring—wants offer.
. 2Taay.

Baird &amp; Warner
283 E. Deerpath
Lake Forest

52

than

$20,000

but

located

in the

cen-

bE

FOR

HOMES

SALE

~ZANDER-OMMEN
REALTORS

LAKE

DEERFIELD
BRAND
NEW
TWO-STORY
COLONIAL
w/4 bdrms., 2% baths, LR w/FP, separate
DR,
kitchen
w/built-ins
and
breakfast
room; full bsmt. w/paneled rec. room &amp;
FP. Att. gar. Many extras.
$33,950
BEAUTIFUL
COLONIAL
RANCH
in desirable Briarwoods area. 3 bdrms., 2 full
baths,
LR
w/FP,
DR,
lovely’
kitchen
w/plenty of eating area, family room, att.
gar.
36,000
CHARMING
TRADITIONAL
COLONIAL
home
in beautiful wooded
area close to
schools, transportation &amp; shopping. Fencedin back yard, screen house, grape arbor,
perennial garden. Large LR w/FP, separate
DR, sun room. Kitchen w/blt.-ins, 3 twinsize bdrms., many closets, floored attic, full
bsmt. 2-car gar.
i
3 BEDROOM SPLIT-LEVEL. 2 baths, LRDR
comb.,
kitchen
w/blt.-ins
and eating
area, finished family room, nicely landscaped
corner lot, central air conditioning. Att. gar.
29,900
ALMOST NEW BI-LEVEL close to schools.
Finished family room w/crab orchard FP,
LR, kitchen w/blit.-ins &amp; plenty of eating
area,
3 bdrms.
Downstairs
powder
room
roughed in.
28,500

Looking for that quality built home with
room to grow? This spacious brick Ranch
with 22x12 finished family room, full basement,
attached
garage,
fireplace in large
living
room,
large
kitchen,
all for
just

OWNER BUILT. Immaculate 2 bdrm. ranch
on beautiful wooded lot. Large family kitchen,
w/thermopane
window,
over-sized
breezeway could be made into family room.
Plastered walls, Bella windows.
$21,500

ZANDER-OMMEN

Move in and enjoy a vacation at home in
this immaculate
3 bedroom
split-level designed for outdoor living at its best. Delightful 22x24
jalousie
porch,
patio
with
built-in barbecue, lovely fenced yard. Basement for future family room and bath, 2
car attached garage.
$27,500
Charm
and
economy
in this face _ brick
Ranch with 3 extra large bedrooms. Carpeted living room with stone fireplace, family sized kitchen, full basement with finished
recreation
room,
patio, located
on
tree lined street.
$24,000

Evanston-North

Waukegan

For the budget conscious executive with expanding
family;
4 bedroom
Split-level, 2
baths, recreation room, kitchen with builtins and eating space. 434% mortgage may
be assumed. Owner transferred.
$28,500
This has everything—including a basement
with work benches for Dad; lovely kitchen
with built-in oven and range for Mom; family room for the kids; attached garage for
the car; living
room and separate dining
room for V.I.P.’s. Besides all this—3 bedrooms and 2 baths at only
$30,500
Brick Contemporary located in Riverwoods
on about 2%
acres of wooded property.
Large panelled living room with wood burning fireplace, 3 bedrooms with 114 baths,
huge family type kitchen with built-ins, wonderful entrance hall, attached 2 car garage.
Nothing can compare to this at the price
of
29,500

HIGHLAND

PARK

For the growing family, these 8 rooms of
comfortable living in choice East Highland
Park location. 3 bedrooms, plus room on
first floor as 4th bedroom, plus enclosed
sleeping porch. Separate dining room, den,
spacious kitchen, basement, 2 car
garage,
lot 85x195. Close to everything.
28,900

Shore

Multiple
&amp;

Deerfield

OPEN

Built-ins

in bedrooms.

?

$28,500
Radical reduction on this charming
brick Bi-level. Living room overlooks wooded ravine. Separate din-

ing room.

Lot 75x180.

3 bedrooms,

2 full baths. Attached 2 car garage. Basement rec. area. 2 blocks
from grade school. Now offered at

$34,500

LAKE

FOREST
old

modified

frame

room,

on

%4

Colonial

acre

panelled

brick

corner.

library,

and breakfast

In-

dining

area in kitch-

en. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths on second
floor. Excellent location. Offered at

Board

of

Realtors

Service

Rds.

WI

Evanston-North
Listing service.

Appletree

$56,500
Brick split level on 34 acre in wood-

5-5700

ed

section.

Includes

dining

room,

panelled family room, lav. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Stone patio, and
glazed breezeway. Available now at

$59,500

John Griffith, Inc.
2 OFFICES TO SERVE YOU

Shore

SUNDAY
604

disposal.

car att. garage with storage. Love
ly patio. Carpeting, draperies, re
frig., stove, washer &amp; dryer includ
ed. Far below replacement cost at

cludes

Carr Realty Co.
Member of the
Multiple

BLUFF

Well maintained Brick Ranch. Liv
ing room-dining room comb. 30x1«
Streamlined kitchen with d.w. ant

and

of

Listing

SALE

3 bedroom Ranch built in 1956. Excellent modern kitchen with builtin oven.
Unusual
daylight
basement. Immediate
occupancy. Low
taxes.
Area
of newer
homes.
A
good value at
$26,900

Year

REALTORS
Members

FOR

John Griffith, Inc.
Realtors

Roman brick with seven delightful rooms.
3 bedroms, 1% baths, den, spacious kitchen with picture window overlooking yard,
attached garage, patio with awning, large
professionally landscaped yard. Located in
Briarwoods—walk
to
trains,
shops
and
schools. Owner will help to finance. $29,500

678 N. Western
Lake Forest

Lane

CEdar

Deerfield
It will be our pleasure to show this home
to you. It could not be in better condition.
This
split level artistically decorated
has
3 bedrms., Liv.-din. “L,’’ Kit. w/eating area
w/built-in G.E.
range/oven.
Many
extras:
Built-in TV, Radio &amp; record player, LR.
Draperies included. Nicely landscaped yard.
(rear fenced-in)
A: YALGE. @t ix
$26,500
This 3 bedrm. home is in excellent condition. Liv.-din. comb. w/frpl. Kit. w/eating
area. Full basement
w/man’s
ideal work
shop, also rec. rm. Nicely landscaped yard.
Back fenced in.
$24,500

Ave.,

12 Scranton Ave.
Lake Bluff

40485

CEdar

EVENINGS CALL
M. C. Lackie CE 4-1380
W. Paul LeRoi
N. Starosselsky CE 4-1181
Donald Kelley
Mary Griffis CE 4-0339
Geraldine Moyer
Frances Rutgers CE 4-1075
June Enos
Nancy Appleton CE 43974

LAKE

4-0816

CE

4-0104

CE

4-1082

CE

4-5132

CE

4-1117

BLUFF

John Coons, Realtor

Do you need a 3 bedrm. home under $20,000? 3 bedrms., Liv.-din. “L,’? Kit. w/eating area, C.T. bath are ready to be moved
into.
$19,950

THE NAME WITH
THE TRADE-IN PLAN

SUPERIOR
LISTING
IN BRICK
with 4
bedrooms,
2 baths,
29
ft. living
room,
f/place,
dining
room,
activity
area,
and
STUDY, GAS h/water heating. Basement, 2
car garage. SPIC &amp; SPAN
home with a
FAMILY sized kitchen, d/washer, RANGE,

Close to Schools, Transportation and shopping is where this home is located. It offers
3 bedrms., Liv. rm., Din. rm., Kit., bath
and pwd. rm. Hardwood floors and black
top drive too! A Truly nice hse. ...... $18,750

TERS,
and
other fine features. TRANSFERRED owner desires quick sale. Offered
at $31,000. Near village &amp; walking to transportation, school and beach.

623 Deerfield Road

WI 5-5100

This 3 bedrm. brick veneer ranch has many
features. Entrance hall, LR, DR, Brierhill
Stn. frpl., Kit. w/birch cabs., also pantry.
2 bdrms. have 7 ft. closets, one walk-in. 2
C.T. bath. Full bsmt., 2 car garage. Many
trees on lot 100x200.
$36,000

LAKE FOREST

Carr Realty Co.

Nearf West Park, 2-story French
Brick. 2 bedrooms, 21% baths, enclosed heated sun room, full basement, gas heat. $24,500.

Off South Green Bay Road, Stone
and Frame Ranch on % acre. 3
bedrooms, 1% baths, open porch
and

patio.

Waukegan

OPEN

Road

SUNDAYS

WI

12 TO

A GOOD
ist home with 3 bedrooms, lg.
FAMILY
KITCHEN,
lg. closets. Truly a
little GEM. $17,000 and financing available.
EARLY
AMERICAN
home
with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, f/place, dining
room, and family room, base, GAS heat.
This house has something of the UNUSUAL
a family living. Do put this on your list.
"Ss.

LAKE

DEERFIELD’S OLDEST
REALTORS
701

double sink, self turned FORMICA COUN-

5-0984

5:30 P.M.

$29,500.

FOREST

LUXURY
RED
BRICK
with 4
BEDROOMS, 3 baths, living room, dining room,
country family kitchen, f/place, wet bar.
Many lg. closets &amp; walk in closet. Full basement, 2 car garage. Wide lot wooded yard.
Carpeting &amp; drapes may remain in this custom: built home. Bedroom sizes (19, 21, 14,

br)

Near

Lake

Forest

High

School,

Contemporary Brick 1-story house
on % acre, wooded. 4 bedrooms, 2
baths,

full

tion room.

basement

with

recrea-

$37,500.

Near Lake Forest College, 2-story
Brick house on attractive fenced
corner lot. 5 bedrooms, 4 baths, library and powder room
on first
floor. $53,500.

Gilbert Rayner
5-0450

HIGHLAND PARK
Owner:
brick
bi-level
in Deerfield.
3391 Summit Avenue
er
tered walls, hardwood floors, 3 bed- |
Bo rooms,
2 baths, oil heat, fireplace, 114
Brick ranch, 3 bedrooms, 214 baths, family
garage. Woodland Park vicinity. Teleroom, fireplace, central air-conditioning, mid
r
5-2390.
30’s, owner. ID 3-0235.

ge H 60—D

Less

CE 4-1855
BR

COONS, Realtor
DEERFIELD

ter of the village is this 5 room quality
constructed Ranch built 6 years ago. Lovely
wooded lot, full basement, attached garage,
patio. Out of town owner anxious ie? fae

PIERSEN REALTY
Deerfield

HOMES

2 story Colonial with superb wooded location. Seven good sized rooms. 3 bedrooms
and
1%
baths, family room
overlooking
yard,
birch
wood
cabinets
and_ breakfast
space
in kitchen.
Separate
dining
room,
stone fireplace in living room. Full basement, attached 2 car garage.
$37,500

for _.$35,500

concrete

111 Green Bay Road, Wilmette
-1111 BR 3-3333 HI 6-6666 WI 5-5555

E

be

Liv. rm.

D NEW—BRICK &amp; FRAME COLOL Well Constructed. 7 large rooms. Liv.
Aid ee Dining room. Deluxe kitchen.
ed
brkfst. room. 3 bedrms. 214 baths.
ng thermopane doors to
patio. Full base.
Car att. gar. Large lot. $38,500.

Sunday

it should

on this well built solid

nry
Colonial
Ranch.
NOW
$29,500.
tadiant heat in floors including garage with
lividual controls for each room. Liv. 1m.
pic., dining
‘L,’ large kit. 2 bedrms. &amp;
Storms
screens. Lovely picturesque
SY

$19,900

up this wooded lane of beautiful
homes in town to reach our black
shuttered Colonial ranch. It looks
like

SALE

Brick and frame Bi-level—freshly decorated.
3 bedrooms with 2 baths (master bedroom
with bath). Wonderful kitchen with builtins, space for future family room, landscaped
Y% acre. 44%%
mortgage can be assumed.
Wonderful neighborhood of fine homes. Near
schools.
$26,900

rage.

REALTORS

PRICE

lot.

If you are from the east, you’ll feel
sure you’re back home as you drive

We
LOW

plus util-

See this lovely home at ___$36,500

Sadler &amp; Hultman

NEW

eating space

&amp; larger scr. porch. Good

CT walls. Large sep.
with f.p., family room,

e by and then call for an appointment
artistic English brick appeals to you
country-like setting on a semi-private
living room with stone fireplace, large
ig room,
ist floor bedroom,
powder
Provincial kitchen, 2 bedrooms and
c tile bath on 2nd, paneled game room
stone
fireplace.
Lot
62x215,
fenced
tiled roof, copper gutters, metal casewindows . .. A real charmer in imate condition at $31,500.
sneer nrrery
take Green
Bay Road
ty Line
Road, west 2 blocks, turn
Just 4 blocks to Braeside transporta-

ie

with

ity room

walnut

SALE

this

PH

&amp; entertaining. 3 nice sized bedrooms — one panelled, attractive

Both baths are a beautiful blend of
dark panelling &amp; colored CT tile.
The custom built kit. cabinets are

IGHLAND PARK
31 VALLEY ROAD

: Davis St,

school
&amp; transportation?
A cozy
fireplace in the large living room
with dining area is ideal for family

work. The

REAL ESTATE
HOMES

in a friendly neighborhood close to

kitchen

FOR

Wonderful 7 room Colonial—all rooms with
a little more space than you would expect
at this price. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, carpeted
living and dining combination. Built-ins in
kitchen with breakfast area, family room,
den or 4th bedroom.

INVESTMENT
OF YOUR OWN

All this for

TELEVISION

TRAILERS

JOHN

Are you a young couple with or
without a small family &amp; would
like a charming custom-built home

BURBAN ROOF TREATING SERVICE
Din

BEST
HOME

A

SHINGLES
Neglect

HOMES

Deerfield

LEhigh 7-1464
Don’t

SALE

PIERSEN REALTY

FREE ESTIMATES
ALL TYPES ROOFING
24 HR. PHONE SERVICE

CEDAR

FOR

REAL

ESTATE

Jaicks
Carmen

Berenice
Burgess Olson

WORTH
WHILE BUYS IN
LIBERTYVILLE
3
bedroom
brick
ranch,
full
basement,
knotty pine recreation room with extra bath,
carpeted living room with fireplace, beautiful 80x200 foot lot, breezeway and garage,
close to schools. $27,500.
2%
acres with 4 bedrooms, tri-level, 2 full
baths, living room with fireplace, breezeway,
2 car garage, transferred owner has reduced
price to $28,500.
Brick two
apartment,
3 bedrooms
and 2
bedrooms plus enclosed sleeping porch, full
basement with extra kitchen facilities, 3 car
brick garage, $31,500 or offer.
Purchase
this brick split level for $1000
down. If you are transferring here and have
not sold your house this is an ideal arrange-

SIX
room
house,
311 North
Bluff; price $13,000. Call CE

and

h/water

Mrs.

heat BASE

BOARD

Lindenmeyer,

H.

CE

TYP.

4-0969

D. Olson

&amp; Co.

Waukegan,

Il.

Realtors

ment.

INQUIRIES INVITED.
Many fine listings.
Kathryn

RANCH
home with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
living
room,
f/place,
(2) dining,
built-in
range, oven, hood &amp; fan, double sink. 19
ft. master bedrooms. FULL basement, touch
type electrical breaker
and
h/water
heat
BASE BOARD TYP. Situated on lg. property. $27,500—

Ressinger

Ave., Lake
4-0844,

FRED
344

N.

Milwaukee

B. WHITE
REALTY
Ave.

EMPIRE

Liverytville,

2-0200

Ill.

CONTEMPORARY RANCH
See this new 3 bedroom, 2 bath, press brick
and rough-sawn cedar ranch nearing completion at 523 Green Bay Rd., Highland
Park. Kitchen with spacious breakfast area,
attached carport, separate entry foyer, large
closets and other features. $27,500.
Al Richman, Builder
ID 2-9249
591-C Roger Williams Ave.
7

Thursday, April 13, 1

1

k
i

pi

�HOMES

HOMES FOR SALE

LAKE

FOREST

LAKE

On 11% acres of partially wooded
well
landscaped
ground,
this
5
year old brick ranch features good
sized rooms and many interesting
details.
There are 3 bdrms. with 2 cer. t.
baths, lge. L-shaped liv.-din. comb.
w. frpl. and thermopane pic. windows; patio. The kitch. is unusual-

ly

large

and

Barbecue,
eat. area.

well

equipped

incl.

combining fam. rm.
Full bsmt. has lge.

and
rec.

rm. w. bar, sep. laundry, gas heat.
An excellent buy in the mid 40’s.
oe

e

school on %
ground, this

traditional ranch house has many
charming features with its 32x17
living room with full paneled fire-

place wall, large
with dining area,
cellent

closet

utility

plaster walls, parquet floors,
to wall carpeting, patio.
Can be bought in the 30’s.

HIGHLAND
Williamsburg

white

wall

bsmt.,

gas

Down—Will Buy Any
of These!

Brick

Ranch:

Completely

ets;

Ige.

Bath;

lower

rm.
rm.

w. frpl., gas heat.
A combination of charm and spaciousness makes this house an outstanding buy in the mid 50’s.

PHELPS,

Sheridan

INC.

Rd.

ID

2-4580

HEIGHTS

down—Move

IN

like rent

Frame
Ranch:
combination _ living-dining
room, large tiled cabt. Kitchen, 2 twin bedrooms,
double Closets, Utility Room,
Oil
Hot
Air
Heat.
FULL
PRICE
Bey

Arthur C. Ullmann
Member of
Waukegan

2

IT

Living Room
with fireplace, sep.
dining room, 2 twin size bedrms.,
plus sleeping porch, can be used as

tile bath with shower.

Large family kitchen and pantry.
Stove included. Enclosed porch. 2
car garage.
Walking
distance
to

old

ranch

on

back

yard.

beautifully

Carpeting

ESTATE

included

*

®

up

to

ranch

Member

1-7300

CONVENTIONAL MORTGAGES
HOME IMPROVEMENT LOANS
LAKE FOREST
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN ASS’N
4-4200

Thursday, April 13, 1961

2

acre

car

garage

of heavily

Inter-City

REALTORS
Rd.

PARK

VACANT

‘houses’

BUSINESS

for

income.’

CORNER

Real

ID

2 and
sell.

plus

2

Estate

2-8077

3%

baths,

modern

All large

rooms,

plus sep.

2-car garage with pan.
attached.
Immediate

Lake

Forest

modern

kitchen,

FA

$27,500.

heat.

screened

residence shows
for the best tra-

but en-

Joys an attractively landscaped 5 acre setting of tall trees, many shrubs, a formal
garden and surrounded by a broad expanse
of meadow.
The beautiful separate living
and
dining
rooms
and_
the
exceptionally
large screened porch offer ample spaciousness for extensive entertaining as well as
the joy of pleasant family living. There are
4 master bedrooms, 2 maid’s rooms, 3%
baths, library, gun room and a 2 att. gar.

Real

6-2900

Estate Co.
AMbassador

ID

PARK

2-0880

GRACIOUS

Idlewood Realty

Forest
ID

2-6776

Central

Can

Show

You

Meeting

Several

Your

Houses

Requirements

residence designed around

NPy

Pena

a

silo. Over eight and a half woode

ID

2-1212

acres.

LISTING

arate

dining

Charles

bath,

room,

kitchen,

full

modern

2 bedrooms,

basement,

new

St.
1 C.T.

Mueller

furnace, basement apartment with
paneled,
tiled-floor
living
room,
twin-sized bedroom, kitchen, powder room.
Nice
landscaping,
detached
garage,
low
taxes,
good

neighborhood.

Realtors
St. Johns

Ave.

ID

ABSENTEE OWNER
SACRIFICES
5 MILES NORTHWEST OF DEERFIELD
Contemporary 3} bdrm. ranch on a % acre
including 4 major appliances, $15,900.

Viking Realty
Realtors Since
Deerfield Rd.

Farm house, lovely views
of apple orchard.

in midst
$69,50

ONE

OF

Five

bedroom,

three

and

Colonial

with

a

bath,

17

FIVE

dining room
derful yard.

BEDROOM

with

HOU; SE

one

ha

lovely

fireplace.

big

Won$55,00

privileged

of

to

ONE OF 10 SIX BEDROOM HOUSES
Lovely
six bedroom,
five bat!
stone residence. Easily maintaine
but with large general living area
U

a:

5-5300

ONE, OF 16 SEVEN PLUS BEDROOM
HOUSES
:
Entrancing older home in exce
laces
east location. Lovely firep

DO YOU PREFER
STRAVINSKY TO CHOPIN?
PICASSO TO REMBRANDT?
are

ho

location.

‘ $85,0

1946
WI

L. Ringer
We

remodeled

eastern

LAKE FOREST
acre
178x245—$3,000

4 BEDROOMS — 2 BATHS — MID 30’s
Owner
transferred offers much below reproduction cost his multi-level 1958 home.
Landscaped half acre, beautiful rec. rm., 2
car att. gar., covered patio, E-Z terms.

masterpiece

completely

excellent

2-1484

IN DEERFIELD
ON
1% ACRE
SITE
PRICE WAS
$24,500—NOW
IS $21,500
3 bdrm. brick and frame ranch, 20’ kitchen,
separate din. rm., bsmt., att. gar.

826

in

$22,900.

Dorsey Husenetter
723

bath,

offer

this

contemporary

ar-

¢ nee

chitecture in a magnificent setting
of century-old trees. See this 5 bed-

room, 34

bath home designed by a

foremost
architect
modern living.

for

gracious,
Parking

L. Ringer
457

Central

For

ID

Space
Our

Available

Customers

2-6600

REAL

OPPORTUNITY

Roomy
and handy to schools, no chauffering necessary. Ranch with 3 bedrooms,
1% baths. 16x22 living room with fireplace
and large dining area, attached garage and
professionally landscaped. Aluminum storms
and screens.
Quick possession.
Call Mrs.
ROESING, CE 4-2665.

BEAUTIFUL

STONE

LEONARDI
ID 3-1000

John

F.

6-1855
3-1855

Hart, Shaw &amp; 4
Company

WORK

On this artistic 2 bedroom
home
at 809
Broadview, Ravinia. Tile bath, living room
with fireplace; separate dining room. Finished
basement,
gas
heat,
combination
storms and screens, 1 car garage, beautifully
landscaped.

AGENCY
1927
Leonardi

Richard

Mrs.
Ruth

B.

Hart,

President

C. Howard ReQua, Vice President
Stuart
E.

R. French

Milton

Henderson

McN.

Kenmore

T:

Tho:
\

260 E. Deerpath
Lake Forest, CEdar

135 S. La Salle”
4-1000

RAndolph

6-71

ID 2-0596

MORTGAGE
LOANS
CONVENTIONAL
OR FHA
For prompt,
personal,
service
when
you
buy—build or refinance in the Lake Forest
Lake Bluff area—See us.

Baird &amp; Warner

f

COMBINED
BUSINESS AND
RESIDENTIAL USE. Comfortable 4 bedroom home,
large living room, dining room and kitchen
at 838
Central
Avenue,
Highland
Park.
New oil hot water heat, very good basement. Perfect location to operate business in
your home.

x

Members

of the Evanston-North

Multiple

Listing

Shore

Service

FIRST NATIONAL BANK
LAKE FOREST CE 4-5100

Page H 61—D 53.
/

ORCA

—

porch.

frame

Ave.

Est.

Hillcrest
SHeldrake

That

Deerfield—2 story brick and stucco,
detached garage, living room, sep-

A

LIVING

An
acre
of
grounds
beautifully
landscaped with a house to match.
Main
floor has all the accoutrements
of gracious
living with
3
wood
burning
fireplaces.
Master
bedroom, 27 ft. x 24 ft. with fireplace and dressing area and private bathroom, 3 other bedrooms
with 2 baths, maid’s quarters on
3rd floor. Garage
apartment.
All
this in northeast Highland
Park.
Low 70’s. Call ID 2-2567 or agent.

576 Lincoln Avenue
Winnetka, Illinois

Excellent

2-5540

RANCH

All this for less than $20,000
3 bedrooms
Aluminum storms and screens
Wood burning fireplace
Carpets on tiled floors throughout
T.V. Aerial
Tiled kitchen

Are

H. and R. Anspach

SEE

Sears

Odds

HART SHAW &amp; COMPANY

studio apt.
possession.

A well maintained
6-room
home
in convenient central location with
3 bedrooms,
1%
baths, cer. tile

Find!

architecture,

The

$47,500.

WEST OF
Choice
wooded

DEERFIELD
OPEN SUNDAY 2 TO 5
1540 CRABTREE LANE
(West on Deerfield Road to Wilmot, north
to Woodland,
east to Crabtree.)
Custom
built NEW ENGLAND COLONIAL with 4
LARGE BEDROOMS. This lovely one owner home features a 25 foot cherry panelled
living room with fireplace, separate dining
room,
country
kitchen
with
knotty
pine
cabinets, range, refrigerator and dishwasher.
Huge
panelled recreation room
with fireplace, large utility room
with appliances,
outside entrance, professional dark rm. This
homeis of superb construction and has been
beautifully maintained. A completely charming home with Early American decor. Wooded lot 75x202. Priced at $42,500 including
like new carpeting.
STORM REALTORS
HI 6-7180

bedrm.

Earhart &amp; Company
HIGHLAND

AL

Lake

with

one

1899 Sheridan

REALTOR
ID 2-5222

on

Glencoe
5-1971

GOOD INCOME from 8 a artments,
3 rooms each, low taxes. Priced to

Hillcrest

or 3rd

property.

$48,50

Ann Andruss

600 N. Western
CE

wooded

den

Realtor Referral
Service

LIBERTYVILLE

prices

plus

porch

©

We have several countryside homes in the
beautiful area just east of town. They vary
in style and size, are located on an acre or
more of select property. One has swimmin

pool;

Colonial

and

find all
$19,500.

AREA—$26,500

2 bedrms

VE

HIGHWOOD

This white brick quality
not only a genuine feeling

in price. Where can you
CS TOP GOI oc.

810 East Illinois Road
$49,500
207 North Maple Court
56,000
161 North Sheridan Road
57,500
120 North Sheridan one
63,500
also
Choice % acre vacant home-site in aera of
finest homes. Wooded, convenient to everything including the Lake
$24,000

1-3430

ditions of COLONIAL

year

in

LAKE FOREST
Spring Selections

bedrooms,

NEW

Market

HIGHLAND

IN

public and parochial schools, shopping and transportation. Price

5

SUNDAY

4

kitchen.

463

3 bedroom house with living room, kitchen,
full basement and 2 car garage. Close to
schools. Priced $18,500.

Service
WI 5-3200

PARK

3rd bedrm.,

Road
AL

Baracani

REALTOR
Multiple Listing
Road
Deerfield

BRICK RANCHES
JUST LISTED!

HIGHLAND

On

PARK

INCOME
PROPERTY—2
family
stucco,
plus 5 room house on large lot, ail in good
Soe
close to schools and transportaion.

COME OUT AND
SEE THESE TODAY.

216

Glencoe
2-7873

in

1582 Arbor St. (Corner Berkeley-Arbor). Ex% acre corner lot. 3 twin
quisite brick ranch home, ideal for couple wooded
wishing luxury, charm, convenience. There size bedrooms,
1 ceramic tile bath
are 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, a very attractive
family room, screened porch, attached ga- with shower. Modern kitchen with
rage,
everything
modern
and
immaculate
large breakfast area. Circular turn
lus central air conditioning. Owner relocato9|around driveway. Brick barbeque
ing, will sell well below coat at
$37,5

SEE

5-0236

Lang Real Estate
712
AM

DEERFIELD

HIGHLAND PARK
Open Sunday Afternoon

VErnon

A home
with charm
and personality.
10
room brick with 5 bedrooms,
3%
baths,
near
lake,
schools,
transportation,
lovely
grounds. Exceptional value. In the 30’s.

Slashed

Balance

in-

urious master suite w. dressing
and bath. Spacious pnld. rec.

Bldg.

HIGHLAND

Brick
Ranch;
Comb.
living-dining
room,
cabt. Kitchen, 2 twin bedrooms, plenty of
Closets, full basement, 14% car gar. on Landscaped 65x155 ft. lot. Near school. ALL
THIS MAY BE YOURS FOR ........
,000.

$1000

incl. lux-

Theater

New

Central

3 cer. baths,

Glencoe

PRICE REDUCED on this beautiful home in best East location with

INC.

Prices

Price

REALTORS

Rec-

Here is the
buy of the month!

on 78 ft.

heat.

J-H Kahn

NORTHBROOK

Colonial

frame

2 FOR |

EASY TO KEEP
SPLIT LEVEL.
3 good
bedrms., 244 baths. Unusually large dining
L with slidewall to lovely patio. Family
rm. Family size kitchen with eating area
and bit.-in oven and range. $33,500.

Face
Brick
Ranch:
Living
room;
Dining
room; lge. Family Kitchen; 3 twin Bedrooms;
lots of Closets; full Basement; Oil Hot air
Heat} Tat TOOKSO Fes ata
cis cciecinad: $19,400

sunny din. rm., mod. kitch., pan.
brkfst. rm., scr. porch, 2 car gar. On
2nd floor are 4 spacious
family

1925

level, unfinished

FOR SALE

12 CLOVER

has entr. hall, lge. liv. rm. w. frpl.,

PAUL

conditioned,

Brick &amp; Frame Bi-Level: Insulated Aluminum siding; Living room; Birch cabt. Kitchen-Dining;
3 twin Bedrooms; plenty Clos-

PARK

Beautiful brick Colonial on 100
ft. well landscaped lot. 1st. floor

and

Air

HOMES

SALE

NEW LISTING. YOUNG
AND
BEAUTIFUL white brick Colonial home on a lovely
wooded lot. 1ST FLOOR DEN, pwdr. rm.
adjoins. NEW G.E. KITCHEN, 3 bedrms.,
2 baths. Screened porch. Forced air heat.
Be sure to SEE at $39,500.

8 CLOVER

An excellent buy in the 30’s.

bdrms.

AVE.

Gas Hot air Heat. Living &amp; Dining room;
lge. birch cabt. Kitchen; 3 twin Bedrooms;
lots of Closets; 120x135 ft. Lot. PRICED
AT
$18,500

cludes carpeting, drapes, stove.
This home has all the charm and
livability of Williamsburg Colonial.

East

SPECIALS”

714 QUASSEY

FOR

J-H Kahn Realty

AREA:

ARLINGTON

lot; large trees, patio and stockade
fence. 3 bedrms., 2 baths, lge. liv.
rm. w. frpl., din. rm., spac. fam.
rm. and mod. kitch.

Full

$1,500

room,

warm air gas heat.
Special
Features: aluminum
storms
and
screens
throughout,

Attractive

“SPRING

modern kitchen
3 bedrooms, ex-

space,

BLUFF

HOMES

reation Room; 4th Bedroom and 2nd Bathroom roughed in. Oil Hot air Heat. $18,450

®

Close to L.F. high
acre of well wooded

FOR SALE

.

ve

te

�bah:

tay

HOMES

NEW

DEERFIELD-BRIARWOODS

LISTING

right

in.

Newly

decorated.

Open Sunday 1 to 5—900 Westcliffe. Stun:
ning ranch in exclusive section; close to
everything;
3 bedrooms,
2 baths,
family
room;
immaculate condition. Owner
retiring—wants offer.

ly 2814’ living room and dinroom with beautiful butternut
lace wall. 2 large bedrooms
excellent
ss
stove,

fast

closets. Kitchen inrefrigerator
and

nook.

Screened

THE

KEMPF

Lin-

Want
GROTH

Low

upkeep.

Near

Ave.

THLAND
ay

ID

PARK
OPEN

INDIAN
38

$29,950.00

Provincial

kitchen

with

family
dining

dishwasher,

» oven
and
range
top,
separate
ility room, carpeted living room, dinin;
and
master
bedroom.
Vinyl in all
x rooms included. '2 car garage. Over
square ft. living area.
ons—Edens

highway

north

to

CO.

50 Yrs.

PARK

Green

HILL

Bay

REALTY,

Winnetka

INC.
HI

6-0900

HIGHLAND PARK HIGHLANDS
for the executive with limited cash. Now
you can own a deluxe 7 room bi-level with
family room and, fireplace, 2 baths, 2 car
attached
garage,
large
wooded
lot, with
payments less than rent.
$1,000 down
Edens to 22, right to Summit, left to Hill,
right to:
3267 Western Avenue
Open Saturday and Sunday 11 to 6.

per month

‘ooms, 2 tile baths,
walnut
large living room with bay,

Home?

LIKE YOUNG
2 year old bi-level. Landscaping is in. 7
rooms. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths.
test kitchen
has built-in oven and eating area. Lower
level has family room. A well cared for
home. Many playmates on quiet cul-de-sac.

RIDGE

LEDERER

$4500 down—$178.53

a

Co. For Over

HIGHLAND

FOR THE FIRST TIME
EXECUTIVE RANCH HOMES
INCLUDING 100 FT. LOTS

AT

Build

CONSTRUCTION

2-1484

SURREY
DAILY

GRETA

5-5552

We
help you completely.
We
draw your
plans, price them and help with financing.
Unless you are thoroughly satisfied, there
is no obligation to you. Homes from $18,000
to $80,000.
For information call WI 5-5998.

Realtors
Johns

to

Reputable

Dorsey Husenetter
;

WI

porch

and Immaculate
Conception
ools. Low, low price .... $19,500.

garage.

REALTY

Berke-

lerkeley west to Ridge rd., Ridge rd.
84.

LO

Sat. &amp;

Highland

Eves VE 5-0343

Sun.

TOO

COMMERCIAL
RESIDENTIAL
;
VACANT
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
CALL

ID

stone,

lerwood

values

Dutch

Forest.

easant living
om, separate

nd powder

in the

Colonial

Park

The

ist

market

in

floor

2nd

floor

today

popular
has

has

a

3

bed-

yoms
and a bath including a master’s room
ha fireplace. There is a full basement,
‘Screened
porch, oil heat andi a 2 car
garage.
e house is vacant and the

f town

UO,

owner

OELZER

is anxious to sell. Price

and WILDE

REALTORS
iim

Street

HI

NCOLNSHIRE—NEW

6 5544

LISTING

mporary with 4 bedrms., 2 baths. Fam.
fpl. has built in bar-B-Q. Huge liv.
with
cathedral
ceilings.
Thermopane
ows throughout. Exquisite draperies &amp;
uc
ting Lovely wooded lot. A dream
priced in the 40’s,

INLAN &amp; TYSON. Inc.
rfield Rd.

Deerfield

750

Sundays

HIGHLAND

10

to

5

PARK

ou’ll feel right at home in this brick Coin
fine neighborhood.
3 bedrooms,
baths, living room with fireplace, sepdining room, large screened porch facely yard.
Only $29,900

~ SEYMOUR GRAHAM
REALTORS
rity

Ave.

HO

Glencoe

5-0655

]
PARK:
3 bedroom house on
wooded acre in quiet area. 1% baths, full
ment,
gas heat, low 20’s. 2222 Higho0r
Road. ID 2-3829.

PageH 62—D 54
"

74030

KIMBALL ROAD
possession. Brick

and

314

baths,

large

kitchen with built-ins; a
lot 80x200
feet. $60,000.
2-7281 for appointment to

see.

room with a, fireplace, sundining room, modern kitchen

room,

SP

5 bedrooms,

modern
wooded
Call ID

rman’s fabulous showplace. Built in
of cedar and crab orchard stone, with
on space.
step-down
living room
is
immering
antique
walnut
floors,
d ceiling, handsome fireplace, 4 bed, 3 full and % baths, 3 car garage,
; meceered porch with stone barbeque
colorful tile patio, louvered breezeway,
ed kitchen. 1 floor living with exn of 1 bedroom 23x23 and bath on
oor offering utmost privacy. 257 foot
, approximately 1 acre ground maslandscaped. Additional land availcluded country living, city conveni1 block to bus, 5 minutes to Northexpressway at Cumberland
and Hig10 minutes to O’Hare National, Price
00.
Call
owner’s
representatives,
- oy
maa
3-7703,
Mrs.
Cella,

best

TREES

2-0212

851
Immediate

ID 2-2682

brick

MANY

Area

family room, attached 2 car garage,

Highland

the

Lake

Cut some for living room fireplace in this
luxury remodeled
barn. 4 bedrooms,
3%
baths,
%
acre Ravine site, sharing own
beach;
$49,500,

Real Estate Service
FRANK PEERS
FRANK ANDERSON

this

Park

EXCEPTIONAL BUY
IN DEERFIELD
Executive
offers charming 4 year old, 6
room brick ranch home on 1/3 acre wooded
corner
lot in exclusive
Briarwoods;
very
near primary school. 3 Bedrooms, separate
dining room,
large picture window
living
room, 114 baths, many closets, full parquet
flooring, unique
3 way fireplace, covered
patio, 2 car garage; kitchen equipped with
washer, dryer, built in oven and range, dishwasher,
disposal,
16 cubic
foot
estinghouse refrigerator-freezer. Low 30’s. Can assume 5% mortgage. WI 5-5874.
DEERFIELD:
Lovely
American
Colonial
home, reduced to Mid 20’s. Fully landscaped, within walking distance to stores,
schools, and train. 3 bedrooms, 1% baths.
ad
anxious to sell. Telephone WI 5HIGHLAND PARK—BY OWNER
5 room
home
on deadend
street. Living
room with fireplace,
dining room, kitchen,
2 bedrooms, bath, full
ment, oil heat,
combination windows, garage, $16,000. Low
down payment. ID 2-8396.

HIGHLAND PARK
413 RIDGE
Owner offers custom built 6 room corner
ranch, full. basement, gas heat, $1500 down;
in low $20’s. WI 5-2419.
$19,900 ON YOUR LOT
Spacious
3 bedroom,
2 bath press _ brick
and cedar ranch, 523 Green Bay, Highland
Park. Al Richman, builder, ID 2-9249.
HIGHLAND PARK BY OWNER
3 bedrooms, 1% baths, basement, screened
porch, garage, near shopping, schools, transportation. Built 1949, Ravinia area, priced
for immediate sale at $20,500. ID 2-4478.
CAPE Cod: on wooded acre, in Riverwoods,
living room, dining room, bath, den or
bedroom, fireplace, breezeway, 2 car gatage; 2 large bedrooms,
bath on second.
Owner. $27,500. 2735 Forest Glen Trail.
WI 5-1511.
LAKE
FOREST;
proud
Norman
home.
Built of imperishable
stone and beam;
needs interior decorating. Must be sold.
Open Sunday 2 to 5, 580 Greenvale. Sudolnik Realty, MAjestic 3-1302.
FOR sale by owner, nearly new 3 bedroom
2 bath ranch; fireplace; carpeted, draped;
full
basement
with
finished
recreation
room; gas heat. Lake Bluff Terrace, under
$30,000. CE 4-5713.
NEW brick bi-level, 3 bedrooms, 144 baths,
panelled
family
room,
fabulous
closet
space, modern kitchen, walking distance
to trains, shopping and schools, mid 20’s.
Telephone ID 2-8597.
SOUTHEAST Lake Forest; new 7 room 2
story COLONIAL: 4 bedrooms, large family room;
ready in 4 months,
$39,500.
Light Builders, Carl F. Wagner, UN 91266 or call Gilbert Rayner Real Estate,
CE 40382.
LAKE
BLUFF
East: by owner,
excellent
buy in low 20’s; 3 bedroom frame, basement,
hot water heat, modern
paneled
kitchen, built-ins, carpeted living’ and dining room, large wooded corner lot. CE
4-3638.
HIGHLAND PARK SHERWOOD FOREST
Attractive 3 bedroom bi-level, paneled Tec.
room, 1% baths, gas heat, carpeting, appliances, patio. Beautifully landscaped wooded
lot. Exceptional value. In 20’s. ID 2-9007.

FOR

SALE

VACANT PROPERTY_

—

HIGHLAND
PARK,
2 bedroom
ranch,
stone and brick, in Sunset Terrace, near
town, well built; patio, carport,
5 years

Nice sized lots availab
sirable locations in

_ | APARTMENTS
TO RENT (U

immediately in deHighland Park, from

$3000 to $6500.

MORE THAN
AN APARTMENT

old; good buy. $18,900 ID 2-4422.

LOVELY
spacious 7 room brick English
Tudor, 3 extra large bedrooms, 2% baths,
full
basement,
attached
garage,
near
trains and schools, wall to wall carpeting
included, a terrific buy. Call owner, ID2-4387 or ID 2-5914 after 5.
HIGHLAND
PARK
Highlands,
bright
3
bedroom, 2 bath ranch, basement, garage,
storm
windows,
doors;
unusual terracepatio;
close
to school,
transportation;
owner transferred, $30,500. ID 3-1579.
OWNER will sacrifice 3 bedroom Highland
Park ranch, 2%
baths, air conditioned,
gas heat, completely
carpeted,
built in
kitchen,
basement,
panelled
recreation
room, garage. Must be seen to be appreciated. Mid 30’s. ID 2-8368.
EAST
LAKE
BLUFF
LUXURY
SHRIMP
BRICK
COLONIAL
RANCH. 2 car brick garage, finest appointments, large entry hall, 22 foot living room,
13 foot dining room, 2 full baths, 1 off master bedroom, 2 large bedrooms, large den
or 3rd bedroom, family size kitchen, dishwasher, 220 wiring, baseboard heat, carpeting, custom drapes, large closets, storage.
Available now. Call CEdar 4-5237.
HIGHLAND
PARK’S'
FINEST
EAST
AREA.
3 bedrooms,
2 ceramic luxury
baths, 214 car garage, 1800 square feet of
living in this new custom designed ranch
&gt;
a
in maples and oaks. 30’s. ID 2HOUSE
for sale by owner;
3 bedroom;
large wooded lot; Northmoor subdivision.
By appointment, CE 4-0247.
RAVINIA
New 3 bedroom, 2 bath, brick and cedar
ranch, conveniently located
at 523 Green
Bay Road. Kitchen with spacious breakfast
area. Attached carport. Open. $27,500. Al
Richman, Builder, ID 2-9249.
;
HIGHLAND PARK
Brick ranch on corner lot, gas heat, large
living, dining room, fireplace, 2 large bedrooms, 1%
baths, equipped kitchen, utility
room, enclosed breezeway, attached 114 car
garage, patio. By owner, ID 2-8849—1690
Midland Avenue.
COACH
house, by lake, French Provincial
8/10ths wooded acre, private road, slate
roof, copper gutters, modern kitchen, 5
bedrooms,
greenhouse,
attached,
natural
gas heat, best East Ravinia section, in the
40’s, immediate occupancy, sacrifice, appointment only. ID 2-8074.
HIGHLAND PARK Elm Place District. 1768
4
Clifton,
Sunset
Terrace.
ID
2-4853.
year old tri-level, 2100 sq. ft. living area,
3 bedrooms, 17x30 family room, 2% baths,
2 fireplaces, 11 closets, gas heat, air-conditioned, thermopaned.
STERLING
silver flatware. Beautiful pattern, service for 12. Many serving pieces.
Valued $800. Like new. ID 3-0196.
DEERFIELD: Ideal 2 bedroom brick ranch,
attached
garage,
well
worth
inspection.
Carpeting, fireplace, screen porch, base\ ment, gas heat, stove, refrigerator. Reasonable. 927 Woodward.
WI
5-0531.
LINCOLNSHIRE-—1% year old, 3 bedroom
Colonial ranch, den, electric kitchen, two
baths, attached two-car garage, one-half
acre, low forties. WI 5-4290.

VACANT

PROPERTY

Highland Park
BUILDING

THIS

Guy
226

Green

tracts;

black

top

price.

drive.

Only

REAL

For further

BUSINESS

HIGHLAND

PARK

5-3650
Realtors

LOCATION

6%4 ACRES, 1 ACRE ZONING,
PRICES, HEAVILY WOODED,
SCHOOLS.

REALTORS

Williams

EAST

LAKE

2

bedrooms,

fully

2-6776

FOREST

&amp; TYSON,

1571 Sherman Ave.,
UNiversity 4-2600
BRoadway

Inc.

Evanston
ALpine 1-6700
3-3750

(Unfurnished)

HOUSE

114

equipped _

baths,

gas

heat,

kitchen,

living

room,
dining
room,
tiled floors,
central TV antenna, indv. dryer and
washer, private garage, near trains
and
shopping.
ID
2-6790,
ID
2-

6791.

HIGHLAND PARK
OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 1-5

ESTATE
BUS TO

ID

RENT

Modern
Air Conditioned

Braeside

28-42

Area

Blackhawk

Road

2 bedroom apartments, individually controlled heat, private parking.

Y block to train. $165.

A very choice piece of vacant property. 2
plus acres or 4-¥% acre lots. Nicely wooded
and in an excellent area.
Call Mrs. Ludwig.

QUINLAN

TO

HIGHLAND PARK
Ravinia Area

Idlewood Realty
Roger

STUDIOS

GLENCOE: store, 343 Park, AA-1 location,
heated, 11x68 or will remodel to 22x68.
Telephone VE 5-3300.
UNIQUE
and
quaint
shop
near Market
Square in Lake Forest; also living quarters if needed. CE 4-0425.
OFFICE, 27x12,
located at 666 Waukegan
Rd., Deerfield, $125 a month with good
lease. Telephone WI 5-9841.
STORE,
1931 Sheridan Road in the heart
of
Highland
Park’s
at
a
Center.
Laser
Company, WHitehall
44318.
STORE 18x40 heated; Offices 1 to 6 room
suites; paved as
for tenants and customers. 460
ntral Ave., Phones ID 20150—ID 2-2358.
DEERFIELD:
803
Waukegan
Road.
2nd
floor, office or shop, heated, electricity
furnished, $60 per month. WI 5-5300.

the

You may select from one of 5 lots on a
beautiful
dead-end
city maintained
street
with all underground utilities. This property
is about a block from the lake and is heavily wooded. Some Ravine lots.

653

STORES, &amp;
TO RENT

Draper &amp; Kramer
30 W. Monroe

Financial

6-8600

GLENCOE
Wooded lot in one of Lake Bluff’s most
desirable areas, just a half block from the
lake. 100x125 or can be divided. Priced for
immediate sale at $11,000.

GOELZER
790 Elm

Street

and WILDE

REALTORS

HI

6-5544

BEL-AIR

—

DEERFIELD,
900 Beverly, 90 foot lot in
finest section of Briarwoods subdivision.
Terms or will trade towards house. HItlcrest 6-1646.
IDEAL home site, approximately 3 acres;
Onwentisa
road
near Green
Bay.
CE 4-2672.

APARTMENTS

DELUXE
AIR-CONDITIONED
TOWN.
HOUSE—5
rooms, 1% baths, living room
dining area, equipped kitchen and full basement. Beautiful garden. $225 ~er month.
VE

5-2565.

Eves.

&amp; week

ends

VE

5-0343.

=

Small
3 room
unfurnished,
English basement, very close in, rent $75 a month, 2
months in advance. For further information
call:
1896

ANCHOR REAL ESTATE
Sheridan Rd.
Res. Ph., ID 2-0037

Deerfield

Garden

Apartments

Deerfield
Modern 2 bedroom apartments. Excellent location, convenient to schools, shopping and
transportation. Ceramic tile baths. Cabinet
kitchen with refrigerator, disposal, built-in
oven and range. Off-street parking. Decorate
to suit.

QUINLAN

High volume gallonage modern 2 bay station in Highland Park, Illinois. —
Telephone SPring 4-4836; evenings HEmpsted 7-0588.

OFFICES,

IRVIN A. BLIETZ
ALpine 1-7800

735

STANDARD OIL
WILL LEASE

TOWN
WI

EAST

OPPORTUNITY

Presently operating major oil, 2 bay service
station for lease in Highland Park actual
inventory. Dealer has to give up location
due to health.
For information telephone DElta 6-0701

details call:

Rd.

WANTED

OPPORTUNITY

L. Ringer
666 Waukegan
Deerfield, Ill.

ESTATE

Enjoy your breakfast on your own
private patio and garden. Spacious
rooms and closets. Ideal for couple
or small family desiring maximum
freedom
from_
responsibility.
3
blocks to lake, transportation and
shopping. $225 per month, including
garage.
PARKWOOD
VILLAGE,
Linden and Central Avenues, Highland Park. Cali for an appointment.

2-3933

NEEDED
6-10 acres of VACANT
property, or with
house on it for a day school (zoning permitted).
Please
call Ann
Caraway,
HIIlcrest 6-7100.

a few

for

ID

HIGHLAND
PARK:
Northwest improved
wooded lot, 100x400. Ready for building
with 2 car garage included. Reasonable.
ID 2-3829.
HIGHLAND
PARK:
110x150 foot vacant
lot on Bloom Street. Reasonable price.
Best offer over $5,000. ID 2-5266.
LAKE
FOREST,
WHISPERING
OAKS;
choice wooded 100 ft. x 200 ft. lots on
Linden or Cherokee, $99.50 a foot; will
build 7 room 2 story COLONIAL
on
above lots, $45,000. Light Builders, Carl
. Wagner,
UN
9-1266 or call Gilbert
Rayner Real Estate, CE 4-0382.

APARTMENTS

SPRING?

comparable

REALTOR
Highwood

Bay

See this beautifully wooded property on a PRIVATE road. ACRE
left—nothing

Viti

©

Deerfield

&amp; TYSON,

Road

WI

HIGHLAND

COUNTRY

CLUB

Inc.
5-3750

PARK

APARTMENTS

OPEN
SUNDAY
1-5
AVAILABLE AT
EXCELLENT VALUE
680 Roger Williams
Convenient to schools, shopping, train
2 floor townhouse layout combines the best
features of your own home with the convenience of an apartment. Two bedrooms,
1% baths, living room, dinette, kitchen, private basement. Newly decorated.
VErnon 5-0344, Sat., Sun., Eves. VE 5-0343

VICTORIAN—GLENCOE—4 HUGE RMS.
Ist FLOOR, HEAT FURNISHED
PRIVATE ENTRANCE AND PORCH
Natural fireplace, 26 foot living room. Foyer. 1
room 24 feet long, other can be
either bedroom or dining room, new electric
kitchen. with
Frostfree
refrigerator-freezer,
tremendous closets, 1 block C &amp; NW
station, bus and shopping. Like living in a park.
Parking
and
anitor
service
included.
May 1. $200 range. ID 2-3607.
DEERFIELD,
cozy 1 bedroom, tile bath,
large
living
room,
combination
dinin
room and kitchen, front and rear encl
entrances, automatic gas heat, stove, refrigerator, garage; couple. WI 5-0167 evenings.
HIGHLAND PARK: 3 room apartment with
a
private
entrance,
near
schools.
’ Prefer couple. 614 Onwentsia.
LAKE FOREST, 5 room, bath and garage,
$100. Call CE 4-2687.
1 BEDROOM,
4 room deluxe apartment,
available May
1, couple only, no pets,
$150 per month, includes heat, enclosed
porch, and garage. WI 5-5122.
3144 ROOM
second floor apartment
with
garage, woman preferred. Call after 5:30
p.m. ID 2-4334.
5 ROOM
flat in Highwood near business
district. Telephone ID 2-6975.
HIGHWOOD:
adult family, 4 bedrooms;
large, modern, attractive, cabinet kitchen,
built-in stove; spacious dining area; living
room; ceramic bath with shower; second
floor flat; references required. Write Box
C-50,
c/o
Highland
Park
News.
MODERN
3 room
apartment, all utilities
furnished, garage included. ID 2-7002.
DEERFIELD: Large 5 room apartment on
1st floor of 2 flat building, heat furnished, garage included.
Apartment
adjoins Jewett
Park,
1 block from town
be train, rent $150 per month. WI 5ONE and two room apartments in convenient Highwood location. Leonardi Agency,
LAKE BLUFF, new 2. bedroom townhouse
apartment; ceramic tile bath with shower;
individual basement
with shower;
stove
and
refrigerator
furnished;
$150
per
month. CE 4-0468.
VERY
pleasant
5
room
apartment,
2nd
floor, living room, dining room, kitchen,
2 bedrooms, bath. Large screened porch,
basement.
Attic storage space, close in
location. Available about June Ist. Adults
only, please. Call CE 4-1174.
ROOM
apartment
near transportation,
private entrance, $125, stove, refrigerator,
2 car garage, heat and gas included, adults,
no pets. ID 2-5229,
3 BEDROOM apartment in Deerfield, living
room, dining room, kitchen, bath, stove,
garage,
basement,
heat
included,
near
transportation, shopping; $125. WI 5-0654.
GARAGE
APARTMENT
3 room garage apartment in northeast Highland Park. Paneled room and kitchen Ist
floor; 2 rooms and bath 2nd floor. Partially furnished,
including stove, refrigerator,
beds, couch and breakfast set. Heat, hot
water,
gas and electricity included.
$125.
Telephone ID 2-4580.
6 ROOM
apartment, 2nd floor, large cabinet kitchen, tile bath, garage, yard, near
town, schools and parks. ID 2-5796.
LAKE
FOREST,
modern
2 bedroom
duplex, 1%
baths, garage, range, refrigerator. CE 4-1083.
DEERFIELD:
well maintained Townhouse.
2 bedrooms, ceramic tile bath and powder
room,
living room,
kitchen with eating
space, full basement, ideal location, $155
a month.
PIERSEN
REALTY,
agents,
WI 5-1670.
Duplex apartment: Deerfield, 2 story livingdining “L.’’ 3 bedrooms,
bath, full basement. 1 block from town. $175.
CARR REALTY
701 Waukegan Road
Deerfield
WI 5-0984

IN_Highwood,

3 room, 2nd floor apartment,

Private entrance,
ID 2-2755.

basement

for

Thursday, April 1

laundry.

�SC

ox

FA

Se n

ft

ARTMENTS TO RENT (Unfurnished)

DEERFIELD:

1st

floor,

heated,

2

bed-

rooms, living room, dining L, cabinet kitchen, tile bath, modern 2 year old building,
basement storage room, parking area. Available May 1, $145.
DONALD
N. ANDERSON
665 Vernon Ave.
VE 5-2113
Glencoe
HIGHLAND
PARK:
5 room 2 bedroom
duplex apartment, near town and transportation,
newly
decorated,
$135
per
month including heat. ID 2-5254.
GLENCOE:
343 Park Avenue, 2%
room
modern apartment, no bedroom, decorated,
new refrigerator, cabinet sink, gas range.
Light, airy third floor, $97.50. VE 5-3300
or if no answer VErnon 5-1901.
GLENCOE, 310 TUDOR COURT, 5 rooms,
will decorate, May
1st occupancy, near
Northwestern station at Green Bay Road.
VE 5-2043.
HIGHWOOD:
3 room unfurnished
apartem available immediately. Telephone ID
DEERFIELD:
2 bedroom apartment, $145
per month, including heat, gas and hot
water. Near schools, shopping and transportation. WI 5-2419.
LAKE FOREST
766 N. WESTERN AVE.
5 room apartment near shopping and transportation,
$115.
For
inspection
call Mr.
Swethko, DE 6-8502 or Baird &amp; Warner,
Inc., Evanston.
GReenleaf 5-1855
524 Davis St.
LAKE FOREST, new duplex, 3 bedrooms,
14% baths, fully equipped kitchen, basement, gas hot water heat, excellent location, near South Park, $200 per month.
CE 4-3180.
LARGE 6 room apartment, 3 bedrooms, 2nd
floor, near business district, heated, $150,
available April 1st. ID 2-3271.

APARTMENTS

FOR

RENT

(Furnished)

HALF
DAY:
furnished,
modern,
Mobile
home convenient to Fort Sheridan. Telephone ID 2-8917.
MODERN
Kitchenette apartment located in
Highwood
business district, 214
rooms;
1 or 2 adults. Phone
CE 4-0136 after
5:30 p.m.
HIGHWOOD:
3 room furnished apartment,
ei
immediately.
Telephone
ID 2een
2 room Ln ga
apartment,
private
entrance,
utilities
paid, laundry
space. ID 2-2840.
.

LAKE

FOREST:

first floor,

bedroom,

sit-

ting room, bath; own entrance; complete
privacy;
meals
available.
Available
to
couple or single woman with other job or
in exchange for housework and some yard
work; man hold other job. CE 4-5398.
HIGHWOOD:
2
room
furnished
apartment, near transportation, for 2 persons
or couple. ID 2-6682.
THREE rooms nicely furnished apartment;
also garage, suitable for employed couple.
Available May 1. ID 2-1128 evenings.
3 ROOM furnished apartment in Highwood.
geror
preferred.
Call ID 2-3544
after
p.m.

DEERFIELD:

attractive modern

apartment,

kitchenette, bath with shower, immediate
occupancy, $95 per month includes all utilities. WI 5-0550.

ge

aac

4 room apartment. Call ID 3-

TWO room cottage, furnished, suitable for
couple or gentleman. Can be seen at 246
North Ave., Highwood.
DEERFIELD:
2 room furnished apartment
for one or two adults, no pets. Utilities
included, also garage, $85. WI 5-0485.
enprivate
rooms,
furnished
3 LARGE
trance, good location, heat, fight, water
furnished. ID 2-3786.
3% ROOM, partly furnished apartment, rechildren
utility room,
cently decorated,
welcome. WI 5-5606.
EFFICIENCY
apartment,
private kitchen,
bath and entrance, utility room. WI
55606.
2 ROOM
furnished apartment in Highland
Park, private entrance, bath. Telephone
ID 2-2319.
THREE
room fully furnished coach house
apartment,
West
Lake
Forest,
$115
a
—
plus utilities. Couple only. CE 4GARAGE APARTMENT
3 room garage apartment in northeast Highland Park. Paneled room and kitchen ist
floor; 2 rooms and bath 2nd floor. Partially
furnished, including stove, refrigerator, beds,
couch and breakfast set. Heat, hot water,
gas and electricity
included.
$125. Tel
ID 2-4580.
,
sadhana
Small attractive East side 2 room garage
apartment, everything furnished, rent $90 a
month, 2 months in advance.
1896

ANCHOR
Sheridan Rd.

REAL

ESTATE
ID

2-0093

Res. Ph. ID 2-0037

HOUSES

TO

RENT

(Unfurnished)

HIGHLAND PARK, 2 bedroom stone ranch,
ggh Poe 2 years old, near
rene mere gr
Own, adults only.
Immediate occupancy.
gots
$175. ID 2-442.”
HIGHLAND
PARK, well built 3 year old,
6 room ranch, corner lot, gas heat, will
rent with option to buy or sell with small
down payment. 413 Ridge. WI 5-2419.
room house, full basement, 2 car
NINE
garage, large yard, close to town, could
be used for residence and business, references required. ID 2-0118.
Like new ranch, modern kitchen with builtins and large eating area. 3 bedrooms, 2
fireplaces. Available July 1, 1961. $250 per
month.
DORSEY HUSENETTER
REAL ESTATE
723 St. Johns
ID 2-1484
AIR CONDITIONED SPLIT LEVEL. Convenient to Ravinia school, train, shops. 3
bedrooms FAMILY ROOM
with fireplace.
Lovely kitchen, dishwasher, eating area. 114
baths. $300 monthly.
J-H KAHN
REALTORS
Glencoe Theater Bldg.
VErnon 5-0236
LAKE
FOREST:
duplex,
6 large rooms,
excellent condition, convenient neighborhood, gas heat, 1 garage space optional.
Call CE 40971, evenings or weekend,

_ Thursday, April 13, 1961

HELP WANTED FEMALE

\

DANISH

country

house

in

beautiful

HOUSES

&amp;

APARTMENTS

WANTED

WANTED: 3 bedroom house near Highland
Park. Responsible couple, 2 girls, June 7
occupancy. CE 6-9200. Extension 883.
YOUNG couple, teachers, desire reasonably
priced 1 bedroom apartment near Highland Park High
School
and downtown
after June 1st. Call ID 2-8799 after 5 p.m.
RESPONSIBLE
couple
wish _ furnished
apartment or home for 2 or 3 summer
months; and would like to earn part of
rental by caretaker or maintenance duties.
Write Mr. Robinson, M.S.M., Physics Department, Rolla, Mo. References.
PROFESSIONAL man and family want to
rent 3 r 4 bedroom house or apartment
in Highland Park or Deerfield. DElaware
7-5108.
DO you have a house to rent, with possible
option to buy, to a family that would take
care of it better than yourself would?
There are 4 of us—father, mother, 14 year
old son and an obedience trained beagle;
Deerfield high school district. Phone WI
5-1066 after 6:30.
RESPONSIBLE
couple would like to rent
comfortable 3 bedroom home with basement; preferably in Lake Forest or Lake
Bluff; no pets, children grown and away
from home;
excellent references. CE
44035.
YOUNG
couple with baby desire 2 or 3
bedroom furnished house or apartment in
or near Highland Park starting May 1st
until October 1st. Call ID 2-4952 or ID
2-4877.

ROOMS

TO

WE OFFER

Ra-

vinia neighborhood
of estate
and
fine
homes. Large woodland lot. Walking distance to schools, station and beach. Spacious 2 story panelled living room, leaded windows, unusual fireplace. Large dining room, 3 bedrooms. All on 1 floor.
Flagstone patio. Furnished, including 21%
horsepower
air-conditioner,
dishwasher
and appliances. One of the North Shore’s
most charming homes. $325 a month or
$1,000, June 15 to August 31st. Write Box
C-60, c/o Highland Park News.
HIGHLAND
PARK,
2
bedroom = stone
ranch, patio, attached garage, 5 years old,
near town, adults only. Immediate occupancy, $225 or part furnished. ID 2-4422.
SUMMER
rental:
charming
4
bedroom
house,
studio
living
room,
all modern
conveniences,
ideally located. Telephone
ID 2-5715.
HIGHWOOD:
3 bedroom furnished house
available now and for four months. Call
ID 2-4976 after 5 p.m.
NORTHMOOR _ subdivision,
2
bedroom
house,
June, July, August;
couple preferred. CE 4-2663.

RENT

PARK HOTEL sleeping rooms, by day or
week, free parking, 511 Waukegan Ave.,
Highwood. ID 2-9862.
VEL-WOOD
Motel, 500 Waukegan
Ave.,
Highwood.
Air-conditioned,
kitchenette
rooms for overnight guests and travelers.
in
shower baths. Telephone ID 25328.
ROOMS
for rent near transportation. 214
Green
Bay Road,
Highwood,
Il, Tele-

pnone JD 2-7000.

A DISTINCTIVE OFFICE PLACEMENT SERVICE. IT IS DESIGNED
TO REPRESENT YOU IN SELECTING A POSITION
THAT YOU
WILL ENJOY.
EMPLOYER

PARK:

Highland

350

COUNTY
DEERFIELD,

CLERK

Statistical
typing,
bookkeeping
experience
and figure aptitude essential. Knowledge of
NCR bookkeeping No. 3,000 desirable.

SECRETARY
To. work in Purchasing Department.
typing skills needed, light shorthand.
aptitude for clerical detail essential.

Top
High

SECRETARY
To Educational Film Producers. Must have
goed skills in typing and dictaphone. Some
shorthand required, experienced background
in office procedure essential. Age to 35.

ASSISTANT
In Film Print Control Department. Experienced background in inventory control and
purchasing
preferred.
Good
typing
skills
essential, shorthand helpful. Age and salary open.
fringe benefits.
OFFICE.

CON-

ENCYCLOPAEDIA
BRITANNICA
FILMS
ALpine

1-8700

LINE ROAD
ILLINOIS

REAL
ESTATE
SALESPERSON
WANT:
ED. Male or female. Earhart &amp; Co. Realtors has an opening in their sales staff
for an experienced person. We would like
a chance to discuss the opportunities with
you. Ask for Bob Earhart, ID 2-0880.

Ridge

Evanston

week.

CORP.

UN

4-6050

Pleasant

disposition

essential.

WANTED

MALE

Field Supervisor

Commercial

Intangible

Bookkeeper

Low

THE FIRST
NATIONAL BANK
HIGHLAND PARK

ADMINISTRATIVE
SECRETARY
Full time, 40 hour week, typing and

shorthand required, starting salary
depending upon qualifications. Liberal benefits. Write Box C-65, c/o

Park

SUPPLY

SECRETARY
wanted for general office work. No shorthand required. Telephone ID 2-6543.
BOOKKEEPER: Part time, steady, Doctor’s
office,
Ravinia.
Experience
and _ references required. ID 2-5755.
PART
time secretary for Saturdays. Must
take shorthand, good pay, work in Highland Park. Call ID 2-2099.
TEACHER or substitute teacher needed for
special summer assignment in local territory. Phone HI 6-3848 after 5 and on
weekends.
YOUNG
woman for inspecting and checking, will train, full or part time. Wayne
Cleaners, 454 Waukegan
Avenue, Highwood. Telephone ID 3-0460,
WOMEN: Telephone work, spare time from
your home, profitable. HOllycourt 5-6288.
TARA Fifth Avenue has opening for women to work part time; no collecting or
delivering. Call BAldwin 3-4614.
PART
time girl for general office work
mornings. The Boat House, Inc., Skokie
Hwy. &amp; Clavey Rd., Highland Park. ID
3-0880.
EXPERT
EXPERIENCED
STATISTICAL
TYPIST FOR LOCAL ACCOUNTING OFFICE. ID 2-5700.
DAY workers, cooks, generals, couples, experienced
with references.
Lingren
Employment Agency, 811 Elm St., Winnetka.
Telephone Hillcrest 6-1047.
EXPERIENCED
hostess and waitress for
private North Shore Club, from May 15th
until September 15th. Call ID 3-1131.
HELP wanted: waitress, Saturdays, Sundays;
Sandwich-salad maker,
11 to 2, 5 to 6

day

News.

Sales

Deerfield

Iilinois

SALES

Full time.

744 Waukegan Rd.
Chicago

an

expert

area

educational

secretary

to

institution

assist

an

needs

admin-

istrative officer. She should be 30 or over,
settled in this area and interested in a career
position.
Expert
typing,
shorthand,
some bookkeeping or accounting experience,
poise, tact necessary. All modern employee
experience.
Salary depends upon
benefits.
Personnel
University,
Northwestern
Apply
Department, 1815 Orrington, Evanston.
BANK. TELLER
For our Great Lakes facility, 5 day week,
excellent opportunity, good starting salary,
free life insurance and pension plan. Apply
in person or call, CE 4-5100.

FIRST
OF

NATIONAL BANK
LAKE FOREST

BOOKKEEPER,
experienced, full or part
time, small office in Highland Park, some
clerical duties. Call OR 3-7678.

for

an

interview.

in

strictest

ing

PERSONNEL ©
ID 2-4461
SUITE 215 NORTH SHORE B
1866 SHERIDAN ROAD
Highland Park

MANAGEMENT TRAINEE
Excellent opportunity for College grad
10 hours Accounting. 1 year experien
Inventory
Control
desirable.
Orders
maintains at optimum levels nationwid
ished goods inventory. Must understan
ventory
and
associated
costs.
al
with other distribution costs and I
sirable. Good starting salary, liberal
f
benefits and many promotional possib
Ext. 220.

AMERICAN

Perma-

Deerfield, Il.

' MONEY
nee
Earn as much as you want; see profit in
first hour; take home pay from start; no
investment; see if you can meet these qualifications;
if so, call CE
4-1360 between
and 7 p.m.
Have ‘car.
Ai CANOE 2A
3. Neat in appearance.
4. Aggressive.
5. Must be white.

HAVE JOB
WILL TRAIN
CALL

ORCHARD

HOSPITAL

2020 Ridge

SUPPLY
¥

UN

Evanston

The City of Lake Forest will accept
pp]
tions for appointment to the Police Dey
ment, Fire Department, and as Call
unteer) Fireman.
Applicants for appointment as P
trolman or Fireman must be over
under 35 years of age; at least 5 ft.
but not more than 6 ft. 3 in., tall ¢
must
be in proportion
to height);
School education is required.

:

Applicants for appointment as Call (Vv.
teer) Fireman must be over 21 and un
45 years of age, and in good physice
dition.
E

Apply at City Hall, 220 East Deerpath,

Forest,

Illinois,

CE

4-2600.

se

NEW
CAREER
a
POLICEMAN—FIREMAN
VILLAGE OF GLENCOE
Permanent,
interesting,
challengin;
career job performing both police
duties. Retire at half pay after 20 yea
be physically fit, between 21-35, high
grad, excellent sick leave, disability,

sc
1

WARDEN

6-0332

o

dog control.
Excellent sick leavé, d
vacation benefits. Uniform furnishée
Village Hall, VErnon 5-4111.
Handyman for hardware store, ca)
repairing screens, glazing windows an
ing deliveries; must be steady, reli
furnish good references.
RAVINIA HARDWARE
447 Roger Williams
ID
RELIABLE white man wanted ten
to wash walls, woodwork, and
y
Call CE 4-3187 in the afternoon or
ning.
eS
HOTEL NIGHT CLERK

Full time,

11 p.m.

to 7 a.m. Good

salary plus board and room. Deerp
Lake Forest, CE 4-2280.
PERMANENT
position with exce
ture for reliable clean-cut man in
pet cleaning service. Previous exp
helpful but not required, good sala
profit sharing plan for right man,
Mr. Lewis, VErnon 5-2400.

GARDENER’S helper wanted, white, si
all

summer.

Telephone

ID

|

Gardener: Gus Johnson.
;
WAREHOUSEMAN,
Highland Park
transportation, good job for able
retired man; $1.75 an hour. ID 2
BOY to do lawn and garden work; 4 h
Saturdays. Telephone CE 4-1475.

I NEED

a young

to help

me

married

in my

man,

business.

2:

Clean

ing work, no experience required.

pointment call
ORchard 6-0330.
EXCITING NEW
PRODUCT |
Full and part time sales with very hig!
come potential. Ideal position and s
job for college and high school
also retired or semi-retired people. —
formation and appointment, call (Dee!
Windsor 5-0152.
6
$75 TO $150 WEEK
Permanent,
service
apparel
customers
Realsilk this area. FRanklin 2-0797.

HELP
RELIABLE

WANTED—DOMESTIC
person for light housework, ]

day morning through early Sunday
ing. Telephone ID 2-6167.
ha
GENERAL housework, cooking, liveroom, 3 in family, 5 day week.
ID 2-0726.
Dk,

CLEANING
references

COOK

good

woman,

required.

wanted,

wages.

1 day

Please

white;

Call

CE

Page
4

All

confidence.

will be glad to arrange an eve
or weekend appointment.
"

work

LIQUOR

WALGREENS

SECRETARY

us
held

ANIMAL

nent. Good salary, many employee
benefits. Apply to store manager.

ADMINISTRATIVE

Regardless of your field or wh
er you are currently employed,

Permanent, full time job, 40 hours
Villages of Glencoe and Winnetka,
new radio equip: ed vehicle prima

Pressure

Duraclean Co.
21 or over.

he

tion benefits. Uniform furnished. A
rector of Public Safety, Glencoe
Hall. Applications ¢lose April 30th.

Outstanding
advancement
opportunity
for
sincere, low-presure sales executive. World’s
largest organization specializing in care of
home furnishings (for 31 years) is creating
national field sales program to assist in selling franchised service dealerships. Also work
with established dealers. Franchise or intangible sales experience required. Able to develop national program
and supervise it.
Considerable travel at start, less as program
develops. Compensation commensurate with
ability and
development.
Please reply by
mail only, giving age, education, complete
experience resume, present salary, salary desired.
Qualified
applicants
will be interviewed. Irl B. Marshall, Jr., President,

Age

ha

Chemistry
Product Design
Accounting
Systems and Procedures
Drafting
2

4-6050

MOTHERS

le"

OPERATOR

HOSPITAL

HELP

(We Will Train)

Engineering

CORP.

UN

Apply in person, 2 to 4 p.m., Cavalier
Restaurant,
Deerfield
Shopper’s
Court,
Mrs. McDermott.

Clerk-Typist

Highland

PUNCH

AMERICAN

To TEMAC
Administrator.
Top
skills in
shorthand
and
typing
essential.
Must
be
personable, poised with some college background, mature and able to work on own.

1150 Wilmette Ave.

AND

We have openings for college
men in the following fields: |

Permanent, full time assignment for young
woman experienced in operation of No. 024
machine. Minimum of 1 year’s experience.
Must
be
neat appearing.
Good
starting
salary and full range of fringe benefits.
5 day, 37% hour week.

2020

5 day week, excellent
TACT
PERSONNEL

SUPPLY

Evanston

KEY

Park

ACCOUNTING

HOSPITAL

Ridge

Part time work,
3 evenings
per
week, 3 hours per evening, average
$40,
interesting
and
enjoyable
work. Call ID 2-8785.

SECRETARY

GENERAL OFFICE
TYPING

DBA PRODUCTS
COMPANY, INC.

2020

HOUSEWIVES

FEMALE

Ideal working conditions. For appointment call Windsor 5-4300.

AMERICAN

FEE

SUITE 215
NORTH SHORE BLDG.
1866 SHERIDAN ROAD

close to shopping and

WANTED

Excellent salary for young woman who likes
responsibility and variety in her daily work.
Interesting
position
available
immediately.
Typing speed of 50 WPM
required, shorthand
not necessary. Congenial
office
atmosphere and liberal company benefits make
an association with American both profitable and pleasant. Ext. 220.

ID 2-4461

Wilmette

transportation, nice large room, man preferred. ID 2 0133.
ROOM
for rent; private bath; near transportation. Call Mrs. D. H. Moore, 317
E. Wisconsin, Lake Forest; CE 4-9175.
ROOM for gentleman, 1 block from _ business district. 1910 2nd Street, Highland
Park.
LARGE sleeping room, suitable for 1 or 2.
possible kitchen privileges, 1 block from
Milwaukee station, Deerfield. WI 5-5599,
LARGE
room suitable for couple, kitchen
and laundry, hot water at all times, off
street parking. Telephone ID 2-3694,

HELP

PAYS

FITZGERALD
PERSONNEL

AVAILABLE
May ist, 1 room and bath,
light housekeeping permitted, located in
Highland Park business district, $70 per
month,
1 year
lease
required.
ID
28117.
1 LARGE
room,
kitchenette,
completely
furnished, close to business and transportation. Telephone ID 2-1229.
LARGE
sleeping
room,
private
entrance,
parking
available,
downtown
Highland
Park. Telephone ID 2-9492.
FURNISHED
room
in Braeside,
private
bath, kitchen privileges, beautiful
view,
mature woman or couple, ID 3-1330.
LARGE room with private bath and kitchen, privileges if desired. Call ID 3-1073
ROOM,
private
bath,
kitchen
privileges.
Woman only. $10 per week. Phone ID 21745.
REASONABLE
combination living sleeping
room, some housekeeping privileges, close
in. Telephone ID 2-1749.
PLEASANT
room with private bath. Suitable for one or two employed men. Near
transportation. Parking space off street.
References. Phone ID 2-7053.

HIGHLAND

DEPARTMENT SECRETARY

a week,
phone

recent

49473.

refe:
:

H 683—D

:

�“

SITUATION
FREE—NO FEE
; General Maid Jobs
smaids and second maids
_A-1 COUPLE JOBS $450-500
a: BAKER SHORELINE AGENCY
ncoln, Winnetka
Hillcrest 6-5818
OOD woman, Tuesday and Friday,
) 7 p.m. Laundry, clean stove and re.
erator, cook dinner. Own transportaOi
a
- Call ID 2-8262.

, 2 ADULTS IN FAMILY, OTHER
EXPERIENCE AND REFERENCES
ISSARY. ID 2-0113.

WALLWASHING,
room and ceiling, 8x10,
$10. Phone Al Williams, DA 8-6669.
EXPERIENCED gardener will do gardening,
landscaping,
fast and
dependable.
Own
truck. ID 2-7698 or ID 2-6668 after 5.
MAN desires work: heavy duty house-cleaning and lawn work, janitor, etc. Telephone
DExter 6-7813.

SITUATION

j
all around girl, stay or go, prefer
colored lady, should have pleasant voice.

lop salary. ID 3-1241.
INERAL housework, 5 days, own room.
hool aged children. $40. References required. Call ID 2-7406.

IABLE

woman,

cleaning and child care,

steady work, 4 days, 1 or 2 nights,
neces
required.
ID
3-2842.

9ERIENCED
ite, 2 in
4-0063.

ANING

chamber

family;

woman,

ref-

maid-waitress:

near

town.

Telephone

two days; small home;

erences
required;
own
transportation
eferred. CE 4-0859.
ORTABLE room and salary in good
in exchange for light duties for one.
oman only, Phone ID 2-1745.
EH woman
who will take interest in
neat, thorough cleaning, 1 day a
» must provide own
transportation.
pay to the right person. Call ID 3, after 6 p.m.
a4 with small ranch house near transation will give lovely room and bath
white woman in exchange for 1 day’s
sework. ID 2-6353.
PLE,
woman
for general housework
d cooking,
husband
to be employed
ewhere and give 1 day for room and
d, other help, references. VE 5-1401.
a DREN’S
nurse or very experienced
tse maid for 3 months starting June 1
hile Our nurse is in Europe. Experience
references required. Call ID 2-3521.
(
ERAL
housework,
pleasant
modern
Glencoe home, own room, 2 school age
:
is,
good
salary,
references.
VE
5-

YUSEWORK
Monday,
Wednesday,
Friy, Saturday, good with children, referah must have own transportation. ID
RAL
housework,
stay,
own
room,
TV;
every
Monday,
every
other
nday
free;
references
required.
Call
pecay after 4, all day Friday. ID 2-

N to live in, will have
bath, 1 child, references.

own
Call

toom
ID 2-

KING
and
general
housework.
Stay
hildren ages 5, 8, and 10. Call CE 4housework and cooking, recent
Nees required,
must like children.
ID 2-6484.
NING woman wanted, white, 2 days
een
erences
required.
Telephone

teen age “‘mother’s
night until Monday
asportation. WI 5-3149.

1LP WANTED

helper”
morning.

EMPL.

from
Own

AGENCY

ATION WANTED—FEMALE
TION
bound parents, do you need
vapable prosy mother to care for your
dren while you are away? Good driver,
ent references. Telephone ID 2-8152
ID 2-7597,

‘LE white woman free to travel as comor

to adults or children or to care
dren
in your
home
while
you
by week or month; own transporta-

el;

'best

references.

KImball

6-1703

or

Tite Box D-65, c/o Lake Forester.
R needs are my interests, desire part
job,
surburban housewife, 2 years
liege, sales experience, likes people, cre&gt; handwork or receptionist for doctor.

ID 2-6405 after 6.
IENCED
cleaning
ay, Wednesday,

woman

Thursday

5 p.m. MAjestic 3-8636.

work.

wants

Call

ER employment desired by University
&lt;r
flute student, age 21; experiwith children, dependable, can drive;
ul give flute instruction, also beginning
ano. (Home allowing practice during free
hours
pr eerable).
Contact
by
writing
Karen
J. Hill, 1212 Minnesota Ave., Han_Michigan. Will be available early

tion

G

lady

majoring

in

elementary

tuehe,

Pembine,

Wisconsin.

edu-

needs summer work. Prefer child
live in. A-1 references. Write San-

EGE

sophomore

desires

full

time

d care during summer months. Write
55, c/o Highland Park News.

O

SACHER

seeks

half

day

summer

em-

ment; in Lake Forest; secretarial, genoffice,
tutoring;
sales;
companion,

ffeur;
TS;

social

SE
free
y geste

_

baby

News.

sitting;

assistant to prof-

Secretary.

Call

CE

4-

April
14th, hourly
or day
to Box C-70, c/o Highland

_ SITUATION WANTED—MALE
repair locks, hinges, doors, glass,
shelves,
many
home
repairs;
22
ng North Shore. ID 2-1636.
yy
CED
houseman
desires
yard
odd
jobs,
etc.;
best
references.
one MaAjestic 3-3060.

ENER and landscaper, part time. Call
before 4 p.m. EMpire 2-0144.
DENER
and greenhouse grower, 25
Pe

%

DELIVERED

TO

Reasonable

Service

By Day

YOUR

Charges

or Month

Exp. Male Day Workers
$12.00 Per Day
®
@
@

Storm windows
Yard cleaning
General spring

BROWNSKIN SERVICE
DE 6-8314
CURTAIN

DEPOT

North

Shore’s only Curtain
Laundry
1825 Green Bay Rd., Rear
All work done by hand;
linens,
curtains, blankets, drapes, etc.

TELEPHONE

ID

NEED HELP?

8 experience. B. Peterson. MU 5-3525.
D or house work, year round. Good
rences.
Call DExter
66312
after 6

IF you have unexpected happenings such as
going away, illness, no cook, or ward
robe in need of alterations, rest assured
bic
gs help. Best references. Call MA
-8778.
MAN
and wife want 2 days work, Monday,
Tuesday
or
Wednesday.
Call
at
5:30 P.M., MA 3-6473, Evelyn Glenn, or
call 3:30 P.M.
DE
6-3500,
Ext. 2609,
Sylvester Glenn.
WOMAN
would like cleaning or laundry
for Monday
and
Tuesday.
Experienced
a
aa aaean
Call after 5
P.M:.,. ON

CLOTHING

NO FEE

LIVE IN
DAY WORKERS
HSWK.—CHILD CARE—REFS.—EXP.
ALPINE 1-5511
SAPPHIRE DOMESTIC SERVICE
413 Linden Ave., Wilmette

REFERENCES CHECKED
NO FEE!
Girls, Women—Live

General
Housework,
enced, all ages.

Child

UNIVERSITY

In Only

Care,

Experi-

9-1467

COOPER EMPLOYMENT SERVICE
1310 Chicago Avenue, Evanston.

UNIVERSITY

9-1467

COOPER EMPLOYMENT SERVICE
1310 Chicago Avenue
Evanston
EXPERIENCED
woman wants day work.
References. Call after 6 p.m. or Friday
anytime. DE 6-4977.
WOMAN wants day work; general cleaning;
no heavy work, no Saturdays; references;
own transportation. TRinity 2-8177.
GIRL desires day work. Experienced, refpranees, own transportation.
ONtario 2high school colored girl
EXPERIENCED
job,
weekend
references.
wishes
Call
MAjestic 3-9664 after 6 p.m.
EXPERIENCED colored woman would like
day work, Tuesday and Wednesday. RA
3-7616.
EXPERIENCED lady would like day work;
cleaning, child care; references. Call DExter 6-7928.
HOUSEKEEPER,
companion;
reasonable;
live in; references. Write P.O. Box 925,
Lake Forest.
WOMAN
desires day work Monday, Tuesday,
Saturday;
references;
Lake
Forest
area; DExter 6-5932 after 5:30 p.m.
WHITE
woman wishes day work Tuesday
and Wednesday, in Lake Forest or Lake
Bluff. TRinity 2-8062.
MAN wants yard work, housecleaning, window washing; references. Call DE 6-7781.
EXPERIENCED colored woman wants general housework, child care, ironing, references, and own transportation provided.
KEystone 3-7735.
DAY workers, cooks, maids, couples. Mrs.
Baker, Shoreline Employment. Phone HIIicrest 6-5818, Winnetka.
COLORED LADY
If you are going on a vacation or coming
home with a new baby and want some one
to care for your children, call GR 5-7119.
I have A-1 references.
LADY
wishes baby
sitting or housework
every Thursday. Good references. Call ID
2-5362.
HOUSEWORK
or laundry Monday, Thursday, Friday by experienced, reliable woman. References. LA 1-3273.
DAY worker. I do cleaning, help with children every other Wednesdays.
Braeside,
Ravinia. ATlantic 5-7299.
WOMAN
wants work 4 P.M. through dinner. Call after 4 P.M. Friday and all Saturday and Sunday. References. MAjestic

3-8076.

SALE

GOODS

FOR

SALE

SUNDAY, APRIL 16
AT 9:00 A.M.
To Our Customers and Friends: Once again
we repeat our highly popular, money saving
One Day Sale of over 250 Carpet Remnants. 100%
Wool—Wool
Nylon Blends—
and 100% Nylon ... All name brand carpets from the leading mills of America.

From 40%

to 60%

Off

Please bring your room measurements
come early for best selection!

and

Lewis Carpets

EXPERIENCED
REFERENCES CHECKED
NO FEE

FOR

One Day Only
CARPET
REMNANT SALE

2-8615

Edens

near

Table
lamps,
switches

Tower
all

VE

5-2400

with

3

way

$12.88 to $19.88
Pole lamps

$12.88

Formica
top
living room
tables;
walnut, oak or mahogany finished

$18.88
Danish

modern

chairs

from

$27.88

John R. Whalen
Furniture
808

Sold

Home—Must
HOURS

Sacrifice!

10-4

Chickering spinet piano, like new; Fruitwood
double bed, 4 piece suite; upholstered small
settle sofa; downfilled lounge chair; 4 Bodart card or dining chairs; permanent card
table, 4 chairs; Zenith console TV; Magnavox 3 speed phonograph and radio console;
luggage; odd tables; antiques galore. 1136
Linden, Highland Park. ID 2-1112.

ee

Waukegan Rd.
WI 5-1915

Pate

uate

eg

eda

Deerfield

COMPLETE
household
furnishings,
appliances,
and
baby
furniture,
reasonable.
Hales, 1920 Sheridan Road, North Chicago, DExter 6-2353.
22 CU.
ft. Carrier upright freezer; Kenmore deluxe double oven electric range;
barbeque with electric spit; Lane cedar
chest. Must sell. Reasonable. ID 2-5768.
NEW clothing; lounge chair; tables; lamps;
aquarium;
set of dishes; kitchen tools;
jewelry; toys; miscellaneous. ID 2-1944.
DEHUMIDIFIER,
like new; complete set
of dishes for 12, reasonable. ID 2-9377.
MOVING!
Must sell by Saturday;
heavy
duty
riding mower,
self
starter,
good
condition;
Magnavox
consolette
Hi-Fi.
perfect shape; Granco FM tuner; mobile
leaf burner;
complete
Lionel train setup, excellent condition, mounted on two
4x8 panels; passenger train, freight train,
switch engine,
many
accessories,
heavy
transformer. Please no calls after Saturday noon. CE 4-3767.
LOVELY rosewood antique desk, originally
a melodian, converted in Europe, 55”x
24’, $250. Telephone CE 4-4101.
ANTIQUES:
mahogany Colonial sofa; mahogany square table, pedestal base; miscellaneous items. EMpire 2 1690.
NEW
electric
stove
with
grill,
sacrifice
price; 24”? TV, used, $69.95; new refrigerators and freezers as low as $149.95;
wholesale prices; our 25th year in Lake
Forest. We give
S &amp; H Green Stamps.
Freeman’s TV and Music, 648 Western,
Lake Forest,

SPRING

CLEANING

SALE

WORLD BOOK, 1954 edition with all yearly
supplements;
ditto
machine.
Call
after
4:30 ID 2-7404.
ANTIQUES; harvest table, pine double leaf,
5 ft. long; burly walnut Victorian table
and other side tables and chairs in pine
and cherry; all beautifully refinished. Telephone CE 4-2559.
RCA TV, 21 INCH, low boy model, walnut
finish, like new. Call ID 3-0173.

FOR

SALE

HOME
MODERNIZATION
SERVICE

Donate your discards to Kenwood
Center
of Infant Welfare for our Spring Rummage
Sale. We need: Furniture, Bric-a-brac, Furs,
Jewelry,
Clothing,
Toys,
and
Miscellany.
FREE
PICK-UP.
Call Mrs. Gray, ID 22818, or Mrs. Unger, ID 2-4266. Donations
tax deductible.

RED
Lawson sofa, excellent condition; 2
matching home-spun linen oversize easy
chairs. Call all day weekends. ID 2-9125,
KENMORE stove, 40 inches, Crosley Shelvadore refrigerator, very good condition,
$120 for both. ID 2-9880.
GARAGE SALE-SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY
Terrific bargains in furniture, draperies and
misc.
appliances
including
washer,
dryer,
TV, floor polisher. 1318 Sunnyside, High
land Park.
TWIN
bed
stand with
spring
and Serta
mattress, $25; blond 5 drawer chest, $10;
standing
20
garment
metal
wardrobe,
$10. ID 2-8436.
LAWSON
sofa, black and yellow tweed,
$40. ID 2-2286.
OVAL
drop leaf dining table with pads,
4 chairs, extends to seat 10. Like new
condition, $75. ID; 2-3268.
WHIRLPOOL gas dryer, 5 years old, needs
minor repair. $50. ID 2-0845.
BROWN wool rug and pad, 9x12 ft., $50.
Call CE 4-2687.
CUSTOM made bed by Quigley, including
box
spring
and
mattress;
perfect
for
bachelor apartment, $45. CE 4-1739.
SEE the things for sale here; dining table
and
chairs;
buffet;
chest
of
drawers,
lounge; electric stove; Hotpoint refrigerator, 9 cu. ft. like new. Friday evening and
Saturday, April 14, 15. CE 4-4124 after 4
p.m.
REDWOOD
porch furniture; couch, chair,
picnic table and occasional tables; new
seat pads, $60. Call CE 4-4191.
WEIMAN commode, $50; Crest and Stiffel
table lamps, $35 and $20; satin drapes
and spread, $25. WI 5-4205.
KENMORE
dishwasher, portable, excellent
condition, must sell, $50. WI 5-4396.
MAPLE six year crib and mattress, $20. WI
5-3585.
DINING room set, dinette set, girl’s 24 in.
bike, wardrobe
trunk,
desk
and
chair,
aluminum door canopy, youth chair, training chair. WI 5-2573.
BEDROOM
set; double bed, spring, innerspring mattress,
dresser, highboy,
dressing table and bench, night stand, excellent condition, $45. WI 5-3738, mornings.
SMALL
washer, crib set, baby items, pictures, mirror, decorator birdcage, plants,
odds and ends; 2 to 5, Sunday, 1342 Dartmouth, Deerfield. WI 5-4342.
MOVING
to California; entire furnishings
8 room house; appliances, garden tools,
porch furniture, etc. 301 Oakdale Ave.,
Lake Forest, CE 4-2196.
HIDE-A-BED,
Sealy, good condition,
red
cover, double
bed size, $25. Telephone
ID 3-0768.
MODERN
dinette set, table and 4 chairs,
$30; General
Electric waffle baker, $8;
telephone ID 2-3822.
GRAY modern sofa, living room and bedroom drapes, TV set, pictures, mirrored
cornice, bookcase, clothes, etc. ID 2-2905.
20 INCH boy’s bike. $5; child’s desk and
chair, $3; metal Hollywood
bed frame,
$2;
baby
wardrobe
chest,
$3; 4 metal
dinette chairs, 50c each. WI 5-0932.
DINING room suite, custom made, by Rway
of Sheboygan.
Table
with
4 concealed
leaves is 51% ft. closed, 81% ft. extended;
china cabinet—sliding glass doors with 2
large drawers. Large buffet with plenty of
storage; 6 side chairs, 2 arm chairs. Light
honey colored mahogany. Will sacrifice.
ID 2-0762.
MOVING;
twin beds, bedspreads,
ruffles,
desk, buffet, mirror, lamps, TV
stools,
tables, pots, pans, Persian lamb coat, garden tools; cheap. ID 2-8365.
ANTIQUES,
Giftwares,
Bric-A-Brac,
Collector’s Items, Furniture, Odds and Ends,
Beer Steins and Junque. We buy and sell.
The Fullers, 803 Waukegan Road, Deerfield.
PAIR
flowered
lined
draw
drapes,
$6
pair; 1 pair Army field phones, $10; 1
metal fluorescent desk lamp, $5; 1 gooseneck lamp, $1; wood typewriter table, $2.
ID 2-1642.
CARPETING used. Bigelow beige firm-twist.
Approximately 100 yards and padding. $90.
ID 2-0762.

Ue

FOR

BEIGE Kroehler davenport, ag
chair,
4 Sean _
$125 or best offer. Telephone

TIME?

ROOM full of rattan, den or family furniture, sofa, 2 lounge chairs, dining room
table, 4 dining chairs, cocktail table, end
table, large corner table and lamp. $100
for everything. ID 2-9116.
FOR sale, 1958 Frigidaire refrigerator, excellent condition,
very reasonable.
Call
WI 5-5992.
EXECUTIVE
desk, dark green steel construction, with or without typewriter; with
swivel chair, and desk accessories. Original price, $450, will sell for $250 with
typewriter. ID 2-1912.
GARAGE SALE
Frigidaire refrigerator,
13 cubic foot, TV
set, table model; 1 portable, 1 walnut console Singer sewing machines; 1 down comforter; assorted luggage; miscellaneous items;
943 Osterman, Deerfield, WI 5-3495.
MAPLE youth bed with Kantwet mattress,
Thayer baby buggy, boy’s tweed topcoat,
size 16. WI 5-4496,
SECTIONAL,
2 piece, new, brown,
very
Nh
will sell at cost. Hales, DExter

,

GOODS

MISCELLANEOUS

NATURAL RUSSIAN SABLE, 4 skins, excellent
condition,
reasonably
priced
to
sell. VErnon 5-3634,
NEW
SPRING
AND
SUMMER
MERCHANDISE
now
on
sale
at Lincoln
School Clothing Exchange, 711 West Lincoln, Highland Park. Open every Friday
8:45 to 11:30, 3 to 4.
SELLING
wardrobe—designer clothes, size
10-12,
like new,
very
reasonable;
also
some boy’s clothes. HI 6-1922.
SILVER
Blu mink stole, latest style, like
new, cost $1000, sacrifice for $300. Telephone VE 5-2624.

HOUSEHOLD

Ne

HOUSEHOLD

HOUSEHOLD GOODS FOR SALE

SITTING

WILL baby sit in my home by day or week.
Have nice yard. Call ID 2-4406.
LONELY 4 year old boy needs friend 3 to
4 hours a day. Call WI 5-4479.
WANT
to baby sit in my home, I am a
young mother and reliable. Call after 6,
WI 5-5606.
WHILE
you golf, shop, spring clean, or
work day or week, your children can play
here. CE 4-0251.
RELIABLE woman wanted to baby sit with
6 young children, 3 or 4 afternoons a
month. Riverwoods area. WI 5-3797.

Cleaning

Women Day Workers
$10.00 per day

THE

_ SITUATIONS WANTED—DOMESTIC

BABY

DOOR

DAY WORKERS

ICATIONS
being
accepted. Kathryn
dow!
Sent
Agency &amp; Secretarial
rvice.
273
E,
Market
Square,
Lake
CE 41148.

ion

WANTED—DOMESTIC

WE SUPPLY
DAY WORKERS

white, experienced, recent references
required, other help, permanent position,
salary open. Collect VE 5-0080 or CE 4-

OE

=

WANTED—MALE

KITCHENS,
RECREATION
ROOMS,
SUMMER
PORCHES
ROOM ADDITIONS,
DORMERS,

FENCES,

GARAGES,

ETC.

COMPLETE INSTALLATION,
OR MATERIALS
ONLY
(All Labor By The North Shore’s
Finest Contractors—Fully
Guaranteed In Writing.)

LOW FHA FINANCING
FREE ESTIMATES

Northbrook Lumber

Company
(Skokie
Northbrook, Ill.

&amp;

Dundee

Rds.)
CR

2-3000

Half Day Plywood
Discount
S.W.
Day,

@

corner

Mart

Rtes.

45

&amp;

21

Half

III.
Grand Opening
Lumber
Mahogany Doors
Ceiling Tile
Pegboard
Plywood Panelling
Mosaic Tile
Underlayment

Grand

opening

sleeve

sport

2-for:

special

shirts,

.. . short

$5.95

value

$5.

YOUR

REPRESENTATIVE
for the
ENCYCLOPEDIA
AMERICANA,
BOOKSHELF
for BOYS
and
GIRLS, LANDS and PEOPLE, etc.,
is now in this area. If interested in
the
WORLD’S LARGEST
REFERENCE LIBRARY
under our promotional
offer and
BOOK-A-MONTH
PLAN
write: Mr.
J. SKALA, 706 De Tamble, Highland Park, or call
Office:
Home:
CHerry 4-2030
ID 2-0858
RENT EVERYTHING FOR THE HOME
FROM YOUR ASSOCIATED STORE
Portable TV Sets
Foldaway Beds:
High Chairs
Reducing Machines.
Hospital Beds
Heavy Duty Vacuums.
Floor Waxers
Power Tools.
Wall Paper Equip.
Moving Equipment
Wheel Chairs
Rug Scrubbers.
Floor Machines
Ladders.
WE DELIVER

ASSOCIATED
RENT-ALLS
651

Roger

Williams,
IDlewood

Highland

Park:

2-6333

SHOP AND SAVE AT
STOCKADE TRADING POST
WHEELING, ILLINOIS
516

N.
WE

MILWAUKEE
SELL

Open

ON

AVE.

TERMS

Daily incl. Sun.
Fri., 9-9

9-6

T.V. tables, all brass, $6.95; double well!
stainless steel sinks, $12; cartop carriers,
$4.95; Recliner chairs, $54.50; 5 pc. Danish
modern bedroom set, value $350, for $200;
8x4 knotty pine room dividers, $25 ea; mahogany
drop leaf tables, $39.50; Formica
bar,
35x42,
$37.50;
chair
and
sofa bed,
$124.50' a set.

FENCES
“YOU

_SELECT—WE_
ERECT”
WOOD OR WIRE
STANDARD OR_ CUSTOM
CABANAS - PATIOS
GARDEN UTILITY BUILDINGS
Mike

For Estimates Call
Estate Fencing

CE 4-1283

Thursday, April
yg

ee ea

A Ba

tia

hay

Bint

dey gs

‘

©

�MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE
DO

|MUSICAL

IT YOURSELF

RENT TOOLS &amp; EQUIPMENT
Chain saws, rug shampooers,
tary tillers, etc. You name it.

MUTUAL
Rtes. 41 &amp; 22

sanders,

SUPPLY

ro-

ID 2-0272

WINCHESTER 410, extension 4 arm; excellent; other guns. CE 4-2868.
ALUMINUM
windows, doors, siding, awnings and
screen houses;
special Spring
prices. Call Coalume, CE 4-1750.
HAY
RACK
Sleigh rental, party facilities. Happ’s Hollow, CR 2-3131.
COINS FOR COLLECTORS
Buy and Sell
Larson’s Store, 1783 St. Johns Ave., Highland Park; Saturday and Sunday only.
ONLY a few weeks left for winter rates on
tree removal. Fully insured. Jim Beinlich,
VErnon 5-1195.
POWER
LAWN
ROLLING-FERTILIZING
Let us take the humps out. Save your back.
Jim Beinlich, VErnon 5-1195.
Cedar ewe
table, park type. Unbeatable
price, $12.50.
MUTUAL SUPPLY
Rtes 41 &amp; 22
ID 2-0272
MONTGOMERY
WARD 7 _ horsepower,
power tractor, practically new; disc harrow, tiller, sickle bar, plow, riding
seat;
original cost $700, make
offer.
1%
EXCEPTIONAL
value for anyone wanting
a deluxe ride-em lawn mower; also child’s
electric tractor, 3 MPH; each $35. ID 2COLDSPOT refrigerator-freezer, set of golf
clubs
including
3
matched
woods,
8
matched irons, all reasonable. ID 2-5648.
GARDEN
furniture; buggy wheels; antique
plows. Saturday and Sunday only, 440 E.
Illinois Rd., Lake Forest.
G.E. ELECTRIC blanket, brand new, $20;
reel type mower, good condition, $20. Call
CE 4-2555 after 6 p.m.
REPLACE
your worn out sink tops with
sparkling Formica or Ceramic tile. Also
cabinets,
sinks,
wall
and_
floor
tiling.
25 years on North Shore. Free estimates.
Snazelle, CE 4-3237.
WATCH for B’ nai Torah’s annual “‘bazarre
of bargains.”’ Bigger this year, Saturday,
April 22, 6 to 11 p.m., Sunday, 23rd,
10 a.m. on. Highwood Community Center,
428 Green Bay Rd.
O’DAY
DAYSAILER,
hit of show, fiber
glass, used one month, 16 ft. 6 in. sloop,
stainless
rigged
with
dacron
sails
and
nylon spinnaker, auxiliary outboard and
fine trailer,
excellent
for launching
in
—Park. EXTRAS.
$1900. ID 21004.
BEAUTIFUL hand made quilts; patchwork
and applique, $50 and up. Call ANtioch
1458.
CONTAX
IIA with accessories, $100; also
Viewlex Project-O-Matic 2x2 projector, 7
trays, 40x40 screen, $50. Call ID 3-1047
after 6 P.M.
FLAG HEADQUARTERS
3x5 flags available, $3.95 complete. Others
can be ordered. Office open 6 to 9 Wednesday and Friday evenings. VFW,
667 Central Avenue. Telephone ID 2-9774.
TWIN stroller for sale, reclining seats, sun
shades, in good condition, purchased 1%
years ago, $20. CE 4-5477.
STAUFFER
Reducing Couch, almost new,
with stretch bar and leg attachments. Reasonable. ID 2-1912.
ALTERATIONS,
dressmaking,
draperies,
slipcovers;
interior
design
consultation.
WI 5-5719; if no answer WI 5-1514
14 FOOT runabout with steering, windshield,
running lights and other accessories, plus
trailer, $500. Call WI 5-3856.
12 FOOT custom made swing set, 3 place,
with
glider,
$50;
also fireplace screen,
andirons, basket, and tools. 1341 Carlisle
Place, Deerfield. WI 5-1584.

RUMMAGE

SALE

MUSICAL

INSTRUMENTS

USED LOWREY

FOR

USED

down

$ 695
695
$ 795
995

PIANOS
$ 595
$ 495
$ 565
$1125

36 months

to pay

LOWREY—MASON &amp; HAMLIN
KIMBALL—KNABE—CABLE
AUTHORIZED DEALER
World’s Finest Organs - Pianos

LOWREY
Organ Studios
Of a
1795

St.

Johns

Park

Ave.

ID

2-2510

UPRIGHT
Marshall Wendell
Ampico
reproducer
with
about
400
recordings;
classical and semi; including such artists
as Rachmaninov
and Grieg, $500. TRinity 2-8317.

|

Thursday, April 13, 1961

Conn, high quality instrument
condition.
Telephone
ID
2-

MUSICAL

INSTRUMENTS

MOVING

AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE

SALE

HAMMOND
CHORD
ORGANS: | floor
models and trade ins; only $795 with neworgan guarantee! Easy terms. Lyon-Healy,
1843 Second St., Highland Park. ID 23434.
NEW
full sized Roth violin, will sacrifice.
WI 5-3197.
WANTED

SALE

We are moving to larger quarters
Must dispose of 90 new and used pianos
New spinets, “88 Mote... ube
from $395
Used spinets and consoles ............ from $295
45. used ‘grand: pianos “cco from $295
Used player Uprights. ...-250. 4c. from $195
Practic€
peignts:
coscasose from $ 79
See the new Hardman Duo Player pianos
Mon.. Thurs. 9-9—-Sunday 11-5
FIELDS PIANO CO.
2921 W. Touhy
AMbassador 2-2023

CHICAGO ART GALLERIES WILL PAY
CASH
FOR _ PIANOS,
ALL
MAKES,
STYLES. BONUS FOR STEINWAYS AND
OTHER
GOOD
MAKES.
CALL LONGBEAC
1-5092,
EVENINGS
ROGERS
PARK. 1-4400.

NEED piano, large, small grand, any condition. JUniper 8-1020.
OWNER
forced to dispose 26 foot greenhouse
equipped
Arco
boiler,
2
B&amp;G
pumps, automatic ventilators, stocked with
orchids and camellias, free for removal
from premises. Call A. N. Schinler, VE
5-0797 after 5 p.m.

WANTED

TO

BUY

CASH FOR YOUR CAR
ANY MAKE OR MODEL
Call

(Mr.

Kelly—ID

Holmes
1909

St.

2-8640

Motor Co.

Johns

Highland

Park

CHICAGO ART GALLERIES WILL PAY
CASH FOR ORIENTAL RUGS, FRENCH
FURNITURE.
ANTIQUES
ETC,
CALL
LO
1-5092, EVENINGS
ROGERS
PARK
1-4400.
ENLARGER
for size 620 film or bigger.
Call George Thorne, CE 4-0189.
6 WALNUT Queen Anne style dining room
chairs. Telephone DOrchester 3-7693.
1956, °57 OR ’58 Chevrolet or Plymouth 6
cylinder 4 door sedan. Standard shift from
private owner.
Good
condition.
VIllage
8-7259

A-1

1960

LOST: black kid glove in ant
Square
March 18; reward.
CE 4-4
LOST, charm bracelet CGeandnther discs)
on ‘Dean Ave. near school ground last
week, reward, Mrs. Helm, ID 2-5472.

AUTOMOBILES

CLEAN

1956

1959

dere, atito, heater. -....... $
Ford conv. R &amp; H, auto.
pow. steer. Ready to put

the top

USED

Evenings

4-5770

1953 CHEVROLET, bad cylinder needs fixing, is
aa
Princeton, Highland Park.
MERCEDES-BENZ,
190-SL Roadster, 1960
ultra-deluxe
sports
car.
Straight
shift,
whitewalls,
$200 FM-AM-Shortwave
Radio, many extras. Beautiful condition, very
low mileage, Buy from original for’ only
$3,800. For appointment to see this fine
car, call ID 2-6905.
1954 CHRYSLER
New Yorker, full power
4 door, low mileage, excellent condition,
$395. ID 2-1413.
CHRYSLER
station wagon,
1954, original
Owner,
needs
some
motor
work,
good
tires and body, unusual car. ID 2-4390.
1957 PORSCHE coupe, 1600N; black with
red leather interior; new battery, tires,
clutch; radio, heater, reclining seats; good
mechanical condition. $1600 or best offer.
CE 4-5323,
1956 VAUXHALL 4 door sedan, only 9500
miles; will consider car in trade. Telephone CE 4-2617
PONTIAC
1961 Temptest,
black 4 door;
stick shift; radio, heater, whitewalls; purchased new 3/12/61; hasn’t had 1000 mile
inspection; private, $1950. CE 4-3747.
1957 MGA ROADSTER, excellent condition,
low mileage, wire wheels. Call EMpire 24364 after 5 p.m.
FOR sale or trade, 1953 Chevrolet and 1953
Buick. WI 5-5107.
AUTO
INSURANCE:
we write everybody.
Under 25, over 65, or in between. Tickets
or cancellations ate no concern to us. Up
to 32% discount for safe drivers. Lauren
R. Januz, CE 4-5670

995

................ $1795
dr.

H.T.,

$1045

1958
1957

Ford, 2 dr, auto., R&amp;H $
Mercury
Monterey,
2
dr.,
H.T.,
R&amp;H,
auto.

1957

Ford,
9 pass.
country
sed., R&amp;H, overdrive ....$1045
Plymouth, 4 dr., 6‘cyl.,
R&amp;H,
auto.
Ford conv., 6 cyl., R&amp;H,
BUOY ct
ie eee $ 695

trans.,

1956
1956

LOW
1955
1953

pow.

PRICED

steer.

2

dr.

1952

Ford,

1952

stand (rans, oes
$
Chevrolet
Carryall
(Handy man’s special) $

295

R&amp;H,
125

IN COMFORT

For your shopping convenience, 50 choice
used cars available for your inspection in
our INDOOR SHOWROOM.
SOME SAMPLE BARGAINS.

1956
1956

Plymouth, 2 dr., 6 cyl.,
car. etc. Full price
Ford V-8, 4 dr., sed. auto. trans.
pow. steer, pow. brakes, heater,
etc. Perfect clean transportation. ’$
Chevrolet V-8, 4 dr. H.T., auto.
trans., etc. The cleanest car inside and out you can imagine .. 0
Chrysler
Windsor,
4 dr.
sed.,
auto. trans., R&amp;H, etc. Fine family car.
$
Ford 4 dr. auto. trans., etc., low
mileage
$

695

795
645
195

MOTORS

Authorized Chrysler Corp. Dealer
First Street
Highland Park, Ill.
Hours—Weekdays 9-9
Sat. 9-6
Sun. 10-4
1766

1950 CHRYSLER station wagon, 6 passenger, $200; 1955 9 passenger Mercury, fully
equipped, whitewalls, $650. CE 4-1143.
FOR SALE, 1959 TR-3
Mint condition, new paint, extras.
PRIVATE
PARTY.
MOHAWK
4-1036.
1957 CADILLAC
62 coupe, power brakes,
steering; power antenna; white with blue
interior;
beautiful
condition.
$1695,
no
Sales tax. ID 2-3607.
1957 OLDSMOBILE
Super 88 convertible
gold metallic finish, new black nylon top,
power brakes and steering, excellent condition, tremendous
buy, original owner.
Call FI 6-0670 weekdays 9 to 5, or ID
2-4001 after 6:30.
1960 RAMBLER
American,
2 tone,
like
new, 2 door automatic transmission, 8.700 miles, 22 miles per gallon, $1,395.
CR 2-3148.
1953 CHEVROLET Bel Air, 2 door, radio,
heater,
automatic
transmission,
$195.
Telephone ID 2-6288.
1959 PONTIAC Bonneville sport coupe, low
ply A * ipoacap condition, $2100. Call
1960

PLYMOUTH

steering,

Fury

automatic

4 door

V-8,

transmission,

SHOP

at Sheridan

ID

2-1369

power
radio,

heater, oversized, white wall tires. A host
of other extras. My own personal demonstrator, full new car warranties 1 year or
12,000 miles. Will accept car in trade.
Call Mr. Fitzsimmons
at Lake Motors,
ID 2-2500.
CHEVROLET
1960 Biscayne 2 door sedan,
348 engine, stick shift; excellent condition, $1875. Knauz Motors, CE 4-2800.
BEL
AIR
Chevrolet,
1959,
22,000
miles,
just driven around Lake Forest, like new.
Telephone CE 4-1674.
1955 FORD Victoria, automatic, radio, heater, excellent
condition,
best
offer.
821
Woodward, Deerfield. WI 5-4009.
CADILLAC
1960; 6 windows, 6 way seat;
blue sedan Deville; low mileage, proved
by Cadillac service invoices; full power,
tinted glass. Immaculate. Blue leather and
fabric interior; $4495;. no tax. Call original owner, CE 4-9501.

For Cancer Drive
Highland Parkers are receiving
a letter from Perry Cohen, Highland Park Chairman for the current cancer crusade, seeking support for the campaign.
Cohen’s
says,

Society

in

This

St.

ID

war

against

cancer

amount

of

at a cost
amount

of less
raised.

than

This

5%

mone

is now being used both here
Lake County and throughout
United

effort

States

for

against

this

Make

the

disease.

Cancer’

is regularly

being

Society

made

against this disease. For exampl
a few years ago only one out ¢
four

persons

with

cance

was saved. Due to the developments through research, this f
gure has now dropped to one in
every three.

“None

PETS
BEAUTIFUL
Bedlington
terrier
puppies,
AKC
registered,
champion
stock,
look
like lambs, don’t shed. ALpine 1-6134.
URSAFELL
KENNELS
BOARDING
AND TRIMMING
Expert grooming, all breeds, individual runs,
country kennel. Telephone WI 5-5035.
WANTED:
good home
for 8 month
old
spayed female shepherd-collie, housebroken, good with children. WI 5-5465.
BABY
kittens to be given away, weaned
and pan trained. Telephone CE 4-0861.
SEAL POINT Siamese kitten, 9 month old
female. CE 4-0624.
AFGHAN hound, male, 3 years old, illness
necessitates loving home. ID 2-1321.
4 KITTENS
to give away to very good
homes. 5 weeks old. $D 2-5427.
WEIMARANER,
female
10 months
old,
AKC
registered. LOcust 6-5792, Mundelein.

continu

dread

Progress

American

progress
every

Bailey? It’s
‘‘bazarre of
p.m., April
Community

the

i

“In the three-pronged attack by

2-1750

GIRL’S 20 in. and 24 in. ard
bicycles,
perfect condition. WI 5-319
24 INCH
Schwinn boy’s a
in good
condition, $15. Telephone ID 2-8733.

WON’T you come home Bill
almost time for B’nai Torah’s
bargains,”’ April 22nd, 6 to 11
23rd, 10 a.m. on. Highwood
Center, 428 Green Bay Rd.

the

money was collected by the volunteers of the Lake County Chapter of the American Cancer So-

Guaranteed during your ownership
Free Pickup &amp; Delivery
First

part:

tremendous

of the

New &amp; Used Bikes
Ranger Bicycles

1844

in

“Last year the citizens of Lake
County contributed over $65,000
to support the American Cancer

ciety

“BIG WHEEL”
BIKE SHOP

195

AUTHORIZED
FACTORY
FORD DEALER
1909 St. Johns
Highland
Park
Call Used
Car Dept.—ID
2-8640
Open
8 A.M.
to 9 P.M.
Daily

1960

&amp; HOBBY

Central

Seeks Support

letter

PERSONAL
345

Holmes Motor Co.

SHOP

CYCLE
486

Local Chairman

MOTORCYCLES

BIKES—Used
and Reconditioned.
Good selection of Boys or Girls 16
in., 20 in. or 24 in. Many Schwinns
—completely
re-built—some
like
new.

........ $ 895

SPECIALS

V-8,

&amp;

1957
TRUCK,
%
ton Dodge
with
side
boxes,
15,000 miles, excellent condition,
$1,100. Call ID 2-2682.
1957 CHEVROLET ¥% ton pick up truck in
fair shape, can be seen at 2005 St. Johns
or call ID 3-1254.

995

Olds., 4 dr., R&amp;H, stand.
TRAPS
is oS ig ae $
Ford, 9 pass. sta. wgn.,
R&amp;H,
overdrive: sxx... $

LAKE

Until 9

2

Belvi-

V-8, stand. trans., R&amp;H

CARS

WENBAN BUICK
589 N. Oakwood
Forest
CE

down.

Chevrolet,

TRUCKS

BICYCLES

Plymouth,

1958

dr.,

SALE

BICYCLES

1959

1953

SALE

Plymouth suburban wagon, auto. trans., R &amp; H,
w/walls
$ 795
4 door
hardtop
Buick
Roadmaster
30. 7
$ 795
Open

Lake

FOR

MOTOR

Ford
Fairlane
500,
2
dr., 6 cyl. R &amp; H, Fordomatic, pow. steer.
Ford demonstrators. Only 3 left. Huge savings.

2

FOR

TWO
Mercedes-Benz
300SL,
coupe-roadsters, 1957 and 1959, 3
and $7500.
Knauz Motors, CE 4-2800
1956 OLDSMOBILE
4 door hardtop, immaculate
condition, $995 or best offer.
ID 2-2606
1957 V-8 FORD hardtop, new tires, radio,
heater, A-1 shape, reasonable. WI 5-0732.

USED CAR GUARANTEE ON
‘57 OR NEWER MODELS

1960

1957

LOST &amp; FOUND

AUTOMOBILES

HIGHLAND PARK
USED CAR
HEADQUARTERS

PIANOS wanted: bonus prices for Steinway
and Baldwin. VErnon
5-1640 eves. and
Sunday. AMbassador 2-2023 days.

ORGANS

Knabe Console, mahogany
Whitney spinet, Fruitwood
Kimball Console, mahogany
Mason &amp; Hamlin, Console, demonstrator
$25

TROMBONE,
in perfect

SALE

3 Lowrey Holidays, limed oak
Lowrey Holiday, walnut
Lowrey Holiday, French Provincial
Lowrey Brentwood, limed oak

FOR

ACCORDIONS
STRADAVOX Crown Imperial Black (with
Twin-Flow
Sound-Chamber)
13
TrebleSwitches
and 7 Bass-Switches, 41 TrebleKeys, 120 Bass 4 Sets of Treble Reeds and
5 Sets of Bass Reeds. None finer made for
the
professional
or
concert
Accordionist.
CAMERANO
Blue 24 Treble-Keys and 120
Bass 2-Treble-Switches.
Phone WI 5-2038

1957

RUMMAGE
Sale: North Shore Methodist
Church,
Hazel
and
Greenleaf
Avenues,
Glencoe. Wednesday, April 19th, 7 p.m.,
Thursday, ee
20th, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. 1
block East, 1 block "South of Northwestern Railroad.

INSTRUMENTS

of us

can

sit back

an

say that this is not a problem

us

to

worry

about,

for

for

at

the

present time cancer will strike approximately two of every three
American
families.
We
can all
help

by

in

this

fight

contributing

against

as

cance

much

as

pos-

sible to the support of the Ameri
can Cancer Society.”

Rescinds Suspension
Of Drivers’ Licenses

_

Secretary of State Charles
pentier’s

office

the Drivers

has

License

advised

Division has

Local Rifle Group

rescinded

Places in Tourney

One of those is Pati H. Gerber
200 S. Deere Park, whose license
was suspended following receipt

The

Sheridan

Junior

Rifle

of

Club

placed 15th in the Milwaukee Sentinel Sports Show
Rifle Tournament ‘held last month. The team

was

qualified

to

participate

by

of

three

suspension

Car-

Lake

erroneous

of licenses

county

residents.

information

of

licenses

of

Benjamin

Gay

of 198 out of a possible 200 earned
him fourth place of the 131 Junior
Shooters participating. Other mem-

To Be Presented

Students To Hear
IRS Speaker on
Tax Problems
Jerry Weinstein,
Chicago
Revenue

of

High

April

14

at

Highland

discussing

with

students and teachers problems and
the program of the Internal Revenue Service. Weinstein will attend various
classes between
9
a.m. and 3:30 p.m. to talk.
Vacation

At

Home

a member

Lake

Zurich,

‘Gay Adventures’

at

Temple

Emanuel,

in

Chicagi

April 15, at 8:30 p.m. and April 1
at 2:30 p.m. The play is sponso1
ed by the Men’s Club of Temp’
Emanuel, and is presented by &lt;¢
cast of about 100 people. Mrs

of the bowling

team which won the co-recreational
bowling championship at the University.

producing

show,
and

which

and

directing

the

is a series of scenes

skits.

Special Training
John P. Flahavin, local representative of the Metropolitan Life
Insurance Company, has returned
from New York City where h

participated in a special advanced
training course relating to
planning and business life
ance

Sidney Frisch, Jr., spent Easter
vacation at the University of IIlinois in Urbana, with his parents,
the senior Sidney Frisches of Ivy
Lane.
The
student
recently won
the Psi Upsilon Scholarship fund,

and was

Yee,

is

a member of the

School,

Patch,

Maxine Berman of Highland Park

staff
of
the
Internal
Service, will spend most

Friday,

Park

a

2760 Deerfield Rd., Deerfield, and

placing 16th in a field of 150 entrants from three states. Outstanding team member was Irwin Wengieski, Jr. of Deerfield whose score

bers
of the team
were
Stephen
Hennessy, Tony Levy, Josh Orkin,
and Howard Worcester, all of Highland
Park.

from

Cook county police magistrate.
Also rescinded were suspension

estate
inser

underwriting.

Flahavin, who lives at 340 Grant
Ct., recently was appointed to th
position

of Metropolitan

Insurance

Consultant, in which capacity he
will continue his insurance sales
and
service activities from the
Metropolitan’s Sheridan office a’
816 Central Avenue, The office is.
under the direction of Manager Alfred

Simons.

Page H 65—D

57

.

‘
—

�Spring Adult Class
Sessions Open at Y|

COMING

Registration is open for Spring
adult education classes at the Highland Park YWCA, 494 Laurel Ave.,
Miss Musa I. DeMouth, executive
director, announces.
Two
bridge
classes, under the
direction
of
Isabelle
Garn,
are

IN

scheduled

JULY

to start April 25 and 26.

A class for intermediate bridge
players will be held Tuesday evenings from 8 to 10 p.m. and will be
open to both men and women. The
Wednesday afternoon class will be
“play of the hand” instruction in
advanced
play.
The
Wednesday
class will be held from 1 to 3:15
p.m.; both clases will continue for

eight weeks.

|"GET
AQUAINTED"

Classes in oil painting, with Hilda Rubin as instructor, will start
Tuesday
morning
and
afternoon,
April 11 and Friday morning, April
14.
The classes will last for 12
weeks.
The
Duplicate Bridge club for

beginning duplicate
continue Wednesday

players will
evenings

throughout May and June. It then
will be discontinued until September.
The
fourth
Wednesday
of
each month is master point night.

Persons

interested

“YY”? classes

may

call

in
ID

any

of

the

2-0675

for

further information, Miss DeMouth
said.

PUBLICATION

in your

AL
LAKE
aoe

Worn

Hy

0

mee

wo

Uroup

7

aimee PEE

NOTICE

STATE
OF
ILLINOIS,
COUNTY
OF
LAKE,
SS:
IN THE
CIRCUIT
COURT
OF
LAKE
COUNTY,
ILLINOIS.
IN
CHANCERY:
ANITA
MARIE
GREGORY,
Plaintiff,
vs
HAROLD
THOMAS
GREGORY, Defendant, General No. 75143.
Affidavit,
showing
that
the
defendant,
Harold Thomas Gregory, is concealed within this State or resides out of this State so
that process cannot be served upon said
defendant, Harold Thomas Gregory, having
been filed in the office of the Clerk of this
Court, NOTICE IS, THEREFORE, HEREBY GIVEN to said Harold Thomas Gregory that the plaintiff in the above-entitled
cause filed her praecipe for summons in
suit for divorce on April 4, 1961; that summons was duly issued out of the said Court
against you as provided by law, and that
said suit is; still pending.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE ADVISED that
the Complaint for Divorce has been filed
against you on the 4th day of April, 1961,
in accordance with the statute in such case
made and provided.
NOW, THEREFORE, unless you, Harold
Thomas
Gregory, the said defendant, file
your appearance and answer to the Complaint on or before the 30th day of May,
1961, as provided by law, a default may be
entered against you at any time after that
date and a Decree entered in accordance
with the prayer of said Complaint.
YTEPHANIE SULTHIN, Clerk
JAMES P. MOORE
Attorney for Plaintiff
9 South County Street
Waukegan, Illinois

pe

l A WSPAPERS

Telephone:

McDONALD

ON

2-5665

4/13/61—97

OBITUARIES

Alfred Olsen, 84, of Waverly
Rd., life-long resident of Highland
Park, died in Anaheim, Calif,,

Mrs. Fred Cuscaden

April
Mrs.
685

Fred

Vine

A.

Ave.,

Cuscaden,
died

early

79,

of

Friday

afternoon

copal Church,
Shore Garden

at

Wednes-

Trinity

5 while

visiting his daughter,

Mrs. Frederick Wendling.
Funeral services were held April
9 at the chapel at 1913 Sheridan
Rd., with the Rev. Paul V. Berggren, pastor of Zion Lutheran
church, officiating.
Interment was
in Rosehill, Chicago.

day morning last week at Highland
Park Hospital. The funeral was
Epis-

and burial in North
of Memories.

Mr. Olsen, a retired auditor, was
born in Highland
Park Aug. 26,
1876, the son of Hans Johan Olsen
and Anna Hansen Olsen, who had
come here from Norway.
His father was
a well known
pioneer
blacksmith in Highland Park.

Mrs. Cuscaden, nee Maude Macomber,
lived
in Highland
Park
since 1922 with her husband, who
is a retired vice president of the

Northern Trust Co.
She was the great-grandmother
of five children. Her son, Henry
J., lives on Sanibel Is., Fla.; his
sons are R. R. Cuscaden of Chica-

He leaves two daughters, Mrs.
Wendling,
and Mrs.
Raymond
Osborne, with whom he lived. One
sister, Miss
Jennie
Olsen,
Highland
Park,
survives
him.
One
brother,
Ole
Laurence
Olsen,
a
Highland Park contractor, and one
sister, Mrs. Emily Elfstrom, Highland Park, preceded him in death.

go and Michael Cuscaden of Cleveland.
Mrs.
Cuscaden’s
daughter
is
Mrs. Charles Perrigo of 230 Cary
Ave. The Perrigos’ daughter, Jean,
married
Basil Paschall
and
now

lives in Tucson, Ariz,

Harry L. Appelman

Fine Arts Quartet

Funeral
services
for Harry
L.
Appelman,
145 Oak Knoll
Terr.,
were held April 6 from a Chicago
chapel.
Interment was in Sholom

Sets Two Operas
When the Music Center of the
North Shore presents an evening
of two one-act operas as part of
its
Fine
Arts
Quartet
concert
series, it will mark still another
instance
in a recent
trend,
the

inclusion of opera
of

instrumental

Memorial Park. Mr. Appelman died
April

on the schedule

groups.

Kansas

New

City;

Matt,

Issahr, New York;
Gordon, Portland,

zetti’s
“Il
Campanello,”
will
be
presented April 26 and May 3 at
the Studebaker Theatre, Chicago,

and on April 25 and May 2
the Howard School, Wilmette.

5.

He leaves his widow, Molly; one
son, Evan H., Downers Grove; one
daughter, Leta Griffin and one
grandchild.
He also leaves three
brothers
and
one sister, Hyman,

The operas, both in a comic
vein, Ernst Toch’s “The Princess
and the Pea,” and Gaetano Doni-

Los

Smorgasbord Apr.

at

Feature

the orchestra
bert Zipper.
Outstanding

Other singers
Emma
as the

include Catherine
Princess,
Richard

Knoll,

Nazarian,

conducted

by

the

professional

singers

is

soprano

Chookasian,

Lilli

cently
claim

Her-

won
in

cast

Hasmick
Michael

re-

APPLIANCE

GAS WATER HEATERS

DAYS—ID
NIGHTS—ID
2236

Skokie Valley Rd.

Page H 66—D

58

Disposals

Everhot

Rheem

|

3-2270

Park

WORTH

$2
ON

ANY

APPLIANCE

Offer

2-0268

rab

THIS COUPON

Psa

SERVICE
Highland

-

CALL OR CHECK

Expires June

1, 1961

ac-

Edward

Bondon,

HEATING

Permaglas

critical

Hall.

Jordan Bard, Ardis Krainik,
ward Rodriguez and Robert
kin.

of

mezzo-

who

unanimous

Carnegie

Pierson,

among

We Service All Makes of
Washers - Dryers

24 HOUR

16

806, Sunday, Apr. 16, from 3 to
6 p.m. Mrs. B. M. Cardina is chairman. Tickets will be available at
the door.

JAMES J. CAROLLO
-

Helen

The
Moose
home,
1799
Green
Bay Rd., will be setting for the
smorgasbord
dinner to be given
by Women of the Moose, Chapter

INTRODUCING

Dishwashers

Angeles;

and Mrs.
Ore.

During the last decade or so,
symphony
orchestras increasingly
have
presented
operas,
usually
those seldom
produced
in opera
houses. But whereas the orchestras
have given the works in concert
form, the Music Center’s productions
will be fully staged,
with
settings,
costumes
and
a choral
and
dance
ensemble
augmenting

PLUMBING
AND

Alfred Olsen

UP

Anita

EdZal-

�ee
NEwe esate

Some Ideas on How
To Saw Hardboard
The beginning hobbyist will find
that it’s easy to saw the hardboard
he uses for home fix-up and workshop projects.
No special skill or
needed when working
satile material.

equipment is
with this ver-

Standard
woodworking
saws,
either hand or power, can be used,
according to the American Hardboard Association.
The industry group offers these
tips:
In handsawing hardboard, a slow
stroke at a shallow angle and a soft
touch produce smooth edges. The
cut should be taken on the downstroke, with the teeth disengaged
on the up-swing.

Repairing Old Roof
May Start New Leaks
Repairing an old roof generally
is a waste of time, says Andrew C.
Lang, authority on home maintenance.
“Walking on an aged, weathered
roof to make repairs here and there
may open up new leaks,” says Lang,
“that will show up at the first rainstorm.”
That’s why roofers generally reccommend applying a complete new
roof of asphalt
shingles
directly
over the old material. This is the
most
economical
measure
in the
long run, since an asphalt shingle
roof will give years of protection
from all kinds of weather.

If the floor of your station wagon
is taking a beating, try this: Cut a
pattern of the floor area and transThis assures clean edges on the fer it to a piece of % inch tempered hardboard. The rugged and
face of the board.
Cut with the exposed surface up durable hardboard will protect the
when using a hand or table saw, floor from scuffs and damage. It
and the reverse with a power saw, ean be easily removed and stored
so that the teeth hit the exposed | when not needed.
side first.
A
10-point
crosscut
saw
with
medium
set gives good hand results. Remove
saw marks, if any
with a plane, file or sandpaper as
you would with natural wood.
When
power sawing
hardboard
avoid “crowding”. the saw beyond
its normal capacity; otherwise saw-

ing

will

be

edges may
Per

difficult

and

Tree
‘
f

ee
eee
ft
Orne saee

.

pei

Fa

7

eRe

oR tae

yet

Less Mess When

J+

oe

f}—+

ea

bop
|

bak

abs | aN BRAS
|

to

4

Spring Cleaning
There are probably many homemakers who are convinced that the
word “spring” is always followed
by the word “cleaning.”
And it’s
true that spring usually. does signal |
the start of projects to spruce up|
he home after winter has left its
}
mark.
Cleaning

Windows

If winter’s mark happens to be |
smudges on walls and windows at}
your house, cleaning these areas is
sure to be on your list of “things to
do.” You'll probably be using paper towels to dry your windows
after washing, so try this: fold two |
pieces of Kleenex
towel in half,
wrap one around each wrist and secure with rubber bands. The paper |
towel
will make
absorbent
wrist |
cuffs to keep water off your arms
and clothing when you’re reaching|
up to do wall areas near the ceiling, or the top window panes.

aeaaeaes
Brand

New

Models 7-8-4 or 6-8-4

|

VICTOR CHAMPION ADDING MACHINES
© Top quality... famous
. +» lowest price ever

precision-built

Victors

© 10-key or full-keyboard . . . totals 9,999,999.99
@ Electric models

low as $171

were $119

NOW

ONLY

1

SO4
plus tax

a

645 Central Ave.

ID 3-0230

rough

result.

capita

consumption

board in the U.S: was

of

hard-

12.98 square

feet
in
1960,
compared
to 6.23
square feet in. 1950, according to
U.S. Bureau of Census figures.

CUSTOM

UPHOLSTERING
°

Restyling

*

Recovering

¢

Repairing

¢

Cornices

Large Selection of Fabrics
All Work Guaranteed
Free Estimates

Ace

Upholstering Co.
DExter

6-6425

1615 Jackson St., No. Chicago, Il.

TERETE

Ss

a

HOMEOWNERS:

A
Nip
NOT

our

OC

with

Et

leaks

RE

save your nerves,
stop expensive

RE

Nl A

I

LN

RNG

AONE

SE

TOS

Special Rates for Medical
&amp; Commercial Buildings

Ask about the
60-Day Free Trial
1414 HIGHLAND AVE., CHICAGO 26
The Rains are Coming—
Check your Sump Pump!

at:

Noch onié (

E

A

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plus

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ACQUAINTED
SPECIAL

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"The Friendly People’’

RADIO-CONTROLLED SERVICE
Thursday,
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April

13.

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«HOLY
CROSS
CATHOLIC
CHURCH
te
North Waukegan
Road
;
Rev.
John
O’Mara,
Pastor
i)
Rev.
Edward
Reilly, Assistant
i
Rectory, 724 Elder Lane
Windsor 5-0430
hy
a
Masses:
7, 8, 9, 10, 11:15 and
_ Daily Masses: 6:30 and 8:30 a.m.
_
First Friday of each month, Masses at
6:30
a.m., 8:30 a.m
ConfesSaturday: 4 p.m. ‘and 7:30 p.m.
NORTH
SUBURBAN
EVANGELICAL
FREE
CHURCH
Rev.
Vernon
Olson,
Pastor
200 County Line Rd.
Church Office—WI 5-4640
Parsonage—WI 5-4641
UNDAY
9:30 a.m. Sunday School.
10:45 a.m.
Worship Service.
7 p.m. Worship Service.
8:15
p.m.
Youth Groups.
WEDNESDAY
7:30 p.m. Bible Study.
7:30 p.m. Junior
Crusaders.
&gt;, ‘

THURSDAY

%

ye

6:45

p.m.

Pioneer

Girls

Boys

and

Bri-

ce.

CONGREGATION
BETH OR
In Trinity United Church
638 Wankegan Road
Deerfield

“ey
bi,
_
.

FRIDAY
:30 p.m.

SA
Ne

Sabbath

RDAY

9:30

a.m.

Eve

Religious

— 9:30 a.m. and 11:15 a.m. Church School
for toddlers up through 8th grade at 9:30
.m. and 11:15 a.m. simultaneously with the
lurch services.
High School Group meet at 9:45 a.m. and
ternate Sunday evenings.
REDEEMER

LUTHERAN
CHURCH
Highland
Park
(Missouri Synod)
Rev. Robert A. Wendelin, Pastor
1717 Deerfield Rd.—ID 2-6848
y service,
10:15 a.m.
Holy Com.
union, first Sunday of each month.
Suny School, 9 a.m.
JOSEPH
THE
WORKER
CATHOLIC CHURCH
W. Dundee Rd., Wheeling
George J. Mulcahey, Pastor
Raymond Nugent, Assistant

181
Rev.
Rev.

;

Rectory,

a

171

W.

Dundee

Rd.,

CHURCH
OF CHRIST,
SCIENTIST
155 Deerfield Road
SUNDAY—11
a.m. Services.
Children
are
cared
for during
Church
service,
9:30 a.m. Sunday School.
For pupils up to 20 years of age.
WEDNESDAY
EVENING
MEETINGS—
8 p.m.
Including testimonies of healing
through Christian Science.
All are welcome to attend these services
and to use the reading room. For further
information call WIndsor 5-1626.
READING
ROOM
3 to 5 p.m. Daily.
9 to 9:30 p.m
Wednesdavs
LESSON—SERMON
The oneness and supremacy of God will
be emphasized
at Christian Science services this sunday.
“Doctrine of Atonement’? is the subject
of the Lesson-Sermon. The Golden Text is
from the first chapter of II John: ‘He that
abideth in the doctorine of Christ, he hath
both the Father and the Son.”
The opening selection to be read from
“Science
and
Health
with
Key
to
the
Scriptures”
by Mary
Baker
Eddy
states:
“Jesus taught but one God, one Spirit, who
makes man in the image and likeness of
Himself,—of Spirit, not of matter’ (p. 94).
From the Bible will be read this verse
from Psalm 143: “Teach me to do thy will;
for thou art my God: thy spirit is good;
lead me into the land of uprightness.”

Wheeling

LEhigh 17-2740
Masses: 6:30, 8, 9:30, 11, 12:15
Day Masses: 6:30, 8, 9:30, 11 a.m.,

eendey
Holy
p.m.
eekdays: 6:30, 8:30 a.m.
turday and Thursday before the first
ay in the month: 4, 5:30, 7, 9 p.m.,

nfessions.

QUAKERS
SOCIETY
OF
FRIENDS
David Stickney, Clerk
Lake Forest

UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIS1
638 Waukegan
Road
Rev. Philip A. Desenis, Minister
Parsonage—1139
Elmword
Ave.
Telenhone WI 5-5050
THURSDAY.
April 13
7:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
9:09 p.m. Report meeting.
SATURDAY, April 15
9 a.m. Advanced confirmation.
10 a.m. Beginners confirmation.
9:09 p.m. Report meeting.
SUNDAY,
Anopril 16
9:30 a.m. Family Worship.
9:30 a.m. Church
School
Nursery
thru
Juniors.
11 a.m. Worship.
11 a.m. Church School Junior and Senior High Nursery provided.
7:44 p.m. Victory night.
MONDAY,
April 17
4 p.m. Cherub choir.
TUESDAY, April 18
9:30
a.m.
Regional
women’s
Guild
at
Crystal Lake.
8 p.m, Circle 3.
THURSDAY, April 20
9 am. to 3 p.m. 6 p.m. to 9 vo.m. Repel
shop,
church
annex
and
fellowship
Choir

Friends peering, in Deer Path
ool Library in Lake
Forest.
or information call Windsor 5-1774.
NORTH SHORE
UNITARIAN CHURCH
Rev. Russell R. Bletzer. Minister
Ferry Hal! Chapel
Lake Forest
sa Information Call WI 5-3332

10:

45 a.m.
Church School.
a.m.
Church Service.

Bol

B'NAT
TORAH
2789 Oak Street
Highland Park
Sholom Singer, Rabbi
School,
Saturday
and

i
} oes

Sunday

SUNDAY
:

9:30 a.m.

Church

am

Worship

A

a.m.

nursery

Worship

lephone WI

School.

Service.

Service

is provided

for

and

Church

small

children

5-4179 for more

information.

THE
(An
Oak
4
Rev.
Panay
“3
a.m,
Wie,

NORTH
SUBURBAN
BAPTIST
CHURCH
American
Baptist
Church)
Lane School, Midway Road
Northbrook
East
CR 2-4623
Donald E. Thurston, Pastor

11
am.
people and

| children.

Sunday

School

for

Worship
Service
adults.
Extended

PRESBYTERIAN

CHURCH

824 Wankegan Road
Bernard F. Didier, Minister
Rev. Hugh Jeffers.
Director of Christian Education
Manse—1218 Walden
lane
Church phone—WI 5-0560
Manse nhone—WI 5-0107
THURSDAY,
April 13
9:30 a.m.
Meeting of Circle 6.
3:45 p.m.
Jr. Choir rehearsal (4th and
5th graders).
4:30
p.m.
Westminster
choir rehearsal
(6th. 7th and 8th graders,) both under the
direction of Mrs. Edward Alder.
9 p.m.
Mixed bowling league at Strike
N’ Svare Lanes, Northbrook.
SUNDAY,
April 16
9, 10, and 11:30 a.m.
Morning Worship
and Church school.
Nursery for children
1, 2 and 3 years. Kindergarten and classes
for all other grades through high school.
10 a.m. Adult Bible class.
7 p.m. Tuxis group for senior highs, supper and program following.
MONDAY, Aopril 17
3:30 p.m.
Girl Scout troop 11.
3:30 p.m.
Girl Scout troop 127.
8 v.m.
Adult Bible class.
TUESDAY, April 18
7:30 p.m. Boy Scout troop 52.
WEDNESDAY, April 19
9 am.
Prayer group.
9:30 a.m.
Bible study.
10 a.m. Girl Scout neighborhood meeting.
7:30 p.m. Tuxis choir rehearsal.
8 p.m.
Chancel choir rehearsal.
Rev.

WASHBURN
CONGREGATIONAL
CHURCH
ee
Half Day
Rev.
Wakeland,
Pastor
Route 22

9:30

METHODIST
CHURCH
Maplewood School
Clay and Alden Cts.
Rev. Richard F. Mellor, Interim Pastor
Parsonage—1652 Pear Tree Rd.
Membership—WI
5-5203
SUNDAY,
April 2
9:30 a.m.
Church school,
children
two
and three years, kindergarten
and classes
for all grades through high school. Adult
Bible class.
10:30 a.m. Fellowshin coffee
11 a.m. Morning
Worshin
service.
Reception of new members. Sitters for children will be provided.
FIRST

Y
730 p.m. Sabbath eve services.
lebrew
School,
Wednesday
afternoon;
or information call Windsor 5-5466.

|

Rev,

children

and

for
young
session
for

Robert

Humrickhouse,

church chairman, at dedication service March 19. The Rev.
Vernon E. Olson is pastor of the church, which was organized

Pastor
5-0708

KINGDOM
EVANGELICAL
Woodland Park Schooi
Stephen G. Bodony, Pastor
Preaching
the Gospel of the Kingdom
SUNDAY
10 a.m. Sunday School.
7 p.m. Evening Service.
GRACE

For
4-3060

in May 1958.
Charter membership included 24 people.
Ground was broken for the new church just a year ago on
ground purchased, with the present parsonage, in 1959.

Again

ZION
LUTHERAN
CHURCH
10 Deerfield
Road.
Deerfield
Rev. Paul V. Berggren. Pastor
Genrrge Jacohson, Intern
Telephone: Windsor 5-2009
THURSDAY, April 13
1 p.m.
Spring Luncheon
sponsored
by
ALCW.
Guest will be Sadie Stern Merel,
who will interpret the play, “A Majority
of One.’’
SATURDAY,
April 15
9:30 a.m.
Confirmation classes.
SUNDAY, April 16
Second Sunday after Easter
8 a.m.
Ceebration of Holy Communion.
9 a.m.
Family
Worship
service
with
church school for children three vears old
through
7th grade; eighth graders to attend worship service.
Cry room
facilities
available during this service.
10:45 a.m.
Family Worship service with
church school for children three years old
through
7th grade;
eighth
graders attend
worship service.
Bus transportation is provided for this service only.
Please contact
the church office for schedule.
5:30 p.m.
Family Night supper and _ program sponsored by the Luther League.
MONDAY, April 17
7:30
p.m.
Bible
study
course
of the
School for Christian Living.
9 p.m.
Church Bowling league.
TUESDAY,
April 18
7:30 p.m.
Boy Scout Troop 150.
8 p.m.
Altar Guild at the home of Mrs.
Arthur Juhl, 1302 Deerfield Rd., Deerfield.
WEMNESDAY. April 19
4:30 p.m.
HP Youth Instruction classes.
8 p.m.
Adult Choir rehearsal.
THURSDAY,
April 20
8 p.m.
Meeting of Board of Deacons.

rehearsal.

Erling Kasperson, contractor, presents the key to the new
North Suburban Evangelical Free Church to Harold Hedstrom,

COMMUNITY
BAPTIST CHURCH
1250 Waukegan Road

FRIDAY, April 14
8 p.m.
Berean Class meeting to be held
at the parsonage, 1250 Waukegan Rd.
Mr.
E. Neyer, manager of Scrivture Press Bock
Store in Wheaton. will bring a program on
Christian books
Co-hostesses for the meeting are Mrs. William Lindholm
and Mrs.
R. Humrickhouse.
SATURDAY,
Aopril 15
8 p.m. Four Grand Piano concert is presented
bv the
Awana
Youth
association,
3859 North Central
Chicago.
Tickets are
available at the church.
SUNDAY, April 16
&amp;
9:30 a.m.
Sunday School classes, Bible
studv for all aves.
10:45 a.m.
Worshiv service.
7 p.m.
Evening Gosvrel service.
8:15 p.m.
Deacons meeting.
MONDAY, April 17
3 p.m.
Opening
sessiom of the II-Mo
Association
of
Regular
Baptist’
churches
spring
conference.
Pastor
Humrickhouse
and other delegates will he attending these
sessions. The three dav Conference will be
occunied with inspirational Bible messages,
Associational reports, and Association business.
3:30 p.m.
Chums
Awana
Youth
club,
girls 8-10.
TUESDAY, April 18
3:45 p.m.
Guards, Awana
Youth
club,
girls 11-13,
6:30 p.m.
Pals and Pioneers, boys 8-13.
WEDNESDAY.
April 19
7:30
p.m.
Prayer
meeting
and
Bible
study.
8:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.

TRINITY

p.m.

16

Tetephone:
Windsor
We Preach Christ
Crucified. Risen and Coming

CONGREGATIONAL
CHURCH
In South Park School
1331 Hackberry Road
Rev. John S. Usry, Minister
Porsonage Telephone WI 5-0176
THURSDAY
7:45 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
SUNDAY
10:30 a.m. Worship
Service.
10:30 a.m. Church School.
7 o.m. Pilgrim Fellowship.
TUESDAY
8 p.m. Constitution Committee.

7:30

April

8:30, 9:30 and
10:55 a.m.
Services
of
Divine Worship.
Rev. R. C. Grigereit will
give the sermon.
9:30 a.m.
Church
School
for
nursery
(2-yr. old) through
6th grade,
and adult
classes.
10:55
a.m.
Church
School for nursery
(2-yr. old) through high school First year
Confirmation class.
:
6:30 p.m. Youth Fellowship—program of
recreation.
MONDAY, April 17
3:30 p.m. Girl Scout troop. 172.
7 p.m.
Second Year Confirmation class.
8 p.m.
Fireside Club at Mr. and Mrs.
Ted
Johnson’s.
1145
Elmwood.
ESDAY, April 18
“
a.m. -3 a
Guild Etection Day Bake
Sale in old town hall, 602 Deerfield Rd.
WEDNESDAY.
April 19
(
6:30 a.m.
Men’s
Bible Study meeting.
Coffee and rolls are served—dismissal 7:10
a m.
9:30
a.m.
Women’s
Bible
study—“In
Him Was Life.”
Coffee and rolls will be
served.
Dismissal
time
about
10:45
a.m.
7 p.m.
Chorister (Grades 4, 5, 6 and 7)
rehearsal.
d
7:45
pm.
Chancel
Choir
rehearsal
(adults).

Office

CHRIST

ei

SUNDAY,

DEERFIELD

Service.

School.

THE
HIGHLAND
PARK
PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
ID 2-1695
Dr. William Atkinson Young
Rev. J. A. Miller
Ministers
UNDAY

ST.

FIRST

THE BETHLEHEM CHURCH
(Evangelical United Brethren)
Rev. Eugene M. Wykle, Minister
Rev. R. C. Grigereit, Asst. Minister
801 Rosemary
Terrace
Church—WI 5-0078
Parsonage—WI1
5-2221
THURSDAY,
April 13
7 p.m. Youth Choir rehearsal. Boy Scout
troop 51.
7:30 p.m.
board of trustees.

LUTHERAN
CHURCH
(Missouri
Synod)
Walters Ave. at Fourth St.
Northbrook
further information call CRestwood
or WIndsor 5-1323.

Sisterhood
For

Bazaar

Prepares

At Highwood

Magic And Comedy

In April

Greet Members At
League’s Meeting

Center

The Sisterhood of B’nai Torah
Reformed
Temple
of
Highland
Park is getting ready its Annua!
“Bazaar of Bargains’
which will

An

Community Center, 428 Green Bay
Rd.,
Saturday,
Aprik
22, 6 p.m,

11

p.m.

and

Sunday,

April

23,

10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Funds raised are used to suppert
free
religious
services
for
military men, youth group activities and
the Temple’s
Religious
School.
Deerfield
residents
who
are
helping
to
make
the
Bazaar
a
success
are:
Mrs.
Melvin
Koral,
131 Forest Way Dr., Mrs. Stephan

amazing
of

and

comedy

of the

North

and

unexpected
powers

audience,

of

and

discovery

members

the

of

prediction

of an event which has just occured
found in a letter given to a member of the group at the beginning

of

the

evening.

Responsible
for
these
strange
happenings will be Edward Seder,
who
has
appeared
professionally
throughout his native New York

Lip-

and New

Jersey area. Now

a jour-

nalism
student
at
Northwestern
University, Seder performs around
Chicago and the North Shore. Sup-

Sponsor Luncheon
The Afternoon circle of Trinity
United Church of Christ will sponsor a post
Easter
Luncheon
on
April 11, 12:30 p.m.
The price of this ‘Luncheon Is

plementing magie with other aspects of show business, he has
worked with five summer stock
companies, and three broadcasting
stations.
Arrangements for the fun program were made by Mrs. Arnold
Cohn,
1425
Central,
and
Mrs.
Bernard
Peskin
of Northbrook.

Served” will be $1. Tickets may be
purchased from the circle members
or by calling Mrs. Paul Shipley,
CE 4-3272.
The circle plans to have an exchange student speak on his impression of America.
GREGORY’S
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
Wilmot and Deerfield Roads
The Rev. J. D. Parker, Rector
The Rev. E. G. Wappler, Curate
The Rev. G. W. Robinson, Assistant
Rectory Telephone—WiIndsor 5-1881
Church
Telephone—Windsor
5-1678
DAILY
9 am. and 5 p.m.
Morning and Evening
Prayer.
THURSDAY, April 13
7:30 p.m. Boy Scouts.
SATURDAY,
April 15
11 a.m. Eighth Grade Confirmation class.
SUNDAY, April 16
8 a.m.
Holy Communion.
9:30
a.m.
Holy
Communion,
Church
school and Nursery care.
11:15
a.m,
Morning
Prayer,
Church
school and nursery care.
12:30 p.m.
Adult Confirmation and Inquirers class.
p.m.
Youth
Congregation—leave
church for trip to Chicago.
MONDAY,
April 18
Afternoon—Girl Scouts.
TUESDAY,
April 18
9:30 am.
St. Anne’s Guild—baby sitter.
WEDNESDAY,
April 18
8:15 p.m. Choir rehearsal.

of magic

members

magical

the

Demain, 1319 Charing Cross Rd.,
Mrs.
Bernard
Eisenstein,
1232
Deerfield
Rd.,
Mrs.
Henry
schultz, 1429 Deerfield Rd.

greet

Suburban
League
of the Jewish
Children’s Bureau when they meet
Wednesday, April 19, at 8:30 p.m.,
in the Northbrook Youth Center.
Among
the
surprising
things
happening
that
evening
will
be
the sudden appearance and disappearance of a live white dove, the

be held this year at the Highwood
to

evening

will

Deerfield Darlings
Under Leadership Of
Mrs. Ray Ferguson

ST.

The Deerfield Darlings, a new
4-H club has been
organized
in
Deerfield, under the leadership of
Mrs. Ray Ferguson and Miss Penny
Jorat.
The eight members of the group
are: Katherine Bueger, president;

Julie

Walker,

vice

president;

Jo-

anne
Sobato,
secretary-treasurer;
Sandra
Wolske,
publicity;
Elizabeth
Solie,
recreation
chairman;

Jane

Clarke,

Susan

Ducey

and

Joanne Ferguson.
The
girls are learning
to use
the
sewing
machine
currently.

Their

immediate

making

of

project

is

scarfs.

Lj

“The Service Bank Of Highland Park”

BANKs* HIGHLAND

1771

Second St.

BANK —POST

Member

Page H 44—D 60

Federal

OFFICE

Deposit

BLDG.

Insurance

PARK
IDlewood 2-7800

Corporation
Thursday, April 13, 1961

the

�ONE FEEDING
LASTS. MONTHS
ed

Gives your grass
a complete diet
with every nutrie
ent grass needs

a

Nae
AS

ADVERTISED

tHE

MAGAZINE

OF

IN

PLEASANT

S7
PLACES

ee

Now, just one full-season feeding
lication of New

VitoGRO

asts all summer—and
or needs watering

for

8 ioGinog
apGrass

it never burns

in!

Peon RO’s timed release of nutrients
sudden surges of excess

growth,

i eeds evenly for 6 months.
ot just
the top, thin layer. either. VitoGRO

Donald

Mrs.

Lindsey,

880

Hiawatha

Ln.,

left,

joined

with

Miss

Wanda

Paul,

Evanston,

western.

WWeStO

Jack D. Ewan, account executive
of Fuller,
Smith
and
Ross
Inc.,
has been named
public relations
consultant to the 1961 Crusade of
Mercy
for the Community
Fund
and the Red Cross.

Ewan,

1523

Woodbine

Ct.,

will

serve with seven other executives
on the Crusade’s public relations
committee.
It meets
every
week

over

a

six-month

period

to

plan

the general strategy of the campaign.
Ewan has been in public relaions
since
he
graduated
from
Northwestern
university
Medill
school of journalism in 1948.
He
is also
an advisor
to the
Booth
Memorial
hospital
of the

Salvation
League

Army
of

and

Women

the

Chicago

Voters.

Contest

Medal winner, John
W. Dwyer
of Deerfield, led a group of 199
successful CPA candidates who received professional certificates at
the semi-annual awards dinner of
the
Illinois
Society
of Certified
Public Accountants recently.
Dwyer, 35, assistant controller of
Oliver
Corporation,
Chicago,
received the society’s gold medal for

placing

first in the

state

CPA

Deerfield Women
Win Show Prizes

“Tllinois
State
Parks
and
Memorials,” the Department of Conservation’s motion picture in sound
and color will be shown as illustration for the talk by Miss Vivian
Rankin, for North Shore chapter,
Daughters of the American Revo-

At
the
recent
World
Garden
show held at McCormick Place in '
Chicago,
Mrs.
Reinhard
E. Lutz.
and Mrs. Leon Sherman won second
place
in
the
Class
called
“Faith” for the Garden
Club of
Deerfield.

lution,

Mrs.
Robert
O.
Clark
placed
second in the Class called ‘‘Crafts.”’
Also winning a second place were
Mrs.
Robert
O, Clark
and
Mrs.
Thomas Z. Hayward in the Garden
Club
of
America
Class.
called
“Music.”

Thursday

13, in the
Sked,
800
Forest.

afternoon,

April

home of. Mrs. Wilson
Longwood
Dr.,
Lake

Miss Rankin is a representative
of the Conservation Department’s
Education division.
Essay

Winners

Guests

Mary L. Bowie, Fort Sheridan, who
mention,

will

ex-

Y ana

amination last November.
A graduate of the University of
Connecticut in 1948, he is currently working on his master’s degree
at Northwestern university’s school
of business administration.
Dwyer
was
also
named
silver
medal winner, emblematic of sec-

ond

Sells award

sored

by

the

of Certified

competition

American

Public

Accountants.

brought out
beautifully

use of
service

:
Thursday,

aS
April

MAGICI"
13, 1961

Mower Sharpening

&amp; Repair

FERRARO
Garden Spot
826

Skokie

Blvd.

Northbrook, Ill.
FREE DELIVERY

(South

of Dundee

Rd.)

CR 2-1840

to

$4

your

for $3

Savings

Bond.

if held to ma.

DRIVE CAREFULLY — THE LIFE YOU SAVE
MAY BE YOUR OWN

COSMOPOLITAN®

Mail and phone orders filled

MAGIC
SCISSORS
BEAUTY
1394

Lawn

expert

tinting

ID 2-3814

per bag

just glides over the figure
for that stem-slim look
(with no distractions)
which junior sizes
cultivate for compliments.
In linen-look spun
rayon. Black, string
beige, grass green,
Riviera blue or
Paris pink.
Sizes 5 to 15. 14.95

spon-

Institute

HAIR
TONES
by the

***'"$4.75

summer sheathing

N IATURAL

our

on

get

YOUNG

place nationally, in the Elijah

Watt

bag covers up

BEST
Hold

You'll

Mary
Ann
Fabbri,
Highwood,
who won first place in the Illinois
DAR historical essay contest, and
won state honorable
read their essays,

treatment for grass.

to 5,800 sq. ft. Money-back
=
on every bag.

le @ trademart of dwitt &amp; Company

By

State Parks, Essays
Topics for the DAR

Hostesses for the afternoon will
be
Mrs.
Frank
Sorg,
chairman;
Mrs. Robert Herbst, Mrs. William
Jacob,
Highland
Park;
and Mrs.
Harold O. Sudbrink, Deerfield.

Deerfield Man
Awarded Medal
In CPA

Arrangements

actually builds deeper root systema
that help
grass stay greener with
fewer waterings.
VitoGRO is a complete, nutritional

VitoGRO FOR CRASS

to present an unusual form of recital at Northwestern university April 9. The two women
played four hands on one piano. Both women are associate professors of music at North-

‘Jack D. Ewan
Is Consultant
For Fund Drive

gumer=

SALON

Deerfield

Road

Highland Park

AMPLE ERES

PARKING

|
Mn

OLD

ORCHARD

at Skokie

© ORchard 6-3060
Page H 45—D

61

�NEW!

saueug ls 5

makes Painting
"35 easy!

INSTANT
PAINT

Winter’s still with us, it’s true,
but as the saying goes ...
can
spring be far behind?
It
won’t
be
long
before
the
skates, sleds and snow shovels go
into storage and the garden equipment will be brought out. This be-

flat finish for walls and ceilings
For nearest Jewel dealer, see
Phone Book Yellow Pages,
or phone SEeley 3-2430.

ing

ing

Room-Size
Remnants

Sunday,

LEWIS
Edens,

16th

CARPETS

near Tower—VE

case,

there’s

no

time

like

the

spring,

when

the

grass

is

tender and growing rapidly. You’lJ
want to clean and oil the mower,
too.
Give the same attention to lawn
clippers, rakes, hoes and other outdoor tools.

and More
April

the

now to make sure your lawn and
garden tools are ready for use.
First, check the lawn mower. If
the blades need sharpening, you’ll
beat the rush by having it done
ahead of time. It’s especially important to have a good “cut” dur-

ONE DAY
CARPET SALE
OFF

tt --

Check Outdoor Tools and Grills

JEWEL

520%

us

And
how
about
the
barbecue
grill? You’ll be ready for that first
cookout day if you’ll take a few

5-2400

minutes
now to give the grill a
thorough cleaning. Kleenex towels
are especially handy for drying the
grids, and you can toss them away
as they become soiled—no laundering needed.
While you’re busy with springtime preparations, you may as well
make
sure the skates, sleds and
snow
shovels
are _ thoroughiy
cleaned and dried before they’re
packed away for the season. Have
the skate blades sharpened, if they
need it, and scour sled runners to

remove

any

traces

of

rust.

way, you'll be all set for
snowfall of next winter.

the

This
first

| Landscaping Adds
Value to Property
When
home

it

the

landscaping

grounds

can

value

substantially
of the

of

is properly

the

planned,

increase

property.

How do you plant
be more liveable

windows

your property
and valuable?

The purpose of landscaping is to
blend the home into the landscape,
making it more pleasing to look
at, and to afford extension of the
living area from indoors to outdoors.

A

garden

planted

living

for

room

privacy

may

and

be

beauty,

affording a delightful area in which
More than one billion square feet
of hardboard was channeled into
new home construction and home
improvement during 1960, according to the American Hardboard Association.

In

landscaping,

we

think

facing

the

street,

which

planted

house

con-

to

the

Trees

may

corners

form

part

of

of

be
the

the

land-

scape “frame.”
We need to connect these with a flowing line of
plants,
or “foundation”
planting.
Low-growing plants are placed

along the front of the house
foundation.

in flowing

TOOLS

line.

25%

SAVE
ON

off

DURING

On

These

lines than
each

side

a higher-growing
to accentuate

the

straight
entrance

is planted

doorway.

living”

cleaned

These

area

RIGHT

“ps

NOW

Sl) NY Nt Wr

aX N Ws

Sins
Ne
oe
us

do away

with

dangerous
ladder-climbing
bucket-hauling.
By
making

and
win-

washing

1590 Deerfield Road,

Phone

COMPANY,

[Dlewood

Highland

2-0140

Park,

Ill.

the

kitchen

Page

H 46—D

62

Thursday

&amp; Friday

also

en-

lives. Usually it
the house, close

door,

for

conven-

In

the

garden

living

room

home owner can indulge his
with roses, camellias or any
plants that will grow well
soil and climate. Since this

designed
decorated

the

wants
otherin his
area is

for living, it can
be
with any of the lovely

plants found at nurseries. Nurserymen
can
advise
what
will best

thrive, what plants te use to screen
off the area, and give other valuable

“tips”

that will save

time

and

money.
The

third

Is.

area

is the

fruits
other

THE BEST

“working”

of your choice,
plants may be

Vito IGROAs"a

ts asomay kot

Nae

atse

Fi ay

Swult

and

Until 9 P.M.

Fri., until

earn

Brava
im
Pre
( cetintines

&amp;5Coomen

TO

afi

&lt;c]| he

tN: dl

4s wi

an
J PREVENTER

ti

|

a

“KILLS ‘SEEDLINGS

AS ‘THEY

SPROUT

| COVERS 3,000 SQ. FT. |

ANT
Panne
printed

MOST
EFFECTIVE

on every bag

CONTAINS

a

GIVES 90% to 100%

APPLICATION
PREVENTS
CRABGRASS

CONTROL

ALL SUMMER

.

DACTHAL W-50

COSTS LESS

Henry C. Wienecke, Inc.

Hours—Monday thru Saturday,
8-5:30
Thurs.

TIME

T fo

Wdaanoae ji ltinaos
hee

VitoitoGR

INC.

Sunday, 9-1

Open

they

ience.
Planted shrubs and at. least one
shade
tree
can
be
arranged
to
provide ‘‘privacy’ and coolness in
the hot summer months.

SAFE FOR ESTABLISHED GRASS

—

easier,

where the family
is at the rear of

ja

eae ei.

CRAFTWOOD

of Route 41

inside.

KILL
ya amg:

MONEY-BACK

Just west

old

APRIL.

MITRE BOXES
HAMMERS, BRACES,
BITS, BLADES
SAWS
DRILLS and BITS
SOLDER, GUNS
HAMMERS
FILES
VISES
TORCHES

LUMBER

from

innovations

area, where
berries and
is) grown.

Area

“garden

All Nationally Advertised Brands!

STANLEY
DISSTON
IRWIN
WEN
TRUE TEMPER
NICHOLSON
CRESCENT
COLUMBIAN
BERNZ
SQUARES

in a

of the

plant

Living

The

at its

are better placed

an

so that both sides of the glass can
be

to

tinuously on view to neighbors and
passersby.
Here we usually like to see a

patch of open lawn.

remodeling

courage
cleaning
windows
more
often, resulting in a better, neaterlooking house inside and out.

of

is

for

future winyou
choose

house or building a new one.
Windows of ponderosa pine are
available today in many styles and
types that make washing windows
less of a chore and much safer.
Some models have sash that can
be
lifted
out
of the
frame
for
easy
washing
inside
the
house.
Others—-such
as many
casement,
awning
and
hopper
styles—open

dow

to relax, entertain and play outdoors. Evergreen trees and shrubs,
roses and fruits and other plants
are
arranged
for more
gracious
living for family and friends.
planting
a picture
to frame
the
house. There are three main areas
of any property.
First,
comes
the
front
area,

ALE

Give a thought to
dow
washing
when

the

Trees
and
shrubs
increase
in
value as they grow, in contrast to
many things
purchased which
deteriorate in value as time passes.
to

Wiidows Today '
Easier To Wash

9

HARDWARE

— HOUSEWARE

680 VERNON
GLENCOE

—

— TOYS

AVENUE

VErnon

5-3060

AS

SEEN

IN

“Suburbia
Today”
THE MAGAZINE

Thursday,

OF PLEASANT

April

13,

PLACES

1961

�the
announced
Association,
the
meeting would be held Thursday
evening, April 13, at 8:15 p.m. at
Wayne Thomas School auditorium,

3
®
Candidates To Meet
ee
4
Civic
P ubl ic At

oe

DAY
S ALE

remain-

Room-Size

In keeping with its purpose of|ing before the election, the Assoresponsibility to the citizens of its | ciation feels. that this meeting will
area, the Old Elm Civic Associa- | give interested citizens an oppor-

Sa cannnie

Group

=

Avenues.

North

and

Summit

e

i

ONE
Cc ARPET

Ss

only

With

Meeting

to

tion will present at its first general | tunity

meeting

public,

Board

of

the

open

the

year,

City

Council

candidates

and

running

April 18 election.
O. Dean Kanouse,

Park

for informal

we

Political

If we were old enough

LEWIS

con-

Edens,

More

and

OFF
Sunday,

will be

versation with the candidates at a
of | coffee hour following the meeting.
(Paid

April

16th

CARPETS

near Tower—VE

5-2400

a
eRe
FREE

Advertisement)

we would vote for
for park

S. KARGER

WILLIAM

There

There

She eaerdates,

sheet,

50%

and

question,

to,

listen

in the |@% opportunity

president

days

few

didates.

th

the

to

a

North Shore Group Photo by Percy Prior

Preparing for the panel which will be presented as part
of the Highland Park High School PTA meeting at the high
school this evening (Thursday), are from left, Newman “Red”

Fell, Bob Sandy, Mrs. Donald Sims and Bill Price.

Gail Platt

and Jim Gray, also members of the panel, were away when

the NEWS’
chairman

picture was taken.
of

the

will

Raymond

present

the

Perlman,

panel

The

will act as moderator.

Sandy

Bob

PTA

program

members,

group

will

and

discuss

three issues of most concern to high school students and their
parents—drinking, driving and dating.

Wood
Air

Resists Heat
conditioning

Kite Flies Higher

engineers

have

Last week’s story of a kite that
took a mile of string was topped
Friday
when
four boys
reported
using ten 25-cent rolls of 750-foot
string—closer to a mile and a half.

less of a “heat gain’ problem when
a house has wood windows. Frames
and sash of windows of ponderosa
pine
are natural
insulators.
The
wood resists the flow of heat from

outside instead of conducting it into the
frames

house,
do.

as

sash

Start

and

at School

Ralph Koransky, Scotty Ring and
Alan
Lazarus,
all
15,
and
Jim
Reinach, 14, unreeled it all after

a kite flown from Lincoln School.
When they phoned at 4 p.m. it was

Away

Folds

Range

metal

Ever hear of folding up a kitchen | still up.
range? That’s just what you can do
with some of the new electric cooking elements, designed to give ex-| alive who can’t use more counter
her
big
how
matter
no
tra counter space when they’re not|space,
in use. There’s hardly a housewife | kitchen.

Political

Advertisement)

SS

a

SSS

aS

Ro

(Paid

ote

ote

=

ote

oc.

62

SALE

POST-EASTER

2°

“":

important reductions

s,°
a's

i:

e

“:

“e
ee

“d

e

4

&lt;:

ss

oe

oe
ee

“te

SPORT SHOP.

LAKE FOREST

=

CHILDRENS SHOP

=

ne

“

Ine.

.

ae

-

se
's

Ro

and

ate
as

ae

Y

ge!

SUITS

$35

up

ns ye

aeote
*

SKIRTS $6.95 up
WOOL

SPRING SUITS $14.95 up

s

sizes 7—subteen 14

DRESSES

COTTON

$20

DRESSES

a:
ote

up

ad
*

$10 up

ate

os

oe

os

WOOL FLANNEL

se

&amp; TWEED SPRING COATS $14.95 up

ote
ote

sizes 3—subteen 14

ot

os

se

EVENING DRESSES $25 up

“os

BLOUSES

ote

$3.95

ate

up

ots

BELTS—JEWELRY $1.00 wp

DRESSES $3.95 up

e

a

sizes 3—subteen 14

ote
fe

“"

oe
ote

WOOL &amp; COTTON SLACKS $2.95 up

se

one

sizes 3—-subteen 14

all sales final, all sales cash

ate

&lt;

LJ

s

x

eve

ons

be

oung i] | girls sho Pp

=

§:

es

ce
2

Thursday,

eta

April

aa

ta Meme

13, 1961

anette

te

ete

ee

ete

enters

ete

sete

ate

ee

ne

ene

a ee

ee

ss

ne

ee

ee

ee

8

58

6 685

8/66

8 /5.6)5)6.0.8" eo" ctetetstctete

se" em at ee” sofa

Page H 47—D

63

�Crash on Half Day
Kathryn

Loomis

Phone

of 1360 Old Mill

Rd., Lake Forest, collided from the
rear with the car of Jennie Werhane, 1515 Bowling Green, Lake
Forest, Wednesday
morning last
week on Half
Valley Rd.
The

for
Park

Day

Werhane

the

car

traffic

police

Rd.
was

light,

report.

Mrs.

at

Skokie

Clings

Crash at Driveway

The outdoor public pay telephone at Half Day and Skokie Valley

Rds.

is

still

there,

despite

Harriet

ef-

forts Tuesday or Wednesday last
week to pry it loose, Highland Park
police

Loomis

told them the brakes failed on her
1949 Chevrolet, and no ticket was

slippery

ruptured
blame.

master

3409

Mary

Sum-

of

collision
118

S.

with

collision

Sandra

Central,

Rds.
land

High-

or

pavement

cylinder

was

a

to

Hurt

Kay

was taken
pital with

wood.

issued; although it was not decided
whether

rear-end

Ohlwein

stepped

Highland

of

mit Ave. got a ticket for failure to
have her car under control after
a

report.

Paroubek

Passenger

of

Ft.

B’nai Torah
Wayne,

at

Skokie

and

at 3:15 a.m. April
Park police report.

Olden

Ind.,

to Highland Park Hosa back injury after a

Ray

The crash occurred Wednesday
morning last week, as Mrs. Ohl-

traffic

wein was turning into a driveway
at 2356 Skokie Valley Rd., Highland Park police report.

his car from
Sathe gut a

light

was

when

Half
7,

stopped

for

Chester

of 2948 Arlington Ave. skidded

driving.

Day
Highthe

Sathe
into

the rear, police say.
ticket for negligent

Funds to Aid Youth
Funds from B’nai Torah Reform
temple’s Spring bazaar April 22-23
will

be

used

services

youth

group

temple’s

We

need Jim

activities

and

the

Robert Silverman, president
sponsoring Sisterhood, said.

of the

Initial
and

plans

for

Sunday

the

bazaar

Saturday

were

made

Tuesday evening when the commitThe

annual

convictions.

Borowitz

on our

will

be

bazaar

Mrs,

of

“most

are

being

said,

merchandise

with

already

received,
Among
bcoths to be featured
will be housewares, men’s, women’s and children’s wear, millinery,
gifts, toys,
drugs,
jewelry,
rum-

mage,
bakery,
“kiddyland.”

snack

bar

HIGHLAND

PARK STORE

City

Council because he has shown initiative,
integrity, intelligence, vigor, energy
and the desire to do an effective job.

589

Central

*

1D 2.8550

9.

WINNETKA STORE
847 Elm + HI 6-5141

new

idea!
PLATED

GOLD

22-KT.

Our Family TreeSP

Plaque
Holds 8 Family Snapshots
We

Jim

Borowitz

is

a

graduate

of

the

University

Sorbonne and the Paris Conservatory of Music.
Bradley Mfg. Co.

of

Chicago

and

has

He is a director and general

studied

at

manager

of the

FOR
ELECTION

TUESDAY,

APRIL

H

48—D

Ne

only 4%

inches

high

Insert snapshots of those
you love in the 8 Floren«
tine 22-Kt. gold plated
frames and create a pricee
less family treasure that
generations will cherish,
Plaque
is easel backed,
gift wrapped.

COUNCILMAN

18
(Paid

Page

CITY

AAAS

the

JIM BOROWITZ
Political

in

Center.

and

all

Silverman

BerAve.

held

Community

for the biggest

outstanding

of thought and the

sale

Highwood

made,

to elect men with

re-

men,
Mrs.

Plans

of their

free

military

Religious

exciting”

courage

support

for

school,

the

independence

to

ligious

tee met in the home of Mrs.
tram Schwartz, 885 Virginia

(Paid Political Advertisement)

It is essential

Bazaar

Advertisement)

64
Thursday,

April

13,

1961

and

�a

bar

oat Sal

sss

ENC

aaa
ei Rare
a aacae etine ae
eS

Xs

a

Hi Fi Gone
A man
graph
able

who

repairmen

took

a $125

port-

stereo

hi-fi

from

Mr.

Dean’s
M.

Pee
+.

‘

Park

Burnham,

and Mrs. W.

Crash

List
son

M. Burnham,

of

Ave.

Hahn,

week.

Berkeley

Rd.,

were

a light
blue
and
white
1958
Chevrolet.
Highland
Park
police
phoned all the other Edelmans in

the
had

book, but found no
requested service.

one

(Paid

Oneea

RE
CA, ae

of 1029

ticketed

the

collision

Park

1633

Claypool

was

yield

105

Hiawatha
Trail, and
Frederic
L.
Hahn, son of Mr. and Mrs. Max

EO
:
i

for

Green

Ay ay Bieat a)

stays
Seen

Ave.

Thursday
Stop

proaching

from

land

police

Park

to

a

Rd.

and

evening

last

e ee.

Room-Size
Remnants

50%

Sign

the

i

ONE DAY
CARPET SALE

Central
after

Bay

Claypool
pulled
out
stop sign while Richard
of
865
Pleasant
Ave.

Political

N aedOR

failure

right-of-way

at

Leaves

who

ORC e

at Park

Haven

students,
Jr.,

with grey hair and glasses, driving

Sunday,

from
the
Innocenzi
was
ap-

north,

OFF and More

LEWIS

April

16th

CARPETS

(,

5-2400

Edens, near Tower—VE

High-

report.

Advertisement)

LET IT PAY FOR ITSELF
S-T-R-E-T-C-H YOUR TAX DOLLAR

¥

Pat Fawcett (Mrs. Gene) of
3064 Greenwood, Highland
the

eee

included on the Dean’s List of Cornell University’s College
of Arts
and Sciences for the fall semester,
1960. Both boys are juniors.

pa

of

ae

Highland

Willets

Elizabeth Edelman, 12, let him in
and led him to the den.
He is
described as 45 to 55 years old,

member

MS

Two

a phono-

Richard S. Edelman’s, 525 Pleasant
Ave., Thursday afternoon last week.

Park,

i

‘Cornell

said he was

Traveller

j

North

Shore Harmonizers Women’s 70-

voice Barbership Harmony Cho-

HK

rus, and their director and arranger, Earl Baumgarten, invite

you to their annual

Spring Con-

cert this month.
Mrs.

Fawcett,

a member

of the

HY ¥

North
Shore
Harmonizer’s
fourpart
harmony
chorus,
affiliated
with
the
Wilmette
Recreation
Board
will be singing with this
popular group in their ninth annual Spring Concert Friday evening, April 21, in the Wilmette Jr.

High School. The concert begins
at 8:15 p.m., but doors will be open

ushers”
Valley
will en-

Women Bowlers Hold
Awards Luncheon

HH

at 7:30 when 12 “singing
from
the
men’s
Skokie
Chapter of the SPEBSQSA
tertain until curtain time.

Members of the Sunset Valley
Women’s Bowling League held an
awards luncheon Monday (April 10)
in the Gold Room of the Villa
Moderne,

celebrating

the

windup

XH

of their first season of league play.
The group is composed of mem-

Trophies
Wien,

Mrs.

went

(233)

to

1222

Richard

Mrs.

Robert

Crofton

Ruhman,

HY KH

bers of the Sunset Valley Women’s
Golf League, who formed the bowling group last fall after play on the
links ended. The first bowling season produced enough enthusiasm to
assure
the
league’s
becoming
a
permanent winter group.
Ave.;

(228)

608

Hillside, and Mrs. Norman
Levy,
(225) 1322 St. Johns Ave., for first,
second and third individual high

games

with

NH ¥

den Ave.,440 603,
Rd., HighGreenandBay Mrs.
Fiocchi,

place

first

trophies.
Glueck,

also

team,

Mrs.

are

They

165

“Mulligans,”

the

of

Mrs.

Clavey

Rd.,

ans we
Miller,

Harold

1791

¥

Fred Stoddard, 657 Rice St.; Mrs.

¥

“Most improved bowler” trophy
went to Mrs, Wesley M. Neff, 2144
Linden Ave.

revenue

a

Unification

and

Recreation

of effort and

wood,

Burtis

Ave.,

High-

x

109

secretary.

Honors

List

x

On

Vole,

x

Included in the academic honors
list for the Winter term at Shattuck School,
Faribault,
Minn., as
announced
by Gerald L. Kieffer,
director
of
studies,
is
Douglas
Cushman,
son of Mr.
and
Mrs.
Robert S. Cushman,
739 Kimball

Road, Highland Park.
Thursday,

April

13, 1961

Park

District.

Call

Him

|
|
i
|

committee
Beach

of Park

Owners

Board,

to work

out

City
solu-

Boards

ee

Establishment of multiple purpose parks of five to ten
An

7;

er

“walking”

.

aot

distance of all neighborhoods, for

to elim-

Work

with

Lake Forest Col-

educaStation

ABILITY

3

ie

.

BY

all age groups.

Rt

County

Forest

Preserve

Commission

to

=

EDUCATION

Innovated for first time in Chicago Professional sports, a family plan
whereby parents brought their youngsters to Sunday football games without
charge.

School,
Conception
Immaculate
Highland Park High School, Lake Forest College, B.A., (Minor in physical

Assistant
Advertising
Manager,
Telephone Engineer Publishing Corp.

Ray, his wife Ann, and their three
children live at 375 Dell Lane.

education with courses
and administration.

in

e

2

locate a county forest preserve in Highland Park.

EXPERIENCE

VOTE
TUESDAY,
APRIL 18

Owners,

tion to current lake front problems.

to utilize to fullest extent,

Moderator and writer of
tional sports TV show, for
WTTW, 1958-1959.

John

Mrs.

permanent

Boat

acres within

of Park

Publicity Director,

up

Council,

producer.

Oakland

and

Set

land, while vacant
to be revenue pro-

par three golf course as

of nine-hole,

Construction

lege. Public Relations Director—Chicago Cardinals Football Club. 195460.

treasurer,

The

Vote for RAYMOND J.GERACI
TRAINED AND QUALIFIED
TO SERVE AS
PARK COMMISSIONER OF HIGHLAND PARK

First year officers were Mrs.
Robert Jordan, 929 Marion Ave.,
president; Mrs. Harry Reisman, 451
Ave.,

garding

At ID 2-5691.

all Park District Property.

Samuel

Ray Would Welcome A Call If You
Have Questions or Suggestions Re-

Raymond J. Geraci, Speaking Before League
of Women Voters Meeting, March 30, 1961.

inate duplication

received
Rd.;

Bay

Green

After a careful study I would recommend the construction of a
nine-hole, par three golf course to alleviate Sunset Valley Golf Course;
to provide substantial revenue to help maintain other Park District nonrevenue producing property and to provide an additional recreational
facility for youngsters and adults... 99

ducing to help maintain other parks.

Frank

Members

to help reduce taxes.

Acquisition of 100 acres of
property is still available—portion

handicap.

Other trophies were awarded to
the
first
three
individual
high
series winners: Mrs. Ruhman, 618;
Mrs. Robert Weinberg of 1235 Lin-

wood, 598.

“I believe it is vital to the future of Highland Park that we
xX acquire a minimum of 100 acres of land for park-playgrounds as quickly as possible while land is still available. To provide
this land for future generations of Highland Parkers is our obligation.
If elected Park Commissioner I would recommend that a portion
of any new lands acquired be designated as a revenue producing area

‘

recreation

FOR PARK COMMISSIONER

RAYMOND
(Paid

Political

J. GERACI

Advertisement)

Page H 49—D 65.
hy

�Bowling Chatter .
Hi, another banner week, and a few more
scores, for all our bowters. Our Bowler of
e Week
will have to be Bud Schaibly
Old
Fitzgerald
of the Cyjassic League
ho had a terrific 759 on games of 224-257-

29.

Nice

siness
ith 659

: aS

shooting

Bud.

From

the Glencoe

Men’s League we had John
and a 249 game followed by

and

Andy

Seiler

632.

Gieb
Arch

I think

that

ndy
Seiler is probably the hottest bowler
’N
Spare
at the
bowii ng
at the
Strike
resent time. In the Wed. Nite League Andy
d 647 and Friday nite he had a 622 plus
tears six hundreds
last week, how many

can

a

man

knock

down

before

he

era

J everyone thinks about

the

ABC

and

it is

4 our turn to go. On Tuesday the Strike ’N
‘Spare team will make its usual trek to the
C at Detroit and for the first time since
(952 I wijl not have my doubles partner
ed Day bowling with me. Ned has not

Basel

arial

lalla

lalla 4

THUNDERBIRDS
FALCONS

HOLMES
MOTOR

CO.

1909 ST. JOHNS
Highland Park, tif.

ID 2-8640
. [ LL

Ty

bowled at all this year due to a very bad
hand,
so I will have
another
very
fine
bowler
as my
partner,
Leon
Woodman.
Something
very interesting was called to
my attention and this is very simple—the
ABC has all kinds of ‘‘specs’’ pertaining to
pins, size and weights, how thick the plastic has to be, the pins must have an ABC
decal on them, but will someone explain to
me why the ABC has never come out with
specs pertaining to a Plastic bowling ball?
This ball could be made out of lead and if
it weighs so much and was balanced everything would be OK. I think its about time
the ABC grew up and got together with the
proprietors so that some of these problems
could be ironed out and everyone would
be satisfied.
As the league season nears its finish I
want to take this opportunity of thanking
all of our patrons, men, women, children
who have made it possible to operate one
of the
outstanding
establishments
in
all
the country, and its peopje like you whom
we have to thank.
Ill see you all when I
get back from the ABC.
I may not win
any titles but I’ll bet you no one will try
any harder, and to you Mr. Arthur Bogeaus, just remember that the ball you are
throwing
is only
thirteen
and
one
halt
pounds and if you bow! 640 every week, like
you did last week, keep on using it.
H.P.

ELKS

Team
1. Oak Terrace Blatz
2. Mr. Duffy’s Tavern
3. Acme
Liquor .....
4.

4
.
74 .
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.

Del-Rio

Restaurant

Braun Bros. Oil Co.
Ace Hardware
Singer Printing Co.
Moran Plumbers
Goldini’s Aces
Mutual Coal Co.
Frontier Inn
Ame’s Shel! “&gt;-:'

Mr. Duffy’s Tavei..
Oak Terrace Blatz
Ace Hardware
R. Shethen
Carani
Krenek
High
Ace Hardware
Oak Terrace Blatz
Mr. Duffy’s Tavern
Goffo
C. Snyder
Azzi &amp; Carani

&amp;

‘

pins

cools off?
It
is my pleasure to announce that the
Strike ’"N Spare will have a very unusual
tournament starting May ist. It will be a
‘Singles tournament with men bowling five
a
and
women
bowling
three games.
andicap
will
be
seventy
five
percent
Scratch will be 200. Entry fee for the men
‘six dollars and
women
five dollars. This
omrenent
will be open to bowlers who
ve an average at the Strike ’N Spare
LY. We want you to know that this is
sua, because of the demand that we have
a,
for such an event. We would also like
to advise the youngsters
of our area to
atch for a big announcement about our
+ summer program for them.
_ This is about the time of the year that

By Charlie Crovetti

Game

GREAT LAKES LEAGUE:
1. Henry C. Wienecke. Inc.
2. Schwartz- ay a Insurance
3. Plasto Mfg.
High Series
M. Greenfield
A. Wolf
R. Rosen
High Game
D. Gottlieb
M. Greenfield
A. Wolf

SUBURBAN
B’NAI
B’RITH
LEAGUES
NATIONAL LEAGUE:
1. U.S. Auto Leasing
2. Lubin &amp; Lubin
3. Frankel Packing Co.
High Series
E. Krinn
H. Friedman
Robert Cole
High Game
H. Friedman
H. Ellman
Harry Cooper

BOWLING
Tony Porco
Wm. Lake
Fred
Sacco
Joe Vole
Harold Mathe

High

PUBLIC
Team
Little Bills
Meter
Dept.
Sub-Station
Maint.
Sub-Station
Little Amps
High
Sub-Station
Mackie
High
Sub-Station
P. Kassel

Team
R. O. Jordan
Glencoe
Nite -N-Gale
Porco
Hunters

AMERICAN
LEAGUE:
1. Bennett &amp; Kahnweiler
2. Abbott Construction Co.
3. Alan Construction Co.
High Series
H. Winkelman
I. Addis
J. Miller
High Game
H. Winkelman
R. Kittner
B. Exelrod

Mel Mailfald
Howie Cole
Paul Hollister
Hank Schotanus
Gene McDermitt

CLASSIC
LEAGUE:
1. Sherman Industries
2. Mayer Paving Co.
3. Lake Car Wash &amp; Siecel
High Series
H. Berg
L. Zagel
A f MIO cis

Team

High

Series

High

Game

39’ers
Screwballs
Clowns
Eightballs
In Laws

Lumber

“High Seas

High

ae

High

MIXED

Series

ALL STAR LEAGUE:
1. Lake Motors, Inc.
2. K. Schlanger Co.
3. Adelman &amp; Brott
High Series
W. Adelman
L. Kleinfeld
S. Dolin
High Game
W.
Adelman
J. Crusin
S. Dolin
MOOSE
446
Team
Manhattan
Lighting Products
Rehns Drugs
Hiland Paint
Able-Trucking
High Series
Fred Sacco
Dan Switalski
Tony Porco
Joe Vole
Arnold Gotaas

GLENCOE
BUSINESS
Team
Glencoe Yellow Cab
Rav’s Snort Shop
Quinto &amp; Bruno
High Series
John Geib
Arch Ferrari
Andy Seiler
High Game
John Geib
Andy Seiler
Lynn Beecher

GREEN

Team

.

sky blue waters,
gy

gy Naseer
woe

mel ie

taunt

FARMER BEVERAGE CO., Inc.
_ HIGHLAND

PARK

WAUKEGAN

ID 2-0850

the

greatest

bowling

season ever under way
roll your best with the greatest
bowling accessories by AMF!
Page H 50—D

66

C.

w

MEN’S
Ww

Lake Motors
DX Sunray Oil Co.
Rosby’s
Richard Gilmore Inc.
Sunset Food
High Series
Betty Johnson
Darlene Field
Rosemary Johnson
Dorothy
Pershing
Loretta Kozlowski
High Game
Dorothy Pershing
Betty Johnson
Jackie Hanson
Darlene
Field
Rosemary Johnson

SUNSET

Mulligans
Gimmies
Scramblers
Birdies

Kanow
Weinberg
or oc 11 Net:

204
203-201
201

VALLEY

High Series
ert en apap ee Mattie:
High Game

ROLL 271?

Piled)

Hwy., Highland

C.

HI-LADIES

Come

MENONI &amp; MOCOGNI
2200 Skokie

ACRES

Men

. Masser

CALL.

Step out in style
with AMF
Now—with

Stock

Game

Drell

M. Kanow
N. Weinberg
B. Jordan

(Screened,

1049
241-10-251

. Masser

M.
N.
[GE

the BEER refreshing
from the land of

3095
611-48-659

Game

Julius Boros ....
Tommy Armour
Byron Nelson
Ben Hogan
Gene
Littler
sate
MAM DhOad. wash
oa fe
High Series
Ladies
. Drell
. Masser
. Stone .
Men
. Mascer
. Wolfe
as WV GLORY oksess eich cs ealbvciad ho higscaoersn AL Ae So
Hizgh Game
Ladies
. Stone

,
Game

MOOSE
446
Team
Manhattan
Lighting Products
Rehns Drugs
Hiland
Paint
Able Trucking
High Series
Dan
Switalski
Joe Brooks
Fred
Sacco
Paul Anhalt
Don. Stohrer
High Game
Hal Henderson
Wally Lange
Dave Eklund ....
Dan Switalski
Fred Sacco

High

a Bae a g
H. Yormark
E. Bazelon
S. Pizer
A. Kaplin

Fred Coleman
Tony
Porco
Ed Wachsning
Frances Porco
Lorain Jahnigen

MAJOR LEAGUE:
1. Grand Electric
2. Paul Safran Metals
3. Active Specialty
High Series
M. Goldstein
H. Handler
L. Kaplan
High Game
&gt;. Shapiro
. Levy
- Goldstein

Series

High Series

A. Kaplin
L. Shapiro
H. Lustigson
S. Pizer
J. Wasserman

Joe Brooks
Fred Coleman
Ed Wachsning
Lorain Jahnigen
Frances Porco

SERVICE

B’NAI
TORAH
BROTHERHOOD
Team
Pt
Lewis Carpets
Carroll’s Standard Serv.
Green Bay Cleaners
Ruby’s Delicatessen
Strike N’ Spare

Gene McDermitt
Mel Mailfald
Paul Hollister
D. Z. Redfield
Ed Tead
MOOSE

A.
G
I

Game

Park

(with

Powell’s
589

this

ad

signed)

Camera

Central

Ave.,

for a roll of Black

&amp;

FILM...

to

Mart
H.P.
White

Still

FREE!

Must
be
league
series
total.
Have your league secretary sign
te date in space provided beOW, 6.

AMF

Bowling Bags—

Starring

the

smart,

all-new

Hat-

box models, the AMF Fashion
Line of bowling bags is truly a
fashion first in 1961.
AMF
Bowling
Shoes—Tops
in_ style,
tops in comfort,
AMF
bowling
shoes
fit
you perfectly,
No
cramping,
no
chafing,
no crowding.
They
give you
sure-footed fit for extra comfort, higher
scores.
See them now in all styles and
prices!

AMF

bowl-

ing bags give you the perfect
combination of rugged beauty
and distinctive design. See these
exciting bowling bags and order
yours now... you'll be buying
the best.

Thursday, April 13, 1961.

�re

_"

.

va

: me

3

; ; ;

ar

me

a :

¥

#.

r

ae}

ek

el

*

sal

4%

j ? ¥

i

ad

2

"2

saa

we

:

"

ny

:

oP

a

a

—

.

IF YOUR NEST EGGS ARE
AT DEERFIELD SAVINGS
FERFIELD

HIGHER DIVIDENDS with GREATEST SAFETY
745 DEERFIELD ROAD,

. A\

DEERFIELD, ILLINOIS

Phone: Windsor 5-2550

ly [

Hours:

&amp; LOAN ASSOCIATION

Sat.

Mon.,
— 8:30

Tues.,
to

Thurs.,

12:00;

Fri.
— 8:30

Fri. eve. —

Closed Wednesday

6:00

to

4:00

to

8:00

�CHINA
LAMPS
add sparkle
to any decor

is
with

ee

gh

moreso

PEO

nn.

un
in the sun

irresistible
dinates

cotton
in

irresistible,
ee

and

V,

2.

knit

colors
too.

patterns,

Cardigan.
MOR BRU

coor-

that
Solid

are
colors

10-16.

oe. dase eee
eck)has 7.95

Round

collared

Lined

Jamaicas

shirt

....

5.95

3.

Band
Lined

Collared t-shirt
slim pants
..

3.95
5.95

4.

Sleeveless

stripe

..

2.95

cardigan,

ee

. Button front shirt .... 3.95
Lined cabin boy pants, 5.95
(Fashion

white

china

designs

Corner)

with
soft

(Gift Shop)

ol
oe

$660
in merchandise is the TNT
prize! You'll have a chance
to win if you get a TNT

44
;

no

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wo.
i

Enjoy

2 Hours

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Parking

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a

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of
with

fine white silk shades. 30" tall.

eS
thm
eg

ticket Thursday
night need to buy anything.

in

�</text>
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                    <text>OF

Thursday,

May

4, 1961

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too, with a Sav ings Account at the

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grows. And of course, the sooner you start, the sooner you reap the benefits So why wa it?
&gt;

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Start

now.

THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
Our

62nd

Member

The

year—Complete
Federal

Reserve

The Federal Deposit Insurance
United States Depositary

WEEKEND

Modern

System

Banking

and

Corporation

BANKING

HOURS

and

Trust

Services

of Highland Park

Friday 8: 30-2:00 &amp; 5:30-8 00 pm,

Saturday 8: 30-Noon

�,Vol, 36, No. 9

© 1961

by Highland

Park

Co.

Thursday,

May

4, 1961

ards Company Petitions To Dump

Bric
pe Saree

County Zoning Board Slates
Hearing in Deerfield Village Hall

-

-

The

Lake

County

zoning board

of appeals

has

slated two

public hearings May 25, following petitions from the National
Brickyards

The first hearing will consider a change

The
hearings
will
be
in
the
Deerfield village hall on May 25,
according to chairman pro tem of
the zoning board of appeals, Max
Pilz. The first hearing will begin
at 1:30 p.m. and the second will
be held at 2 p.m.

&amp;

First on the docket
for the
afternoon is the attempt to rezone
from R-4B residential to I-1 light
industrial
the area north
of the
drainage
ditch
and
east
of the
drainage ditch roughly.
In the second hearing the company seeks to obtain a special permit to operate a dry, sanitary landfill southwest of the Chicago, Mil‘waukee, St. Paul and Pacific railroad,
The
brickyards,
which
dis-annexed from the village of Deerfield

¥

oe

Arbor

railroad
village
”

Day

celebration

station

Saturday

manager,

Norris

in

Deerfield

morning.
Stilphen,

featured the planting of flowering

Former
right,

crab trees at the

president of the village, Joseph

receive

aid from

two

in

unidentified

Koss,

ing smoke

as they

health

+ Milwaukee Railroad Station To Get
‘Face-Lifting, 40 New Double-Deckers
The Milwaukee
” modern double deck

the

station is soon to be repainted, and 40
stainless steel passenger coaches with air

conditioning will be ready for service by late summer
fall. These were the two important announcements

or early

made at the

*Arbor Day ceremonies by B. B. J. Ornburn, assistant chief engineers-structures, last Saturday
“The Milwaukee Railroad is very
pleased that it has been afforded
an opportunity to cooperate with
the Community Conservation council in its goals of community beau-

as such

hand in hand
gram of the

“modernize

a program

goes

with the overall proMilwaukee
Road to

and

improve

its

sub-

urban service,’ said Mr, Ornburn.
He said that in addition to paint-

; ing the exterior of the station that
»

the
interior
will
be
completely
cleaned. New sand urns for cigarette butts and wastebuckets will be
Placed in the waiting room. Steps
leading to the station are scheduled for repair in the very near
future.
»
Mrs. Jerry Sayre, of the Community Conservation council, who
@awvas in charge of the program, gave

a bit of the history of the Milwau»kee
Railroad
in
Deerfield.
The
material had been taken from the
4History
of Deerfield,
written
by
Marie
Ward
Reichelt,
mother
of
¢ Ruth Pettis, recently retired editor
of the Deerfield REVIEW.
It was
written in 1928.
The Chicago Milwaukee and St.

Paul

Railway

bought

way through Deerfield

road

was

graded

the

right

of

in 1870, The

in 1871,

and

morning.

was

George

Pratt,

Third

Station

Built

The third station was
1900 through the efforts

P.

Schneider,

who

built in
of Mrs.

circulated

a petition to have a new station
nearer
the center of population,
and
this
was
erected
near
the
Deerfield
road
crossing
on land
bought of Mrs. Philip Hole, The
magnificent oak tree standing in
the field opposite the station, (now

part

of

Station

landscaped)

inal

grove

was

of

the

Circle

which

one

the

of

Hole

is

orig-

Estate.

The Garden Club of Deerfield—
which later became the Woman’s
Club were responsible for the first

landscaping
design
at the railroad station some twenty five years

the /or more ago.

complete

fishburg
Court

in the

last
D-18

text of the opin-

by Mr.

Thursday
of

Justice

Sol-

This

appears
week’s

on
RE-

Civic

8 p.m. Wilmot
School
board, Wilmot school.

Tuesday, May 9
8 p.m. District
Wilmot school.

110

School

school

P.T.A.
P.T.A.,

board,

8 p.m. Kipling
School
board, Kipling school.

P.F.A.

Wednesday, May 10
8 p.m. Deerfield Village
village hall.
8 p.m. West Deerfield
Board, township hall.
Thursday, May 11
8 p.m.
sion.

Deerfield

Plan

Board,

Township

commis-

8 p.m. Deerfield Grammar School
P.T.A. board, Deerfield Grammar

school.
8

p.m.

Maplewood

ular meeting,

P.T.A.,

Maplewood

1947

opposed
for creat-

burning

and un-

were

free

from

village

it was

out

of the

village,

went

classification

into

a county

of farm

land,

the zoning classification that any
large dis-annexing tract goes into.
When

held

zoning

after

the

hearings

were

dis-annexation,

first

the

brickyards sought a heavy industrial
classification,
but
this
was
denied in 1952.
Zoning

Ruled

Invalid

However,
a declaratory
judgement in 1953 ruled the Lake county
zoning
for
the
area
invalid
as
concerned
with
the
brickyards
property.
brickyards

are located

along

the County Line Rd., to the west of

Thursday, May 4
7:30 p.m. Highland
Park
High
School P.T.A., annual meeting,
Highland Park high school.

8 p.m. Maplewood
Maplewood school.

since

fumes,

brickyards

The

Calendar

openly

codes.

zoning

Illinois Supreme

VIEW.

whose

wife was Lilian, and daughter of
Simeon
and Lydia Tupper,
early
settlers.
The second station was built in
1872 at the corner of Hall Ave.
sometimes
called
Central
Ave.,
and is now a freight house (now
a lumber yard).

H.

The

page

tracks were laid in 1872.
(Deerfield was founded in 1835).
The first station was in a box car
near Hall Ave.,
and the station

agent

Complete Opinion
Of State Supreme
Court Printed Here
ion rendered

been

sanitary conditions. However, once
dis-annexed from the village, the

brickyards

plant the first tree.

tification,

has

by the village

left and

workmen

1949,

When

‘#

The company seeks I-1 zoning.

The second hearing will consider a request to permit a dry,
sanitary landfill operation in the presently zoned I-3 district.

le

y

Company.

in zoning in the R-4B district.

°

reg-

school.

the
Milwaukee
tracks
and
east
Forest
Way
Dr.
Currently
children, coming from Elm St., have
been wandering into the brickyards
property
and
parents
have
been
warned against letting their children go onto the property, due to
the deep holes filled with water,
according to a statement from
a
mother in the area.
Following the declaratory judgement in 1953, the brickyards was
without any zoning.
Finally in
1960, a zoning hearing was held in
the Deerfield village hall and the
present zoning of I-38, heavy industrial, and R-4B residtntial was set.

The village had
classification

for

asked for an I-1
the

area.

In 1952, the village had the county prosecute
the
brickyards
for
operating,
a dump,
run
by
ExAlderman William Cowley, opera-

tor of the Glenview

dump.

Again
in
1961,
a _ restraining
order was put against the brickyards when dumping was discovered.

Jaycees Slate May
Meeting Tonight
At Legion Hall
The

May

dinner

meeting

of the

Deerfield Jaycees will be held tonight at 7 p.m. at the American
Legion Hall, 849 Waukegan Rd.
Ray Craig, newly elected president, will preside.
The main items of business will
be the organization of committees
for the forthcoming year and the
planning
for
Chark-O-Chick, - the
annual Jaycee fund-raising project.
Invite

Men

All men between the ages of 21
and 35 have been invited to attend
the meeting.

The

Jaycees

held

their

annual

installation of officers banquet at
the Great Lakes Officers club Friday, April 28.
In addition to president Craig,
the following officers and directors
were installed:
Vice presidents —
George McLaughlin and Bob Seiler; secretary
-— Jack Sutherland;
treasurer —
Br. Bill Burns;
directors —
Bob
Burns, Fred
Lindemann,
Bill
Erdmann, Al Hall and Bernie Forrest.

Slate Manager's
Meeting Monday
At Jewett Park
The

Deerfield

Park

district

has

slated a manager’s meeting, Monday, May 8, 8 p.m. at Jewett Park
fieldhouse for respresentatives of
teams which will enter the Men’s
Softball league
in Deerfield
this

year,
The meeting is essential
formation of the league and

ules.
for

to the
sched-

Many new teams have applied
membership

and

expansion

of

the league will be considered.
to

After May 8, it will be difficult
accept teams.
League play will

begin

on

Monday,

May

15.

Seek Aid For

Family Days
To
Get
Family
Day
off
the
ground this year, help is needed
from all citizens and organizations.
The annual affair will be held
later on this summer.
For
information
about
helping
with the village wide project, contact Henry Zander, WI 5-5700 or
Lewis
Thompson,
WI 5-4240,
co-

chairmen

of the event.

�ay
i MR i
Aoh EES

aA

Sg ER tg aa te

ae

i

I
og 5
ie

I

RSNa

aggro

‘

a

“

me

Your Village Government

“

aoe ae

ree

a

8 TAGE

Pa

ennntagery Swarin
©

_ district, and the village, assembled
at the railroad station last Saturday and planted Flowering
Crab
trees.
They are indeed to be commendae

‘

it

ed for this project because through
a new conciousness of the value

4 és of landscaping and flowering trees
and! shrubs in the community has
- been created. There is a need to reestablish
Arbor
Day
activities
among the youth by having them
participate in the planting of trees
ihe’
around the schools, in the parks,

le

and throughout the community.
Have Added Pride
- Observances of this sort tend to
give them a feeling that Deerfield
is their home town and that they

BAS:

|

have a stake in its beauty and
future.
They can take pride

its

in
watching a tree which they planted
- grow and prosper as the years pass.
/
Recently, the dean of civil engi- neering at Northwestern university
in an address to the American Pub-

ui
i

lic
Works
association
expressed
concern over the reduction in num-

bers of college

students

interested

in civil engineering as a profession.
He stated that today young people
are interested in becoming “Astro
Physicists,” “Micro Biologists” and
the like rather than the more prosaic and mundane civil engineer.
He went on to say that a new
name was needed for his profession
as it has been proven ‘that people
are influenced by the glamour of
a prestige name. Searching for a
suitable
title, he has just about
settled on the name “Biospherics”’
to cover the old field of civil engineering.
Biospherics would cover the improvement of living conditions in
this thin film of the planet where
all things live. This, then, is rightfully the title for all who work toward this end.
The ladies of the Garden Clubs
and the Conservation Council can

take

pride

in the

title ‘“Biospheri-

cian”
for
indeed
improving
the
beauty of the community improves
its liveability.

Rummagers

Swarmed

by

the

the

parish

hundreds

hall

and

“We learned a lot in putting on
Mrs.
Conedera
| our
first
show,”
- pointed out, “and this year we’re
planning farther in advance and in

more

detail.

“While

af

the

we

success

were

very happy

of the

1960

with

‘Arts

and

Riverwoods,’ we naturally want to
Doar.
an even larger audience in
1961,” she said.
A new event being added to the
1961 show will be an Artists’ Ball,

a

~ which is scheduled for the evening
of October 7 at the Chevy Chase

i peeguniry Club.
_In putting on

&gt;

the

"year,

Riverwoods

more

people

in

art

hopes
owning

show

each

to interest
fine

works

_ of art. All the work on exhibit will
be on sale and much of it will be

priced
ning

within the reach of begin-

collectors

of

moderate

in-

come.
Many of the artists who brought
their works to the 1960 show will
be returning this year, and invitations also have

been

sent to a num-

ber of others, selected by an Exhibition
artists

Committee
of professional
and art directors who live

i in the Riverwoods area. The Arts
Hi and Riverwoods show is unusual in
_ that the work is shown in its natural habitat, the home, in contrast
to
many
community
art
events
which take place in galleries and

_ shopping centers. Weather permitting, the work of many of the art| ists will be shown
out of doors,
- against the arnent
of patios
tid._and gardens.
Admission
tickets to the show
Page

2

Charles Healy Is

District Chairman Of

Skokie Valley Dist.
Charles L. Healy,
1235 Oxford
Rd., was elected district chairman
for
the
Skokie
Valley
district,
North
Shore
Area
council,
Boy
Scouts
of America.
This election
was part of the Skokie Valley district annual meeting held Tuesday,
April
18, at Deerfield
American
Legion hall.
Alan G. Moore, 1240 Warrington,
was elected district vice-chairman
for the village of Deerfield at this
same meeting.
Healy has served as cub master
and institutional representative for
the
Deerfield
Grammar
School
PTA. This past year he served as
District vice chairman and representative to the executive board of
the North Shore Area council. As
district chairman he will be a member of the executive board of the
North
Shore
Area
council,
Boy
Scouts of America. He is the holder
of the Wood Badge Award, Trail
Blazer Award and Scouters award.
Moore has served on the committee of Troop 52 sponsored by the
Presbyterian church in Deerfield.
He has also served this last year as
vice chairman of the Skokie Valley
district advancement committee. He
is an Eagle Scout and a member of
the Order of the Arrow.
The
following
Deerfield
men
were elected Members
At Large:
Jake Bakeman, 1046 Forest, activities committee; David S. Barrow,
1676 Eastwood, advancement com-

Ha

stop expense

The

Approximately
450 parishioners
contributed thousands of items covering
clothing,
furniture,
appliances and toys.
During
early
Thursday morning
peak hours,
more than 60 frantic workers handled
some
400
rummagers
who
crammed
the hall, basement,
garage as well as three moving trailers in the parking lot, furnished
by M. J. Seiwart Trucking
Company.

playing

being shared

field

by the Deerfield

requirement

for

over

Boys Baseball Association.

800

boys

and

girls

is no

small

one.

For

the

presidents

4

convenience
with

League
Minor National

of all parents,
telephone numbers:

Age of
Players
0)...
8-9

1UCSCCN ee oc ee ae Cen Mie Dea

tr

following

is a listing

President

of League

Telephone

Maw

No.

WI 5-3599"

Bob Baboook 1.2) .0..8 0
Joe Mautner 22.2)...
Chas. Tarnoff ................
Larry’ Pels ‘ ,...:......:........
John Poindexter _.......
Earl Sundberg _............

WI
WI
WI
BD
WI
WI

5-3696
5-1988
5-3904
Bee
5-2173
5-1436

Marian

WI

5-5627 a

Ben La Buda...

Prep

30 Midwest Artists To Appear
| At Annual Riverwoods Show

1961.

ee

With the completion of the various leagues’ tryout activities, followed by the team assignments, practice in all leagues is getting underway. Regular game schedule will begin about May 15. The older boys
leagues, Pony, Colt and Prep, will be restricted in their practice until*
the end of the High Schools’ athletic program or until about the end |
of May.
In the final tally, 16 teams make up the Minor leagues, 16 teams ,
in the Intermediate league, 8 in the Major league, 7 and possibly 8 in
the Pony league, one in the Colt, one in the Prep and 8 teams of Girls
:
softball.
Last week’s REVIEW carried an article about two new ball
diamonds which are being provided by the Park district with the back-*

grounds of Holy Cross church last
Thursday
and Friday, April 27
and 28, 1961, from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
for
the
biannual
rummage
sale,
sponsored by the Altar and Rosary
society.
The two day event involved an
estimated 95 volunteer
workers
team and grossed over $3,000 according to general chairman, Mrs.
William Schroeder, Westgate Ra;
and
co-chairman
Mrs.
Ray
Marshall, Forest. Ave.

The
overflow
i by
crowd included
bargain-hunters from as far away
as Harvey and Kankakee, Illinois.
They packed the parking lot with
the overflow spilling out on Waukegan Rd. and nearby side streets.
Department
chairmen
included
Mrs.
Norman
Brown,
Elmwood
Ave., children’s ware; Mrs, Phillip
Works by some 30 outstanding midwest artists will be Delaney, Springfield Ave., shoes;
"presented at Riverwoods’ second annual art show, set for Octo- Mrs.
Bernard
Enright,
Warwlek
_ ber 7 and 8, according to the coordinator of this year’s show, Rd. and Mrs. Neil Salemi, Carlisle
Ave., toys; Mrs. Richard Hartman,
Mrs. Henry R. Conedera of 920 Hoffman Ln., Riverwoods.
Birchwood Ln., books and records:
“The
Arts
and _ Riverwoods,”
a
of last year’s October show, will go on sale in September at Mrs. Joseph Macht, Stratford Rd.,
s being carried over to the 1961 $1.50 each, the same price as last men’s ware; Mrs. James McLoughlin,
Elder
exhibit of arts and crafts.
Lane,
year.
women’s
ware;
And
repeating another popular
“We hope to make a
profit, of Mrs. Edward Mooney, Hazel Ave.,
feature of the 1960 show, again course,’”’ Mrs. Conedera said, “but glass and dishware; Mrs. Edward
Oakley
this year six homes of Riverwoods our chief aim in making a charge is Moroney,
Ave.,
and
Mr.
Mrs.
John
Rawle,
area residents will be selected for to assure an attendance..of serious and
Deerpath
display of the paintings, sculpture, viewers. We select our artists with Dr., furniture; Mrs. Frank O’Connor, Deerfield Rd., the French
_ ceramics, jewelry and other crafts. great care and we feel they deserve
ione
used for the exhibition will an interested, attentive audience.” ‘room specializing in
exclusive
apparel;
‘be open to the public from noon
Proceeds of the show will go to women’s
Mrs.
Irwin
r + to 6 p.m. each of the two days of the sponsoring
organization,
the ‘Wengierski, Longfellow Ave., genZ 14 the show.
Riverwoods Residents Association, eral cashier.
Both Reverend John J. O’Mara,
Last year’s attendance was in the to be used in furthering the assooe
of preserving
the ‘Dastor, and his assistant, Reverend
a
neighborhood of 1,500 and with the ciation’s work
- increased publicity of the accep- natural beauty of the wooded area. Edward R. Reilly expressed their
gratitude to the many participants
tance
of that show
a much
in-

a" ereased attendance is expected for

ED

800 loool Yaongsters Begin Practice.
For Season Opening; 65 Teams Play

Holy Cross Church

To Get Bargains
The ladies of the Deerfield Con“ servation committee with the cooperation of the Milwaukee road,
the
girl. scouts, boy scouts, park

Te

Lauer

_......_....

¢

ID 2-0126”

10-17

Commissioner J. G. Johnson announces that there are still Year
books available from last year’s program. These can be: obtained
from
Johnson or from Mrs. Jeanne Coffey, president, Women’s Auxiliary.

Collect 500 Books,

$50 For Library
In AAUW Drive

Mrs. Richard R. Smith, Library
Chairman of the Deerfield American Association of University Women; Mrs. George Haney, Librarian,
and the West Deerfield Township
Library board have all expressed
their thanks to the 33 AAUW who
helped
in
AAUW’s
recent
book
drive, and to the public for their
cooperation.
The recent drive during National
Library Week has to date resulted
in
534
books
for
the
library
shelves and about $50 from the collection
boxes
which
had _ been
who assured the success of the
placed in local stores. The books
sale.
that were donated were hard covProceeds
will be
used
toward: ered and in good condition.
helping reduce the parish debt.
Along with the monetary contri-

|

Deerfield Manor News

4

butions, the AAUW collection boxes
also produced a number of unusual ,
findings—one
straight pin, three”
tooth picks, one piece of parsley,
one drapery hook and two bakery
tickets.
A book barrel and a collection ‘
box are still located in the library
for persons who might still wish to
ro
make a contribution.
An estimated 495 persons availed
themselves
of the
conducted

{

tours of the library, which were di-

rected
by
members
of
AAUW.
Members of AAUW also served refreshments
at the library during
the book drive to about 800 persons.

é

Deerfield Savings
Hosts Contractors

At Annual Dinner
The
officers
and
directors
of
Deerfield Savings and Loan assor |
ciation were hosts at the annual

Deerfield

Savings

dinner

for

con-

«

tractors held at Thorngate Country
Club Tuesday evening, April 26.
A number of awards were made
The
fight
for
the
Deerfield
ly when King entered suit in Waufilm,
the
and
Manor water works may take on a kegan against
“Operation Aboli- sy
Pekara for title to
tion,’ was presented.
new front before long, according
Chief speakthe land on which the water works
er for the evening was Col. Roberts to one source. Presently the fight
pump station is located.
Moore of the U.S. Marine Corps.,
has been confined to a squabble
King, in attempting to obtain a
Naval Air Station, Glenview.
between builder John Pekara and | permit
to operate the water works
Col. Moore, former correspondwater works operator John King,
from the ICC, discovered that he
ent
for
the
Hearst
but
Newspapers,
the
manor
association
has
did not have a title to the land and
recipient of the U.S. Freedom
threatened to enter the hassle for withcut
title or at least a perpetual
Award and a resident for a time in:
control of the water works.
easement, he cannot obtain a cerAfrica, Asia and
many
Last week the manor association
countries
tificate to operate.
of Europe was assisted by Sgt. Ed-«
issued a statement that they had
King,
who
has
operated
the ward Smith.
set a price of $5 flat rate for all water
works for nine months, said
Award winners among the hunwater
users
in
the
manor,
but
that he cannot make necessary imdred guests present included Karl
water works operator King count- proveme
nts to the works until he
Nagel,
Lake
Forest
Mill
Work,
ered that the association had no gets
clear title or perpetual easeDavid
E. Lundman
and
Lincoln
right to “fix the price.”
ment,
Meyer
of Libertyville,
Frank
This week the association was
W.
However, the Gora family, ownMcDonald,
Sr., Time
Magazine,
ready to get into the water busiers of the presently defunct Pekara
Maver Rosset, M. Rosset and Asness again although nine months
Water Works Co., are in the pro- sociates,
Inc., and Chris C. Rones,
ago a motion which
would
have
cess of filing a petition with the
Deerfield Insurance Agency.
given the manor officers the okay
ICC in an attempt to obtain the
Special awards also were given
to attempt to purchase the water water works
themselves.
&amp;
to Andrew
Demetreius, President
works and operate it was defeated.
A hearing has been set for July
Builders,
Inc.,
Chicago,
John
DawThe fight came to light recent6.
son, LaSalle National Bank, Frank“*
Whether or not the manor assoHouska, Harris Trust and Savings
mittee; Harold Fox, 1039 Spring- ciation will enter a bid for the
lad
Bank,
Chicago,
Fred
Schnell,
field, advancement committee; Rob- water
works
is
not
presently
Northbrook Electric
Company,
ert Jordt,
1555
Stratford,
health known.
Robert
C. E.
Carlson,
Deerfield
and safety; Mel Slattery, 1407 ArWord has been received from the
builder, Daniel K. Augustine, treasbor Vitae, organization and exten- national office of the Boy
Scouts urer, Deerfield Savings, James Di- &lt;
sion;
Rev.
Eugene
Wykle,
808 of America, as well as the North
Pietro, DiPietro Plumbing,
J. W.
Warrington,
public relations; and Shore and Northwest Council of- Dobbratz,
contractor-designer,
E.
William
Trowbridge,
849 Holmes
fices, thanking the manor scouts
B. Kulberg and Russell P. SedgAve., training committee.
(Continued on page 13)
wick, Chicago Title and Trust.
Thursday,

May

4,

1961

�ou

et

Oe)

Despite Broken Neck, Pole Vaulter’s
Second In Big Ten After Indoor Meet
In

March

1959,

an

Iowa

competing in an A.A.U.

State

University

meet in Des

Moines,

pole

Grove School Plans
May 12 Benefit To
Raise Needed Funds

| nicipal colleges of New York City.
There are more than 100 members
of the alumni
association in the
Chicago area.

On

The Grove school, located near
Libertyville, will hold a _ benefit

vaulter,

broke his neck

May

12

to

raise

funds

for

CARRying

con-

when his pole twisted the wrong way and flipped him through tinued support of the school.
the air. That athlete, Dave Rudolph, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd
Mrs. T. A. Saari, 1345 Linden
Rudolph, Wilmot Rd. now competes for the University of IlIli- Ave., WI 5-1157, is in charge of
nois,

and

has

become

the

second

best

vaulter

in the

Big

Ten,

tickets

according to results of the conference’s indoor meet.
Rudolph’s story is an inspiring
one of triumph over an injury that
barely missed killing him. Strangely, he did not know the extent of
his injury for more than an hour.
“I was able to dress and ride the
bus from Des Moines back to Ames.
A doctor examined me in Ames and
found out my neck was broken,”
Rudolph says.
He was in the hospital for about
two months. He wore a neck brace
for five months. Before the mishap
his neck measured 16 inches; when
he got out of the hospital it was
less than 15.
He went back to Iowa State for
the fall term, finished his sophomore
year, then
dropped
out of
school. He enrolled at Illinois in
February, 1960, primarily because
he wanted to change his course of
study. Rudolph is an excellent student. He made a 4.0 (B) average
last semester, and hopes to go into
granduate school.
At Illinois he underwent corrective therapy from Robert Shelton,
associate professor in physical education, and a nationally-famous expert in his field. He lifted weights
with a special harness to strengthen his neck muscles, and he did
other corrective exercises.
Rudolph joined the Illini varsity
track squad
at beginning
of the
current semester and cleared 13-0
in his first meet. He vaulted 13-6
and 13-4 in two additional regular
season meets, then climaxed the indoor season by clearing 14-0 and
finishing second in Big Ten Indoor

y

ee Se

~¥

PTA Meeting Set,

Install Officers
PTA

meeting

of

the

year will be held Thursday, May 11,
at 8 p.m. in Maplewood school gym.
The
new
officers,
Mrs.
James
Breed, president; Ctto Almasy, vice
president; Mrs. Roy Anderson, secretary; Richard Schaeffer, treasurer, will be installed at that time.
A speaker from the board of education will present a progress report and the plans for the coming
year will be discussed.
At the conclusion of the business
meeting, the Barbershop society of
Deerfield will present a group of |
songs in close harmony.
|

Thursday,

May

4, 1961

an

Chicago and North
Lake Forest High

By

area.

present

George

internationally

concert

pianists

in

lola

re-

B.

Carr

his

Shore debut at
school at 8:15

p.m.
Grove school, privately endowed,
provides educational treatment for
brain-damaged and/or perceptually handicapped children.
It is operated on a day school
basis and serves Lake county exceptional children.

“Jimmy”

Area

Hunter

Alumnae

Hold

from

a

Te Sale

le

Sale

Ic

can

College

take

we’re

REG.

98c

of

Mary

hope

advantage

of

Haven”
that

you

all that

fun

the

Ford

Jimmy.

Lieberman

Pharmacy

of

will be leaving soon (and

sorry)

own

Store

has

named

but
in

he

will

Elgin,

his

have

Illinois.

Drug

Store

—

his
Dave

the

El-

gin West Pharmacy—address—575
North McLean Blvd. Opening will —
be June Ist, and any and all you
good people that have been served —
so well at Ford’s by Dave, be sure
if you

are

in

that

neighborhood—

—

stop in and see what Dave can do.
A

it any more. When you’re ready to
vault, there are so many things to
concentrate on—grip, timing, etc.—
that all have to jell together, you
can’t think
about
anything
else.
And, if you’re going to be a champion, you’ve got to think like one.
You can’t worry about injury.”

Shop Ben Franklin and Save

510 BEN
LOCALLY

FRANKLIN 5-10

OWNED

PROPRIETORS

NATIONALLY

NAME

AND

KNOWN

Big

Wedding

Party

was

held»

on Saturday—Kenneth

George,

son :

of Mr.

George,

was

and

Mrs.

married

to

Canada

and

Mike

Lorna

Dancoisne

California,

of

the Cere-—

mony
was
held at Holy
Cross
Church,
the young
couple will
make their home in Weston, Mass.

ADDRESS

LAS
3 DA
T
YS!

|

The past week was full of Birthdays—Charles (Bud) Rogers, Joyce —
Anderson Horst and Estelle Bow-man (my dirt gardener friend). A

belated

greeting

to

little April |

Fladeland.

There come a time of the year
that all we gals get a chance to —
dress up, the Deerfield Woman’s

Sale

DON’T MISS THIS
OPPORTUNITY!

Ic Sale

Club

c sale

your

SATURDAY

tickets

May.

dee ae

FORD
DEERFIELD

($3.50)

and

Fern

Fels

out to the

will

such

fun

so

be

Walker,

son

Mrs. Burr Walker,

do

some

sure

to turn

|

of

Mr.

—
©

and

—

has joined the ©

Armed Forces, at: present he is —
spending some time at Fort Dix—
until the Army decides what to do |

with him. At present he has sore
arms and - - - -oh!
Don’t forget where
the Carr
Realty Company is—we need listing—call us and find out what real
capable

young

with us, they
to please

DEERFIELD

men

and

women

will try ‘everything

you.

Carr Realty Co.

5-1111
ROADS,

©

—

—

personal service is. We have very

REXALL PHARMACY

Windsor

out

out—if you don’t know where to
purchase
tickets
just ask your
neighbor—she will surely belong
or I will find out for you but
remember the date— May 23rd.
Fred

C
SALE

Bring

Villa Venice—1:00 p.m. on Ann
Alonzi’s Birthday—that is the 23rd —

ways

SALE ENDS

SALE

Luncheon.

humorous skits for the entertainment. The Spring Luncheon is al- |

REX ALL

1°

Spring

your fancy hats and etc., and get —

of

and

Mueller just

Sure

soon,

David

Reunion

Ic Sale

WAUKEGAN

“Friends

Luncheon.

The
annual
North
Suburban
spring reunion and social of the
Chicago Chapter of the Hunter college
alumni association was hostessed on April 11 by Mrs. Laurance
Spungen, 32 Oxford Dr., Lincolnshire.
Among
those
attending
from
Deerfield were:
Mrs. Michael Castronovo, 1235 Dartmouth Ln.; Mrs.
Walter
L. Hardy,
1445 Deerfield
Rd.; Mrs. Henry Mason, 1151 Deerfield Rd.; Mrs. Walter S. Roth, 104
Plum Tree Rd.
Hunter college is one of the mu-

nothing like vaulting outdoors. I
take a good, deep breath of air and
I feel ready to go.”
Rudolph admits his injury made
him more cautious for a while after
he began vaulting again.
“But I don’t think much about

(Margaret)

won a trip (for two) to Las Vegas—

very

as Advertised in
PARADE
THIS WEEK
FAMILY WEEKLY
SUNDAY NEWSPAPERS

Final Maplewood
final

Deerfield

will

nowned

“I think I’m fortunate in being
able to compete against Mike Johnson of Purdue so many times this
year.”
(Johnson
is the
Big
Ten
champion).
“I
faced
him
three
times during the indoor season and
once already outdoors. And if he’s
at the Drake Relays I’ll meet him
three more times during the outdoor season.”
Rudolph believes he is ready to
vault 14-4 and possibly 14-8.
“T’m feeling real good now,” he
says. “I weigh 184, which I think
is the ideal weight for me. Our indoor facilities are good, but there’s

The

in the

school

Banhalmi,

Championships.
“T don’t think I ever felt better
than I did in the conference meet,”
Rudolph
says. “I cleared 14 feet
easily and felt as if I could go much
higher. But there were five others
attempting 14 feet, and I cooled off
while I was waiting and missed at
the next height.”
Rudolph,
who
won
the Illinois
state prep pole vault title in 1957
when he vaulted 13-0 as a senior at
. Highland Park, thrives on competitition.

The

701

Waukegan

Road

WI

5-0984

Page 2-A

—
—

�Gets Distinguished

‘Eight New Members &gt;
Added To Advisory

Service Award

Committee

George Schmid

George
Road,

P.

Schmid,

Deerfield

“Trail

Blazer

uished

service

Skokie

Valley

748

was

Award”

The coming Bargain Bazaar being

Deerpath

presented
for

the

disting-

For Sale

planned

by Congregation Beth Or at

‘the Deerfield American Legion hall

‘for the weekend of May 27-28 has
gathered momentum with the addition of eight new members as an
Shore Area Council. The award was advisory group to aid chairman,
made at the Skokie Valley District Mrs. Edwin
Slavin, and her four
annual meeting held April 18 at the
“captains.”
Deerfield American Legion hall.
The
advisory group
will share
Schmid
has given outstanding responsibility by seeing that the
service
as
the
assistant
district all-new merchandise will be sold at
commissioner
for the
Village
of bargain prices.
Deerfield. In this role Schmid has
Members of the advisory group
inspired scout unit leaders to give are Jerome Cole, Morton Jacobson,
a better program to their boys. He David Kaplan, Leon Kessler, Lawhas kept scout leaders informed on rence
Scheer,
Morton
Siegel,
all civic endeavors and has coor- Milton Silverstein, and Edwin
dinated scouting activities with the Slavin.
highlights of village plans and acBenefits from
the Bargain
tivities.
Bazaar will be used to support edSchmid is the holder of the Com- ucation in the religious school.
missioners Key, a medal awarded
to commissioners for a minimum of sioner and for all training taken in
the field of scout commissioning.
three years service as a commis-

to

boyhood

District

by

of the

the

North

The

Visiting the Library during
grade children from Maplewood
visit on April 25.

SECRET

Work

so

well

Bring out the real, glamorous you
. with our professionally perfect
styling.

response to many inquiries regarding
the field of photography the following books
have been added! to the shelves of the library during the past few months:

TRY ONE OF OUR MANY
DIFFERENT SHADES OF BLONDE

Arin, Michael K.—How to Shoot Weddings
Lootens, Joseph G. — Lootens
on Photographic Enlarging and Print Quality

done

can

at such

be had

reasonable

Waukegan

ae

In

Satow,
Dark

prices

BEAUTY

SHOP
WI 5-1525

Deerfield

Y.

Ernest—Taking

Russell, Ted—Lenses:
Use Them

only at

Beauty Corner
666

Plays Important Role In
Computer Introduction

Photography Books
At Deerfield Library

is in the Styling!

How

to

Choose

Co.—How

to

Make

Eastman
Home

Kodak
Movies

Deschin,

Jacob—35mm

Wright,
Your

Pictures

after
and

Light

Harry
F.
Tubergen,
Jr.,
1103
Kenton Rd., executive vice president of Merchandise National Bank
of Chicago, played a leading role
in the introduction this week
of
the bank’s
new
General
Electric
210 computer system to customers,
the public and Chicago area bankers.

Good

Photography

George B., ed.—Available
Camera

Library Week were Miss Beverly Koucky and her second
school. Librarian Mrs. Helen Haney opens the door for their

and

Wolbarst, John—Polaroid Portfolio
Henle, Fritz and Kinzer, H. W.—Photography for Everyone
Benser, Walther—More Color Magic
Sweet, Ozzie—My Camera Pays Off
Archer, Fred—Fred Archer’ on Portraiture
Monier,
Pierre—Complete
Technique
of
Making Films
Rothstein, Arthur — Photojournalism;
Pictures for Magazines and Newspapers
Focal Encyclopedia of Photography

Adopt.

System

Merchandise National, after two
years of planning,
installing and
testing, became the first bank east
of the Rockies to adopt an MICR
(magnetic
ink character
recognition) system for deposit accounting.
The project, which has been Tubergen’s responsibility from the outset, will freeze the Bank’s bookkeeping costs at the 1957 level.

NEW Store HOURS:
MON. thru FRIDAY—8 a.m. to 8 p.m.
:

ge"

WEIGHS ONLY 3 Ibs!
“Vacueat” hnontated — eey Cou! Longer

‘|

SATURDAY—8
SIZE 16 x 12 113%

BILLFOLDS
BY

AMITY

995

LADIES’

UP

$2. 15 THERMOS

=LINDEMAN
99

SYNCHRONIZED 5 1)

s{9a7
$1.43

3)
12 Jowpo Sur pcrunes
qj [FL couok_BLACK
&amp;, WATE

PHARMACY

800 WAUKEGAN RD.
DEERFIELD, ILL.
Page

2-B

Our

WI 5-2400

a.m. to 5 p.m.

a.m. to 5 p.m.

SPRING
SUMMER

SALE

“MEN'S

CONTINENTAL FASHIONS Mand ITALY

Pint Size __..

SUNDAY—9

and

QUALITY LEATHER - ELEGANT STYLES

VACUUM
BOTTLE

TR

is

now

‘Seventh iibincligea&lt;

Invited To Party
At Walden School
Seventh graders from Deerfield
Grammar school are being invited
to a spring party at Walden school
on May 6 from 7:30-9:30 p.m. Mrs.
Gordon
Segert,
chairman
of the
seventh grade dancing committee,
announced that the theme of the
party is to be “Paris in the Spring.”
There
will be a dance contest
as well as games, and prizes will
be given to the winners.

On

ily

holds

a few examples...

Thursday,

PEAT MOSS
$4.77
Organic FERTILIZER el te 8
21” POWER MOWER
$39.97
6 cu.
feet

Four Cycle BRIGGS &amp; STRATTON ENGINE

HERRICK’S V&amp;S HARDWARE
VE 4- 3447
x
*
Ave.

religious

services

in

Trinity United
church
of Christ,
638 Waukegan.
At home—president of Deerfield
B’nai B’rith, Jerry Flaschner, his
wife, Joy, and their two children
Steven and Mark invite two students into their home.
The
students are Genya Shoham and Ami
Leidner.
At the synagogue — Rabbi David
Cederbaum
and president
of the
congregation,
Larry
Scheer, worship with two students, Micha and
Rivka Gisser.

DEERFIELD
REVIEW

on...

Milwaukee

Our Cover

Congregation Beth Or, together
with
the
Deerfield
B’nai
B’rith
committee celebrated the 13th anniversary of Israel’s statehood
April 21, and aiding in the special
celebration were 35 Israeli students
in
the
Chicago
area
who
were
invited to be guests for dinner in
members’ homes and attend joint
religious services at the synagogue.
Congregation Beth Or temporar-

Half Day

May

4,

1961

Vol. 36, No. 9

Published Weekly every Thursday
PUBLICATION
OFFICE
699 Waukegan Road
DEERFIELD,
ILLINOIS
Telephone Windsor 5-4500

HIGHLAND PARK OFFICE
608

Laurel Ave., Highland Park,
Telephone ID 2-4500

III.

MEMBER
National Editorial Association
Illinois Press Association
Local Subscription Rates—$3.50 per year
Domestic Rate—$5.00 per year
Single Copies—15c¢
Foreign Rates on Application
Second class postage paid at Deerfield,
Illinois.
Unsolicited
manuscripts or photographs
are sent to the North Shore Group newspapers at the sender’s risk.
The
North
Shore Group
Newspapers
assume
no responsibility for the publication of such mai terials or their return to the sender.

Thursday,

May

4, 1961

©

�Here’s a new line-up of casual sunmates to suit every family
member. Choose carefree tops and shorts to mix or match
at value-packed prices! All styled in easy care fabrics.

“Women'sSurreyTop

‘900

Cottons—5 Colors

Women’s Cotton

7”

Jamaica Shorts

Girls’ Surrey Top

*“9OO

Gabardine Pullover

&gt; Girls’ Washable
Cord Jamaicas

Boys’ Sizes 4-6X q”
Printed Cabana Set

Girls’ 3-6X Blouse 7°7
and Short Sets

°-Girls’ 2-4 No-lIron
Crepe Sunsuits
For Sport or Dress

SPORT

RT SLEEVE

ee
ar
styles

-

cottons. Knit‘ casua 1

te

eee

with

emblems. White

:

J

.

oe

is weave shirts are extra cool.
f

;

Men’s Sanforized Prints - ----

Sis

Thursday,

May

-

5

4, 1961

*S. S. KRESGE

shrunk. 100% cotton,

COMPANY

«Deerfield Commons Shopping Center

Jong-wearing Sport

Snurts in bright prints. Pre.

HOURS: OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.
AY

Boys’ Sizes 6-16

SATURDAYS 9 A.M.to 6 P.M.
-

722 Waukegan Road
Page

H

19—D

3

�]|BB Hits Boy in Eye — \HPHS Dance Groups | HP Hospital Names
Two New Staffers
Present Program
Next Thursday

10 YEAR ANNIVERSARY

PINE
A Nursing
AGED —

Mark

MANOR

was

day

eye

afternoon

Mark
1890

by

last

a bb

Thurs-

week.

The

was

with

Deerfield

Allen

Rd.,

Nault

using

a

of

card-

board box for a target. The boys
did not agree on how the accident

”

occurred,

Rates

police

said,

but

probably

a pellet riccoheted while Mark was
looking at the box.

VIS-A-VIS LINCOLNSHIRE
Route 22 — \% Mile East of Half Day

NEwton

8, of 954 Lilac Ln.,

in the

port.

“A Truly Fine Nursing Home —
As A Nursing Home Should Be ...

Phone:

Moore,

pellet was removed at Highland
Park Hospital, without serious
damage, Highland Park police re-

Home of Distinction for the
CONVALESCENT — AILING

Best of Care — Reasonable

hit

Full schedule of Clean-Up Week
pickups will be printed in the May 11
issue of the Highland Park NEWS.

4-3212

Watch

for it.

Norman Eckliff has assumed the
duties as the Highland Park Hospital’s purchas-

A dance demonstration, open to
the public, will be given in the
girls’

gym

on Thursday,

3:45.

Two

dance

groups

the

program:

ticipate

in

dance

group,

The

co-educational

wilderness canoeing

Come with us on an exciting wild life expedition
in

northern

Come

viewed

Minnesota.

close to nature

and

behold

by pioneers of yesteryear.

her as she was

Contact us now and receive your folder describing
the Interlaking Adventure and introducing our
staff.

| INTERLAKING CANOE CAMPS, Inc.
| 1310 Linden

ye

ye

WI5-1437)

x

©

Deerfield

1 LAKE FOREST

Just

Reduced

to $28,500

Keck designed contemporary ranch.
Bar-B-Q
| fireplace on scr. porch, cedar pan. living room
/fireplace. Two twin size bedrooms.

mornings

on

their

under

the

di-

own.

Participating

dance are Randy
Bernardi, Cheryl
Derboylu,

Lynn

Feis, Nancy

SERVICING

degree
Michigan

for

wife was

formerly

at

Hosp.,

Grant

Turn

to the

Feldman,

gat

Janet

Has-

“Hard-to-Find”

section

for

items there at money

prices!

the

Hospital.

Previously
employed as Executive
Assistant
Housekeeper
at
Weiss Memorial
Hospital in Chi-

Rose
Gigi

Bonnie

Want-Ad

a bacteriologist

Chicago.

advanced

Bergman,
Connelly,

Gordon,

Eckliff

State U. While
in Chicago he was area president
of the National Association of hospital purchasing
agents and currently is a member of the American Hospital
Association Department
of Purchasing
Agents.
His

O. C. Ayers
has
assumed
the
duties of director of houskeeping

kett, Nancy Merner, Joyce Rainwater, Barb Roessler, Ann Shapiro,
Ellen Shapiro and Norma Vice.
Those
in
the
co-educational
dance are Mike Baumann, Cheryl
Connolly,
James
Eaton,
Laurie
Holloway, Hunter Johnson, William
Kanter, Wesley Marks, Jean Olson,
Bob Rigler, Earl Roessler, Ann
Shapiro,
Sue
Shurberg,
Norma
Vice,
Eve
Walnak
and
Mike
Zaeske,

saving

Worthy

group

B.A.
from

The two groups will demonstrate
skills
and
present
individual

If the front, left tire of the family
automobile wears out prematurely, you
not only replace it, but correct the condition that caused it. It might have been
out of balance, out of alignment or the
axle might be bent. ““Why keep on buying tires?’’
So, it could be with a TV tube. Just
replacing a burned-out tube is not always the complete correction. “Is there
anything
that is causing the tube to
wear out besides normal operation?”
This question is answered every time
at TURNER’S
TV LAB
when we replace TV tubes or any part for that
matter.
We
have
the electronic tools
and know-how to correctly diagnose all
electronic breakdown. Phone WI 5-1401
next time and be sure. It costs no more,
often less in the long run.

adventure.

dance

Participants

697 Waukegan Rd.
WI 5-1401 — DEERFIELD

in a

ad-

is a new experiment this year. A
selected number of boys and girls
meet first period on Tuesday and

dances.

us this summer

the

Girls in advance dance were
chosen at the end of January and
have met every Friday after school.

work

By William Turner

Join

at

par-

rection of Miss Merrilynn Tracy.
They work on skills and do creative

TURNER'S |
TV-LAB
NEWS
COMPLETE

11

will

vanced dance group of the Highland Park Girls’ Athletic Association,
and
the
Co-educational

Thursday

12 to 16 YEARS

May

ing agent. Eckliff was
previously
the
purchasing agent at
St. Francis Hospital, Evanston,
and Augustana
Hospital, Chicago. He holds a

cago, and prior
fo: ¢' Beat
he

Ayers
swain

Mate.

Pacific

and

He

served 20 years
with the United
States Navy
as
Chief
Boatsaw action in the

Atlantic

during

World

War II and the Korean War aboard
carriers, cruisers, battleships and
destroyers. The last four years of

duty were at Great Lake Naval
Center training recruits in fire
fighting, swimming,

capacity of

athletics in the

a company

commander.

He and his wife, son and
ter live at 1724 McGovern.

daugh-

of Ownership

$25,000 LINCOLNSHIRE
Just Reduced to $39,500
Blue stone floored family room.
Three bed- Four twin size bedrooms. All elec. kitchen with
rooms—1 12 baths, modern kitchen w/built-ins brkf. bar. Cathedral ceiling living room. Patio
Near schools and shopping.
living on wooded half acre.

DEERFIELD

DEERFIELD
$34,300
Four or five bedrooms—3 baths. Modern kitchen with built-ins. Family room — 2% car garage. Lovely half acre corner lot,

$28,500
Family room w/B-B-Q
Beautifully

77

&lt;

seavice

Quinlan
ad LY SONG Inc

‘Page H 20—D 4

half acre.

Landscaped

&amp;

wooded

half

acre.

fireplace Charming tree-lined
ing available.

Quinlan. «.2Tyson,in

YEARS
i

landscaped

735

Deerfield

Road

Deerfield Office —

Open

Weekdays

9 to 5 —

Sundays

Panelled

street.

family

Excellent

room.

financ-

!

Windsor
10 to §

UNiversity

5-3750
9-1112

\

|

REALTOR

.MEMBER
.
CHICAGa
NO
Rea ¥STAVE
Yo KS BOARD,

[))

\

oF

|

�ae Soe

:

‘

FAMILY STEAK |

U.S. CHOICE—-SURE

EVERYONES
HEADING FOR

SAVE TRIMMED—

ae
Ais
yy
hd
G i

BONELESS

ee

SURE
SAVINGS!

BES eas
eee
at aged et

Ae

ae e :

1%

¥

U.S; ; choice—sure save trimmed—with bone

‘round steak

SERPS co ». 73¢

-u.s. choice—sure save trimmed—

boneless and rolled

rump roast
ys. choice—sure save trimmed—boneless—

rolled sirloin tip roast or

sirloin tip steak ».$1.09

in ea |

&amp;

morrell pride—tray pack—lean

sliced bacon

a

a

“4

armour’s—pieces or sliced

cooked salami...

-w49c

buddig’s—smoked

sliced beef

&lt;j
x
x
ay
.

314-02.
cello bags

$1.00

eh

‘ ca

ata

Ny i.

Fresh Fruits and Vegetables
xas—green

n’ crisp—perfect

pet

for cole slaw

ABBAGE
. » 5c
BREEN ONIONS sire.
a fancy—crisp—for

spring

From

ZEDLESS

meat—extra

39c

Lb.

Lb.

s Gw

puget

FRESH SMELTS
Lbs, 29¢

oa

sound

sockeye salmon

\ ae
size

a.

Fes303 39c

s G w—california—garden fresh

sweetpeas

FANCY
2

old—chunks

yellow COP

RED SNAPPER

IRAPEFRUIT = 10c

months

_s G w—cream style
:

FANCY

79¢

20

cheddar cheese |

Fresh Fish

or 27 size

or

peach pies
aged—over

Kidney Bean Salad |

salads

large 23

Delicatessen

Dept.
FRESH—HOMEMADE

large

prida—white

Our

ritz—frozen—aopple

ss

PDs 303sdie

college inn

chicken broth __

2

oe

hunt’s—give leftovers a delicious lift

tomato sauce 2 cans
15 33¢ can
®

y

open pit

snider’s—the hotter

tomato catsup.

"

manor house—drip or regular

.

Coie

‘ils
‘ean $1.09

family napkins

"DRE.

s &amp; w—california

tomato juice
hershey—plain

.

or almond

milk chocolate .........

“

meadow

.

MUIR

SHOPPING
716

k

‘vars $1.00
airs

CENTER

WAUKEGAN

RD.

SPACIOUS PARKING FOR 400 CARS
Open Mon. thru Fri., 9 A.M. to

9 P.M.

vean

gold—lightily salted—creamery fresh

6

Sat., ‘til 6 P.M.

barbecue Sauce.

We reserve the right to limit quantities.
Meat and produce prices available Thursday,
Friday and Saturday only.
Sale starts Thurs., May 4 thru Wed., May 10.

28-0z.
nana
ee

lipton’s—chicken noodle, tomato, beef noodle,
chicken-rice,

scot—special offer

,

1Oc¢

mushroom,

green 3

onion soup

or

3

kes,

$ l 00

hershey—plain or almond

milk chocolate
Se

10

ee

ee

Valuable Coupon

39c

tan
ee

Worth

eee

50c

This Coupon

*
‘

Certified — Red Label

.

Lightly Salted

:

With

‘ BUTTER

17&lt;:

1 Lb.
Only

t

Offer good Monday, Tuesday and Wednes- :
day, May 8th, 9th and 10th only.
Limit
one coupon per adult customer.
Offer good
with $5.00 or more minimum purchase only. a

Valuable Coupon
(—

Worth
—

=

me

50c
me

me.

‘
me

Page
H 2I—D 5

ml

�cee

\

CITY OF HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS
~ BOARD OF APPEALS

BOYS 6-15
CAMP MIKQUANO
RIDING, RIVER TRIPS,
RIFLERY, OVERNITE
CAMPING, SWIMMING,
SAILING, FISHING,
ALL SPORTS
22 Campers from this North
Shore Area
FOLDER ON REQUEST
2-4-8 Week Periods

June

Welton

OAK

24

— Aug.

Alm,

19

or
Gary Nemchock,
1123 S. Humphrey
PARK, ILL.
EU 3-2532

Highland
Park
Clean-Up
Week
starts May 15 and runs through’ May
20. Are you ready?

BOARD
To

John
be published

MARTY

students
20

Lake

and

their

County

Science

Students

Laboratories,

Day

North

at

Chicago.

A tour of the company’s
tories

and

plant

bott scientists
gram.
The
guests

the

and

talks

featured

laboraby

the

and

Abbott

cafeteria.

that featured
High

During

Abbott research.

schools

represented

us

you have a problem

it pays to consult a

have the know-how to treat stubborn stains.

takes on

new

are

restored

and

your

apparel

life thru the exclusive MARTINIZING

process.

Consult us about all your dry cleaning problems
... we'll do our very best to serve you!
“Headquarters put him out
here because he forgot to
have

his

uniform

ONE

HOUR

cleaned

MNARgtTieIOANTGCuIpaNneG

MARTINIZING!”

Open Doily
7:30 A.M, = 6:30 P.M.
Saturdays

HOUR

® Une

at

ie
the met
* "

__,

.. serene

‘

708

—aal

Deerfield
Deerfield
WI

5-9793

——_

8:00 A.M. - 6:00 P.M,

YOU ARE INVITED
TO

the

in-

Deerfield, Ela-Vernon,
cluded
Highland Park, and North Shore
Country Day School.

4/27-5/4/61—112

colors

pro-

afternoon session they were shown
a kinescope
of ‘“Expedition—Science,” a recent television program
with Norman Ross as commentator

OF APPEALS

Original

Ab-

students and teachers were
of the company for lunch in

Your local MARTINIZING establishment is operated by dry cleaning specialists who understand fabrics

Om

and

Abbott

specialist.

acecinnmereed

Oe ome

450
from

other Chicago area high schools got
an inside look into the world of
science April 26 at the sixth annual

consult

OE
OO ae a OR TR

es Ms Ae

About

N. VanderVries, Chairman
April 27 and May 4, 1961.

When
tetas

Laboratories

teachers

Appeal No. 332
School District No. 111
Northwood School, 945 North Avenue
Request for a variation of the sideyard
requirement of
the
“D”
Single
Family
Dwelling District to allow the roof overhang of a proposed addition to the Northwood School, 945 North Avenue, to project
beyond the required sideyard at the west
property fine.
Appeal
yi
Harold H.
Lot 2 of Kermans Resub
Request for a variation of the intensity
of use and the lot of record requirements
of the
“B-1" Single Family Dwelling Districtto allow the construction of a Single
Family
Dwelling
on
Lot
2 of Kermans
Resub. Said lot is located on the east side
of Sheridan
Road,
200 ft. south
of the
north Waverly Rd. intersection.

Nelsonville, Wis.

1-HOUR

High Schools Visit
Abbott

Notice
is. hereby
given
that
a
public
hearing will be held in the Council.
Chamber of the City Hall in the City of Highland Park, Illinois on Tuesday,
May
16,
1961 at 7:30 o’clock P.M.,
C.D.S.T.
Said
Public Hearing
will be conducted by the
Board of Appeals of the City of Highland
Park, for the purpose of considering the
applications for the following variations of
the zoning ordinance:

Rd.

Two-Year College tor Area
Studied by School Group
Evanston,

Trier,

Niles,

Maine,

area.
Most

met

these

of

April

20 and

superintendents

decided

to seek

the services of an inter-university
committee
to
survey
interest,
for
needed
finances
and
needs,
comprehensive educational institution that would provide two-years
of college work for students in this
area.
The superintendents were alerted to the problem calling for a junior college
because
students
attending suburban
schools in this
area are in classes in which there

are increasing numbers of students
planning to attend colleges.
The
same
situation
exists throughout
the country. The problem presents
a challenge to the adults of the
area — especially those who
are
concerned that there be colleges
for students who are qualified to
attend.

The complexity
world will demand

of tomorrow’s
a well educated

No longer is it
total population.
an educational
adequate to have

elite.

Communities

will

have

to

provide educational institutions if
they expect the young people of
their areas to seek advanced edu-

cation.
Colleges have not been able to
expand their facilities to accommodate the increasing percentages of
NOTICE
25381
to all
GIVEN
IS HEREBY
NOTICE
of June,
the first Monday
that
persons
date in the estate of
1961, is the claim
pending
Deceased
E. OLSEN,
ALFRED
County,
of Lake
Court
Probate
in the
filed
be
may
claims
that
and
Illinois,
said
before
or
on
estate
said
the
against
All
of summons.
issuance
without
date
beor
on
estate
said
against
claims filed
fore said date and not contested, will be
adjudicated on the first Tuesday after the
first Monday of the next succeeding month
at 9 a.m.
FRANCES O. OSBORNE,
Administrator
Marvin Wallach, Attorney
1896 Sheridan Road
Highland
Park, Illinois
v
Phone IDlewood 2-4160
4/27 5/4-11/61—109

2

4

4

FRIDAY, MAY 9
5:30 A.M. to 3:00 P.M.

you need

Mueller Climatrol
AIR CONDITIONING
i’s TIME you put an end to the
strain of sweltering Chicago
summers with our new Mueller

Climatrol air conditioner.
WE SELL MUELLER CLIMATROL because

“brand

in

demand’’,

we

A steering committee, consisti
of theg
superintendents
of the
bes
has
schools,
high
eight
formed to study a junior colleg
for the students in this area. O
members of the committee includ
Hobart Engle, representing Now

County

J.

Puffer,

of

Schools;

and

consultant

a state
leges,

Superintende1
Birkhimé

Robert

representing

Co

Junior

for

George

kins, State Superintendent

Wé

of Pu

lie
Instruction.
Dr.
Norman
Watson,
Superintendent
of Gl
brook High School, serves as chat
man of the steering committee.
On May 10, Birkhimer will m
with the steering committee to a
sist in the selection of the perso
nel for the survey team which

to

determine

the

vario

ACQUAINTED

SPECIAL
ecked
e all faucets ch ped
op
st
and leaks
osets
e all water cl sted
ju
ad
d
checked an

2102 0

;

plus
parts

Special Rates for Medical
&amp; Commercial Buildings

can

pay for an ordinary make,
Hiawathas

"Cities" fleet

Get our estimate now!

FREE!

Call for your copy.

S$
&amp;L HOME HTG. CO., Inc.
7611 W. Irving Park Rd., Chicago
Phone: TU 9-8824
6

!

Education.

on Higher

GET

install for no more than you’d

22—D

This is part of the total plan ps
posed by the Illinois Commissj

leaks with our

"Longer life through Air Conditioning.”

H

Communitie
across the nation.
are planning and supporting juy
ior colleges in their own areas ¥
accommodate some of the studen
who want to go to college. This 3
a
of the stress
some
leviates
strain on the colleges througho,
the nation. Communities in Illin
have been slow to begin inves
of junio
the possibility
gating
communitie
their
for
colleges
Gradually the movement is gainim
throughout the st;
momentum

save your nerves,
stop expensive

pletely new, Williamsburg Colonial building. We
are proud of it—and hope you will be, too.
Dome

has beg

to this problem,

answer

DRIPPY ! 4}

will be served for your enjoyment in this com-

and the Western

1Page

College tuitions and fees are ris
ing rapidly. This eliminates ma
students who have the ability, dé
sire, and necessary preparation
attend college, but are financia
*
unable to meet the expenses.
A junior college movement, a

are you 5)

and air conditioning for 102
years! Yet, because it’s the

of the Super

“

want to study there.

HOMEOWNERS:

turer that’s concentrated exclusively on residential heating

view and nearby communities. ‘Coffee and...”

eac

turng
simpl

sl

ter compressor, quieter fans,
the best controls ... quality
you’d expect from a manufac-

This new Milwaukee Road station is a convenient transportation facility for residents of Glen-

admission

don’t have the facilities to educag
the numbers of young people whi

attempt

we know it’s better built. Bet-

Route

seeking

students are
Many
because the schools

fall.
away

NEW

MILWAUKEE ROAD STATIC
IN GLENVIEW
ah
ty)
¥

students

factors involved in the establis
ment of such an institution.

THE

THE

Glenbroo

Heights,

and Palatine High Schools have been attending a series ‘
meetings to study the possibility of a junior college in thi

OPEN F OUSE
AT

Arlington

Ne

Park,

The high school superintendents of Highland

1414 HIGHLAND AVE.

CHICAGO 26

The Rains are Coming—
Check your Sump Pump!

RADIO-CONTROLLED SERVICE
Thursday, May 4, 196

�Let JOSEPH help you make your back yard
a safe home

16 FT. CRAWFORD

7

LON

Pe
OF eo

err ce

GARAGE DOORS
4 SECTIONAL
$7 3 9°°

aa
2

ss
ee

GIVE
ee ecoesoorm!

WE

playground!

Se

&lt;b.

*TORSION

SPRING

HARDWARE

*FACTORY

PRIMED

4 sectional—8 panel Crawford marvel—lift two car garage
door with deluxe
Expensive doors.

features

usually found

only in the most

~ CYCLONE CHAIN-LINK FENCE
:

posr-tOr
y

Whatever your fencing needs
to protect your flowers or to
to investigate Cyclone fence
However, if you wish, you can

CHECK

THAT

FITS

THE

YOUR

creel ee 11

GAUGE

FABRIC

WITH TOP

RAIL,

LINE

*K

POST AND

L POST AND GATES EXTRA) PER LIN. FT. 8 5c
36"’-11 gauge terminal posts and gates extra *minimum

NEEDS!

42" high—I1-gauge with top rail, line
post and fittings. Posts set in concrete.
INSTALLED by JOSEPH......per foot
MATERIALS ONLY PER FOOT...
91c

Sera

[MAprimae

SIZE

INSTALLED

—to create a safe child's playground,
establish property lines—it will pay you
installed by Joseph's fence specialists.
save money by erecting your own fence.

f

66

f

80

Readymade

REDWOOD

By

'

SS
$

88

[NSTALLED!

‘

36” high
ferminal posts
and gates

TERMINAL POSTS AND GATES EXTRA
MINIMUM LABOR $50.00

per

PICKET FENCE
Bt

pee

—

HERE'S
You

get

20

WHAT

YOU

1”x3”—36"

high,

2"x4" stringers, cedar post and nails.
week free use of a posthole digger.

redwood

8-ft. readymade

sec-

FENCE
s

Ill.

NAtional 2-3000
hursday,

May

4, 1961

|

612

WAVERLY COURT
DEERFIELD, ILL.
Windsor 5-3220

3333 N. Kimball
Chicago, Ill.
INdependence 3-6000

red-

posts.

HHI

terminal

installed with 4x4
posts......-- + per
installed with 4x4
posts......-.. per
installed with 4x4
posts....-...- per
posts

Wood

INSTALLED

fabor $50.00,

JOSEPH
LUMBER

less posts.

Ea.

$308
$336

minimum

INSTALLED

Rustie cedar
pickets
that
are tightly fitted
to
cedar stringers to form a uniform appearance from
the front with no -posts showing. Installed with 4°’
cedar line posts. Terminsd gests and gates extra.

long,

$983

SPLIT PICKET
RUSTIC FENCE

60

360” highfoot
Minimum

redfoot
redfoot
redfoot

and gates extra
labor $50.00

one

6-10”

N. Narragansett

4’x4’

INSTALLED BY JOSEPH
high
line
high
line
high
line

|
pc

60” high prefabricated section

Chicago,

into

labor $50.00.

48”
wood
60”
wood
72"
wood

free one week use of a posthole digger

48" HIGH—8-ft, ECONOMY SECTION $4
EVERYTHING YOU NEED! ...........36” HIGH—8-ft. QUALITY SECTION $554
EVERYTHING YOU NEED! .........+0.
48” HIGH—8-ft, QUALITY SECTION
$5
EVERYTHING YOU NEED! .........0

2001

1 1).95

72" high, 8-ft. ready made se
c3 ]
OH
tions less posts..........++-@a

pickets,

Plus

interlock

Minimum

tions less posts. .....ee+0+++-€a
60” high, 8-ft. ready made
seetions less posts.....eeece++a ] 2.95

GET!

economy

The tightly woven

sections

DO-IT-YOURSELF MATERIALS
48”

ECONOMY

pieces

The aristocrat of all fenec designs.
wood

protection.

ill A&gt;
a)

extra

foot

weave is the perfect fence for swimming pool enclosures and

JOSEPH GIVES YOU
EVERYTHING YOU NEED!

FLA

labor $50.00

© g4a9/ WOOD WEAVE FENCE

post and fittings. Posts set in concrete.
INSTALLED by JOSEPH......per foot
MATERIALS ONLY PER FOOT ..
$1.05
48” high—9-gauge with top rail, line
posts and fittings. Posts set in concrete.
INSTALLED by JOSEPH......per foot
MATERIALS ONLY PER FOOT ..
$1.13

arora

per
foot

1443

..........

per

foot
44"

high

Authentic
Early
American
rustic
split
pickets,
staggered 40’ and 44’’ In hetght.
Installed with
doweled 4’’ cedar posts. Terminal posts and gates
extra.
Minimum labor $50.00. —
es

44’ high prefabricated
long less posts ea.

section

6’-10

$498

DEERFIELD, ILLINOIS
Y2 BLO€K SOUTHWEST OF DEERFIELD
COMMONS

Daily 7:30 t0 5

SHOPPING

—

CENTER

Friday Nite Till 9
Page

H 23—D

7

�to

Fine Arts

Award

Dinner Is

Planned for May 18

EVANSTON

Students

will

be

who

excel

honored

at

in

a

the

arts

banquet

to

be given by the Fine Arts Council
of the Highland Park High School
PTA on Thursday, May 18, at 6:15

p.m.

1718 Sherman

Ave.

UN 4-3004

Wm.

H.

Caliow,

Prin

in the North

school.
Highlight

| the

of the

presentation

cafeteria

of the

evening

of

those

students

outstanding

will

Key

be

Awards

who

have

contributions

fields
of
art,
creative
writing
more than three

made

in

the

speech,
music,
and
dance.
No
awards and five

honorable mentions will be made
in each field.
Complete secrecy surrounds the
awarding of the keys, and names
of the students to be honored are
kept in sealed envelopes until the
dinner

is in progress.

Awards

may

be
made
for
achievement
classes, clubs or activities of
department.

award

The

is decided

recipient

upon

by

in
the

of

each

a jury

This will be the second
Key Awards banquet. This

annual
unique

method of honoring students in the
arts has been a tremendous stimu.

lus

to

students.

In

many

ways

similar to awards given for scientific
achievement
or
athletic

prowess,
served to

this
raise

recognition
has
the prestige of

those who excel in the arts. Keys
are designed to symbolize the department in which the award
is
given.

with LINT - FILTER
AGITATOR

Speaker

for

the

dinner

will

be

Dr. Thor Johnson, director of orchestra activities and professor of
music

at Northwestern

Tickets

for the

event

Washing

Action

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Draining

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Tub
Wash

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Lint Removal

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the cleanest wash ever. The
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FLAMELESS

designed smooth to do a fine,

ELECTRIC APPLIANCES

does

job

College,

to

w

members

4«

the
Highland
Park
High
Schogq
Parent Teachers Association at
annual meeting May 4.

Dr. Cole, who will be introdu
by

Raymond

chairman,

Perlman,

will

discuss

progra

the

whef

area of stimulating and educatin!
the young, and the way in whi
the home and schools need to cd
operate to produce the kind of i

formed

and responsible citizens

need in this day and age.
The election of officers for 196]
1962 will take place during
business
meeting.
Refreshments will be served 4

the conclusion of the program
der the supervision of the socié
chairman,
Mrs.
William
Schwa}
Sophomore room mothers will ¢
hostesses and
will include:
Mr;
Mrs.
Johy
Richard Zac

charias. The

table centerpiece wi

be

by

arranged

Mrs.

Zacchiaris.

Mrs.
Thomas
Carlin is dinn’?
chairman and Mrs. W. F. Hesler j
in charge of decorations. Co-cha
men of the PTA Fine Arts Counc}
are Mrs.
Harold
M. Gilden
and
Mrs. Arthur Adler, Jr.

Wonderful new paint by Du Pont makes re-doing
any room easier than ever before. Creamy-thick
“Lucite” Wall Paint needs no stirring or priming.
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Maytag’s wonderful
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Lake

Mrs.
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Chickerneo and Mrs.

on

city’s rising young talent are invited to attend. Tickets are limited.
Early reservations are advised.

Gyrofoam

of

be

is tg

Mark Panther, Mrs. Irwin Newma

go

persons interested in honoring the

Maximum

dent

will

Ingredient”

talk to be given b
Graham Cole, preg

will

Jr., 1370 Lincoln Avenue
South.
All students, parents, friends and

Controls

Missing

University.

sale May 8 in the school book store
during all lunch periods, or they
may be procured from the ticket
chairman,
Mrs. Ralph Ettlinger,

Flexible

“The

title of the
Dr. William

of three qualified faculty members,

MAYTAG BIG CAPACITY
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Ea

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RD.

WI
OPEN

Page

H

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ia |

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‘TIL 9 P.M.

Thursday, May 4, 1961

�YOU'RE ALWAYS

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OVER
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Highland

c

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Lawn Sprinkler
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tata

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|

�Elected
makes painting.

to Class

Cake Hound Sought

Office

William C. Gentry, Jr., son of the
late Mr. William C. Gentry and

so easy!

Mrs.

Gentry

Highland

of

Park,

year at Boston
School,

656
now

Walnut
in

his

University

has been

elected

St.,

second

Medical
vice-pres-

ident of his class. He is an alumnus

flat finish for walls and ceilings

of Highland

For nearest Jewel dealer, see
Phone Book Yellow
Pages,
or phone SEeley
'

Dartmouth

Park
College

High

School

and

ing Boston University
ship,

and

is atttend-

on a scholar-

A

big

black

Labrador

retriever

—which was chased away earlier
Wednesday
afternoon
last week
when he tried to take a piece of
cake from Matthew Vincent, 4, of
393 Vine Ave.—came back and bit
him

Park

on

the

little

finger,

police

were

told.

Animal

wald

has

Warden

begun

Highland

Frank

a search

dog.

Licht-

for

the

HGA Water Ballet
“Ringing Wet”
Opens Tomorrow
Highlighting

practicing

several

will

be

weeks

the

Goldbogen,
Rosenberg,
Weissert.

Girls who
will
show
are
Jamie

Baum,

girls

have

Karen
of

Hivhland

been

preparing

since the beginning
of the year
with
swimming
sessions
once
a
week. Actual work on the show began early in March. Gail Golden
and Linda Kaufman, student heads,
and Mrs. Jean Ubl, faculty sponson, have directed the show.
Each

two

of the

heads.

fourteen

They

are

ballets

Marge

has

Berk-

son, Betsy Dawe, Andi Fox, Gail
Golden, Retta Greenberg, Michaele

Hicks,

Sandy

Julian,

Linda

Kauf-

man, Kathy Keare, Nicki Maiorano,
Leslie
Michaele,
Roses
Millner,
Lynn
Moses,
Jill
Nathan,
Joan
Neiman, Carol Phillips, Gail Platt,
Sally Pollack, Bonnie Rose, Paulette Rubin, and Stephanie Rudo.
Narrating

the show will be Gayle

Bottled

Naturally

GOOD

Sparkling
Mineral

By

. .

Spring

Water

Co.

1629 Park Ave.
(IDlewood 2-0042

appear
Adler,

Berkson,

in the
Kathy

Pat

Ber-

Blosten, Judy Borinstein,

Brecher,

Ellen

Buchman,

Wendy
Cassidy,
Ellen
Cholewa,
Ginny Cholewa, Betsy Dawe, Mary
Feuchtwanger, Barb Fiedler, Helen
Foa, Andi
Fox, Nancy
Freeman,
Brenda Golden, Retta Greenberg,
Leslie
Gurrentz,
Judy
Hammer-

man,
Nancy
Hexter,
Michaele
Hicks, Karen Hirsch, Karen Hutchinson, Judy Irvine, Laurie Joseph,
Sandy Julian, Susan Kahn, Ellen
Katz, Kathy Keare, Barb Kux, Kay
Landau,
Nancy
Lipman,
Ellen

Luckman,

Micki

Maiorano,

Susie

Mason,
Mary
McComb,
Nancy
Mead, Leslie Michaels, Rose Milner, and Lynn Moses.
Also
Joanne

Jill Nathan, Joan
Newman,
Susie

Kathy

Papienniak,

Neiman,
Newton,

Jean

Pettin-

gell,
Carol
Phillips,
Gail
Platt,
Nancy Pollack, Sally Pollack, Gail
Rademacher,
Bonnie
Rose,
Paulette Rubin, Jill Rubil, Stephanie

Rudo,

Trudy

Schloss,

Betty

Sammet,
Smith,

Patsy

Elizabeth

Theile, Penny Weisbard, and Diane
Winters,
Helping behind the scenes with
the locker room are Pat Mandel,

chairman,
Berry,
Leslie

Water

Delivered

Marge

nard, Kay

Park Girls’ Athletic Association’s
water ballet show. “Ringing Wet’’
will begin at 8:15 in the boys’ pool
tomorrow and Saturday, May 6, A
limited number of tickets will be
sold at the door. Proceeds will go
to the HGA scholarship fund.

The

Carol
Miller,
Emily
Jane Smith, and Tari

Joanne

Austin,

Kathy

Ann
Ettinger, Jane
Jones, Nancy
Neal,

Graf,
Helen

Parker, Ann Segel, Connie Smith,
Sharon Tracy, and Mary Ann Ullman.
Sandy Vines is chairman of the
make-up committee. With her are
Shirley Folger, Elaine Coss, and
Helen Cox.
Ushering
for
the
show
Suellen Bilow, Micki Gamm,
Gane, and Jan Slater.

Buy

and

hold

U.

S.

Savings

are:
Judy

Bonds.

Gee /t/ Try lt/ Here!

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Page

Vad, Exononueal, /

ON THE NORTH
645 CENTRAL

SHORE SINCE 1895
.
ID 3-0230
Thursday,

May

4, 1961

-

�Cub Pack 350
Holds Final

| Michele

Meet of Year
Cub Pack 350 held its final meeting of the year Friday
evening,
April 21, in Bannockburn
school.
Scout officials George Schmid and
Dick Becker were judges for the
annual ‘Pinewood Derby.”
designed
best
for the
Awards

racers

were

as follows:

Lichter Will

Attend Girls State

8-year-old

9-y ea r-oldsclass-Jeff Ferguson,
Peter Daniel,
10-year-olds-Scott
Peter.

Mrs. William Tennermann, Illini
Girls State chairman of the Deerfield
American
Legion
auxiliary
has announced that Michele Diane
Lichter has been selected to attend
Illini Girls State this year.
She is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Irving Lichter, 1307 Charing
Cross Road, and is a junior at Highland Park High school. Michele was

selected by the members of the faculty of the high school as an outstanding student, co-operativeness,
character and leadership and her
scholastic record.
Illini

Girls

State

is held

at Mac-

Casey

Murray college in Jacksonville, IIl.,

entrants, Tom
Jones-8-year-old
Brenner-9-year-olds and Tim Evans10-year-olds.
Tim Evans won the
final race between the three individual class winners.
Cub Scout achievement awards

and 500 girls, all high school juniors, throughout the state will attend.

Speed races were won by:

as follows:

were earned

Bobcat — David Scheele, Frank
Polkowski.
Wolf — Randy Sarton, Steve
Geuder.
Bear — Tom Doetch, John Eaker,
Skip Smoot, Scott Peter.
Lion — Bill Devens.
Dana Staats,
Denner Badge —
Erick Peterson, Skip Smoot.
Assistant Denner Badge — Pat
Hill,
Tim
Potter,
Casey
Jones,
Steve Geuder, Bill Devens.
Geuder,
Steve
—
Arrow
Gold
Jeff Ferguson, Bob Walleck, Chris
Walters, Chris Huff, Pat Hill, Jim
Devens, Randy La Gorio, Mike Hill,
Bill Devens.
Silver Arrow — Craig Schiffer,
Tom Heidenfelder,
Tim Potter,
Casey Jones, Steve Ewan, Bob Walleck, Pat Hill, Phil Jackman, Jim
Scott
Gorio,
La
Randy
Devens,

Michele will represent the Deerfield unit and will attend the week
of June 20-27. The girls are instructed in the functions of state
government and will visit Springfield while there.

Nancy Hoffman
Member Of SUI

Is Cast
Play

Nancy Hoffman
of Deerfield is
a member of the cast of “Thieves’
Carnival,” which was presented by
the Southern Players of Southern
Illinois University April 14-16 and
18-22 on the Carbondale campus.
Written
by
French
playwright
Jean
Anouilh
and
translated
by
Lucienne
Hill, the play is a romantic farce in which the thieves
concoct
an elaborate masquerade
to cloak their intentions but, in
the process, become confused between reality and make-believe.

Peter, Mike Hill.

Hold Banquet
The

Trinity

Christ

will

United

have

Church

their

of

Mother-

Daughter
banquet
on Thursday,
May 11, promptly at 6:30 p.m. at
the
American
Legion
Hall,
849
Waukegan Rd.
Cost for Adults is
$1.50, children
10 and under
75
cents.
All Mothers
and daughters invited.
Please call Mrs. Leo Lamoureux
at WI 5-3018 for reservations and

tickets.

Begin Work For
Rose Garden At
Village Halls

FINAL

Team
Tax
Pay-out
Inspection
oans
Savings A
PUOOONIEINE
Insurance
Title

TEAM

1 IG

co

Lost
51%
56
60
63
64
681%
73
92

done

by

the

in town.

Approve

STANDINGS

Set oe

clubs

LOAN

Won
80%
716
72
69
68
63142
59
40

is being

Construction

The
village
trustees,
the park
district trustees and the township
officers
have
approved
the
construction of the garden which is
expected
to be valued at $6,000
when completed.
At the rear of the garden there
will be a plaque with the names of
donors listed on it. Donations which

The Deerfield Savings and Loan
Association
Bowling
League
entered a team in the annual North
Suburban Team Handicap Tournament.
Twelve
teams competed
at the
Deerfield Bowling Lanes and the
Deerfield Savings and Loan team
won with a total of 3041 pins, including handicap. Team members
are: Ed Sordyl, Berger Larson, Lee
Johnson, Jim Fairbairn, and Lyle
, Jacobs.
The team now goes to the semifinals to be played in the North
Chicago Bowlarium early in June.

the garden club wants to get as
many residents as possible to have

Proclamation

seven inspections during the month
of April. They include:

WHEREAS:
The
Chicago area
has been
invited
by the United
States Information Agency to conduct
a People
to
People
Book
Drive,
and
WHEREAS: This Book Drive will

be

initiated

May

10th

THEREFORE:
President

of

I Joseph W.

the

Village

of

Deerfield, do hereby proclaim May
10th

to

May

20th

as

Deerfield

People to People Book Drive Week.

Thursday, May 4, 1961

He
donate

of the

said

garden

that

more

their names

club.

no

than

on the

one_

one

should

dollar,

for

plaque.

Conduct Seven Fire
Inspections Here
Fire

marshal

Kipling

school,

Fred

Grabo

Deerfield

made

Gram-

mar school, Walden school, National Tea company, Jewel
pany, Sure Save foods
Ben Franklin store.

Royal

Neighbors

from

the

Deerfield

club will attend the 66th

annual state convention of the Illinois Federation of Women’s clubs
in the Grand Ballroom of the Hotel
Sherman, Chicago, on May 9, 10,
and 11.
Mrs.
George
V.
Malmgren
of
Chicago, state federation president,
will preside at all sessions.
The
opening session will be at 9:30 a.m.
on Tuesday, May 9.
The Illinois
Federation of Women’s Clubs has
a membership of over 80,000 and
more than 1,000 clubs.

Taking an active part in convention planning for the fourth year
is local Deerfield
Woman’s
club
member Mrs. Elmer F. Anderson,

who is a member of the state board.
As state credentials chairman, Mrs.
Anderson
heads
a committee
of
more than 75 volunteers from the
state’s 22 districts.
They will handle registration and
credentialling of voting delegates
and their alternates. Approximate-

ly 1500 voting members
ed,

exclusive

Woman’s

who

Activities for the Nation-

Tea comstore and

Meet

The Deerfield Royal Neighbors
will meet with Mrs. Edwin Johnson, 859 Todd Ct., on Wednesday,
May 10 at 1 p.m.

parlimentarian;

Judge Thaddeus V. Adesko, Judge
of the County Court of Cook County, Dr. Bergen Evans; Judge Bowden Hunt of the Juvenile
and
Domestic Relations Court,
Polk
County Florida and Stuart Brent.

The

president

of

the

R. Lenn Franke and Robert Folger. The Stagers will present the

are

not delegates are invited to attend
any or all of the sessions as visitors.
For further information call Mrs.
Locke Rogers, WI 5-0765 or Mrs.
Anderson, WI 5-3521.
Headliners
on
the
convention
program
include
Dr.
Carl
S.
Winter, who will deliver the keynote address carrying out the convention theme ‘‘Make Living Worth
While.”
Other
speakers
will
be
Mrs. Louise Bushnell director of

General

Federation of Women’s Clubs, Mrs.
E. Lee Ozbirn of Oklahoma
City
and Washington, D.C. will address
the convention on Thursday afternoon, May
11 and Norman
Ross
will be the closing banquet speaker
Thursday evening.
Two tours have been planned, to

“Moon is Blue” as their third play of the season.

May

9 and

to the

The

Wednesday,

May

10.

On
Wednesday
afternoon, May
10,
a Federation
luncheon
twopart program will include a fashion
parade of district winners in the
General Federation Vogue Sewing
contest and an International Fashion Pageant with Mary Gordon of
TWA as commentator.
Departmental conferences will be
held at 2:30 p.m. on Wednesday,
May 10. Newly elected department

of

the

Deerfield

Wom-

an’s club were especially invited to
these conferences.
Of special interest to Illinois clubwomen will be two resolutions on
Election
Law
Amendments,
the
first of which would urge the members of the 72nd Illinois General
Assembly
to create a continuing
Election Laws
Commission
con-

boys

of

den

one

The North Shore alumnae of Zeta
of

cub

scout pack 350 toured the Electric
Railway Museum April 22. The museum is maintained by the Chicago

Hardware

Foundry

in

North

Chi-

cago.
The group making the tour were:
Erik Peterson,
Dana
Staats, Lee

Soule,

Greg

Soule,

Johnny

and Peter Daniels.
Some
of the trains

on

Kyle
exhibit

included car 277, built in 1913 for
the [Illinois Terminal
railroad
as
a passenger-baggage
combination,
and car 1024, built in 1899 for the
Northwestern Elevated railroad. It
is the oldest car in the museum.
All of the cars in the museum

Evanston.

Proceeds

from

the event will go

to the National society for crippled
children and adults.

Modeling

hats

will be president

from

this

area

of the group, Mrs.

Herbert C. Sundmacher,

1425 War-

rington
Biggam,

Frank
Dr.

Rd., and Mrs.
1427 Ambleside

D,

May 25 Is Poppy

Day In Deerfield

Collect Books

26. Members

Here

poppies
and St.

For City-Wide Drive
Mrs. Harlan Philippi is chairman
of

the

drive

People-To-People

in

this

area

Stores
Mrs.

in

the

area,

according

to

Philippi.

30 days

as of the date of election,

provided proper certification could
be obtained
from the state of
previous residence.
It was felt that many qualified
voters of other states, at the time

they

moved

into

Illinois

were

hotel Monday

evening.

will sell

25 so the majority of commuters
will buy their poppies in Deerfield.
Made

the

coming
week.
The
drive,
to be
held between May 10-20, will collect books for the United States
Information agency.
Books
can
be
left
at
Jewel

of the group

at the Chicago, Milwaukee
Paul railway station May

book

during

county

90 days and in the precinct

Saturday, May 13, at 2 p.m. at the
chapter house, 721 University PIl.,

The American Legion auxiliary
of Deerfield, unit 738, will have its
annual Poppy day on Friday, May

ple
to
study
and
make
recommendations to subsequent sessions
of the Illinois General Assembly
for improvements
in the Illinois
election laws.
The
second
resolution
would
urge the members of the General
Assembly
to make provisions for
persons to vote in the national elections, if they have lived in the

of legislators and lay peo-

Tau Alpha will present “Chapeaus
by Camille’’ with dessert and bridge

were saved by a group of men who
wanted to preserve the trolley era.

denied the privilege of voting because
they
did
not
meet
the
residence requirement of one year
in the state.
Among
other resolutions under
consideration is one recommending
the strengthening of Illinois laws
governing drivers
licenses, and
stricter enforcement of motor vehicle laws.
Mrs. Anderson will attend a preconvention state board meeting at
the
Hotel
Sherman
on
Monday
afternoon, May 8, and a traditional
pre-convention dinner for the state
board and convention committee in
the Skyline Terrace Room of the

stituted

Bridge

To Be On Saturday

Tours Museum

Illinois

Youth Diagnostic Center, Joliet, on

Desert And

Cub Pack 350

the Park Ridge School for Girls on
Tuesday,

Rehearsing for the current play which will be presented
11, 12 and 13 at the Deerfield Grammar school are,

standing, Tek Osborn and William Walbaum. Seated are Mrs.

Deerfield

members

federation

May

are expect-

of visitors.

Club

chairmen

through

20th.

NOW
Koss;

on May

should be $1 can be left at the
village library, according to Clover
Perkins,

Delegates

Woman’s

general

men’s garden club of Deerfield in
cooperation with village agencies
and

DEERFIELD SAVINGS AND
BOWLING LEAGUE

work

To Convention

al Manufacturers’ association; John
K. Morley, foreign correspondent;
Mrs. W. Glenn Suthers, state and

building.

The

Send Delegates

Women’s

Work
began over the weekend
of the formal rose garden which
will be located between the Deerfield village
hall
and
the
West
Deerfield Township offices and

library

Women’s Clubs

by Vets

Poppy

Day volunteers are wives,

mothers,
veterans

sisters and daughters of
and wearing a poppy will

bring aid to disabled veterans and
needy children of veterans.
The poppies are made by disabled veterans in hospitals for the
American Legion auxiliary and it
is their only way of earning money
through beneficial employment.

All proceeds from Poppy Day are
used

for rehabilitation

at veteran’s

hospitals.

Holy Cross Youth
Sponsor Dance For

Married Couples
The sophomore and junior classes
of the High club of Holy Cross
church will sponsor a dance, May
12, for married couples.
The annual dance, “Rapsody in
Blue,” is $5 per couple and proceeds will be used to purchase a
juke box for the club. Tickets are
available through Tom Eiden, WI

5-1089.
Saturday,

May

13, the sophomore

class will sponsor the annual spring
dance

with

tickets

at

Page

$1.25.
H

3—D

11

�Anthony Nosek Will Head Military
Committee of Medinah Temple Again
Anthony

F. Nosek,

1825

Wilmot

Rd., again will head Medinah Temple’s
military
committee,
it has

been announced by Harold G. MacDonald,

Potentate

of

the

22,000

Shriners

who

in

Cook,

Lake

live

and surrounding counties.
This is one of Medinah’s

usual

groups,

members

armed

who

forces

being
have

and

most un-

made

up

served

who

in

of
the

appear

in

their service uniforms at ceremonials and in parades. Nosek now has
headed
the
committee
for eight
years and at the moment is preparing the group for the big initiation
ceremony
scheduled
at Medinah

Temple on May 5.
Members also will participate in
the Imperial Council session at Miami Beach June
19-23, in which

Medinah
Anthony

nearly

Nosek

Ave.

and

the

a

of

the
event
announced
Miss
Fern
Fels, a versatile commedienne, will

present
peared

a skit.
locally

leading

role

in

civic

field-Bannockburn

Des

Plaines River, Northbrook.
Mrs. Philip Ruth, chairman

represented

by

affairs.

He

is a former member of the board
of Bannockburn, as well as a former police magistrate there and also served as chairman of the Deer-

Members and guests of the Deerfield Woman’s
club are looking
forward to the final social affair of
the season, a luncheon, to be held
Tuesday, May 23, at the Villa VenMilwaukee

be

Nosek is a retired captain in the
U.S. Naval reserve and in addition
to his Masonic activities has taken

Slate Final Social
Affair Of Season
For Woman's Club

ice,

will

1,000.

Miss Fels has apin summer stock

and on both filmed and live television shows
“What’s My Line?”
“Robert
Montgomery
Presents”

and for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.
Reservations and remittance are
to be sent to Mrs. Philip Ruth, 129
Plumtree Rd.

district board.
He is a member
Lodge

No,

fire

and’ A.M.,

a member of the Red Cross of Constantine, the Royal Order of Jes-

ters and both the Chicago and
Lake Michigan chapters of the Na-

tional Sojourners,

Births
PATRICK

son of Mr.

and

Mrs.

SHERIDAN,
Richard

Sheri-

dan, 331 Pine St., was born April
26 at Highland Park hospital. Other
children in the family are: Richard,
6; Thomas, 5;: James, 4; Julie, 2.
Maternal: grandmother is Mrs. Lillian S. Brown, Highland Park; and
paternal grandmother is Mrs. Stella Smith, Highland Park.

JEAN
daughter

CAROL
MLODOCK,
of Mr. and Mrs. Richard

W. Mlodock, 1535 Chippewa Path,
Riverwoods, was born April 27 at
Highland Park hospital. Other chil-

dren

in the family

are Mary

Ann,

2; and Robert, 1. Maternal grandparents
are Mr.
and
Mrs.
Peter
Salm, St. Ann; and paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Adolph
Mlodock, Chicago.

JAMES

RUSTMAN,

son

of Mr.

and Mrs. John E. Rustman,
1515
Wilmot Rd., was born April 28 at

Highland Park hospital. Other children in the family are
Jay, 7; Jeanne, 5; and

THOMAS

Robert
Robert

Johnson

Johnson,

21,

the

son

of

Mr. and Mrs. Theodore
Johnson,
826 Pine St., was awarded a graduate assistantship at Wesleyan university, Middletown, Conn.

Robert, a senior at Colorado college, Colorado Springs, will be a
part time instructor in physics at
the school. He is a member of Kappa Sigma fraternity where he was
voted the outstanding senior in the

local chapter.
His parents

and

ald, are going west
tion on June 5.
A

graduate

their son, Donfor his

of Holy

Cross

graduagrade

school, Robert was graduated from
Highland Park High School.
Page H 4—D

12

Barbara,
Kirk, 2.

ARTHUR

10;

FIOCCHI,

son of Mr. and Mrs. Caesar A. Fiocchi, 957 Osterman Ave., was born
April 29 at Highland Park hospital.
Other children in the family are
Robert Jr., 10; Virginia, 8; William,
7; and Bonita, 5. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur P. Fink, 565 Briarhill, are the

maternal

grandparents;

and

and
Mrs.
Caesar
Fiocchi,
Vista, Cal., are the paternal
parents.

In Honor

Mr.

Chula
grand-

Group

Rosalie Ward, 714 Osterman
Ave.,
Deerfield,
a sophomore
at
Lawrence College, Appleton, Wis.,
has been elected to membership in
Pi Sigma, honorary
sophomore
girls’ society.
Elections
are made
by Mortar
Board, national women’s honorary.
Membership in Pi Sigma requires
a 2.25 grade average, with 3.0 representing
straight
‘A’. work
plus

significant

service

dents:

Fort

Dearborn Chapter 245 Royal Arch
Masons and Lincoln Park Commandery, Knights Templars and also of the Scottish Rite bodies, Valley of Chicago. He serves one of
them, the Princes of Jerusalem, as
master of ceremonies. He is also

to the school.

Shore

Group

Photo

by

Zeloof-Stuart

Cradle society recently when members were entertained in the Bertram Beers’ attractive outdoor-indoor patio in West Lake Forest. Shown, from left, is this quartet of Deerfield resi-

protection

of Constellation

89, A.F.

JOHN

North

It was a French cafe party for members of the Country Shore auxiliary of the Evanston
Mrs. J. A. Westlund, Stephen Chase, Mrs. Chase and Mr. Westlund.

47 Adults, Children
Confirmed In Service

At St. Gregory's
On Sunday, April 30, at 4 p.m.
The Rt. Rev. Gerald Francis Burrill, S.T.D., D. D., D.H. L., Bishop
of the Diocese of Chicago visited
St. Gregory’s Episcopal church in
Deerfield
to
confirm
47
young
people and adults.
Following the service coffee was

served in the Parish House

and the

congregation, and friends greeted
the
Bishop
and
the
new
communicants.
The adults
confirmed
were:
Quentin Uptegrove, Joseph Clark
Roper, Marie Roper, Barbara Jean
Abbott,
Ruth
Neville,
Charles
Lieber, Edward A. Ravenscroft, Jr.,
Marilyn
D.
Hayes,
Elizabeth
Weirich,
Florence
Edith
Sugden,
Joseph Dale, Joan Lieber, William

A.

Couch,

Marjorie

L.

Shipley,

Robert David Fulton, Rosemary A.
Wright, David G. Wright and Mary
Margaret Kehr.
Members
of the
eighth
grade
class were:
Frances Holly Fordham,
Jonanne
Chase
French,
Georgia I. Caldwell, Coe Ann Sue
Cox, Peter Hall, Valerie
Anne
Kussler, Jane Ellen Rawitzer, Carol
Joy Askew,
Katherine
Jean
Ortman, Harold L. Fox, Teena Joanne
Weisert,
Priscilla Bax, Roy
Randolph
Pfeiffer,
Paul
Robert
Schlenker, John Torrance Forbis,
Margaret Leah Thullen,
Brian
Glenn
Gunderson,
Karen
Lee
Foster, D’Arcy H. LeClair, Peter

Glenn Burnett, Patricia Leigh Martin,
Jeffery
William
McCulloch,
Paul John
Stewart,
Robert
Scott
Carlson, Thomas Dwight
Wells,
Thomas
Riley
Clark,
Thomas
Charles Glasser, Christopher Gail
Brown, and Mark Emmons.

Sponsors Disney
Movie On Saturday
At Wilmot School
The Deerfield Chapter of Women’s American Ort has announced
the showing
of the Walt Disney
movie “Dumbo” at Wilmot school,
corner of Wilmot and Deerfield Ra.,
Saturday, May 6.
There will be two performances
at 1 and 3 p.m.
All ages are welcome-from 3 to 9. The ticket price
of 50 cents includes a free surprise
for each person.

Newest Member
Of Pack 150 Gets
Top Derby Honors

Troop Committee Man,
New Scout Welcomed

By Local Organization
Two

new

part in
tions.
One

people

will

Scout

troop

Boy
is

new

scout

and the other is
the

troop

be

taking

52

Gary

funcGilbert

a new member

committee,

Gordon

of

Om-

men.
The
which

newly organized troop band,
is being directed by W. Lee,

practiced

at the

Tuesday

meeting.

The band will play at the Scout-ORama on May 13.
This
week
the
scouts
will be
going door to door selling tickets
for the
Scout-O-Rama.
Eighteen
boys and two leaders successfully

completed
hawk

the

Trail

twenty

mile

Black-

hike.

A small Court of Honor was held
and the following scouts received
awards:
Ed Fosse and Rick Shapmen, First Class
Badges;
Tom
Moore,
Personal
Fitness
Merit
Badge;
Chuck
Fahrenholz,
two
year
service
star;
and
Curtis
Tucker,
Second
Class
Badge.
It
was announced that assistant scout

master,

Charles

his boys will
New York.

soon

Fahrenholz,
be

leaving

and
for

Program Expansion
Plans Underway
In Park District
Plans are
underway
for the
summer recreation program within
the
Deerfield
Park
district,
according to David Carr, recreation
director for the park district.
The program this year will be
expanded to include boys and girls

from

10-13 years of age.

Details of

the program will be announced in
the coming weeks.
A staff, being assembled by Mrs.
Nancy Christensen, will handle the
6-9 year old group.
Another staff
will
handle
the
10-13
year
old
group. This will be headed by Don
Pilger.
Both junior high gyms have been
open Saturday mornings from 9-12
for boys and girls up to the sopho-

more

year in high school for gym-

nastics work.
Individual and group instruction
has been given in various areas in
this program which will end May

27.

The newest member of Cub Pack
150 walked off with top honors at
the Pack’s Pinewood Derby, held
Saturday, April 29 at the Kipling
school gymnasium.

Keith
Mrs.

Wessling,

Kenneth

field

Rd.,

racer,
some

had

the

and won
official

Keith’s

of Mr.
625

fastest

and
Deer-

model

first prize, a handBoy
Scout
watch.

victory

day after
a Bobcat,

son

Wessling,

came

less

than

a

he had been inducted as
and assigned to Den 2.

Some 24 cars participated in the
annual racing event.
Second prize
went to Tom Roth, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas R. Roth, 330 Margate
Ter. Third fastest car was entered
by Todd Sterner, son of Mr. and.
Mrs. Edgar K. Sterner, 1993 Westgate Ter., Highland Park.
Give

Two

Awards

Two
awards
were
given for
craftsmanship.
First prize went to
Tom Kiebzak, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Walter M. Kiebzak, 452 Longfellow. Second went to Warren Montgomery, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard K. Montgomery, 840 Westcliff.
Air Adventure was the theme of
the monthly pack meeting, held the
previous evening. Highlight of the
program
was a very entertaining
skit presented by Den 4, depicting

man’s first flight to the moon
the exchange of greetings
and moon people.

and

by earth

Den 1 had built a model airport,
and had many ingenius models to
show.
Den 3 had a wide variety
of flying ‘‘objects’” in its display.

A
for

dozen

boys

achievement,

DEN

1—David

received
as

awards

follows:

Corcoran,

Wolf;

Jimmy Gillette, two Silver Arrows
on Wolf; Warren
Montgomery,
Lion and a 2-year Service Star.
DEN 2—Keith Wessling, Bobcat
Pin.
DEN
3—David
Glickman, Bear,
Gold
Arrow,
and North
Shore
Council Patch; Tom Kiebzak, two
Silver Arrows on Wolf; Jeff Payne,
Silver Arrow on Bear.
DEN 4—Danny
O’Neill, Gold Ar-

row

and

Todd

DEN
Arrow

Silver

Sterner,

5—James
on

Arrow

on

Gold Arrow

Wolf;

'on Bear.

Harvey,

Silver

Wolf.

Thursday, May

4, 1961

�John P. Decker
Aboard Destroyer
Navy

Ens.

of Mr.

John

and

Mrs.

P.

Decker,

D.

D.

1335 Valley Rd., is serving
the destroyer USS Somers

ing with the
Western

Seventh

son

Decker

of

aboard
operat-

Fleet

in the

Pacific.

The

Somers,

flagship

of

Com-

mander, Destroyer Squadron Five.
is scheduled to visit Australia, Japan and the Philippines.
During
the visit to Australia, the destroyer
will participate in the allied victory
celebration of the World War
II
battle of the Coral Sea.
The Somers is one of the Navy’s
newest destroyers, having been in
commission for only two years.

The ship and crew recently won
the Marjorie
Sterrett battleship

A view

of the

new

Milwaukee

Rd.

passenger

station

at

award as the outstanding
in the Pacific fleet.

destroyer

Glenview.
The
Milwaukee
Road
has
set
Friday, May 5, as the date for a
big open house affair at its attractive new passenger station in Glenview, and has invited its 800 Glen- |
view commuters
and the general |
public to stop in for a visit and
some “coffee and... ”
William Wallace, the road’s general passenger
traffic manager,
said that the hours will be from
5:30
am.
to accommodate
early
ommuters)
until
3 p.m.,
which
will be after the northbound and
southbound Hiawathas have stopped at Glenview.
In the interest of public
convenience, the new station was opened for business on Apr. 2, immedi,ately
following
its completion.
However, its official opening has
been timed to follow the razing
of the old depot and the comple-'

tion of other work, such as grading,
surfacing

driveways,

and

the

in-

stallation of lighting fixtures in the
station area.
Other phases of the overall program
at Glenview,
such
as the
, landscaping, further extension of
the platforms, and the painting of
shelters on the platform opposite
the new station, have been scheduled for the future.
Wallace stated that the Milwaukee’s
new
facilities
at Glenview
have been designed to accommodate the increased number of passengers using the station for commuter travel and “through” travel
to Milwaukee, St. Paul, Minneap-

olis,

Madison,

Green

Bay,

the

Upper Peninsula, and other points.
All trains bound for those points
now stop at Glenview, either regularly or on request.
The new structure, of Williamsburg colonial design and measuring
24 by 76 feet, has more than twice
the waiting room space of the old

depot.

It

is

of

smooth-faced

red

brick, with interior surfaces combining painted concrete block and
Plazed units.
The rest rooms are
finished in glazed tile.
Removal
of the old depot and
the shifting of a spur track have
increased
the space
availabe for
automobile parking on the east side
of the tracks.

| Six Deerfield
rGirl Scouts Are
Color Guards Here
Six Deerfield Girl Scouts were
in charge of the flag ceremony at
the Arbor Day ceremonies at the
Milwaukee
Station
last Saturday
morning.
Le
An
Tubergen,
of
Troop 127, was the American Flag
Color Bearer.
Nadine
Scott
and
Nedra Wondreis of Troop 62 were
color bearers.
Color Guards were:
Susan Evans and Debbie Lundberg
of Troop. 212. Wendy Warner
of
Troop 127 was in charge of giving
commands. Mrs. John Eisinger .is
district chairman of the Girl Scouts
Thursday,

May

4, 1961

Powell Appointed
To Chamber Post

Visits Kipling School
Garth
Powell,
an
English
exchange
teacher
from
Ravinia
school,
Highland
Park,
recently
presented a talk to Mrs. Karl Windberg’s
sixth grade
social studies

Appointment of Joseph G. Powell of Deerfield as a field representative in the member relations
department of the
Illinois
State
Chamber
of Commerce
was
announced
by
Ormond
F. Lyman,
executive vice president recently.
Powell comes to his new assignment from Carl Fisher Inc. and its

completion
of the study unit on
the British Isles.
The class, while studying adver-

subsidiary,

tising,

the

Gamble

Hinged

Music
Company,
where
he
has
served since
1947. He
has been
general
manager
of all Gamble
enterprises since 1958.
Earlier, Powell was a market researcher with A. C. Nielsen Company,
Evanston.
He
started
his
business career as a sales representative for the Campbell
Soup
Company
after
graduation
from

Duke

university.

heard

Davenport,

a

the

talk

Rosalie

Ward

Rosalie
Ave.,

from

Robert

714
a

college,

was

Rd.

Osterman

sophomore

Appleton,

elected

on

Staff workers from the park dis-

who assisted were: Julius
Warren Bohnsen, Grant
and Delver Dener, Ellis
the public works departHoward Pantle and Jerry
the park district.

May Meeting Of
North Shore DAR
Slated For May 11
meeting

of

the

North

Shore chapter of the Daughters of
the American
Revolution will be
held at the home of Mrs. Irl Marshall, 2693 Sheridan,
May
11 at

1:30 p.m.

national

made

by

women’s

honorary.

Membership

in Pi Sigma

a 2.25

average,

grade

Mortar
requires

with

3.0 rep-

resenting straight ‘A’ work, plus
significant service to the school.

Mental Health
At Alumni Meet
of the

Hunter

Chicago

college

chapter

alumni

association.

with

the

Cook

County

Health clinic and herself
of the

alumni

held in Washington, D.C.
The assistant hostesses are chairman Mrs.
Wallace
Carroll,
Lake
Forest;
Mrs.
Norman
Erskine,
Deerfield; Mrs. Walter T. Rice and
Mrs. Harry Knoll, Highland Park.
The DAR members of the North
Shore chapter attending the Con-

Congress

are

Mrs.

Rich-

ard Thompson, Jr., regent of the
North Shore chapter from
Deerfield; Mrs. George
M. Campbell,
Winnetka;
Mrs.
George
Strecker,
Lake Forest; Mrs. Richard Wolfe,
Deerfield; Mrs. Dan Pagenta, Highland Park and Mrs. William Winters of Trappe, Maryland.

and Mrs. Herbert Rodell
borhood chairman.

is neigh-

side, was worried
because it needed

about his house
a coat of paint.

limbered

their

with

end

the

arms

and

result

that

set to,
Rinker’s

house now gleams with a-new coat
of paint.
Hes |
Participating in the painting -of
his house
Snelten,

were
Mr.

Mr.
and

and Mrs. Will
Mrs.
Roger

Fisher, Mr, and Mrs. Robert Jones,
Mr, and Mrs. Gene Melchiorre, Mr.
and Mrs, George Young, Mr. and
Mrs. D. Panerali, Mr. and Mrs.

Mental

reportedly

ports

taking

of

oil

investigating

and

industrial

tion of the DesPlaines
passes

through

Mr.

and

this

re-

polu- :

river as it :

area,

Mrs. David

‘

Schumacher,

their wedding

held

at the

in Deerfield.

their

reception

American
The

Mrs.

was

hall

couple

honeymoon.

bride,

which

Legion
is now

Mother

John

of

Polimeni,

the
is

this past week

during

Corresponding

14

W.

“‘Oper-

ation

Larry

takisic-Tripp school district 102,,
whose
youngsters
handled their
drill with top percision.
;
Many of the youngsters in the

Ryan,

Sally

Cassady,

daughter

Alert.”

of

tian Fellowship, a religious organization at Lake Forest college. Miss
Cassady is now spending her junior
year abroad at Women’s Christian
College, Madras, India.

was

principal Michael De Vincenzo,

school

Mr. and Mrs. R. I. Cassady of 624
Hermitage Dr., was elected secretary of the United Campus Chris-

Congratulated

are

from

the

manor.

The past Sunday, Father George
Muleahey,
St.
Joseph
of
the
Worker, gave first communion to
four youngsters

of the manor,

They

were: Susan and Keith Hackbarth,
1046
Dogwood;
Patricia
Ann
Holien, daughter of the president
of the village who lives at 1031
Cata!pa;

and

of Birch

St.

Mary

Jane

Swanson,

for the

Dr., Lincolnshire.

Mothers
lege
girls

of Mount St. Clare colwere
guests
of their

daughters

at a formal

till 5 o’clock Friday
April 28, at the college
Ta.

tea

from

3

afternoon,
in Clinton,

The college chorus and double
sextet sang for the occasion.
Miss Terry Di Pietro, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. James Di Pietro,
1511 Crabtree Lane, was among the
hostesses for the afternoon party.
She
is also being
commended

for her art work on the production
staff of “Mrs. McThing,” the Mary
Chase Broadway hit, presented by
the Mount St. Clare college players, April 28 and 29, at 8:15 in the

college theatre.

Three

welcomed

new

members

of the

into the organization

Deerfield

by

Lions

president

club

were

Dr. Michael

Baran (right) recently.
From left, the new Lions
Fragassi, William Pittenger and Frank Ventura.
Page

are:

Mel

H 5—D

—

Ap-

association is Mrs. Walter S. Roth,
104
Plum
Tree
Rd.;
and
North
Shore membership
coordinator is
Mrs.
Laurance
W.
Spungen,
32

Oxford

.
—

Russ Boudreau,
Mr. and . Mrs.
Frank Peterson, and Mr. and Mrs.

Randolph

secretary

:

a

board director of the manor.
It has reached the office of Norman Litz, Waukegan civil defense
director, that excellent work was
done

:

on

association.

herg restaurant,
St., Chicago.

*

newlyweds of five days as of now,
have asked that their thanks be
expressed
to their friends who ,
joined them
Saturday
night at

The luncheon will be held in the
tower room of Allgauer’s Heidel-

Hostess At College

being

Rinker when he returns from Minnesota where he has been recuperating after an operation.
Rinker, who lives at 1219 Park-

which came to a close during the *
past week.
Lake County Health officials are

a member

Afternoon Affair

Congress

of the

Speaker for the May 6 affair will
be Mrs. Ann Leiner, a social worker

for their part in the Scout-O-Rama ‘

On His Return

Miss

“An
Overview
of
the
Mental
Health Situation” will be the feature of the annual spring lunch-

eon

(Continued from page 2)

Deerfield Man

Sally Cassady Elected':
Secretary Of Youth
Group At Loke Forest

To Hear Talk On

the

tinental

Wis-

Thursday,

It will be the annual business
meeting, highlighted by reports of

Continental

at

April 27, to membership
in Pi
Sigma, honorary sophomore girls’
are

Deerfield Manor News.

So, last weekend, a group of his
neighbors
banned
together,
un-

Elected

Ward,

Lawrence

as the

Sorority

Deerfield,

consin,

talk

1254 Wincanton

To Honorary

Board,

trict and public works department
of the Village of Deerfield assisted
the Community Conservation council in preparing the area and in
planting flowering crab apple trees
at the Milwaukee Station last week.

May

class heard

Elections

Park District Men To
Aid Community Project

The

The

Surprise Awaits

A pleasant surprise awaits Chuck

England.

society.

Village Employees Join

Those
Lencioni,
Berning
Giles of
ment and
Bacik of

class at Kipling school.
Powell is from Nottingham,

On a recent cruise to Nassau, Mrs. Russell Benedict, 1365
Indian Tr., is pictured with her children, Rusty, Tom and Debbie; and with Jonathon Eaton, Riverwoods. They are pictured
at the railing on the boarding deck just before “Anchors
aweigh” on the SS Bahama Star, which sailed from Miami.

13

�Krips To Conduct

teux, J oseph Rosenstock, Paul Hindemith, and Izler Solomon.
Conductors and soloists are:
Conductors
Walter Hendl, June 27-29; Andre
Kostelanetz, July 1; Walter Hendl,
July 4; Josef Krips, July 6 and 8;

The engagement of Josef Krips
as a guest conductor at Ravinia this

t’s only fit and proper

summer
completes
conductors
of the

the listing of
Chicago
Sym-

phony Orchestra for the 1961 summer season.
Walter Hendl has announced that
Mr. Krips, internationally famous

to give stockings
with proper fit!

eo sgNe ae =

se

oe

conductor of symphony and opera,
will conduct the July 6 and 8 concerts, which were
previously announced for Mr. Hendl, who now is
scheduled to open the 26th season,
conducting on July 27 and 29, as
well as July 4. Soloists’ dates remain
the same
as originally announced.
Leon
Fleisher,
pianist,
will appear with Mr. Hendl
and
the orchestra on June 27 and 29,
and soprano Dorothy Kirsten will
be his guest soloist on July 4.

a

Mr. Krips, who holds the posts
of music director of the Buffalo
Philharmonic
Orchestra
and
the

Se

London

Pee

Fe
es

Symphony

conducted

Orchestra,

at Lyric

Theatre

has

during

ree

the past two seasons, and at European and American

festivals during

the past several summers. He appeared at Ravinia during the 1953

season.

His

soloist

at

both

vinia concerts this season
pianist John Browning.

will

Rabe

Ravinia’s seven guest conductors
for 1961 in order of their appearance, are: Mr. Hendl, Andre Kostelanetz, Josef Krips, Pierre Mon-

22; Paul Hindemith, July 25, 27 and
29; and Izler
3 and 5.

Solomon,

August

1,

Soloists
Leon Fleisher, pianist, June 2729; Dorothy Kirsten, soprano, July
4; John Browning, pianist, July 68; Henryk Szeryng, violinist, July
13-15; Marilyn Neeley, pianist, July

18

(1960

Michaels

Awards

Win-

ner); Byron Janis, pianist, July 2022; Gary Graffman,
pianist, July
29 and August 5; and Isaac Stern,
violinist, Aug. 1-3.

The
give

New
six

vinia
20.

York

City

performances

pavilion

August

Ballet

will

in

the

Ra-

15

through

Other events recently announced
for the pavilion and Murry Theatre

are:
Budapest
String
5 and 7 (Theatre).

Quartet,

July

Dorothy Stickney, July 12 and
14 (Theatre) (one woman show—“A
Lovely Light’’).
Dukes of Dixieland, July 24 and
26 (Pavilion).
Theodore Bikel, July 30 (Pavilion).
Pro Musica, August 2, 4 and 5

(Theatre).
Duke

Ellington

Vaughan,

August

and

9 and

Sarah

11

(Pavil-

ion).

Richard
and

12

Dyer-Bennet,

August

10

(Theatre).

?

“stockings”

ROSBY

S

SUBURBAN

FASHIONS

ING
CLEARANCE

|

FINAL

Is your mother small, tall, or ‘middling? Is she a
homemaker or a world-shaker? Come tell us what
she’s like, and we’ll show you Ballet stockings that
she will like! They’re all here: dress sheers, walking
weights, regular knits, stretch stockings; seamed and
seamless.

Pierre Monteux, July 11, 13 and 15;
Joseph Rosenstock, July 18, 20 and

~

Ravinia Festival

-

Two Concerts at

SPR

In charming Mother’s Day boxes.

3 Pairs ... $3.30

Thurs., May 4 thru May 11

'

You'll be amazed
OTHER

FINE MOTHER'S

DAY

IDEAS

at the Low, Low Prices!

IN

SAVINGS
UP
TO

ROBES
LINGERIE ¢ SHIRTS
CO-ORDINATES
SWEATERS

GLOVES « BAGS

Terrific Values on
Use Our

OPEN

TE
595

Central

Formal

THURSDAY

‘TIL

Rental

DRESSES
SUITS

Service

9 — MONDAY

and

2-5300

“aloo: Winnetka’ and

HIGHLAND
Glencoe

Page H 6—D

14

aes

COATS _
SKIRTS

e Sweaters

e Slacks
|
PARK

ROSBY
1835
(Across

Sey

Spring Stock

e Blouses

EVE. 7-9

FELL COMPANY

Ave.

New

Second

St.

from

H.P.

S
Jewel)

SUBURBAN
OPEN

FASHIONS
ID

2-0788

THURSDAY

NITES

|:
a

MANY

�-HPHS Names Staff
For 1962 Yearbook
Ann Shapiro has been selected
editor for the 1962 Little Giant,
Highland Park High School’s year
book.

and the Trinity church choir, under
the direction of Carol Hyman.

and names were posted by Kathi
Edmonds, editor of the 1961 yearbook,
and
Miss
Helen
Palmer,

Feature
long-lost
di

will assist Ann

include Jan Hesslein, Pat Oswald,
and
Joe
Schoenthal,
associates;

with

Elizabeth

Sue Johns and Micki Lichter, busi-

no,

as

soloists.

be

sung,

and

former
singer”

Blank,

LUCITE,

Linda

specific

solo

motets

organ

an’s society of the Winnetka Congregational church in the Winnetka
:Community House.
Proceeds are distributed
45 different charities.

|

Music

Festival

and

is

between

well

Two

George

will

works

‘of

music

McClay,

land.

at

Northwestern

dean

Univer-

sity, will accompany the singers for
the Vivaldi work. Thomas Harris,
student,
|Northwestern
graduate
will be guest organist.

of infectious

were

Park

reported

KEEPING
TIME

mono-

in High-

during -April,

teports

Harry Bostick, Lake County health

educator.

This

disease

with paul leeds

is a little

more serious than his usual ‘‘measles report,”
he
explained,
but
nothing to get.excited about.

_. Cause Unknown.
Bostick’s. haridbook says

known

assistant

casés

nucleosis

the

cause of the ‘disease and the way
it spreads are unknown.
Highland Park and Highwood
also had ten mumps, nine chicken
pox, seven measles and two German measles; but' no scarlet fever.

A tremendous amount of work —
must have gone into planning the
Wayne Thomas School Disneyland
Carnival this Saturday. It begins
with a parade at 10 A.M. led bys

the 5th Army Band and is followed—
by

many

wonderful

sure

your

don’t

miss

surprises.

youngsters

Be

(and

|

you)

this.

*

The

*

above

*

reminds

‘

us that the

“day” and reception planned for
May 21st in honor of retiring school
superintendent,
MR.
WAYNE
THOMAS, has been postponed because of a recent auto accident in-—
volving Mr. and Mrs. Thomas. The ©
co-chairmen of the affair, MRS.

SAM

DEVOE,

Now

Gold-

yearbook

Three

In White and

Richard

Assistants have not yet been
to

Its 29th annual rummage
sale,
which attracts approximately 8,000,
will be given Thursday, May
11,
from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. by the Wom-

C

HOUSE
PAINT

man, Kathy Lewis, Nancy Gordon,
Fred
Grubar,
Jill Rizzolo,
Lynn :
Tauman, Katie Levi and Joan Gatewood.
signed
tions.

&gt;

Finest Quality

Junior assistants are Bill Buckholz, Ellen Falkof, Vivien Clair,
Jeff Perlman,

Reported in City

winner
of
“best
woman
title in the Chicagoland

Larry Glickman, boys’ sports; and
Vi Nelson, girls’ sports.
Lynn
Marcus
will
handle
art,
Martha Meintzer, index, Mike Feingold, copy, and Ann Segal, photos,

Cowan,

sopra-

Mystery. Disease

11

this year’s Metropolitan Opera regional auditions. Miss Stuart is a

Whitted, activities; Michelle Lefcourt, faculty and administration;

Dot

Swanson,

played by Thomas Harris.
Miss Swanson is winner of the
American Opera Award for 1961,
who is also second spot winner in

ness managers; Joan Fingold and
Bob Gordon, seniors; Kathy Levin,
sophomores; Jill Frank, freshmen;
Georgia Marks, organizations; Lori

Pacin,

is the
re-dis-

May

no, and Ellen Stuart, mezzo-sopra- | 2S 4 concert soloist.

Sub-Editors

Phyllis

of the program
and _ recently

covered “Gloria” by Antonio Vival-

sponson.

who

Planned

Musical treat for Sunday, May 7,
is the choral concert to be given at
4 p.m. in Trinity Episcopal church
is the choral concert to be given at

Selection of the senior staff for
" the yearbook was made last week,

Sub-editors

29th Annual Sale

NS Chamber Choir,
Trinity Choir in
Concert Sunday

SOMENZI

and her daughter :

OLGA POTTKER are going ahead
with plans for a later date recognizing almost 40 years of commu
nity service by Mr. Thomas.
*
*
*

UGS

Colors

at

Our

CRAFTWOOD

warmest

good

wishes

tis

BARBARA WING and GARY GAR-

VENS and to LORRAINE BRAN- —

as-

LUMBER

sec-

COMPANY,

DAU

and

“BUD”

CUNNINGHAM

~

(our host at Wenk’s) who will be
“walking down the aisle” this Saturday.
ie
*
*
*

See Page 42

And on Saturday nite the ladies
and

friends

of

the

Highland

Park

Rotarians will be guests at the annual Rotary-Ann Party at the Fort

Sheridan Officers Club. TV comedian

DON

ALAN

will

headline

the

show and dancing will be to a fine

:

band
BILL

i

the young point of view in shoes

featuring Highland Parker
YOUNG at the drums.
:
*
*
*
Only 10 days until Mother’s Day.

®

Why not give her a lasting gift of
jewelry this year. This weeks’ Keep-

Life Stride

adds

tone

upon

tone of brown

ing Time Specials at Leeds include

to the

many

bone pump for more daring and dash in the popular
Spectator. Sleek and elegant with a reed-slim heel.

$12.99

that

will

help

you

—

watches from $24.50, counters and

say it with a card!
Tell her how much she means to
you
with’ a card from the North
Shore’s largest collection. Here you'll
find» just the kind of card you want:

New interpretation of

items

choose her gift. Beautiful cultured —
pearl pins from $8.00,—17 jewel

with

a

touch

sentimental

of

or

whimsy, sweet and
studio, all to mdke

Mother
happy
on
Mothers
Day.
Hundreds of wonderful gifts for Mom,
too!

drawers full of fine jewelry and for
the

youngsters

shopping

pleasure

there’s our $1.00 counter chock-full
of pins,
esting

earrings,

and

other inter-

suggestions.

*
*
*
“a
“Around the world in 40 paintings.” The theme of the month-long

exhibit

now

in

progress

at

the

Sherman Hotel Gallery of some of
the works by Highland
Parker,
HILDA RUBIN. And to “whet your
appetite” for her wonderful work
we are showing 2 of her paintings
in our Sheridan Road window this
week,

FS
*
*
:
A pleasant way to snend a Sun- ©
day afternoon.—At 4:00 this Sun- |

b ]

day

STATIONERY
_ Established

1783 St. Johns Ave.

Choir

STORE
1906

the

“hurch

‘

1D
'
2-0567
HOURS DAILY
- 8:30

p.m.

Hours Sunday
9:00 a.m. ~ 12:30 p.m.

and

Friday

499

Central,

Thursday,

May

YOUNG

Highland
4, 1961

POINT

Park

OF

VIEW

IN

Nights

SHOES
ID

direct- a

Parker CARON,

HY- A

And

the

favorite

|
14
a

©

is still our

24

inelndine taxes. Engraved Free and
during May you may select an ex-

|

17 iewel shockproof watch for him _
or her. Priced at a svecial $24.50 |

”Waltons. Shoes
THE

Chamber —

the Trinity

MAN. And you will have an onvortunitv to hear the fine church orsan played by THOMAS HARRIS.
*
*
*
If you’re giving a watch for
sraduation next month he sure to
cee Leeds’ selection of over 400.
styles,

Thursday

Shore

choir in a program

ed hv Highland

7:00 a.m.

Open

North

will join with

2-0172

nansion

band

at no extra

cost.

LEEDS JEWELERS
491 Central Ave., Highland Park |

Page H7—D 15

�Costeal
CO Ticners

Three dogs bit children Sunday,
Highland Park police were told.
Fritz, Robert Dutton’s dachshund
at 819 Sumac Rd., bit Aaron Gelvan, 9, of 607 LaPorte Ave., Wilmette, on the arm.

Equipment Funds

&amp; laundry

The

annual

Highwood

Police-

men’s Dance, Saturday at the Community Center, will raise funds
which are used to help buy equip-

SINCE 1926
1 Day Laundry Service
Call For and Deliver

ID 2-0305

evolent
buy

a

Fund

Committee

Breatholizer

ceeds. All members
are

‘members

Ben-

voted

with

the

to
pro-

of the departof

the

com-

mittee. Chief Ted Benvenuti is
president, and Sgt. Charles Maserati

is secretary-treasurer.

The dance

will be

from

Betty

9 p.m.

Inman,

6,

of

2860

by. her

Sally

own

was

Morton

dog.

Taibleson,
nipped

Roth’s

4, of 1062
on

the

Ave. (or got the
the dog’s chain,

Golf

finger

poodle,

1092

by

Golf

finger caught in
or hurt it some

other way), A ticket
license was issued.

Clean-Up Week
Organizations Meet
To Complete Plans

Skokie

Valley Rd., was bitten on the hand

Ave,,

ment for the department,
Last year, the Policemen’s

ment

1873 St. Johns Ave.
Highland Park

Three Dogs Bite

for

no

dog

to midnight May 6. Virgil Lenzini
and his orchestra will provide the

Plans for Highland
annual
May

15

to

meeting
mittee
ager

20

were

to

be

discussed

of the Civic Clean-up
in

Aalph

the

office

Snyder

of

City

held
in

a

comMan-

last week.

sis should be given to trash which
a

fire

hazard,

as

well

as

the

Daniel M. Pierce, Clean-Up Week

Park’s second

Week

eyesore,

coordinator
for the Jaycees,
announced full cooperation by his organization. Russell F. Turco stated

Edward Hart, city public works
director, announced that city trucks
and personnel will haul the materials that are placed on the parkways by residents. Special emphais

music.

Clean-Up

which constitutes an
committee agreed.

that

that

all neighborhood

associations

have

been

the

city

trucks

notified

will

of

be

in

day

their

the

area. «

The Park District’s part in the program was explained by J. Gordon
Smith. Clayton Sandel represented
the garden clubs and told of their
interest in the project. Arthur Caplin reported Lincoln School’s role
in the program. Others attending
the meeting were Ruth Braver and

*

Highwood Police
Dance To Raise

*

Mrs. Harold M. Gilden.
NOTICE

TO

CONTRACTORS

1. TIME
AND
PLACE
OF
OPENING
BIDS.
Sealed proposais for the improvements described below will be received at
the offices of:
Village
of
Deerfield
850 Waukegan Road
Deerfield, Illinois
hare 4:00 P.M. CDST on May 15, 1961.
INSTRUCTIONS TO BIDDERS.
Plans,
Bc igneticns
and
Contract
Documents
may be obtained from
the office of the
Building Commissioner
of the Village of
oe"
850 Waukegan Road, Deerfield,
Tin:
a PREQUALIFICATION
OF
BIDDERS.
All bidders will submit a resume of similar projects performed, enumerated as to
location, type of work, approximate completion date, and supervising engineering or
architectural firm. Additionally, all bidders
will submit a list of equipment owned by or
available to them for the efficient pursuance
of the project.
4. REJECTION
OF
BIDS.
The
owner
reserves the right to reject: any or all bids
and bidders and to waive all technicalities.
5. LOCATION OF THE WORK. Village of
Deerfield Lot No. 7, located at 813 Deerfield Road. (Present roadway into Deerfield
Commons Shopping Center).
6. DESCRIPTION
OF THE WORK.
The
improvement consists of the construction of
excavation, grading, curb and gutter, base
and finish surface coarses, and adjustment
and
relocation
of drainage
structures
on
Lot No.
7 (access
road
from
Deerfield
Road to Deerfield Commons Shopping Center) as shown on the plans titled “Lot 7
Improvement”?
dated April 20, 1961, (including Special Conditions made a part of
this proposal), of which 297 feet (.057 miles)
are to be improved.
7. Items listed as separate schedules may, at
the Owner’s option, be let to separate contractors.

8. Bidder’s
security.

Bonds

will

be

accepted

as

bid

.5/4/61—D122

COUNTY
ZONING
NOTICE
STATE
OF
ILLINOIS)
COUNTY OF LAKE
)
) SS
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
PUBLIC
NOTICE
is hereby
given
to «
all persons in the Town
of W.
DEERFIELD, Lake County, Illinois, that a public hearing will be held on May 25, 1961,
at 2:00 P.M., in the Village Hall, Deerfield,
Illinois, relative to a proposal to vary the
terms of the Lake County
Zoning
Ordinance, as to the I-3 Heavy Industrial District, for a Special Permit for dry Sanitary
Land-fill operation,
on the following
described real estate, to-wit:
That part of the Southwest quarter of
Sec. 33, Twp. 43 N., R. 12, East of the
3rd
P.M.,
lying
Southwesterly
of
the
Southwesterly line of the right of way
of Chicago,
Milwaukee,
St.
Paul
and
Pacific
Railroad,
all in Lake
County,
Illinois.
As a result o fthe petition of NATIONAL
BRICK COMPANY, a corp., which petition
is on file and available for examination in
the office of the below named Board, 316
Washington Street, Waukegan,
Illinois.
All persons interested are invited to attend and be heard
LAKE
COUNTY
ZONING
BOARD
OF
APPEALS
ka
Max Pilz, Chairman Pro Tem.
Dated at Waukegan, Illinois, this 4th day
of May, 1961.
§/4/61—121
STATE

COUNTY
ZONING
OF
ILLINOIS)

NOTICE
SS

COUNTY
TO

to try two packages today!

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H

8—D

16

(2) FRONT

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ee

77, illinois

wae

NAME

Sara Lee

Please Print

we

ah ce me

Chicken
Box W
Chicago

arty

eee

ADDRESS.
ZONE

STATE.

Limit: One refund per fomily. Offer expires June 15, 1961.
Subject to state and local regulations. Void if taxed, re-

stricted, or forbidden by low.

Lessee

in your grocer's freezer

your name and address with TWO

ages tor

Ow

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IT

MAY

CONCERN:

PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given to all
persons im the Town of W. DEERFIELD,
Lake County, Illinois, that a public hearing
will be held on May 25, 1961, at 1:30 P.M.,
in
the
Village
Hall,
Deerfield,
Illinois,
relative to a proposal to vary the terms
of the Lake County Zoning Ordinance, or
to reclassify by amendment thereto, from
the R-4B_
Residential
District, to the I-1
Light Industrial istrict, the following de- A
scribed real estate, to-wit:
é
The East half of the Southeast quarter of
Sec: 32.. Twp. 43. N., R. .12;, Hast af the
3rd
P.M.,
excepting
that part
of the’
Southeast "quarter of the Southeast quarter of said Sec. 32, commencing at the
Northwest corner of said Southeast quarter of the
Southeast
quarter,
Easterly
623.1
feet;
thence
Southeasterly
to
a
point 586.9 feet West of the East line of
said quarter Section to and im the center
of Drainage Ditch; thence Northwesterly
along center line of said Drainage Ditch
to the West line of said Southeast quarter of the Southeast quarter of Sec. 32;
thence North to the point of beginning,
all in Lake County, Illinois.
As a result of the petition of NATIONAL }
BRICK COMPANY, a corp., which petition
is on file and available fo rexamination in
the office of the below named Board, 316
Washington
Street, Waukegan,
Illinois.
Al Ipersons interested are invited to attend and be heard.
LAKE
COUNTY
ZONING
BOARD
OF
APPEALS
Max Pilz, Chairman Pro Tem.
Dated at Waukegan, Illinois, this 4th day
of May, 1

5/4/61—120

Thursday, May

4, 1961

�ie a ie
at
Lye

Oe
OSati
RI |TE
tal:

Red Cross Offers

meaty

4

ae

=

Bea

F

geste:
c

{

New Plan Offered
For 1961 Ravinia |

Water Safety
Starting on May 8 Coupon Book Sales
The Lake County chapter of the
American Red Cross announces a
water safety program in Waukegan
8,

and

continuing

through May 15 and May 22.
Training will be offered to those
who hold senior life saving certificates, and will be for the purpose of preparing individuals for
positions as life guards at beaches
pools throughout
summer.

the

county

The program runs from 7 to 9
p.m.
and
will
be
given
at the
pool in Waukegan High School.
Further information may be had

by calling Howard Copp, Highland
Park Recreation Center, or from
Red

Cross

headquarters

in

Wau-

informed the NEWS that there is
a possibility that a life saving

In

the

be

Toy

on Page

instituted

Heaven

in

1, gift

certificates,

of

book
sales
as of May

redeemable

for

Ravinia coupon books at Garnett’s,
will be available. It is felt that
this

will

help

solve

gift

problems

for Mother’s Day and graduation.
These certificates may be purchased

from

Mrs.

David

Bay Rd., ID
man
Vance

2-7133; and
Jr.,
1540

Judith Ann Winthrop, daughter
of Mr, and Mrs. Alan D. Winthrop,
1461 Ridge Road, will serve as
chairman of art for the Annual

of

to

Mother’s Day is a spring event
with a luncheon and musical program as part of the festivities, as
well as open houses in the various
residences.
Judy is a sophomore

redemption.

donor

A

art

major.

ATTENTION
SWIMMING POOL
OWNERS!
|

Harris,

Mrs. NorHawthorn

the

Free plastic Pool Accessory to
first 25 inquiries for our Custom
Pool

Maintenance

Weekly,

Service.

monthly or season ser-

vice available. We carry a full
line of Pool Accessories &amp; Patio

and

Furniture.

program

Call

Universal Pools

is also being worked on currently
whereby
the certificates will be

available on a year-round basis for
all occasions.

SAcramento

“On

BRAND

COMPLETE

LINE

OF

GROCERIES, MEATS
FROZEN FOODS

R-

i
T
sé
S

For Your Convenience We
Have a Full-Time Butcher.

OPEN

7 DAYS

A WEEK

Monday thru Friday — 7 A.M.-8:30 P.M.
Saturday—7 A.M.-6 P.M.
Sunday—8 A.M.-Noon

OPEN ALL DAY WEDNESDAY
DEERFIELD &amp; RIDGE
ID 2-9712

ROADS

KO sd

deliveries outside of our free delivery area, please add 35c for post-

rl

age and handling charges” should
be deleted. Mailing charges on the

A GIFT SUGGESTION

‘sy

items advertised will be charged for
at their regular rates. Also, when

FOR

MOTHER'S

ay RS

ordering any of the items in Nos.
1 or 4, please specify Model No.

wy
re

DAY

e one The timeless beauty of

Spring

¢

Fence

Time!

ARTEMIS

Fence material or fences

®

Rustic Fence

_

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&lt;

in lace-adorned

(Rail &amp;

Stockade).
® Quality material at
competitive prices.

tricot satinette

¢ FHA terms available.
e FREE ESTIMATES.

HOPSACK wesh ‘x

NORTHBROOK
LUMBER CO.

65% “Dacron

te

wear blend of

$45

Highland

478 Central

Cobey’s

Who wouldn’t be delectable
in this soft-sweeping
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exquisite exclamation
points in the lacescalloped
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Keep it
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low price cars. Phoenix is so much more car, in room, in performance and in pure richness

122

LAKE

COUNTY’S

N. Sheridan

Thursday,

May

OLDEST

Rd., Waukegan,

4, 1961

DODGE
Illinois

DEALERSHIPS

and

service

Gown;

32-36.
$13.00

facilities at

Whit
MAjestic

COU ES OR

sales

Waltz

mR

plus the excellent

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OF

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of appointments. See the Phoenix TODAY
your Dodge dealer . . . Sorensen Motors!

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completely installed.

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CARLOAD SALE!
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DRIVE CAREFULLY— THE LIFE YOU SAVE
MAY BE YOUR OWN

eansgate,

advertisement

.

EVERYTHING

2-4600

High-

13, the line reading

A
R

Mother’s Day on May 7 at Illinois
Wesleyan University, Bloomington,
Illinois.

Lane, ID 2-6535.
The certificates will be mailed
directly to the recipient with fu!!
as

GARRITY'S

Plans Mothers’ Day Program

142 Central Ave., ID 2-1856; Mrs.
Samuel
Lawton, Jr., 117 Green

date

About 12 Highland Parkers now
are qualified as water safety instructors, and the Red Cross office

course may
land Park.

the Ravinia
coupon
have announced that,

information

kegan.

chairmen

vay

LEI

and
this

Park

sae

TER LE

May

Highland

eS

EERE

beginning

The

nes

ELEN

CCR
BAS
so)acta ie

SEND

Babe

LEAN CABELL

TN
eh

PORTE LDL

PURE

LEA BEN ECR

a

LE EPL LS SRL

Ne

AE NLGED LEER OCG

Ne

EAT ARS ES SOLO BER

ET
aan

oe

A

TE‘3 TT
Behe
ee ae

Emi
3-1107

See

FRE
sah

578 LINCOLN
HI 6-4750
OF WINNETKA

Page H 9—D 17

i

�Complete Text Of State Supreme Court Opinion
Docket
Agenda

No.

trict Court against the Park District, the village of Deerfield, and

36207—

40—January,

1961

Deerfield Park District, Appellee,
__

et al, Appellants.
Justice Solfisburg delivered

he opinion of the court:
This

is an

ent

of

appeal

the

trial

from

court

a judg-

in

consoli-

Jated condemnation cases on June
, 1960, ordering that title to cern real estate vest in the petiioner, the Deerfield Park District,
‘hereinafter called Park District),
t on their depositing the sum of

68,500 with the county treasurer
Lake County. By this appeal, de-

fendants,

Progress

Corporation

ink,

as

erred

and

Development

Chicago

trustee,

to jointly

National

(hereinafter

re-

as Progress),

seek

0 set aside the judgment and overe the motion of the Park District
‘strike portions
of defendants’
verse or motion to dismiss. No
estion is raised as to the amount
just compensation for the land

|

ken

which

was

trial court.

stipulated

of the partles the sole quesnm before this court is the scope

an¢ d extent

of the issues which

may

roperly be submitted to the trial
court in a condemnation proceedz. However, a decision of this
eon
:

necessitates

proceedings
art

and

ith the

both

Federal

prior
in

review

in

the

courts,

history

Beginning
bsequent

a

of

together

April,

1959,

and

Progress

two

unimproved

ate

in

the

tracts

village

of real

of

es-

Deerfield,

e County, Illinois. One tract of
approximately fifteen acres became
&lt;xnown as Floral Park Subdivision
and the other tract of approximate.
y seven acres, as Pear Tree Subdi-

a

July

8,

Park

Subdivision

ipproved

by

1959,

the

the

plat
was

Deerfield

of
duly

village

board. This plat was properly reried on July 31, 1959, and pro-

ided for 39 residential lots. There-

fter,

Progress

commenced

the

in-

sta lation of water, sewer and street
mprovements and the construction

f two model homes with village
oi d approval.

On September 16, 1959, the plat
Pear Tree Subdivision was apoved by the Deerfield village
oard and was recorded on September 18, 1959. This plat provided for
elve home sites.

On

December 7, 1959, the Deer-

ld Park Board took formal acn to designate Floral Park and
Tree subdivisions

as park sites

d ordered that they be acquired
condemnation proceedings for
k purposes. Plaintiffs rejected
offer of the Park Board to purse these subdivisions for $166,991. In the same meeting the
ark Board, by -proper resolutions,
ovided for a referendum to be
d on December 21, 1959, for the
p urpose of submitting to the voters
Deerfield a $550,000 bond issue,
000 of which was designated
the purchase of the two subdi-

together

alleged

The

com-

a conspiracy

to

de-

sought damages

against all defend-

ants,

Development

Progress

poration
681.

v. Mitchell,

182

Cor-

F. Supp.

At the same time Progress
Modern
sought
a temporary

straining

order

from

the

States District Court
Park Board and the

tees.
the

The

order

village

and
re-

United

against the
village trus-

was

granted

trustees

but

as to

denied

to the Park Board. Two

as

days later,

on December
24, 1959, the Park
District filed the present condemnation petition.
By agreement the condemnation
procedings were held in abeyance
until hearings in the United States
District Court were concluded.

On

March

4,

1960,

the

United

States
District
Court
denied
injunctive relief and dismissed the
complaint of Progress and Modern
and
granted
summary
judgment
thereon and they appealed.

Thereafter

on

March

11,

Progress filed a motion to
the condemnation petition
grounds:

1960,
dismiss
on five

1. That a prior action is pending
between

the

petitioner

and

one

of

of the

r the

sites
es,

bond

acquisition

of

making

issue was
of four

approximately
a

total

of

to

other

58

approxi-

tely 80 acres in the six tracts.
n December 21, 1959, the bond
ssue

referendum

was

held.

The

ion carried, and the bond issue
approved

by the voters.

e following

day Progress,

heir present corporation,

and

Modern

ommunity Developers, Inc., instied suit in the United States Dis-

the

the

pendency

United

of this

ap-

Court

of

States

Appeals

for

affirmed

the orders

the

con-

Seventh

Circuit,

of the

district

court denying plaintiffs’ motion
a preliminary injunction; but

versed

the

orders

and

for
re-

judgment

dismissing the complaint and granting
summary
judgment
thereon.
The cause was remanded for a trial
on the merits. The court also denied a motion for mandatory in-

junctive

relief.

Progress

ment Corporation
12976, January 4,

Develop-

v. Mitchell,
1961,

Doc.

Fed. 2d
On this appeal, Progress insists
that they have been denied a right
to a hearing in the trial court on
their charges that the present condemnation proceeding is a part of
a conspiracy to deprive Progress of
their civil rights.
The Park District, however, maintains that the issues of conspiracy
and a denial of civil rights can only
be
adjudicated
in the forum
of
Progress’s
choice,
the
Federal
courts; and that the Park District
sufficiently
proved
below
the
necessity for condemnation.
It is conceded, as it must be, that
every private
owner
of property
holds his title subject to the lawful
exercise of the sovereign power of

eminent

domain,

and

courts

may

not substitute their judgment for
that of the condemning authority
in inquiring into the necessity and

petition

of

the

is an

con-

overt

act

in a conspiracy to deprive Progress
of its civil rights.

3. That
public

there

need

for

is

no

bonna

acquisition

fide

of this

property for public use.

power

of emi-

nent domain, great as it is, is subject to constitutional
limitations,
and the courts may interpose their
authority to prevent a clear abuse
of the exercise of that right. De-

they

are

conclu-

contains

allegations

suf-

ficient to charge the Park District
with using its power of eminent
domain for “the sole and exclusive
purpose” of preventing the sale of
homes by Progress to Negroes in
violation
of
Progress’s
right
to
equal protection of the law.
We
consider such a charge, if
proved, to be a denial of the necessary prerequisites to condemnation
of necessity and public use, and
therefore a defense to the petition.
This conclusion,
however,
does
not mean that all, or even a substantial part of the matters alleged
by Progress are material to this inquiry. We think it of no importance
that the citizens of Deerfield, and
even a member of the Park District board were
opposed to the
policy
of
controlled
occupancy
adopted by Progress. Nor is the
fact that steps to acquire this land
were not taken prior to Progress’s
announcement
of its Tene
material here.
The
material
questions of fact
are whether or not Deerfield needed park sites; whether or not Progress’s property is suitable for park
sites; and whether or not these sites
will be devoted to public use. On
these issues the Park District has

made

a

prima

Trustees
20 Ill.2d

facie

case.

It then

became

to rebut

offered

to prove would sufficiently rebut
the Park District case. In this contention they rely on the recent case

of Gomillion v. Lightfoot, 362 U.S.
916, 5 L. ed. 2d 110. As we have

5. That the acts of the petitioner
in
conspiracy
with
others
are
abuses of the power of eminent domain.
In support of the motion, Progress attached a copy of their complaint in the United States District
Court. The same day the Park District moved to strike grounds 1, 2,
and 5 of the motion to dismiss and
filed an answer to grounds 8 and 4.
The trial court granted the motion

Buildings v. Lewis, 411
Ill. 242;
City of Chicago v. Vaccarro, 408
Ill. 587; Tedens v. Sanitary District

noted before, the teaching of that
case is relevant here, but we think
the facts are inapposite. The Go-

of Chicago,

million

did

not

nego-

to strike grounds 1, 2 and 5 and,
finding grounds 3 and 4 constituted
a traverse of the petition to condemn, set the same for hearing.
Upon the hearing the Park Dis-

trict

introduced

evidence

of

its

resolutions designating these areas
as necessary park sites and author-

izing their acquisition. They further proved offers to purchase and
their refusal. Progress then submitted a 50-paragraph request for
admission of
to have been

facts which appears
treated below as an

offer of proof: Objections thereto
were sustained.
The gist of the rejected offer of
proof is that Progress follows a
policy of building homes for sale
to Negroes and white persons; a
policy first revealed to the general

public on November

11, 1959. Prior

to July, 1959, there were ‘‘For Sale”

of

Public

Works

149 Ill. 87.

It is also well settled that State
power cannot be used as an instrument to deprive any person of a
right protected by the Federal con-

stitution. Gomillion v. Lightfoot,
a6 -Uss, 3016; 9. * Led;
(2d: 310:
Shelley v. Kraemer, 334 U.S. I, 92
L.

ed.

US;

1161;

Aaron

v.

Cooper,

3): bee eds Sd. 1;

If, therefore, the Park District’s
attempted exercise of the power of
eminent
domain
would
deprive
Progress of equal protection of the

law, it is the duty of the
courts to prevent it. We
think

the

Federal

resort

forum

Illinois
do not

of Progress

absolves

the

trib-

unals of this State from the duty of
protecting their rights.
The present status of the Federal
proceedings merely determines that
Progress has failed to show sufficient ground for the issuance of
a temporary Federal writ to stay
the Illinois condemnation proceeding. There is at this time no final

adjudication of the question of law
regarding

Progress’s

purported

de-

fense to condemnation.
The time was ripe to determine
the validity of the defense in the
trial

court,

and

it was

of necessity

so determined by the judgment

The
Park
District and the local
school board had many meetings
with regard to school and park and

der.

The
narrow

issues
to

before

two

us

questions.

the stricken counts
to dismiss contain

or-

therefore
(1)

prived

them

a

suit

for

of

certain

constitu-

tional rights. Act 140 redefined the
territorial limits of the city of Tuskegee, converting its shape from
square
to
an
“uncouth
twentyeight sided figure.” All but four or
five of approximately 400 qualified
Negro voters were thereby excluded
from
the
municipality
while
none of approximately 600 white
voters were removed.

The

United

States

Court, in striking
tricting, said:
“These

would

Supreme

down

the

allegations,

abundantly

if

redisproven,

establish

that

Act 140. was not an ordinary geographic redistricting measure even
within
familiar
abuses
of gerrymandering. If these allegations up-

on a trial remained
or

unqualified,

uncontradicted
the

conclusion

would be irresistible, tantamount
for all practical purposes to a mathematical

demonstration,

that

the

legislation is solely concerned with
segregating

white

and

colored

vot-

ers by fencing Negro citizens out of
town

so as to deprive

them

of their

pre-existing municipal vote.
*

Did

of the motion
allegations of

involved

declaratory
judgment
by
several
Negroes
claiming that Local Act
140 of the Alabama legislature was
invalid on the ground that it de-

to the

District did not contact the owner.

swimming pool sites prior to November 11, 1959, but no discussion
was had or acquisition attempted

358

case

“The

claim

*

complaint

of

racial

alleges

a

discrimination.

Against this claim the respondents
have
never
suggested,
either
in
their brief or in oral argument, any
countervailing municipal function

Progress
offered no further
proof, and the parties stipulated as

fact which if proved would constitute a defense to the petition? (2)
Did the offer of proof upon the
traverse constitute a good defense?
We have carefully examined the
motion to dismiss and the district
court complaint which apparently

to

is

protested—the

in relation

to

Floral

Park

or

Pear

Tree, until the public disclosure of
the controlled occupancy policy of
Nae abe Sows PoOesS

the

fair

market

value

of

the

incorporated

therein

by

ref-

which

Act

140

is

designed

to

serve.”
In

the

In

Gomillion,

Court

the

United

did

not

at

bar,

the

States

engage

in

any metaphysical investigation into
the motives of the legislators. They
found the inescapable illegal purpose from the act itself. From an
examination of the record in the
case at bar, it is apparent
that
many of the allegations of Progress
are framed for the purpose of directing a judicial inquiry into the
motives of the individual members

of the Park

District Board,

rather

than into the actual purpose for
which this land is sought. This is
clearly an inappropriate area for

judicial

inquiry.

Railway

(Detroit

United

v. City of Detroit,

225

U.S.

171, 178, 65 L. ed. 570; Soon
v.

Crowley,

113

U.S.

703,

Hing

710-711,

28 L. ed. 1145; Sinclair Refining
Co, 0. City: of Chicago, (7th: cir.)
178 F.2d 214, 217.) As we stated in
Ligare v. City of Chicago, 139 IIl.
46, in a condemnation case the pur-

pose

for which

the

power

of emi-

nent domain is exercised may be
questioned, but “the motives that
may have actuated those in author-

ity are not the

subject

of judicial

investigation.”

We cannot see how the rule could
otherwise.

If parks

in Deerfield,
for

are

needed

and if the land so se-

them

is appropriate

for

domain cannot be made to depend
upon the peculiar social, racial, re-

ligious or political predilections

of

either the condemning

or

authority

the affected property owner.

Prog-

ress is entitled to the same opportunity to hold land and operate a
business as anyone else. They, like

all others,
to

the

hold

lawful

er of

their land

exercise

eminent

subject

of

domain.

the

pow-

They

like

all others are entitled to show, in
a condemnation
proceeding,
that
the land sought to be taken,
is
sought not for a necessary public

purpose,

but

purpose

of

rather

from conducting
Cf. Progress

tion

v.

for

the

preventing

sole

Progress

a lawful business,

Development

Mitchell,

(7th

artio:

condemnation

of

~

Corpora-

cir.)

Doce.

In the light of these
observations, we must consider the record
below. We think that any proper
proof on the issue of the right of
condemnation could have been presented on the pleadings before the

trial

court

traverse.

on

the

If by the trial court’s

on

the

hearing

rul-

ing, it was intended to strike the
allegation and deprive Progress of
the right to prove

that

the

by material

exercise

of

facts

eminent

do-

main in the instant case was not
necessary, and was not to be devoted to a public use, but was for the
sole purpose of depriving Progress
of the right to do business, then the
ruling was in error. We have care-

fully

examined

while

we

the

feel that

record,

and

Progress’s

offer

of proof was

in poor form,

large
loquy

immaterial,
trial court,

degree
in the

and to
the
and

colthe

briefs and argument before us indicate a restriction on the right of
Progress

to

prove

a lack

of

neces-

tice will be

served

in reversing

the

judgment of the trial court and remanding the cause for the sole purpose of permitting Progress a full
hearing on the question of whether this taking is necessary and for
a public purpose.
Renewed

case

Alabama

sity and public purpose. From the
record as a whole we feel that jus-

*

amply

in the

facie *!that purpose, the power of eminent

and

petitioner

as contained

Supreme

lected

have

of Progress’s

legislation.

upon

prima

partment

That

pose

incumbent

they

designation

tion, standing alone, contains no
such
irresistabla
mathematical demonstration
of illegal pur-

be

the

The

land as a park site and its acquisi-

Corp.

tiate or bargain in good faith.

4.

tion.

School

by material evidence.
Proghowever, seems to argue that

the facts which

land for park purposes, is a legitimate and laudable municipal func-

Heights

v. Sherman
357.

case
ress,

demnation

filing

the

complaint

elder, 7 Ill.2d 178.
Nevertheless the

the

of

together

unsupported

sions and voluminous allegations of
fact which appear to be completely
immaterial to any issue in this case.
However, we think that the 42-page

Progress

2. That

exercise

with

power. School Trustees v. Sherman
Heights Corp. 20 Ill.2d 357; County
Board of School Trustees v. Batch-

same

the

Viewed

District Court involving
subject matter.

the

of

erence.

replete

propriety

“isions owned by Progress. The re- signs on the property; and the Park
ainder

During

peal,

of

the defendants in the United States

ac-

juired for residential development

boards,

individuals.

trict from condemning the land; the
village from unlawful enforcement
of their building code: and further

trial

of this con-

thereto,

other

prive plaintiffs of their civil rights,
and sought to enjoin the Park Dis-

in the

_ Stripped of the epithetical rheto‘ric

respective

with
plaint

Vv. Progress Development

_ Corporation
Mr.

their

premises, and the order
demnation was entered.

with

ama

momanded,

directions.

1961

€

�“Sun-Fresh”’ Tender, Young

— “Sun-Fresh” Golden Ripe

CARROTS

a8

cd
&amp;
&amp;
@

e
@
@

NEW

-In Our DELICATESSEN!

There’s a new
—it’s the dozens of
now presents with
ever tasted. Typical

look in our Delicatessen Department this week
home-cooked new delicacies that Sunset Foods
pride! We guarantee they‘re the best you've
are:

@

* Old Fashioned German Potato
Salad
®.
European Stuffed Cabbages
we

* Tasty Stuffed Peppers
¢

Home

Made

%

@

NEW

MIRACLE

BUY SOME TODAY!

¢
e

Ce
we
STRAINED
Foops .~ $1.19
—with

Delicious Kidney Bean Salad
Swedish Meat Balls
Fresh Baked Meat Loaf
Plus dozens more to choose from

Blintzes

e

SPECIAL

*
*
*
*

e

°

TABLET!

MOTH-CLOUD. TABLETS instantly penetrates nap of clothing and eracks and crevices in closets where moth life
breeds. KILLS Clothes ‘Moths, Larvae and Carpet Beetles.
New easy way fo kill destructive stages of moth life in
closets. Place a MOTH-CLOUD Tablet in a plate. Light it

and leave it. A fine white cloud forms to fill entire closet.
No flame— no fire. hazard. Leaves no tell-tale odors on

25 TABLETS

clothing as do sprays, flakes and mothballs; Non-staining.

INSTANT
TANG
Giant Family Size.

$449

85c

Coffee 2-5]

*"MANOR HOUSE

‘U. S. Government Graded
Tender, Frozen, Eviscerated

HEN

NEW BAB-O.........2 ci" 33c
P SCOTT TOWELS .....2 “5° 57c

ib.
Rath BACON
6 to

finish
SOILAX,

‘with GERMISOL

like all the many Sunset Foods extras are typical of
Sunset’s desire to give you the tops in service .. . at

|

3-Ib.
box

|
1812

ij
K

mar

ae

Open

ae

_

FO
GREEN

BAY

ROAD

—

:

|

59c

|

Both

PLENTY

39°
3%.

16-lb.

Bin

for automatic

ENJOYED FREE COFFEE AT SUNSET FOODS LATELY?
If not, cmon in today! Our self-service, free, coffee
bar and lounge alcove are here for YOU. Free coffee,

TURKEY

Thursday

OF

FREE

and

0

y

C

S

2

A

CENTRAL FOOD STORE
:
4
:
Friday Nights ‘Til 9 P.M.

PARKING

—

ALWAYS

no extra cost!
Thursday,

May

4, 1961

Page H 11—D

19

Late

BANANAS

�Crossroads

Shopping

Center

ID

2-9586

LTV)

:

O

Restaurant

PARTY? — ORDER

“THE

STEER
and

Delicatessen

Mrs. Ralph Jonas, Highland Park, and Mrs. Cyrus MacKin-

STEER’S”

non, Winnetka, North Shore Regional Chairman of the Peopleto-people Book Drive; discuss plans for the May 10-20 campaign.

LAZY IRVING!
(A Lazy Irving Is Twice As Good
Lazy Susan—just ask Max!)

North

chairmen

As A

tray

is guaranteed

to win

We

make

discuss

trays to serve from four to four
For a special consideration, we'll
make up one to serve 401. Call us!

OPEN—

MON.,

WED.,

the

THURS.,

SUN.

TO THOSE

plans

for

8:30 a.m.-2

CLOSED

TUESDAYS

WHO

LOVE

We cater to Bar Mitzvahs and sales meetings.

drive

is

to

send
overseas
country’s policy

FRI. &amp; SAT.

8:30 a.m.-Midnite
——

CATER

Area

Book

Drive

the

Regional Chairman,

met

People-to

a.m.

books

to

to
support
our
to promote inter-

friendship

standing,

This drive is in coopera-

tion

——

explained that

gather

national
with

the

and _ under-

United

States

In-

formation Agency which is not able
to

WE

Chicago

the

place in the Chicago
area from
May
10 to May
20. Mrs.
MacKinnon, who is the North Shore

up

We’re

area

People Book Drive which will take

first prize for beauty,

people.

Hours

suburban

at the home of Mrs. Cyrus L. MacKinnon, Winnetka, on April 27 to

taste and concentrated stomach acid.
hundred

for

People-to-People

We'll make you the greatest Lazy Susan, Tired
Moe or Sleepy Morris tray you've ever seen! Beautifully designed by our chief delicatesseur, your lazy
susan

Shore

TO EAT
— THE

supply

needed.
Books
on the

BEST

The ultimate in Western dining pleasure.

the

number

of

books

chology, sociology, geography, etc.
(2) textbooks on applied sciences
do-it

shop

economics,

government,

law,

psy-

manuals,

etc.,

(3) pure

science
books
on chemistry,
astronomy, higher mathematics, biology, zoology, botany, etc. (4) history books (5) American literature,

dictionaries,
be

in

etc. All

English,

in

books

good

should

condition,

and textbooks should not be more
than 10 years old.
It is hoped that residents will
take

their

points

books

in

their

10 through

May

to

the

cities
20.

drop-off

from

Local

May

drop-off

«

points will be the fire stations and
Jewel

Food

Mrs.
needed are (1) textbooks
social sciences such as

business, medicine, enginhome
economics,
how-to-

such as
eering,

Stores.

Donald

Quinn

is the High-

land Park chairman for the drive,
with Mrs. Ralph Jonas serving as
co-chairman,

HIGHLAND PARK or
DEERFIELD COMMONS
Catalog Store

36

MONTHS TO PAY ON
ORDERS OVER $100.00

FREE ESTIMATES, QUICK INSTALLATION SERVICE,
:

AND 3 YEARS TO PAY FOR WARDS

INTERLOCKING ALURINUM SIDING
INSTALLED
iilt

Let Ward’s siding experts bring new beauty
and
long-lasting protection to your home.
Baked-ename! finish won’t ‘chip, crack, peel or
blister from weather exposure. Dirt rinses off
:
a
with
colors.

hose.

Your

Guaranteed

Low

beautiful

of

choice
Cost

Per

pastel

50

Square Feet

Installation.

Phone ‘Round the Clock—24 Hours a Day—7 Days a Week for a Free Estimate
Your Nearby

Phone:
Address:
Your
t

Nearby

Highland

Store:

ID 2-8830

1854 First St., Highland
Deerfield Commons

Phone: WI
Address:

Park Catalog

714 Waukegan

Park,

Catalog

Il.

Deerfield,

MAIL

Ill.

THIS TODAY

FOR

MAIL TO MONTGOMERY

FREE

ESTIMATE

WARD—DEPT.

CS

c/o Your Catalog Store—Address Shown At Left
Please have your personal representative telephone for
appointment regarding
[-] SIDING

Store:

5-4600
Rd.,

i

ee
PCE

an

Ty: COFPIERR iico~ sheared

agence Rat AVR, Saar
iii cdssickians

ere

ap

oe

REY: scabies tesmenecanias

A A eS

RR

:

sk

Telephone
UAT

NR

US UR

SD

. :0:-i kine staeaenl
AES AER PG

IE a

NE

CD A

OT

�gh ta

WHIRLWINDS

1

No.

are

wonderful

No. 3. Ever Popular CLIMBING TOWER.

ALSYM-DANDY&lt;

With four ladders, gym rings and side bars.

Model 189

fun.

_Will accommodate six youngsters at one

For backyards, carports or basement. Designed

$22.95

time.

for safe use.

$5.00 assembly charge.

4 Seater .... $24.95
2 Seater .... $14.95
We'll assemble 2 Seater, $2.50, 4 Seater $3.50

Ss

.
Model

84

(nema

ne |

“

oo

ou

$5.00 assembly charge

et

\

E

No. 5. Big enough for an eager quartet,
whether they’re cowboys or cute little:

ie

No. 2. New for '62—TANGLE TOWER.
Youngsters will see completely new play“,
angles in this graceful hexagonal design.
“©

Vik\ MEE

SY

9

(X7)_)

ee

.

$22.95

$2.50 assembly charge

Model 55
FREE

0
No.

4 Fun

for everyone

on

three

different

Rockaway No. 22 ........ $11.95
DELIVERY

Hi-Ride

DAILY

ROLLICKING

waar

RIDES.

Rock-It No. 33 ........

12.95

$14.95

$1.50 assembly charge on each.

COME

.

NN
f
J

ee
\

‘

TOY
By

“Artistry In Tet!

1833 SECOND ST.
4.

196

ip

AV

"
:

ID 2-3001
Mav

OF

ORDER COUPON BELOW

ye

te

SEE OUR MARVELOUS SELECTION.
GYM SETS AND SLIDES.

USE THE HANDY MAIL

oh
&amp; L RUBENS ? INC.
%, .
SS)
ce

_Thursday,

IN AND

N

HEAVEN

ary

cl

d
tak

(] Charge to my account
wae

=

.0.D,
i

is Enclosed

Gentlemen:

Please send me the items circled:

1

2

3

4

5

PORES nn ee
PRAIA

obi coves, cc. Lana pacaaee de oan dal mcliesoosseeaks

HIGHLAND PARI) | 32%: Peor.c%,2 4%, Sesto, On oll oer ide ot Se
ae

;

rave

fi

oT)

�Mostly for Women

Engagements

nt

Whddings

a

thas

Tews

The members of the Deerfield Branch of the American Association of University Women will have their annual potluck
dinner on Tuesday, May 9 at the Jewett Park Fieldhouse.
Members are encouraged to be present promptly at 7:30 p.m.
This is the last event of the 1960-61 season.
Miss

Display Symbol
Of Baby Week
At Pharmacy

above

Park

include Mrs.

Herman

son, publicity chairman

clubs in the

Illinois Tenth

District

met

for the group’s annual meeting. Deerfield club women

Pack,

who

for the Tenth

in

is the press book chairman, Mrs. Elmer S. Ander-

District, and Mrs. Charles H. Carman, press and publicity

chairman for the Deerfield Woman's Club.
The

Tenth

award
ior

District

certificate

for first place,

group

in

the

class

press

of

2 sen-

book

con-

test was presented to Mrs. Charles
H.

Carman,

press

and

publicity

chairman of the Deerfield Woman’s
club, for the club’s press book by
Mrs, Elmer F. Anderson,
press
and
publicity
chairman
of the
Tenth

ing

District

at the

Wednesday,

Highland

April

Park

Highland

annual

meet-

26

at

Woman’s_

the
club,

Park.

Mrs. Herman Pack, press book
chairman, compiled the book,
Mrs. Anderson announced that
22 junior and senior clubs in the
tenth district entered the state
press

book

contest

of

the

and

senior

‘grouped

separately

wers

each

in

Books

to

clubs

were

select

win-

into

two

group.

were

divided

classifications:
Class

One—press

books

from

clubs in towns of 30,000 population or over. Class Two—press
books from towns of under 30,000
population.
List

Judges

The judges were a public relations career woman, a former state
federation officer and a past state
press chairman of the IFWC.
The press book will be submitted for judging in the state
contest and will be on display at
the Illinois Federation State Conwention May 9, 10, and 11.
An art award was also presented
te William Aiston, 142 Briarhill
Rd, a student of Holy Cross school
‘who placed second in Class B (with-

ut

regular art instruction) in the

tenth district contest. He was

award

was

accepted

by

Mrs.

Norman Erskine, chairman of the
department of fine arts for the
‘coming year. His work will also be
entered in the State contest.
Annual reports were heard by
Mrs. Joseph F. Bernhard, president of the tenth district, at the
[Po

At May 10 Meeting
Of Mother's Club

| Junior Board Plans
Cocktail Dance

The May 10 meeting of the PreSchool Mother’s club will have a
dual purpose.

recent

‘i

Lucius

the

All set to move onto the benefit
scene now that summer is on its
way
are members
of the junior

Teeter,

Society

and

first

the sculptor, went
and persuaded him
orable piece.

friend

of

tions are being attended to by Mrs.

Graduate

Student

Eugene White of Chicago and Mrs.
Stephen
Cornell
of 1430 Central
ave., Deerfield.

Miss Anderson, a graduate of the
University of Wisconsin, did graduate work
at Northwestern
university. She did speech therapy at

Something
different
has
been
hinted in the way of decorations

Halloran

given

hospital,

was

a

speech

for the party and members

correctionist
at Beloit,
Wis.
and
has taught in) Highland Park since

gather
Room

1948.

hotel

She

will

problems

discuss

of

the

common

speech

pre-school

child

and the help parents can give them
in
promoting
a
speech
pattern
which will be adequate
for enrollment in school.
Kipling school will be the meeting place for the club and 8:30 the
time.
All mothers
of pre-school
children are welcome.

Three Deerfield Woman
Work on Society Benefit
Mrs. Percy Wilson, Mrs. Gordon
R. Wallace and Mrs. Reid A. Olson,
of Deerfield, are working on the
Chicago Child Care Society’s benefit on June 2.
The society will
present
the
Kingston Trio at McCormick Place.

meeting.

going

Mrs.

Locke

president

of

Woman’s

club,

Rogers,

the

presented

out-

Deerfield
her

re-

port of the club’s activities for the
past year to Mrs. Bernhard.

Other members of the Deerfield
Woman’s club who attended the
meeting were the Mesdames Orin
M, Thatcher, Eugene
R. E. Malmquist.

Cooksy

and

a

sneak

preview

will be

when

they

for luncheon at the Pump
of the Ambassador
East
on

Wednesday,

May

10,

at

1

p.m.
Proceeds from the charity ball
will be contributed to the budget
at the school for guidance, education, and welfare
work which
touches the lives of more than sixty
girls who make their home at the
cottage-type institution.

Return From Meet
Of Blackhawk Society
In Washington, D.C.
Miss

Bertha

Bradt,

daughter

Children

of the American

Hold Annual Meeting

of

Revolu-

tion at the 66th National convention held at the Mayflower Hotel.
Miss Bradt flew to Washington
for the three day Congress (Apr.
20-23) which included pilgrimages
to historic places and tours of the
Capitol city.
Included
in the
places visited were, the White
House, Archives Building, The
F.B.I., U.S. Capitol and the new
Wax Museum.
Saturday evening the delegates
held a formal dinner and ball at

be a guest for the evening, Mrs.
Bailey will be serving as vice-president of the North-Central region
of AAUW next year. She was one

the

AAUW

members

Mrs. George Gessner is the new
president with Mrs. Arthur Meltz,
vice president, other officers are

as follows:
Corresponding
secretary,
Mrs.
Owen Nichols; recording secretary,
Mrs. Karl Berning; treasurer, Mrs.
Arthur
Juhl; membership, Mrs.
Kenneth K ohanzo; flower show,
Mrs. James Cody; publicity, Mrs.
Richard
Glowe;
and fruit and
flower guild, Mrs. Robert Ettinger.
Mrs. Donald Kempf won the tricolor ribbon for ‘‘an elegant table’
at the Chicago World’s
Flower
Show
at McCormick
Place,
and
also Mrs.
James Cody won the tricolor ribbon for “an interpretative
arrangement” in the
Deerfield
Garden Club show at Jewett Park.

activities
conthe Evergreen

the Mayflower. Sunday, a memorial
service was held at the Washington Cathedral, followed by wreath
laying at the Tomb of the Unknown

Soldier in Arlington;

who

sisted Deerfield women
izing their branch three

New
during

officers

will

a

business

brief

as-

in organyears ago.

be

installed
session.

Mrs. Robert Mazur has been elected

president,

secretary,

Mrs.

and

Other

Howard

Kirst

Duke

Miller

Mrs.

corresponding

secretary.

members

of the

executive

board will continue their duties until June

1962.

any

questions

arrangements

may contact anyone serving on the
ing assisted by Mrs.

a wreath was

also placed on the Tomb
of the
Unknown Revolutionary Soldier at
the Old Presbyterian Meeting
House in Alexandria, Virginia.

Robert

Dona-

hue, Mrs. Thomas Granfield, Mrs.
William H. Tallent, Mrs. Douglas
R. Thornton, Mrs. David A, Tyner,

Mrs. John T. Washburne,
Bruce

The program for the coming year
was outlined, emphasizing, the
September Flower show.

Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Bradt, 454
Margate
Ter., has returned from
Washington, D.C., where she represented
the
Blackhawk
Society,

of the

will be

hospitality committee. Mrs. Robert
Rhinehart is chairman. She is be-

Gardeners

Post
luncheon
stitued a tour of
nursery.

the

She is

president

dinner

The Amateur Gardeners of Deerfield held their annual luncheon
at the Evergreens Inn in Dundee
to honor their new officers.

refreshments.

Josh

and

Illinois Division of AAUW,

having

Co-chairmen
of this
year’s
charity ball are Mrs. Thomas Gleed
of Highland
Park and Mrs. Stig
B. Liliebladh of Northfield. Invita-

correctionist. The title
will be “Speech Develthe Pre-School Child.”
be an informal question
period followed by an
for a social time with

Amateur

her

Bailey of Arlington

currently

concerning

To Honor Officers

son, speech
of her talk
opment of
There will
and answer
opportunity

the

Mrs. George
Heights,

to Lorado Taft
to do the mem-

officers and the second an informative talk by Miss Isabelle Ander-

be

with
Hall

high school.

Members

Girls with
their
annual
cocktail
dinner dance to be given at Lake
Forest academy on Saturday, June
17,

will

Park

of

through

Orchestra

of

board of the Park Ridge School for

first

residents

area

head of the department of girls
physical
education
at
Highland
Park High school.

of

president

a close

at

Highland

Taft

to the

Shore

appearances

White

election; of

The

spon-

sored by the department of art
of the Deerfield Woman’s
club,
Mrs. H, Robert Dieterle, chairman.
‘His

Park Ridge School

|

Illinois

Federation of Women’s clubs. Aceording to the state rules judging
‘on the district level was conducted
‘to select winners as follows;
Junior

Dual Purpose

familiar
North

=

come
the

It was designed and executed by
sculptor Lorado Taft, in 1914 specifically to commemorate the first
Baby Week.
It has been the official insignia of tne Infant Welfare
Society of Chicago ever since. It
is a piece in the round, depicting
a mother holding an infant. The
cradling arms are exaggerated to
convey the idea of protection.

shown

folk

&amp;

many of the woman’s

last Wednesday

popular

be

Representatives from
Highland

By

Lill,

singer, will provide entertainment
after the dinner. Miss Lill has be-

Through the efforts of the Deerfield
Center
and
the
Deerfield
Wing of Infant Welfare Society of
Chicago, a symbol of the spirit of
the society is being displayed in
the window of Ford Pharmacy in
honor of Baby Week, and the 50th
anniversary of the Society.
Designed

Eva

&gt; a

AAUW Holds Annual Pot-Luck Dinner
At Jewett Park Fieldhouse Tuesday

M.

and Mrs.

Warnecke.

April In Paris
Deemed Success
By Woman’s Club
Mrs. Locke Rogers, president of
the Deerfield
Woman’s
club announced that the club’s recent ben-

efit dinner
Paris,’

dance

held

Country

at

Club,

‘An
the

April

Evening

in

Vernon

Hills

15, was

most

successful.
Present

The
the

goal

Scholarship

achieved

Deerfield

present

will

Woman’s

the

enable
club

to

annual _ scholarship

award to a girl graduate
of thea
Highland Park High school living
in the Deerfield area.
Additional

benefit derived from the dance will
go to

some

worthwhile

project to be decided
executive

board

of

community

upon
the

by the

Deerfield

Woman’s club.
“TI wish to thank the members
of the club and the community who
supported
this worthy event.
Through

Mrs.

the

Robert

outstanding

G.

work

Clendenin,

of

ways

and means chairman, and her committee and members who partici-‘
pated in the program, the dinner
dance was a very enjoyable affair,”
said Mrs. Rogers.

Mrs.
1897,

Edward
will

be

M.

Borre,

glad

to

WI

hear

5-

from

Installation of the new National
Officers was held at Mount Vernon.

members

Miss Bradt served as honorary
page
to the
Senior
State
President,
(Mrs.
Frank
Davis,
Green-

Woman’s Club on
11, in her home

Thursday, May
1326 Elmwood

Ave.

coffee

| ville, Ill.,) Illinois Society, C.A.R.

the

who

bridge

served

Dessert

at

wish

group

12:45

to

of

and

play

the

with

Deerfield

will

p.m.

Thursday,

May

4, 1961

be

i

�Hospital Auxiliary
Quarterly Meeting
Is Planned May 10

32nd Garden Fair’s
Final Plans Will
Be Made in Meet
Final plans for the 32nd
Garden

Fair

in Ravinia

on

the

will

be

annual

Village

Masaichi

Green

completed

Fri-

4

Since

den

a new

Fair

May

of all kinds

next

Gar-

20 will be the sale

of herbs,

week’s

Miss

of the
program

meeting

will

for

feature

Mrs. Bruce Mackey of Libertyville,
well
known
herb
grower
and
authority on the subject, to speak,
Mrs. J. W. Barton, program chairman, announces. Mrs. George Eisenbrand
of Green Bay Road,
as
herb
chairman,
is in charge
of

arrangements
at the

for the

special

Fair.

The

Garden

from

8

a.m,

May

20,

Fair

to

“rain

4

will

chairman,

plant

be

p.m.

or

held

Saturday,

shine,”

Walter M. Buchroeder
Mrs,

sale

Mrs.

Jr., general

announces,

Frank

M.

chairman,

assortment

of

Fucik,

the

promises

Fair’s

a

annuals,

wide
shade

plants, vegetables, rose bushes and
many other specialties. Mrs. Carl
Fathauer, food chairman, has recruited
all members
to prepare
their prize bakery goods and dishes

for the Fair.
On

Fair

Mrs.

Wilson

Mrs.

Edward

play;

Mrs.

Sked,

*

maintenance;

A. Olson,
Raymond

Mrs. Albert M. Louer,
ea

Mary

by

Bernie

Morrison

Miss Mary
Morrison,
daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Donald K. Morrison of Eastwood Avenue, a candidate for the degree of Master
of Music at Northwestern Univer-

sity,

will

present

her

graduate

organ recital Wednesday evening,
May
10, at 8:15 in Lutkin Hall,
Evanston.
Miss Morrison began her music

poster
Green

disand

plant dona-

tions. Mrs, Edward M. Fucik is cochairman of the plant committee;

Mrs. J. C. Snow is food committee
. co-chair
man.

ber

pleting

award,

stduies

at

the

vatory

in

Chicago

Shore
Oahu,

and

Conser-

did

her

undergraduate
work
at
Oberlin
Conservatory
and
the University

of Illinois, where she received her
Bachelor’s degree in 1960.
Represented in her program will
be

music

and

of

the

classical,

contemporary

is no admission

baroque

periods.

charge.

The

There
public

at

for the

best thesis

administration.

His

cluded an assignment
Hospital
Hawaii.

The

Tasaka

on

The

April

field

chology.

of

family

social

They

schaft

of Hartsdale,

N.Y.

Miss Kaplan attended the University of Colorado and is a gradlate of the University of Michigan;
2urrently she is a member of the
Devonshire school staff in Skokie.
Mr. Davidson is a graduate of

Syracuse

University,

-eived both Bachelor’s

where

he

re-

and Master’s

couple

were

Island

lives

work

have

and

two

known

orchestra.

.

=“,

The bride, a graduate of High- a
land Park High School and former |
student at Lake Forest College, is
in

her

junior

year

at

the

Univer-

Service

$

Lake,

|

Prescription

=

psy-

Secundum Artem

‘PROFESSIONAL

1895 Sheridan
-

ARTS

Rd.

|

,

PHARMACY
Highland

FREE, PROMPT
DELIVERY

ALL PHONES :
ID 2-9000

Park ©

M. J. Dray, R.Ph., Manager

ar-

rangement specialist, opened yesterday and closes tomorrow with:
examinations for the students,
degrees

in

chemical

He

is

continuing

now

towards

a Ph.D.

western

University.

engineering.

degree

his

studies’

at North-

FEATURING

SMART

NEW

SPRING

&amp; SUMMER

_ HANDBAGS ......
ue
EXCITING COSTUME JEWELRY ......
PERFUME TRAYS
JEWEL BOXES ..

&amp;
&amp;
&amp;
&amp;

Up
Up
Up
Up

PRAGRAINGED voles cheesci
scisc oensesucdcdy $1.00 &amp;
Outstanding Values
REPLIQUE SPRAY MIST by Raphcel ...... 2-0z. $4.50
MISS DIOR COLOGNE—2-o0z. _...................-... $2.50
PRINCE MATCHABELLI SPRAY MIST—Abano,
|
Wind Song, Beloved, Stradivari ........ $2.00 ea.

Up

20%

OFF ON

ABOVE

.. $3.50
$1.50
$5.00
$9.95

ITEMS

DELIGHTFUL

Something
Different

© Cosmetics
® Compacts:

seating
for the contemporary
minded. At last — a pull-up chair that’s

comfortable, yet styled for those who like
a touch of something unusual. Illustrated
in Solid Walnut and Black Vinyl. Also
available in wide selection of vinyl col-

ors and 500 fabrics.

© Theatrical Make- ve
© Leotards
® Opera Tights

-.

® Lipstick Cases

——in

Matching Pin Curl Bonnets, Curler Bags
Containers, in beautiful gift box

and

Kleenex
$2.50 ea.

Exquisite miniature articifial floral arrangements.

Prompt delivery on

special orders.

Confirmation and Graduation Gifts!
Come in today and select your gifts.
We carry thany beautiful items.

“The

North

Shore’s

Finest

Center

for

Casual

Furnishings”

Gift . Certificates

KAYMAC
Open
Thursday and Friday
Until 9
Thursday,

May

4, 1961

COSMETIC MART

495

Central

ID 3-1550

*

—

sity of Miami, where she is major- —
ing in Education.
Mr. Ehrlichman, a graduate of
the University of Miami,
is in
business in Coral Gables, whene 4
the young couple are living.

and his Patient

children,

flower

University

of

Its 31st annual Chicago Flower
Show school is being sponsored by’
the Garden Club of Illinois this
week in the Art Institute of Chi-.
cago.
;
The school, which features C.
G. Milne, landscape design expert
and horticulturist, and Miss Irene.
well

the

For the Physician

at 2160

Sharon Lei and Russell Ken.
Mrs. John Hennessy, 1729
is chairman of the meeting.

Haddox,

married

Gables.

ston

at the South
the

ls Staging ‘School’

Mr. and Mrs. William A. Kaplan
of Rambler Lane have announced
the engagement of their daughter,
Beverly Jean, to Burton Davidson,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Lester Pet-

young

10 in Coral

Midlothian. Mrs. Tasaka is a gradu- |
ate of the University of Hawaii in
the

of

in-

State Garden Club

Engagement Told

ae

on hoswork

taking

ns

is invited.

Beverly Kaplan’s

f

Irma Ehrlichman of Miami Beach.

Northwestern

University in the field of hospital
administration. His undergraduate
study was at the University of Hawaii
in business
and
economics.
While at Northwestern, Tasaka was
co-winner of the Davis and Geck

study at the age of five in Highland
Park.
She
continued
her
American

studies

Parkers

Miss Kelly and Miss Rubenstein on
are freshman students. The show C
is being presented at Cahn audi- —; q
torium on the university’s Evan-—

oto my Maurie’ Seyzhobr
follows at 10:30.
Tasaka will speak at 11 o'clock |. Mrs. Stephen M. Ehrlichman
on the
relationship
of the
new
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Fish, 1619
South: wing with the present hosSylvester Pl., are announcing the
pital building.
.
Tasaka came to the Highland Park recent marriage of their daughter,
Hospital in 1954 as an adminis- Judith Frances (Judy), to Stephen
Ehrlichman, son of’
trative resident while he was com- Martin

pital

Committee

Mrs, Richard R. Little is cochairman of the 32nd Garden Fair.
Others in charge of the festive
affair are Mrs. Sidney Frisch, sales
personnel; Mrs. Robert Prosser and

ad-

hospital and the business meeting,

Pnoto

Highland

in the successful
30th
anWaa-Mu show, “Don’t Make a

a Scene,’”’ May 1-6 at Northwestern —
University are Colleen Kelly, 730
Broadview Ave., and Barbara Rub- |
enstein, 1089 Linden Ave., dancing _
girls; and Edward Imhoff, 1503 —
Sunnyside Ave., sophomore mem-_

Park Hospital Wednesday morning
May 10.
The meeting will begin at 9:30
in the hospital board room
with
the making
of bandages
for the

Topic

feature

Among
part
nual

the quarterly meeting of the Woman’s Auxiliary
of the Highland

Luncheon at 12:30 p.m. will be
preceded by a board meeting at
11 o’clock. Mrs. George W. Straub
of
Lakeside
Place
is
luncheon
chairman; she will be assisted by
Mrs. Raymond Green, Mrs. Erwin
B.
Jordan
and
Mrs,
Robert
H.
Ruhl.
Program

assistant

30th Annual Show

ministrator of the Highland Park
Hospital, will be guest speaker in

day afternoon, May 12, when the
sponsoring
Ravinia
Garden
club
meets in the home of Mrs, Robert
W. Harvey, 216 Pierce Rd.

Herbs,

Tasaka,

Three In Waa-Mu's

Highland

Park

1860

FIRST ST.

HIGHLAND

PARK

ID 2-3023-4
Page H 15—D

23

i Py,

�‘— LET US DO IT —

Vows Read Recently

Chumbley-Michels

Her husband is the son of Mr. and

May 13 Installation

Mrs. John A. Michels of Onwentsia
Avenue.
Dr. Lloyd
A. Gustafson
read the service.

Avenue

Kenneth

We

Repair Screen Doors and Windows
Replace Broken Windows
Fix Storm Windows and Doors
Keys Made To Order While You Wait.

Store Hours Daily 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. — Wed. ‘til Noon

OPEN

SUNDAYS

YOUR
NEEDS

447 Roger

ONE STOP STORE
— HOUSEWARES

Williams

—

TOY Ss

ID 2-4387

PURCHASING
A HI-FI SYSTEM?
Bring

Us Your List Of Components
For A Package Quotation

PARTIAL

LIST

OF

BRANDS

ALTEC LANSING
ELECTROVOICE
JENSEN
OXFORD
UTAH
VIKING
BELL © G.E.
WEATHERS
HARMON KARDON
EICO
SHERWOOD
FULL
We

LINE

AVAILABLE

Mr.,

FISHER
GROMMES
DYNAKIT
COLUMBIA
REVERE © VM
PENTRON
GARRARD
MIRA-CORD
GLASER-STEERS
SHURE
PICKERING

OF

of

Park

Ridge.

The
bride wore
a white
satin
princess
style street-length
gown
with long-sleeved nylon lace jacket.
Her French illusion veil fell from
a seed pearl coronet.
She carried
blush
blue
phalaenopsis
with
a
cascade of white hyacinths.
Mrs. Lowell Gratigny, her sister
anl only attendant, was matron of
honor.
She wore
a powder blue
shantung sheath
and carried a
colonial bouquet
of French
blue
cornflowers.
Mr. Gratigny was best man.
The bride’s mother wore a turquoise blue shantung sheath with
matching
accessories.
The senior
Mrs.
Michels
wore
a Dior
blue
dress with navy accessories.
Both

RAVINIA HARDWARE
GARDEN

Chumbley

Sister Is Attendant

9 A.M. — 1 P.M.

Mrs.

John

F.

had

Michels

New Orleans will be the home of
Mr. and Mrs. John Frederick
Michels
who
were married

Wednesday

evening,

the Passmore chapel
Methodist church.
The
Marie

March

29,

of Park

Ridge

in

bride is the former Janet
Chumbley, daughter of Mrs.

purse

corsages

eymbidium

orchids.

of blush

pink

Both Mr. Michels and his bride
were graduated from the University of Illinois, and he is continuing
his studies at Tulane
University
Law School.
She is a member of
Kappa
Alpha Theta sorority and
he is affiliated with Alpha Sigma

Phi fraternity.

design and build cabinets
to your specifications!

Mrs, Lloyd

Bergquist

Club

113

Saturday

Also, Mrs, Fred Rivett, first assistant
marshal;
Mrs.
Thomas
Roach,
second
assistant marshal;
Mrs.
Herbert
Moran,
organist;
Mrs. James Meehan, press correspondent; Mrs. Albert Marks, first
guard;
Mrs.
Harry
Hall,
second
guard; and Mrs. Ray May, chaplain.
Meeting May 10
The
Emblem
club’s
monthly
meeting will be held Wednesday

evening, May
planned

10, Board
Monday

evening,

Hostesses

for the

meeting

Mrs.

William

and

Mrs,

AND

FRIDAY

EVENINGS

WE

Joseph

will
John

Tomei.

issue

of

the

Highland

Park

NEWS.

DEVOE
PAINT
In 5,000

Color
New,

Combinations
Now

at

CRAFTWOOD
LUMBER

See

A,

POTTED
ROSES

COMPANY

Page

42

hhh

THURSDAY

Mrs.

‘ph

OPEN

1D 2-0725

Kelly,

Watch for it.

COVUVVVVVVS

1805 St. Johns Ave., Highland Park

May

8.

This is our own stock—
grown in our own fields—
in Lake Forest.

Household Appliances, Inc.

meeting is .

for

Full schedule of Clean-Up Week
pickups will be printed in the May 11

EVERGREENS - SHRUBS
TREES

yyyvuvvuvevev’s
VvvVvvVvVVY”,

A Division of Columbia

May

urer.

Dunham

PECVVVVYVVYV.

COLUMBIA Hi-Fi &amp; 1V

evening,

include: Mrs. William Sarakanoff,
vice president; Mrs. R. Sheahen,
Maynard
Mrs.
trustee;
first
Schramm,
second
trustee;
Mist
James Watson, third trustee; Mrs.
recording secreNicholas Miller,
tary;
Mrs.
Carl Arens,
financial
secretary; Mrs. Peter Carani, treas-

PLANT NOW!

BE UNDERSOLD!

WON’T

Emblem

13, at 9:30 in the Elks hall.
Other officers to be installed

Beautify Your Grounds

WE

presi-

as

Park

Highland

of

of Central

installed

be

will

dent

be

SPRING
PLANTING

CABINETS

Emblem Club Sets

INVITE YOU TO VISIT OUR GROUNDS AND
SEE THIS TRULY HIGH-QUALITY STOCK

Special Price For Cash &amp; Carry
Sales office open daily and Sunday

JOHN FIORE NURSERIES
840

"Like privacy?
flowers?

Large lot? Beautiful trees and

home when the buds are coming out and the

Full acre.

that is growing.

For the young family

Now—Rent

In the twenties.

A

BAIRD
SALES

*

&amp;

MORTGAGES

576 Lincoln Avenue

OPEN

*

¢

SUNDAYS

MANAGEMENT

°¢

+

H

16—D

24

CE

A New

4-0476

DAY

Even

a ce

AUTO

Hillcrest 6-1855

H Ri F TY
First St.

Highlamd

PARK
STORE
© 1D 2-8550
°~

WINNETKA
847 Elm
*

STORE
Hi 6-5141

ID

CHECK

OURS

20 Exp. Kodachrome .......... $1.64
20 Exp. Ektachrome ..._.......
620 Kodacolor ....................
620 Verichrome Pan ............
8 mm Kodachrome, roll ....

8 mm
16

RENTALS
Park

CONSCIOUS?

Less

INSURANCE

11 a.m. to 5 p.m.

HIGHLAND
589 Central

Car For

INSURANCE!
1890

Page

Forest

INCLUDING

WARNER
Winnetka

Lake

AR RENTALS

Call MR. OWENS to see this ranch

air is fresh.

S. Waukegan,

mm

Kodachrome,
Kodachrome,

Eastman

Processing
film.

1.08
45
2.28

mag. .... 3.32
roll ....

6.90

on all color

2-6300
Thursday,

May

4, 1961

�DINETTE SETS

&gt;

$49.95 5-PIECE DINETTE
smart ebony frame,
complete

$149.95 SEAMIST
SUITE,
dresser, chest,
Bookease bed -wica.

SET,
$29"

$59.95 BRONZETONE DINETTE
30x40x48 size,
D PIeOCe
ou
are

$239.95

SET,

DAYSTROM

DINETTE

self storing leat,
TP PAGCCG se ar
es

dresser,

$319.95 BROYHILL SET,
triple dresser, chest,
NOOKCABE ‘DEG 3.5 oneness
| $529.95
triple
panel

SET,

AMERICAN
dresser,
bed

Pacific Ironing Board
and pad set ................

$189.95 PHILCO
family size,

of

floor

Prices Slashed to
30c, 50c and 70c
on the Dollar Now!

5] P das

$6.95 Twist-o-matic Wax Applipint

door

T1c¢

$21.95 Universal Steam-Dry
{ron plus adjustable ironing
board

with

$] V7

wax

$7.98 Electric Alarm Clock
famous Sunbeam brand ........
HOUSEHOLD BROOMS, long
sturdy bristles of corn ............

= SMALL

8 8c

APPLIANCES

$39.95 SHETLAND FLOOR
POLISHER, scrubs.too,
electric

-

GE STEAM-SPRAY
self cord, easy to use

$]

all

| JUVENILE. NEEDS

$12.95

FAMOUS

MAKE

costs

PLAY

YARD,
$] O*

STORKLINE

$79.95 MAPLE BUNK
everything included,

8 pieces complete

PHILCO
ebony

with

Supermarketeer

Find

floor

samples,

23”

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

Mattresses
SEALY

- Box

Springs

INNERSPRING

MATTRESS,

low cost sleeping
comfort

$

$59.95

SERTA

88
24

SERTA INNERSPRENG
or box spring
choice, each

MATTRESS,
$ 3 g°

HOLLYWOOD

EN-

SEMBLE, innerspring
CONStTPUGGHON 115 ei:

one-of-a-kind

$349.95 KROEHLER
AL, Decorator
fabric

TELEVISION,

¥%

Twin

%

All

%

Pre-built,
borders

%

Smooth

consolette

or

Full

Finest

229
SECTIONAL

$269.95
SOFA
BED
AND
WING
CHAIR, Early American
$] 69”

Sizes

| QCCASIONAL CHAIRS —

Crushproof
and

Oe
$

foam cushions
BOIBGORS el
eS

Quality

tops,

4-Pc.

$499.95 HOWARD
3-pc.
bumper end,
fOami. TUDVEL: ie

$28 *8 ana 83. G6

...0...000...0....

PORTABLE

$9.95

cleared!

REFRIG-

$499.95 PHILCO REFRIGERATORFREEZER, 14 cu. ft.

Box Springs

BED,

$599.95 CURTIS-MATHES
ATION, 23-in. TV,
Stereo, “ANVEM wo

$49.95 GE

$399.95 WESTINGHOUSE
ERATOR, 2-door,
automatic defrost

Mattresses and

CRIB,

six year size with
adjustable spline jo)

smart

be

scsi. c.cnscscecs

STROLLER,

draftproof

"v4

must

CTISPET

$499.95
PHILCO
REFRIGERATOR
ha proof, 2-door, 12 cu. $ 27 9”

Your Choice Serta, Simmons or Sealy

$14.95 STORKLINE
40x40 inch size,

$239.95

fVECZET,

You'll find fantastic values because we have disregarded

. . everything

REFRIGERATOR,

items at great savings plus you get free delivery and easy credit terms . . . up to
3 years to pay! This sale is licensed by the City of Highland Park Permit No. 1

lightweight,
folding model

$29.95

.

shelves

LT cu. ft,

5 99

Hurry in this weekend!

REFRIGERATOR,
$1 46”

WESTINGHOUSE

* FURNITURE
* APPLIANCES

$ 2 5*

$49.95 GE VACUUM
CLEANER,
cannister deluxe model,
$ 3 4°
with tools ..
gs
$21.95
IRON,

*399”

REFRIGERATORS
ey

cator

SUITE,

chest,

es

EARLY BIRD SPECIALS
$3.95
cover

SUITE,

chest,

full size bed

$79.95 DOUGLAS ROUND DINETTE,
5-piece
extension table ....0....02.........

$133.50

WALNUT

triple

double
$

$98.50 DEARBORN
wing style,
reversible cushions

Tufted

ROCKER,

Maple

COMBIN$129.95 STRATOLOUNGER
easy-view, TV

STEREO

record

CHAIR

s recliner feature ..........2...4.
7 $189.95 PULLMAN
deep

comfort

LOUNGE

CHAIR,

foam

Ponnes, NOW oc

/ CABINETS and CHESTS:
$249.95

PHILCO-DEXTER

WASHER,

$14.95

Automatic 2-speeds,
# CYOICS Gu
Be
$249.95

PHILCO

automatic
WS

OVO

ELECTRIC

RANGE,

$29.95

SPECIAL SHOPPING HOURS
May

all

hia doce ere

$549.95 WESTINGHOUSE WASHERDRYER, two speeds,
$
95
BOD CHC oui isswslivcnssse pat 29

Thursday,

4, 1961

CABINETS,

double

$

assorted

clock-timer,
os

UTILITY

door,
sizes

on
oo

UTILITY

5 large

$

shelves,

$39.95 UTILITY
giant, 36 inches
4

all

CABINETS,

steel

steel

white

...........

CABINETS,
wide

...

MONDAY, THURSDAY AND FRIDAY
UNTIL 9 P.M. OTHER DAYS TILL
5:30 P.M.
Page H 17—D

25

�yd WA

iE Sie

PPS

§

A

B. M.

OPN

‘

OF

en

STAIN

ORI

TUCKPOINTING—Masonry

For
PAR,

CHIMNEY—FIREPLACE
Repair—Cleaning

leaks

REDWOOD-REZ,
PENTA,
RAWHIDE
For All Outdoors

of

at 1 o’clock,

members

Association

of

in

the

the

Highland

LUMBER

crisis.
Dr,
Robert
W.
Spike’s
study
“Safe in Bondage” is being used
as basis for the groups’ study. The
women are meeting in the following homes: Group One, Mrs. Robert Ruhl, 617 Rice St.; Two, Mrs.
Dorsey Husenetter, 460 Comstock
Pl; Three; Miss E. Ringdahl, 441
Hazel. Ave.; and Four, Mrs. ‘Lin-

role
COMPANY

Page

42

ROSE SPECIALS

in

the

population

dell Peterson,

explosion

1546 Green

Bay Rd.

Fee

ee

ee

40'

Regularly $2.44
(Manvfacturer’s Suggested
Retail Price)

speaks

to

Sheridan

the

Suburban

Rd.,

at

12:45

p.m.

Book

.............. $

“LessOn

2.302 ac

1.50
3.50

rn

LIST

$25.50

meecte Prevent Oieenee

ALL
(ms
pa

VIGORO ROSE FOOD
END-o-PEST ROSE DUST

GRANT
708

252

FOR

$18.00

y” ~—SO WE GIVE.GUITAR LESSONS

&amp; GRANT
Central

—

STEREO

H.P. Store —

CENTERS
ID 2-7222

Deerpath — L.F. Store — CE 5-0658

(in ready-to-use dust gun package)

;
ag

Here’s an offer you won’t want to miss! Just
in time to get your prize roses off to a good,
oe nmi start—and help ’em bloom like never
ore.
Vigoro Rose Food is especially formulated to

at

ive plants a complete meal at a steady rate.

Miss Lois Marlene LePlavy
Mr.

Plavy

and

of

Mrs,

Anthony

Ashland,

Wis.,

C.

Le-

are

an-

nouncing the engagement of their
daughter, Lois Marlene, to Henry
Bertucci, son of Mr. and Mrs. John
Bertucci of Homewood Avenue.
Miss
LePlavy,
who
makes
her
home on West Park Avenue, is a
nurse’s
aide
in
the
emergency

room

Guitar 2.0.2.0... $19.50

som ron omy 6999"

ae...

Re

Seeders

Mrs. Billings, who will illustrate
her talk with Japanese flower arrangements,
.is: an advanced. student:of the. Misho-Kai School of
Japanese Arrangements.
She will

Private.

frorvimng yw Mond 40 Feed Ronee Como

a

Thursday afternoon, May 11.
The May meeting of the Suburban .Seeders will be held in the
home
of Mrs.
Sam
Posen,
1044

Instruction
Ce 2

supe

Mrs. Curtis Billings, vice president of the Garden Club of Illinois,
will give an illustrated lecture on
“Japanese
Influence
on Contemporary
Arrangement’?
when
she

Quality

} BL BOTH FoR ony $122

ae

anese Influence
On Arrangement Is
Topic of ‘Seeders’

GRANT &amp; GRANT
GUITAR SPECIALS

‘d ‘

a

J
ee

four

Wom-

to study and discuss solutions to
the urgent question of the church’s

See

DEAL NO. 1

afternoon

CRAFTWOOD

repaired

VIGORO

This

groups

aye

ares

ai

Park Presbyterian church will meet

Call ID 2-4553

i

bis

Groups in Woman’s
Association Meet
an’s

FLAT ROOF
hot tar recoating
BASEMENT

i Precbyter
tae Studly

tio

ai

A

of

Highland

Park

Hospital.

Mr. Bertucci, a graduate of High.
land Park High School, is in the
contracting business here.
The young couple will be married June 17 in Ashland, Wis.
give a brief history of Japanese
arrangements
and
illustrate
the
three main types.

The

Suburban

Seeders

are

d nothing surpasses End-o-Pest Rose Dust
for all-around pest and disease control.

| DEAL No. 2

Spray gun

ea

tt :

||

|

with the purchase of a 3-lb. package of

NEW

canterBE

| | INSTANT

INSTANT VIGORO ROSE FOOD

VIGORO
ROSE

New! A spray-on rose food that’s acclaimed
by experts. Balanced right for extra blooms,
sturdier canes, and vigorous roots. Contains
every nutrient roses need, plus chelating
agents to make them most effective. Just
dissolve it in water and spray on. Hose pressure does all the work, Gun meters right
amount automatically.

FOOD

Both for

$3.25
Lawn

| FERRARO
Mower

| Ga rd en

Sharpening

Spot

&amp; Repair

225

Skok'-

Blvd.

Nerihbrook,

FREE
Page

H 18—D

26

(South
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You

Rd.)

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in-

viting
presidents
and
program
chairmen
of neighboring
garden
clubs to be their guests for the
program.
Mrs.
David
Barnow
is
the club’s president; Mrs. Joseph
Kahn,
program
chairman.

ZENGELER
CLEANERS

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Thursday,

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Thursday,

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Page

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TRADE-IN

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ID

22-8120
Page 29

�Redeemer Lutheran Church Celebrates
OTauck
HOLY

CROSS

CATHOLIC

North

Daily

Masses:

First

6:30

|

CHURCH

Friday

a.m.,

6:30

and

of Pr areps

8:30

and

a.m,

month,

Masses

8:30 a

Saturday:

TRINITY

Road

Rectory, 724 Elder Lane
Windsor 5-0430
Masses: 7, 8, 9, 10, 11:15

was”

|

Waukegan

Directory

4 om ‘and 7:30 p.m.

at

Confes-

RTH SUBURBAN
EVANGELICAL
FREE
CHURCH
Rev.
Vernon
Obon,
Pastor
200 County Line Rd.
Church Office—WI 5-4640
Parsonage—WI 5-4641

SUNDAY
9:30 a.m. Sunday School.
: aed a.m. Worship Service.
a

.m.

Worship

Service.

att 5 Bees Youth
bide

p.m. bible

7:30

Groups.

Study.

p.m. Junior
Crusaders.
AY
p.m. Pioneer
Girls
and

6:45

Boys

Bri-

THE HIGHLAND
PARK
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
ID 2-1695
Dr.

William Atkinson tea
Rev. J. A. Mille
Ministers

‘SUNDAY
9:30 a.m. and

11:15 a.m.

Church

School

toddiers up through 8th grade at 9:30
. and 11:15 a.m. simultaneously with the
services.

igh School Group meet at 9:45 a.m. and
ternate

Sunday

evenings.

‘REDEEMER

LUTHERAN
CHURCH
Highland
Park
(Missouri Synod)
Rey. Robert A. Wendelin, Pastor
1717 Deerfield Rd.—ID 2-684

stem
ion,

service,

10:15

first Sunday
ool, 9 a.m.

of

a.m.

Holy

Com-

each

month.

Sun-

JOSEPH
THE
WORKER
CATHOLIC CHURCH
181 W. Dundee Rd., Wheeling
Rev. George J. Mulcahey, Pastor
ev.oa
en
Nugent, Assistant
Bay ped 6:30, 8, 9:30, 11, 12:15
ly
Day Masses: 6:30, 8, 9:30, 11 a.m.,
p.m
eekdays: 6:30, 8:30 a.m.

and

ay in the
essions.

Thursday

month:

before

4,

5:30,

the

7,

9

first

p.m.,

QUAKERS
SOCIETY
OF
FRIENDS
David Stickney, Clerk
Lake Forest

i

AY

245

a.m.

Sunday

=)
AY
. 10 a.m.

meeting

in Nerd

Path

ool Library in Lake
Fores
lor information call Windsor ‘5. 1774,

Rev.

NORTH SHORE
UNITARIAN CHURCH
gree R. Chap peer

+

Information

10:45
11

a.m.

a.m.

Call

Church
Church

B’NAI
Sholom
School,

5-3332

School.

Service.

TORAH

2789 Oak
Highland

:
ligious

WI

Street
Park

Singer, Rabbi
Saturday
and

Sunday

nings.

DA
B:30

p.m.

Sabbath

eve

services.

Hebrew
School,
Wednesday
For information call WIndsor

afternoon;
5-5466.

9:30 a.m. Church School,
9:30

am.

Worship

1 ian
00)

Worship

Service.

Service

and

Church

AY

ory a.m.

ae
Ns

j

cs
-:

_

NORTH
SUBURBAN
BAPTIST
CHURCH
American
Baptist
Church)
Lane School, Midway Road
Northbrook East
CR 2-4623
Donald E. Thurston, Pastor

and

Evening

1 SUNDAY,

6 a.m. Holy. ‘Comnsaks, ;
9:30 a.m. Morning Prayer, Church School
and ‘Nursery care
41:45
a.m.
Holy’ Communion,
Church
.
and Youth Foote
.
4k
68m.
Worship
Service
for
young,
{
p.m.
You
ngregation.
pane and adults.
Extended session for ‘MONDAY, May 8
ren.
Afternoon—Girl Scouts.
be eras
May 9
KINGDOM
EVANGELICAL
p.m. Weary. meeting.
Woodland Park Schooi
WEDNESDAY
May 10
Stephen G. Bodony, Pastor
9:30 a.m. St. Mary’s Guild—Holy ComPreaching
the Gospel of the Kingdom
munion,
AY
, 8 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
eRe
10 a.m. Sunday School.
THURSDAY; May.11
,
1:30 -p.m. Boy: Scouts.
7 p.m. Evening Service.
Rev.

é

GREGORY’S
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
Wilmot and Deerfield Roads
The Rev. Rs D. Parker, Rector
The Rev. E. G. Wappler, Curate
Eyed Rev. G. w. Robinson, Assistant
ectory Tel
Windsor
5-1881
Chavet
Telephone—WIndsor
5-1678

DAILY
9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Morning
Prayer.
THURSDAY, May 4
7:30 p.m. Boy Scouts.

THE

ae

COMMUNITY
BAPTIST CHURCH
1250 Waukegan Road
Rev. Robert Humrickhouse,
Pastor
Office Telephone:
Windsor 5-0708
We Preach Christ
Crucified, Risen and Coming Again
SATURDAY,
May 6
8 a.m. Work Day at Camp Awana. Families are encouraged to go to Camp Awana
where there will be work outlined for all
roups to put the camp in readiness for the
961 season.
SUNDAY, May 7
9:30 a.m. Seadey School providing Classes
of Bible Study for all ages and nurseries
for the young
10:45 a.m. Worship Service. Communion
will be observed.
T p.m. Evening Gospel service.
8
p.m. Deacons meeting.
8:45 p.m. Senior Youth Singspiration in
Evanston.
MONDAY, May 8
m.
Chums
Awana
Youth
Club,

ST.

nursery is provided for small children.
phone WI 5-4179 for more information.

(An
Oak

Man’s
perfect, spiritual
relationship
God will be emphasized at Christian Sek
ence services this Sunday.
BR soa + g selections pa
the Bible in the
Lesson-Sermon on the subject “Adam and
Fallen Man”
will include
these
passages
from the first chapter of Genesis:
“And
God said, Let us make man in our image,
after our likeness: . . . So God created
man in his own image, in the image of
God
created
he him;
male
and
female
created he them ... And God saw every
thing that he had made,
and, behold, it
was very
From ‘
ence and Health with Key to
the Scriptures” by Mary Baker Eddy these
fines will be read
259): “The Christlike
understanding of scientific being and divine
heating
includes a perfect
Principle
and
idea,—perfect
God
and
perfect
man,—as
the basis of thought and demonstration.”
The Golden Text comes from Psalm 138:
“The
Lord
will perfect that which
concerneth me: thy mercy, O Lord, endureth

ESDAY, May 9
3:45 p.m. Guards
Awana
Youth
Club,
girls 11-14.
6:30 p.m. Pals and
een
WEDNESDAY, May 1
7:30 p.m. Prayer Diostins and Bible study.
8:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.

WASHBURN
CONGREGATIONAL
CHURCH
Half Day
Rev.
Lewis
Wakeland,
Pastor
Route 22
|)

CHURCH
OF CHRIST,
SCIENTIST
155 Deerfield Road
SUNDAY—11
a.m. Services.
Ctiidren
are cared
for during
Church
service,
9:30 a.m. Sunday School.
For pupils up to 20 years of age.
WEDNESDAY
EVENING
MEETINGS—
8 p.m.
oe aera
testimonies of healing
through Christian
Science.
All are welcome to attend these services
and to use the reading room. For further
information call WIndsor 5-1626.
READING
ROOM
3 to 5 p.m. Daily.
9 to 9:30 p.m. Wednesdays.

for ever.”

School.

Friends

FIRST

LESSON—SERMON

ST.

emereeday

UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
638 Waukegan Road
Rev. Philip A. Desenis, Minister
Parsonage—1139 Elmwood Ave.
Telephone WI 5-5050
THURSDAY, May 4
7:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
SATURDAY,
y 6
9 am. fl Rpnend Confirmation.
1 p.m. Advanced Confirmation at church,
SUNDAY, May 7
9:30 a.m. Family Service
9:30 a.m. Church School for Nursery thru
Juniors,
11 a.m. Worship.
11 a.m. Church’ School for Junior and
Senior High, Nursery provided.
ra
a May 8
Cherub choir.
TUESDAY. May 9
9:01 p.m. Elders meeting.
WEDNESDAY, May 10
9:30 a.m. Morning
Study group at the
home of Mrs. Paul Shipley.
THURSDAY, May 11
1 p.m. Afternoon Circle Co-hostesses Mrs.
L. Ott and Mrs. A. Schultz.
7:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal:

Sunday

School

een)

for

children

ani

a

MORTGAGE LOANS from

gh
ers,
Minister of Christian Education
Manse—1218
Walden Lane
Church phone—WI 5-0560
Manse phone—WI 5-0107
THURSDAY,
May 4
:
;
. choir rehearsal (4th and
5th grades).
4:30
p.m.
Westminster
choir
rehearsal
(6th, 7th and 8th graders).
Both under the direction of Mrs. Edward
Alder.
8 p.m. Building Committee meeting.
9 p.m. Mixed Bowling league at ‘Strike
N’Spare Lanes, Northbrook.
:
SUNDAY,
May 7
9, 10 and 11:30 a.m. Morning Worship
and Church
school.. Nursery for children
1, 2 and 3 years, Kindergarten and classes
for all other grades through high school.
9 a.m. Leadership training classes.
10 a.m. Adult Bible class.
4 p.m. New Member class, Elder Murtfeldt’s.
MONDAY, May 8
3:30 p.m. Girl Scout Troop 11.
3:30 p.m, Girl Scout Troop 127.
7:30 p.m.
Session meeting.
8 fg Adult pele Class.
TUESDAY, May 2
cin
p.m.
8th
Grade
Communicants’
cla
4:45
p.m.
8th
Grade
Communicants’
class
7:30 p.m. Boy Scout Troop 52.
bal erties jag. bot May 10
a.m. Women’s Prayer group.
9: 30 a.m. Women’s Study group.
1:30 p.m.
Women’s
Assistants
meeting.
3:45
p.m.
7th
Grade
Communicants’
ass.
4:45
p.m.
7th
Grade
Communicants’
class.
THE BETHLEHEM CHURCH
(Evangelical United Brethren)
Rev. Eugene M. Wykle, Minister
Rev. R. C. Grigereit, Asst. Minister
801 Rosemary Terrace
Church—
5-0078
Parsonage—WI
5-2221
Our Centennial Year—1861-1961
THURSDAY,
May 4
9 am.-9 p.m. RUMMAGE
Sale—former
Centrella store site.
4 p.m. Boy Scout Troop 51.
p.m. Youth Choir tohoubeal:
FRIDAY, May 5
a.m.-12 noon. Rummage sale.
SATURDAY. May 6
9 am.
Breakfast for Confirmation students at the church followed by rehearsal.
SUNDAY,
May 7
8:30, 9:30 and
10:55
a.m.
Services
of
Divine Worship. Confirmation at 9:30 and
10:55 Services of Worship.
:30
a.m.
Church
School
for
nursery
se yr. old) through 6th grade, and adult
10: 55
am.
Church
School,classes
for
nursery (2 yr. old) through high school.
6:30 p.m. Youth fellowship.
MONDAY, May 8

3:30

p.m.

Girl

Scout

Troop

No.

7:30 p.m. Evangelism committee.
TUESDAY, May 9
9:30 a.m. Circle 1 meets at Mrs. Hollis
Johnson’s, 1160 Linden.
1:15 p.m. Circle 2 meets at Mrs. Fred
Yates’, 1126 Hillcrest, H.P. Circle 3 meets
at Mrs. Louis Zenko’ Ss, 143 Wilmot Rd.
8 p.m. Circle 4 meets at Mrs. Robert
McClellan’s,
1117
Hazel
Ave.
Circle
5
meets at the church. Circle 6 at Mrs. Jean1340
Hackberry,
Circle
7 at
a
List’s,
Mrs. Geneva Nickelsen’. s, 1679 Hertel.
bid mihecange’
t May 10
p.m. Chorister rehearsal (Grades 4-7).
}: 8 Chancel Choir rehearsal.
CHRIST

METHODIST
CHURCH
Maplewood School
Clay and Alden Cts.
Rev. Richard F. Mellor, Interim Pastor
Parsonage—1652 Pear Tree Rd.
Membership—WI
5-5203
SUNDAY,
April 2
9:30 a.m. Church school, children two
and three years, kindergarten and classes
for all grades through high school. Adult
Bible class.
10:30 a.m. Fellowship coffee.
11 am.
Morning
Worship
service. Reception of new members. Sitters for children will be provided.

DEERFIELD

CONGREGATIONAL
CHURCH

In South Park School
1331 Hackberry Road
Rev. John S. Usry, Minister
Parsonage Telephone WI 5-0176
THURSDAY
7:45 Pe
Choir rehearsal.
SUNDAY
10:30 a.m. Worship
Service.
10:30 a.m. Church School.
7 p.m. Pilgrim Fellowship.
CONGREGATION
BETH
OR
In Trinity United
Church
638 Waukegan Road
Deerfield
Telephone WI 5-5070
Rabbi David Cederbaum
Cantor Jerome
Frazes
FRIDAY
8:30
p.m.
Sabbath
Eve
Service.
Oneg
Shabot following service.
SATURDAY
9:30 a.m. Religious school.
11 a.m. Hebrew school.
Board
of
Directors
meetings
are
the
first Wednesday of every month. Sisterhood
general meetings
are the second Monday
of every month.
GRACE

For
4-3060

LUTHERAN
CHURCH
(Missouri
Synod)
Walters Ave. at Fourth St.
Northbrook
further information call CRestwood
or Windsor 5-1323.

}

Redeemer Lutheran church, 1731 Deerfield Rd., Highland
Park, will celebrate the 70th anniversary of its founding on Sun-

day, May 7. Two worship services will be held to commemorate
the event.
A service of Holy Communion
will be celebrated at 10:15 a.m.,
and
a Rededication
Vesper
will
begin at 4 p.m.
Guest speakers at these services
will be the Rev. Reynold J. Lillie,
pastor
of
Ashburn
Lutheran
church, Chicago and a director of

the English District of the Lutheran church-Missouri Synod and the
Rev.
Prof.
Martin
L. Koehneke,
president
of Concordia
Teachers
college, River Forest, Illinois. The
70th anniversary Buffet
Supper
will be held in the church’s lower
level at 5 p.m.
Redeemer
church
traces
its
earliest beginnings
back
through
eleven
decades.
About
the year
1847, groups of Lutherans came to
the community and formed a settlement at Green Bay Rd. and the
the Lake-Cook
County
Line
Rd.
Subsequently
they
requested
the
pastoral services of the first German Lutheran pastor of Chicago.

Beginning
August

in

Selle

Lutheran

1850,
of

the

First

church,

Rev.

C.

St.

Paul’s

Chicago

made

the trip up the north shore in an
ox-cart once a month, in order to
conduct worship services in private
homes.

In 1853, the Rev. Henry Wunder
became the successor of the Rev.
Selle.
Under his direction a congregation was organized with the

name of Trinity Lutheran church.
In the year 1866, a church was built
on

Green

Bay

Rd.

south

of

the

County Line Rd.
As

the

years

passed

the

of Lutherans

in Highland

creased.

idea

from

The

the

to more

mother
adequently

land Park

number

Park in-

of branching

church

off

in order

serve the High-

community

by pastor and people.

duct services of worship in MacDonald’s Hall, on the present site
of
the
Highland
Park
National
Bank building,»and later in Evans
Hall, at Second
St. and
Central
Ave.
For several years the group of
Lutherans in Highland Park existed as a preaching station until in
1890
when
the
Rev.
Detzer
Jr.,
suggested that
because
of his
already crowded schedule as pastor

of Trinity

was

BANK—POST

Federal

Glen-

on

April

26,

1891.

first 65 years of its history.
In

1954,

the

congregation

pur-

chased a 5.7 acre site at 1731 Deerfield Road.
The
was dedicated on

present
church
June 23rd, 1957,

at a cost of $175,000.

The

exterior

and interior
are traditional in
design — but have a contemporary
flavor in keeping with the modern
interpretation of the functions of
the church. Last summer the new
it was
Bay

parsonage
built

Mrs.

on

Minnie

was

the

dedicated;

church

Quadt,

Rd., Highland

surviving

Park,

charter

site.

1628

Green

is the last

member

of

the

church. She is 88 years old.
The following pastors have served
the congregation:
The
Rev. J. Adam
Detzer
Sr.,

1890-97; The Rev. A. F. Sallmann,
1897-1900; The Rev. Albert Bau- .
mann, 1900-05; The Rev. Alvin
Stark, 1906-10; The Rev. William
F. Suhr, 1911-41; The Rev. Hans K.
Platzer,
1942-51;
and
The
Rev.
William H. Remmert, 1952-59.
The Rev. Robert A. Wendelin has
been the pastor since 1959.
The church numbers
500 souls
and 300 confirmed members.

The

founding

church

consisted

fathers
of

the

of

the

following

men:
Fred Arnswald, Gottfried Arnswald, William Arnswald,
Fred
Garling,
George
Huber,
Julius
Johnson, Henry Lawrentz, George

Leffert,

William

Markgraf,

Fred

Rudolph, Henry
Ohlwein, George
Schumann,
Christoph Staebling,
and Charles Wetzel.
A 70th anniversary convocation
featuring Dr. Frederic Norstad of
Lutheran
General
Hospital,
Park
Ridge,
and Luther
Theological

Seminary,

St. Paul,

Minn.,

will be

held at the church on May 25, at
8 p.m. The public is invited.
The 70th anniversary committee
consists of Clarence Wilhelms and
Fred
Schoen,
Highland
Park,
Patrick Hollenback, Deerfield, William Rectenwald Jr., Palatine and
the Rev. Wendelin.

Of Highland Park”

BANKS HIGHLAND
4771 Second St,

dedicated

$35,000

ZION
LUTHERAN
CHURCH
10 Deerfield
Road,
Deerfield
Rev. Paul V. Berggren, Pastor
George Jacobson, Intern
Telephone: Windsor 5-2009
THURSDAY, May 4
8 p.m. Meeting
of the ALOW
Board
at the home of Mrs. Harold Gleason, 705
Deerpath Ave.
SATURDAY,
May 6
6 p.m. Banquet honoring the 1961 Confirmation Class, sponsored by the Luther
League—Speaker, Mr. David Nelson, former
Intern.
SUNDAY, May 7
Rogation Sunday.
8 a.m. Celebration of Holy Communion.
9 am. Family Worship Service with Holy
Communion.
Church
School
for children
3-years old thru 7th grade; eighth graders
to attend worship service. Cry Room
facilities available during this service.
10:45 a.m, Family Worship Service with
Holy
Communion—Confirmation
Class’
First Communion
at this service. Church
School for children three years old thru
7th grade; eighth graders to attend worship
service. Bus transportation is provided for
this service only. Please contact the church
office for schedule.
MONDAY, May 8
7:30-9 p.m. Fifth Session of the School
for Christian Living conducted by Pastor
Berggren on the Book of John.
7:30 p.m. Church Bowling League Banquet.
TUESDAY, May 9th
rH 30 p.m. Boy Scout Troop 150.
8 p.m. Meeting of the board of trustees.
WEDNESDAY, May 10
8 p.m. Adult Choir Rehearsal.
THURSDAY, May 11
8 p.m. Regular monthly meeting of the
A.L.C.W. at the church. Miss Bernice Larson, 1209 Gordon Terr., will show slides
with explanation of the colors of the paraments and vestments for the different seasons
of
the
church
year.
Mrs.
Elmer
Blank, 40 High Street, Highwood, will explain the various symbols of the altar of
Zion Lutheran church.
The Circles will be re-organized at this
meeting.
Anyone
desiring
membership
in
one of the five circles of the A.L.C.W.,
kindly contact the membership
chairman,
Mrs.
James
Nordhaus,
WI
5-1977,
indicating
preference
of
morning,
afternoon
or evening circle meetings.

church,

Located
at Central
Avenue
and
McGovern Street, this
building
served
the
congregation
for the

was favored
in the

Lutheran

coe, and
Bethlehem
Lutheran
church, Evanston, the Highland
Park group would be better served
by calling their own pastor.
As a
suitable candidate he proposed his
father, the Rev. J. Adam Detzer Sr.
In May, 1890, the Rev. Detzer Sr.,
became the first pastor of the congregation, serving it from Racine,
Wis.
In November
of 1890, the
Rev. Detzer Sr., took up residence
in Highland Park.
On January 6,
1891, the congregation became incorporated under the laws of the
State of Illinois. During the same
month
construction
of a church
building began and the new church

It was

month of May, 1888, that the Rev.
J. Adam Detzer Jr., began to con-

“The Service Bank

Member
| Page30

172.

70th Anniversary Of Founding Sunday

OFFICE

BLDG.

PARK
IDiewood 2-7800

Deposit Insurance Corporation
Thursday, May 4, 1961

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tll
[tf

of

the

Bannockburn

area

the

Legion

American

Deerfield

for the

which

were

Legion

to

the

Deerfield-

have

thanked

post

new

50-star

presented

all

Girl

738,

flags

by

Scout

of
the

troops

in

area.
Entertain

On

Sunday

Fathers

afternoon,

April

16,

the girls of Brownie troops 67 and
212 and Intermediate scout troops

19, 19 and 183 entertained their
fathers at a box luncheon in the
American

Legion

hall

gan Rd.
They
sang
and
movie, ‘The Wider

on

Wauke-

watched
the
World,” which

depicts the international activities
and
service
projects
of the girl
scouts in their native lands.
The girls and their fathers had
the opportunity to witness troop
programs and service projects in

Mexico, Finland, the United
and

»

States

Burma.
Present

Flags

Highlighting the afternoon program was the presentation of new
50-star
American
flags
to
each

troop by Arthur

Martin,

of the flag committee
ican Legion.

A

total

of

29

chairman

of the Amer-

flags

were

pre-

sented to the girl scouts in the
area.
They
were
bought
largely
through the proceeds received by

the

legion

from

their

‘A

Bethlehem Church
Circles To Meet

flag

in

The circles of Bethlehem
will meet on May 9.

Church

Circle 1 will be at the home of
Mrs. Hollis Johnson, 1160 Linden
Ave. at 9:30 am.
The two afternoon circles will meet at 1:15 p.m.
Circle
2 at Mrs.
Fred
Yates’
home, 1126 Hillcrest in Highland
Park; circle 3 at Mrs. Louis Zenko’s home, 143 Wiimot Rd.
The other four circles meet at
8 p.m.: circle 4 at the home
of
Mrs. Robert McClellan,
1117 Hazel Ave.; circle 5 at the church;
circle 6 at Mrs. Wm. List’s, 1340

Hackberry
Nickelsen’s,

circle
1679

7 at Mrs.

Robert

Hertel.

Satire On Bazaars
Presented Monday

NORTH

Zion Circles Hold

Meeting May
regular

ALCW

of

will

be

held

Zion

day,

May

11.

at

of

Lutheran
the

Miss

church

3-5400

Bernice

Larson,

home’”’

project.

NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
that the
Board of Local Improvements of the City
of Highland Park has filed in the County
Court of Lake County its certificate as to
final completion
and costs
of the local
improvement for the paving and otherwise
improving of Central Court in the City of
Highland Park, Lake County, Illinois, and
an application has been made to the said
County
Court to consider and
determine
whether or not the facts stated in the certificate of completion are true.
A hearing will be held on said application
on the 12th day of May, 1961 at 9:30 A.M.,
C.D.S.T., in the County Court at Waukegan, Illinois, and at that time the Court
will hear and determine any objections and
enter an order according to the facts. Any
objections must be filed in the proceedings
prior to the date and time for said hear-

ing.
BOARD
City

of

OF

LOCAL

Highland

Park

IMPROVEMENTS
By:

ROY
4/27

Thursday,

May

4, 1961

MILLEN,
Secretary

5/4/61—113

Memorial

The circles will re-organize at the
meeting. Those who wish member-

* Convenient to North Shore
and Downtown Chicage

of the five circles can

Mrs.

James

Nordhaus,

WI

5-1977.

Most

» Funeral

own

goods for the May 27-28 Bazaar being given by the congregation.
The program and skit are under

the direction of Mesdames Stanley
Brill, Melvin Homer, David Kaplan,

and

Harold

by

NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN
that the
Board of Local Improvements of the City
of Highland Park has filed in the County
Court of Lake County its certificate as to
final completion and costs of the local improvement for the construction
of lateral
sanitary sewers in Cherry Lane and Taylor
Avenue in the City of Highland Park, Lake
County,
Illinois,
and
an
application
has
been made to the said County Court to consider and
determine
whether or not the
facts stated in the certificate of completion are true.
A hearing will be held on said application on the
12th day of May,
1961, at
9:30 A.M., C.D.S.T. in the County Court
at Waukegan, IIinois, and at that time the
Court will hear and determine any objections and enter an order according to the
facts. Any objections must be filed in the
proceedings prior to the date and time for
said hearing.
BOARD
OF LOCAL IMPROVEMENTS
City of Highland Park
By: ROY MILLEN,
Secretary
4/27 5/4/61—114

¢ Perfect accommodations for
small or large attendance

Home

consultation

home

¢ Parking adjacent to building

and .arrangements

with our North

SUBURBAN

PHONE

may

be

made

in your

Shore representative.

NUMBER—VErnon

5-2221

Pawlan.

“Adolph Eichmann:
Lessons His
Mother Never Taught Him” will be
the subject of the sermon to be

given

Complete Funeral

in Metropolitan Area

At Open Meeting
The May 8 open meeting of the
Sisterhood
of Congregation
Beth
Or
will
be
highlighted
by
the
presentation
of
“Bazaar _ Skitzophrenia,” a satire on organizing
a bazaar.
The meeting will be held at the
home
of .Mrs. Edwin
Slavin, 630
Appletree Ln., at 8:30 p.m.
Members are requested to bring canned

Chapels

Symbols

Rabbi

David

Cedarbaum

or LOngbeach

5206

North

Broadway,

1-4740

Chicago

(Just north

of Foster)

at Congregation
Beth
Or Sisterhood Sabbath Service Friday, May
5 at 8:30 p.m.
Members of the Sisterhood will
assist in the reading of the service.

NOTICE
NOTICE
NOTICE
Highland Park
Highland
Park
Highland Park
Special Assessment
Special
Assessment
Special Assessment
No. 369
No.
368
No. 358

every

Gree: Wigs
*

contact

reverence.

South Shore Chapel: 2100 East 75th Street, at Clyde Avenue

Mrs. Elmer
Blank,
Highwood,
will explain the various symbols of
the altar of Zion Lutheran church.
ship in one

with

Thurs-

1209 Gordon Terr., will show slides
with explanation of the colors of
the paraments and vestments for
the different seasons of the church
year.
Explain

ritual

the

church

facilities in your community

for prompt service . . . Lee J. Furth,
Jules L. Furth, and their staff, will
personally arrange and conduct the
entire funeral—a service of warmth
and beauty, observing customs and

Call Midway

11

meeting

SERVICE

Complete

On Church Rituals
The

SHORE

yewerd

Scouts

COMPANY

Funeral Directors to the
Jewish Community Since 1865

Arthur Martin, representing the American Legion unit of Deerfield, presented 50-star
flags to area girl scout troops April 16. Receiving the flags are, from left: Nancy Lundberg,
Joyce Russell, Suzanne Finnell, Barbara Vickerman and Nancy Visoky.
Girl

AND

NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
that the
Board of Local Improvements of the City
of Highland Park has filed in the County
Court of Lake County its certificate as to
final completion and costs of the local improvement
for the construction of lateral
Sanitary
sewers
in
Skokie
Highway
between
Deerfield Road
and Birch Avenue
in the City of Highland Park, Lake County,
Illinois, reflecting an excess assessment of
30. per cent and an application has been
made to the said County Court to consider
and
determine
whether
or not the facts
stated in the certificate of completion are

true,

A

hearing

will be

held

on

said

applica-

tion on the
12th day of May,
1961, at
9:30 A.M., C.D.S.T. in the County Court
at Waukegan,
Illinois, and
at that time
the Court will hear and determine any objections and enter an order according to
the facts. Any objections must be filed in
the proceedings prior to the date and time
for said hearing.
BOARD
OF LOCAL IMPROVEMENTS
City of Highland Park
By: ROY MILLEN,
Secretary

In

time

of need...

ade SONS inc.

... complete funeral consultation
and arrangements may
be made in the privacy
of your own home.

3019 West Peterson Road
LOngbeach 1-1890
HERSHEY WEINSTEIN, President

LAURIE WEINSTEIN, Funeral Director

Be

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4/27 5/4/61—115

Page

31

�B‘nai Torah Women
Install Officers

At Party May 6
Newly-elected
officers
and
the
board of directors of B’nai Torah
Reform Temple Sisterhood will be
installed Saturday, May 6, at 12:30

p.m. in a gala luncheon
in Country
Grayslake.

Squire

to be held

Restaurant

in

Officers include: president, Mrs.
Robert
Silverman;
administrative
vice-president, Mrs. Martin Mandler; program and membership vicepresident, Mrs. Herbert Geist; ways
and
means.
vice-president,
Mrs.
Bertram Schwartz; recording secretary, Mrs. Bernard Gollub; corresponding secretary, Mrs. Marvin
Katz; financial secretary, Mrs. The-

odore

Kassel;

treasurer,

Mrs.

Le-

land Winter; past president, Mrs.
Manfred Kohlberg; honorary director, Mrs. Sholom Singer.

Theme

of the

afternoon

will be

“A Salute to Israel in Fashion and
Song,”
in honor
of Israel’s
13th
year of independence.
Sisterhood
members will serve as models in
a showing of Israeli imports. A program of Israeli folk music will be
presented
known

by

Sam

Alpert,

well

Israeli folk singer.

Reservations

for

the

afternoon

Soil's Too

Plan Smorgasbord

Of Mom-Daughter

At 1.C. Church

For 1,500 May 21

Banquet at Bethany
Possibly

the

only

church

in the

Chicago
area in which
men
are
sponsors
of the annual Spring
mother-daughter
banquet is
Bethany Methodist and Evangelical
United Brethren.
For
the
banquet
planned
for

Sunday,

May

7, at 6 o’clock in the

church, Laurel and McGovern, the
Bethany
Men’s
club,
headed
by
James
Bench,
will
prepare
and
serve the dinner.
The custom is
of several years’ standing at the
local church.
Special guests will be 15 to 20
girls of the Lake Bluff Children’s
Home, who will be daughter guests
of women
without
daughters
of
their own. Women who would like
to adopt
a Lake
Bluff daughter
for the banquet are invited to call
the church office, ID 2-3522.
Tickets for the banquet may be
obtained
from
members
of
the
Women’s Society of World Service,
who also are arranging transportation
for
the
Lake
Bluff
Home
guests.
are being handled by Mrs. Mangel,
877 Auburn Ct., ID 3-0706.

from

What every lawn owner should know

No

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tractor maker

A

smorgasbord

hundreds

dinner,

featuring

of foods, for 1,500 guests

is planned by the Voluntary FundRaising committee of Immaculate
Conception parish for Sunday, May
21, from 3 to 7 p.m. in the school
auditorium,
Deerfield
Rd.
near
Green Bay Rd.
The smorgasbord is the second
such event to be sponsored by the

committee headed by Mrs. Edmund
Amendola and John Lenzini. First
smorgasbord was served to more
than 1,200 members, families and
friends of the parish.
“The calorie-conscious will chuck
diet plans for the day when they
view the delightful specialties offered by parish cooks,’ Mrs. Hilbert E. Lang, general chairman for
the smorgasbord, predicts.
Assisting Mrs. Lang are the following
chairmen
of sub-commit-

tees: Mrs.

Ronald

Schlabowski

and

Mrs.
John
Lenzini,
smorgasbord
table:
Mrs.
Emmett
T. Moroney
and Mrs. A. V. Vole, coffee and
dessert table; Mrs. Vito Fiore, food
and kitchen; Mrs. George
Edson,
Swedish table; Mrs. Raymond DeMartini, waitresses and costumes;

Mr. and Mrs. Edward Brown, china
and cutlery.
Also, Mrs. Robert Philips, calling; Mrs. Joseph Patten, publicity;
Mrs. Adam Bernardi, finance; Mrs.
Bernard
Alchon,
tickets;
Mrs.
Amendola, arrangements; Mrs. Patrick
Sweeney,
co-chairman,
arrangements.
Tickets
may
be obtained from
any of the committee chairmen or
at Sunset Foods; reservations for
tickets may be made by calling Mrs.

Alchon at ID 2-9158.

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Tuesday

The Tuesday Evening group, the
Highland
Park
Presbyterian

church’s organization for business
and professional women, will meet
Tuesday evening, May 9, at
for its regular get-together.

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447 Roger Williams
Page

32

—

STOP

STORE

HOUSEWARES

eo

‘til Noon

9 A.M. — 1 P.M.

— TOYS

ID 2-4387

6:30

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8-7700

at the following dealers:

MUNDELEIN
Herschberger Implement
812 N. Lake Avenue
NORTHBROOK
Reiland &amp; Bree,
1415 Waukegan Rd.
BUFFALO GROVE
A. J. Firnbach

Store,

WAUKEGAN
Burris Implement Co.,
Rt. 3, Box 199

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WAUKEGAN

O’Leary’s Equipment &amp; Supply,
1817 Holdridge Rd.
ZION
Waukegan Equipment &amp; Supply

S &amp; L Home
7611

Htg.

Co., Inc.

W. Irving Park Rd., Chicago
Phone:

TU

Thursday,

9-8824

May

4, 1961

�sta

Re

eee

Nite

teepic Nie
oe
9) Sis

e

i i

et
aca

RE ee phe BeeA ot
a
Rae
aire

cutee

H

Roe

eo
rE
fa

ow ye

Wa

Ee,

ch

ROEee a

+e

;

Has Naw Position

Hearing

and Speech

Mrs. Robert Henner, 781 Judson
Ave., widow of the late Dr, Henner,

eo

a

é

Foundation

Dinner

Morton
Schamberg,
219
Cary
Ave., is president of the Foundation which
supports the Hearing

is
co-chairman
of
the
dinner
Speech
service
at Michael
planned
for the
Foundation
for |}and
Reese Hospital and Medical Center.
Hearing and Speech Rehabilitation
Currently, the Foundation is enofficers and directors Tuesday evegaged in a campaign for funds for
ning, May 2, in the Downtown club
Dr. Robert Henner Hearing
of the Sherman Hotel, Chicago. At 'the

that time,
bert

R.

they will meet

Herer,

the

new

Dr.

Gil- |and Speech Center in the hospital’s

director.

'new

surgical wing.

DRIVE CAREFULLY
THE LIFE YOU SAVE—MAY BE YOUR OWN!

David

Addresses

Convention

Roy D. Simon, CLU,
agent for
the Penn
Mutual
Life
Insurance
Company, Chicago, was a featured
speaker at the Agents Forum at the
1961 Mid-Year Meeting of The National Association of Life Underwriters. Mr. and Mrs. Simon were
among the nearly 600 life insurance
business representatives in attendance at the Galt Ocean Mile Hotel in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., April
16-20
live

for the NALU
at

1540

Sheridan

meeting.

They

Road.

Portraits
pastels or oils
painted from life by

Josephine C. Pearson

INQUIRIES

INVITED...
NO OBLIGATION

ID 3-1124 days, WI

;

|

5-5578 eves.

|

Canmann

David L. Canmann, 629 Kincaid
St., has been elected to the newly
created position of executive vice
president, Ekco Products Company.
Canmann has been financial vicepresident and treasurer since 1958.
Canmann
earned his B. A. degree at Carleton College, where he
was
a Phi Beta Kappa,
and received his L. L. B. degree from
the
University
of Michigan
law
school.
Canmann
is a member
of the
Illinois
Bar
Association,
Chicage
Bar Association, Northmoor Country Club, and a director of Sears
Roebuck Y.M.C.A.

Beagle

Bites

John
Stolkin,
9, of
205
Pine
Point Dr., was bitten on the arm
Wednesday
afternoon
last
week
while
teasing
a seven-month-old
beagle hound Lise Lauterstein was
walking on a leash in front of her
house at 219 Pine Point, Highland
Park police report.

Highland
Park
starts May 15 and
20.

Are you

Clean-Up
Week
runs through May

ready?

DECORATING?
We’re

the

people

to see.

Our Service Features...
THOROUGH

PREPARATION

Each surface is given the
proper basic work to insure
successful painting.
CAREFUL

WORKMEN

Your property

is protected

each step of the way.

C’mon! Leave your conscience at home
... you can be a happy thief and we'll
help you go straight afterwards. You'll
feel just like you’re stealing when you
see our low prices on new Valiants. So
what if you do have to leave your old
ear and a few bucks behind —as little as

BEST MATERIALS, PROPERLY
APPLIED
We pay for and get the best
paint and apply it as it’s supposed to be applied. The result — your work will last
longer.
You pay no more than for
ordinary
painting
and
because your work is done thoroughly it will retain its beavu-

$42 a month*

4, 1961

ae

You can make a clean getaway with a good used car, too

~

SEE YOUR PLYMOUTH-VALIANT DEALER

RY
Mf iDiwd 25544

May

can

* Based on Manufacturer’s Suggested Retail Price
for Valiant Model V-100 2-door Sedan and average
local carrying charges for 36 months, after % down.
Transportation and taxes (local and state) extra.
Terms may vary slightly with individual dealer’s
pricing policies.

Call us today.

Thursday,

you

steal new Plymouths, too. Happy heisting!

ty.

bloom painting
company

will do it. And,

:
4

LAKE

MOTORS,

INC.

1766 FIRST ST.
HIGHLAND PARK
ID 2-2500
Page

33

�a Pe

Re

ery ae ge

In Drake Honor Group
Robert

Adler,

son

Army

of

Mr.

and

Mrs, Charles Adler, 1392 St. Johns,
has

been

in the

MOTHERS
HAVE
ALWAYS
BEEN OUR
BEST
CUSTOMERS

selected

Drake

for

membership

chapter

of Omicron

Delta
Kappa,
national
honorary
leadership society for men at Drake
University, Des Moines.
Selection to membership in ODK
is based
on achievement
in five
major
phases
of
campus
life,
scholarship,
athletics,
social
and
religious affairs, publications and
speech, music and dramatic
arts.
Adler is a senior majoring in eco-

cali)

Coa

ee

Nd

ane

Trains Clerk

Private
enrolled
training

Howard
for
in

is now

advanced
individual
the
Army
Clerical

School
at Ft.
basic training
information

I. Bass

Knox,
at Ft.

office

Ky., after
Knox, the

there

reports.

In civilian life. he was an attorney for the Harlem Savings Association, Norridge, Ill. He is the
son of Mr, and Mrs. Saul Z. Bass
of 176 Indian Tree Dr.
nomics
arts.

in

the

college

of liberal

Nagel

Block

Carol

ea

‘

Short
i

ive

MOVAL
RE
/
Diathermy }

Wave

|

1893 Sheridan

Highland Park

OLIN

Te
ip
we

DEER

AA Tee TOURER

MHASH

New

EAA

PORE

APRN
NRC
Posie
Lies

Executive

Five
Highland
Park
residents
are listed in the 1961 Roster of the
Million Dollar Round Table of the
National Association of Life Underwriters. Every member of the
1961 Round Table must have sold
at least a million dollars of life
insurance in 1960 or must have attained Life membership by having
sold
a million
yearly
for
three
years
in succession,
Fewer
than
one percent of the world’s life insurance
agents are Round
Table
members.

Trevor
Mutual

Acacia

Mutual

D.
Weiss,
Life.

Life,

and

Massachusetts

Rd.

TD 2-88("

11)

i

Five Local Men in
“Million Dollar” Group

CLU,

PERMANENT

HAIR

ey

The
members
are
Millard
Grauer, CLU and Stanley L. Harris, both of Equitable Life of New
York; Roy D. Simon, CLU, Penn
Mutual Life; Leslie H. Warshell,

ociate of
Electrolysis Ass
OUNG BLOCK
ay
from face
geunwantes ij haix
ove
sa
ail rem
hairline
brows ® baped,
eye
s.
leg
s,
ot
arm
Neyrer Method
ed with. t he
restyl

OAR
Nang

Help
ism

defeat the threat of commun-

by buying

U, S.

Bonds.

Howard
Several

W.

new

Peterson

appointments

- There's plenty of hot water with a
ameless electric water heater

eT

THEY KNOW
THAT

ee

At
SKOKIE

VALLEY

LAUNDRY...

ae

se

3

FLAMELESS

CALL

Bs

ELECTRIC WATER HEATING
So Clean. So Safe, So Modern

Today’s New Fast Electrics heat water really hot—
really fast—enough for 6 tub baths in one hour!

SKOKIE
VALLEY
SU

Twin heating units in a Fast Electric Water Heater heat water so
fast—you always have plenty on

tap

(even if the shower and your
are going at the

automatic washer
same time).

Laundry &amp; Dry Cleaners, Inc.

One electric unit heats water at
the

bottom

of the tank,

at the top. Thus,

fk - Main Office and Plant:
i
IDlewood 2-3310
Deerfield Call Enterprise 1616
_ 512-518 Waukegan Ave.
Highwood

New

the other

Fast Elec-

trics supply 150° water faster than
any other kind.

counter, in a closet or down in the
basement. Electrics are not tied to
a chimney by a flue. They require
no long pipe runs or vents. There is
no pilot to light, no flames or fuel
to worry about.

Fast Electric Water Heaters last
longer than any other kind. You can
expect

service of 15 years or more

from any electric water heater you
buy.
For complete facts on the

INSTALLS
ANYWHERE New Fast _ special low rate on electric water
Electric Water Heaters go any- _ heating call our nearest office.
where you want—under the kitchen

CO Public Service C ompany
Page

34

to

executive
positions
recently
announced
by
Walter
L.
Cherry,
president of Cherry Electrical Products, 1650 Deerfield Rd., included
selection of Howard W. Peterson,
950 Half Day Rd. as treasurer.
The company develops and manufactures snap action switches for
the electrical appliance, automatic
coin vending, photocopying, automotive and other industries,

ms

PecmaneremeLe aTORE
Thursday,

May

4, 1961

�hd

Se

A a

NO

a)

Org,

Repay

iw

Grove School Pland

.

Day Camp Program
John W. Conzelman II, chairman
of the board of Grove School, a program for children with psychological and neurological learning disorders, has announced the beginning of a summer school and camping program for children throughout the county who require special
learning helps. Dates for the school
program
will
be
from
June
12
through July 28.

eatures!

“Z

cea

=

fit your kitchen
and your budget

4 to 13

NEW
Superba
VariCycle
Series
New push-button

es

_ Sescante

ease —
every

a wash

type

size

capacity

double
eee

i

ee

load.

wash,

action

for

New

NEW PUSH-BUTTON EASE! Rinse
and Hold—rinse for. partial loads

for

that removes food

Full Cycle
— the complete

rinse.

—individual

spotless drying. New luxurilook.

Choice

wash,

rinse and dry. -Utility and Utensil

Rinsing Agent Dispenser
for

ous

particles with-

out hand rinsing. Holds and stores
until you accumulate a full load.

king-

12. New

triple

seaciaes

®

e

DISHWASHERS

treatment

utensils.

for

of fronts?

NEW Imperial Series Kingsize capacity for 12. Dual
‘ wash. Choice of finishes.
Rinsing Agent Dispenser
optional,

NEW KING-SIZE CAPACITY! New
load-as-you-like racks. Capacity for
12 place settings (NEMA standards). Two-position upper rack
with adjustable dividers adapts to
big pieces ... variable loads.

Bites

Cora Durschlag, 9, of 460 Lincoln Ave., was bitten on the left
wrist last Thursday
by a tomcat
owned by James Ross of 1355 St.

NEW DOUBLE WASH, TRIPLE
RINSE! KitchenAid now scrubs
twice (or power pre-rinses and a
single wash) ... then rinses three
times. Detergent is automatically

Johns Ave., while playing in a yard
Highland
ner

d.
NOTICE

NEW Custom

_ Ald traditional features,

STEPHANIE
JAMES P. MOORE
Attomey for Plaintiff
9 Seuth County Street
Waukegan, Illinois

May

4, 1961

easy built-in installation with

pus h

a

z
Seen * SERIAL

button.;.

PERROTT

hhitchenAid
FOR

®

'61

dishwas

DISPL
. N ae

lf you’re remodeling, include the

ry

new IMPERIAL

od
———

f

OOS)

pA
SE pM i Bodot
a2
includes wood.

NEW

DISHWASHERS

TELS

NEW LUXURIOUS LOOK! Modern

_ kitchen. Come in and see all that new KitchenAid offers you.

ON

Clerk

:

Guards keep water filter-clean. Wide variety of front finishes to match any

by

hhitchenAid.

2
OIE SA NOMS

20—FACTORY TRAINED TECHNICIANS TO SERVE YOU—20
“Largest Discount House on the North Shore”

RADIO

HIGHWOOD

wih:

oe en, [1D 2-6260
Waukegan Ave., Highland Park ,f2:22" Allseries
2631
1% Blocks North of Moraine Rd. — East of Tracks
Day Wednesday
AMPLE

4/13-27

Thursday,

-"_

NOTICE

SULTHIN,

Rinsing

ce

' More new dishwasher features and models than ever before. All have the big,
_ blue lifetime wash arm that scrubs with controlled, high-velocity wash action
».. and exclusive Flo-Thru sanitized hot-air drying for even heat. Dual Filter

All persons

STATE
OF
ILLINOIS,
COUNTY
OR
LAKE,
SS:
IN THE
CIRCUIT
COURT
OF
LAKE
COUNTY,
ILLINOIS,
IN
CHANCERY:
ANITA
MARIE
GREGORY,
Plaintiff,
vs. HAROLD
THOMAS
GREGORY, Defendant, General No. 75143.
Affidavit,
showing
that the
defendant,
Harold Thomas Gregory, is concealed within this State or resides out of this State so
that process cannot be served upon said
defendant, Harold Thomas Gregory, having
been filed in the office of the Clerk of this
Court, NOTICE IS, THEREFORE, HEREBY GIVEN to said Harold Thomas Gregory that the plaintiff in the above-entitled
cause filed her praecipe for summons
in
suit for divorce on April 4, 1961; that summons was duly issued out of the said Court
against you as provided by law, and that
said suit is still pending.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE ADVISED that
the Complaint for Divorce has been filed
against you on the 4th day of April, 1961,
in accordance with the statute in such case
made and provided.
NOW, THEREFORE, unless you, Harold
Thomas
Gregory, the said defendant, file
your appearance and answer to the Complaint on or before the 30th day of May,
1961, as provided by law, a default may be
entered against you at any time after that
date and a Decree entered in accordance
with the prayer of said Complaint.

wash.

for spotless dry-

\

desiring may file objections in said court
before said day and may appear on the
hearing and make their defense.
HARRY EARHART
Officer appointed to make said assessment
Dated at Highland Park, Illinois, April
27th, A.D. 1961
4/27 5/4/61—116

PUBLICATION

each

ii RGR REE rm

be

for

Dispenser

ing under any water conditions.

7
AEC

and after date of first voucher.

Real value.

Variety of finishes. Kitchen

Agent

Ie BEY

NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
to all
persons interested that the City Council of
Highland Park, County of Lake and State
of Lllinois, having ordered the construction
of lateral sanitary sewers in Priscilla Avenue,
Greenwood
Avenue,
Euclid
Avenue,
Burchell Avenue, Warbler Place, Old Trail
Road and Llewellyn Avenue
in Highland
Park, Lake County, Illinois, the ordinance
for the same being on file in the office of
the City Clerk of said City and having
applied to the County Court of Lake County
for an assessment of the costs of said improvement
according
to benefits,
and
an
assessment thereof having been made and
returned to said court, the final hearing
thereon will be held on the 12th day of
May, 1961, at the hour of 9:30 A.M. (central daylight time) or as soon thereafter as
the business of the court will permit.
_ Said assessment is payable
in ten (10)
installments,
with interest at the rate of
six (6) per centum on all installments from

released

eS

Si

EER

370

fo

$
a5
aay
OTL TIEN
IEEE
IE LILLE
TERA

No.

A

i

ASSESSMENT

:

Sei

ban ee
INSTI

SPECIAL

nape

ane

IONE

Ave.,
told.

UTIL

at
1384
Linden
Park police were

AE SPORE TI LRT

Tomcat

KhtittchenAid __ these

ee
OE
ee

Ages

Conzelman said that the school
conduct
learning
and play activities for children from ages four
through fourteen. Learning levels
will be arranged for the children
and play will be conducted in social groups. The enrollment for the
school will be limited to twenty
children and classes to five in each
group.
Parents will have to plan their
own
transportation
pools
to and
from school, but the school bus will
be used to ferry the children back
and forth for swims and to take
them on many tours of the surrounding
area. Art, music,
playground games, as well as some daily
formal work in reading, language,
numbers
and writing will be included in the school’s activities.
Parents
who
are
interested
should get in touch with the school
(EM 2-7524, or write to 950 N. St.
Mary’s Road, Libertyville) as soon
as possible because of the limited
enrollment.

Look at

E
INA OO

a

ei Se ie

ihe
i

FREE

PARKING

AT

ALL

TIMES

5/4/61—97

Page

35

�k
r
o
P
d
n
a
l
h
g
i
H
f
o
y
a
Everyd

Mrs.

tired”

Josie

from

Guglielmi

the

position

has

*

“re-

of house-

keeper at the Highland Park Hosiptal, but will remain in charge of
the laundry. The expansion of the
hospital necessitates that the duties
of housekeeper
which
previously
included the laundry, be divided.
Mrs. Guglielmi preferred to remain
with the laundry.

g
=
O
ms

Pee,

aooeens

fee

fi

Lots

of Linen

Daily laundry requires handling
of some 400 bed sheets, 400 hand
towels, 400 bath towels, 800 wash
cloths, 600 pillow cases, 20 blankets,
bedspreads, nurses uniforms, maids
uniforms,
doctors
coats,
interns
suits, laundresses uniforms, maintenance mens suits,
pharmacy
jackets, volunteer womens
aprons
and smocks.
Mrs.
Guglielmi
has been
with
the hospital over 15 years.

Contrary to popular belief— cataract
is not a cancer, nor is it a film that grows

over the front of the eye. It is a cloudiness
that forms within the lens of the eye, making
it opaque so that objects are not visible through
it. Fear of cataracts is largely unjustified. Drops
will not “cure” nor will any other medical method
known today — other than surgery. A delicate operation,
of course, but with modern techniques and knowledge,
not a frightening one. Following cataract extraction
and proper correction with glasses, good vision is
the usual rule. The proper fit, type of lens, grinding
of lenses to eliminate unnecessary weight of
glasses of cataract patients are highly important. We at H.O.V., consider ourselves

specialists in this field.
CONSULT AN EYE PHYSICIAN

(M.D.) FOR EYE EXAMINATION

che House of Vision ™-

in need of help?
Hear Wilson M. Riley,*
C.S.B., of Kansas City, Missouri, speak on “Christian
Science: God’s Ever-present
Kingdom Revealed.” Free
Public Lecture. Monday,
May 15, at 8 p.m. First
Church

of

Christ,

*Member
of the Board of Lectureship of
Mother Church, The First Church of Christ,
entist, Boston, Massachusetts.

SHERIDAN ROAD, HIGHLAND PARK
610 CHURCH STREET, EVANSTON
135 NORTH WABASH AVENUE, CHICAGO
@H.O.Y.

QZ—-3a

Q2Z2Z—-AOmMZae

-P&lt;Paxknm

1891

@
@
aN

ms

soe

Figs 4h

ear
a

The
Sci-

A Gift for
Each Mother!
An

invitation

to be

GRADING
ROADS

CRANE

RENTAL
@ DRIVEWAYS
@ PARKING LOTS

CALL FOR AN ESTIMATE WITHOUT OBLIGATION

GLADER &amp; TAZIOLI
EXCAVATORS

ID 2-3785

our

guest

at

no

charge

for any future Sunday buffet dinner this summer.

$3.25 a person
(children

@

a

Scientist,

Highland Park, 493 Hazel
Avenue.

Craftsmen in Optics

yy

If you think Monday is gruesome at your home, consider
what the housekeeping staff of Highland Park Hospital faces
daily except Sunday in the giant laundry which keeps everything washed and ironed for patients and staff in the institution. The truck filled to overflowing with clean linen is
just one of many that leaves the laundry room each day.

Brunch

also

served

under
from

12—$1.75)
10:00

a.m.

to

12

noon

Our buffet is a sumptuous feast with steaming

hot

chafing dish delicacies, prime roast beef and a tempting array of cold meats,

salads

and

desserts.

Make

as many trips through the buffet line as you wish.
RESERVATIONS

SUGGESTED

Telephone ID 2-4444

oQrai
ON

THE

LAKE

©

HIGHLAND

ne
PARK,

SLLINOIS

Thursday, May

4, 1961

�Let us reflect, for

a moment,

on the things

that beckon a man to Cadillac.
There is, to begin with, the car’s grace
and majesty of styling—a temptation that
is difficult indeed to deny.
There is its luxury and its comfort—
eloquent invitations to ownership all by
themselves.
There is its masterful performance and
its reputation for quality — irresistible
attractions in today’s world of cars.

VISIT

YOUR

And

now,

more

than

ever,

Cadillac’s

economy ranks high among those important

considerations that lead inevitably to the
“car of cars’.
For

a Cadillac

has,

over

the

years,

be-

come progressively more practical to own
and to operate.
The price of a 1961 Cadillac is remarkably reasonable in relation to other cars.
In terms of value received, it might well
represent the greatest bargain of all.

LOCAL

AUTHORIZED

And consider how well a Cadillac holds
that value—and makes your Cadillac a
sound investment for whatever length of
time you might choose to own it.
Then, too, the car is unusually conservative in its use of gasoline—and as free from

maintenance as sound engineering and
careful craftsmanship can make it.
Visit your dealer soon for the facts.
You’ll find, we are certain, that even
Cadillac’s economy says ‘‘yes’’!

CADILLAC

DEALER

CADILLAC MOTOR CAR DIVISION
2050 FIRST STREET
Thursday,

May

4, 1961

®

HIGHLAND

PARK
Page

37

�Re

Pa

Te

Roe

ne eee)

aT

ean Moe

ee

Boy Scouts’ Summer
Camping Program Is
Getting Under Way

Summer
Joel

AY

he i

9

i

U5

Re

it

9

atVilla Moderne

i

FASHION SHOW

a
is

Luncheon
Every Thurs. 1-2:30 p.m.

4

Reservations

HEIDELBERG

in the

RATHSKELLER

Suggested

i

In Our New Cocktail Lounge

4
iy

THE

THREE

the

HUNGRY FOUR

TWINS

Ray, Len &amp; Doug
Musi¢e — Vocals — Comedy
Tues, Thru Sat.

.

6 Private Dinin
Accommodations

Tues.

Rooms
S$ te 500

Reservations

14 W.

VE 5-3353

Fi

date

have

take

sin.

sign

up

NEW!

6-8080

who
and

to

want to go
for
troops

attend

as

units.

of

Goldstein,

Mr.

560

and

(iust west of State)

social

ma-

practical

experience

research

undertake this project, Joel is assisting Dr, Haner
on a research
project during June, at Newton, Ia.

in “Dad's”

Wallace

INSTANT

B.

side

Place,

Lois

Friday

Weekend

Shlopack,
joined

on

21

his

the

Lakeof

Monticello College in Alton, IIL.,
for the women’s
college
annual
Dads’ Weekend. Over 270 fathers
of
Monticello
students
attended
the weekend program planned for

PAINT
flat finish for walls and ceilings

“dad”
April
28-April
Shlopack
accompanied

For nearest Jewel dealer, see
Phone Book Yellow Pages,
or phone SEeley 3-2430.

band

for

the

30.
her

Mrs.
hus-

event.

MODERN

Wisconsin

CONVENIENCES

quiet,

Excellent

comfortable

16 foot boats,

were:

Mrs.

luncheon

held

April

William

Buch-

Irl Marshall,

Mrs.

Mrs.

Maus

Smith,

Lilly

elected

Roland

Zumbahl.

for

a

years.
Remaining

first

on

Har-

They
term

the

and

were
of

two

Board

and

being re-elected for a second term
of two years were Mrs. Herbert
F. D’Sinter, Mrs, David Jenkins,
Mrs. Theo Osborn, Sr. and Mrs.

Edwin Rowe. Re-elected for a third
term was Mrs. Lewis Winston. A
nominating
committee
to
serve

for the year 1961 and 1962 was
made up of Mrs. Herbert D’Sinter
Mrs.

A.

J. Gaudreau

from

the

Board and Mrs. Carl Howard,

Mrs.

Edmond

John

Leach

Froelich

from

Mrs,

the

James

president,
dent-elect,

and

Mrs.

membership.

Snow,

the

retiring

introduced
the presiMrs. Robert Billeter,

who will take office in the May
meeting.
Following
the
business
meeting, a skit was presented by
club girls entitled
“Who
Knows
Mrs, Powers?”

Margaret

Hillis,

Chicago

Ses

in a RUSTIC

director

Symphony

chorus,

will

lead

the

of

%

netka Community
at 8:30 p.m.

SETTING

North

Shore

housekeeping cottages on Big Spider
best beds, modern appliances.

House

May

Lake.

Day.”

Guardian
The

a

eye

your
_

of Nature's Most Precious Gift . . . Your Eyes
physician

is qualified

need for glasses and

qualified

to detect

to distinguish

medical

between

treatment.

early symptoms

He

of threatened

is

eye

diseases and check their progress. The eye physician
can
help you protect your eyes for the years ahead
by

proper examination at regular intervals.

Almer Coe

will be glad to provide the names of eye physicians.

;
J:

Fashion
:
Brief

Es
ace

fi
a

on the smart coat

coverage taking over

F

y
p
ae

||
Mere

SA

now, points with
praise to our nubby
wool tweed topper...

BO
ee

a

fully lined

In answer to the requests

‘

e

of

‘a

since /886

in

a
‘

each

frames

.

store.
for

men,

accounts

yom

in red, sapphire, white,

|
—

its perfect details,
°
a)

°

Fashion

bone

women

navy
’

invited

Sizes

10 to

gold
1

or
:

pale olive.
18.

29.95

Mail and phone orders filled

the “Finest in Glasses

‘

prized

for its glamorous ways,

and children at $5 to $10
Charge

and

and

eee sae

budget gyorg

,
%

physicians

Se
ee@
ave
oO

e

.

eye

EVANSTON (next to Cooley's Cupboard)
1629 Orrington

Open

Monday and Thursday until 9:00 P.M.

SKOKIE,

North

Mall, Old Orchard

Open Monday, Thursday and Friday until 9:00 P.M.

_

CHICAGO,

10 North

Michigan

Avenue
OLD

Page 38
ee

ORCHARD

at Skokie

17

The choir, which is under the
regular direction of Carol Hyman,
of Highland
Park, will present
Brahms’
“Nanie,”
a
group
of
motets, a group of madrigals and
Mandel‘s
“Ode
on St. Cecilia’s

Sand beach. General fishing (musky, panfish, bass, walleyes).
Spring fed lake. Write Tall Timbers, Rt. 1, Box
117-H, Hayward, Wis.

|

the

Orchestra

Chamber Choir in a choral workshop-concert at Matz Hall, in Win-

Reduced Rates on Vacation Rentals Beginning Before June 24.

Clean,

meeting

meeting

Workshop-Concert

TALL TIMBERS
117-H

were elected
of Directors

anan, Mrs.

consider:

Rt. 1, Box

Ul

aha

Chicagoan To Direct
NS Chamber Choir in

JUNE VACATIONERS

Hayward

NY

v4 Fa

old

daughter,

campus

Annual

business

Miss

in
to

the

and

techniques.

Prior to going to Washington

Take

SAT

Board

Five new members
to the YWCA Board

Ramb-

a senior psychology

science

Oe

RU Ate

To YWCA

and

makes painting.
“50 easy!

JEWED

RANDOLPH

EYE

son

The six Fellows will take part
in several current studies at the
Bureau, which is a private, nonprofit organization devoted to basic
and applied research in the social
sciences. The training program will

provide

SS

Members

27. They

to

will

SS

Oe

Elect New

training
fellowships
from
the
Bureau of Social Science Research,
Washington, D.C.

which

Sat.

3 Private Dining Rooms
accommodating
50-250 people

On EDENS EXPRESSWAY
at LAKE COOK RD.

BR 3-4626

Thru

Goldstein,

Harold

GTN MOTs

ar f ENE

in the North Shore Area Council
summer
camping
program _ at
Camp
Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan
in Wiscon-

they

room for Scouts
as
individuals,

plus the
SINGING WAITERS

Wins

Fellowship

ler Lane,

SRR PS

Tey

at

District

that

Four top leaders have been secured to conduct the camp, providing the programs, preparing meals
and
maintaining
camp
facilities.
Camping period starts June 29 this
year. Officials announce that more
than 1,300 Scouts have registered
for
the
program,
but
there
is

“International Cuisine
at Moderate Prices"

TRERC

jor at Grinnell College, in Iowa,
is one of six recipients of summer

Shore

indicated

ar

Sy

STUBS cS

Ss We isPR 1 fe Nn

part

Lake

it

Mrs.

We

ak tin)

Joel Goldstein

More than 175 Boy Scouts of the

¥yt,

Pe

REP
pe:

x.

* ORchard 6-3060
Thursday, May

4, 1961

�Pa en aes

WC?

ne

Prominent

Central

Speakers on Panel
Two Highland Parkers will participate as panelists at a weekend
institute on “Judaism: A Heritage

in Crisis,’ May 27-28.
They are Rabbi Anrold
Wolf,

spiritual

leader

of

gation Solel, and Prof.
1515

Arbor.

Prof.

ern

Jacob
Congre-

Jacob Scher,

Scher

fessor of journalism

is

pro-

at Northwest-

University.

More

than 800 young

adults and

adults from
all over the Middle
West are expected to attend. The
Institute, first of a projected se-

ries, will be held at the Bernard
Horwich Center, 3003 W. Touhy,
Chicago.

be

Among the keynote speakers will
Dr. Bruno Bettelheim, famed

psychoanalyst;
Rabbi
Ira
LEisenstein, executive director of the Reconstructionist
movement
in the
United
States;
Rabbi
Zalman

Schachter, renowned Hasidic rabbi; Prof. Daniel Boorstin, awardwinning historian; and Rabbi Jacob
J. Weinstein, recently appointed to
the President’s Committee on Equal
Employment Opportunity.
Following each keynote speaker,

the audience
smaller panel

will participate
discussions led

prominent figures in
Jewish Community.

They

include

the

Rabbi

in
by

Chicago

Wolf

Pvt. Edward J. Moylett,
Edward
M.
Moylett,
421

and

Prof. Scher; Rabbi David Polish of
Beth Emet, Evanston; and the Honorable David Tesher, Consul Gen-

ave.,

recently

completed

the eight week
radio relay
earrier operation
course
at
Southeastern
Signal School,

Gordon,
soldier

Ga,
was

The

trained

and
The
Fort

26-year-old
to

operate

and

in Show

Miss Jill Lauer, daughter of Mr.
and

Mrs.

Street,

Richard

will

duction

take

Lauer,

part

“Diamond

185

Vine

in the

pro-

Flashback,”

day, May

campus

building.

Miss

Army

student

technical

director

1960, and

com-

7, in Harrison

pleted basic training at Fort Leon.

Show,

ard

committee.

Wood,

Mo.

the

75th Anniversary Spring Festival
Show at National College of Education,
Evanston,
The
Festival
will be presented at 3 p.m., Sun-

maintain radio relay systems and
carrier equipment. He entered the
in November,

and

is also

on

Hall,

main

Lauer
the

of

is
the

writing

Reserve District No. 7
Report of Condition of the
FIRST
NATIONAL
BANK
OF HIGHLAND
PARK
In the State of Mlinois, at the Close of Business on April 12, 1961 Published in Response
to Call Made by Comptroller of the Currency, Under Section 5211, U.S. Revised Statutes
Charter

No.

14390

ASSETS
1 . Cash, balances with other banks, and cash items in process of collection $ 3,959,376.55
United States Government obligations, direct and guaranteed ...............04 13,169,356.13
7,319,332.52
Obligations of States and political subdivisions
60,000.00
Corporate stocks (including $60,000.00 stock of Federal Reserve bank) ....
6,523,357.24
. Loans and discounts (including $2,679.81 overdrafts)
2.00
y: .- Bank premises owned $1.00, furniture and fixtures $1.00 ........2.....-..::-c++
313,046.65
1 . Other assets

4z ..
12.

TOTAL

$31,344,471.09

ASSETS
LIABILITIES

13. Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corporations .............. $12,011,526.08
14. Time and savings deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corporations 14,327,126.70

15. Deposits of United
16. Deposits of States

States Government
and political subdivisions

18. Certified and officers’ checks,
19.
TOTAL
DEPOSITS
(a) Total

demand

(b) Total

time

149,039.76
1,762,484.53

etc.

288,720.41

TOTAL

deposits

......................-- $14,327,126.70

ue

29.

TOTAL

30.

TOTAL

CAPITAL
LIABILITIES

the slip that
compliments your

bra... while
compliments

your figure!
always
never

Registrations

for

the

Institute

nard

Horwich

Center.

flattering

—

flattening...

seam-shaped

smoothly

to

over

fit

your

bra.

$28,965 ,386.09
CAPITAL

stock,

ACCOUNTS

total par $1,000,000.00

CAPITAL

....2.......... cesses: $ 1,000,000.00
1,000,000.
379,085.00

sizes 32-38

$ 2,379,085
.00
ACCOUNTS.

sizes

32-40

in white,

ecru mist or fresh peach.

ACCOUNTS
AND

Average

Short

in white only.

Matching half slip,

3.95

..u............::0c000 $31,344,471.09

eral of Israel.
are now being accepted at the Ber-

it

426,488.61

LIABILITIES

25. Capital Stock: (a) Common
26. Surplus
27. Undivided
profits

Laros

5.95

14,211,770.78

savings

23. Other liabilities
24.

COMPLI-FIT
by

$28,538,897.48

deposits

and

ei
A nl Wa

To Have

Aids

Radio Training

Army
son of

LN li OO OR AR

Institute

Be AE

Ends

Judaism

(Lingerie)

MEMORANDA
31 . Assets pledged or assigned to secure liabilities and for other purposes ....$ 2,215,000.00
413,279.29
32. (a) ihe st as shown above are after deduction of reserves of ................-.ART, Cashier of the above-named bank, do hereby declare that this
report of condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and ag © 88

C. HART

The
not

biggest

lack

of

parking
space.

problem
It’s

lack

drivers with enough skill to
into them neatly and safely.

is
of

We, the undersigned
declare that it has been
is true and correct.

directors
examined

attest the correctness of this report of condition and
by us and to the best of our knowldege and belief
FRED A. CUSCADEN)
IVY J. SHUMAN
) Directors.
GEORGE
R. STONE
)

get

Garnett
¢ Co.

5/4/61—117

te

HER FIRST

Just

Another

SERVICE

of

RAFFERTY TRANSFER &amp; STORAGE CO.
$

ID 2-0507

2123 Green Bay Rd., Highland Park

SEND
N.A.V.L. Agents
_ Thursday,
Pw

May
\

4, 1961

FOR YOUR

FREE “HOW

TO

Local &amp; Long Distance Moving

BUY A MOVE”

BOOKLET
Storage

�Ne a uy ae uenoe

PUBLICATION

NOTICE

2 OF NLLINOIS COUNTY OF
Ss:
CIRCUIT COURT

zi

COUNTY.
ILLINOIS,
eet!
RAYMOND
FF. WORTH,
SHIRLEY WORTH, Defendett, v3. No. 75188.
ffidavit
showing
that
the
defendant,
Worth, resides out of this State so
SF shohgaed cannot
be served upon
said
ant. Shirley Worth, having been filed
fice of the Clerk of this Court,

ADE

IS,

THEREFORE,

HEREBY

to said Shirley
Worth
that the
iff in the above-entitled
cause filed
raecipe for Summons for Suit for Dion April 10, 1961; that summons was

RNA

bectine

Highland
Neighbors of
in the VFW
ning, May 10,
ing
to the

Mey

10

Local Women Will
Attend Conference

Park
Camp,
Royal
America, will meet
hall Wednesday eveat 8 o’clock, accordoracle,
Mrs.
Nick

Mrs.
Angelo
Maddalon,
1960
Second St., Miss Barbara Lee EIwood, 810 Laurel Ave., and Mrs.
Howard Early, Northbrook, of the
Women
of the
Moose,
Highland
Park Chapter No. 806, will attend
the Academy
of Friendship State
Conference
in
Quincy,
May
6

Marino.

EN
sf

lly issued

out of the said Court

as provided
“Ae

by

law,

» THEREFORE,

ec

NS

that

said

suit

nding.

BE

ADVISED

through 8.
The
three
ladies
will
receive
their Academy
of Friendship degrees for the activities and services as either chairmen or officers
in the Women of the Moose. This
group is the first in a number of

that

STEPHANIE
SULTHIN,
Clerk
JAMES P. MOORE
Attorney for Plaingiff
~Y
with the statute in such case 9 South County
Street
Waukegan, Illinois
W,
V
THEREFORE, unless you, Shirley | Ph one: Ontario 2-5665
, the said defendant,
file your apnce
and answer to the Complaint on
4/20-27 5/4/61—104

E Goshisint

ainst

and

against

or before the 20th day of May, 1961, as
provided by law, a default may be entered
against you at any time after that date and
a Decree entered in accordance with the
prayer of said Complaint.

you

for

on

the

Divorce
10th

day

has

of

been

filed

April,

in

Money

Missing

Mrs.

Local YWCA Namés

Shirlee

Kineaid

St.

Bernstein

reported

of

the

disap-

pearance of $23 from a fishing
tackle box in her house Wednesday

afternoon

formed

last

Highland

week;

Park

her
once-a-week
Tallie, 38, address
at the same time.

and

maid,
Sadie
unknown,
left

years to bring this honor to the local chapter.
In
ceremonies
at the
regular
,meeting in the Moose Home, May
16,
Mrs.
Josephine
Volpendesta,
graduate Regent of the Women of
the Moose,
will present the trio
with Academy of Friendship rings.

WH

The

Antique
Shop
‘isaint little antique shop where you
1 be pleased to find the unusual in
lassware,
silver, china,
bric - a - brac,
pewter,
furniture,
prints
and
ntings at reasonable prices.

REAL

| WILLIAM PITTENGER
|

7—&gt;

a"

1084 W. EVERETT ROAD
LAKE

FOREST,

ILLINOIS

Sales-A ppraisals
Mortgages
TELEPHONES:
|
LAKE FOREST—CEdar 4-0249
| DEERFIELD—Windsor 5-0308
DRAPERIES

J &amp; K ADDRESSING

* Custom
Furniture

0 Linden Ave.

ID 2-3430

Hubbard

Licensed

from
To

A

Stump

a Smile

[+ Septic Tanks, pig...
ie
a
|

_

ID 2-2883

.

LANDSCAPING

q

F.

D.

CLAVEY

ee &gt;, NURSERIES

4i.

ee

|
§

4

|

CORNER

CENTRAL

_
Established
Office

and

WI

1885

&amp;

Leading
Official

Watch

Inspector

f

Deerfield

etc.

&amp;

DECORATING

PAINTING
PARK,

ILL.

° os

cab

stg

it Serlea

t

Wall

Western

R.R.

Washing

BERNARDI

2-8917

ELECTRONICS
REPAIR

R

c

,; YWCAs
pants
the

Highland

Park,

IIlinois

A DIVISION OF MIDWAY LIMOUSINE SERVICE
IDlewood

3-0833

of New

the

United

but
a number
of world
This year’s special partici-

will

be

YWCA’s

Exchange,

the
Latin

23

members

America

the first such

exchange

ASK US ABOUT

contact

lenses

TU
ACTUAL

SIZR

We have all of the newest
types. H.0.V., you know, was
one of the two pioneers in
the successful development
of contact lenses in this country.
Here your contacts are
custom made, especially
for you, from start to finish
in our own laboratory by
expert technicians. And with
your House of Vision
contact lenses go unlimited
attention for as long as
you wear them.

RADIO CONTROLLED
¢

FCC

¢

1 Ye. Guarantee

Approved

RCA SERVICE COMPANY

HI 6-5080

of

U.S.A.

to be sponsored by a voluntary organization
in the
United
States.
Some three thousand YWCA delegates from the US and abroad are
expected to attend.

Let’s talk about it!
Phane for appointment,

Or 4,000 Miles |/| GaRAGE DOOR OPERATORS

Avenue,

throughout

States,
leaders.

A

* U.L. Approved

Second

Dobson,

service and genuine solicitous

SERVICE

by experienced cooler specialist . . . using modern factory methods

1883

W.

INTERIOR - EXTERIOR

Craftsmen

Sepeneenne Ve Dery

Dan

4-3034

Designers
e

RADIATOR

University,

Evanston

UNiversity

AUTO RADIATORS
AUTO

Dr.

Belts

722 Main

ID

MIDWAY

Columbia

Fabric Shop

PAINTING

5-0035

West Deerfield Road

Vogue

TREE EXPERTS

REPAIR

for the North

at

York
University.
The
study
affirmed the belief that the Association can
continue
best to serve
America’s girls and young women
as a separate, autonomous women’s
organization.
This
triennial
meeting
of the
membership will bring together not
only
official
delegates
from
the

&amp; Machine Button Holes

Nursery

;

Convention
May
8-13 in Denver,
Colo.
Miss
Aileen Memler
and Miss
Musa I. DeMouth, executive director, will be the two delegates. Miss
Memler, who is president of the
Highland Park Friendship club for
working girls, also will attend the
Young
Adult Assembly
which
is
being held simultaneously.
Major focus of the triennial parley will be the role and responsibility of the YWCA in the sixties, Miss
DeMouth, said. Heading the list of
speakers
are
Dr.
Allan
Nevins,
noted
historian,
DeWitt
Clinton,
Professor
Emeritus
of American

Buttons —- Hand Bound

FIREPLACE
woopd

HIGHLAND

Repair

Sweaters,

Shirts,

Pleating —

Jewelers

Jewelry

SERVICE

Blouses,

Towels,

/

SHERIDAN

Watch

and
ares

Linens,

cutter

TELEPHONE ID 2-2028

- Commercial

454 Central

a

of Highland Park will attend
organization’s 22nd National

MONOGRAMMING
On

Phones:
ID 3-1622 &amp; KI 6-2292

/

_* Rubbish

Residential

stump

WING’S

ok er 5.

and

Pumped

Serving Highland Park
Over 40 Years

NOT SORRY

JEWELER — WATCH

Basins

Dependable Service Is Our Quality

State
power

FEEDING
TRIMMING
CA BLING
PATCHING

REFUSE

With

the

new

BE SAFE
TREE REMOVAL
POWER SPRAYING

Shevings

SERVICE.
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Catch

Septic Tanks

DRESSMAKERS’

Now is the time to order
DORMANT
SPRAY
and
DUTCH
ELM CONTROL

SERVICE

HIGHLAND

by
a

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Deerfield Road

GARBAGE AND RUBBISH
REMOVAL

WING’S TREE EXPERTS
Introducing

ID

1683

BONDED

Woods

DISPOSAL

Phone

EXPERTS

INSURED

We Custom Make

Spreads

&amp; LETTER SHOP, INC.

TREE

SERVICE

FRED A. COLEMAN
COMPANY

Automatic Machine-Production
ADDRESSING
°¢ INSERTING
e
SEALING
POSTAGE METERING
e
FOLDING
Mimeographing
© Adv. Inserts Imprinted
MAILING LISTS MAINTAINED
«+ PHOTO COPYING
Automatic Addressing by Name Covering:
Highland Park, Highwood, Deerfield, Glencoe, Northbrook, Lake Forest
&amp; Lake Bluff
701 PLEASANT AVE.
¢
PH: ID 2-7717
Wedding Invitations
«
Personalized Stationery
«
Business Cards

ui
INTERIORS

Bed

DISPOSAL

SERVICES

Fast,

otwe

* Upholstery
* Carpets

SHOP

“A Complete Letter Shop Facility”

&amp; FABRICS

Draperies
Slip Covers

tion
the

of
the
Associa-

and Dr. Charles H. Wesley, president, of Central State College at
Wilberforce, Ohio.
Program for women and girls in
today’s
scene
will be the major
subject of discussion. The National
Board of the YWCA recently completed a self study under the direction of a leading American sociolo-

BE DONE

LETTER

REAL ESTATE

|]

Two.
representatives
Young Women’s Christian

gist,

ESTATE

.

Two Delegates to
Aitend Convention

History

IT CAN

W.
H. LINCOLN
Appraiser &amp; Auctioneer
One Mile North of Route 45
On Highway 21—Halfday, Il.

in-

police that

ANTIQUES

Lincoln

605

The

ae

House of Vision
Craftsmenin Opeies

1091 SHERIDAN RD., HIGHLAND PARK
610 CHURCH ST., EVANSTON
198 NORTH WABASH AVE. CHICAGO
On.a¥,

‘Thursday, May 4, 196

�Vani... fle) icrininating
Mother's Day . . . or any day
es

Sunday, May 14
a
On Daan
‘ci
5
Treat Mother to a Delicious Brunch _

o

oe
git
PATTERSON

a
PAT

‘
EN aie eAheaLs
AT
DINNER
SUNDAY

/S

at the

STEAK HOUSE

Home-Made

Your Choice of:

Green Pepper
Cheese

Onions

Cheese &amp; Sausage

Sausage

Pepperoni

OPEN

11

AM.

TO

Lobster

(with

(with trimmings)

Peerre

fo

Northbrook or

ie

Chicken

Northbrook,

Table leans

Open at Noon Sunday.

q

Edens, Skokie &amp; County Line Rd.

5-9835

VErnon

artist

intimate
in sae Round

Parad

joins

Yi;

5-1 611

VERNON

Hl.

Beef paving:

th

joy

Uy

Excalibur

.

saris

(77 ,

FREE Ice Cubes with Each Liquor Purchase

Dinner

Include:

Specialties

|

We deliver any $10.00 or more order to

Arthur

King

of

Court

Our

mie

170 Skokie Highwoy

5-3614

VErnon

oP

:
Highland Park, oe

Illinois

Northbrook,

75c PER PLATE

4 AM.

Highway

Skokie

40

trimmings)

11:00 a.m. — 2:00 p.m.

U.S. STEAKS

CHOICE

Steak

LUNCHEONS

Mushroom
Anchovies

ALSO

T-Bone

3a new and excitingly different restaurant

|

Barbecued Chicken (with trimmings) .... $1.25

Pizzas

amelot

:

Cut Rate Saber Store

KEY

CORAL

Charlie Wenk’s
tea house
Cantonese and Chinese Carry-Out
Restaurant and Table Service
Tea House
;
a
:
Unbelievably delicious, authentic,
and Cantonese delicacies
Chinese
served

am

S
».

y

“North

or carry-out service. Complete Ameri-

:

Except

Daily

Deliveries

—

Sunday

1908 Sheridan Rd. ID

Open

,

Daily

:

11:30

For ICTHYOPHAGISTS

Chicken and

THE FABULOUS

Prime

New
|

DINNER

2-2'4-lb.

Lobster

Make

ee

hgh

AVE.

Fine

iS

For Reservations Call ON

Front)

2-3610

WAUKEGAN

2-9437

From $2.95

for

°

F FOOD

SEA

For Banquets and Parties

top

food,

quality

Fashion

Phones:

SP

5-3535

On Route 45—2 miles West of Half Day

;
e

Nightly
Satin

Ribs Getlen 2

NA

penal

Roast Duck
specializing

Fag cit
Steak

Ave.
—

(Rte. 21)
ILL.

LE 7-2300

5 p.m. Daily

Open

Except
Sunday

Luncheons

Show

Milwaukee

HM,

hae

$2.95

from

NORTHBROOK,

:

core

COLE

Dinners

of

Selection

beak”

wei

Weekly

S

or ON

ITALIA

Meda

estaurant

Luxurious surroundings at modest prices.
Family dinners all day Sunday.
Open daily from 11 a.m.

y

(Lake

@

RIBS

Only

kR

DAY

MOTHER'S

2855
6

Venice

Reservation

Your

Dinners

HON

Choice

one

CUT STEAKS

YORK

NEW

Top

IKE

Boats

T
MA

Villa

RESTAURANT

Steak

SPECIAL

Specialty

{fae

Also Featuring Brunch from $2.00

Cocktail Lounge

Ever Tasted—

in Today

Facilities —

Michigan

Fresh Fish from Our Own

&amp;

4 p.m.-1 a.m.

Lounge”

&amp;

Call “Frank” for Your Reservations — ID 2-0440

SEA FOOD RESTAURANT
Piet

@

Private Dining

MATHON’S

pomp

Prime

LOBSTERS

MAINE

p.m.

|

Live lobster . . . direct from Maine
Shores of Lake

BROILED

CHARCOAL
a.m. - 9

Meadey

You've

Our

Highland Park

3-1 414

Just a few miles north .. . on the

Foods

Stop

Served—4:00 to 9:00 p.m. Sundays.

Exeept

pa

Restaurant

Finest

Shore’s

For the Finest

BUFFET

SPECIAL SUNDAY

ID 2-0440
Ph.
Open Nightly

ee

ty

can menu, too.

_ Rd.
Highwood, Ill.

5

eeae

road

ape

Fes

i

:

rye.

’

ae

sg

dinners

luncheons,

as complete

—
=

:

Monday

Open

ot 12 noon

We have facilities for banquet groups,

Weddings and Fraternal Organizations.
For

reservations,

EMpire

call:

2-8770

�:

‘

che

APACHE
OR

DAY
AM

Crash

RATED

IN

SAFETY

&amp;

ELLIS

Hot Lunches

2-0452

TRANSPORTATION

lision

too

with

Louis

Highland

214

got

RN

et

Ne it

RET

he

CeTales EeeBS

ea

2

ey

;

Rd.

Waukegan

a

closely,

1027 Windsor
last week.

ticket
after

col-

Haberkamp

of

Tuesday

Park

e

on campsite

police

Bay

Rd.

when

Haberkamp

for

the

Vine

Ave.

the

evening
say

both

on Green

light

stopped

and

was

rear,

2S

¢ Chocolates
Ice

¢ Cookies
¢ Salted Nuts

Cream

NACHMAN'’S
Linden

Ave.,

Hubbard

Woods

yn
SUV

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on

e

PARK

When

you

When

He

are

ill

Lieutenant Colonel Sabin C. Taplin, 66 3 Hyacinth Place,
was presented the Certificate of Achievement in a ceremony
at Headquarters, Fifth U.S. Army, Chicago, April 14, 1961.
Colonel Taplin was cited for his meritorious service and accomplishments while Chief of the Plans and Training Division

Call your Doctor
Prescribes

Call Morrie!

of the Provost Marshal Section of the Fifth Army

at ID 3-2525
Park-Sheridan
Park Ave.
24 Hr.

nee
VV

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EVERY SATURDAY

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Highwood,

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Ave.,

Beautiful Wooded Campsite with
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“Prescription Service” means
“Park Sheridan”

from No-

vember 1959 to December 1960. During this time, Colonel
Taplin made numerous speaking engagements before civic
and military groups. In addition to appearances at local
Kiwanis, Lions, and other service clubs, he has been featured

on WITW

television.

He was recently a guest speaker before

th Chicago Council on Foreign Relations.

Hospital Women
Attend Luncheon
For Volunteers

seeking better health?
Hear Wilson M. Riley,*
C.S.B., of Kansas City, Mis-

QT.

GAL.

DUPONT LUCITE

$7.4

The sensational paint you
much about lately.

have

$2.25

heard

*Member
of the Board of Lectureship of
Mother Church, The First Church of Christ,
entist, Boston, Massachusetts.

DEVOE
—a

$8.40

long time favorite
of our 5000 custom

House

The

the
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Sci-

$2.40

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event

State

Street

volunteers
Mrs.

$5.69
$3.88

paint covers well.

the

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entrees

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Chicago
selected
as

one

area.
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Specializing in
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oe

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S

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Highland

2-0140

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Ill.

Hours—Monday thru Saturday,

alee
Sunday, 9-1

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a

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25 finalists to attend this luncheon.

STAINS AND WOOD FINISHES

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yearly by

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in

Hair Cutting

PRYME

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Expert Hair Coloring

Paint &amp; Varnish—lead zinc
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HOUSE PAINT
General
titanium

souri, speak on “Christian
Science: God’s Ever-present
Kingdom Revealed.” Free
Public Lecture. Monday,
May 15, at 8 p.m. First
Church of Christ, Scientist,
Highland Park, 493 Hazel
Avenue.

Mrs. Russell Vinnedge, 3292 University, candidate for Volunteer-ofthe-Year;
Miss
Patricia
Schloss,
975 Wildwood, candidate for Junior-Volunteer-of-the-year and Mrs.
Harvey Cornelius, 2104 Park Lane,
director of volunteers; Mrs. Theodore
Rehn,
175
Belle,
Highland
Park, President of Women’s Auxiliary,
John
D.
Schneider,
425
Briarhill Rd., Deerfield, Committee
Member
for
Welfare
Council
Luncheon,
all
of
the
Highland
Park Hospital, attended the 15th
Annual Volunteer - of - the - Year
Award Luncheon April 20, at the

=

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tre

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ore coe

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Thursday, May 4, 1961

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TOP

6th

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Mixed Vegetables...
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FOR

We Reserva The Right To Limit Quantities . . . Prices Effective: Thru May éth fn Chicage
And Ifiects Suburbae Sic
Calumet City, Chicago His, Aed Dolton
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Lening, &amp; 14
en

4, 1961

FOR

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TD

THIS

VALUABLE

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FOR

The

Purchase Of Section

4

GARDEN BOOK ENCYCLOPEDIA
Limit One Coupon Per Customer
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eee,
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May

COUPON

The Purchase Of One 2-Pair

With The Purchase Of GARDEN

With The Purchase Of One 12-02. Jar KRETSCHMER’S

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ve

With

Expires May 6th

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50 EXTRA S&amp;H STAMPS

LDEN

25 EXTRA S&amp;H STAMPS

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so pick up some today.

ALL PURPOSE CLEANER
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= Coupon

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With

With The Purchase Of One Quart Bottle B-TIDY
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The’. Purchas® OF: Beer.” Wide,
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One

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because it's delivered fresh to your National daily. Try it
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es
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APPLE;

00

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BREAD

New Flavor ..+ New Wrapper

TOP TASTE—Frozen Cherry, Peach Or

$4

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TASTE

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ee

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303
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00

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oly

Cut Corn...
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NANITY FAIR

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With The Purchase Of One Can LIQUINET

No.

1

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POR ONT MAB
r ee renee

FOR

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$

HEINZ

LOAF CAKE MIX. . 6%
THIS

8

DOLLAR DAYS SALE!

BEST

25 EXTRA S&amp;H

that pt

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your Waite Nvenigen. Get
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ku =
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= ©"

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Page H 51—D 43

�werd

ernment

|
a

game

=e

race
cannes

Siz

,

| ib

Pm.

as

™

4

‘

;

Track Team Second

In Three-Way Meet
Highland
Park’s
varsity
and
sophomore cindermen finished second
in a triangular
track
meet
against New
Trier and Evanston
run on Wednesday, April 26 at New
Trier. The unique meet, consisting
of mostly relay races with a small
number of individual events, saw
only four HPHS entries win their
events as New Trier ran off with
the meet, scoring 91 points to 61
for Highland Park and 46 for Evanston.
Parker
winners
included:
400
vard high hurdle shuttle relay of
Mike
Field,
Alan
Winkley,
Ken

Brecher

and

Steve

Goodman,

1:-

00.1; the varsity mile relay of Tony

Sherman,
Russell
Winters,
Joel
Lewitz and Jim Weinert, 3:36.7;

Mayor Robert S. Cushman affixed his signature to a proclamation setting aside a week
for Youth Baseball. Watching him are Joe Patten, treasurer of the Youth Baseball Commis-

with them
problems.

due

to

transportation

Little Giant Nines

DHS Nine Shut Out

Have Bad Week

By Maine West;
Frosh Also Lose

National

Club

championship

at

Dunedin,

Fla.,

last

winter.

Presentation was made at the recent Spring Clinic of

Pictured with
the Illinois Section of the P.G. A. in Chicago.
Bernardi is Howard R. Gill Jr., editor and publisher of Golf
Digest magazine.

WOOCSSCCONSC+CORM
moocooorocooh

VROCOrForooCoRm

SP

2

Baseball was a
encouraging for all
High School teams
end.
The Little Giant
dropped a double

ton,

4-1

on

April

who

29.

lead

the

Jack Seacrest was on the mound
for the Parkers in the first game,
with
Chuck
Pascal
behind
the
plate.
The second game ran eight innings
when
Morton
broke
the
scoreless time with a bases loaded infield hit after two were out.

Parker
the

pitcher,

loss

ing

Tom

despite

LaBuda

took

an excellent

performance.

pitch-

Pascal

also

caught the second game.
Morton defeated the sophomores
5-1, with Jimmy Panther pitching,
and Mike Levin catching this game
for the Little Giants. The freshmen also were beaten by the Morton frosh, 10-1. Jeff Moller started for Highland
Park,
and was
replaced by Willy Jackson, on the
mound,

Waukegan

Speedway

To Open May 14
Inclement
weather
conditions,
which has hampered workmen in
preparing the Waukegan Speedway
grounds, has also caused the man-

agement to set back the 1961 open-

Face Busy Week

to

The

Highland

will

Park High School face a busy week.
They will participate in the Maine
East Relays tomorrow, May 5, and
Saturday, May 6, in the Hinsdale
Relays.
The Lake County Meet is set for
next Tuesday, May 9, at Libertyville and the freshmen will go to
New Trier next Wednesday,
May
10 for the Frosh Suburban Meet.

May

at

Varsity squad
header to Mor-

league, held Highland Park to one
run and 5 hits for the afternoon,

ing

teams

1-0

little less than
Highland Park
over the week-

Mustangs,

viously

track

and

The

HPHS Track Teams
The

ciation

keieecse

pncHooocooHH

--]

Gundlech
WOTRETOUN,
Diora
Total
Maine West
Deerfield

x

West

Player
Kraft

Sam Bernardi (left), 1710 Elmwood, holds special award
presented by friends in recognition of his record-breaking 72hole score of 274 in winning the Professional Golfers Asso-

NOCSOCOHKOCOHKOOM

ecoococoocoesco°o

&gt;

=]

Player
Bahnsen
Woolley
Brandwein

b=)

Despite a three hit pitching performance by Warrior hurler, Jeff
Robin, the Deerfield High School
baseball team dropped its second
straight to Maine
West, 40, last
Friday on the local field.
Tallying two runs in the first
and
second
innings,
the
Maine
team supported the strong pitching
of Art Wenstrom
as he held the
Warriors to two hits.
Ray
Sharp
collected
another
safety to make him three for six
in conference competition.
Deerfield freshmen also lost to
Maine West by a score of 5-1.
Deerfield

Maine

drive

for funds

for summer

May

14

instead

announced
Waukegan

officially
14,

with

of

May

the

Speedway

gates

Sunday

night,

open
time

trials

at

and the first of the racing
scheduled to begin at 8:30.
Drivers

pre-

7 date.

will have

DHS Warriors Dump
Glenbrook Nine
Despite Errors
A pair of late inning doubles’ by
Deerfield
catcher,
Bill
Couch,
pushed tcross the tying runs in the
fifth hand winning tally in the seventh as the Warriors dumped Glen-

brook, 8-7, last Wednesday.
Behind 7-1 afteh the first inning.
the Warriors picked up an unearned run in the third and then staged
a five-run uprising in the fifth to
tie the score and set the stage for
the seventh inning dramatics.
Deerfield
hurlers,
Steve
Stolle
and Jeff Robin, shut out Glenbrook
after the first inning to give Deerfield its first victory.

Box

Total
Player
Roberts
Williams
Baldwin
Gunderson
Coffey
Weinstock
Shulz
Agnello
Kuntsman
Krantrell
Brown
Total
Glenbrook
Deerfield

Varsity Nine Wins
On Marv Fiocchi’s

7:15

Five Hit Pitching

events

an opportunity

Score

Player
Bahnsen
Hess
Woolley
Brandwein
Sharp
Fess
Sundberg
Stolle
Robin
Varner
Staats
Couch
Bull

The
feated

varsity baseball squad deEvanston last Wednesday,

to check their cars in special speed

April

run
demonstrations
on
Sunday afternoon, May 7. Speed runs
are scheduled from 12 noon to 5
p.m. and are open only to drivers
and crew members.

Marv Fiocchi went all the way
for the win allowing only five hits,
Chuck Pascal accounted for all
three Highland Park runs by scoring

26, 3 to 2 at Evanston.

one

and

driving

in

two.

“The Service Bank Of Highland Park”

PARK

BANK? HIGHLAND
1771

Second St.

BANK

Member
Page

H

52—D

44

poecoHocoonHomms

Harris.

The

copcceHcocola!

Glen

secretary.

aml

and

sophomores were also schedto
play
but
Libertyville
bring
a sophomore
team

Snyder,

OOM

Kentor,

Carroll

OHH

The junior varsity golf team defeated the Libertyville team by a
score of 11144 to 3% April 26. The
meet was played at Sunset Valley

The
uled
didn’t

and

COCOOH

Paul

president,

under way.

ArH

Beat Libertyville

Inman,

is now

a!

Junior Golfers

Dar

baseball

OO

sion,
here,
Point winners for Highland Park
were Jeff Marks, John Lawrence,

OH

jump,

OM

broad

CooHH

the

in

and

a]

in

714”;

on

Ron
Joseph
wre Te .

unbeaten

146’

pA

as yet

throw,

=]

Sternfield,

discus

concroommnnocog

Jim

the

nonn

schedules

ee
peaennesow mi
Somme oo
7

eet —aie

conor

play will begin Thursday

ee
pa -— Sr hele

Tal

pony

The
Highland
Park
Recreation
Department
16 in. City
Softball
League
will be well represented
this season as ten evenly-matched
teams, 150 players, have signed up.
Managers met Thursday evening
with league director, Earle Hodgen,
to
discuss
general
rules,
game
schedules, and league proceedures.
Managers from last season who
attended
include Angie
Passuelo,
Norbert Ferraro, Bob Merens and
Rory Sherony.
New managers included Art Arkusk, Ned Siegle, Dan Herz, Robbie
Moroney,
Wally
Stein,
and
Sam
Belmonti.
evening,
May
18,
and
will be announced soon.

ttn

o

OapewooMoUnou&gt;

ame?

aaa

eee ES, SO

Sign Ten Softball
Teams for City
Summer League

League

aero

k

P

v
rol
=
yal

wn

«

,

eee
Paks

.— a

Ee

ee enwecemame
poe Ta
&lt;
-

©

en
teelen lh

pommeukaAop

le

Oe

ry

ft

SC

v4

Pa

ee

oo

ee

Now

—

a

—POST

Federal

OFFICE

Deposit

BLDG.

Insurance

IDiewood 2-7800
Corporation
Thursday,

May

4, 1961

�HP’s Jim Weinert © DHS Tennis Teams — Four Matches And
Lose Heart Breakers
Outruns Speedy
Win Frosh Singles
Despite victories contributed by
Trier Racer

New

Highland Park’s junior-dominated track team took sixth place in
the fourth annual Waukegan Relays last Saturday
as Morton’s
Mustangs took the meet title.
Foremost of several high spots
for the Little Giants came in the

mile

run

as Jim

Weinert

for

the

first

time

realized

in

three

years of fierce competition. Weinert’s time in beating Kirkland was
4:24.3, a meet record and the best

mark

run

so far this year

state.

Another

Little

point

came

the

in

in the

Giant

high

discus

with a 156’ 54” throw
MeGregor was third.
placing

for

as

Jim

Parkers

feldt, Russell Winters, Larry Kanouse and Joel Lewitz, third; Ron
Joseph, fifth in the broad jump;
the varsity 440 relay of Joseph,

Sherman,

Ed

Gamson

and

Joe Wolk, fifth; the two mile relay
of Tom
Huxley,
Chuck
Redman,

Joel Lewitz and Jim Weinert, second; the sophomore 880 relay team
of Jay

Levy,

Winters

and

freshman

Ken

Brecher,

Wolk,

ed New

3-2

decision

to

Glenbrook

Both

Wednesday
afternoon.
Both Bax and Mandel were impressive in their victories, Bax defeating Fairclough 6-1, 6-2; Mandel

Jeff

Ayres,

6-4 and

5-0

Set
6
6
2

Russell

fifth;

and

the

440 relay of Steve Weiss,

Jon Johnson
Jim Burnett
Craig, Peter
Shurberg, Jon
Game Score

the

meet:

Morton

59,

Oak Park 52, Waukegan 47144, New
Trier 4614, Maine West 40, Highland Park 33, Evanston 30, Proviso
East 2714, Proviso West 27, North

a 4-1

DHS

6
3

3

4

2

:
39

Set
1
4
4

Set

Chicago

7, and

DHS

25%,

Niles

Glenbrook

7, Bloom

3.

6
43

Impressive in

43.

Warriors

face

Total

..........

balanced Maine West squad turned
in a 186 team total against the
Warrior’s 190.
Don Clark carded 47 while Chris-

Miller, Ken ....
Wasmund,
Bob
Pemoller, Bob
Green, Mike ....
Schleicher, Karl
Team

Set
4
6
1

Set
Dotig
Albers:
....ccccos ieee 6
Joe Priest
2
William Spyrison ...........---s-0 6

DEERFIELD

Peter:

Craig,

Bob

Shurberg
MAINE
Ken Kelly, Bob Gauerth
Andy Amant, Ralph Dennis

Jon

.

Set
6
8
3

Set
.... 2
Set
.... 6

Set
4
Set
6

Set

.... 4

i

20.

Aroma

Are you

Tells

For nearest Jewel dealer, see
Phone Book Yellow Pages,
or phone SEeley 3-2430.

ready?

ou

It’s Baked

In

Our

Kitchen”

WEEK- END

THE
CROSSROADS

WE

e Lemon
Reg. $1.25

&gt;

a

|

LUMBER COMPANY
See Page 42

of Touhy Avenue
COME TO HIGHLAND

GOODS ARE DELIVERED FRESH
A DAY — EVERY DAY!

STEE

PARK!

TIMES

FOUR

CATER

TO

8:30

ID 2-958

Wed., Thurs., Sun., 8:30 a.m.-Midnite.

a.m.-2

THOSE

.
Closed

a.m.

WHO

LOVE

TO

Tuesdays.

EAT

—

THE

BEST

The ultimate in

Now is the Perfect _

Set

Time to Outfit Your

—
Boy for CAMP
CHARGE

@ NAME TAGS SEWN FREE OF
WITH CAMP ORDER
@ TEE SHIRTS WITH CAMP EMBLEMS :
@ ALL CAMP EQUIPMENT
@ COMPLETE CAMP WARDROBE

Gentlemen ff
convenience

For

your

69

Linden

Avenue
THE

we

will

be

open

VErnon

HUBBARD

WOODS

Thurs.

5-3181
FASHION

Eves.

during

Hubbard

May.

Woods

CENTER

WIN Valuable Prizes FREE!

or Apricot

Filling
Reg. 90c

know you
A them Cake

are going to
from Baum’s.

serve

HEART
Decorated

BAUMS
Ave.

with

Carnations,

Roses

DAY
or

Orchids.

ASTRY SHOP
ID 2-0815

COMING
NEXT WEEK

sa 0000000000000

zl

620 Central

Place Your Order Now!
CAKES FOR MOTHER’S

Tn

Spring training
A HIT HOME!
is over and baseball is the “talk
Mt
You can score a
of the town.

hit and your men folks will run
home from the game when they

Page H 53—D
Thursday,

May

4, 1961

—

RESTAURANT AND
DELICATESSEN

CENTER

OPEN—Mon.,

Sat.,

&amp;

IN

FRENCH
OLD-FASHIONED
COFFEE CAKE
Raspberry

CRAFTWOOD

We cater to Bar Mitzvahs and sales meetings.
Western dining pleasure.

nnn

© Strawberry
© Chocolate

Sy

Waukegan

SHOPPING

WE'RE

Fri.

BAKERY SPECIALS
FROZEN
ANGEL FOOD

at

Featuring Ackerman’s famous: GERMAN COFFEE CAKE * STREUSSE
SOUR CREA
°*
FRENCH ONION ROLLS
COFFEE CAKE - *
COFFEE CAKE — plus — SEVEN DIFFERENT KINDS OF BAGELS —
Onion,
Pumpernickel,
Poppyseed, Egg, Water, Pumpernickel-Onion
and Pumpernickel-Poppyseed.

‘50 easy!

PAINT

BAKERY

OUR

HOURS
Set
6

flat finish for walls and ceilings

Highland
Park Clean-Up
Week
starts May 15 and runs through May

Now

New

Park.

Set
2

Set
0
6
6

JEWEL
INSTANT

186

floors

The full line of bakery goods is now being offered by The Stee
Restaurant and Delicatessen, Crossroads Shopping Center, Highland

makes painting
NEW!

to

at

2, with hopes of

NOW

HAS

Deerfield Game Score—48.
Maine Game Score—49.

43
52
46
45
56

Total

Cordell

team

for

winner

ACKERMAN’S BAKERY

Doubles
Johnson,

lone

Meet

DEERFIELD

John

the

returning to winning ways. On Saturday, May 6, they will participate
in the district meet at New Trier
and Tuesday, May 9, will play Evanston here.

Singles

West

was

last Tuesday, May

Randy Bax, playing No. 1 singles
position,
dropped
a_
hard
fought, three-set match to Maine’s
Doug
Albers,
4-6, 6-0, 2-6.
This
proved to be the decisive match for
Jeff Mandel and the doubles team
of Pete Craig and Jon Shurberg
won
decisively
in
their
two
matches.

190

Ross

Tennis Team

39
50
58
54
47

Maine

three over par
front nine last
carry the Deerdivot diggers to
victory. A well-

The

with

the

Prospect on Monday, Willowbrook
on Tuesday, and Glenbrook on Friday.
Deerfield

Team

Maine West Match

“Where

squad

week

Fleming,
John
Christy, Jerry
Hussar, Gary
Hadjuk,
Mike
Clark,
Don

Golfers Are

John
Fleming’s
39 on Thorngate’s
Thursday could not
field High School
their third season

Maine

Saturday

MAINE

6

visit-

score.

0
0

of

Jim

for the frosh-soph
Trier,
The
teams
went

Deerfield
High
School
netmen
dropped
their
home
opener
to
Maine
West by a 3-2 score last
Set6 | Friday at Tennaqua courts.

ty and Hadjuk followed with 50
and 54 respectively. Ken Miller led
This

they

4-1.

Drops Home

Doubles

the

defeat

the varsity lost

sophs

Paul Gordon, Bob Tripp, and Winters, fifth.
Scores for the

Tuesday

Randy Bax
Jeff Mandel
Jon Eaton

Richards, Lew
Michael, David
Gilster, Ron
Welsch, Frank
Game
Score

Hal

frosh-soph

double

Renny WerrenGray won against

team

and

Niles.

The Parkers had only a single
winner to show for their two per-

Singles
Glenbrook
Fairclough, Jim
Ayres, Jeff ....
Bemm,
Bill

and

met

Trier, and

and

lost by

6-0.

Singles

varsity

rath

visiting Niles defeated the upperclassmen 3-2, while the sophs again

Coach Karl Wildermuth hopes to
receive additional help with the return
to
action
of
Neil
Hirsch
promising
freshman
player.
“If
Neil can play singles along with
Bax and Mandel, I may be able to
strengthen
the doubles
team
by
those
of
one
in
Eaton
moving
spots,” he said.

Deerfield
Bax, Randy
Mandel, Jeff
Eaton, Jon

the

teams

this past week.

last

Doubles

the

were: mile relay team of Jim Murt-

Tony

a

throw

where
Jim
Sternfield,
recently
number one ranked contestant in
the state, set a new meet record

Others

tennis

defeating

a long-time goal by beating New
Trier’s Weymouth Kirkland in the

mile

Randy Bax and Jeff Mandel, Deerfield’s number
one and two singles players, the Warriors dropped

doubles

Le

�To Receive Awards Friday

ALWAYS FREE PARKING!
LAST DAY!
— WALT
DISNEY’S
“101

THEATRE
HIGHLAND PARK

DALMATIANS”

FRIDAY,

MAY

5th

FOR

7 DELIGHTFUL

DAYS!

A riotous, happy time
when four U.S. sailors take
i
over a geisha house!
COLUMBIA PICTURES
presents

A WILLIAM GOETZ
PRODUCTION

Marilyn

Zoller

Hillel

Two students of North
Synagogue
Beth
El’s_

Suburban
Religious

school, Marilyn Zoller, daughter of
Mr.

and

Mrs.

669 DeTamble
Schwartz, son
Harry

David

Zoller,

Ave., and Hillel
of Mr. and Mrs.

Schwartz,

Northbrook,

receive first and second

Thy Teacher’ tribute which will be
paid to all teachers of the Beth
El Religious school. The program
is open to the public.

Buy

and

with

Israel’s

13th

in
at

of
anthe

Israel Independence Day celebration April 23 in McCormick Place,
by

the

Chicago

Board

of Rabbis, of which Rabbi Philip L.
A feature of the Family night

program

will be the annual

Tween

North

Youth

Shore

SPECIAL—

semble

after Religious

the

group

swim

6th

—

Have

ANY

SEWING

:20-7

with

this ad

THEATRE
x

KOON

Me
ri a
Storer
x?

Open

(A)

x
XS
SOKO

as-

to go

Daily 6:00

This

|

Our

ONE

WEEK

Panoramic

11

—

Wide

Screen

Weekdays—”
All Hands on Deck” begins at 7:30 and 9:30.
Saturday— "All Hands on Deck” begins at 5:15-7:30-9:30.

Sess

NECCHE

Is

oe

SCHEDULE

O’Keefe

—

+ KING-SIZE DRINKS
Special Saturday Matinee 2 to 4
“TARZAN’S FIGHT FOR LIFE”
with Gordon Scott

served by the
“exciting new. CREWMATES

RNEECH
we.
CUNA

GY [00kS tast of GreenBay: HIGHLAND PARK)

~“ARONNIE: ORLAND
at the PIANO

Sun.— "All Hands on Deck” begins at 2:00-4:00-6:00-8 :00-10:00

BAR

_* BUFFET. FOOD. SERVICE
- “No cover—No

nig

EDGEWATER

May 12—"THE HOODLUM

minimum

HOTEL

5300

Guidepost

Rating

BEACH

Adult

&amp; M.-Y.

PRIEST”

ayo

May 19 “THE TRAPP FAMILY” 9 mmc COPY

May 26—"ALL IN A NIGHT'S
WORK”

ad

PY

Boulton

Frederick

W.

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ad must be presented
at time of servicing.

pB62 CENIRAL.

ANY OLD

at 6:30

Open
P

in CinemaScope and De Luxe Color
Starring—Pat Boone, Buddy Hackett, Dennis
Barbara Eden:

GRANT &amp; GRANT STEREO CENTERS
54—D

és

“ALL HANDS ON DECK’

Arenps
Sewing
.)
MACHINE.
Co...
|

co

Curtain

Given With
Every Repair Call
This Week

r
fe]
NY CV/C eC Off
A NSKOS.

‘Aad
Mores,

—

5 thru Thursday, May
—

On

_ LP. PURCHASED

H

IMPOSTOR”

POLICY

to 12 Midnight

Friday, May
0,

One Can Oil
One Pack Needles

to Glen-

$1.00 OFF ON ANY

Page

:30

Sunday y Continuous 2 to Midnight—Doors
9

RR
605

REWARD

Central

:27-9

P.M.

May
12th!
” THEmd G REAT

North Shore’s Most Beautiful Theatre
Forest, Ill, — CE 4-2106 or CE 4-2107

San

708

1:30

MACHINE

WANTED
OLD RECORDS
TRADE-IN

—

ADJUST

Cookout

Voices.”

SHOW

Sun.—1 :30-3 :30-7 :37-9:35

—

‘Issues

KIDDIE

CHILDREN!

ae

of

Teens and Frosh groups plan an
Outdoor cookout supper for Sunday, May 14. Additional information and reservations may be made
with Alvin Platt, Youth program
supervisor, at VE 5-0724.
The Alumni
group is planning
supper-discussion
Sunday
eveing, May 7, at 6, when the Eichann trial will be subject. This
is
one
in
the
program
series,

FOR

“CRY FOR HAPPY” at:
Week Days—7:17-9:24
:
‘
:
Sat.—5

Lake

party,
Plan

NOT RECOMMENDED

Color

CLEAN

Israel

school

MAY

3 Cartoons

OIL

to the Glenview Pladium for a twohour

SATURDAY,

FREE ! 1!
will

pCMIIKO TAKA wn MIYOSHI UMEKI\,

&amp;

u
”
ne
No.—
14 Geronimo

% Price

view Air Base after lunch at the
temple
Sunday,
May
7. The fol-

Sunday,

el

AND THE YUM-YUMMY GIRLS FROM ‘SAYONARA’

_

Bonds.

d

group
bus

lowing

Savings

¢

CinemaScope

“Honor

Congregation

will go by chartered

S.

ee

Youth Groups Plan
May Excursions
The

U.

will

year

independence,
culminated
nouncement
of
winners

sponsored

hold

fs

CRY FOR
HAPPY
cosaring JAMES SHIGETA

&gt;,
SS

prizes, re-

spectively, for their winning essays
in the North Shore regional essay
contest sponsored by the Chicago
Board of Rabbis in family worship
services at the temple Friday evening at 7:30.
The contest, sponsored in con-

nection

GLENN FORD =
DONALD O'CONNOR

Schwartz

HAL’S DRIVE INN
SKOKIE

HIGHWAY AT ROUTE
HIGHLAND PARK
Thursday,

22
May

4, 1961

�Men’s Garden Club

GLENCOE
VErnon

5-0605

Wives
and
daughters
of
the
members of the Men’s Garden Club
of the North Shore will form a
women’s auxiliary at an organiza-

tion

FRI. thru THURS.,

1850

May

5-11

FULL WEEK

ONLY

SAT. &amp; SUN. at 2:00 p.m.
WORLD’S

OF

GULLIVER”
in

SUPERDYNAMATION
Plus Cartoons

“101

The

8 p.m.

P.

at

Stein

is

organization

of

the

Road,

wives

have

in

Center,

Bay

the

held

and

chair-

commit-

daughters

of

will automatically

be

the

its

auxiliary

own

which

meetings

and

FRIDAY, MAY

12—

DISNEY’S

DALMATIANS”

bdaadbia.
aaaa saab
aaa
VV VV Vv vv
YY VVVVVVV VV
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UY
FOS CCCCCCCCCCCUCUCCCUUCUUUUUUUUCUCUUUUVUUUVUUVY
00 OO 9 OU WU
ie
pA BBABBBDADAAAAAAAAAAAAASA Be

Sun.—4:55-7:15-9:35
Mon.-Thurs.—7 :10-9:30

WALT

tee.

eeore%
eeoeoe
eer eoreeeeeeeeeet
wsriArrreoo444-%'ee%e%eo%ee
ss sisi
badbbdhdbled
bbb
bbb
Abb
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for children

Fri.—6 :05-8:10-10:10
Sat.—4 :40-6 :30-8 :25-10:20

STARTING:

be

Recreation

supervise the flower arranging and
table setting classifications at the
Club’s annual Flower and Garden
Show.

feature times:

3

of

will

A Continental Distributing Inc. Release

“THE

man

members

THE
ENTERTAINER

MATINEE

Green

all members

LAURENCE
OLIVIER

*not recommended

to

Park

May 9.
Mrs. Edward

sss
Db hebttth6 tt ttt thtteherrr-re*’ arrrs
eae
_AAA pRB BRABRABABABADAAAAAAAAAALS a

ONE

meeting

Highland

acm
SN,
When you move
to town...or to
a new home...
Your Welcome

Wagon

Hostess will call ‘with a
basket of gifts...and
friendly gréetings from
our religious, civic and
business leaders.
If you, or others you
know, are moving, be
sure to phone Welcome
Wagon.
Highland Park
Mrs. Mitzi

Lavin

Mrs. Dorothy Darling
ID 3-2253
Deerfield-Bannockburn
Grace Clark
WI 5-0887

Grace Grady
of Lincolnshire

WELCOME
Dry

‘da ias hes LE

he

WAGON

oe
Ry
:

et
Tee

pew!
Peme ti

on Ree
ee oe
ome

Women

Install Officers

Will Be Formed

THEATRE — GLENCOE
ID 2-0605

Pioneer

Ladies’ Auxiliary

Oh

t

Mrs.

Melvin

Eisenberg,

ject

will

be

“35

Achievement.”

also

is

Years

Mrs.

a member

to

4:00—Mon.

thru

Fri—June

19

to

Aug.

Football —

Self-defense

Track —

Instruction —

Crash

Richard Root, 18, of 940 Central
Ave., Deerfield, was ticketed for
passing

nesday

in

an

intersection

morning

last

24 Years of Developing Boys —

Call

Coach

Games

—

William

week

DIAMONDS
Your Rings and
We Check Them

Jewelry
FREE.

JEWELERS

- OPTICIANS

Highland

Tel.

Park

IDlewood

2-0630

Across “from bank over 35 years.
We do our own diamond setting.
Have your diamonds set in modern settings.
Payments arranged.

Welcomes
you to its
small classes
of French,

German and Modern Hebrew.
For Pamphlet, write:

Fun

Sight &amp; Sound

Bern

Language

706 Glencoe Rd
on Phone VE 5-0978
Mon., Wed. &amp; Thurs. 5-7 p.m.

648

Oe

f

Dinner
Late

a

‘i. Se

OF

————

« Sa
YY

OR

Get

Acquainted!

FREE
COFFEE from
8 to
and

11

A.M.

2 to 5 P.M.
@

WIndsor
Thursday,

May

5-975]
4, 1961

OPEN DAILY
Including Sundays)
8:00 A.M. to 10:00 P.M.

from

throughout

Slate Registration
For Kindergarten
Children In Dist. 109

1961-62

Staff of the 1961-62 Shoreline,
the
Highland
Park
High
School
weekly
newspaper
has
been
announced.
The choice was made by
Dr. John Munski, publication director, and the present Shoreline

staff.
Selection is based on semester
English grades and grades in first
year journalism.
Additional
consideration
is given
to assistance
and interest in publications work
during this year and past years.

Tom

There will be three days of registration for kindergarten children
entering Deerfield Public Schools
of District 109 on Tuesday, May 9,
Wednesday, May 10 and Thursday,
May 11.
On
Tuesday,
May
9,
Walden
school children will be registered
for kindergarten; Wednesday, May
10 at Maplewood school; Thursday,
May 11 at Kipling school.
Register Alphabetically

Elias will be editor-in-chief

of the newspaper
with Emily
Rosenberg as managing
editor.
Others on the editorial staff will
be Judi Kahn and Isabell Gibson,
news
editors,
Suzie
Siegel
and
Vicki Packer, feature editors and
Andi Fox, Girls’ sports editor. Jill
Rubel will be a columnist.
John
Markoff and Tom Wolk will cover
boys’ sports.
John
Lawrence
will
head
the
business staff as business manager.
Sandy Rankin will act as advertising manager.
Karen Rae, Ellen
Cholewa and Marth Kerr will be
in charge of circulation.

Laurel

Whitted

will

head

the

High School News Bureau which
supplies the local papers with news
pertaining to High School activities. Beth Derby will serve as news

bureau

news
new

editor.
staff

will

publish

the

May 26 issue of Shoreline with the
assistance of the present staff. The
June

2 issue

will

be

produced

en-

Off Campus Group

held this month
who

attended

winter sessions.

for

members

the

fall

and

The five programs

a free lance
the group on

Thursday, May 4 at 10 a.m. in the
Winnetka Community House.
Richard Gilston, a literary agent
from the New York office of Music Corporation
of America
will
address the group on May 11.
It

will be his second
the

The

Off-Campus

group

will

appearance

be-

Workshop.

hear

for the three

Children

days

are

whose

last

names begin with A through L will
register during the morning hours
of 9 to noon.
Those whose
last names
begin
with M through Z will register at

their

respective

proper

dates

schools

from

1 to

on
3

the

p.m,

Parents are reminded that children must be five years of age on
or before December
1, 1961
and
have birth certificates or other evi-

dence of age to be eligible for kindergarten

enrollment.

Director

of Sales

Robert Palmer Corporation has
announced the appointment of Edward T. Putt, 3360 Old Mill Road,
as director of sales. The company
publishes
human
relations
programs for sales, management and
white

collar

divisional

the

series is being

were
arranged by the May
Program chairman, Mrs. Jerry Smoler,
324 N. Deere Park Drive.

Lillian Pompian,
writer, will address

hours

same.

employees.

manager

and

for

the

last two years he has been assistant vice president attached to

by the Off-Campus

Workshop

have

the

a

Five Writers

special lecture

The

Putt has been with Robert Palmer Corporation since 1955, Before his appointment he served as

tirely by the new staff.

fore

Fair, which

dealers

antique

Staff For Shoreline

A

Antique

midwest.

Writers’
Let’s

Ce
2S

Snacks

DEERFIELD

DEERFIELD

(1% block East of Waukegan Rd, stoplight)

a

Ci

RD.,

The

11, 12 and 13 at Ravinia School, will fealeading

by

displays

ture
the

1166 Lincoln Ave. S. and

Dawe,

Broadview.

869

For Lectures

Dining

Tea

Baldauf,

will be held May

Names

Breakfast
Afternoon

265 Woodland, Mrs. Vernon
Mrs. John

The

Hillcrest 6-3851

Luncheon

In.

1. H. NEMEROFF

Delghtful
Gourmet

after

~ DON’T LOSE YOUR |

11

College Trained Counsellors

1092 Cherry St., Winnetka

Wed-

a collision
on Deerfield
Rd.
at
North Ridge Rd,
Highland Park police say he was
eastbound,
passing
cars,
when
Maurice Unger of 1275 Sherwood
Rd. turned west out of Ridge.
Unger drove onto the shoulder
to avoid the oncoming car in the
wrong lane, but Root’s car clipped
his left rear fender, police report.

Bring

Planning for the Ravinia PTA Antique Fair was launched
last week at a tea at the home of Mrs. Herschell Lewis, 638
Among those attending were (left to
Hillside Dr. (seated).
right) Mrs. Henry Freedman, 390 Flora Pl., Mrs. Martin Block,

Name

at Ridge

Language
Studio

Basketball —- Cub Games

Popular Group

who

National

Sight &amp; Sound

Boys 6 to 14 Years — Pontiac all-steel station wagons
Swim Instruction — Cookouts — Educational Trips

Baseball —

Proud

Board of Pioneer Women, will install the new officers and all new
members of Ramah chapter. Mrs.
Eugene Heller is chairman of the
affair.

High School Physical Director
RED CROSS SWIMMING INSTRUCTOR
Day—9

of

Kaplan,

of the

COACH BERN DAY CAMP
All

1837

Richfield, will be installed president
of Ramah
chapter
Pioneer
Women, in the season-end installation luncheon Wednesday, May 10,
at 12 o’clock in the home of Mrs.
Eugene
Heller,
85 Crescent
Dr.,
Glencoe.
Mrs. Milton Margulies will be installed
administrative
vice-president; Mrs. Louis Shapiro, Moetzet
Hapoalat, vice-president; Mrs. Sholom Singer, program vice-president;
Mrs. Sam Weisberg, general funds
vice-president; Mrs. Eugene Heller,
treasurer; Mrs. Morris Gordon, corresponding
secretary;
Mrs.
Seymour Weiner, recording secretary;
Mrs. Joseph Benson, Bulletin editor.
The president of the Chicago
Council of Pioneer Women,
Mrs.
Evelyn P. Kaplan,
will be guest
speaker at the luncheon. Her sub-

Elizabeth

company’s

Chicago

office.

He

will continue to reside in Highland
Park

and

carry

on

his

from Chicago.
Putt holds an A.M.
the

University

of

new

degree

Chicago

duties

fro:
and

B.S. from the University of Illinois
Gregg

Patterson

discuss the art 0

story
writing
on
May
18.
Mrs
Patterson has an impressive record
of published fiction.
The editor of Kiwanis Magazine
Richard
Gosswiller
will
discuss
magazine needs on May 25. Dennis
Orphan, associate editor of Today’s

Health,

another

magazine,

Chicago

opened

the

published
series

0

April 27.
Page H 55—D

47

�VA

ve Fritz Says

Pioneer To Build
New Offset Plant
Governor Otto Kerner of Illinois

Can

a

tree

with

isease be cured

Dutch

OFFICE

Elm

OTTO

April

Mr.

W.

Newton

Chairman

Pioneer

of

Burdick,

the

ure, but have failed to present
dence that is recognized as valid
responsible plant pathologists.

Oak

Park,

Illinois

Dear

Mr.

All

of the
that

replies
there

is

Burdick:

of your company's
near Naperville.

not

do

of

Applied

Botany

I have

seen

assistance
on us.

to

pub-

elm dis-

e. I have been informed that
earch workers with the United
tes

Department

ested

zinc

eral

Agriculture

chloride,

other

their

of

along

chemical

Dutch

with

materials,

elm

disease

re-

earch
work
several years ago.
ey found no indication that zinc

: oride was
x the

effective in control-

disease.”
Expert’s

Opinion

. G. E. Hafstad, plant pathst for the Wisconsin Departof Agriculture writes:

“In regard
pride

or

cure

or

disease,

to the use of zinc

zine

coated

prevention

I have

nails
of

for

Dutch

no confidence

soever;
such
treatments
are
contrast to experimental work.

ch elm disease is caused by
fungus,
Ceratostomella
ulmi,

PY
LCi

grows

in

the

outer

wood

elm twigs, branches, trunk and
ots. The fungus is spread from
iseased tree to a healthy tree
elm bark beetles.
‘Dr. Carter states further:
e
only
proven
treatment
we feel justified in recom-

ing

is

a complete

carried on if this type of prom is to succeed.”
elimination or
elm materials

which the elm bark beetle can
reed. Piles of elm logs, broken
weakened
elm
branches
on
althy trees, or elms weakened
some other cause are suitable
beetle breeding and should be
troyed.
Property owners are requested
observe the following recomdations in an attempt to mini-

future

losses resulting from

disease:
Prune all weak,

dead

50% Over
Cumulative

1960

total

permits

issued

for single-family
dwellings
as of
May 1 were 42 this year, the Highland Park building department reports, compared to 42 in 1960. Most
of the 50 per cent jump was made
in March.
April added
year’s figures;

13
for

homes
to this
a valuation of

$275,250.
Also
issued
permits
were
23
dwelling alterations, valued at $76,750; a $60,000 commercial building;
six business and industrial alterations totaling $38,300, three residential garages for $3,250; and four
miscellaneous
buildings
(green
house, cabana, shed) for $3,740.
The 50 total building permits this
year, valued at $457,290, compare

with last May’s
$400,020.

cumulative

35 for

Sixty electrical permits were issued last month, 19 water tap, 18
heating, 17 driveway and 17 sanitary tap, 15 miscellaneous fence and
wrecking, eight storm sewer, five
sign, a septic system and an air
conditioner.

Two reinspection fees were collected. Six appeals were made from
department

rulings.

program

Sanitation and spraying. It is
eedingly important that very
ough and complete sanitation
nitation is the
iruction of all

you

in

any

way,

and dy-

ing branches
trees

and

from

remove

healthy,
all

dead

living
trees.

2. Burn all elm prunings, broken
limbs,

bark,

and

infested

wood.

3. Have your elms sprayed while
dormant in the fall or spring. Reputable

to use
and

tree

know

(generally

how

4. Keep
tion

men

by

to

use

a DDT

spray

solution)

it.

all elms
applying

what

in good

condi-

fertilizer

when

needed, spraying to control leaf
insects and diseases, pruning all
dead

and

dying

branches,

brought

the new plant, and space is being
provided for several additional web
offset presses.
Pioneer also has plans, Burdick
stated, to gradually modernize the
company’s present main commercial printing operation, Roto-Color,
Inc., a letterpress plant
in St.
Charles.
This plant employs 350 people in

two

fire

made

in the

same

the council,
be expected
Twenty
for $396,

the
of

old

Great Books Leader
Course Outlined
The
will

Cantagallo

helmets

Highwood
city council
Friday, One was brand
other 30 years old.
The leather helmets
way,

to

the

meeting
new, the
are
he

still

showed

so the new ones can
to last just as long.

new hats were
to completely

hats,

most

of them

Ray

Tamarri

bought
replace

made

plastic.

Honor

fire

house

tonight

at

6:30,

Great

honor-

ing Chief Ray Tamarri’s 20 years
as a volunteer.
A letter from Joseph Baruffi,
zoning
board
chairman,
recom-

Books

conduct

Books

dis-

that will form

this

tually

a

Leader

designed

didates

to

cussion

groups

fall

the

in

session

Suburban

This

can-

com-

tuition-free
will

Forest

Training

prepare

Great

North

course

Lake

to

lead

munities.

its 71,000 square feet of floor space.

Foundation

The St. Charles plant is a completely
self-contained
unit
with
seven
high-speed
rotary
presses
and a composing room which ac-

Course

be

six-

held

College,

at the

Industrial

Management Building on two consecutive
weekends.
The
first
2

hour session will be given on Friday, May 26 at 8 p.m. with two
sessions on Saturday, May 27, at
10 am. and at 3 p.m. The same
schedule will be followed on the

following weekend of June 2 and
June 3.
This is a free course open to all
adults,

A letter to the council invited
all members to a banquet in the

regardless

of

education,

who like to read challenging books,
talk over the ideas they contain,
and stimulate a group of thoughtful adults to active critical thinking.
Additional information may be
obtained

by

Marder,

Great

reaching

Mrs.

Books

Marvin

Foundation

Community

Representative,

li’s tentative resubdivision plat for
four lots from two on Burchell

Court

ID

Ave.

asked for the change, which will
allow relief men a short rest between weeks, Benvenuti was authorized to buy two new tires for
the 1960 squad car. A $123.20 repair and towing charge was questioned by Santi, but approved after
discussion.

mended

approval

Alderman

of

David

August

Santi

Ruel-

moved

to
accept
the
recommendation,
and to add a four-inch water main
and hydrant to serve the lots.
Two

new

ordinances

recom-

mended by Alderman Jack Peterson would be drawn up by City
Attorney Jack Bairstow, the council agreed.
One would add a 50-cents-a-day
storage charge to the $10 towing
fee for abandoned cars. The other
would prohibit negligent driving
in the city, so that
police
can
write tickets for a lesser charge
than reckless driving when carelessness causes an accident.

water-

ing to maintain an adequate supply in dry weather.
5. Interest
your
friends
and
neighbors in preventing the spread
of Dutch elm disease.

Dominic

Vacation Schedules
Police

vacation

complete
a flying

paster, will be installed initially in

Highwood Council
Expects Fire Hats
To Last 30 Years
Alderman

A five unit Miehle web

offset perfecting
press,
with
two
folders
and

please

and

no reliable,
of Dutch

Gradually Modernize
The
new
plant
will
permit
Pioneer to add to its production
facilities
Miehle
roll-fed offset

Governor

Building

including

gram designed to double the firm’s
operations by 1966.

no

ed data to support the claims
e for zine chloride as a cure

preventative

plans

Sincerely,

HP Home

Publishing

of newspapers

equipment.

If we can be of
hesitate to call

Pioneer

ing plant on 12 acres of land acquired near Naperville. According
to Burdick, this is a first step in
a modernization and expansion pro-

I would like to extend my congratulations on your
growth, and wish you continued success in the future.
It
is a principal concern of this administration to maintain
the kind of business climate that is conducive to industrial growth.

ndation in fact for these claims.
ir.
J. C. Carter, head of the
tion

Governor

the North
Shore
Group
Newspapers, will at an early date build
a new Pioneer commercial print-

re-

int Pathology, State Natural HisSurvey
Division,
Urbana,

that

of a group

Avenue

I have read with interest
construct a new printing plant

to

During the summer of 1960 the
k district received many inuiries from local residents conning the use of zinc chloride
zine-coated finishing nails for
prevention and cure of Dutch
n disease. The park district has
tacted several agencies includthe State Natural History SurDivision at Urbana in an atapt to determine the validity of
ain claims regarding the use
these materials in the control
indicate

from

Co., which has as one phase of its
activities the publishing of a group

Company

Kenilworth

of Calls

Burdick

Jr.

Board

Publishing

South

Lots

letter

The letter from Goy. Kerner followed an announcement
by

100

D.E.D.

The

1961

Kerner, wished this leading midwest publishing
firm
continued
success and noted that the state
administration has as a principal
aim the
fostering
of industrial
growth in Illinois.

people have claimed to have

ved

24,

superintendent

f the Park District of Highland
*k
and custodian of its 1,000
“lm trees, investigated the recent
lain s for zinc; and reports the
owing answers:
o the present time there is no
own cure for Dutch elm disease
e a tree has become infected.

Gets

GOVERNOR

KERNER
GOVERNOR

Or are all striken trees doomed
0 be removed?
David H. Fritz,

THE

SPRINGFIELD

ted nails into the trunk, or
agi
a solution of zine chlor-

ny

OF

by driving zinc-

this week congratulated W. Newton
Burdick Jr., chairman of the board
of Pioneer Publishing Co., and expressed interest in the plans of
the company to enter a period of
major expansion
of its facilities.

schedules

this

year will permit Chief Ted Benvenuti
and
other old-timers
to
split their three weeks, Peterson

Ave.,

Alderman

asked
nance

replied
good,

but

Minorini

in the

dog

needed.

that
the

ordinance

city

has

strays.

Treasurer

added

that

the

was

inadequate

and

Joseph

keeping
McClory

number

licensed each year
people are keeping

ordi-

Benvenuti

the

facilities for catching

more

type

than

Chi-

Chicago

American

and

Chicaga

Daily

News.
Improved Quality
The decision of Pioneer to enter
the web offset field, Burdick said,
was made after an extensive cross
country study by the
company

which

indicated that the improved

quality of the offset process, plus
the company’s ability to turn out
a large volume of letterpress printing, both at exceptionally low unit
cost, would make a combination of
printing facilities that would provide
the
surest
course
for continuing growth.
Pioneer’s
North
Shore
Group
Newspapers
will continue
to be
printed in Highland Park on new

web

offset

equipment

now

being

installed.

Samuel

if changes
were

1040

2-8468.

sets

eago’s largest daily newspaper.
Its
modern bindery stitches an average of 2,000,000 booklets a week,
including
the television
program
listings for the Chicago Sun-Times,

of

dogs

is less. Fewer
dogs now that

the city is completely built-up, he
explained.
Letters from Public Service Co.
reported that all requested new
street lights have been installed.
ys a

aed

ih

‘

Summer

School Is

Scheduled by NCE
A full program of class work and
recreation for children in nursery
school
through
seventh
grade
is
olanned for the six-week Summer
Sesson of the Children’s School of
National College of Education, 2840

sheridan

Road, Evanston,

June 26-

August 4.
The School will be open from
3:50 a.m. to 11:20 a.m. for nursery
school,
kindergarten,
and_
first
grade; grades two through seven
will continue until 12:20 p.m.
Strengthening or makeup
work
in the basic subjects, arithmetic,
reading, and other language arts,
will be provided as well as studies

in art, music, and physical education. There will be numerous field.

trips in most classes.
ad

thar nce!

¥

Uy

Vv.

as

IVE.

�Choose the Jewel U.S.
Choice Beef Roast that's your
family's favorite! Whichever
one you buy, you know it’s all
good eating beef, trimmed of
excess fat and bone. And it
looks the way you like it to:

bright red, firm, fine-grained,
well marbled with just the right
amount of creamy white fat.
This week serve your family
one of Jewel's delicious beef
roasts!

U.S. CHOICE — EXTRA VALUE TRIMMED

Tae HOICE

— EXTRA

VALUE

Round Bone o¥
Boston Cut
Pot Roast

TRIM

CUT

STANDING —U.S. CHOICE
Rib Roast

Hot House Tomatoes from Jewel
are perfect for stuffing with your favorite
spring salad filling. And, of course they're
tasty served plain or in sandwiches, too.
Buy a bagful at Jewel!

EXTRA FANCY

Hot House _
Tomatoes
Cake Mixes

'*

a

SWANSDOWN “3c OFF LABEL
(LEMON FLAKE, DEVIL'S FOOD, YELLOW, WHITE, OR BANANA)

CHERRY VALLEY

French Fries“: 20:

HELLMANN'’S

Mayonnaise

JEWEL MAID

White Bread
Coca Cola =

¢

63:

7277 19:
5 BB

FOR COOKING &amp; SALADS

Wesson Oi:
BATHROOM TISSUE

Sable Soft
Royal Jewel
COFFEE

-:

59:
4EWer

TEA

CO

ie

Page

H

:

57—D

49

�To Open Classroom
In District 108

For Film Library

For Handicapped
District
approved
physically
this fall.
tablished
provisions
partment
the State

108,

Highland

Park

has

a

special classroom for
handicapped
children
This program will be esin accordance with the
as outlined by the Deof Public Instruction in
of Illinois.

District 108, along with District
107 and the high school, belongs to
the
recently
organized
Northern
Suburban
Special Education
District. This special district includes
all elementary schools underlying
Highland Park, New Trier, Glenbrook
and
Lake
Forest
High

Schools.
Located
The

108

at

special

will

West

Ridge

classroom

be

located

in District

in

the

West

Ridge School. It is anticipated that
approximately ten physically handicapped school age children between five and 10 years of age will
be enrolled this fall. Most of the
children
will
be
enrolled
from
adjoining districts throughout the
northern suburbs on a tuition basis,
and transported to the West Ridge
School.
Other districts in the new Special Education District will offer
special classes for children who are
deaf, hard of hearing, mentally retarded, and multiply handicapped.
The venture, supported by all coop-

erating boards of education, is an
attempt to meet the educational
needs of handicapped children in
the northern suburbs. W. N. Pierce,
the director of the Northern Sub-

urban

Special

maintains

Education

his

District,

headquarters

in

Glenview. Pierce recently said that
“a high degree of discretion will be
used in accepting physically handicapped children into the program
at West Ridge. The decision as to
who will be accepted will be determined
largely by school, psy-

chological
tion,”

Scenes such as these shown here were usual in the homes

of Wayne Thomas PTA members these past weeks, while they
constructed the Disneyland decorations for the Carnival Sat-

urday.

One

of the committee

members

who

brought

her

on hand

to visually record interviews with
all of the children who attend. Refreshments will be available.
Proceeds of the Disneyland Car-

Senior Work Day
Set for May 20
The

senior

class

at

Senior

School PTA.

raise

money

Car Hits House

land

done by calling phone numbers
be announced
soon. The jobs

Boy Scouts, Civil Air Patrol and
a tv remote control truck and doz-

Anthony
Pellegrino
of
419
Bloom St., southbound on Central
Ave. at 12:25 a.m. Sunday, drove
onto the parkway on the north

ens

side

nival will go to the Wayne

ten

trucks

floats,
(from

with

Disneyland

theme

Indian Chief White Eagle
tv chanel 11). Girl Scouts,

of

Wayne

Thomas

school

chil-

Thomas

Residents

of

the

street

and

hit

Ray

J.

Porterfield’s

The carnival will begin at the
school at 11:00 a.m. and runs to
4:00 p.m. Displays and booths will

tral, Highland Park police report.
Shock shattered a picture win-

such

as

Post

disneyland attractions

Auto-rama,

Office

and

Adventureland,

Frontierland

Shooting

Fantasyland,

‘Thousands

of prizes have

from

original

the

Anaheim, Calif.
Marty
Green,

and

host

of

Gallery,
been

Disneyland

local

etc.
sent

in

disc-jockey

‘Celebrity

Showcase”

will broadcast live from the Teen
“Playboy
Penthouse”
(at Wayne
‘Thomas School) and interview Troy
Donahue, tv personality. Other personalities will be on hand such as
Frank “Wanna Dance” Pisani; the

‘(Gem Tones, Gary and Chuck, Bonfnie Lane

and

other

big names

sur-

prises.
Robert

Page

Popke

H

58—D

will

50

have

his

re-

house

at

1045

Cen-

dow. Damage to the house was
estimated at $415. Pellegrino said
he was trying to avoid a vehicle
coming toward him fast from behind, swerving all over the road.
Police cited him
for negligent
driving.

out

of

gas

on

the

home from a night shift job
Lighting Products Co. Friday.
He

had

put

10 gallons

in on

way

at
the

way down. No leaks were found in
the tank; so police are sure a
siphon was used.

Day,

to

scholarships.

any

lawn

area

and

will

will

be

all odd jobs

include

mowing,

to
to

such

weeding,

gardens,
painting,
cleaning garages or basements,
putting
up
screens, washing cars, babysitting
and anything
else that can be
thought up. The charge for the
work done
except for

will be $1.00 per hour,
washing cars or baby-

sitting which will have a set price
to be decided later. Each customer

will

be

given

a

receipt

district for the

the

to

a statement

saying

are

sale

production

Oak

of tick-

which

will

be staged Friday evening, May
and Saturday evening May 20

19
at

8:45 in the school’s

A

auditorium,

special matinee for children will be

presented Saturday afternoon, May
20th at 3:30 o’clock.

Block

captains

will

continue

to

visit the residents until May 15th.
Starting May 16th, tickets may be
purchased
in
the
lobby
of the
school from 8:30 to 9 each morning.

Two Red Oak parents who wrote
and directed the original “Red Oak
Revue” last year have been called
back again to take over the direction of this year’s show. They are:
Mrs. Robert Friedman, 1930 Berk-

ley, named

director, and Mrs.

Mrs. Sanford Sandler, 528 Ridge
Road,
Chairman
of
Ways
and
Means for the Red Oak PTA, has
named the following in charge of
the stage crew and stage settings:
Mrs. Abel Davis, scenic designing;
Edward
Juul, stage construction;
Maurice
Unger,
lighting;
Mrs.
Robin Padorr, stage crew manager,
and Mrs, Isadore Mazer, props.
The revue will consist of 16 num-

bers

featuring

from

“Guys

musical

and

selections

Dolls,”

‘Do-Re-

Mi,” “Bye, Bye, Birdie,” and “Bells
Are

Ringing.”

Proceeds will be used to purchase a film library for the Red
Oak

school.

intentions

5.

that

date

the

students

their

whether

fifth

summer

NOT

Parents
with

are

will

six-week
school

at-

their children

to

consider

the advisability

of taking courses otherwise unavailable to them, or of repeating
courses for better grades and increased skill.
This survey is not a formal registration. Primarily because of the
problem

of

obtaining

the

available,

that the

done satisfactorily, Also,

there will be a special number to
call for complaints
of any type.
In connection with the work day,
the senior
girls are planning
a

description

of

courses, and a calendar of summer
school dates will appear in this
Paper.

students

and

teams

recent graduates tapped for spring
membership
in
Indiana
University’s Alpha chapter, Beta Gamma
Sigma national honorary in busi-

of three or four, each team having
an assigned schedule.
There will be a party after the
work day is completed, for all who
participated.

ness.
Membership
in Beta
Gamma
Sigma
is the
highest
accolade
awarded by the I.U. School of
Business for scholarship.

bake

The

sale.

jobs

will

be

done

by

Mrs.

Satinover

of

and Northwood

is on the faculty

Training

and

Personal

Develop-

ment Courses. She received both
her
Bachelor’s
and
Master’s
degrees from University of Chicago.
She also studied at Columbia University and has taught at the elementary levels as well as the col-

lege level.

With
For

the

Mlinois PTA

past

ten

years

she

has

been Professional Leader for the
training of Parent-Education Leaders for the Illinois Congress of
Parents and Teachers.
Mrs.
Satinover’s
topic will be
“Why Modern Parents Need Parent
Education.”
The
co-chairmen
of

Parent Education
Sally

Lerner,

Kruger

Pollack,

Amy

themselves

Schell

very

Norma

consider

fortunate

in

Satinover.

Mrs.

curing

for both schools,

Lew

and

se-

served.

be

will

Refreshments

Register Children
For Kindergarten
At Mother's Teas
Tuesday,

May

16,

at

the

In-

room.

A child will be registered only
if he will be five years old on or
before December 1, 1961. Mothers
are asked to bring their child’s
birth certificate as proof of age.
The children are not
this tea but have been

regular
spring.

kindergarten
Miss
Clara

invited
invited

to
to

sessions this
M.
Malvey

teaches the class,

Blosten, Mrs.

Gerald

Dean,

Mrs.

A.

Dubin and Mrs. J. H. Last.
Parents
whose
children
are
eligible for enrollment this fall and
who have not already been contacted are urged to call the Superintendent’s

office,

Green

ID

2-9255.

Bay School

A registration tea for mothers of
incoming
kindergarten
children

will be held Wednesday, May 17,
at the Green Bay Road School. The
mothers are invited to gather at
3:15 p.m. in the kindergarten room.
A child will be registered only if
he will be five years

old

on

or be-

fore December 1, 1961. Mothers are
asked to bring their child’s birth
The

Allen R. Greenberg, junior from
1900 Old Briar in Highland Park,

39 current

Thomas

of University
College,
University
of Chicago,
and the Director
of
Parent
Education
Leadership

certificate

Tapped for Honor

is among

fea-

School PTA Tuesday, May 8 at 8
p.m.
Officers
of Wayne
Thomas
PTA for the 1961-62 school year
will be installed. Fred Lane will
be installed
as President,
Rema
Sirota as Vice President, Mrs. Bert
Marx as Secretary and Jim Cannman as Treasurer.

best

qualified teaching personnel, the
survey at this time is necessary.
The first formal registration for
high school students will be held
at 3:30 on Friday, May 19. On
Thursday, May
18, a
listing of
courses

be

Hostesses will be room mothers,
Mrs. G. M. Suber, Mrs. George

Registration

urged

will

at a joint meeting

the kindergarten

concerning summer school will be
taken in the home rooms at Highland Park High School, Friday,

received

Satinover

the Wayne

held

At HP High School
of students’

K.

speaker

dian Trail School. The mothers are
invited to gather at 3:30 p.m. in

Summer Sessions
survey

Mary
tured

A registration tea for mothers of
incoming kindergarteners will be

Study Needs for

A

Wayne Thomas and
Northwood PTA’s
To Have Speaker

Sid-

ney Weinberg, 820 Ridge, who is assistant director.

for

the amount paid, and will be asked
work was

Bobby Rhoads of 525 Kirkwood
Ave., Winthrop Harbor, complained
to Highland Park police that his
ran

as

designated

of the Deerfield-High-

undertaken

things

to sign

Gas Tank Drained

car

be

class

Park-Highwood

able to have

dren in Disneyland Costumes.

feature many

for

captains

of the Red

ets

Highland

Work

Block

school

mine

School

Among
the parade participants
will be the Fifth Army Band, Marine Color guard from Great Lakes,

has

week.

on

tendance is desirable.

High

as

this

went

grades and should be able to deter-

20

# land Park Highlands.

sale

visiting the homes

have

Park

Park in the High-

Oak school in Woodridge,

By

May

a.m. at Old Elm

Tickets for the two evening performances of the 1961 edition of
the “Red Oak Revue,” the musical
satire being produced by the Parent-Teachers Asociation of the Red

May

of them.

control tv equipment

informa-

gram.

on the decorations. In case you cannot identify the characters
they are drawing, ask your youngsters. They will know all
mote

medical

Kenneth Crowell, principal of the
West Ridge School, along with Miss
Sue Hunt, psychologist for District
108, will supervise the local pro-

camera, took pictures of Mrs. Paul Wienger, chairman of the
decorating committee, and Mrs. Bert Sadock, as they worked

Wayne Thomas School, Summit
Avenue, presents its Disneyland parade and carnival on Saturday, May
6. The parade will begin at 10:00

and

Slate Proceeds of
Red Oak Revue

this

tea

regular

as proof

children
but

have

not

invited

been

invited

kindergarten

spring, Miss
the class.
Hostesses

Pelly

of age.

are

and

Frances

sessions
Pelly

to
to

this

teaches

at the tea will be Miss

members

of

the

PTA

children’

are

Board.
Parents

whose

eligible for enrollment this fall and
who have not already been contacted are urged to call the Super-

intendent’s office, ID 2-9255,
Thursday, May

4, 1961

�SAILBOATS
O’DAY
IMPERIAL
MASTERCRAFT
24 hour

&amp;

SUPPLIES

swaging

DINGHY

RACE-LITE
MERRIMAN
INTERLUX
service

FIREPLACE

SHOP

591-B Roger Williams (rear)
Highland Park, ID 3-2620
Daily

WANT

AD

Permitted)

50c per additional line,
(Up to 10 lines)
25c Service Charge for blind ads

3 Lines .. $1.75

Ads containing 11 lines or more are charged at the inch rate. Contract
rates for 4 or more consecutive
insertions available on request.
1 inch
Minimum.

Your Ad

Will Appear

pie 3 i

tal

MIOHLAND PARK NEWS

In All Seven*

qa

eae

s

HIGHWOOD NEWS

VERNON REVUIW

THE LAKE PORESTER

Wort

meer SHERIDAN TOWER

iJuore

Urour

l Ve WSPAPERS

*Fort Sheridan Tower is pubti hed every other Friday. Ads
in which the Tower is publish
will appear in the Tower

WANT
Tuesday,
DEADLINE

FOR

Monday,

CONTRACT

ADS

—

3

P.M.

Phone Your Want

Ad —

(except situation wanted

e

Advertising of any kind is accepted for
publication in this newspaper with the
understanding
that the publisher assumes no responsibility for omission or
for errors and
shall be under no obligation or liability of any kind whatsoever,
either to the advertiser or third parties.
However, in the event of an error in
any advertisement, clearly the fault of

610

LAUREL

AVE.

DRESSMAKING

Join

&amp;

TINA
ID 2-7118

PARK

As low as 10%

¢

Dinner served at fine restaurant. Private camp grounds and pool. All sports,
canoeing, riding, special trips, dancing,
bowling.
Max Neiberg
DAvis 8-9037

the

EXPERIENCED SEAMSTRESS
wishes to do alterations . home. Reasonable. Telephone ID 2-8097, Miss Anna Caringello, 138 Burtis Ave., Highwood.
ALTERATIONS expertly done in my home,
reasonable. For appointment, ID 2-4553.
2528 Green Bay Road, Highland Park.
ALTERATIONS?

CARPENTERS,

Bank

rate

Fun

196]

down.

financing

up

to

36

of
Sales

PARTY
items.

WE

Mercury Outboard Motors
Grady White Boats .................. Dorsett Boats
Stareratt Bouts ooh Giese, Balko Trailers

AUTO SERVICE

WM. RUEHL &amp; CO.
GENERAL BODY SHOP
NOW OPEN

CH

NEEDS

RENT FROM OUR NEW ASSORTMENT
of adult and child sized tables and chairs;
fine china, silver, linens and 100’s of other

Service

2927 Belvidere
120) just east of Green
Bay Rd., la,
Ill.
Open Mon., Thurs., Fes 9-9
Tues., Wed., Sat.:
Sunday: 12 noon to 55 es,

DELIVER

651 Roger Williams,

lewood

Auto

Body and Fender Repair
All Makes - All Models

Complete
Undercoating

ASK
4

FOR

JACK.

Touch

Ups

SKOKIE

ID 2-5845
LOANS

' top

aluminum Mie

carrier,

$200. I

boat. and

_ Thursday, May 4, 1961

PARK

INC,

LONE STAR
LARSON

3815

OPEN

MON., THURS.
&amp; FRI.,
SUNDAYS ‘io TO 4

’TIL

CLAUSING
9

el a

of

WORK

PIANO
INSTRUCTION
Hank
Winston,
staff pianist
at WBBMCBS. Adults mornings and evenings, children
after school. Call WI 5-0244 after 7:30 p.m.
NORTH
SHORE MUSIC STUDIOS
(formerly Garino’s)
North
Shore’s
finest.
Inquire
about
our
liberal trial plan. Instrument furnished.
GUITAR-ACCORDION
ID 2-0015
If no answer, ID 2-1498
ORGANIZING
small
group
of
teenage
girls for summer sewing class. Wish to
contact woman who could instruct rudi~—_
of simple dressmaking. Call ID 31096.
BEGINNERS’ guitar lessons—individual ato&gt; eeehamaea dgciaesie reasonable. Call ID
3-01

JUNK

LIGHT

general

LANDSCAPING

PRAIRIE ACRES
LANDSCAPING
SERVICE
Black soil, fill dirt, manure,
top dressing
and rolling lawns. Ever reens, shrubs, trees.
For estimate phone WI
5-0818.
MODERN Landscaping, Jack Vena. Call’ me
for the best in lawn maintenance
_cae
in garden and patio work.

PAINTING

FIM BEINLICH
TRUCKING—VE Stioe
5-1
Evanston—DA 8-3853
Chicago—PL 2-8088
FRED &amp; ROBERT’S LAWN CARE
LANDSCAPING—LAWN
MAINTENANCE
Weekly &amp; Monthly rates
AVAILABLE
30 YEARS experience, white veteran gardener-landscaper, skilled and odd jobs, cultivating, planting, patios layed, flower and
vegetable beds made. Customers wanted
for the season. $2.75 per hour. Dependable, sober, reliable. AL 1-4636.
MEMORABLE
Day Special, cemetery lots
fixed right, $15. Yards cultivated, edged,
pruned and trimmed, $50; flower ‘beds or
vegetable gardens, $25. ALpine 1-4636.

SOIL

5-5117.

&amp;

and

SAM
walks,
floors,
VE 5-

ELECTRIC

work,
post lights,
circuits,
its, repairs Reason-

Elm

WOO

Place

DECORATING
DECORATORS

decorating,

EM 2-8592.
PAINTING
and paper hanging, re
prices; f.
one
Telephone P’
GALLOS, CE 4-015
PAINTING
WD “DECORATING
@ Thorough
preparation
@ Clean, careful, workmen
@ Best materials, applied properly
@ Sensible
rices
BLOOM PAINTING co.

and

decorating

trained.

Call

—

3- 1661

washed,
$25,
shampooing
vs
on Also floors and windows

after

cleaned.
cle

PIANO TUNING
PIANOS expertly tuned,
of satisfaction or no
phone ID 3-0608.

PLANTS

REMOD.

with the
charge.

$10.

&amp; BULBS

GROUND
cover,
plants for sale.
wood. Telephone
all day Sunday.

beautiful
shooting _ sti
125 North Ave.,
ID 2-3936 after 5 d

&amp; HOME

MAIN.

ZIELKE CONST.
GENERAL

CO.

CONTRACTORS

COMPLETE PLAN SERVICE ON
Room additions
Recreation rooms
Kitchens
Dormers
Garages

MONTH’S
Room

Fully insured
Call now for

SPECIAL

additions

and union men
your free estimate

Zielke Const. Co.

CRestwood
ROTO
ROTO-TILLING;

for

sare 7

Cal EM 3 |

garden and lawn_pr

ROTO-TILLING,
pax

2- 5820

TILLING

tion; spading ‘and
pire 2-0472 or CE

ye
4-

grec

light cating:

seeding.

bin wena

ID

eroune

SPORTING

J

2-8029,

fast service. John,

at

C

GOODS

THOMPSON
surf board; brand new. O
inal cost $30; will sell for $15. Phon
Empire 2-3714.

cannot

Prgeohvoonm,

pe

TV

SERVICE
try

set

Park

EXPERT TREE REMOVAL
COMPLETELY
sured

men.

EXPERIENCED

Modern

power

electrical

cherpening,

and

re-

WING’S

TREE

IN- .

equipment.

JIM BEINLICH
PRECISION
sharpening and repair; hand
and power mowers, all work guaranteed,
free pick up and delivery; open 24 hours
a day. S and H Green Stamps. Cruickshank Standard Service, Dundee and Skokie Highways, Northbrook, CR 2-3070 and
CR 2-9852.

&gt;

ea
SURGERY

TREE

it today

LAUNDRY

pairs. ID 2-8029, or ID 2-9202.

done

ID

—

EXPERTS at wall washing. 5 rooms hee,
$45, or living room and dining room

we

Highland

ales,

and

con Service
1 $4.95 pi when
to your satisfaction.
NORTH ada
pc
TV SERVICE

LAWNMOWERS,

LAWNMOWER

|

interior

TELEVISION

SHIRTS
590

Call

prinap natural or bleached wood
wood
rs
fin; quality workmanship,
For estimating, call Eric Schneider, Libertyville,

THIS

Manures
Tractor Work
Tree pemere.

desired,

also PBs

terior and exterior painting. For
workmanship
by
‘experienced,
men call W. C. Veena WI 5-0654.

c. RBINK
JR. &amp; CO.
For the best in spring cleaning, fertili
rae maintenance, new lawns, etc. Call

services

We

orating. Hubert Johnson. Call ID S14 770.
PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING. aly

Park. ID 3781

FAST

5-3815 or

CALL COLLECT
BAldwin 3-0954 or BAldwin 34636
PAINTING and decorating; 25 years on
North Shore; outside a specialty.
Free estimates. Phone any time. CE 4-393
EXTERIOR and interior painting and dec-

NOEL
TEAGUE
LANDSCAPING.
New
lawns; black soil; evergreens; shrubs and
trees;
lawns
re-seeded
and _ fertilized;
stone work; driveways; tree work; patios.
Telephone ID 2-7619.
GENERAL De
wy New jobs. Gabriel
Ruffalo
es
Day
Rd.,
Highland

FAST,

VE

hauling.

VILLAGE

YARD maintenance, shrub pingties, tree reeae and trimming. CallC
opp, ID

TOP

anywhere. You

Phone

nemenutets asc ‘d

THE

European
5:30 p.m.

25c per CWT brought to our apn yr
im ir a ada paid for all types of
ht to our door, such as rags,
s, etc. Or call ID 3-1466 for truck
pick-up.
Hours
daily
—v
Saturday,
8:30 to 5:30 p.m. Sun.
HIGHLAND
PARK
WASTE
MATERIAL
1466 Berkeley Rd.

,

5-3824.

PAINTING

NEWSPAPERS

if special

REPAIRS

outlets, new
cole prices. Telephone
ID

VE

haul.

types of household sppliances.
6098 or ID 2-4917.

R. Cohen, 76 Glencoe Rd., VE 5-4248
SUMMER PROGRAM AVAILABLE

gree

BIKES

HAULING

haul anything,

call, we

PAINTING

Top Soils
Gravel Drives
ewe ee

&amp;

Service.

1 year, 1600
condition, $75.

&amp;

NO

patios, sidewalks, steps,
L. Gulbrandsen. Phone

ELECTRICAL

We

LAUNDRY

5-3824.

EXPERT on cement
garage floors, etc.
WI 5-4458

JOHNSON SEAHORSE
SALES AND SERVICE
BANK FINANCING AVAILABLE
car-

or VE

4-3826.

NORTH SHORE READING CENTER
Remedial and Developmental
Reading
Specializing in study methods: comprehension and speed. Individual attention based
on diagnostic testing; for Junior high school
thru college.

.

All types of cement work,
driveways, retaining walls,
etc. Free estimates. Phone

MOVING

INSTRUCTION

WI

Patio Time

RD.

ALCORT SAILFISH &amp; SUNFISH
GATOR &amp; MICHIGAN TRAILERS

BOATS
FOOT

&amp; CLAVEY

Featuring
CRUISERS
RS ETT

LOW COST AUTO LOANS
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF LAKE FOREST
LAKE FOREST CE 45100

12

HIGHWAY

HIGHLAND

FRECH

t87 E. Park Ave.
AUTO

BOAT HOUSE

Painting,
and

CEMENT

SCOOTERS
used
good

An

Furniture

General —4

size kitchen, $1.75. NEwton

‘Highland Park

2-6333

$20 per ton;
ID 3-1622.

Have any of your floors professionally cleaned, waxed, and polished;
latest equipment. Trial offer; any

rib

ASSOCIATED
RENT-ALLS

4-1310
“_

MOTOR

Repaited.

Merit

1958 WHIZZER,
cost $220 new,
ID 2-3499.

s0&amp;

CATERING

Waukegan
and

&amp;

CHRISTO-CRAFT
REMODELING
CO.
WI 5-3273
ID 2-2319
Remodeling and home maintenance is our
business. Porch enclosures, basement paneled room additions, kitchen cabinets, or
just that one door that doesn’t close right.
All work guaranteed.

months.

BELVIDERE
BOAT WORKS

Come and see Eda at our New Drive In.
——
——
2020
First St.,
land Park
ALTERATIONS.
dressmaking,
draperies,
slipcovers; interior design oe
eee
5-5719, if no answer WI 5-1514

CONTRACTORS

HOME
remodeling,
additions, TV rooms,
repairs, free estimates, winter rates. Telephone WI 5-1511.
FOR he ort omg that new home, addition or
remodel
be it ap
or small,
call
V &amp; F
onstruction
Telephone ID
2-5477 or WI 5-2980.
BUILDING
and
remodeling.
Recreation
rooms and cabinets, floor and wall tile,
window awnings, door hoods and carports.
Free estimates. Telephone TRinity 2-7313.
HERB BLOMOQUIST carpenter, quality custom homes, additions, porch enclosures,
rec rooms, custom
cabinets;
remodeling and repairs. sh vse WI 5-2830.

boats and motors
to choose from.

ABBOU
HIGHLAND

M TWEEN CAMP|§

APACHE
DAY CAMP
Co-ed, ages 4% to 13, transportation. Beautiful camp site with deluxe
wim lessons, sports, crafts, dramatics. Phone for
brochure: ORchard 5-2935.

Largest selection

ALTERATIONS

3-4919

Refinished,

tiques Restored.
TRinity 2-7322.

MAINTENANCE

€

BOYS AND GIRLS 11-14 YRS.
5 days or Mon., Wed., and Fri.

BOAT
FESTIVAL

NEEDLE

SH

CIRCLE

BOATS
done at
4-3460.

ALTERATIONS

SILVER

IR 8-8150

&amp; SUPPLIES

SERVICE

EXPERT
bookkeeping and typing
_ home. Telephone Jean Sisler, CE

THE

It!

FURNITURE

HOUSEWIVES

Give Your Tween A Wonderful Summer
Experience While Living In The City

CEdar 4-2300

e

#

A New Concept
In Tween-Age Recreation

for ‘Business
Monday).

the publisher and which substantially
impairs the value of the advertisement,
on the advertiser's request, the publisher will rectify the error by publishing
the correct
ad in the next regular
issue
without
additional
charge.
All
claims for adjustment must be made
within five days of the date of publication in which the error occurs.

BUSINESS SERVICE
ACCOUNTING

* TWEEN TRAILS

ads)

Windsor 5-4500_

you want your child to be ‘“‘better than
average,” give him World Book/Childcraft,
the finest in home educational help. Telephone Miriam Booth, HlIllcrest 6-3848.

BOYS &amp; GIRLS 11-14
SET YOUR SAILS

TUESDAY

We'll Charge

HOME

CAMPS

4:30 P.M.

CANCELLATION
DEADLINE
—
NOON
TUESDAY
(except
Services G Supplies’ ads which may be cancelled until Noon

IDlewood 2-4500

IF

run during the week
at no extra charge.

“Business Services &amp; Supplies’ Classifications Will Be Accepted Up To

4:30 P.M.

12-4

BOOKS

AD DEADLINES———

All Classifications Except ‘Business
Services
Supplies’ Will Be Accepted Up To

Sun.

WOOD

SEASONED
fireplace wood,
tailgate delivery. Telephone

RENT a Houseboat-Cruiser or Pontoon boat
for your vacation. For information or brochure write Weimar Houseboat Rentals,
Inc. 1521 Green Bay, Highland Park or
phone ID 2-8029.
15 FOOT Glasspar boat with 50 H.P. Johnson, electric. Camper top, trailer, equip—
for overnight cruising. $1600. ID 3161.
WILL sell large wheel boat trailer for $50,
suitable for Fleetwin. Telephone
ID
27629
CRESTLINER
aluminum
12 foot
fishing
boat, $100. Telephone ID 2-8400.
16. FOOT Thompson boat, 30 HP Johnson
motor, Gator trailer, electric starter, fully
equipped. ID 2-7208.
16 FOOT Fleetwind Arrow, class boat of
North Shore Yacht Club, stainless steel
centerboard,
many
extras.
Reasonable.
Call ID 2-5857 or SHeldrake 3-4820.
14 FOOT runabout with 18 horsepower motor, steering, windshield, running lights,
etc. and trailer, $700. wi 5-3856.

RATES

(No Abbreviations

9-9;

MAGIC.
“Sweet 16” Show. oe Lent
day Party
Show.
Gifts;
Prizes;
David Echt. WI 5-0774.
CLOWN-MAGICIANS, Bands, Pianists, Vocalists, anything!
Call hdo Productions,
ID 2-1240. Your entertainment specialists.

VE 5-119
EXPERTS.

Cutting,

ming,
removing,
feeding
and
power stum
removin i. and power
ing. Fully
insured an
nded; free

mates;
seasoned
phone ID 3-1622

G

&amp;

N

TREE

ing, repairing,

ay-

fireplace wood. —
or Rimball’ Scere
&amp;
Sens

EXPERTS.
sid

saying ant

ramoval.

Fay

val, 1m

iD 2-8750; ID SuMA
Page H 59—D 51 _
Cage

�$

EA

Ei oey

SAS OD

eye

. HOMES

JOHN

DR

IOS

.

i

M

as

FOR

FOR

SALE

SO MANY EXTRAS
in this tastefully decorated home
make it a real bargain. 3 bedrooms,

Dorsey Husenetter

den

, Large house—small price. Living
room with fireplace, separate din_ing room. 2 car garage. Lots of liv-

or

4th

bedroom,

baths,

attached

peries,

inside

separate

Bod

dining

room,

very

kitchen, full basement $19, 900

5 - Young

brick

and

frame

ranch.

hs, Large kitchen with built-ins and
| eating area. 28’ living room. 3 bed_ rooms, 2 ceramic tile baths, large
ie _ lot, full basement

: Have you missed this spic and span
_ white ranch? Beautiful landscaping
and fruit trees. Situated on 2 lots
_ §2’x216’ each. One you can sell off

fs,

Mas

eatnicisndckee see all for $26,500

, Dorsey Husenetter
.
ee
See

2 oe bedrm, 2 bath RANCH. LR, DR,

_ 5 large Kit w blt-ins and eating area.

in

treed

grounds.

‘

LITTLE

LOW

30's.

CASH!

| 2-story Living rm, Dining area. Pan

rm. Screened

PERFECT

porch. Home

condition.

down! LOW 20’s.

ONLY

in

$3000

A REAL BUY!
3 bedrms., 114 bath Split level. LRDR comb. Pan Rec rm, Kit w/eat| ing area. Attractive SECLUDED
yard. IDEAL house to start your
suburban life. $19,000 mtg. avail-

call

6-7274

LOngbeach

1-4463

fit the

beautiful

ra-

site and to fill the requirements of
very
particular
owners.
FAMILY
OOM
of this SPLIT LEVEL
opens to
¥¢
patio with built-in Bar-B-Q. Striking
etm
wih ee
fireplace. Mutschler
i
Bedrms.,
3 baths.
Loads
of
ts. A
at comparable at $69,500.

e
Le

REALTORS

iVa
ie
=

Ge

Theater

Bldg.

WHY

when you can so easily own this
well-built 3 bedroom Ranch with a
full basement. No need for that extra cash for draperies, carpeting,
stove and refrigerator for they are
all included in the low, low, price

of $21,500.
room

VErmon

FOREST

5-0236

Be
Mi|

Ahlmann

Christensen

Close to North Shore station,
and school, 6 room brick ranch,

golf course
3 bedrooms,

1%

baths.

Full basement, 2 car garage. All

ay drapes and carpeting.
_ Forty thousand.
Call

A.

fine

Ahlmann

buy

around

Christensen

— Baird &amp; Warner
: 283 E. Deerpath
fBL

CE 4-1855

Forest

BR 5-0450

DEERFIELD-BRIARWOODS

vs

Sunday 1 to 5—900 Westcliffe. Stunranch in exclusive section; close to
_ everything:
3 bedrooms,
2. baths,
family
Me room;
immaculate
condition. Owner retir-

Bs -ing—wants

a THE
y

_

offer.

KEMPF

REALTY

- Page H 60—D 52

Colonial

bedrooms

only

with

1

21%

Seven
room
brick Ranch
with 3
bedrooms, 2 ceramic tile baths has

all the features you are looking for.
Family room with nice fireplace,
carpeted living and dining room.
Master bedroom has complete bath
with
tile
shower,
completely

lequipped

kitchen,

full

basement,

large bedrooms, 2 car attached garage, slate entry hall. Over 100 ft.
landscaped lot. $38,500.

COUNTRY
Tired of cramped

LIVING
quarters?

delightful seven room
3
bedrooms,
family room,

on

down

on 4%

large
living
huge kitchen,

payment

and rent-

LINCOLNSHIRE
Southern Colonial

Gracious
Ranch

set

among

giant

bedrooms;

2

Stone

towering

baths;

trees.

3

stone
entire

fireplace
in family
room;
house carpeted except fami-

blue

ly room; master bedroom with bath;
patio; attached 2 car garage.

Owner

transferred. $39,500.
OUTSTANDING
brick Ranch with full

This

WI

5-5552

patio
in

area

area;

fst.

nook

&amp;

all

with

a

listed

this

base-

large

homes

architect

is

mas

i

Es

.

3 good

view

size

of

bedrms.—

the

beautiful

Chas

WORT

WASt OP 3. 2eeus $24,900

borhood. Good construction is obvious—plaster walls—ceramic tile
in the 2 baths &amp; full bsmt. House
work cut to a minimum by excel-

lent

traffic

pattern—from

the

en-

try hall one may directly enter the
liv. rm., the din. L, the kit. w/eating space or the bedrm. area consisting of 3 good size rooms.
Priced: ats
$25,900
We want your opinion, so please
don’t fail to inspect the interior of
this spacious brick ranch in north-

east location. It has all those sought
after features: center hall, f.p. in
liv. rm., truly sep. din. rm., huge
kit., family rm., 3 twin sized bedrms.,
2 baths;
beautifully
landscaped. Vacant.
Must be sold! Asking __.$31,900
Most

appealing

4

bedrooms

area for children.

family
adj.

rm.

The

w/picture

lot.

Full

pwd.

rm.

is

perfect

for

the

young ~.fry’s ». entertaining,-.. while
Mother and Dad can enjoy peace
&amp; quiet on the main level with its

liv. rm., big din. L for formal

en-

tertaining &amp; big built-in kit. w/eating space, bsmt. &amp; garage.

Only
When

you

see

the

interior

bsmt.,

Entr.

statement

that

the

Just

the

gorgeous

from

the

window

price

is firm.

wooded

walls

&amp;

garage.
Peieee

at.

nice

opening

hall,

fenced

yard.

Kit.

patio

has natural

wood cabinet &amp; good eating space.
Full bsmt. w/outside entry.
A brick ranch for __... $29,750

PIERSEN REALTY

in-

Ranch

lge.

the

liv.

rm.

2nd

floor

and

a

Studio
On

beautiful

with

age

room
2

car

ground

rose

addnl.

bdrms.

and

bath.

2

car

gar., new W.A. gas and cent. air
cond. Convenient to schools, shops
and station.
construction

shingled

roof.

of

grounds

and

The
the

WI

of

PAUL PHELPS, INC.
1925

Sheridan

BUY OF THE WEEK
Seven room: custom built Split-level
offered for sale. An outstandvalue.
with
spacious
rooms,

ID

Rd.

2-4580

REALTORS
of the Evanston-North
Multiple Listing Service

Member

plenty of closet space. Family room

Lang Real Estate

plete kitchen; 3 large bedrooms;
attached 2 car garage. Excellent

712

Glencoe

neighborhood.

AM

2-7873

$29,750.

John Coons, Realtor
WITH

THE TRADE-IN
623 Deerfield Road

PLAN
WI 5-5100

Glencoe

Road
AL

1-3430

1652 BERKELEY

VE

5-1971

ROAD

HIGHLAND PARK SHERWOOD FOREST
aecsoggast F 3 paeronm bi-level, paneled rec.
room,
gas heat, carpeting apHi
dy i Pi ae
scaped wooded lot. Exceptional value. In 20’s. Open. ID 2-9007.

w/frpl.

Att.

DEERFIELD’S
Waukegan Road

701

OPEN

SUNDAYS

NEWLY

1090

N.

Ridge

Rd.,

ily

rm.

w/sliding
16

ft.

w/built-ins
car garage.
district.

Shore

Highland

This 3 bedrm. 2 bath
has so much to offer to
and guests with its 37
living, 15x15 dining ell,
yard.

9

' caeng

12 TO

WI

OPEN

x

Park

brick ranch
your family
ft. carpeted
20x12 fam-

glass

in.

IN

RAVINIA

shops

3

and

within

trains.

bedroom

2

with

2

This

bath

RANCH
blocks

quality

home

has

high

barbeque

Large

full

basement,

doors

to

Highland

school

tree

the

focal

WI

TO

5:30

point.

(11x16)

peren-

old

There

are

and bath on
and

garage

5-0984

makes

a wonderful

private

4th bedrm. Excellent closet and
storage space; also a big tool house
in rear. Price
$54,500

P.M.

Member

Inter-City

Realtor Referral
Service
PLANNED

Ranch—Tiled

$26,500.

entry

hall,

Rd.

Earhart &amp; Company
REALTORS
1899

Sheridan

Rd.

ID

2-0880

MORTGAGE LOANS
CONVENTIONAL OR FHA

CALL:

L. Ringer
666 Waukegan
Deerfield

and

300 year

bath upstairs. A unique studio (16x
30) and bath over 2 car attached

OLDEST
12

bushes

A huge

first floor, third large bedroom

Park

appts.

is

berry

two bedrooms

Large
Liv.-Din. rm. comb.
Stone
fireplace—Beautiful cabinet kitchen, very generous eating area; 3
twin-size bdrms. Ceramic tile bath,
oversize 1 car gar. GAS heat—many

fine

good sized kitchen with breakfast
alcove. Panelled den overlooks the
finest,
superbly
landscaped
2%
acres with 19 fruit trees of several
nial gardens.

IDEALLY
Brick

school. 28 ft. Living Room
with
fireplace,
separate
dining
room,

varieties,

Road

gas

ing to be desired if you want privacy of country living close-in, being only 2 blocks to grammar

and 214%

109

fire-

NEWLY LISTED
BANNOCKBURN

plus basement
in

the

$33,500

Kitchen

Located

of

built

a waist

13

SUNDAYS

5-0984

5:30 P.M.

This 10 year old charming Early
American styled home leaves noth-

Carr Realty Co.
Waukegan

Rec.

Garage.
A
$31,750.

LISTED—BRICK

IN

HOUSE
2-5

DEERFIELD’S

with attractive fireplace; large living room; formal dining room; com-

Comb.

Carr Realty Co.

Carr Realty Co.

701

Magnificent
French
Provincial
home
on
over an acre of beautiful property in view
of lake. Step-down living room, large dining room, breakfast room, 2 dens, 4 family
bedrooms, 2 maid’s rooms, 5% baths, beach
earners
A must for the executive! $95,-

Liv.-din.

rm.
Storage
rm.
Good value at

heat

5-1670

PARK

NEW LISTING
4 BEDRMS.
Colonial Bi-level, 2 blocks to town
and
school.
Excellent
area.
Ent.

place.

Bungalow,

HIGHLAND

BRICK
VENEER
RANCH,
3_
bedrms.
w/many
Large
closets,
one
walk-in
LR
w/frpl., Din. rm. Kit. w/birch cabinets and
pantry, 2 C.T. baths.
Full bsmt., 2 car
garage. 100x200
lot.
$36,000

finest modern kitchen with eating
area, a unique informal living room

=

5 room

LIKE NEW BI-LEVEL—OWNER TRANSFERRED.
Brick and frame 3 bedrm., entrance way, L-D “‘L” shaped, Kit. w/built-in
oven and re e with eating area. Large rec.
rm. EXTR
NICE HOUSE. ahead
3,600
rage.

beauty

charm

the home can be appreiciated only
by inspection. in the 30’s.

For
Commons

$1,950 DOWN,
BALANCE
LIKE
RENT
on this new Bi-level, Liv.-din. Comb “L”,
Kit. w/eating area, 3 bedrms., 2 full baths,
sae rm, and den. Ideal location. Close to
school.
.

is of stone with

heavy
the

RANCH,
well
bath, 1% car
$18,750

WOCDLAND
PARK AREA is the settin:ng
for this Attractive ranch.
Large carpet
Liv.-Din, area. Kit. w/eating space. 1 car
garage.
20,750

garden pool. The liv. rm. is large
w. frpl and 114 story ceiling; mod.
‘kitch., bdrm. and bath on 1st floor,

2

3 BEDRM.
Kit. and 1%

NEWLY
DECORATED
STONE
and
FRAME
RANCH
offers
3 bedrm.
or 2
bedrm. plus den and L-D comb., nice landscaped yard, cyclone fenced-in back B by 4

gardens,

Priced at—$39,000
Deerfield

DELIGHTFUL
kept. LR, DR,
garage.

hall,

Room

trees,

3 BEDRM.
2 STORY
HOME,
Kit., Full basement, 2 blks from
$18,250

Do you need a hse. in
a HURRY?
We
have this 3 bedrm. ranch ready to be moved
into. Very nice floor plan. Kit. Mtn
area. Attractive yard. Priced at
$19,95

as $32,500

landscaped

old

DEERFIELD
OLDER
LR, DR,
town.

f/frpl.,

plant;

Living

Shore

1 ACRE LOT w/3 bedrm. hse. has LR-Din.
Comb., Kit. w/eating space, ref. and stove
included. Full basement w/rec. rm. $19,950

maid’s

with new gas heating
gar.
Ii POal MUS Obi

Evanston-North
Listing service.

attraclot
in

and bath on the 3rd. Full basement

OPEN

&amp;

Price

There are 3 bedrms. and 2 baths on

$37,500

onto

heat.

This well built brick and stone
English
home
conv.
to _ transp.,
school and shops, is in a setting of
beau. trees. It has a good size liv.
rm. w. frpl., TV rm., din. rm., kitch.
and
large
scr.
secluded
porch.

picture

This is an ideal home for the growing family. 3 nice bedrms. &amp; 2
baths plus a huge redwood panelled
rm.

gas

East

views

windows are worth it. Ceramic tile
&amp; wood panelling have been blended in both baths &amp; in the huge
built-in kit. to give a most striking
effect. Sep. din. rm. has a f.p. &amp;
doors leading to the family rm. All
3 bedrms. are twin size. 2 car att.

2 baths,

mod. kitch., lge. scr. porch, 3 bedrms., 2 cer. t. baths, utility rm.,
full bsmt., gas heat.
House
in
excellent
condition
with many fine appointments. Owner leaving town.
$45,000

The

of this

3 bedrms.,

Traditional

$26,900

custom built &amp; unusual contemporary ranch, you won’t question our

fence.

Member of the
Multiple

and frame

Beautiful white ranch on
tively
landscaped
corner
wooded Sherwood Forest.

panelled

&amp;

brick

cludes carpeting, drapes, stove.
This home has all the charm and
livability of Williamsburg Colonial.
An excellent buy in the 30’s.

brick

window

white

lge. liv. rm. w. frpl., din. rm., spac.
panelled fam. rm. and mod. kitch.

&amp; frame Col. split level in wonderful

Carr Realty Co.

Colonial

on 78 ft. lot; large trees, patio and
stockade

neighborhood

right at $26,500.

THE NAME

the

town are the extra bonuses.

family

full basement; 2 bedrooms; large
living room; porch; garage. See us
about down payment.

just
ing

was

property. A huge utility rm., scr.
pch. &amp; gar. plus a top location in

$15,900
Just

of contemporary

Keck

overlooking

excellent

see this—priced

say

enough—but we’ll give you a few
more details on this well planned
brick home. Large liv. rm. w/f.p.,
most efficient kit. w/built-in brk-

place. Carpeting in living room and
dinette included. 3 good sized bedrooms; light and spacious kitchen
breakfast

lovers

to

See this

Ranch

SMALL DOWN
PAYMENT
Or rent this 3 bedroom
Ranch
with living room
and oversized
kitchen on ¥% acre. Call for infor-

value

bed as
room,
dining
room,
family
_ £00
den, modern kitchen. Basement
ds W/lireplace, enclosed porch. Beautiful woodi"
lot. East side of Lake Forest. All car7 “peti ne a
ep The house is in excellent
condition.
A wonderful buy in the middle

Call

POPULAR

story

baths.
Master
bedroom
has
own
Bath.
Powder
room
just off 1st
floor family room. Formal dining
room; entrance hall; full basement.
Located
on high terrace in fine
neighborhood of comparable homes.
Over 1,600 sq. ft. of living space.
$7,000 down. Price $29,000.

fenced

OFFICE

. White clapboard Colonial 4 bedrooms, 2%

am Hixties.

two

old—3

with

LAKE

RENT

ment and 2 car attached garage offers space and value that is not
easily found. Living room has fire-

J-H Kahn

To

Attractive

Beautifully maintained
contemporary brick ranch in congenial neigh-

al. Price $14,900.

LISTING.
5 year old RANCH
in
borhood
of
other
young
homes.
:
living
room,
Dining
L
comb.
ned kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 24% baths.
a:
ptional recreation
room
too for the
y “Famiy’s hobbies. $34,500.

to

in

rage. Choice wooded lot. $39,900.

mation

NEW

BUILT

cabinets

attached garage. $23,000.

“i J-H Kahn Realty
CUSTOM

COLONIAL

Mutschler

ee

Williamsburg

Deerfield

kitchen w/disposal, dishwasher,
oven and range; 2 car attached ga-

acre.
room,

AL. Ringer
Lt

carpeting,

LUXURIOUS

pe Owner will help finance this attractive 3 bedrm, 2 bath Bi-Level.
ada

w/fireplace;

year

2-1484

dra-

located in Deerfield’s finest area. 3
bedrooms;
2 baths;
family
room

MOST

Se

ID

2

dishwasher, disposal, oven, range,
and refrigerator are included in the
realistic price of $29,500.

7

Realtors

room,

All

shutters,

BEAUTIFUL
den,

play

garage.

ea
i

HIGHLAND PARK

PIERSEN REALTY

Reaitor

DEERFIELD
HOMES

Ryka

HOMES
FOR SALE

SALE

COONS,

%

%

For prompt,
personal,
service
when
you
buy—build or refinance in the Lake Forest
Lake Bluff area—See us.

WI

5-3650
Realtors

FIRST NATIONAL BANK
LAKE FOREST CE 4-5100

Thursday, May

4, 1961

~

on

�ee
pa

ee
capetiacie aoa
ne
4
Rivas 2
Bas)

SaaScre Betbial

PH

wy

at

phy

‘

LAKE

i

ROMES

DOLL HOUSE 3 bedrooms, family
sized kitchen, double sink formica
counters.
Many
closets.
See this
gem, for $16,500.
OLDER with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
living room, f/place, dining room,
basement,
h/water
heat.
Garage.
$21,500. All offers considered.
THIS
FOUR
bedroom
house
has
spacious rooms, plus den, and dining room, basement, Gas heat. Low

oe

hall,

FOREST

living

HOMES

SALE

EAST

LAKE

BLUFF

HOME PLUS
plex 2 blocks

room,

INCOME: Frame dufrom Village. Living

dining room, kitchen, 3 bed-

If you
month

rooms and 1 bath in each unit. Separate basements and heating plants.

2 car garage.
at

small

Excellent investment
$22,000

room,

f/place,

dining room, and DEN, full basement, h/water heat. 2 car garage.

plant-

ings and tall trees surround
home, Offered in the 40’s...

this

PETITE RANCH boasting a lg. entry hall, living room,
f/place,
3
bedrooms, equipped kitchen, base,
gas heat,,family room, study room,

&amp; furnace room, plus 4 -bath.: At-,

tached

garage. Tall Oaks. 20’s...

COUNTRY SETTING
room home with 19
tiled

baths,

dining

is this 3 bedft. master 2

living

room,

lg.

room,

f/place,

family

kitchen,

range, oven, double sink, formica
self turned counters, fan &amp; hood.

Full

base,

f/place,

h/water

BASE

board heat. See this HOME so lovely decorated with taxes under 400
... Offered at $27,500.

Lindenmeyer,

H.

CE

D. Olson

&amp; Co.

Waukegan,

Ill.

large

heated

2-car

garage,

QUIET

COURT.

4

ON

bedrooms,

fered at

LAKE

2

$32,500

OPEN
2 to
2326

HOUSE—MAY
5 P.M.
Ash Lane,

(Edens to
Waukegan

THREE

BEDROOM

on

Dundee

Bee

BE

1 bath. Living room,

room,

Attractive 10 room,
ern Colonial. Large
race, 2-car garage,

1%

room with picture
room with Honey
pine cabinet kitchplus eating area.
a quiet winding
Come out Sunday.

E ES nae
a aa Bee $59,500

Baird &amp; Warner
Hillcrest
SHeldrake

6-1855
3-1855

HIGHLAND PARK — BY OWNER
JUST OFFERED
Charming 2. bedroom home on large wooded
tot. Cypress paneled living room, fireplace,
detached garage, basement, fine neighborhood, near schools, low maintenance, priced
under 20’s. ID 2-7977.

4, 1961

din-

FOR
THE
QUALITY-MINDED
BUYER!
has many
This extremely well-built home
extras—thermo-pane
windows
throughout,
plastered walls, a second kitchen, large patio
for ideal summer living, 8 lovely shade trees
located in Briarwoods area on quiet street
only 1 block from school. This 3 bedroom
split-level has 3 full CTI_baths, LR, separate
DR, family room w/FP and an att. 3500

4 bath Southbluestone tergas heat. Ap-

acres, fenced

landscaped.

“Z/ANDER-OMMEN

and

$80,000.

Gilbert Rayner
REAL
266 E. Deerpath
Kathryn Jaicks
Carmen

CEdar 4-0382
Berenice Ressinger
Burgess Olson

REUSE

&amp;

John Griffith, Inc.
2 OFFICES TO SERVE YOU

Multiple

COMPANY

CEdar

40485

M.

Lackie

12 Scranton Ave.
e Bluf! f|

Ave.,

CEdar

C.

LIBERTYVILLE

CE

40104

CE

4-1082

CE

45132

CE

4-1117

NEW

LISTING

first rate
baths;
3
plumbing

condition with two new
bedrooms.
Second
floor
roughed in for kitchen.

FA oil heat. Low taxes. Convenient
central

location.

Architect

on

Under

designed

mendous

modern

landscaped

living

streamlined

$20,000.

BRAESIDE

beautiful

w/f.p.,

3 large

bed-

rooms, 2 tiled baths. Enclosed patio.
Att. garage. Radiant heat, and many

and 3 full baths;

porches

and

patios;

including 2 box stalls

In

finest

East

location

on

ravine property. Master bedroom
and bath on Ist. 4 nice bedrooms,
2 baths on 2nd. June 15 to
tember 15. $500 per month.

Sep-

H. and R. Anspach
INC.
463

Central

Ave.

ID 2-1212

Exclusive

Estate Area

1st floor

for extensive

perfect

arrangement

entertaining or for just pleasant family living. 2 extra ist floor rooms and a huge
screened porch, 6 bedrooms and 3% baths.
Priced
accordingly.

2-5540

AMbassador

6-2900

ON

THE

MARKET

with

large

fireplace,

and

screened

porch.

ment. Two-car
with four-room

to

for

34 of an acre, wonderful

barbe-

entertaining—a

outdoor

charcoal
for those
waiting
que
steaks. Unusual details include a
room

dining

separate

fireplace,

hooded

copper

and

den.

A

“can’t be

beat” location within walking distance of schools, transportation and
shopping. A house you'll love for
years: all yours for $28,500.

at

Partial base-_

detached garage|
apartment. The |

the lovely fairways of the adjoining —
country club.
Ye

$120,000
om

THE BEST

A perfect example of classic Georgian architecture this lovely home

with

five

master

bedrooms

has _

many features no longer obtainable |
on today’s market. A true library,|
oval dining room, lovely stairway |
and
excellent
cabinet
work
throughout. The residence is situon

wooded

four

and

one

ha if

room,

24%

baths,

the estate. An excellent opportunity|

indirect
cases,
paneled.
French
lighting, built-in appliances—without a doubt the most handsome

kitchen on the North Shore. Second

clair Station.

2-6600

2 car

for

children

Phillip

A.

Bedrm.

in

a jewel-like

loca-

tion. Entire house beautifully m

tained.

OFFERS
OF

LAKE

FOREST

vos

|

This newly listed French Provincial

residence is one of the most desirable homes this firm has had an
opportunity to offer for sale. Flaw-|

K |

stone

cut

the

From

throughout.

millwor

and

paneling

less

the

reflects

taste:

execllent

and design sense of the owners.
Lovely entrance hall, living room,
and

walnut

black

with

ceiling

walls.

paneled

Large

beams.

fireplace

and exquisite carpeting and drapes

Am-

both included with the house.
ple-sized
kitchen

dining
with

Impeccable

room.

built

applian

in

se)
breakfast area with fireplace.
additior
in
room
first floor utility

to partial basement.
library has random

Elegant small
width pegge l

floors. Guest bedroom
space

and

ample

with

lovely bath.

Mas-

with dressing alcove and large bath.
The house is situated in a lovely
oak grove on two and one hal
acres and completely surrounded by y
lovely fairways and greens. This is
truly the house for those appreciat -

ing the very best in architectura

design and the very finest in col nAe
try club living.

$77,500 ¥

gaFor Our

1946
WI

PARK

C. Howard
Mrs.
Ruth

House

Remodeled for delightful family living.
location. See it and love it. $29,
ID 2-4693.

Best
Call

Customers

Brie

“y

Hart, Shaw &amp; —
Company

5-5300

Wonderful
4

fire-

plus
place, bath and dressing room,
three additional bedrooms wi th
private baths. A marvelous house |

Parking Space Available

Realtors Since
Deerfield Rd.

HIGHLAND

with

suite

master

has

floor

at just $31,600.

Sin-

house
in |

with full bath, kitchen with raised

Viking Realty
826

an excellent

the very best eastern location.
—
$110,000
|
ie
VIEWS
Well designed French Provincial.
residence overlooking terraced ‘garden with golf course beyond. Reception hall, living room withfi re- |
place, dining room, den or bedroom &gt;

ter bedroom is partially panelled

ID

Central

sale of two valuable tracts if the
buyer wishes to modify the size of -

1% acre.

Domonicks

Call FInancial 6-0606.
Shapiro, Executor.

—

lot and has beautiful vistas over

closet

L. Ringer
457

immediately.

house

room,

house is ideally located on a well-—
landscaped two and one-half acre|

Richard

Key

dining

modern kitchen and butler’s pantry, |
library, first floor laundry room

house

ranch. Picture book fence sur-

rounding

rage

room brick residence,
2 baths. Oil forced air

On

Entrance

sills and bluestone entry steps to
the wood shake roof, the ent

Charming country cottage, 3 bedroom

_ Knollwood

heat. Attached garage.
Possession

2-5

In a 5 bedroom home, this transcustom
his
offers
owner
ferred
built 1958 Colonial multi-level with
all the extras including
spacious

BLUFF

Shagbark Road
Beautiful 7
4 bedrooms,

Sunday

Here’s a charming, quality WHITE BRICK
home with a genuine feeling for the best
a
on
architecture
Colonial
of
traditions
beautiful 5 acre setting of tall trees, broad
a
contains
It
gardens.
many
and
meadows

family

LAKE

wooded

Open

A BARGAIN!

422 S. Milwaukee, Libertyville
EMpire 2-2280

RENTAL

FOREST

No. Cliffe Way

NEW

other fine features. $39,500.

SUMMER

5-5700

LIKE A RAINDROP in a crystal vase, this
shrimp colored brick RANCH
on %
acre
truly SPARKLES.
Interesting fireplaces in:
the LIVING
KITCHEN,
the COUNTRY
and paneled GAME rooms, in addition are
3 twin sized bedrooms, 2 baths, a large
patio and a 2 att. gar. 5 years old. AIR
CONDITIONED.
And only $59,500!

LAKE

FITZPATRICK
REALTY CO.

Tre-

WI

AREA

for
horses;
boat
house _ with
screened
summer
porch
at lake
front.
This
property
is
located
among other fine estates and adjacent to Country Club. Priced in the
$80’s; will sell furnished or unfurnished. Brochure on request. For
appointment call exclusive agent.

ranch

lot.

room

kitchen,

screened

4 car garage
in

990

Rds.

SEARS REAL ESTATE CO.

Gentleman’s
estate;
5.7 acres
of
lake frontage. High scenic view of
entire lake; well maintained residence of Swiss Chalet design. Living room, 22x44 ft.; studio den 17x
17 ft.; master bedroom 20x20 ft.;
many

condition.

to acquire

Service

SEE

2-2000

COUNTRYSIDE

CALL

CE

Deerfield

LAKE

Hllicrest

4-0816

&amp;

Realtors

of

Board

Listing

Ave.

LIBERTYVILLE
EMpire

Shore

Evanston-North

LIBERTYVILLE

C.

excellent

hall with powder room, living room |a

acre lot allowing complete priva cy
if required—yet also permitting the

Waukegan

J.

in

ated

ESTATE

322 N. Milwaukee

EAST

DEERFIELD
in
lovely
BRIARWOODS
area, 3 bedrooms, 1%4 baths, custom ranch,
attached
gar., large liv. rm.
w/fireplace,
modern kitch. w/large eating space, excellent utility area; 31% blocks to Grammar
school (a real help to Mom). Well worth
inspecting. MRS. ROESING, CE 4-2665.

3

CONVINCED

Zoned for 2 family. Older home

RANCH

Almost new split level, beamed ceiling in
living room,
separate dining
room,
large
screened porch, bedrooms up and 2
F
baths, lower level family room, maid’s room
or sewing/work room, and bath, 2 car garage with electric opener. All this_on
a
woodsy
%
acre in beautiful Lake Forest.
MRS. ROESING, CE 4-2665.

May

OHS

past

FIVE BEDROOMS
IN LOW 60’s

Thursday,

ing

foot frontage.

ALMOST NEW 4 BEDROOM SPLIT-LEVEL. Complete w/large family room, separate
DR, full basement, 3 full baths. This brick
&amp; frame home is just 2 years old. All this
$34,000
for only

ATTRACTIVE
BRICK
VENEER
that this 6-room frame ranch is the SPLIT LEVEL home built in 1957
best buy in town for the money. on one acre in Libertyville School
Entrance hall, living room, dining District.
13x24
carpeted
living
room,
kitchen,
bath
and
utility room,
11x11
dining ell, beautiful
room. Large landscaped lot situat- kitchen with birch cabinets, builted on desirable cul-de-sac. $21,950 in. range, oven and dish washer,
-breakfast ' area, °4
bedrooms,” 2'
YOU’LL NEVER KNOW
...
unBATHS,
17x18 panelled family
less you take the time to inspect
room
with
fireplace,
12x12
enthis 3-year-old, well built brick
closed porch, 2 car attached gahome.
3. twin-size
bedrooms,
2
rage. $39,000.
baths, beautiful pecky-cypress panelling
in
family
room.
Powder
SMALL
FARM:
26 ACRES
ON
room, full dining room, enclosed HIGHWAY WITH full set of farm
porch for summer and winter liv- buildings,
needing
some _ repair.
ing
PLUS
spacious
Lopez
stone Completely fenced and in excellent
patio. 2-car att. garage, and over location.
3,000 sq. ft. of living space. A buy

Northbrook

In coveted area. Living
window. Terrific family
Walnut paneling. Knotty
en with thirteen cabinets,
If you want privacy on
street you have found it.
HARRIET STEVENS

_

bedrooms,

100

2 other bedrooms

Dundee, West
to Ash Lane)

576 Lincoln
Avenue
Winnetka, Illinois

over

beautifully

4-1380
W. Paul LeRoi
N. Starosselsky CE 4-1181
Donald Kelley
Mary Griffis CE 40339
Geraldine Moyer
Frances Rutgers CE 4-1075
June Enos
Nancy Appleton CE 43974

7

lot with

proximately

FOREST

AND

on beautifully
BUILT RANCH
TACKETT
landscaped lot. Living &amp; DR overlook rear
yard w/large patio; 3 twin-size bdrms., 2
gar., unusual storage
CT baths; 2-car att.
partial
room,
family
paneled
throughout;
basement. In Deerfield’s finest area. Highest
quality construction. Owner anxious 2.

4,

kitchen,

HOME

EVENINGS

Realtors

Sept.

jalousied sun room.
gas heat. $34,000.

BRICK

678 N. Western
Lake Forest

4-0969

occupancy

PRESENTS
wi
Delightful five bedroom, two-story
Colonial. Perfectly maintained and &gt;

BRAND
NEW
TWO-STORY
COLONIAL
w/4 bdrms., 2% baths, LR w/FP, separate
DR, kitchen w/blit-ins &amp; breakfast room; full
bsmt. w/paneled rec. room &amp; FP. Att. gar.
Many extras.
$33,950

French

Excellent

RENTALS ... 3 bedroom home
$160 monthly . . . 3 bedroom home
SLES is
Mrs.

Forest,

Hart, Shaw

DEERFIELD

Unusually well built and designed
fireproof Brick house on wooded

INSPECT

Lovely

2-story,

SALE

REALTORS

to pay $250 a
“lease-to-own”

bath,

FOR

ZANDER-OMMEN

elled Victorian; 4 bedrooms plus
den with fireplace, 214 baths, basement and garage. Magnificent view.
Priced at
$45,000

plus 2%

car garage.

can afford
you
can

214

Lake
1961,

Seldom de we have an opportunity
to offer
a home OVERLOOKING
LAKE MICHIGAN. Lovely remod-

CUSTOM RANCH OF brick has entry hall, living room, f/place, dining room, family room, f/place, 3
bedrooms,
2 ceramic
baths.
concrete basement.
Area to develop
for family
use.
Screened
porch,

30’s.

SALE

home, walking distance to Market
Square. Drive past 75 E. Atteridge,

SOMEONE
WITH
FORESIGHT
will see the tremendous potential
in this low-priced duplex property
located close-in. Entrance hall, living room, dining room, kitchen and
enclosed porch. Upstairs are 3 bedrooms, bath, and enclosed porch off
master bedroom.
Low
taxes; low
maintenance. Offers.

LOW

FOR

HOMES

GOOD VALUES
IN
LAKE FOREST

Realtors

baths, screened porch, full basement. Low maintenance. Ideal location for school age children. Of-

COLONIAL in wonderful condition
with 4 bedrooms, good closet space,

entry

FOR

John Griffith, Inc.

BLUFF

ets, cedar closet for storage, plus
loft storage. 2 car garage radio way
doors, equipped kitchen, also washer, dryer, carpeting etc. Gas heat
$175 including cooking &amp; hot wateri 20'9:s*,:.

LAKE

:

sae?
4

j

BRICK DELUXE lg. living room,
f/place, dining, master has 3 clos-

A

ree

fie

\

—

es

B.

Ha

ReQua,

Stuart R. French
E. Henderson

President

Vice President _
Milton

McN.

T:

as

Kenmore
Thorse
260 E. Deerpath
135 S. La Salle St.
Lake Forest, CEdar 4-1000 RAndolph 6-7
Members of the Evanston-North Shore |
Multiple Listing Service
ia

Page H 61—D 53
hd
he
WON
Vas

�ES

FOR

os)

LE

HOMES FOR SALE

‘

COMMERCIAL
RESIDENTIAL
;
VACANT
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
|

MUST

Estate Service

FRANK PEERS
FRANK
ANDERSON
Laurel

Ave.

Highland

IN

HIGHLAND

2-2682

PARK

edroom house with living room, kitchen,
ll basement and 2 car garage. Close to
shools. Priced $18,500.

IN
7m

HIGHLAND PARK
BY OWNER

Park

ID

‘DEERFIELD,

Custom 2 year old, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths,
brick Tri-level plus basement on Sheridan
Road in Braeside. Crab orchard entrance
hall, living-dining
room
with Thermopane
window
wall and crab orchard fireplace.
All electric kitchen, panelled family dining
room, large panelled den with wet bar and
stone
fireplace
and
Thermopane
sliding
doors to garden and patio. Gas heat, central air-conditioning, 214 car garage with
electric eye door. Shown by appointment.
Call OWNER
at ID 2-9250.

CALL

Real

HIGHLAND
PARK
SELL — BEST OFFER

Sherwood
Forest:
3 bedroom,
2
bath bi-level, wall to wall carpeting,
Youngstown
cabinet
kitchen
and paneled rec room, new black
top side drive, awnings, beautiful
yard with patio and play area for

children.

HIGHWOOD

In

pointment.

the
ID

20’s.

Call

for

ap-

2-8461.

tiful

lannon
stone
home
with
large
[
plus eating area, large living room,
Over sized bedrooms, full basement with
led rec. room, attached garage, on large
good location.

(OOD

INCOME

} rooms each, low

from 8

apartments,

taxes.

Priced

2 and

to sell.

BARACANI

PLEASANTLY

2 bedroom home at 809 Broadview, Ravinia.
Living room with fireplace, separate dining
room, plastered walls, hardwood floors, modern cer. bath, finished basement, gas heat,
combination storms and screens, beautifully
landscaped. Low 20’s.

REAL ESTATE
ID 2-8077

LEONARDI
ren

LAKE
FRONT
IN MUNDELEIN
ge bedrooms, 2 full baths, tiled and
ed rec. room
with wet bar in full
lent, separate dining, fireplace in carpicture windowed living room, enorscreened rear porch overlooking lake,
pagne
maple custom formica cabinet
chen with tile walls and vinyl floor, builtlishwasher, double stainless sink. 2 lots,
= trees, abundance of shrubbery, private
oe dock, excellent fishing and water
;
.
Plastered, hardwood floors, low cost
heat. Conveniently located. $33,000.
Contact Mr. Dennee

SCHWANDT
es
602 N.

REALTY

REALTORS
Milwaukee
Libertyville

LO

6-6720

ick

Dutch Colonial in popular Sherwood
. The
1st floor has a living room
fireplace and adjoining sunroom, ding room,
modern kitchen and a powder
m. There
are 3 bedrooms and a bath
ha
full basement, 2 car brick gaand an unusually large screened porch.
Priced at $27,500. Adjoining lot 50x
i available for $5,500.

WILDE
HI

WEST

HIGHLAND

6-5544

F.

AGENCY
3ear

Leonardi,

HIGHLAND

Jr.
ID 2-0596

PARK

A view of the lake and private beach privileges this handsome Lannon stone and clapboard house with circular driveway has 4
king sized bedrooms, 3%
baths, den and
family room, screened porch overlooks beautifully landscaped yard.

Idlewood Realty
653

Ave.

AND

John
ID 3-1000

CO.

2-2015

OELZER

DIFFERENT

Roger

REALTORS

Williams

HIGHLAND

ID

2-6776

PARK

SHERIDAN ROAD AND RAVENOAKS
1958
CUSTOM
BUILT_
RESIDENCE.
STRIKING INTERIOR, OFFERING ULTIMATE
IN
LUXURY
AND
SPACIOUSNESS. BEACH RIGHTS.
Call broker for appointment. HI 6-5577 or
evenings HI 6-6126,

HIGHLAND

PARK

LAKE

AREA

OVERLOOKING
A VISTA
of ravines, this completely remodeled carriage house has 4 to 5 bedrooms, 3% baths, big family room kitchen,
sharing own beach; $48,500
ID 2-0212
SP 7-4030

PARK

m

Cape Cod, full basement, approxi1 acre,
1%
car detached garage,
immediately. Down payment $2,monthly
payments
$150,
complete
$22,500, Details

~ Guy Viti
Green

Bay

Highwood

ID

2-3933

INVENTIONAL MORTGAGES
4OME IMPROVEMENT LOANS
LAKE FOREST
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN ASS’N

90 N. Western
i

Lake

CE

Fores

4-4200

~ DEERFIELD EAST
4

bedroom

home

ready

for

gracious

living.
Family
room;
living
room
h own
fireplace;
separate dining

2%

tile baths. Large basement. Over-

“car garage.

E

LOW

Many

40's.

extras.

A VALUE

_McGUIRE &amp; ORR
Realtors
1-0228

GReenleaf

5-1080

~ 851 KIMBALL ROAD
amediate possession. Brick and
ne, 5 bedrooms, 314 baths, large
mily room, attached 2 car garage,
odern kitchen with built-ins; a
ded lot 80x200 feet. $60,000.
1 ID 2-7281 for appointment to

CAN

YOU

immediate

SPARE

$500?

possession

of

your

home in Wheeling. This roomy
droom, 14% bath ranch is now
tant. May 15th can be moving
Full price $15,700.

_

Signal

Realty

29 Milwaukee Ave,

Co,

NlIles 7-8414

RAVINIA—777

ST.

JOHNS

Just finished.
Modern
contemporary
built
to overlook ravine. All rooms
are large.
Living
room
and der
are oak panelled.
Kitchen
with
built in oven, range,
dishwasher and disposal. Air condition unit in
bedrooms. Zoned hot water heat. Landscaped
Lot includes 188 feet across ravine. $35,500
with low down payment.
EVANSTON BOND &amp; MORTGAGE CO.
1732 ORRINGTON GR 5-5600 EVANSTON
HIGHLAND
PARK:
On lovely
%
acre,
finest construction, many a
a | features, 3 bedrooms, one 15x22, 2
baths,
kitchen with dining area, utility room adjacent,
full basement.
Priced low
30's.
a
north to Berkeley, west to Ridge to
$19,900 ON YOUR LOT
Spacious 3 bedroom, 2 bath peoes brick and
cedar ranch, 523 Green Bay,
Highland Park.
Al Richman, builder, ID 2-9249.
DEERFIELD,
3 bedroom brick Georgian,
separate dining room, drapes, carpeting,
recreation room, attached garage, patio,
low 20’s. WI 5-3291.

HIGHLAND PARK
413 RIDGE
Owner offers custom built 6 room corner
ranch, full basement, gas heat, $1500 down;
in low $20’s. WI 5-2419.
NEW brick bi-level, 3 bedrooms, 1% baths,
panelled
family
room,
fabulous
closet
space, modern
kitchen, walking distance
to trains, shoppiay and schools, mid 20’s.
Telephone ID 2-8597.
TWO
apartment
brick
duplex
in a new
Lake
Forest area; air conditioned; recreation room; 3 bedrooms in each unit; full
basement; good mortgage available. Call
Ted Gabanski, CE 4-3737.
DEERFIELD
east,
by
owner,
must
sell
charming Cape Cod adjoining
golf course.
Large livin: -dining combination with fireplace,
kitchen with eating
bar,
1 bedroom and full bath down; 2 bedrooms and
full bath up; knotty pine panelled basement; carpeting and drapes; asking under
cost $27,500. Make offer. Call WI 5-3308.
LAKE
BLUFF,
owner
transferred;
solid
brick ranch, 2 years old; 3 twin bedrooms,
2 full ceramic baths, full birch cabinet
kitchen, living room, dining
L, full basement, landscaped,
35x15
ft. patio. Mid
$20’s. CE 4-4076.
BY OWNER—E. LAKE BLUFF
Don’t miss this delightful
1 story home.
Entrance hall, living room, fireplace, dining
area, modern kitchen with boa space, wall
oven; 3 twin sized bedrooms,
ull baths
full dry basement,
gas heat, 2 car attache

garage. Under $35,000. Telephone CE 4-5213,

EAST

Country club view. Large oak trees. Bright
airy rooms, 3 bedroom
modern
Colonial.
Attached garage. Separate living and dining
rooms,
Beautiful
stone _ fireplace,
screened porch, large paneled. family room.
Kitchen to please any woman. Full basement.
1% baths. $29,900. WI 5-2073.

LAKE

FOREST—BY

OWNER

Four year old brick ranch in Meadowood.
Beamed. ceiling living-dining room; paneled
den with built-ins; complete kitchen; paneled family room; 3 bedrooms; 2 baths. Excellent storage. Fine traffic pattern. Full,
dry basement. Lot 120x200. Owner moving
east. At $54,500. CE 4-1706.
SPACIOUS 7 room 2 story brick and stucco,
superior
construction,
3 bedrooms,
2%
baths,
full
basement,
attached
garage,
lovely grounds, near schools and transportation, priced to sell. Call owner, ID 24387, or ID 2-5914 after 6.
BY owner, charming 6 year old brick ranch.
Paneled living room, large family dining
room
combination,
kitchen
with
eating
space, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, full basement,
screened porch, covered patio. Near park
and transportation. Low down
payment.
$32,500. ID 2-4302.
BY owner: 4 bedroom brick Colonial house,
10 years old, excellent condition. Large
lot on
quiet
street.
Near
schools
and
transportation. Shown by appointment. 935
Fairview Road, ID 2-4636.
DEERFIELD (E.)
1147 Oxford
First time offered. May consider contract or

rental.

One

of the nicest red brick ranches

on the market today, only $26,500. Living
room
with parquet floor, family kitchen,
gore 3 bedrooms, attached garage, fenced
in yard.
MAE B. BLACKWELL, ALpine 1-3640,
LAKE BLUFF, must sell 3 bedroom 2 bath
home; fireplace; carpeted and draped; full
basement;
come
see,
make
offer.
454
Mawman, CE 4-5713.
LINCOLNSHIRE, handsome Colonial ranch,
3 bedrooms, den, 2 baths, large family
room, lovely sunken living room, dining
area, peek-through fireplace, smart electric oo
2 car garage, low 40’s. WI
BY
owner,
birch panelled 2 bedroom,
5
room
bungalow,
basement,
garage,
oil
heat,
near
schools,
transportation
and
shops. 1820 Clifton. WH 4-6379.
THIS RANCH IS DIFFERENT
Was
model home!
Spacious living, dining
combination; beautiful family room, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, air-conditioned, patio, beautiful new draperies and carpeting, and many
other features. Must see. Priced right for
quick sale. Call owner for appointment. 2778
Arlington. ID 2-2083.
RAVINIA
New 3 bedroom, 2 bath, brick and cedar
ranch, built in kitchen with spacious breakfast area. Attached car py
Conveniently
located at 523 Green Bay
Rd. $27,500. Open.
Al Richman, Builder. ID 2-9249.
HALF DAY: 3 bedroom frame ranch, 2 car
attached
garage,
1%
acres,
Priced for
a
Call agent, WI 5-0254, or ID
HIGHLAND
PARK:
new brick ranch, 3
bedrooms (1 paneled), large kitchen, living-dining room, 1% baths, basement, gaTage, decorated, near schools, transportation. $27,900. Builder, ID 2-1338.
LAKE
FOREST,
8 room
white
shingle
house, excellent condition;
3 large bedrooms and sleeping porch 2nd floor; living room, dining room, kitchen and den
1st floor; 11% baths, full basement, 2 car
garage; next to large City Park; close to
transportation; $31,500. CE 4-1804.
HIGHLAND PARK:
OWNER
TRANSFERRED
Braeside, 514 year old tri-level, living dining
room combination,
fireplace, 3 bedrooms,
2 baths, ample closets, large walnut paneled family room, large kitchen, 2 thermidor
ovens, range, dishwasher. Priced right. ID
HIGHLAND
PARK:
1734 Winthrop
Rd.
New
3 bedroom,
1%
bath bi-level, Lshaped living dining room, oversized family room, built-in dishwasher, oven, range,
exhaust fan, immediate occupancy, $30,900. Call owner, ID 2-5737.
HIGHLAND
PARK
East, lovely English
cottage,
beamed
ceilings,
3
bedrooms
(family
room-bar),
excellent
condition,
2
aa
1262 St. Johns Avenue. ID 2HIGHLAND
PARK:
Elm. Place District.
1768 Clifton, Sunset Terrace. ID 2-4853.
Tri-level, 2100 sq. ft. living area, 3 bedrooms, 17x30 family room, 2% baths, 2
fireplaces,
11 closets, gas heat, air-conditioned, thermopaned.
HIGHLAND PARK, near lake on heavenly
wooded ravine, 1 year custom ranch, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, 2% car garage. Realistically priced. ID 2-8453.
LAKE FOREST, by owner; 4 bedroom, 2
bath, faced brick; radiant hot water heat:
many
extras:
$36.800.
Call
after
6:30
weekdays, CE 4-0601.
IMMACULATE 8 room split level, 214 car
attached garage; 1% acre beautifully landscaped; large roofed patio; GE kitchen;
1 block to schools. By owner, transferred.
WI 5-3197. $34,700.
DEERFIELD
Briarwoods; thousands under
cost for fine 6 room contemporary ranch
with many extras. Sacrifice by owner under
unusual
circumstances
with
exceptionally attractive financing. $28,500. 640
Warwick Road, WI 5-5874. Open house
Sunday 11 to 5.
REDUCED
TO $29,000
Deerfield, by owner, brick and frame split
level; 3 bedrooms;
2 baths; living
room;
dining room;
family room
with builtins:
electric kitchen with eating space; lots of
closets; 1800 square feet, plus basement, garage and laundry room; 2 blocks to schools.
WI 5-3646.
LAKE BLUFF: East on Sheridan Road in
Ravine Forest on % acre wooded lot, 3
bedroom ranch; 32 ft. living room; plastered walls, fireplace, carpeting; 2 car ga-

tage. Patio, Mid $30’s, Owner. CE 4-3669.

SUMMER
HIGHLAND
PARK—6
year old 2 story.
3 bedrooms, separate dining room, large
solarium,
fireplace,
basement,
oil heat,
2 car attached garage on 1 acre, near
Ridge Road.
$29,500. ID 2-0474. Highland Park—1
story older home, 3
bedrooms, full basement,
hot air oil heat,
near Sunset Park. To close estate. Call
ID 2-0474,
CONTEMPORARY
modern ranch, 3. bedrooms, panelling, Thermopane. Reduced to
ping ie Call ID 2-2739. Open house Sunay 1-5.

BUSINESS PROPERTY
FOR SALE
In the center
of Highland
Park
business area brick building suitable for light manufacturing, laundry,
garage
or similar
business.

First floor 4500 sq. ft., second floor
1500 sq. ft. For immediate occupancy.

Excellent financing.

PAUL PHELPS, NC.
1925

Sheridan

Rd.

VACANT

ID

2-4580

ID 2-5553, or write Antler Resort, Route

2,

Eagle

also

available

RAVINE

have
from

OFFICES,

other
$6000

ravine

lots

up.

APARIMENTS

2

bedrooms,

room,

dining

homes.

Walk

Glenview,

FOREST

1571 Sherman Ave.,
UNiversity 4-2600
BRoadway

_ Evanston
ALpine 1-6700
3-3750

IN
HIGHLAND
PARK
WE
HAVE
18
acres zoned 1 acre residential, with sewer
and water along the front. Very reasonable
terms, to a responsible purchaser,
and a
survey is available in’ our office.

shopping.

ID

2-6790,

HIGHLAND

PARK

Hokanson &amp; Jenks
Street

GReenleaf

5-1617

W.

Monroe

Deerfield

ID

2-

Financial

6-8600

Garden

5 acres on Wilmot Rd. in exclusive
lovely
homes.
4 ‘acre
residential
$27,500. Call Mr. Robinson.

McGUIRE

area of
zoning.

&amp;GORR

Realtors
GReenleaf

5-1080

VACANT”

Fully improved and wooded.
CLOSE
TO
LAKE. Call broker HIllcrest 6-5577 or evenings HlIllcrest 6-6126.
CHOICE Ravine lot, northwest corner Cary
and Sheridan Roads, priced to sell. Telephone PEnsacola 6-2800.
DUPLEX
zoned lot in Lake Forest; 50x
125 ft., fully improved. Call ONtario 20188 after 5 P.M.
CHOICE
vacant
business
property,
near
Mount Prospect and Des
Plaines. Zoned
B-2. Sewer and water available. Also 37
acres vacant near Wheeling and Northbrook. Terms, or will work with reliable
developer or builder. Ozell Atkins, 9650
Milwaukee Ave., Des Plaines. VAnderbilt
4-1950.
.
ONE lot, 60 ft. by 131. ft., Northeast Highland Park, near Highwood. Call anytime
up to 4 p.m., ID 2-5325.
DEERFIELD:
Brierhill Road, wooded 7/8
acre along golf course, all improvements,
$15,000' or best offer. ID 2-1373 after 6.
DEERFIELD
Riverwoods, 2 acres in beautiful location, high and heavily wooded,
at bargain price. WI 5-5552.
HIGHLAND
PARK, Sherwood Forest, 50x
146 fully improved, reasonable. Telephone
ID 2-9444,
LAKE BLUFF, ravine lot on private lane,
improved, 5/8 acre; CE 4-1117 evenings
and weekend.
DEERFIELD,
900 Beverly, 90 foot lot in
finest section of Briarwoods subdivision.

or will trade towards

house, HIIil-

Apartments

Deerfield
Modern 2 bedroom apartments. Excellent location, convenient to schools, shopping and
transportation. Ceramic tile baths. Cabinet
kitchen with refrigerator, disposal, built-in
ae ene range.
Off-street parking. Decorate
to

suit.

QUINLAN &amp; TYSON, Inc.
735 Deerfield Road

WI 5-3750

GLENCOE

APARTMENTS

DELUXE
AIR-CONDITIONED
TOWNHOUSE—5 rooms, 1% baths, living room,
dining area, equipped kitchen and full basement. Beautiful garden. $225 ver month.
VE

BANNOCKBURN

6-1646

floors,

apartments,
individually
conprivate parking. 14 block to

BEL-AIR

Terms

tiled

Draper &amp; Kramer
30

QUINLAN &amp; TYSON, Inc.

crest

room,

heat,

living

Iil.

A very choice piece of vacant property. 2
plus acres or 4-% acre lots. Nicely wooded
and in an excellent area.
:
Mrs. Ludwig.

WINNETKA

gas

kitchen,

IRving 8-2204

LAKE

1-0228

baths,

central TV antenna, indv. dryer and
washer, private garage, near trains

2 bedroom
trolled heat,
train. $165.

Rd.,

1%4

equipped

Braeside Area
28-42 Blackhawk Road

Baird &amp; Warner

ALpine

(Unfurnished)

HOUSE

fully

LOT

Highland Park. Area of fine
to train. MRS. CLIFF.

513 Davis

RENT

TOWN

2-6600

$11,000

EAST

TO

Modern
Air Conditioned

and

100x610

Waukegan

STUDIOS

6791.
ID

WOODED

1157

STORES,
&amp;
TO RENT

OFFICE, 27x12,
located at 666 Waukegan
Rd., Deerfield, $125 a month with good
lease. Telephone WI 5-9841.
STORE,
1931 Sheridan Road in the heart
of
Highland
Park’s
Shopping
Center.
Laser &amp; Company, WHitehall 4-4318.
DEERFIELD:
803 Waukegan
Road.
2nd
floor, office or shop, heated, electricity
furnished, $60 per month. WI 5-5300.
STORE
18x40
heated;
$160
per month;
Offices 1 to 6 room suites; paved parking for tenants and customers. 460 Central Ave., Phones ID 2-0150, ID 2-2358.
LAKE Forest: ground floor office space on
Westminster now
available at $100 per
month. Call CE 4-4604.

BUY

Central

PArk 4.1855

OPPORTUNITY

TAVERN
with short order kitchen, Highwood location. $4400 and stock, or best
reasonable offer. Telephone ID 3-2033.

HIGHLAND PARK
Ravinia Area

L. Ringer
457

Wis.

PROPERTY

If the building bug has bit you
and you want that most desirable
of properties: woodsy views, ample
tableland, within walking distance
of school and transportation, it’s
yours for only $16,500.

We

River,

BUSINESS

L. Ringer
A

&amp; WINTER RESO

ANTLERS
Resort,
modern
Saar reegagcaie
cabins,
reasonable.
Food,
fishing
an
swimming.
Rustic bar. Information,
call

5-2565.

Eves.

&amp; week

ends

VE

5-0343.

Small
3 room
unfurnished,
English basement, very close in, rent $75 a month, 2
oo naa in advance. For further information
call:

ANCHOR REAL ESTATE
1896 Sheridan Rd.
ID 2-0093
Res. Ph., ID 2-0037
DEERFIELD:
2 bedroom apartment, $145
per month, including heat, gas and hot
water. Near schools, shopping and transportation. WI 5-2419.
LARGE 6 room apartment, 3 bedrooms, 2nd
floor, near business district, heated, $150.
Telephone ID 2-3271.
HALF DAY, first floor, 2 bedroom apartment
with fireplace, recently decorat
$90 per month;
tenant pays heat an
utilities. Leonardi Agency. ID 3-1000.
3%
ROOM
second
floor apartment
with
garage, woman preferred. Call after 5:30
p.m. ID 2-4334.
DEERFIELD
We have 2 exceptionally nice Town House
apartments.
Quality construction and convenient location plus own yard space. 2 bedrooms, 14% baths at $155 or 1 bedroom and
family room, 1% baths at $150, Call PIERSEN REALTY, Agents
we-e-WI 5-1670
DEERFIELD:
Large 5 room apartment on
1st floor of 2 flat buliding, range, refrigerator and heat furnished, garage included.
Apartment
adjoins
Jewett
Park,
1
block from town and train, rent $150 per
month. WI 5-5301.
BEDROOM
first floor apartment, large
fenced yard, close to schools, transportation,
shopping,
$125
per
month.
Heat
=
included. Leonardi Agency,
LAKE FOREST: Modernized apartment in
Market Square available June 1. Living
room, dining
room, kitchen, 2 bedrooms
and bath.
Heat and water supplied. Call
Market Square, Inc.,
3

+

b

�‘ROOMS TO RENT

HOUSES
TO RENT (Unfurnished)
HIGHWOOD,
5 rooms 2 bedrooms, living
room, dinette, kitchen, close to shopping
and transportation. Call ID 2-5812.
IN Highland Park, 6 room upper duplex
close to school and transportation. Telephone ID 2-2569.
4 ROOM ie mae in Highwood, 1st floor,
stove and
refrigerator furnished, no pets,

$85. Call after 3 p.m.

3

ID

Deerfield
4 Bedrooms
Living rm. Dining, kitchen w/built-ins.
full baths. Basement. $200 per month.

CARR

2-3039.

ROOM
apartment in Highwood, second
floor, central location, laundry facilities,
a
parking. Available June ist. ID 2-

HIGHLAND PARK: newly constructed duplex, 3 bedrooms,
1%
baths each unit,
kitchen has built in stove and oven, renting for $200, immediate occupancy. For
details, Guy Viti, Realtor. ID 2-3933.
HIGHLAND
PARK:
4 room,
first floor
apartment, Call ID 2-5175 after 5.
MODERN 3 room apartment, close to transportation
and _ shopping.
Utilities
furnished. ID 2-1764.
HONEYMOON
hideaway of 41% rooms including beamed ceiling living room with
fireplace, new kitchen, dining room, bedroom with ample closets, dressing room
and meets bn 8 rape
ay Immediate occupancy.
per month
on 2
year lease.
Call ID 3-1140.
:
LAKE FOREST—Living room, dining room,
den,
2 bedrooms,
kitchen,
2 enclosed
porches, in 6 apartment
building on 1
acre of ground, small summer house with
outdoor
fireplace
available
to
tenants.
Walk to stores and beach. Adults only,
no pets. Immediate occupancy. $150 per
month. Baird &amp; Warner,
CE 4-1855.
HIGHLAND
PARK: 6 room, second floor
apartment, attached garage, $155. Call ID
2-4771 after 5 p.m. or week-ends.
LAKE
FOREST:
4 room, 2nd floor, heat
and water, stove, refrigerator. Newly decorated. Call ID 2-2568.
GLENCOE,
NEWLY
DECORATED,
310
TUDOR COURT, 5 rooms, immediate occupancy,

near

Northwestern

station

at

Green Bay Road. VE 5-2043.
4%
ROOM
apartment in Highland Park,
heat, water furnished, centrally located.
Available immediately. Call ID 2-2582.
HIGHLAND PARK, 3 room apartment, garage and utilities furnished. Telephone ID
2-6022 or 614 Onwentsia.
4 ROOM
apartment,
near_ transportation,
private entrance, stove, refrigerator, 2 car
garage, heat and gas included, no pets.
ID 2-5229.

APARTMENTS

FOR

RENT

ities
ployed

2

paid,
garage. available, May 1, emcouple preferred. ID 2-3086.

ROOM

fu

apartment

in

Highwood,

d, near transportation,

utilities

for couple

or 2 working people. ID 2-6682.
MODERN
kitchenette apartment located in
Highwood
business district, 2%
rooms;
1 or 2 adults. Phone
CE 4-0136 after
5:30 p.m.

HIGHWOOD:
a

3 room furnished

immediately.

HIGHLAND

PARK:

apartment,

Telephone

large

ID

living

2-

room,

w

kitchen, ceramic bath, utilities furnished,
close to transportation, $95. ID 2-2965.
3 ROOM &lt; furnished apartment, heat and hot
water, couple preferred, no children or
pets. Call ID 2-2637.
HIGHLAND
PARK,
2 room
kitchenette
and bath,
located
in business district,
available May 10, $115 a month, utilities
included, lease required. Call ID 2-8117.
tal ved eo es abr
all utilities
included.
reen
d Telephone
1D
2004s
ay
Ro
3

ROOM apartment for rent in Highwood,
318 Washington St., $75 per month.
IN Highland Park, 3 room furnished apartment, close to town, transportation and
hospital, $85 per month. Phone DExter
9034.
DEERFIELD:
1st floor,
heated,
2
bedrooms, living room, dining L, cabinet kitchen, tile bath, modern 2 year old building,
basement storage room, parking area, stove
and refrigerator. Available now, $152.50.
NALD
N. ANDERSON
665 Vernon Ave.,
VE 5-2113
Glencoe
1 ROOM kitchenette furnished with private
bath. Telephone ID 2-4792.
Small attractive East side 2 room garage
apartment, rent $90 a month, 2 months in
advance.
ANCHOR REAL ESTATE
1896 Sheridan Rd.
ID 2-0093
Res. Ph. ID 2-0037
LAKE
FOREST;
small apartment, private
entrances; partly furnished; garage available if desired. Call CE 4-1647.
HIGHLAND
PARK:
large
living
room,
kitchen, ceramic bath, utilities furnished,
close to transportation, couple or 2 persons, $95. ID 2-2965.
HIGHLAND PARK: Living room, kitchenette, ceramic bath, utilities furnished, $60
per month. Lease required. ID 2-2965.
LAKE BLUFF, 26 Washington St., 3 rooms;
beautifully furnished and decorated; private patio, washer and dryer; convenient.
Call Kenosha, OLympic 2-7282.
AVAILABLE June 1, 3 room furnished first
floor apartment;
gas heat; utilities; gatage; private entrance; $125 per month.
‘Telephone CE 4-0911.

3

bedrm.;

water

liv.

included.

din.

comb.;

full

$175 per month.

basement;

Immediate

possession.
3 bedrms.; 114 baths; built-in kitch.; living
rm.; sep. dining rm.; rec. room; June possession. $200 et month.
Carr Realty
Co.
WI 5-0984
ILAKE FOREST: new townhouse apartment,
3 ‘bedrooms,
112 baths, on new street,
near park, immediate occupancy... CE 4BLs0. °

‘Whursday, May 4, 1961

WI

5-0984

4

BEDROOM
older residence near schools
and transportation, ideal for large family.
Leonardi Agency, ID 3-1000.
FOR rent, with option to buy; Deerfield.
4 bedroom, 1 year old, 1% ceramic tile
baths,
kitchen
with
built-ins,
fireplace,
full basement, gas heat, $200; WI 5-4145.
LAKE BLUFF:
3 bedroom house; recreation
room;
screened porch off dining room;
1%
baths; garage; gas heat; basement;
new carpet and draperies; available July
1; $240 per month. CE 4-3576.
LAKE FOREST, three bedroom, 1% baths,
available now. New, with full basement
and air conditioned. CE 4-3737.
LITTLE old fashioned 1 bedroom cottage,
wood burning fireplace, carpeted livingdining room, knotty pine panelling, stove,
refrigerator, automatic gas heat, full basement, screened porch, fenced yard with
room
for garden,
walking
distance
to
town, adults only, no pets. ID 2-8152 or
ID 2-7597.
BEDROOM, 2 bath guest house (partially
furnished) on 7 acre estate, fireplace paneled living room, screened porch, utility
room, 2 car carport. Occupancy July Ist,
$250 a month, Call ID 2-6281 for appoint-

PARK HOTEL sleeping rooms, by day or
week, free pees,
511 Waukegan Ave.,
Highwood.
2-9862.
VEL-WOOD
Motel, 500 Waukegan
Ave.,
Highwood.
Air-conditioned,
kitchenette
rooms for overnight guests and travelers.
me
shower
baths. Telephone ID 2ROOMS
for rent near transportation. 214
Green
Bay Road,
Highwood,
Ill. Telephone ID 2-7000.
AVAILABLE
May ist, 1 room and bath,
light housekeeping permitted, located in
Highland Park business district, $70 per
month,
ID
21 year
lease
required.
8117.
SINGLE room for rent,
near transportation, gentleman preferred. Telephone ID
2-1655.
ROOM
for rent, kitchen privileges, share
rest of apartment, near train. ID 2-3591.
LAKE FOREST, 128 Wildwood Road; large
bedroom:
share bathroom
with another
man. Call CE 4-1647.
HOMEY,
airy, twin bedroom, all modern
conveniences, lot parking, employed couple
preferred. Call ID 2-3441.
ROOM for rent 1 block from Lake Forest
business district, gentleman preferred; telephone CE 4-2305.
GARAGE
GARAGE
2-4976.

HOUSES

TO

CHOICE

SUMMER

EAST
6 bedroom,
4 bedroom,

RENT

RAVINIA

444
22

Call

655

Vernon

VE 5-4121

Ave.

lovely

patio,

1st, $290 per month.

&amp;

APARTMENTS

APARTMENTS

&amp;

HOUSES

YOUNG gentleman wanted between the ages
of 21-35 to share apartment with other
man. Write Box 53, Highwood.

ROOMS

TO

bedroom,

RENT

adjoining

bath-

room,
call
after
6 o’clock,
gentleman
preferred.
Telephone
ID 2-3981.
CLEAN
furnished room, ample closet and
drawer space, parking space in rear, kitchen privileges if desired. ID 2-4275.
SINGLE room near town and _ transportation. Telephone ID 2-4245.
NICE large sleeping room, close to shopping, transportation. ID 2-1229.
SLEEPING room for working girl, laundry
privileges, basement kitchen, walking distance to Deerfield Commons. WI 5-4087.

e
e
e
e

woman,

e Congenial

part time

sales girl,

sic background
preferable.
Contact —
Casassa, Lyon &amp; Healy, 1843 Second &gt;
ID 2-3434.
Wins
PART time clerk for King
Korn Stamp
demption
Center
at
gle Food
S$

Shopping

Center.

Call fc

will train qualified applicant. Top sal
regular hours, near
Northwestern Static
Call

5 Day Week
Generous Discount
Health Insurance
Air Conditioned Store

ID

2-9100

COUNTER

for interview.

girl wanted,

full or part |

steady work, good pay. J. Zengeler
ers, 2020 First St. ID 2-2800.

HELP WANTED MALE

Surroundings

&amp; CO.

Park

Cle

ID 2-4700

Draftsman- Sales

CLERK-TYPIST

IMPORT

MOTORS OF CHICAGO
1850 Frontage Road

Northbrook

839 WAUKEGAN RD.
DEERFIELD
WI 5-2000, MR. LYONS

CRestwood

2-5500

RECEPTIONIST
Opportunity
for personable
type
married woman who enjoys meeting people and who is capable of
learning relief switchboard.
Typing helpful.
Paid
Hospitalization,
Life
Insurance and many other benefits.

KLEINSCHMIDT

If you have 2 years of drafting
perience, a successful backgrol
working

dence,
have

a

Cook

Rd.
WI

customer

are

growth

Sales

under

correspon

age

30;

opportunity

Department.

Part

in

of

y

time will be devoted to layout '

for illustrated catalogue. You v
spend an equal amount of
handling customer corresponder
Further

challenge

will

be

prese

ed to you through assigned sp
sales projects. Attractive salary.

CULLIGAN,
INC.
NORTHBROOK
CRESTWOOD 2-1000

(Div. of Smith Corona Marchant)
Lake

with

and

fy

k

©

Deerfield
5-5100

SEAMSTRESS
Experienced.
Good pay.

Steady

or

J. ZENGELERS
2020 first St.

ID 2-

SHARE

PART TIME
FULL TIME

Varied
assignments,
including
compiling
and typing, statistical data. Ability to operate
calculator
and
work _ independently.
Modern,
well equipped offices.

Duraclean Co.

YOUNG

¥3

terview, ID 2-0840.
iS
BEAUTY Counselor, Inc. offers high e
ings for women able to direct others
sales and service. Flexible hours, car
sirable. Call CE 4-0471.
DENTAL ASSISTANT FOR ORTHODOD
TIC
OFFICE.
Experience preferred bu

SALESLADIES

ALpine 1-8700

Interesting position for woman to
assist publications
director
Typing,
paste-up
and
layout
of
company publications. Advertising
or production experience desirable.

2-3107.
WANTED
in neighborhood of Green
and Clavey mature woman, pleasant
disposition who can spend a few ho
day in home of sick man. Wife admi
ters nursing care. Write Box C-95,
Highland Park News.

Crossroads

GARNETT

PUBLICATIONS
ASSISTANT

ID

part

time.

CLEANERS
Highland Park

2-2800

HOUSEWIVES
and

COMMUNICATIONS
OPERATOR
VILLAGE OF GLENCOE
Permanent job operating village telephone
switchboard.
Police-Fire
radio,
inter-com,
paging, information center. Pleasing personality, ability to deal with public courteously.
Typing required, 40 hour week, night shift,
attractive disability, retirement, sick leave,
vacation.
;
Se gas of Public Safety, Village Hall. VE

MOTHERS

WANTED

TO

CALL ID 2-8000
EXT. 504 FOR APPT.

Highland

Wilmette

ag ito
rr
yd
ogg. foe Cae
ortable
room
furnishe
ome.
Griffith
Road,
Lake
Forest.
Telephone
CE 4-1793.

HOUSES

CON-

OPERATOR for telephone sok ae Serv-_
ice, hours 5 to 9:30, 5 day week. Call ID

Monday through Friday, typing and short
-hand essential.
Liberal benefits.
Starting
salary dependent upon qualifications.

FILMS

dishes,

FAMILY
of 3 wants furnished house for
summer months, near lake between Highland Park and Winnetka. Call LAkeview
5-1537, Chicago, after 6 P.M.
WANT
to rent: Rooms,
apartments,
and
houses for employees
of MUSIC
AND
TENTHOUSE THEATRE.
Telephone
VErnon 5-4040.

SECRETARY
ADMINISTRATIVE

To
High

ENCYCLOPAEDIA
BRITANNICA

linens,
appliances,
lawn
maintenance
included. 5 minutes trains, shopping, beach,
Edens Highway. Rental may start June 21st.
Telephone ID 3-1233.
DANISH
country house
in beautiful Ravinia neighborhood
of estates and fine
homes. Large woodland lot. Walking distance to schools, station and beach. Spacious 2 story panelled living room, leaded windows, unusual fireplace. Large dining room, 3 bedrooms. All on 1 floor.
Flagstone patio. Furnished, including 2%
ton air-conditioner,
dishwasher
and
appliances. One of the North Shore’s most
charming homes. $325 a month or $1,000,
June
15 to August
31. Box
C-60, c/o
Highland Park
News.
HIGHLAND
PARK:
modern, like new 2
bedroom stone ranch, patio, garage, decorated, near town, adults only. Immediate. $150, or partly furnished. ID 2-4422.
SUMMER
rental, May 27 to September 4,
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, all appliances, $650
for season. 1103 Hillcrest Avenue, Highland Park. ID 3-0728.
LOVELY 2 story home on % acre, ravine
property, 3 bedrooms, living room, separate
dining
room,
breakfast
room,
screened
porch,
1 block
to shopping,
churches, transportation, available June 1st

cerenaner

e benefits.
fri
OFFICE.

HO 5-0655 | 1150 Wilmette Ave.

room,

SUITE 215 NORTH SHORE BLDG.
1866 SHERIDAN ROAD
Highland Park

SECRETARY

tri-level,

FEE

ID 2-4461

To Educational Film Producers. Must have
good skills in typing and dictaphone. Some
shorthand required, experienced background
in office procedure essential. Age to 35.

Glencoe

PAYS

FITZGERALD
PERSONNEL

FEMALE

RENTALS

REALTORS

EMPLOYER

SECRETARY

GRAHAM

ing office. ID 2-1788.
HIGH
school graduate wants any typ
work; references. Write P.S.R. Med
Wisconsin, or call 0129 Medford. N:
‘
Strebig.
PART time sales person for gift shop,
ae
perienced
preferred, flexible hours.
town Interiors, ID 3-03
PART
time experienced bookkeeper,
g
typist, small office in Highland Park.
phone ID 2-6955.
EXPERIENCED
woman for general O ffice
work including typing, bookkeeping,
dic
tating, and payroll. Must have own tran
portation. This position is with
a
established local firm and will be pe
nent.
Please
write
giving qualifica'
D
age, salary expectations, etc., Box
c/o Lake Forester.
dav:
ALTERATIONS SEAMSTRESS 4 or 5
a week. Call CEdar 4-9100 during dé
WAITRESS; apply to the hostess Deer
Inn. Telephone Lake Forest, CE 4-22'
WAITRESS:
permanent,
full time. G
pay, good tips—no Sundays. Starr’s
Shop, 1819 St. Johns. ID 2-9758.
‘
TYPIST to work at home Pree
velopes and letters, state rate desire:
1000. Write Box D-5, c/o Highland Par
News.
a
er
GIRL for general office and light typi
Apply 530 Waukegan Avenue, Highwood.
Telephone ID 2-2747.
c,

OFFER

A DISTINCTIVE OFFICE PLACEMENT SERVICE. IT IS DESIGNED
TO REPRESENT YOU IN SELECTING A POSITION THAT YOU
WILL ENJOY.

ID

For interesting Amusement
Film
Department. Some experience in inventory, good
at figures. Typing essential. Excellent for
movie fan.

SUMMER
RENTAL
Park: 4 bedroom, 3 bath

fatnlly

Call

To work in Purchasing Department.
typing skills needed, light shorthand.
aptitude for clerical detail essential.

5 day week, excellent
TACT
PERSONNEL

FEMALE
EXPERT statistical typist for local ac

WE

SECRETARY

SUMMER
rental:
charming
4
bedroom
house, studio living room, 2 bathrooms,
all modern conveniences. ID 2-5715.

large

Central.

ASSISTANT

SECTION

WANTED

RENT

WANTED

en

‘
Highland

TO
at 421

To TEMAC
Administrator. Top skills in
shorthand
and
typing essential. Must
be
personable, poised with some college background, mature and able to work on own.

Further: Details

SEYMOUR

rent

(furnished)

bath home
bath home
For

for

HELP

ment.

HIGHLAND
PARK: deluxe 4 bedroom, 4
bath, near lake, 1 year or longer, carpeting and drapes available, September 1st
occupancy, rent $375 a month. ID 2-2821.
HIGHLAND PARK: 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms,
glassed-in
porch,
oil heat.
388
Bloom
Street. Telephone ID 2-0309.
6 ROOM house in Hubbard Woods business
district, no pets, rent $80 per month, Call
HI 6-0038.

FURNISHED

TOWN HOUSES
Deerfield

CO.

HALF DAY: Rent for $150 per month or
purchase at $15,900 this lovely 3 bedroom
contemporary ranch on % acre, all appliances included. Phone WI 5-5301.
HIGHLAND PARK: 4 room bungalow, $115
furnished or $100 unfurnished, near town
oe transportation, 1 year lease. ID 2-

(Furnished

ATTRACTIVE
2 room
apartment,
lovely
view, tile bath, adults, no pets, $100 includes utilities, parking. ID
23-7596.
2 ROOM
apartment, private entrance and
private bath, near Ft. Sheridan and transportation. ID 2-3971 or ID 2-9184.
1 LARGE room, kitchenette, completely furnished, close to business and transportation. Telephone ID 2-1229.
2 ROOM apartment, kitchen privileges, util-

REALTY

2

MELP

Part
time
work.
3 evenings
per
week, 3 hours per evening. Average

$40.

Interesting

work.

Call ID 2-8785.

and

enjoyable

FULL
time saleslady, 40 hour week, air
conditioned store, apply in person to Mr.
Eaton,
Rehn’s
Hillman
Pharmacy,
353
Park Ave., Glencoe.
WOMAN for general office work, knowledge
of adding machine necessary, 5 day, 40
hour week, with opportunity to participate in all Sears benefits. Apply in person.
Sears, Roebuck and Company, 153 Skokie
Valley Rd., Crossroad Shopping Center,
Highland Park.

Director

5-4111.

in person,

ern Avenue,

Lake

Experienced, or
school graduate.

624 N. West-

Forest.

1812

SUNSET
Green Bay

will

disability,

of

Public

retirement,
:

Safety,

Village

SALESMAN

The Lake Forest Bookstore offers
a full time position to a college
graduate with adequate typing abil-

sick

le

Hall.

.

_

Outside selling on plumbing, heating
building materials. Some experience
r
sary. Draw
against comission. Car
n
sary. For interview contact Mrs. Sullivan
‘
WI 5-4600.

REAL ESTATE SALES

CHECKERS
Experienced and expert secretary to do work
at home on IBM electromatic executive typewriter.
Shorthand
required.
Please
write
Box C-85, c/o Highland Park News.

attractive
vacation.

SALESLADY

ity. Apply
SECRETARY
Part Time

Permanent job operating village telephor
switchboard.
Police-Fire
radio,
interco
paging, information center. Pleasing pers
ality, ability to deal with public courteovu
Typing required, 40 hour week, night s

and

train.

FOODS
Highland

High

Park

Counter help wanted, part time, must be
neat and pleasant.
MASTERCRAFT FURRIERS &amp;
CLEANERS
1841 Second St.
ID 2-3122

$75 to $150 week
Permanent,
service
apparel
customers
Realsilk this area. FRanklin 2-0797.

for

Take complete charge of subdi
sion sales from model home. Sal
plus bonus. Unlimited earnings
sible. Write Box D-15, c/o High
Park News.
I NEED

fives

a young married man, 21 to 3

help me in my business.
Clean intere
:
work,
no experience
required. For
pointment call ORchard 6-0331.:

Page H 63—D55

—

�Pil

on

ca

ae

Ere

z

7

ty

‘
‘i

SITUATIONS WANTED—DOMESTIC
HARDWARE

RELIABLE white woman for cleaning, some
ironing, one day
a week; top wages, references required. CE 4-0894,
GARDENER,
white, experienced;
3 or 4
days a week through summer months; outdoor and some greenhouse work. Call CE
4-0875.
WANTED: cleaning woman 2 days fet week,
permanent; references required.
Call Mrs.
Muzzy, CE 4-1517.
GENERAL
housework,
plain cooking,
attractive salary, own room, bath, TV, only
Ht
abiang with references apply. ID 2-

CLERK

srmanent, full time position
lable man. See Mr. O’Neill.

for

ACE HARDWARE
ID 2-1150

‘LY Sunday a.m. route man;
n car,

married

man

JARDENER

and

must use

preferred.

yews AgenWIcy.
5-2331.
general

Deerfield

work,

day

HELP

or

, week, small apartment available for single
_man. Telephone ID 2-2106.
NG MAN
to drive and assist clothing
alesman
on the road. Telephone ID 2ry

ART

time

delivery

truck

driver

SITUATION

wanted,

Deerfield area, 1:30 p.m. to 3.30 p.m., 6
”, week, steady. Phone HI 6-0455 after
730 p.m.
ARWOOD
Country Club needs laborers
r golf course maintenance until late fall.
perienced in gardening or landscaping
eferred. Middle aged or retired. Apply at
maintenance
shop,
on
Waukegan

ad, 1% ee

grounds
week of May

8.

OUNG

to

man

learn

Apply
th
sedithen

OPTICAL

BUSI-

ESS. Air conditioned office, paid vacams, pension plan, medical and life in_Surance. House of Vision, ID 2-3340,
XPERT flower gardener (individual) 1 day
week. No lawn or general work. Refj = erences required. ID 3-1314 after 6.

|MAN
|__ing

for yard work, 4 hours, Friday mornonly. Telephone CE 4-5147,

NDYMAN—a
Mr.
Fix-It—white,
refneces required. Telephone CE 4-0256,

AUTOMOBILE

SALESMAN

ry
plus commission; car furnished. Sell
‘m rica’s number one car. Apply Mr. Mclum,
McCallum
Chevrolet,
191
East
serpath, Lake Forest.
JARDENER, white, full time, references reuired. Telephone CE 4-0256.
R DENER,
white, experienced,
3 or 4
lays a week
through
summer
months:
oor and some greenhouse work. Call
°

HELP WANTED—DOMESTIC
ATT
:
/WAITRESS,
experienced,
references
reer ired, other help employed in household,
|_
800d wages. Call ID 2-3920.
'COOKING and general work, four adults,
nust
be
experienced,
have
references;
ity
open; laundress and cleaning help
ployed.
Live
in,
own
room,
bath,
rah
ursday, Sunday off. ID 2-4482.
OOK:
light housework; quiet, refined wom1, Scandinavian or Japanese preferred;
ecent references; two adults; good pay;
or working conditions, Telephone CE
ERAL
housework,
plain cooking,
no
ndry, Own room and bath, school aged

ch a

recent

references

required.

ID

K and downstairs work, 2 adults, other

Ip, experienced and recent references.
sphone ID 2-5454,
ALL FREE—NO FEE
ok, General Maid Jobs
$50-65 wk.

(

Nursemaids
_

and

second

maids

$50-55 wk.

A-1 COUPLE JOBS $450-500 mo.
RS. BAKER SHORELINE AGENCY
Lincoln, Winnetka
Hillcrest 6-5818

TED:

se
699

older man

in exchange
after 5.

ED:

or woman

for

middle

aged

a

home,

to helpin
Call

ID

woman,

white or
as companion and light household
vies for 1, $25 per week. ID 2-1745.
N for yard work, 4 hours, Friday morn.

olored

only. Telephone CE 4-5147.
fa
RFIELD; experienced
girl for general
]
sework 1 day a week.
eferences, own
a sportation required. WI 5-5323,

IERAL

housework,

aning; starting
ed. me Mrs.

ae

cooking;

May
John

no

hea

15; references At
Ames after 6 p.m.

\N’S nurse
or very
experienced
, white, other help kept, school
a
references required. Please
.

MAN, white,
wo weeks mid
ho usework, live

vERAL
i

to care for bed invalid,
June. Cooking and some
in. Phone CE 4-4804,

pepeework, ohba care, Monday,

nesday,

Friday,

ng

!

neces. WI 5-1718.

.

June 1.

ERAL
housework,
cook, no
n room, bath and TV; school
en; references. VErnon 5-2163.

ne

Ref-

laundry
age chil-

[D for 3 days through dinner, 2 adults,

transportation. ID 2-1082.
MAN
for
general
housework,
plain
ing, Stay, assist with 3 school age

children,
aie

near train, no heavy laundry or
Own room and bath. Call ID 2-

‘COND

MAID, white, recent references
wired. Call VErnon 5-1031.
SENERAL housework, some cooking, child
are, 2 small children, own
room
and
|
bath, experienced, recent references. HI
6-2765.
AN

with

car

pping, riding,
e; afternoons
O] 2

LEGE

girl with

to

take

older

woman

and supervise during day
only. Call CE 4-4731,

driver’s license wanted

| to care for 3 small boys and assist with
I eer
ae cs: eennt ie Mrs. George
| Burrows,
akwood,
Lake Forest, Ill.

|_or call CE 4-1156,
A

|

RESS-SECOND
ferences reouired;
76.
Iilcrest

a

girl; top experience;
residence;
Winnetka

.NTED, woman, white, for cleaning on
Tuesdav: references required. Telephone
4-1632

_CE

ABLE person for mother’s helper and
e of baby, 3 or 4 half days a week,
own transportation. ID 2-2868.
sh
K, white; light housework; lovely air
ditioned home in Winnetka; own room
pect), pevmaanent position. Call Hill-

‘Page H 64—D 56

EMPL.

AGENCY

WANTED—FEMALE

VACATION
bound parents, do you need
a capable proasy mother to care for you
children while you are away? Good driver,
excellent references. Telephone LD 2-8152
or ID 2-7597.
COLLEGE
Psychology Major, age 20, desires summer employment: Modeling, photographic or apparel; receptionist; filing.
Available mid-June through August. Please
write Nancy Jo Michaels, Box 593, Wheaton College, Norton, Mass.
MOTHER’S helper, 15. References. Sandra
Gorichs, Route 2, Medford, Wis.
EXPERIENCED real estate saleswoman for
Highland Park or vicinity. For interview
write Box D-10, c/o Highland Park News.
WANTED,
high school boy to cut lawn
twice a week during
July and August, and
if possible, part of June and September.
Power mower furnished. WI 5-0694.

south 8 Deerfield Road.

superintendant.

WANTED

APPLICATIONS
being
accepted.
Kathryn
Dowse Employment Agency &amp; Secretarial
Service.
273
E.
Market
Square,
Lake
Forest. CE 4-1148.

SITUATION

WANTED—MALE

EXPERIENCED
gardener will do gardening,
landscaping,
fast
and
dependable.
Own truck. ID 2-7698 or ID 2-6668 after 5.
GARDENER
available,
experienced
with
flowers, vegetable gardens and lawns, good
references. ID 2-0009.
EXPERIENCED
cabinet maker will repair
all types of furniture in his home. Call
ID 3-2742.
PENSIONER
wants living quarters in exchange
for
garden
work.
Please
write
N.Y. P.O. Box 191, Wilmette, Lllinois.
VITO MARIANI LANDSCAPING
Everything
in lawn
or yard
and
garden
maintenance. New jobs, excellent references.
Call after 8 p.m. ID 2-1774.
EXPERIENCED gardener with best of references wishes work 1 day a week. Telephone ONtario 2-7803.
EXPERIENCED gardener wisher lawn maintenance, also flagstone patios and walks
layed. Telephone ID 3-0364, evenings.
WOMAN
wants a
work, full or part
time.
Experienced,
have
transportation.
Call 5 p.m. to 8 a.m. CHerry 4-2267.
GARDENING and lawn care, 4 to 5 hours
in afternoon, or all day Saturday or Sunday. ONtario 2-3977 after 4 p.m.
EXPERIENCED man, white, desires housework, gardening
and grass cutting; references. Call DExter 6-7646.
YOUNG
man
with
gas station,
grocery,
gardening
experience
wants
part.
time
work now, full time this summer, WI 5I

FIX:
build
years

repair locks, hinges, doors, glass,
shelves,
many
home
repairs;
22
serving North Shore. ID 2-1636.

~SITUATION

NEED HELP?

NO FEE

DAY WORKERS
CARE—REFS.—EXP.

do

ironing

in

my

Call

ID

FOR

SALE

2

BEAUTIFUL
natural ranch mink stoles.
perfect condition; 1 white beaver jacket,
reasonably priced. ID 2-2089.
LADIES’ summer outfits, fleece coat, size
12; men’s suits, 42 long; layette needs,
highchair. ID 3-0545.
COMPLETE spring-summer maternity wardrobe, size 12-14, worn one season, in excellent condition. Call CE 4-4771.

GOODS

FOR SALE

CHINA

CRYSTAL
SILVER
Mother’s

DIRIGO

desires cleaning by

home.

CLOTHING

ful

the day and also baby sitting evenings.
Lake Forest only. Call CE 4-2376.
IF you are going away on vacation or coming home with a new baby and want help
with your children, call GReenleaf 5-7119.
A-1 references.
HANDYMAN,
experienced, wants evening
work. Also party
work, bartending, etc.
A-1 references.
Call CE 4-5675.
MAN wants work as handyman; putting up
screens, washing windows, painting, lawn
work, etc. Call CE 4-1747,
EXPERIENCED
cleaning
and
handyman,
has Mondays
available, excellent North
Shore references. ID 3-0758.
EXPERIENCED woman will do day work.
Call ID 2-8114.
EXPERIENCED Jamaican Man would like
work as handyman, janitor, or cleaning ofones: References. Own car. GReenleaf 5iA

SITTING

for the bride-to-be and the thought-

ALPINE 1-5511
SAPPHIRE DOMESTIC SERVICE
“The Right Girl In Every Home”
413 Linden Ave., Wumette

EXPERIENCED woman

BABY

HIGH
school girl 16 desires baby sitting
job all summer; experienced. Write Darlene, 502 Union St., Hartford, Wis.
EXPERIENCED baby nurse will sit Wednesdays from 10 a.m. on. Have references.
Write Box D-85, c/o Lake Forester.
EXPERIENCED,
reliable high school boy
would like part time and summer baby
sitting. Call ID 2-1031 after 5 p.m.
RELIABLE high school baby sitters available any night of the week. Phone ID 25054. Ask for Nancy.
SLEEPER:
room
and board in exchange
for doing dinner dishes and baby sitting.
ID 2-6038,

“HOUSEHOLD

WANTED—DOMESTIC

LIVE IN
HSWK.—CHILD

GIRL wants work as nurse maid for summer months. Age 16. Live in. References.
Telephone ONtario 2-5127.
WILL do washing and ironing in your home.
Call ID 2-5735 and ask for Mary. Will
also do baby sitting evenings.
MAN
wants job as gardener, and can do
housepainting, window cleaning, etc. Satisfaction guaranteed. EM 2-9208.
oavk
sitting, serving and
dish washing.
Telephone ID 2-0233.
NEBRASKA girl desires summer work, child
care, light housework, etc. Available June
1st. Telephone ID 2-3383.
WOMAN
wants
day
work
Tuesday
and
Wednesday.
General cleaning. Call after
5 p.m., MAjestic 3-5883.
EXPERIENCED woman; references; would
like cleaning,
ironing;
day
work;
own
transportation. CH 4-0787, ask for May.
WANT day work, washing, ironing or cleaning; Monday, Tuesday, Thursday. $12 a
day. References. DElta 6-8756.
COLORED man wants day work. Call after
6 p.m. CHerry 4-2267.
CLEAN cut young man is desirous of obtaining part time employment as a domestic or laborer. Call MAjestic 3-3720.
COLLEGE
girl desires work
as mother’s
helper; Lake Forest experience; Majorie
Johnson,
3259
N.
Hackett,
Milwaukee.
Telephone WO 2-1629.
EXPERIENCED Wisconsin girl desires summer work with children; high school graduate; please contact Mrs. K. Douglas for
further information. CE 4-4951.
WOMAN
wants day work. References. Call
OLympic 8-1401, Kenosha, Wisconsin.
EXPERIENCED
woman wishes day work,
any day open; local references. Telephone
OLympic 2-6472.
MATURE
experienced woman wants light
housework and care of children 2 days a
week. $13 plus carfare per day, excellent
references. Telephone Midway 3-7457.
WOMAN wants day work, experienced, references. Call ONtario 2-2028.
WOMAN
desires two or three days cleaning, Fridays available. References, Telephone DE 6-8158.

3-

HIGH
school
graduates
desire
work
as
mother’s helpers for the summer.
Contact
Mrs.
Eskil
Bostrum,
Ishpeming,
Michigan, HU 6-6446 after 6 p.m.
GIRL wants work 5 days a week; general
housework. References. Call MAjestic 3EXPERIENCED lady would like day work
Monday,
‘Tuesday
and
Thursday;
references. Call ONtario 2-2297 after 5 p.m.
WANT to find work for my excellent cleaning woman one or two days a week. Telephone CE 4-0118.
COLLEGE junior seeks summer employmert;
enjoys
children;
help
with
housework,
cooking; experienced; references; Frances
Tomberg, 341 W. Hall, Marquette, Michigan.
HIGH school graduates want to be mother’s helpers or maids.
17 and 18 years
old. Available June
1st. Write
Barbara
Sosin, Marengo, Wisconsin.
VETERANS’
Service, $2.25 per hour, gardening and landscaping, odd and skilled
jobs, expert workers, windows, floors and
walls, etc. washed an cleaned, also spring
clean up jobs, painting. AL 1-4636.

Day

gift.

in WHEELING

shows over 100 open stock patterns
by SPODE, DOULTON,
LENOX,
MINTON,
HAVILAND,
ROSENTHAL,

WORCESTER

and

many

other well known makes.
Those
who have visited our shop say
there is no finer collection anywhere. Here in pleasant home-like
surroundings

an

unhurried

you

are

free

selection.

be delighted to discover
est prices, as well.

to make

You
very

will
mod-

Dirigo, Inc.
FINE

TABLE APPOINTMENTS
170 N. Milwaukee Ave.
Wheeling, Ill.
Phone LEhigh 7-1978
Open Daily 9-6, Mon.-Thurs. 9-9
Sunday 1-6
FOR porch or family room, sofa, 3 chairs,
tables, pink wrought iron and reed; good
condition; Call CE 4-9572.
NEW
Hoover vacuum cleaners as low as
$49.95; 24 in. TV, reconditioned, $69.95;
new refrigerators and freezers as low as
$149.95; wholesale prices; our 25th year
in Lake
Forest.
We
give S&amp;H
Green
Stamps. Freeman’s
TV
and Music,
648
Western, Lake Forest.
ANTIQUES,
Giftwares,
Bric-A-Brac,
Collector’s Items, Furniture, Odds and Ends.
Beer Steins and Junque. We buy and sell
Fh Fullers, 803 Waukegan Road, Deerield.
COMPLETE
DINING
ROOM’
ENSEMBLE: authentic Williamsburg
Restoration
hunt board, dining room table, and buffet made by veenorh
8 Early Dutch antique chairs, beautifully refinished and 9
pelgenee. $1500. For information call
e

ELECTROLUX
ative in your

sales and service represent
locality! Bob LeClair, tele

BRAND new modern foam rubber sectional
sofa with table and ottoman, originally
$500 will sacrifice $165; Japanese
rush
folding screen. Telephone ID 3-2374.
PRICED right: bedspreads, drapes, 3 piece
sectional couch, blonde mahogany corner
table, lamp, lounge chair with ottoman.
Call ID 2-7828.
APARTMENT
gas range, used 4 months,
$50. Just. like new. Telephone ID 3-1428.
RED sofa; pair tweed chairs; excellent condition. All day Thursday, Saturday, Sunday, Friday after 5 p.m. 604 Pleasant Ave.,
ID 2-9125.
11 FT. X 15 FT. light gray twist rug and
ped, nylon and wool. Telephone WI 5-

automatic

washer,

excellent

CHARCOAL
lounge chair; 2 metal children’s desks; Baby Tenda. ID 2-4781.
2 HOLLYWOOD twin beds, very good condition. $50. Telephone ID 2-1037.
PAUL
McCOBB
contemporary
desk
and
chair. Black, $30. WI 5-3239.
1 HIDEABED
with slipcover, best offer.
WI 5-1352.
1959 MODEL
36 inch Kenmore
as range,
used o7!v 2 months, reasonable.
elephone
ID 3-1088.
YOUNGSTOWN
dishwasher
for
sale,
2
years old, perfect working condition, $35.
Telephone ID 2-5537.
NEED minor revairs: Fairbanks-Morse power mower, $15: Norge washer, $25; Hotpoint range. $10. FINE condition: Amana
freezer, $75; G-E refrigerator, $75 ($135
for both);
2 old cartwheels,
$10 each.
Cash or swap. ID 2-9043.
ANTIQUES—Many pieces lovely milk glass
and crystal. Priced $5 to $20 a piece.
Telephone ID 2-2119.
BEIGE Kroehler davenport, matching chair,
9 months old, $125 or best offer. Telephone
ID 2-5427,
GENERAL
ELECTRIC combination refrigee,
8 years old. Call CE
4HAMILTON
2
cycle
automatic
washer.
Telephone CE 4-5121.
MAHOGANY
desk, excellent condition, 7
months old, cost $100 rew, will sell for
$65. Telephone ON 2-8873, Great Lakes.
SIMMONS sofa bed with Beauty Rest mattress,
$50;
mahogany
Widdicomb | step
table, $20. Telephone ID 3-1317 after 5
p.m.
FINE CONDITION: double bed headboard,
matching spread and dust ruffle. dressing
table,
adjustable
bed
frame;
mahogany
gossip’s bench, mahogany end tables (2),
wing chair. brass fireplace tools. Best offer. ID 3-0614,
CRAFTSMAN
rotary power mower, 1 year
old. Telephone CE 4-5562.
FOURTH anrual Fox Valley Antiques Show
and Sale, May
11, 12. 13. Fox Valley
Livestock Certer on Randall Road between
Hiohway 64 &amp; Alt. 30, Geneva-St. Charles,
Tlinois.
PORCH
furniture, white bamboo;
1 oval
table. 2 side tables, 3 arm chairs with upholstered
cushiors.
4 orcasional
chairs;
$50. Call after 5, CE 4-2052.
LARGE chest type freezer. Can be seen at
241 Washington Rd., Lake Forest or call
CE 4-0467
MOVING
SALE:
refrigerator, stove. automatic
washer,
mangle,
miscellaneous
items. Sale starts May 8, 10 a.m. till 4
p.m. 122 Highwood Ave., Highwood.
PIECE metal porch set. $19; meat grinder,
$1.50; stainless steel flatwear. 42 pieces.
$7; record changer cabinet, pillows, $1.25;
boys’
clothing.
size
6.
shoes.
boots,
men’s shirts. 14%, clothing, 38-39. Telephore ID 2-8760.
GREEN fibre rug, new. 6 feet wide and 14
feet long; single bed, walnut frame, inner spring mattress and springs; 2 lawn
chairs; 2 kitchen chairs; miscellaneous. ID
3-0049.
BRAND new Naxon apartment size portable
washer and dryer, no installation necessary, plugs in any wall outlet, received as
gift, bill with original 10 year warranty,
a
sell for half the original price. ID 3-

1

°

onan

GOODS
SPRINGTIME

Bunk bed ensemb. w/matt.
231 coil matt., or b. spr.
320 coil matt. ,or b. spr.
1020 coil matt., or b. spr.

SALE

$99.88
$34.88
$44.88
$54.88

John R. Whalen
Furniture
808

Deerfield

Waukegan Rd.
WI 5-1915

PAIR of French oil lamps; Venetian commode;
2 Oriental runners approximately
23 ft. by 4 ft. wide; Italian iron wine table; altar stick lamp; bleached Baker book
table; dresser; French cane full size bed;
walnut server; antique small coal scuttle;
pee. of painted barber poles. Hlllcrest 6-

condi-

tion, $60. Telephone ID 2-7945.
KENMORE
washing machine, 3 years old,
excellent condition, $45. Call Saturday or
Sunday. ID 2-6971.
PHILCO refrigerator, 8 cubic feet; 34 size
Hollywood bed, complete. Call ID 3-2196
before 3 p.m,
21 INCH rotary power mower, good running condition, $10; 16 in. hand mower,
$3; barbeque grill, $2; assorted baby and
little boy’s clothes; strapless formal dress,
size 9, $5. WI 5-3724.
OAK
kitchen
set, extension
table and 4
chairs. Telephone CE 4-9153
DINING room set; bedroom set; collection
of salt and pepper shakers, miscellaneous
items. Call CE 4-1356 after 5:30.
RUGS; bedroom, dining room, living room,
breakfast room
furniture; TV, etc. 301
sere ia Lake Forest, CE 4-2196, Bouchard.
ONE antique coach light, very unusual. ID
2-8303.
GARAGE
Sale: Maytag automatic washer,
$45;
captain’s
chairs,
$10;
radios,
$4;
chest, $5; baby buggy, $7, car bed, $3;
miscellaneous. 1231 Ferndale. ID 3-1421.
ELECTRIC
coffee maker,
50 cup,
$18;
Burroughs
adding
machine,
like
new;
modern
lamps;
beautiful
brass electric
light fixture, never used, cost $185, now
$50; RCA 21-in. television, $55. Thursday
or Friday evening or Saturday 1 to 4:30
p.m. Telephone ID 2-9188.
VISTA
contemporary
formica
and
metal
furniture: 2 sliding door cabinets, 1 chest
of drawers, 1 small desk, all 30 inches
high. Also matching 3 drawer night table,
1 year old, very smart for child’s room.
or family room. ID 2-4519.
BARGAIN
SALE
GE range $20, 40 pieces glass block, 12”x
12”;
many
new picnic
chests,
miscellaneous household samples. 1950 Dodge, body
shot, runs fine $75 or best offer, red shag
oe
236 Deerfield Road, Deerfield, WI 5-

ae

BURTON-DIXIE

ANTIQUE
pitcher
lamp,
2. table
lamps,
drum table, cheap. Telephone ID 2-7366.

NORGE

HOUSEHOLD

WHALEN’S

Phone ID 2-6367.

iu?

}

PIECE modern bedroom set, will separate;
cocktail table;
TV
set;
bamboo
porch
blinds; lamps; shopping cart; linen place
mats; pictures; pink drapes and bedspread;
women’s
clothes,
10 and
12; men’s 39
and 40 regular; miscellaneous items 10c
to $1; 9 ft. garage door. WI 5-2639.
G.E. AUTOMATIC
washer and dryer set,
like new; Philco 9 foot refrigerator, new
condition; chests of drawers; good dinette
set; occasional chairs; 6 year youth bed;
bassinette;
Waring
blender;
pull lamp;
matching couch and chair, cheap; Westinghouse 40 in. electric stove; gas space
heater;
accordion
and _ miscellaneous.
Hales, 1920 Sheridan Road, North Chicago, DExter 6-2353.
SOLID walnut dining table with leaf, seats
8. Solid
walnut
sideboard.
Both
from
Colby’s, $125. CE 4-3048,
GARAGE
SALE
James
Automatic
dishwasher,
$25;
Lionel
electric train with extras, $15; Westinghouse
oven, like new, $25; Mixmaster, coffee maker, clothing and miscellaneous. WI 5-3907,
922 Wilmot Road, Deerfield.
METAL
ironing board,
$3; Westinghouse
electric roaster and cabinet, $13.50; pair
living room chairs, $23; pair maple end
tables, $16. Call CE 4-4924.
ROPER
6 burner
stove, just overhauled
excellent condition, good buy for $75. wi
5-3613.
FRIGIDAIRE
electric stove, double oven,
automatic
time
clock,
very good.
condition, $35. Phone WI 5-0658.
RATTAN
room
divider;
2 rattan chairs;
lounge chair and ottoman; large framed
mirror;
Gorham
silver plate service for
8; numerous ceramic pieces. WI 5-0931.
FOR sale; Frigidaire electric stove; GE electric dryer; Storkline baby carriage; wrought
iron table and chairs; all in good condition. WI 5-1308.
LOUIS
XIV
antique china cabinet, $250,
Call WI 5-3285 after 6 p.m.
6 PIECE sectional sofa, cost $1200, sacrifice for $200; 83 inch walnut commode,
leather covered cocktail table, other interesting items. Telephone ID 2-5050.
eh
HAND crocheted Colonial bedspread, heavily plated silver.tray worth $200. 24 inch;
silver coffee service, 3 piece; table model
Addressograph. ID 2-6787.
LAWNMOWER,
20 inch rotary self propelled, $25; carpeting, gray 11x5 feet, excellent condition, $10. ID 2-0056.
BEAUTIFUL
pickled
pine
credenza,
top
drawer is a leather lined desk. Call ID 27666 after 6 p.m.

MISCELLANEOUS

FOR

SALE

POWER LAWN ROLLING-FERTILIZING
Let us take the humps out. Save your back..

MODERNIZATION
SERVICE
SUMMER
This

summer

with

indoor

A

screen

PORCHES
enjoy

outdoor Living:

convenience.

enclosed

porch

on

your

patio is the answer. Completely in—
stalled and finished for as Tittle as

$15.95 Per Month
FREE

ESTIMATES

Northbrook Lumber
Company
(Skokie
Northbrook,
III.

&amp;

Dundee

Rds.)
CR

2-3000

RENT EVERYTHING FOR THE HOME
FROM YOUR ASSOCIATED STORE
Portable TV Sets
Foldaway Beds
High Chairs
Reducing Machines
Hospital Beds
Heavy Duty Vacuums
Floor Waxers
Power Tools
Wall Paper Equip.
Moving Equipment
Wheel
airs
Rug Scrubbers
Floor Machines
Ladders
WE DELIVER

ASSOCIATED
RENT-ALLS
651

Roger
wie

Williams,
IDlewood

2-6333

Highland

Park

Thursday, May 4, 1961
Mh

ae

Cu

.

�AUTOMOBILES

MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE
PLANTS
Giant
and
and
and

FOR

YOUR

Pansies

and

GARDEN

Violas

in flats

boxes. Hardy Chrysanthemums
Cushion Mums, Daisies, Phlox
other choice perennials now

ready for your selection.
_ Geraniums,

Lantanas,

Vinca

Vine.

Flats of Annuals; Hybrid Petunias,
Snapdragons,
Carnations,
Dwarf
Marigolds,
Ageratum,
Verbena,
Coleus, Double Petunias, and many
others.
Ground Cover
plants;
Euonymus
Vegetus, E. Coloratus, E. Kewensis,
Bowle’s Vinca, Baltic Ivy and Aju-

ga.
Yews
Pfitzer
each.
$1.50
Golden

in containers,
$2.50
each.
Juniper in containers, $2.00
Crimson
Pygmy
Barberry,
each
potted.
Cotoneaster,
Vicari Privet.
Drive

to

OMAN’S FLOWER
FARM
located on Rt. 83, % mile south of
Rt.

22,

near

Weekdays
8 P.M.
“We

Long

and

Grow

Grove.

Sundays.
Our

Open

8 A.M.

Own

to

Plants’

SHOP AND SAVE AT
STOCKADE TRADING POST
WHEELING, ILLINOIS
WE

SELL

ON

TERMS

Will
take your
clean
used
furniture
in
trade or down payment on new furniture.
3 pc. maple bedroom set with canopy bed,
$179.50;
89?
Danish
modern
davenport,
$159.50; 2 pc. Danish modern living room
set, $129. 50; 2 pc. living room sets, $98.50;
mahogany
"dropleaf
tables,
$39.50;
large
asst. of bedroom furniture, dinette sets, odd
chairs, lamps, bedding at discount prices;
heavy duty underground
cable,
10c a ft;
closet combination, $22.95; 24” vanity formica topped lavatory complete with trim,
$72.50; 66” 2 bowl cabinet sink with trim,
$97.50; 2 bowl stainless steel sinks, $12; 25
ft. extension power cords, 75c ea; hoses,
spades, rakes, $1.25 ea; 6 tube fluorescent
te,
$5 ea; filing cabinets, $10 ea; new
and used gas stoves, asst. sizes, very reasonable. Many
other items too numerous
to mention. Come in and browse.

FENCES
“YOU

SELECT—WE
ERECT”
WOOD
OR WIRE
STANDARD
OR CUSTOM
CABANAS - PATIOS
GARDEN
UTILITY BUILDINGS
For Free Estimates Call
Mike
Estate Fencing
CE 4-1283

DAY

GIFTS

See
out
antique
jewelry
collection
and
choice selection of old china, glass, silver,

furniture.

LINDWALLS
808 Oak Street
HI 6-0145
Winnetka
(1% Block West of Green Bay

e0cccesee =

HALF DAY PLYWOOD
DISCOUNT MART
corner Rtes. 45 &amp;
Lumber
Mahogany Doors
Ceiling Tile
Pegboard
Plywood Paneling
Mosaic Tile
Underlayment
Floor Tile
Wall Tile

21,

BIG EVERGREEN

Half

Top Soils
Manures
Gravel Drives
Tractor Work
Lawn Rolling
Tree Removal
Fill Dirt
Wrecking
JIM BEINLICH
TRUCKING—VE
5-1195
WILL pay to $25 a year for roadside loca0
of advertising billboards, 8 ft. x 8
on main
streets or highways.
Call
Ronald Frey, YOrktown 5-4000, collect.
TRANSMISSION for sale. 4 speed plus shift
selector still in car. Price
$220 firm. ID
2-1498.
LIONEL
train, excellent condition, cheap.
Will sell as a unit or will separate. After
6 o’clock ID 2-7454.
OUTDOOR
Playhouse
in good
condition.
Call or write to Robert Stensland, 1029
Lake Street, Oak Park, VIllage 8-4852.
STAINLESS steel storm doors and windows
expertly installed;
also embossed
aluminum siding. CoAlume. Call CE 4-1750.
SQOLEX
MOTORBIKE
imported
from
France. Excellent running condition. Perfect transportation from home
to_ train
=
First $75 takes it. Phone ID 21960 ELECTRIC Norge dryer,
30
inch
lawn
sweeper;
spreader,
Storkline
baby
chair, 3 drawer metal file
coat and mink jacket. WI

Mon., Thurs., Sat., Sun., 9-6
Tues., Wed., Fri., 9-9

MOTHER’S

ALUMINUM
windows, doors, siding, awnings and
screen houses;
mito
Spring
prices. Call CoAlume, CE 4TOOL
&amp; EQUIPMENT
RENTAL
Chain saws, rug
pooers, sanders, rotary
tillers, etc. You ren it.
UTUAL SUPPLY
ID 2-0272
Rtes. 41 &amp; 22
LANDSCAPING
Garden
plowing
and
harrowing;
grading,
disking, driveways dug and widened; patios
dug and new lawns. Phone WI 5-0535
COINS For Collectors—Buy and Sell. Larson’s Store, 1783 St. Johns Ave., Highland Park. Saturday and Sunday only.
DRAPERIES, slipcovers, interior design consultation; alterations, dressmaking, WI 55719, if no answer WI 5-1514.
ROSEBUSHES
GALORE!
Everblooming Hybrid, Tea, Florabunda and
GrandiFlora.
Priced from 40 to 60 cents
each.
Call
ID
2-7837
or write
Century
House, P.O. Box 14, Highland Park, II.
ROTO-TILLING, light grading; ground prepared
for
seeding;
lawnmower
sales.
ig
and repairs. ID 2-8029-ID 2-

Day,

Ill.

deluxe model;
lawn
fertilizer
carriage, baby
Se he mink
5-5632.

SIMULICITY Power Lawn Mower,
with 30 in. sickle bar and spray

24 in.,
attach-

ment for trees and lawn fertilizing. Cooper edger-trimmer, Hamilton electric dryer, Simplex ironer. MAjestic 3-4066.
USED refrigerator, ideal for basement use,
good condition, $30. WI 5-4273.
REEL type lawn mower, 20 in. girl’s bicycle,
2 old chairs, 1714 Garand Drive, Deerfield. WI 5-4151.
EVERGREENS for sale, hews only, dig your
own and save, $2 to $4 each. ID 2-2412.
GARAGE
SALE
Thursday, Friday, Saturday; juke box, 40
play; sofa; chairs; mahogany tables; Lionel
“O” gauge train on large table; vaporizer;
crib and mattress; high chair; youth chair;
fur jacket; small gas range; drawing board;
much Sy
1111 Linden Avenue, Deerfield. WI 5-139
LADY’S wie Patty Berg golf clubs and
bag. Used only once, $80. WI 5-3239.
PROFESSIONAL Berlant 33 stereo record
er, new heads, also 4 track playback. cost
$1200, sell $495; also Ampex 351-2P sell
$1600. Call evenings after 7 or weekends,
ID 2-8661.
PORTABLE 8 ft. x 8 ft. house, ideal for tool
shed or small office, formerly used for
bw car lot shed; first $50 takes. ID 2-

reel tyne,

36

in. cut;

in|

WESTINGHOUSE electric range, good condition, $35; man’s storm coat, size 40,
$6; lady’s blue storm coat, size 12, $10;
walnut tier table, $5; G.E. sun lamp with
timer, $25; cafe curtains. 805 Muir Ave.,
Lake Bluff. CE 40314.

HAY
a

pay

Give

RACK
facilities.

Happ’s

Hol-

REPLACE
your worn out sink tops with
sparkling Formica or Ceramic tile. Also
cabinets,
sinks,
wall
and
floor
tiling.
25 years on North Shore. Free estimates.
Snazelle, CK 4-3237.

_ Thursday, May 4, 1961

Her

RUMMAGE
Sale,
field. Thursday,
Friday, May 5th,
Toys, Furniture,
lehem E. U. B.

Console

Station—6:30

9-9 Daily

Never

Day

A-1
1960

LOWREY

1959

Organ Studios

1959

St.

Johns

ID

2-2510

1958

1958

We are moving to larger quarters
Must dispose of 90 new and used pianos
New spinets, 88 note ................-.- from $395
Used spinets and consoles
15 used
grand pianos ......................
Used player uprights ~................
Practice
uprights
Pate CRS SRA
Ns _from $ 79
See the new
Hardman Duo Player pianos
Mon.. Thurs.
unday 11-5
FIELDS P
O CO.
2921 W. Touhy
AMbassador 2-2023
LOWREY
electric organ, will sacrifice, no
reasonable offer refused. Moving out of
state—must sell. ID 2-1415.
ACCORDION, 120 bass, never used. Make
offer. DExter 6-2353.
HAMMOND
CHORD
ORGANS: | floor
models and trade ins; only $795 with neworgan guarantee! Easy terms. Lyon-Healy,
yer Second St., Highland Park. ID 2baby
Call

Fords,
Falcons,
T-Birds. Final
clearance. Priced to sell.
New car guarantee
Ford cenv., pow. steer.,
R
&amp;
H,
Fordomatic.
Your old conv. taken in
$1895
trade.
Chevrolet,
4
dr.
H.T.

GALLERIES bila ¢ PAY
IANOS,
AL
MAKES,
ye’ STEINWAYS AND
LONG- ;
CA
MEVENINGS ROGERS

PIANOS wanted: bonus prices for Steinway
and Baldwin. VErnon
5-1640 eves. and
Sunday. AMbassador 2-2023 days.

WANTED
TO BUY
CHICAGO ART GALLERIES WILL PAY
CASH FOR. ORIENTAL oS ey FRENCH
FURNITURE.
ANTIQUES ETC.
LO 1-5092, EVENINGS ROGERS

your

kids

trailer

A

black,
matic.

R

&amp;

$

LAKE MOTORS
Authorized

14

that

foot

official|

BASKETBALL
BASKET
mounted
on
your garage? If so, call us, we’d like to
buy it. Telephone ID 2-1682.
OUTBOARD
motors, one 2 to 10 horsepower, ane Fig 25 to 40 horsepower. Call
after 6
AbD 28924,
FREE rag en
for cash for your old nylons,
discarded dolls, broken parts needed to
stock ‘‘surgery” of doll hospital opening
soon. WI 5-0685.

LOST &amp; FOUND_

A

1957
1955

Ford,

2

dr.

&amp;

V-8,

htr.

Fordo-

1

owner

LOW
1954
1952

$

PRICED

Sun,

Holmes Motor Co.
AUTHORIZED
FACTORY
FORD DEALER
Highland
Park
1909 St. Johns
640
Call Used
Car Dept.—ID
Open
8 A.M.
to 9 P.M.
Daily

American,
automatic
transmission,
rear tire mount,
$1050.
TY) 2-6807.

CanVxULtki

1958

2

door

2 tone, 2 door,
radio,
heater,
Private
party.

hardtop

V-8,

tomato red, radio, heater, power steering.
automatic
transmission,
whitewall
tires,
suburban driven only; low mileage; perfect condition, $1195. HI[llcrest 6-1256. _
1951 CHEVROLET
4 door sedan, 34,000
miles, new tires, $100. CE 4-0722.
1958 VOLKSWAGEN sedan, sun roof, heater. in good condition. $1050. Telephone
CE 40251.
CHEVROLET 1955 convertible, power steering, brakes, continental wheel, dual exhausts,
wonder
bar
radio,
white
sidebe a black with white top, $750. WI 5-

Immense

SALE

variety—Large

Some

items

reductions,

unfinished;

Furniture and Accessories
BETTY’S
Deerfield. Illinois
811. Waukegan Rd.
Second Floor
WI 5 -0137
LOST,.
slate
blue
lady’s
raincoat,
plaid
lined, size 18. Burberry London label, reward, CE 4-0238 after 7 p.m.
LOST,
dog,
German
shorthaired
pointer;
large male, white. brown ein
. long
ears, short
tail. aie
Any
information, call EM 2-77
LOST—dark
brown oad
glasses
between Highland Park High and Highwood
on Green Bay, Mav Ist. Reward. Call ID
2-1000 or ID 2-2003.
LOST:
English
Bull
dog,
male, . brindle,
child’s pet. answers to name of Louie,
reward. VErnon 5-2232.

"AUTOMOBILES
FOR SALE
WE
Top

NEED

Allowances

New

|

USED

Open

CARS

Made

On

The

Until

WENBAN BUICK
589 N. Oakwood
Forest
CE

CHEVROLET,
1958,
station “wagon,
V-8,
Brookwood,
door, power glide, radio,
heater, $995 or best offer. ID 3-0976.
1956 BUICK convertible, good second car,
power
seats,
windows,
steering;
new
syrings.
new
snow
tires, year old top.
ID 2-0553.
FOR
sale by owner;
1955 Chevrolet
Bel
Air sport coupe; lo mwileage; Powerglide,
radio, heater, whitewalls, power steering;
excellent mechanical condition; body very
good. Price $695, firm. EMpire 2-3714.
1957
FORD
Fairlane,
4 door,
automatic
transmission,
all power,
good condition,
1 owner driven, $575. WI 5-4046.
1959
THUNDERBIRD
convertible,
black
beauty,
local driven, very low mileage,
mint condition. Call ID 2-6300.
SAFE DRIVER, Auto Insurance, as low as
$13 per quarter, Aetna Casualty and Surety Co.
Moroney
Insurance Agency, 612
Laurel, Highland Park. ID 24049
1960 CHEVROLET
Bel Air, 2 door, radio,
heater, whitewalls, perfect condition. Call
WI 5-2964 after 6 p.m. or weekends.

Buick

Evenings

TWINS,
almost
identical,
1952
and
1954
Packards, both $150. wi 5-5716.
1958 LINCOLN 4 door, air conditioned, full
power.
Have
complete
service
record,
must see it. Call ID 2-6300.
1¥o4 CHEVROLET,
mechanically excellent,
numerous recent part replacements, best
offer. Weekends only. ID 2-9175.
cg 3
eaten Wayfarer, runs ak $50. WI

9

4-5770

—

4

Lake Forest
We

Will

Arrange

European
Your

Then We
On Your

at the

will Service It
Return Home

USED
1959
1957
1957
1959
1958
1958
1953

Delivery of

Mercedes-Benz

IMPORTS

300 SL Coupe Roadster
SL Coupe Roadster
220 S Sedan
Volvo Sedans, 2 cars,
VW
Convertible
Volvo Sedan
Morris Wagon

German

Factory

Mechanics

Pontiac, 2 dr. H.T. ___$ 150
Ford, 2 dr. ranch wgn.,
6 cyl., htr. Handy man’s
$245
helper _-_

3

:

of

595

SPECIALS

Be
10-4 _

Mercedes-Benz

$ 895

matic

‘a

Park, Ill. —
Se

H. Fordosporty
gas

ic. New car condition _.$ 695
1955

Dealer.

9-9

Sat. 9-6

$2495

Lineoln
Premier
H.T.,
full pow., air-cond., low
mileage. Beautiful car ..$1295
Ford, 2 dr. ranch wegn.,
6 cyl., R &amp; H. Fordomat-

Corp.

Highland

Hours—Weekdays

To

KNAUZ

Trained

Service

Your

Car

MOTOR SALES.

1060 ‘caer
CE 4-2800

Ave.
Open

wean

‘suntan

CASH FOR YOUR CAR
ANY MAKE OR MODEL
Call

Mr.

Kelley—ID

2-8640

Holmes Motor Co.
t909

St. Johns

Highland

1953 CHEVROLET convertible, perfect run-—
ning order, new top, dandy second car,
$225. Call ID 2-2089.
1958. CADILLAC,
2 door ete .
like
new condition. 1 owner. Call ID 2-6300.

1955

++

CADILLAC,
a

2 door,

new

1958 RAMBLER
low
mileage,

economy

car.

tires,

light blue,

$300.

good

EAstgate ie

American,
excellent
condition,

ID

2-5737

or 392-3068.

=

1956 Four door Bel Aire Chevy, V-8 engine, automatic transmission, radio
ang
heater, white and plum colored, very good

condition

inside

and

out,

ID 72-5223 afte

er 5

1959 RAMBLER
Feonomy

plus.

EXCEPTIONAL

4 door.

Call

fine family car,

ID

2-6300.

value! Will sacrifice 1959

A

Fiat 4 door, 2 tone white/light green,
15.000 miles, 1st $1075 takes. WI 5-4579.
CHEVROLET 4 door sedan, 1954, auto= ae
matic

ANTIQUES

Chrysler

1766 First Street

R

saver

in

1956 Buick Special, 2 dr. H.T., blue/
white, fully equipped, custom interior... TW Price® 4.265...
1954 Pontiac
Star Chief
Conv.,
engine red, hydramatic,
R &amp; H,
WW
tires, P/Steer. Price
1954 Chevrolet
Bel
Air
4-dr.
.
R &amp;
stand. shift. Excellent
transportation Caf’ 60.03.46

$5800

car for
Ford V-8, Fordomatic,

CALL
PARK : 1959 RAMBLER

for

outgrown

convenience, 50

Thunderbird, H.T. fully
equipped including air-

&amp; H, new car trade-in _$ 895
1958 Lloyd, 2 dr. sed. A real
economy 2nd car
$ 295
1957 Ford, 6: e¥ly 2..dr.- BP.

grand, ItalTAlcott
3-

“MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS WANTED
CHICAGO oss,
CASH
FOR
eae
BONUS
GOOD
BEACH
1-5092,
PARK 1-4400.

shopping

Chrysler
Saratoga
4-dr.,
pow.
steer., pow. brakes,
WW
tires,
etc. Full price
$1295
Oldsmobile CONVERTIBLE, full
pow. New
white top, like new
pnt:
Must
see this one,
Full

1956

Rambler
sta.
wgn.,
6
cyl., 4 dr., auto. trans.,
R &amp; H. Will pass for

trade-in
Straus
style.

your

1958

USED CAR GUARANTEE ON
‘57 OR NEWER MODELS

conditioning.

MOVING SALE

WALNUT electric
ian Renaissance
2261

For

used cars available for your inspection
our INDOOR SHOWROOM.
PLE BARGAINS.

black, V-8, R &amp; H, ww’s.
Priced to sell __._..-...$1595

Park

Ave.

SHOP IN ‘COMFORT

new
1960 demonstrators.

Forget

Of Highland
1795

813
Waukegan,
DeerMay 4th, 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
9 a.m.-12 noon. Clothes,
New Merchandise. BethChurch.

a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Piano
Now $695

SALE ©

HIGHLAND PARK
USED CAR
HEADQUARTERS

AUTHORIZED
DEALER
World’s Finest Organs - Pianos

29TH ANNUAL
RUMMAGE
SALE
Winnetka Congregational Church
Thursday, May 11—7 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Winnetka Community House
620 Lincoln Ave.
Free bus to and from Linden Ave. Wilmette | wake

“El?

ORGANS

a Mother’s

She’ll

RUMMAGE SALE

CLUB

Hobby Health Club classes at
Field House, Deerfield, or call

CABLE

Have

mower,

NUTRI- ge VITAMINS and MINERALS
MRS.
E. W. McDONALD,
R.N.
1516 McDANIELS AVENUE
HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS
ASSOCIATE OF
MARIAN’S
HOBBY
HEALTH

USED LOWREY
FROM $695

RIDING

ti
condition
excepting
clutch.
Wellnown make, Lists at $450. Will sacrifice
for $150. See it at 150 W. Onwentsia Road,
Lake Forest.
A WONDERFUL
SPRING
TONIC!
A 6
lesson course in Yogic inspired exercises for
$10. A series of passive movements
that
are never enervating. Friday morvirgs
at
Sedalia School of Dancing, CE 4-3488.
Given by ALTA SHEPARD
Call CEdar 4-4206
ALPINE Current hedge plants, 18 inch, 65
cents each. Telephone CHerry 4-0788.
ROTOTILLER, excellent condition, $60. CE
4-5599,
WHEEL-HORSE
tractor unit, 3% _ horsepower, equipped with 32 inch reel mower,
freshly sharvened. 42 inch snowplow. $205
complete. Call after 6 p.m. ID 2-4749.
LAWNMOWER
with
seat, used
once,
3
horsenower, no reasonable offer refused.
ID 2-3850
JOCOBSEN
Javelin riding mower with attachment lawn feeder. lawn sweeper; 24
inch Admiral TV; 1958 Corvette; 3%4 inch
garden
hose;
walking
sprinkler;
various
miscellaneous items. WI 5-3119.

PIANOS

You can save hundreds of dollars NOW
yn floor models—Mason &amp; Hamlin, Knabe,
Kimball
spinets,
consoles
and
grands
convenient terms on all instruments.

SALE!

D 2-6681

AND

Brand new
Regular $870

BRADLY garden tractor, rotary mower and
snow dozer blade attachment, 80 rourd
wheel weight. Good condition, $125. Whizpoe aid
bike, $50. WI 5-4643, or WI

Deerfield

low, CR 2-313

NEW

AND

LOVELY
edition of Encyclopaedia Britan-|
nica, 23 volumes, price $25. ID 2-2119.

REMOVABLE
screens 90 in. high for 3
sides of a 12 ft. x 14 ft. porch, very reasonable: big roll 24 in. chicken wire, new.
WI 5-1272.

Sleigh

ORGANS

1-4400.
WANTED:
used boat
boat. Call ID 2-2627.

$2.00 and up. Also fruit trees and shrubs.
1 mile West of Toll Road on Rt. 22.
MANHART
Ne

Register for
Jewett Park
WI 5-0471

MOTHER’S DAY
SPECIALS

FOR

transmission,

dition,

private

good

owner,

1958 AUSTIN-HEALY

mechanical

$295.

ID

con- |

2-6983,

100-6 Deluxe 4 seat

er roadster, 4 speed, overdrive. Best
fer. Telephone ONtario 2-2915.
1954 FORD,
Tudor,
6 cylinder, standa
shift; radio. heater and whitewalls. G
buy. CE 4-2347.
1952 JAGUAR
XK120
roadster, modif
and recently overhauled; top mechani
condition,
$950.
Can
be seen a La
Bluff Si-clair station or call CE 4-228!
Room 314.
1959
CORVETTE,
blue,
automatic transae
fully equipped. Telephone ae

1957 TRUCK,

%

ton Dodge

15.000 miles, excellent

with side bo:

condition.

2-2682.

Call

aa

1948 INTERNATIONAL dump truck, K-B-7, a
good condition. Call ID 2-4124 ei
5 and 7 p.m.
PICK up truck, % Diamond T, 1948,
eo
Call ID 2-4124 between 5°

p.m.

AUTOS

WANTED:

WANTED

Jaguar HK

120 or 140 that has a

not been raced and has been treated with

care. Write complete details
c/o The Lake Forester.

to

Box RS,

HK
*&amp;

BICYCLES

1956 STAR
Chief Pontiac, 4 door hardtop. Automatic,
power steering, brakes,
windows. $495. Telephone ID 3-2161.

BOY’S red 20 inch Schwinn bicycle in ex-

1960 THUNDERBIRD
hard top, 1 owner
low mileage. Jet black with red interior,
must see to appreciate, Call ID 2-6300.

GIRL’S

cellent
carrier
oaoh

condition, 2 new tires,
rack, $25. ID 2-4207.

20 in. bike, $10;
boy’s

D '2-7545.

26

in. bike,

i
Re(|

horn

ay

girl’s 26 in. bike,
Schwinn,

$15,

Page H 65—D 57

C

‘y

�BICYCLES

7

NeMEIIDER

OSBY

SUBURBAN

FASHIONS

BIKES—Used
Good

BICYCLES
and

selection

FREE:
beautiful mother cat, tortoise and
white, 4 adorable kittens. ID 2-8869.

Reconditioned.

of Boys

or Girls

16

in., 20 in. or 24 in. Many Schwinns
—completely

re-built—some

like

new

CYCLE &amp; HOBBY IDSHOP
2-1369

486 Central at Sheridan

“BIG WHEEL”
BIKE SHOP

wile

Guaranteed during your ownership
Free Pickup &amp; Delivery
1844 First St.
ID 2-1750

PERSONAL
AT

HALF

LUNCH
Li

Drip-dry Pastel
Cotton

SERVED,

9 3 CLUE

NO.

$5.98
Other Robes in Larger

WILL

COMFORT-

ANOTHER

DE-

BE SURE TO WATCH THE DAILY MAIL.
I WILL not be responsible for debts contracted by any person but myself. Mrs.
one Rabattini, 117 Highwood Ave., Highwood.

EBENHOLZ

Benedict Ori, 421 Central Ave.,
got a ticket for improper backing
Monday

afternoon

Ln.

LABRADOR
retriever, black, male, AKC,
1 year old, champion stock, loves children. ID 2-6288.

backed
north
into the back

NUBIAN
bid Pr

43

goat, 1 year old, needs
friendly, wonderful pet,

very lit$25. WI

after

colliding

with a parked mail truck on Russet

COCKER-SPRINGER,
3% year old, black
spayed
female,
all
shots,
completely
housebroken,
good pet for family with
older children. ID 2-9054.

Highland
was

driven
Clay

Park

police

say

Set Special Meet
For Degree Work

KENNELS

On

4085 DUNDEE RD.
NORTHBROOK
CRESTWOOD
2-2865
BOARDING
GROOMING
TRAINING
BATHING
3 Miles west of Waukegan Road
On Dundee Road

by

St.,

Jack

Gasparic

Highwood.

NOW...
The World’s Largest
Lawn Spray Company
Offers You a Professional

FERTILIZING
SERVICE,

Thursday,

May

11,

=:

a special

held for the purpose of conferring
the third degree on a candidate
for Masonry.
The Grand
Lecturers’
Association of Cook County will pay a
special visit to the Lodge for the
purpose of conferring this degree.
The
Grand
Lecturers
are
the
men who instruct Masonic Ritual
and teach the work of conferring

URSAFELL KENNELS
BOARDING
AND TRIMMING
Expert grooming, all breeds, individual runs,
country kennel. Telephone WI 5-5035.
|
SMALL
entirely new boarding kennel has
space for well cared for dogs. Woman
owner does all work herself. Inspection
invited. Near Long Grove. Mrs. Huck, LEhigh 7-0099,
BEAUTIFUL
Bedlington
terrier
puppies,
AKC.
registered,
champion
stock,
look
like lambs, don’t shed ALpine 1-6134.
sa to
da Siamese kittens, $15 each. WI

degrees

in

schools

held

for

the

purpose and in the various Lodges
throughout the Chicago and suburban areas.

MINIATURE
poodles, AKC
registered, 6
weeks,
bred for disposition as well as
looks. Private party must dispose of litban oo 6 immediately. Make offer. ID 3-

SES x

7-WAY PROGRAM of fertilizers in care:

meeting of A. O. Fay Lodge in the
Hundley Memorial Temple wiil be

or Half Sizes.

fully planned combinations throughout the
season. Your lawn grows healthier, greener
—— stays that way through summer heat
and into late fall.

AMAZINGLY LOW COST

due to scientific automation—as little as

1¢

GUARANTEED

proven in over

RESULTS

sq. ft

14-billion sq. ft. of lawn treatments yearly.

ACT NOW

1. Electronic Soil Test

GET FREE
2. Liming or Acidifying
Put your lawn problems In the hands of
experts. Write or call:

GENERAL

OF

SPRAY

SERVICE

DEERFIELD

ID 2-7766

This is a rare occasion for the
Highland Park Masons and promises to be

an

entertaining

evening.

BRIARWOODS ESTATES
A spacious deluxe split level
with four large bedrooms and

22 baths. Excellent kitchen
with large eating area. Paneled family room with fireplace.
2%
car _ garage.
Beautiful

landscaping.

$46,500
Beautifully Maintained
Here’s an almost new four
bedroom split level in East
Deerfield.
Two baths, two
car garage, birch cabinet
kitchen

with

all

the

extras,

family room and lovely carpeting make
for gracious
living.

$37,500

SEPARATE

DINING

ROOM
An

immaculate

bedroom

home

all

brick

with

3

that

much wanted separate dining
room. Living room with fireplace. Kitchen with built-in
oven and range, disposal and

eating area.

114

baths.

$35,500

To help you choose the perfect gift for

UNUSUAL

Mother, we have a wide selection of

| SPORTSWEAR
LINGERIE
JEWELRY

HOSIERY
DRESSES
ACCESSORIES

DEVELOPMENT

4-bedroom new bi-level, 2
baths, basement, 2-car garage.
Kitchen
with eating
space,

range,

oven

and dish-

washer. Lovely family room
with fireplace. Nine trees on
85 x 145 corner.

$38,950

FREE GIFT WRAPPING

Hl4

ROSBY

’S

1835 Second St.
(Across

from

H.P.

Page H 66—D 58

ID 2-0788
Jewel)

Wyatt &amp; Coons, Inc.

SUBURBAN FASHIONS=
OPEN

THURSDAY

NITES

Shop Ben Franklin and Save

5-10 BEN FRANKLIN 5-10
LOCALLY

REALTORS
999

Waukegan

Ori

from
his driveway
of the truck, which

A. O. Fay Masons

PETS

Duster

with eyelet trim.
Sizes 10-18.

DRESS

2, AND

feID

DACHSHUNDS, lovable, home raised puppies, AKC
registered, health guaranteed.
Manchesters,
WlIndsor 5-1027.
TOY
poodles,
1 black male, 7 weeks; 2
white males, 2 months. Champion sired,
healthy, home raised. CE 4-3067.
BABY crows make unusual and interesting
pets. Also racing homing pigeons. Call WI
5-2189 after 6 p.m.
POODLES: AKC, champion stock, 5 weeks.
Call VErnon 5-1338.
4 ADORABLE kittens, 1 adult, box trained,
to give away. Telephone ID 2-3173. 1891
Old Briar Rd., Highland Park.
WHITE toy poodles, champion sired, show
quality. Male and female, 9 weeks old.
Call ID 2-1951.

New &amp; Used Bikes
Ranger Bicycles

CLUE NO. 1
PAST 12 MY PARTY

POODLES,
black miniature, male and
Sete y Wena home raised, best offer.

Mail Truck Hit

&amp;

BUILDERS

Road

PArk 4-3000

Glenview

OWNED

:-- NATIONALLY

KNOWN*

658
DEERFIELD RD.
DEERFIELD, ILL.
Thursday, May 4, 1961
Lae,

t

‘

a

Mae ree ene ee

of

�SWRA

ie

e

md

Mega.

Piano

Concert

Set

As Benefit for
Grove School
A

concert

by

internationally

George

famous

Banhalmi,

Concert

pi-

anist, to be given May 12 in the
Lake Forest High School Auditorium at 8:15 p.m., will benefit the
Grove School for handicapped children.
Banhalmi, former official pianist
for the Hungarian Philharmonic Institute and the Budapest Radio, is
associated
with
the
Community

Music Center of the North Shore.
Grove School serves Lake County children
with severe learning
problems. Tickets may be obtained
from Mrs. Robert Fuchs, ID 2-5717,
or Mrs. Melvin Harzog, ID 2-9333.

l
a
ictES,
BRID

|
.
.
.
S
E
BRID

MINWAX
Mell

Linn, 339

an abstract

Park Ave.,

mobile

design

Park

Hospital

the Highland

for

is shown

in his studio creating

a window

for National

display
Hospital

portraying
Week,

Finishes

for

New,

Now

May

7-13. The theme of the mobile construction will be the message “Your Hospital—A Community Partnership.” Linn is an
advertising designer who volunteers his talent for hospital
projects.

Wood
at

CRAFTWOOD

(HERE’S WHERE

DRIVE CAREFULL
THE LIFE YOU SAVE—MAY BE YOUR OWN '

TO

FIND

THEIR
aM

TO

HERE’S WHERE

LISTINGS,
LUMBER

|

COMPANY

See Page 42

BUY

THEIR

SALE!

GIFTS)

NORTH

SHORE’S

COMPLETE
FOR

THE

FINEST,

SELECTION

MOST

OF

HONEYMOON

GIFTS
HOME:

SILVER, CHINA, GLASSWARE,

LINENS, CUTLERY, LAMPS AND

sf |

SHADES, FURNITURE (ANTIQUE,

ie

OCCASIONAL AND SUMMER PIECES), ff
CLOCKS, BAROMETERS, WASTE
BASKETS, DECORATIVE AND

o

PRACTICAL ITEMS OF EVERY
DESCRIPTION.

Helens Rubinstein
5 Color-Tone Shampoos

PRICES

stein bottles her famous color-rich
shampoo in lightweight, unbreakable
plastic and offers you a whopping
2.50 size for only 1.50! You save 1.00
on every bottlel

AN

Choose the color made for your

own hair shade. Your own shade, but

brighter, emerges from this creamy

conditioning shampoo. Your hair is
radiant

with

lustre.

ROGER

WILLIAMS

Red-Head, Brunette-Tone, BrownGlow, Silver-Tone or Silk-Sheen
Cream Shampoo, without color.
On sale at the same time: super-

PRESCRIPTION
L. Sylvester,
35

years

Three
Thursday,

May

R.Ph.

experience

Registered

4, 1961

Jerry
20

Building

ITEM

s

INCLUDING

VALUE,

NO

EVERY

GIFT-WRAPPING

EXTRA

CHARGE

PACKING

OR

WORLD-WIDE

AT

NO

EXTRA

FOR

.

=
.

LOCAL

SHIPMENT

COST.

GRACE HERBST|
SHOP

SPECIALISTS

Brody,

years

AND

STURDY

ID 3-1212

Next Door to Ravinia Medical

...

AT

rich Silk-Sheen Cream Rinse, a conditioning wonder that makes all hair
easy-to-manage. Prices plus tax.

AVE.

HONEST

EVERY

HANDSOME

Blonde-Tone,

Roger Pharmacy
643

SUIT

POCKETBOOK

NOT A TINT, NOT A RINSE... RICH SHAMPOO WITH COLOR HIGHLIGHTS
Just once each year Helena Rubin-

TO

ee

R.Ph.

experience

Pharmacists Total

Henry
45

100 Years

years

Stine,

WINNETKA

R.Ph.

experience

Experience

563

Lincoln

Ave.

(Open

9:15

Hilicrest
to 5:15—Monday

through

6-1811

Saturday)
Page

H 43—D

59

�Bowling Chatter .

By Charlie Crovetti

Hello another week,
and more
good bowling scores coming your
way. We will start with the scores
shot by the Chicago Classic league,
Earl
Johnson
708—Bud
Schabily
708—Adam
Kmak
705 — Hamms
1117 and 3216, Old Fitzgerald 1101
and L &amp; A Vending 1105.
That’s
a lot of wood to be knocked over
by one league.
We also had a lot
of good scores by our local bowlers
# and here’s a few from the VFW
Ed Sordyl 236 and 632; Wm. Pantles and Swede Johnson 235; Tony
Porco had 221 and 606. C. Ebert
221
and
621
from
the
Moose
League, A. Wankel 236, J. Barkstashen 228 and 610, and Lee LaBuda
223. North Shore Line, J. Knelling

Pt
T TTT TTT TT

: LEASE

oe
cd

am

Cd

Prouty 236 and 629, D. Cassell 629,
B’Torah C. Brooks 223, A. Kaplin
219. From Immaculate
Con. Rose

Orsi 213 and Mabel

From the California League we
have that guy Andy Seiler again
this time he started off with the
first nine and finished with 278
and 879 for four. Carlton Prouty
had a 258 and 876 for four. Those

}#

THUNDERBIRDS

ROLL 321?

§)

HOLMES

*

1909

=

ST.

JOHNS

at

Powell's
589

es

ad

|

signed)

Camera

Central

bowler in that family he has yet
to prove it. But in all fairness he
does a good job of greenskeeper at

Sunset Valley Golf Club.
As usual when something new is
tried in bowling it always causes a
stir and the Classic Division in this
year’s ABC was no exception, and
I for one
hope
that it will be
shelved.
Can you tell me of any

other

H.P.
White

sport

where

the

otherwise

you

are

Still

FREE!

a regular.

Some fellows who work as counter
(}men and carry a 145 average have
to bowl in the Classic division, this
1}is rough but I don’t make the rules

them.
The
climax
of the
Strike
N’
‘| Spare Bowling season for this year
will be a tournament to be held at

Strike N’ Spare Bowling
‘!the
;/our

bowlers who
lanes in the

have
past

Lanes

SHUTTERS
WITH

* PRE-SANDED—READY
* AMERICAN MADE

TO

STAIN

OR

PAINT

Panel Widths
r Height

tid

by fo

8”

96

1.40

1.50

9"

10”

1.60

1.75

ie
ale,
2
Bt
TA
: ig lites ©. Wee ©; Games 6 ees Sees
a4"
162
AGE.
208:
$222

ee eee:
rail

ae"

1 Fa AF

i

40"
a,

fe

ee

6”

ig

On

OO.

divider rail

%

2.67

2.82

2.97

97

5,5

4.5

4.95

5.74

6.30

. 6.08.

6.53

7.09

269

F788.

BA‘

BES

Bi 4

AS

40k

4.73

507

4.95

495
5.18

BIR

Bak

Gk
Sie

5.78
COR.
GUS

5,85
O81
Tae

08
382
Fae

ee

LIE"

7.99

eee

8.10

3.40

568

ee

5.29

658

FAR)

ee

8.21

8.33

5:18
5.51

15”

G08

7.09

BAT,

64

Po cc obo

7.76

9.2

8.66,

OAT

9.00

9.23

9.34

8.78

9.11

9.45

9.56

9.57

9.90

9.68

10.35

9.79

10.24

10.58

11.14
14.90

9.68

hpaey

y
Mine

bowling
60

We

hope

annual

affair

Strike

N’

so

Spare

to make
come

ORT

se

this an
all

you

here

is

your chance to bowl in your own
house in a handicap
tournament
and win some prizes. Let’s have a
big turnout
for this tournament
which the bowlers have asked for.
TERRIBLE
Team
Highballers
Gunners ....
Blockbusters
Sharpshooters
R. Magnus
J. Greenebaum
J. Zimmerman
R.
Magnus
J. Greenebaum
M.
Block
IMMACULATE
Team
Missiles
Hepcats
Fireballs
Jets
Sputniks

20
Pts.
119
116
106
93

........
High

Series

High

Game

578
539
455
222
202
190

CONCEPTION

High

LADIES
Pts.
68%
6814
65
6314
63

Series

Fran Bartlett
Elena Carani
Marge Sordyl
Mabel
Sordyl
Rose Orsi

492
483
481
481
470
High

Game

Fran Bartlett
Marge Sordyl
Elena
Carani
Rose Orsi
Mabel
Sordyl

196
180
175
175
172

ORT “O” LEAGUE
Team
Pts.
Strike N’ Spare (Champs) © s00000 0560. 112
Perry &amp; Marie
111
Coiffure Shop
104
King Optical
102
Villa Moderne
95%
High, Series
Sally Garretson
548
June Goldberg
516
Gert Baker
506
Sonny Schulman
504
TROT MPM
eit ee
eo
Se et 473
High Game
Sally Garretson
213
Sonny Schulman
196

481
474
470
456
450

ORT “T” LEAGUE
Team
Earl Gsell &amp; Co. (Champs)
Ravinia Auto
rvice
Talk of the Town
Business Card
Ravinia Lamp Studio
High Series
Fritzie Goldsmith
Phyllis Levin
Charlotte Brown
Dora Koenig
Beverly Zeloof
High Game
Phyllis Levin .
Janet Warshauer
Jane Cole
Sylvia Leibach
Charlotte Brown
STRIKE
N’ SPARE
Team
Fashion Flaire
Washington Gardens
Ravinia Standard
H &amp; R Anspach
Club Seven
High Series
E. Cantagallo
R. Timm
A. Seiler
B. Grabinski
D. Carani
High Game
J. Lorimer
S. Thomas
E. Carlson
E. Cantagallo
A. Seiler
UOTS
Black Balls
Striking L’s
Untouchables
Matzo Balls
H, Sigman
T. Baron
J. Myers
S. Sonn

JOHANNA

High

Series

High

Game

440
404
403
403
403
178
164
164
159
158

LADIES

221
202
199
198
198
NO.

9

485
481
477
473

T. Baron
H. Sigman
P. Grober
J. Myers

the BEER

221
215
191.
179

12.40

12.60

13.40

13.87
15.50...

14.03
35.75

jis

Highland
Hwy. —

Park
Gurnee

DE 6-4121

by AMF!

refreshing

from the land of
sky blue waters,

ee

“hn

Paitin

PARK

__ WAUKEGAN

AMF

Bowling Bags—

Starring

AMF
Bowling
Shoes—Tops
in style,
tops in comfort,
AMF
bowling
shoes
fit
you perfectly.
No
cramping,
no
chafing, no crowding.
They
give you
sure-footed fit for extra comfort, higher
scores.
See them now in all styles and
prices!

te,

FARMER BEVERAGE CO., Inc.
HIGHLAND

e
92%
80
TTA
1612
N”%
562
533
516
515
514

No 4 (comp. set for

d conele)
$1.49
Set. No. 6 (comp. set for
8 comets)
$1.79

729 Ridge Rd. —
Estes Ave. &amp; Skokie

GO:

accessories

on

bowlers

Each Panel Can Be Trimmed 1 Width—3” Height

Now—with the greatest bowling
season ever under way
roll your best with the greatest

44—D

nament.

men. All
into the
returned
the tour-

a

Step out in style
with AMF

H

women and $6.00 for the
but the bowling fee will go
prize fund and will be
to the bowlers who win in

ORT “R” LEAGUE
Team
Sunset Foods (Champs)
Ruby’s Delicatessen
Daisy Brand
Sun Valley Dairy
Burg-Alexander
High Series
Lil Sharf
Corinne Lane
Iolene Janoff
Muriel Zakroff
Miriam Sokol
High Game
Marian Borden
Corinne Lane
Lil Sharf
Iolene Janoff
Sybyl Roth
Muriel Burg

4.73

IMPORTED BRASS
SHUTTER HARDWARE

ID 2-1283

Page

fee is $5.00 for the

16”

5:5}
5.96

8.89

|
:
we aSTStOe

14”

3.83

4.50

498
4.84

5.20

3.60

203

439°
4.50

4.6

12”

21. Entry

2.10

a2

2 4417
4.39

oo

84”
96”

pA

2.82

1.95

May

Gert Baker
June Goldberg
Juliet Bass

Oe
ae
Bas
© T Bee eT toe a
RF
3.08.
85

394
4.28

Be

(80

36” from
bottom

‘

BAB

OU)
By

in center

2.84

5

j a6)

mia

207

1 1

for

bowled
at
year. This

|

THICK—TOP QUALITY PANELS
MOVABLE LOUVERS

tournament is strictly for our bowlers no outsiders will be allowed to
bowl. It will start May 1, 1961 and
run any evening or weekend until

layman

bowler has the chance of competition with the caliber of the ABC
and rub elbows with the big names
of
bowling.
Even
though
their
chances
of winning
are
slim
it
makes no difference to them. They
bowled
against the Don
Carters,
the Ned
Days, the Buzz Fazzio’s
and all the rest of the hot shots;
now why did they have to take
this away and have two separate
divisions, the Classic and the Regular Div.? To bowl in the Classic
Div. you have to earn twenty five
percent of your salary from bowl-

and they have all the right in the
world to speak and I don’t BLAME

Mart

Ave.,
&amp;

to

Must
be
league
series
total.
Have your league secretary sign
—
date in space provided beow
*

WOOD
34""

this

FILM...

“ :

RRR

(with

for a roll of Black

a

ID 2-8640

CERRERE

:

ai

Highland Park, III.

"

Come

§

MOTOR CO.

4

goes to prove that some people in
the Sordyl family can bowl even if
Al Sordyl CLAIMS he is the best

(|ing,

FALCONSS

=

Sordyl 217 and

549. Northbrook Ladies, L. Blumberg 221, Strike N’ Spare Ladies,
A. Beaudin 232, A. Cucchario 206,
E. Carlson
205, A. Balz 204, B.
Drier 202 and NSCI D. Brown 229.
From the B’Brith Men, Bob Cole
226, P. Warren 246, Dick Ross 244,
Bert Frankel 234, L. Eisenberg 224
and E. Krause 223.

:

iSFORDSCARS

=:

From the Glencoe Business Men
Bill White 238, R. Vallert 237, C.

yy

a
-

=

213 from the Al and Jane League,
Al Pierantoni
had
223
and
609,
from the Sub
Ladies Rose
Wool
210, J. Goldberg 200, and R. Brott
205.

are some pretty good scores its a
pleasure to report them.
Did you
notice
that the name
of Sordyl
pops up twice this week, it just

the

smart,

all-new

Hat-

box models, the AMF Fashion
Line of bowling bags is truly a
fashion first in 1961. AMF bowling bags give you the perfect
combination of rugged beauty
and distinctive design. See these
exciting bowling bags and order
yours now...
you'll be buying
the best.

Thursday,

May

4, 1961

�NORTH
Team
Chumpions
Furious Five
Kitt-Kats

SHORE

COUNCIL
Won
62
54
53
Series

High
A. Gray
| ee pcs) paaeeene len genne ot fe tse thelr See avn
High Game
i ATOM sa dink cee atic deat
OREO
panied
J. Kittner
are
—_
GLENCOE
BUSINESS
MEN’S
eam
Ww
Ray’s Sport Shop. .0...0002..05.600..0
Glencoe Yellow Cab
Wienecke
Hardware
_................ 26
High Series
William White
Arch Ferrari
CATR
PPOOUy ss.
Recents ait
gh Game
Arch
Ferrari
Andy Seiler
PEORIA SOR ib) delist
Senet
sn
UOTS
JOHANNA
NO.
9
Team
Won
ere
EO ac. Wc ewsd es
29
Strikers
28
PRAMATG SOUS. 5. ra criesvines 26
High Series
EE. SSE
GEE St) Mee Nic Dyn
NE A
Pig IND
NE el adios ides Ivsucsth ds bad ndeacss
J. Richman
M. Resnik
.
High Game

Biss INE ise vcyphsecccnddixine
CERES se
M. Resnik
G.
J.

Gutman ......
Richman
netic
AL &amp; JANE
Team
H.P. Fuel
Al &amp; Jane
H.P. Electric
Nite-N-Gale

Acme

Al

Liquors

Won
55
53
49
4714

47

HI-LADIES
L. Shapiro
201
Lost | Team
Won
Lost|T. Kassel
194
29
Lake: MMOtOrS © 250
a kan
37
Rosby’s
CRAFTSMEN
38
DX Sunray Oil Co.
Team
:
Won
Lost
Richard Gilmore Inc. ....
Walt’s Service Station ................
23
505 | Sunset odds):
fasnungen
cack
Babsteel
24
489
High Series
Larson Stationery
oe
Mariivw.. Risdon
s\n
ics cacaiintiaecs 532 | Anchor Insurance ....
32
193 | Arlene
Stohrer
SIG | SICSELON. © ROUGE es stesso ness
33
192 | Rosemary Johnson
$18
High Series
Mary: Cravettl knees
cr
494|R. G. Johnson
581
M. . Bruce &amp; 3B. MoeGrath® 0.0.
ks 488
|}K. Burge
566
High Game
H.
Wadley
545
Warlivt | eno
elas
ck jadi diccctaiaren 218| A. Fox
539
Mary Crovetti
196 | C. Bierwirth
519
Arlene Stohrer
193
High Game
Grace Goffo
193} R. G. Johnson
210
ey MRE A) 1 Ci eaten gap Mar cutie eno dcUy ate Rete 191 | K. Burge
208
———_--——H. Wadley
201
SUBURBAN
B’NAT
RRITH
LADIES
C. Roscher
197
SCRATCH
H.
Rogers
197
257 | Team
BAB FUMIO. Mine 63k
le Sides
SUBURBAN
B’NAI BRITH LADIES
241 } Beacon Ins. ......)...00..
Team
Pts.
Midland Hotel
Talk of the Town
64
High Series
Checker Taxi
56
Lost | Clarin Mfg. ....
1936 | No. 13
13
13
Cis Levi
514
14
High Game
SUBURBAN
B’NAI
B’RITH
LADIES
A
16
Clarin Mfg.
Team
Pts.
E. Rubin
Kimball Pharmacy
54
491/1B. Levy
Villa Moderne
53
448|R.
Hoffman
Universal Screw
51
448 |G. Baker
18
High Series
445|C. Hersch
184 | Miller’s Del.
2073
SB AGRI
eos
ea ane 180-175 | P. Ruder
a
497

177 | L. Garfinkel
167} Re WOOE = occs

17

4166) CO. Lew
css
166 | J. Goldberg
H. Buckman
DPR
RMR REBEL caer ee Corl ht Semte
Lost
———
38
B’NAI
TORAH
eee
40
‘eam
44
Strika N’ Spare ..
45% | Lewis Carpets ......

46

Carroll's Std: Serves

isc

Ske

High Series
CSeande. JORMMON 636s iis Sidi cio.
nee
Emin
EERO SRO RSIRS Rane Pace
ar
ohnson

Green Bay Cleanere 22262
=. ia
612 | Ruby’s\ Delicatessems oo. .&lt; 2.5 ccccse ik
593
a
High Series
$60] Dy SROSENGSre cer

Clarence’

548 | I. Morrison
L. Shapiro ..
227| R. Pizer
213
211 | D. Rosenberg
ZIOAD
MAGOR eee:
203
'S. Grossman

Pierantoni

Ee
S.
mo
32

High

,

Game

The PEERLESS
Architect Designed

PEERLESS HOME
1550

Park

Ave.,

ROOMS
* GARAGES

BUILDERS

West

INC.

Highland

Park |

RELIABLE
LAUNDRY
To Get The

32

56

* KITCHENS
¢ BATHS

ID 2-6800

755

Weller
Rappaport

WAY Means
and Supervised

cat PEERLESS ‘°

* FAMILY AND RECREATION
* ROOM ADDITIONS

204
203
189
182
182
180
177

28
26

358 | 'T; Meso

Fathom
00 co eee
High
Game
Gheoras: : Ihnen)
chase
Red Haskett
ee
AR
id
hs eG Sake rs
COTO TROIS
isi
Sa akssasiceinasscoseintataac
Bs JORMA
Sicctee
acs cuentas

E.
N.
e;
B.
23
B.
G.

HOME IMPROVEMENT
with the CUSTOM TOUCH!

|
‘

Kind

ERIC 4
IT IE,

By TAE FRONTIER INN

of

Laundry you
Truly want.
Your whole family will

Classic

League

appreciate

Pi: eet
Bere is
tig sete 1026-1052-1101—3179
2. Oak Park Federal Savings ............ 1106-1047- 995—3148
oi
6;

PIOUS
Coronet

OE fii a Sci. ee
Vemsore oo
baa

y

Gi
7.
8.

up

976-1034-1118—3128
1081-1065- 969—3115

So Ole Premera

979-

979-1091—3049

I, a
ae
937Bergmann’s Restaurant ..............-..- 1023Globe Glass &amp; Mirror .............-...--- 929-

986-1057—2980
959- 996—2978
927- 926—2782

this

super-—

ior
laundry
service. —
Call now for free pickand

delivery

ser-—
ms

vice.

economical,

a

too.

“PUT DOWN THAT CHAIR, CACTUS!"
Frontier

Inn’s Famous

TUB O’ CHICKEN
(Screened,

Stock

18 Pieces
of Wonderful
Chicken to

Piled)

Carry Out

CALL.

MENONI &amp; MOCOGNI
2200 Skokie

Hwy., Highland

ID 2-0850

&amp; HICKORY RIBS

YING.

YL!

Park

Serving

Lo ROAD

1636“On

Phone Today

The Ridge Between

2226

Charcoal STEAKS *

STRIKE “N SPARE BOWLING LANES
May
"

}

4, 1961

60

Years

ID 2-4551

Bay

Rd.,

who

H.P. — AMPLE

FREE

PARKING

knows your game—your

bowling

Now—enjoy the big fun and excitement of bowling with bowling
accessories by AMF! Be sure to ask your local ‘‘Magic Triangle’’ bowling proprietor about the complete line of AMF bowling balls, bowling ©
bags and bowling shoes—the finest quality money can buy!

by the man who knows your
game...your bowling proprietor. Order from him now!

_ Thursday,

Over

proprietor!

custom-fitted

185 Skokie Blvd.

Green

Buy from the man

Balis—

For more nin-scattering punch,
more explosive power—use the
Amflite...champions do! AMF
Amflite balls are available in a
of weights,

Shore

Highland Parksx Deerfield”

AMF Amflite® Bowling

range

the North

Northbrook,

III.

“uum

MF PINSPOTTERS INC.
SUBSIDIARY OF AMERICAN MACHINE &amp; FOUNDRY COMPANY

P TRIANGLE”

"6500 N. LINCOLN AVE.
CHICAGO 45, ILL.

�ieee
SFr

Car

Ad See

DRO

RT

We

Othe

Hits Trailer

Marjorie Eppstein of 815 Rice St.
got

a ticket

for

negligent

eles

Cae

driving

after a crash on Skokie Valley Rd.
Wednesday afternoon last week.
Highland Park police say Allan
Born of Cleveland, Wis., pulling
a trailer behind his car, stopped
for the Half Day light ahead of
her when
her purse slipped off
the seat and she bent to pick it up.

TOS
erry reeee
Me
; oN: ne

CoeVG Tae

Tear
®

A

Lea
Ree
Py
eerie,
teoe
j

Seats Available

ett
HP

For Evanston

Jeff Robertshaw
To Boys’ State

Children’s Play
Reservations

for

tickets

to

the

Highland Park Recreation Department’s trip to see “Tree in the
Trail,”
at Children’s
Theatre
Evanston are still available.

of

trip will be made by chartered bus,
and the bus will leave the Recreation Center, 1850 Green Bay Road,
promptly at 9:00 a.m. Children will
return at 12:30 p.m.
All persons
wishing
to attend
this fine play should make reservations immediately by phoning the
Recreation Center, ID 2-2442, or
stopping by in person. The cost of

Lovely 3-bedroom, 2% bath home built by Highland Park

for his own

use.

Contemporary

de-

seeking happiness?

sign, common
brick construction, 3 levels.
Combination
_ living- dining room, fireplace, oval breakfast room, modern
_ kitchen, TV room, glassed-in sun room, full basement. Builté_ ins

in every

room.

Dishwasher,

incinerator.

Living

room

| FOR APPOINTMENT
i.

has

priced

to sell.

ID 2-7503

BUTTONS

REPLACED

GOOD

BUY

*Member
of the Board of Lectureship of
Mother Church, The First Church of Christ,
entist, Boston, Massachusetts.

been
Post

17, a Junior

Park High School, has

chosen by
No. 145 of

American Legion
Highland Park to

at Springfield. Jeffery has indicated leadership ability and participated in baseball, swimming
and
other student activities. He is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Rob-

ertshaw of 627 Pleasant Ave.
As
a=
representative
at
Boys
State he will receive training in the
functional aspects of citizenship.
Premier
Boys
State,
sponsored
by the American Legion, Department of Illinois, originated in Illinois in 1934 and has been adopted
by the national organization and is
now in operation in fifty states.
The program
aims to teach con-

structive

attitudes

toward

the

American form of government in
a mythical 51st state conducted by
boys from urban and rural areas
throughout the nation. The enrollment in Illinois is limited to 1,200

LAUNDERING

EXACT

_STARCHING

boys

ONE-DAY
SERVICE

and

the

program

the

in June will be conducted

by

trained

well

of boys

Fair Grounds
The
Sci-

during

last week
leaders

Avenue.

TO SEE THIS UNUSUALLY

PHONE

SHIRT

souri, speak on “Christian
Science: God’s Ever-present
Kingdom Revealed.” Free
Public Lecture. Monday,
May 15, at 8 p.m. First
Church of Christ, Scientist,
Highland Park, 493 Hazel

—

trip

Jy ORCHID

Hear Wilson M. Riley,*
C.S.B., of Kansas City, Mis-

PDining room, sun room, powder room and reception hall have
_ bluestone floors. All other floors are parquet cork. 85’x
| 290’ lot has wooded area in front, formal garden in back.
| Garage. Circular stairway to sun deck.
Owner

a reserved seat and round
transportation is only $1.50.

Robertshaw,

attend the 1961 Premier Boys State

The play, adapted for children
in the third through eighth grades,
will be held Saturday, May 13. The

q Architect Henry Dubin

Jeffery

at Highland

and

experienced

at the Illinois State

in Springfield.

Service Mothers

or ID 2-7519

To Meet May 10
Service

Mothers

Club

will

meet

Wednesday, May 10 with Mrs. Enea
Picchietti, 1449 Glencoe Ave., with
Mrs.
William
Harrison
acting as
co-hostess.
A business meeting will start at
1:30 p.m. followed by a social hour
and refreshments.

DUPONT

Strawtime

LUCITE
PAINT

at kell’s

NEW,

CELLOPHANE:
PROTECTED

the Material

Natural

Soft, Airy,

Black
Orange

Nylon, Straw

ORCHID CLEANERS
NEXT

TO
1862

LUMBER COMPANY
See Page 42

‘SUPERMART “PARKING
FIRST STREET

TRAIL BLAZER
AN

AT

CRAFTWOOD

DI
RAINBOW

the Colors

NOW

EXCLUSIVE DAY CAMP

DUDE

RANCH

FOR BOYS AND

GIRLS—5

thru 12

Lunches, Teacher-staff, Transportation, etc.
Ultra Modern Outdoor Swimming Pool
Swimming, Horseback Riding (2 Corrals),
Fishing, Boating, All Sports, Crafts, Golf, Hot

Weekends available to organizations for parties
Directed by Teachers—Program Fitted to Child
All activities conducted on our Country Estate
in Northbrook,

Illinois

Camp Season: June 26 thru Aug. 18, ‘61
Phones: OR 4-9789 or OR 4-3829

Hair Styling
Tinting

Town &amp; Country
Shoes

Bleaching
Permanents
Manicuring

|

Evaughn

Fell Shoes

Roe Sh
633 Central
932 Linden

Highland Park
Hubbard Woods

(Open Friday evenings by appointment only)

508
H 46—D

62

ID 2-2330

Central
Thursday,

May

4, 1961

�Sees

\

%

ah

ict
-

petri,
ip

Poy

i

AY

want

ok

$8

AND OPENING!
yi

‘

peas
i

rk

:

f

4

eX

ai

‘

Sate
y

5

i

é

ates:

as

i

4

me

i

See
vy

rt’

Raeearahea
1%

:

ies

eda)

q
aces

Panui
3

ba
|
:

E SL

UG a)
One

NUE

:

ie

6 and 7

SATURDAY and SUNDAY, MAY
SELF - SERVICE
=)

LAUNDRY and CLEANING VILLAGE

305 WAUKEGAN AVE. - HIGHWOOD
NOW YOU CAN SAVE UP 70 75%
ON YOUR DRYCLEANING COSTS!
You’ve read about it in magazines—
you’ve heard about it on TV and radio.
Now it’s here! Automatic self-service

drycleaning—in wonderful new
machines that operate easier than an

* Save as much as 75% on your drycleaning costs.

*
*
*
*

automatic washer!

READY TO WEAR
IN 50 MINUTES!

The actual

A

number of things you can

“

dryclean in one load depends on the

size, weight, and bulk of the items. Here

e 6 Children’s Snowsuits
or
e 9 dresses

&amp;

do your drycleaning...

RELAX, VISIT, OR SHOP WHILE YOUR CLEANING IS DONE

automatically!

=

WASHING T00!
Automatic Washers and Dryers
give you a beautifully white,
bright wash of every washable...
and fast, gentle drying of every
fabric. And it’s all so economical!

Use our brand-new

fully automatic

WASHERS

GRAND OPENING

FREE

©

These are our amazing
automatic, coin-operated
Norge drycleaning machines.

Dry Clean
One

305

Highwood
Waukegan Ave.
Open 8 A.M. to Midnight

Load

FREE!
and
We'll

1961

offer!

SATURDAY AND
SUNDAY ONLY

They dryclean anything that’s drycleanable—and using them
is actually easier than using an automatic washer! You just
open the glass door, pop in your load, drop the coins in a
slot, and push a button. As the machine whirs softly, you
can see your garments gently swished through the special
Norge cleaning fluid. Then, after thorough cleaning, they
are tumbled gently until dry—ready to use or wear!

laundry and cleaning village
B-W,

=

DRYCLEANING

Come

DRYERS

:

special

While you do your drycleaning,
you can do a week’s laundry at
the same time! The newest Norge

4, 1961

rae

or

are some sample loads to show you
how economically you can now

Bring in all your

May

en

© 4med.-weight men's suits

* Regular drycleaning methods would cost you about 4 times more!

rat

Thursday,

.

© 10 slipover sweaters

Dryclean all this for only

It takes only 50 minutes, for a load
to be drycleaned ... and ready
to wear! You can dryclean the coat
or jacket you have on, and
*
then wear 1t home. Norge
automatic drycleaning leaves
no odor. Everything is
ie
fresh and odor-free!

@

Dryclean as much as 8 pounds per load.
A whole load takes only 50 minutes.
Easier to use than an automatic washer.
Do all your drycleaning and laundry in
one quick stop.

bring the kiddies.
have

balloons

for them

FREE!
Page

H

47—D

5

�‘Suburban Writers

Attends Allstate Meet

SATINLAC
Now

Mr.

1349

i

Mrs.

Oakwood

Allstate

at

tenth

Robert

Ave.,
sales

Bock

qualified

Bock,

attended

Insurance

annual

C.

the

Companies’

“Conference

Champions”
in Montreal,
May 1 through 4.

CRAFTWOOD
LUMBER

and

as

of

Canada

a member

of

COMPANY

top

See Page 42

sales

representatives

from

the

ranks of more than 3,900 Allstate
agents.
The
conference
included

sales meetings and round table dis-

|

cussions with
Companies.

Weoew

CALLING

ALL

&gt;

22s

Furs

| For one low storage cost,
your furs are stored and thorpughly checked. And we do
al small repairs at NO EXTRA

-OST

Victor Furs
iM

458

Central Ave.

Highland Pork

ID 2-0351

FRE

of the

AN
ORDINANCE
CHANGING’
THE
NAME
TECUMSEH
AVENUE
TO WINONA
ROAD.
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE COUNCIL
OF THE
CITY OF HIGHLAND
PARK,
ere?
OF LAKE,
STATE
OF
ILLINOIS:
SECTION I. That the name of the street
kmown as Tecumseh
Avenue, which street
lies between County Line Road and Nyoda
Place and runs in a North and South direction, be and the same is hereby changed
to Winona Road.
SECTION II. That any and all maps and
plats heretofore approved be and the same
are hereby
amended
to conform
to the
provisions of this ordinance.
SECTION
III. All ordinances
or parts
of ordinances in conflict herewith are hereby repealed.
SECTION IV. This ordinance shall be in
full force and
effect from
and
after its
passage, approval and recordation as provided by law.
daa
E. GIESER, Mayor pro tem
A
:
ROY MILLEN, City Clerk
Passed: April 24, 1961
Approved: April 24, 1961
Recorded:
April 25, 1961
Published: May 4, 1961
5/4/61-118

| Storage |
a ha

top executives

Mrs.

Eugene

SAVE

CLOSET

Experienced
to answer

The

Mayor's

Civic

Beautification

:

727

a

ST. JOHNS

AVENUE,

ID 2-0352

To Gather May
11,

in

Founders’

history,

the

Hall

there

Academy’s

always

has

the school’s membership
number of students from

problems.

PARK

of

long

been

PATIENT

RUBINSTEIN’S

COLOR-TONE SHAMPOO
Colors

NOW $1.50

in

a large
the Chi-

cago area. Founded in 1855, Wayland
is a co-educational
college
preparatory school.

North Suburban spring
and social of the Chicago

of the Hunter
sociation
home of

College

Alumni

was held April
Mrs, Laurance

32
Oxford
Deerfield.

Drive,

reunion
Chapter

Lincolnshire-

Attending from Deerfield
Mrs.
Michael
Castronovo,

Dartmouth
Hardy,

Lane,

1445

Henry

Walter

tree

Road,

Park,

Mrs.

Ridge

Rd.

Mrs.

1151
S.

and

Rd.,

L.
Mrs.

Deerfield

Roth,

Alfred

were
1235

Walter

Deerfield

Mason,

Mrs.

as-

11 at the
Spungen,

104

from

Rd.,
Plum-

Highland

Gertler,

1450

Hunter
College
is one of the
municipal colleges of New
York
City. More than 100 members of

WHICH
DAY
wired

the Alumni
Chicago

Association

live in the

Area.

Display Lazard Art
In Glencoe

We know your
interest is in the
t—_iromwWell being,
~.
health and safea
ty of your child.
For the future happiness of
your loved one, the best is the
only answer. SUNSHINE VALLEY requires and gets the finest from each counselor. We
have had long experience (as
well as lovely grounds and
ample equipment) in seeing

SINCE 1909
SERVING THE PHYSICIANS and

5

6:30,

Throughout

ID 2-0312

from

at

the Saddle and Sirloin Club of the
Stock Yard Inn, West 42nd and Halsted Streets, Chicago.

PROMPT
DELIVERY
SERVICE

Choose

Deerfield Recently

11

Chicago area alumni of Wayland
Academy, Beaver Dam, Wis., will
meet for dinner on Thursday, May

SPACE!

HIGHLAND

Hunter Alumni Hold
Spring Reunion in

Wayland Academy

FREE

|

ice firm. The new address is 1848 First St., two doors south
of the former location.
Highlights of the grand opening
celebration include free orchids and an FM auto radio con-

Area Alumni of

sot unto’

HELENA

according to John Reynolds, proprietor of the sales and serv-

and

verter door prize.

-ROESSLER’S EXCLUSIVE CLEANERS
4

New, expanded quarters recently occupied by 20th
Century TV and Radio will be shown to the public today,
Friday and Saturday during a gala grand opening ceremony,

Clean-Up Committee sets May 15-20
for second annual Clean-Up Week.

until ready for use.

dry cleaning

Here and There

active year will be crowned

with the Annual Manuscript Dinner
to be held
in
early
June.
Tribute will be paid particularly to
members
who
have
seen
their
work published during the season.
They include Mrs. Robert Friedman, Highland Park, for television
scripts;
and
Mrs.
Alex
Polikoff,
Highland Park.
Summer meetings will be held
monthly in members’ homes. Any
published
writed
interested
in
visiting the group is urged to con.
tact any of the new officers.

Dry Cleaner on route
all your

From

field; treasurer, Mrs, Harold Oppice, Lincolnwood.
Suburban Writers will continue
to meet through May under the
direction of author Helen David
Szold. Sessions are held Tuesday
mornings
in the Highland
Park
Recreation Center.

No harsh chemicals used in cleaning. Our exclusive method
of SPOT REMOVING leaves wools &amp; cashmeres naturally SOFT.

FREE
PICK-UP &amp;
‘a
DELIVERY

$IDELIGHTS

Highland Park; vice-president, Mrs.
Robert Cromie, Grayslake; secretary, Mrs. James Devine, North-

E STORAGE
Garments are not pressed

Shore

‘

Hotchkiss,

Of Out-of-Season Garments Cleaned by Us.
* Not Box Storage. Each Garment Individually
Stored on a Hanger by Itself.
@

‘

Suburban Writers elected officers for the year 1961-62 at the
April 25 meeting. The slate is:
president,

Allstate’s exclusive “Honor Ring”
organization by being among the

North

Elect New Officers

Library

Mrs. Alice A. Lazard (Mrs. Ben
Lazard) 1610 Linden will show her
recent paintings during the month
of May in the Hammond Room of
the Glencoe Public Library.
A student of the Art Institute of
Chicago and of Northwestern Uni:
versity, Mrs. Lazard worked
also
with
Chapin,
Arvhipenko
and
Briggs Dyer. She has exhibited her
work at the Art Institute of Chicago, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine
Arts,
Chicago
area
shows,
Art
Fairs.
In
addition
she
has
had
twelve one-man shows.
Mrs.
Lazard’s
work
has
been
seen at the Ravinia Festival in 1959
and is represented in many private
collections.
The
New
William
Struwe Art Gallery in Winnetka also features her paintings.

that YOUR CHILD is kept busy
and

happy,

but

have

no

fiercely competitive activities.
We also keep you informed of
YOUR child’s progress.
We
¢ HIGHLAND

PARK

ID lewood 2-2600
1831

St.

Johns

Ave.

* RAVINIA

DRUG

STORE

IDlewood 2-2300

give

results,

SUNSHINE
2600

Half

Roger

Williams

Day

VALLEY
Road,

Deerfield

CEdar 4-3120
Mr. and

493

not promises.

Mrs,

J. R. Thompson

Visiting all Sundays in May
P.M.
Thursday,

May

4, 1961
ee

eee

Pee
Ue

�U of Chicago Speaker

Honor Accountant

Harold A. Katz, Glencoe, will act}

Edw.

Road, a past president of the Chi-

sity of Chicago Downtown Center
course on “Labor Arbitration for
Management
and
Unions.”
Bert

‘
a
cng Cliagter of the PauOnas
Lago
ciation of Accountants was honored

Luskin, 76 Indian Tree Drive, a|at
leading Chicago arbitrator, will be|27

a special guest speaker, comment-|

ing on the effective presentation
cases from the arbitrator’s point
view.
The program will be
five Monday
evenings,

HIGHLAND
when

PARK’S

TNT

EVENT

ended

Friday

W. Krueger, 241 Woodland

as an instructor in a new Univer-!

a meeting on Thursday, April
at the Furniture Club of Ameri-

ca Krueger is a partner with the

of
of

Walton,

;
Joplin, Langer

offered on|May 8, from 6 to
beginning | East Lake Street.

flat finish for walls and ceilings

&amp; Company.

8:30

p.m.,

at

For nearest Jewel dealer, see
Phone Book Yellow Pages,
or phone SEeley 3-2430,

64

morning

Randy

Carlson, right, 565 Skokie Ave., lost his chance
$850.00 merchandise prize. Since he was unable to

at the

produce a current TNT ticket, Carlson received a $10.00 merchandise certificate consolation prize from Bert Flodin of
Powell’s. Camera Mart.

J

|
lini
dd
osslyn
Clinic
Adds

ee

ee

e3=

ee

. . . When

p—

Member to Staff

Z

DRAPERY

eee

S

The

Irene

etre
trained

and

Josslyn

psychiatric

becomes

“team”

on

social

is

where

an-

‘

worker

basis.

originally
he

did

work at Seton Hall.

from

the
¥

He received

afraid

of

e

4
Hear Wilson

Kingdom Revealed.” Free
Public Lecture. Monday,
May 15, at 8 p.m. First

currently taking the child care}

Are you ready?

fibers and

colors

in your

fine draperies.

28

count on MR. DUFFY to clean them RIGHT!

complete

know-how

to

'

Wood

Now ot

through

*Member

of

the

Board

of

ae he ee

Lectureship

MR

DUFFY

a

F
Bis
(Ji

KF

ID

\

MM

of

The

duffy

dO

\

Sachets

LUMBER COMPANT

\

Rose

cleaners

e

across

from

Highland

N

Summer
Petals

and

\

Shae

ice

\

Clutches

\

Handbags

\

and Totes

\

og ID. 2.72294

Thursday,

May

4, 1961

:

Robes

Nes

a

4

7 Mothers day bouquet of
_

:

¥

:

cs)

;,

650 N. Western, Lake Forest

2

polka dots

Decorated

e

Orlon Cardigans

ve
with French Lace and

Chalk Beads

$18.95

Boy

GRANT

Sb,

from $9.95 to $14.95

Tax

ia

Chommeabia ai weekabe ||
or

Fed.

avenede
seve SCE
:
(hg

GRANT &amp;
io

plus

a

prints, checks

e203 Oe YP
Radio’ Dispatc!

Library

Easy-care
and

Ya

Park

or Choose from our Sax

Dusters

:

Pot-Pourri

$1.00

a

LLL

Lavender

fan

E:

820

&lt;

i

7

2-1

po

Tone

See Page 42

Lp

can

May|@@e0a860000000060

CRAFTWOOD
4

the

You

phone...

DURASEAL
Interior

and

renew

Avente.

Nighinek: Dirk Cee Ue: Wad
20.

=

og
gy

Highland Park, 493 Hazel

Chicago.

runs

cleaning

oe

Church of Christ, Scientist,

course at the Institute for Psycho-

and

DOWN

Sears
fone

C.S.B., of Kansas City, Mis-

dren’s Home and Aid Society.
In addition to his work at the
Irene Josslyn Clinic, Krasner is

15

CARE,

DEEP

od

:
&gt;
M. Riley,

souri, speak on “Christian
Science: God’s Ever-present

May

TENDER

thorough,

Ete

something?

Chicago. For the past four years
he has been with the Illinois Chil-

starts

It takes

:

BS

undergraduate

er in the Army before coming to

in

CLEANING!

; ae

his masters degree from Fordham
University, and was a social work-

analysis

to

a

part of the Clinic

a full time

Krasner
East

Clinic

ghurrigged a

it comes

oe

and

$22.95

N

Folding

Slippers

a

in a plastic bag.
$3.95

E
a

$4.95

3

er

.

okine

4gaa

| 4

4

CE 4-9168
Page

H

49—D

|
a

65

�CUSTOM
UPHOLSTERING
¢ Restyling
* Repairing

A
&amp;

BRIGHT

NEW.

TASTE

Selected

iN AEA

Edward B. Gibbs, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Edw. Gibbs, 132 South Central, Highwood, is one of 30 fresh-

Flavored for you
with bits of

* Recovering
* Cornices

ORANGE

AND

men
at
Vernon,
students’

All Work Guaranteed
Free Estimates

Upholstering

College,
Mount
have been
se-

lected for an Honors Program.

Large Selection of Fabrics

Ace

Cornell
Ia., who

DExter 6-6425

1615 Jackson St., No. Chicago, Ill.

schedules

at

The
the

school will place special emphasis
on individual creative work. Seminars
in
the
sophomore
year,
junior tutorials and a senior thesis

FOR YGU.... YOUR FAMILY...
YOUR GUESTS
HAHN BROTHERS
672 Western Avenue
Lake Forest

Co.

future

or

other

project

are

HPHS

Hospital Credit Manager

for Honors

BIG ELOW'S

intended

lead to graduation with honors.

to

Stan
Levin
has
appointed
Credit

recently
been
Manager’
in

charge

receivable

of accounts

the credit

department

and

of the High-

at

land Park Hospital. His training in
this field offers patients of the
hospital

them

the

advantage

of

aiding

in their problems.

Students

were

selected

basis of their freshman
recommendations of their
sors
and
their
board scores,

college

on

the

grades,
profesentrance

Now
period
caught

eh

ou

that
the
fifth
six
week
is over many
of us have
spring fever even if it has

been snowy, rainy and cold recently.
Spring is definitely here and
summer is not too far in the future.

“Dig
fun.

Me

Pygmy”

Seen

manual

there

and

Ricky

Asher

Inman

and

was

were,

loads
Barry

of
Em-

Rosalie

Goldware,

and

Siegel, Tom

Susie

Lynette

Maestri,

and

two
real
live
pygmies,
Marshal
Ragir and Carol Burge. We would
like to give special thanks to R.

Ross

T've
Given Up
Smoking

and

Dave

Jennings,

who

helped with the decorations.
senior
couples
bombarded
ney’s after the dance.
We’ve
heard
that
Patsy

Many
Hack-

has

eating

an awful

lot of trouble

Kulp

popsicles during fourth period
lunch,
Good luck to the thirty two girls
who made cheerleading recalls and

are

now

trying

out

in

the

finals

could

be

better

competition.

Seniors!

What

than a trip to the Dells as a climax
to graduation.
It should be a real
blast.
Surprise!!!
yes, that’s just what

Mickey

Panther

was

when

he

ar-

rived at Nancy
Zacharias’
house
and found seventy of his friends
there to celebrate his birthday with
him. Those enjoying the ice cream

and

cake

included,

Patsy

Schloss,

Pete Sande, Charlie Pascal and Jeff
Leckie.
“Southern Side of Heaven” will
take place sooner than you think.
Boys, you better start getting dates
now.
It’s sure to be a Prom to
remember.

Shut

the

door

filled kitchen
less

with Roper’s

broiler.

with the door
Roper

forever

Broils

meats

closed!

This

also features

control,

timer,

new

giant-size

and

a smoke-

silent-roll smoketo

perfection —

attractive

Circle-Simmer

‘“burner-with-a-brain”
hour

against

automatic

with

burners,

with Flame-Set,

low-temperature
oven

30-inch

X-Ray

oven

4-

heat

window,

lighting of top burners,

oven, and broiler. It's yours for
$5 down .. . $5.48 per month.
VISIT:

4
GS

Company

Noth Shove

"The Friendly People’’
OR YOUR
Page

H

50—D

66

GAS

RANGE

DEALER

ORDINANCE

AMENDING

“THE

HIGHLAND
PARK
ZONING
ORDINANCE
OF 1947” AS AMENDED.
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE COUNCIL
OF THE CITY OF HIGHLAND
PARK,
COUNTY
OF LAKE,
STATE
OF
ILLINOIS:
That The Highland
Park Zoning
Ordinance of 1947, as amended,
be and the
same is hereby amended as follows:
SECTION I. That the premises described
in SECTION
II and III of this amending
ordinance be and the same are hereby reclassified and rezoned from ‘“B” Country
Home District to ‘“B-1” Twenty Thousand
Square Foot Single Family Dwelling District and
‘“C’? Twelve
Thousand
Square
Foot Single Family Dwelling District, and
that said premises shall from and after the
effective date of this ordinance be subject
to all the rights, privileges, restrictions and
regulations applicable
to property
in the
“B-1” Twenty Thousand Square Foot Single
Family Dwelling District and ‘‘C’ Twelve
Thousand
Square
Foot
Single
Family
Dwelling District under the Highland Park
Zoning Ordinance of 1947, as amended.
SECTION
II.
That
the
districts
and
boundaries
thereof
as shown
upon
the
“Use!
District
Map’?
accompanying
and
mad¢
a part of The Highland Park Zoning
Ordinance of 1947, as amended, by Section
4-6 thereof, be and the same are hereby
amended to excluse the following described
property from the “B’? Country Home District and to include said property within
“B-1”
Twenty
Thousand
Square
Foot
Single Family Dwelling District:
Lots 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 14 in Sherwood
Ridge Estates, being a subdivision of the
South
559.7
feet of that
part
of the
Southeast Quarter of the Northeast Quarter (SE4% NE%) of Section 28, Township
43 North, Range 12 East of the 3rd P.M.
lying West of the Center line of Ridge
Road,
in the
City
of Highland
Park,
County of Lake, State of Illinois.
SECTION
III.
That
the
districts
and
boundaries
thereof
as
shown
upon
the
“Use
District
Map’?
accompanying
and
made a part of The Highland Park Zoning
Ordinance of 1947, as amended, by Section
4-6 thereof, be and the same are hereby
amended to exclude the following described
property from the ‘‘B’? Country Home District and to include said property within
the “B-1” Twenty
Thousand
Square Foot
Single Family Dwelling District and to include said property within the ‘“‘C’’ Twelve
Thousand
Square
Foot
Single
Family
Dwelling District:
Lots 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 and 13 in Sherwood
Ridge Estates, being a subdivision of the
South 559.7 feet of that part of the Southeast Quarter
of the Northeast
Quarter
SEY% NE'%) of Section 28, Township 43
North, Range 12 East of the 3rd P.M.
lying West
of the Centerline of Ridge
Road,
in the
City
of Highland
Park,
County of Lake, State of Illinois.
SECTION IV. All ordinances or parts of
ordinances in conflict herewith are hereby
repealed.
SECTION
V. This amending
ordinance
shall be in full force and effect from and
after its passage, approval, recordation and
publication as provided by law.
FRED
E. GIESER,
Mayor pro tem
ATTEST
ROY MILLEN, City Clerk
Passed: April 24, 1961
Approved:
April 24, 1961
Recorded: April 25, 1961
Published:
May 4, 1961
5/14/61-119

Thursday, May

4, 1961

&lt;

AN

�21,000-WIRES SERVE YOU

: ite
;ath

;
eee

Whig

SOR tees,
ttt,
HH
assent :
Re sy

Picture

by

Milton

Merner

wires with soldered

Yes, miles and miles of wire and more than 21,000 separate

connections

are part of the tele-

phone equipment providing contact for you with DEERFIELD SAVINGS. Shown here are Marilyn Rosendahl and Alice
Watson (left to right) marveling at the wires contained in one of the vertical metal drawers installed in the DEERFIELD
SAVINGS

PBX (Private Branch Exchange) installed by Illinois Bell Telephone

and Loan Association's basement floor. The

—a
Company is a miniature central office

dial office within a dial office. And if you are interested in more figures, this

smoothly operating communications system has 13,175 wire connections terminating on the relays and 4,800 connections on each jack and plug arrangement. Our switching equipment has 463 relays plus eight relays for each trunk, making a total of 503 relays. And incidentally, Marilyn and Alice, whose desks are in opposite corners of our lobby, have big
parts in keeping everything running smoothly at DEERFIELD SAVINGS.

HIGHER DIVIDENDS with GREATEST SAFETY

Sa
. AV

AND

USTaHIB YOUR MONEY IS ALWAYS AVAILABLE
\\ (

745 DEERFIELD ROAD,

Hours:

&amp; LOAN ASSOCIATION

Phone: Windsor

DEERFIELD, ILLINOIS
Sat. —

Mon.,
8:30

Tues.,
to

Thurs.,

12:00;

Fri.

Fri.
eve. —

Cleeed: Wedeentery

— 8:30

to

6:00

to

4:00
8:00

5-2550

�ee

ee

hte,

bs

mtg

Mothers

Day

smart
in

is May

14

dresses

sizes

her

to

fit

figure

1. Korell plus size jacket dress is a
favorite, so becomingly
tailored
in
Arnel and cotton. Blue and white,

14!/2

plus to 20!/2

plus.

14.95
2. Rayon
linen with lace applique,
looks
like much
more!
Blue, sizes

12-20.

10.95
(Daytime

Desses)

ine:

f

Kenneth
ELEGANTE

‘“Sng

in

many

a

y

|

o

DRAPERIES

widths

and

they’re fade-proof

lengths
g

\

it

asi

Se

oe

en ate cetetniens

4

gee

. . . even

under the

hottest sun!
Decorate with ease and certainty with these Coloray antique
satin draperies . . . color guaranteed for the life of the fabric.
White, champagne, sandalwood. Also mist green, nutmeg, gold
or pink.

8-piece
SNACK

for

her

“u

CANDLE
SET

“coffees

add
Wreaths

“

leaves

4.95

white

with

Window

glamour

of

flowers

fit

on

or

top

green

of

side

persis a

in-

candle

mi agate

'

dentation for easy holding.

:

Trimmers with ivy or
hil
a

(Gift Shop)

eater eneren, 1.49

only

'

(Gift Shop)

58-piece set
STAINLESS TABLEWEAR

width | to 48''|

drapery width | 50"

sticks.

beautifully simple design in
pure

TRIMMERS

oa" "

|

63"

long

wa

5.9

pr.

:

6.50

from 48"'-72"'|
re.

pe,

10.9

from 72''-96"' | from 96''-144"
104"

pr.
:

butter
(Gift

ae

=~

14.95

23.50

72" long

7.50

12.50

16.95

25.50

84"' long
a

7.95

14.95

18.50

27.95

7.95

15.50

18.95

29.95

90"

long

12.95

knife.
Shop)

Garnett =
Enjoy

2 Hours

Free

Parking
Bee

in Our
:

oo.

- Save, save, save, in our
ee

:

:

:

Eee

Co.

Lot —

as

ID 2-4700

; ny

:

ave

soup spoons, salad forks, iced tea
spoons, 16 tea spoons, plus sugar
and

pr.

11.95

“Enchanted Star'’ stainless steel includes 8 ‘each, dinner knives, forks,

shell

156"

White

Sale!

�</text>
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                    <text>VISITING NURSE
OF DEERFIELD TOWNSHIPS

�The big bank that grew up
with Highland Park

NNN
V Lins

vest

Seaman,

BANK

|i
'

pen

y

Py

Pa

PON

ON

ON

ie
i

1899

4

Sannin,

A

NATIONAL
/OUNDED

x

E)

BD

|

est

| RON

ef

oa

pas

|
as

:

:

FOUNDED

1599

Behind these doors are the

largest capital funds in Lake County
The capital funds of the First National have now grown to over $2,385,000. .. . the largest
of any bank in Lake County.
What this means to you is that your savings at the First National are now backed up with
more capital than ever before. And as you probably know, capital is the way you measure a
bank’s security. The more capital a bank has, the more secure your savings are.
So if you feel security is important in a bank, come to “The big bank that grew up with Highland Park.” There’s more reason than ever that you'll be glad you did.

THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
e
Our

62nd

year—Complete

Modern

Banking

and

Trust

Services

O

Eh

hland

Member The. Federal Reserve System and
The Federal Deposit Insurarce Corporation
United States Depositary

WEEKEND

BANKING

HOURS:

Park

.
.
: 4

Friday 8:30-2:00 &amp; 5:30-8:00 pm, Saturday 8:30-Noon

|

�Vol. 36, No. 10

© 1961

by Highland

Park

Co.

Thursday,

Commission Named
To Study Persons
For Village Jobs
A five-man
commission,
named
by village president David Whitney,
was approved at the first meeting
of the new board of trustees with
one negative vote Wednesday, May
8.
The commission, named the manpower commission,
will have the
duty of selecting candidates for village commissions
and committees
as terms
expire or members
resign.
The commission will recommend
its
candidates
to
village
president Whitney and he in turn
will present them to the board for
approval.
The commission will keep a file
of persons in the village, to screen
them
as possible appointees, and
report on its conclusions to the village board.

on

districts are

Paul

Greenfield,

president

of the

board;

William

schools for district 109; and Frank Whitcher, principal
sume the reins on the new junior high school.
The new junior high school, under construction on the Franklin
Brothers Nursery tract which was
purchased jointly by the park district and the school district, has
received its name.

The school was dedicated to Alan
B. Shepard moments after he returned from his successful flight
to outer space. Shepard received
the following telegram from the
board of education.
“The board of education of district 109, Deerfield, Illinois, con-

gratulates

you

on

event. In honor
endeavours
for

of

human

your

historic

of your unselfish
the advancement

achievement,

our

new

junior high school under construc.
tion is being named the Alan B.
Shepard Junior High school.”

It

was

the

first

honor

to

bestowed
on the astronaut,
completion of his flight,

-

ca

Contract

be

upon

Let

be located on the former Franklin
Brothers Nursery tract which has
been

purchased

Deerfield

school

district

(Continued

for

park

$114,000

district,

purchased

on

page

of

E.

DGS.

six

D

by

The
acres

2-A)

Sheehan,

Whitcher

superintendent

will

eventually

as-

Residents of Elm St. and Brookside subdivision who are
circulating petitions to abolish parking of garbage trucks of ford

Deerfield

Disposal

service

and

dumping

on

village

garage

property have said that rats are being seen in the neighborhood

and mothers of small children cannot let them out to play. Petitions will be presented to Deerfield’s newly installed president, David Whitney and board of trustees at the village board
meeting,

Monday,

May

15.

Residents
have
said that after
trustees Maurice Petesch and John
Aberson, and village police visited
the site on March 28, they were
told at village board meeting the
following evening that scavengers
would
be given 30 days to find
other parking facilities. They said
that health officer Esther Giss told
them that arrangements could be
made at the Highland Park Land22, where
hauled.

Deerfield’s

Village manager

garbage

is

Norris Stilphen

said that the agreement with the
disposal
services
who
collect
in
Deerfield
was
that if the
truck
parked on the village garage property they would first dump whatever garbage they were carrying.

Unsanitary

Conditions

The
trucks
had
been
parking
evernight. with half a truck load
of garbage, he said.
This created
unsanitary
conditions,
he
noted,
adding that the trucks which presently park at the garage site are
emptied of all contents at the end
of the day and washed.
In
a fact
sheet
accompanying
the petitions, it was reported that
trucks have parked overnight with
garbage, cans, mattresses, and other items. Debris has been observed
on the property along with small
greenish pools of water, they said.
Small
pick up trucks have been
observed
dumping
and also have
used the garage site for overnight
parking.
The fact sheet also notes concern
of the neighbors regarding safety

field
are

Park

addition

unaware

clay

pits.

and

Brookside

of

the

water

With

the

approach

spring

weather

children

into

pits

some

the

and

filled
of

Johnson,

president

of

the

11,

1961

Meeting Day For
Village Board Is
Now On Monday
If you tried to attend the village
of
Deerfield’s
board
of trustees
meeting
last
night
(Wednesday)
and found no one there, don’t be
alarmed.
The new board, under the leadership of president David Whitney,
has changed the meeting days from
Wednesdays to Mondays.
The new board will meet formally the first and third Mondays of
the month at 8 p.m., according to
a resolution passed Wednesday evening, May 3.
Previous meetings of the board
were Wednesday nights. The board
held
discussional
meetings
each
week with an official meeting on

the

Members

Named
to the
commission
for
three
year
terms
were:
Joseph
Powell, who headed up the Caucus
Plan
nominating
committee
this
past year and Howard Kane, of the
Deerfield Jaycees.
For two years, Mrs. Jules Beskin of the League of Women Voters, and Mrs. Locke
Rogers, immediate past president of the Deerfield Woman’s club were appointed.
Appointed for one year was Clif-

of

Circulate Petitions To Abolish Parking
Of Garbage Trucks At Village Garage

| fill site, Skokie Highway and Route

Contract on the new junior high
school was let to the Kiendl Construction Co., Chicago, March 30 at
a low bid of $466,555. Eight bids
were received by the board.
The base bid for the initial stage
of the school—20: classrooms—was
$338,640.
Three
alternates
were
added to the base bid. They were
a gymnasium
at $93,400;
paving
and attendant drainage at $31,500;
and rerouting of sewer and water
mains at $3,015.
In addition to the actual cost
of construction, the school district
will
pay
between
$12
and
$15
thousand to furnish and equip the
building.
A bond issue for $450,000 was
approved
by voters for the new
junior high school. In addition to
that money, the school district has
approximately $25,000 in building
funds which can be used for construction of the new junior high
school.
Architects
for the project
are
Perkins and Will.
The new junior high school will

the

Commission

Looking over the site for the new junior high school for district 109 which will be built
the land purchased from the Franklin Brothers Nursery jointly by the school and park

May

second

Wednesday

of

th

month.
The
new
board
meetings
will
start at 8 p.m., and the trustees are
in hopes that business will be fin-

ished

by

midnight,

according

the old board held during the
weeks where there was no official
board meeting will be discontinued

Deerfield Chamber of Commerce.
Chairman pro-tem is Powell in
whose
home
an _ organizational

Whitney

said

able

attend

meeting

business with only the two meetings

was

held

Tuesday

night.

At that meeting a chairman was to
have been named.
Trustee Winston Porter, a holdover
trustee,
registered
the sole
vote against the manpower commission.

under

the
to

new _

that
to

administration.

he
all

hopes
the

per month.
With the board meetings

day

nights,

the

REVIEW

to be
village

on Mon-

will

it

for

swimming.
Neighbors have also reported to
Harry Carlson, county zoning en-

forcement

officer,

been shooting
recent weeks.
a 30-06 army
the window of
ago. Machine
on the same

that

there

has

in the clay pits in
A two inch slug from
rifle went through
a home a few weeks
gun shooting occured
day.

Petition

Pending

Bernard
Weber,
president,
National Brick company, has a petition pending
before the Lake
County zoning board of appeals for
a public hearing to operate a “dry
sanitary land fill” operation in the
clay pits on Thursday, May 25, in
the Deerfield village hall.
Deerfield mothers won a garbage battle
on the site with Chicago politicians
in 1952 when William Cowhey, former
Chicago
alderman
sought to
use the pits for garbage dumping.
Matthew Rockwell, planning consultant, in his suggested revisions
to the
Deerfield master plan,
spring,
1959, suggested
that clay
pits be used for lagoons with surrounding area for an amphitheatre,
baseball fields, and picnic groves
near homes at foot of Elm St. and
new
Alan
Shepard
junior
high
school.

a

A

fireman battles his way into the Rib-Eye restaurant on

National Brick Company property.
Mothers say that many of the new-

Richard
Baxter, of Baxter and
Woodman, Crystal Lake, who act as
consulting engineers to Deerfield,
suggested in a water report to the
village several years ago, that pits

in extinguishing a blaze at the restaurant. Firemen from
Wheeling and Deerfield aided the Vernon fire department in

comer

be used for a water reservoir.

Gerbert, the damage

problems

involved with the nearby

families

in

the

new

Deer-

Milwaukee Rd. in Vernon township last Thursday night to aid
fighting the blaze.

According

be

able to present the news
to its
readers the same week it is happening.

wander

use

to

statements at the meeting May 3.
At the two meetings of the village
board—the
first
and
third
Monday—business
of the
village
will be conducted.
The
discussion
meetings
which

to Vernon

was estimated

fire chief, Walter

at $25,000.

�;

This
ment

week

I would

on some

like to com-

| which are underway in the village
and are of interest to many of the
citizens
of
WILMOT

the community.
ROAD: After years

‘discussion,

yy
Red
re

ship

:

of

on

debate

with

the

responsibility,

other problems

age has been underway for some
time with gratifying results. Work
is continuing to place a row of

of

town-

and

shrubs along the line between the
Kottrasch property and the garage
property to screen trucks, plows,
and material storage as much as
possible,
We
want
to
be
good

a host

and delays, Wil-

fe
Rd. construction will be uni-_ mot
derway this week, weather pera _ mitting.

The “weather permitting” item
wey
is an important one as this is the

neighbors and hope that Village
efforts to provide landscaping for
municipal property will, at least

asic reason why the project hasn’t
_ gotten under way before this. Re-

r.

4

viewing

find

the

that

under

project

it is to be

Motor

Fuel

in

ciated

constructed

The

Tax

funds

estimated

by

the

State.

except

_ the

in

abuttor

those

wishes

to

down

Weather

cA

as

his

of the road

light

parking

are

lot

planting

and

lot

Church

is of critical importance

the grade

appreis

arbor

as

noise

from

much

as

expansion

should

to give this section
munity a lovely new

will be

an

lowered considerably getting down
into virgin clay, and should it rain
}
for any substantial period of time
- after this grading starts, the road
x will
become completely impassable. The road is certainly rough,
dusty, and difficult to traverse at
Bay
4i
this
time;
however,
everyone
&gt;
should
take heart as this long

ee

Sent

To

ae

The

the

a

district

110

=

to

their

of the comappearance.

board

portion

of

of

meeting

Plan
last

trustees

the

Advisory

the

do much

Commission

Deerfield

referred
study

=

Plan

School

committee

commission

at

Wednesday.

f2

DEERFIELD

a”
a
i

Opinions expressed in these
columns do not necessarily constitute the opinions of the paper.
Letters
should
be brief and

iis

)WA

To
Beth

mulling

I’ve

of
%

now

over for some

been

an

active

time.

member

Deerfield Stagers for almost two

years. Anytime I happen to mention that I’m a Deerfield Stager,

us

| people
ee

ask

“what’s

that?”

(as

if

4 were

We

Here

is

a

group

that

has

devoted

25 years to bringing the enjoyment

Oe and

cultural

entertainment

of

the-

_ ater to the people of this town and
yet
By

_

it is relatively

unknown.

Now perhaps you will say “surely
these people who question you are

new

in town?” Yes, some of them

are,
are

but a great number of
people whose
families

- lived
field

in Deerfield
Area

most

of

and

the

their

them
have

Deer-

lives.

I even had one old time resident
tell me that she and her husband
didn’t want to buy season tickets
for
our shows because they only
contribute to the larger charities.
They thought that Deerfield Stagas much

a civic

as

do

the Rotary, Chamber of Commerce,
and I’m sure many
We, have in our

bers.
A

group

I know

groups

that

larger

and

others.
group 45

there

are

many

your
mem-

many
smaller

but I wonder how many there are
of our size, who have 25 years of
_ service behind them, and who are
as little known as we seem to be.
ay

'y

What
is the
problem?
Aren’t
people interested in theater? Don’t
they realize the professional quality of talent that resides in their
community?
What is the solution
to making the people of Deerfield

aware

of

don’t know

their
the

theater
answer

group?

I

but perhaps

you do.
It

seems

Page

2

strange

to

me

that

are busily

making

Ls Sark
oe) ON
ae

a

8

Raw
totes
CRETE

me I CRSEMAR A OEM Oe,
SE yaya a

SESGLY

They

plans

for

ayesOe NEme ae ae a Ee CoeToy

OR

Deerfield Manor News
A

joint

by John

announcement,

King

and

Ed

issued

Goline,

has

The final meeting of the district
110 PTA will be held at Woodland
Park school at 8 p.m. on Tuesday,
May 16.
Due to the growing concern on
the part of taxpayers and parents
in the district about the schools’
financial prospects, the PTA
has
decided to devote this last meeting
of the year to this problem.
The newly elected school board
of district 110 will be introduced
and will present a panel
discussion of the district’s financial situation so far as it applies to education, and a limited forecast of the
future.

have

Charles

Caruso,

superintendent,

will report on how future finances
will effect the curriculum and staff
of the schools.
Presents

for 0 and

R zoning.

Prior to this program there will
be
a regular
and
an
adjourned
meeting of the PTA members to
elect officers and to vote on proposed changes in the by-laws.

PTA

nominating

has

committee

proposed

the

of the

following

slate
of officers
for
next
year:
president, Jules Beskin; first vice
president (program), Dr. Jack Holbrook; second vice president (ways
and means), Mrs. John Kittermaster; recording secretary, Mrs. Richard Entz; treasurer, Ned Mitchell;
corresponding
secretary,
Mrs.
Howard
Griftner.
Members
will
have
an
opportunity
to
make
nominations from the floor.

Honor
For

Deerfield

10 Years

Man

Service

John R. Kinsey, 1568 Oakwood
Pl., was honored for 10 years of
service at the Chicago Wesley Memorial hospital May 9 at an em-

ployee service recognition program.
Kinsey, director of public relations, was among
have worked for
hospital.
A total
their 10th

of 26
year.

in

been

King,
the

54 employees who
10-35 years at the

with

owner of the
manor,
gave

to president

Goline.

water works
the
meters

of the manor

associa-

tion Gorline last week
and
were to have been installed
the weekend.

The

addition

of the

ten

they
over

meters

will mean that all homes in Deerfield Manor are now metered. The
association had sought to have all
residents pay a flat rate for water
until the final ten meters
were
installed.
The officers of the association
have again stressed that residents
of the manor, who are behind in
their payments for water, should

catch

up

before

July

6 when

the

ICC will consider the cases of both
King
and Pekara,
At that time,
be issued and
be up to date.

completed

the

Survey
A

survey

is

books

In

Progress

in

progress

may

to

furnish

the

pest
control
in the
season, and president

company

manor
Goline

this
has

asked
for
the

planning

that

all who

have

Ash St.—Mrs. Elmer Ruley.
Aspen Ct.—Gordon Contine.
Birch
St.—Irwin
Kessel.
Catalpa—Leonard Plughaupt.
Dogwood—Mrs.
Virginia
Polimeni,
Walnut Dr., odd numbers—Lar-

ry Kebschull.
even
numbers—
Walnut
Dr.,
Isaac Mercavo.
Pekara Dr.—Mrs.
Avis Bell.

Officials

Ask

retarded

children

Donzella

was

the

11th

by

school of the North Shore association for retarded children which
opens June 26 in Leahy park in
Evanston.

Boys Baseball Here
Last week, with the registrations
in the 10 to 12 year age group for
boys
bulging
past
360,
another

P.T.A.

draft of 16 boys was taken into the
major league, making that
8 teams of 15 boys each.

league

The original plan was to have
in

the

13

Major

of 8 teams in the

8 p.m. Deerfield

board,

plan

Monday, May 15
8 p.m. District 106 school board,
Bannockburn school,
7 p.m. District 113 school board,

regular

league

exceeded the 240 limit, additional
teams were to be formed in the
Major league.
This move appears to be a necessity for next year’s program
although this year the economics of
uniforms
and equipment dictated
adding
to existing teams
rather
than create new ones.

Commissioner
son

has

James

announced

G.

that

opening day will be May

Johnofficial

28 with a

parade of all boys and girls in the
program starting at 1 p.m. followed
by
the
opening
ceremonies
in

school

8

p.m.

Wilmot

meeting,

school
Wilmot

P.T.A.
school.

8 p.m. Walden
school P.T.A.
regular meeting, Walden school.
8 p.m. Deerfield park district
board, Jewett Park field house.
8 p.m.
Kipling
school
P.T.A.
regular meeting, Kipling school.

Thursday, May 18
8 p.m, Deerfield Grammar school
P.T.A. regular meeting, Deerfield
Grammar school.
8 p.m. West Deerfield township
library board, library building.
make
parks

header in Jewett park after
ceremonies as well as opening

the
day

games.
The next general meeting of the

parks

association will be held at Jewett
Park field house on Thursday, May
18 at 8 p.m.

in most

of the

other

in

encouragement

and

refreshments available at all
for
weekend
and _ holiday :

support.

The personal pleasure that we derive from theater work is not half
as gratifying as the thought that
we as Stagers and you as our audience can work for the mutual benefit of the whole community.
There aren’t many communities
that can boast of a sustaining 25
year old theater organization. So
when we extend a hand for your
help and support please take hold
and let us know that you’re proud

to have us numbered

2:

among you.

Sincerely,
1962 Green Bay
Highland Park

With

Christy

Judith Tibbetts
Road

coach

take

Ted

a stance.

Repsholdt,

Team

members

members

juk, Skip Godow, and Gary Hussar.
John

of the

Deerfield

High

school

golf squad

watch

Jerry

pictured from left to right are: Mark Biega, Mike Had-

Missing are John

Fleming,

“

school.

Jewett park. There will be a double

in Deerfield. The Women’s auxiliary
again
this year
intends
to

.

Grammar

school.
8 p.m. Maplewood P.T.A. regular
meeting,
Maplewood
school

each.

intermediate

commis-

Grammar

Deerfield

Highland Park High
Tuesday, May 16

the

play

11

league as long as the number of
boys
in the Intermediate
league
did not exceed 16 teams of 15 boys

If

annual

Civic Calendar
May

team

appointed

director

the

for

of the area.

recently

Deerfield

each

Aid

Seout officials, Eugene Downer
and Wilbur Henneman, have asked
that all residents
in the manor
join in helping Michael A. Donzella, our neighbor from Wheeling
in his summer
program
for the

8 p.m.
sion.

on

of
at

once:

Thursday,

boys

paid

should

In Major League Of

league with a limit

not

this service to contact one
following
board
members

Registrations Bulge

games
have

deposited

a permit for the water works

Report

John Davenport, chairman of the
Citizens
Advisory committee of
district 110, will present a report
of the committee’s study of nonresidential land use in this school
district and the conclusions they
have reached.
His report will be
augmented
by maps
and colored
slides illustrating the areas being
considered and the types of build-

ings feasible

pas
aa tes
Bere
eeeu

We as a civic theater group are
responsible for providing you with
enjoyment and entertainment, but
you as the citizens of Deerfield are
responsible for providing us with

_ ers was a charity! We consider ourselves

sb

words.

our final show of the season, ‘The
Moon Is Blue” as well as for next
season’s program. We try to contact as many
people as possible
during
the
summer
for advance
ticket sales. However we are bound
to miss some of you—there are only
45 of us and almost 12,000 of you.
If you are seriously interested in
supporting the Deerfield Stagers,
don’t hesitate to call us. You’ll find
us friendly and interested in your
ideas. If you don’t know whom to
contact, ask any one of your local
merchants,
the REVIEW,
or the
Post Office. I’ll wager that they’ll
be able to give you the name of at
least one Stager member.

of Deerfield should be embarrassed.

ii

300

Of course, we cannot adequately
express our gratitude to our faithful patrons who enjoy our efforts
and continue to support us year
after year.

a strange breed of animal).
Needless to say this is embar_ rassing to me. But more so I should
think that the town and the people
vu

|

than

a town of almost 12,000 only 125
people
(approx.
average)
attend
each Stager performance. An even
stranger fact is that half of the
people making up our audience are
out-of-towners.

Perhaps you can give me the an_ swers to some questions that I’ve

_ been

less

raat
ve

been made to residents of Deerfield Manor,
stating that the 10
water meters needed in the village

The

should contain the name and address of the writer, whose name
will be withheld tf requested

the Editor:

Kt

FORUM
have

Gee

About Taxes

possible.

The widening
of Rosemary
Terrace along the parking lot plus the
completion
of
the
Bethlehem

where

install

crews

parking

- own walk to Village specifications.

,

be

benefited.

vitae as a screen along the North
property line in an effort to cut

The

areas

measure,

those

Rosemary

Village

curb and gutter and sidewalk are
| being installed by Special Assessment

small

by

progressing nicely with virtually
all of the cement work completed.

as

far as the road base, sidewalk
grade
excavation,
and
drainage
installations are concerned. This
will cost approximately $208,000
as

some

we

briefly,

ee

Members Hear

standing problem is, with the start
of construction, on its way toward
resolution.
Landscaping of the village gar-

of the improvements

Me OV

WoodlandPTA

Your Village Government

ae

FO.

cat

ra

-

Enh

~

Deere

Dan

Clark, Greg

Kraft and

Feagan.
Thursday,

May

11, 1961

~

Ry

�Re

ELS 0

ae

‘i
i

I

Battle Bannockburn

New Trustees Take
Oath, Begin Terms
At Wednesday Meet

School Fire

Three

of

the

trustees

village

ended

board

Local Committee
Members Attend
Arden Shore Affair
A group of members of the Deer-

their terms

of Deerfield

field-Bannockburn

Arden

and three new trustees and a new
president were sworn in and took
office at an adjourned meeting of
the board last Wednesday night.
Also

clerk,

sworn

Mrs.

in

was

Catherine

the

as trustees

first time were

James Mandler, Ira

Hearn
siding

and
for

David

Whitney,

the

for

John Lindemann,
his first meeting

village

who

for

the

will head

up

coming

two

years.
Retiring from the board
were
trustees Harold Peterson, Arnold
Wehle and Joseph Koss who was
president of the board.
Wives of the new and old trustees, the village manager and the
building commissioner were in at-

tendance at the meeting and were
introduced to the citizens present.

_

The first May fire was shortly
after five p.m. on May 2 when the
fire
department’s
jeep
and
one
pumper answered a call for a brush
fire at 1211 Knollwood Ave.
Two days later, May 4, the
partment fought the blaze at

_ Bannockburn
Aid

dethe

school.

Vernon

New Junior High
(Continued

from

page

1)

Junior

High,

but

eventually
the
building
will
be
used solely for junior high students.
The new junior high school will
have
Frank
Whitcher,
presently
principal of DGS, as its principal
for seventh and eighth grade students, Sheehan said.
Thursday,

“The Moon is Blue”

had

Tonight, Tomorrow &amp; Saturday
May 11, 2463
at 8:30 P.M.

been

injured in an automobile accident
on Deerfield Rd., west of Sanders
Rd., he reported.
Proving
they
are
gluttons
for
punishment, the chief commented,
eight members of the department
were back at the fire station at 9
a.m. Saturday morning, May 6, to
assist in high pressure testing of a
two and a half inch fire hose.

Deerfield Grammar School
Adm.

Tickets

$1.50

May

11, 1961

B.

Carr

be

We'll start out this week with the

|

Square Dance (for those of you that —
are able to shake a leg) given by —
the Ivy Cancer League at Jewett
Park. Call Jennie Baxter for tickets
it will be
loads
of fun.
Phone
WI 5-0677.

|
~
i

Mrs. James Peterson and little
daughter, Lori, of 1165 Linden Ave.

have
been
in Santa
Mexico, visiting Mrs.

Fe,
New
Peterson’s

_

—

at door

Mrs. Agnes (William) Tenner- —
mann of 1020 Oakley Ave., flew to —
California
recently
on vacation —
from the Deerfield State Bank, to ©
visit her brother-in-law and sis- —
ter, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Yenni. Mrs. —

Yenni

is the former

sen. I’ll bet the
is back home! !

Peter-—

—

Chief
Warrant
Officer
Frank
Spannraft,
Mrs.
Spannraft
and
their two sons, will be coming

—

home

—

from

Bank

Lora

she

Germany

is glad

in June.

©

Mr.

and Mrs. Arthur Peterson, who
have been occupying the Spannraft
house at 735 Chestnut St., while
that family was in Germany, have
leased

an

apartment

in

the

Max

©
©
&gt;

Winter building at 702 Elm St., be-

|

ing vacated by the Ralph Taylors,
who are moving to Henry Hohl-felder’s house on Woodward Ave.

(that’s

really

the

big

—

shift).

Barbara Petersen, daughter of
Chief of Police David Petersen, |
will be welcoming

Save $73.06

8

MOVIE

Includes DeJur Electra Camera,
Sylvania Sun Gun-Hand Grip, Sunset Tripod, Type A Filter &amp; Compartment Case.

Includes

YOU
PAY ...

DeJur

Projector,

sen, he is most happy these days
with the new Scotch light tape that
identifies the Police cars. Getting
these things involves a lot of work |
even if they seem small to us.

mm

PROJECTOR

OUTFIT

Radiant

Screen,

P-880

400

ft.

and Katherine
week.

Rell &amp; Can.
of
List Price

$150.60

139" * pay 9102.99
YOU

FORD
&amp; Deerfield

WI 5-111]

Mr, and
Duluth,

Price

for lunch

|
WE

Mrs. John Westgaard,
Minn., were the guests

©

of Steve and Barbara Anderson.
For entertainment, instead of the
usual thing, they were taken on an

excursion

to

Maxwell

Street—

didn’t
buy
anything
although
Steve was tempted to buy a little
dog—he didn’t!
‘
Congratulations
who

will serve

ter at the

Roads

—
—

last

to

Jack

Ried,

son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred E. Ried,

PHARMACY
Waukegan

Our past Editor of the REVIEW,
Ruth Pettis, is not idle these days
—she had as her guest Lt. Coots

OUTFIT

Ambassador

sis-

I’m sure Janet will do the same...
Speaking of our Chief, Dave Peter-

$47.61

Save

her younger

ter, Janet, in August, as Janet will —
enter the same Hospital for her
nurses
training
(in
Kankakee).
—
Barbara was capped February 19th —
and her father and many relatives —
were there for the ceremony. Glad —
you are doing so well, Barbara, and —

HOME
MOVIE PLEASURE
SPECIALS!

List Price $213.05

. from the park district for $28,000.
Occupancy of the building is expected by January, 1962, Sheehan
said.
He said that primary grade children of the area will be moved
into the rooms
as soon as they
are completed. In September, 1962,
the junior high schoolers from the
area will be moved into the new
school.
And for the present, grades one
through eight will go to school in

Shepard

Stover

soon

boys on the lake near Lake Bluff.

Department

Again on May 4, shortly after 10
p.m.,
the
fire
department
was
called
to aid in extinguishing
a
blaze.
A fire had broken out in
the Rib-Eye Restaurant on Milwaukee
Ave.,
and
the local
department aided the Vernon department
» in bringing the fire under control.
Answering the call from Deerfield
were a truck and six members of
the department.
The Vernon
department
also received
aid from
the Wheeling department and other
Vernon departments in fighting the
blaze.
On the afternoon of May 5, at
2:30
p.m.,
the
fire
department
rescue
squad
was
called by the
Lake county sheriff’s office to assist in treating and transporting an
unidentified
woman
from
the
Riverwoods area to Highland Park
hospital.
And on May 6, Saturday morning, at 2:35 a.m., the rescue squad

the

reported.

will

present

rolled
again
to
the
Riverwoods
area.
The squad transported
Thomas B. Stover, of Deerfield
Manor, to Highland Park hospital,

deJong

which

under construction. The Benjamin
J. Rosenthal
foundation
grant is
financing this project. The Deerfield committee
presented
the
proceeds from its recent successful
benefit bridge lessons for supplies
for the cause.
The “Adelyn
Doyle Memorial
Sports Recreation
Center”
was
dedicated
Sunday,
May
7.
This
to the
project will contribute
physical education and recreation
of the boys at Arden Shore, which
for gifted
is a school and home

The Stagers of Deerfield

school was the scene of a fire May 4.
fire when 18 men in three trucks arrived
p.m. The fire was rapidly extinguished,
Jan deJong, and the damaged area was
firemen work to get the fire under control.

The
volunteer
firemen
of the
Deerfield-Bannockburn fire department were kept busy during the
first six days of May as they handled three fires and two rescue
calls, reported chief Jan deJong.

By
lola

mother.

We
Bannockburn
A roof section on
on the scene at 9
according to chief
closed over. Here

classrooms

the
Prewas

of

attended

Mr. J. David McCartney, director
of the school and home, discussed
the need for the new grade school

who

was re-elected.
Seeing action

committee

association

a luncheon on Monday in the home
of Mrs. Kenneth Covell in Kenilworth.

village

Price,

Shore

CARRying
On

Cedar Rapids,
a

Don’t
home
Thank

as Associate

First Lutheran

Minis-

Church,

Iowa.

forget us when you
(I’m still trying.)
you,

need

Ruthy.

Carr Realty Co.
701

Waukegan

Road

WI

5-0984

Page

2-A

©

�Alumnae Group
Slates Final
Meeting May 18

a

The
last meeting
of the 19601961 year will be held by Delta
Gamma
alumnae
of
EvanstonNorth Shore on Thursday, May 18, «
at 12:30 p.m., at the Kenilworth
home of Mrs. L. Morgan Yost, 363
Ridge Rd.
Luncheon
will
be
served,
followed by a short business meeting
at which Mrs. Yost, president, will
preside.
Mrs. A. Dryden Eberhard, program chairman, has planned a program for the afternoon which wil]
be presented by Mrs. Wesley Bow- —
man of Kenilworth. She will speak
on
her
hobby,
“Collecting
Old
Glass.”
She will show pieces from her
collection of old glass which dates
from the early days of our country

If you
thing

insist on the best of everyfor your

family

—

you

send

your clothes to us regularly for dry
cleaning! If you haven’t yet made
Our acquaintance —
try us this
week.
We know you'll agree that
our methods —our service are superior.

(Customer’s

CLEANERS

an outdoor lunch.
Engineered by Jean Aitchison, the committee
son, Mrs. Nancy Crawford, Mrs. Laurel Teidt, Mrs. Barbara Keno,

Ann

Signature)

WHO

Gates Of Paris

Bring out the real, glamorous you
. . With our professionally perfect
styling.

yi

Ws
A
AEASLEHAL,
&amp;.
Wy

Academy
award
winner
for
foreign
films,
Ingmar
Bergman,
directed
the
Swedish
movie,

CARE

“Naked

COMPLETE

CLEANING FLANT

_ in. DEERFIELD

TRY ONE OF OUR MANY
DIFFERENT SHADES OF BLONDE

y fe 3 33

DEERFIELD Koad

Work

so

well

done

can
Make it a habit to read the Want
Ads every week before laying your
paper aside!

Sia

B

be had

ft

CAU

666 Waukegan

at such

reasonable

only at

ey

¥y

OTVrner

panne

prices

BEAUTY

SHOP

Road, Deerfield

by the Women’s

WI 5-1525

..

U.S.

the
Cog.

79

I
heeag

or the

19th ,

III, Evanston,

Edward

C. Hil-

dreth, Glenview, and Mrs.
H. Thompson, Deerfield.

Mrs.

Donald

thick liquid which is applied
bamboo brushes to rice paper.

with

DEERFIELD
REVIEW
Thursday,

May

11,

1961

Vol.

36,

No.

59c

PUBLICATION
OFFICE
699 Waukegan Road
DEERFIELD,
ILLINOIS
Telephone Windsor 5-4500
HIGHLAND
PARK OFFICE
Laurel Ave., Highland Park,
Telephone 1D 2-4500

608

III.

MEMBER
National Editorial Association
INinois Press Association

Elected

Society

student

at

Local Subscription Rates—$3.50 per year
Domestic Rate—$5.00 per year
Single Copies—15c
Foreign Rates on Application
Second class postage paid at Deerfield,
Ilinois.
Unsolicited manuscripts or photographs
are sent to the North Shore Group newspapers at the sender’s
risk.
The
North
Shore Group
Newspapers
assume
no responsibility for the publication of such materials or their return to the sender.

Locally Owned &amp; Operated
by JEAN &amp; BILL OTTER

—_—_—

1 LB. PKG,
@

PS lalla

lela

CLIP THIS

Supreme

Foods

COUPON

LLL

AND

BRIGHTEST WASH
with plenty of HOT*
RAIN-SOFT

SAVE!

LAND 0’ LAKES

BUTTER

Road

ELT 1p

DEERFIELD

*or warm,

water.

if you prefer

@

FLUFFY-DRIED
in big economical
gas dryers.

@

IN AN HOUR OR LESS—
No matter how big your
wash.

with

Wi 35-0266

this
coupon

Ib. 5 9-

AMPLE

PARKING

Commons

—

RIGHT

Lower

BY

THE

DOOR

(West)

Terrace

a

Deerfield

FREE

Page 2-B

16

Published Weekly every Thursday

TERRACE
LAUNDROMAT

Sliced BACON

PORTERHOUSE
STEAK

Clark

Clark is a graduate
university.

MORRELL PRIDE

Prime

814 Waukegan

ORT.

Michael Clark, 640 Thornmeadow
Rd., has been elected into Pi Mu
Epsilon, national honorary society
in mathematics
at the University
of Kansas, Lawrence, Kan.

U.S. Prime

Ib.

be

June Holmes will exhibit her

To Honorary

.

SIRLOIN
STEAK

American

time,

*

Mrs. Bowman’s
interest in col- .
lecting rare old glass stems from
her mother and grandmother whose
wedding
gifts included cranberry
glass and cut glass as was the custom of their day.
Hostesses
assisting
Mrs.
Yost :
will be: Mrs. Ferdinand P. Mehrlich, Wilmette, Mrs. DeWitt Davis -

“Aik

Have You Tried Shopping at 814 Waukegan Rd.?
this week

will

paintings which reflect the oriental
&gt;+,|influence.
Mrs. Holmes paints in
“sumi,” a technique using ink and
solids,
ground
on
stone,
into
a

Michael

featuring

which

shown, Saturday, May 13, at Maplewood school at 8:30 p.m.
The “Gates of Paris’? was scheduled, but a mix up in films brought
“Naked Night” to Deerfield at this
time.
“Naked
Night” is the passionate
story
of the
bitter
and
disillusioned life of a circus troupe.
This is the last in the current
series of foreign films sponsored

TAILORS
FIRST

Night,’

War

purposes.

Tonight Instead Of

SECRET

is in the Styling!
HOSE

included: Mrs. Alice JackobMrs. Bernie Cloos and Mrs.

Naked Night Shown
The

to Civil

century.
Her
listeners will learn
how to know Early American glass,
hallmarks of genuine pieces compared with fakes and reproductions,
and will receive ideas on how to
use glass for decorative and useful

Brackett.

One to a customer—Adults
only—This
coupon
redeemable
only
for
King
Korn
Stamps.
All rights reserved
in the King Korn Stamp Co.
—Coupon
valid only when
signed by customer.

PPOs

up

e %

Del Mar Woods residents held their first annual spring clean-up day last Saturday, April
29. Fire hydrants were painted green and white and the area around them was seeded and
rolled. Drainage ditches were cleaned of leaves and sticks. As pictured above, the neighbors
gathered together on the corner of Forest Ct. and Elmwood Pl. on the Crawfords’ lawn for

EXTRA KING KORN
STAMPS WITH ANY
PURCHASE AT

ALPHA

ie

Thursday,

May

11, 1961

�&gt;

es

OFOPPING

CENTER

You'll find a complete
selection of fine
Mother's Day gifts
at Deerfield Commons
Jewel Foods
S. S. Kresge

Lilac Shoes
Gift Lantern Gift Shop
Sure-Save Foods
Country

Squire

Men’s

Shop

Young Ages Children’s Wear
North Shore Barber Shop
Shore

Line

Cleaners

Etheridge Restaurant and Coffee Shop
Burny Bros. Bakery
Walgreen’s
Talk-o-the-Town

Beauty

Cora Lee Candies
Modern Miss Women’s

Salon

Apparel

Montgomery Ward
Terrace Laundromat

"DEERFIELD COMMONS SHOPPING CENTER — DEERFIELD AND WAUKEGAN ROADS
ae

Thursday, May

11, 1961

Page

H

19—D

3

�{Boys 6-15
CAMP MIKQ

Attend Presbyterian
Women’s Meeting
Several

UANO

an’s

24

— Aug.

to attend

Presbyterian
tomorrow
at

byterian

of

Christian

that

National

time,

the

Wom-

Highland

the

are

Chicago
meeting
Park Pres-

Program

will

education.

delegates

Conference

Presbyterian

the

church

Society
the Oak

church.

feature

At

of

Presbyterian

expected

Women

to

the

of United
at

Purdue

University in June will be honored

19

Welton Alm, Nelsonville, Wis.
or
Gary Nemchock,
1123 S. Humphrey
OAK PARK, ILL.
EU 3-2532

_

Association

Park

RIDING, RIVER TRIPS,
RIFLERY, OVERNITE
CAMPING, SWIMMING,
SAILING, FISHING,
ALL SPORTS
22 Campers from this North
Shore Area
FOLDER ON REQUEST
2-4-8 Week Periods

June

members

Highland
Park Clean-Up
Week
_ starts May 15 and runs through May
20. Are you ready?

New Science Honor
For Tom McGivern
Thomas

McGivern,

Highland

Park

who

one

was

347

High
of

Elm

Pl.,

School

senior

four

Illinois

the

finalists in the Westinghouse competition, and who received the allexpense trip to the Science Talent
Institute in Washington, D.C., has

received
work

another

honor

for

his

in science.

Tom
is
dents who

one
will

of
be

62 Illinois stuawarded certifi-

in a special dedication service. Mrs.
Carl Herbst, 604 Melody Ln., will
be
delegate. from
the
Highland

cates by the Illinois State Academy

Park

meeting

association.

May 15-20 are dates for Highland
Park’s Clean-up Week. Trucks will
pick up trash and waste materials
from parkways.

/| 1-Hour

The

of

Science

during

at the

the

May

University

nois, Urbana, of the
Academy of Science,
the senior group.

12-13

of

Illi-

State Junior
sponsored by

The
scientific
organization
selected for honors the students who
won
recognition
during
the
science talent search.

Professional

Touch

Every wardrobe contains one or two questionable
garments that don’t let you feel or look your very best.
We suggest you check with us before discarding
or replacing these items. ONE HOUR MARTINIZING
“deep-cleans” the drabness from the garment .. .
restores the original vivid colors ... gives the garment
that “Professional Touch.”
For expert advice on the care and conditioning
of your “problem” garments, bring them in to us.
The consultation service is free.

ae
“Looks like Senator Weideseat is
off on another filibuster marathan
. .» his wife had his suits cleaned
at ONE
HOUR
MARTINIZING,
and then sent them over here!’

Registration

Open Daily
7:30 A.M, - 6:30 P.M.
Saturdays
8:00 A.M. - 6:00 P.M.

NE Houp

708

ARTINIZING’

Deerfield

WI

To Be Held May 12

summer

Rd.

sion of Township High Schools District

113

will

Park

High

High

School

be

held

School
on

at

Highland

and

to be presented by the music committee of the PTA in the schoole

Deerfield

Friday,

May

19.

Both high schools will participate
in the program, which will be held

auditorium

their

four

provide

to

year

plans.

They

also

an opportunity for students

raise

a

grade

or

make

up

Monday,

the

May

courses

8 to

that

help

offered.

The following courses are a tentative list of the courses that may be
given, depening on the number of
students interested and the number of qualified teachers available.
Att 2: 207/38, 4, 557 and: 6). typing;
driver training; English 1, 2, 3, 4,
5 and 6; foreign languages including French 1, 2, 3, and 4, Spanish
1 2) Sand. 4, Latin: lz 2. 3,-and
4; home
economics
1 and 2; industrial arts 1 and 2; math 2, 4, and
6; and physical education for both
boys and girls. In the social studies
department both modern European
history and United States history
will be offered.
School
charge

and Harold J. Perry are in
of the summer school pro-

grams

and

questions

to

Springer

should

be

them.

Bites
7, of 900 Dean

Ave.,

which annually commemorates the
Music
of National
observance

The

theme

Music

Richard

Senior
The
(chorus and band).
choir will feature selections from
Gershwin’s “Porgy and Bess” and
the orchestra, under the direction
of Harold Finch, will play the waltz
by Aaron
“Billy the Kid’
from
;
Copland.
in
President ' John F. Kennedy,

of Na,

sponsors

to the

a message

tional Music week, has stated: ‘A
speaks
America
creative
vibrant,

in many voices—not the least of
which is her music, which breaches
all barriers and reaches all hearts,
Please accept my best wishes for
bringing
in
success
continuing

to a world

music

more

and

more

that increasingly hungers for it.”
A dance for participants and the
audience will follow the concert.
the
heads
Sheftel
Bernard
Mrs.
music committee of the PTA, as-~

sisted

by Mrs.

liams

Ave.,

on the thumb

year’s

Juan”
Strauss tone poem “Don
Schubert’s “Omnipotence”
and

by
Edward
Stewart’s
springer
spaniel, while playing in front of
Stewart’s house at 163 Roger Wil-

nipped

this

Make

of

(band);

Bernstein

Leonard

last week

was

has

concert,

Among numbers to be presented
by
to Candide”
“Overture
are:

determine

be

and

gay,

this

for

planned

been

chor-

and

and

serious

Music week is “Let’s
Around the World.”

in all sessions

will

will be the

classical

both

program

A

contemporary,

at

12,

May

Friday,
orchestra

band,

school’s

us.

week,

deficiencies.

A survey was taken

on

8:15 p.m. Participating

from Monday, June 19, to Friday,
August 11. Summer school sessions
are designed to give students an
opportunity to take courses which
they could not otherwise fit into

Janet Louer,

5-9793

Over 350 students of Highland
Park High school will participate
in the 31st Annual Spring concert

ses-

Robert Benson of Deerfield High

Deerfield

the most in DRY CLEANING

for the

Students

HPHS

Summer Sessions

directed
i

Annual Concert by

Register Students
For High Schools’

Kauffman.

Robert

Highland

Park

police

report.

For Spacious and Economical Living

DEERFIELD: Spacious Colonial in area of fine DEERFIELD: Contemporary ranch with 3 bedLiving-rm. with fireplace, dining-rm., rooms, two Ceramic tile baths, kitchen has
3 twin size bedrooms, airy sunporch, situated built-ins, full basement. House is in immacufonon % acre wooded lot. Close to everything. late condition. Good traffic pattern. Located
$26,000
$32,500 in young neighborhood
} Owner owns two houses. ANXIOUS.
homes.

LINCOLNSHIRE: NEWLY LISTED: A rare find
on 2 acre. 4 bedroom, 2 bath, huge kitchen
with built-ins and family eating area. Cathedral
- ceilinged living-m. with panelled fireplace wall,
plus a full basement &amp; gas heat. A MUST to SEE
IF YOU WANT COUNTRY LIVING .. $35,500

7
x

i

c*

DEERFIELD: Transferred owner has maintained
this immaculate split level in the finest condition. Vinyl tile entrance hall saves wear and
tear on carpeting and floors. 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, family room, basement, attached garage,
$29,750
and fenced 80’ yard with patio OAS

in la Nm

and LY SON Jaz.

eating

corner

area,

and

fireplace

panelled

room

recreation

with

$27,500

735

Deerfield

Road

Deerfield

Office

—

Open

23,500

lot

Large corner

dren,

LINCOLNSHIRE AREA: A beautifully built and
maintained 3 bedroom ranch situated on 2

HIGHLAND PARK: Older home
location. 4 bedrooms, 22 baths.

acres.

master

Living-rm.

has stone fireplace,

nice din-

bedroom,

ing-rm. Kitchen with built-ins, and eating area, place. Eating
‘s a housewife’s dream. Gently sloping lawns from lake
$36,500
cre visible from all directions

Quinlan. and LYS ON,,Ine

YEARS
SERVICE

Qu

Immediate possession of this im- DEERFIELD: NEW LISTING: Cozy 3 bedroom
DEERFIELD:
maculate 3 bedroom split-level, complete with Colonial, red brick and frame ranch located in {
Rear yard is
Large living-room friendly young neighborhood.
carpeting
and
draperies.
dining-room combination, kitchen with family completely cyclone fenced; ideal for small chil-

Weekdays

9 to

5 —

Sundays

10 to 5

and

area

Windsor

library

in fine east
Living room,

each

in kitchen.

have

Just one

block

$31,500

5-3750
\—\\

UNiversity

a fire-

9-1112

\

\
AON
\

Curcaco

REAL ESTATE
NEN

i] —/

/4YY/
VO)
Wa57,

Thursday, May 11, 1961

�GIFTS GALORE AT HUGE SAVINGS!

NOW ... SPECIALLY FOR MOM!

MOTHERS DAY IS
SUNDAY, MAY 14th

e Arnel &amp; Cotton; Viscose
e 2 huge pockets;
Pan collar
¢ Solids, checks

:
bret C08,

Rise

® Cord

¢ All easy-care fabrics
Woman's Slee 1048

jamaicas

Women's sizes 10-18

-Cotton

omen

$998

:

Special!

:

2 Wi wren

Dacron- ip

actin

in colors

Ram

L

L

e Sanforized cotton
,
tops in pert prints

4
i

Peter

SLItP 5
WN
“COW

sicot
Tr

#27

e Mesh or plain styles
Mist-tone, Sun-Tone
Sun=&amp; @ Mist-t

¢ Sanforized

cotton

e Sheer 15 denier.

¢ Convertible

collar

® Novelty designs

Sizes 9-11

Women’ S Sizes 32- “38

$3

ksi

2

thee septate:

Foam Pillows

anh blind

Gift Hankies 59c to $1.29 |

White with lace, embroidery,
scallops,

Solid color faille, satin zip
-off covers.

Pearl Jewelry
a

—)

=

“ee

Chocolates, 1 box 47c
Delicious Chocolate

| ce
bell,

57¢-97¢

Earrings, 57c; Necklaces,
97c,

eae

Boxed Billfolds
Tumblers
9-pc. Caddy Set

Treat cup,

Special purchase.

Handsome

‘Cutt lebone ae
‘
on Care of Parakeet.

8

12-0,

High

Cherries.

$1.98
$1.98

quality cowhide.

12 oz. size.

8 pc. boxed set.

crystal tumblers

plus carrier.

$3.77

liytstaegegegetetetatet
eaten atte

HOURS:

OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.

S. 5. KRESGE
Deerfield Commons
Thursday, May 11, 1961

Shopping Center

SATURDAYS 9 A.M. to 6 P. M.

COMPANY
722 Waukegan

me
Roa
Page

H 21—D

5

�erences SRE PT

for mother’s

Male Chorus Sings
On Mother's Day

day

The

Male

United

sing

chorus

Evangelical

in

the

of

Attends

Kenneth Waltzek, son of Mr. and
the

First

church

Mother’s

Day

will

service

Sunday at 10:45 a.m., and a Mother’s Day message will be given by
the
pastor,
the
Rev.
Alfred
E.
Anderson.
Banquet

Conference

Mrs,

Edward

state

of ceremonies

and

of

660

convention

of

the

United

neth,
a
sociology

junior,
is
at LFC.

majoring

in

banquet

May

Moth-|church.

Friday | Hubert

12,

at

Speaker

Mitchell

Members of the Credit Women’s
Breakfast club will meet at Starr’s
coffee shop, St. Johns
Ave., for
their
“breakfast
meeting
of the
year” Wednesday morning, May 17,
at 7:30.
The

slate of officer

the 1961-62

Friday

for the annual

Daughter

Waltzek

Campus Christian Fellowship held
recently in Bloomington, Ill. Ken-

Mrs. Leslie Trout will be mistress | evening,
er

B.

Gray Ave., was chosen to represent Lake Forest College at the

‘Breakfast of Year’
For Credit Women

6:30
will

in
be

the
Mrs.

of Chicago.

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Thursday,

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11,

1961

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Tickets

JOHN FIORE NURSERIES
S. Waukegan,

Sa ktSEER
2 Sy
eee a
ESR

Lake

Forest

CE

may

be

SOARES
ne

1S

procured

Mrs. Ettlinger ID 2-6473,
either of the co-chairmen.

Sales office open daily and Sunday

840

1sea
Pt paihee
Sha 08

oiGLE

fi EN

Highland

Schedule

4-0476

NEWS.

Park

is
Look

in

issue

Art

Week

of

be

awarded

Honor

for

the

may

be found

on the

dor,

near

auditorium.

the

corri-

PTA

U. S. KEDS

al

BUDDY
BUGGY

.

FREE

ws

Register TODAY

The Pre-Civil War South will be
the theme
of “Southern
Side O’
Heaven,” the 1961 Junior Prom at
Highland Park High School.
Plans have been completed and
preparations
are well under way

for the June

is

3 event.

“

A Prom King and Queen and a
court to serve them at the dance
will be elected
by every Junior
through voting in homeroom
ses- |
sions.

May

North

Art
chairman
for the
Mrs. Bernard Buchholz.

for it.

HPHS Junior Prom

Students

Is Giving This

iyY yd
hlLT

the

Also on exhibit at present are
the works of two students who are
taking art honors
at the present
time. Exhibiting from their portfolios are Mary Ellen Brown and
Linda Kahn, both seniors.
Mary
Ellen has won a scholarship on her
portfolio
of
varied
art
works,
awarded
by
the
Art
Students
League of New York. Linda is the
winner of a Gold Key award at the
regional scholastic art show held
recently in Evanston. This exhibit

from

Clean-up

this

Prizes will
best works.

from

or

Southern Flavor
Will Spark 1961

best
works of this year’s art students.
is now
in progress
at Highland
Park High school. The show, which
will
continue
through
the
first
week in June, includes outstanding
examples in drawing, oil painting,
water
color and
commercial
design, as well as some sculpture. All
work was done by students of Mrs.
Norman
Esserman
and _ Robert
Palmgren of the Art department.

Speaker for the evening will be
Dr. Thor Johnson, director of orchestra activities and professor of
music at Northwestern University.
Internationally
recognized,
Dr.
Johnson has been guest conductor
with major orchestras in this country and abroad
and has received
many honors and awards for his
work in the field of music. He will
be introduced by Mrs. Harold Gilden who, with Mrs. Arthur Adler,
Jr., heads the Fine Arts Council.
The
address of welcome
will be
made
by
the
principal,
Charles
Stunkel.

eaves:

RSPPSOSYSAYOWOUCURUOC

w—vyvvyVvyVvyVTY
CVTVOVVVVVVY..

GERANIUMS
ANNUALS

eR a
sos

Tickets are still available for the
Key Awards banquet to be given
by the Fine Arts Council of the
Highland Park High School PTA
on Thursday, May 18 at 6:15 p.m.,
according to Mrs. Ralph Ettlinger,
Jr., ticket chairman.

Beautify Your Grounds

TREES

eee

High School Art
Tickets Available
For High School
Now on Display
Key Awards Dinner An art show, presenting the

| SPRING
| PLANTING
EVERGREENS

oP

17, the Junior

Class

Execu-"

tive
Board
Representative
from
each session is to submit to the.
Executive Board the name of the
boy and the girl receiving the most
votes for these honors in their session.

Nominees

are

to

be

chosen

on,

the basis of charm, poise, personality and their ability to represent
their class.
Miss
Elyse
Rinkenberger
and
John Broming, Junior class sponsors and members of the executive
board, headed by John Wharton,
president, will review the names
submitted by each session.
From these lists they will com-

pile

consisting

of

the names of the eight boys
eight girls receiving vote from
most sessions.
;
Wednesday, May 24, every
ior will have a chance to cast
ballot for the four boys and

the

final

ballot

and
the

a

junhis&lt;
four

girls to become king and queen and
act

as members of the Court.
2
The boy and girl who receive the
highest number of votes will become King and Queen of “Southern Side O’ Heaven.”
The other
three couples will become their at-*
tendants.
Sponsors
will
count
the
final

ballot but results will not be known,
even to the nominees themselves.
All the nominees are invited to
attend a rehearsal dinner the night
before
Prom.
There,
they
take
turns playing different members of
the royal group.
Alumni and students of Highland
Park
High
School
and Deerfield

High

School

are

invited

to attend,,

the Prom and to see the crowning
of a new King and Queen.

at

Nothing to buy.

LILAC SHOES

No obligation.

Come

to LILAC for a complete Selection of KEDS
and KEDETTES for the Whole Family.
Pond

YOU

MAY

BE THE

LUCKY

WNNER!

DRAWING TO BE HELD SAT., MAY 20.

fi

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|LILAC
a

Open Thurs.
Page H 24—D 8

PERFECT FIT

Your young tigers give shoes a rough time — so don’t
take a chance with unbranded “look-alikes.” Get ‘em U.S.
Keds Super Champ — the shoe that’s tougher through and
through. They give 50% longer wear for just pennies more.

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new

benefits...

new

safeguard against cancellation
due to accidents! Find out how
you stand. Call today!

HENRY

HAKANEN

825 Deerfield Rd., Deerfield
Phone:
erate sane

WI

STATE

5-1383

FARM

Mutual Automobile Insurance Co.
Home Office: Bloomington, Ill. peizss
Thursday,

May

11,

1961
gs

é

�Sure Save
Has

‘Happy

the Prices!

Here's the Proof
red

label—solid

pack

_s.

tomatoes
»

green

giant—giants

in

size,

babies

in

sweet peas
quick-cooked

niblets

brand

mexicorn

as

corn

a

soup,

a

or

noodle

at Sure Save

2-02.
= 2 cet
ane

sauce

tomato soup i

heinz—chicken

from everyone

tenderness

2 ans OIC

°

heinz—delicious

Mother s Day

4 2k, 49c

or

in cooking

3

goth 49c

rest, 1

or

mushroom soup
milani’s 1890

french dressing
bay

von 43¢

pride—cleaned

small shrimp "can

39

heinz——vegetcarian

baked beans

_.

4 ons 49¢

hunt’s—california

tomato juice

b

in

b—whole

or

We

reserve the~right
to limit quantities.
Meat and produce prices

=m be

—
—

available Thursday,

Friday and Saturday only.

sliced

Sale starts Thurs.,

mushrooms

____

rans OFC

May
;

11th thru Wed.,
May 17th.

Si

ama

broadcast

corned beef hash
cut-rite—keeps

food

waxed

fresh

___ van are

longer

paper.

“rolls 49€

sandwich bags __

2 °° AI

cut-rite

From Our Delicatessen Dept.
IMPORTED

BOILED
PIPING

HAM

HOT—-READY

_.

TO

14 Lb. O9C

EAT

Barbecued Chickens;, 98c
FRESH—-HOMEMADE

MACARONISALAD,,
Fresh
FRESH

39c

Fish

FROZEN

DOLE FILLETS... Lv, 99C
FANCY

FRESH

SMELTS

21,, 29c

young—lean

n’ fresh—3

With
SURE

Worth

40c

WA!)

to 6 lb. avg.—fresh

STEWING
CHICKENS
young—lean

n’ tender—rolled

young—lean

n’ fresh—boneless

39c_

Lb. 29:

FRESH—CALIFORNIA
SUGAR SWEET—RED

boneless

n’

juicy

GERANIUMS “cscn’os 59¢
mother’s

$8.00

day

special—purple

or

white

value

Orchid Corsages -=v$1.98

n’ fresh—Ist cut pork chops or 2 to 3 Ib. avg.

Deerfield Sure Save

size—sweet

mother’s day special $6.49 dozen

butterfly pork chops ....... » O8c

country 10S .2. (yas.

80

‘s25c_

Valencia Oranges «~ 59¢

cut up, lb. 33¢
and

RIPE

STRAWBERRIES

pork loin roast ............ » 69c

young—lean

soston

florida—large

food mart this weekend

FRESH

loin

See

WHOLE

u.s. govt. insp. grade a—white
rock—5

This Coupon

SAVE’S—GROUND

..

PORK ROAST

Shop at Your
Valuable Coupon

rib portion

to 4 Ib. avg.

» 29¢

FASHION PICTURE—60 Gauge—15 Denier

NYLONS
STRETCH

or

Pairs 99¢

SRAMIOSS

so
hl

MOTT’S—FROM

ORCHARD-RIPE APPLES

RED

Light

APPLE SAUCE
LABEL—In

2 pairs $1 49 |

---eececeeneneeae J Sc

Syrup—Halves

or Slices

CLING PEACHES .......... 2 Means 49

Cottee 2 17c:
Offer
May

good

15th,

Monday,

16th

and

Tuesday

17th

only.

and
Limit

Wednesday,
one

Offer good with $5.00 or more

minimum,

only.

Valuable Coupon
Thursday,

May

11, 1961

.

Worth

PILLSBURY’S BEST—AIl Purpose—Enriched

FLOUR

coupon

per adult customer.
purchase

¢
WHOLE APRICOTS... 9 ai 49

RED LABEL—In Light Syrup—Unpeeled

40c

SHOPPING CENTER
716 Waukegan Rd.
SPACIOUS

PARKING

FOR

400

CARS”

Page H 25—D9

�SALE
SAVE 37%
on PANELING
CRAFTWOOD
LUMBER

COMPANY

See Page H49 - D65

Seniors To Hear Talks on College At May 17 Meeting
College

bound

seniors

at

Miss Shine and Floyd will discuss with the students college life
in general with special emphasis
on dating, new found freedoms,
Greek letter groups, and keeping
in contact with the home.

High-

land Park High School will be
welcomed at a special meetings at
the high school, May 17.
Miss Roberta Shine, senior girls
adviser chairman, will speak to the
girls
in
the
student
auditorium
of the first period.

This is one of a series of meetings
for college
bound
students
that the school has
conducted

At the same time, David Floyd,
senior boys adviser chairman will
speak to the boys in the main auditorium.

ed

a

lecture

Problems

on

the

“Academic

of College.”

Highland
nic

Miss Kate Wing,
and Mrs. John B,
tral

Ave.,

has

Centenary

daughter of Mr.
Wing, 106 Cenbeen

invited

College

for

to
Wo-

throughout the year.

men’s pre-registration and orienta-

Last Monday, May 8, Mr. William
Gutherie, English teacher, conduct-

tion’

conference

campus,

May

Park

sophomore

Visits Campus

attend

Sophomores Plan
HP-Deerfield Picnic

6

on
and

the
7.

college

for

class

High

School

is planning

Saturday,

May

a pic-

13,

in the

indoor track at the school for High-

land
Park
and
Deerfield
High
School sophomores, Bill Newmann,
class

president

Known

announces.

as the

picnic

will

booths

sponsored

“trackdown,”

feature

the

entertainment

by

each

session

of the
class.
Class
officers
including Newmann, Susan Fell, vicepresident; Vivian Banish, secretary;
Bob Ruder, treasurer and Margaret
Baldrey,
social chairman,
are in
charge.

Highland
starts May
20.

Park

Clean-Up

Week

15 and runs through May

Are you ready?

i
'

TURNER'S TV-LAB
NEWS
By William

Turner

697 Waukegan Rd.
5-1401 — DEERFIELD

W!

FAST

AND ACCURATE
SERVICE

I don’t think it’s much of an exaggeration to say that most TV programs
are mediocre if not downright poor in
quality.
But, do you ever try changing
the station when a group of people are
watching?
There’s
always
someone who
wants
to see how the lousy thing ends.
The
amount of time wasted like this must
be terrific.
But, how about the times when your
TV set needs service?
We have seen
folks tolerating hazy and distorted TV
pictures just because
they thought
it
would take too long to get it serviced.
No need to do this with an organization like TURNER’S TV LAB around.
We have the most modern equipment
and know-how
to do the service job
quickly.
And often ... at least nine
out of ten times right im your own living room.
Phone WI 5-1401 next time
for guaranteed electronic service.

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oven control. It's yours for $5 down... $6.85

|:

MOTHER'S DAY

MAY 14th

Flowers and vase delivered
anywhere in the U.S.A. or
Canada for just $750 ire

a month.
Flowers Are for Everyone

VISIT:

Depend

North Shore (as Company
"The Friendly People’’
OR YOUR
Page H 26—D

10

GAS

RANGE

DEALER

on

Henry C. Weiland
For the Best in Flowers
Christine
1781
ID

Mager,

Associate

St. Johns

2-0600
Thursday,

Ave.
ID

May

2-0492
11, 1961

�Jaycees Plan
Annual Project,
Chark-0-Chick
The

Deerfield

Junior

Wilmot Music

Students Hold
School Program
Chamber

delivered by members of the Jaycees on Sunday, June 4,
The Deerfield Jaycees are confident
that
this
years
Chark-OChick will be the most successful.
This is the only fund raising project conducted
by the group.
Proceeds from the event will be
used
to support Jaycee
projects

Wilmot School District 110 will
present “Broadway Curtain Time,”
a musical
program
featuring
excerpts
irom three
popular
operettas, on May 11 and 12 at 8 p.m. in
the Wilmot gymnasium.
The program will feature orchestrations, vocals, and choreography
from
‘The
King
and
I,”
“Carousel,” and ‘‘The Music Man,”
under the direction of Mrs. Virginia
Hardacre, Charles Barnett and Miss
Barbara Johnson. There will be a
double cast chosen from members
of the music department, support-

such

ed by the chorus and orchestra.

of Commerce is planning its third
annual
fund
raising
project,
“Chark-O-Chick” which is a delicious chicken dinner with all the

trimmings,

prepared,

as the

visual

boxed

and

education

pro-

gram for schools; Deerfield Family
Day,
town
meetings
on
public
issues, Deerfield children’s Easter
egg hunt, the Deerfield children’s
Christmas
program,
and
many
other new civic and charitable activities which may be undertaken
by the group.
Jaycees will begin ringing bells
on Saturday, May 20, to take or-

ders for the project. The dinners
will be delivered on Sunday, June
4. Telephone orders will be accepted
also.
The
REVIEW
will
earry further information on the
project in the coming weeks.

Deerfield Newcomers
Club Holds Luncheon

Wednesday,

May

17

The Deerfield Newcomers
club
monthly luncheon will be held on
Wednesday, May 17 at the Country Squire in Grays Lake.
This
luncheon
will honor
the
past presidents of the group which

started

in

1949.

The

presidents

have been: 1949—Mrs. E. E. Wood;
1950—Mrs.* James
Oberlin;
1951
—Mrs.
Robert
Hamilton;
1952—
Mrs. Richard Schlesinger;
1953—
Mrs.
Jack
Dowdall;
1954—Mrs.

Virgil

Jenson;

Smith;

1956—Mrs.

row;

1955—Mrs.
James

1957—Mrs.

T.
W.

Robert

D.

Mor-

Steele;

1958 -59—Mrs.
Charles
Walton;
1959-60—Mrs. Joseph Dassing.
After the luncheon the honored
guests will be welcomed and in-

troduced

by Mrs,

president.
follow.
Anyone

Bridge

may

Mrs.

call

5-2845.

Joseph
and

desiring

All

M.

Cadieux,

canasta

will

transportation

C.

Milner,

reservations

WI

must

be

in by May 13 to Mrs. John Hanrahan, 1125 Oxford Rd., WI 5-3918.

Dr.

Gerry

Tuveson

Dr. Gerry R. Tuveson, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Harry N. Tuveson of Warrington Rd., recently sailed on the
SS Gripsholm for a two months
tour of Europe.
Dr. Tuveson is a recent graduate
of the University of Illinois college of medicine.
He will begin
his internship on July 1 at Presbyterian St. Lukes hospital in Chi-

cago.

The cast and music department
have had the assistance of a parents group known as the Music Appreciation Parents
Association
of
Wilmot (MAPAW), who have constructed and painted the scenery
and props, and in addition have
helped
with
the costuming,
pro-

experienced

and

the

amateur

an

evening of enjoyment.
Mrs. Jennie Baxter, league treasurer, looks forward to a successful
evening. Mrs. Baxter, longtime resident of Deerfield, has been prominent
in
the
local
Ivy
Cancer
League.
The purpose of the affair is to
raise funds in support of Dr. Andrew C. Ivy, leading proponent of
Krebiozen as a useful drug in the
control
of cancer,
in his cancer
research.
Information on tickets may be
secured from Mr. Berger Larson,
WI 5-1129.

High

club,

Achievement Award

28 at Maplewood

on

Nov.

6, 1891.

Mrs. Anderson was buried in
Memory Gardens cemetery in Arlington Heights following services
at

the

Zion

Lutheran

Deerfield,

May

Rev.

V.

Paul

5

at

church

2

Berggren,

p.m.

in

The

pastor

at

Zion, officiated at the services.
Survivors include her husband,
Peter

J.

Anderson;

a

daughter,

Mary Frances Anderson, Deerfield;
a son, Howard
R.
Marquette
Heights;

W.

Anderson,
of
a son, John

Anderson, Wheeling.
In addition, Mrs. Anderson

is

survived
by a
sister,
Edith
M.
Brown of Santa Barbara, Cal.; two
sisters and one brother in Ireland
and one brother in London, England. Four grandchildren also survive.

school.
not
but
for

ter is to be framed

and

will hang

in the library at Maplewood
Give

school.

Skits

Den

3 boys enacted

fly to the moon

an attempt to

in a balloon

sup-

ported basket from Cape Canaveral
in the year
1885. Bruce
Homer,
Fred Homer, Larry Rogers, Peter
Guthrie, Richard Mason, Ray Mentzer, Bill Weeks and Bob Thompson
joined in this skit.
Steven Schneeweis, David Selvig
and Raymond Bauss were awarded
the Wolf badge. The Wolf Gold Ar*lrow was awarded to Craig Root,
Danny Newhart, Ray Mentzer, and
Mark
Sutherland,
and
the
Wolf
Silver Arrow
to Danny
Newhart
and Chris Kemper.

awarded

to

Richard

Mason,

John Dwyer received two Bear Sil-

the

members

are:

Mrs.

C.

Robert

Isely, Deerfield; Mrs.

Thursday,

May

11, 1961

Percy Wilson,

King, Northbrook.

Bannockburn;

assessment project on
Ave., between Oakley
Sts., was unaminously

The Wilmot sidewalks will be put
in by special assessment, following
unaminous approval of the project

by the

The cubs and their parents were
entertained with skits by two dens.
Air Adventure being the theme for
the month, Den 5 presented a space
play entitled ‘Destination Moon.”
Boys in the play were Scott Jacobs,
Bill Harris, Mark Wright, Danny
Hanson,
David
Klemp,
Larry
Chunn,
Paul
Sack
and
Eugene
Thrasher.

ver Arrows. The Lion Badge
awarded
to Tom
Felt
and
Weeks.
Phil Brown
received
one year service star.

left,

A special
Summerset
and Forest

that cost of the project, requested
by the area residents, will not exceed $20,472.

Paul Staton, Bill Harris, Paul Sack
and Herb Gould. Donald LeBrun
received a Bear Silver Arrow and

From

Deerfield trustees, operating as a
board for the first time since being
elected April 18, passed three special
assessment
projects
last
Wednesday evening, May 3.

Donald LeBrun, vice president of
the Maplewood
PTA—the
Pack’s
sponsoring organization. The char-

was

Mrs. John T, Benedict, Lake Forest; and Mrs. Naida

the

approved. Village engineer Robert
Bowen said that the estimate shows

Phil Brown, Richard Mason, and
Paul
Staton
were
awarded
the
Bear badge. The Bear Gold Arrow

Preparing for the Chicago Child Care benefit on June 2 at McCormick place are North
Shore members of the society. The society is sponsoring an appearance of the Kingston Trio.

for

commissioner and accepted by Mrs.

field for 38 years, died at her home
May 3. She was born in North
Ireland

Grammar

The cubs were presented with
only the coming year’s charter
also an Achievement pennant
the Pack.

The presentation was made by
Dick Becker,
neighborhood
scout

- Emily F. Anderson

decorating

Trustees Approve
Three Assessments
At Adjourned Meet

Pack 250 Receives

Cub Pack 250 held its monthly
pack meeting on Friday night, April

Emily F. Anderson, 1152 Chestnut Ave., who had lived in Deer-

busily

juke box for the club.

At Monthly Meeting

OBITUARY

The Ivy-Hoe Down, sponsored by
the Deerfield Ivy Cancer league,
will be held on Sat., May 13, at 8:30
p.m. in Jewett fieldhouse.
In an atmosphere
of “the old
barn,” the local group hopes to attract the local square-dance groups
for an evening of fun and frolic.
Ruppert
Hampton,
one
of the
North Shore’s most popular callers,
will be on hand to give both the

the

Tickets may be purchased from
members of the chorus and orchestra or at the door.

music
department
for equipment
for the orchestra, band or vocal department.

For Saturday At
Jewett Fieldhouse

of

grams, and ticket sale.

Proceeds of the tickets for this
performance will be used by the

Ivy Hoe-Down Set

Members

annual married couples dance are, from left: Dennis Wood,
Mike Noll and Bill Ray. The dance will be held tomorrow
night. Proceeds from the dance will be used to purchase a

was
Bill
his

Denner badges went to Donald
Olson, Glenn Goodfriend, Fred Homer, Don Naab, Danny Hanson and
Steven
Somers.
Assistant Denner
badges went to Bill Mielenz, Tom
Felt, Bruce Homer, Danny Robinson, David Klemp and David Selvig.
Two
new boys, Bob
Thompson
xnd Glenn Gooderlend, were welcomed into the Pack as Bobcats.
The morning following the Pack
meeting,
in celebration
of Arbor
Day, boys from Pack 250 joined
their Cubmaster, Ben Block, in the
planting of three trees at the Milwaukee Railroad Station.
All the boys are looking forward

will

board.

not

Cost

exceed

of this project

$61,172.87,

accord-

ing to Bowen’s estimate.
Passed as an emergency measure
was
a special assessment
in the
Rosewood, Birchwood area.
The
trustees said that while they were
approving only water and sewer in
the emergency special assessment,
they
did not condone
doing the
work piecemeal.

Usually

when

a

special

assess-

ment is passed, roads, storm sewer,
curb and gutter and sidewalk are
included,
but
because
it was
a

health problem, the sewer and water would be done separately.
The cost of the project was

mated

not

to

exceed

cording
to the
Norris Stilphen.

The

residents

esti-

$23,000,

ac-

village

manager,

in

area

the

had

asked for only sanitary sewer, but
the village included the water in

the area at an approximate
$8,000.

cost of

Judge George Heard
Ramsay's Sign Case
It was
Judge
Michael
George
who head the sign ordinance violation case which was reversed in
the circuit court
and not Judge
Walter Page as was reported'in a
recent REVIEW.
The case was one in which the
village brought Robert S. Ramsay
into court for displaying
a sign
that did not comply with the village
ordinance.
The circuit court ruled in favor

of Ramsay

in an

appeal

which

he

filed.

to the next Pack meeting on
2 when,
in honor
of the
theme for the month, Indian
try, the whole
group
will:
dressed in Indian costume.
There will be a contest to

the

best

and

most

creatively

June
Cub’s
Councome
judge

cos-

tumed Den. The rules are that no
money may be spent on the Indian
outfits so many attics will be raided during the coming weeks.
Page

H 3—D

11

�PTA Of DGS Hears
School Board's
Progress Report

Director Of Music
At Deerfield High
Workshop Group

Miss
Mr.

Sonja

and

Mrs.

Marie
Lloyd

Berg
Berg

of Half

Day, formerly of Rhinelander, Wis.,
announce the engagement of. their
Daughter, Sonja Marie, to Donald
A. Numerowski, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Alex Numerowski of Munde-

lein.
_ Both Miss Berg and Mr. Numer_Owski are graduates of Ela-Vernon
Township
High
School
in Lake
Zurich.
No date has been set for their
| wedding.

‘Hold Second Annual
Mother-Daughter Affair
The second annual
MotherDaughter banquet was held May 5
by the North Shore Evangelical
Free church.
Fathers served as waiters for the
affair.
Highlighting

presentation
-“Pilgrim’s

the

of

evening

John

Progress”

by Miss Margaret
North Park college.

Name

was

a

Bunyan’s
with

puppets

Peterson

of

Residents

Purchasing Crab
Trees In Deerfield

council,

who

designed

and

lettered

the 84 tags.
Mrs.
Hagen paid particular trib/ute to the boys who worked so ef-

ficiently to see that the trees were
delivered

at

the

depot

last

Satur-

}day. Those who helped were: Allan Winfield, Tom King, Bob Healy,

Charles Fahrenholz, and Tom Roth.
_ Those who have purchased crab
apple trees through the coupon
printed in the REVIEW include:
- Michael Abt, Willard B. Allen,
James F. Ashenden, Jr., Robert F.
Basche,
Mrs. Andrew
G. Bradt,
James L. Breed, John H. Brenchley, Dick Brewer, Mrs. G. H. Carl-

‘son, Mrs. Frederick L. Chezem

and

| Mrs. John W. Cooper.
Also

Mrs.

R. C. David,

Olof

Dahl-

skog, Mrs. Jan deJong, Sheridan
L. Demain, Zeva M. Deutch, Ray‘mond Funk, Lee N. Hames. Mrs.
‘Fred

Harris,

Joseph

A.

Hogan,

'George A. Jacobs, Rolf H. Jensen,
Paul J. Keller, Jr., Tom King, Mrs.
‘R. K. Kinney, and William Kloppelt.
|

Also Mrs. Melvin Koral, Mrs. F.
W. LaPorto, Mrs. Donald A. Larson,
-R. M. Larson, Russell K. Linton,

Mrs. W. J. Mauer, Donald W. McCabe, Wallace C. McConaghey, Jr.,
George N. Mullman, John McGhie,
Keith Nockoley, Day Perry, Russell A, Perry and Mrs. C. E. Piper.
_ Also, Mrs. Edward Raley, Walter
§.

Roth,

Philip

F.

Ruth,

A.

E.

Sav-

age,
Mrs.
Jerry
Skillman, Donald

Sayre,
Donald
H. Slack, Mrs.

Anne

Robert

Strueland,

Varick,

Virginia K. Wahl, Lewis B. Walton,
Mrs. Robert Winfield, and Dr. Arthur A. Wykes.

_ Page H 4—D

12

The
district
109
school
board
consisting
of
Paul
Greenfield,
chairman,
Mrs.
Robert
Moseley,
William Nelson, Marvin Schaid, Dr.
Albert Dawe, T. A. Granfield, and
Joseph Peyronnin will give a graphic presentation of the overall picture of the community’s schools.
Complementing the progress report will be the showing of colored
slides taken of pupils in their various activities around the school.
The first item of new business at
this meeting will be the installation
of officers for the coming
year.
They are: Mrs. Edward
Gourley,
president; Mrs. Roland Rentscher,
vice-president; Miss Nancy Keefer,
secretary; and Mrs. Frank Jacober,
treasurer.

Mrs. Gourley and Mrs. Rentscher
have already anticipated their responsibilities
by
attending
the
state convention of Parents Teacher Associations in Springfield. They
will report briefly on the workshops

Thumbs
Green
Deerfield
The
garden club was awarded a blue
ribbon garden club by both the national council of state garden clubs
and the garden club of Illinois.
The monthly meeting of the local group was held at the home of
Mrs. Edward Higgins, 636 Hermitage Dr. Guest speaker was Mrs.

James

Sayre,

a

member

of

they attended.

The

the

Five Deerfield High School students, three sophomores and two
freshmen, were rated last week as
“Excellent” Latin students in the
Lake Shore district, according to
the report of the Illinois Classical
conference.
Barbara Zimmer, Charles Kafa-

dar,

Mothers
Mothers

and

Ray

Sharp,

sophomores

enrolled
in a second
year Latin
course, and Lynn Gordon and Diane Swartz, freshmen
Latin students, were given the second highest award based upon tests administered by the Lake Shore district
of the conference last March 25.
“We were extremely proud that
five of our six entrees received this
award,” said Miss Adele Fredrickson, chairman of the language department of Deerfield High School.
“We expect that, as our fall school
program
develops,
many
future
students will receive both superior
and excellent awards.”

Lunch

Bannockburn

Camp instructors who will aid in leadership at Camp
Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan, where the North Shore area council, Boy
Scouts of America, conducts its summer camping program
during the eight week summer camping period for 1,500
boys

club

will hold its annual luncheon
Wednesday, May
17, at 1 p.m. at
the home
of Mrs.
John
Larned,
2640 Telegraph Rd.
Popular dramatic reviewer Mrs.
Gladys Applegate of Evanston will
entertain the members of the club.
A short business meeting will be
held
to elect a president
and
a
treasurer,

this year,

are,

from

left:

Larry

Smith,

Scott

McCulloch

and Jim Smith. Approximately 80 boys from Deerfield will
go to camp. Larry Smith is director of west camp, Jim Smith
is director of east camp and Scott McCulloch is camp commissioner.

They

will

work

directly

under

Charles

Hribble,

who

heads the staff of 68 persons for the camp.

BIRTHS

Women’s Republican
Planning Board

Meets Wednesday
The

Five Deerfield Students
Win Latin Awards Here

Community Conservation council of
Deerfield.
Mrs. Sayre talked on community
conservation.
Color slides of wild flowers were
shown and a commentary was presented by Mrs. Robert Billeten, 760
Thornmeadow Rd. to the girl scouts
at Bannockburn school.
Mrs. Fred Wilson, 1254 Meadow
Ln., is president of the group.

Slate Spring

enrollment

That
question
and
others concerning this year’s progress as well
as future plans will be answered
for the Deerfield Grammar School
Parent-Teacher association’s meeting at 8 p.m. on May
18 in the
school gymnasium.

Deerfield Green
Thumbs Club Gets
Blue Ribbon Here

Bannockburn

Those plastic streamers flying
from crab apple trees in the village
are the trees purchased on Arbor
Day, according to Mrs, A. W. Hagen
of the Community
Conservation

What is the projected
for District 109?

Chester Kyle, director of music
at Deerfield High school, has been
named a member of a committee
for a pilot workshop series to upgrade public school music in Lake
county.
Heading up the workshop will be
Arnold
R. Thomas,
head
of the
music department at Lake Forest
college.
The first session of the workshop
will be held Sept. 9 on the college
campus. The group is sponsored by
the Lake County superintendent of
schools and colleges.
Lake county is the first in the
state to institute such a series of
workshops. The goal of the workshop is to improve vocal and instrumental music in Lake county.
From 600 to 1,000 teachers are expected to be in attendance at the
workshop.

board

of

directors

of

the

West
Deerfield
Township
Women’s Republican club will have a
planning board meeting on Wednesday, May 17 at 8 p.m. at the home
of Mrs. Nevin L. Fidler, 1215 Kenton Rd. Mrs. Elmer F. Anderson,
president, will report on the Annual Meeting of the Women’s Republican club of the 13th Congressional district which she will attend on May 16.
The meeting will be held in the
Devonshire
Community
Center,
Skokie, with James Worthy as principal speaker.
Mrs. Herbert E. Tucker, legislation chairman, will submit plans for
the new Round Table Series which
will begin in September.
Mrs. Anderson
emphasizes
that
all board meetings are open to the
general membership
and any interested members are invited to attend this meeting. Those planning
to attend are asked to call Mrs. Anderson at WI 5-3521 or Mrs. Fidler
at WI 5-2511.

4

SUZAN
ELIZABETH
MASON,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Verne
Mason, 1511 Oakwood PIl., was born
April 20 at Evanston hospital. The
other child in the family is Scott,
4. Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Mason, of
Chicago,
are the paternal grandparents.
The
maternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Elmhurst.
WILLIAM
STANLEY
POREMBA, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
J. Poremba, 942 Brookside Ln., was
born April 20 at Lake Forest hospital. Other children in the family
are Charles, 3, and Susan, 2. Mr.
and Mrs. Edward A. Laing, Deerfield, are the maternal grandparents, and the paternal grandmother
is Mrs. Stanley Poremba, Calumet
City.
MARY
ELIZABETH
JAEGER,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
J. Jaeger, 140 Birchwood, was born
May 1 at Highland Park hospital.
Other children in the family are:
Catherine, 4; James, 3; Joseph, 2;
and Virginia, 1. Mr. and Mrs. Peter
Jaeger,
Skokie,
are the paternal
grandparents and Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Schneider, Wilmette, are the
maternal grandparents.

Movies Of Fair
To Be Shown At
Walden PTA Meet
Movies of the Walden
International fun fair will be featured at
the
final
Walden
School
P.T.A.
meeting on Tuesday, May 16, at 8
p.m.
The
movies
were
taken
by}
Donald Dickens, and show the preparation and decorating in progress|
the evening before the fair, as well
as shots of the crowd enjoying the
many activities on the day of the
fair.
A member of the school board

will discuss plans for the new

Alan

B. Shepard Junior High school, and
give
a general
report
of school
board activities. The P.T.A. board
reports of accomplishments during |
the year will also be outlined.
William Haines will turn over the
president’s
gavel
to
next
year’s

P.T.A.

president,

Mrs.

Guy

Wood. |

Donald
Martin,
vice
president: |
Mrs. Robert
Baer, secretary;
anc |
David Fish, treasurer; will be in
stalled as next vear’s officers.
The
out-going
board
members |
are planning
a luncheon
for the |
teachers and administrators at Wal- |
den on Wednesday, May 24, to be |

held at the noon lunch hour in the |
gym.

|

‘=

3

Spanish Moss, imported from Florida, ona cheesecloth backdrop set the stage for the
Deerfield-Melodeer chapter of Sweet Adelines, Inc., as the group presented its first barbershop
harmony show in the auditorium of Highland Park High school. Pictured above is the local

group which sa g in the show.

The show was directed by Mrs. Lee Thorsen of Rockford.
Thursday,

May

11, 1961

�North

When
Center

Mrs. Joachim Ackerman opened

benefit tea,

prepared
Herbert

Bargain

guests

saw

Seymour,

270

Oxford

Bazaar

Planned For May
The coming Bargain Bazaar being planned by Congregation Beth
Or at the Deerfield American Legion hall for the weekend of May
27-28 has gathered momentum with
the addition of eight new members
5s

3

as an advisory

se

On tropical vacation are Mr. and Mrs. Alfred J. Capelli,
50

Cumberland

Isle hotel,

Dr.,

situated

who

are

on Jamaica’s

pictured

above

romantic

at

north

the

Tower

shore

where

they were guests. Capelli is regional sales manager with the
New Hampshire Ball Bearings, Inc. This was their first trip to

Hold Annual

Albert L. Bruer, 1248 Hackberry
Rd., has been
appointed
general
sales manager of the Machine Tool
division of Onsrud Machine Works.

will hold their annual dinner in
honor of the Gamma Phi’s graduating from Lake Forest college this
June.

Bruer, who has had more than
20 years experience in the specialized field of production metalworking, will be responsible for marketing and sales direction.

The dinner will be held on the
campus in Lois Durand Hall at 5:45
p.m. Chairman
for the dinner is

On
County

Mrs.

Wednesday,
Gamma

Richard

Dinner
May

Phi

17,

Beta

Jauch

of

Lake

Alumnae

Liberty-

ville.

and

her

all-new merchandise will be sold at
prices.

are Jerome

Bruer Appointed
Sales Manager

to aid chair-

Slavin,

The
advisory
group will share
responsibility by seeing that the

Members

the island.

group

man, Mrs. Edwin
four ‘‘captains.”

bargain

of

the

advisory

Cole, Morton

group

Jacobson,

David Kaplan, Leon Kessler, Lawrence Scheer, Morton Siegel, Milton Silverstein, and Edwin Slavin.
Benefits from the Bargain Bazaar Will be used to support education in the religious school.

Bonnie Jean Becker

Tapped For Group
Miss Bonnie Jean Becker, daughter of the Eugene C. Beckers, 2715
Daiquiri
Dr., was
among
the 25

outstanding

junior women

at Indi-

ana university recently tapped for
membership
by Mortar
board,
a
national activities honorary.
The
new
Mortar
boards
were
chosen on the basis of scholarship,
leadership, and personality.
Miss
Becker,
a member of Kappa Delta
social sorority, has served as an
executive officer
of the junior
class, Treasurer of association of
women students, a student leader
for orientation week, and has been
named to the I. U. Foundation.
Bonnie,
a German
major with
an A minus grade average, has also
received
a Ford
Foundation
fellowship to further her plans for
entering the college teaching profession.

Celebrate Golden

Anniversary

An orange and white banner joined the American flag
floating over the Kleinschmidt division of Smith-Corona Marchant,

Inc., located on Lake-Cook

Rd., Deerfield. The

is the U.S. army signal corps quality flag which was
awarded to Kleinschmidt.
Thursday,

May

11,

1961

new

flag

recently

Mr.
Ridge
golden
house
Mass
church

this

for delivery of babies

Here

and Mrs. E. M. Zahnle, 1388
Rd., will
celebrate
their
anniversary with an open
at their home
on May 20.
will be said at Holy Cross
at 11 a.m.

Mr. Zahnle was born in Deerfield
and he and his wife have lived
‘their 50 married years in Deerfield.

model

of

a home

used

to

Mrs.

Photo by Percy

Prior

a Chicago Maternity

demonstrate

by the Center’s home care service.

Dr., and

Shore Group

her home at 15 Oxford Dr. for

how

the

home

is

Shown, from left, are Mrs.

Ackerman.

25 Girls Named
Honor Members
To Honor Dorm
Making Quotas
At May 17 Brunch For Coming Year
Members
of Congregation Beth
Or Sisterhood who have filled their
earning fund quota will be honored
at a Flower Pot Reward Brunch 1
p.m., Wednesday,
May
17, at the

home

of Myrle

Silverstein.

Three

Ways and means vice president
Judy
Schweitzer
announced
that

the

brunch

bridge

Faye

will

and

mah

Parker

be

followed

jong.

and

by

Chairman

Social

Fund

Raising
Committee
members
Charlotte Sarley, Lila Weiner, and
Vicki Weisenberg are helping with
the arrangements.

Presbyterian Men
Hold Flower Sale
Saturday,
May
13,
the
men’s
council of the First Presbyterian
church
of Deerfield will eonduct
its
annual
flower
sale
on _ the
church lawn at 840. Waukegan Rd.

The

sale has been

conducted for

a number of years and the stock
is of the highest quality, according
to John Bundock, president of the
men’s council.
Dr. Jack Holbrook is chairman
of the sale.

May

13 at the Lyons

school,

will hold its annual Scout-O-Rama
display.
At this time scouting skills and
crafts will be exhibited and demonstrated. The
displays will be on
view from 11 am. to 6 p.m. and
special skills will be demonstrated

4:30

p.m.

Refresh-

ments
will
be
available
on
the
grounds.
Tickets are 50 cents for adults
and children under 12 will be admitted free.

The couple was married
1911.

May

Mr.

were

and

Mrs.

R.

I.

Cassady,

624

Hermitage Dr.
Kay Stumpf, an English major,
is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Leo P. Stumpf, 604 Westgate.
Judith Roberts,
a psychology
major, is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Hollace B. Roberts, 607 Woodvale Ave.

Two Win Radios in
National Contest
George

H, Allen,

636 Ambleside

Drive,
and
Victoria
Johangren,
1350
Somerset
Ave.
were
listed
today as two of the winners in a

Rexall

Drug

contest.

The

company
prizes

national

were

Westing-

house seven-transistor portable radios. Some $64,000 worth of prizes.
were
awarded
throughout
the
country.

multiple

brook, Deerfield and Bannockburn,

3 and

Deerfield

Pharmacy,

local

sponsor, .

is proud of the fact they were the
only store in the nation to have

Lake and Waukegan Rds. in Glenview,
the Skokie
Valley
district,
Boy Scouts of America, which is
comprised
of
Glenview,
North-

between

girls from

among the 25 chosen.
They are:
Salty Cassady who is
spending her junior year studying
in India.
She is the daughter of

Ford

Boy Scout Councik
Plans Scout Display
May 13 In Glenview
On

A total of 25 junior class girls
were
recently
chosen
to live in
Bradley hall, senior honor dormitory for women, next year at Lake
Forest college.

16,

winners.

Elected Member
Board Of Directors
Richard C. McLean of Deerfield
General Manager and Director of
Palmer Method Hanwriting Textbook Publishing Co., Chicago and
New York, was elected for a 3 year
term as a member of the Board of
Directors of the Associated Exhibitors, National Education Association.

McLean’s
the

annual

election
meeting

ican Association
istrators
held
Principal

took
of

place

the

at

Amer-

of school admin-.
in
Philadelphia.

function

of

the

Associ-

ated
Exhibitors
Board
involves.
plans for various exhibits including the ASSA, referred to as the
biggest showcase of educational
products in the country,
Page

H

5—D

13

�ORE

D.

Funeral

Harris,
4
&lt;a
Sa.

AAS

held

Harris

services

711

Old

for

Trail

te zi

JaSie
astaigre

of Highland

Park,

died

Edwin

Rd.,

D.

were

April

29.

eee
=

reg”

He leaves his widow, Marie Inez,
and one daughter, Marie Inez. He
also leaves two sisters, Mrs. L. A.
Murff of Texas, and Mrs. Charles
of Louisiana.
Mayor's

Civic

Beautification

Science

May

10

services

from

the

were

chapel

at

1913 Sheridan Rd. for John “Jack”
Davis, 65, of 2229 St. Johns Ave.,
who died at his home May 8. Interment was in Libertyville cemetery.
Mr. Davis, a resident of Highland Park for more than 35 years,
had been a partner in the Davis
and Maurine electrical firm, Sheridan Rd., until his retirement four
years ago.
A prominent Boy Scout executive in North Shore Area Council,
he was
former
chairman
of the
camp committee for Camp Ma-KaJa-Wan and held the Silver Beaver
award,
highest
award
for
councilors.
He
was
for
many
years
Scoutmaster of Troop 33, Lincoln
school.
He also had been a member of the Highland Park American
Legion post for more than 30 years.
Born
June
25,
1895
in
Park
Ridge,
he
spent
his boyhood
in
Rehoboth,
Mass.,
and
came _ to
Highland Park from Libertyville.

He was traffic manager for the
Western Union Telegraph company
for 45 years.

Roy

Davis

Christian

held May
2 from the chapel
at
1913 Sheridan Rd. with the Rev.
Darrell D. Sample, pastor of Bethany
Methodist
and
Evangelical
United Brethren
church,
officiating.
Interment
was
in
Cyprus
Grove cemetery, New Orleans, La.
Mr. Harris,
a 23-year resident

Os

as RS

ee

Edwin

ia

A

John

Obituaries

and

Clean-Up Committee sets May 15-20
for second annual Clean-Up Week.

He leaves one sister, Mrs. Marian
Wray, and a nephew, Robert Wray,
of Rehoboth, Mass.

Crash at Vine
A negligent driving ticket was
issued to Andrew Erickson, 17, of
1000 Portwine Rd., Deerfield, after
a collision Monday morning.
Highland Park police say Erickson turned left from Vine Ave. to

The Fell Company

go north
the

Meyer
cago.

seeking better health?
Hear Wilson M. Riley,*
C.S.B., of Kansas City, Missouri, speak on “Christian
Science: God’s Ever-present
Kingdom Revealed.” Free
Public Lecture. Monday,
May 15, at 8 p.m. First
Church of Christ, Scientist,
Highland Park, 493 Hazel
Avenue.

— has the most variety
’

in new sport jackets —

'

Ene ania
oS peas

.
a’
eeta
‘

‘

Bie

;
‘ ,

for young men ,
m2

name

your

dish,

men!

We're

cooking

with

all

the ingredients .... wool, cotton and cool modern

|

blends.

See you tomorrow!

1

Climbers

Eve.

ADMIRAL,

Page

H 6—D.14,

al 2 eae

&amp; Clavey Rd.
ID

TV

2-4664

TV SALE

SALE

BUB
any

and

WHILE:

FREEMAN’S

JANE!

19’

Admiral

THEY

TV,

DOES

portable,

LAST

Pitt

ACT

FAST!!!

a

IT AGAIN.
FREE

BOAT

A REAL
for

two

eG $159.95
oo $164.88

19” Portable TV Prices are LOW-LOW-LOW

7-9

FELL COMPANY
oo

Grandiflora

FREE BOAT
HIT!
With
people. . :

| 595 Central Ave.

Floribunda

19

Highway

TV SALE

YES-SIREE

Thesdiy

Chi-

ROSES

Park

\

Open

Ave.,

COMPLETE LANDSCAPING AND
YARD MAINTENANCE SERVICE

___ SLACKS TO BLEND . . . FROM $8.95
till, 9 — Monday

POTTED

From

Hybrid Tea

Skokie

|

Merrill

Highland Park

Lightweight

pe PeQuinr 1.19.95.
7 NOW ssiias.
boat free plus 1599 S &amp; H Stamps

ADMIRAL STYLEMASTER
vegular:$179.95 = 3 new...

boat free plus 1648 S &amp; H Stamps

FREEMAN’S
648 N.. Western, Lake Forest

TV &amp; MUSIC

in

Fred

The
Sci-

EVERBLOOMING

Highland

:

6737

collided
with

CLAVEY’S TREELAND

ee

4

|

of

lane

Ss

*Member
of the Board of Lectureship of
Mother Church, The First Church of Christ,
entist, Boston, Massachusetts.

Checks and plaids ..: . solids and stripes... batik
and madras .. . dark or light . . . bold and bright
...

on St. Johns;

southbound

CE 4.0519.

Thursday,
May 11, 196

�Hold Registration
For Summer
In District
Registration

School

to be

| On Our Cover.

School

for

thee

held

School

Dis-

trict No. 111 will be held on Monday, May 15, at all three schools in
the District.
Registrations will be

accepted for Summer School

and founder

and

ence

instructor

is

Shore

Group

Photo

by Milton

install

new

officers.

Shown,

from

left,

are

Mrs.

Park

in the month

Harold

_

4

Genevieve

cellist;
anist.

and

Andrew

Hughel

Warren

Lewis,

Clemmons,

pi-

Following the recital, the faculty
will be guests of the Center’s board
of trustees for a supper party at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Colburn, 1107 Sunset Rd., Winnetka.

CITY

CITY

OF

HIGHLAND
PARK, ILLINOIS
NOTICE
TO BIDDERS

Public notice is hereby
given that the
City Council of the City of Highland Park,
County of Lake, State of Illinois will receive
bids for liquid
asphalt
sealcoating
and bituminous
concrete surfacing of existing bituminous and concrete surfaces on
various streets and areas in Highland Park.
Said bids will be received until 12:.00
Noon, C.D.S.T., May 29, 1961, in the Council Chamber,
City
Hall,
Highland
Park,
Tilinois at which time and place bids will be
publicly opened and read.
Specifications
and
proposal
forms
will
be furnished at the office of the City Clerk
in the City Hall of said City.
The City reserves the right to reject any
and all bids, or increase,, decrease, or omit
any

BY

item

or

items.

ORDER

OF

THE

nar

COUNCIL:
W. Snyder
Rity
Manager
5/11-18/61—126

YOUR

HIGHLAND
PARK, ILLINOIS
NOTICE
TO BIDDERS

Public notice is hereby
given that the
City Council of the City of Highland Park,
County of Lake, State of Illinois will receive bids for the installation of a new
electrical service to’ the City Hall and miscellaneous electrical installations within the
City Hall.
Said bids will be received
until
12:00
Noon, C.D.S.T. May 29, 1961, in the Council Chamber,
City
Hall,
Highland
Park,
I!linois, at which time and place bids will
be publicly opened and read.
Specifications and proposal forms will be
furnished at the office of the City Clerk,
City Hall of said City.
The City reserves the right to reject any
and all bids, or increase, decrease, or omit
any item or items.
BY ORDER OF THE CITY COUNCIL:
R. W. Snyder
City
Manager
§/11-18/61—125

AVE.

PARK

eS

In

Thursday,

Open 8:00 A.M. ~ 5:30 P.M.
Fridays ‘til 8:30
Paints
e
Best in Colors
@
Best in
May

11, 1961

the

FINE HORSE SALE

VE

Saddlebred

and

Jumpers

Sat.,

May

13th

Two

rings, two top auctioneers,

all horses approved
North of Libertyville

West

of Milwaukee Ave.

Mid-America

Horse

Sale

Co.

Route 21, Libertyville
Call

7-0638

|

Libertyville—-EM 2-0570

School.

Mssrs.

and

by

Choir

Have

Boy”

the Orchestra,

tomorrow
*
x

you

yet?

given

your

DON
and

“Buck for a

INMAN,

their

Band

nite.
et

JOSEPH

of the Youth

fellow

Baseball

workers

Commission

support for their Little
plans for Highland Park.
*
x
*

League

Worth
Repeating:
“A
man’s
reputation is a blend of what his
friends, enemies and acquaintances
say behind his back.”
*
*
*
This

really

sounds

interesting—

The Antiques Fair sponsored by
the Ravinia PTA today, Friday and

Saturday starting at noon each day.
too.
5

*

You Asked For It! After almost
2 years of Thursday nite openings,
Leeds
Jewelers
will join their
neighbors on Central between St.
Johns and Sheridan by going back
to Friday nite openings this week'
During the seasonal Mothers Day;
Confirmation and Graduation rush
we will also be open on bettie
nites for a few weeks.
*
*
*

roots and all

*

‘| i

mandy
(:

te aT.

NEW

eh

LAWN WEEDER
and FEEDER

BROAD-LEAFED LAWN

(NONGRASSY) WEED

degree

Masons

ducted

into the Shrine

week

and

in-

on Friday

printed

appetite.

. . Two

eee
Vi

$5.65
|
ae
Sharpening &amp; Repair.

0
in

THE iMaGAzINe OF PLEASANT Paces

(South of Dundee

Rd.)

CR 2-1840

of her works

ok

‘on every bag

As snivedie

+

on display in Leeds’ Sheridan
window this week.

GUARANTEE

gen bgen wis

*

land
Parker
HILDA
RUBINS’
paintings during the month of May.
And—a small sample to whet your

MONEY-BACK }

and FEEDS

last

Don’t miss the “one-man” showing at the Hotel Sherman of High-

KILLS! EVERY TYPE OF

FERRARO
Garden Spotk
Blvd.

*

Our warmest anniversary greet-.
ings this coming week to ZELMA
“LEE”
and
JOHN
ENJAIAN,
ROSEMARY
and
CLARENCE
DOMBECK
and to ALICE
and
TONY SIMONAITUS.
*
*
*

vi *

5,000 SQ. FT.

Mower

*

*

is

WEEDS

Saturday

nite.

y

LIGHTWEIGHT

weeds used fo grow

on

Our congratulations to DANIEL:
CALDARELLI
and
CHUCK
EL-.
STROM who were raised to 32nd

iies “

Fc

Hop

Show.

GIVES GRASS A QUICK GROWTH PICK-UP, TOO}
WIPES OUT WEEDS

Record

nite at the Recreation
Center,
President BOB KAPLAN also tells
us there will be a Surprise Floor

TOES

USE

Hill.

High

Hey Kids! Don’t miss the Student

cet

DELIVERY

the

program

Union

VitoGRO®

FREE

at

*

(rain. date Sunday)

iA wee
un InA

Lawn

val

FINCH, HABERLAND and QUICK
help bring us this great musical

into evening |

te

.

Festi-

freshments,

Noon

and

KILL
wecea

Northbrook,

Service

100

Chicago—DE

NEW
EASY WAY

le

Music

Priced $200 to $5000

5-0978

YOU

Spring

Starts

Mon., Wed. &amp; Thurs. 5-7 p.m.

Hi

time.

annual

The wares of leading dealers will
be on display from Noon—and re-

706 Glencoe Rd
on Phone

of

VNA,

Come To
First Mid-America.

Language

826 Skokie

ID 2-3553
Best

Sight &amp; Sound

bare spots where the

SHERWIN-WILLIAMS
PAINTS
HIGHLAND

of

urer of the Association.

German and Modern Hebrew.
For Pamphlet, write:

Helps grass fill in the

BUY

482 CENTRAL

and

thousands

president

Ponies

HT

BEST

Deerfield

in her

all the

The

have been going strong in lining up

Welcomes
you to its
small classes
of French,

Speed and driver fatigue
go
hand-in-hand.
When
you
become
tired behind the wheel, stop and
rest, but remember
to pull completely off the highway when you
do come to a stop.

OF

Highwood,

on for 31 years!

better

Deerfield,

Sight &amp; Sound

Sutherland,
oboist;
Mrs.
Frank
(Elizabeth) Fetter, vocalist; George
Banhalmi, pianist; Amy Neill, vio-

linist;

and

Over

Seven artist-members of the faculty and one guest artist, Mrs. H.
Tom
Collins,
Winnetka,
pianist,
will present Spring faculty recital
at the Music Center of the North
Shore, 300 Green Bay Rd., Winnetka Sunday afternoon, May 14,
at 4 o’clock,
according
to Mrs.
Ralph Nash, 576 Clavey Ct., assistant director of the Center.

be

literally

Quarter-Morgan-Appaloosas

Recital Is Sunday

will

has

Mrs. Wayne
Thomas,
representative of the Highwood Community
Fund, and Harry Pearson, treas-

of March.

Faculty’s Spring

part

transportation

who

going

getting

PATTEN

Studio

Taking

new

It’s been
And

miles annual travel: Shown
with
her
are
Mrs.
Robert
O.
Clark,

Language

corresponding secretary; Mrs. Max
Rittenberg,
Winnetka,
recording
secretary; and Mrs. Arthur Resnick,
Glencoe, treasurer.
Mrs. Harvey Lederman, outgoing
president, was installed junior past
president. Mrs. Harold Unger was
installing officer.

of

Kellner

Bannockburn,

available.

models.

Haskell, Glencoe. Mrs. Allen Adelman was installed financial secretary; Mrs. Milton Cohen, Wilmette,

Mrs.

driven the wheels off the former
vehicle she used to cover Highland

Lake county residents purchased
a total of $740,549, in Series E
and H United States Savings Bonds

Pollak of Glencoe, who staged the show; Mrs. Leon Gray,
chairman; Mrs. Albert Friedmann, Mrs. Stanley Warsaw and
Mrs. Robert Babbin, three of the Highland Park memberMrs. Gordon Terry of Green Bay
Rd. was installed president of the
North
Shore
section,
National
Council of Jewish Women, in the
season-end luncheon, fashion show
and installation. Maggie Daly was
the show’s commentator.
Vice-presidents
taking
office
were Mrs. Stephen Barr, Mrs. Sanford Levy, Mrs. Irving Gerson, all
of Highland Park; and Mrs. Daniel

FlorNurse

Merner

It was a gay afternoon Wednesday, May 3, when women of the North Shore section, National Council of Jewish
Women, gathered at Le Pavillon in Northbrook to see “Fashions Around the World” modeled by their own members and
to

own

Kellner, shdéuld’ be shown

acquisition
for

28.
North

our

Visiting

on our cover. this week,
and _ it
is a particularly eventful week for
the Association, since it marks the

grammar.

Classes will be held in the school
from which most pupils register.
Summer School will begin Monday,
June 19, and end on Friday, July

that

Nightingale,.

Evelyn

Classes will be formed in each
subject for which ten or more pupils register, and for which a com-

petent

of the Visiting, Nurse

It is fitting

pupils

Results of a recent questionnaire.
showed sufficient interest to invite
registrations in reading improvement, arithmetic, personal typing
on the pupil’s own typewriter, science for fun, dramatics, and eng-

composition

with pat, leeds

Association.

at the schools where they regularly
attend throughout the year.

lish

“TIME ©

ence Nightingale, pioneer in lHospital
management
and
nursing
education, a veteran of the Crim
ean war, founder of the Red Cross

Summer

by

“KEEPING

Tomorrow, May 12 ig the 141st
anniversary of the birth of. Flor-

111

FRIDAY
LEEDS. . .
Day. $37.50
lace at only
teen jewel
Beautiful

*

are
Road

*

NITE SPECIALS AT
In Time for Mothers
cultured Pearl Neck$19.75.—$35.00 sevenwatches at $22.50,—

crystal

necklaces

at

a

low $7.95,—And for the youngsters’
low budget all jewelry on the $1.00
table only 79c. Many other values |
to help get you back into the Friday nite shopping habit! !

LEEDS JEWELERS
491 Central Ave., Hightand Park Page H 7—D

15

�NOTICE OF HEARING
May 22, 1961

CITY

NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
by the
Board of Zoning Appeals for the Village
of Deerfield, Illinois, that a public hearing
will be heid by said Board on Monday, May
22, 1961 at 8:00 P.M. in the Village Hall,
850 Waukegan
Road,
Deerfield,
for
the
following applications:
1. 1 billboard
10’x40’ on the southwest
corner of County Line Road and Waukegan Road.
2. 2 billboards each 20’x6’—one on each
side of intersection of Ellendale
Road
north of County Line Road.
%. 12
double
faced
signs,
each
4’x8’
spaced about 200’ apart along the north
side of County Line Road beginning about
250’ east of the intersection of County
Line Road and Ellendale Road running
east along Briarwood Vista Unit No.
1
and No. 2.
4.1
sign, 6’x16’ at the intersection of
Pfingsten Road
and County
Line Road
on the north side of the street.
5. Request of Deerfield Electric Company
to erect a 4’x8’ sign on the side of the
fuilding at 708 Waukegan Road.
6. Request
of De Mar
Construction
to
erect a 4’x3’ sign at 534 Deerfield Road.
7. Request of Mr. and Mrs. William E.
Reidy, 651 Byron Court for a variation
of sideyard
requirements
to permit the
construction of a garage and den attached
to the main building within 5’-3” from
the south lot line, making
a combined
total of sideyards 10’-3” in lieu of 13’
required by ordinance.
At said public hearing, or any adjourn-

STORE

HIGHLAND
PARK, ILLINOIS
NOTICE OF LETTING

Public Notice
is hereby given that the
City Council of the City of Highland Park,
County of Lake, State of Illinois, will receive sealed proposals for the resurfacing
with Sub-Class
1-11
Bituminous
Concrete

of existing

bituminous

surfaces

ment
vited

&amp;
NEW

Brand

E-Z INFANTS

KIMONOS
BOXES,

reg. $24.95
All Steel CARTOP
Wearever

&amp;

Sat.,

9-6

Oil

and

Automotive

DISCOUNT

and GOWNS,
22”

Supplies

Reg. $1.49 Seat olor NOW

x 40’, white, gold,

maple

69c

or mahog.

NOW

$14.75

44" $4.50 a set;
54’ $5.60 a set
FOUNTAIN PENS, BALL POINTS,
30%
DISCOUNT
3 for 32c
31/2" x 2¥2"' x

PENS,

MECH. PENCILS
Plastic WHATNOT BOXES,
Artist’s TOUCH-UP BRUSHES,

package

of 24 brushes

NOW $3.50
Redwood PLANTER TUBS, All are octagon—1!0" size $1.69,
12” size $2.24, 14’ size $2.79, 16" size $3.59, 18° size
$4.19, 22" size $4.98.
LILAC BUSHES,
6 ft. to 8 ft. sizes, $3.95 each
or 10 for $30.00

PAINT-BY-NUMBER

SETS,

Reg.

$6.00

Phone LOcust 6-7325
Located

on

To Direct Concert

In Northbrook
The North Suburban
Baptist
Church
is
sponsoring
a
Spring
Festival Concert Friday, May
19,
at 8:00
p.m.
in the
gymnasium
of Oaklane
School on Midway
Road, Northbrook East.
Miss Romayne
Gunsteens,
1300
St.
Johns
Ave.,
Highland
Park,
music director of North Suburban
Baptist,
is arranging
this
event.
She has announced there will be
no admission
charge
and
coffee,
cake, and cookies will be served
following the program.
Under the direction of Mrs.
Mabel
E.
Hultgren
of
Chicago,
about 40 members of the “United
Stringband”
will play various
stringed instruments and also sing
at the same time. The instruments
will include zithers, mandolins,
suitars, violins, tiples,
and accordions. There will be vocal soloists, a mandolin quartette, a stringed octette, and other special groupings of the musicians.
Half of the
program will be secular music and
half sacred.
NOTICE

PRICES!

CARRIERS,

CARTRIDGE

Local Musician

DEPARTMENT

Motor

at LOW
Mirror SHADOW

various

thereof, all persons intere t-1 are into be present and be' heard
BOARD
OF ZONING
APPEALS
Robert E. Bowen,
Building Commissioner
§/41-18 ‘61—D124

HOURS: Tuesday, Friday 9-9—Wed., Thurs.
CLOSED MONDAYS.
Sunday 10-9.

Name

on

streets in Highland
Park.
The
proposed
work will be done under the Motor Fuel
Tax flaw and is officially known as Section
40-CS.
Said proposals will be received until 12:00
o’clook
Noon,
Central
Daylight
Saving
Time, May 29, 1961, in the Council Chamber of the City Hall, in Highland Park, at
which time and place bids will be publicly
opened and read.
Plans
and proposal
forms
will be furnished at the office of the City Clerk in
the City Hall of said City.
Payment will be in cash. All bids must
be accompanied by cash or certified check
for 10% of the total bid.
The City reserves the right to reject any
and ali bids, or imcrease, or decrease, or
omit any item or items.
By order of the City Council.
:
R.
Snyder
City
* ‘anager
§$/11-18/61—127

Railroad
Discount Store

Illinois

Salvage

OF

Rte. 83, one

block

MUNDELEIN,

South

of Rte.

45

[ILLINOIS

We buy factory surplus and store stocks.

SHINGLE AND
SHAKE FINISH

OF

PUBLIC

HEARING

vice-chairman;

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 for said School
District for the fiscal year beginning April
1, 1961 will be om file and conveniently
available
to
public
inspection
at
THE
BOARD

OF

EDUCATION,

SCHOOL

This quintet of Highland
Parkers were among the
more than 100 North Shore Young Matrons who gathered at
the Abel E. Fagen home in Lake Forest last week to boost the
1961 Combined Jewish Appeal at a gala fund-raising lunchFrom left are Mrs. Edward Arvey, Mrs. Alvin Altman,
eon.

DIS-

TRICT 108, 530 Red Oak Lane, Highland
Park, Illinois from and after 8:30. o’clock
A.M., on the 11th day of May,
1961, at
530 Red Oak Lane, Highland Park, Illinois
in this School District.
Notice
is further hereby
given that
a
public hearing on said budget will be held
at 7:30 o’clock P.M., on the 20th day of
June, 1961, at 530 Red Oak Lane in this
School District No.
108.
Dated this 8th day of May, 1961.
Board
of Education
of School
District
No. 108 in the County of Lake, State of
Illinois.
By Charles H. Wilson, Secretary.
§/11/61—123

ONE APPLICATION,
TWO RESULTS:
FEEDS and WEEDS
ONLY *495

Mrs.

Fred

S. Gordon,

Mrs.

Joseph

Joseph

and

Mrs. Edgar Zimmerman.
Contributing
more
than
$6,000
during their big fund-raising luncheon
Tuesday,
May
2, the
North
Shore Young Matrons boosted their
gifts to the 1961 Combined Jewish
Appeal
to well over the $11,000
mark,
according
Mrs.
Robert
A.
Glass; the chairman.
Mrs. Abel E.
Fagen was hostess at the Fagens’
‘Dream Farm,” on Old Mill Rd.,
Lake Forest.
The North Shore Young Matrons
surpassed
their
original
$10,000
goal for ’61 when $6,000 was contributed at the luncheon.
Mrs. I. D. Fink of Minneapolis,
a member
of the French
underground during World War II, an
authority
on current
Jewish
immigration
problems
in Europe,
Israel and the Middle
East, was
guest speaker for the affair.

Walk out weeds
in 30 minutes!

Girl Scout Carousel
Planned for June 3
A Girl Scout Carousel to be held
in the Highwood City Park June 3
was the principal topic for planning at the meeting of the Neighborhood: G-1 of the Moraine Girl
Scout Council May 9,
Each
Girl
Scout
troop
will
have two booths.
One booth will
exhibit scouting
skills in the 11
fields of scouting, and each troop
will have a booth offering items
for sale.
Tickets for the Carousel will be
sold by members
of the troops.
Money from the sale of tickets will
go to the Moraine
Girl Scout
Council. Money received from the
sale of items in the booths will go
to individual troop treasuries.
Most of the troops participating
in the event are planning trips to
Springfield or Washington, and, in
the case of the high school troops,
a trip to Mexico.

Crash

in Driveway

Michael

Wolf

of 2778

Arlington

Ave. was coming out of the Texaco
station driveway at 1454 Deerfield
Rd. Sunday evening when Robert
At last, a dependable finish

LeClereq of 271 Hazel Ave, was
coming in. They collided, Highland

specially made for shingles and

Park

shakes, Not a shingle stain,

police

report.

but a true house paint.
Heavy-bodied,

high-hiding,

with long oil vehicle for longer

life, Contains zinc oxide to
resist mildew.

Breather-type

paint allows moisture to escape
from

inside. Combats

"aay

curling,

splitting and cracking.

6.65

{hrm

$2.10
quart

| ~ VeLweT
oencuene
on Loony 2

$6.65

May be tinted with Dramatone
colors for additional hues.

® Easily rolled or brushed

Glidden

® Dries Dust-Free in One Hour
®@ White and 12 Modern Colors

Mites,

RICE)

DUO is applied once to kill
weeds and feed grass.

Easy-

to-apply Duo will not harm
desirable grasses. Duo helps
busy home owners grow
greener, healthier turf for
less money.

m

Made By The Makers of

~=SPRED SATIN

Choe

1 bag covers 5,000 sq. ft.

INMAN’S PAINT SPOT
609 Laurel Ave.
Page

H

8&amp;—D

16

°

ID 2-0528

Henry C. Wienecke, Inc.
Hardware

680

- Houseware

Vernon

VErnon

- Toys

Ave., Glencoe

5-3060

Bonus® does two jobs. Kills
ugly weeds like dandelions,
plantain, buckhorn. Fertilizes
good grass, makes your lawn
greener, lovelier. Non-burning
Bonus is clean, dry. Apply with
the Scotts Spreader— uniformly
good results guaranteed!
Bonus
— product of Scotts...
first in lawns, Bag 2,500 sq ft 3.45
5,000 sq ft 5.95.

RAVINIA
HARDWARE
Your One Stop Store
GARDEN
NEEDS
HOUSEWARES

447

Roger

Williams

ID 2-4387

CUSTOM COLORING
WINDOW
SHADES
PAINTS
GLASS
WALLPAPER
SHUTTERS

BREAKWELL’S
Highwood

ID 2-1418

B. M.

ORI

TUCKPOINTING—Masonry
CHIMNEY—FIREPLACE
Repair—Cleaning
FLAT ROOF
hot tar recoating

BASEMENT

leaks repaired

Cali 1D 2-4553
Thursday,

May

11, 1961

‘

�| 4‘| CATALOG sTORES

ARDS
A

we

RV

Moe
TF GO N
MOO

iN

HO

ae

HIGHLAND
1854 FIRST STREET,

PARK

HIGHLAND

DEERFIELD

PARK

Deerfield Commons

Shopping

Center

KOO.
&lt;u&gt; 0"~,

(@) STORE EMATNIANGEGRS
CARP

ALE

NE
&lt;

1ST

ar

“iy

WE

were

BROADLOOM

ON

A

COLORS

&amp;

waePRS

PATTERNS

INSTALLATION AND HEAVY WAFFLE PADDING INCLUDED*

backed

ili

;

$

9, 12 and 15-ft. widths.
“

loop

all-wool

3

cab bbe in

9, 12 and 15-ft. widths.
Resilient closely woven

57 sq. yd

cut

with

9 decorator

bias

12 and
15-ft. widths.
plus wearability
Style
.
in pattern
to under-

a smart

94

setting.

looking.

12-ft. widths. $

ete

atterned
il

yay

all-woo
i

,

94 aw

oh

with

d

/ 4

‘ze.

“athe
Sede Wards
cake.
tien.
Call

OVER

* NORMAL

Phone:
Address:
Thursday,

May

11, 1961

1854

Highland

INSTALLATION

Park Catalog

Store:

ID 2-8830
First St., Highland

Park,

Ill.

SLIGHTLY

12 and 15-ft. et

High-low

Wilton

design.

quality.

in a velvety leaf
Finest

7 decorator colors.

or

INSTALLED

$

99. yor

“BS

199

?

sa. yd.
with
.

tant.

ad

INSTALLED

12 and 15-ft widths. §

with

99... yd,

Deep dense pile springs
after
quickly
back

pad

INSTALLED

&lt;¥

poser yer

H

Our Best Axminster
with

pad

INSTALLED

harsh crushing wear.

YOUR

za

SATISFACTION

3 Full Years to PayS=" “~ Le
Your Nearby

INSTALLED

Luxuriant
broadloom
in 10 decorator colors.

.

7 decorator colors.

INSTALLED

sq. yd
with

INSTALLED

loop

dtvhen.

12 and’ 15-ft. widths.

pad

pile in leaf scroll design.

NOON CARPET
MONEY
DOWN
INSTALLATIONS
OR

r

Scroll Wilton

multi-level

than

resistance

Our Deepest Sheared Pile
99

colors.

Se

Two-tone

pad

cutpile. Easily cleaned.

$100

8

All Wool

All Wool Axminster
9 and

INSTALLED

Takes roughest treatment
yet springs back to stay
fresh,
luxuriously new

INSTALLED

as

soil

weave

pad

12 and 13-4, widths,

s«. yd.
with
pad

vd

38 “ee

Miracle Acrilan

(

score

.

colors.

All Wool Wilton

fesilte

more

on

and

Sculptured Plush Wilton

$

decorator

5

pile.

orca
* me

uy padi
=
—
mibiger

sidtinane

INSTALLED

Our Better Axminster

All Wool Suburbia
Springy

oak
with
pad

-Kaers.

Segpretas

INSTALLED

gc i

$

10

weave.

popcorn

pad

*e"

ener

ane

og

aa

son

added

for

12 and 15-ft. widths.
Distinctive multi-level

29

$

9 and 12-ft. widths.
Durable, smart. Double

DuPont 501 Nylon

Wool Nylon Salem Square

All Nvlon Tweed

GUARANTEED

HIGHER

Your

ON

CONCRETE

Nearby

FLOORS

Deerfield Commons

Phone: WI
Address:

714 Waukegan

Catalog

Store:

5-4600
Rd.,

Deerfield,

Ill.
Page

H

9—D

17

�Deerfield Stagers Celebrate 25 Years
1936

1961

Of Show Business Here
The

Deerfield

in January

Stagers,

of 1938

when

organized

a group

of enthusiastic young people from
the Deerfield Presbyterian church
banned together, will climax their

ay sMitibylEity,

Plays Performed
By Deerfield's
Stagers Since ‘36
A Murder
Has Been
Arranged
(1936); Mrs. Bumstead-Leigh (1937);
The Bat (1937); Crab Apple (1938);
Men Must Fight (1938); The Ninth
Guest (1938); Candle Light (1939);
Enchanted April (1939); The Last
Warning (1939); Kind Lady (1940);
Fresh
Fields
(1940);
The
Bishop
Misbehaves
(1940);
Pure
as
the
Driven
Snow
(1941);
George
and
Margaret
(1941); The Milky Way
(1941);
Old
Man
Minick
(1942);
Post Road
(1942);
The
Youngest
(1942; The Night of January 16th
(1943).
Meet the Wife
(1943); Nothing
But the Truth (1943); The Ghost
Flies South (1944); Ladies in Retirement (1944); The Late Christopher Bean (1944); Petticoat Fever
(1945); Love From a Stranger
(1945);
The
Little
Foxes
(1945);
Claudia (1946); Blythe Spirit (1946);
Hawk
Island
(1946);
Our
Hearts
Were Young and Gay (1947); Dear
Ruth
(1947);
Outward
Bound
(1947); Dear Ruth (1947); The Cat

and

the

Canary

(1948);

George

Washington
Slept
Here
(1948);
State Of The Union (1948); Laura
(1949);
My
Sister
Eileen
(1949);

John Loves Mary

“A Murder Has Been Arranged” was the second attempt
by the Presbyterian Dramatic club, forerunner of the present
Stagers. It was performed in 1936. The caption in the Stager

scrapbook had this to say about the picture above: “Look at
them

laugh—

(You

might

know

the play was

a success).”

(1949).

25th

the

year

with

‘Moon

Is

10—D

18

tonight,

of

to-

grew

by

leaps

and

bounds

until

in
1946,
the
group
became
a
corporate
organization,
not
for
profit, with a seal issued.
A board of directors was elected
and the group
officially became
the Stagers of Deerfield.

During the 25 year period, which
includes the performances of the
“Moon Is Blue,” a total of 74 plays
have been presented by the group.
This figure does not include the
One-Act Festival participation or
other
community
activities
in
which the group has participated.
The
present
president
of the
Stagers
is
Kenneth
Hunter,
a
member
of the
group
since
its
1936
beginning.
Hunter
directed
the first play that the group put
(1955); Lo and Behold (1955); Bell,
Book and Candle (1955); The Oblong Circle (1956); Miranda (1956);
Ladies In Retirement (1956).
The
Philadelphia
Story
(1957);
Rebecca (1957); White Sheep of the
Family
(1957);
Night
Must
Fall
(1958);
The
Tender
Trap
(1958);
Gigi (1958); The Bad Seed (1959);
The
King
of Hearts
(1959);
The
Rainmaker
(1959);
All
My
Sons
(1960); Anniversary
Waltz
(1960);
Mr. Roberts (1960).

on and

has

directed

in many of the
then, including
duction.

and

appeared

productions since
the current pro-

Playing the lead in the current
play, which opens tonight at 8:30
p.m. in DGS
gym, will be Mrs.

R. Lenn Franke, 16 Cambridge Ln.,
Lincolnshire. She will portray the
charming
but
frank
young
lady
who moves from one amusing situation to another. Mrs. Franke has
appeared in the “‘Night of January
16” as well as in the “Bad Seed”
and ‘‘King of Hearts.”
Robert
Folger,
845
Woodland,

will

play

the

part

of

the

friend

and
neighbor
whose
misunderstanding creates a situation which
lends
itself
to
more
misunderstandings.
Folger was last seen in ‘All My
Sons,” and before that in “Gigi.”
Carrying the role of the young

and

gay

Orsborn

recently

architect
of

will

Chicago.

seen

in

He

“The

be

Tek

was

most

Night

of

January 16,” which was presented
in February of 1961.
Completing the cast will be William Walbaum of Northbrook, who

will depict the irate and Puritanical policeman father of the
girls,
Walbaum has appeared in many
of the recent Stager productions.
Kenneth
Hunter,
who
lives at

1500
his

Wilmot,
wife

comedy.

in

The

is being
directing

assisted
the

by

adult

play was written

and

will be presented for adult amusement, he said.
Tickets will be available at the
door the nights of the perform-

ance.

Double
Door
(1950);
Light Up
The Sky (1950); The Petrified Forest (1959); Cuckoos On The Hearth
(1951);
Heaven
Can
Wait
(1951);
Both Your Houses (1951); Ten Little Indians
(1952); Father of the
Bride (1952); The Curious Savage
(1952); Suspect (1953); Mr. Barry’s
Etchings (1953); The Dark Tower
(1953); See How They Run (1954);
Gramercy Ghost (1954); My Three
Angels (1954); For Love or Money

“Double Door,” a mystery drama was presented by the Stagers in their 14th year,
1950.
The director and some of the members of the cast included: seated, from left:
Helen Ross, Thomas Shultz, Geneva Ritter, Karl Berning, and Beatrice Cox. Standing from
left are: Jack Clubertson, director, Leslie Gage, and Martin Decker.
H

presentation

Blue,”

morrow and Saturday nights in the
Deerfield
Grammar
school
gymnasium.
In
March,
Donald
Clark
was
elected president of the 32 member
group
and
the
first
play,
“Go Slow, Mary,” was presented.
But the Stagers did not ‘‘Go Slow.”
It was
just
the
opposite.
They

“Ladies

Page

the

in Retirement,”

directed

by

Kenneth

Hunter,

the

current president of the Stagers, was a hit during the 21st
season of the group. Having her hair done by Mildred Holmquist who played Ellen Creed was Martha Jordan, who por-

trayed

Leonora

November

Fiske,

in the

comedy

which

appeared

in

of 1956,

,
Thursday,

May

11, 1961

�LAMB SAL
Sunset’s Finest U.S. CHOICE

Young,

Tender, Spring

Leg of Lamb»

WEICHADE 3 2.79
Cans

Save

:

e

FOR

WEIGHT

CONTROL

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e

Centrella

LJ

SPARERIBS

Sunset’s Specially Selected,

U.S. CHOICE,

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He

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| DIETARY

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92 Score

BLEND,
MATCH
OR

in

ACCENT

HALF

your color

aa

Pg 0 UARTS

One Carton Serves 18

schemes with

am

permanent
“Sun-Fresh”

Choice,

Green

PASCAL CELERY

2

=

2 he

Royal Crown
COLA

\\N

the fresher refresher

Plus

NABISCO

ONIONS » 9
Thursday,

March

11, 1961

Deposit

OREO,

11-0z.

pkg.

BARONETS, 11-o0z. pkg.
DEVIL’S FOOD, 8-0z. pkg.

SHELF LINING

ee

Bottle

compleme

any home
decor.

GREEN, Oe
ONIONS *“*

Cc

or

planned

“Sun-Fresh” Choice Garden

\e)

3

f

6

Color

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$1.89plate

HyDRox

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3 11M"ce $1.0

sperenkesity

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SUNSET

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1812 GREEN
Open

Both

PLENTY

BAY

ROAD

Thursday

OF

FREE

— A CENTRAL

and

Friday

PARKING

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—

FOOD

a

STORE

‘Til 9 P.M.

ALWAYS
Page

H

11—D

19

�Summer Program
For Children

_

goin

Insistent demand from the community has resulted in the decision
by the Suburban Fine Arts Center,
654 Deerfield Rd., to repeat the
successful comprehensive Summer
arts
program
for
children
aged
seven throuh 15, it was announced
this week.

The

program

morning,

will

start

26,

and

June

through
Aug
19,
eight-week term.

in

Stoffel’s/

+

eimported

Swiss

cotton voile;
ry atching lace-trim
neckline.

:

*

/

oa
*

:

yen
4

- Sizes
12-18

?

Bo
Raymond Johnson
ertificates of Achievement

(right) awarded Civil Air Patrol
(from left) to Earle Hodge, Mrs.

i

Peter Roknich and Dr. C. O. Dahle, Superintendent of District
107, after the trio had successfully completed 14 hours outlined for the Aerospace Educational program. Award of

|dramatics and conversational
|French. Guitar lessons also will
be available. Classes are divided

certificates preceded
experience.

into age groups, so that instructo their undertion is geared
standing.
Last summer’s program of paint-

a

trip

to

local

airports

and

actual

air

ing

8

W

&amp;

tional

PERFECT

/
ER’S

MOTH

DAY

GIFT)

ents

Dresses

Other

a

=~.

Windbreakers

3-20

ee

‘A

Caps

:

+

Nylon
Teaching

STEVE SIDARI
For

Golf

Lessons

A

Men’‘s

may

be

as

jorie

Ruud,

Line

Golfing

Steve

Sidari

?

means

GIFT

SUGGESTIONS

FOR

PRO

MOM

463

Roger

Golf

at

of

|

classes

Mrs.

Mar-

director

executive

at 654 Deer-

Six

Highland

Parkers

were

on

teams placing second and third in
the annual club championships of
the Highland Park Contract Bridge

Apparel
‘

ID

the

from

Bridge Teams Place
Second and Third

club played May 2 in the Strike-NSpare Bowling Lanes.
Comprising the second

2-4330

were

School

Williams

dis-

class-

the

about

obtained

Mrs.

Eugene

spot team

Sage

ald Schiller of Highland

HERE ARE SOME OTHER

of

usual

the

or writing the Center
field Rd.

|

Full

:

outstanding

|| of the Center, by calling ID 3-1404,

Group Lessons Available
Contact

excellent

23s

Socks

aiso’

Professionals:
PETE MAZZETTA

an

activity yi dui

ie
oe

So:

:

:

Sizes

Vy

as

room routines.
Information

i

&lt;A

an

students, while providing learning

Shorts

Svanters

$29.98

to

$5.98

was

-~ || covering latent talent in the young

Bermuda

Latest

a.

;

— trem

a=

French

success for the enthusiastic young
students.
The program, it was pointed out
by the Center, is regarded by par-

oe

Shoes

Golf

¢

crea-

sculpture,

drawing,

and

tive dramatics, dance and conversa-

A

Goll

\

omen

(A

“a

an

outdoor
sketching
and painting,
three-dimensional crafts, the dance,

;
F

providing

Classes, limited to a small number of students, will be held each
:
morning.
A different subject will
North Shore Group Photo by Milton Merner | be taught every weekday morning,
each child receiving instruction in
e
ee
H

i

5

Monday
continue

and

Don-

Park,

with

Chapman of Glencoe, =

ID

Playing on the third-place winning team were Dr. Sunall Blumenthal, James Trinz, Robert Gottlieb

2-4330

and

William

Katz,

Highland

Park.

LAKE FOREST

A ROSBY

WIN Valuable Prizes FREE!

:

.

}

HOMEMAKERS

are

GIFT CERTIFICATE
niciatesuetned

FREE

GIFT

A very fine white

IS ALWAYS

condition
I

modern
basement

WRAPPING

and

excellent

kitchen.
with

Colonial

home

location.

Living

ID 2-0788

5 Second St.
cross

from

H.P.

Jewel)

OPEN

THURSDAY

NITES

REAL
283

ESTATE

SALES

E. Deerpath

with

lot, in superb

wooded

fireplace,

dining

full

room,

paneled study, family room, 4 bedrooms, 2% baths. Full
recreation room, porch and 2 car garage. Priced in the sixties.

BAIRD

sscmnaos

room

Wood

Call

POSBY’S

on a beautiful

®

Ahlmann

Christensen

&amp; WARNER
MORTGAGES
Lake

Forest

@

e¢

INSURANCE

CE 4-1855

— BR 5-0450

MANAGEMENT

Thursday, May 11, 1961
ene

Mined,

eS

�Thru May 17 Is

Te
Tj 9

fe,

4

Yf/

Just Clip The Co upons On The
Next Page — Deposit Them In
The Stores Before May 17
NOTHING

TO BUY... HERE'S ALL YOU

Just turn this page to find all your Homemakers’ Week
coupons. Clip out these coupons and deposit each one at the
store whose name it bears. That's all there is to it! There's

nothing to buy... nothing to write but your name. Each
participating store will hold a drawing on Thursday morning,
May 18th to determine the winners of each store's prizes.

ANYONE
be seen at the News office, 608

Thursday, May

11, 1961

Laurel Ave.,

Everyone,

Highland

Park and at the

Highland

age

in the May

25th

issue of this

18 or over is eligible to enter

the

Home-

makers’ Week contest. So turn the page and clip out your
coupons now. You can easily be one of the lucky winners!

AGE 18 OR OVER

Everyone, age 18 or older is eligible to win in the Homemakers’ Week contest
except employees of the North Shore Group Newspapers and their families.
Entries: may
be submitted on the printed coupons on the reverse side of this page, or may be submitted as reasonable
facsimiles of said coupons,
(Free copies of this newspaper

may

Winners will be announced
newspaper.

DO...

CAN

WIN!

Park Public Library.) Judge for the Homemakers’ Week contest will be the editor of the
North Shore Group Newspapers. Judge’s decision will be final. All entries become the
property of the North Shore Group Newspapers and will not be returned. Winners will
be announced in the May 25th issue
participating stores one week following

of this newspaper.
Prizes
the publication of winners’

will be
names.

awarded

by

DAY — ENDS MAY 17 — ENTER NOW!!
Page

H

13—D

21

�‘HERE ARE
A
YOUR HOMEMAKERS’ WEEK COUPONS!
INSTRUCTIONS

17, 1961.
To be eligible for these prizes, all addresses must be complete.

These coupons represent GIFTS given by participating merchants, and
these gifts are to be awarded one week following the announcement of
winners of the Homemakers’ Week contest. Winners will be announced in
in

the

A

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merchants’

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10 LP Records

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OR

CHILDREN NOT ALLOWED TO MAKE DEPOSITS. NO PERSON UNDER
18 YEARS OF AGE WILL BE AWARDED A PRIZE. North Shore Group Newspapers staff and their families are ineligible.

in the boxes

Tt?)

provided
(EE A

BY YOU

Each

IT BEARS.

NAME

WHOSE

PERSON

BY THE

BE DEPOSITED

MUST

COUPON

ee

the May 25th issue of this newspaper.
COUPONS MUST BE SIGNED AND DEPOSITED

CAREFULLY

PTT?

READ

ee

PLEASE

:

Rea che an dha aie, pasting

Thayer's
835 Central Ave., Highland Park

(o2eeesee

seen

r

�Carrier

Training

Ends

When

Navy Ens, Richard J. Belmont,
son of Mr. and Mrs. John I. Belmont

of 896 Pleasant

Ave.,

Call

completed || When

April 20, six arrested carrier quali-

in the

USS

Antietam

Gulf

at

operating

of Mexico.

your

Doctor

He Prescribes

Call

fication landings aboard the antisubmarine warfare support aircraft

carrier

you are ill

Morrie!
ID

3-2525

Park-Sheridan

at Sheridan

as NS

hoe

Flight students completing these

landings are qualified to proceed
to the advanced stages of aviation

Pharmacy

Park Ave.

Rd.

“Prescription Service” means
“Park Sheridan”

— LET US DO IT —
We

Repair

Screen

Doors

and

Windows

Replace Broken Windows
Fix Storm Windows and Doors
Keys Made To Order While You Wait.
Store Hours Daily 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. — Wed. ‘til Noon
OPEN

SUNDAYS

9

A.M.

~~

1

P.M.

RAVINIA
HARDWARE
YOUR ONE STOP STORE
GARDEN

447
North

Highland

ing.

From

Haviland,

Group

Photo

by Milton

NEEDS

—

HOUSEWARES

—

Pe. ie

TOYS

Williams

ID

2-4387

Merner

Park Post Veterans of Foreign Wars installed new officers at the March 29 meet-

left are Stan Pankman,
Gordon

der, Dudley

Shore

Roger

|
ee

Fields

Bob Howell, Frank Jacks, George Quinn, Lloyd Moon, Carl

(standing

LeRoy Clausing,

E. W.

sideways),

Carlsen,

Sylvester

Reitmeyer,

Joe

Nizzi,

Hugo

every girl loves
the freedom and comfort

Schnei-

Ray Mann and Art Dickelman.

DRIVE CAREFULLY — THE LIFE YOU SAVE
MAY BE YOUR OWN

THANK

every girl loves &amp;
the look and contro/

YOU!

To the many hundreds of people who made our Grand Opening an
unforgettable event, our sincere thanks. Some of you had to be disap-

Skin

Sl

pointed because of the large crowds—but we want you to come back
again soon and let us introduce you to the convenience, economy and

satisfaction of Norge one-stop SELF-SERVICE DRYCLEANING
AND COIN-OPERATED LAUNDRY SERVICE.
No wonder it’s the talk of the town! Now you can clean
as many as four suits, or eight dresses, or lots of skirts and
sweaters—for only $1.50, in less (&gt;en an hour’s time!
And now you can do all yar.
‘+ end laundry

2}

a4!

same time!

You can keep everything in your closet bright, clean and fresh, with
hardly any effort. You'll save 75% on your cleaning. Bring in an
armload of clothes soon.

The first really new look in foundation fashions in a decade
... that’s PRETTY PETITE Silf Skin’s love-at-first-sight BRIEF
that looks like a pretty girdle! Silf Skin’s new PRETTY PETITE
is knit like a brief, from the finest elastic yarn that’s as kind
to your skin as a caress. But... here’s the PLUS . . . PRETTY
PETITE has an elasticized ‘skirt’ that gives this garment
extra control...and the “look” of a girdle. Amazing! It’s
a must for your foundation wardrobe! White only. #15
Small, medium, large.......eceeeeseeeeeeeee $7 50
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|

Look for this package at

WIN Valuable Prizes FREE!

MA
Teh
rig

Biel
f :

if

yA

LOW:

4 Beis

fot

bs
a

Me

oo

LAUNDRY

AND

CLEANING

VILLAGE
k

&amp;

305 Waukegan Ave., Highwood
Open 8 A.M. to Midnight
Thursday, May

11, 1961

:

STORE
9-5:30

Wed.,

52

S

Highwood

Ave.

HIGHWOOD
ID 2-7020

HOURS
9-12:30

Fri., 9-9
Page H 15—D

23

�Mostly for Women

Engagements

Executive

Board

Of Woman’s
executive

board

field

Woman’s

club

May

2, at the

home

Tuesday,

of Mrs.

Wil-

liam S. Hollatz, 230 Ramsay
Rd.
The
following
new
memberships
were announced: Mrs. John Lindemann,
Mrs.
Paul
Sterrup,
Mrs.
Glenn
Thrasher,
Mrs.
Craig Davison, Mrs. John Kelsey, Mrs. Dallas C. Davis, Mrs. Karl Berning,
and Mrs. Alan Moore.
:
To

Meet

the

Mrs.

Tuesday

the

Bentley,
son
of the
Everett
G.
Bentleys of Deerfield, formerly of
Winnetka, in historic Christ Episco-

pal

church

April

22

in

Sausalito,

Calif.

on

at 4 p.m.

Miss Anderson, daughter of Mr.
and
Mrs.
Roy
W.
Anderson
of
Glenview,
formerly
of Wilmette,
wore a bianche design, hoop skirted
dress
of tissue
taffeta.
Her
three-tiered veil dropped
from
a
pearl-seeded coronet to just below
elbow length and her bouquet was
of butterfly
orchids,
stephenotis,
and lilies of the valley.
The
bridesmaids’
dresses
were
peony
colored
silk
sheaths
with
chiffon cummerbunds.
They
carried demi-basket parasols filled
with spring flowers as did the maid

of honor,

Miss

Elizabeth

Scheib

of

Winnetka
whose
dress was white
chiffon with rose appliqued bodice.
All three wore tiny veiled headpieces made up of a ring decked

with tiny silk rosebuds.
Bridesmaids-Miss Judith Burford
and Miss Judith Gunther of San
Francisco.
Miss Gunther was Miss
Anderson’s classmate at Briarcliff
college last year.
Best man
was

Roy
bride

H.

Anderson,

and

former

brother
classmate

Bentley at Princeton.
William
Johnson

of

the

of Mr.

Ushers were
and Joseph

Garden Club Slates
May 18 Meeting At
Henninger Home »
The

Garden

club

of

Deerfield

will meet May 18 at the home of
Mrs. O. L. Henninger 1345 Woodland Dr. at 9:30 a.m.
Dr. Margery C. Carlson, professor emeritus of botany, Northwestern university, will speak on ‘‘Gar-

Fenelli, both of San Francisco.
The reception was held in the

Olympic

Country

Mr.

Lake

and

Mrs.

Maurice

tion, held

in Constitution

organization’s
Washington.
At

own

Mayflower

S. Garrison

Finch,

chairman

of the

He is
Huskins,

Hagberg

the son of Mrs. William
1200
Cedar
Lake
Rd.,

Minneapolis,
Dr. Edward

Minn.,

and

the

late

Dratz.

Miss Hagberg and Dratz will be
graduated from
Carleton college,
Northfield, Minn., June 2.
They plan their marriage
following day.

de-

will

for the

Mrs.
Ruth will be
Mrs. J. L. Pfeiffer and

the

day

Johnson
sen.

will
and

be
Mrs.

Mrs.

assisted
greeters

by
for

William

P.

Walter

M.

Carl-

Reservations
for
the
luncheon
must be made by Saturday, May
13.
Remittances
may be sent to
Mrs.
Philip
Ruth,
129 Plumtree
Road,
Deerfield.
Please
make
checks
payable
to the
Deerfield

Woman’s

club.

of

Highland

Park

High

Other North Shore chapter members
attending
the
Continental
Congress were Mrs. George Murray
Campbell
of Winnetka,
and
Mrs. George Strecker of Lake Forest, Mrs. Dan Pagenta of Highland
Park and Mrs. William Winters of
Trappe, Maryland, alternates.

Fashion Show
The
auxiliary of the American
Legion Vernon post 1247 will present “Fashion Fancies,” card party
and fashion show Friday, May 19
at 8 p.m. at the Washburn church
in Half Day.

For tickets, call WI 5-1821 or NE
4-3524.

Delegates Represent
Deerfield Woman’s
Club At Convention
The Deerfield Woman’s Club was
represented
by
delegates
Mrs.
Locke Rogers, president and Mrs.
Charles Lager, program chairman,
at the Annual State convention of

the Illinois Federation

of Women’s

clubs held May 9, 10, and 11 at the
Hotel Sherman, Chicago.
Alternates
were
Mrs.
Thomas
Charlton and Mrs. Charles H. Carman. Mrs. Rogers, Mrs. Lager and
Mrs. Carman are out-going officers
of the Deerfield Woman’s club and
Mrs. Charlton is the newly-elected
press and publicity chairman.
Other members of the club who
attended were the Mesdames Wessley Stryker, Norman Erskine, R.
E. Malmquist and Elmer F. Ander-

Anderson,

dens in Southern Europe” and illustrate with color slides of these

tials

chairman,

gardens.

ternates

state

handled

the

the

regis-

|.

Deerfield Woman’s club board
bert Dawe, the new president; Mrs.
man.
Standing are, from left: Mrs.

and al-

Mrs.

Harry

convention.

Mrs.

Norman

tration of all the delegates
attending

creden-

Ruppel,
Erskine,

Jr.,

Mrs.

Mrs.

of

present

Auxiliary Slates
partment
school.

music

chairman

Imogene Coca, June Havoc and Ed-‘

in

Hotel

Ruth,

luncheon,

ward Everett Horton, at the Drury
Lane and ‘Shady Lane theaters and
the Evanston Showcase.
She has
also been on both filmed and live
My *
television
shows
“What’s
Line?,’” Robert Montgomery
Presents” and for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.

hall, the

headquarters

At the DAR Illinois dinner, held
at the Mayflower Hotel on April
16, the Suitland High school choir
entertained and included in their
program ‘Fair Illinois,’ the DAR
state song composed by Harold N.

who had driven from Fort Pierce,
Fla. to attend the ceremony. Besides the immediate families, the
bride’s uncle and aunt, Mr. Frank
J. Svoboda
of Escondido,
Calif.,
and their two children were present.
Mr. and Mrs. Everett G. Bentley
gave the rehearsal dinner-complete
with
Polynesian
fare
and _ background-the night before the wedding at Timerlane Tim’s.

Mrs.

24

club,

Merced. After their honeymoon in
Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, the couple will make their home in San
Francisco where Mr. Bentley is in
the advertising department of the
San Francisco Chronicle.
The guests who traveled furthest
to attend the ceremony were the
bridegroom’s grand uncle and aunt,

son.

Page H 16—D

Mrs. Richard H. Thompson, Jr.,
1560 Robin Ln., Bannockburn, regent of the North Shore chapter,
DAR, has recently returned from
Washington, where she served as
a delegate to the 70th Continental
Congress of the National society,
Daughters of the American Revolu-

Philip

spring

Miss Fels, a native Chicagoan,
was educated at Northwestern university and at the University of
Chicago.
She has appeared locally
in summer stock with Sid Ceasar,

Mr. and Mrs. Nils Hagberg, 628
Byron
Ct.,
have
announced
the
engagement of their daughter,
Peggy, to Edward Dratz.

Returns From DAR
Meet In Washington

of the’ Deerfield

Miss Fern Fels, a versatile commedienne. Miss Fels has a delightful
way of telling original humorous
stories on phases of family life and
as long as people behave the way,
they do, and are willing to laugh,
she will never lack material.

Peggy

Mrs. Thompson

season

Mrs.
Albert
R.
Dawe,
newlyelected president and members of
her executive
board
will be in‘stalled.

uation of the seasons study to follow. Phone Mrs. Erskine, WI 5-2257
for reservations.

Miss Bonnie Bess Anderson became the bride of Mr. Shepard

social

Woman’s Club will be the annual spring luncheon on Tuesday,,

cussion of Modern Art and an eval-

Bentley

Views

May 23, at the Villa Venice, Milwaukee Ave. at the Des Plaines
river, Northbrook. Luncheon will be served at 1 p.m. preceded
by a social hour at noon. Members and guests of the Deerfield
Woman’s Club are invited to attend.

The Palette and Chisel, art appreciation
study
group,
meets
Wednesday, May
17, in the residence
of Mrs.
Norman
Erskine,
1525
Oakwood
Pl.
Refreshments
will be served at 1 p.m., with a dis-

Shepard

Club

—

A gala affair to climax

The
garden
department
of the
club will meet Tuesday, May 16 at
1 p.m., at the home of Mrs. Harold
L. Fox, 1039 Springfield Ave. Dessert and coffee will be served before the group leaves for a tour of
the Kolbeck Tulip Farm on Route
22. Please make reservations with
Mrs. Fox, WI 5-4357.

Mrs.

sin

With Annual Spring Luncheon

of the Deermet

Weddings

Woman's Club Climaxes Year

Club

Approves Members
The

—

Ronald

Charles

for the coming year includes: seated, from left—Mrs. AlHarry Henderson, Mrs. Paul Holmberg, Mrs. Arthur VickerWilliam Hollatz, Mrs. Joseph Roper, Mrs. Hunter Johnson,

Rentschler, Mrs. Thomas
Healy,

and Mrs. Donald

R. Charlton, Mrs. J. L. Pfieffer,

Dick.

:
Thursday,

May

11, 1961

�oR ene
In Show Friday
Tots will take to the runway Friday
afternoon
when
the
North
Shore auxiliary of Herrick House
stages ‘La Petite Promenade”
in
Le Pavillon restaurant, Northbrook,
at 2 o’clock.
Several
young
Highland
Parkers will be among the 30 models
who will model both Summer and
Fall fashions, Mrs. Allan M. Brown
of Sheridan Rd., co-chairman, said.
Each guest to the party will bring a
token gift for a young patient at
Herrick House, the institution for
children convalescing from rheumatic fever and associated diseases.

Among

of the Karl

Hanck, Sherwood Forest, chairman of local ticket-sellers, points out the date (the night before
Summer begins). From left are Mrs. Richard Gottlieb, Sumac Rd., Mrs. Malcolm Greenebaum,
Lincoln Ave., co-chairman; Mrs. Irving Shepard, Sheridan Rd., and Mrs. David Lockett, Hyacinth Ln. Proceeds benefit United Charities.

of free

rides

begins

at 7.

Heading up the Highland Park
committee
are
Mrs.
Malcolm
Greenebaum, Mrs. Brandon Hanck,

and

Mrs.

may

be

at ID
7284.

2-7380,

Junior

dents

Richard
contacted

in

making
Ramble,

high

Gottlieb.
for

They

reservations

ID

2-3505

or

and

high

school

Highland

Park,

ID

2stu-

who

are

up many parties for
will be provided free

the
bus

Lazard’s Art

program

room of the Glen-

versity

coe public library is attracting special attention through May with recent oils, water colors and gouaches

by

Alice

(Mrs.

Ben)

Lazard,

Pi

Beta

Phi

“Sunshine Girl” award by her sorority at the annual Founders’ Day

In Glencoe Library
The Hammond

Attending were sorority representatives from Beloit College, Lawrence, at Appleton, Wis., and the
University of Wisconsin.
Miss Parks also had the lead in
the musical comedy,
“Annie
Get
Your Gun,” presented by the sorority members
and
men from
the
Phi Kappa
Psi fraternity in the
Beloit interfraternity program.

Miss Cynthia Parks, daughter of
the
Gordon
Parkses
of
Glencoe
Ave.,
and
Beloit College
senior,

the

recently
of

held

Wisconsin

at the Uniin

Madison.

CORRELATED

well

and

STYLE

and

Mrs.

Baren.

Sidney

Baren

Rd., Deerfield.

tes

Both Miss Baren and her are graduates of Highland
High School. She is a junio.
Northwestern University, and —
Echt is in his junior
Forest College.

year at
Sg aie &amp;

They are planning to be m
June

11.

Honored at Smith :
Miss Kay Herzog, daughter
Mr. and Mrs. Myron E. Herzog”
Sheridan Rd., was elected se

tary of the executive board of
Smith

College

at Smith

Athletic

College,

associa

where

she |

freshman.

we

DELIGHT ~

By DILLINGHAM

known Highland Park artist.
Cne-woman
shows are not new
to Mrs. Lazard, who has staged 12
of them.
She
has exhibited
her
paintings in many Chicago shows,
and also has had them in Theobald’s Avant Garde Gallery in New
York, and other galleries around
the
country.
She
also
has
had
paintings chosen for the Ravinia
Art Festival.

Mr.

Carole

St. Johns Ave. are announci
engagement of their
daug
Carole, to David Echt, son o
and Mrs. George Echt of Bri

Sunday,

ls ‘Sunshine Girl’

presented

Linda

Susan Felsenthal, daughters of Mrs.
James Felsenthal; Amy and Chip
Gatzert,
children
of the
Robert
Gatzerts;
and
Patricia,
Marjorie
and
Bruce
Jr.,
children
of
the
Bruce Goodmans.

Miss Cynthia Parks

was

Mrs.

Eisenbergs;

Miss

are

_ With Matching

Moderately Priced—
Yet Quality-Minded
People will be more
than satisfied.

Plastic Tops
Also available with
plain wood tops
SPECIAL ORDERS
FILLED PROMPTLY

eee ea

evening

transportation
to
and
from
the
park.
One of the gay ‘‘pre-events” will
be the convertible parade that high
school students will stage Saturday,
June 10.

models

Sarah Jo Anthony, daughter of the
Raymond J. Anthonys; Susan and
Thomas Arenberg, children of the
Paul
Arenbergs;
Patricia
Brown,
daughter of the Allan M. Browns;
Susan and John Eisenberg, children

Can Summer be far behind when Riverview Ramble planners begin buzzing over plans
for their 1961 gala evening of rides and fun at Riverview? In a recent initial plan session at
the Saddle and Cycle club, these Highland Parkers took over their key posts. Mrs. Brandon

One
of the
busiest
women
in
town and anywhere along the North
Shore is Mrs. Harold Florsheim of
Sheridan Rd., who has taken over
the
momentous
task
of
general
chairman
of the Riverview Ramble. The gay evening of rides, entertainment and fun is planned for
Tuesday, June 20, as benefit for
United Charities of Chicago.
Thirty Highland Park women are
recruiting “ramblers” for the informal family evening that last year
attracted 2,000. The park will open
at 5 o’clock for picnic suppers; the

young

ciel
Wedding
a
Social
Sta tion ery

SPECIAL
100 ANNOUNCEMENTS or INVITATIONS
$21.95

Two exquisite finishes —- Walnut and Light Cherry.
Available with matching wood grain plastic tops or plain wood tops.
Young simple, light scale design to create the illusion of spacious interior.
Pale Gold anodized aluminum pulls for everlasting beauty and service.
Reversible cane panel doors with matching veneer backs for a quick change in decor.
Fine Dillingham craftsmanship and construction throughout.

Other Styles 50 for $19.45 up
YOUR WEDDING ORDER SHOULD INCLUDE
ONE OR MORE OF THE FOLLOWING

ENCLOSURE

CARDS

for ‘at home’”’ notice
“‘reception”’ or ‘’please reply”

100 FOR $10.50
INFORMAL

CALLING

CARDS

For the new title of “Mr. and
Mrs. John Richard Jones’
and Mrs. John Richard Jones

100 for $4.45 and up
NOTES

'

34" 3-drawer Chest $85.00

As illustrated, with Plastic Tops:

34” 2-door Cabinet $85.00

Slightly

ee

less without
“The

North

41%"

Desk $95.00

plastic tops.

Shore's

Finest

Center

for

Casual

Furnishings”

For the same change in names and for
“thank you’’ notes to acknowledge wedding gifts

100 FOR $7. 50 AND
645

UP
CENTRAL
ID 3-0230

ursday, May 11, 1961
aE LS es thle

AVE.

Open
Thursday and Friday
Until 9

495

Central

ID 3-1550

Highland

Park

Page H 17—D 2

;

�eansgate,

&lt;&lt;
we a

:

Antiques
from
30 well
known
dealers and collectors for Americana will be sold for scholarships
at the Rockford College club’s 27th
annual Evanston
antiques exhibit
and sale Monday, May 15, through
Thursday, May 18, in the Evanston
Woman’s Club, 1702 Chicago Ave.
Hard at work on final plans are
Mrs. Roger O. Brown, special gifts
committee;
Mrs.
Robert
G. Hall,
punch committee; Mrs. Walter F.
Hammel
Jr. and Mrs. Edward
J.
Lauesen,
ticket
committee.
Also
working on ticket sales are Miss
Katharine Beech, Miss Helen Carr,
Mrs. John Hartman, Mrs. Robert
Misch, Mrs. Lee Ostrander. and Mrs.
David
Sanders.
Announcing
committee appointments was Mrs. Dale
Patterson, co-chairman of publicity.
Doors
open
at noon,
and
the
show continues to 10 p.m. the first
three days, and to 6 p.m. Thursday.
Tuesday, the
Rockford
College
club is staging its annual Spring
dinner-meet in the Colonial Room
of the Georgian Hotel in Evanston.

nh RATALeceLESSS’

Cobey’s

~
Highland

478 Central
(Open Thursday Nites)

Park

League

University

fieldhouse.

Schechter

is

member

Miss
of

the

Alpha Epsilon Phi team.

evening
is planned
by
of the North Suburban

of

the

Jewish

Children’s

Bureau
for
their
first
Embassy
Ball, Saturday evening, May 13, in
the Sarah Siddons Walk of the Ambassador East,
Chairman
of
the
affair,
Mrs.

Howard

Wolf

of

Northbrook,

as-

sures all participants of a full evening, including cocktails,
dinner,
dancing and entertainment.
All proceeds of the affair will go
to aid mentally disturbed children
under the care of the Jewish Children’s. Bureau.
Mrs.
Leslie Rockoff
of North-

brook

is

president

Suburban

Ruben,

League,

487

of

the

and

Sumac

North

Mrs.

Road,

Fred

is social

chairman.
Bett’s

Mr.

and

Mrs.

John

Photo

Petik

At home in Highland Park following a honeymoon trip to the
East

coast

are

the

John

former

Petik

and

Norma

his

Morelli,

daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Serafino
Morelli of McDaniels Avenue.

Sue Schechter, 871 Pleasant Ave.,
Highland
Park,
daughter
of Mr.
and Mrs. Alvin Schechter, is among
195 team riders and alternates participating
in the
1961
Miniature
500 tricycle race, Friday, May 12,
at 7:30 p.m. in the new Indiana
a

A gala
members

bride,

‘Stunt Day’

POPLIN
Faultless natural shoulder
styling in a wash ‘n’ wear fabric of 65% “Dacron”* polyester and 35% cotton. In the curs
rently correct shades.

First ‘Embassy’ Ball
ls Saturday Night;
Children to Benefit

Antiques to Aid
College Students

The young

couple

were

married

Saturday,
April
15, in the
Immaculate Conception church with
the Rev. Nicholas Carsello officiat-

ing.

Mr.

Petik

is the

son

Katherine
Petik
of
Avenue, and the late

of Mrs.

Homewood
John Petik.

For her marriage, the bride wore
a Chantilly

to match,

lace

Her

orchids carried on her prayerbook.
She was attended by Miss Alma
Morelli
as maid
of honor;
Miss
Rita Rettig
as bridesmaid;
Jean
Matteoni
and Penny Pasquesi
as
junior
bridesmaids.
They
wore

pink

chiffon

shaded

frocks

and

pink-to-red

Joseph

Petik

carried

carnations.

served

his brother

as best man; Guy Morelli, brother
of the bride, ushered.
A reception in the American Le-

gion Memorial
ceremony.
The

land

bride

Park

gown

with

crown

attended

flowers

were

white

Loyola

hall

followed

is a graduate

High

School;

the

of High-

Mr.

Petik

St, George’s Academy

and

University.

Dboys and girls!
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=

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H 18—D

26

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DRAPERY

CLEANING
Thursday,

SERVICE
May

11, 1961

�At First United
A

Election of officers of the West
‘Highland Park B’nai B’rith lodge
for the year 1960-61 will take place
Wednesday, May 17 at 8:30 p.m. in
the Club room of the Strike ’N
Spare Bowling lanes, Skokie highway and Lake-Cook road.
The nominating committee headed by Morton Hartman has named
the
following
slate:
President,
Leonard Lesnick; Vice-Presidents,

Abraham

Benjamin,

Marc

J. Berk-

man,
Melvin
B,
Janoff,
Robert
Jacobson and Ted Kenig; treasurer,
Harvey Amsterdam; financial secretary, David Wolf; Corresponding
secretary,
Morton
Hartman;
recording secretary, Murray B. Rae;
Warden,
Irving Saverslak;
Chaplain, Carleton Germaine; Trustees,
Jerome Cantor, Philip A. Kal and
Jack
Norwell;
Directors,
Samuel

Becker,

William

Berman,

Rock

River

Peas and Beans

Bible

camp

and

youth
rally will be held
at the
First United
Evangelical
church,
Laurel Ave. and Green
Bay Rd.,

Sunday

evening

at

7 o’clock,

the

Rev, Alfred E. Anderson, pastor,
announces.
The Rev. George Ralph, district
superintendent, will show pictures
of the camp taken last year. Special music will be provided by the
young people.
Christian

In

Endeavor

The
Sunday
Evening ¥ High
School-College Christian Endeavor
will meet at 8:15, when the sound
film-strip,
“Conduct
on a Date,”
will be presented.

Tasty in Cooking
Are peas and green beans among
the
favorite
fresh
vegetables
at
your house?

If you

would

like

to be

sure

of

serving these popular vegetables at
their best, take a tip from the food
canning industry.
Soft water can be put to use
advantageously in the preparation
of many
foods.
Here
are a few
suggestions worth trying:
(1) Rinse
fresh
vegetables
and
fruit in soft water before cooking.
Soft water readily removes garden
dirt
and
helps
to
maintain
the
color and flavor of foodstuffs.
(2) Boil vegetables in soft water

Rifle

Matches

a

Soft Water Keeps

Specialist Four George
E. McKay, whose wife, Pat, lives at 21
Webster ave., Highwood, competed
in the Fifth U.S. Army rifle and
pistol matches at Fort Riley, Kan.
The matches ended May 6. During
these matches, top marksmen from
units throughout the 13-state Fifth
Army area competed for trophies
and the opportunity to represent
the Fifth Army
at the All-Army
championships
at
Fort
Benning,
Ga., in June.
Specialist McKay is regularly assigned as a radio operator in the
66th Military Police Company
at
Fort Sheridan, Il.

to protect
taste.

both

appearance

and

Cabal’

eT

Plan Youth Rally

Cleaners
éx Laundry
SINCE 1926
1 Day Laundry Service

TT

West Highland Park
B‘nai B’rith Lodge
To Elect Officers

Call For and Deliver

ID 2-0305
1873 St. Johns Ave.
Highland Park

Bert

Braverman, Elmer Burack, Sidney
J. Brody, Morris Coff, Peter Cohn,
Nathan Firestone, Edward Glazier,
Fred Lane, Zorack Rabin, Morton
Rubin,
Charles
Wenk,
Robert
Buhai,
Burton
Kadison,
Edward
Becker and Marvin Wolfberg.
Past presidents include Jerome
L. Kohn, Dr. Albert A. Freedman,
Natham M. Gomberg. Gilbert Golden is the retiring president.
For
the
past
four
years
the
Lodge has been sponsoring an annual bowling tournament for the
patients at Downey hospital as part
of its program for aid to veterans.
The Fourth Annual bowling dinner
sponsored
by the Lodge
will be
held at the Pavillion of Downey
hospital Thursday evening, May 18
at 6 o’clock. The banquet climaxes
30
weeks
of
bowling
for
250
Downey
hospital
patients.
Irving
Saverslak is the Chairman of the
Aid to Veterans Committee of the
West Highland Park B’nai B'rith.

HIGHLAND: PARK STORE
989 Central

+

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Hi 6-514)

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11, 1961

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May

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see why Buick sales are soaring!

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Page 27

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Smaller

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Crash

at

Dennis

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1390 Skokie Hwy., Lake Forest

at

of

power
the

dental

Lakes

Great

de- |
qa

got

on

Victoria

| dan

Skokie

at

Park

Mitchell

of

940

Group

Photo

by

Milton

Merner

NE

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when
Park

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Michael

hit | Sedgwick Ave., Chicago, was ticket
car
his
police report. jed for driving without a license
or plates after an accident on Skokie at Half Day Rd. Sunday afternoon.

/
a
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Ave.©.
Sheri-

slowing

was

Glencoe,

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right
driving Sat-|a
for negligent
afternoon after a rear-end | hers, Highland
ae

ticket
urday

P

Park

Bailey

partment

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Shore

More than 30 members of Girl Scout Troop 59 spent last weekend in Springfield, exploring the historical spots in the area. The NEWS cameraman happened by while the girls were
loading in front of the Wayne Thomas school.

‘@)

Highland Park police say he was
towing
his
own
station
wagon,
when it jackknifed and tipped him
over,

BB Breaks Window
O

F

7
—)

RY

?

Irving Simpson of 365 Lincolnwood Rd. heard a “ping’”’ Saturday
evening; found a bb-sized hole in
one of his storm windows, Highland Park police were told.

ery

PA

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on PICNIC SET
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1% Blocks North of Moraine Rd. — East of Tracks
Page

0

EASIER

ee
3

-'
o

Radio Dispatched
EW

&amp; Radio Service

GRANT &amp; GRANT
708: Central, Highland Park
ID 2-7222

Thursday,

May

11, 1961

�Me

eee

ig

px

ee

Siw

Ue

5

‘

ae

ere Dae

Bh

Pr

aay

i

eet

ee

Music Teachers

Ma

ak a it:

gest

ee

kien

he ie

gin

eee

d

ee

AP

eS

?

_

Pioneer Improvement
Illinois’ first county-wide music
teachers’
workshop
has been
organized in Lake County by a com-

mittee

of

ten,

and

will

hold

its

first session at Lake Forest College
in September.
Details are being worked out in
the meantime
by the committee,
which includes Chester Kyle, di-

rector

oe

ean

A goal of three million dollars to restore and reac ‘
tivate
the Auditorium Theater has been set by the Council which

expected

left, Oscar

Getz,

co-chairman

of the

Council,

Arthur

High

to

participate—600

to

ia” of ashen:

wide interest, reports W. C. Petty,
county school superintendent.

Rubloff,

Help defeat the threat of communism by buying U, S. Bonds.

chair-

Crossroads Shopping Center

Restaurant

at Deerfield

1,000 of them.
he “ated werner:

is endeavoring to revive the institution, designed by Adler
and Sullivan, and often called the world’s most famous theater. Discussing the work that lies ahead of them are from
Chicago realtor, Mrs. John V. Spachner, 51 Oakmont,
man of the Council, and Albert Pick Jr., 106 Vine.

of music

Se,hool,
and
Florence
Ottesen
music
consultant
of
Elementary
District 108 in Highland Park.
The goal is improvement of vocal
and instrumental music in elementary and
secondary schools. All
teachers who have any connection
with the school music program are

ID 2-0300

,

and

Delicatessen

“| Want Another Western

Primeburger at The Steer!’
“Stop beatin’ my ear, kid! I already stuffed you with two Prime-

can you eat? The world’s record is
four! Y’know, they ain’t exactly |

burgers

the

at

The

Steer.

How

many

smallest

seen!
WIN

.

:

Valuable Prizes
DURING

of

meat

, 35 Available Cams

| ever

I admit they're a heck of a

bargain,

FREE!

hunk

but

I

ain’t

made

.

of

Zig-Zag Stitches
ends

and

Darns

" Appliques

money! So if you'll just shut up
and suck your lollypop, | promise
to take you back to The Steer tomorrow, OK?”
‘Whatever you say, Mom, on
account of Sunday is Mother’s Day
and your moustache tickles!

Hours

We’re

MON.,

We

THURS.,

——

CATER

TO THOSE

WHO

‘Height
12”

no divider
rail

16"
on.
424”

4.165
AO
1.62

a6

AT

a:
SG"
40
Ae

-

A

divider rail
in center

:

6”
96

y

| 36"
160"

divider rail
36” from
bottom

6S"

2a.

(80
384"
96”

8”
2SO:

9”
1.66°.

1.61:
OE
2.07

176:
28ST
2.22

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5.29
5.74

GER

G58"

eee
FSGS

ee:
BIO

8.89
9.45

9.00
9.57

5.40
+ 5.85

5.63
6.08

CAT

7.32.

7.20:

754°

TOS
B21

TBS
833.

9.23
9.68

9.34
9.79

Thursday, March
ees

11, 1961

2.36.
2a
3.04

tet

Sea

4.95

11"
hes

181
2
237

S98"

WESTSIDE

_

10”
98

807°

ABS

a.m.

——

TO EAT
— THE

PRE-SANDED—READY
MADE
AMERICAN
Panel Widths

Os

4.73

|

erane

+
¢

327
2.57
54.95
5.18

6.95 = 698

tA
poe

WITH

287
BAR
493.
4.84

6

TUESDAYS

The ultimate in Western

282:
2ST.
489)
4.50

5-18
5.63

GO".

446°
Te
1.92

SAT.

8:30 a.m.-2

CLOSED

-2.OP . 254:
ay
02.
Le
ANT
4.28
+39

5

52":

Yh
346.

&amp;

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dining

pleasure.

SHUTTERS

THICK—TOP
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a

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WOOD
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WE

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ee

268:
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BS
5.51

5.29

5.74

808

6.08
6.53
365.

7.68
BAA
878

9.56
10.24

6.53
7.09
OEE
9.4)

9.90
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Each

MILLWORK

CO.

12"
&lt; ate

Panel

STAIN

6.30

6a

7.09
7.76

Bee

OO
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10.35
11.14
14.90
Can

Be

PAINT

15”

ee

480
40%
58)
5.96

OR

14”

2.48
3.15

786-821

© 8:21

TO

SEWING CIRCLE

16”

FREE
Home

4.73

for
¥

ie.

is
-

.

bs

a

Demonstration
IMPORTED BRASS
SHUTTER HARDWARE

ie ger tiga

Set.

No.

RF

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ye

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e

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a

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=

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Width—3”

Height

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Set. No. 4 (comp. set for
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729 ‘Ridge Rd. ~~. Highland Berk

Estes Ave. &amp;
ID 2-1283

Phone
*

e

SEWI

662

NG

CENTRAL

M ACHI

AVENUE

HIGHLAND PARK

NE

C0

9

4EastDoors
of

Green

Bay Rd.
Page 29

4

=
0
Eg
’ ~

.

a4

�Expert Hair Coloring
and

James

Shades

Permanent Waves
Hair Cutting
All

of Beauty

Branches

Culture

listed

CLASSIQUE
1815

St.

Johns

10,

of

Ct., was riding

1083

his bi-

cycle in the alley between Park
Ave. and Elm Pl. Friday morning
when he collided head-on with a
tow truck; tire-to-tire.
The driver was Fred Patterson
of
141
Park
Ave.,
Waukegan.
Highland Park police reported the
view blocked from both directions
by a building and another truck;

Specializing in
High Blonding

Featuring

Dungjen,

Sandwick

Hair Cutting

In All

Crash on Skokie

Bike Hits Truck

See

Beauty SALON

Avenue

ID

EXPERIENCED

no

damage,

no

Several
$22.50,

OPERATORS

Mrs.

yield

the

total

The

report lists $500

Roberts’

45

car,

Ravine

of

$120

Dr.

2907

to

damage

accused

W.

police

value
of

M.
No

in

new

Karen

143rd

Kelly Jr.,
complaint

the

to

Douglas’.

Island, of taking some
week,
were
found
by

Lowe

Friday

hitting the car of Arthur Douglas,
141 Robsart St., Kenilworth.

Mahone’s
Jean

right-of-way

afternoon, Highland Park police
report, after turning onto Skokie
Valley Rd. in the 2200 block and

Park

bracelets,

which

to

hone

injuries.

Jewelry Found

2-1603

Robert Roberts of 3116 Enoch
Ave., Zion, got a ticket for failure

home

employers

Pl.,

Ma-

Blue

time last
Highland

of Mrs.
(William

1871 Sheahen Ct.).
has been signed.

eee

Richard

K. Sullivan

Richard K. Sullivan, 3118 Dato
Avenue, has been appointed to the
newly
created
post
of Associate
Manager of the Chicago Office of
Holiday.
Sullivan,
most
recently
an advertising sales representative

for Holiday, will assume his additional
duties
immediately.
He
joined the Curtis Publishing Company in 1954, after previous advertising sales positions with American
Home,
National
Geographic
and Coronet magazines.
A native of Chicago, Mr. Sullivan attended Northwestern Univer-

sity.

He

served,

with

the

rank

of

Captain, as a pilot in the Marine
Air Corps during World War II.

Ends

Recruit

Marine

Period

Pvt.

Donald

S.

Schwal-

bach, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
Donald J, Schwalbach, Sr. of 887
Deerfield Rd. has completed recruit training at the Marine Corps
Recruit

Depot,

San

Diego,

Calif.

Upon completion of the final phase
of

training,

ported
for

the

to Camp

further

new

marines

Pendleton,

infantry

re-

Calif.,

training.

YOULL BE PLEASED WITH THE
CAREFUL
ATTENTION
YOUR
WORK WILL RECEIVE.
OUR

Put on your sneakers, turn your hat brim

down and your coat collar up. Then slip
down to our showroom. We'll help you
make

a clean

getaway

in a brand

new

Valiant. Plan to pull off the job this week
—about $42 a month* ought to do it. Deals
on new Plymouths are also so good that

you'll feel like you’re stealing. But hurry!
*Based on Manufacturer’s Suggested Retail Price for
Valiant Model V-100 2-door Sedan and average local
carrying charges for 36 months, after 14 down. Transportation and taxes (local and state) extra. Terms may vary
slightly with individual dealer’s précing policies.

At our prices you can steal a good used car, too

SEE YOUR

PLYMOUTH-VALIANT

LAKE
1766
Page

30

FIRST

MOTORS,
ST.

HIGHLAND

PARK

DEALER

INC.
ID 2-2500

SERVICE

FEATURES:

Thorough Preparation
Each surface is given the proper basic work to insure successful painting.
Clean, Careful Workmen
Your furnishings are protected
each step of the way.

Best materials, properly
applied.
We pay more for our paint,
get the best and apply it as
it’s supposed to be applied.

Your job will last longer.
Sensible Prices.
Neither the lowest nor the
highest! You'll get a good
job for a fair price.

é

iDiwd

2.

53544

bloom painting

company
Thursday, May

11, 1961

�@ MUTUAL SERVICES ¢
TFINEST
THE
|
‘SHREDDED

Miss Barbara
100

Bucknell

pated
May

in

the

Day

J. Sturm
coeds

is among

who

partici-

University’s

recent

ceremonies.

Entitled
the May
crowning
featured a

“Salute to Broadway,”
Day ‘program followed
of a May Queen
and
series of dances, a spe-

cial presentation by the women’s
drill team, and several selections
by the women’s glee club.

Miss

Sturm

has

been

chosen

to

take part in the processional as a
laurel chain bearer.
A freshman
at Bucknell,
Miss
Sturm
is the

daughter

of

Mr.

and

Mrs,

Albert

F. Sturm of 107 Ridge Road. She
is studying for the degree of baehelor of arts.

BUY

Shown

making

plans for the annual

U. S. SAVINGS

BONDS.

MUTUAL RCE @

[in May Day Fete

TOP

SOIL

SPECIALLY PREPARED BY MACHINE, Easier to Spread
—Improves Growing. Most uniform, perfectly processed
soil obtainable . . . a® no extra cost.
MANURE — FERTILIZER

Phone
MUTUAL

ID 2-0027

SERVICES

OF

HIGHLAND

PARK

@ MUTUAL SERVICES

|

Are you, like millions of others, today...

North Shore fund

raising campaign for Jewish Big Sisters are from left, Mrs.
David Weinstock, Highland Park, Mrs. Lawrence Blum, Wilmette, Mrs. Neil Holleb, Glencoe, Mrs. Jack Stein, Winnetka.
Members of the Big Sisters met
April 25 at the home of Mrs. Stein

in Winnetka,

last

fund raising campaign. The
will be culminated
by the

Chicago.

Reservations

being

taken

Zieve,

612

by

Old

Mrs.

now

the

North

held

at

the

that

home

of

Mrs.

This

meeting

23 in the home
Distelheim,
959

car

to

see

the

pedestrian.

It

is important that during a rainstorm
pedestrians
don’t
obscure
their own vision or visibility with

membership.
Benno

1946 Rollingwood.

planned.

When it’s raining, it’s easier for
a pedestrian to see an approaching car than it is for the driver of

The first was a clothing workshop
Rothschild,

is

workshop

recreation for Little

are

Leonard

Elm,

Shore

Recreation

will be held May
of
Mrs.
Irving
Brittany,

The workshop was the second
of three which had been planned
by

the

summer

Sisters

event
May-

time Frolic Dinner Dance, to be
held May 13 at the Standard Club
in

is

when

to launch the annual

.

Looking for a practical
approach to a more
meaningful daily life?

The | umbrellas.

after |

Spend one hour at this free public lecture and learn
how Christian Science can help you in relation to your

family, your work, your health, your peace of mind.

Se
oS
IA

Cam _

ile ™

N

WS

SY

Wilson M. Riley, C.S.B., of Kansas City, Missouri, will speak on

‘Christian Science: God’s Ever-present Kingdom Revealed,” at a free
public lecture to be held at 8 p.m., May 15, at First Church of Christ,
Scientist, in Highland Park.
a

y
d
hazar

to

WwW Toy
ateh

:
glaucoma is: the greatest cause
Of all eye diseases
of blindness. It is also one of the most insidious

—because often no pain heralds it. If there are

a

symptoms they may be so unobtrusive that a
healthy, ordinarily unobservant person fails to
notice or ignores them until too late. Caused by
pressure inside the eyeball, glaucoma may cause
permanent vision loss every day it continues
without detection. It is primarily a disease of late
middle age and often the first inkling of glaucoma
comes during a routine examination by your eye

physician (M.D.) If it is discovered early, further
sight damage can usually be halted through

Mr. Riley,ys member

Board of Lectureship of The Mother
e
‘
;
of Christ,
Church
Church, The First
Scientist, Boston,

Massachusetts,

has spent many vears in the
public
maces
te
P
practice of Christian Science.

Open to all. This is one of a
series of public lectures sponsored

your opportunity

to learn about
( &gt;)"HRISTIAN Sse) CIENCE
Monday.
‘
Free

che House of Vision

FOR EYE EXAMINATION

Craftsmen in Optics
1891

SHERIDAN ROAD, HIGHLAND PARK
610 CHURCH STREET, EVANSTON
135 NORTH WABASH AVENUE, CHICAGO
@H.0.¥.

3 Thursday, March 11, 1961.

May 15 ~8 to 9 p.m.

Pustic

LECTURE

jf

Aut Are WELCOME
Young people especially invited

Scientists.

First Church of Christ, Scientist
AVENUE

:

during lecture

by the Highland Park Christian

493 HAZEL

i

Plenty of seats! Excellent parking!
Small children cared for

eyesight, see your eye physician (M.D.)
regularly and oftener after forty.
(M.D.)

Le

i

AKL

proper treatment. So protect your precious

CONSULT AN EYE PHYSICIAN

‘

This is

of the

- HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS
( Next door to City Hall)

7

‘a

�National College

FREE STORAGE

Auxilary To Meet

Garments are not pressed

WIN Valuable Prizes FREE!

SAVE

No

harsh

CLOSET

chemicals

of SPOT REMOVING

FREE
PICK-UP &amp;
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until ready for use.

used

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leaves wools &amp; cashmeres naturally SOFT.

Experienced

to answer

Dry Cleaner

on

route

all your dry cleaning problems.

ROESSLER’S EXCLUSIVE CLEANERS
727

ST. JOHNS

AVENUE,

HIGHLAND

ID 2-0352

Mail

Boxes

Postmaster Gregory M. Sheahen
has announced that the
annual
rural mail box improvement proa.m. cofffee Tuesday in the home
gram, to aid the Postal Service in
of Mrs. Benedict K. Goodman
of
providing more efficient deliveries
390 Hazel Ave.
She is a trustee
of the private elementary teachers’ and to stimulate efforts to improve
the appearance of the countryside,
college.
will be emphasized May 15 to 20.
Plans for the coming year will
The program is to encourage pabe made, and a slate proposed by
a nominating
committee
of four trons to provide suitable mail receptacles erected and maintained
including Mrs. L. L. Peterson of
for easy and safe accessibility, preDeerfield.
senting a neat
appearance, and
In the afternoon, Auxiliary memaffording protection to the mail.
i bers will attend the annual scholThe Post Office Department listarship assembly and choir concert
ed these suggestions for rural mail
at the college.
box improvement:
Boxes that are not properly
Name Camp Officers
erected, or not maintained in good
Arnold Shure of 1394 Sheridan serviceable condition retard the deRd. has been named a vice-presi- livery of mail
and expose it to
ident, and Maurice Spertus of 827 the weather.
Bob-O-’Link Rd. treasurer, of the
Boxes which are no longer servCamp
Ramah
in Wisconsin
Com- iceable should be replaced.
mittee. Hebrew is spoken at this
Name of box owner should be
summer
camp
for Conservative inscribed on the side of the box
Jewish youth.
visible to the carrier as he approaches, or on the door if boxes are
grouped.
Boxes
and
supports
should
be
kept painted preferably white, but
other colors may be used.
Mail
boxes
on
rural
and star
routes must be located on the right
side of the road in the direction
of travel of the carriers in all cases
where traffic conditions are such
that it would be dangerous for the
carriers to drive to the left in order
to serve the boxes, or where their
doing so would
constitute
a violation of State or local traffic laws
and regulations. The approaches to
boxes should be filled and properly graded and unobstructed at all
times.

SPACE!
Our

Rural

The board of the Women’s Auxiliary of National College of Education will be entertained for 10

Of Out-of-Season Garments Cleaned by Us.
¢ Not Box Storage. Each Garment Individually
Stored on a Hanger by Itself.
@

Ask Users To Check

PARK

ID 2-0312

POLICE!
“police”

h

ousehold

y with a full
go
value

plan! Get a
protection
Lines
Van
American
=
move.
el?
ren
ape
a eee
tie
complete
the
do
perts
sae
&amp;
er
Rafferty Transf
Rd.,
oo
en
Gre
3
212
Co.,
2-0507.
ID
k,
Par
Highland

WHEN

YOU

MODERNIZE

YOUR

KITCHEN,

REMEMBER...

Aflameless electric kitchen won't go out of date
The lady above demonstrates the
amazing flexibility of a flameless
electric kitchen. Because there are
no fuel pipes to get in the way, she

can have her automatic electric
dryer wherever she wants it. There
are no vents to install, no pilot to
burn. So the entire laundry unit
can fit into a small area behind
attractive sliding doors.
Of course, the electric range is
the heart of every flameless electric kitchen. With it, you can cook

your

meals

without

overheating

your

kitchen

(or yourself).

oven

is insulated

The

on all six sides,

not just five. Hardly any heat escapes. The surface units transfer
heat directly into pans and into

foods—not into your kitchen.

_

And because electric ranges burn
no fuel, no dirt is created. Your
kitchen (and everything in it)
stays clean twice as long.
Before you spend a penny on
kitchen remodeling, get a professionally-prepared plan based on
your specific needs and budget. An

a J Public Service Company :
‘Page 32

leaks with our

experienced kitchen specialist can
shew you howimaginative planning
can save you

steps and eliminate

unnecessary bending and reaching.
He can also help you work out color
schemes and lighting effects and
help solve storage problems.
For

the names

and

addresses

of

kitchen modernization specialists in
your area, call your nearest Public

Service Company office.

FLAM ELESS

ELECTRIC KITCHEN

So Clean, So Safe, So Modern

© Commonwealth Edison Company

save your nerves,
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ked
e all faucets checpe
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ital

Special

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for Medica]

‘&gt;...

RO1414 HIGHLAND AVE., CHICAGO 26
The Rains are Coming—
Check your Sump Pump!

RADIO-CONTROLLED SERVICE
Thursday,

May

11, 1961

�| restate Planning .

An estate-planning seminar for
women will be held on the Lake
Forest College Campus May 18.
Edwin
L.
Gilroy,
367
Central
Ave., will act as chairman for the
seminar, which is one of the first
in the Midwest.
Four
men,
outstanding in the fields of wills, investments,
estates
and
insurance
will be the speakers.
Gilroy is vice-president
of the
Alumni Executive Board and chairman
of the Lake
Forest College
Estate
Planning
committee.
Assisting him with the seminar will
be Arthur
O’Hara,
vice-president |
of the Northern Trust Co., Chicago.
a specialist in securities and bonds;
Russell W. Steger, general agents
for the New England Mutual Life
Insurance
Co., an expert
in the
area of insurance; Ralph K. Bell,
Evanston attorney, an authority in
the estate planning field who will
discuss how to relate insurance and
securities
into
a personal
estate
planning program;
and James
C.
Daubenspeck,
Chicago
attorney,
whose field is the tax implications
of estate planning.
John
S.
Munshower,
business
manager
of Lake
Forest College
will serve as moderator of the four
discussion periods, and President ,
William Graham Cole will address
the guests at the luncheon in Hixon
Hall, which will be the site for the
day’s program.

hhitchenAt d

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features! —

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was
awarded
an
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Technical Institute in Chicago on
May
5. Henderson
will
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employed in the Evanston area as a
customer.
engineer
for
International Business Machines.

Falls

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3, of 654

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Friday night, suffer-

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WELCOME WAGON
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iD

’61

ON

identifies your

Mrs. Mitzi

FOR

—a
ee

Tot

a

For your convenience we are open:
Thursday and Friday Evenings 7 to 9
All Day Wednesday

PARKING

AT

ALL

TIMES

ID 2-6260 |

ica
¥

To Be Held May 18

LTE
RITE

Look at

Seminar for Women

Graduate

eee:

eee Ga,
Fe

ees

TT

1

7
aes

x
sees
yar
as

�ae

if

¥Y

CROSS
CATHOLIC
CHURCH
Nerth
Waukegan Road
. John O’Mara,
Edward
Reilly,

» 724 Elder Lane

Masses:
ly

§-0430

7,

8,

9,

10,

11:15

and

Masses: 6:30 and 8:30 a.m.
F
of each month, Masses

a.m., 8:30
urday: 4

a.m.
p.m. and

7:30

p.m.

at

Confes-

NORTH
SUBURBAN
sh gge pene
FREE
CHURCH
. Vernon Obon,
Pastor
“
200 County Line Rd.

Church

Office—WI

Parsonage—WI

JAY
a.m.
45

Sunday

5-4640

5-4641

School.

am.
Worship Service.
Worship Service.
.m.
Youth Groups.
SDAY
.m. Bible Study.
.m. Junior
Crusaders.

m.

SDA
p.m.

Pioneer

Girls

and

Boys

Bri-

HE HIGHLAND PARK
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
ID 2-1695

poe

Dr.

William Atkinson Young
Rev. J. A. Miller
Minist ers

&gt; 4
am. and 11:15 a.m. Church School
ers
up through 8th grade at 9:30
d 11:15 a.m. simultaneously with the
;

ol Group meet at 9:45
Sunday evenings.

nate

wi

REDEEMER

ee

a.m.

and

LUTHERAN CHURCH

Highland
Park
(Missouri Synod)

le 4 Robert

A. Wendelin, Pastor

1717 Deerfield Rd.—ID
unday service,
10:15 a.m.
; a
Sunday of each

a.m,

“st.

2-6848
Holy
month,

ComSun-

JOSEPH
THE
WORKER
CATHOLIC CHURCH

W.

Rev.
pry,

Dundee

Rd., Wheeling

.« George J. Mulcahey, Pastor
Raymond Nugent, Assistant
171 W. Dundee Rd., Wheeling

LEhigh

7-2740

Masses: 6:30,
8, 9:30, 11, 12:15
ay Masses: 6:30, 8, 9:30, 11 a.m.,

days: 6:30, 8:30 a.m.

turday

ay

and

in

ursday

the

month:

SOCTE
David

~¢
.

4,

before

5:30,

7,

the
9

first

p.m.,

School.

aim.
Friends meeting
in Deer
Path
‘
ibrary in Lake
Forest.
it:
rmation call WIndsor 5-1774.

NORTH SHORE
UNITARIAN CHURCH
Chapel
rest
Call WI

{ eration

5 a.m.
am,

Church
Church

School,

330

School.
TORAH

Saturday

information

call

CONGREGATIONAL

irsery is
ie V

THE

Bere? 4
_
Oak
ae

Sunday

5-5466.

CHURCH

provided for small children.
179 for more information.

NORTH

SUBURBAN

BAPTIST. CHURCH

. Northbrook East
oe
CR 2-4623
r Donald E. Thurston,

am.

Sunday

Pastor

School for children

Worship
Service
adults.
Extended

and

for young
session for

KINGDOM
EVANGELICAL
:
Woodland Park Schoo:

§tephen G. Bodony, Pastor
ing the Gospel of the Kingdom.

a.m. Sunday
p.m.

Evening

School.
Service.

IMPROVEx3

p.m.

Guards

Awana

Youth

meeting

Club,

and

for

Bible

UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
638 Waukegan Road
Rev. Philip A. Desenis, Minister
Parsonage—1139 Elmwood
Ave.
Telephone WI 5-5050
THURSDAY, May li
6:30 p.m.
Mother-Daughter
Banquet
at
Deerfield Legion hall.
SATURDAY, May 13
9 a.m. Beginners Confirmation.
~ 1 p.m. Advanced Confirmation at church.
SUNDAY,
May 14
MOTHERS
DAY
9:30 a.m. Family service.
9:30 a.m. Chuirch School for Nursery thru
Juniors,
11 a.m. Worship—Confirmation,
1i am.
Church School for Junior and
Senior High, Nursery provided.
MONDAY, May 15
4 p.m, Cherub choir.
8 p.m. Plans and Construction commitTUESDAY, May 16
8 p.m.
Circle 3 Co-hostesses
Zahnie and Mrs. F. Brandwein.
THURSDAY,
May 18
7:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.

Mrs.

L.

CONGREGATION
BETH
OR
In Trinity United
Church
638
aukegan Road
rfield
Telephone WI 5-5070
Rabbi David Cederbaum
Cantor Jerome
Frazes
FRIDAY
Oneg
8:30 p.m.
Sabbath
Eve
Service.
Shabot following service.
;
SATURDAY
9:30 a.m. Religious school.
11 a.m. Hebrew school.
Board
of
Directors
meetings
are
the
first Wednesday of every month. Sisterhood
general meetings are the second Monday
of every month.

DEERFIELD

American Baptist Church)
Lane School, Midway Road

am.
le and

_

and

Windsor

WASHBURN

3:45

girls 11-14. This is the last
camp points.
6;30 p.m. Pals and Pioneers.
WEDNESDAY,
May 17
7:30
p.m.
Prayer
Meeting
§' tudy.
8:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.

tee.

p.m. Sabbath eve services.
brew
School,
Wednesday afternoon;

Ee

¥

5-3332

rvice.

B’NAI

COMMUNITY
BAPTIST CHURCH
1250 Waukegan Road
Rev. Robert Humrickhouse,
Pastor
Office Telephone:
Windsor 5-0708
We Preach Christ
Crucified Risen and Coming Again
SUNDAY,
May 14
9:36 a.m. Sunday School Classes of Bible
Study for all ages. Nurseries are provided
for the young.
10:45 a.m. Worship
service.
7
p.m. Evening
Gospel service.
8:30 p.m. Victory Rally for Chicago Area
Baptist Sunday school contest. The rally will
be held at Belden Ave. Baptist Church of
Chicago.
MONDAY,
May 15
3:30
pm.
Chums
Awana.
Youth
club,
girls 8-10. This is the last meeting for camp
points.
TUESDAY, May 16

TRINITY

UAKERS
OF
FRIENDS
Stickney, Clerk
Lake Forest

Sunday

THE BETHLEHEM CHURCH
(Evangelical United Brethren)
Rev. Eugene M. Wykie, Minister
Rev. R. C. Grigereit, Asst. Minister
801 Rosemary Terrace
Church—WI1 5-0078
Parsonage—WI
5-2221
THURSDAY,
May
11
7 p.m. Boy Scout Troop 51.
¥ p.m.
Youth
Choir
Rehearsal
(high
ool),
7:30 p.m. Board of trustees.
FRIDAY,
May
12
6:30 p.m, Church Federation of Greater
Chicago
area
meeting
and dinner,
Glenview Community
Church,
$1.50.
SUNDAY,
May
14—Mother’s
Day
and
Christian Family Sunday,
Rite of Baptism at both services.
9:30 and 10:55 a.m. Services of Devine
Worship,
9:30 a.m. Church School for rursery (2
wr
old)
through
6th
grade,
and
adult
asses
10:55
am.
Church
School
classes
for
nursery (2 yr. old) through high school.
6:30 p.m. Youth Fellowship.
MONDAY, May 15
8 a.m.
Confirmation
class
leaves
for
North Central College, Naperville.
3:30 p.m. Girl Scout Troop No. 172.
8 p.m. Fireside Couples Club, at the home
i Mr. and Mrs. Roger Case, Woodland
6.
WEDNESDAY, May 17
7 7m. Chorister
rehearsal
(grades
4-7).
7:45 p.m. Chancel choir rehearsal.
8 p.m. New members meeting at Parsonage.

CONGREGATIONAL
CHURCH

In South Park School
1331 Hackberry Road
Rev. John S. Usry, Minister
Parsonage Telephone WI 5-0176
THURSDAY
7:45 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
SUNDAY
.
10:30 a.m. Worship
Service.
10:30 a.m. Church School.
7 p.m. Pilgrim Fellowship.
GRACE

For
4-3060

“LOW-COST LOAN

FROM

Paul

°

V. Berggren,

Deerfield Man Named Associate Pastor

Pastor

George Jacobson, Intern
Telephone: Windsor 5-2009
THURSDAY,
May 11
:
8 p.m. Regular monthly meeting. of the
A.L.C.W. at the church. Miss Bernice Larson, 1299 Gordon Terr., will show slides
with explanation of the colors of the paraments and vestments for the different seasons of the church year, Mrs. Elmer Blank,
40 High
St., Highwood,
will discuss the
various symbols of the altar of Zion Lutheran.
:
The circles will be re-organized at this
meeting.
Anyone
desiring
membership
in
one of the five circles of the A.L.C.W.,
kindly contact the membership
chairman,
Mrs. James Nordhaus, WI 5-1977, indicating preference
of morning,
afternoon
or
evening
circle meetings.
;
SUNDAY, May 14, Sunday after Ascension

Mothers Day
8 a.m. Celebration

of Holy

ee
Communion.

9 a.m, Family worship with church school
for children three years old through
7th
grade;
eighth
graders
to attend worship
service.
Cry Room facilities available during this service.
10:45
a.m.—same
as above.
Bus transportation is provided for this service only.
Please contact the church office for schedAcolytes will meet between
the 9 and
10:45 Service of Worship.
7:30 p.m. Luther League meeting at the
church
pre-election.
MONDAY, May 15
5
4
7:30-9 p.m. School for Christian Living
conducted by Pastor Berggren on the Book
of John.
TUESDAY, May 16
7:30 p.m. Boy Scout Troop 150.
8 p.m. Altar Guild Meeting at the home
of Mrs.
Harold V. Dahl,
1318
Division
Street, Highland Park.

WEDNESDAY, May 17

:

4:30 p.m. High School Youth Instruction
Class for church membership.
8 p.m. Adult Choir rehearsal.
THURSDAY, May 18
8 p.m. Meeting of the Board of Deacons.
FIRST

PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
824 Waukegan Road
Bernard F. Didier, Pastor
Rev. Hugh Jeffers,
Minister of Christian Education
Manse—1218 Walden Lane
Church phone—WI 5-0560
Manse phone—WI 5-0107
THURSDAY, May 11
3:45 p.m. Jr. Choir rehearsal (4th and
5th grades).
4:30
p.m.
Westminster
choir
rehearsal
(6th, 7th and 8th graders).
Both under the direction of Mrs.
Edward Alder.
8 p.m. Building Committee meeting
9 p.m. Mixed Bowling league at ‘Strike
’N Spare Lanes, Northbrook.
SATURDAY,
May 13.
Men’s
Council Annual
Flower
sale on
church lawn.
SUNDAY,
May 14
9, 10 and 11:30 a.m. Morning Worship
and Church
School. Nursery
for children
1, 2 and 3 years. Kindergarten and classes
for all other grades through high school.
Baptism at 10 and 11:30 services.
9 am.
Fiders Assn. meeting.
9 a.m. Leadership training classes.
10 p.m. Adult Bible class.
Her4 p.m.
New
Member
class,
501
mitage.
MONDAY,
May 15
3:30 p.m. Girl Scout troop 11.
3:30 p.m. Girl Scout troop 127.
8 p.m. Deacon’s meeting.
8 p.m. Adult Bible class.
TUESDAY, May 16
Communicants’
3:45
p.m.
8th
Grade
class.
8th
Grade
4:45
p.m.
Communicants’
class.
7:30 p.m. Boy scout troop 52.
8 p.m. Church School .staff meeting.
WEDNESDAY,
May 17
9 am. Women’s Prayer group.
9:30 a.m. Women’s Bible Study group.
sets
p.m. 7th Grade Communicants’
class.
Rev.

ST.

GREGORY’S
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
Wilmot and Deerfield Roads
The Rey. J. D. Parker, Rector
The Rev. E. G. Wappler, Curate
The Rev. G. W. Robinson, Assistant
Rectory Telephone—WIndsor 5-1881
Church Telephone—Windsor
5-1678
DAILY
9 am, and 5 p.m. Morning and Evening
Prayer.
THURSDAY, May 11, Ascension Day
7 am. Holy Communion.
7:30 p.m. Boy Scouts.
9:30 a.m. Holy Communion—Altar Guild
Breakfast and meeting.
SUNDAY, May 14
8 a.m. Holy Communion.
9:30
am.
Holy
Communion—Church
school and Nursery care.
Prayer—Church
11:15
a.m.
Morning
school and Nursery care.
MONDAY, May 15
Afternoon—Girl
Scouts.
TUESDAY, May 16
9:30 a.m. St. Anne’s Guild—Baby Sitter
provided.
WEDNESDAY,
May 17
1 p.m. Afternoon Bridge tournament.
8 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
CHRIST

LUTHERAN
CHURCH
(Missouri
Synod)
Walters Ave. at Fourth St.
Northbrook
further information call CRestwood
or Windsor 5-1323.

WITH A

Rev.

METHODIST
CHURCH
Maplewood School
Clay and Alden Cts.
‘Rev. Richard F. Mellor, Interim Pastor
Parsonage—1652 Pear Tree Rd.
Membership—WI1
5-5203
SUNDAY, - April 2
9:30 a.m. Church
school,
children
two
and three years, kindergarten
and classes
for all grades through high school. Adult
Bible class.
10:30 a.m. Fellowship coffee.
11 a.m. Morning
Worship
service.
Reception of new members. Sitters for children will be provided.

Of First Lutheran Church, Cedar Rapids
John W. Ried, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred E. Ried, 1447
Wilmot Rd., and brother of Fred E. Ried, Jr., 1520 Greenwood
call to the First Lutheran

Ave., with Mrs. Ried, have accepted a

where

Rapids, Ia., a congregation

Cedar

church,

will serve as associate

Ried

of 2,500 members,

minister.

Ried
received
his
elementary
training in Leander Stone School,
Chicago; North Park college academy,
Chicago;
St.
Olaf
college,

Northfield, Minn., from which both
he and Mrs. Ried graduated cum
laude, with special honors in philosophy and art, respectively.
Ried will graduate with his class
of 30 seminarians, from the Chicago
Lutheran
Theological
seminary
of
the
United
Lutheran
church,
on Friday
evening,
May
12, exercise to take place at St.
Lukes
Lutheran
church
in Park
Ridge.

Ordination

into

the

parish

min-

istry will take place in his home
church, St. Mark’s Lutheran, 6047
North Rockwell St., Chicago, Pastor J. Stephen Bremer, the minister, on Friday evening, May 26, at
8 p.m. Dr. Youngquist, minister of
the First Lutheran church, Cedar
Ripids, will preach the ordination
sermon; Dr. Howard Weeg, President of the Illinois Synod of the
United
Church
of America,
will
conduct the ordination ceremony.
Reception in the church parlors
will follow the service. Friends of
the
family
are
invited
to these
services, and reception.
On
Sunday
following, May
28,
Ried will preach the sermon at the
three
services
at St. Marks
Lutheran.
Mrs. Ried at present is teaching

art in Franklin

Park

and will con-

tinue
in this
as. her
specialized
field
by
taking
a_ post-graduate
course at Iowa State university. In

addition

to

her

teaching

she

is

busily engaged painting a wall mur-

al, depicting

the

a congregation
Chicago.

of Christ

in

of less privileged

life

in

The couple will be at home in Cedar

Rapids

by

the

middle

of June.

Lutheran Spring Luncheon
Held n Lake Forest Inn
The Guild of Redeemer Lutheran
church, 1731 Deerfield Rd., High-

land

Park,

held

its Spring

lunch-

eon and meeting yesterday at the
Deerpath Inn, Lake Forest.
Judge
Minard
Hulse
was
the
guest speaker. He spoke on “Juvenile Deliquency.”
Recently the 1961 Confirmands

FIRST

CHURCH OF
SCIENTIST

CHRIST,

155 Deerfield Road
SUNDAY—11
a.m. Services.
Children
are cared
for during
Church
service,
9:30 a.m. Sunday School.
For pupils up to 20 years of age.
WEDNESDAY
EVENING
MEETINGS—
8 p.m.
Including testimonies of healing
through Christian Science.
All are welcome to attend these services
and to use the reading room. For further
information call WIndsor 5-1626.
READING
ROOM
3 to 5 p.m. Daily.
9 to 9:30 p.m. Wednesdays.
LESSON—SERMON
The immortal status of the children of
God will be brought out at Christian Science
services Sunday in) a Lesson-Sermon on the
subject ‘‘Mortals and Immortals.”
Scriptural
selections
will
include
the
following from Romans (8): “For as many
as are led by the Spirit of God, they are
the sons of God. . . . The Spirit itself beareth witness with our spirit, that we are the
children of God.”’
A correlative passage to be read from
“Science
and
Health
with
Key
to
the
Scriptures”
by
Mary
Baker
Eddy
states
(p. 519): “Human capacity is slow to discern and to grasp God’s creation and the
divine power and presence which go with
it, demonstrating its spiritual origin. Mortals can never know the infinite, until they
throw off the old man and reach the spiritual image and likeness.”

John

W.

Ried

Confirm Young People
At Trinity United
Church On Sunday
On Sunday, May 14 John Siffert,
Nancy
Sticken,
Walter
Sticken,
Steve
Williams,
Stuart
Bennett,
Sandra Thompson,
Linda Rectenwald, Carol Kapschull,
Jim Beloian,
Bob Hertel, Ray Nielsen, William
Nielsen and John Flint will be confirmed at Trinity United Church
of Christ.

These

young

people

have

com-

pleted two years of Confirmation

in

which

of

they studied the doctrine

the Christian Church and the meaning of Church membership.
_On the following Sunday,
21
they
will
receive
their
Communion at the altar with
families and God Parents.

May
first
their

Confirmation
for
these
young
people will be their reaffirmation
of their Baptism vows taken for
them
by their parents
and
God
parents
at the time of their infancy.

Catholic Women

Observe Day In
Lake Forest
Members
of parish
and _ interparochial
groups
in
south
Lake
county district of the Archdiocesan
council
of Catholic
women
have
been
invited
to observe
“President’s Day’”’ on May 18 at 1:30 p.m.

at St. Mary’s parish, 175 E. Illinois
Rd.,

Lake

Forest.

Local presidents who will report
at the May
18 meeting
include:
Mrs.
Robert
Dressler,
route
1,
Prairie
View,
St. Mary,
Buffalo
Grove; Mrs. Edward Moroney, 1039
Oakley, Deerfield, Holy Cross.

of Redeemer Lutheran church enjoyed a Sunday afternoon performance of the Zion Passion play at

Zion,

Illinois.

Hosts

and

hostesses

for this event were Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Eichler, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Potter and Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Schoen, all of Highland Park.

“The Service Bank Of Highland Park”

BANK?

HIGHLAND

1771 Second St.

BANK—POST

Member

Federal

OFFICE

BLDG.

Deposit Insurance

PARK
IDiewood 2-7800

Corporation

Thursday,
May 11, 1961 _
tide

�SUBTLE and NATURAL
HAIR
TONES
brought out
beautifully

N

by the use of

ne

\

CALL

our

SSS

Lager, teacher

Charles

Mrs.

Road
1598 Deerfield

aS

AND

Grammar School P.T.A., directed by Mrs. Fred Ritter, makes a point to her students. The students, from left, are: Mrs. Edgar Sterner, Mrs. James Mitchell and Mrs. Joe Brown, seated;
standing are Mrs. Colin MacDimard and Mrs. Harold Fox.

Holy Cross Club
Art Exhibition
Attracts Art
An

enthusiastic

lovers

viewed

creation

at

Mothers’
The

a

the

exhibit

Lovers
crowd

galaxy
recent

club

art

,
of

of

art

artistic

Holy

Cross

fair.

featured

an

array

of

paintings,
ranging
from
the
impressionist style to the more modern form of art. The striking contrasts lent an air of charm to the
fine collection of canvases.
The aesthetic beauty
Nature was evident in

tion

of

photographs

of Mother
the collec-

exhibited

the art fair. The photography
tured the artistic qualities of
ple and still life.
Children

Show

at
cappeo-

Work

The ceramic entries
included
many forms of art, ranging from
table tops to murals.
The colors,
textures and shapes added harmony
to the collection.
The exhibit featured works of art
done by the adults and children
of Holy Cross parish.
One of the

outstanding

contributions

in

the

children’s
division was
a mozaic
mural of the Crucifixion, prepared
by the fifth grade students at Holy
Cross school.

Rettig,
Mrs.
John
Mrs. Joyce Johnson,

Women’s

association

First Presbyterian
field,

will

luncheon

hold
on

Mrs.
Homer

T, Washburn,
Miss Kathleen

18,

1

announced

p.m.

that

Church

den

club.

when

members

Her

she

was

of an Ohio

interest

Surprise

Awaits

THIS

Very
Green

Bay

Rd.

If You

spread

&amp;

GARDEN

Reasonable

18th

Not

8
Chapels

is

¢ Perfect accommodations

* Most Complete Funeral Home
in Metropolitan Area

to

® Convenient to North

¢ Parking adjacent to building

Shore

¢ Funeral consultation and arrangements may be made
own home with our North Shore representative.

in
i

PHONE

SUBURBAN

or

5206

North

NUMBER—V_Ernon

LOngbeach

Broadway,

Chicago

Water

Prominent

“| tip my

CE 4-4550

1-4740

(Just north

of Foster)

CEMETERY

Prices

In
Phone

St.

DE

6-6500

time

of need...X

yreinstel

_..adewish Funeral Chapel only —
minutes from the North Shore

Pitcher
North

Shore

Executive,

hat to MIDWAY

says,

LIMOUSINE

SERVICE.

They

HI 6-2620

3019 West Peterson Road
LOngbeach 1-1890

RO

1-5878

'
HERSHEY WEINSTEIN, Proeeieet

LAURIE WEINSTEIN, Funeral Director

11, 1961

5-222]

Visited

always get me to the airport on time.”

_—————

in your

and SONS inc.

Mr.

Thursday, March

for

small or large attendance

and Downtown Chicago

in nature will
educational as

Frederick
Ritter
of this luncheon

Have

|

Avenue

an
Gar-

as interesting.

Mrs.
charge

You

BEAUTIFUL

Memorial

this subject and she explained that

well

wl

stoff,

customs

East 75th Street, at Clyde

LoS.

the trees, flowers, and herbs mentioned in the Bible. She has become very popular as a lecturer in
anyone
interested
find her program

their

Mrs.

Northminister Presbyterian
subject

2100

South Shore Chapel:

Bible.”
of the

this

and

and beauty, observing
ritual with reverence.

Ellis will present a program

honorary

service .. . Lee J- eet

Furth,

Program

entitled “Gardens of the
Mrs. Ellis is a member

in

L.

in

Northshore Garden of Memories
A

3-5400

of Evanston. She became interested

Walker, Misses Kathy and Suzanne
Otter, Mrs. John F. McGuire, Mrs.
E. Boratyn, and Norman Brown.
Exhibiting in the ceramics division were Miss Diane
Washburn,
Miss Jane Healy, Mrs. Lucy Griffin,
Mrs.
Donald
F.
Jaycox,
George
Drake,
Mrs.
Donald
Parise
and
Miss Kathy Otter.
Photographs were exhibited by
Mrs. Edward Wolske, Mrs. John F.
McGuire and George Drake.
Joanne Sabato and John Tobin,
Jr., entered the art crafts division.

SERVICE

personally arrange and conduct the
entire funeral—a service of warmth

spring

building.

Stryker,

Jules

1865

facilities in your community

for prompt

Call Midway

the

Since

SHORE
Complete

of Deer-

at

Community

NORTH

of

annual

education

Lewis

Chairman

church

its

May

the Christian

T. C..Hammer, Mrs. Ruth Perry,
Robert Savage, Mrs. Kay Ellis, Neil

The use of color and design gave
an artistic quality to the hook rug
exhibited
by Mrs. J. M. Phelan,
1900
Telegraph
Rd.
in Bannockburn.
The W. J. Loarie family, 853 Oxford Rd., exhibited a variety of art
work, including oils, water colors,

The

COMPANY

Funsral Directors to the
Jewish

Presbyterian Women
Slate Spring Lunch
In Deerfield Church

ceramics and wood carvings.
A collection of oils and pastels
was displayed by Mrs. George
Schleicher, 1535 Dartmouth.
Entries in the painting division,
including oils,
sketches, water
colors and pastels, were submitted
by Mrs. Dorothy Lourim, Philip N.
Delaney,
Christopher
Schleicher,
George Drake, Robert E. LaBuda,
Mrs. Edward Moroney,
Robert,
Marty,
and
James
Enright,
Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Dobroth, Mrs. J.
M. Dobyns, Anthony J. Hebel, Mrs.

Park

_AMPLEHighland
FREE PARKING

MAGIC!’

Deerfield

by the

recently

held

Schoolhouse,”

in the skit, “Old

T’S

service

~ MAGIC —
SCISSORS

ID 2-3814
sel |

expert

tinting

ee

ndddaaddaadddddaars

parece
parking
over 200for

cars...

Page 35

j

�Lecture May 15

To Sisterhood

The
lecture which
the
First
Church of Christ, Scientist 493
Hazel

ae

HEIDELBERG |

MOTHER’S DAY
Brunch

MOTHER’S

8 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
huis
From

11

;
Dinners

a.m.

THREE

11

TWINS

to

based

the

plus the

Saf.
| Rooms
15 te 500

SINGING

speaker.

A

member

of

the

On EDENS EXPRESSWAY

This

6-8080

CAREF

ULLY

SAVE—MAY

RE

YOUR

heroic

(Shabuoth),

and

Annié

afternoon,

May

for

confirmands

service

dedicated

Sisterhood

of the

whose
program
is
furthering
religious

ice within the Temple
the community.

and Immortals”

eight

Torah

Reform

land

Park

Goldsmith,

and

be

held

21,

at

Sunday

2:

o’clock

of

B’nai

Temple

in the High-

Woman’s

clubhouse,

son

of

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Arthur Goldsmith;
Barbara Katz,
daughter
of
Mrs,
Marvin
Katz;
Michael Reifman, son of Mr. and

Participating in the service will
be members
of the Sisterhood’s
executive
board
including,
Mrs.
Trevor D. Weiss of Highland Park,

will be

with

family

will

marking
Shavous

1991 Sheridan Rd.
Eight young people will be confirmed. They are Henry Balikov,
son of Dr. and Mrs. Harold Balikov; Darryl Berkson, son of Mr.
and
Mrs.
Alvin
Berkson;
Fred

worship, education and social serv-

Topic

“Science and Health
the Scriptures.”

OWN!

the

to the

congregation
devoted
to

Mrs.

Donald

Reifman;

Mare

Ros-

enbaum, son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Rosenbaum;
Susan
Schwartz,

daughter

the outgoing Sisterhood president;
Mrs. Nathan T, Rosenberg of Highland Park, president-elect who will
be installed at the annual meeting
May 15; and Mrs. Jerome Factor,
Mrs. Roy W.
Server,
Mrs. Leon

Theme will emphasize ‘‘the immortal status of the children
of
God”
with
scriptural
selections
from the book of Romans in the
Bible and from Mary Baker Eddy’s

(Just west of State)

is

annually

theme for the lesson-sermon Sunday, May 14, in the 11 a.m. worship
service
at the
First
Church
of
Christ, Scientist, 493 Hazel Ave.

14 W. RANDOLPH

at LAKE COOK RD,
BR 3-4626
VE 5-3355

DRIVE

Fi

of two

Keller

8:30.

Science Board on Leche is speaking on the

“Mortals

Tues, Thru Sat.
Reservations

the story

Helen

Confirmation services,
the Jewish
holiday of

play

Wilson M. Riley, a former moderator
of the television
series,
“How Christian Science Heals,” is

Lesson-Sermon

WAITERS

upon

the

Sullivan,
will be subject
of Dr.
Edgar E. Siskin’s sermon at North
Shore Congregation Israel, Glencoe, Friday
evening,
May
12, at

‘Mortals-Immortals’

the

Musle — Vocals— Comedy

YOU

Monday

open

topic,
“Christian
Science:
God’s
Ever-present Kingdom Revealed.”

R ATHSKELLER

HUNGRY FOUR

LIFE

is

Worker,”

public,

Christian
tureship,

a.m.

Ray, Len &amp; Doug
Tues, Thre
6 Private vg
Accommodations

THE

from

sponsoring

15,

Miracle

women,

the

DAY

is

May

“The

iesdiesiniinteiini

In Our New Cocktail Lounge

THE

Ave.,

evening,

Confirmation Service
Planned for May 21

Dedicate Service

Open to Public

of Mr.

and Mrs. Rudolph

Schwartz;
and Joel Fritz, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Cyril Fritz, Deerfield,

Cantor
combined
under

Joseph, Burns and the
senior and junior choirs,

the

direction

of

Mrs.

Oscar

Schiller, Mrs. Robert R. Scher, |Geller, will present the cantata,
to|Mrs. Sol Shulman, Mrs. I. Robert | “Israel—A
Dream
Realized”
by
Levy, and Mrs, David N. Rickles. | Bugatch.

Key

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Chairman

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NG.
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for

Et!
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districts to

-S

Serre
S

&amp;

SORES

districts,

April 27, As
May 11,

CA,

Ss

BPO

present

-

ze

me

Park, for the purproposed
changes

the

4/27 5/11/61—108B

vip

©
gi

3\\
A.

Hearing will be conPlan Commission for

)

cd

carci

on

in relation to this matter.

Application

is

ie

ane

Illinois

HIGHLAND PARK
PLAN COMMISSION
Norman J. Schlossman,

&lt;

7

im

from

Park,

;

e

oa

3
Yomer

oy

%5

Highland

of Highland
considering

be heard
i

I
A

2

4/27 5/11/61—108A

recommended

Publish:

&gt;

COMMISSION

Chairman

area lying north of County Line Road,
south of Deerfield Road, west of Green
Bay Road
and east of Skokie Valley
Road, (U.S. Rte. 41). The changes proposed are indicated on the map shown
herewith and made a part of this notice.
At said Public Hearing, and at any
adjournment thereof, an opportunity will
be afforded to all persons interested, to

3

ag,

daerter

PLAN

Said Public
ducted by the

a
x

MCY to "Bel"

(9ZO

PARK

in zoning

RRR

aN

oppor-

in relation to

Commission

ag

=

recom-

an

Park

PN

NOS

thereof,

J. Schlossman,

the City
pose of

pga

.

: =.

appropriate

GIVEN that a public hearing will be held in

,

7
al dag Med

eG = sar

ge

and

automatically
upon

to be heard

the Council Chamber of the City Hall, City of
Sint
=
16, 1961, at 8:8:30 P.M. C.D.S.T

;

ne

be

until

Council

adjournment

HIGHLAND

225%,

wee
jes

City

interested

Norman

NOTICE IS HEREBY

Woe
an

1
ea
ie

vs
ie

shall

purpose,

matter.

oS

0’

private

District

the

use.

2

any
it

Residence

Highland

Witkiam. 5

to
na

and

for

discontinued,

ordinance

hearing

for a conditional

used

PUBLIC HEARING

vy

HC"

by

=

10

is

be

the Plan Commission.

;

,

S

yEibgt

area

Three-Acre

Application No. 3-61
Publish: April 27, 1961
May 11, 1961

GRE
AONE
eh Se
Nyt:
+

Wp

shall not

:

:

donnersherger

8

the

established

said

..

we

“A”

tunity will be afforded

or core

Rel

of

the

mendation.of
At

all the requirements

eee

this classification

zoning

eee
‘Sor

HI
a 23

_

within
zoned

GS.
co.

Amy

when

nna ey Gaodrow

oC!

(2) Cemeteries.

oh

fideseile ae TA
“|*
ahcook SEAL as AA
7, OS 3 . Oecd : 9.
Hatt to Mot
fz LALA aE ae eA f
4 spi antes
AN
to
(C" pobre aay | bm | 92 Acres
r | = jue nigel te | Se | 2 | 2
A

aa

Permitted Uses:
(1) All federal, State,
of the area, and

the uses proposed

NES:

suo

ish parabens
‘hed
Agere ate

i

Ry 20 |

5

part of this hearing.

The ‘“P-Public Lands, Open Space” District provisions are designed primarily to
designate public ownership of land and to provide, upon return to private ownership,
a reasonable means
of rezoning these areas to uses compatible with a surrounding

RE2 5

ca

"| ste]

a2, Noe

AS

i,

g's

mags sersittadotel
ie

shown herewith and made a

my
METS Lae
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"WA" : to iy
"Cc"
ar

NOTICE IS HEREBY
be held in the Council
Oe
PAL. the yar. Hall,
Tuesday, May 16, 1961,
at
Said public. hearing will be conducted by the Plan Commission
for the City of
Highland Park for the purpose of considering an amendment to the Highland
Park
Zoning Ordinance of 1947, by the addition of an article to create ‘‘P-Public Lands,
Open Space District Regulations.’”’ Presently proposed areas are indicated on the map

%
*

wae

Ss eeu
ek

’

re
Fi

S33

PUBLIC
HEARING
Highland Park
Plan Commission
GIVEN that a public hearing will
City of Highland Park, Illinois, on

Sl

’

3

ve

fe

be
IESIDE

FO.

a
ng

“== BRAE.

11, 1961

�Women Plow Dinher
Film at First United
“Operation
minute sound
produced
the House

will

United

1713

Green

ning,

May

ing

be

Bay
15,

to the

shown

at

Evangelical

Rd.,

at 8 o’clock,

Rev.

Alfred

the
eve-

accord-

E.

Ander-

son, pastor, The public is invited.
“The film shows the rioting and
disorders in connection with the

hearings
tivities

of the

Un-American

Committee

cisco last May,’
derson pointed

in

San

the Rev.
out. It

Change’

dinner for adults

of

+

neat”

Passion

50th Year of Successful Teaching

Play

SECRETARIAL, STENOGRAPHIC,

North Shore Methodist church, Hazel and Greenleaf Aves., Glencoe,

Members of the 1961 confirmation class of Redeemer Lutheran
church enjoyed
a recent Sunday

is being sponsored

afternoon

by the church’s

Passion
Hosts

performance

Play

in

and

hostesses

Program
will be presented
by
the Methodist
Youth
Fellowship.
Mrs. George Hilden at VE 5-2627

Potter

and

is

Schoen,

all of Highland

in

charge

of

reservations.

were

Eichler,

Mr.

Mr.

of the

TYPING,

BRUSH-UP

and

and

for

Mrs.

Mr.

the

Mrs.

and

ACCOUNTING,

COURSES.

af-

AND

SHORTHAND

Harry

Clarence
Mrs.

AND

GREGG

EVANSTON
BUSINESS COLLEGE

Zion

Zion,

fair

Fred

Park.

Day and

Evening

Sherman

Ave.

Classes
UN 4-3004

Wm. H. Callow, Prin.

AcFran-

Put pride in

Mr. Anwill be

shown by a representative of the
National Association of Evangelicals.
“The
free-will
offering
to be
taken will go to what has been
termed
‘the anti-Communist
program of the National Association
of Evangelicals,” the Rev. Mr. Anderson said. The association is comprised
of approximately
40 conservative Protestant: religious denominations.

‘Paradoxes

Zion

Women’s Society of Christian Service Friday
evening,
May
12,
at
7 o'clock.

church,

Monday

'Coahenannds

Methodist

A catered

Abolition,’
a
45documentary film

under
authorization
of
Un-American Activities

Committee
First

For NS

Your front lawn’ [esp
od GPE

of Social

Is Topic

Charles P. Rippey will have as
topic,
“The
Paradoxes
of Social
Change,” for the service Sunday
morning, May 14, at 11 o’clock in
the North Shore Unitarian church
meeting
in
Ferry
Hall
school,
chapel, Lake Forest.
Attorney Rippey is a member of
the church, a graduate of Harvard
Law School and well known as a
“fighter in the cause of human
rights,” according to the Rev. Rus.
sell R. Bletzer, minister, who will
be attend the May meetings of the
Unitarian-Universalist
church
in
Boston.
NOTICE
25381
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
to all
persons
that
the first Monday
of June,
1961, is the claim
date in the estate of
ALFRED
E. OLSEN,
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.
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 9 a.m.
FRANCES O. OSBORNE,
Administrator
Marvin Wallach, Attorney
1896 Sheridan Road
Highland
Park, Iltinois
Phone IDlewood 2-4160
4/27 5/4-11/61—109

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Food—
Vegetable Food—Bulb Food .
21-lb. packages.

RIDGE

ROAD

ID 2-3400

�ings

To Meet

The North Shore Vikings, of the
Independent Order of Vikings, will
have a fish fry at their clubhouse
in Gurnee tomorrow from 6 to 9
p.m., reports
Ellard
Schweiger,
recording secretary. Proceeds will
benefit
the
club’s
old
people’s
home, “Valhalla,” there.

Continues

Training

Army Pvt. Howard I. Bass, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Saul Z. Bass, 176
Indian Tree dr., is receiving eight

weeks

of typing

and

clerical

to be

our

guest

for any future Sunday buffet

at

no

Put In Library

The Loyola University students
who dumped a load of rubbish at
the foot of Ravine Dr. last week
are identified by Highland Park
police as David Raia, 19, of 6551
N, Sheridan Rd., Chicago; Robert
Mundt, 22, of 3332 N. Kenmore
Ave., Chicago; and Arthur Wondrasek Jr., 20, of 1323 W. 58rd PIl.,

The Fine Arts Council of Highland Park High School PTA has
arranged an exhibit of its depart-

LaGrange.

Each

posted

Three

ported

$25 bond.

complaints

by

police

were

Brunch

also

served

from

Alpert

500

week:

—Mrs.

Robert

It’s

been

going

on

_ ing

array

of cold

meats,

since

ments

Park
of

and

clubs

Public

May.

ranged

The

by

in

the

Highland

library for the month
exhibit

Mrs.

has

Claude

been

ar-

Nathan

of

the library staff.
Photographs of recent activities
are shown, as well as trophies, medals and awards won by the various
groups
participating
in the
display. A collage has been prepared
by the Arts club, demonstrating
their work. Included are a Debate
trophy,
stage
band
trophy
and
prize-winning
clippings
from
“Shoreline.”
Mrs. Harold M. Gilden and Mrs.

Arthur Adler,
of

the

Fine

Jr., are co-chairmen

Arts

committee.

March,
—Cleve Inman of 1272 Taylor
Ave. complained
of firecrackers
in the vacant lot behind his house

—John Dean of 774 Central Ave.
reported two hubcaps, valued at
$20, taken from his 1961 Chevro-

at

let

7 p.m.

May

2.

convertible

April

28.

dinner this summer.

EYE
PHYSICIAN (M.D.)

12—$1.75)
10:00

dish delicacies, prime

of

Braeside Rd. complained that some
one has been subscribing to record

house,

charge

a.m.

to

12

ACTUAL

noon

roast beef and a tempt-

salads

and

desserts.

SIZ

Ask us about the different
kinds of contact lenses.
H.O.V. contact lenses
are safe because they are
fitted under the supervision of your eye
physician. Get the
benefit of our 27 years of

Our buffet is a sumptuous feast with steaming hot
chafing

re-

last

$3.25 a person
(children under

also

Wednesday

and book clubs in her husband’s
name, and put an ad in the Trib
offering a boat for sale at their

contact
lenses ?
invitation

Liitterbugs Nained’

pro-

cedures
training
under
the
Reserve Forces Act program at The
Armor School, Fort Knox, Ky. The
training is scheduled
to be concluded June 8.

An

Ravine

Make

as many trips through the buffet line as you wish.

contact lens experience.
RESERVATIONS

SUGGESTED

Phone for an appointment

Telephone ID 2-4444

“Shouse of Vision’
Craftsmen
in Opsics

OM

THE

LAKE

¢«

HIGHLAND

PARK,

1091 SHERIDAN RD., HIGHLAND PARK
610 CHURCH ST., EVANSTON
193 NORTH WABASH 4VE., CHICAGO
OHO,

HLINOIs

Guardian

BRAUN

,
TIME FOR
“ANNUAL FURNACE CLEAN-UP
1961-62

Here’s an 11-Point Program
Assures You Top Performance
From Your Heating Plant

brush

and

surfaces

Furnace.
. Clean the smoke

vacuum
of

. . . Your

need

for glasses

and

medical

Eyes

between

treatment.

He

is

of threatened eye

by proper examination at regular intervals, Almer Coe
will be glad to provide the names of eye physicians.

with

_ heating

Gift

diseases and check their progress. The eye physician
can help you protect your eyes for the years ahead

JEATING SEASON

. Wire

Precious

qualified to detect early symptoms

GET SET FOR
HE NEXT

That

Most

The eye physician is qualified to distinguish
your

OW

of Nature’s

the

clean
Boiler

the
or

:
pipe and chimney

base,
. Seal air leaks around the furnace
doors so you will have better combustion.
. Test and adjust the draft control so
heat
isn’t extravagantly sent up
_ the chimney.
5. Clean the oil burner nozzle so oil
will
ignite more
quickly,
cleanly
and completely.
. Clean and flush the burner strainers to prevent burner clogging.
. Clean the fan housing and turbula_ tor and adjust the air shutter to
help make certain of the right flow
of air for proper combustion.
. Clean, test and adjust the oil burner controls.
. Adjust the oil burner so it will operate with maximum efficiency.
. Lubricate the motor bearings.
- Make an operating test to be sure
that everything is running correctly,

Lanbye AVAILABLE
CALL OR
GREEMENT BASIS

HEATING

OIL

BROS.

AGREEMENT

You can count on “Care-Free” fuel oil delivery to keep your
supply adequate in any weather. Years of experience and
carefully maintained temperature charts assure you of a
worry-free winter.
ANNUAL

BURNER

Expert maintenance

round.
nace

SERVICE
men

In answer to the requests
of eye physicians and
.many friends, Almer Coe
have opened a fantastic
budget
eye-frame
bar
in each store.
Fashion
frames for men, women
and children at $5 to $10
Charge accounts invited

AGREEMENT

are on the job now

and

all year

Don’t wait till cold weather hits to have your furchecked.

A

Burner

Service

Agreement

insures

the

peak performance of your furnace next fall and all winter.
CONVENIENT

MONTHLY

BUDGET

the Finest in Glasses

PLAN

An easy way to make even payments throughout the heating season at no extra cost.

Telephone

.

ID 2-3804

EVANSTON (next to Cooley’s Cupboard)
1629 Orrington
Open Monday and Thursday until 9:00 P.M.

SKOKIE,

BRAUN
444 CENTRAL AVE. — ID 2-3804

BROS.
CARL

CASEL,

OIL
DIV.

MANAGER

CO.
HIGHLAND

North

Mall, Old

Orchard

Open Monday, Thursday and Friday until 9:00 P.M.

CHICAGO,

10 North

Michigan

Avenue

PARK
Thursday, May

11,1961

�Cheese Foot Novi

Theatre Festival Is
‘First’ Here; Six
One-Acts Offered
The

val

North

is

year

Shore

establishing
by

Theatre

a

scheduling

Highland

Park.

“first”
the

It will

this

event

in

held

at

be

the Tenthouse Theatre, Friday and
Saturday evenings, May 26 and 27.
The

festival

is

a combination

of

the talents of six North Shore Little Theatre groups, which include
many
Highland
Parkers who
are
interested in the theatre. Format
of the Festival includes six one-act
plays, which will be presented by
each of the six groups. Three of the
plays will be presented Friday evening, May 26, and the other three
will be offered Saturday evening,
May 27.

The

tors from

tax; the
Central
Robert

increase

sales

Illinois Republican
Committee
reports,

State

Coulson

and

W.

J.

crease in municipal

CENTEAL

TURNER

&amp;

beruling

O

SERVICES

AUTO

MIDWAY

HIGHLAND
Dependable

Roger

Williams

*

Slip Covers

Ave.

far

regiicnien

tik

urih.

Vogue
orn GR.

West

*

LANDSCAPING

F. D. CLAVEY &gt;

Miles

Inc.

*

Inc

RCA

Chicago
-

SERVICE

Hi 6-5080

by
a

and

Nursery

Deerfield

Road

Deerfield

—
a

UPHOLSTERING

Conte

the State

new

power

stump

Now is the time to order
DORMANT
SPRAY
and
DUTCH
ELM CONTROL
BE SAFE
—
NOT
TREE REMOVAL
POWER SPRAYING
FEEDING
TRIMMING
CABLING
PATCHING

* Restyling

cutter

° Repairing

TREPLA’

Y pong

Free Estimates
ones:

ID 3-1622 &amp; KI 6-2292

DISPOSAL

Catch

—

Ace Upholstering Co.
DExter 6-6425

1615 Jackson St., No. Chicago, |

SERVICE

With

* Septic Tanks
*

ey

Large Selection of Fabrics
All Work Guaranteed

SORRY

WING'S lgea EXPERTS

OPERATORS

COMPANY

West

EXPERTS

Licensed
Introducing

Carpets

1 Yr. Guarantee

ge
1885

WI 5-0035

BONDED

°* Custom

¢ FCC Approved
¢ U.L. Approved

Evanston

WING’‘S TREE EXPERTS

ELECTRONICS

Call for your copy.

:

UNiversity 4-3034

REPAIR SERVICE

INSURED

see

Air Conditioning”

ae

Fabric Shop

722 Main

RADIATORS

TREE

890 Linden Ave.
ID 2-3430
Hubbard Woods

DOOR

etc.

Buttons — Hand Bound |
&amp; Machine Button Holes

TASTELESS TT
TC
IS
TE
TT A
EATON
PTTITITITITULILLUCOCLELLLECLILILOL

Furniture

Aso | “I onger Life through

Thursday,
March 11, 1961
at
:
o
ee

s

|

Sweaters,

Pleating — Belts :

ILL.

Second Avenue, Highland Park, Illinois
A DIVISION OF MIDWAY LIMOUSINE SERVICE
iDlewood 3-0833

1883

* Upholstery

* Bed Spreads

to the

9-8824

2

Blouses,

Office

Service

TU

PARK,

2-2028

eis

Linens,

. Towels, Shirts,

Neat

GARAGE

Phone:

MONOGRAMMING
On

HIGHLAND
WD

SERVICE

Established

estimate before you decide!

Rd.,

|

campsite

}
i
en bas

Or 4,000

&amp; FABRICS

¢ Draperies

ments. Only a quality product
rates such recognition. Get our

Park

on

DRESSMAKERS’

Guaranteed 90 Days

HIGHLAND REFUSE
SERVICE

Irving

conducted

@

RAVINIA NURSERIE

SERVICES

RCA
RADIO CONTROLLED

W.

INCLUDED

REPAIR

RADIATOR

mansions, in modest bungalows,
in huge new suburban develop-

7611

Optional

by experienced cooler specialist . . . using modern factory methods

We Custom Make

the 102-year-old Mueller name
on air conditioners in luxury

Co.,

activities

Jewelry

Jespee tar

ei fiers i Water &amp;

Cum

big volume of Mueller Climatrol units in Chicagoland.
The public acceptance of
Mueller Climatrol is based on
the quality built into every unit
—and the integrity of Author-

Htg.

Het Lunches

AU

Rep

oateh

and

ID 2-0650
¢ Secretarial
* Bookkeeping
¢ Notary Public @ Mimeographing

You may be surprised at how
much the price of top-quality
central air conditioning has

Home

Dramatics

TRANSPORTATION

SHERIDAN

AUTO
BUSINESS

Fast

Mueller Climatrol
AIR CONDITIONING

S&amp;L

@

Tape Transcriptions

QUIET

0

@

TELEPHONE

Dependable Service Is Our Quality
Serving Highlond Park
Over 40 Years

DRAPERIES

ye

Crafts

Beautiful Wooded Campsite with
DeLuxe Swimming Pool &amp; Clubhouses

,

Catch Basins and
Septic Tanks Pumped

591A

ized Dealers, like ourselves.
Look around and you’ll

@

TOP RATED IN SAFETY &amp; STAFF

A. COLEMAN
COMPANY

Pick-up &amp; Delivery

thanks

Sports

SERVICE

BUSINESS

house with—

down...

as

WHERE

GARBAGE AND RUBBISH
REMOVAL

. ee

cool your whole

come

used

AM 2-0452

For Boys and Girls From 4'2 te $2
JUNE 26 TO AUG. 18

IT CAN BE DONE

Phone ID 2-2079
1683 Deerfield Road

sales tax, could

summer

be

OR 5-2935

JEWELER — WATCH

put Illinois retailers at a disadvantage near the borders, the bloc
agrees.

This

may

DAYMEL CAMP
ELLIS

ORIVE CAREFULLY — THE LIFE YOU SAVE
MAY BE YOUR OWN

Washing

DISPOSAL

Mur-

phy of the 31st District (Lake
County) are listed as members.
The extra half-cent, along with
a proposed half-cent optional in-

bodies

pull tab

BERNARDI
ID 2-8917

legisla-

in

APACHE
BERT ELLIS

Sais

&amp; DECORATING

Wall

Illinoig districts adjoin-

half-cent

‘4 es

Kraft said.

® Reasonable Rates
® Excellent References
@ Free Estimates

ing other states has organized to
fight Governor Otto Kerner’s pro-

posed

can

PAINTING

FRED
of

|

pull.

dessert cups or gelatin
molds
after their contents are consumed,

INTERIOR - EXTERIOR

Fight Tax Hike
Brigade”

a gentle

The four flavors are identified
in the supermarket dairy case by
color. The onion flavor is colored
are four brown;
blue cheese
flavor, blue;
cheese; dill pickle flavor, green; and baconhorseradish flavor, ‘hot orange.’

can has an opening

PAINTING

One
ticket
may
be
purchased
which will permit theatre-goers to
see all six of the plays. Further information may be had by calling
Mrs. D. J. Ruhman
of Threshold
Players, ID 2-7304, Mrs. Raymond
Perlman, Experimental Theatre, [ID
2-7300, or Thomas J. Tibbetts, of
the Deerfield Stagers, ID 2-7835.

“Border

lid with

device which eliminates the need
for any sort of can opener, key, or
lid flipper. Attached to the tab is
a narrow strip of aluminum which
seals the lid to the lower portion

Highland Parkers are offered an
exceptional opportunity to see the
best efforts of the outstanding amateur talent of the North Shore area.

A

The

A “zip” opening aluminum can
which ushers in a new era of convenience
for
Mrs.
Housewife
is
being
introduced
nationally
this
month by Kraft Foods.
Packed in the new can
varieties of ready-to-use
dips in 8-ounce sizes.

the

After the can is opened, the lid
may be replaced for refrigerated
storage.

Offered in New
Aluminum Cans

Festi-

of the can. The strip comes free
from

Basins

a Smile
*
°

Refuse
Rubbish

Pumped
Residential - Commercial
454 Central

ID 2-2883

FOR SALE: 11,786 SALESMEN*
Who will work 24 hours a day, 7 days a week canvassing al
homes in Highland
Township.
*THIS

Park,

Highwood,

Deerfield

and

IS THE CIRCULATION THAT YOUR AD ON THIS
WILL RECEIVE. CALL FOR DETAILS AT ONCE!

For Space
Reservation

Phone:

Vernor

ID 2-4500

PAGE

�Con Game Charged
At the request

When

you need

Ridge

School

| Wednesday

carpet come to

colors

| BY sey is)
Brothers
120
Hil crest

Green

Bay

1920
:
6-612

Thursday 9 A.M. to 9 PLM.

Agree

That Clean

Carpets

Wear

at’

8:

p.mi

Longer!

We Offer You The Finest In Carpet And Furniture Cieaning
eR

are,

left

who

is in charge

1581

W.

Old

Mill

Road,

Lake

Forest,

to

to

right:

Henry

Gamson,

of placing

1405

sculpture

Waverly,

sculptor,

to be exhibited;

Mrs.

side, in charge of the art catalog.

DRIVEWAY CONSTRUCTION

First

*Member
of the Board of Lectureship of
Mother Church, The First Church of Christ,
entist, Boston, Massachusetts.

E. Fagen,

Fagen; Mrs. Harold Blumenthal, 2501 Sheridan, chairman of
hostesses for the art exhibit; and Herbert Baker, 333 Lake-

Church of Christ, Scientist,
Highland Park, 493 Hazel
Avenue.

Chicago — La Grange
Experts

:15;

Abel

launch plans for the sixth annual art exhibit to be held this
summer in conjunction with the Ravinia Festival concert season, which opens Tuesday night, June 27.
Among those who attended the kick-off brunch April 9,

Hear Wilson M. Riley,*
C.S.B., of Kansas City, Missouri, speak on “Christian
Science: God’s Ever-present
Kingdom Revealed.” Free
Public Lecture. Monday,
May

Dail). 9° .4.M. to 5 PM,

Carpet

Highland Park members of the Ravinia Festival Art Exhibit committee met at the home of the committee’s chairman,

seeking happiness?

_ Hillerest

Vonday and

Clavey

Mrs.

Road, Winnetka

6-3336

10, of 570

ARE

styles

Carpet Specialists Since

and turned

Ln., was bitten on the finger the
evening of May 2, Highland Park
| police report, after she pulled the
whiskers
of
Max
Medoff’s
toy
poodle, in the Medoff living room
at 532 Clavey Ct.

A large selection

Newest

lot at 8 p.m.

last week,

Poodle Bites
Lauren Baum,

where you will find;
smartest

parking

police,

Rosemary
the West

over to the detective bureau; Highland Park police report.
The charge is listed as Chapter
| 388, Paragraph 253 of the Illinois
| Revised Statutes—obtaining money
or valuables under false pretenses.

- DeSITTER BROTHERS
The

of Chicago

Nate
Larkin
of 1816
Rd.
was
arrested
in

—

Parking Areas—
Old Drives Refinished
The
Sci-

@ BLACK TOP
¢ Sw
@ CONCRETE
ii
@ CRUSHED STONE Af

:

Call for

FREE

Estimate

%

Metered

q
24 Hour

FUEL

SILJESTROM
1930 First St.

i

et
DO
|

THE

Highland

EST

KITCHENS
COOKING

MOTHER’S

Park

oustroin

RESTAURANTS

OUR

FUEL CO.

ID 2-0065

DRIVE CAREFULLY
THE LIFE YOU SAVE—MAY BE YOUR OWN!

Lx

LET

OIL Service

ANTS

ONTROL

ON

protects your home
against insect damage

DAY

Mother’s Day will be more pleasant for her if it includes
Among the most common insect pests around all homes
large and small alike, are ants. One of their cozies’
refuges is around the kitchen sink where they posi.
tively revel in the moisture and warmth. Of course

dinner or brunch at the Crabapple. Perfectly delicious food
awaits the family here in the Apple Basket or Countryman Grill

Page

40

they journey

to other parts of the

house

too.

They

ara

with brunch served from 10:30 A.M. until 1 P.M. and dinner
from 12:30 until 8 P.M. You'll find plenty of parking

frightfully unpleasant and downright dangerous, but
now you can get rid of them easily, quickly. Just phone Household
Pest Control, division of Aerosol Exterminators. They'll not only put an

near the entrance at the north end of the Mall, Old Orchard
in Skokie. For reservations please
phone Orchard 4-6446, or in
Chicago, Juniper 8-6446.

waterbugs, carpet beetles, spiders and all the other damage-dealing
insect pests that invade our homes. HPC chemicals are safe for people
. . . murder for insects. The HPC Plan is inexpensive, too—as low as

end

to your

ants,

$20.00

per year

6-room

homes

but

their

for two

HPC

will

get

rid

treatments

inside

for each additional

room.

PEST CONTROL
7 DAYS A WEEK

—

. . . $2.00

complete

Plan

of

moths,

and

out

roaches,

for

most

Don’t delay, call

today!

HOUSEHOLD

HI

6-6173

Thursday, May

11, 1961

�s

coo A

SARATOGA
Newly

Re-Modeled

Throughout
ITALIAN

TRY

THESE

Veal Parmigiana

SPECIALTIES

FROM

OUR

Chicken

BROILER

Baked

CHARCOAL

SELECTIONS

Veal

a la Cacciatore
Lasagne

Scallopini

Ravioli al Forno

Strip Sirloin
Filet Mignon
Chopped
Baby

Sirloin

Spare

Double

SEA

Ribs

Lamb

Stuffed Shrimp

Chops

Chicken

Boneless

Sauted Chicken
Beef

FOOD

Livers

Rainbow

Stuffed

Ribs

Jumbo

Trout

Oysters
Shrimp

Imported
LIVE

Dover

Sole

MAINE
Fresh

LOBSTERS
Daily

Frank Fiocchi, the genial host,

awaits
NEW

your

at the

Saratoga where the fin-

est foods
are

pleasure

you've

served

ever

nightly

tasted
from

4

p.m. to 1 a.m. nightly.

Closed

OPEN.

NOON

MOTHER’S

OL
For casual, suburban
mate in pleasure.

AT

Monday

atmosphere

this

informal

dining

area

offers

the

ON

DAY

ulti-

The artistic decor and elegance
excelled on the North Shore.

440 Green Bay Rd.,
We

Cater to Banquets,

Private

Parties and afternoon Weddings

Thursday,

March

11,

1961

AIR CONDITIONED

— PLENTYO

PRIVATE PARKING

of

Saratoga’s

formal

dining

room

is

un-

Highwood
For

Reservations

Call

ID 2-0440
Page

41

�0664644646464 44444444444444444444/;
A AL
LAAAAAAAAASAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA

DELIVERIES IN HIGHLAND
EVERY SATURDAY
¢ Chocolates
¢ Ice Cream

PARK

¢ Cookies
¢ Salted Nuts

HI 6-3775

NACHMAN’S
944

Linden

Ave.,

Hubbard

Woods

|

BOX STORAGE BARGAIN
Va

' STORAGE SERVICE

North

Veterans

[Is

STO RE
ENTIRE

|

um
uy

|
\\

hs | |

NOTHING

——

FALL

—

eturned

4 ft

freshly

Cole,

junior vice-president;

Dudley

Mrs.

Sylvester

Volpendesta,

Reitmeyer,

outgoing

Clausing,

two-year

Day

Stored

in Cold

Greenleaf

Aves.,

Sunday

May
14,
Christian

will
be
“Marks
of
Home.’’ The sermon

Woman’s

Missionary

second

in

tional

Family

a Services
is | a.m.

are

morning,

a

series

society
of

two

Week,

sues

san

held

at

9:30

|

of the|18,

i

.CUSTOM

Vault

be als

i

SHIRT SERVICE

P

«Individually cellophane

:

wrapped.

4

4)

ee

on

lle

i

~

KING

the

home

of

Mrs.

George

1296

St. Johns

Ave.

Time

11
U. S. SAVINGS

BONDS.

BABY YOUR SET
is

NO CHARGE
if we

cannot

repair

your

TV

set in your home.
Service Call
is repaired

$4.95 only when set
to your satisfaction.

NORTH SUBURBAN TV SERVICE

ID 3-0608

Furs!

eich

Ld bok

i}

FIRE. THEFT ~ MOTHS

Craftsmen

1913

Clean

Quality

Dry

ACRES OF

d

Your

Cleaning

WE

Clothes”
Service

GIVE

DEERFIELD,

COMMONS:

You

WE GIVE

Arthur

ee

FREE PARKING

OH

Mrs.

Not only do we

Hangers.

ESTABLISHED

—

in

Wittig,

but there

:

Complete

Na-

and

d

SAFE IX

, Pryotect Your

“Where

we GIVE

Merner

year

7-14. | 1:15.

from moths, fire

Storage

secretary;

BUY

this includes:
Insurance protection up to $260.00
PLUS USUAL CLEANING CHARGES

abs

i

by Milton

president, and three-year trustee;

for

May

tower

No garments are stored in the hamper. After careful cleaning
and inspection, each garment is hung on individual hangers.
i

Photo

Mission Society
First United Evangelical church
Regular monthly meeting of the! will meet Thursday afternoon, May

ONLY

PER
BOX

Group

trustee; Mrs. John Burk, color bearer No. 4, and Mrs.

and other dangers

$995

Shore

officers for the coming

musician.

Sermon topic for Dr. G. Clifton
Ervin,
minister,
at North
Shore
Methodist
church,
Hazel
and

cl

srapeet and nail

7”

.

recently installed new

storage all summer long. In

\

*

‘

Mrs,

For Mother’s

the Fall, everything is

~—s

'
Ti

Auxiliary

president; Mrs. Joseph

Francis Wing,

Just fill the large hamper to
the top with suits, dresses,
coats, jackets, sweaters and
other winter woolens. Return
it to us far insured safe

M

‘PAY

guard;

need professional
storage to keep them
safe and smart.

=

flog

MBM

Wars

Mrs. Robert Howell, senior vice-president; Mrs. Frank Jacks, treasurer; Mrs. Mark Carani, oneyear trustee; Mrs. Edward Glover, historian; and Mrs. Ray Mann, patriotic instructor.
Not present when the picture was taken were Mrs. Leonard Larson, banner bearer; Mrs.
Mrs. Carl Haviland, color bearer No.
1; Mrs. Joe Nizzi, flag bearer; Mrs. Pierre Thomas,

WINTER

Winter weary woolens

i

Ben

Dickelman,

PRICE!

(

i

lain; Mrs.

YOUR

WARDROBE
AT ONE LOW

)

|
: |

Foreign

at ceremonies in VFW Hall. Shown above, from left, are Mrs. Cora Krohn, color bearer No. 2;
Mrs. Lloyd Moon, conductress; Mrs. Kenneth Krellwitz, color bearer No. 3; Mrs. Lee Cora, chap-

——

sy)

of

Get

Stamps

at

BOTH

Shopping

Centers

CROSSROADS [fa
KING
SHOPPING

HIGHLAND
Located

PARK
«¢
Next Door

CENTER

ACRES OF FREE PARKING
to the Eagle Food Store

KORN

STAMPS

See your hardware dealer,
garden center, or nursery
Products of

ae

Smith-Douglass Company,

Distributed by

GEORGE

Incorporated, Norfolk 1, Virginia; Columbus

A. DAVIS,

16, Ohio

INC. Chicago 30, Il.
Thursday, May

11, 1961

is

�| Change Date of

Fine Arts Qua rtet

Tenthouse Opening

Subject to Article
In May Magazine

Herb Rogers has changed the
opening date for his Chicago Tent-

A feature article on the Fine
Arts
Quartet
entitled
“Ambassadors in Chamber Music,” written by Grace C. (Mrs. Ralph) Nash,
576 Clavey Ct., appears in the
May issue of the School Musician
Magazine. Mrs. Nash is assistant
director of the Music Center where

radio

and

arrives
months

accompanied

wife

and

this

their

How
In
Nash

on

Park,
tour

three

Quartet

Hans

his

pany”

children.

its

Grew

problems

and

a fine

arts

series

of

28

standreperof the
Shore,

concerts

son.
Their artistry is made available
by the Music Center for in-school
similar

to

the

Conried,

who

from

July

is now

play-

for

one

week

e

yn
. . We.

.

ine

e259

3

WEL

ns

trim in muted tones

‘Sizes 3, 4,6
Sizes 8, 10, 12, 14
Teen sizes 9 to 15

4.00
5.00
6,00

at
Mail and phone orders filled

CRAFTWOOD

professional

LUMBER

direc-

and

cotton satin piping

Be SG

tear

of pink or aqua.

held at the Music Center,
The magazine School Musician
is published in Joliet, and is the
students

CAS
eS

SAVE!

ber
Music
Workshop
June
8-16
by the Fine Arts Quartet to be

teachers,

broadcloth with pretty
ruffled sleeves and

SALE—

Of special value to teachers and
string players is the coming Cham.

tors,

at very special prices!
Crease-resistant cotton .

spring

chestra.

for

{~ *

at Tenthouse.

Ne

in-school

orchestra concerts given in District 108 by the Music Center or-

magazine

Girls’ floral print robes

The American Legion clubhouse
in Deerfield is setting for the Mother
and
Daughter
banquet
this
evening at 6:30, sponsored by the
women
of Trinity United Church
of Christ. Mrs. Fred Gahl is chairman, and men of the church will
serve the dinner.

under
the
direction
of Herbert
Zipper has been presented in Chicago and the North Shore this sea-

concerts

MacArthur,

PURCHASE!

Mother-Daughter
Banquet Tonight

deter-

mination to maintain highest
ards
in performance
and
toire. With the sponsorship
Music Center of the North

James

Marlowe

August shows have not yet been
scheduled.

human
interest story, Mrs.
tells of the quartet’s organ-

ization,

O’Brien,

SPECIAL

ing in Chicago, will return July
25 to star in “Pleasure of His Com-

was

by

for
with
3-9;
Don
“UnMar-

garet

to programs

of Highland

Tenthouse shows scheduled
July
are
“49th
Cousin”
Menasha Skulnik, from July
“Holiday for Lovers” with
Ameche, from July 11-16; and
der the Yum Yum Tree” with
and
Hugh
18-23.

in 10 European countries. Abram
Loft, violinist in the quartet, and

a resident

for

oS

of concert,

Candle”

ah

residence.

The Fine Arts Quartet
home this week after two

and

ee
pow RJ7 ‘deen
=samme:

in

Book

A

is

“Bell,

HS oOo

quartet

in

two weeks.

WORDS Sie

the

house theatre from June 19 to the
20th, with Ginger Rogers starring

OLD

ORCHARD

at Skokie

© ORchard

6-3060

ORIVE CAREFULLY — THE LIFE YOU SAVE
MAY BE YOUR OWN

COMPANY

par-

ents.

10 YEAR

PINE
A Nursing
AGED —

MANOR

Moley TV

Home of Distinction for the
CONVALESCENT — AILING

“4 Truly Fine Nursing Home —
As A Nursing Home Should Be...
Best of Care — Reasonable
VIS-A-VIS

Sells ALL
”

Our Records At

Rates

LINCOLNSHIRE

NEwton

SHORT
Afternoon,

Passenger
$5.75

OFFER

-

Enjoy Clipper hospitality—
Spacious decks, beautiful
lounges. Outside bedrooms
with toilets, berths, children’s

MOLEY

EXPIRES

TV

Pi

playroom, free movies, TV,
—
The

ments at reasonable prices.

Milwaukee Ticket Office &amp; Dock:
Municipal Passenger Pier
500 N. Harbor Drive
Tel: BR 141-7905
SEASON OPENS MAY 26

&amp;.S. ee

670
ity

dancing, fine food and refreshNight sailings—gain a day—
travel while you sleep.

Good

' Send for beautiful color brochure
showing

rates,

schedules,

OUR MOTTO
—
latest records at the
LOWEST PRICES

WIN Valuable Sag

etc.

WISCONSIN &amp; MICHIGAN
STEAMSHIP COMPANY

CLIPPER

for $1.50

_

FREE!

17,

MAY

Central,
aig

a

ee

1961

Park

Highland

ieessatin

(oh

ie

FY a

RSEG BS KEK

tin

SS By

Ay

&lt;

3

dig

MOLEY T.V.
The

North

Shore’s

Smallest

Discount

670 CENTRAL
ID 2-2042
Open

_ Thursday, March 11, 1961

LPs :

Toward purchase of any $3.98 LP in our
Special Homemaker’s Week Group of Records

MILWAUKEE

Sailings

Save 240 miles of driving —

at}

This Coupon

-&amp;:

LOOK!

Goupon

POR

One Way Rate

CUT
Night

Top 40 — 74

Sant wd RN

Milwaukee, Wis. - Muskegon, Mich.
Morning,

4-3212

Trae

AUTO-TOURISTS!
TAKE LAKE MICHIGAN

Stereos” ,

$1.00 OFF on all LPs and

Route 22 — % Mile East of Half Day

Phone:

Eder

DID YOU sr

ANNIVERSARY

Friday Evenings

House

�oF

FA

Re

Esa

Ss

eRe

PER

er

a

~

RS

a

ohh,

TRAIL BLAZER DUDE RANCH
AN

EXCLUSIVE

DAY

Bi IO BS is

oe

CAMP

New

BOYS AND GIRLS—5 thru 12
Lunches, Teacher-staff, Transportation, etc.
Ultra Modern Outdoor Swimming Pool
Horseback

Riding

to

IT’S

TIME

| PUT YOUR
| SEAFARING
Wig

ai

ee

tae

ig Ans
i:

ae

new

membership

members

in

the

and

the

Co.,

sales

added

Evanston-

staff

Highland

Director

of

Earhart

Park.

Named

Sidney Rubenstein of Highland
Park will be installed in a twoyear term as director of the Covenant Club of Illinois, at the annual
—|meeting tonight.

of Pleasure

eee

Countryside

Lake, Mundelein,

Hlinois,

LOcust

at

GOLF CLUB, a

We

are

represented

Sikora, our home
his fine teaching

PGA

champion

by

Season

2

fine

Golf

Pros:

and touring tournament

A

Membership

and

give

rates

and

Bob will

exhibitions

through-

the

regular

daily

limited

will
types

of

1.

3 p.m.

March

24- May
4S 6 Os 2

Mey
March

24- May
53S «ti

4:30

Three

1.50

3.50

2.50

1.75

15

Weekdays
............ 2.00

1.50
1,75

oe

SKOKIE VALLEY
| LAUNDRY...

CLUB

and

a member

and

i

MR

rere

kt

his family

to

his

family

to

room

is now open

1.00
1.25

ela

aa $150

this

area

and

we

1.

assure

Rr:

3.

11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.

Sunday

dinner

Through
in a

POOL

permit,

swimming

we

pool

are

as

now

well

able

as

fa-

The Pool can be built for this season
will be done as follows:

and

ID 2-3310

The

POOL MEMBERSHIPS—We will admit a total of 100 family pool memberships at
$65.00 per family for the entire season.
If 70 families have signified their interest
by signing

up for pool memberships

May

12, construction

pool

can

be

open

who

are

about Saturday,

WKOKIE
| VALLEY
wes
oy!
'
&amp;

“Laundry &amp; Dry Cleaners, Inc.

Those
tact

the Club

berships

will

will begin

for

June

3.

the

interested

at once

(A

100

on

or

conmem-

daily fee

rate at the pool may be paid by those who
have golf memberships.

Countryside Service Company

golf play as per classificaadditional

Charge

of the

available

“

The

IDlewood 2-3310

Deerfield Call Enterprise 1616
_ 512-518 Waukegan Ave.

COUNTRYSIDE
Black

Highwood
Lorne

A.

Most

Complete

NURSERIES

Dirt—Pulverized Humus
Yard Maintenance

Cameron,

General

Manager

directly

patients.

been

2616

elected

Sheridan

Director

of

on

Recorded

TV

Roll Along.”

OVER 39?

Handicaps.

Golf Club

Driving

home

for

golf

pro

Rrange

is

It is under the di-

Chester

Sikora,

who

you need

is

Mueller Climatrol

at

I”’s TIME you put an end tothe
strain of sweltering Chicago

instruction.

AIR CONDITIONING
The

range,

Countryside
clubhouse

an

Golf
and

important

Club,

added

is directly

is also open

to the

are 50c and $1.00 per bucket.
location

COUNTRYSIDE
Main Office and Plant:

services

hospital

z

for

your

practice

feature

east
Public.

of the
Balls

This is an ideal

and

our

complete

night play a pleasure.

So

a

tem-

Officer

has

ly We

fees.

accounts.

open daily until 10 p.m.

lighting makes

Operating Divisions—

Club

Countryside

rection

before

should

as only

be available.

now

and the

season

of

DRIVING RANGE

to put

other

cilities.

d

6.

recent rezoning and the acquisition

of a special

use

recording

R. Ruwitch,

per season,

p.m.

Saturday and Sunday Breakfast 7 a.m. to 12 noon

SWIMMING

and

Michael Kanter of 368 Ridge Rd.
will play the part of Cyrus Winthrop tonight at 9:30 on a WTTW
‘production of a scene from “Merri-

5. Golf Club storage and cleaning at $10

12 noon to 8:30

ex-

the National Sanitary Supply Association.
The
election took place
at the 38th Annual Convention and
Merchandise
Exhibition
of
the
N.SJS.A. at the Conrad Hilton Hotel, Chicago.
The
National
Sanitary
Supply
Association
is composed
of over
‘1200 member firms throughout the
United
States
and
Canada
that
manufacture and distribute cleaning equipment, chemicals and supplies to institutions and industry.
Ruwitch is with World Dryer Corp.,
Chicago.

2. Special starting time privileges.

Dinner 5 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.
Saturday and

Unlimited
tion without

(Monday through Friday)
Lunch

Park,

are

and _ respiration,

other

with

Named

Cast

at all times.

every day for lunch and dinin

They

Entitles one person to all golf privileges

Membership privileges include the following:

ner. The Cuisine is the finest
you of complete satisfaction—

and

pulse,

many

|Rd.,

day except on legal holidays.

HOUSE

Our dining

taking

Theo.

all golf privileges Monday through Fri-

p.m.

2.00

2.25

season.

available:

q member

Entitles

............ 3.00

Be.

are

Highland

patients,

memberships

all golf privileges at all times.

After

15

turning

units;

Ree

Bay

1961

Ave.,

nurse,

| of hospital equipment and patients’

2. Weekday

After

Ava

wheel chair; room and ward care
of patients; care and maintenance

Regular

fee

REGULAR DAILY FEE RATES—1961
Saturday, Sunday &amp; Holidays
}

season

for the

memberships

Entitles

rates are listed on this page. Those interested in the
seasonal plan should make arrangements before May 15.

bile

490

and

be offered

joined

920
North
Ave,
Highland
Park,
have
finished
their
nurses
aide
training class, and will assume regular schedules.

connected
of

aides

pected to give four hours a week
to duty in the hospital. Aspects
of nursing covered in the nurses
aide training course
include patient bed-making, bathing, lifting

6-6610

number

nurses

Northfield, Mrs. Erick Klein, Morton Grove, and Mrs. Bert W. Marx,

a registered

MEMBERSHIPS

Chester

player.

new

perature,

pro who is well known in this area for
ability, and Bob Bruno, 1960 Illinois

make special appearances
out the year.

ee
ee

Five

the nurses aide volunteer service
at Highland Park Hospital when
they were capped May 3. Mrs, Lee
Corbin, 112 Forest Way, Deerfield,
Mrs.
Patrick
Israel,
1045
Wade,
Highland Park, Mrs. Ingvold Jinse,

pen,

SEASON GOLF
MEMBERSHIPS

rolling 6,400 yard course

Siegert
Tk

As Nurses’ Aides

and

west of Mundelein is undergoing a complete rehabilitation program. The course today is in its finest condition
and the program for maintaining
its excellent condition is assured.
Improved and additional club facilities
include men’s and women’s Locker Rooms, Complete Pro
Shop and Lighted Driving Range to mention a few.

A
ese:

Nurses Aides are trained under
the direction of Mrs. Harold Lap-

GOLF
COUNTRYSIDE

f
gta
ks

-|Five Are Capped

Member

Countryside Golf Clu

TOGS

5s

1

Your Invitation for a Season

aa

AG

Realtor

joined

(2 Corrals),

Camp Season: June 26 thru Aug. 18, ‘61
Phones: OR 4-9789 or OR 4-3829

TO

See

North Shore Board of Realtors include Audrey S. Padorr, who has

Fishing, Boating, All Sports, Crafts, Golf, Hot
Weekends available to organizations for parties
Directed by Teachers—Program Fitted to Child
All activities conducted on our Country Estate
in Northbrook, IIlinois

’

|

Seventeen

FOR

Swimming,

aber

re
Ee
tte
eT

}

op gate

GOLF

Recreational

CLUB

Property

In This Area

WE

SELL

MUELLER

CLIMATROL

because

we know it’s better built. Better compressor, quieter fans,

the best controls . . . quality

you’d expect from a manufacturer that’s concentrated exclusively on residential heating
and air conditioning for 102
years! Yet, because ‘it’s the
“brand in demand’, we can
install for no more than you’d
pay for an ordinary make.

Get our estimate now!
FREE! Call for your copy.

KARA FARMS
700 cres of Soybeans

‘Longer life through Air Conditioning.”

for America

Phone—LOcust

summers with our new Mueller
Climatrol air conditioner.

James
6-6610

764

Bulger
Osterman,

Phone:

WI

Thursday,

Htg.

&amp; S/M

Deerfield

5-2323
May

11, 1961

:

�y

‘

Prices On. Your Excryday Necds
Low ay
Prices On Gour Ecoray Noss (BY Lecryd
Low ay
Exenyd
ba

ay

Early Sweet Corn at Summer Prices!
y

After a long, cold winter, the first really plentiful shipment of golden corn on the cob is a most
welcome sight! Now—your Jewel has it! All you
want—and at mid summer low prices! Have a

.

sweet corn feast this weekend—surprise your fam-

ily with a platter piled high with steaming sweet
corn from Jewel!

TENDER,

YOUNG

~

Jewel knows these are the finest
chickens you can ‘buy! And you'll
know it, too, when you bite into a
meaty, sweet-flavored piece of a
fresh Jewel Fryer! Every Jewel chicken is inspected by the U.S. Government and Jewel meat buyers. These
Grade A fryers are plump and tender, rushed fresh to your Jewel from
the farm three times a week. That's
why Jewel Fryers are different!

&amp;Y

U.S. GOV'T
INSPECTED

ys. GOV'T INSPECTED

Nylons

—e

AGILON
SEAMLESS

Fresh
Cut-Up

\b.

Fryers

MEDIUM
OR LARGE

25¢

wax

SALE

At

Jewe

i
See

Peaches

:x2

Pear Halves

Pair

Salerno
GENUIRE

moro

| Nieuwe

2 5:

SIX PACK

Canfield’s

50-50

2.5:

10 oz.

Drink 2“

2.5:

btl.
ctn.

PLUS

DEP

LIBBY'S

Tomato Juice “:: 2.5:
a

BROAD,

MEDIUM

OR

“We reserve the right to limit quantities, No sales to dealers,

FINE

Noodles s222 (£25:

SALERNO

COCONUT

BARS

OR

Butter Cookies?: 25:

Comr

Bitwas
scm

13 .

TENTS 3 te. 13 ©

"

a
JEWey

TEA

CO.

ING

~

Prices Ov Your Everyday Necds
€BD Leeryday Low Prices On Your Lreryday Needs BY EveryLowday
Thursday,

May

11,

1961

Page

45

�[Plan Program on

ganized

Highway Safety for
Senior Citizens
On
1961,

TYPEWRITERS
-

RENTALS

-

REPAIRS

Chandlers
1645 CENTRAL

-

at

1

afternoon,

p.m.,

“Safety

May

16,

on

the

Highway” will be the subject for
discussion at the Senior Center—
North
Shore
Committee
on
the
Older Adult, at Winnetka Community House. Police Chief Anthony
Schmieg of Highland Park will act
as moderator and present a panel
of police representatives: Lt. Willard Fiel, Glencoe;
Chief Robert
Daley, Kenilworth; Sgt. Chas. Taylor, Wilmette; and Sgt. Chas. Unger, Winnetka.

| ADDING MACHINES
| SALES

Tuesday

ID 3-0230

Sgt.

Taylor

of

Wilmette

has

or-

the program

tion

to

include

from

the

point

for presenta-

traffic

problems

of view

of the

pe-

destrian, from the point of view of
the driver, and from the point of
view
of
adults
responsible
for
training children.

To Show Film
Dr.

will

Maurice

discuss

Wald

the

of

basis

Winnetka

for

caution

among older people, pointing out
what to expect in the way of limitation resulting from slowness of
reaction time. A short film will be
shown to demonstrate how we can
guard against traffic risks. A question and answer period will follow.
The matters of obtaining driver’s licenses after 65, car insurance
problems,
etc., also will be
discussed. This session is open to the
public.

‘| FREE
| PROMPT
| DELIVERY

A
odies
to

Mrs.

si

:

Follow

PARK

RAVINIA

IDlewood 2-2600
St.

Johns

DRUG

493

Roger

Williams

ET
EERE
re
RRR EE IR

During Homemakers’ Week, May

Ficeaiiaiaek:&lt;“aadeamieamea* “caiuiabiaed

DR

This Ad Is

11-17, 1961...
on any $10

= WORTH

purchase

at The Style Shop!
(This ad is worth

purchase

of

10%

more

OFF on any

than

$10.00!

We’re celebrating Homemakers’
Week by actually giving you a dolat

The

Style

This

offer

week’s

issue

of the

NEWS.

in

this

4]

dames
Richard
Weiner,
Irving
Shepard,
John
Baldauf,
Martha
Block,
Henry
Freedman,
Joseph
Libman,
Mare
Friedman,
Joseph
Buhai,
Edward
Siegel
and
Bert
Bateman.

CALLING
ALL
FURS

SALE

SAVE
on

Central

Ave.

Park

ID

60%

DOORS

CRAFTWOOD

Victor Furs
Highland

Mrs.

'members of the committee are Mes-

For one low storage cost,
your furs are stored and thoroughly checked. And we do
all small repairs at NO EXTRA
COST,

458

and

Starting at noon today, and continuing through Saturday, at 6 p.m.,
the Fair is featuring
20 leading
Midwestern
Antique
Dealers who
will display and offer for sale their
particular specialty: Early American, English Provincial and French
Provincial
Furniture;
Chinaware,
Antique
jewelry
and
a Country
Store
complete
with
all the old
time favorites: bulls-eyes, licorice,
green leaves, chocolate soldiers and
the like.
Admission tickets will be on sale
at the door, There will be beautiful
antique door prizes twice daily, and
the coffee and cake are for the asking. Free color sound cartoons will
,be run continuously for the children.
Mrs. Herschell Lewis is co-chairman of the Fair which is being held
in the Ravinia school gym, Roger
Williams
and
Judson,
and
other

LUMBER COMPANY
See Page H49 - D65

2-0351

GARRITY’'S
A
MR.

A. PICCHIETTI

Manager of our Meat Dept.

Wednesday,

ends

CLIP

THIS AD

USE

IT LIKE

— GET ACQUANTED OFFER —
1 LB. SPAGHETTI
FREE

NOW!
MONEY!

With
HIGHLAND|PARK

507

CENTRAL

ID 2-6944 ei
to the North

Open Mon., Tues., Wed., Sat., 9 to 5:30
Peo]

Page 46

ee

od

A

EVANSTON

AVE.

Free Delivery

4

printed

event,

PTA.

17, so hurry!

WIN Valuable Prizes FREE!

at

Clean-up

15-20,

the

INTRODUCING

Shop!

Just clip out this ad and bring it
in.
It’s worth
$1.00
on
any
purchase . . *. 10% OFF on any
purchase of more than $10.00!

May

for

May

MODERN
FUR
STORAGE

IDlewood 2-2300

Ave.

instructions

Week,

STORE

LETT TT PrFrrpPTrTeyePTrtiriii
CLIP THIS AD RIGHT NOW!

spend

Unit

Capitani, a rifleman in the infantry’s Company
C, entered the
Army
in October 1960 and completed
basic
combat
training
at
Fort Riley, Kan.

Earl W. Gsell &amp; Co.

1831

to STRAC

of

of the Ravinia

The
101st,
a major
Strategic
Army
Corps
(STRAC)
unit, constantly maintains an immediate
readiness
force
for airborne
deployment to any area of the world.

WIN Valuable Prizes FREE!

Be Refilled at

HIGHLAND

chairman

president

Army Pvt. Charles W. Capitani,
son of Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene
E.
Capitani,
1925 Deerfield
Rd., recently was assigned to the 101st
Airborne Division’s 502d Infantry
at Fort Campbell, Ky.

— ANNOUNCEMENT —
Suss Pharmacy Prescriptions
May Now

Krause,

Dawe,

Assigned

SINCE 1909
SERVING THE PHYSICIANS and
PATIENT

to

William

Vernon

| SERVICE

lar

sixty-year old Gramaphone which plays tinkling melsymbolizes the forthcoming Ravinia PTA Antique Fair

Shore
Thu. &amp; Fri., 9 to 9

Purchase

of 2 Pounds

Italian Style
SPAGHETTI

SAUCE

We’re Now Open 7 Days a Weck.

OPEN ALL DAY WEDNESDAY
DEERFIELD &amp; RIDGE ROADS
ID 2-9712
Thursday,

May

11, 1961

�WITH
CONFIDENCE!
A BRAND
NAME!
Barbecued

16

Chicken Noodle

CAMPBELL’S BEANS. 2 &lt;&lt;, 39°

N ATI ON yi

» SWIFT'S STEW
Flavor

Chicken

.

‘LIPTON SOUP MIX . . °° 43°

.&amp; 59

_ BREAST 0° CHICKEN 2‘: 65°
IN GLENDALE
HEIGHTS, ILL.

_. FOOD STORES |

@

ij
The Light Dessert

Truly Extra Rich LIBBY‘S

Low Priced At National

aun 39°

SALAD DRESSING

4

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4:98: |'
Cans

:

a

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Flavors Of

3¥;

JELL-

Top Taste Sliced

Bo

15c

RYE

WARSAW

0

UR

PUDDING

hy

eeeenronrreraae

Ce
Strawberry

Pkgs,

OPEN

PIT

SAUCE

eee

24 LINDSAY
SOFTENERS

3¢

Off—Assorted

29

CHARMIN

39°

All Purpose

Colors

650- ‘

TISSUE

. 4

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Neee

GUARANTEED

q

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10%.

TO PLEASE OR YOUR

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¢

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5

Model.

Winners

from

every

National

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NOTHING TO BUY!

NOT A CONTEST!

Get entry blanks at your "Friend of the Family" National Food
Store or at the Model Home in Glendale Heights. Enter today

.%" 69°

ch

to enter.)

AO cat Bee. eens Saee

=

.

a

BACK!

KRAFT'S

TRIMMED

MIRACLE
WHIP
Quart

(

Jar

one leg of lamb. Delicious steaks can be cut from
the upper portion of the leg and nicely broiled. And
you can roast the balance of the leg as usual. This
gives you two fresh cooked meals. Buy it now at

ee

Acarnation. . . 6% 89°;
For Your Coffee or For Baby

National at only

Reg.

BREAKFAST FAVORITES "|
FROSTED

FLAKES

{Installation not included).

ct 36

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1840 WINNERS OF
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S&amp;H STAMPS

(CAU)

This top grade meat is tender, juicy and extra flavorful. And you can get two fresh cooked meals from

c

CHEESE SPREAD. 2 *:. 69

i}

A sun filled week at the SHOREMEDE Hotel - Motel, 3600 Collins
Ave.
{Vacations must be taken
before OCT. Ist, 1961).

WATER

''Princess'’

is from

# VACATIONS FOR Two

Impala.

O’ LAMB

¢

Pend
For Snacks — NATCO

MONEY

U. S. CHOICE . . . VALUE-WAY

» of, | LEG
* SUGAR

The

« If entry-blank

WINNERS

paires
evrolet

interiors

1961 Impala 4-door Hardtop. See
them on display at
NICKEY
Pa
a Gal
4501
W.
IRVING

ob ad ad cre

c

™

custom

1878
&lt; seoup

oil
Lorn

COTTAGE

|
55c

Btl.

fF

aE

with base-

y THE

ckey

:)

ae

4

CAMPBELL’S

—

oe

Bi-Level home

The homes are located in Glendale Heights (north of Glen

MODEL HOME,

Just cant beat thst Netone! Mest”

a

Bh.

2 5c

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a &amp;room

ent.

Ellyn). SPECIAL BONUS PRIZE: Furniture in the model home . . .

|ie

..

MAZOLA MARGARINE

Have Campbell's Every Day!

j

Se

Barbecue

32

ee
.

a

The luxurious “Camellia”

Fi

ae

VINEGAR

C
@

dar

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The

2-Lb.

FRESH

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5 g:

PRESERVES

See

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c
y-01.

in Midiana Enterprises Development In Glendale His., lil.

. .; Twice
High, Calorie Low.
Vitamin
or, Rich in Vitamins.
ich—Ri ch ini Flavor,
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for
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helpful
supplies
Libby’s
your family.

Wi

‘e

Giveaway

JUICE

TOMATO

| FRUIT COCKTAIL

AMERICAN DeLUXE

Tuna

Light Meat

Style...

Chunk

© QUAKER LIFE

Your Choice

MIX ’EM or MATCH 'EM

:

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Lb

00

® RICE KRISPIES

© WHEATIES
CORN FLAKES
+e

Price

Boxes

“&lt;

REDEEM

%

THIS

YALUABLE

COUPON

FOR

100 EXTRA S&amp;H STAMPS
With A $10.00 Or More Purchase

.

Excluding The Purchase Of Beer, Wine, Liquor And Cigarettes
Limit One Coupon Per Customer— Coupon Expires May 12th

/

SWIFT'S — Premium

:

{|

69c

SLICED BACON

t-Lb.

‘

. . . i 59°

U. S. CHOICE

| pip

LAMB

CHOPS

| LOIN | SHOULDER

—"7 tame suoutpen Roast = 39° |» 69° | «79 | » 49
10

Delectable

SEMI-BONELESS HAMS ..."O@«
HYGRADE—West

Flavors

ROYAL
GELATIN
3-02:
Pkgs.

STOCK UP
NOW
6 With

Tra

Confectioners

Reg. 79c¢

DOMING
SUGAR

"lest aan¥ Find Fresher Fher Bootice *"
¢

4 s.o.s. soap pans . * 39
am

Virginia Whole or Half

CALIFORNIA
— RICH ... RED...

. STRAWBERRIES
-

c

Serve with cream over your
favorite cereal... for breakfast tomorrow
morning.
They're red...ripe...and

Fait

juicy . . . and low priced at

your

“Friend

National

of the

Produce

i-Lb.
Boxes

RIPE

t

Prize Winning

A Gold Medal Four. 5 i: 55°
as
‘,
‘4

= Din

Cc

Cin

Family"

LJ

Depart-

ment.
REDEEM

THIS

YALUABLE

25 EXTRA
With The

COUPON

S&amp;H

FOR

STAMPS

Purchase Of Two Rolls BLUE

WAXED

GREEN ONIONS
For Your

PAPER

Relish Tray

_.,,,., 5e

REDEEM

CANTALOUPE....* 39°

VALUABLE

COUPON

Limit One Coupon

With

The

Purchase

CHUNKY

Of One 8-oz.

Family

¢
.

Bar

CHOCOLATE

Limit One Coupon Per Customer — Coupon

RN

ie

ISH

es

&amp;)

S|"

REDEEM

THIS

VALUABLE

COUPON

CAKE

3 i OF:

C2,
=|

Betty Crocker’s

HEINZ
KETCHUP

Expires May 13th

FOR

25 EXTRA S&amp;H STAMPS
Limit One Coupon

Per Customer— Coupon

a

Expires May 13th

Baby Kosher Dill

ae

Si

39°

Jar

Berti
o)
OM,

,
NS

MIXES

“RNATCO CHEESE. . . 3. 39°F
Longhorn

10-

THIS

VALUABLE

COUPON

FOR

25 EXTRA S&amp;H STAMPS

We

Per Customer— Coupon

25 EXTRA

Expires

May 13th

S&amp;H

STAMPS

With The Purchase Of One Two-Pair

GIFT BOX NYLONS
Limit One Coupon Per Customer

— Coupon

Expires May 13th

THIS

VALUABLE

COUPON

FOR

50 EXTRA S&amp;H STAMPS
GARDEN
%,

With The Purchase Of SECTION

5

BOOK ENCYCLOPEDIA

Limit One Coupon Per Customer
— Coupon

LLL, PTT

TD

et

Expires May

17th

Eee

oS.

intyf

REDEEM
REDEEM

WESTON

=o REDEEM THIS VALUABLE COUPON FOR

REDEEM

er
BEY

Pkg.

v4

Pkgs. ? , 00

With The Purchase Of One 1-Lb. Box

PRINCE'S MOSTACIOLLI

SaMA

ces |
WAY
Pos
Sy,

Devil's Food Or White

Rich In Tomato Flavor

FOR

STAMPS

SEEKERS

FOR

25 EXTRA S&amp;H STAMPS

COUPON

KING SIZE CREMES

Food Store.
THIS

VALUABLE

With The Purchase Of One 12-0z.

RIBBON

See the display
of “Atomic Energized" Seeds, Bulbs,
and Potting Soil at your "Friend of the Family" National

REDEEM

THIS

25 EXTRA S&amp;H

Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities . . . Prices Effective Thru May 13th... In Chicago
And Illinois Suburban Stores Except
Lansing, S. Holland, Calumet City, Chicago Hts. and Dolton

THIS

50 EXTRA
With

VALUABLE

S&amp;H

The Purchase

COUPON

FOR

STAMPS

Of SECTION

6

With The Purchase Of One 14-0z, DRESSEL’S

PECAN COFFEE CAKE

636
Thursday, May

11, 1961

DEERFIELD

ROAD

DEERFIELD,

ILLINOIS
Page H 55—D

47

�Tennis Pro Will Be Speaker

DHS Frosh Nine
Wins 15-2 Game
With Seven Hits

start
Sun-

et Woods Park baseball diamonds.
ys will make a baseball throw
istance, hit for distance from
ting tee, and race around the
against time.
e classifications are:
Minor
ue, 8 and 9; Intermediate, 10;
or League, 11 and 12; and Pony
gue, 13 and 14. Boys. should
gn

up

in

‘ibbons
five

person

at the

will

awarded

be

place

division

diamond.

to the

finishers

for

each

in

each

event.

All

residing in Highland Park are
ble

and

invited

to compete.

e-Season

Drills

or Baseballers
pen on May 20

Pony League players will
the Lincoln Park diamond.
Times Announced

ough

League
10,

will

cludes Dom

Ort; Mike Riley,
Ollie Innocenzi.
Hubert Amidei
Bruno Amidei is
league.

League

players,

age

8

practice

from

9

boys,

13

and

winning

Mary

Geno

Croci

is president and
secretary of the

The

14

Jane

Junior

Bowling

154; High game, boy, Brent Bohne,
293:
High
series,
girl,
Barbara
217;
High
series, boy,
Scornavacco, 329.
improved,
girl,
Vicky

Most

Scornavacco;

Most

improved,

Mike

ndamentals
of
gripping
the
throwing
properly,
gripping

Deerfield Golfers

stance

and

hitting

be among skills covered on the
ng

day

of

practice.

On

fol-

ng Saturdays, pitching, catchinfield play at first and third,
d play at second and short,
eld play, and base shat sted will

ys who have not yet signed up
the Little League
or Pony
eague should do so immediately

the Highland

Park

er, 1850 Green

the Major
igue

are

also

Recreation

Bay

Road.

Boys

League

and

Pony

eligible

to try

out

eir respective All-Star teams
1 will represent Highland Park
North Shore Leagues.

; p Opener In
Golf League
agsue

dropped
meets

at

their
New

golf

opening

Trier

Mon.,

y 1. The varsity lost 9 to 6 and
-Sophs lost 12% to 214.

Joe Hurst, George Cimbalo,
ehinson,

and

Ken

points,

and

sophomore

lers were Sarge
inzelberg.

Bow to Prospects

Hot-Shooting Team
Prospect

High’s

Warriors

who

fore

fourth

the

golfers

totaltodown

threw

a

Deerfield’s

took 402 strokes beman

holed

out

on

the 18th green last Monday night
at Thorngate Country Club.
John
Fleming
again led the
scoring
parade
with
a 39-41-80.
O’Day, Feige, Barger,
and Luebcke, all of Prospect, followed with
a 91, 98, 98, and 100 respectively.
Freshman Skip Godow shot a 5347-100
to
come
in
second
for
Deerfield.
Prospect in Interim League play

Gaines
Ori

and

Bill

each
point-

Har-

four

losses.

DHS
Fleming, —
Clark, Don
Godow,
Skip
Hadjuk, Mike
Biega,
Mark
Team Total: 402
Prospect
O’Day,
Robert
Feige, Ron
Quirsfled, Chuck
Barger, Russ
Luebcke,
John
Team Total: 382

and

i-*]
3

a celee

George

In District,

Monday,

the

baseball

The varsity and frosh-soph tennis
teams played Waukegan last Tuesday.
The
varsity won
by a 3-2
score, while the sophs won by a

score

team

on

Beginning on Monday, regional
baseball occupies the slate. If the
Parker varsity has won all its district games, they will be qualified
to advance to regional action, also
at Evanston.
Coach Ralph Cianchetti’s varsity
golfers move into District competition against the strongest field in
the state tomorrow
at Evanston.

Tuesday

the

freshmen

Dan
of

honors

next

week

in

The

varsity

and

junior

varsity

defeated the North
on Sunset Valley

Golf course May 3. The varsity
won 11% to 3% and the junior
varsity won 1414 to 4.
Ken
Gaines,
Dick
Campagni,
Rick Ascher, and Steve Mora were
varsity
point-winners
and
Dave
Ricker,
Jeff
Marks,
John
Lawrence,
Bill Glickauf,
and
Barry
Grossman, won for the junior varsity.

as did the team

as he finished

Compete

second

Mike

Bonamarte,

Highland
track teams

In First

Park
High
took seventh

School’s
in a field

of eight teams at the first annual
Maine
East
Relays
last Friday
night

at the

Park

Ridge

school.

Only two Parker entries emerged
victorious.
Jim
Sternfield,
now
ranked

third

discus

throw

and

the

team

of Joel

ters,

Chuck

in the

with

state,

Distance

Weinert took
10:58.7 mark
4:20 mile on

won

a 156’

the

3” effort

as

holds

Board

a B.S.

degree

of Education.

port,
and

first;

Scott

Terry

Slawin,

Moroney,

“HO56—D 48

Federal

Class

“B”, Robert Barancik, first, Ronald
Rosedale, second, and Dan Engel,
third.
Class
“C,’
John Shimizu,
first, Ronald
Lavin,
second,
and

Kim

Friedman,

third.

Boxing exhibition
winners
are
Jack Lewitz, Ronnie Carlson, Tommy Cortesi and Jeff
Feldman
(draw),
Jeff
Perraud,
Gordon

Schaippi,
Marx

Scott

and

Scheain,

Johnny

Johnny

Pink

(draw),

Pat Tilley, Gil Schwartz, Bill Laing
and Larry
(draw).

Cortesi

Judo
In

Judo

and

Mack

Promotions

promotions,

improvement

Bill

in

based

upon

proficiency,

tech-

by Tsuyoshi
(fifth degree

Miyazaki,
a
Black Belt)

Chicago

Club.

Giants

Judo

were

Godan
of the

the two mile relay of

Larry
Kanouse,
Redman,
Lewitz
and Weinert, fourth; the frosh 880
relay of Paul Lamson, Frank Checchin,
Winters
and
Steve
Weiss,
fourth; the sprint medley relay of
Joe Wolk, Ed Gamson, Jim Murtfeldt and Barney Olson, fifth; Bob

Rosen,

Win-

and

Jim

Dale Zech, fourth in the shotput.
Complete
scores for the meet:
Lyons Township 77, New Trier 53,
Maine East 48, Maine West 4514,

Redman

their event
as Weinert
the anchor

OFFICE

second;

third.

relay

with a
ran a
leg to

make up a halflap deficit and nip
the Lyons Township team at the
tape.
Others who placed for the Little

BANK—POST

Member

in elec-

Winners of Awards
Awards will be presented to the
following winners in the Judo exhibition:
Class ‘‘A”’, Steve Rappa-

fourth

in

the

high

Waukegan
4514,
Evanston
Highland Park 27, Prospect

BLDG.

Deposit Insurance

jump;

27%,
19¥%..

The thinclads did not compete
in the Hinsdale Relays Saturday as.
scheduled.

BANK of HIGHLAND
1771 Second St.

as

trical
engineering
from _ Illinois
Institute of Technology and a masters degree in Education.
He won
the. all-around
athletic
award
at
IIT, with letters in baseball, basketball, and tennis. During the winter he serves as a supervisor and
teacher
trainer
for
the
Chicago

“The Service Bank Of Highland Park’

| SAVINGS MEAN SECURITY
| AND YOU GET N')1/7 om

well

Russell

Medley

Lewitz,

exhibition,

niques and ability, two White Belts
were promoted
to Green Belt,
Ralph Rothfelder, and Ronald
Lavin. Promotions were presented

Maine East Relays

paign.

golf teams both
Chicago
teams

won

H. P. Thinclads

Cham-

To Golfers’ Record

Wagner

Jim Levin and Art Altschuler.
Steve Simons made the big news

of the week

and

More Wins Added

varsity met New

in the District meet at New Trier
Saturday,
and thus qualified for
the state competition on May 19-20.
Defending state champion Evanston
invaded
the
Highland
Park
courts Tuesday and on Saturday,
the Morton Mustangs play here.

JVs
take
on
Lake
Forest
in a
home meet.
The
tennis
teams
will
meet
Morton Saturday in a home meet
as they face state competition next
weekend.
Coach Dick Ault’s varsity cindermen
move into district action at
Evanston Saturday as they hope to
qualify enough men to contend for

state

The

Trier
Saturday
for
the
district
meet. They placed second with 10
points to New Trier’s 14.
At Waukegan,
Steve Atlas won
his
single
match.
The
team
of
Ken
Cousens
and Jim Gray was
victorious as was the team of Ron
Panter and Renny Werrenrath.
Jeff Gluck, and Hal Ross were
winners
for the frosh-soph.
The
doubles team of Trevor Weiss and

kegan as the Bulldog freshmen and
take

of 4-1.

judo

He

Matches May, 19-20

forced Evanston in its first District
game at Evanston.
Then, on Saturday, the Giants will go to Wausophomores come here to
the Parker underclassmen.

Jennings

For State Tennis

Spring sports team at Highland
Park
all head
into
district
and
state tournament competition this
week.

On

Sgt.

awards
for
Sportsmanship,
Most
proficient and Most Improved
in
Boxing and Judo.
As
an
amateur,
Jennings
won
the National Public Parks championship four times. He won many
state
and
sectional
tournaments,
and was named to the 1931 Davis
Cups squad. He turned professional in 1933, and has taught thousands of players. In 1942 he enlisted in and served in the U.S. Navy
four years.
As coach at Lake Forest College,
he conducts a seven week tennis
school
during
summer
for
boys
and girls 10 to 18 years of age. He
is a tennis consultant for Dunlop
Sports and gives clinics throughout the Middle West.

Simons Qualifies

All Spring Sports

Next

has won 4 and lost 1. Deerfield’s
record now stands at two wins and

e varsity and sophomore
s

boy,

Supanich.

382 team

Sena ey Pade orga

advised

Sr., chairman of the event, that he
has selected the topic “The recipe
rof a champion—20%
ability and
80% desire and hard work.”
Awards
will
be
presented
to
those winners in the recent boxing

State Competition

Banquet

Mary

Deerfield
Player
Samuelson, 2b
Reeder,
3b
Moore, SS
Folger, RF
Schlessinger,
Frantz, c
Butler, lf
Busse, CF
Jones, P
Hedge, 2b
Patterson, 3b
Totals
Leyden East
Player
Ferguson, LF
pS
o TUE i Oy TARR
Fetzer, 3b
Nojak, 2b ...
McNamara,
C. Saghi, 1b
Stoltz, ss
DeMarignot,
Olivaris, P
Zibovitz, P
Markese, 2b

Are

of age, will practice on the
In Park field from 10 a.m.
11:30 a.m.

at, batting

and

Leaque
ended the season with a
banquet
held
at the Mary
Jane
Lanes.
Trophies were presented to the
following:
High game, girl, Ginger Carlson,

until 10:15.
Major League
ages 10 through 12, will have Bluhm,
iamonds from 10:30 to noon.. Minnie
ony

the

Ori, Carl Konsler, Sam

Awards

it’s Little League is slated for
rday morning, May 20 at the
et Woods Park baseball dia-

inor

of

Mary Jane Juniors
End Season With

The initial practice session of the
thland Park Recreation Depart-

s.
at

Members

Jane team are Dominic Molinari,
George
Luezanich,
Ted
Zagnoli,
Willie Eggermen, Don Molinari and
Gene Belmont.
Oak Terrace Beverage team in-

has

Interim League victory.
Dick Folger and Rick Moore led
the attack with
two
hits apiece
while
Jim
Jones
hurled
a _ neat
four-hitter to squelch the Leyden
attack.
woocococorHoHHos

will
at the

George Jennings, tennis professional, the speaker for the evening,

first

NooCOHRORNNOHm

o’clock

their

WOSSOCR
OK CCOHKOCOM

events
10

for

ROCOCOCCOOHOHHH

The
at

night

_
MOOCNNNOOCWKWWNe

13.

The Mary Jane sponsored bowling team has won the championship in the Marconi league by defeating the Oak Terrace Beverage
team in a playoff match.
Mary Jane team won the first
and second games of a slated threegame playoff.
The team won the
first game by 14 pins and the second by 98 pins.
Mary Jane bowlers were champions of the first half of the season’s play, and Oak Terrace came
out on top of the second half, calling for the playoff.

Friday

NOSCCSCSCOOCOCOOHHA

li Highland Park boys who wish

ptly

last

Marconi League

test their hitting, throwing, and
nning skills should plan to come in the Highland Park Recrean Department’s Baseball Tryout
: ield Day
on Saturday
morning,

A recipe for a champion will be given those who attend
the annual Father and Son banquet given by the Highland Park
Police Youth Club Saturday evening, May 13. The event will
be held at the Highland Park High School.

By
scoring
three
runs
in the
first inning without a base hit and
seven
more
in
a
third-inning
spree, the freshman Warriors from
DHS
scalped
Leyden
East
15-2

Mary Jane Bowlers
Are Champions of

Ss “ae fae

At Police Youth Club Dinner

Corporation

PARK
iDlewood 2-7800

-

�Improved Golfers
Defeat Niles Twice
Varsity golf team gave its most
impressive showing as they defeat.
ed Niles on the home course by
14 to 1 score April 5. The sophs
also won 11%
to 314.
Bob Zender won Niles’ only point
as he defeated Parker Joe Hurst
on the front nine. Hurst came back
to win the back nine and the match
2to 1. Other winners were George
Cimbalo
178, Bill Hutchinson
79,
Rick Ascher 81, and Ken Gaines
82. Hurst’s score was 75.
Highlight of the soph meet was
an
eagle
3
scored
by
Harvey
Kinzleberg on the 485. yard third
hole.
Parker
point-winners
were
Marty Becker, Buddy Block, Roger

Cimbalo,

and

Kinzelberg.

Speedway Ready for _
Racing on May 14
The final trial runs of the 1961
season were held at the Waukegan
Speedway
in Waukegan,
Sunday,
as some 35 cars and drivers tested
their machines in preparation of
the
season
opener
of
modified
stock car racing next Sunday night,
May 14.
In the past two weekends some
75 cars and drivers have tried out
their
cars
and
all
have
been

through

the inspection

HP Frosh Nine
Beats Glenbrook

ALWAYS

FRI, thru THURS., MAY

The freshmen nine of Highland
Park edged Glenbrook 6 to 5 getting their first win of the year at
Glenbrook,
last
Monday
as_ the
sophs
lost 2 to 0. The
winning
freshman
pitcher,
Willy
Jackson,
is the first frosh pitcher to last
the entire game. Fred Chaimson hit
a single in the first inning, taking
second on a passed ball, and being
driven in by a double by Ken Gross.
Glenbrook retaliated, however, and
went
ahead
4 to
1. The
Baby
Giants tied things up in the 4th by
a double by Ron Lev, a single by
Dennis Coppi, 2 walks and an error. Jeff Molner, Ron Lev and Russ
Lodge
scored in the 4th inning.
Russ Lodge
scored again in the
6th
inning,
taking
second
on
a
single and an overthrow, and being
driven in by Bob Abram’s single.
Abrams scored on a single by the
catcher, Dick
Flamm,
giving the

THEATRE

— GLENCOE

ID 2-0605

VErnon

5-0605

= May 12-14

EDMOND O'BRIEN, GARY MERRILL, RAYMOND MASSEY,
KARL

“TECHNICOLOR®

Weed by BUENA HES Brserbetign Co tne Own! B:SREY PRODUCTIONS, Mae)

Feature Times:
Fri., 6:00-8:00-10:00

AMATEUR
RACES

MALDEN,

ARTHUR

Highland
May 15-20.

O’CONNELL

Park

Clean-up

Week

SAT. KIDDIE SHOW
|,

“ABBOTT

MAY

13 —

1:30 —

&amp; COSTELLO MEET

CAPTAIN KIDD”
No. 15—-SON OF GERONIMO”

COMING
COLE

2

PORTER’S

CAN - CAN

19th!

ee

in Color

3 Cartoons

Levin.

MAY

North Shore’s Most Beautiful Theatre
Forest, Ill. —- CE 4-2106 or CE 4-2107

afraid of something?
Hear Wilson M. Riley,*
C.S.B., of Kansas City, Missouri, speak on “Christian
Science: God’s Ever-present
Kingdom

Revealed.”

THEATRE

Free

*Member
of the Board of Lectureship of
Mother Church, The First Church of Christ,
entist, Boston, Massachusetts.

Your Rings and
We Check Them

Jewelry
FREE.

On

Starring—Don

diamond

ern

settings,

Wide

xs

18

Screen

Murray
wore

a

— SCHEDULE —
Weekdays—’’The Hoodlum Priest’’ begins at 7:30 and 9:35
Saturday—"’The Hoodlum Priest’’ begins at 5:15-7:30-9:35
Sunday—"The Hoodlum Priest’’ begins at 2 :00-4:00-6
:00-8 :00-10:00

tn.

Saturday Children’s Matinee 2 to 4 ‘“THE SPIRIT
with James Stewart

ST. LOUIS”

Exhibit in Our

Lobby by

Work”

Rating

Boulton
| Frederick W.

June 2—"Cimarron”
June 9—"Absent Minded Prof’

Adult
&amp; M.Y.

setting.

OF

May 19—"The Trapp Family”
May 26—’‘All in a Night's

Guidepost

set ‘in mod-

Payments

Panoramic

OOK?
KX
X)

SOON

He spent his time with thieves and killers—this man who
priests garb—and lived in a white-hot world of violence!

JEWELERS - OPTICIANS
Highland Park
- Tel. IDlewood 2-0630
Across from’ bank. over 35 years.
own

Our

“THE HOODLUM PRIEST”

The
Sci-

_.

our

PORTO

Friday, May 12 thru Thursday, May
—— ONE WEEK ——

1. H. NEMEROFF

‘Have- your diamonds

POLICY

Open Daily 6:00 to 12 Midnight — Curtain at 6:30
Sunday Continuous 2 to Midnight—Doors Open 1:40

Public Lecture. Monday,
May 15, at 8 p.m. First
Church of Christ, Scientist,
Highland Park, 493 Hazel

We.do

Sat., 12:00-2:00-4:00-6:00-

—

FREE FLOWER to each lady on Mothér’s Day, Sun., May 14th Matinee!
Courtesy of HENRY C. WEILAND FLORIST, 1781 St. Johns Ave.

Lake

FEATURE

One Hundredan
One
Dalmatians

14

EVENTS

DRIVE CAREFULLY — THE LIFE YOU SAVE
MAY BE YOUR OWN

Bring
ALL-CARTOON

ADDED

WAUKEGAN
SPEEDWAY

De &gt;Yo)a mm ey) im colt) 3
DIAMONDS
NEW

STARTING MAY
—

Adults 1.50 - Child 25¢
Time Trials 7:15 ~ Races 8:30
West Washington Street

Avenue.

FRI. thru SUN.

Sun., 1:30-3:32-5
:34-7 :36-9 :38

oo ¢

lines,.some

GLENCOE

Sat., 5:15-7:29-9:38

S\TONY.CURTIS /_.

two times.
Many
of the drivers
this week were tagged as having
approved cars, as the safety committees found their cars complete
in every respect for racing competition.
Opening
night
is expected
to
draw a field of some 50 cars and
season championship begins, Time
trials
start
at
7:15,
racing
at
8:30
p.m,
The
speedway
is
located on West Washington Street.

Weekdays, 7:17-9:26

HIS TRUE-LIFE STORY MAKES FICTION SEEM TAME!!

2 to 0. The

catcher was Mike

Features At:

12-19

THE WORLD’S MOST FABULOUS IMPOSTOR ... AND HIS
AMAZING ESCAPADES WITH LOVE—-AS 60 DIFFERENT PEOPLE!

aged another run in the 6th inning,
but could not tie the game, losing
6 to 5.
Jimmy Panther, pitching for the
sophomores, gave up only two runs,
sophomore

‘STOCKCAR RACES
SUNDAY NITE

1D. 2-2400

FOR ONE WEEK!

frosh a 6 to 4 lead. Glenbrook man-

lost to Glenbrook

IFIED

THEATRE
HIGHLAND PARK

ENDS TONITE!
“CRY FOR HAPPY”

For First Win

but

FREE PARKING

arranged.

8:00-10:00

Sun., 1:30-3:30-5:30-7 :30-9:30

De
MON.

thru

THU.,

May

15-18

ightful

Gourmet

648

Dining

DEERFIELD

RD.,

(Y% block East of Waukegan

DEERFIELD
Rd. stoplight)

ps

Let’s

he9
|
wa ¢

TECHNICOLOR® paesenen
sy WARNER BROS, wy
(Waitign and Produced by OORE SCHARY Saved on bis ota

feature times 6:45-9:25

Thursday,

Tea

Dinner

Late Snacks
ag

MINE
May

MINK”

11, 1961

WIndsor

5-975]

Y

a

Acquainted!

@.

/

COFFEE from
8 to

Cs

jo sn

COMING:

“MAKE

Afternoon

KF

~¢

(

Luncheon

Get

FREE

&gt;

Breakfast

Sr

a

and

~——N
=

11

KING-SIZE DRINKS
served by the
exciting. new CREWMATES

A.M.

RONNIE ORLAND
atthe PIANO BAR

2 to 5 P.M.

BUFFET

¢

FOOD

No. cover—No

—_err

OPEN

DAILY

Including Sundays)
8:00 A.M. to 10:00 P.M.

SERVICE
minimum

EDGEWATER

BEACH

HOTEL

5300

North

Sheridan
Page

H

Road
57—D

49

�py

= ae

ll

all

i

i

od

site. olde.

le

site

ls

site

ste

Home

brand-new

Sie finer accommodations, including
communication system, etc.

ote

wing

with

air-conditioning,

even
inter-

| Almost all are single rooms—occasional doubles.
Yes, Abbott House is a nursing home. But people see it also
as

__

a dignified residence,

a fine hotel, a place to rest and

recuperate, a haven for the elderly, and a friendly, comfort_ able dwelling, all rolled in one.

In addition to modern beauty, convenience, comfort and friend-

liness, we offer Registered Nurse supervision and 24-hour
nursing care. Ask your doctor about us.

‘rom residents, their doctors, their relatives and their friends,

___ Wwe get compliments and thanks.
_ If you have a problem which Abbott House can help you solve,
|
we shall be happy to have you contact us.

| ABBOTT

HOUSE

The Highland Park Nursing Home

=

Central

405

Avenue

site. site. ste

| Now Abbott House is even newer!
; We are just completing another

Friendliness

ste. sie.

Convenience —

sate

— BEAUTIFUL

ste.

al

ste. ste

a

othe

i

Nursing

— MODERN

Comfort —

lt

te

Highland Park
NEW

HOUSE

a

9

Little Giants Drop

Chemistry

Highland

Park’s

freshman

and

teams

each

baseball

Dr.
Guthmann
has
conducted
seminars
at Purdue
and
Loyola
Universities and was a member of

dropped a pair of games last week.
The sophs were beaten at Lane
Tech
on Tuesday,
May
7 to 6 score, and at New

next

day

6 to

3. The

beaten at Lane on
3 to 2, and
lost

the

next

Jim

frosh

13

and

rently
liaison

were

Levin

were the pitcher and catcher for
the Parker sophs in both games.
Jeff Molner and Dick Flamm were
the

freshman

battery

at Lane

tin,’

New

Trier

with

Flamm

|
a

|

SEDAN

SAVE
on

Dr.

25%

FENCE

CRAFTWOOD
LUMBER

COMPANY

See Page H49 - D65

is one of the lowest in the medium

a

» + + plus the excellent sales and service facilities available.

| 122
er.

COUNTY’S

N. Sheridan

OLDEST

Rd., Waukegan,

DODGE

chairman
of

the

He

of the

American

and

of

its

is immedi-

Chicago
Institute

a past

president
Club,
since

Guthmann
holds several chemical patents in the U.S. and Canada, and has had technical papers
published in chemical and chemieal
engineering
journals.
He
is
vice chairman of the education ac-

SALE

in

Guthmann

Dr. Walter
S. Guthmann,
695
Euclid,
will
join
the faculty
of
Roosevelt
University,
Chica
go,
Sept. 1, as an associate professor of
chemistry.

tivities committee
turing
He

Metal

Hy-

drides, Inc., a Massachusetts
which manufactures sodium

a

director

of

firm
boro-

has

111,

and

man

of

Association.

served

of

six

School

is

a

mittee
boards

years

Board

immediate

curriculum

as

a

District

past

chair-

study

com-

set up by the joint school
of the Highland Park area.

Ski Club

In 1933, he was a co-founder of
the Edwal
Laboratories,
Chicago,
where he did chemical consulting
and manufactured fine organic and
photographic chemicals. After returning from Army duty in 1945,
he was eiected president of Edwal
Laboratories, which later merged
with
the
Morton
Chemical
Co.
Guthmann is currently with Morton
Chemical
and
in
1960, was

of the Manufac-

Chemists

member

Dr. Guthmann received his B.S.
degree
in
chemical
engineering
from Yale University in 1928 and
his
Ph.D.
in
organic
chemistry
from the University of Chicago in
1932.

Officer

Douglas Brown, 1071 Golf Ave.,
has been elected vice-president and
treasurer of the Ski Club at Lawrence College, Appleton, Wis.

Mail

Strewn

Frank Nicolazzi of 1073 Andean
Pl. complained to Highland Park
police that neighborhood children
dumped

again

his

last

mail

on

the

ground

week,

Floor Covering

-—s Of custom coachmakers, and, seemingly a paradox, the price of this automobile

LAKE

member

of the
Chicago
Chemists’
which
he has belonged
to

_-—«*rThe deepest satisfaction of car ownership is yours when you drive the Polara.
You will take pride in its quality, unexcelled even by cars bearing the marque

NE OF

is cur-

1935.

By

;

present
committee.

tof Chemists,

again

V8

price field.

and

chapter

elected
GOOR

Illinois

He

consultant in industrial
for Baldwin-Wallace Col-

ate past

and

doing the receiving.

As seen

4

of

a

advisory

Willie Jackson, Ron Lev, Molner
and Tom Walker were the pitchers
at

faculty

of Technology.

lege, Berea, Ohio.
Guthmann has been a member of
the
American
Chemical
Society
since 1932. He is a past editor of
its journal, “The Chemical Bulle-

to 3.
Mike

graduate

Institute

the same day,
to New
Trier

afternoon

Panther

the

2, by a
Trier the

Becta

POLARA

Professor

Pair of Ball Games
‘sophomore

;

hydrides and other inorganic hydrides and rare metals. From 1941
to 1945, he served in the U. S.
Army’s Chemical Warfare Service.

ste.

The

ts

ste.

ae

i

ie... oie... ttn.

| ABBOTT
el

tlie...ttie...sihe... she... se...ote...

vi
alll

See it at Sorensen Motors TODAY

SPRING IS THE TIME TO REPLACE YOUR
CARPETING, LINOLEUM OR TILE FLOORING
VISIT OUR SPACIOUS SALES ROOM
OUR TRAINED SALES SPECIALISTS
WILL GRACIOUSLY HELP SOLVE
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SENN

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WE

HAVE

prevo

BEEN

IN THE FLOOR COVERING
SINCE 1915

John B. Nash — ssmes
CARPET AND

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BUSINESS

ROGER

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HIGHLAND

PARK

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Wooded,

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283

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Page H 58—D
Be |

©

MORTGAGES
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¢©

MANAGEMENT

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@ NAME TAGS SEWN FREE OF CHARGE
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@ ALL CAMP EQUIPMENT
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|GeatlemenOr

For

your

Y

ite

convenience

sae

we

will

pigs

be

open

Thurs.

Eves.

during

saslnagninds Barge

50

Thursday,
\

May

May.

Woot
11, 1961

sed
ad
Stage

OM

�Bera
*

[HP Police Pistols

ae

Varsity Nine Beats
Glenbrook 12-3

Top Two States

The varsity baseball team
at
GlenPark clobbered
Highland
brook here last Friday, May 5, 12

Highland
pistol team

to 3.
Mike

regular

second

a

junior

baseman

and

for

the

one

Nicholas Cascarano, Michael Bonamarte Jr. and Norman Zenko won
the center-fire gallery season, shot
indoors during the winter.
In the .22 caliber gallery series,

hit.

At the
plate the
Parkers
got
eight hits, including a home run
by Ed Sordyl and a triple by Bill
Bodle, and they scored in every

Schmieg won and Cascarano placed
seventh
Schmieg
series,

inning except the second. Mickey
Panther and Harry Henderson each
Little

Park

0

0
1
0
0
0
0

.

ISON

.

ok
WODCHOKOHOOCOOANROOCOSCS

WONYNASAYWWORRORS

Connelly

0
1

0

Schapps

Ohlmeyer

The
E

RPNOFRONWOMm

Henderson
McLaughlin
Subs

Giants.
OR WONRHEA

the

AWE

Highland
Adler

for

OR

hits

moocorococoosoooomx~coosesco

two

HOBNWWA

got

0

0
0
1
1

4

E
2
2
2
0
0

Training

here

at the

Roosevelt
5th

.32

ev-

except

ended with his heavy

.45

Dedication Match the last weekend
in April. Team 1 (Schmieg, Cascarano,
among

Zenko, Dalziel) placed first
the
experts
there,
while

3

(Knudson,
placed

Hamm,

Knaff,

second

division.

in

the

Schmieg

got

individual honor: third match.
The
competition
included
FBI
men,
four districts
of the state
police, seven Chicago districts, and
others
totalling
294
contestants
representing
27 . police
departments.

Named

B&amp;H

ad

From

Here

&amp; There

Saratoga Club Opens
Frank Fiocchi, restaurateur and
owner of the Saratoga Club, 440
Green Bay Road, Highwood,
this
week announced the completion of
remodeling work on the Saratoga
Club.
“The
Saratoga
Club
has
been
renovated
throughout
to provide
the proper atmosphere for diners
who enjoy food,’ Frank explained.
“Beautiful wall murals have been

installed

in our

main

dining

Ave.,

North

Springs,

52,

of

Chicago,

was

stopped

side

of

Skokie

said

he

had

Valley

not

Rd.

slept

Reading

Tutoring

Begins

ap-

SUMMER
PORCH

room

to furnish a restful setting for our
patrons. For those who appreciate
the suburban motif we have a more
casual room
for dining complete
with fireplace and rustic appointments.”
A
new
leather-padded
cherrywood
bar
graces
the
handsome
cocktail lounge
which is conveniently located between the two dining rooms. Flooring in all rooms
has been covered with plush carpeting. The exterior of the Saratoga was also remodeled in keeping
with Fiocchi’s plans to maintain the
high reputation which the Saratoga
has acquired
during the past 13

Extend

Your Living
Outside

@

Enclose Open

@

Screen

@

Add

We know ye
interest is in the
(4.
— well being,
health and safe.
ty of your child
For the future happinesso
your loved one, the best
is the
only answer. SUNSHINE VAL
LEY requires and gets the fin
est from each counselor. ©
have had long experience (a:
well as lovely grounds
an

Room

Porch

In Porch

ample

A Porch

FHA
FREE

Financing
ESTIMATES

addition to Italian specialties,
the
Saratoga
features
charcoal
broiled steaks, fresh Maine lobsters
and a variety of seafoods.

Skokie &amp; Dund
Northbrook,

CRestwood

in

fiercely competitive

seeing

activities

We also keep you informed oO
YOUR child’s progress.
Wé

NORTHBROOK
LUMBER
CO.
ee
i

Mend
In

equipment)

that YOUR CHILD is kept bus
and happy, but have

give results, not promises. —

SUNSHINE VALLEY.

2600 Half Day Road, Deerfield
CEdar 4-3120

Mr.

Rds.

Sa

Mrs.

J. R. Thompson

ee

Ill.

2-3000

e
e
*
©
e
e

Fri-

cleared

him

charges.

He

of

was

drunk

driving

released

on

$10

"Se

*

Center

Program

June

Springs

since

A score of .10 on the Breatholizer

19
Study Methods
Comprehension
Speed
Basic
Advanced
Specialized

ie

706

Glencoe

Glencoe

Rd.

VE

2 AEE
1

:

Es

|

Sparkling
Mineral

By...

Spring

Water

Co.

1629 Park Ave.
IDilewood 2-0042

ed by

od Housekeeping

ic

NORTHSHORE
inquire

(Formerly Garino’s)

about

HN

&gt;
bat

i.

our

Clarence Dombeck, proprietor

for accordion—guitar

Instrument furnished
Franchised dealer Gibson Guitars

Dallape — Scandalli — Camerano
Highland Park
ID 2-0015

Studio

Thursday, May 11, 1961

ctane

TWIN! LUMINALL ACRYPOLYRENE

re

L AN

:

PAINT

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Studio

UN

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668 Central

Ave.,

Highland

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colors and dazzling White dry in less than an hour to
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EYE

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Portraits

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° MAR. os ary

gs

Bottled

pastels or oils
painted from life by

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oot]

Diagnostic Testing
Individuals
or Small
Groups
Junior High School Thru College

bond.

:

airman

prentice, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs.
B. Siensa of 795 County Line rd.,
was graduated April 21 from the
two-week Aviation Familiarization
School at the Naval Air Technical
Training
Center, Memphis,
Tenn.
His instruction
included
naval
aviation history,
flight theory,
safety precautions and
survival
training. The course prepared students for more technical study in
another
school
at the
Memphis
training center.

Advisor

Shore

Summer

3060

day.

jn

|

Siensa,

Henry Kerulis, Powell’s Camera
Mart, 589 Central Ave., has been
elected to the Bell &amp; Howell Retailers’ Advisory
Council,
it was
announced by Carl Schreyer, Bell
&amp; Howell vice-president of marketing.
Kerulis is one of 16 franchised
Bell
&amp;
Howell
photo
specialty
dealers throughout the United
States
who
were
elected
to the
panel by their fellow B&amp;H
franchise-holders.

by Highland Park police at 5:30
a.m. Sunday driving on the wrong

a

B.

conditioning.

Stop Wrong-Way Car
W.

(which

a

an

nation’s largest engineer training
center May 11.
The eight weeks of basic training begins the army service of all
enlisted men,
teaches the fundamentals of self defense in battle,
firing of the Army rifle, knowledge
of
basic
military
subjects,
and

physical

series

with

scoring 2268 out of a possible 2500.
Among
the
experts,
Bonamarte,
Zenko and Cascarano placed seventh, eighth and ninth respectively
for the team first.
Bonamarte
and Zenko,
as well
as Schmieg, made the top ten list
for the event.
Three
teams
from the department
entered
the
Lake
Forest

marksman

Pvt. John
P. Palandri,
son
of
Mr. and Mrs. Peter C. Palandri,
1495 Oakwood Ave., completed his

Basic

Schmieg)

Grandi)

Basic Training

Army

shoots

Team

McLaughlin.
Winning
Pitcher:
Pitcher: Cutter.
Runs Batted In: Kadison, Sordyl (2), Bodle, Inman.
Three Base Hit:
Bodle.
Home Run:
Ed Sordyl.
Score by Innings
1234567
Highland Rare: accis:. 311222
1—12
GHONOTOON
ic... eae 600042
0

Ends

in
the
expert
division.
also took the .45 caliber

center-fire

eryone

Raymond

SIDELIGHTS

police,
whose
best in Illinois

of the Dllowa Rifle Association
year.
Chief
Anthony
Schmieg,

Little Giants, handled the pitching
task and held the Spartans to just

Ends Air Course

| North ian

and
Iowa
outdoor
shooting
last
summer, went on to a clean sweep

‘
McLaughlin,

Park
ranked

— “t\

NO

ae a

TSE

BN Ate

a

KERS’§
aLPO

Vers bay

z Pi

ee

aa
HOI
sheer
OS

ID 2-2350
Page H 59—D51

�eld Go
You'll Find It
at

SHERONY’S

rs

Take Close Sane
From Willowbrook

Ons. fps
Highland

Paced
by John
Fleming’s four
over par 77, the Deerfield High
School divot diggers and sand hogs
defeated Willowbrook, 386-390, last
Tuesday at Thorngate Country
Club.
The Deerfield victory total was
established by Fleming’s 77, Mike
Hadjuk’s
97,
John
Feagan’s
99,
and Skip Godow’s 113. Dan Lindstrom, Willowbrook’s
No. 2 man,
led his team with an 89.

Deerfield’s

next

opponent

will

be an undefeated Glenbrook sophomore squad as the Warriors travel
to
Glenbrook
for their Friday
match.
A Deerfield victory would
put them back in the .500 level for
the season.
Deerfield

High

School

Mixture

(Bulk)

FERTILIZERS

PLUS

BAGS
For

56

386

58

Willowbrook

Mrs. Stevens

29
7
0
Winning Pitcher: Fiocchi; Keiing Pitcher:
Dykes.
Runs Batted in: Fleishacker, Maggio (2),
Pappas,
Sordyl,
Henderson,
Panther,
LaBuda
Panther, O’Connor.

pie,
Ns: ta
Ps

land
’| Highland

e

Park

‘ts:

CANDY

SPECIAL!

THIS WEEK AND
ONE BAG FREE

TRANSISTOR TAPE
RECORDER

Lesson Included
Instruction Book

Large Speaker, Ear Phone,
Battery &amp; Case

List $25.00
Only $18.00

Lots!

$59.95

WE

GIVE

Value

Only $29.95
GUITAR

LESSONS

GRANT &amp; GRANT STEREO CENTER
Central,

Highland

Park

ID 2-7222

Open All Day Wednesday &amp; Friday Evening

“Where

CALL

TURF

Aroma

Tells

ID 2-0815 RIGHT
To Order Your

2—4

You

It’s Baked

To

COMPLETE LINE OF
SCOTTS PRODUCTS IN STOCK

AB
p23
—

Overlock,
Greengard, 1b
ep
p
epperman, p
Totals
24
|
2
Winning Pitcher: Mitchell; Losing Pitch.
er: Secrest.
Runs Batted in: Mitchell, LaBuda, Panther,
Adams (2).
Double Plays: Mitchell to Greengard.
Two Base Hits: Panther.
Highland
Park
1
New. A tiet ss. cckan de

Orientation

Leaders

Donald
Riskind
and
Robert
Neiman,
both
of Highland
Park,
and Connie Linari, Highwood, are
among 175 Indiana University student orientation leaders and alternates selected to help next fall’s

students

in their

adjust-

ment of college life.
‘
The
student
leaders
who
will
work with the Junior (Freshman)
Division during the orientation period are all members of the campus YWCA-and YMCA.
They were
chosen on the basis of ability, academic achievement, interest, leadership, and personality.

In

Our

Kitchen’

NOW

Give

SALE

WIN Valuable Aaa

Jeg

LAWN

SUPPLIES

HARDWARE
Green

Bay

Rd.,

Highwood

—

ID

2-2041

E
2

Trier

HEART CAKE

BUILDER

STORE-WIDE

The

1004200—7

Kadison,
cf
McLaughlin, 2b

freshman

GET

avidor.

R

SPECIAL

QUALITY GUITAR

...

708

ald

AB
4

Johnson, 1f
Campion, ss

SPECIAL

OTHERS

Assorted
Delivered

on all
GARDEN
, FERTILIZER

Player
Henderson,
ss
Adler, If
Panther, Ib ...

2

— THURS. — FRI. — SAT. —

Fertilizer

USE SCOTT’S

114

6

Park

000002

L. P. PURCHASED

Reduced Price Must Be in 5 Bag
Reg. $25.00 to $26.95

BUY

Total:

WITH EACH

¢ Vertaganic
e Lime

MANY

Gary

Team

FR ie 3

BOX

Y2-Lb.

¢ Organic

Hussar,

24

Highland

New

Lb.

Milorganite
© Vertagreen

Manaio 2b
Davidor, ib ....
Fleishacker, If
Pappas, c
Delanoval,
3b

in two trips to the plate as well as
two runs scored to help his own
cause.
Harry Henderson and Tom
LaBuda also had two hits each for
the Little Giants.
At New Trier the Giants outhit
the Indians 6 to 5, but were not
able to capitalize on a last inning
scoring
opportunity when New
Trier’s
pitcher
Mitchell
snagged
a line drive off the bat of Bill Bo-

GIVE MOM A
RECORD &amp; BOX OF CANDY

_5-LB. SUN OR SHADE MIX
With 50% Top Blue
Grass

Park’s Varsity baseball

team split a pair of games beating
Lane Tech 7 to 4 in a non-league
contest here, on May 3, and losing
at New Trier, 4 to 3, on May 4.
Marvin Fiocchi, the
winning
pitcher against Lane, had two hits

Peterson, Dave
Lindstrom,
Dan
Ganske, Don
Schultz,
Steve
Waskow,
Cliff
Team Total: 390

Fleming,
John
Godow,
Skip
Feagan. John. ....
Hadjuk,
Mike

. $1.25 Ib.
IAL THIS WEEK,

Gis

ID 2- 0815 "

�PROMOTION
WILL
OPEN

DOORS
TO
SJ)

bret

memes

&lt;

S)

a

Facies

PARK

—

&lt;[

Bcdlant

C=

QD

HIGHLAND

NEWS

THE LAKE FORESTER

Lt. ORTH

March 11, 1961

Uusore

Ukoup

i He WSPAPERS

�photographer’s
snowball
Starts

a romp

with
Those

the
“angels

Choir—who

in pigtails’—the

performed

February;

‘angels’

with

such

Obernkirchen
discipline

Children’s

in Chicago

last

are they like that all the time?

A photographer from the NEWS

who

has his own

quota

snowball

in their

of mischievousness tossed an experimental
midst.

One
the

snow

the

air.

of the angels
at the

followed

suit, and

Moraine-on-the-Lake

within

Hotel

seemed

Fraulein Mueller, the choir director, caught
the back of the neck.

minutes

all

to be

in

a couple

-in

She took it with a giggle; tossed a few

of her own.

The romp didn’t get called off until a face or two had
been washed

and all the blue cloaks were

spattered

with

the

were

white.

The

neighbors

here,

they

were

gang

went

on

were

treated

morning

delighted.
to
walks

While

impromptu
along

concerts

the streets.

kids
when

the

Several

of

them showed up the morning the shooting session was scheduled.

Even those two toy poodles had fun.

Page H 62—D 54

Thursday,

May 11, 1961

�MISC. SERV
&amp;

SUPPLIES

IMPERIAL
MASTERCRAFT
24 hour

RACE-LITE
MERRIMAN
INTERLUX
service

swaging

DINGHY

SHOP

WANT

AD RATES

(No Abbreviations

Permitted)

50c per additional line.
(Up to 10 lines)

$1.75

3 Lines

25c Service Charge for blind ads

Ads containing 11 lines or more are charged ‘ at the inch rate. : Contracth
.
;
4
1 inc
available on request.
insertions
or more consecutitive
Lo
f
rat or Sirol

Appear

ill

VERNON
DERRMELD REVIEW
se
FT. SHERIDAN TOWER

MOOHLAND PARK MEWS
samme

&lt;

B OOKS

REVUrW
IF

LV ORTH

“Wxore

Urour

*Fort Sheridan Tower is publi
in which the Tower is publish

r——

WANT

FOR

CAMPS

Monday,

CONTRACT

ADS

—

3

P.M.

Ad —

(except situation

| TR 8-8150

done

4-3460.

CEdar 4-2300

EXPERIENCED SEAMSTRESS
wishes to do alterations at home. Reasonable. Telephone ID 2-8097, Miss Anna Caringello, 138 Burtis Ave., Highwood.
ALTERATIONS expertly done in my home,
reasonable. For appointment, ID 2-4553.
2528 Green Bay Road, Highland Park.
ALTERATIONS?
Come and see Eda
Zengeler
Cleaners,
land Park.

ALTERATIONS,

dressmaking,

AUTO

CARPENTERS,

Auto

Body and Fender Repair
All Makes - All Models
Complete Painting,
Undercoating and Touch Ups

‘RY E.

JACK

Bank

ID 2-5845
LOANS

LOW COST AUTO LOANS
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF LAKE FOREST
LAKE FOREST CE 4-5100
BOATS
RENT a Houseboat-Cruiser or Pontoon boat
for your vacation. For information or brochure write Weimar Houseboat
Rentals,
Inc. 1521 Green Bay, Highland Park or
phone ID 2-8029.
16 FOOT
Fleetwind Arrow, class boat of
North Shore Yacht Club, stainless steel
centerboard,
many
extras.
Reasonable.
Call ID 2-5857 or SHeldrake 3-4820.
FOR sale: Thompson Sea Lancer outboard,
17 ft.;
steering
wheel,
remote
control,
compass,
speedometer,
automatic
bailer,
50 H.P. Evinrude motor, generator, electric starter, heavy duty tip-up; Gator trailer. Call CE 4-2960 or CE 4-0562.

Thursday, May 11, 1961

BLOMOQUIST

selection

of

used

boats

1961

at

CATERING

attractive

PARTY
items.

WE

SKOKIE

HIGHWAY

&amp; CLAVEY

DELIVER

ASSOCIATED
RENT-ALLS

4-1316
2927 Belvidere
(Rte. 120) just east of Green
Bay Rd., Waukegan, III.
Open Mon., Thurs., Fri.: 9-9
Tues., Wed., Sat.: 9-6
Sunday: 12 noon to 5 p.m.

BOAT HOUSE

NEEDS

RENT FROM OUR NEW
ASSORTMENT
of adult and child sized tables and chairs;
fine china, silver, linens and 100’s of other

prices.

CH

651

Roger

Williams,
IDlewood

2-6333

CEMENT
RD.

Highland

Park

WORK

Patio Time

PARK

USED SPECIALS
1960 CRUISERS INC., 17 foot cabin cruiser with full canvas, marine head, vent., flying bridge, elec. windshield wiper, 18° gal.
tank, etc., twin JOHNSON
35 H.P. elec.
starting motors and GATOR tilt-bed trailer.
Like new!

13 ft. CORL fiberglass fishing boat with 7144
H.P. SCOTT and ELGIN trailer. Used one
season
$295

All types of electrical work,
post lights,
wall outlets, new circuits,
re oy
Reasonahle prices Telenhone fin) 2.

JOHNSON
SALES
OPEN

AND

CLOWN-MAGICIANS,

SEAHORSE

calists,
ID

SERVICE

anything!

2-1240.

Your

Call

9

Bands,

6

years

old.
35c a bushel

Acres

Road off Route
NEwton 4-3049

83

Top Soil—Humus
For

The

Very Best
Quickest

NEwton

and

The

4-3213

call, we haul.
VE 5-3824.

WI

5-5606

NOEL
TEAGUE
LANDSCAPING.
New
lawns; black soil; evergreens; shrubs and
trees;
lawns
re-seeded
and _ fertilized;
stone work; driveways; tree work; patios.
Telephone ID 2-7619.
GENERAL
landscaping. New jobs. Gabriel
Ruffalo,
909
Half
Day
Rd.,
Highland
Park. ID 2-7817.
C. MEDINA, JR. &amp; CO.
For the best in spring cleaning, a
lawn * secea sincanate new lawns, etc. Call
WI
5-5696
Manures
Top Soils
Tractor Work
Gravel Drives
Tree Bie vie
Lawn Rolling

recking

TRUCKING—VE_

51198

have

Exe

typing |

Repaired.

An-

Service

HAULING

VE

5- 3815

3-0954 or BAldwin 3-4636

North Shore; outside a speci
Free estimates. Phone any time. CE 4EXTERIOR and interior painting
and d
orating. Hubert Johnson. Call
2-1
PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING. a
terior and exterior painting. For
workmanship
by
experienced,
men cali W. C. Varney,
PAINTING
and
decorating,
aadae
exterior, natural or bleached —
ishing;
quality
workmanship.
For
mating, a
Eric. Schneider yaiasten =
and

paper

prices; free estimates.
GALLOS, CE 40156.

hanging,

reason

Telephone

PE

PAINTING
AND DECORATING
Thorough preparation
Clean, careful, workmen
Best materials, applied properly
Sensible prices
BLOOM
PAINTING
CO.
ID 2-5544
BJORNSON Decorating, interior and e
ior, expert painting and paper ha
prompt
free estimates;
reasonable rates.
LE 7-0737 or PE 6-0461.
PERFECT 1 day wall washing service,
ings, walls and woodwork; 11 rooms,
5 rooms, $45; references. ALpine 1-4636._
CONGER
BROTHERS
PAINTING
DECORATING
SERVICE.
Paper

ing. Telephone

ID 2-3452 or ID S 3058
and

decorating. Free
LOTHER
SERVI

ree
A

TUNING
with the
charge. $1 0.

&amp; BULBS

HOGANS’ GREENHOUSES
1390

Duffey

Road

Complete
line of annuals
1H
choice color
READY
FOR SPRING

and perenni
geraniums
PLANTIN

Seeds
Shrubs

Fertilizers

Shade Trees
Grass Seed
Tuberous Roses Impatients Plants:
Tomato
Complete
Mile

south

Plants

planting

of 22 on

service

Saunders

Road

GLADIOLI
bulbs 35 for $1.00, mixed
ors; blooming
size Phlox plants, 3
$1.00;
Peony
plants,
$1.00. Entrance —
block west of 42A on Route 120.

ROSEBUSHES GALORE!
Everblooming Hybrid, Tea, Florabunda sand
GrandiFlora.

Priced

from

40

to

each. Call ID 2-7837 or write Century Hoe,

P.O. Box 14, Highland Park, Ill.
GROUND
cover,
beautiful
shooting
plants for sale. 125 North
Ave.,
Hig!
wood. Telephone ID 2-3936 after 5 da ily,
all day Sunday.
S

REMOD. &amp; HOME MAIN.

LAUNDRY

SAM WOO
&amp;

DRY

CLEANING

Special: Men’s
Cleaning
Elm

and

Place

Suits

Pressing

$1.25

Highland

Park

ZIELKE

CONST..CQie

GENERAL

CONTRACTORS

COMPLETE PLAN SERVICE ON
Room additions
Recreation rooms
Kitchens
Dormers
Garages

THIS

MONTH’S
Room

LAWNMOWERS
WOODY,
formerly
of Woody’s
Highland
Park Service Station, is now located at
1749 Green Bay Road for lawn mower
service and roto-tilling. Call ID 2-8029.

a

NOCAL OR RFE
FULLY INSURED
CALL COLLECT

PLANTS

Estimates

on IBM

Furniture

Phone

PIANO

Dawson

590

$20 per ton;
ID 3.1622.

&amp;

Par

LIGHT general hauling. We also move,
types of ewes
appliances. Call
6098 or ID 24917

Productions,

specialists.

Merit

PIANOS expertly tuned,
of satisfaction or no
phone ID 3-0608.

$95 SPECIAL on small complete landscaping jobs; or 1 day service spring clean-up
yard work, gardening, cleaning, painting,
$2.25 an hour. AL 1-4636.
YARD maintenance, shrub — ing. tree removal and trimming. CallC
opp, ID
2-3227.
PRAIRIE ACRES
LANDSCAPING
SERVICE
Black soil, fill dirt, manure,
top dressing
and rolling lawns. Evergreens, shrubs, trees.
For estimate phone WI 5-0818.
MODERN Landscaping, Jack Vena. Calt ‘me
for the best in lawn
maintenance
and
sgyyuns in garden and patio work. ID

BEINLICH

home

Refinished,

MOVING

¢ SODDING
R.

SERVICE
Highland

in my

HOUSE painting
mates. PCall
TRinity 2-7332.

e LEVELING

LAUNDRY

WOOD

SEASONED
firepiace wood,
tailgate delivery. Telephone

typing

¢ GRADING

Free

REPAIR
Road

ecutive typewriter. Do you
troubles? Call ID 3-1495.

Pianists, Vo-

hdo

entertainment

FIREPLACE

‘TIL

are

$2.00
$3.00
and up

Vitae

ELECTRIC

ENTERTAINMENT

AVAILABLE

ID _3-0880
MON., THURS. &amp; FRI.,
SUNDAYS 10 TO 4

trees

Sassie

walks,
floors,
VE 5-

ELECTRICAL REPAIRS

FINANCING

All
dirt

Arbor

Evergreens

Fill Dirt

All types of cement work,
driveways, retaining walls,
ete. Free estimates. Phone
3815 or VE 5-3824.
CLAUSING

Own

Yews,

Bush

JIM

15 ft. MILO CRAFT with spot and running
lights, 30 H.P. EVINRUDE elec., and TEE
NEE trailer. Sharp!
$895

BANK

Your

carpenter, quality cus-

7

Wide

Pines
Pfitzers,

&amp; 30)

CHRISTO-CRAFT
REMODELING
CO.
WI = 5-3273
ID 2-2319
Remodeling and home maintenance is our
business. Porch enclosures, basement paneled room additions, kitchen cabinets, or
just that one door that doesn’t close right.
All work guaranteed.
CONCRETE
and carpentry, residential tile
and sewer work, free estimate. Steve E.
Sabol, ID 2-7604.

DEALERS

HGHLAND
AU To

CONTRACTORS

CUSTOM

PAINTING

Dig

tom homes, additions, porch enclosures,
rec rooms, custom cabinets; also remodeling and repairs. Telephone WI 5-2830.

As low as 10% down
rate financing up to 36 mos.

AUTHORIZED

FRECH

Park Ave.

HERB

Mercury Outboard Motors
Grady White Boats
Dorsett Boats
SthPOPAEt BOMS Ciciesccs ian Balko Trailers

SERVICE

WM. RUEHL &amp; CO.
GENERAL BODY SHOP
NOW OPEN

FOR

selection

LANDSCAPING

HOME
remodeling,, additions, TV roc
rooms,
repairs, free estimates, winter rates. Telephone WI 5-1511.
FOR building that new home, addition or
remodeling,
be
it large
or small,
call
V &amp; F Construction Co. Telephone ID
2-5477 or WI 5-2980.
BUILDING
and
remodeling.
Recreation
rooms and cabinets, floor and wall tile,
window awnings, door hoods and carports.
Free estimates. Telephone TRinity 2-7313.

boats and motors
to choose from

draperies

slipcovers; interior design ee
ge
5-5719, if no answer WI 5-1514
HAVE
your summer clothes altered now.
Expert work. Reasonable.
Mrs. Hansen,
ID 2-2459.

ASK

Largest

M TWEEN CAMP

APACHE
DAY CAMP
Co-ed, ages 4% to 13, SPARADINT ATION, Beautiful camp site with deluxe pool.
lessons, sports, crafts, dramatics.
Phone
for
brochure: ORchard 5-2935.

of Waukegan

at our New Drive In.
2020
First St., High-

25c per CWT brought to our door.
Highest prices paid for all types of junk
brought to our door, such as rags, iron,
metals, etc. Or call ID 3-1466 for truck
pick-up.
Hours
daily
including
Saturday,
8:30 to 5:30 p.m. Sun. 11-2.
HIGHLAND
PARK: WASTE
MATERIAL
1466 Berkeley Rd.

Black

BELVIDERE
BOAT WORKS

ALTERATIONS

3-4919

Dinner served at fine restaurant. Private camp grounds and pool. All sports,
canoeing, riding, special trips, dancing,
bowling.
Max Neiberg
DAvis 8-9037

the publisher and which substantially
impairs the value of the advertisement,
on the advertiser's request, the publisher will rectify
the error by publishing
the correct
ad in the next regular
issue without
additional
at ge All
claims for adjustment must be
within five days of the date of ‘oa
lication in which the error occurs.

at

*

A

BAldwin

NEWSPAPERS

BOYS AND
GIRLS
11-14 YRS.
5 days or Mon., Wed., and Fri.

BOATS

EXPERT
bookkeeping and typin
home. Telephone Jean Sisler, C

SH

CIRCLE

It!

ads)

SERVICE

TRAILS

&amp;

Deerfield

tiques Restored.
TRinity 2-7322.

PIANO
INSTRUCTION
Hank
Winston,
staff pianist
at WBBMCBS. Adults mornings and evenings, children
after school. Call WI 5-0244 after 7:30 p.m.
NORTH
SHORE MUSIC STUDIOS
(formerly Garino’s)
North
Shore’s
finest.
Inquire
about
our
liberal trial plan. Instrument furnished.
GUITAR-ACCORDION
ID 2-0015
If no answer, ID 2-1498
BEGINNERS’ guitar lessons—individual attention—exceptionally reasonable. Call ID
3-0193
FOLD MUSIC, BLUES—LEARN TO PLAY
THE GUITAR
NOW!
Classes, adults or
children; private or semi-private lessons.
In
home
or
my
studio.
EVERYONE
GUARANTEED to learn! Will furnish instrument if necessary. Call at once. ID 30084, after 5 p.m.
JACK MOORE
GUITAR
SCHOOL
By teachers who have produced solo and
band
national
championships
from
1955
thru 1960. Lessons in your home or studio.
Instrument furnished. Phone HI 6-3730.

SAILS

A
1640

charge for estimates
Call ID 2-3550

FURNITURE

INSTRUCTION

JUNK

Give Your Tween A Wonderful Summer
Experience While Living In The City

for ‘Business
Monday).

BUSINESS SERV ICE &amp; SUPPLIES
ACCOUNTING

for

No

HOUSEWIVES

11-14

A New Concept
In Tween-Age Recreation

TUESDAY

Windsor 5-4500

IDlewood 2-4500

Advertising of any kind is accepted for
publication in this newspaper with the
understanding
that the publisher assumes no Hse porter ytahig for omission or
for errors ‘and shall be under no obligation or liability of any kind whatsoever,
either to the advertiser or third parties.
However, in the event of an error in
any advertisement, clearly the fault of

YOUR

* TWEEN

P.M.

We'll Charge

wanted

&amp; GIRLS

SET

4:30

CANCELLATION
DEADLINE
—
NOON
TUESDAY
(except
Services &amp; Supplies’ ads which may be cancelled until Noon

Phone Your Want

BOYS

‘Business Services &amp; Supplies’’ Classifications Will Be Accepted Up To

4:30 P.M.

DEADLINE

run during the week
at no extra charge.

you want your child to be “better than
average,” give him World Book/Childcraft,
the finest in home educational help. Telephone Miriam Booth, Hlllcrest 6-3848.

AD DEADLINES

All Classifications Except ’’Business
Services &amp; Supplies’’ Will Be Accepted Up To

Tuesday,

[Vewspapers

d every other Friday. Ads
will appear in the Tower

12-4

after 6 p.m.

r | ti

gu

SRD

|

= T

Seven

All

In

Sun.

Gator trailer, fully equipped, excellent for
water skiing or fishing, like new. $700. ID
3-0469.
16 foot Waverider;
catamarran;
SAILING
bargain; practically new. Call CE 4-529i

*

Wi
Ad

Your

9-9;

16 FOOT Lyman with 25 H.P. Johnson electric, remote controls, deluxe trailer, fully
equipped. Call CE 4-5296.
1956 CRISTCRAFT
17 ft. utility, 95 HP,
low hours, excellent condition, extra prop,
new cover, $1750. Call ID 3-1663 after 7
p.m. weekdays, Sunday after 10 a.m.
FOR
Sale: 16 ft. mahagony boat, 25 HP
Johnson motor, trailer, in good condition.
ID 3-1943 after 6 p.m.
16 FOOT
Fleetwind Arrow, class boat of
North Shore Yacht Club, 1 year old, exceptional equipment, with trailer, $1500.
ID 2- withz SOTIP Scott motor.
FOOT Chesilinar
ic Televhone

WASHER DRYER
REPAIRING

MAINTENANCE

Have any of your floors professionally cleaned, waxed, and polished;
latest equipment. Trial offer; any
size kitchen, $1.75. NEwton 4-3826.

591-B Roger Williams (rear)
Highland Park, ID 3-2620
Daily

HOME

o

SAILBOATS
O’DAY

TWO
chestnut
Geldings;
well
mannered;
suitable for child for adult. CE 4-3689.

Fully insured
Call now for

SPECIAL

additions

and union men
your free estimate

Zielke Const. C

CRestwood

29-5820"

Page H 63—D

55

:

�\7

MS
THinG, expert Saran, lawn preparation for seedi ing; brush clearing. Specials

for

new

sub-divisions.

Contract

HIGHLAND

for

lawn work. EM 2-0472, CE 4-2846.
OODY, formly of Woody’s Highland Park

Service Station, is now located at 1749
Green Bay Road for lawn mower service
and roto-tilling. Call ID 2-8029.

_

—
a

TRAILERS

MODERN

&amp; . TRAILER

trailer

with

| SPACE

awning;

oil

drums,

as tanks,
duel;
ideal for lake
or as
pest priced for quick sale, $400. Must see
Bue
wt me”
203
Skokie
Hwy.,
Lake

TREE SURGERY

oy

EXPERT TREE REMOVAL
Ms

COMPLETELY

Insured

men.

Modern

Power

2

baths.

Unusually

34
5-1195

bsmt.,

radiant

FOR the best in tree surgery and roto tiilLok telephone Howard J. Lewis, WI 5-

TREE

EXPERTS.

Cutting, trim-

mo
removing,
feeding
and
repairing,
wer stump removing
and power spray. Fully insured and
bonded; free estiseasoned
fireplace
wood.
Teleme ID 3-1622 or KImball 6-2292.
&amp; N TREE EXPERTS. Trimming, feedairing, guying and removal. Fully
insied
FREE
ESTIMATES.
Telephone
2-8750; ID 2-5481.

REAL ESTATE
HOMES

WHITE

FOR

CAPE

cheery

bedrooms

stairs,

full

stem.

and

1

basement,

bath

new

large w. frpl. and 1%

Ranch

A good example

up-

heating

of the fine,

etailed construction of the 40’s.

4 bedrm.,

rooms

3%

bath,

full

plus porch and 2 car attached

garage. Ideal for those that want
country
living with
city convennces. Brick and frame built in the

OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS
THREE TIMES!
ooking
for a 3 bedrm.
2 bath
anch or bilevel? 3 to 5 year old

homes. All convenient to schools
| and N.W. transportation. The bievel has a finished family room.
eee
ranch has central air condioning,
full
basement,
fireplace.

he other ranch has over $22,000
44%% 29 year financing to assume
with about 1600 sq. ft. living space,
plus

basement.

$30,000!

AS

EACH

LITTLE

UNDER

AS_

$3,700

properties now
available. Each
127 ft. x 160 ft. in southeast location.
$16,750
each.
Both
for
_.. $30,000

4

Av.

55

seaped

ft.

fr.

Inter-City

REALTORS
ID

2-0880

-_

HIGHLAND

PARK

Wonderful
4 Bedrm. House
D

2-4693

Page

for delightful family living. Best
t and love it. $29,
\: a

H 64—D

of

56

1%

the

to L.F.
well

traditional

Acres

30's

high

school

wooded

ranch

on

ground,

house

has

%
this

many

charming features with its 32x17
living room with full paneled fireplace wall, large modern
kitchen
with dining area, 3 bedrooms, excellent closet space, utility room,
warm air gas heat.
Special
Features:
aluminum
storms
and
screens’
throughout,
plaster walls, parquet floors, wall
to wall carpeting, patio.

PAUL
1925

PHELPS,

Sheridan

Rd.

INC.
ID

2-4580

LARGE
space in
redwood

kitchen
w/real
_brkfst.
this 4-year old brick and
ranch. Lovely living-din-

3 twin size bedrooms,

11% bath ranch
$500 CASH.

SUMMER

2

Nice
30’s.
in

low

RENTAL

Rustic home on ravine in wooded
area. Perfect for family who wants
to get away from city living. Master
bedroom and bath on Ist. 4 nice
bedrooms, 2 baths on 2nd. June 15
to Sept. 15. $500 per month.

SPACE
LISTED BELOW ARE SPACIOUS
HOMES—THE BEST THAT YOUR
MONEY CAN BUY

DEERFIELD
SEVEN
ROOM
French
New
Orteans Colonial—a little bigger than
you would think possible at this
orice. 3 Bedrms.; 2 Tile Baths; Carveting
in the
Living
room
and
Dinette; Family Rm.; Den. Owner

BRIARWOODS,
CUSTOM
brick
ranch, 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms,
114
Baths, Den, spacious Kitchen with
picture window
overlooking yard.
Att.
garage,
Patio
with
awning.
Lovely landscaped yard. Low down
payment. $29,500.
LOOKING
for that quality built
home with room to grow? This face
brick
ranch
with
22x12
finished
Family room, Full Basement, Att.
garage, Fireplace in large Living
room, good size Kitchen, all just
for $24,000.
FOR THE BUDGET conscious executive with the expanding family.
4 Bedrooms,
2 Baths, Recreation
room, Kitchen with Built-ins and
eating space. 434% mortgage may
be
assumed.
Owner
transferred.
$28,500.
EVERYTHING—including
a_ basement with a work bench for Dad;
lovely Kitchen with built-ins; Family room for the Kids and TV; Living room and Formal Dining room
for the V.I.P.’s. Att. garage; Besides all this—3 Bedrooms and 2
Baths at only $30,500.

RIVERWOODS

463 Central Ave.

ID 2-1212

LAKE

BRICK

CONTEM-

PORARY
on about 2%
acres of
wooded
property.
Large
panelled
Living
room
with
wood
burning
brick fireplace,
3 Bedrooms
and

Family

type

wonderful entrance
garage—$29,500.

hall,

Kitchen,
att.

FOREST

™TNSPECT AND
BE CONVINCED
that this 6-room frame ranch is the
best buy in town for the money.
Entrance hall, living room, dining
room,
kitchen,
bath
and _ utility
reom. Large landscaped lot situated on desirable cul-de-sac. $21,950

YOU’LL

NEVER

KNOW

...

un-

‘ess you take the time to inspect
this
3-year-old,
well
built
brick
home.
3
twin-size
bedrooms,
2
haths, beautiful pecky-cypress panelling
in
family
room.
Powder

room,

TWO STORY COLONIAL—suberb
wooded
location
in
Scatterwood.
Ist floor Family rm. overlooking
the yard, good size kitchen that is
well equiped, 3 Twin size bedrooms,
1%
Baths, Full Basement, 2 Car
attached garage. $37,500.

Baths,

LAKE

Realtors

full

dining

room,

enclosed

vorch for summer and winter living
PLUS
spacious
Lopez
stone
vatio. 2-car att. garage, and over
3,000 sq. ft. of living space. A buy

at

$59,500

LAKE BLUFF
OPEN HOUSE WEEKEND
THIS SAT. &amp; SUN. 3 to 5
231 CENTER
AVE. Income property. Rent from one side will carry
this house. Low taxes: LOW 20’s.

38 HAWTHORNE

CT.

Brick

Cape

Cod—1955:
4 bedrooms,
2 baths,
large porch, full basement: Owner
transferred. LOW 30’s.
247 BLODGETT AVE. 4 year Brick
Ranch:
Streamlined
kitchen;
3
bedrooms; 2 full baths; large basement with fireplace; Excellent condition; MID 30’s.

$2,500 DOWN
on this 3 Bedroom
quality constructed Ranch. Delightful kitchen with eating space. Large
lot, oversize garage, walk to shops,
schools and trains. $20,500.
BEAUTIFUL
TRADITIONAL
COLONIAL—2
story
brick.
Master
bedroom
suite with Ceramic
tile
Bath, 2 other bedrooms and bath, 2
Fireplaces,
Formal
Dining
room,
Full Basement, 2 Car att. garage.
Lovely wooded lot. $38,500.
LARGE LIVING AREA in this Six
room home. Nice Kitchen, separate
Dining room, Large living room, 3
Bedrooms on the second floor, Full
basement, 2 Car garage, nice size
lot. $18,500.

NORTHBROOK
RED WOOD RANCH—Seven good
size rooms located on an acre of
ground. Living rm., Dining rm., 3
bedrooms
all carpeted.
2 Baths,
completely
equipped
kitchen,
attached
oversize
garage,
seventh
room can be used for office or tool
shop. $22,500.

THE NAME WITH
THE TRADE-IN PLAN
623 Deerfield Road
WI 5-5100

BLUFF

GRACIOUS LUXURY RANCH: 24
ft.
living
room,
f/place,
dining
room, 14 ft. DEN, 3 bedrooms, 20
ft. panelled FAMILY ROOM, base,
gas heat, 2 car att. garage. Storms
&amp; screens, lovely landscaped lot.

EARLY
with
room,

15

AMERICAN

—

QUAINT

a
modern
FLAIR!
Living
f/place, dining room, PLUS

ft. sun

filled

FAMILY

ROOM,

&amp; powder room. Also play room,
base, gas heat. UP are 3 bedrooms,
&amp;
bath.
Towering
trees,
private
yard. Perfect location
VIEWS
OF THE LAKE
from all
FAMILY
ROOMS.
See the sun &amp;
moon beaming on the waters. This
house
has
entry
hall,
carpeting
through living room, dining room
(22 ft.), also den, 2 f/places, FOUR
bedrooms, 214 baths, lg. family kitchen,
base,
gas
heat,
&amp;
garage.
Lovely
views
of
surrounding
TREES,
LAKE
&amp;
SKYLINE.
A
family home in top neighborhood.
40’s

LAKE

FOREST

BRICK
COLONTAL
’... . 4 bedrooms, (21 ft. Master), 2 full baths
oti
ce elf: baths, 24 -ft.: country
kitchen, (equipped) plus wet bar,
2 f/places, Porch, 2 car att. garage.
100 ft. wide lot, city water &amp; sewers. All fine features. Solid brick
construction.

A

OLDER
4 bedrooms, living room,
f/place,
dining room,
small
den,
base, h/water heat, 2 car garage.
Low 30’s.

large family will enjoy this 8 room,
21% bath Colonial; Wooded lot; Immediate
Occupancy;
$38,000—Offers.

SMALL RANCH near High School,
3 bedrooms, REC area in base, 1%
baths, att. garage. 20’s.

129

RAVINE

FOREST

DRIVE:

Salesmen
at the above addresses
can direct you to other homes ranging from $12,500 to $45,000.

TWO
h/water

John Griffith, Inc.
2 OFFICES TO SERVE YOU
678 N. Western
Lake Forest

CEdar

Ave.,

12

CEdar

M.

C.

N.

Starosselsky

Mary

Lackie

Frances
Nancy

Rutgers
Appleton

STRIKING

H.

CE
CE

4-1082

CE

4-5132

CE

4-1117

and
family
room
plus
playroom.
In desirable

service

of

fine

homes

to all schools.

WEDGEWOOD

baths.

As

an

COLONIAL

added

bonus

an

APARTMENT
over the 2 car
rage. Priced to sell. $46,000.

ga-

L. Ringer
457

Central

CE

20’s.

4-0969

D. Olson

&amp; Co.

Waukegan,

Ill.

HIGHLAND

ID

2-6600

PARK

NEW ENGLAND
COLONIAL
Designed by well known
tect for present owner.
Compact
house
and yet

Archihas

4

bdrms. 2 baths.
‘ Living

rm.

porch

opens

fire

off

pl.

SCREENED

living

rm.

and

din. rm., cozy PINE pnid. DEN.
Kit. on Ist.
Picturesque
setting with lovely
trees and garden.
‘ Choice
EAST
location.
NO
CHAUFFEURING for mother!
Price: $35,500.
CALL

L. Ringer

with

$53,500.

So called because of its perfection with a charming Wedgewood
Blue Interior. Set on over a half
acre
of rolling lawn
situated
in
Choice North East Highland Park.
Designed for you who are crowded
into
small
ranches
and
_trilevels;
but
sufficiently
compact
for easy maintenance. Center hall
living room, dining room, den, modern cabinet kitchen, dishwasher and
breakfast nook; panelled porch and
powder room. Five bedrooms and

3

LOW

4-0104

ly functional floor plan with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, den (usable as 4th

bus

bedrooms,

Realtors

4-1380
Ww. roe LeRoi
CE 4-1181
posal Kelley
4-033
Ger eine Moyer
CE 4-1075
June Enos
CE 43974

CONTEMPORARY

neighborhood

Lindenmeyer,

4-0816

If you’ve
been
hunting
for
a
truly
modern
1 story
home
on
wooded 2/3rd acre, don’t miss seeing this outstanding offering, built
for present owner with beam ceilings thru-out, thermopane windowwalls overlooking patio and most
private walled garden. Wonderful-

bedroom)
basement

3

Garage.

CALL

CE

Griffis CE

with

heat.

Mrs.

Scranton Ave.
e Bluff

40485
EVENINGS

STORY

tiled bath, living room, 15 ft. dining
room,
lg.
family
sized
kitchen,

2 car

H. and R. Anspach John Coons, Realtor
INC.

Joha Griffith:

Reaitor

SELL

1%

APPEALING white brick Colonial
ranch perfect for small family. Living room w/adjoining pan. comb.
den-dining room; excellent kitchen
w/dishwasher,
formica
top counters, double
sink. 2 family
bedrooms, each with own fine bath,
plus maid’s room and bath. Patio
built for leisurely outdoor-indoor
living. FA gas heat and fully airconditioned. $39,500.

3 bedroom,
20’s. ONLY

Farhart &amp; Company
; 1899 Sheridan Rd.

story ceiling;

tile baths. 2-car att. garage.
lot on deadend
street. Low
Owner wants offer.

Realtor Referral
Service

| Remodeled
34"

Close
acre

ing comb.,

:

- Member

on

COONS,

transferred. $29,500.

House

FOREST

In

7

$45,000

Modern brick ranch, well landscaped
with
fine
trees.
Large
rooms. Excellent construction.
34 ft. pan. liv. rm., lge. picture
windows,
spac.
din. rm.
or den,
mod. din. kitch. Master suite with
t. bath, 2 addnl. bdrms. and t. bath.
Roomy rec. rm., frpl., bar in full
bsmt. 2 car gar. Many quality features.
Reduced to
$55,000

TRADITIONAL COLONIAL
1% WOODED ACRES
This

doors.
at

alum.

mod. kitch., bdrm. and bath on Ist
floor, 2 addnl. bdrms and bath. 2
car gar., new W.A. gas and cent. air
cond. Convenient to schools, shops
and station.
The construction is of stone with
heavy
shingled
roof. The beauty
of the grounds and the charm of
the home can be appreciated only
by inspection. in the 30’s.

COD—$19,500!

dowed living room with Col. firelace, center hall, separate dining
room, attached garage, porch. 2

heat,

Farm

LAKE

Don’t miss this traditional Colonial

|

spacious

On beautiful landscaped ground
with age old trees, rose gardens,
garden pool. The studio liv. rm. is

SALE

designed, cozy full 5 room home.
A short 2 blocks to Northwestern
Ravinia station and shops. Bay win-

gas

storms, screens and
A beautiful home

Flemish

WINGS

Ranch

screened porch, oversized 2 car gar.,

equipment.

VE

JOHN
WE

Here is a beautiful white ranch
on a double lot, exquisitely landscaped, and perfect in every respect
with 1 exception. The construction
is of the finest; beautiful carpeting
covers natural wood floors on concrete base.
Lge. liv. rm. with bay and frpl.,
comfortable din. area, mod. natural
wood kitch., 3 good sized bdrms.

and

EXPERIENCED

JIM BEINLICH

Custom

PARK

666 Waukegan
Deerfield

Rd.

WI

HIGHLAND

5-3560
Realtors

PARK

A jewel in a lovely setting. Custom built
brick ranch. Large living room with marble fireplace, separate dining room, modern
kitchen with breakfast nook, 2 bedrooms,
marble
bath.
All closets cedar.
Screened
porch,
attached
garage,
large
beautifully
landscaped grounds. Truly a gem! $33,500

GLENCOE
Beautiful custom built brick ranch just 7
years old. 3 twin sized bedrooms, 2 ceramic
tile
baths,
large
living
room,
wonderful
kitchen with open plan dining room, thermopane
windows’
throughout.
Screened
porch,
gas
heat,
attached
garage,
lovely
landscaped grounds. In the 50’s.

Lang Real Estate
712

Glencoe

AM

2-7873

Road
AL

Glencoe
1-3430

Thursday,

May

VE

5-1971

11, 1961

�itu

SRE

ES aes |

HOMES FOR SALE

PIERSEN REALTY.

REALTORS
Member
of the Evanston-North
Multiple Listing Service

IF YOU TAKE MOTHER FOR A
DRIVE, STOP BY AND INSPECT
THESE OUTSTANDING
HOMES
Open

Sun,

2 to 5

851
WARRINGTON—Deluxe
Colonial in like-new condition. 3 BRs,
2 baths, lge. panel. recr. rm., sep.
DR, 2 fireplaces, bsmt. ....$37,500.
1232 WARRINGTON
—
Spacious
center hall brick ranch. All lge.
rooms,
sep.
DR,
f.p.,
3 BRs,
2
baths, fam. rm. Needs some decorating.
No
reasonable
offer
refused
$31,900
800 CEDAR
TERR.—Large
ranch
with
many
desirable
features.
3
BRs, 214 CT baths, den or 4th BR,
recr. rm., 2 f.p.s, 2 car gar. bsmt.

SRS

ce

ene ce

ue

oor

$34,750.

1209 HAZEL—8 room custom built
Colonial brick &amp; frame split level.
Family rm., built-in kit., bsmt., gar.
All this for
$26,900.
1028 CASTLEWOOD—4 bedrooms,
2 bath split level on lge. 90’ lot in

nice neighborhood.

Built-in kit. w/

eating

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

area,

bsmt.

NEW

$26,500.

LISTING

A truly deluxe
package
for the
small
family!
Charming
brick
ranch
on
established
tree
lined
street. Quality construction thruout from the entry hall thru liv.
rm. w/i.p., kit. w/eating space, 2
BRs
&amp; bath plus panel. pch. off

kit. which
to make
The big

rec.

needs

bar,

gar.

Low

PIERSEN REALTY
Commons

LAKE FOREST
LISTINGS
Six room modern white brick house
on attractive 100 foot lot. $34,000.
Small
house

This 1% story home offers 4 bedrms., 242
baths, Liv. rm., Din. rm., den, kit. w/eating
area. Good
location, walking
distance
to
town.
$26,500.
Like-new brick and frame bi-level with 3
bedrms., 114 baths. Entrance way, Liv.-din.
comb.
“L” shaped, Kit. w/built-in oven/
range and eating area. Large rec. rm., Oversized garage, patio. You can move into this
home jjust as it is. A good value at $28,000.
Are you looking for a home that has everything? 4 bedrms., 2 baths, Liv. rm., din.
rm. ell comb. w/fple. Lovely cabinet kit.
w/built-in oven/range, and separate breakfast area. All carpeting and LR _ draperies
included,
storms
and
screens.
Full bsmt.
w/panelled rec. rm. Beautifully maintained
home. Lot 100x200. Priced at. ........ $30,900.
A, large lot with many trees is the setting
for this Jovely frame ranch. Entrance hall
Liv. rm. din. rm. comb. w/fple., Kit. w/
electric
Tappen
oven/range,
refrigerator,
Family rm., 3 bedrms.,
1% baths, 2 car
garage w/storage area. Offered at $35,000.
We have a 4 bedrm. Bi-level 1 blk. from
town that you should see. Entrance hall
living-dining rm. w/fple., 4 bedrms., 2 ful)
baths and one half bath. Large panelled rec.
rm. and 1 attached garage. House is like
new, carpeting included. A buy at $31,750.

Carr Realty Co.
701

Waukegan
OPEN

WI
12

TO

5:30

COUNTRYSIDE

5-0984
P.M.

LAKE

be had on this beautiful 5.7 acre
lake front estate adjacent to fine
country club; swimming,
boating,
horseback
riding
and
all winter
sports. Charming residence on hill
top with panoramic view of entire
lake. Living room 22x44 ft. with
picture window view of changing
seasons;
panelled
study;
3. bedrooms,
3 baths;
large
attractive
kitchen;
basement
workshop
and
brand
new
200
amp:
service;
2
patios for entertaining; boat house
at lake front; 4 car garage with 2
box
stalls
for
horses.
Excellent
schools. Priced in the 80’s. Brochure on request.

422

A REAL BUY!
Just what the small family
needs. This 2 bedroom frame &amp; stone ranch
in excellent condition has a lovely landscaped yard.
A Bargain at $18,500

ZANDER-OMMEN
Evanston-North

Members

of

Shore

Board

&amp;

Listing

Deerfield

S. Milwaukee, Libertyville
EMpire 2-2280

screened porch
extra

20 acres.
12 room

Gilbert Rayner
REAL
266 E. Deerpath
Kathryn Jaicks
Carmen

NORTHEAST
DEERFIELD
New custom deluxe split-level, 3 bedrooms,
2 tile baths, family room,
2 car garage,
basement. Will trade.
BANNOCKBURN
40 wooded acres ripe for
consider selling 10 or 20

ESTATE

1%

CEdar 4-0382
Berenice Ressinger
Burgess Olson

Viking Realty

on

5

Acres!

Call
to
see
this
picturesque
white
residence in an ideal country setting of broad
meadows, tall trees, and a colorful garden.
Exquisitely appointed, it contains 2 extra
1st floor rooms, 6 bedrooms
(all on the
2nd
floor),
3%
baths
and
one
of the
SHORE’S largest and most inviting screened
porches. Upper bracket in price.

SEE

Realtors Since
826 Deerfield Rd.

NEW

6-2900

Thursday, May

AMbassador

11, 1961

2-5548

1946
WI 5-5300

LISTING

Five room ranch on large wooded
lot and four adjoining large lots
ready to build on. Excellent location, close to West Ridge and Red
Oak School. Total Package $45,750.

Dorsey Husenetter

SEARS REAL ESTATE CO.

Realtors
St.

Johns

Ave

ID

sell.

Realtors
723

St.

Johns

Ave.

ID

2-1484

FOR
CHILDREN

2-1484,

DIFFERENT

2 bedroom home at 809 Broadview, Ravinia.
Living room with fireplace, separate dining
room, plastered walls, hardwood floors, modern cer. bath, finished basement, gas heat,
combination storms and screens, beautifully
landscaped. Low 20’s.

LEONARDI
John

F.

AGENCY
Jr.

ID 2-0596
Deerfield

EXECUTIVE

Beautiful all Lannon Stone Ranch located
in center of finest residential area (Briarwood
Estates). Constructed
by top-quality
builder, W. C. Tackett. Center entrance design with good traffic pattern. All rooms are
large
and
spacious,
marble
fireplace
in
living room, separate dining room with adjoining big porch, 2 car attached garage,
etc. Many deluxe features. Walking distance
to shopping and trains. Asking only $42,500
and open to all offers. Call today for details. MR. DEAKINS.

Baird &amp; Warner
1157 Waukegan
PArk 4-1855

Rd.,

Glenview, Ill
IRving 8-2204

GRAYSLAKE
3 bedroom brick on fenced large lot, full
basement and rec. room, bath and powder
room, attached garage. Reduced from $29,900 to $23,500. Terms. VACANT. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION.
DIAL

A.

HIGHLAND

Entrance

PARK

IN

VEHLOW

BALDWIN

REALTY

3-0880

hall,

fireplace,

3 bedroom house with living room, kitchen,
full basement and 2 car garage. Close to
schools. Priced $18,500.

HIGHWOOD

room,

paneled

den

heat.

Two-car

Four bedroom,

NEWLY
room,

hall,

living

|

room

fireplace,

dining

room,

|

with

kitchen,

den

second

floor

and

tached

garage.

kitchen

and
7

Oil

apartment,

old

kitchen,

bedrooms

and

1 bath

porch
room,

low

Johns

WEST

Ave.

ID

HIGHLAND

2-1484

PARK

R
Highwood

Bay

ID

and

LAKE
600

N. Western
CE

FOREST
&amp;

stone,

LOAN

ASS’N
Lake

acres.

Entrance —
—

paneled

fireplace

and

dining

room

antique

shut- —

ters, screened porch, country kitch- _
en and
adequate large, walk-in —
closets. Two-car attached garage. —
Gas heat, tool shed and dog run. —
Priced

at

:

HAVE
Four

bedroom,

LOVED
three

Entrance

bath,

remod-

hall,

KIMBALL
possession.

one

bath,

314

baths,

little

guest

with —

cottage.

at

$58,500

THESE HOUSES
Four bedroom,
three bath, onestory
‘Traditional Virginia - type |
farm hcuse in an orchard of flow-_
ering fruit trees. Large living room |
with fireplace, dining room, kitch- Fe
en. Gas heat, two-car garage. Acre te |
and a half
Priced at

For

a

Company
Richard

and

kitchen
with built-ins;
ene
8
lot 80x200
feet. $60,000.
2-7281 for appointment to

a

Custom

Our

Hart, Shaw &amp; 4

5-1080

large

of property.

ble
Parking Space Availa
ers

ROAD
Brick

room

two-car attached garage. An extra —
bonus is a charming two-bedroom.

Realtors
GReenleaf

living

fireplace, screened porch, dining |
room, kitchen with dishwasher and |
disposal and utility room. Oil heat, |

Mrs.

B. Hart, Presiden

C. Howard ReQua, Vice President
Stuart R. French Milton McN.

family room, attached 2 car garage,|""" = Meteor...
modern
wooded
Call ID
see.

|

‘a

Fores'

4-4200

5 bedrooms,

bed-

—

McGUIRE &amp; ORR
851

half

firepiace,

DEERFIELD EAST

Immediate

near Lake in

Bluff. Three

ble

New 4 bedroom home
ready for gracious
family
living.
Family
room;
living
room
each
with own
fireplace;
separate dining
room; 2% tile baths. Large basement. Oversized 2-car garage. Many extras,
A VALUE
IN THE LOW
40's.

ALpine 1-0228

a

2-3933

CONVENTIONAL MORTGAGES
HOME IMPROVEMENT LOANS
SAVINGS

~

at- |

hall, a 26x15 living room with mar-

Priced

Guy Viti
Green

two-car

eled Coach house on two and eight |
tenths acres of beautiful property.

7 room Cape Cod, full basement, approximately
1 acre,
1%
car detached
garage.
available immediately. Down
payment $2,400,
monthly
payments
$150,
complete
price $22,500. Details

226

heat,

ae

Lake

20’s.

Realtors
St.

The

bedrooms,

2

Dorsey Husenetter
723

room.

WOULD

One

upstairs

living

four

room, two bath, frame Colonial |
ranch overlooking beautiful ravine.|

FLAT

enclosed

year

powder

has

baths.

Southeast

location, 2 bedrooms,
living
room,
dining

downstairs.

two and a half bath

Newly listed charmer

Highland Park
ID 2-2682

TWO

garage.

Priced: at «c . aiciceacemeanteane $47,500 |

Service

LISTED

and |

Entrance

with
Convenient
1%
paths,

dining |

Colonial.

two

FRANK PEERS
FRANK ANDERSON
Ave.

room,

bedroom

MOTHER

cee

657 Laurel
(D 2-0344

TV

or spare

|

with |

powder room, kitchen with eating
area. Three bedrooms,
two baths

Gas

COMMERCIAL
RESIDENTIAL
VACANT
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
CALL

Estate

room

Priced at

REAL ESTATE
ID 2-8077

Real

living

on second. Recreation room with
fireplace and laundry in basement.

Beautiful
lannon
stone
home
with
large
kitchen plus eating area, large living room,
2 over sized bedrooms, full basement with
paneled rec. room, attached garage, on large
lot, good location.

(East)

EXCELLENCE

attached

Two-car

heat.

VErnon 5-0236

Bldg.

1927
Leonardi,

ID 3-1000

MARTIN

723

to

Dorsey Husenetter

Est.

LOOK!
W. LAKE
FOREST
acre buiding site $6500.

CONTEMPORARY
RANCH
3 bedrooms, birch cabinet kitchen, tile bath,
4 major appliances. Will rent for $150 per
month with option to buy. Asking $15,900.

It isn’t every day we have one like this.
We wish it were! Shrimp colored AIR-CONDITIONED brick RANCH along traditional
COLONIAL
lines. Raised fireplaces in the
all modern COUNTRY KITCHEN, paneled
basement game room as well as the living
room, a patio off the large dining area, 3
bedrooms, 2 ceramic tile baths and a 2 att.
gar. $59,500.

Home

will

BARRINGTON-MCHENRY
COUNTY
For choice Fox River frontage or Fox River
Valley property, visit our Viking office on
Rte. 14 in Cary, Ill. or phone ME 9-2011.

LAKE FOREST
990 Northcliffe Way
Open Saturday 2-5

Brick

AREA
subdivision,
acre tract.

lot

gas

—

base-

Partial

garage.
Priced at

5-5700

Excellent buy on a beautiful White
an

ment,

breezeway.

©

bath, Colonial on lovely wooded lot

IN

$34,900.

PLEASANTLY

Large Country estate on
Lannon stone and Brick
house. 2 barns. $150,000.

Theater

Realtors

WI

and

en

rm.

REALTORS
Glencoe

Service
Rds.

dining room,

with fireplace,

kitch-

living

hall,

Entry

of property.

GOOD INCOME from 8 apartments, 2 and
3 rcoms each, low taxes. Priced to sell.

The Southern White Colonial you
have been waiting for. New kitchen,
large
separate
dining room,
living room and recreation,
both
with: fireplaces,
3
bedrooms,

with

room, two bath Cape Cod. One acre —

BARACANI
of

two-bed-

enchanting,

listed,

Newly

J-H Kahn

OPEN
SUNDAY—2-5
680
BROADVIEW
AVE.
-HIGHLAND
PARK
4 bedrooms, 214 baths, large living
room with fireplace, separate dining room, 2 car garage. Loads of
living space at a modest .... $25,500.

ranch

EVEN

Then
you'll
MODERN
MINDED?
love
this Ravinia
Ranch
with
3 bedrms., 24%
baths. Studio livimg rm. with marble window sills. Family rm. with fireplace adjoins
kitchen. Terrazzo floors. Driftwood panelling. $42,500.

REALTORS

3 bedroom
ranch, less than 4 years old.
Modern kitchen, oak floors, beautiful recreation room. Across from park and school.
Near transportation. Low 20’s.

$80,000.

Hillcrest

OWNER
TRANSFERRED.
See
this
attractive split-level brick &amp; frame
3 _bedroom. 2 bath home. Situated on beautifully
landscaped
spacious lot. Many
extras including built-in kitchen &amp; pleasant family
room.
Low 30’s

PERFECT
SCHOOL AGE

FITZPATRICK
REALTY CO.

Charming
10 room
New
Orleans
Colonial on over 1 acre, well landscaped. Property can be divided.

% ACRE WOODED LOT FRAMES THIS
BEAUTIFULLY
MAINTAINED
home for
retired couple or newly-marrieds. Low taxes
and maintainence costs. Has been kept in
immaculate
condition
by
builder-owner.
$21,500

Waukegan

The very best in outdoor living can

Country estate with greenon 2 beautiful acres. Sixties.

CONVENIENCE
IMPORTANT? HAVE A
LOOK!
Located close to town, transportation, &amp; schools.
Deluxe
ranch
house on
large
nicely
landscaped
lot. 3 bedrooms,
2%
baths,
lovely finished
rec.
room
in
basement plus paneled family room. $36,900

YOU MUST SEE THIS LANNON STONE
RANCH, set well back from the street on
lovely.
woodsy
property.
4 bedrms.
and
room for more. PANELLED
DEN,
separate dining
rm. Finished
game
rm. with
bar. Screened porch. Excellent, easy-to-work
in kitchen with eating space. 3 full baths.
CENTRAL AIR CONDIT. $67,500.

OLDEST

Road

SUNDAYS

HAVE
CHILDREN?
NEED
HOUSE?
Home
built
&amp;
situated
to accommodate
children. 5 bedrooms, family room, w/FP,
separate DR
plus eating area in kitchen.
Located
on quiet street close to school.
Many extras!
$44,500

Multiple

only addit. of ht.

w/built-in

Deerfield

DEERFIELD

DEERFIELD

it a delightful family rm.
surprise is the lge. panel.

rm.

REALTORS

Shore

It would be our pleasure to show this split
level home to you. It has been decorated
in excellent taste, all you have to do is
move in! 3 bedrms, liv.-din. “L’’, Kit. w/
eating
area
w/built-in
G.E.
range/oven.
Many extras: Built-in TV, Radio &amp; record
player, LR. draperies included. Nicely landscaped yard (rear yard fenced-in). Priced to
SELL at...
$26,500.

DEERFIELD’S

Hart, Shaw

ZANDER-OMMEN

Carr Realty Co.

260

E.

Deerpath

135

S.

La

Salle

of the Evanston-North Shore

Multiple

r

Benmore

Lake Forest, CEdar 4-1000 RAndolph 6-71
Members

M

Listing

Service

Page H 65—D 57

Si 3

|

a

i

Bs

�HOMES
RCHITECT
DESIGNED
—
CUSTOM
LT Brick Ranch in beautiful landscaped
ting.
Liv. rm.-Din.
rm. comb.
w/frplc.
drooms. Large closets. 2 Patios. Kitchen
-B-Q. 1% C.T. baths. Full bsmt. w/tile
floor
&amp; ceiling &amp; Rec. room w/frplc. $51,OST NEW—AND
IN SUCH
WONERFUL
CONDITION—Many
extra feaU
too numerous to mention. Make it a
ust to see this attractive Brick &amp; Redwood
yplit-level. Ideal for large family. 8 rooms.

Ae

ge

bedrms. 244 DeLuxe baths. Kitchen

v/brkfst.
-

area.

rH S HOME

Full

bsmt.

&amp;

Patio.

IS AS SOLID

$45,500.

AS IT LOOKS

non Stone construction. 4 beds. 2%
baths. Liv. rm. w/frplc. Dining
. Tiled kitchen, w/brkfst.
rm. Library.
bsmt. Beautifully landscaped grounds
x200. Many nice features. Mid. 50’s.

AOMEFINDERS,
ahh Green
1-1111

Bay

10 Acres with excellent deep top soil, near
Gages Lake. Small 2 bedroom house with
basement; 2 car garage plus barn. All for
just $18,000.
Near Grays Lake, 26 acres, excellent location;
ideal
for
subdividing
or
boarding
horses; 7 room old farm house, large barn,
tool chest; large garage and chicken house.
?

BEAUTIFULLY built brick ranch home 84
feet long including garage; large living room
with fireplace; separate dining room; 3 bedrooms, 2 ceramic baths; full basement; electric radiant
heat.
11/3
Acres completely
fenced. Good Libertyville location. $39,500.

Lovely split level near Highland School. 3
Bedrooms, 2 baths, recreation room. Owner
will sacrifice.
Many

Wilmette
BR 3-3333
N.

LAST HOUSE LEFT
BULDER MUST SELL
Reasonable

_ ORIGINAL

Offer

PRICE

het

‘ri-level, 3 bedrooms,
‘eation room, large

$24,500
paneled

rge,

COUNTRY

HOMES

$24,

aSy

A. VEHLOW REALTY
DIAL BA 3-0880

WEST LAKE FOREST
Modern, Custom

t listed.

Well

Milwaukee Ave.
Libertyville,
EMPIRE
2-0200

HERBERT
SPring

for retirement or hideway.
Located
a very exclusive dead end cedar lane,
Oe
to
a
scenic,
clean
lakeshore.
nds
are beautifully
landscaped
with
vers, shrubs
and stately trees. Livingg combination 15x34 with fireplace and
to ceiling bay window, master bed15x30 with sundeck, 2nd 12x14, 3rd
; ultra
modern
kitchen
and _ nook;
bath and shower. Screen porch 12x18;
; gas heat; combination windows; 1%
x
completely
furnished
including
mowers
and
garden
tools.
Near
shopping and transportation.

MARTIN

B. WHITE
REALTY
Ill.

&amp; SONS
4-5611

Grove

PAlis
ORchard 6-2596
(Take Edens to Clavy, Clavey west to
Ridge Road, Ridge north to Grove)
Open Sunday 1 to 5

ELITE

invited.

3 bedroom brick ranch, full basement, 1%
baths, fireplace, side drive. Construction to
start soon. Long term financing. $24,900.

BUILDERS

1600

Inquiries

RAVINIA

Refused

2 full baths,
wooded lot.

BERKSHIRE

listings.

FRED
344

No

choice

Realtors

Road,

*e

located

on

CUSTOM

Quality _construction
consistent with moderate prices. Plan estimating at no cost. We
nese
our own
designing
and engineering
staff.

HERBERT
SPring

NEED

wooded

&amp; SONS
4-5611

4 BEDROOMS?

If so, you must see this attractive Cape
Cod home on a ang winding road in South
Highland Park.
Full basement, 2 car garage,
heavily wooded lot and close to Eden’s and
new shopping center. Almost ready for occupancy.
Well priced at $29,900 with flexible terms.
L. H. BAMBURG Realtors
342 Park Ave.
Glencoe
VE 5-2600

BY OWNER

Ranch
area

access to main road and expressperb stone frplce. in Ige. liv. rm.,
kitch., din. rm., 3 bdrms., 2 full baths,
t. never musty or wet. Middle 20’s.

BUILT

Colonial house with extra lot, 3 bedrooms,
bath, den, 2 car garage. Convenient to trains
Sug, bance $25,500. Call Lake Bluff, CE 4-

DEERFIELD
ge

expertly maintained split level in fine
4 bdrms., 214 baths, 2 plus car gar.,

lel Kitch. w/lge. din. area. 9 rooms
in excellent condition. Mid 30’s.

_111 Green
'-1111

Bay

951

Road,

AKEN

IN

TRADE

ONTEMPORARY

in

Wilmette
BR 3-3333

Fairview

(corner—Bob

by

Rd.

EXCEPTIONAL

builder.

RANCH;

FIREPLACE.

7 ROOM

attached

North

buy at $37,500.
| year finance.

om

win size

ga-

Shore’s best

YO

6-9215

_
LIBERTYVILLE
brick and frame split

bedrooms,

2

full

level

baths,

REALTY

REALTORS
N. Milwaukee
Libertyville

602

with

separate

MORTGAGE LOANS
CONVENTIONAL
OR FHA

3

For prompt,
personal,
service when
you
buy—build or refinance in the Lake Foresi
Lake Bluff area—See us.

FIRST NATIONAL BANK
LAKE FOREST CE 4-5100

CO.

HIGHLAND

6-6720

~ OVERLOOKING
ISTA
of ravines, this completely reeled carriage house has 4 to 5 bedis, 3% baths, big family room kitchen,
ing
own beach; $48,500.

SP 7-4030

Central Ave., 1 story brick and stucco,
bedrooms, basement, oil furnace heat. 50
foot lot. Must sell to close estate. $14,500,

6 year old, 2 story frame, 3 bedrooms, separate dining room, sunroom, fireplace, basement, oil heat, 2 car attached garage on one
acre, near Ridge Road. Excellent
buy. $29,500. Call ID 2-0474 or WI 5-0254.
HIGHLAND
PARK:
on lovely
%
acre.
Finest construction, many interesting features. 3 bedrooms, one 12x22, 2 baths.
Kitchen with dining area, utility room adjacent.
Full
basement.
Low
30’s.
1471
Ridge Road, Highland Park.

HIGHLAND

LAKE
our

year

FOREST—BY
old

brick

ranch

1768

in Meadowood.

ifuxury

ranch,

4 bedrooms,

3%

ths, paneled den, heated, jalousie porch,
il basement, radiant heat, 144 acre woodlot, beautifully landscaped. East Rania. Upper $60s. Owner.
2-0399.

Page H 66—D

58

PARK:

Clifton,

Tri-level,

OWNER

zamed ceiling living-dining room; paneled
Ae with built-ins; complete kitchen; panfamily room; 3 bedrooms; 2 baths. Exellent storage. Fine traffic pattern. Full,
basement. Lot 120x200. Owner moving
At $54,500. CE 4-1706.

DERN

PARK

968

Ave.
LO

26212

BUY

Deerfield: 3 bedroom frame ranch;
living room dining room combina.
tion with fireplace; large screened
porch; nice neighborhood. For details call WI 5-0493.

eves.

ng, birch cabinet kitchen with built in
e and oven, GE
dishwasher;
14x1914
room, large utility. Gas heat. Combiation
storms and screens, automatic sofener. carpeting in living dining room and
, drapes included. $26,400.
j
Contact Mr. Dennee

SCHWANDT

Famous Scholz contemporary designed trilevel home. 17,640 sq. ft. lot heavily wooded, beaut. landscaped, stone entrance, cathedral ceilings, beams im every rm. 3. bedrooms,
2!2 baths, living, dining, kitchen,
utility, rumpus rooms, gar., patio, balcony,
refrig., range, dishwasher, washer and dryer,
carpeting and drapes. Walking distance to
be tri and parks. Mid 30’s. By owner. ID

O’Link)

. Full basement, 100x200 ft. landscaped
rer. BEAMED CEILINGS. Roman brick
‘
tedwood living room and family room.
INDI
T
LIGHTING
and
LANNON

STONE

HIGHLAND PARK HIGHLANDS
“A LITTLE BIT OF DRAMA”

2100

Sunset

Ely

Place

Terrace.’

District.
TD

sq. ft. living area,

2-4853.

3 bed-

rooms, 17x30 family room, 214 baths, 2
fireplaces,
11 closets, gas heat, air-conditioned, all windows thermopane.
LAKE
FOREST:
proud
Norman
home.
Built of imperishable
stone
and
beam;
needs interior decorating. Must be sold.
Open Sunday 2 to 5, 580 Greenvale. Sudolnik Realty, MAjestic 3-1302.
LIBERTYVILLE; Open house by owner, 14
May, 1-5 p.m.; 3 bedrooms, 2 baths; heated breezeway; 2 car garage; patio; tennis
court; 1 acre. 310 Hawthorne Rd.
24751; 1 block north junction 176 and west
of St. Mary’s Rd. Priced to sell; low 30’s,
Navy orders; principals only.

RAVINIA—777

ST.

JOHNS

Just finished.
Modern
contemporary
built
to overlook ravine. All rooms are large.
Living
room
and
den
are oak panelled.
Kitchen
with
built in oven,
range,
dishwasher and disposal. Air condition unit in
bedrooms. Zoned hot water heat. Landscaped
Lot includes 188 feet across ravine. $35,500
with low down payment.
EVANSTON BOND &amp; MORTGAGE CO.
1732 ORRINGTON GR 5-5600 EVANSTON
$19,900 ON YOUR LOT
Spacious 3 bedroom, 2 bath
press brick and
cedar ranch, 523 Green Bay,
Highland Park.

Al Richman, builder, ID 2-9249,

NEW brick bi-level, 3 bedrooms, 1% baths,
panelled
family
room,
fabulous
closet
space, modern
kitchen, walking distance
to trains, shopping and schools, mid 20’s.
Telephone ID 2-8597.
TWO
apartment
brick duplex
ih a new
Lake Forest area; air conditioned; recreation room; 3 bedrooms in each unit; full
basement; good mortgage available. Call
Ted Gabanski, CE 4-3737.
BY owner, charming 6 year old brick ranch.
Paneled living room, large family dining
room
combination,
kitchen
with
eating
space, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, full basement,
screened porch, covered patio. Near park
and transportation. Low down payment.
$32,500. ID 2-4302.
RAVINIA
New 3 bedroom, 2 bath, brick and cedar
ranch, built in kitchen with spacious breakfast area. Attached car
rt. Conveniently
located at 523 Green Bay
Rd. $27,500. Open.
Al Richman, Builder. ID 2-9249.
REAL estate investment available that offers safe 20%. Your investigation invited.
Minimum $5,000 needed. Write Box D-35,
c/o Highland Park News.
535 RIDGE
ROAD,
Highland Park needs
an owner. We will work out something to
fit your requirements. 3 nice bedrooms,
1%
baths, full basement.
Near
Edens,
school, and shopping. Call AL 1-7876.
DEERFIELD—OWNER
TRANSFERRED
Attractive split level; 4 oversized bedrooms,
2 full baths, recreation room
with bookcases and storage, many built-ins. 2144 car
garage, covered patio,
%
acre with fruit
trees. Conveniently
located.
$34,700.
1610
Montgomery Road. WI 5-3197.
LAKE FOREST area: lovely wooded acre,
3 bedroom brick and stone ranch with 2
car
attached
garage,
living
room
with
fireplace, 1%
ceramic baths, family size
kitchen, dining
room
and family room
bk I east
ceiling and’ barbecue. EM

FOR Sale: cottage in Deerfield by owner.
Call CE 4-2176.
LAKE BLUFF
:
Brick Colonial ranch, 2 car garage, 3 twin
bedrooms, 2 baths, exclusive east location,
top value, by owner, in the 30’s. Immediate occupancy. CEdar 4-5237.

HIGHLAND
PARK:
new brick ranch, 3
bedrooms (1 paneled),
large kitchen, living-dining room, 1% baths, basement, ga_ Tage, decorated, near schools, transportation. $27,900. Builder, ID 2-1338.
HIGHLAND
PARK:
1734 Winthrop Rd.
New
3 bedroom,
1%
bath bi-level, Lshaped living dining room, oversized tamily room, built-in dishwasher, oven, range,
exhaust fan, immediate occupancy, $30,900. Call owner, ID 2-5737.
DEERFIELD
Briarwoods: thousands under
cost for fine 6 room contemporary ranch
with many extras. Sacrifice by owner under
unusual
circumstances
with
exc
tionally attractive financing. $28,500. 640
Warwick Road, WI 5-5874. Open house
Sunday 11 to 5.
REDUCED
TO $29,000
Deerfield, by owner, brick and frame split
level; 3 bedrooms;
2 baths; living
room;
dining room;
family room
with
built-ins;
electric kitchen with eating space; lots of
closets; 1800 square feet, plus
basement, garage and laundry room; 2 blocks to schools.
WI 5-3646.
CONTEMPORARY
modern
ranch, 3 bedrooms, panelling, Thermopane. Reduced to
hay
Call ID 2-2739. Open house Sunay
1-5.
LINCOLNSHIRE
area;
not only are we
selling our attractive Colonial below cost,
but we’re
sure you
can
obtain
better
mortgage terms than we have! We’re in
the country,
with
plenty
of room
for
children
(4 twin bedrooms,
wooded
™%
acre). Big
living
room
with
fireplace,
separate dining room, large family room
—kitchen
with
dishwasher,
first
floor
laundry-mud room, 1% baths, double attached garage, % basement. Easy access
to Tollway, too. For sale by owner. Will
accent best offer. WI 5-4347.
DEERFIELD:
4 bedroom
older
2. story
frame, tiled bath, full basement, hot water oil heat, 1 car garage, low taxes, near
schools, shonning and transportation. 1146
Chestnut, $16.900. Call WI 5-0129.
HIGHLAND
PARK,
1032
Ridge
Road.
Large living-dining combination,
2 bedrooms,
den,
kitchen
with
eating area,
$15.500. Telenhone ID 2-6409,
OWNER
MUST SELL charming 5 room 2
bedroom ranch home on beautiful wooded
%
acre. Low taxes. Mahogany paneled
thruout. 16 ft. vear-round sunroom. Lake
Bluff School District. 2 car garage with
attached 12x18 workshop. Patio and outdoor brick bar-b-q. $22,500. Call CE 49099 after 6 P.M. or weekends.
LAKE FOREST, 985
lody Rd., 3 bedroom brick ranch; 2 baths; family room;
screened porch;
double
stone
fireplace;
basement;
oversize 2 car garage;
play/
garden tool house; beautiful wooded carner; in the $40’s; by Knute Larsen, CE
4-3453,
OPEN
Old
story
baths,
4387

HOUSE
SUNDAY
12 til 4. 860
Trail,
Highland
Park.
Spacious
2
7 room
home.
3 bedrooms.
214
priced under $30,000. Call ID 2or ID 2-5914 after 6 p.m.

LAKE
BLUFF:
must
sell 3 bedroom,
2
bath,
home;
fireplace;
carpeted
and
draped; full basement;
come see, make
offer. CE 45713.
E. LAKE BLUFF-BY ORIGINAL OWNER
2 years old, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, living
room with fireplace. Kitchen with wall oven,
eating area, china closet. Wooded lot, brick
patio, 2 car attached garage, full basement.
Low 30’s. CE 4-5213.

FOR THE FIRST TIME
EXECUTIVE RANCH HOMES
INCLUDING 100 FT. LOTS

AT

APARTMENT BUILDINGS FOR SALE
disposal,

oven

PARK

63%4 ACRES, 1 ACRE ZONING,
PRICES, HEAVILY WOODED,
SCHOOLS.

HIGHLAND

REALTORS

Williams

ESTATE
BUS TO

ID

Street

TOWN

2-6776

GReenleaf

McGUIRE

washer, private
and
shopping.

Deerfield

5-1617

kitchen

&amp; WINTER

RESORTS

BUSINESS

OPPORTUNITY

FOR sale: year round resort in Wisconsin,
70 miles from Chicago. $600,000 per year
gross. Inquiries invited. Mr. Fuller, VIIlage 8-9330.

OFFICES,

STORES, &amp;
TO RENT

STUDIOS

STORE,
1931 Sheridan Road in the heart
of
Highland
Park’s
Shopping
Center.
Laser
Company, WHitehall 4-4318.
STORE
18x40
heated;
$160
per month;
Offices 1 to 6 room suites; paved parking for tenants and customers. 460 Central Ave., Phones ID 2-0150, ID 2-2358
SHOP 25x32, heat, light, water furnished,
774 Central, Highland
Park.
Telephone
ID 2-2397.
NEW: approximately 1000 sq. ft. retail store
next to new U.S. Post Office in Lake
Bluff. Call CE 4-2617.

aPARIMENTS

TO

RENT

(Unfurnished)

HIGHLAND
PARK:
3 bedroom
duplex,
close to transportation, no pets, $135 per
month. Call ID 2-7597.
HIGHLAND
PARK:
3 room
apartment,
stove
and
refrigerator,
all utilities furnished, garage included. ID 2-7002.
DEERFIELD:
1st floor,
heated,
2 bedrooms, living room, dining L, cabinet kitchen, tile bath, modern 2 year old building,
basement storage room, parking area, stove
and refrigerator. Available now, $152.50.
DONALD
N. ANDERSON
665 Vernon Ave.,
VE 5-2113
Glencoe
4 ROOM, first floor apartment, newly decorated, modern
kitchen,
all utilities included, available June 1st. ID 3-0893.
HIGHWOOD: modern 3 room second floor
apartment, stove and refrigerator included; no children or pets. ID 2-1007.

with

sys

goood

range.

disposal,

Off-street par!

built-in

. Decorate

QUINLAN &amp; TYSON, Inc.

5-1080

LAKE BLUFF, ravine lot on private lane,

“SUMMER

Apartments

Modern 2 bedroom apartments. Excellent location, convenient to schools, shopping and
transportation. Ceramic tile baths. Cabinet
oven and
to suit.

ANTLERS
Resort,
modern
housekeeping
cabins,
reasonable.
Food,
fishing
and
swimming.
Rustic bar. Information, call
ID _2-5553, or write Antler Resort, Route
2, Eagle River, Wis.

Garden
Deerfield

area of
zoning.

improved, 5/8 acre; CE 4-1117 evenings
and weekend.
DEERFIELD,
900 Beverly, 90 foot lot in
finest section of Briarwoods subdivision.
Terms or will trade towards house. HIIIcrest 6-1646.
SHERWOOD FOREST—75x146. ID 2-3682.
AM&lt; sub-dividing a more than ™% acre property and offer inside lots for sale. Private and quiet, zoned for 1 and 2 family
residence.
Several nice trees, many
interesting
possibilities,
Write
Box
R-15,
c/o Lake Forester.
NORTHBROOK
AREA—Attention
Builders, Subdividers,
Investors!
Approx.
20
acres, County zoned, 10,000 sq. ft. Near
Grove School, approx. 600 ft. frontage
on Pfingsten
Road
S. of Dundee
Rd.
Close
in
location.
Call
PIERSEN
REALTY, Agents, WI 5-1670.
TWO ¥
acres in choice location on Duffy
Lane,
Deerfield;
partially
wooded.
By
owner. Phone WI 5-1i721.
2.4 ACRES
suitable for small estate with
view
of Lake
Michigan;
convenient
to
Northwestern
RR
in Winthrop
Harbor,
Til. ad
Sogaegs title $3800. Box 1945 Sarasota,
Fla.
DON’T
BUY
YOUR
HOMESITE
UNTIL YOU SEE ME
I have % to 15 acres northwest with Northwestern Railroad transportation, schools and
shopping. Excellent terms. No interest first
cha
ROgers Park 1-9174 or CEntral

garage, near trains
ID
2-6790,
ID
2-

6791.

&amp; ORR
GReenleaf

baths, gas heat,
kitchen,
living

room, dining room, tiled floors,
central TV antenna, indv. dryer and

Realtors
1-0228

HOUSE

2 bedrooms,
1%
fully
equipped

BANNOCKBURN
5 acres on Wilmot Rd. in exclusive
lovely
homes.
4 acre
residential
$27,500. Call Mr. Robinson.

Area

Air Conditioned

Hokanson &amp; Jenks
Davis

separate

room, dining
Vinyl in all
garage. Over

Modern

IN
HIGHLAND
PARK
WE
HAVE
18
acres zoned 1 acre residential, with sewer
and water along the front. Very reasonable
terms, to a responsible purchaser, and a
survey is available in our office.

513

top,

PARK

Ravinia

Idlewood Realty
Roger

range

Directions—Edens highway north to Berkeley, Berkeley west to Ridge rd., Ridge rd.
south to 1284.
VE 5-0344 Sat. &amp; Sun.
Eves VE 5-0343

5 lots on a beautiful dead-end street with
all underground
utilities. This property is
about a block from the lake and is heavily
‘wooded. Some Ravine lots.

653

and

utility room, carpeted living
room
and master
bedroom.
other rooms included. 2 car
1850 square ft. living area.

VACANT PROPERTY
HIGHLAND

$30,800

4 bedrooms,
2 tile baths,
walnut
family
room, large living room with bay, dining
room,
Provincial kitchen with dishwasher,

FOR
Sale: Duplex apartment building, 2
years old. We’re serious about selling, so
call only if you’re really interested in
buying. Call after 6 P.M., ID 2-8586.
36 APARTMENT building in River Forest.
Gross
$60,000.
Mr.
Fuller, VIllage
89330.

ALpine
HIGHWOOD:
2 bedroom frame, basement,
1 block to Catholic Church and shops.
Excellent condition. Call Agent ID 2-0474,
HALFDAY:
3 bedroom frame ranch, 2 car
garage attached, 144 acres, gas heat. Priced
for quick sale. Call WI 5-0254 or ID 20474 for details.

GRETA LEDERER

735 Deerfield Road

WI 5-3750

GLENCOE

BEL-AIR
DELUXE
HOUSE—S5

APARTMENTS

AIR-CONDITIONED
TOWNrooms, iy
eg
living
room,

dining area, equipped

kitchen and full base-

ment.

$225

VE

Beautiful

5-2565.

garden.

Eves.

&amp; week

yer

ends

month.

VE

5-0343.
=

Small
3 room
unfurnished,
English basement, very close in, rent $75 a month, 2
months in advance. For further information
call:

1896

ANCHOR REAL ESTATE
Sheridan Rd.
ID
Res. Ph., ID 2-0037

2-0093

HIGHLAND
PARK:
2 bedroom
second
floor knotty pine apartment; range; heat
and electricity furnished. ID 2-2111.
3 ROOMS, unfurnished; heat, water, stove
and refrigerator included. CE 4-0496, after
6 p.m.
BEDROOM with large closets, sunny kitchen, tile bath, ideal location, partially furnished,
garage
available. Call
after 6,
ID 2-6914.
HIGHLAND
PARK:
Nice apartment
for
rent; 3 rooms, 1 bedroom, $85 per month.
ID 2-3785 or ID 2-3931.
LAKE BLUFF, new deluxe 3 room apartment, air conditioned; fully carpeted; all
deluxe appliances;
heat, water and gas
furnished. Just 2 left; $150 per month.
Call CE 4-2617.
LAKE
FOREST:
entire 2nd floor apartment, spacious and pleasant; living room,
dining
room,
kitchen, 2 bedrooms
and
bath. Large screened porch, basement and
attic space, close in, available June 1st.
Adults only, please. Call CE 4-1174.
HIGHLAND
PARK:
4 room
apartment,
first floor, $65 per month plus utilities, 1
bedroom. Call ID 2-7630.
DEERFIELD:
2 bedroom apartment, $145
per month, including heat, gas and hot
water. Near schools, shopping and trans__ portation. WI_5-2419.
as

HIGHWOOD,

5 rooms

2 bedrooms, ‘Tiving

room, dinette, kitchen, close to shopping
and transportation. Call ID 2-5812.
IN Highland Park, 6 room upper duplex
close to school and transportation. Telephone ID 2-2569.
4 ROOM apartment in Highwood, Ist floor,
stove and refrigerator furnished, no pets,
$85. Call after 3 p.m. ID 2-3039.
HIGHLAND PARK: newly constructed duplex, 3 bedrooms,
1%
baths each unit,

kitchen has built in stove and oven, renting

for

$200,

details, Guy
GLENCOE,

TUDOR

immediate

Viti,

NEWLY

COURT,

occupancy.

For

DECORATED,

310

Realtor.

ID

2-3933.

5 rooms, immediate oc-

cupancy,
near
Northwestern
station
at
Green Bay Road. VE 5-2043.
4%
ROOM
apartment in Highland
Park,
heat, water furnished,
centrally located,
Available immediately. Call ID 2-2582.

APARTMENTS
2

FOR

RENT

(Furnished)

ROOM
apartment in Highwood, utilities
furnished, near transportation, for couple
or 2 working people. ID 2-6682.

HIGHWOOD:

3 room furnished

apartment,

ayaatie
immediately.
Telephone
ID 23
3 ROOM furnished apartment, heat and hot
water, couple preferred, no children or
pets. Call ID 2-2637.

Thursday, May 11, 1961 i

�ae
¥

APARTMENTS

FOR

RENT

(Furnished)

MODERN
Kitchenette es
business
Hig hwood
i district,
1 or 2 adults. Phone
CE
§:30 p.m.

located in
2%
rooms;
4-0136 after

Small attractive East side 2 room garage
apartment, rent $90 a month, 2 months in
advance.
ANCHOR REAL ESTATE
1896 Sheridan Rd.
ID 2-0093
Res. Ph. ID 2-0037
LAKE BLUFF, 26 Washington St., 3 rooms;
beautifully furnished and decorated; private patio, washer and dryer; convenient.
Call Kenosha, OLympic 2-7282.
MODERN
trailer;
awning;
on
nice
lot;
ideal for couple or bachelor. 203 Skokie
Hwy., Lake Bluff, Ill.
HIGHWOOD:
3 rooms and porch, 1 bedroom, kitchen and living room. Telephone
ID 2-4192 or CE 4-5260.
2 LARGE
rooms,
water, light, heat furnished, good location, share bath. Telephone ID 2-3786.
FURNISHED apartment in country, reasonable to right party, convenient to North
Shore. Telephone CEdar 4-4446.
HIGHWOOD—tThree room furnished apartment, all utilities included, newly decorated. Call ID 2-0980.
STUDIO
apartment,
partly furnished,
for
rent in Deerfield near transportation and
shopping. WI 5-0602.
HIGHLAND PARK, 2 room kitchenette and
bath, located in business district, available May 10, $110 a month, utilities included, lease required. Call ID 2-8117.
2
ROOM
funnished
apartment,
kitchen
privileges, utilities included, garage available, employed couple. ID 2-3086.
NICE
clean 3 room
furnished
apartment
in Highwood residential district. Call ID
2-3544, after 5 P.M.
HIGHLAND
PARK:
large
living
room,
kitchen, ceramic bath, utilities furnished,
close to transportation, $95. ID 2-2965.

TOWN

3 bedroom, living room-dining room combination, full basement, water included. $175
per month. Immediate possession.
3 bedrooms,
1% _ baths,
built-in
kitchen,
living room, separate dining room, recreation
room. June possession. $200 per month.
Carr Realty Co.
WI 5-0984
FOR rent: Highland Park’s most beautiful
2 bedroom townhouse, gas heat, air conditioned, private
patios, 9 closets.. Model
now open at 625
Mulberry. ID 2-0946 or
CEntral 6-1900.
TO

RENT

(Unfurnished)

HIGHLAND PARK: 4 room bungalow, $115
furnished or $100 unfurnished, near town
ae transportation, 1 year lease. ID
LAKE FOREST, three bedroom, 1% baths,
available now. New, with full basement
and air conditioned. CE 4-3737.
LITTLE old fashioned 1 bedroom cottage,
wood burning fireplace, carpeted livingdining room, knotty pine panelling, stove,
refrigerator, automatic gas heat, full basement, screened porch, fenced yard with
room
for garden,
walking
distance
to
town, adults only, no pets, ID 2-8152 or
ID 2-7597.
HIGHLAND
PARK: 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms,
glassed-in
porch,
oil heat.
388
Bloom
Street. Telephone ID 2-0309.
2 BEDROOM partly furnished house; heat,
water and garbage disposal furnished; living room with fireplace plus dining room,
_—
and full basement. Telephone ID
HIGHLAND
PARK:
modern, like new 2
bedroom stone ranch, patio, garage, decorated, near town, adults only. Immediate. $150, or partly furnished. ID 2-8917.
SALE OR RENT, big older home, 5 bedrooms, tiled baths, plenty of waste space;
modern kitchen, fireplace, garage. Telephone ID 2-0212.
DEERFIELD, year old 3 bedroom tri-level,
fully draped; panelled family room; available May 15, $275. WI 5-3505.
6 ROOM
house at 911 Linden, Hubbard
Woods.
No pets. Rent $80 per month.
HIllcrest 6-0038.
HOUSES

TO

RENT

SUMMER
rental: gracious old home near
lake, large garden, patio, porch, 4 master
bedrooms, $450 per month. June 12th to
Sept. 12th; phone evenings ID 2-3730.
4 BEDROOM
furnished house in Highland
Park; 24% baths, gas heat; 2 open screen
porches.
June
15th
into
September
or
early October. Phone ID 2-0921.
LAKE FOREST, 5 room cottage nicely furnished, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large living
room, kitchen, 2 car garage space; available May 15, $165 monthly; no children;
middle aged couple preferred. Call CE 41971; after Friday, call CE 40029.
ON
Lake
Michigan
at Shoreacres,
Lake
Bluff; modern house on 5 wooded acres,
6 bedrooms, 6 baths, furnished or partly
furnished, for 1 year starting June 16th,
$425. Call CE 4-2094.

&amp; APARTMENTS

* rent: pone. bag
WANT
o
for employees
houses

TENTHOUSE THEATRE.

Lang Real Estate
712
AM

Glencoe
2-7873

Road
AL

Glencoe
VE 5-1971

1-3430

COMMANDER
at Great Lakes
wants
3
or 4 bedroom unfurnished house; reasonable rent. Call Delaware 17-7412.
FURNISHED house or apartment from June
to September; act as caretakers in lieu of
part or all of rent; older Swiss couple;
references. Write Box R-10, c/o Lake Forester.

APARTMENTS

&amp;

HOUSES

TO

YOU
HAVE ABOVE
AVERAGE
SKILLS, AND A PLEASANT PERSONALITY AND GOOD
REFERENCES, YOU CAN QUALIFY FOR
AND
TAKE
ADVANTAGE
OF
OUR SELECTIVE
PLACEMENT
SERVICE.
WE COVER THE ENTIRE NORTH SHORE AND WEST
SUBURBAN
AREAS.
HIRING
NOW!

SHARE

ave

ROOMS

EMPLOYER

GARAGE
GARAGE
2-4976.

WANTED

;

for

HELP

rent

TO

RENT

at 421

WANTED

Central.

Call

ID

FEMALE

PUBLICATIONS
ASSISTANT
Interesting position
assist publications

Typing,
paste-up
and layout of
company publications. Advertising
or production

experience

Telephone

1961

1150

executive

shorthand

and

recent

Write Box
News.

photo.
D-30,

c/o Highland

J.
2020

ZENGELERS
first St.

CLEANERS
Highland

Monday

Friday.

PERSONNEL

OFFICE

HIGHLAND PARK
HOSPITAL
ID

2-8000

FOR

(No Typing

ance

SECRETARY
Time

Experienced and expert secretary to do work
at home on IBM electromatic executive typewriter.
Shorthand
required.
Please
write
Box C-85, c/o Highland Park News.

personable

and

many

type

who enjoys meetwho is capable of
switchboard.
Typ-

Hospitalization,

Life

Insur-

other benefits.

KLEINSCHMIDT
(Div.

Lake

of Smith

Cook

Corona

Deerfield
5-1000

EXCITING
business
women with good
able.

others,

Call

Marchant)

Rd.
WI

direct

CLERK

CE

for
above
background,

flexible

4-0471.

hours,

car

average
able to

desir-

heating

experience

and

nece

charge

of

subdivi-

es.

Applicants for appointment
as Police Pa
trolman or Fireman must be over 21
under 35 years of age; at least 5 ft. 9
but not more than 6 ft. 3 in. tall (wei
must
be in proportion to height);
HB
: z
School education is required.
.

“bs:

Applicants for appointment as Call
unteer) Fireman must be over 21 and
45 years of age, and in good physical
dition.

naer

co
3

Apply at City Hall, 220 East Deerpath, La
Forest,

Illinois. CE

4-2600.

LOAN

ASSISTAN

Lake County financial institution looking
aggressive
pearance,

Required)

Dempster

plumbing,

Some

complete

MORTGAGE

UN

9-9000

EXTRA MONEY
TELEPHONE WORK
HIGHLAND PARK

Personnel Department
1815 Orrington Ave.
Evanston

on

materials.

sary. Draw
against comission.
Car nece
sary. For interview contact Mrs. Sullivan
WI 5-4600

The City of Lake Forest will accept applications for appointment to the Police Dep
ment, Fire Department, and as Call
unteer) Fireman,

Evanston

Apply

selling

building

Park News.

We have an excellent opportunity in the
Returned
Goods
section
of our
Credit
‘Department for a woman with clerical aptitude. Light typing is helpful but not rewares Mornings or afternoons, 5 days a
week,

APPT.

WANTED MALE _

sion sales from model home. Salary
plus bonus. Unlimited earnings possible. Write Box D-15, c/o Highland

APECO

3 WEEKS’ VACATION PLUS TUITION
REBATE FOR DEPENDENTS ARE SOME
OF THE FRINGE BENFITS AVAILABLE
TO OUR EMPLOYEES.

for

‘HELP

and

PART TIME

2100

IF YOU
POSSESS AN APTITUDE
FOR
figures, and are a good typist, we also have
a position available in an interesting department.
Person
must
desire
permanent
position and have good skills.

married woman
ing people and
learning relief
ing helpful.

~

WANTED:
Experienced
real estate
person in active North Shore office.

sales

young man
personality,

fe

24 to
§
and. handwriting

sential. Person who can type preferred.

ends
Give

status,

salar

complete resume by
tional
background,

letter, including ed
marital
and _ militar

requirement.
Forester.

Box

a recent

snapshot,

Write

and

your

D-80,

c/o I

MEDICAL
secretary, 40 hour week,
nate
Saturdays;
dictaphone
e
necessary; must be excellent typist.C
personnel
department Lake Forest Hi
pital, CE 4-5
PIPELINE construction, Las Vegas to
fornia; long project; top pay. ‘‘Constru
tion News” 30c, stamped envelope. IR
Box 373, Houghton,
ashington.
school junior or senior for 3
HIGH
:
yard pe
work, Ravinia
district. Call ip
Bits.
=
MATURE SALES REPRESENTATIV
Age 40-60
s
Business
experience
or ability to
ideas important.
Integrity a prime.

site.

Need 6 ladies to work in their own homes
Monday thru Friday 4 hours daily. Excellent earnings, must have private telephone,
no experience necessary, we will train. For
information call collect CEntral 6-2361.

Some

knowledge

able, but not
sion potential.
Il.

YOUNG

of investments

¢

required. Unlimited con
Write Box 150, Lake Fo

man

to

learn

OPTICAL

B

NESS. Air conditioned office, paid
tions, pension plan, medical and
surance. House of Vision, ID 2-3340.

GARDENER,

white, full time, references

quired. Tetephone CE 4-0256.
pet
LIGHT general office work, age or exper
pern
work,
ience no barrier, pleasant
nent. Telephone Mr. Lewis, VErnon: 3

2400.

LANG
VE

5-1971

REAL

2

SALES PROMOTION |

NORTHWESTERN
UNIVERSITY
HAS
an opening
for an individual to process and
file confidential data, and be responsible
for employee records. Some typing required.
Must be interested in detail, and have knowledge of filing procedures. Excellent opportunity for right person interested in permanent position.

Typing

girl,

REAL ESTATE SALES —

Apply

through

sales

working
conditions
for capable
persor
typing required. Call Martha, CRestwoo
2-5770.
9
EXPERT
STATISTICAL . TYPIST:
FO
LOCAL
ACCOUNTING
OFFICE.
ID
1788.
$e
NICE phone personality, small pleasant
fice, permanent.
Telephone Mr.
Lev
E 5-2400.
WAITRESS;
apply to the hostess Deerpatl
Inn. Telephone Lake Forest, CE 4-2280.

Outside
1-8700

Personnel Department
1815 Orrington Ave.
Evanston

and shorthand essential, pleasant
surroundings,
liberal
benefits,
starting
salary
depending
upon
qualifications.

ID 2-2800

Part

RECORD

SECRETARY

Paid
Park

ALpine

Park

RECEPTIONIST
time.

Ave.

time

SALESMAN

LADIES’ APPAREL:
5 DAY
WEEK, NO EVENINGS, GENEROUS DISCOUNT, GOOD
SALARY.
CALL
AFTER
6
P.M. ID 2-6674.

and _ typing

skills (IBM Electric), some college
training, and who is well versed in
executive
secretarial
responsibilities. Salary will correspond
with
your background
and experience.
Please
submit
complete
resume

Opportunity
part

Wilmette

FEMALE _

part

Hillman Pharmacy, 353 Park Ave., Glenc
+
excellent
with
position
INTERESTING

Take

5-2444

or

CON

WANTED

woman,

hours per week, music background
p
erable.
Contact
Ed
Casassa,
Lyon
Healy, 1843 Second St., ID 2-3434. _
SALESLADY |
es
Full time, 40 hour week, air conditi
store. Apply im person to Mr. Eaton, Rehn’

SALESLADY

Here is the top position that every
ambitious secretary has been preparing for. Our President who is
Chairman of the Board requires a
personable young lady (25-32) with

MODERN MISS
DEERFIELD COMMONS
DEERFIELD, ILLINOIS

SEAMSTRESS

fringe benefits.
OFFICE.

ENCYCLOPAEDIA
BRITANNICA
FILMS

HAS AN OPENING AS A DEPARTMENTal secretary for a woman with good typing
skills, some shorthand and interest in detail.
Some college preferred but not essential for
the right person.

SALESLADY

Steady

ASSISTANT
For
imteresting
Amusement
Film
Department. Some experience in inventory, good
at figures. Typing essential. Excellent for
movie fan.
5 day week, excellent
TACT
PERSONNEL

NORTHWESTERN
UNIVERSITY

full and part time, nice surroundings, pleasant working conditions,
paid
vacations,
liberal
discounts,
excellent opportunity for right person. Phone
Mr.
Barmash
or Mr.
Caplan for appointment.

Experienced.
Good pay.

To Educational Film Producers. Must have
good skills in typing and dictaphone. Some
shorthand required, experienced background
in office procedure essential. Age to 35.

desirable.

839 WAUKEGAN RD.
DEERFIELD
WI 5-2000, MR. LYONS

WI

SECRETARY

SECRETARY
TO
PRESIDENT

Duraclean Co.
EXPERIENCED

FEE

To TEMAC
Administrator.
Top skills in
shorthand
and
typing
essential.
Must
be
personable, poised with some college back
ground, mature and able to work on own.

SUITE 215 NORTH SHORE BLDG.
1866 SHERIDAN ROAD
Highland Park

CALL

for woman to
director
. .

HELP
YOUNG

ID 2-4461

ROOMS
for rent near transportation. 214
Green
Bay
Road,
Highwood,
Ill. Telephone ID 2-7000.
SINGLE room for rent,
near transportaoe _—_—
preferred. Telephone ID
LAKE FOREST, 128 Wildwood Road; large
bedroom;
share bathroom
with another
man. Call CE 4-1647,
ROOM for rent 1 block from Lake Forest
business district, gentleman preferred; telephone CE 4-2305.
.
ea
SLEEPING room, furnished, for gentleman.
Call ID 2-3981.
CLEAN furnished room, ample closet and
drawer
space,
parking
space
in rear,
kitchen privileges if desired. ID 2-4275.
1 ROOM kitchenette furnished with private
bath. Also 1 sleeping room. Call ID 24792.
HIGHLAND PARK: close to shopping and
transportation, nice large room, man preferred. ID 2-0133.
LARGE
sleeping room,
private
entrance,
parking
available,
downtown
Highland
Park. ID 2-9492.
DOUBLE
bedroom, twin beds, clean and
airy, all modern improvements, yard parking. ID 2-3441.
SLEEPING room for man. 150 Waukegan
Road, Deerfield. WI 5-0268.

PAYS

FITZGERALD
PERSONNEL

TO RENT

SINGLE room near town and transportation. Telephone ID 2-4245.
NICE large sleeping room, close to shopping, transportation. ID 2-1229.
PARK HOTEL sleeping rooms, by day or
week, free parking, 511 Waukegan Ave.,
Highwood. ID 2-9862.
VEL-WOOD
Motel, 500 Waukegan
Ave.,
Highwood.
Ajr-conditioned,
kitchenette
rooms for overnight guests and travelers.
ise and shower baths. Telephone ID 2-

FEMALE

SECRETARY

IF

YOUNG
gentleman
wanted
between
the
ages of 21-35 to share apartment
with
other man.
Inquire
upstairs Apartment
B, 246 Green Bay Road, Highwood, or
write Box 53.

iiia raw ANiy

WErnon 5-4040.
“EXECUTIVE,
wife and 4 children desire
home for summer
rental from June 25
through July. Former North Shore residents,
able to furnish
finest character
‘and financial references. Telephone DEla-

ware 71-4770.

HELP WANTED

WANTED

EXECUTIVE
will pay up to $2000 per month
on one, two or three year basis in estate
area for unfurnished traditional home.

(Furnished)

SUMMER
rental:
charming
4
bedroom
house, studio living room, 2 bathrooms,
all modern conveniences. ID 2-5715.
SUMMER
rental: July and August;
comfortable
6 room
furnished
home.
1221
Griffith
Road,
Lake
Forest.
Telephone
CE 4-1793
LOVELY 2 story home on % acre, ravine
property, 3 bedrooms, living room, separate
dining
room,
breakfast
room,
screened
porch,
1 block
to _ shopping,
churches, transportation, available June 1st
ye
tn
aad 1st, $275 per month. ID 2-

“HOUSES

&amp; APARTMENTS

HOUSES

DEERFIELD

HOUSES

HOUSES

AL

“

GARDENER,
experienced
yard work, 1 day a week.
preferred. ID 2-1995.

ESTATE
1-3430

EXPERIENCED salad girl for private North
Shore Club. Call ID 3-1131.
PERSONABLE,
dependable
High
School
senior for summer
work;
consider
any
type of work; have own car. Call CE 40471.
CLERK
Five day week, closed Saturdays; pleasant
working
conditions;
many
fringe benefits;
excellent opportunity. Apply in person or
call CE 4-5100.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF LAKE FOREST
SALESPERSON:
stationery, card and gift
shop. Apply in person R. Burns at Crossroads, Crossroads Shopping Center, Highland Park, Illinois.
PART time woman for general office work,
knowledge of adding machine necessary,
28 hour, 5 day week. Apply in person
Sears, Roebuck &amp; Co., 153 Skokie Valley
Road, Crossroads Shopping Center, Highland Park.
WOMAN, part time, to call on newcomers;
car
and
typing
necessary.
No _ selling.
Write Box D-20, c/o Highland Park News.
DOCTOR’S
office assistant and receptionist, with experience. WI 5-2020.
WAITRESS mornings, 7:30 to 1:30. Chubee’s Kitchen, ID 3-1433.
WANTED:
rursery school teacher for Libertyville Co-Operative Nursery
ool. 3
mornings a week, must be qualified. Call
Mrs. Weirich, EM 2-1039.

HELP

in flowers
Local refere

WANTED—DOMESTIC

ALL FREE—NO FEE
20 cook, General Maid Jobs
Nursemaids and second maids
A-1 COUPLE JOBS $450-500 mo.
MRS. BAKER SHORELINE AGEN

525 Lincoln, Winnetka

Hillcrest 6-

COLLEGE girl with driver’s license w
to care for 3 small boys and assist
household duties. Please write Mrs.
Burrows, 464 Oakwood, Lake Forest,
or call CE 4-1156.

PERMANENT

mother’s

helper

for

chi

care and simple housework, own room 1
congenial modern home,
salary depe'
and qualificatio
experience
ent upon
Write
Box
D-25,
c/o
Highland
P
News.
os

EXPERIENCED

woman

for general hou

work and plain cooking to live in 5 day
own
room
bath
overlooking
lak:
references required. ID 2-8728.
fe

WOMAN
woman,

for day work, prefer Highwoo
approximately 6 hour day, Mo:

day

and

Friday,

hours

GIRL

for

general

housework

ID 3-1078.

open,

:

will pic

and

cooki

experienced, 11 a.m. through dinner hou
steady work, own transportation. ID

1490.

:

%,

HOUSEWORK and child care 11:30 to 4:3
4 or 5 days; if local will
return. Telephone ID 2-6308.

pick

up

EXPERIENCED WOMAN WANTED
GENERAL
room, TV,

2-2113.

FOR

housework. Small family, o
live in, references. Cail

Page H 67—D 59 —

‘

a

�—

HELP

WANTED DOMESTIC

SITUATIONS

oo,
to do light housework and cook; live in; references. Telephone EM-

pire 2-1163.
PABLE wnite

and

“

supervise

aprudigh

31

woman

boys

to

14

stay

and

while

12

parents

in

Call

NING.
second
CE 4-0652.

floor,

from

away.

Fridays

only.

°

MAID, white, for lovely Glencoe home, upStairs housework and serving, other hel
employed, top wages, references required.
VE 5-1031
PRACTICAL
nurse
or
capable
woman,
white, to care for 3 children and help
care new baby. 3 weeks starting middle
ih ma
ety cleaning woman employed.

mOND
maid, serving, stay, references;
bo
for cutting grass all summer. ID 2-

__0652 after 11 a.m.
'UUSEMAN
who can drive; steady position by moth for reliable man with best
references. Call ID 2-1329.
ANTED: woman for domestic work, hours
10 to 8 preferred, 3 or 4 days a week,
must
have
own
transportation,
modern
ranch house, no children. ID 2-4017.
ENERAL housework, plain cooking, attractive salary, stay, lovely room, bath, TV.
Experienced only. References. ID 2-1995.

ENERAL

housework,
5 days, 11:30 to 5:30,
;

tn in

weekly,

job

for

reliable

efficient

references

required.

wom-

ID

ERAL
housework, help with children,
live-in Own room, exnerienced, references,
i
ar train. ID 3-1637.
RESPONSIBIE woman wanted 2 days each
week, cleaning and ironing, 1 child. Call
ID 3-0727; if no answer call after 6 p.m.
ENERAL housework, cooking, own room
with TV, 2 school age children, references
Tequired. Call ID 2-1971.

HELP

;

WANTED

EMPL.

AGENCY

ICATIONS
So
tt

;

being
accepted.
Kath
aes Agency &amp; Secretarial
‘
arket
i, Lake
4-1148.
—

ce.

t. CE

—_—_—_—_—_—_—___—

SITUATION

WANTED—FEMALE

VALESCING
ferences.

bedside

MAjestic

nursing,

LPN.

3-7506.

- SITUATION WANTED—MALE
ILOR,
colored, desires
ineenings or week ends.

VANT

work

cutting

up

screens.

putting

XPERIENCED
Or

general

time work
CHerry 4-

grass, spring

DExter

man

handy

part
Call

6-8857.

wants

work.

cleaning,

janitor

work

References.

Call

MAiestic 3-5268 after 5 p.m.

AN

will do

plastering,
sand
finishing,
parting and concrete work; North Shore
‘ ferences. Telephone CAnal 6-2586.
day service on: cleaning, gardening,
223
skilled jobs, by
expert
k
.25 an hour. ALpine 14636,
ve
V,
ILABLE for y Main French and Latin
tutoring during
June, July and August.
j
Call or Write Mr. Francisco Cabello, ¢/o
ake Forest Academy.
ELIABLE white man wishes interior painting,
paper hanging
and
wall
washing.

Telephone ID 2-8917,
ELIABLE single man

(white)

will

barter

and exchange free labor (40 hours per
month) for free living quarters on Lake
Forest
estatete
(furnished). Now employed
2 years with same company. Write Box

-R-20,

c/o

Lake

Professional

Gardening

Setv-

- Member
National
Association
of
ardeners. Flowers, lawns, trees and shrub
aintenance.
MUlberry
5-3525,
Chicago

41, Mi.

SITUAIIUN

WANTED—DOMESTIC

| Experienced Day Workers
ia emale

$10
$12

Male

® Storm

per day
per day

DELIVERED TO YOUR

DOOR

BROWNSKIN SERVICE

REFERENCES

CHECKED

NO FEE!
LIVE IN GIRLS
DAY WORKERS

General
d,

all

Housework,
ages.

Child

Care,

_ UNiversity 9-1467
oe
ae

COOPER
1310

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICE

Chicago

Avenue,

Page H 68—D 60

Evanston

AUCTION

from

the

and

EXPERIENCED woman desires cleaning by

Exhibition

others

WANTED
in neighborhood of Green Bay
and
Clavey,
mature
woman,
pleasant
quiet disposition, who can spend a few
hours a day to relieve wife who administers nursing care to sick husband. Call
ID 2-8088.
MOTHER
of 2 small girls, 1 and 3, wants
summer weekend helper, own room and
bath. Telephone ID 2-4133.
WHILE
you golf, shop, spring clean, or
work day or week, your children can play
here. CE 4-0521.
CHILD
care.
Experienced.
Brenda
and
Yvonne Fritz. Telephone
185, Westfield,
Wisconsin.

FOR SALE

1% PRICE SALE
School Clothing Exchange
711 WEST LINCOLN
HIGHLAND PARK
Friday, May 12th, 8:45 to 11:30, 1 to 3:30.
All merchandise to be cleared at % price.
CLOTHING sale, 1008 Plaister, Lake Bluff;
women’s and men’s, sizes 10-12, 42-44.

“HOUSEHOLD GOODS
FOR SALE _
INCH. gas ‘stove; 2 year old 14 cubic
foot refrigerator; dinette set; beige carpeting; large barbecue stand; buggy, $8.
WI 5-3641,.
RATTAN
room divider, unusual decorator
piece; some ceramics; 8 place silver plate
* service. WI 5-0931.

table

set,

automatic

Nesco

roaster

oven,
electric
blankets,
dishes,
clothes,
etc. WI 5-3909.
VICTORIAN settee for sale. WI 5-0268.
:
DELUXE electric stove, RCA, 2 oven, rotisserie plus full appointments, cost $400,
a real buy at $250; Automatic washer, excellent working condition, $25. ID 2-9301.
WALNUT Victorian settee, $25; 5 cubic foot
GE
refrigerator, monitor top, $10. For
rent,
single
garage
in Ravinia,
corner
Broadview and Highland Place. ID 2-2528.

13th

PICK GALLERIES,

INC.

886 Linden Ave.
Hubbard Woods

HI 6-7444
Winnetka

ENTIRE HOUSEHOLD
MODERN
FURNISHINGS
Including: Steinway bleached mahogany spinet piano, Herman Miller complete dining room set, Naguchi glass top table, planter table
with lamp, also Kittenger complete
bedroom set with dressers, 2 night
tables and 4 lamps; desk with chair,
card table with 4 chairs, large 4
cushion
davenport,
2 end
tables
with 2 lamps; 2 beautiful blue and
white
upholstered
arm
chairs,
1
separate upholstered blue chair, 1
floor lamp. ID 2-7116.
You buy for your home. Why not
shop in your home? I will be happy
to visit you by appointment and discuss
your
furniture
needs
right
where the problem is.
No

charge

for this

service.

John R. Whalen
Furniture
808

Waukegan Rd.
WI 5-1915

GREAT

691

__Merrick, Box 70, Detroit, Michigan.
WOMAN
desires laundry work, good references and own transportation, $12 per
day. DExter 6-5808.
(
EXPERIENCED
country
girl, 17, desires
summer employment doing child care and
light housework.
High
school
graduate.
Rosalie Landfeldt, Rt. 1, Unity, Wis.
SUMMER
housework
and child. care; age
17;
references.
Bonnie
Wollert;
Neshkoro, Wis., phone Neshkoro 34R21.
TWO young men want to do lawn mowing.
__Call MAjestic 3-9483 and ONtario 2-9674.
MOTHER’S helper, age 18, with some previous experience, references, wants summer job. N. Potocnik,
Box
143, Owen,
Wis.
ial vd
HANDYMAN
looking for 3 days work a
week; vardwork and general repair. Call
CE 4-1983.

Days: Saturday, May
10 A.M. to 4 P.M.
Monday, May 15th
10 A.M. to 4 P.M.

To be held at Northshore Farms, Northbrook. Quarter horse racing prior to each
day of sale.

YOUNG girl wishes 5 days per week; local
refernces. Telephone MAjestic 3-5929.
LADY, experienced, wants day work Monday,
through
Friday,
good _ references.
Please call after 8 p.m. DE 6-2305.
WANT
5 days a week, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
or 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Cook and housework.
__References.
MAjestic
3-7594.
HIGH
school
graduate,
18,
wants
light
housework or child care, experienced. Patricia Milz, R.R. 1, Loyal, Wisconsin.
COLLEGE girl wants housework, child care.

Judith Wahl,

16th, 7:30 P.M.

Don’t forget our Chicago National Horse
Auctions on June 24th and 25th. These sales
will comprise of 3 breeds: quarter horses,
Appaloosa and Shetland ponies.

MOTHER’S
Helper, experienced,
17 year
old, senior, work
summer
months,
call
or write Shirley Schnoor, Owen, Wisconsin. CAstle 9-2910.
MOTHER’S
helper: Experienced,
17 years
old, Senior, work summer months, call or
write
Beverly
Smith,
Owen,
Wisconsin,
CAstle 9-2324.
WANTED:
SUMMER
JOB:
BABY
SITTER, SECOND MAID; have experience in
both; sophomore in college. Write Mabel
Wheeler, Suomi College, Hancock, Michigan.
A-1
HOUSEKEEPER;
good
cooking
and
serving; 1 or 2 adults preferred; $50-$55
weekly. UNIVERSITY 9-1532.
MOTHER’S
Helper: experienced;
17 years
old, work summer months. Call or write
Lever Petke, Withee, Wisconsin, CAstle
9-2430.
HIGH School girls wish summer work, experienced; write or call Naomi Pelto; Box
65 Ewen, Mich.; phone 2921.
MOTHER’S
Helper: experienced,
17 years
old, Senior, work summer
months. Call
or write Beth Westendorf, Withee, Wisconsin, CAstle 9-2042.
WILL do ironing in my home. Telephone
ID 2-4337.
:
EXPERIENCED
day worker would like 4
days, reliable and honest with references.
Telephone MAijestic 3-5659.
WOMAN
wants day work 2 days, Monday
at Tuesday; references. Call. Cherry 4-

references;

of

Jr.

May

Deerfield

ANTIQUE

FAIR

at Ravinia
School,
Roger
Williams
and
Dean, Highland Park, May 11, 12 noon to
10 p.m. May
13, noon to 6 p.m. Dealers
from all over Midwest will exhibit for sale:
Early American and Country English Furniture, Antique
jewelry, glassware, dishes,
Bric-a-brac, Coins, etc. Also featuring an
old-fashioned Penny Candy store. Free colored cartoons for the kiddies. Refreshments
included. $1.00 admission good for all weekend.

ANTIQUES
Immense

SALE

variety—Large

Some

items

reductions,

unfinished;

Furniture and Accessories
BETTY’S
Deerfield, Illinois
811 Waukegan Rd.
WI 5-0137
Second Floor
MOVING
out of state: 30 inch 4 burner
electric stove, 3 years old, giant 23 in.
Oven, automatic oven, clock, timer, $100;
Kenmore
washer-dryer
combination,
9
months old; both excellent condition. Call
after 6 p.m., ID 2-8241.
MOVING—40
inch Universal gas stove, 2
years old, $60; day bed, $10; brass headboard, frame, box spring and mattress,
$15; hand mower, $5; 78 RPM classical
albums,
books,
floor
lamp,
bric-a-brac.
Saturday and Sunday, 1051 Wade, Highland Park.
TWO bamboo curtains 10%
ft. wide, $15;
two sieel Venitian blinds 2 ft. wide, $5;
one steel Venitian blind, 5%
ft. wide,
$7.50. 766 E. Highview, Lake Forest. Cali
CE

4-1333.

BABY
grand piano, box spring and mattress
with
headboard,
vacuum
cleaner,
baby
chests, dresser, 2 piece sectional,
radios, red settee and chairs, coffee table.
Call ID 3-1104.
GENUINE antique Louis XIII dining room
set, table, 6 chairs, buffet. Purchased in
France. Call WI 5-5661.
DINING room set; Italian style—unusual—
very ornate, 9 piece walnut, complete with
table pads; reasonable. KEystone 9-4833.
8 SCREENS and screen door, 7 ft. high, for
11 ft. by 11 ft. porch; also French door,
30 in. by 80 in. Call ID 2-6280.
PRACTICALLY
new large portable barbeay
equipment. Reasonable. Call ID
9

SERVEL
refrigerators. Make offer. Call
ID 3-2914.
DELUXE
AUTOMATIC
WASHER
AND
DRYER,
PERFECT
CONDITION,
MOVING, MUST SELL, BEST OFFER. TELEPHONE ID 2-7883.
1959 MODEL
30 inch Kenmore gas range,
pee one 2 months, reasonable. Telephone

PORTABLE sewing machine, electric, French
sofa,
good
used
girls clothing,
size 2
to 12. 1557 Green
y, Highland Park,

GOODS

FOR SALE

SINGLE
maple bed, spring and like new
mattress, $35; round Formica dinette table with 4 chairs, $40; white leatherette
sofa, good condition, $50. WI 5-0550.
SUrA,
large luxurious, all down;
original
cost $900;
perfect
condition;
must
sell
immediately $135. WI 5-0965.
TRAMPOLINE, Nissen, complete, 8 months
old; 12 ft. x 7 ft., cost $363, sacrifice for
$200; garden tractor with plow and 42
in. snow blade, chains $125; redwood furniture, portable ice chest. WI 5-3724.
DEEP fryer; waffle iron; new lazy Susans;
glassware, cookware; vacuum cleaner, new
automatic coffee pot; like new washing
machine, miscellaneous. CE 4-3792.
HOUSEHOLD
furniture and miscellaneous
for sale, SATurday, May 13, at 1028 Osterman Ave. in Deerfield.
36 INCH, Kenmore gas stove with griddle
section, see through door, $30. Call WI
5-3692.
BEAUTIFUL large walnut dresser with mirror; 2 matching modern upholstered lounge
chairs; 3 piece modern Ebony bedroom
set; table lamp; reasonable. CE 4-2241.
NEWLY
upholstered
chair;
love
seat,
chrome dinette set, baby buggy and stroller. Telephone ID 2-3227.
x
TYPEWRITER,
torchierre. bookcase,
end
cabinet, antique lamp with stand. Tele-

These properties and furnishings, paintings
and bric-a-brac comprises a very nice selection and we suggest you attend our forthcoming auction and preview.

the day and also baby sitting evenings.
Lake Forest only. Call~CE 4-2376,
MAN wants work as handyman; putting
up
screens, washing windows, painting,
Al
work. etc. Call CE 4-1747.
HiGH
school
graduates
desire
work
as
mother’s helpers for the summer.
Coatact
Mrs.
Eskil
Bostrum,
Ishpeming,
Michigan, HU 6-6446 after 6 p.m.
RELIABLE
young woman would like five
days, stay or go. Phone CHerry 4-1948.
I DO cleaning, help with children, references,
every other Wednesday; Braeside-Ravinia.
__ATlantic 5-7299.
LICENSED
practical
nurse,
doctor’s
references,
12 years experience,
any case,
ey or go. Pleasant personality. HU
3-

Experienced,

residence

Whitehead,

Sale day: Tues. evening,

CAMP

Experi-

C.

HOUSEHOLD

SALE

B. J. Waldman

“The Right Girl In Every Home”
413 Linden Ave., Wilmette

30

DE 6-8314

B.

FOR

G. W. Emmert
R. L. Mandel

Lincoln

- Reasonable Service Charges
By Day or Month

-

DAY WORKERS
CARE—REFS.—EXP.

CLOTHING

Cleaning

GOODS

PUBLIC
Furnishing

ALPINE 1-5511
SAPPHIRE DOMESTIC SERVICE

Windows

Yard Cleaning
General Spring

HOUSEHOLD

NO FEE

Forester.

washed
and Jawn maintained,
AWINDOWS
good references. DExter 6-0788.

ETERSON’S

LIVE IN
HSWK.—CHILD

May

are

OKING and general housework, current
Wages, references required. Phone CE 4-

permanent

NEED HELP?

home

Local
re erences required.
Please Phone
CE
4-0952
ENERAL maid; references; experience unnecessary;}
plainest cooking;
ight house_work; first floor only; no laundry; own
room
and bath; 2 adults; 2 school age
oe.
Telephone
Mrs.
Blackwell, CE

WANTED—DOMESTIC

phone

ID

3-0452.

WESTINGHOUSE washer - dryer combination, about 4 years old, needs some repair,
$50. Call WI 5-3173.
RIDING
mower, 21 inch, used very little;
excellent condition, $50. Call CE 4-2617.
TAPPEN automatic 40 inch gas stove, original cost $400, used 1 year, like new, sac_ rifice. Call CE 4-9085.
HENREDON
dining
room
set, including
buffet with china deck in excellent condi__tion. ID 2-8696.
IMPORTED
cut crystal light fixture, value
$75, sacrifice $25; 2 chrome upholstered
chairs, $4 each. ID 2-9250.
good
3 PIECE
bedroom
set, mahogany,
condition, fairly priced. ID 2-4553.
CHAISE
longue,
turquoise,
newly
upholstered, adaptable for living or bedroom.
Reasonable. ID 2-3354.
FEDDERS~
dehumidifier,
Universal
gas
stove, large Admiral console T.V., may be
seen
operating;
small
mahogany
coffee
table with glass top, all good condition
and very reascnable. ID 2-0118.
KNABE 5 ft. 8 in. mahogany grand piano,
$650; Melvin Wolf custom beige 100 inch
sofa, cost $900, will sacrifice; Baker mahogany leather top desk, cost $375, best
offer; Kenmore automatic washer; electric
roaster with timer, $10. ID 3-0471.
PIANO, Sterling, upright, $60; wing chair,
$10; baby buggy. $5; car seat and toilet
seat. Call ID 2-0560.
PING
PONG
table; piano;
studio couch;
green embossed rug; executive desk and
swivel chair; post lantern. ID 2-5643.
GARAGE
SALE
|
:
Moving, must sell. Buggy; bathinette; crib;
feeding
table;
porch
furniture;
curtains;
white picket fencing; trunk; door; lots of
miscellaneous
bargains.
457
Pleasant.
ID
2-5626
SINGER sewing machine in excellent condition, with
attachments.
Walnut
console
cabinet. Reasonable. WI 5-1904.
FRIGIDAIRE
Imperial range, GE electric
dryer; Storkline baby carriage; all in excellent working condition. WI 5-1308.
PUTTING
our goods in storage; Electric
power
mower;
ladders;
rugs;
dining
chairs; desk; glider; dehumidifier; washing machine; 2 studio bed covers; miscellaneous items; reasonable. Call WI 5-1468.
UNIVERSAL
gas range
for sale, cheap,
cheap. WI 5-2311.
1953 GENERAL ELECTRIC range; 4 burners and oven. Call WI 5-1505.
GE 20 INCH window fan, 3 speeds, electrically reversible; excellent condition. WI 5SOFA
in good condition, reasonable. Cail
mornings or after 5 p.m. WI 5-2571.
GE
electric range, 40 in. with grill and
meat thermometer, like new $100. WI 52075.
ie
6 YEAR crib, birch, $10; high chair, birch,
$4; 10 inch tricycle, $4; all in good condition. WI 5-2354.
DECORATOR
lamps; Italian wrought iron
tea cart;
step
table;
bookcase;
record
cabinet; new double Hollywood bed; crystal glasses; china; large electric roaster;
bean pot; deep fat frier; Osterizer; animal
clipper; iron gate; and antique artwares.
Call WI 5-3699.
ANTIQUE
shutters plus 4 drawer
chest.
Breakfast
table;
dome
clock;
Bissell;
stroller;
chafing
dish;
radio;
ladders;
planters; knick-knacks. 310 Woodland Rd.,
Lake Bluff, 9 to 5.
WROUGHT
iron table, 4 chairs; 27 in.
TV,
new
picture tube;
modern
console
4-speed record player, 2 speakers; 4 ft.
black and gold driftwood lamp; 2 chaise
lounges, new cushions. Call CE 4-0043.
G.E. AUTOMATIC
washer and dryer set,
like new; Philco 9 foot refrigerator, new
condition; chests of drawers;
good dinette
set;
occasional
chairs;
bassinette;
Waring blender; pull lamp; matching chair
and couch, cheap;
Westinghouse
40 in.
electric stove;
gas space heater:
accordion and miscellaneous. Hales, 1920. Sheridan Road. North Chicago, DE 6-2353.
NEW
Hoover vacuum
cleaners as low as
$49.95; 24 in. TV, reconditioned, $69.95;
new refrigerators and freezers as low as
$149.95; wholesale prices; our 25th year
in Lake
Forest.
We
give S&amp;H
Green
Stamps. Freeman’s
TV
and Music,
648
Western, Lake Forest.
ELECTROLUX sales and service represent
ative in vour locality! Bob LeClair, telephone ID 2-6367.
BEAUTIFUL
pickled
pine
credenza,
top
drawer is a leather lined desk. Call ID 27666 after 6 p.m.
MISCELLANEOUS
D

FOR

SAL.F

BRADLEY 5 HP tractor, 3 gang mower,
i
ai sulky, $295. Evenings call ID

SPECIAL OFFER! H. H. Scott 99-D Amplifier. $40; Garrard Record Changer $35 (includes stereo cartridge); set Stan White
speakers in ebony cabinet, $50; Hanovia
portable health lamp, $35. ID 2-3582.

MISCELLANEOUS

PLANTS

FOR

FOR

YOUR

SALE

GARDEN

Giant Pansies and Violas in flats
and boxes.
Geraniums,
Impatiens,
Tuberous
Begonias and Lantanas.
Flats of Annuals: Hybrid Petunias.
double Petunias, Snapdragons in
separate colors and mixed, carnations, marigolds, asters, verbena,

ageratum,

coleus,

many others.
table plants.

dwarf

Tomato

dahlias,

and

Vege-

Hardy Chrysanthemums and Cushion Mums, Phlox, Daylilies, Veronicas and many other choice
perennials ready for your selection.
Ground Cover plants; Bowle’s Vinca, Pachysandra,
Euonymus
Vegetus, E. Coloratus, E. Kewensis, Baltic Ivy and Ajuga.
We

grow
always

our own plants; they
fresh and healthy.

Drive

to

OMAN’S

are

FLOWER

FARM, located on Rt. 83, 1% mile
south of Rt. 22, near Long Grove.
Open week days and Sundays 8

A.M. to 8 P.M.

HOME
MODERNIZATION
SERVICE
SUMMER PORCHES
This
with

summer enjoy outdoor
indoor convenience.

living

A screen enclosed porch on your
patio is the answer. Completely installed and finished for as little as.

$15.95 Per Month
FREE ESTIMATES

Northbrook Lumber
Company
(Skokie

Northbrook,

III.

&amp;

Dundee

Rds.)

CR

2-3000

RENT EVERYTHING FOR THE HOME
FROM YOUR ASSOCIATED STORE
Portable TV Sets
Foldaway Beds
High Chairs
Reducing Machines.
Hospital Beds
Heavy Duty Vacuums.
Floor Waxers
Power Tools
Wall Paper Equip.
Moving Equipment
Wheel Chairs
Rug Scrubbers
Floor Machines
Ladders
WE DELIVER

ASSOCIATED
RENT-ALLS
651

Roger

Williams,
IDlewood

MOTHER’S
See our
antique
choice selection of
furniture,

Highland

Park

2-6333

DAY

GIFTS

jewelry
collection
and
old china, glass, silver,

LINDWALLS
808 Oak Street

HI 6-0145

Winnetka

(4% Block West of Green Bay

WOOD
All
Free

estimates,

FENCING
Types
competitive

REMODELING

prices

and

BUILDING
WI

CONTRACTORS

5-4145

ID

2-3383

ROGERS
NURSERY
&amp; GARDEN
MART
ROUTES 176 &amp; 42A, KNOLLWOOD
LAKE BLUFF—CE 4-1878
Roses
Clematis
Pansies
Geraniums
All Quality Stock
24 INCH rotary riding mower; Kenmore gas
fired
garbage
incinerator;
folding
baby
__ playpen, all like new, WI 5-3617.
GUTTERS
cleaned and painted. Free esti__mates. Call CRestwood 2-6237.
GO CART, excellent running condition, $120
value when new, sell for $65. Call CEdar
4-3128.

HALLICRAFTERS
S-107
teur short wave receiver;

world-wide /amaalmost new, per-

fect condition. Bargain. Call ID 3-0819. —

�MISCELLANEOUS

FOR

SALE

MUSICAL

INSTRUMENTS

NORTH

FENCES

FOR

SELECT—WE
ERECT”
WOOD
OR
WIRE
STANDARD
OR CUSTOM
CABANAS - PATIOS
GARDEN
UTILITY
BUILDINGS
For Free Estimates Call
Mike
Estate Fencing
CE 41283

OF QUALITY

Organs — Pianos
ORGAN TRADE-INS JUST LIKE NEW
Lowrey Organ 2 full 44 note manuals, 13
note pedal board, percussion effects in amazing variety, only $675.

Aarnos &amp; Sorensen
Homes Our Specialty
Remodeling - Finishing
ONtario 2-6812

Lowrey Brentwood Organ, many percussion
voices including pre-sets, reverberating echo
chamber tage
er
keyboard
and pedal
sustain. Only $99

POWER
LAWN
ROLLING-FERTILIZING
Let us take the humps out. Save your back.
Jim Beinlich, VErnon 5-1195.
EVERGREENS for sale, yews only, dig your
own and save, $2 to "$4 each. ID 2-2412.
18 FOOT portable swimming pool including
ere | system, good condition. Call ID 3-

SPECIAL PURCHASE OFFER
Brand new Cable spinet pianos
Also Cable Consoles

L955
1958

Lowrey

AUTHORIZED
DEALER
MASON
&amp; HAMLIN,
KNABE,
CABLE,
AND KIMBALL PIANOS—LOWREY
OR:

25

LAWNMOWER,
18 inch reel type, self-propelled,
Briggs- Stratton
engine,
excellent
condition, $50. WI 5-2953.
EXPERT on cement
er sidewalks, steps,
garage floors, etc. L. Gulbrandsen. Phone
WI 5-4458.
POLAROID camera, model 150, with flash,
wink light, and carrying case, 6 months
old. Good condition. Call WI 5-4432.
HAY
RACK
Sleigh rental, party facilities. Happ’s Holtow, CR 2-3131.
REPLACE
your worn out sink tops with
sparkling Formica or Ceramic tile. Also
cabinets,
sinks,
wall
and
floor
tiling.
25 years on North Shore. Free estimates.
Snazelle, CE 4-3237.
ALUMINUM
windows, doors, siding, awnings and
screen
houses;
special
Spring

CE 41750.

COINS For Collectors—Buy and Sell. Larson’s Store, 1783 St. Johns Ave., Highland Park. Saturday and Sunday only.
DRAPERIES, slipcovers, interior design consultation; alterations, Prenakine, WI 5
5719, if no answer WI 5-1514
ROSEBUSHES
GALORE!
Everblooming Hybrid, Tea, Florabunda and
GrandiFlora.
Priced from 40 to 60 cents
each.
Call
ID
2-7837
or write
Century
House, P.O. Box 14, Highland Park, Il.
Top Soils
Manures
Gravel Drives
Tractor Work
Lawn Rolling
Tree Removal
Fill Dirt
Wrecking
JIM BEINLICH
TRUCKING—VE
5- 1198
TRANSMISSION for sale. 4 speed plus shift
rng
still in car. Price $220 firm. ID

ALPINE Current hedge plants, 18 inch,
cents each. Telephone CHerry 4-0788.

RUMMAGE
OUR

BIGGEST

RUMMAGE

Sat.

Of Highland
1795

St.

50

STYLES. BONUS FOR STEINWAYS A}
OTHER
GOOD
MAKES. CALL LO
BEACH
1- “ee
EVENINGS
ROGERS
PARK. 1-4400

FURNITURE.
ANTIQUES
ETC,
Se 1-5092, EVENINGS ROGERS

CALL
PARK

SUTBOOR
Playhouse
in good
condition.
Call or write to Robert Stensland, 1028
Lake Street, Oak Park, VIllage 8-4852.
WANTED to buy. metronome in good condition.
Preferably
Seth
Thomas.
Please
call ID 2-7846.

eet

TO BE GIVEN

AWAY___—_|

FREE rag dolls or cash for your old nylons, discarded dolls, broken parts needed
to stock ‘“‘surgery’’ of doll hospital opening
soon. WI 5-0685

~

«LOST
&amp; FOUND |

LOST:
pet
- sometimes
- Telephone

crow;
frayed
wing
feathers;
answers to name
of Heckle.
CE 4-0855.

Thursday, May 11, 1961

Bs mn ay SS

1959

Ford,
H

Make

offer. DExter 6-2353.
KIMBALL
baby grand piano, good condition, $450. Call CE 4-4364, evenings.

C&amp;S

MOTOR
FORD

780 N. WESTERN

1959

Retail

We

SALES

On

Your

1959
1957
1959
1958
1958

1959
1958

at

Service

Return

Home

IMPORTS

1958
1957
1957

1956

C&amp;S

MOTOR
FORD

780 N. WESTERN
OPEN
CE

AVE.

LAKE
till

Top

USED

Allowances
New
Open

FOREST

On

4-0369

The

Buick
Until

Breen—ID

Holmes
1909

St.

4-5770

2-8640

Motor Co.

Johns

Highland

Park

1960 THUNDERBIRD
hard top, 1 owner
low mileage. Jet black with red interior,
must see to appreciate. Call ID 2-6300.

TWINS,

almost

identical,

IN COMFORT

1955

Plymouth V-8 convert. Beautiful
Fire
Engine
red,
auto.,
radio,
heater, pow. steer., W/W
tires,
like new. 4000 mile or 90 day
guaranty on engine. Full price .. .-$1595
DeSoto 4 dr. H.T. Beautiful Snow
White, auto., radio, heater, pow.
steer; spare tire never used. Full
WOBROBE: Ch ccd
iasca ea icone tenn
y ns ig dr. sed. Here is the second car ” of the year. Nice clean
car. Full price
Ford V8, 4 dr. H.T. Powder Blue,
auto., radio, heater, W/W
tires,
pow. steer. Full price
$ 695
Pontiac Safari station wgn, Grn./
wht., auto., radio, heater. This is
Pontiac’ Ss luxury station wgn. Full
price
$ 495

LAKE

MOTORS

Authorized
Chrysler Corp.
Dealer
First Street
Highland Park, Il.
Hours—Weekdays 9-9
Sat. 9-6
Sun. 10-4

9

CASH FOR YOUR CAR
ANY MAKE OR MODEL
Call Mr.

SALES

Lake Forest
evenings, Sundays

1766

WENBAN BUICK
589 N. Oakwood
Forest
CE

wake

1956

CARS

Made

Evenings

1957

8
CE

NEED

1959

1957

EVENINGS

Open

For your shopping convenience, 50 choice
used cars available for your inspection in
our INDOOR SHOWROOM.
SOME SAMPLE BARGAINS.

SALES

4-0720

WE

SHOP

MOTOR
Ave.

1952

ang 1954

Packards, both $150. WI 5-5716.
1959
THUNDERBIRD
convertible,
beauty, local driven, very low
mint condition. Call ID 2-6300.

“black
ec,

in., 20 in. or 24 in. Many
—completely
new.

Schwinns

re-built—some

&amp; HOBBY
at Sheriaan

like

SHOP
ID

2-1369

&amp;

Used

MG MAGNETTE
4 door sedan, 1958, top
shape. Wood-leather interior, bucket seats.
Best offer. ID 2-3809 or MI 2-2779 after
6. See at Robert’s Gulf Station, County
Line and Lincolnwood.
1953 FORD 9 passenger station wagon; V-8,
automatic
transmission, radio and _ heater, $225. CE 4-4324.
1956 Studebaker Power Hawk, coral, 4 passenger coupe; good condition, $400. Call
WI 5-1492 after 6 p.m.
STATION
wagon,
1958,
Ford
Country
Squire. T-Bird engine, excellent condition,
snow tires, $1195. WI 5-5198.
1950 DESOTO, good motor, $65. WI 5-4399.
TRIUMPH, TR-3, 1958 red sports car, good
condition;
3 tops;
many
extras,
$1395.
BAldwin 3-4627.
1953 CHEVROLET, runs fair, bad cylinder,
needs fixing, $75. ID 2-4984, 1073 Princeton Avenue, Highland Park.
FOR sale by owner, 1960 Ford convertibie,
light blue with white top, perfect condition,
ideal for graduation gift, $2175. Call 1D
2-2723.

HPHS Girls’ Club
Scholarships Are
Awarded
the

Highland

Girls’

Park

High

i:

Da

Club.

The five are Joyce Moeller, Vir- 4
ginia Mordini, Judith Siffert, Ann —
Winkley and Kathleen Haugh.
Announcement
of the
winners
was made during the Club assembly in the High School auditorium.
Ann Shapiro, a junior, was in-— Ss,
troduced as the high magazine sell- ees

er for the annual magazine drive. d
This is the second year that Ann i
has

won

the

Nominees

honor.

for

next

year’s

boat

were
announced
as
Rona
president; Betsy Dawe and

chee oe
Maren

Olson,

Amid

ei,

vice-president;

Vivian

Banish

Mary

and

Kathy

:

Me-

|

Guire, secretary; Beth Derby, Judy
Kollar and Penny Weisbard, treasurer.
Other
Nelson,
Stiglitz,

_
:

candidates
are
J onleeBarb
Roessler
and parte
social
chairman;

Aten, Gerry Heyman
emacher,

publicity

and Gail Radchairman.

Golden Wedding

Bikes

Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Zahnle, 1388 |
Ridge Rd., who were married in
Highland

Park

50

years

ago,

are

inviting friends to an open house at
their home

Saturday,

May

20, their

4

“golden date,’ from 2 p.m. through-

PETS

out the

KENNELS

4085 DUNDEE RD.
NORTHBROOK
CRESTWOOD
2-2865
BOARDING
GROOMING
FRAINING
BATHING
3 Miles west of Waukegan Road
On Dundee Road
wines

URSAFELL
KENNELS
BOARDING AND TRIMMING
Expert grooming, all breeds, individual runs.
country kennel. Telephone WI 5-5035.
SMALL
entirely new boarding
kennel has
space for well cared for
dogs. Woman
owner does all work herself. Inspection
invited. zene Long Grove. Mrs. Huck, LEhigh 7-009
SEAUTIFUL
Bedlington
terrier
puppies,
AKC
registered,
champion
stock,
look
like lambs, don’t shed ALpine 1-6134.
4 CUTE black and white kittens, free, mother a Siamese. Phone
ID 3-0487. 1192 St.
Johns, Highland Park.
WANTED,
standard
size
French
+
aan
black or brewn female. WI 5-09
SCHNAUZERS miniature pups, AKC, champion sired, top quality, fine disposition,
home raised, no shedding. EM 2-1168.
PEKINESE
pups,
AKC,
red
with
black
markings. excellent blood line. Call Zion
TRinity 2-3149 after 6. Saturday 9 to 9.
PEDIGREED Siamese kittens; fancy guinea
pigs;
fancy
mice;
spring
peeper
frogs.
Phone CE 4-0855 after 4 p.m.
BOXER, 6 months old, male, brindle color,
AKC ‘registered. Telephone ID 3-0816.
TOY
poodle, male, cream, 1 year; housebroken; wonderful disposition, loves children; all shots. WI 5-5035.
PERSIAN
kittens, pedigreed, Round Lake.
KImball 6-2815.
CHURCH
sale will welcome kittens, bunnies, puppies,
pets unlimited;
May
20
Please contact EMpire 2-2435.
BEAGLE, female, 7 weeks; pedigree, AKC
registered, shots. Rehm, EMpire 2-3066.
BEAUTIFUL, healthy red male Dachshund,
9 months old, AKC, champion stock, loves
children. ID "2-881
817.
Poodles, silver and black, French miniatures,
AKC 1
spagdeas home raised, make offer,
ID 3-211
SODDTED
cuddly Poodle dogs, 6 weeks,
$25. Telephone ID 2-4546.
AKC
GERMAN
Shepherds. Championship
blood lines. 7 weeks. Beautifully marked.
Reasonable. EMpire 2-1200.
PUPPIES,
mixed breed, 8 weeks, healthy,
wormed, inoculated, home care, donation
Kays Animal Shelter, WI 5-2426.

CUSTOM COLORING
WINDOW
SHADES
PAINTS
GLASS
WALLPAPER
SHUTTERS

BREAKWELL’S
ID

2-1418

—4

afternoon.

They will be honored in a golden 4
wedding mass that morning at 11
a.m. in Holy Cross church, Deer- |

field.

ee

They were married in the for©
mer St. Mary’s Catholic church in —
Highland Park May 20, 1911, by —a
Father O’Neill.
Mr. Zahnle, the son of Matthia
Zahnle, a pioneer settler, was born
—
in the family home on Ridge Rd. ia
Mrs. Zahnle, who came to Highland
Park 55 years ago as a young girl
is the former Louise Wonio, daugh- —
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Wonio.
—

Crash at Richfield
Anthony
Marcuccilli
of
589
Glenview Ave. was charged with
negligent driving and driving while
|
his license was revoked, after a —
rear-end crash with Phyllis Remil- _
lard, USAG
5012 Ft. Sheridan, —
We
Sunday evening on Deerfield Rd.
er

Highland
stopped for
watching
a

Park
police
say
traffic, while he
tow truck come

she |. “i
was
que

of Richfield Rd.

?

Nab Crash Driver
Edward

Guy

Sheridan,

has

of

Bldg.

been

scene

82,

charged
of

an

the

driving
plates,

without a license or
and making a left

accident,

1961
turn

from the wrong lane.
Highland
Park
police
say
crashed
into
the
side
of a

driven

Villa

on

by

Sunday

fender
and

David

Skokie

evening,

off;

drove

Irvin

at Old

then

of

Mill

ripping

made

Ft.

with —

leaving

ey
car

Lake ~

Rd. _

Irvin’:

a U-turn

away.

Cable Gone
Some

Highwood

to Five

Five girls have been named re|
cipients of this year’s scholarship —
awards of $500 each, presented by — qi

Zahnles Celebrate

SHOP

EBENHOLZ
It

German Factory Trained
Mechanics To Service Your Car

KNAUZ

BICYCLES
BIKES—Used
and
Reconditioned.
Good selection of Boys or Girls 16

the

European

300 SL Coupe Roadster eeereccecscooel
220 S Sedan
Volvo Sedans, 2 cars, ea.
VW
Convertible
Volvo Sedan

1060 Western
CE 4-2800

i

Ranger Bicycles
Guaranteed during your ownership
Free Pickup &amp; Delivery
1844 First St.
ID 2-1750

1959
mission, Br
heater, tick, A
steal at only
Ford Country Sedan, 8 cylinder
engine, cruisomatic transmission,
radio, heater, gray in color. ..........
Ford Country Sedan, 8 cylinder
engine, cruisomatic transmission,
radio, heater, white. One owner. $1145
Bors F-100 pick-up, 6 cyl., 8 foot
be
Buick
Special
fe 111296
tN Se SeISaVR eae So PR 2 coed et
Ford Fairlane 500, 2 door sedan,
8
cylinder
engine,
Fordomatic
transmission, radio, heater, gray
in color. This car must be seen
to De abpreciated so. ia
$ 850
Ford Fairlane, 2 door hard top,
cylinder
engine,
Fordomatic
transmission, radio, heater,
blue and white. Sharp! 2.000.000... $ 595
Buick Century, 4 door Riviera,
automatic
transmission,
power
brakes, power steering, blue and
white. Only

BICYCLES

New

FOREST

95

&amp; MOTORCYCLES

BIKE

Price...

will

MOTOR TRUCKS

“BIG WHEEL”

Mercedes-Benz

Advantageous

§SALE

1957 TRUCK, % ton Dodge with side boxes,
ead miles, excellent condition. Call 1D

CYCLE

We Will Arrange
European Delivery of
Your

FOR

1955 PONTIAC
station wagon; at Nolan’s
Service Station, Bank Lane; $350.
1949 CHRYSLER
Runs well, good battery, radio, many new
parts, $10 or best offer. ID 2-5054.
1956 BUICK Special, hard top, white, power
drive; original owner;
30,000 miles, immaculate; $850. WI 5-3016.
1960 RED Corvair 2 door, 700 series; automatic transmission, radio, heater, whitewall tires; just turned 3000 miles; must
sell; price is $1550 or best offer. Call CE
4-5683 evenings or Sunday.
1961 TR-3 ROADSTER, must sell. Call ID
2-8461.
MGA
1958 CONVERTIBLE, newly repainted white, like new tonneau and muffler,
top very good, grill guard and luggage
rack, heater. black interior, very sharp.
At Shore Line Shell Station, Lake Forest, or call MIchigan 2-3297.
1958 RAMBLER
American,
radio, heater
low
mileage,
excellent condition,
ideal
economy oar. ID 2-5737 or 392-3068.
1959 RAMBLER 4 door, fine ied
car,
Economy plus. Call ID 2-6300

486 Central

Lake Forest

Then

SPRING CLEARANCE
D.K.W. 4 door sedan, radio, heater, black in color. Sharp! ht ini’
Peugeot;
4 door
sedan;
radio;
a
sun roof, gray in color.
Only

1960

Co.

of

SALE

LAKE

345

dr., auto. R &amp;
Patek eis iin WES it 1? 15:

USED

AVE.

295
ees
S205

Mercedes-Benz

2-2510

120 bass, never used.

FOR

03S

59
BO
165
BS }5)

AUTHORIZED
FACTORY
FORD DEALER
1909 St. Johns
Highland
Park
Call
Used
Car Dept.—ID
2-8640
Open
8 A.M.
to 9 P.M.
Daily

ID

AUTOMOBILES

4

isla ee

Park

Ave.

ACCORDION,

PIANOS wanted: bonus prices for Steinway
and Baldwin.
VErnon
5-1640 eves. and
Sunday. AMbassador 2-2023 days.

WANTEDTO BUY
CHICAGO ART GALLERIES WILL PAY
CASH FOR ORIENTAL RUGS, FRENCH

1954: Ford Victoria:

GRANDS,
spinets
from
$225;
player
pianos,
$195. Admiral
Music
Company,
2659 Milwaukee, Chicago. HU 9-5700.

SALE!

“MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS WANTED
CHICAGO ART GALLERIES WILL PAY
CASH
FOR
PIAANOS, ALL MAKES,

Johns

Chevrolet, 2 dr.
&amp;
Forder. 675 i
Pontiac, 2 dr. hardtop _.$
‘Chrysler, @ door 0.” be
Oldsmobile
Holiday,
2
CU Si te ag Ge
ea Bak ee $
‘Pord, 4 door 2 ee Se
\Lleyd; 2: door’...

MOVING
SALE
Must dispose of 90 new and used pianos.
New, spinets, $8 Mote” 2..o-siccescpestc from $395
Used spinets and consoles ............ from $295
TS: 80d Bane DIANOS auc
from $295
Weed player Virgie
iid. acc from $195
Practice uprights
from $ 79
See the new Hardman Duo Player pianos.
Mon.-Thurs.
9-9, Sunday
11-5
FIELDS PIANO CO.
2921 W. Touhy Chicago AMbassador 2-2023

1956

French
Roo
— Treasure
m
Trove — Bakery
Goods, Plants . . . Snacks served.
Thursday, May 25th. 7 A. M. to 9 P.M.
Friday, May 26th. 9 A.M. to 1 P.M.
To be held at Woman’s Club of Wilmette.
Wilmette
930 Greenleaf
(Near bus, ‘L’ and Rail transportation)
You’ve liked our sales before
AGAIN!
COME

9-5

LOWREY
Organ Studios

65

SALE

Or-

wn
_
wn
o~
wm

FEET
of screened porch panels 8 ft.
tall, including door; heavy eRe canvas 15x8. Phone evenings, ID 2-2023
25 INCH rotary mower, used on season, excellent condition, $25. WI 5-2295.
EXPERT
Ceramic Tiling. Bathroom
walls
repaired, reasonable prices. Free estimates.
Snazelle Kitchens, CE 4-3237.
OLDS slide trombone, very good condition,
$135; Singer electric table model sewing
machine
$25..
After
4:30°
ID
2-5000,
Ext.4154.
CHILD’S double swing-glider set, good condition. Telephone ID 2-6618.
LAWN-BOY power mower, good condition.
Call CE 4-2758, after six.
e
Outboard motor, 5 H.P. late model Bucaneer, like new, gear shift, quietized, reasonable. ID 2-8798.
GIRL’S 24 inch Schwinn bike, good condition; 18 inch Jacobsen power reel mower,
__nheeds some repair, reasonable. ID 2-7198.
WHEEL
4
trailer, 5x14 foot bed; 2 pairs
36 foot extension ladders, excellent conbak
builders scaffold brackets. WI 5-

fruitwood

AUTOMOBILES

SALE

LOW COST SPECIALS
INVENTORY CLEARANCE
1947
$950
1954
1952
1955

Beautiful Provincial
gan just $795.

FOR

HIGHLAND PARK
USED CAR
HEADQUARTERS

SHORE’S

Largest Dealer

“YOU

prices. Cal] CoAlume,

AUTOMOBILES

SALE

a

one stole 525 feet of ian

electrical

welding

cable

_

Frida Fi

:

Sherwood School, 1900 Stratford
Rd., Highland Park police were ~
told by Charles O’Malley, foreman |

of a Mahoney Plumbing &amp; Heating a
crew

from

Chicago.

,

A truck would have been needed
to

carry

it

away.

At

$1.50

a foot,

1
|

the loss totals $787.50. Four hun- |
dred feet of it was Mahoney’s; the |
other 125 was borrowed from an- —
other contractor to make the long” |
loop around

the building.

Page H 69—D

61 —

�Dear Residents of School District 113:
As graduation
the Senior Class

High
Pe
the

ccany evening’s
Highland
Park

Commerce

meeting
Chamber

of
of

with representatives of

new Northwestern station building
t Central Ave. Talk behind closed
been
going
on _ for

the station would

sure

‘be moved one block south, so that
stores

and

where

the

offices

could

station

be

is now.

North

Councilman Fred Gieser replied
at the station property is for
sale to anyone with $325,000, and
the city hasn’t got it. He has heard
rumors of parking for 500 cars on
the roof of the new building, but
John

out;

and

that

the

total

cost

of the

building and land would be $2,250000.
James
Garnett asked if there
wasn’t a three-year moratorium on

the

plans.

Councilman

F Hutchinson
oad

replied

William

that

has only granted

the

rail-

the city first

refusal rights of purchase.
Fred Bishop said the project is
‘ not three years off—he overheard
| two strangers talking about it in
hicago as if it was going through
‘ “The

Jones

&amp;

Duncan

plan

was

‘last seen in the possession of Dr.
harles

dent.

Schelhas,

Chamber

presi-

He was at a dental associa-

tion convention in Peoria the night
of the meeting, and was not ex-

pected back until tonight.
Norman

Hirsch

-Schelhas’

for

450

hole

rty.

floor

block

on

and

building

between

Johns

three

his

decks,

of offices

tracks,

The

in

plan calls for parking

cars

railroad

presided

First

above

stores
would

the

along
fill

St.

a

and

the

St.

Ave. as far south as Laurel

‘Speculators in usable railroad
eal estate are rumored to be very
terested.
Most of the Chamber meeting
was

taken

up

by

discussion

of

po-

lice parking and traffic enforcement, although merchants generally agreed that present enforcement
is

well

planned

and

carried

out.

_ Several businessmen asked for
signs directing shoppers to free
lots, and for all members to pro-

mote use of the Park and Shop lot.
Codification of city ordinances, especially
quested.

traffic

rules,

were

re-

City Manager Ralph Snyder left
arly for another appointment, aftr outlining city plans for more

rking
and

lots,

street

stoplights

improvements,

on

Central

and

Laurel Aves.

: 'Werthamer Club

and Mrs. Ben

Suburban

Werthamer
ts

annual

ion

of

circle

of

Service

club will hold

luncheon

officers

and _ installa-

Wednesday,
. in

the

home

May
of

N.
Deerfield Rd., Deerfield.
_ Mrs. Sigmund
Mannheimer
of
Glencoe will be installed as the

|

Mortimer

Reese
62

Hospital;

Highland

Park

of the speakers

at the

Severin Hotel as the representative
of the
tion.

students

the

chance

to

hold a Bake Sale uptown.

Illinois

State

Bar

Associa-

School,

members,
and

the

All school

school

board

administrators

interested

public

are

in-

vited.
Commission

Cladaugh
powerful

mission
answer

chairman

of

Problems

Almost

after

his

the
Com-

talk.

all of Lake

districts

are

secretary

113,

Honors Awarded by
University of Mich.

Dr. Donald Hammerman, assistant director
of the Lorado
Taft
Field
Campus,
Northern
Illinois

Ave.,

also

a

sophomore

in

the

in

the

liberal

Schover,

Mrs.

Green
arts.

Donald

Bay

Vandals

arts

daughter

S.

school;
of

Schover,

Rd., freshman

Mr.

26

in liberal

Reported

Albert
Dolin
of
68
Lakeview
Ter., new owner of an old house at
1734 McGovern St., told Highland

Park
and

police
other

and

dresser

it also

he found light bulbs
glass broken
inside,
drawers

contributes

handicapped
and

cure

ransacked.
to

the

program

children

and

of

fibrosis.

cystic

re-

for

to

High

secretary-

Health.

The

field

provides

ship

of mental

active

in

health

volunteer

programs

to

and

leader-

benefit

the

mentally ill.
Willard
Gidwitz,
405
Sheridan
Rd., general chairman of the 1961
mental health campaign, announced

in the Society has

increased.

H.P. Teachers Hear

First Class Girl Scouts Mary Ellen
Brown, Jane DeRosia, Denise Hart,

Dr. Hammerman

Elaine
Kuchling
and
Ruth
Ann
Morrison of Troop 130 Friday, May
12, at 8:15 p.m. following
the
Novena in the Immaculate Conception church. Sister Scouts from St.
James and their own parish have
been invited.

Park

school

system

May

9.

This
Edgewood

School

Host

The in-service teachers meeting
was held at Edgewood
School at
10:15 am.
Dr. Hammerman spoke
on “Extending the Classroom into
the Out-of-Doors to Facilitate and
Enrich Learning.”
An assistant
professor of outdoor education, he
received
his doctorate
from
The
Pennsylvania State University. He

is a native of Boston, Mass.

Italian Women
Benefit Dance

Set

Mrs. John Baldi, chairman of the
ways and meanscommittee, announces that there will be a special
benefit dance, given by the Italian
Women’s
Prosperity
Club
at the
Community
Center
on Saturday,
May 27. To assist her Mrs. Baldi
has appointed Mrs. Paul Zenzola,
Tickets; Mrs. Elio Grandi, Raffle;
Mrs. John Cervi, Decorations; Mrs.
Bruno Bertucci,
Awards Booth;
Mrs. Arthur Amidei, Publicity and
Mrs. Aug. Abbou, Refreshments.

The public:is invited to attend.

award

Two

Years’

marks

the

has

been

Work
first

made

In
order
scholarships

to
for

raise
funds
for
deserving
mem-

bers, the
Highland Park High
School senior class.-is holding. a.
work

day

on

May

20.

Local

resi-

dents may have a number of services performed by seniors on that
day for the reasonable fee of $1.00
hour.

Members

of the commu-

nity who would like some of “those

The Rev. Nicholas Carsello will
present Marian
award medals to

University, De Kalb, addressed the
approximately 150 teachers in the

"We Want To Help—
Won't You Help Us?’

per

First Marian Award
Medals to Be Given

treasurer.

Highland

School

$200,000

Mental

steadily

District

liberal arts school; Roger P. Pascal,
son of Mr.
and Mrs. Samuel
A.
Pascal, 145 Indian Tree Dr., a jun-

sociation

of

Tucker,

day, May 12, in Hill auditorium.
The list includes 863 students.
Highland Park students who wiil
be cited include Barbara A. Gans,
daughter of Leo Gans, 132 Maple
Ave., a sophomore in the College
of Literature, Science and the Arts;
Michael E. Lewis, son of Mr. and
Mrs.
L. H. Lewis,
1218
Glencce

Day

Mental Health Society carries on
community planning and education

members

the association. William Thompson, president of the Lake Villa
school board, is president. Miss
of

a Work

Goal
of the local campaign
is
$200,000 to maintain and expand
the Society’s program, and to support the National Association for
Mental Health and the Illinois As-

that membership

School

Honors Convocation tomorrow, Fri-

Is

64

Lillian

The University of Michigan will
cite academically distinguished undergraduates
at the 38th
annual

as

County’s

is

Sincerely yours,
The Senior Class
Highland Park High

has set aside Sat-

20,

Goal

in the

Chairman

in Springfield, and will
questions
about.
school

legislation
school

is
School

Week,

May

of Cham-

8 p.m, next Thursday in the Grayslake High

Clean-Up

Detailed

information concerning the Work
Day may be found below.
We
are very anxious
to make
this project a success both for ourselves
and
for
the
community.
Please call on us to help you with
your Spring Clean-Up.

The Bell Ringer Campaign
for
Mental
Health,
which
will
take
place
in
Chicago
and
suburban
areas in Cook, Lake and DuPage
counties during the week of May
15-21, is part of the nationwide
fight against America’s number one
health problem — mental illness,

On Monday, May 15 Singer will
attend
the
session
of the
Joint
Committee of the Illinois State Bar
Association and the Chicago Bar
Association
in co-operation
with
the Illinois Society of Accountants
which will be held at the Chicago
Bar Association.

search

Michael

Kalan

Rep. Charles Cladaugh

Singer’s subject will be “Halting
and Rolling Back the Unauthorized
Practice
of Law
in Illinois.” He
will speak this afternoon, Thursday, May 11, at the session of the

clinic

H 70—D

In the back, Jon

paign,
Ill,
will be
the
speaker
at the annual meeting of the Lake
County School Board Association,

Mid-Central
Regional
Meeting
of
the American Bar Association being held at Indianapolis May
10
through May 13.

for

at

Singer,

will be one

ircle’s
new
president.
Retiring
president is Mrs. Murray Cohen of
Highland Park.
The group is organized
to
support
the
allergy

Page

forward

Bell Ringer Drive
For Mental Health
Starts on May 15

60 School Boards
To Hear Legislator

attorney and Chairman of the Committee on Unauthorized Practice of
the Illinois State Bar Association,

and
Jessie

Rau, of the Club, watch.

Local Attorney
Is Speaker For
Lawyers’ Groups

ior

the

these

urday,

is barely visible, holding the flag. Continuing to the right
are Sheila Draft, Margery Lissoner, Barbara Mendelson and
Judy Fuente.

Michal

Annual Meet

Photo by Milton Merner

school, and Stanley McKee (left) and Mrs. Bert M. Wallenstein

Luce

‘said there would be two floors of
parking if a plan drawn up by Ar_chitects Jones &amp; Duncan is carried

Group

the tree firmly in the ground, Lloyd Schad, a teacher at the

| said it is still only talk.
Secretary

Shore

In observance of Arbor Day, members of the North Shore
Garden Club presented a hoppa crab tree to Lincoln School.
The presentation ceremony took place May 2 at the school.
While Steve Reskill and Steve Soper man the shovel to set

parking.

Chamber

looking

raise Scholarship funds. This project cannot
succeed without your
help.
Briefly,
during
the Work
Day
we will do your Yard Work, House
Repairs, Garage
Cleaning, Car
Washing, or any other chores you
may encounter. In addition we will

develop
their full potential,
the
Senior Class, in conjunction with |

put

Paul Leeds asked if it wasn’t being moved to make room for more

|

are

to our
future
responsibilities
as
adult citizens of this community.
As you may be aware, Highland
Park
High
School
sends
an
extremely
high percentage of its
graduating students on to college,
an achievement of which we are
very
proud.
Unfortunately,
each
year there are some students who
have the academic ability, but are
unable to pursue their education
for financial reasons alone. To as-

he city government was the first
‘public discussion of plans for a

‘said he’d heard

School,

draws near, we,
of Highland Park

time

the

to any

Girl

Scout in the Moraine Council. The
award recognizes two years’ work
by these Scouts to accomplish requirements set up by the Council
of Catholic Women. The girls have
logged nearly 100 hours of social
service,
provided
clothing,
craft
and educational materials to mission areas, visited
and studied
Catholic shrines, religious art and
architecture.
Troop 130, under the leadership
of Mrs. Ed Brown
and Mrs. Leo
Ladurini, has been active in pioneer camping, community projects,
hospital work and home life pro-

annoying little chores” attended to
may enable several needy seniors
to receive a college education by

calling one

or more

of the follow-

ing people:
1. Yard
work
(lawn mowing,
garden
weeding,
planting,
and
other lawn services),
Lynne
Finder, ID 2-8995.
2. House repairs (Painting,
window washing, etc.), Mary Ann
Credi, ID 2-0264.
3.

Garage

cleaning

or

car

washing, Sue Hirschfelder, ID 21718.
4.
Errands
or miscellaneous
services, Bob Sandy, WI 5-1030.
These people may be most easily
reached in the evenings up to May
20.
Those
desiring to make
last
minute
calls on May
20 are requested
to call Lynne
Finder,
ID 2-8995. The senior class requests
that customers
supply their own
equipment, such as lawn mowers or
paint.

In conjunction with the work day
a bake sale, featuring a selection
of delicious home made goods, will
be
held
at various
locations
in
Highland
Park,
and
possibly
in
Deerfield and Highwood.

grams.

Crash

on

First

Nello Tamarri
of 208 Burchell
Ave., Highwood,
got a ticket for
improper backing Friday afternoon
in the 900 block of First St. after
a collision with William Hirsch of
175 Ravine Dr.
Highland Park police say Hirsch
backed out of a driveway first; was
across
the
street
when
Tamarri
hit his car.

Teens

Battle

A fist fight between
19, of 110 Highwood

John Cinqui,
Ave., High-

wood,

O’Brien,

and

Michael

19,

of 1718
Elmwood
Dr., was
discovered by Highland Park police
who stopped to investigate a crowd
in the parking lot at Hal’s Drivein at 2 am. Saturday.

Both youths were booked for disorderly. conduct and released on
$25 bond.

�This Sale is Licensed by
The City of Highland Park
...

Permit

No.

bera
Blum
J-od KoS
-11\

1

Lake

County‘s

Largest and

Oldest,

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Highland

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Page

H 47—D

63

�Legion Auxiliary

OLD TIME
VALUES

Outlines Projects
For Next Month
Members

American

of

Legion

Highland

Park

Auxiliary

Unit

No. 145 will assist with the picnic
for Lake County Orphans May 28
at Adler Park.

VU-lighter

"S150
p
77, \, - SERRE
V/A littlest lighter
STYLE
that LETS YOU KNOW WHEN THE FUEL IS LOW!

WEIGHS ONLY 3 Ibs!

%,

“Vacucef” Insulated ~ Keeps Cool Longer §— SITE 16 x 12 x 13% |:

The ladies also will attend the
Pilgrimage to Normal, IIl., June 11
to visit at the Illinois Soldiers and
Sailors Childrens’ Home. The Unit,
co-sponsors the Harbord
Cottage,
which houses 10 boys. An outdoor
picnic is planned for the day, along
with a program which will be presented by the children, a parade,

and a drum corps competition.

NS)
GLASSES
NEW STYLES

ait

QUALITY LEATHER - ELEGANT STYLES

On June 4 the Unit will be hostess
for a picnic at Downey for the veterans. Assisting will be Mrs. Oscar
Iverson, Mrs. George Duffy, Mrs.
Eggert
Carlson,
and Mrs.
Philip
Cole. These ladies also will assist
at
a
carnival
at Downey
June
20-21.

Harvey Jacobs, on assignment with the Peace Corps,
encounters some of the “native” girls on Central Avenue in
the

CONTINENTA
veqGheagyoagy

LANOLIZED
_ NYLONS

SAVE
$1.43

3
i

1)
5

12 JUMBO SIZE PICTURES
FULL COLOR

BLACK &amp; WHITE

(it

WIN Valuable

in need of help?
Hear

ons
Established

St.

Johns

Ave.

Wilson

M.

C.S.B., of Kansas

STATIONERY

1783

Oak

ID 2-0567

S. Gilbert,

Revue,”

which

will

be

pre-

HOURS
DAILY
7:00 a.m. - 8:30 p.m.
Hours Sunday
9:00 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.

Mrs.

Riley,*

*Member
of the Board of Lectureship of
Mother Church, The First Church of Christ,
entist, Boston, Massachusetts.

SALE

SAVE 30%
on TURF BUILDER DEAL
CRAFTWOOD
The
Sci-

Seymour

Waldman,

Mrs,

Lyon and Mrs. Jack Blane.

City, Mis-

souri, speak on “Christian
Science: God’s Ever-present
Kingdom Revealed.” Free
Public Lecture. Monday,
May 15, at 8 p.m. First
Church of Christ, Scientist,
Highland Park, 493 Hazel
Avenue.

STORE
1906

Louis

One of the acts which will delight
the audiences attending the 1961
edition of the ‘Red Oak Revue”
will be a speciality number
featuring five members
of the Red
Oak faculty. Ray J. Naegele, principal of the Woodridge area school,
Walter Treichel,
social studies
teacher;
Robert Bordenave, 6th
grade
teacher; Don McFarlane,

SYNCHRONIZED FOR FLASH

.

«

SPRING COLORS!

Mrs.

Jack Norman, Mrs. Norman

. 4¥

FULL
FASHIONED

edition of the “Red

left, are

y
Ups

1961

sented the evenings of May 19 and 20, and at a special children’s matinee Saturday afternoon, May 20. The girls, from

+ ely -4S&gt;s4uvaah&gt;9 ¢BneaSyegio sear

‘@

LUMBER COMPANY
See Page H49 - D65

music teacher, and Gerald Zwetz,
6th grade teacher.
Tickets are being
sold by block
captains Mr. and Mrs. Louis Kahnweiler and Dr. and Mrs. Sherman
Johnston.
Mrs. Donald Benchley,
1385
Ridge Road, heads a committee of
16 Red Oak mothers who are sewing all the costumes needed by the
cast in the
16 acts.
Committee
members
include:
Mrs.
Leo
Tahtinen, Mrs. Don Hokinson, Mrs.
Phillip Rosenberg,
Mrs. Irving
Rodner, Mrs. Herbert Geist, Mrs.
Richard Shoemaker, Mrs.
Ralph
Worchester, Mrs. Frank Lichtwalt,
Mrs. Harvey Jacobs, Mrs. Samuel
Buchsbaum, Mrs. Harry Levi, Mrs.
Jack Piller, Mrs. Frank Levy, Mrs.
Milton Kanter, Mrs. Lee Hilfman
and Mrs. Harry Bryer.
Refreshments will be served by
a committee of Red Oak mothers
led by Mrs.
Burton
Balsam
and
Mrs. Harry Goodwillie.

It's
Tulip

DUFFY

Everybody Likes
Thayer’s Ice Cream
When

you serve Thayer’s

cream

for dessert, you’re

ice

Time!

pro-

viding your tamily with a deliEverybody

in Highland Park recognizes
the superior flavor of Thayer’s
ice cream, and_ everybody
should know how good it is for
them. You'll be doing yourself
and your family a favor by
serving Thayer's ice cream to-

When
winter

Spring

weary

THAYER’S
DAIRY

64

up

. s, Veyour
down. And

You
sparkling

will be absolutely
transformation.

delighted

by a

with

the

for

&amp;

DELICATESSEN

835 Central
ID 2-0597
Hours Daily—8 A.M. - 10:00 P.M.
7 DAYS A WEEK
Page H 48—D

come

they deserve the gentle, thorough care given
master cleaning craftsman, MR. DUFFY.

Bright.

WIN Valuable Prizes FREE!

Flowers

draperies should come

tie diate Bie]

cacy they all love.

|

eciine

|

BILLFOLDS
SY AMITY

DRAPERY

Cleaning

DELUXE

call on

MR. DUFFY - ID 2-1820
across

from

duffy cleaners
Highland Park

|
{

Library

!

Thursday,

May

11,

1961

�&gt;.

SPRING

Sa

:

a

.

“

oe:

,

ane

Seas

4

¢

::

Soe

BE

.

:

:

-

Wi

‘

Peace«tea he

Ace

ae ee

ss

Sak:

Si

eae

:

a

Ps bc

:

de

a

‘

5,

\

‘
\

:
WI

OF

TREMENDOUS SAVINGS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT
SAVE MONEY
IN MAY!
ENJOY THE OUTDOORS MORE ALL SUMMER

A remarkable special purchase of all the most 4
popular sizes of stockade and rustic picket make —
these great savings possible.
OUR

FENCE

IS HAND

PEELED

BRS

STOCKADE

PRICES

Sale

$11.20

We
ie ents $13.88
~ yl ROE CB cee ate 15.89
W seGnastctascid
ae 17.82
ic uh
coeds ae 19.62
All

12.71

14.00

Sale Items

in

Was

6’ STOCKADE

15.70

2. 5%

Save

Sale $13.05

$16.28

Stock

Rail and picket fence also on sale.
Price includes

delivery

on

REDWOOD

camel

5 sections

or

more.

LUMBER

FOR

FENCES

ESPECIALLY

SELECTED GRADE FOR GARDEN
AND FENCE USE
WERE

BML
memanlt %
vote x
4s

6
6
&amp;
4

12¢
16c
16c
30c

pes
oi See
Searde
es
BOGS | oo
Rela sok oc eee
eae
ec
Peete. oss

per
per
per
per

9c
12c¢
12c
24c

ft
ft.
ft
ft.

SALE

Also available for your convenience: Jigs, plans, special cutting
Free delivery.

‘service, posthole diggers.

REDWOOD PICNIC TABLES
6’

SERVICEABLE

certified

redwood

GREAT

Financing.

two

benches.

$26.95

SALE

with

Was
OTHER

$19.50

SAVINGS

Save 50%
he AE
6.0
Daint Clearenee
Tust Guilder Deel. oe eeeeae Save 30%

Reg. $7.00 NOW $4.20
Oe
Paneth BOle |.
Were up to $17.00 NOW $5.00
Dotr Values... esas
oe

om

4

NOW W

es te

eee

Save 25%

E ARE OPEN EVENINGS—THURSDAY AND FRIDAY
CRAFTWOOD

per
per
per
per

UvMBER COMPANY INC.
1590

Deerfield

Road,

Highland

8 A.M.- 5:30 P.M. — Thursday until 9 — Sunday 9-3
Just West of Route 41—Phone IDlewood 2-0140

Park,

IIlinois

fte—=
ft.
ft.
ft.

�to be an ELKS

By Charlie Crovetti

for you fellows
in sports

Elks National Tournament,
sorry

to say

dive

for

from

Highwood,

if

you

me

in

the

bowling

2 host of friends

joyed

their

business,

I have

met

acquaintances.

you

wore

hung

The

to

up

him

,|playing
back

against.
at I can’t

attend

all of them,

but

We

sleeper

as many

from

_ Just
New

as possible.
got

back

York

and

from
I

Rochester,

bowled

in

the

days
Judge
about

same

ROLL 333?
Come

(with

this

ad

589

Central

Ave.,

to

shoes

he

Bill Chambers

if

gin

I

of why

my

he

by

to

go

far

the

spent

one

because

talked

for

to

it

as

Judge

not
a

a

take

a

couple

of

H.P.

keep

and

an

to

Elk

over

get your

FILM ... FREE!

try

hear

also

for

have

going

our

on

for

and

ID
affair,

you

May

with

Ray

the

is
the

want

to

will you explain

May

23

....

Sputniks
Jets

have

to be

the

fun

just

come

7

p.m.

Call

23

at

one of the

two fellows

have

until

May

Elizabeth

O’Neil

youngsters

going

to

day

June

third,

that

Benvenuti

Marge

Riggio
High Game
(Actual)

is the
Elizabeth
Ida

when

Ellena

you

get

to be

to your

high

forty

and

school

Sordyl

Mary

not look important to you now but

ries

in

the most
the

world,

reservation

look

days

you

with

pleasant
so

Kay

Starcevich
Niehus
Riggio

memo-

make

ARnn

O'Neil

Benvenuti

your

Scasslatti

SUBURBAN

B’NAI

and

make

don’t

it.

your

wait

Go

PROM

reservations

till your

and

have

JUNE

forty

fun

early,

to regret

at

the

JR.

Kimball

we

are

dren

who

mer,

want

they

to bowl

going

may

bowl

this
all

at

7

LADIES

A

LADIES

B

Pharmacy

Universal

Screw

Villa Moderne

THIRD.

and
Don’t

Sat.

B’RITH

Team

tickets.

next

Series

(Actual)

Mary

ID

not

you

for you

will have

able

do

if you

forget.

many

summer

men’s,

ladies,

Join

one

leagues.

of

We

our

Strikel N’
M.

sum-

leagues
cool

comfort.

pletely

summer

for

mixed

the

and

summer.
Our

air-conditioned.

junior
Bowl

place

High

Series

High

Game

Spare

Rodin

have

is

in

com-

Have

fun

Strike

N’

Spare

S. Elden
M.

Rodin

J. Blanc
H. Drei

at

the

price

dollar,

of

we

three

have

games

been

trying

for

join the summer

bowling

groups.

to

days.

nite,

Fireballs

Elena Carani

back

in

Sheahen

so

date of the Junior Prom and it may

belong.

2-2583

skill

portant

and

on

men,

High School don’t forget that im-

all pro-

they

your

Now

Valley

Park,

and

something

for

the

SUBURBAN

youngsters
IMMACULATE

Tuesday

charge

Missiles

Ida

to pass out cards to all school chil-

do
On

no

21st.

to have

others,

streets

join

Starting

and

so he is entitled to

buggy

We

in and pick

the

one
and

on

bad

to him that flying has replaced the
horse

is

tournament

ladies

bring

to

Sunset

where

from

2-4227,

too

Jensen

there

cards.

singles

I’m

Hartnett

Highland

the

assistance

feel

Jackie

able

are going

many

of the

either

in

it

Gabby

Snyder

this

him

and

off

but

puts

be

from

from

myself,

not

flying

on

certain

would

should

class

night

a

and

good.)

enjoy

will

playgrounds

(He

look

will

to do is come

a card,

these

date

and

have

up

you will be helping the youngsters

charge

me

you

ceeds will go to the Biddy baseball

Carrol

makes

that

attend,

golf we

golf club

league

quits

have

is

he

advice

ever

will

he

around Highwood,

Mart

Must
be
feague
series
total.
Have your league secretary sign
se date in space provided bee

the

act like a celebrity, but you people

for a roll of Black &amp; White Still

We

see

SPIKES,

Don Newcomb,

signed)

Powell’s Camera

and from

idea

jot

to

Leonard,

N’

some

back,
I

Dutch

you

Strike

Highwood

plane

Carani,

you

boys

gin player I’ve ever played

also

‘we work on the theory of attending

the

that

should

plan

that

bowler

and

and

High

sure

swan

NITE

that are interested

you

and

the

work,

WORST

down

visit

that

me

to

Pete

tournament,

his
is

the

famous

????

will

give you

and

and I’m

it was

very

in the

will

is

that

should

Spare

the pleasures that has happened

that

SPORT

of this

area

for some

time

and

I

CONCEPTION

LADIES

B’NAI

B’RITH

Team

Pts.

Team

Talk of the Town

Hepcats

Checker

74

.

LEASE
CARS

pons
~ THUNDERBIRDS
FALCON

HOLMES
MOTOR

CO.

1909 ST. JOHNS
Hightand Pork, Iii.

ID 2-8640
SRSRGSEoe Roe

SRNR RMURSRR ERM GSU CER NEEEETUREESEER

:

p.m.

at the Elks

Hall there is going

finally

got

the

go

ahead

sign,

DIRT
(Screened,
CALL

Stock

Piled)

.

MENONI &amp; MOCOGNI
2200

Skokie

Hwy., Highland

ID 2-0850

Park

Step out in style
with AMF
Now—with

the

greatest

bowling

season ever under way
roll your best with the greatest
bowling accessories by AMF!

Page H 50—D 66

all

Taxi

FARMER BEVERAGE CO., Inc.
HIGHLAND

PARK

WAUKEGAN

AMF

AMF
Bowling
Shoes—Tops
in style,
tops in comfort,
AMF
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No
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chafing, no crowding.
They
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sure-footed fit for extra comfort, higher
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See them now in all styles and
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Bowling Bags—

Starring the smart, all-new Hatbox models, the AMF Fashion
Line of bowling bags is truly a
fashion first in 1961. AMF bowling bags give you the perfect
combination of rugged beauty
and distinctive design. See these
exciting bowling bags and order
yours now... you'll be buying
the best.

Thursday, May 11, 1961

�High

Series

G,. Rodkin

474
High

I.

Bram

NORTH

63
59

No. 13
Young in Heart

Game

....

20

Team
Gunners
Highballers
Blockbusters
Sharpshooters

Pts.
123
119
108
98
High

Series

M. Block
R, Barnard
A. Mann

GLENCOE

Chumpions

62

mei
ge
Furious Five

Lost
36

$8.56

High

Team

WO.42

Round

MEN

“a

Series

(ag

High

Smith

459 | Mike

D.

Miller

456 | Lou

T.

Baron

443 | Fred Sitz

om

Series

Rutzen

The

652

Garino

602

High

SUBURBAN

M. Smith ...
D. Miller

175 | Mike Rutzen
173 | Lou Garino

232
226

B.

171 | Clark

226

Eubanks

PEERLESS HOME
Classic

224
193
186

+;

LADIES

Team
Junior Miss
Beacon Ins.
Midland Hotel

Pts.
128
119
110
High

Beer.

1892
608

9. lek Pitecerdid oie

6. Bae

Game

7. Oak

Beacon Ins.
Ruby
Grass
I. Goldstone

222-222
208

S. Garretson

190

Cc.

ncn

FOR:

ROOMS
¢ GARAGES

¢ KITCHENS
¢ BATHS

BUILDERS

INC.

Highland

West

©

Park |

ID 2-6800

q

1024-1116-1058—3198

3. Globe Glass &amp; Mirror ...................- 1081-

5. Bergmann’s

Means
Supervised

oa ses 1021-1121-1123—3265

A. Coronet Vendors:

Series

Beacon Ins.
Ruby Grass
High

Hennes

Ave.,

ee

League

e@

Park

WAY
and

PEERLESS

* FAMILY AND RECREATION
* ROOM ADDITIONS

1550

B’NAI B’RITH
SCRATCH

Designed

CALL

Game

Game

M. Block
R. Magnus
J. Greenebaum

PEERLESS

Architect

602

Game

Dressler

HOME IMPROVEMENT
with the CUSTOM TOUCH!

Winners)

|
alow CAB ec 31s8 20I
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M.

High

BUSINESS

(Second

488
475
465
High

Levi
LEVY.
BE. Caine

COUNCIL
Won

178

TERRIBLE

SHORE

Team

isc 5s.

Restaurant

10 Sr

Park Federal Savings
6

1008-1014-1062—3084

IF YOU’RE FUSSY ABOUT
YOU'LL LIKE THE WAY WE

SHIRTS
DO THEM

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5 chins
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6. LB A. Vonding

952-1137—3170

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ne

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182.
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176

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MAKE

SAFETY A BY-WORD
Let our experts put your car
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in perfect shape for summer driving.

We have Hellwigs and Overload Springs
stock for all “61 Cars!

DAHL'S auto RECONSTRUCTION

Serving the North Shore Over 60 Years

Phone Today

ID 2-0077

2058 FIRST ST.

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Now—enjoy the big fun and excitement of bowling with bowling
accessories by AMF! Be sure to ask your local ‘Magic Triangle’ bowling proprietor about the complete line of AMF bowling balls, bowling
bags and bowling shoes—the finest quality money can buy!

weights, custom-fitted by the man
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May 11, 1961

2226

.. . ID 2-4551

STRIKE ‘N SPARE BOWLING LANES

BOWL WHERE YOU SEE THE

185 Skokie Blvd.

“MAGIC *

Northbrook,

III.

|

AMF PINSPOTTERS INC.
SUBSIDIARY OF AMERICAN MACHINE &amp; FOUNDRY COMPANY

TRIANGLE”

6500 N. LINCOLN AVE.
CHICAGO 45, ILL.

Page H 51—D 67.

�Kids Throw
Stones

thrown

by

Stones

children

near

the Hill-Behan Lumber Co. Thursday
evening
last week
broke
a

window
Skokie

of a passing
Valley

Route

train
and

on the

injured

A.

J.

Highland

near Ridge Rd.,
of a car driven
of 440 Ellridge
see who threw

a

passenger.

Attend

Into Train, Truck

Some

time

an egg hit the roof
by Gertrude Cowan
Circle. She did not
it, she told police.
the

previous

week-

end, stones thrown at a dump truck

Pauletic,

dispatcher,

told

Park police J. S. Woy

of

207 Ravine Forest Dr., Lake Bluff,
suffered
several
small
forehead
cuts.
An ‘hour earlier on Clavey Rd.

parked

knocked

at

out

Material

the

Service

windshield,

Co.

both

door windows, headlights, parking
lights
and
side
mirror.
Roland
Reed, superintendent, reported the
damage to police.

Convention

Mrs, William B. Katz, 1104 Wade,
Mrs.

Herbert

Zak,

441

Dell

Ln.,

and Mrs. Earl Price, 1464 Oakwood
attended

the

April

27-30

New

Orleans.

Mrs.

Katz

is

administrative
secretary
of the
group and Mrs. Price and Mrs.
Zak are regional advisers.
All three
vestigated.

incidents

are

Mrs. Martha Winch

Heads Meeting

And

Fashion Show

About one hundred attended a
luncheon meeting of the Suburban
Family Agency Committee
at the
Hotel Sherman in Chicago on May
4. This committee, charted-by Mrs.
Martha Winch, Director of Family
Service of Highland Park, is a com-—
mittee of the Welfare Council of
Metropolitan Chicago and consists
of executives of the suburban family agencies.
Board members accompanied the
executives to the meeting and participated actively in its program.
The
main speaker was C. Virgil
Martin, President of Carson, Pirie,
Scott &amp; Company, who spoke on
“Merchandising the Family Agen-

Supreme

Council of the national collegiate
sorority Sigma Delta Tau, held
in

B‘nai B‘rith Women

Planning Luncheon

being

in-

“Fun,

Frolics

and

Fashions

the Suburbs” will be
Highland Park B’nai

theme
B’rith

in

of the
Wom-

en’s
membership
luncheon
and
fashion
show
Wednesday
noon,
May 24, in the home of Mrs. Seymour Cousin, 256 Oak Knoll Terr.

Mrs.

Leonard

chairman
bins will

Levin

is program

and Mrs. Samuel Robbe chairman of the day.

Imported knits,
Mexico,
French

beachwear from
and
American

sportswear

witk

show.

luncheon-fashion

The

be

modeled

in the

show,

brings the club’s
activities will be
Fall,

year to an end;
resumed in the

Buy

S.

cy.”

Second

and

hold

U.

Savings

Brief talks were

Fry ORCHID
SHIRT

suburban

v4

Te ra
ere
oe,

OF

TELEPHONE

in

by ten

various

setting

interpreting

ed slides with narration

Room to room calls can
be answered hands-free.

PHONE FAIR BRINGS
A “HOME FULL”

the

forth

their

family counseling programs to their
communities.
Mrs. John Severson,
of Deerfield, spoke for the Board
of Family
Service of Highland
Park. Two of the agencies present‘C|

request

SPRING

presented

of

agencies

techniques

EXACT
_STARCHING

ONE-DAY,
SERVICE
by
&amp;

Home Interphone lets caller identify himself through outside speaker
while you answer the door confidently by picking up the nearest phone.

,|representatives

LAUNDERING

BUTTONS
REPLACED

Year

Bonds

YOU

describing

the work of their agencies.
This is the second year that Mrs.
Winch has been Chairman of the
Suburban Family Agency Committee of the Welfare Council, and the
second
year that a large annual
meeting of the group has been held.
Those
who
have
attended
these
meetings have expressed the feeling that they are so useful to the
agencies participating in them that
they will probably become a regular part of the Committee’s
program in future years.

CONVENIENCE

ouswt

See
one

SALE

CELLOPHANE:
PROTECTED
P OF

DIV.
RAINBOW

SAVE

35,000
SHIRTS
IRONED
WEEKLY

on

PAINT

CRAFTWOOD

ORCHID CLEANERS
NEXT

50%

LUMBER COMPANY
See Page H49 - D65

TO ‘SUPERMART PARKING
1862 FIRST STREET

HOW TO BE SURE
any

Bell Chime—Centrally located in your home,
it announces calls with a pleasant chime.

Don’t miss Illinois Bell’s Wonderful Spring Phone Fair. Fill your
every need in home communications from this colorful carnival of
telephone services.
Home Interphone lets you use
your phones as a handy home communications system.
Color Extensions for comfort and
convenience. A variety of styles and
colors to choose from. You'll especially like the Princess extension
phone ...the dial lights up when
you pick up the receiver—it’s ideal
for your bedroom.
Wall Phones to save you space
and steps. Perfect for busy activity
centers in your home.
Bell Chime has three different

sounds. A pleasant chime, a loud
bell to bring you from outdoors and
the familiar telephone ring.
Extra Lines permit two people to
phone at the same time. Each line
can have its own number and share
all your extensions.
Additional Listings in the telephone directory make it easy for
other people to find any member of
your family.
Call your Illinois Bell business
office or ask your installer-repairman about the many new services
that cost so little—yet do so much
for you. Better still, come on down
to your telephone business office
and see for yourself, at the Spring
Phone Fair.

Color Extensions—-to
room in the home.

harmonize

ILLINOIS

with

BELL

H 52—D

68

OF AIR CONDITIONING
AT A REASONABLE PRICE
.«. call us and we'll go over your house carefully and
recommend the right size Bryant unit (too big or too
small is costly). Our factory-trained Air Conditioning
Specialists know how to avoid needless costs. We
guarantee the job and your satisfaction. Call us today.
LOW

DOWN

PAYMENT~—5

bryant |

FOR

YEARS

TO PAY

OUR FREE ESTIMATE
CALL TODAY!!!

BISHOP'S

TELEPHONE

Telephone service makes a thoughtful gift.
Remember Mother on Her Day, May 14.
Page

rTOP JOB

Air Conditioning
1741

Second

St., Highland

and
Park

Heating

Engineers
Phone

Thursday,

ID
May

2-0407
11,

1961

�Wong... fre ioruminaling
Mother's Day . . . or any day
AT

cee _

on ‘aoe

PATTERSON'S

PAT

BOBS

Etheridge 3

STEAK HOUSE
and

In

Deerfield

Restaurant

Commons

Cut Rate Liquor Store

‘Home

Steak

(with trimmings)

Lobster

(with

trimmings)

Treat

Breakfast

75c PER PLATE

Dinner

We deliver any $10.00 or more order to

FREE Ice Cubes with

VERNON

Snacks

from

Noon

to

at

Your

Reservations

WI

Each Liquor Purchase
“FINE

Edens, Skokie &amp; County Line Rd.

FOOD

8

p.m.

Carry

Out

Please

FINE

No

@

EXOTIC

@

At

DELIVERY

Cooking

for Mom

CHINESE

Reasonable

&amp; CARRY

OUT

on Her

Service,

Too

Deerfield

Rd., Deerfield

Famous

for More

Prices.

RESTAURANT

i

@

FISH

O

STEAKS

@

CHICKEN

(Fresh

Open

CHEF
WI

Day

to the

take Mom

UNION HOTEL

Day.

FOODS

DON, THE CANTONESE

Mother’s

on

Phone Your Order in Early.

652

Mom will really appreciate this
tasty pie made with fresh (not frozen) strawberries as only Bob can
make ‘em.

Call

FOLKS”

LET DON THE CANTONESE
CHEF MAKE THIS MOTHER’S DAY
A REAL MOTHER'S DAY
@

Fresh

SPECIAL $1.50

Pleasure.

5-3500
FOR

To A Whole,

P| &amp;

or

5-1611

Mother

9 A.M.

from

Served

Available

For

Highland Park

:

11:00 a.m. — 2:00 p.m.

Park, Deerfield, Northbrook
Glencoe

Its Best’

STRAWBERRY

)

E

Z

|

:

LUNCHEONS

Highland

At

1846 First Street

Barbecued Chicken (with trimmings) .... $1.25
T-Bone

Cooking

for

Fine

Than
Lake

daily

Perch)

from

124

5-3383

Foods

A Century.

11

a.m.

S. Milwaukee

Ave.

LE 7-4000 |

WHEELING, ILL.

at the Shoppers’ Court
Hours: Daily 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Fri. &amp; Sat., 11 a.m, to 11 p.m.

THE FABULOUS

For Pure Dining .
Pleasure
and

Villa Venice

RESTAURANT
From

Make

Enjoyment,
Treat

New

Your

SHELTON'S
RAVINIA GRILL

Your

Reservation

MOTHER’S
Fine

of

From

$2.95

Dinners

To Our

at Least Once

a Week!

Dinners from

$2.95

We serve only top quality food, specializing
in prime beef.
Luxurious surroundings at modest prices.
Family dinners all day Sunday.
Open daily from 11 a.m.
Weekly

2855

Fashion

Milwaukee

Show

Luncheons

Ave.

(Rte. 21)

NORTHBROOK, ILL.
Phones: SP 5-3535 — LE 7-2300

Luscious, Sizzling

STEAKS

Also Featuring Brunch from $2.00

Family
to Dinner
“Out”

Delicious

HAMBURGERS

for

DAY

Selection

Our

We Use Prime &amp; Choice Meats Only!

100% PURE BEEF HAMBURGER
Ground

@

ORDERS

in Our

TO

Own

TAKE

481 Roger Williams
Highland

Kitchen

OUT

e@

'D 2-3306
Park

�¥

ne!

Double-Check Labels On Canned Foods
Consumers
control food

who
costs

check

the

weight

ment

on

food

are anxious to
should double-

or measure

labels

consumers

they

money and make better judgments
about the most value for the money,

a University

Packages,

persistent

and

because

too,

vary

in

size

and

shape.
Odd sizes and fractional
weights make price comparisons

of Illinois home
of contents
years ago,

be

it is sometimes hard to find.
Consumers
should remember,
too, that net weight includes liquid.

By this practice they can tell how
much they are getting for their

economist.
The net weight
was passed many

must

hunt for this information,

buy.

says

_

somewhere on all
packages
the
weight must be given.
However,

state-

before

Expert Suggests

very

law
and

difficult

for

anyone

except

a

Meets To Install New Officers
of

Association

Teachers

Parent

Oak
8:00

Terrace School will meet at
p.m. Tuesday, May 16 to inofficers for the coming
Robert Russell, assistant

stall new
year. Dr.

superintendent of school District
111, will preside at the installation

in the school

auditorium.

Mrs.

president,

Sirotti,

Mario

mathematician,

PTA

Oak Terrace

Mario Sirotti, vice-president, Mrs.
Eugene Vogds, secretary and Doninald Elstrom, treasurer, will be
l.
Russel
Dr.
by
stalled

Built By Architect For His Own Use!

Sirotti’s

first official action will

of the
be to name the members
PTA board, who will handle affairs
The
for the PTA for the new year.

Elizabeth
Mrs.
Charles Elstrom

are:
selections
Smith, program;

and
and Mrs. Dino Caselli, ways
memmeans; Mrs. Edgar Bortolotti,
and
bership; Mrs. Eugene Powers
mothroom
,
Albert
Mrs. Carmen

ers;
Mrs.

Mrs. Bruno Coppi, library;
Robert Bartoni, safety; Mrs.

Mrs.
Dominic Tamarri, hospitality;
Fuller,
Edward Gibbs, Mrs. Victor
refreshCabri,
Primo
Mrs.
and
legisto,
DeSan
Albert
Mrs.
ments;
magalation; Mrs. Joseph Mornini,
ity
zine; Mrs. Elmer Blank, public
Stunkel,
Stella
Mrs.
aper;
newsp

teachers representative; Mrs. Peter
health;

Fabbri,

fliers;

publicity

common

brick

construction,

3

A program

Combination

levels.

Arts

room.

Dishwasher,

incinerator.

Living

room

dawn,

the

scientific

All other floors are parquet

290’ lot has wooded

DS RINS

rose fertilizer

Garage.

area

—

Dog

Owner
FOR

cork.

garden

APPOINTMENT
PHONE

TO

has

priced

SEE THIS

85’ x

in back.

ID 2-7503

|
|

This amazing applicator is the key, It’s called the Scotts
Zephyr, and it’s designed to apply new HAZE—Scotts all-in-one
protection against insects and disease.
The HAZE container fits snugly in the Zephyr. Nothing
to mix, measure, fill or spill. To apply, just point the deflector
at the base of the rose bushes, turn the crank gently, and walk
along the bed. An atomized dry mist envelops the plant—depositing a nearly invisible HAZE film on both tops and undersides
of the leaves.
Come

see

and

save.

You'll

find

these

new

Scotts

Ask
Store Hours Daily
OPEN

us about

8 a.m. to 5:30
SUNDAYS

Ter-

conference

BUY

or ID 2-7519

Only your f lorist can
express your thoughtfulness so well
For Mothers’ Day,
remember...
?

Your Allied Florist has the freshest flowers

$5.00.

it.
p.m. — Wed. ‘til Noon

send or deliver anywhere,

on time

?

He will

He

has the widest

wis

selection

?

He will help you choose correctly PB

He will

package your flowers beautifully.

9 A.M. — 1 P.M.

| RAVINIA HARDWARE
YOUR

ONE

STOP

STORE

GARDEN NEEDS — HOUSEWARES

447 Roger Williams
Page H 54—D 70

— TOYS

ID 2-4387

of

mediately following the 7 o’clock
E.
Alfred
Rev.
rally, the
youth
Anderson, pastor, announces.

Rose

Program products at our big SUCCESS WITH ROSES display.

Introductory offer saves you

on

24,

the First United Evangelical church
will be held Sunday evening im-

more continuous bloom
With roses, the surprising secret of more blooms is—
more leaves! Now—with the new Scotts Rose Program—it’s
so easy to keep foliage strong and healthy, even a beginner
enjoys success.

May

all Oak

for

quarterly

Regular

GOOD

educa-

Quarterly Meet

to sell.
UNUSUALLY

Industrial

Economics

Wednesday,

sale

the school ground
race students.

Circular stairway to sun deck.

Let me show you
how to get better roses,

in front, formal

explaining

Home

and

man
The Ways and Means chair
Hot
has announced there will be a

Dining room, sun room, powder room and reception hall have

bluestone floors.

mu-

tional objectives will follow.

living - dining room, fireplace, oval breakfast room, modern
kitchen, TV room, glassed-in sun room, full basement. Builtins in every

Sabol,

Cabri,

Primo

James Waller, principal of Oak
sic.
Terrace School, will assist as audio
visual chairman and advisor.

Lovely 3-bedroom, 2% bath home built by Highland Park
Architect Henry Dubin for his own use. Contemporary design,

Steve

Mrs.

YOUR ALLIED FLORIST MEMBER

Thursday, May 11, 1961

�Always

Money IS

Your

Here

Available

Check
Please!
Emilie Hart Seul
places this request for a
check in the pneumatic
tube system opening in
her desk. In a matter of
seconds,
the
request
goes through the system
and arrives in the wall
container on the opposite side of the lobby
where all checks are

made out.

At DEERFIELD
SAVINGS
you can be assured your
money is always available to you while it is
safe and earning high
dividends.
DEERFIELD
SAVINGS, Lake County's largest savings and
loan, with assets of more
than $24,000,000.00,has
never missed a dividend

payment in its almost 34
years of service to the
community
and surrounding areas.

Come Join
Our Happy Savers
Be assured if a need
arises, you, too, can say,
‘A Check Please!’ for

your principal plus your
dividends

compounded
year.

Waatayaal
SAV

| fy

[

.

HIGHER DIVIDENDS with GREATEST SAFETY
745 DEERFIELD ROAD,

Hours:

&amp;

LOAN

ASSOCIATION

Phone:

DEERFIELD, ILLINOIS
Mon.,

Tues.,

Thurs.,

Fri.

— 8:30

to

4:00

Sat. — 8:30 to 12:00; Fri. eve. — 6:00 to 8:00
Closed Wednesday

Wlindsor

5-2550

which

twice

are

a

�flower
picture frame
for her family
1.00
spaces for 5 pictures in this
clever gold toned frame on
wood stand.
(Accessories )

_THER’S DAY

Gis
nylon

=
stretch

gloves

3.5C,
vy

nylon stretch sidewalls make
these gloves
fit every-

one. White black, pink»
or orchid.

~~

2

is / ee

ae Nee

te

Be

i

(Accessories)

fairest of the
fair in nylon
lingerie

lacy look
4.25

5.95
Half

slip with

for

deep

lace

border,

white or orchid, S, M, L.

:

i

her

E
=
reat gg

5.95

morning

briefs,

white

hours.
¥

Bemyerge

—
(Daytime

Matching

{
;

_

4 we

‘

.

Dresses)

gown.

Rainbow

Matching

colors, S, M,

Mother's

bi
i
\

Delicate
sheer
over
opaque
nylon
makes
this 3-tone shift

L.

ye

i

a

ee

ee

1. Soft white
Camp. clothe

a

OR

‘0.78
baby doll.

10.95
(Lingerie)

Garnett eCo.
you'll

find

it in

PURSES

’
to glamorize

’
i

only.

2.00
2.

e

Highland

Park

at

Enjoy 2 Hours Free Parking in Our Lot — ID 2-4700

shopping

marshmallow, wipes clean with a
eases.
«eee
RA er ase 4 4.95

2.

Handsome
tapestry in soft tones,
| ...... nae
roomy.

3.

Long
MONG

large

and

8.95

or
beige
Tan,
marshmallow.
low
and
2.95
ON Vea eee
55 se vit ek
a

wails
A

FY

f}

BE

16)

te

j

duster

;

rete)
210g

aR RN

x

——

32-40, Short, white, 32-38.

te

1. Lovely slip with lined lace
bodice, lace hem. White or mint

~
:

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                    <text>~

May

18

1961

Ly rlicld Keview

eet
i, si

�The big bank that grew up
with Highland Park

STARTING

JUNE 3

The First National will observe the

following banking hours ..
Monday ¢ 2a.

8:30 to 2:00 p.m.

TROBGAY 2.504. 6. 8:30 to 2:00 p.m.

Wednesday ............ not open
TDMPSORY 2.5.2.-. 8:30 to 2:00 p.m.
PUIGRY 6 05.5

8:30 to 2:00 p.m.

Friday night..... 5:30 to 8:00 p.m.

PAUGPORY oo oa

8:30 to noon

THE
FIRST
NATION
AL
BAN
K
4
cet acon tte tin
an on sis OF FT a

A Federal Deposit sioaiias ee
nited States Depositary

WEEKEND

BANKING

HOURS:

Friday 8:30-2:00 &amp; 5:30-8:00 pm, Saturday 8:30-Noo

Park

|

�Lod

4 gerhiold keview
-

Vol. 36, No. 11

© 1961

by Highland

Park

Co.

Thursday,

May

18, 1961

_Freshmen Trustees Taste Citizens Cold War
Truck Parking Protested By
Irate Elm Street Residents
President David Whitney and three freshman trustees received their first taste of the cold war which is currently being
waged between some Deerfield citizens and the village government at the first regular meeting of the new board Monday
night. The blast come shortly after 10:30 p.m. when Whitney

opened the meeting to gathered

Bakery Re-Zoning
Issue Is Principle

|Says Plan Comm.
The
plan commission,
in joint
session with the village board of
trustees for Deerfield, said that the
area which Sara Lee seeks to purchase for erection of a new plant
should
be studied with the surrounding area before any re-zoning is accomplished.
The commission, which deliber| ated with the board for more than

an
Fire

Chief

Jan

De

Jong,

in

mask,

instructs

H. Ferry residence at 903 Greenwood
additional

five

minutes

before

the

Ave.

firemen

De Jong

firemen

arrived,

as

they

battle

the

blaze

at

stated that if the fire had
the

house

could

have

the

M.

burned

been a

an

total

hour,

is

expected

to

have

its

final report turned into the board
by the first Monday night in June
and a final decision on the entire
matter should follow.

loss.

B. B. Montgomery, vice president
Chief
%

Jan

operation

De

Jong

between

credited

police

and

co-

fire

departments
with
saving
the
M.
H. Ferry home at 903 Greenwood
Ave.
The house broke into flame
at 8:45 a.m. Friday morning.
The fire was discovered by Sheldon Prais of the Deerfield police
department
who
noticed
smoke
coming out from under the eaves
of the house. A closer investigation
showed that the house was afire,
Prais said.
Two pumpers, the utility rescue
truck and 10 men hurried to the
seene to fight the stubborn fire in
the kitchen of the home. Fire gutted the kitchen and smoke
damage throughout the house was extensive, according to fire chief Jan
DeJong.
No one was home when
the fire started, he said.
The fire started, the chief reported, in the stove, and it had a

good

start

by

the

time

the

first

units
arrived.
According
to the
chief, if the fire had had an additional
five
minute
start,
the
house could have been lost.
In other action during the week,
the fire department
found
itself
rolling at the rate of almost one
es
eall a day, according to chief De
Jong.
Shortiy after 5 p.m. on May 8,
the department answered a dryer
fire at the Guthrie
residence
at
946B Waukegan Rd.
One pumper
responded to the call.
At 11 a.m., May 10, the depart&amp;»
ment was called to another dryer
fire at 611 Waukegan
Rd.
Nine
Cd
men and a pumper were on hand to
put out that fire.
And on May 12, at 3 p.m., the
department rolled with a pumper,
the Jeep and six men to a grass
fire at the north end of Waukegan
Rd.
Saturday morning, a pumper and
16 department members answered
a call at the Deerfield Garage on
Waukegan Rd. A car was on fire.
ry

Robert S. Ramsay Appointed Trustee

of

Of Local Fire Protection District

pending for eight months

Robert S. Ramsay,

president of the Deerfield State bank,

N. Kelley.
At the
board of

Nab Three Youths
With Stolen Car

was
1959,

Three
Chicago
teenagers
were
arrested
Sunday
afternoon,
minutes after stealing a 1960 Chrysler
in Half Day, Deerfield police reported.
The

three teenagers

were

spotted

first meeting of the new
trustees, Elmer A. Krase

selected

served

assistant chief. Krase

previously

and

has

as

assistant

also been

and second captain.
Other
officers named

both
to

in

first
serve

until May 1, 1962, were William
Wachholder,
first captain;
John
Liske, second captain; Edward J.
Wachholder, first lieutenant, Jack
R.

Gagne,

second

lieutenant;

Eric

and Waukegan Rds., he said.
Radioing for help and working
on a hunch, Prais gave chase, aided by officer William Butler in another squad car, he said.
The chase, which started at the

this being the only office on which

with the arrest
a reporter.

They

were

of the

brought

Deerfield

station

could

prove

not

trio,

when

he

told

into

the

the

driver

ownership

of the

ear.
He
was
also
charged
with
driving with an invalid learner’s
permit.
The three youths were booked

with “Joy Riding,”
police in Deerfield.

according

to

They were held overnight in the
Deerfield jail and bond was posted
Monday
morning.
In a second
Saturday fire, 12
men and a pumper answered a call

for a grass fire on County Line Rd.,
east

of

Waukegan

Rd.

third

and

by Deerfield police officer Sheldon
Prais at the corner of Half Day

northern boundary of Deerfield,
ended on the southern boundary

Iversen,

lieutenant.

Jan deJong will continue as chief,
a term is not set.
At its regular

monthly

meeting

held the same night as the trustees’
meeting, the volunteer department
elected Richard Lundquist
as its

president,

Obert

Fladeland

vice

president, and Earl Pluskowski secretary and treasurer.
The men elected by the depart-

ment serve as social and business
officers, while those appointed by
the district are the line officers responsible for conduct of the department’s fire fighting. The
department’s president attends meet-

ings of the district trustees
ison between
the district.

In

the

announcing

that

Sara
Lee
forever.”

trict. He replaces John W. Carlson, who recently moved to
Wisconsin. The other trustees of the fire district are George
and Hubert

as lia-

department

and

trustees’

ap-

pointments, district president Hubert Kelley explained to the firemen that men with past officer experience had been selected for top
posts, but that other experienced

past officers were asked to serve in
the ranks this year, without title,

this

is

Inc.,

“not

issue

would

be

the
been

now

and

to

wait

said that it

irresponsible

a set of zoning

has

going

The plan commission

to

provide

principles

for one

concern.
They
stressed
that the
whole area must be considered as

a whole.
Sara Lee seeks to erect its plant
on 32 acres along Waukegan Rd.,
on a tract owned by Anthony Mercurio. The tract is at the south end
of Deerfield.
“
The plan commission, according
to one report, opened a full barrage in a last-ditch effort to sink
the Sara Lee plan to move
into
Deerfield with a prestige plant.
The commission said it was faced
with two problems.
The first was
protecting the entrance to Deerfield and the second was holding
down the land coverage.
The commission noted that Sara

Lee may build a prestige plant, but
pointed

south

up

that

the

land

to

the

of Sara Lee might be devel-

oped in a less “orderly fashion.”
Other issues raised by the commission included sewerage, water
and drainage.
According to man-

ager

Norris

Stilphen,

facilities would
the addition
facility.

the

village

be overloaded by
of the Sara Lee

Elm Street residents began the
verbal
barrage
directed against
parking of garbage trucks at the
village
garage,
located along the
railroad tracks on Elm St.
The residents claimed that the
area was infested with rats, was not
attractive and was a health problem to the village.
They brought
as evidence pictures taken in early
March which showed the area in a
“messy” condition.
Since the issue was raised more
than a month ago, the village has
taken steps to clean-up the area
and protect the sanitary conditions
of the village garage, according to
village manager Norris Stilphen.
The citizens
first complained
against
private scavengers who
service Deerfield when they were

observed

there

Wachholder,

new

first

parking

at night

garbage

with

trucks

partially

filled

trucks. The citizens also complained against private dumping in the
area.
However, since their first complaint, the area has been posted
Dumping”

“No

with

accord-

signs

ing to Stilphen. Also, he said, the
trucks which still park
garbage
there are washed out at night and
are “as clean as garbage trucks can
get.”
In

Stilphen

addition,

board

told

members that a total of 400 shrubs
and two trees have been planted
in an effort to partially block off
from the
garage.

the area
from the

across

houses

This was not good enough for
the citizens. “Anything you don’t
want

anywhere

goes

at

else

in

garage,”

the

village

the

com-

one

plained.

Stilphen agreed that the cttizens
in that area have been subjected
to an extreme amount of traffic.
The road leads to the sewerage
treatment plant and currently that
project is in its final stages of
completion.
Too, the park district is working
and

property

newly-acquired

their

on

Franken

the

Brothers

are

clearing out the last of their stock.
Also, work is just beginning on the

Shepard

Alan

New
school

which

High

Junior

is in the vicinity.

However, Stilphen told the board
the

since

that

first

complaint,

the

area has been cleaned up and conare

ditions

in order to give officer training to
newer men. It is expected in this
way to work up a large, experienced pool of men trained in officers’ duties.

William
the

Foods,

Sara Lee parent company, told the
REVIEW

was last week appointed by Judge Maynard Hulse to a three
year term on the Deerfield-Bannockburn Fire Protection disWard

Consolidated

spectators.

a

when

sanitary

verbal

The
plained

sewerage
been left

PTA

about

area.

in that

barrage

continued

representative

the

gate

to

com-

the

plant having
treatment
About two weeks
open.

fireman

ago a small lad, nine years old,
slipped through an opened gate,
was riding on a trickling filter,
which spins in a large are in a vat

is permitted to drive a fire truck
until certified as capable by Captain Wachholder.

about three feet deep.
The child, according to Stilphen,
fell from the arm of the filter and

captain,
deJong

trucks

At

has been selected by Chief
as
chief
instructor
on

and

equipment.

No

last week’s meeting several
(Continued on page 2)

was

but otherwise
scraped
(Continued on page 2)

not

�TMG PRS Fe
hs eyeae oe is bi ca me

Trustees Oppose
It is alleged that these piles of
grass cuttings, twigs and branches
and material of this sort act as a

”

breeding

place

for

- vermin.

In

|

ble

owners

te;

to

for
clean

order

up

rats

and

to make

and/or

vacant

other

it possi-

neighbors

lots throughout

the community, the public works
_
department has established a pro43 gram to haul away any debris piled

iy.

up

adjacent to the street on, these

lots.
This

Pe
|

is

not

in

the

nature

of

a

house-to-house clean-up campaign
because it is generally felt that the

_ seavenger

services

in the village

County Appoints

_ Finance Director

ie

L.

Morrison

of

Zion

was

appointed director of finance for
Lake

Au

county

cording

s

effective

The

June

to a resolution

the May meeting
_ supervisors.
job

of

finance

1,

ac-

passed

at

board

of

of the

director

for

the county was
okayed
by
board at the April meeting.
In

other

meeting,

action

chairman

supervisors,
Patee

ed

three

Karl

at

the

the
board

of the board of
Berning,

special

appoint-

committees

study and report back
matters.
Berning,
supervisor

on

to

specific

from

West

- Deerfield Township, named

a pub-

lic works committee to study the
report
mittee

.

ag
os,

of a special
of 12. The

committee

lems

will study

citizens compublic works
related

of water, sewerage

prob-

and flood

control in the county.
Joseph Koss of Deerfield

and

Arnold
Pedersen of Bannockburn
|
‘were members of the citizens’ com-

mittee which made the initial study
which

| Me

recommended

that

a county

oa

wide public works department be
established.
A legislative . committee
was
named and directed to analyze legislation pending before the legisla-

A

ture

H,
Medi

ae

|

*

Cat
,

|

as

well

as

able changes
/

iy
we

determining

to existing

desir-

laws,

or

new laws, that would strengthen
local
county
government.
That
committee will maintain communication with representatives in the

state legislature.
The third committee named by
Berning was the Lake County Museum
committee
which
was
instructed to receive all communica-

tions about the museum. The committee will also study the plight of

e

the museum
at a logical

and
iy!
OL
e,

in an effort to arrive
program of assistance

help in order to protect “this

Vital

cultural

asset.”

- President Sends
— Invitation To

| Eleanor Roosevelt

Tan
Py!
a, «

Chicago

night

of

area and to spend

Wednesday,

guest in my home.

May

24,

the
as

a

I look forward

to discussing
with
you
privately
the true position of the residents of

Deerfield

who

have

misrepresented
ligned.”’

and

Page

2
YZ

been
much

a vacant

lot which

you wish to clear of debris, it has
been suggested that you organize
your neighbors to pick up and pile
the material near the street.
Once this is accomplished, a call

should be made

to the village hall,

and arrangements will be worked
out to send a front end loader and
truck to the lot and the materials
loaded and hauled away.
While this is a small service in
itself, it is hoped that it will provide for a better safety climate to
prevent injury to neighborhood
children
from
possible
nails
or

objects

found

in the

debris.

Chark-0-Chick
Sales Campaign
Junior
Chamber
of Commerce
members
will launch their house
to house drive on Deerfield homes
this
Saturday,
selling
Chark-OChick barbecue chicken dinner orders
for
delivery
on
Sunday,
June 4.
Bernie Forrest, sales chairman,

has

grossly
ma-

reported

that

orders

may

be

placed by calling WI 5-2880.
Jaycees will also be selling the CharkO-Chick
in
Deerfield
Commons
and downtown.
Dinners will be prepared on a
precise
schedule
at Jewett
Park
and delivered at any hour requested between noon and 6 p.m.
In
addition to a full one-half chicken,
dinners will include cole slaw salad, potato chips, roll and honey.
Chark-O-Chick
is the
Jaycees’
major fund raising event of the
year. Money from the project will

finance the club’s civic service program.
Projects carried out last year or
now underway
include
Operation
Santa Claus, the Deerfield Easter
Egg
Hunt,
a Children’s
Reading
room in the new library, the GetOut-The-Vote campaigns and visual aids for the schools.
“Deerfield residents planning to
use our mail order coupons should
send them in as soon as possible to
beat the late rush of orders by
people
who
have
changed
their
®lans for that Sunday,” said John
Ely, Chark-O-Chick chairman.

Chamber To Hear
Tape Recording Of
Major's Speech

Brickyard Plea
For Special Use
The

village

Amid

the

of Deerfield

passed

two resolutions Monday
night at
their board meeting opposing two
requests
by the National
Brickyards Co. which will come up before the Lake County zoning board
of appeals May 25 in the Deerfield
village hall, beginning at 1:30 p.m,
The first request is a petition
to rezone from R-4B residential to
I-1, light industrial, the area north

of the
the

drainage

drainage

ditch

ditch

and

east of

roughly.

The second request by the brickyards, which dis-annexed from the
village of Deerfield in 1949, is for
a special permit to operate a dry,
sanitary landfill southwest of the
Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and
Pacific railroad.
Because the village has opposed
the two positions, if the issue is
to pass,
it must
have
a threefourths majority of the Lake County board of supervisors to be approved.
The village has no formal control over the area.
However,
the
village
has
the
right to make recommendations to

on

their

1,000
val

he

Mayer,

property;

and

at the

to

more

Glenview

than

Na-

Air station last September.
In his talk, the major will tell
the results of psychiatric studies
made
on
17,000
Americans
who
were taken prisoners by the Chinese Communists
during the Korean War.
Approximately 70 Chamber members viewed
the film ‘Operation
Abolition” at the April meeting of
the group.
That film dealt with the rioting
and confusion in connection with
the hearings of the Un-American
Activities committee in San Francisco last year.

words

in

over

Deerfield

the destiny
areas.

board

May

21.

Scherrer is to explain
dents
of unit two can

prize
up

of

for

$100

the

which

best

how resiwin
the

he

looking

has

put

lawn

this

summer,
A
survey
of pest control
has
shown that in unit two, only one
person has contributed.
Unit one is 20 per cent better
with
its contributions
than
last

year.
Senator
Robert
McClory
has
added to his calendar a bill which
would create a state crime investigating commission.
The
ladies
of the manor
who

had

the pleasure

of attending

the

at the
25 at

a mile

village hall
1:30 p.m.

In other action
at the village
board meeting, the trustees passed
a budget which estimates expenditures of $666,458. The estimated

of the
will

village

leave

is $671,509

a

surplus

of

The
board
okayed
a_
paper
change of procedure on the Greenwood
Ave.
Storm
sewer
special
assessment. The change was made
because the procedure of amending the ordinance was not propstressed

and

or

WHEREAS,
operation
of
this
proposed dry landfill would lead
to the dumping
of infected
elm
wood in the form of limbs, trunks,
and stumps which would provide
a menace to the healthy trees of
the community; and
WHEREAS,

the

burning

a nuisance to the essentially residential
areas
surrounding
the
National Brick Company property;
and
WHEREAS,

failure

to cover pro-

perly disposed material with clean
fill daily would lead to the breeding
and

of

rats

and

other

all

vermin;

drainage

water

from the clay pit im which
dumping would, if permitted,

this
take

place

Fork

is pumped

to the

West

of the North Branch of the Chicago River without any treatment
whatever;

and

WHEREAS, operation of a dry
land fill of this sort would lead
to excessive traffic of heavy trucks
on

the

highways

of

the

Board of Trustees
of Deerfield, that:

State,

The Village

the

Village

of Deerfield

strong-

ly opposes the
cial permit for

sanitary
of the
and

land

of

granting of a speoperation of a dry

fill

National

in

the

Brick

clay

pit

Company:

BE IT FURTHER
RESOLVED
that copies of this resolution be
sent to the Hon.
Garfield
Leaf,
County Clerk of Lake County, to

the Hon. Karl Berning, Chairman
of the County Board of Supervisors, and to
Chairman Pro

of Lake

Zoning

the Hon. Max Pilz,
Tem of the County

Board

that

cost.
An ordinance

ant

venders

streets was
of 4-2.
Accepted

Paving
Frost

this

David
will

Whitchange

prohibiting

from
passed
a low

itiner-

roaming
by a

of Appeals.

Lake

County

Civic

League

bid

from

vote

Mayer

of $8,277.50 for paving the
property.

Taken To Hospital

Following Accident
Frank Ganger, 17, of 1329 Waukegan Rd., was taken to Highland
Park hospital
following
an accident May 7 involving a car he was

and

two

others,

will

award
the first
annual
Jack
E.
Sams honor citation to a public official who has “stimulated thrift
and efficiency in the administration of tax monies,” according to
James Paxton, the league’s president.
The
supervisor
from
Vernon
township George Stancliff has been

in

nomination

for

this —

award.

The Deerfield
man Rights have

Citizens’ For Hupresented a check

,

for $75 to the West Deerfield Township public library for the purchase
of books
written by leading experts in the field of Human Rela-.~
tions to improve group understanding and to further the basic con-.
cepts of American Democracy.
The list of books to be purchased
was compiled with the help of Mrs.

Helen Haney before she left for her
European
trip. They will supplement the books already owned by»
the library and will provide new
books in every age category as well «
as in the fiction and non fiction collection.

the

split

17-Year-Old Youth

driving

WHEREAS,

President

of com-

bustible materials would constitute

The matter was referred to Mrs. +
Betty Kebschull and Lelia Huber,
co-chairmen of the ways and means
committee for action.
Honor Official
Next
Thursday,
May
25,
the

Committee Gives
Money For Books

The hearings
will begin May

within

ney

field;

suburban*

the county of land
of its boundaries.

none of the special assesment work

of Deer-

new

placed

the

Village

of the

two largest women’s organizations
in
the
Chicago
this past
week

done.

of the

asked that plans be made
for an open house discus-

the

erly

heart

have
here

sion on the merits of the Illinois
Federation
of Women
clubs
and
the League of Women Voters in
Illinois and how each could effect

WHEREAS, the clay pit is located in an area relatively close to

M.D., of the Unit-

delivered

people

of

rights

$5,051.

WHEREAS, the National Brick
Company has applied to the County Board for a special permit to
operate a dry landfill in the clay
located

battle

Manor,
president
of the
association
Edwin
Golien
has
sent
a
special note to Fred Scherrer of
1703 Walnut Dr, to appear before

which

Resolution

the

water

revenue

pit

haa
Ve 2

Deerticld Manor Rowe’

County, and Village; and
ed ‘States Marine Corps, will speak
WHEREAS, the location of this
by tape recording to the Deerfield property
outside the Village of
Chamber of Commerce at its din- Deerfield precludes effective conner meeting May 25.
trol of the aforementioned conThe meeting will be held in ‘he ‘ditions:
Legion
Hall
at
7
p.m.
Major
NOW THEREFORE BE IT REMayer’s speech will be the same
SOLVED
by the President and
Major

one
President of the village of Deer- field, David Whitney, has sent the
following telegram to Mrs. Eleanor
em)
Roosevelt, who is expected to speak
_in Chicago at end of May.
“As president of the village of
Deerfield, I wish to extend an invitation to you to visit Deerfield
during
your
forthcoming
trip to

| the

have

Jaycees Start

i

beh!

Robert

If you

sharp

~ Robert Morrison

HA

are adequate to take care of this
type of trash.
This program is specifically designed for vacant lots and will be
on an “on call’’ basis.

7

:,

Deerfield

police reported.
In the accident, which happened
in front of 813 Waukegan
Rd., a
car, proceeding north on Waukegan
Rd., stopped to unload passengers,
when the Ganger car hit the rear
of it, according to police.
Ganger stated that he did not see
the stopped car, which was driven
by Warren A. Jackman, 1444 Wood-

land, police said.
The open car door of the Jackman car hit an unoccupied car belonging to Janis Sundberg, 925 Hiawatha Ln., Riverwoods.

Slate Registration
At Half Day School
Registration
of 1961-62
kindergarten students will be held from
1 to 3 p.m. in the kindergarten
room at Half Day school, Wednesday, May 31.
Children who
are five by December 1, 1961 are eligible. Parents
should present official birth certificates.
Tea and coffee will be served by
the Community club while the new
students will be familiarized with
their school. Any persons knowing
of new families with kindergarten
age youngsters have been asked to
call the school, NE, 4-3232, so that
an invitation can be sent.

Protest Trucks
(Continued from page 1)
seriously injured.
The PTA representative accused
the village of not protecting its
children to which Stilphen replied:
“We
are doig everything in our
power
to protect the youngsters,
but some of the responsibility lies
with the
parents.
They should
know where their children are,” he
declared.
He noted that the gate had been
left open by workmen as they left
the site and there was still a village employee
on the site.
The
gate,
according
to Stilphen,
was
not normally open.
&amp;
And since the accident, the gate
is locked after each car comes and
g
goes from the site. Also a pedestrian gate has been installed for the
workmen.
The
PTA
representative
then
|
complained that he was not notified
as to meetings of the Safety council, despite
requests
to be so
notified.
i

President

David

Whitney,

in

considering the issue, told him that
any suggestions for safety measures which the PTA’s felt necessary

should be made to the board.
“But how will be village pay for”
them?
As. I underdstand it, the
budget has already been cut neek:; Hd
he said.
‘You worry about reteuieanine
tions for added
safety and we’ll
worry about
financing
them,”
President Whitney said.

Appoint
(Continued

Trustee
from

page

1)

vacancies, caused for the most part
by members moving from the area,
were officially declared, in order

that applications may be accepted
from new recruits to bring the department

up

to

its

full

authorized

strength of thirty men.
Thursday,

May

18, 1961

»

Recently a number of complaints
have been received in connection
- with debris located on vacant lots.

WAS
A ae

�i Pee
eee er

ctr
Hsik BR aaae vip

ROY
UREN a te ia

Bit; ae

\

f

Daniel

Boys’ Baseball

Auringer Leaves Local Force;

Takes Over Reins Of Fox Lake Police
Daniel Auringer, a Deerfield police officer since April 15, 1960,
has resigned from the local force

-leffective

Daniel

Auringer

Civic Association

Plans Airing Of
School Consolidation
The Highland
ation will hold
on the subject
dation, Thursday
the
Highland
center.

June

1 when

he will be-

come chief of police in the village
of Fox
Lake,
Auringer,
who
is
presently living at 1515 Rosewood,
will move to Fox Lake as soon as
he finds a home there, he said.
An
air
force
policeman
from
1950-54,
Auringer
began
his
civilian police work in Fox Lake in
1957.
He was a patrolman there
until he
came
to the
Deerfield
force.
The
appointment
of
Auringer
came at the May 15 board of trustees meeting in Fox Lake.
His force in
Fox Lake consists
of six patrolmen
and four radio
operators
for the town
of 3,900
population.
Auringer and his wife, Angeline,
have two boys—Dan,
14 months;
and David, 2 months.

Park Civic associan open meeting
of school consolinight, May 18 at
Park
Recreation

All interested residents of Deerfield, Bannockburn and Highwood,
as well as those of Highland Park
are invited to attend.
Robert M. Buhai, president of
the civic association issued the following statement. ‘“‘The subject of
school consolidation is of primary
interest to every resident and taxpayer in the general area, We felt
we could best serve the community by giving a full airing to the
pros and cons of redistricting. We

therefore asked the Highland

Park

league

to

offer

year

long

the

of

women

results

of

voters,
their

study on school consolidation as
the program for our annual meeting and were delighted at their
acceptance.
We
meeting will be

believe that this
one of the largest

and most informative

ever held in

this community.”
The

panel

program

will

discussion

consist

which

of

a

explores

all phases of consolidation, and the
good and bad points of each. The
impact on education and on taxes
will be thoroughly discussed. Har-

old

prominent

Colt League Has

CARRying

First Practice

On

Th Colt League of the Deerfield
Boys Baseball Ass'n. will hold its
first practice session of the season
on Saturday, May 20 at Woodland
park north diamond at 9 a.m. This
is the newest league of the association, includes boys ages 15 and 16.

Forecast —by
“When

in

the

REVIEW

of

the

following

staffs

every

school

in

have been invited to attend.
The meeting will start promptly

at 8:30 p.m. Annual
officers will precede
program.

REG.

7.
98¢

A committee appointed by Guy
L. Grinnell, former
chairman
of
the Lake County Board of Supervisors,
was
appointed
in March
1960 to investigate tax administrative procedures within the county.
Their recently released report on
the township level included the recommendation that all local assessors and the supervisor of assessments adopt and use the real property assessment manual issued by
the state department of revenue.
On a county level, the committee,
composed of Andrew A. Semmelman; Richard Hire, Francis Corrigan, James Paxton, Leo Grischeau,
Eric Anderson, William Pittenger,

Taisto

ba |

Aho

and

Robert

Dickson,

recommended that there be a ‘‘complete separation between
the supervisor
of assessments
and
the
board of review and the legislation,
if necessary, be recommended
to
accomplish this, so that the board
of review makes all final decisions.”
The committee also recommended that the board
of review
be
made an independent review body,
insofar as this is possible, and that
the “practice
of appointing members of the Lake County Board of
Supervisors or any other tax levying body to the board of review,
be discontinued insofar as the law
permits such discontinuance.”
Included in the report was a letter from State Senator Robert McClory, to the state legislature. In
his
letter,
McClory
gave _ his
recommendations for items to be
included in the report by the committee.

Thursday, May

18, 1961

ears

are

then

as big |

it is time

are—and

it is, —

for the coming year, Nice to see
Irma Cosmos back in circulation —
(Chris’ wife) and many of the Old
Lions were out that night—along ©
with a few of the younger ones. |
We have a nice two bedroom —
home for sale over on Springfield, —

built by one of our best Builders, |
has separate dining room and is in

perfect

condition.

The

price

is

right, too. Under $19,000. See this
Shop Ben Franklin and Save

election of
the regular

LOCALLY

FRANKLIN 5-10

OWNED

-- NATIONALLY

KNOWN

658
DEERFIELD RD.
DEERFIELD,

and you'll buy it.
Billy

Allen,

son

x
of

Bill

and

Al-—

berta Allen, has been promoted to
Manager of the business office of —

th Illinois Bell Telephone at Har-

ILL.

vey.

. . Audrey

(Allen)

Benson’s

was

appointed |

husband,

Marvin,

Principal

of the Lincoln

School in

Riverside. , . . Bill and Alberta Allen

just

got

back

from

a trip

to

New Orleans. (That takes care of |
the Allen family pretty well, Bar-—

Committee Studies
Tax Procedures

In Lake County

Stryker:

leaves

The Deerfield Lions had their
Installation Dinner Monday night
at the Union Hotel in Wheeling. —
Carl Layer was elected President —

districts

problems
attorney,
will
offer
a
critique and commentary followed
by an open question period.

Fred

Oak

to plant corn—they

5-10 BEN
of

the

a Squirrels

Scores of all games, team standings and other statistics will appear
in the REVIEW
each week.
The
deadline for game scores will be
Saturday night of each week,
so
that reports of games
and other
activities between
Sunday and
Thursday of each week will appear
week.

B.

Carr

The Girls softball league starts
its season
with
the first games
played
next Tuesday
night, May
23rd. The Major league Braves are
scheduled to play the Major league
Cards
at Wilmot
field with
the
Minor league Braves
against the
Minor league Cards at Woodland
park.

106, 107, 108, 109, 110, 111 and 113

school
superintendents,
and
members,
principals

By
lola

Earl Sundberg, Colt league president, has indicated that the Colt
league team will play at 21 game
schedule in the North Shore Suburban
association.
The
Deerfield
team will play in the Northern section of the Suburban group. Sundberg has announced that any boy
in the Colt league age group who
has not registered should show up
for the practice Saturday if he is
interested in playing this year.

school

The
board

Norman,

i)

bara we

has been with our Department a
about a year—speaks pretty well of |
the fine training given them by

vin

3

our own Chief Dave Petersen ,. .

ase

must make an apology to Lt. Koets, 3
(K O E T §S) sorry, dear.
4

Corday’s great new fragrance from France!

Happy
zer.

-

1000

measured

Birthday to Donald

Sel- :
ae

Tam—owned by Audrey Meldahl |

spray cologne
concentree
Over

in awhile.)

Officer Dan Auringer will be- |
come Chief of Police at Fox Lake
—the end of the month... Dan

ea

#

see once

—became

the

mother

of

10

Air-

dale puppies (6 boys and 4 girls)
at 2 a.m. Monday.

Trouble

Double &gt;

(Ardis Peet’s) is the father. Since
the gals are really in the Real Estate Business they advocate
an
Airdale in every home . . . does.
this mean business is going to the

sprays

Sensationnelle! ‘line soaring lilt of this
provocative new fragrance from France,
now in an exhilarating double strength spray cologne. Each
crystal flacon gives more than 1,000 long-lasting sprays of
Corday’s Trapéze . . . clouds and clouds of pulse-quickening
fragrance, the very essence of Paris.
Leakproof even on planes, it’s equally at home for boudoir or
travel... makes a perfect gift.
Complement Trapéze Spray Cologne Concentrée with
Trapéze Parfum, Trapéze at its most intense, created, packaged and sealed in France. $7.50, $13.50, $25
Trapéze Eau De Parfum, $5 and $9. Trapéze Dusting

dogs?

WAUKEGAN

and

DEERFIELD

¥\:

Barbara Adelman, daughter of
Al and Bee Adelman is being con-—
firmed the 21st, at the Lakeside
Congregational Church. This is a
big thing for our young people—

Good Luck, Barb.

$3.50
and $5.00

Bowen,

WI
ROADS,

5-1

DEERFIELD

‘

The Village Hall Drive will be
widened—which will be a benefit
to us all, plans are being made
and details and legal papers are

plus tax || being

Powder, $5. Parfum Purse Flacon, in jewel gift box, $4.

PHARMACY

:

prepared

Gn

1 1 1
701

by

Engineer

REALTORS

Waukegan

Road

wi

53-0984

Page 2-A

—

�NEWS

Rev. A. P. Johnson To Assume Duties

.. . for ALL who are ..

At First Presbyterian Church June 1
On June 1, the Rev. A. P. Johnson will begin new duties
as minister of parish visitation in Deerfield’s First Presbyterian
church. Rev. Johnson, who recently completed an eight year
pastorate

in Bethany

church

in Highland

years as a minister in the denomination.
Ill.
One of five children, his father
was a minister in the United Evangelical church.
Following
his graduation
from
Westmar college, LaMars, Ia., and
securing master of arts and bachelor of divinity degrees, Rev. Johnson
began
his
ministry
in
the
United Evangelical church in Chad-

Dick Longtin’s SPORTS HUDDLE
WILL HAVE A NEW HOME, Soon!

wick, Il.
From there he went to the Adams
Street church in Chicago, and later

transferred

We Are Moving to the
DEERFIELD COMMONS
Shopping Center
ON or About JUNE Ist
FREE
Meet

DOOR

and

Greet

Sports

sons, who

Favorite

Opening

Dick Longtin’s SPORTS HUDDLE
733

Waukegan

gi

Deerfield

WI

5-2336

DRIVE CAREFULLY — THE LIFE YOU SAVE
MAY BE YOUR OWN
OPEN
SUNDAYS

9-6

Tue., Wed., Thu., 9-6
FRIDAY 9-9
SATURDAY 9-8

Portion

” ee

rrr

enjoy travel, have

xxx

Vine

Ripe,

HAM

N meee
wid

Salas

OS

es

uw.

in the union, Cuba,
and the Islands of

Caribbean,

Minister of the church, the Rev.
Bernard
F. Didier,
has
reported
that the rapid growth of the congregation and the imminent expansion of the church’s facilities with
the erection of its projected new
sanctuary
make
Rev.
Johnson’s

services

a valuable

church’s

ministry.

On

adjunct

Our

final

urday

dance

evening

of

the

at

season

the

Sat-

Thursday,

mosphere for the party, which will
be
complete
with
island-type
snacks
and
a large
fresh
fruit
centerpiece.

Fresh

soca

6

hii
Chicken

CHUNK
6'2-0z.
Cans

of the Sea

STYLE TUNA

Vol.

36, No.

IN.

MEAT DEPT.
OPEN DURING
EVERY STORE
HOUR

Party,

Home

Style

ALBERTA PEACHES

nee
size

3

Cans

Guaranteed

to

Ever
6

00

Cans

BI

be

the

Packed!
to

Del

a

Finest

Fruit

Limit

Customer

Monte

PINEAPPLE-GRAPEFRUIT
46-oz.
Cans

DRINK

A ron $100
Phone:

RD.

t1

Local Subscription Rates—-$3.50 per year
Domestic Rate—$5.00 per year
Single Copies—15c
Foreign Rates on Application
Bo
a
class postage paid at Deerfield,
inois
Unsolicited manuscripts or photographs
are sent to the North Shore Group newspapers at the sender’s risk.
The North
Shore Group
Newspapers
assume
no responsibility for the publication of such materials or their return to the sender.

Dinner

1 Oc

37

1961

MEMBER
National Editorial Association
Illinois Press Association

Frozen

FOR

18,

HIGHLAND
PARK OFFICE
Laurel Ave., Highland Park,
Telephone 1D 2-4500

608

Halves

PRR

May

g

PUBLICATION
OFFICE
699 Waukegan Road
DEERFIELD,
ILLINOIS
Telephone Windsor 5-4500

«x«x«x

POT PIES

Johnson

Published Weekly every Thursday

Highland

Dominic Panerali, decorating chairmen, have set the Hawaiian at-

22
DeLuxe

P.

DEERFIELD
REVIEW

Park Women’s club, beginning at
10 p.m.
Mr.
and Mrs.
Frank
Peterson,
left,
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
George
Young, right, get into the Hawaiian
spirit for the affair, which
will
feature music, provided by George
Cook’s
orchestra,
Dancing
will
continue until 2 a.m.
Mrs. Peterson, along with Mrs.

LB.

A,

to the

The Deerfield 100 Club will hold
its

Rev,

Cover

TOMATOES

8-oz.

2-B

40

4,

Garden

CHICKEN

Page

spent

in Dixon,

A reception for Mr.
and
Mrs.
Johnson will be held by the church
congregation
immediately
following the third service, Sunday, June

49¢
Fox

732
WAUKEGAN
Deerfield

has
born

GROCERLAND

Star re
39c

the

COSMAS

SLICING

ii

was

ed every state
Mexico, Haiti

visit-

The following children received
the Rite of Holy Baptism at morning worship on Mother’s Day, May
14 at the Bethlehem church:
Pamela and Scott Clarbour, children of
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Clarbour, 1351
Deerfield Rd.; Carol Anne
Gant,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Gant,
1015 Osterman
Ave.; Maureen Jeannette
Miller
and
Mark
Miller, children of Mr. and Mrs.
Maurice Miller, 1010 Hillside Ave.;
Cassandra
Nancy
Marilyn
Neill,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James
Neill, 1124 Waukegan Rd., and Julie Ann Shepard, daughter of Mr.
and
Mrs.
Charles
Shepard,
1106
Davis St.

Specials May 1 18- 19- 20
Armour

on

which

Highland

Baptize Children
At Bethlehem Church

FACTORY REPRESENTATIVES WILL BE ON HAND
TO SHOW YOU THE LATEST IN SPORTS EQUIPMENT
Our

from

at 630 Hermitage Ave. They are the
parents of two sons who live in
Chicago and Milwaukee. The John-

Personalities

Don’t Miss

Joliet

Rev. and Mrs. Johnson are living

PRIZES!
Your

to

pastorate
he
came
to
Park eight years ago.

Park,

He

Wndsor

0707
Thursday,

May

5-

18, 1961

�fet
|
Re-coil Starter
Fingertip Controls.

ALUMINUM

ox

PRICED:
SPECIAL GRILLS

3 H.P. ROTARY
POWER MOWER

WITH

$4.98

on

3

A

@

and white webbing

positions

Engine

chr&gt;me grid

ff

® Moves easily on sturdy wheels!

green

turdy Aoi

Briggs &amp; Stratton

\

SWITCH
Motorized spit barbecues to perfection “i
e Hood shelters huge 24” chrome

Electric......

te
inis

grid’ |

| Fans;
18°?

Ballerina Shades
Save 62c—Reg. 1.39

.
a

3 Speeds
|
UL Motor
Rotary Switch

f

1 yr. warranty; manually
reversible. vari-sized fans!

:
.

Get these value- packed plastic

items while quantities last. Select
vegetable bin and wastebaskets
from many bright colors now!

10” Portable Fan ....... $9.99
14” 2- ppee Mesa
cs buat

Acetate with dotted
Swiss skirt. Five
for boudoir.

=a

colors

White,

Colors.

REG.

$1

SLEEVELESS

BLOUSES

+s22¢

embroidered
@ Preshrunk

ie

e For B

d Girls
peteinforcedchose
stitching

ks
250 Paper2 iNapkins

Tots

Blue @ Red @ White
Women's

Sizes

ey

® Buoyant rubber soles

Rayon

3-8

10c

Pkg.!

pe

Si,

Pee aa

to
59¢ pr.

Athletic

or band

Girl’s and Women's

Sizes

6-10

| @ Elastic turnover cuft
@ Nylon reinforced
heel and toe
f=

rete
7c

bees

© Sizes

&lt;—~ go

,

|

N

-

a

fy © Sizes 972-11

OPEN HANDLE
STEAM IRON

.,

"

Iron Pad and Cover

|

Save 23¢! Reg. $1.00
ufflex

54”

pad-cover

§

Shanna
with elastice binding,a

‘ahike

blue, champagne

$

Comnions

shepping

Center

F ste

722 Waukegan.

88

e A steam iron or a dry iron
e More a

e Easy-t
* actirtn

vind wider raha

abric contro
ese open handle

e See it demonstrated today

HOURS: OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.
SATURDAYS 9 A.M. to 6 P.M.
S. 5. KRESGE COMPANY |
Deertield

en

WESTINGHOUSE

ee
White,

ni

Z

37c

Silicone coating
_makes ironing edsy!

eg ty
ti

ree
'\ye
White; white
2

Sosch up 08 sbesehur

PANTIES | ANKLETS
3.781) 4 34
Values

Reg.

Save

a

Road&gt;

32-38

�NOW

GOING

ON

MAY 17th THRU 24TH — 8 BIG DAYS!
Cut your food bill almost in half — with savings of almost 30%
to 50%.

Our anniversary sale is an annual food event that home-

makers know they can’t afford to miss. The finest fresh fruits and
vegetables, a tremendous, all U.S. choice beef sale and literally
hundreds of famous, national brand canned foods are all waiting
:

for you, at prices that we guarantee are the lowest you've seen in

a long, long time.

This is a family affair; so bring everyone and

don’t miss the fun and savings at Sure Save’s big 14th Anniversary
Sale.

‘14th ANNIVERSARY
TO

SURE
SAVE’S

START SAVING NOW!

Delicious

on

Baked

Potatoes—SOUR

HALF &amp; HALF
(REG.

LAND

O’ LAKES—93

Creamed

or

25c—SAVE

10c)

Score—Salted or Unsalted

BUTTER

(REG.

om. 15¢

PRICE

atrs. 69¢

PRICE

77c—SAVE

8c)

Dry

COTTAGE CHEESE ..... &lt;=. 19c
(REG.

FREE—1

PRICE

31c—SAVE

12c)

Pint of Highlander

ICE CREAM...

oxty 58¢

WITH

PURCHASE OF 2 PINTS AT
(REG. PRICE 87c—SAVE 29c)
O’ LAKES Grade A—Fresh

LAND

58c

BLEND—DRIP

BUTTERNUT

WEBB’S

Pure—Unsweetened

Grapefruit Juice 4 ‘99
(REG.

LIBBY’S

VIM

PRICE

29c—SAVE

VEGETABLE

JUICE

COCKTAIL...
(REG.

AUNT

PRICE

3

FOR

17c)

14c

PEACHES .4 =: 99:

Extra Heavy Syrup—Sliced or Halyes—Reg. Price 39c—Save 57c

RAGGEDY ANN—In

ROYAL
Delicious Flavors

DESSERTS
Pkg.

RAGGEDY

PLANTER’S

PEANUT

Alaskan—Red Sockeye

BUTTER

SALMON

6c

(Reg. Price 3for29c)
(SAVE 1 1c)

£2

ANN

-

§6,

Thursday,

Friday and

Be.

Can...

be

‘cas 25¢

35c—SAVE

10c)

Meat and produce

prices available Wednesday,

Saturday only.

NELLIE

DICED CARROTS
(REG.

S &amp; W

Save

.....%43&lt;«

SUGAR

GELATIN

Blackwell

Reg. Price 57c —

CANE —

DOMINO—GRANULATED—PURE

10

&amp;

Price $1.29—Save 30c

COFFEE.....« 99°

LARGE EGGS

Crosse

OR REGULAR—Reg.

PRICE

=: 10¢

15c—-SAVE

We

reserve the right to limit quantities.

No sales to dealers.

5c)

CALIFORNIA

Stewed Tomatoes 2 © 39c
(REG.

CROSSE

&amp;

PRICE

2

for

49c—SAVE

10c)

BLACKWELL

SHOPPING CENTER
716 WAUKEGAN RD.

VICHYSSOISE SOUP “c=: 19¢c
(REG.

PRICE

29c—SAVE

10c)

SPACIOUS
Open

Mon.

PARKING

FOR 400

thru

9 A.M.

Fri.,

CARS

to 9 P.M.

Sat., ‘til 6 P.M.
Page

H

20—D

4

Thursday,

May

18, 1961

�14th ANNIVERSARY SALE &gt; ‘
COFFEE &amp; CAKE
WILL BE SERVED
all

to

Sure

custom

Save

BANANAS 9

ers

m :
Thursday:y, Moy 18th, fro
a.m.

to

9

—

p.m.

bring

the

CALIFORNIA—FANCY—FRESH
whole

N’ CRISP

PASCAL CELERY

family!

ssiatk 10¢

s

(Reg

SOLID PACK—WHITE MEAT

Si

RLOI

“u

“

:

N

STEAK

“Se w

et

ae
Gor ot oa

ete

ees ,

These

exquisitely beautiful

Xo

Anchor Hocking glasses are
new and smart and Sure Save
has them for you—ABSOLUTELY
FREE.
The valuable free coupons
which you received in the mail can be

|

a

|

79:

ENTICING

:

;

—

Bt

We

ff

a

99 C : a

Mk se

4

...... » 19

STEAK

29C

ff OLIVES

U.S. CHOICE SURE SAVE TRIMMED—BONELESS

FAMILY

Lb.

89

= 49
GROUND BEEF...x sums
:: Anchor Hocking Glasses! Temenos
Ra

inh

carton

JUICE

© 89c

See.
‘FREE!
RUMP ROAST .......
DESIGN || ae
¢ 8© MILANO
1

| a

,

STEAK

PORTERHOUSE

6c)

Weg. Price. 350 SAVE Ga)

GRAPEFRUIT .... 10 t 39¢
U.S. CHOICE SURE SAVE TRIMMED

(Reg. Price 35¢ — SAVE 41c)

SAVE

i

fe

=

(Plus Dep.)

Price 2 for 35c —

ORANGE

FLORIDA—THIN SKINNED SEEDLESS

TU NA
4 et 99.-

:

SUNSHINE PURE

aunts 15c

Tr

Sree

TOMATOES

GEISHA

2 =. 29c |)
Quart

Assorted Beverages

SOLID—RED RIPE

:

Thursday —

Open

Your Deerfield SURE SAVE
and Friday ‘Til 9 P.M.

ice auc aivn Ge
_ F

CHICKEN LEGS ...... ~ AQC Te
CHICKEN BREASTS ...* 59c

redeemed at any Sure Save food mart for }\'

glasses.

There are four useful

sizes in all

and to get your complete set (two of each
size), here’s all you have to do—each week
;

for 8 weeks starting this week, clip one
coupon (starting with coupon number 1)
and redeem it for one of these beautiful
glasses. No purchase is required. Coupons
are good only on the weeks indicated—only
one coupon redeemed each week. It’s our
way of saying ‘Thank You” to old customers
and “Welcome” to new customers.

ROLLS

spr ee | aes Dozen (13) 39c

oe
pol agents

20-0z.

Size

69c

2 55c

WESSON OIL
(Reg.

Price 71c

—

SAVE

(Reg.

Price 6 for 49c—SAVE

see

| 4 vc: 99¢
(Reg. Price 29c—SAVE

16c)

17c)

COUNTRY’S DELIGHT
FROZEN

Pepsi Cola
2-0. Bis. SOC
(Plus Dep.)
_ ‘Thursday, May 18, 1961

TOMATO |
S JUICE

Orange
10c)

:
§

On
: Rog

Juice . a
4

ae

oe 2 Aus —

13¢

ae

.

Page H 21—D 5

�in

operas
*

Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday mornings last weck between 8
and 8:45 a.m., stones were
at a Norih Western train

Vine

Ave.,

agent,

C.

thrown
passing

Stephens,

complained

to

special
Highland

Park police.

’

AbnoUHCe Schedules for
Dist. 113 Summer School
Although

both

schools

are

the

closest

school

offering

the

they wish to take.

ET}

course

IGE ASAT te aD

IR

TURNER'S
TV-LAB

BE

NEWS
By William
WI

degree.

That
is the
exchange
of television
programs. With the fine electronic recording
processes
available,
programs
could
easily be exchanged
and made
understandable by interposing the languages
of the
area,
These
programs
would
be
highly
interesting
and
less
costly.
Yes, that TV in your living room has
a great potential in this world.
But,
the servicing of TV for the best viewing potential has improved. TURNER’S
TV-LAB has the latest and finest servicing equipment and know-how to maintain your TV set for the best picture
viewing.
Phone
WI
5-1401
next time
and see the difference.

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HAKANEN

| 825 Deerfield Rd., Deerfield

met

5-1383

FAR
NSU

ne

+ aed

TELEVISION

There’s much talk about people understanding people around the earth to
solve
the
world’s
troubles.
And
the
one way that would improve the relationship is not being encouraged to any

State Farm Mutual rewards
Mlinois families with new rate

en

NOW'S

The high cost of allowing students to repeat failed courses during the regular school year can be
greatly reduced
by optimum
use
of the summer months.
The tuition fee for practically all
semester
courses
is $15 for students residing in the high school
district, and $30 for those residing
elsewhere.
Some
courses may be
taken for credit, or not-for-credit;
however,
the
choice
should
be
made at registration.
The curriculum is lested below.
Art;
‘Art 1; 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 are
offered.
Art 1 and 2 prerequisites
for all other courses in the Art
Department.
A
year’s
work
requir double periods (three hours)
daily.
Typing:
Typing 1 for beginners
or repeat students; for credit or
not-for-credit.
Advanced
typing

may

be

taken

THE

by

dead-end

street.

REDUCED to $28,500. The incomparable Keck
contemporary on gorgeous 90 x 264 wooded
property
has
Lake Forest.

little

competition

in

wonderful

Living room with striking raised
hearth fireplace has 24’ window wall with south
exposure overlooking patio and yard.

7

&lt;

Page

or

by

training

hours

Classroom

will

attendance

and TY SOW Inc.

6

735

Deerfield

during

the

training.

Industrial Arts:
Industrial Arts
1 and 2 are offered; 4 hours daily
for year’s credit; prerequisite for

other

departmental

courses.

equipped

kitchen.

phasizes

Road

Deerfield Office —

Open

Weekdays

Me-

chanical
Drawing
3 and
4;
for
credit or
not-for-credit;
4 hours
daily for eight weeks.
Mechanical
Drawing for students interested in
Engineering who have not taken IA
1 and 2; for credit or not-for-credit.

Mathematics:

Math

2 and 4, for

new and review students; for credit
or not-for-credit.
Math 6 for review students only.
Physical Education (Boys): Swimming, life-saving and water-safety;
one hour per week for boys interested in qualifying for certification
(Red Cross, Boy Scouts, ete.) Fee:
$6.00.
Physical Education (Girls): Water
Ballet; one hour per week; for ad-

vanced swimmers. Fee: $6.00.
Science: General Science 1 and
2: credit by semester; three hours
daily.

Social Studies: Modern European
History (SS 7-8); either one or two
semesters; the one-semester course
meets one period daily for eight
weeks; the year-course meets two
periods
daily
for
eight _ weeks;
credits for full year (SS 7-8) are
given upon completion of SS8.
United States History (SS11-12);
either one or two semesters; the
one-semester course
meets one
period daily for eight weeks; the
year course meets two periods daily

for

eight

weeks;

credits

for

the

full year are given upon completion of SS12.
Note:
1961-62
juniors
are eligible — as are 1961-62 seniors.
The
courses
listed
above
are
tentatively offered at both Highland Park High School and Deerfield High School, with the following exceptions:
English.
At Deerfield only E2
and E8 are offered.
Mathematics.
Math
6 is not

available at Deerfield.
Social Studies. The single semester history courses SS7,
and SS12 will not be
Deerfield.
Freshmen

May

SS8, SS11,
offered at

Enroll

Incoming freshmen are eligible
to enroll in the following courses
at either high school in the district.
Some
of these courses are
not-for-credit. The tuition fees are
the same as for other high school
courses, $15 for a semester’s work.
Art: A double period course cov-

ering

fundamental

principles

of

design, color, free hand drawing,.
and
painting.
Classes
meet
five
days a week for three hours per
day.
The fee for the full year‘s

work

is $30.00.

For

credit

or not-

for-credit.
(Continued

on page

41)

TO BUY!

size bedrooms,
with

30
first

Home
Economics:
Home
Economics 1 and 2, the basic course in
the department, a prerequisite for
other departmental courses; credit
awarded only upon completion of
Home Economics 2; two hours daily
for 8 weeks.

marvelous

living room w/fireplace
ing secluded yard show

basement

seg-

require

$38,500 is a very realistic price for this quality custom built spacious brick ranch. Three
twin

iti-

English:
Englsh 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and
6 are offered; English 1 and 2 are
for repeat students only, not for
incoming freshmen.
Foreign Language: Conversational French and Spanish (non-credit
courses).
For review only: Latin
1, 2, 3, 4; Spanish 1, 2, 3, 4; French
Sa
ae ee

spacious

closet space

and

and window overlookcareful planning. Full

paneled

rec.

room.

efficiency.

Storms

and

screens,

Quinlan. and LYS ON,,Inc

Quinlan.

22—D

semester

Training:

Now only $39,500 for this nine room ranch in $20,500 ! ! ! Located on 100 x 175 beautiLincolnshire with wonderful room sizes. Dra- fully wooded property, this three bedroom brick
matic planter in slate floored entrance hall. ranch is in the select Bannockburn school distDressing room in master suite, 3 other bed- rict. Separate dining room and dreamy electric
rooms, 2 baths, family room, study and fully kitchen with wall oven, and counter range em-

YEARS
SERVICE

H

plete

TIME

Attractive brick ranch 4%2% mortgage can be assumed on this terRefreshingly decor- rific ‘‘buy’’ in the low 30’s. 7 large rooms inated and maintained. Living room with picture cluding cypress pan. rec, room, living room
window, very large kitchen and dinette combin- w/fpl.,
kitchen
w/dishwasher and disposal,
ation. Full basement w/rec. room. 3 bedrooms. lovely concrete patio plus huge pine pan. play2 car attached garage.
room and 2 baths.
quiet

with

the-wheel training (6 clock hours
per student) will be available to
eligible
students
throughout
the
8 week summer session, hours by
appointment
with
instructor.
No
tuition fee for students who com-

of their

dent who is falling behind.

New listing at $25,509.

on

because

four-year plans.
In the 1960 summer session students taking work
new
to them
accounted
for approximately 56 percent of the enrollment.
Summer courses also provide an
opportunity for students wishing to
raise a grade or to make up deficiencies.
The Board of Education
is interested in maintaining a summer program attractive both to the
accelerating student and to the stu-

Set Fees

697 Waukegan Rd.
5-1401 — DEERFIELD

WORLD

eer

Turner

to them

arrangement

half (4 weeks) of summer session.
Classroom work is prerequisite to
behind-the-wheel training. Behind-

Students are invited to take advantage of the summer session by
enrolling in courses otherwise un-

available

of

clock

offer-

that a small enrollment may make
it economically desirable to conduct
a particular course in one or the
other
school.
Regardless
of the
final determinatior. of course location, residents of the High School
District will be eligible to attend

Phone: WI

Driver

ment

The summer session of Township High School District 113
will be held at both Highland Park High School and Deerfield
High School from Monday, June 19, through Friday, August
ing a reasonably complete list of
summer courses, it is conceivable

upof

structor.

11

BUY U. S. SAVINGS BONDS.

HENRY

year,

9 to 5 —

Sundays

10 to 5

New

price

of $41,500

has

been

suggested

by

this anxious owner for his exceptionally well
constructed 3 bedroom brick ranch on 63,900
sq. ft. of beautifully wooded property.
Plaster
walls, thermopane thruout, full basement, hot
water baseboard heat!

Mid 40’s is an attractive price for the executive
wanting

t

Train Stoned

4

a beautiful

white

brick home

with cen-

tral air conditioning. Custom built with all large

rooms, the owner will include new fine beige
wool carpeting and costly draperies.
Thermo
pane windows thruout.

f‘

Windsor
UNiversity

5-3750

Uf:

REALTOR
«~WEMBER

9-1112
Thursday,

May

18, 1961

t

�WARDS
MONTGOMERY W

CATALOG sToRES
IN

| 44,

—

HIGHLAND
PARK
1854 FIRST STREET, HIGHLAND PARK

and
_ DEERFIELD
_
DEERFIELD COMMONS

SHOPPING

CENTER

CATALOG
STORE MANAGERS
CARPETING

E up To 20% on 12
BROADLOOM

COLORS

&amp;

PATTERNS

INSTALLATION AND HEAVY WAFFLE PADDING INCLUDED*
Wool Nylon Salem Square

DuPont 501 Nylon

Eeaacine mult evel

Deeper,

All Nvion Tweed
9

and

12-ft.

Durable,

smart.

12

widths.

Dou-

ae

ble backed for added
stability and
longer

.

a he

All Wool

popcorn

pad

INSTALLED

Geecanwer

$ 5

57

9, 12 and

sa. yd.
with
pad

12 and 15-ft. widths.
Style plus wearability

cut

12-ft.

widths.

pile.

5

hea

Takes

decorator

15-ft.

roughest

pad

£6

i

looking.

fs.

ye
8

nee

Sone

=

colors.

94

, Se

OVER

Address:
Thursday,

May

18, 1961

1854

INSTALLED

to

your
selec
Call
Wards
for
a _ free

So

help

you

$99. A
cua
INSTALLED

weave

15-ft.

1

widths. $

~

99.

ue

dealin,” Pinest’ tales,
7

decorator

d

ga

as

pad

re

colors.

INSTALLED

and

15-fe.

hae
crush
tant.

widths.

paragon

|

99:2. ie:

decorator colors
sheared pile is

and

mat

py

resis-

INSTALLED
e

99s. ° yd.
with
pad

INSTALLED

make
tion.
today

Ny-

Our Best Axminster

Ie

home

and

High- das

in 10
Lush

e

Two-tone multi-level loop
pile in leaf scroll design.

with
pad
INSTALLED

*NORM/!

Phone:

“Sat

baie. Ser

9, 12 and 15-ft.
widths. $
.

sq. yd

widths.

501

Our Deepest Sheared Pile

wed

:

$

12

5

All Wool Scroll Wilton

3 Full Years
¥
bad Pay
Highland

with

3g

treatment

ON CARPET INSTALLATIONS / fi 220ml

Your Nearby

yd

pad

widths.

HOME—SAVE

OR

sq.

H
Me

INSTALLED

Patterned all-wool
cut pile. Easily cleaned.

$100

38

INSTALLED

and

15-ft.

denser

Sculptured Plush Wilton

$

Miracle Acrilan
12

All Wool Axminster
and

15-ft. widths.

colors.

INSTALLED

in pattern to underscore a smart setting.

9

INSTALLED

Resilient
closely woven
.

Wilton

All Wool

cele:

and

lon
has
more
resilience
and
soil resistance
than
ordinary Nylon.

Our Better Axminster

Suburbia

9, 12 and 15-ft. widths.
Springy all-wool loop
pile in 9 decorator
colors.

weave

aa we PA

12 and 15-ft. widths. G

Deep dense pile springs
back
quickly
after

harsh crushing wear.

gc

nt ith

4.

¥ee

INSTALLED

YOUR
en

eal

SE

GUARANTEED

'NSTALE!TIGN SLIGHTLY HIGMER ON CONCRETE FLOORS”
a,

Park Catalog

Store:

ID 2-8830
First St., Highland

Park,

Ill.

Your

Nearby

Deerfield Commons

Catalog

Store:

#§$#+—Phone: Wi 5-4600
Address: 714 Waukegan Rd., Deerfield, III.
Page

H

23—D

7

�os
4.0

Cy
ee Teeee
a

pe
2
‘oe

a

cH
bei

aM

Dance and Concert ;

Part Two will portray “A Spring
Story’’ in dance by eighty-five students
(beginners
through
advanced) in the Dance Classes of the
Music Center.

Will Be Presented
By Music Center
The Music Center of the North
Shore
in Winnetka
will present
members of the dance classes and
the junior orchestra in a joint program of dance and concert Sunday,
May 21, at 2:00 p.m. in the auditorium of North Shore Country Day
School, 310 Green Bay Rd., Winnetka. There will be no admission
charge.
Part One
of the program
will
feature the junior orchestra in concert.

Public

Both

the

Invited

orchestra

and

dance

classes are comprised of students
from 12 to 14 different communities
of the area.
The
orchestra
which
meets
on Saturday
mornings
is open
to qualified
grade
school
instrumentalists;
develops
sight reading skill and knowledge
of orchestral literature and technic.
The
public is cordially invited
to this program.

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2. ‘‘Low Profile’’ tires are
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A remarkable new development of Du Pont Research
now gives you greater protection against moisture blistering than traditional linseed oil paints.
SIMPLY DO THIS: 1—If the old paint has blistered,
remove old paint down to bare wood. 2— Prime bare
wood with Du Pont 49 Blister Resistant Primer.
3 — Cover with one or more coats of Du Pont “Lucite”
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Profile”’

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Result—a rich, lovely, low-luster finish of significantly
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based on service rendered at current
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For full explanation of coverage and
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5. “‘Low Profile” tires save you
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DEERFIELD
_ PAINT and GLASS
HEADQUARTERS
PICTURE

LOW PRICE!

Figures from the current Illinois
Highway
Bulletin
show
Highland
Park and Deerfield less typical of
statewide trends than the rest of
Lake County.
From 1959 to 1960 county accidents
rose
8
per
cent,
deaths
dropped 14 per cent, and injuries
rose 10 per cent. This resembles.
figures for all urban counties—accidents up 11 per cent, injuries up 4
per cent and the whole state’s 4
per cent drop in traffic deaths.

oy

FOR WALLPAPER, GLASS TABLE TOPS, MIRRORS,
FRAMES, CUSTOM PICTURE FRAMING and
ARTISTS’ SUPPLIES

810 WAUKEGAN

ROAD,

Highland

Park,

during

the

Mrs. Evelyn E. Kellner, Visiting
Nurse of Deerfield Townships. reports that during April she made

| FOR Woop ano MASONRY

MOUNTING

State Accident Toll
Shows Local Trend

Visiting Nurse Goes
656 Miles in April

LUCITE’,

For Wood,

*“Low Profile’ is United States Rubber Company’s trade-mark for its lower, wider shape tire,

ALL

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Suburban Fine Arts Center, 654
Deerfield Rd., has announced the
Annual Members’ Exhibit June 10
to 24.
Center members are invited to
contribute
an
example
of
their
work.
Any
member
is
eligible,
whether currently a student in the
Center or not.
Work in paintings, drawings, ceramics
and sculpture will be accepted for the exhibit, and a special
section is planned
for children’s
work.
A committee
of outside artists
will judge the exhibit, and their
selections
will be
shown
at the
membership dinner in June.
A scholarship award will be given one of the children exhibiting,
and anyone desiring information on™
preparing a portfolio for this purpose should contact the teachers
of the children’s classes.
Work for the exhibit should be
delivered to the Center
June
3
5 or 6:

In

7. “‘Low Profile” tires are built

their

To Have Exhibit of
Members’ Work

same two years, accidents decreased
almost one per cent while deaths
rose 67 per cent and injuries 9 per
cent.
In rapidly-growing Deerfield, accidents increased 83 per cent and
injuries 36 per cent. Deerfield had
no traffic deaths in either year.

6. ‘‘Low Profile” tires save gas
—6 to 12 extra miles per
tankful.
to

Suburban Art Ctr.

DEERFIELD

“6

—

PHONE

WI 5-2286

were

wood

patients. The VNA

gratefully

acknowledges
his gift as well as
the interest which
prompted
the
gift,

a

ROCK

127 visits to 26 patients, who

confined to their homes by illness.
The nurse also made four courtesy
calls.
Mrs. Kellner travelled 656 miles,
in Deerfield, Highwood, and Highland Park, to care for her patients.
Nello
Ori
has
generously
donated a bed for the use of High-

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| DEERFIELD OIL
Waukegan Rd., Deerfield
Phone WI 5-1277

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(RT!

Thursday, May 18, 1961
eS

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FIFTH

79

E
|=
=
Sl!
nS

a

=

�Deerfield -Netmen

| Theatre O

‘HPHS

Drop Glenbard East
| ———
Single

victories

and Neal
tories by

and Pete Craig,
Deerfield

over

Randy

night.
Victory
this
J.V.

blanked

a

East

4-1

triumph

last

Tuesday

was doubly
Glenbard

Deerfield
Jeff

sweet
squad

in

Mandel

the
was

since
had

season
the

only

Warrior to lose his match.

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OPEN

WI

MONDAYS

of

their

players
of

our

were
seven

5-1800

DEERFIELD,

ILL.

&amp; FRIDAYS ‘TIL 9 P.M.

RIVE CAREFULLY — THE LIFE YOU SAVE
MAY BE YOUR OWN

a

is

Dy

oe

Spring is definitely in the air.
It’s even
affecting
the
teachers.
Why we heard that Mr. Gray has
started
calling
people
by
their
hames
and
even
announcing
his
tests. Seriously though, spring has
come which means that Prom can’t
be far off. Southern Side of Heaven
will be June 3, so hurry up boys,
get your dates and rent those tux.

Threshold

ipate

Highland

ORDINANCE NO. 61-0-3
BE
IT
ORDAINED
BY
THE
CITY
COUNCIL
OF
THE
CITY
OF
HIGHWOOD:
SECTION
1:
Section
6 of Ordinance
No. 54-0-1 entitled ‘“‘An Ordinance Regulating the Sale at Retail of Alcoholic Liquor
in the City of Highwood” is amended to
read as follows:
SECTION
6: Limitations. (a) No license
shall be issued for sale of alcoholic liquors
at retail, except in establishments in the
business
district
along
the following
described streets:
1. Green Bay Road—from. Prairie Avenue
to Washington Avenue.
2. Waukegan Avenue, from the south city
limits to Washington Avenue.
3. Highwood
Avenue,
from
Waukegan
Avenue to the right-of-way of the Chicago,
North
Shore
and
Milwaukee
Railroad.
It shall be unlawful for anyone to operate a tavern or an establishment for the
sale of alcoholic liquor at retail outside the
above area in the City of Highwood.
The maximum ‘number of Class “A” license, tavern license, which may be issued
is limited to thirty-two (32) in number and
no more.
(b) The maximum number of Class ‘“C”
license, Club license, is limited to two (2)
in number and no more.
SECTION 2:
Whoever violates any provision of this amendment to the ordinance
shall be fined, on conviction, not more than
Two Hundred Dollars ($200. 00)
JOHN FRANTONIUS,
Mayor
ATTES
EDGAR ‘C, BENSON
City Clerk
Presented and read: 5/12/61
Passed: 5/12/61

those

receiving

the

titled

good

‘A

recently

Trap

Is a Small

played

key

Place.”

roles

in

the

production

Experimental’s

drama,

which

of

Selection

demands

the

confusions

The

audience

food

for

that

is

answers

beset

our

furnished

provocative

with
not

by ilusions created by scenery

and

costumes, but by the emotions and
fears of the actors.
Maxwell J. Kelley, who earned
his master’s degree
at Goodman
Theatre,
and
is now
with
CBS
news, is directing this play. Highland Parkers in the cast are Mrs.
Harry Perlman, George Perry and
Raymond Perlman. Crew members
include Mrs, Herbert Lapine, Mrs.

Meet

Raymond

followed by a social hour.

Levy,

Perlman and Miss Evelyn

Wie

ceux

we
2
Zine

TO

KILL
WEEDS2,

| LOSS.
YHts
USSPA)

a

YOU. ED
a=

}

Hh ty
Heh
Ni iNyin nNRYifNee
H=
gil

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REVLON

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roots and all

bare spots where the
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_Lawn

e HIGHLAND

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RAVINIA

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IDlewood 2-2300
493

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thought,

Royal Neighbors will meet at 8
p.m. Wednesday,
May
24, at the
home
of Mrs. Ferdinand
Humer,
1465
McDaniels.
Members.
are
asked to bring a “white elephant”
to the meeting. Business will be

i

—

Experimental
Theatre’s production, “Hangs Over Thy Head,” by
Ruth Angell Purkey, is an exciting

Well, as we said before spring is
sprung and remember Seniors only
28 more days until you get sprung.

NEW
EASY WAY

North

Park.

very
successful
“‘Major Barbara.”

Sophomore
picnic,
Trackdown,
was a big success. Just a few of the
many
Sophs
enjoying themselves
were Fred Gruber, Jeff Zivin, Allison Luater, Mare Geman, Laura
deKoven, and Nancy Baim.

Neighbors

partic- .

Charles
Suber,
Chicago,
who
is
editor of the magazine ‘‘Downbeat,”
will direct the play. Appearing in
important roles are Highland Parkers Mrs. Frederick Asher, Mrs. Edward
Mandel
and
Mrs.
Donald
Ruhman.
William
Zimmerman,
Wilmette, also has one of the prin- &gt;
cipal spots.
Mrs,
Ruhman
bad Zimmerman

news recently are Barry Sussman
and Steve Mora at Brandeis, Patsy
Kulp and Suzy Graham
at Skidmore, and Ken ‘Lark’ Lehman at
Johns Hopkins.

Royal

will

Annual

Threshold’s
contribution
is
a
dramatic human interest play en-

Seniors are working hard on two
big events. First is Senior Assembly on June 9, and then the big
night,
June
15—GRADUATION!
Congratulations to all the Seniors
and especially to the Commencement
speakers,
Buddy
Friedman
and Frances Kahn.

Among

Players

in the Fourth

Shore Little Theater One-Act Festival. Six one-act plays, three on
Friday night, May 26, and three on
Saturday night, May 27, are to be
presented at Tenthouse Theatre in

With the coming of spring college
acceptances have been pouring in.

Deerfield
Eaton, Jon—Burnett,
Jim ....
Craig, Peter—Shurberg, Jon ..
Glenbard East
Pishko, Pete—Hasse, Fred
Mayer, Bill—Brier, Jim
Deerfield Game Score—53.
Glenbard East Game Score—28.

$129.95

Demonstration!

| 803 DEERFIELD RD.

four

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In Today
Stereo

that

Deerfield
Mandel,
Bax,
Hirsch, Neal
Glenbard East
Sandstrom,
Nels
Thebald, Herb
Beall, Bob

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“The decisiveness of the winner,”
said Coach Karl Wildermuth,
“‘is
reflected in the game
score. We
won 53 games while losing 28 in
the sets played. This becomes even
more impressive when you realize
juniors while three
are freshmen.”

Festival Coming
May 26 and May 27

Bax

Jon Shurberg gave

netmen

Glenbard

opener.

by

Hirsch plus doubles vicJon Eaton, Jim Burnett

&amp; Repair
As Advertised in

“Suburbia: *
Today.
THE

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Thursday, May 18, 1961

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reuse
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Total Regular Price __........ $19.80

EVERGREENS,

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yeh

A

PTO Meeting To Hosi Dr. Rosenheim a

| For Last Meeting Of The Year May 23
The

Deerfield Parent-Teacher

Organization

will hold its

final meeting of the year on May 23 at 8 p.m. Dr. Edward W.

sosenheim, Jr., chairman of the Humanities staff of the college
at the University of Chicago, will be the speaker for the eve-

|

Deerfield Woman
Named President
Of N.S. Alumnae
Members
of the North Shore
alumnae of Zeta Tau Alpha met on
Thursday, April 27 at 12:30 at the

of Mrs. Gordon H, MacNiven,
| tion.”
ning. His topic will be, “What’s Liberal About Liberal Educa- home
123 Howe Terr., Barrington.

humanities

as well

as ar-

Bs

and reviews that have appeared in magazines and journals.
|
He has served as director of the
| University of Chicago round-table

| and

director-moderator

and

pro-

| ducer of other radio and television

_ shows.
Besides his varied academic interests, Dr. Rosenheim enjoys trout

fishing

and

Hostesses

is the author of

books

hunting

and

amateur

theatricals.
|
At the business
meeting
the
| nominating committee will present
ie following slate for the coming

year, Elections will be held at the

Niven

‘Kickoff’ Gathering
Headlines Mental
Health Campaign
A kickoff coffee and cake gathering at the home of Mrs. Thomas
W. McClure, 1339 Dartmouth Ln.,
for captains of the Mental Health
Society of Greater Chicago will begin the drive locally, Mrs. McClure
stated. It will be held at 8 p.m., tonight.
Last year, residents of Deerfield

contributed

|

Ringer
Campaign
for
Mental
Health.
Special emphasis
on the
drive this year will be May 20 and
21 when the door-to-door campaign
will be made.
The goal of the greater Chicago
area this year is $200,000.
Captains for the Deerfield drive

district

110; James

president,

Johnson,

first

| vice president, district 109; Robert
| Savage, second vice president, dis-

| trict

109;

third

vice

Mrs,

Lloyd

president,

Rudolph,

district

110;

| Rew Godow, treasurer, district 107:
| Keith Rawitzer,
| 109;

Mrs.

I

ip,

secretary,

Samuel

district

Rechtoris,

district

109;

Trabert, scholarship,

mem-

Mrs.

Vernon

district 110;

é ‘Mr. and Mrs. William Olendorf,
| fine arts, district 109; Mrs. George
(

aig, Jr..

PTO

Mrs, Thomas

news,

district

106;

Straus, publicity, dis-

trict 108; Mrs.

T. F. Wands,

hos-

tality, district
109;
Mrs,
Roy
Pfeiffer, student activities, district
110; Mrs. Warren Cordell, foreign
xchange, district 108; B. Biega,
Pr Ss and means, district 110; and
| Frank Moynes, budget, district 106.
_ Parents of incoming freshmen
are also invited to attend as are
interested persons in the district.

|

Attends Convention

Mrs.

S. K.

to the

1961

Bell

DeTurgalski;

Mrs.

R. Grodnsky;
Mrs. H. S. Hardin;
Mrs. H. Maleski; Mrs. A. Shay; and
Mrs. O. W. Strangohr, Jr.

Sleeping Man
Found On Steps
A

man,

Tommy

who

gave

Brown,

vagrancy

and

his

was

name

as

for

fingerprinted

by

Deerfield police after he was found
hall

Sunday

Brown,
is being

at the village

night.

who gave his
held
without

age as 26,
bond = set

the 35th annual convention

of the Illinois Chiropractic society,

_ May 5-7, at the Sheraton Towers.

to discover his identity, police said.

Brown
curity

was

card

carrying
which

a social se-

gave

of Richard Earl Rawson,
said,

and

he

was

the

name

III, police

booked

follows:

Mac-

Rasmussen,

president,

Mrs.

Herbert

Sundmacher, Deerfield;
president and program
Mrs.

Donald

Ansel,

C.

first vice
chairman,

Wilmette;

hos-

pitality chairman, Mrs. Fred T.
Greaves,
Evanston;
second
vice
president
chairman,
Wilmette;

D.

and
ways
and
means
Mrs.
Paul
Rasmussen,
secretary, Mrs. Frank

Biggam,

Mrs.

John

sistant

Deerfield;
Lindgren,

treasurer,

Glenview;

treasurer,

Mrs.

as-

Gordon

MacNiven, Barrington; social chairman,
Mrs.
George
L. Hall,
Jr.,
Northbrook; rushing alumnae rec-

ommendations
Felix Morris,

chairman, Mrs. J.
Evanston; member-

ship chairman, Mrs. Walter Douglas, Lake Zurich; panhellenic representative,
Mrs,
Eugene
Corley,

Evanston;

alternate

panhellenic

ship

under

man,

is reported

from Elgin State hospital
1960, said the police.

The

the

basement

of

the

Four

18,

village

hall.

adopted

Quality

and

Drive

Bank

WI 5-0860

MEATS
FOODS

Free Parking
for

150

Cars

size

for

$] 00

SWANSON’S

TV DINNERS
LOIN of
PORK
SIRLOIN
of BEEF

SWISS
STEAK

‘Page H 4—D 12
eae

Voters
State
Hotel

and

twenty-seven

74 Leagues

Constitutional

Convention

for the com-

dates

convention

to cre-

Illinois constitution.

support

back

to

of

this

The

project

1943.

The official delegates
Deerfield League
who

from the
attended

the three day convention were Mrs.
Harold
Fox,
Mrs.
Burton
Zook,

Mrs.
Keith Peter,
Aitchison, and Mrs.
Other
official

Mrs.

Mrs.
Alex

Robert
Briber.

members
who
served
as
convention
workers
were

Harold
Mrs.

William

Harris,
Wells

Mrs.

Norman

Burnette,

and

Sabin,

Of Hearing
22-oz.

4

North Shore Council

Corrected Notice

PIES
APPLE
PEACH

Prepare Camp For

representing

a constitutional

Mrs.

Frozen

Women

Volunteer Scouters

ing
two
years.
The
league
will
concentrate to have submitted to
Illinois voters a proposal to hold

Erskine,

MORTON’S

of

as the state program

yileague’s

Road

49

YOUR

CHOICE—U.S.D.A. TOP CHOICE

SIRLOIN
STRIP

1°

NEW YORK
STRIP
FILET
MIGNON
MINUTE

MAID

FROZEN

ORANGE JUICE
6-02.
Cans

2.

ie

47.

member-

member

held their 40th
recently at the

hundred

ate a new

Waukegan

Each

Mrs. Elmer F. Anderson,

the club’s “Two-for-One”

Chicago.

delegates

Brown was discovered by offieer
Robert
Porter.
while
on
a
routine check of the boiler room

in

League

Sherman,

escaped

July

campaign.

of Illinois
Convention

Brown,
of the

have

announced

Local Women Attend
League Of Voters
Chicago Convention

be found, police

to

has

is asked to bring two new
members into the club in June. Any other interested Republican women should call Mrs. Slater at WI 5-2659.

His fingerprints have been sent
to the Federal Bureau of Investigation in the hope that a clue
disclosed.
A man, named Tommy
who fits the description

Slater, membership chairman of the West
Women’s Republican club, met recently
to make final plans for the club’s June
Shown from left are Mrs. Slater and Mrs.
Other members of Mrs. Slater’s commitMoore, Mrs. William M. Messinger, Mrs.
Keith Nickoley, Mrs. Joseph F. Zapf, Mrs.

Robert Seiler and Mrs. C. Baechler.

name,

to his identity may

Mrs. George O.
Deerfield Township
with her committee
membership drive.
L. Robert Smaltzer.
tee are: Mrs. Lyman
Robert Jordan, Mrs.
president,

representative,
Mrs. M. L. VanderVort, Evanston; Chicago federation
representative, Mrs. W. A. Erdman,

that

booked

sleeping in a doorway

Mrs.

Paul

Deerfield; publicity chairman, Mrs.
Richard Raymond, Wilmette.

while an investigation is conducted

Dr. Samuel Perva of Deerfield at-

| tended

are:

$532

Mrs.

Wilmette; Mrs, M. L. VanderVort,
Evanston; Mrs. C, H. Welles, Evanston; and Mrs. Walter Douglas,
Lake Zurich.
After luncheon the officers for
the coming year were installed as

| meeting.

The slate includes:
Mrs.
Henry
Staats,

assisting

were

NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
by the
Board of Zoning Appeals for the Village
of Deerfield, Mlinois, that a public hearing
will be held by said Board on Thursday,
June 8, 1961 at 8:00 P.M. in the Village
Hall, 850 Waukegan Road, Deerfield for the
following applications:
1. 1. billboard
10’x40’ on the southwest
corner of County Line Road and Waukegan Road.
2. 2 billboards each 20’x6’—one on each
side of intersection of Ellendale
Road
north of County Line Road.
3. 12
double
faced
signs,
each
4’x8’
spaced about 200’ apart along the north
side of County Line Road beginning about
250’ east of the intersection of County
Line Road and Ellendale Road running
east along Briarwood Vista Unit No.
1
and No. 2.
4. 1 sign, 6’x16’ at the intersection of
Pfingsten Road
and County Line Road
on the north side of the street.
5. Request of Deerfield Electric Company
to erect a 4’x8’ sign on the side of the
building at 708 Waukegan Road.
6. Request
of De Mar
Construction
to
erect a 4’x3’ sign at 534 Deerfield Road.
7. Request of Mr. and Mrs. William E.
Reidy, 651 Byron Court for a variation
of sideyard
requirements
to permit the
construction of a garage and den attached
to the main building within 5’-3” from
the south lot line, making a combined
total of sideyards 10’-3” in lieu of 13’
required by ordinance.
At said public hearing, or any adjournment thereof, all persons interested are invited to be present and be heard.
BOARD
OF ZONING
APPEALS
Robert E. Bowen,
Building Commissioner
5/11-18/61—D124

@

_ Dr. Rosenheim

Some 200 men from widely separated sections of Lake county and

Northeastern Cook county will pack
sleeping bags and bedrolls early in
June

for a weekend

Instead
few

of

days

trip to camp.

enjoying

of fishing,

a

leisurely

campfires,

talk, they’ll be pounding

and

nails, fix-

ing hinges, trimming tree branches
too near power lines, painting, fixing plumbing, cleaning and otherwise getting things ready for the
vanguard of 1,500 Boy Scouts who
will attend the North Shore Area
Council’s
Camp
Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan
near Antigo, Wis., this summer.

The

date for the scouters’ week-

end
this
year
has
been
moved
back to June 2, 3, 4, Tilden Batchelder of Libertyville, council camp-

ing

chairman,

weekend

announced.

usually

has

uled early in May,

been

The
sched-

but unexpected

cold chilled Scouters and dumped
wet snow on activities last year.
This was
a principal reason for
switching
to
a more
temperate

month this year.
The men who volunteer for the
weekend work crews are all volunteer scouters of the North Shore
Area
council
which
includes
approximately western Lake county,
the North Shore from Lake Bluff
to Wilmette and other northeastern
Cook county communities.

Registration
who

want

camp

to

by

adult

aid

in

maintenance

Scouters

the

annual

project may

made. at the
North
Shore
Council
office, 724 Vernon
Glencoe, VE 5-4125 or 4124.

be

Area
Ave.,

Civic Calendar
Thursday,

May

18

8 p.m. Deerfield Grammar school
P.T.A.

regular

meeting,

Deerfield

Grammar school.
8 p.m. West Deerfield Township
Library Board, library building.
Monday,

May

22

8 p.m. Deerfield board of zoning
appeals,
public
hearing,
village
hall.

Thursday,
8

School
Park

May

p.m.

25

Highland

P.T.A.
High

board,

Park

High

Highland

school.

Thursday, May 18, 1961
ee
ee ee
ve ae A

:

�i

Airplane Show

Bob

McGarry

volunteered

position of advancement
for next year.

Meeting Theme
For Pack 450

Ed

Last
Friday
night
at
Walden
. school gym, cub pack 450 presented
skits and exhibits relating to air. eraft and airplane history from the
days
of the
Wright
brothers
in
1903 to the present day of rockets
and fast jets.
Opening the meeting were several
announcements
by
Chuck

Tanielan

for

will be on

hand

to

his

services in the past.
Fahrenholz
is leaving
for the
east to accept a new position.
After the exhibits ranging from
a. complete airport made entirely

help out at special events.
Mrs.
MacDougall
also offered
her assistance
for
special
events
and

Katherine

Clements

will be a new

Student- made
fashions
were
modeled this year when the home
economics department of Ela-Vernon High school presented its annual
fashion
show
on
Monday,

minated
board
of the
planetary
system,
several
dens
presented
skits on airplanes.
Awards and badges were given
by Dick Dereby, awards chairman.
Steve Schroeder, Kevin McGarry

and Randy Berning were awarded
the Arrow of Light award;
gold
arrows were presented to Norman
Kidder, Jim Hooker, Todd Tucker,

popsickle

sticks

to

an

15, in the E-V gym

The evening began at 7:30 p.m.
with the dessert hour; the style

illu-

from

den mother next season. Gary von
der Linden who capably directed
the Webbelos will again head the
Webbelos
den
next
September.
Mothers who are interested are invited to sign up as den mothers.
After the announcement of par-

May

Ela-Vernon Girls
Hold Style Show

ents who will assist the den next
year, Gordon Ommen presented a
pen set to Chuck Fahrenholz for

the

chairman

Stan Girtler and Steve Dereby.

show began at 8 p.m.
oe
All the girls in home economics
modeled

the

fashions

they

have

made either in class or as a home —
project

in

courses.

connection

The

theme

with

their

of the

show

was “A Night in the Orient” and
the
general
chairman
Carolyn|
Geffe said that the girls made ig

special

arrangements

Junior Prom
evening,

to

use

decorations

for

the —
that

* Fahrenholz. The new cubmaster for
next year will be Dick Dereby and
e

Wib Johnson was named pack committee chairman.
Other fathers who responded to
fill the pack vacancies were George
Allen, the new program chairman
and
Burke
Clements,
the
new
~ treasurer.
Leonard
Paquette will
be the new publicity chairman and

YOU

good

that will result,

it’s

Complete

Or

decided

on

this

Beth

approach,

two

value.

Sec-

of secondary

ondly, the prices have to be attractive, and the values recognizable,

Here’s

What

@

of a large chicken—

to earn the trust and respect of all

those

that
bazaar

who

only
to

attend.

on

this

raise

It

was

basis

funds

be

agreed

could

a

Now, how can such stringent ob“truly
outstanding
bargains
to draw the largest crowds

have
business
acquaintances
who
are overdue to return a favor. Fur“thermore,
whatever
merchandise
they donate is tax deductible.
”
Having established this strategy,
the Beth Or membership has gone

all out to secure merchandise meet-

ing these standards.
What’s more,
it’s proving a surprising and gratifying experience.
The generosity
encountered and willingness to cooperate has been truly great. And
this spirit assures
being able to
hold a bazaar which will be beneficial to all concerned.
The bazaar will be held at the
American Legion Hall in Deerfield,

27, from

6 p.m.

to

19 p.m., and Sunday, May 28, from
Edwin
rs.
8 p.m.
to
am.
10
of the Bargain
chairman
Slavin,

Bazaar, promises
ping for all.

wee

wonderful

y, May 18, 1961

with

the rich

open

pit charcoal

@

Potato Chips

@

Roll

Get

Fresh, tender and tasty.
The family will love it!

.

deep-through

flavor

of an

fire.

@

Cole

Slaw

HELP YOUR JAYCEE’S
DEERFIELD CIVIC PROGRAM

Salad

Cup of Honey

@

so as
possi-

ble?
Well, it was realized that
many members of the congregation |

May

1

You

justified.

~jectives be met?
What's the best
procedure for being able to offer

Saturday,

wheat oO

prices,
Congregation

firm
stipulations
were set forth.
First, merchandise
must be new,

_hothing

to Eat!

$425
ORDER
YOURS
TODAY!

event from which the whole community can benefit.
Yet, there have been all kinds
of bazaars, with varying degrees of
results. Upon checking on the various methods by which others were
conducted, one fact became
very
clear. For the best opportunity of
_ Success, it’s necessary to go first
class. This involves having a broad
variety of desirable items—at irrewhen

. . « Ready

ONLY

_dens—while offering a worthwhile

Thus,

.. .

Deliciously Barbecued
Chicken Dinners

surely worth the effort.
Congregation Beth Or of Deerfield has plans to improve and expand the extent and quality of its
services.
To do the job as hoped,
however, requires considerable expense.
More so than a fledgling
«group can undertake—and still do
itself proud for the community.
»
It was learned a bazaar is an
effective
and
pcpular
means
of
raising funds.
And for good reasons.
It
spares
the
sponsoring
group
and
individual
members
from unrealistic and financial bur-

* sistible bargain

TIME...

HARK-0CHICK

How
do
you
reach
goals
for
three years from now—today? One
thing sure: it can’t be done—unless
you try.
But if there is a sincere
belief in a need to be satisfied,

the

THE

and We'll Be There With Your

Beth Or Plans To
Improve Services
‘With Bazaar

«and

NAME

shop-

PHONE YOUR ORDER
For CHARK-O-CHICK
BEFORE

JUNE

Dinners

Mail this handy coupon or give it to any JayCee .. .
SN

ae a eae Ses

em

CHARK-O-CHICK, P.O.

Ct

Box

ae

117,

a

Deerfield,

WE

RS

A

RE a

i

Ra

tH

Se

Illinois

Ist!
Name

errr

ree

ere

rt

eer

rrr

Address

Please

reserve

For [_] Delivery to above address at
For [-] Pick-up (by above named) at Jewett Park at
Deposit

enclosed

$.........--..-.---- ;

Balance

—

due on

delivery

$

Page H5—D130

—

�Worthy To Address
Republican Women
At Afternoon Tea
Highland

Park

Republican

Wo-

men are planning a program and
tea for next Thursday, May 25, at
the residence of Mrs. Irl H. Mar-

shall,

2693

James

Republican

Kidd,

Mrs.

Robert

Smith
Tea,

brief—world
made

heavy

for

famous.
of

17

Waist-

strands

heat resistant

longer

separate

life.

pieces

for

no-gap

fit.

oe

packed

in a
with

every

opening.

extra

inch

Use

Ss

00

SSSSSSSSSEHSSESSSSHESESSSSSESESSEHSLES

Sy

M,.

Jockey

L; XL.

Our: Formal

Rental

cotton

for

long

in
life,

look

wash

after

wash.

$1.50

ete

the

of

Seamfree

boxers

and

Martin,

Mrs.

Mrs.

J.

Herman

Horton

Mrs.

Gordon

Anspach;

Johnson,

chair-

man, Mrs. Bernhard Nihlson, Mrs.
Marvin H. Dixon, Mrs. Percy Prior,
1/Mrs. Arthur Irish, Mrs. James H.
Siljestrom, Mrs. Paul Barclay and
Mrs.
S. Parker
Johnston,
Jr.
Pouring
will
Lilley,
Mrs.
| Mrs.
Charles
Robert Brown.
tee is headed

be
Mrs.
George
Robert
Engleman,
Rubens
and
Mrs.
The house commitby Mrs. Robert A.

Johnston, and includes Mrs. W.
Marvin Cochran, Mrs. David Perry,
George
Bantin,
Mrs.
Mrs. Donald Ross and
Tazioli.

John
Mrs.

The speaker has been active in
the work of the Republican party
for many years. He was co-chair-

Concerts Listed for

Coming Season
Captains planning the Fall campagin for the Highland Park Community Concert Association met at
the home of Mrs. John V. Spachner, Oakmont
Rd., May
16.
The
series of concerts to be given by
world
famed
artists this coming
season
was
announced
by
Mrs.
Spachner.
The concerts will open Nov. 16,
when Robert Merrill, baritone and
star of the Metropolitan Opera Co.
will be heard. in recital.
On Monday, Dec. 11, the Beaux Arts Trio
will be presented.
Byron Janis, outstanding pianist,
will appear on Wednesday, Feb. 21,
and the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra will be the March 5 feature.

4

~

The series will conclude with the
Robert
Joffrey
Ballet,
scheduled
for March 27.
Mrs. Morton C. Scheff and Mrs.
Maurice A. Rosenthal are co-chairRenewals
men
of the campaign.
or requests for subscriptions may
be made by contacting Mrs. Clinton
J. Lewis,
secretary,
55
Hiwatha
Trail, ID 2-4687. As previously, the
concerts will be given in the Highland Park High School auditorium
at 8:15 p.m.
man

of

the

Citizens

for

~

Eisen-

hower-Nixon in 1952, and served
as an aid to Nixon in the 1956
campaign.

past

He

president

publican

Fund

is

the

of the
of

immediate

United

Re-

Illinois.

HIGHWOOD
—— ONE DAY ONLY ——
AT THE HIGHWOOD BALL PARK

THUR.
JUNE

TWICE DAILY
3:30 &amp; 8:00 P.M.
RAIN OR SHINE
UNDER MAMMOTH
WATERPROOF TENT

HIGHWOOD

COMMUNITY

WORLD’S

NEWEST

CENTER

PRESENT

BIG SHOW

are

full cut of one piece of cloth;

no seat or side

SSCS

HEHEHE ES
COOSHSSHHHSAHEHHHRHSEHHEEOSES

tra leg coverage, protection
in Jockey ‘Midway
+] 65
Pte
BS DU. ced

: Contoured tail undershirt fol| jows natural leg line.

fabric

Charles

Olsen,

Mrs.

Mrs.
Ross,
John

brand’s

special

like-new

comfort—ex-

body

$1.25

Power-Knit,

maximum.

13

Famous

The T-Shirt—Jockey.

For

of

smooth

front

of

rubber

Tailored

conforming

Suk

of

League

William Woll, Mrs. Charles Rubens,
Mrs.
Otto
Shilling,
Mrs.
Allan

underwear

extra

Citizens

Committees working on the program
include:
Reception,
Mrs.
Howard Lausche, chairman, Mrs.

try Jockey

band

Rd.

chairman

Illinois will be the principal speaker for the meeting, which is open
to members and their guests.

For Long-lasting comfort

The

Sheridan

Worthy,

Community

seams.

+] 50

28-44.

Service

OPEN THURSDAY ‘TIL 9 — MONDAY EVE. 7-9

UE:
595

Central

WHAE
‘1D

Ave.

Also

ns

a Page

H

6—D

Winnetka

2-5300

and. Glencoe

HIGHLAND

THE WORLD’S
PRESENTING
STUPENDOUSLY
FAMOUS, BIGGEST A D GREATEST FEATURES

|

J

14

PARK

$1.00 at The Fell Co.
Advance Tickets : .
and the Highwood Community
Center.
ADMISSION: ADULTS—$1.25
CHILDREN—75c

Thursday, May 18, 1961

i

2

�Local Student

Seniors Ready To

|

Named To Frat

KEEPING |
TIME

At U. Of Utah
A University of Utah graduating
senior
from
Deerfield,
was_
this
week elected to the Alpha Chapter
of Phi Beta Kappa.
The
student
is George
Daniel
Zally, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. W.
Zally, 941 Cedar St.
Graduating
seniors
are elected

to Phi

Beta

Kappa

in recognition

of high scholarship based on fundamental liberal studies.
Records
of candidates are evaluated indi-

vidually by a Phi

Beta

Kappa

fac-

ulty committee.
Zally will be among 21 graduating seniors to be initiated on Baccalaureate evening, June 4.
Zally is a graduate
of Loyola
academy in Chicago, and has been
attending the University of Utah
on a Naval ROTC scholarship. He
will graduate
with
a degree
in
physics.

Elected To Office
Linda

and
North

Although
only a few
days re- |
main, it is not too late to make
reservations for a Highland Park
High School senior to perform any
one of innumerable household
chores on Saturday, May 20.
In
order to raise money for scholarships for several
worthy class
members, the Highland Park seniors
are
conducting
this
“work |

Shore

dows

day.”
Local residents may phone the
following people for senior workmen whose labors are satisfaction
guaranteed
of the rate
of $1.00
per hour.

Group

Photo

washed),

by

Mary

Lance

Golden

Ann

Credi,

ID 2-0264.
3. Garages
Washed,
Sue

Cleaned
or Cars
Hirschfelder,
ID 2-

1718.

ple Ave.,

president
Clothing

Bosselli,

John
was

on

page

8)

daughter

recently

of

the

Club

at

of

311

elected vice-

Textiles
Iowa

State

State

choose

on Sunday

And

on

10th

EDWIN

“PETE”

dinner

Thursday, May

miss

it!

Worth
repeating:
“People
who
never make mistakes are usually
uninteresting.”
*

Set

*

aside

*

Friday

or

Saturday,

May 26th and 27th for an interesting “first.” Six theatre groups
from the area are staging the first
North Shore Theatre Festival at
Tenthouse. Many local talents including MARY RUHMAN, the RAY

*

*

Keeping

for

Time

specials

Confirmation.

Gold

in
and

Pearl rings at only $8.95,
popular

pendants

from

peoples’

gifts.

*

sincerest

*
good

wishes

and

*

*

and

that’s heaven to feel!

OF

VIEW

IN

the

ELLIOTT.

All-Stars,

And ee

Nights

SHOES

white, black

|
ID 2-0172

3 95

A, B, C cups

Emily J
OF WINNETKA

4

*

*

oy

The neighbors and friends of theOld Elm Civic Association always,
have a wonderful time at their annual dinner dance. The boys in myband and I are looking forward te.
joining them for the 4th year on.
the 29th at the Adria Restaurant.
on Skokie Highway.
3|
*
*
*
Hs
A

&amp; HIGH

Friday

LEONARD

*

fashion-right high-round look .. comfort

and

by

And featuring the music of prize
winning pianist DAVE
LEWITZ

evening

18, 1961

-

It sounds like a great show! The
Red Oak Revue on Friday and Saturday nite starring many of our
friends and neighbors and pro-

Wonderful under-bust support... the

Park

dance. Don’t
*
*
*

*

dye

Highland

MR.

urday. And they have spent all of
them right here in Highland Park.

Waltns_ Shoes
Central,

opening

GILROY who was so instrumental
in making this wonderful addition
to our community is chairman of ©
the committee that has planned

Our

from

them to match
the
muted colors in grad-

499

the

congratulations to MR. and MRS.
EUGENE ZAHNLE who celebrate
50 years of married life this Sat-

you with such gentle authority.

POINT

of

Building.

*

creative genius of Lily of France can shape

YOUNG

of

Memorial

young

France

It's up to you! Choose

THE

many

$3.95 (including
many with precious stones), and many other specially selected gifts for
Him or
Her that have helped make Leeds
the North Shore headquarters for

Lily
of

$10.99

Thursday

nite

Legion

Cultured

young, provocative contours. Only the”

Open

Saturday

beautiful

This exquisite bra gives you wonderfully

wear.
MID HEEL

*

anniversary

Some

|

or

*

of the American

duced

uation

3:00 to 7:00 p.m.

2k

our friends will be celebrating the

time

WHITES

or we'll

Auditori-.

from

*

oO r

the white

School

PERLMANS
and
others
will be
working
in the
production
and
performing parts of the Festival.

by

For GRADUATION...

and

Sorority.

Lace
Bra
®

Conception

Uni-

and social

of ‘Kappa Delta

Nylon

the young point of view in shoes

late

um. MRS. HILBERT LANG and
her hard-working committee have
planned another fabulous spread

Mr.

Tem-

versity in Ames. The new office
also makes her a member of Home
Economics Council. Miss Bosselli
chairman

Expecting friends this week-end?
Give your wife a ‘‘bonus” Mothers
Day and take the family to a wonderful smorgasbord at the Immacu-

the

Bosselli,

is a junior at Iowa
(Continued

1. Yard
Work
(lawns
mowed,
gardens
weeded),
Lynne
Finder,
ID 2-8995.
2. House Repairs (painting, win-

Mrs,

with paul leeds

convenient

time

to shop—Fri-

day nite. You proved it to us last
week when we joined our neighbors on Central Avenue in re-instituting Friday nite store hours.
And we will continue to feature
some terrific specials on Friday
nite to get you back into the habit.
During
the
pre-graduation
seasonal rush we will also be open on
Thursday

nites.

578 LINCOLN

LEEDS JEWELERS

HI 6-4750

491 Central Ave., Highland Park

Page H 7—D

15

�ee

gk

Mek

Fy
VF
POMC
ORE GA He
‘ ‘ bie
ee

ROUEN
pee

CE

ONE
Od re ek , ee tea

ae e e

|

Choice Color

Jill

Players

more

at

Highland

Park

Mrs.

will

Free

Delivery

* Open

Skokie

7 a.m.-9

CRestwood

Flowers by Wire
1390 Skokie Hwy., Lake Forest

|

&amp; Dundee

Northbrook,

p.m.

7 days

B.

be

Brakes

ESTIMATES

NORTHBROOK
LUMBER CO.

| KINDLEIN'S FLORIST

eS ita

A.

on

Hamilton,

and

Mrs.

of the

sale.

Coffee

will

be

2-3000

Wedding

}

the

field stoplight.
lice
ticketed
| brakes.

northbound
Highland
her
for

Deer-

Park podefective

Invitations

Memorial Cards
SEE US FIRST

THE ANTHONY PRESS

—THANKS FOLKS

DRIVE CAREFULLY— THE LIFE YOU SAVE
MAY BE YOUR OWN

For
=

3906

W. Chicago Ave.
Chicago 51,
Tipografia Italiana
Anthony Abbatiello, Prop.

BE 5-7760

Makin’ Our First Year

Here’s Our

Fi

Hi

.

i

Oh

As

on Saturday, May 20, at 12:30
on
WBBM-TV,
Channel
2.

p.m.
Bob

Sandy

who

have

and
won

Gerry
their

Mindell,

two

previous

bates on the air, will meet

de-

a team

from Blue Island High School to
debate the subject “Resolved: that
the United
States should
accept
the World Court without reservations.”
Sandy
and
Mindell
have been
assigned
the affirmative
side of
this question.
The public is invited to attend
the debate. No tickets are required.
The studio is at 630 McClurg Ct.
in Chicago—a block east of Michigan Ave., at Ontario.

from page 7)

a WHOPPER!
It’s Our

Ist Anniversary!

TIME

Aan

&lt;

ic

Aa

Frontier

.

Two Highland Park High School
debaters
will
compete
in
the
quarter-finals of television debates

Invite to Join Us In Our

SPRING

su

J

4. Errands
or
Misc.
Services,
Bob Sandy, WI 5-1030.
Those
wishing
to make a
last
minute
phone
call
on
May
20,
should
direct
their
inquiries
to
Lynne Finder at the above number.
Convenient to most residents of
Highland Park and Deerfield will
be three bakery goods stands filled
with cakes, cookies and other delicious treats baked by the senior
girls. Two of these stands will be
located in the business district of
Highland Park, and a third will be
in Deerfield’s central business district.
Several station wagons will
cruise the streets of
Highland
Park, and a third will’ be in Deerfield’s
central business district.
Several station wagons will cruise
the streets of Highland Park, Highwood, Deerfield and Bannockburn
for those unable to visit one of the
permanent bakery sale locations.

Social &amp; Business Stationery

CE 4-2764

ae

P

(Continued

When you need the finest in

a week.

i

Work Day

Fail

proaching

Sea

&gt;

Eleanor
Contrell
of
4021
N.
Harding
Ave.,
Chicago,
collided
from the rear with the car of Ray
Molini of Kenosha Saturday evening
on
Skokie
Valley
Rd.,
ap-

Rds.
Ill.

aby sida

¥

served
between
the hours of 10
a.m. and noon, and tea will be in
order from 2 to 4 p.m.
The program is an annual event
to raise funds for the Home.

FHA
Financing

Complete Planting Service

5 eae

Executive Board of the Presbyterian Home,
are planning the annual tea and sale at the home in
Evanston, May 20.
Also working on the project are
Mrs. Cecil Boyle, chairman of the
Hospital
Committee, and Mrs.
Charles E. Piper, who is in charge
of decorating the Home
for the
event, both Deerfield ladies.
Throughout the day,
articles
made by the residents of the Home,
as well as many nice things that
have been donated for the occasion,

High.

ANNUALS - PERENNIALS

|

ear

Robert Y. Williams, member

planting

SEEDS
SHRUBS
SHADE TREES
TUBEROUS
BEGONIAS
EVERGREENS
FERTILIZERS
GRASS SEED
IMPATIENS
PLANTS

see ae: af

Sandy and Mindell
Tea May 20 Resume TV Debates

Home

production

of the musical “Goldilocks” next
month in Chicago. She is a sopho-

| GERANIUMS
| ready for spring

and

sone

Plan Presbyterian

in Musical

Joan Bernstein, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Simon Bernstein of 407
Pleasant Ave., has a role in the
Jack

apes
ie a

a eee

Time's

me PARR EY

. =
+

A'Wastin’

e SACK
WHOLE

to Take

ID 2-3034

O' BURGERS
SLAB

By Phone

BBQ.

(5 toasack)
BABY

Jamboree
Page

H 8—D

16

Home

. .

BACKRIB

97¢
DINNER

TUB O' CHICKEN — 18 PIECES . .
SACK O' EXTRA THICK JUMBO SHAKES

ns Wheaten Cash hk
ea

Order

ns

|

oe
.

,

$2.41
$3.36

(5 to asack)

97c

Specials for Thurs., Fri., Sat. &amp; Sun. Only
Thursday,

May

18, 1961
/

Neat
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�| A CLOSED LETTER

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of us don't read ‘open’ letters)

Dear Friend, Neighbor, Customer, Client, Reader — uh — Dear Everybody:
(don’t want to miss anyone)
There’s an old saying: “IF YOU CAN’T BEAT ’EM—JOIN ’EM” And so, a lot of us discovered that for reasons of
convenience, “because it’s payday,” or “that’s when I bank” or “that’s when I shop for groceries” or because it’s just too
hard to break a long standing habit or tradition—that most of you like to shop on Friday nights.

After many meetings, surveys, and luncheon discussions a preponderant
decided to continue or re-institute Friday Night Openings.
Here are a few, but by no means all, of the reasons why
(in addition to lots of free un-metered parking):
ART

OLSON

&amp; CO.

FIRST NATIONAL
FELL SHOES
CHANDLER’S

SPORT

WOOLWORTH’S
STYLE SHOP
LEEDS JEWELERS
WALTERS SHOES

JEWEL FOODS
GSELL’S DRUGS
CHARLIE WENK’S
LEO’S DELICATESSEN

SUNSET

LARSON’S
HI-LAND PAINT

T. S. DUFFY

FURN.

CO.

(and probably many more which may

Some

of the above

SHOP

ACE

CHESTNUT COURT BOOK SHOP
CYCLE AND HOBBY SHOP
TOY HEAVEN

FOODS

are also open

on Thursday

of central business

people have

Friday night is a good time to do business in Highland Park

GREENWALDS
BANK

number

MOLEY
A&amp;P
been

:

ELLANGEE SHOES
WALGREEN’S
SERVICE STATIONS
ZELOOF-STUART
I. H. NEMEROFF
ALCYON THEATRE
~ COLUMBIA

CO.
have

HARDWARE

RADIO

TV

overlooked—sorry !)

nights.

And for those of you who have been kind enough to read this far in our “closed letter” your reward will be fabulous
Friday Night Specials at all of the stores listed above, as well as those shown below.
THE

FOLLOWING

STORES

WILL CLOSE WEDNESDAY AT
(unless otherwise specified)

NOON

BEGINNING JUNE 7TH

ART OLSON
AND COMPANY

LEEDS
JEWELERS

ACE
HARDWARE

H!-LAND
PAINT CO.

CYCLE AND
HOBBY SHOP

T. S. DUFFY
FURNITURE CO.

MOLEY
TV

BRAND
BROS.

GREENWALD‘S
SPORT SHOP

ELLANGEE
SHOES

ID 2-0638

Thursday,

May

18, 1961

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- OBITUARIES |

boort On New School Sits
Half Day school board, district 103 which serves Lincolne, Prairie View

and

Half

Day,

heard

a report

from

Curtis

feland, of M. K. Young and Associates, architects and engiS, On a proposed) school site in Lincolnshire

d meeting May 8.

ouples Club Holds
‘inal Program Of

jurrent Year May 26
For the last program of the seathe Couples club of the First
sbyterian church of Deerfield
onsoring

Neighbor’s

a “Have

House’

oh Friday,

This

May

at a

to be

26.

progressive

ill begin
bers’

Dinner

evening,
dinner

party

at 7:15 p.m. Ten or 12
homes will be opened

r guests, and each couple making
reservation will be assigned to a

me for

nner.

the

Each

main

course

hostess

prepare

the

of the

will provide

dinner

for

her

ests.

Following dinner,
sts will proceed

hostesses and
to the church

dessert and coffee

at 8:45 p.m.

od and arrangements

will be pro-

d by the club.

As the third and final part of the
ening’s program the Couples club
present minister, Reverend

rnard Didier, in a talk entitled
e

Secret

of

Personal

Happi-

ecause of the careful coordinanecessary, reservations should
@ made as early as possible. No
eservations will be accepted after
nesday, May 24. Reservations
be
made by ealling Mrs. R.
mn

‘e Miller (WI 5-5507), Mrs. Nor-

ne Erskine (WI 5-2257) or Mrs.
“a

Ponedera

(WI 5-4079).

at the regular

the teaching of these subjects. The
program includes audio-visual presentation,
demonstration
material,
subject and reference material, and
programs for the inservice training
of teachers
with better planning
for students with exceptional ability.
The board also approved the cur-

riculum improvement program sub-

Pam

Heitz

er.

he Badger, University of Wisin yearbook, has consistently

been rated one of the few top colege books in the nation. Published
1884, this year’s book consists
over

500

pages,.many

of

which

in color, and has a circulation
over 5500.
fiss Heitz was the editor of the
Scholastica High school newsand copy editor of the Miami

ersity yearbook. At Wisconsin,
is

considered

an

outstanding

she is an international relations
jor with

age on
ude

a 3.9 grade-point

campus

es,

ave-

a 4.0 scale. Her activities
politics,

executive

house

secretary

of

acthe

al symposium, and candidate
secretary of the student body.
y 8, she was chosen to become
mber of Mortar Board which
mposed of about 10 of the most
iding senior women.

HH 10—D 18

Services were held May 6 at the
Grace Lutheran church in Northbrook for Andrew Wenderling, 661
Chestnut
Ave., who
died May
5

at his home
ness.

after

a six-weeks

ill-

Services were conducted by the
The board received the Lincoln- Rev. Donald Wolkenhauer and inshire
Woodlands
site
from
the terment was in Mooney cemetery
Birchwood builders.
in Deerfield.
Meland, who will work with suMr.
Wenderling,
who
lived in
perintendent J. Howard
Quick in the North Shore area for the past
establishing the requirements and 55 years, spent the last 20 years
needs of a new school building, was of his life in Deerfield. He was
instructed by the board of educa- 92 years old.
tion to check further into the sewBorn in Germany, Mr. Wenderer and water requirements and as- ling came
to America about 60
sessments.
years ago. His wife preceded him
Authorized to make borings and in death by 25 years.
study the topographical problems
Survivors include five daughters
of the donated
land, Meland
re- and one son. They are: Catherine
ported that the site is ‘fine’ for Goebel, Caroline Massengill, Marie
a school building.
Peterson, Rose Fable, Lily Rentz
According
to superintendent
and John Wenderling. He is also
Quick,
plans
for
the
proposed
survived by 15 grandchildren and
school should be formulated early 22 great grandchildren.
in June. Bonding power of the district
is
approximately
$360,000.
Mrs. Gertrude Keller
Half of the bonding power is curFuneral services for Mrs. Gertrently in use.
rude
Anna
Keller,
80,
of
1056
Letters of resignation were read
‘Cherry St., were held May 16 in
from Warren Brewer, sixth grade
Grand
Rapids,
Mich.,
and _ interteacher, Ardis Miller, fifth grade
ment took place there.
teacher,
Barbara
Laubenstein,
Mrs. Keller died May 13 in the
fourth grade teacher, Merna Young,
Medical Pavillion of Highland Park
first
grade
teacher,
and
Anna
Hospital.
Hornback, seventh grade teacher.
The
widow
of Addison
Keller,
Superintendent Quick announced
Mrs. Keller had lived in Deerfield
that so far there have been seven
She
was
born
in
resignations, and that 14 had re- for six years.
Ionia County, Mich., Apr. 11, 1881.
turned contracts. The superintendShe
leaves
her daughter,
Mrs.
ent pointed out that he had been
Muriel
Edwards,
with whom
she
working on replacements and needmade her home; and a son, Oliver
ed the help of the board and the
of Grand Rapids, Mich.
She also
community to get the best teachers
leaves a brother,
Orson Quant,
possible.
Grand Haven, Mich.; and a sister,
At present there are openings in
Mrs.
Mildred
Manning,
Portland,
the Ist, 2nd, 4th, 5th, 6th, and 7th
Ore.
Two
granddaughters,
Mrs.
grades.
The
contracts
of Ronald
Muriel Shelton, Deerfield; and Mrs.
L. Amend, eighth grade teacher and
Mary, Parker, third grade teacher Shirley Parr, and two great-grandchildren also survive her.
were ratified.
The board approved the Title III
NDEA
program
for science
and
math,
which
included
$1161.07
worth of new materials and aids in

iss Pam Heitz, 21 Lancaster
has recently been appointed
ng Units Editor of the 1962

Wenderling

Andrew

mitted by the superintendent designed for a more adequate 7th and
8th grade program, leading to an
adequate
junior high program in
the future.
The
present
change
would
include the block system under which
a teacher teaches two major related
subjects such as science and mathematics and another teaches social

studies

and

language

arts.

It was

said that this had been recommended by Mrs. Louise Fricke in the
state department
report, June
7,
1960. It will make better use of
staff abilities.
The board acted on several in-

surance

matters

including

the

ex-

tension of liability coverage to all
employees and the lowering of coverage
on the vacant house from
$2,000 because it is no longer used
as a residence. A $1,000 policy has

been issued on the contents.
Letters were read from the civil
defense agency on disaster alarms
with no specific recommendations
made.
The superintendent was instruct-

ed to employ Paul Pettengill and
Co., to audit the school books at
the end of the school fiscal year,
July 1, and to help establish the
accounting system
State of Illinois.

required

by

the

The board transferred $25,246
from the working cash fund to the
educational fund to provide money,

Garden Club Opens

will

be

the

school

for

boy

this

write

prize for
or

prize,

a local

To

be

the

student

a brief letter to Mrs.

Garden

The

club

student

of

high

eligible

should
Stephen

merely

tell

why
he or she wishes to go to
the Youth Conservation Workshop
at one of these universities: Southern Illinois university at Carbondale, July 16-21 and July 23-28;
Western Illinois university at Ma-

comb,
ois

9-14;

June

25-30;

university

Eastern

Northern

at

De

Illinois

Kalb,

IllinJuly

unversity

at

Charlston,
July
23-28
and
July
30-August
4; University of Illinois at Champaign, July 23-28.

This year’s winner will be the
8th student the Garden club of
Deerfield has sponsored for this
statewide conservation project. Besides

an _

interesting

there

will

also

be

workshop,

an

extensive

program of social activities to add
to the fun of the trip. Transportation and accommodations will be

paid by the Garden club of Deerfield. The letters should be in
the mail by June 1.
for the balance of the fiscal year.
A list of summer projects and
needs was submitted to the board
by the superintendent and further

study will be made

on some. How-

ard Foote was authorized to purchase a new lawn mower for the
school.
A letter from Dr. Childress of
Northwestern
university
was
re-

ferred to Okel Fuqua, school attorney.

will

meet

John

at

the

Morrison,

3420

Deerfield Rd., for pot luck luncheon and bridge on May 25 at 12:45
p.m,
Reservations
are
available
by

iealling WI

the

McGuire

at the

annual

agricultural

ment

on April

Nick,

who

A.

and

fe
M.

a
was

Roundup

economics

of

depart-

27.
is the

son

of Mr.

and

Mrs. R. N. McGuire, 822 Warrington
Rd.,
was
named
‘The
Outstanding freshman in the department of agricultural economics for

1961.”
1960

HPHS

Grads

Nick is a 1960 graduate of Highland Park High school. Along with
his activities
with
the
Ag.
Eco.
Club, Nick has served as an officer
in the freshman agricultural society and is a member of the collegiate
4-H
Club.
Nick
plans
to
spend this summer in Texarkana,
Texas
and
will return
to Texas
A. and M. next fall to continue his
studies in agricultural economics.

5-5351.

Hold Installation
Luncheon For ORT
The installation luncheon of the
Deerfield
chapter
of
Women’s
American ORT will be held Saturday, May
20, at the Tally Ho
restaurant in Evanston. The 196162 slate of incoming executive officers are as follows:
Mrs. Jerry Glaschner, president;
Mrs. David Kaplon, Mrs. Eugene
Ornstein,
Mrs.
Donald
Prodbin,
Mrs. Jack Perlish, vice presidents;
Mrs. Max Russell, treasurer; Mrs.
Norman
Glist, corresponding secretary; and
Mrs.
Meyer
Merkin,
recording secretary.
Mrs. Robert Frost, regional president of Women’s American ORT,

will be the installing
Lucille

Omey,

provide

the

a

Alfred
to

officer.

Mrs.

humorist,

will

entertainment.
Rubin

reservations

at WI

Deerfield.

should

club

of Mrs.

desiring

Mueller, 540 Juneberry Rd., who
is the conservation chairman of
the

Towne

Mrs.

campus of
in Illinois

girl.

Towne Club Meets
home

(Nick)
at Texas

honored

Walter Nielsen, a sophomore at
Deerfield High school, was awarded the rating
of outstanding
in
Chemistry at the Junior Academy
of science fair at the University
of Illinois last week.
Charles Sherman, another Deerfield sophomore,
was
awarded
a
first in the area of biology.
An outstanding rating is given to
the top five per cent of the first
awards at the fair.
The two sophomores were competing with high school students of
all classes from the entire state.

of

Contest To Send
Student To Seminar
‘Five days free on the
one of five universities

Award In Science

Robert
freshman

is

and

attend

in

all

charge

members

should

call

her

5-2225.

Patricia

Charles Pantle, Sr., 1180 Deerfield

Bannockburn

Dads

Plan Picnic June 3
Bannockburn’

school

fathers’

club will hold its first
picnic Saturday, June 3

annual
at the

school from noon to 6 p.m. Admission is $2 per family.
Included in the afternoon pro-

will be games for the chilmusic, a father-son softball

game,

a

mother-daughter

game and food.
In charge of the
Ted

Harris

Olson

Mr.
and Mrs.
Carl Olson, Jr.,
1150 Oakley, have announced the
engagement
of
their
daughter,
Patricia A. Olson, to Kenneth R.
Pantle,
son
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Rd.,

gram
dren,

A.

at

Park.

Miss

Smith,

Olson

Kline

is

and

a _ secretary

French

at

of Deer-

field.

softball

picnic

WI

Highland

Both Miss Olson and Pantle are
graduates of Highland Park High
school. Currently he is serving six
months
in Fort
Leonard
Wood.
When his Army tour is up, Pantle
will resume his job with Dealers
Ready Mix.

will

be

5-20835.

Hold Missionary
Meeting Friday
Friday

evening,

May

19,

at

7:45

p.m., in the home of Mrs. Ruth
Collier of Wilmot Rd., there will
be a monthly meeting of the JOY
missionary

aides

ity Baptist

church

Devotions

of

will

Esplin

and

a

Tll-Mo

will

be

the

Commun-

of Deerfield.
be

film

led

by

about

Mrs.

Camp

shown.

Slate Special Meet
Of ORT On Tuesday
A special board meeting of Deerfield chapter of Women’s American ORT has been scheduled for
Tuesday, May 23 at 8:30 p.m. in
the home of Mrs. Jerry Flaschner,
848 Apple Tree Ln.
Mrs.
Fleschner
is the
newly

elected
This

president

will

ing of the
tors,

be

the

of

the

group.

first board

1961-62

board

meet-

of direc-

Helen

Marie

Announcement

Soderberg
has

been

made

of the engagement of Helen Marie
Soderberg
and
Robert
Lawrence

O’Connor, son of Mrs. Joseph Anthony
O’Connor,
730
Osterman
Ave. and the late Mr. O’Connor.
Miss Soderberg is the daughter
of Mrs. Herbert William Soderberg of Chicago and the late Mr.
Soderberg.

An early July wedding ve

been

planned.

Thursday, May

18, 1961

�Sunset’s Choicest, Grade A, Large, White

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4

Sunset’s

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CHOICE

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-KRISPIES

Ab

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DONUTS ¢

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OUR

KEN-L

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LINE.

RATION

KEN-L

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1

4 Ib. bag

65c

MR.

PILLSBURY ANGEL Foop

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6

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| 39¢

“COMET

vx 39¢

1%-oz.
jar Instant Tea

49c

LIPTON SOUP ic&lt;2: 39
CHICKEN
3 PACK

2-pk.

ctn. 27¢

WISH-BONE

|

CARTON

Onion,

2-pk.

ctn.

' DRESSING
8 oz. Cheese

Thursday,

May

18, 1961

33¢

;

TALIAN

B07
Dressing

45c

Sc)
oo

Cleanser
2

39c

$1.19

king size

7c

—

|

SUNSET
FOODS

ey LIPTON 48 TEa’Bacs
Ya-lb. p pkg. Tea 43c

19°

CHEER

CLEAN

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GREEN
Both

BAY

ROAD

Thursday

—

and

A

CENTRAL

Friday

PLENTY OF FREE PARKING

Nights

FOOD

STORE

‘Ti! &amp; P.N.

— ALWAYS
Page

H

11—D

19

�Re Laas ch
Feo aa

Oe

a i

urate

ey ae
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Teta
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PONE AG

A

pi oan

tie
ase

al

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a

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'|Sings

Your

Sherwin-Williams Paints
SAVE 54c
ona

t.

SHERWIN-WILLIAMS
:
PORCH &amp; FLOOR ENAMEL
For wood
Regular

floors

$2.27

and

SPECIAL
=

a

Miss Sharon O’Shea, daughter of
Mrs. Eugene Bowns, 2015 Deerfield
Road, will be a member of the 40voice chorus participating in the
Opera Workshop
production of
“Cavalleria Rusticana,” at Bethany
College.
The opera, sung in Eng-

lish

steps.

in Opera

and in costume, will be pres-

ented Friday (May 19)
Miss O’Shea, a 1960

$173

Highland

Ss
SESS

Park

High

freshman at Bethany
joring in music.

Av

SSS

at 8 p.m.
graduate of

School,

is

College,

ma-

a

Red Oak’s Revue
Opens Tomorrow

|Great Books Group
Sets Training Class
The

A
standing
room
audience
of
over 500 first-nighters
will view
the opening of the 1961 edition of
the
“Red
Oak
Revue”
tomorrow
night (Friday, May 19) at 8:45 p.m.
in the auditorium of the Red Oak
school in Woodridge.
The production, a musical satire on Highland
Park suburban life, is being presented by the Red Oak PTA to raise

funds to establish a film library.

A

second
evening
performance
will
be given Saturday, May 20. A special children’s show will be staged

Saturday afternoon, May

20 at 3:30

p.m.
A cast of 54 parents
and 13
faculty members will be featured
in the 16 acts of the revue. Parents
in
the
cast
include:
Mrs.
Leonard
Baker,
Edward
Basil,
Stanley Baum, Mrs. Donald Bench-

ley, Mare J. Berkman.
Cast

Members

Also Mrs. Jack Blane, Mr. and
Mrs. David Bluford, Mr. and Mrs.
Dan Cavalier, Mr. and Mrs. Abel

AIR

CONDITIONED

COLONIAL—Located

on

a

large

fine area

ae
Pe.
OS,

offers many unusual features. Three family bedroom suites,
two baths, a large living room with paneled fireplace wall,
full dining room, a family room with fireplace just off

in Highland

Park,

near

Lincoln

School,

Davis,

lot, in

;

this

home

the kitchen, a den with plenty of bookshelves, powder room,
a paneled recreation room with fireplace and wet bar. Circular driveway. Plenty of trees. $49,500.

p

BAIRD

Mrs.

&amp; WARNER
MORTGAGES

¢

MANAGEMENT

576 Lincoln Avenue

Ps

e

ard

INSURANCE

Hillcrest 6-1855

Winnetka, Illinois

Eisenberg,

Mr.

Also John Lindquist, Mrs. Harvey Lloyd, Mrs: Norman
Lyon,
Mrs. Edward Miller, Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Norman, Robin Padorr, Rich-

Pick,

Podall,

REAL ESTATE SALES

David

and Mrs. Leonard Elliott, Mr. and
Mrs.
James
Frankel,
Leonard
Friedman,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Robert
Friedman, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Gilbert, Mr. and Mrs. Don Hokinson,
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Jacobs, Mrs
Charles Lauzon.

SHeldrake

3-1855

Sheldon

Mrs.

Mr.

and

Donald

Riskin, Mr.

-Mrs.

Robert

Reifman,

Mrs.

and Mrs. Bert

Singer, Mrs. Edwin Scher,
Mrs. Donald Stein, Mrs.

Mr. and
Maurice

Unger, Mrs. Seymour Waldman,
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Weinberg,
Mrs. Gerald Weiner, Mr. and Mrs.

Great

Books

Foundation

is

scheduling two weekends of Leader Training at Lake Forest College to prepare residents of Lake
County to lead discussion groups

in the coming

fall. The

six-session

course will be held in the
trial Management Building

College.

Time

is 8:00 p.m.

Indusof the

Friday,

May 26, and 10:00 a.m. and 2:00
p.m. Saturday, May 27; with three
sessions at the same time and place
the weekend of June 2 and 3.
This
is
a _ tuition-free
course
offered to all adults, regardless of
education, who like to explore the
ideas contained in the great and
challenging literature of our civilization,
Registration is now being taken
by a Great Books Community representative, Mrs. Marvin Marder,

1040

Court

Ave.

ID

2-8468.

Earl Yaffe and Mrs. Jack Zeff.
Faculty members in the cast include Robert Bordenave, Byron
Burge, Mrs. Nancy Foss, Charles
Gessert, Miss Harriett Kaisor, Miss
Sara Karon, Don McFarlane, Ralph
Muchow,
Ray
Naegele,
Wally

Treichel,

Al

Trevor,

Norland

Wil-

son and Gerry Zwetz.
Directors of the show are Mrs.
Robert Friedman and Mrs. Sidney

Weinberg,

who

also wrote

and

di-

rected last year’s first edition of
the “Red Oak Revue” which is the
major fund-raising project of the
Red Oak school.
Greetings will be extended by
David
Bluford,
president
of the
Red Oak Parent-Teachers Association, and Ray J. Naegele, principal

of the Red

Oak

Following

freshments.

the

will

school.
performance

be

served

re-

by

a

committee of ladies headed by Mrs.
Burton Balsam
and Mrs. Harry
Goodwillie.

[EXECUTIVES CAR SALE
/

196]

onvertibles

FORDS

Hard-Tops
2-Doors

|
|

|

All Cars Carry New Car Guarantee
HOLMES
MOTOR
CO.

1909 ST. JOHNS
: Page

H

12—D

20

°

HIGHLAND PARK

:

ID 2-8640
Thursday, May

18, 1961

�Move It, Well Sell It!
)=€6LAST 4 DAYS!
es

oe
ia

2

SINCE 1900

4g

DISREGARDED! NO REASONABLE OFFER WILL
BE REFUSED! BUY AT LOWEST PRICES...

COSTS

2 YEARS TO PAY

OE
}%

@

K

oq

‘

Se
heer

OUR

i NG

a
g
oY

a

:

Highland

yourself fantastic
Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday are your last days to get
merchandise to
the
move
than
Rather
.
furnishings
home
quality
finest
the
savings on
of dollars
hundreds
yourself
save
and
in
our Waukegan store we'll sell it to you! Come
don’t miss it!
chance,
last
your
is
This
s.
appliance
ond
furniture
brand
on famous

ae
ab

:

|

SHOP THURSDAY AND FRIDAY UNTIL 9 P.M.

. Store

Park

SATURDAY

BEDROOM SUITES |

$59.95 BRONZETONE DINETTE SET,

$ 3 9”

30x40x48 size,

DIN "38

oe

9°

eke

ty

case

ivory-linen

ceccccictiectcstennes

oi

FARE

full size bookcase

| ao chaenyesnen

$169.95 DOUGLAS 9-PC. DINETTE,
s99”
2 large leaves, extension
tiie, 4heR ioe cakes

$] 59 95

ny deluxe

SUITE,

$119.95

SET, Seafoam

$] 99”
grey, triple dresser,
chest, bookcase bed ........
$499.95 AMERICAN CHERRY SUITE,
$ 3 49*

chest,

triple dresser,

$359.95 BASSETT SUITE,

white plastic top triple dress$ 2 29*
er, chest, 2 twin panel
ee EE BPE Se Aa Ae TOO

$299.95 WESTINGHOUSE CONSOLE TV, American Con- $ 239"
temporary, walnut, 21 in.

49

RE-

STRATOLOUNGER

CLINER CHAIR, 3 position, $8 4%

foam, black and beige ......

$189.95 PULLMAN LOUNGE CHAIR,
599”

deep comfort foam
FODDET, NOW cronies ctenseness
$149.95 THAYER COGGIN
~apcene

fw

re higpe ns

a

reversible

bu

bed

panel

.......6..2.:...4..

reversible cushions .........-......

5] 59”

Mon

ROCKER,
$

$98.50 DEARBORN
wing style,

19

bed ........

$319.95 BROYHILL

STEREO-PHONO, 4 speeds, 599”
4 speakers, automatic changer

$ 5 g*

5-piece
extension table .........2.......---

WALNUT

$239.95 BASSETT

double dresser, chest,

$] 0 0”

$129.95 GE PORTABLE

$79.95 DOUGLAS ROUND DINETTE,
per egiend ear

Charcoal, portable
WOE

et

5 pieces

17” TV,

$179.95 OLYMPIC

ico tas ciecea

WOU

WGOKCHRE.

eta . T 88

Rs

oe

CHAIRS

OCCASIONAL

double
99
$

SUITE,

$149.95 SEAMIST
dresser, chest,

80
ONa

sok 29

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complete

SET,
95

di

sag
$49.95 hctdeapde
smart ebony frame,

11 a.m. to 6 p.m.

SUNDAY

UNTIL 5:30 P.M.

569

cushion,

ROBE RTEPE

ss eg aca

$149.95 VALENTINE SEAVER
LOUNGE CHAIR, Reversi- $39”
ble T cushion, black nylon

ES ENITE
Every Lamp in the Store Reduced! | EIET
Ironing

Pacific

$3.95

Board

ican

cover. and pad set ................
=

Fah

to 44

Singles and pairs.

$21.95 Universal Steam-Dry
adjustable

30

styles.

ironing

bargains.

sg

Amer-

early

traditionals,

Moderns,

I7c

tall.

inches

t

599

Don’t miss these

$349.95 KROEHLER

AL, Decorator

838

oO

$499.95 HOWARD 3-pe. SECTIONAL

gy a

Appli- $1 39

nes
or

E

WASHERS

ee

very Table

in the Store Reduced!

traditional.
and groups

c

and RANGES .

All finishes.
of 3.

REFRIGERATORS
ATOR,
$189.95 PHILCO REFRIGER
5] 46”
family size,
BOOK GROIVER os. asscemeeendes

$249.95 PHILCO ELECTRIC$] RANGE,
79”

$279.95 WESTINGHOUSE

automatic clock-timer,

cycles,

steel

chassis

peek window

Thursday,

May

EMBASSY
$1 39”

oven ................

OPEN
18, 1961

SOFA
BED
AND
WING
$] 49*
Early American

2

$1 7 he

crisper

toe ey Py

Amen

peer a iON an

$399.95 WESTINGHOUSE REFRIG$ 25 $°*°
ERATOR, 2-door,
4 POS

rc ery mre emee arenon

$499.95 PHILCO REFRIGERATOR$ 298”
FREEZER, 14 cu. ft.
Supermarketeer

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

$249.95 KROEHLER DAVEN$

D CHAR,

P

99

$399.95

TO

49

2-PC, LOUNGER

SECTIONAL, Foam
cushions,bolsters

$] 48”
9

fabric

........-....-...-----

$269.95 EARLY AMERICAN SOFA
AND CHAIR, Maple wood $1 59”
arm:

sleeps:

9 P.M. su

2 oicacitet

and

CHESTS
double
$OQ495

CABINETS,

$29.95 UTILITY CABINETS,

$] 9”

all steel

shelves,

white

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

$39.95 Bin Sl CABINETS,
$ 29”
giant, 36 inches wide
all

nylon

$329.95 FAMOUS *MAKE SLEEPER
BED, spring cushion, gold $ 21 9”
tweed

$14.95 UTILITY
door,
assorted sizes

5 large

-..........------+

1G
_
$239.95 a
size, reversible mattress,
beige

PARAMOUNT SOFA

CABINETS

SLEEPERS

$89.95 ARMLESS SOFA BED, 488
$5
decorator fabric. Bedding
storage compartment ........

$229.95 SERTA

99

ANY
Aaa cushion,
EERE turSTOVER$
cial, spring
88
quoise matelasse ................... T 69

DUAL PURPOSE

;

12 eu. $9-7Q71
eat gt tres
rost proof, 2-door, 12 cu.

bg PA

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

$189.95 AUTOCRAT 30”
GAS RANGE, 4 burners,

cu. ft. freezer,

yeaa

sie, see ese tay, © set

$139.95 SPEED QUEEN WASHER,
9 9°
Safety wringer, large
capacity,

REFRIGERATOR,
11

Pe

$549.95 WESTINGHOUSE WASHER$3 29"
DRYER, two speeds,
two

$269.95
CHAIR,

foam

F

OF

Singles

$299.95 PHILCO-DEXTER $]WASHER
99"
Automatic 2-speeds,
a8
2 cycles .......

big oven

end,

Carpet yarn frieze, beige |

Step, lamp, commode and cocktail
tables in modern early American,

$ &gt; hg

HOUSEHOLD BROOMS, long 77
sturdy bristles of corn ............

$ 299”

bumper

foam rubber .....................-

cator with pint of floor wax
yas Bryne.

$] 99”

fabric

ar

$6.95 Twist-o-matic Wax

4-Pc. SECTION-

steel

...

5

$49.95 MAPLE CHEST,
drawers, large 41 inch
size .....

$ PES be

moe

$69.95 BLONDE CEDAR
CHEST, 43 inch size,

88

$
45

Lift waeshelf «&lt;....:e4se.-5e,-n

SUNDAY

|
Page

H

13—D

21 :

�ostly for Women

Engagements

le

Weddings

see Che

Thesis

Woman's Club Press Book Wins
first Place Award For State
The award of excellence was given to the Deerfield Woman’s club for its press book, which won first place, senior group,
class two in the state press book contest of the Illinois Federa-

tion

of Women’s

clubs.

Mrs. Roy L. Newman, state press
and publicity chairman of the Illinois
Federation
presented
the
award to Mrs. Charles H. Carman,
press and publicity chairman of the
Deerfield Woman’s club on Thursday, May 11, at the annual convention of the IF WC held in the Grand
Ballroom
of the Hotel
Sherman,

Chicago.
The press

book

of the

Deerfield

Woman’s
club
had
received
the
award of first place in the same
classification in the tenth district
contest from Mrs. Elmer F. Anderson, tenth district press and publicity chairman, at the annual meet-

ing
of the
tenth
district
held
Wednesday, April 26, at the Highland Park Woman’s club.
Other winners in the state contest in the senior Group, class two
{Population under 30,000) were second
place,
Geneseo
Columbian

club,

district

15,

Peru Woman’s

La
6.

Grange

third

place

tie,

|"

Mount Holyoke’s
Chicago Club Plans
Annual Spring Buffet
The east and the west will meet
and
find
much
in
common
on

Saturday,
Mrs.

May

Philip

The
spring

Woman’s

club,

Belleville, district 22 and Woman’s

Club of Skokie, district 10; third
place, Cicero Woman’s club, dis-

trict 6.

clubs

place

La

district

Herrin

class

Grange

Junior

6,

two,

Park

Wom-

second

place

Woman’s

club,

dis-

third
place
tie
Junior
of the Woman’s club of

Wilmette,
line

group,

club,

trict
25,
Auxiliary

district 10 and East Mo-

Junior

of

Hinsdale.

cago Mount

Holyoke

club, and the

speaker,
Mrs.
Zenbei
Furuya
of
Chicago, will talk on, ‘‘The Education of Women
in Japan.”
Cur-

rently

a

graduate

student

at

the

University of Chicago, Mrs. Furuya
attended Kobe college in Japan for
four years before coming to this
country to complete her education.

Woman’s

club,

district

1858

Holyoke,

graduate

of

Moses.

Smith,

Mrs.

was a long term
cago. Mrs. Smith

Kobe

college

resident of Chihelped found the

corporation

of

Chi-

cago, the Chicago Mount Holyoke
club, and the Mount Holyoke alumnae association,

Mrs. Richard W. Kasperson of
Chicago, president of the club, will
announce the club’s board of directors for the coming year. Among
those to be named are two Deerfield
women:
Mrs.
Bayard
E.
Wynne, Jr. of 2540 Saunders Rd.

and
of

Mrs.
512

Francis

Radcliffe

M.

Compton,

III

Circle.

Junior
clubs
group,
class
one,
first place East St. Louis Junior
Woman’s club, district 22, second

place Moline Junior Woman’s
district

14,

Heights

Junior

third

place

Woman’s

club,

Chicago

club,

_ The press books entered in the
State contest were judged by three
field.

highly

One

perienced

qualified

was

a club

in publicity,

in

their

woman
one

was

exan

editor of a national magazine and
the other was the managing editor
of a newspaper.
“As this article goes to press and
my

term

of

office

ends’

I wish

to

express my sincerest appreciation
to the following
members
who
helped me to win the press book
award

for

club,”
Herman
igently
_make it

Deerfield

Woman’s

said Mrs.
Carman.
“Mrs.
Pack, who worked so dilin compiling the book to
interesting and neat in ap-

pearance,

who

the

Mrs.

assisted

H.

me

Robert

in

Dieterle

publicity

and

Mrs, Elmer Anderson, who instructed me in its presentation.
“J wish to thank Mrs.
‘Rogers,
‘Lager,
Robert

Locke

president,
Mrs.
Charles
program
chairman,
Mrs.
G.
Clendenin,
ways
and

‘means chairman, and the chairmen
“of the departments of fine arts and
_civie for keeping

me

well informed

of the club’s activities. And to all
the
members
who
so. willingly
. posed for pictures.
“The full support of the Deerfield
REVIEW
was
extended
in
publication. Elizabeth Lamb, Edi-

‘tor of the North Shore
‘papers, Mrs. Robert
tired editor and Mr.
son, present editor of
Page

H

14—D

22

Amateur

Gardeners

Conduct

Workshop

In Zellet

dis-

trict 3.

Group newsE. Pettis, reSteve Anderthe Deerfield

John J. Ward,
and Mrs. Carl

ing secretary Mrs.

first vice president; Mrs. Robert Mazur, president; Mrs. George Reich,
Bagge, second vice president. Missing from the picture was record-

Howard

Kirst.

Auxiliary Members
Hold Planning Meet

For September
Members

of

Show

the

Country

Shore

Auxiliary of the Cradle met at
luncheon on Wednesday May 17
at Exmoor Country club, to launch
plans for their 12th annual
beth Arden
Fashion show

held in the fall.
The gala benefit
tember 19 at the
hotel
titled

Elizato be

is set for SepConrad Hilton

in Chicago and will be en“Twelve Years of Elizabeth

Arden Fashions.”

14.

‘women

tary; Mrs.
treasurer;

Mount

who

AAUW officers for the coming year of the Deerfield Branch of the organization are picat their annual pot luck supper at Jewett Park, held May 9. The new officers will astheir duties May 22. From left, the women are: Mrs. Duke Miller, corresponding secre-

tured
sume

Kobe and Mount Holyoke have
strong common ties. Both are the
oldest senior women’s colleges in

their
respective
countries,
and
district’ both have benefited through a far-

hurst Woman’s club, district 11;
second place tie Woman’s Club of

an’s

home

of

club, district 12, and

Senior group, class one
(population over 30,000) first place, Elm-

first

at the

occasion
is
the
annual
buffet luncheon of the Chi-

sighted

Junior

20

Cochran

The.

Among
Country
Deerfield

on plans for the fall
Mrs. Stephen Chase,

Home

Amateur

Gardeners

of

Deerfield
will
have
Mrs.
Max
Bramer conduct a workshop at the
home of Mrs. Frank Zellet, 814
Spruce Ave. on May 22. -

The

members

will

meet

at

10

a.m, bringing their own containers and materials.
Mrs.
Bramer
has
long’
been

known
on

as an outstanding

period

authority

arrangements,

and

has

studied with some
of the best
recognized
artists in flower arranging.
A planning meeting was held on
May 9 at the home of Mrs. James
Cody, 853 Beverly, and another on

May
1024
tion

5 at Mrs. Robert Ettinger’s,
Warrington Rd. in preparafor the September
flower

show.

Present Play
written

Milk

Wood,”

by Dylan

the

Thomas

play

just be-

fore his death, will be presented
by the senior class of The North

Shore
p.m,

Country
Friday,

Day

May

school

at 8:30

26, at the

school.

REVIEW staff and Milton Merner,
photographer, were most co-operative.
“Without the help of all these

people it would have been impossible for the Press

field Woman’s
honor

Westlund,

Mrs.

and

I am

Book

of the Deer-

Club to receive this
deeply

grateful.” -

Mrs.

Raymond

benefit are:
Mrs. James

John

Hale,

and

Dau.

:

‘From 18-Day Trip
With Daughter
Mr.

and

Mrs.

R. M.

Harvey,

1014

Deerfield Rd., have returned home
from an 18-day trip with their
daughter
and
Mrs.

father

and
her
husband,
L. J. Snider,
and

from

Ohio.

They
drove to
and had breakfast

Mr.
his

:
Oklahoma
with Mrs.

City
Har-

vey’s niece, Mrs. Harry J. Schafer
and her husband and mother, Mrs.
G.

W. Knox.
Then
they.

way

to

continued

Tucson,
Mrs.

Ariz.

Harvey

on

their

After

three

flew

back

to

Oklahoma City to spend a week
with her sister, Mrs. Knox, where
the others picked her up Monday,
May 8, before continuing home.
They arrived
May 10.

back

in

Deerfield

Visits Son
Mrs. Robert McGuire, 822 Warrington Rd., drove to College Sta-

tion,

Tex.,

Weekend,
Texas A,

Nick,

to

a

Parent’s

May
12, 13 and 14 at
and M. where her son,

is a student.

Accompanying
was Mrs. R. J.

Prospect
Jay.

attend

who

her on the
Wheelock
of

will

visit

|

Mr, and Mrs. James M. Tibbetts
of Orchard St. have announced the
engagement
of
their
daughter,
Miss Dora Jean Tibbetts, to John
A. Peterson, son of the William
H. Petersons of Duffy Ln.
Miss
Tibbetts,
a
graduate
of
Highland
Park
High
school,
attended
Lake
Forest
college.
She
is currently employed by the Illin-

ois

Scholarship

commission.

Peterson,
also
a
graduate
of
Highland
Park
High
school,
attended
Southern
Illinois
university. He is currently employed at
American Terra Cotta corporation
in Crystal Lake.

Hold Installation
Of New President
Of Woman's Club

Harveys Return

days,

“Under

the
members
of
the
Shore. Auxiliary
from
who
are working
hard

Deerpath Center

Dora Jean Tibbetts
Tells Engagement
To John Peterson

her

trip
Mt.

son,

Mrs.

elected

Albert

R.

president

Dawe,

of the

newly-

Deerfield

Woman’s club will be installed by
Mrs. Joseph F. Bernhard, president
of the tenth district of the Illinois
Federation
of Women’s
clubs,
at
the annual spring luncheon to be
held on Tuesday, May 23, at the
Villa Venice, Milwaukee Ave. and
the Des Plaines River, Northbrook.
Mrs,
Locke
Rogers,
retiring
president, has announced that Mrs.
Bernhard
and
Mrs.
Walter
J.
Barth, first vice-president
of the
Tenth
District,
will
be
honored
guests at the luncheon, the final
social affair of this season. Mrs.
Elizabeth
Lamb,
editor
of
the
North
Shore
Group
Newspapers,
and Mrs. Robert E. Pettis, retired
editor of the Deerfield REVIEW
have also been invited to be guests
of honor of the club.
Mrs.
Philip Ruth,
chairman
of
this year’s luncheon, will present

Miss Fern Fels, versatile commedienne, who will entertain members
and their guests. She is the author
of numerous sketches; among them
are “How To Break Up Anyone’s

Marriage

Including

and

To

ize

“How

It.”

Cook

Your
And

Not

Own”
Real-

Starts Plans For
Informal Outing
Although
spring
has
just
arrived, members
of the Deerpath
Center of Infant Welfare are already busy marking plans to spend
an informal
day in the country

early

next

fall.

Mrs, Eduardo Farias, 1309 Woodland Dr., and Mrs. Charles Cederberg,
1119
Sheridan
Rd.,
Lake

Forest,

have

been

named

men of the affair to be
tember 30 at Wild Rose
Charles.

co-chairheld SepFarm, St.

Preliminary reports on the forthcoming
affair will
be presented
by committee chairmen next Monday evening, May 22, when center
members
gather at the home
of
Mrs. Charles
Cederberg
in Lake
Forest for their regular monthly
meeting.
Assisting Mrs. Cederberg as cohostesses will be Mrs. Keith Nick-

Oley,

662

Timber

Hill

Ln.,

Mrs.

Edward Chase, Jr., Highland Park,
and Mrs, Robert Gressens, Northfield. Mrs, Thomas R. Roth, center
president, will preside at the meeting.
Mrs.

Keith

chairman,

will

Nickoley,

diseuss

program

plans

for a

summer
party for members
and
their husbands. Mrs. John D. Ware
of Lake Forest, will be in charge
of
arrangements
for
the
social
function.
Center members from Deerfield
who have attended the Alice Wood
Station in Chicago during the past
month
are Mrs.
Eduardo
Farias,
Mrs. John Severson and Mrs. William Hennings.

Sorority Member
Sandy Franks, 29 Melrose Ln.,
is one
of
13
students
initiated
into
Alpha
Tau
Delta,
national
nursing sorority at Marquette uni-

versity
Miss

in Milwaukee, Wis.
Franks
is a_ student

Marquette’s

college

Thursday,

of nursing,

May

18, 1961

in

w

�Needles Click As

Big Game Hunters

Music Club’s Gay

Race Is Re-Run

In Town Tonight

Annual Meet Soon

48-Year Residents
Observe

Golden

Wedding Date

For Festive Party

Craigs have nine children and 16
grandchildren. Only three of their

LeBolt

will

be

a tame

Most

chim-

Zeloof-Stuart

Miss

Connie

Photo

Adler

This noon,

are

members

Club,

whose

the women

attending

LeBolt Is Officer
The LeBolts, who have lion and
leopard
skins
to show
for their
African
safari
a few years
ago,
are among hosts for the convention
which
stresses
conservation
as
much
as big game
hunting. Following
their
cocktail
party
tonight, they will be hosts to the
crowd at dinner in the Lake Shore
Country
Club, Mr. LeBolt is assistant secretary of the Shikar-Safari Club.

in the U.S. Air Force, he currently
is employed in Chicago.
A late Fall wedding is planned
by the young couple.

soring Woman’s Board, announces.
The quintet includes Mrs. Richard Ettlinger, Mrs. Louis Haller,
Mrs. Glenn
Keats, Mrs. Bernard
Nath and Mrs. William Binford.
The
Festival, from
6:30 to 10
p.m., will feature a Mozart opera,
a jazz combo,
Mrs. James Ward

Five Are Hostesses

At Lively Arts Fete
Five Highland Park women will
be serving as hostesses
Tuesday
evening, May 23, for the 1961 May

at the Art Institute,

crowd

Shikar-Safari

the convention will be entertained
at luncheon
at LeManoir
in Old
Orchard.

Mr. and Mrs. Eugene M. Adler
of Moraine Road are announcing
the
engagement
of their daughter, Connie,
to Fred
W.
Meyer,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Meyer
of Merrill Avenue, Chicago.
Connie, a graduate of Highland
Park High School, attended Stanford
and
Northwestern
universities.
Her fiance is a graduate of Hyde

Festival

of the

the

Thorne’s famous shadow boxes and
bibelots, a “living galleries” pres-

“The

entation
work.”

and

‘the

lively

artists

LP SALE

Craig,

Oaks,
Van

Catherine

Calif.;
Nuys,

Miss

Calif.;

Eileen
and

Mrs.

Carter, Miami, Fla.

Mr. Craig continues his business
career
with
Hornblower
and
Weeks, investment firm in Chicago.

Meet at Gooch Home
Mrs. J. William Gooch is opening
her home
at 2610 Ridge
Rd. to
members of the Intermediate group
of Highland
Park-Ravinia
Infant
Welfare Center Monday
at 10:30
a.m. The Intermediates will begin
a new sewing project in the allday meeting with luncheon served

at noon.

y during “May

is Mantovani

CARDS

50 for $2.00

100 for $2.50
4-day Service
ENGRAVED CARDS
on Wedding Bristol
100 for $4.45
10-day Service

645 Central Ave.
Thursday,

May

ID 3-0230

18, 1961

lagher

Jr. has

her mother,

of

been

announced

Mrs. Lawrence

McDaniels

is the son
Gallaghers

Ave,

Mr.

TRANSISTOR,

Illinois

in

English.

uate

where

she

He

fiance

of the

is majoring
is

University

a

of

grad-

Illinois

where he majored in chemical en.
gineering.
He
now
is employed
with Universal Oil Products in Des
Plaines.
Miss Hutchings will be given in
marriage
by her father, William
L. Hutchings
of Kenilworth
August 5.

Bat.

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RADIOS
Reg. $14.95

SIX TRANSISTOR—5-yr. warranty .... Reg. $35.95
SIX TRANSISTOR, Case, Bat., Earphone Reg. $32.95

SALE

CREATIVE

ING

and

AUDI
EQUIPMENT
will
Sj
-}

make

at the
SOUND

your

WHILE

ENCE

your

a

lessons

SIGHT
G
WORTH
EXPERI-

you'll

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friends

about.

write to Sight

INFORMATION

FOR

TEACH-

a COLORAPPROACH
ve

&amp; SOUND LANGUAGE STUDIO, | 706
e, 1H. Or
Glencoe Road, GI
Monday, Wednesday,
5-0978
VE
Thursday 5 p.m.-7 p.m.

at

Students Learn
SUPERIOR READING SKILLS
Individual Programs for:
10-12 — COLLEGE STUDENTS

—

ADULTS

July 11 to July 31.

f

detailed

information

call

or

write

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Dean

4-3000

by

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comprehension, rate, and enhances

enjoyment

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MAY BE YOUR OWN

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SUMMER READING PROGRAM

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$61.50
$42.50

TRANSISTOR
Case,

“OUR CHILDREN NEED THE
BEST OF TEACHING!” You Say

Gallagher

Miss Hutchings,
a graduate
of
Highland Park High School, is in
her senior year at the University

of

gay and surpris-

by

Morano

of the senior William
of Marseilles, T1.

Administered

$Q58

_ Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

SALE
ABC

for

ing performances by various members
of the
dignified
musicians’
club.

engagement of Miss Patricia
Hutchings
to William
Gal-

Improves

GUITAR SALE

VISITING

The
Lynn

CE

SALE PRICE

GIVE

sandwiches

fun. She promises

Miss Patricia Lynn Hutchings

|.

For

Stereo

WE

their own

BARAT COLLEGE

Reg. $4.98

HARMONY

at 11:30,

Mrs. John Irland, program chairman, has planned the afternoon of

Month”

Mono

MAR. LESTER ORIN FULLERTON *

will convene

.

“Reg. $3.98

HARMONY

an-

luncheon.

June 19 to July 10

ONDON

SALE PRICE”

of

Highland

will be annual reports, elec-

the box

BALDRIDGE
RECORDS

women

bringing

GRADES

daNTOVA

the

tion of officers for 1961-62 and a
delightful “fun” program and picnic
luncheon.
The
members
are

10th
annual
convention
opened
yesterday
and
continues
through
Saturday at the Edgewater Beach
Hotel.

children live in the Chicago area; ‘Lively Arts,” Mrs. Suzette Morton
they are Norman of Highland Park
Zurcher,
president
of the
sponand
Chicago;
Robert,
Naperville;
and Bradford, Peoria. Others are
Mrs. Barbara Dawes, Bloomington.
Ind.; Mrs. Francis Peregoy, Luth- |§
erville, Md.; Jesse, San Bernardino,
Calif.; Mrs. Harriet Buskett, Sher-

man

The

There

panzee.
of

gayest

is

president, Mrs. Carl J. Hildebrand
at 922 S. Oak Knoll Dr., Lake Forest.

ering in the John LeBolt home in
Waverly Rd. this evening for cocktails. Greeting guests with Mr. and
Mrs.

the

meetings

Park Music club’s, which will be
held Wednesday at the home of the

Big game hunters from all over
the United States, and some from
India,
Africa
and
Europe
make
up the crowd of 100 guests gath-

|Park High School and Grinnell
Grinnell,
Iowa.
After
| College,
Mr. and Mrs, A. B. Craig, 804
three
years
of
service
as
an
officer
Laurel Ave:, who moved to Highland
Park
just two
years
after
they were
married,
will observe
their golden wedding anniversary
Saturday, May 20.
Too busy to stop for a “big celebration,’
Mrs.
Craig
said
they
would observe the day quietly, possibly wth just a small family gettogether.
Married
in Oakland,
Md.,
the

Traditionally,
nual

oOo
oooogogonoOgoogHcDOCdGog

While
members
of the
Junior
group of the Highland Park-Ravinia
Center of Infant Welfare sew away
on baby garments Monday morning,
they hope to hear a first-hand report on the Kentucky Derby from
Mrs. Wayne Miller of Indian Tree
Drive. Mrs.
Miller and her husband returned recently from Louisville after an exciting Derby weekend.
The Juniors are meeting in the
home of Mrs. Laurence Scott, 1760
Dale Ave., at 10:30 a.m.
Luncheon chairman for the day
will be Mrs. Paul Behanna, Lake
Forest, with Mrs. Winslow Pettingell, Mrs. James Souby and Mrs.
Roger Strecker assisting. Morning
hostesses will be Mrs. Robert Billeter, Deerfield; and Mrs. Robert
Clarkson. Afternoon hostesses will
be Mrs. Nathan
Corwith Jr. and
Mrs. Ralph Mack.

$99.50
$34.50

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Only

$80.00
$29.95

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CE 4-0658
ID 2-7222

moment.
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Let’s

get

my

camp

clothes

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WITH CAMP ORDER
@ TEE SHIRTS WITH CAMP EMBLEMS.
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For your

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we

will

be

open

Thurs.

Geut
69 Linden Avenue
IN

THE

Eves.

during

May.

“Yr,
VErnon 5-3181
HUBBARD

WOODS

FASHION

Hubbard Woods
CENTER

Page

H 15—D

23

a

�Five new officers and four directors were elected to serve North

Shore chapter, Daughters of
American Revolution.
Mrs. Richard H. Thompson

Founded in 1930
by Augusta Marseilles

Illinois

DE

John

6-2843

“A pleasant sheltered care home
for elderly people’’

Deerfield;

and _

historian,

McGuire

of

Dean

Ave.

Mrs. F. G. Waggett of Marshman
Ave, was elected to fill out the
unexpired term of corresponding
secretary.
Elected
as_
directors
were Mrs. John E. Nohren, Northbrook, membership; Mrs. Kenneth

the
Jr.,

will continue
as regent
through
the next season. Elected as viceregent was Mrs. Albert C, Linenthal, Lake Bluff; recording secretary, Mrs. Harry F. Hillman III;
treasurer, Mrs. Norman H. Erskine,

604 N. Genesee Street
Waukegan,

Edward Strengers
Celebrating 50th
At Open House

North Store DAR Flach: Officers

THE MARSEILLES
RETIREMENT HOME

H. Kraft, of Lakewood

Mr. and Mrs. Edward Strenger,
1189
Ridgewood
Dr.,
will
greet
friends and relatives in an open
house at their home Sunday, May

PIl., correct

21,

use of flag; Mrs. Francis H. Compton III, Deerfield, ways and means;

and Mrs. Walter E. Koch,
field, press and publicity,

Mrs.

from

2 to

Deer-

the

have one son, Thomas,

Strenger

Miss Carolyn

WINNETKA
847

Elm

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6-5141

The bargain hunting
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and

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shoot

Powell's.

Mrs.

Alan

1835

and

Joyce,

a
801

grandchil-

Ave.,

and

four

Mr. and Mrs. Irving Segal of Oren.
Tampa, Fla., recently announced | Last night,

the

Strengers

were

the engagement of their daughter,
Carolyn, to Stuart Jay Wayne, son

entertained by the immediate family at a golden wedding dinner

of Mr. and Mrs. William Wayne of
Hazel Avenue.

|Party in
Zurich.

Mrs. Stone Elected

Foundation

Prexy

Mrs. Leonard Stone of Old Mill
Rd. was chosen president of Karen

Brown

now!

of

dren’s

Memorial
Research

Chapter,

Chil-

Foundation,

at the

Farner’s

Hotel,

Lake

April meeting.
Two of the new board members
are also Highland
Parkers;
Mrs.
Bert Braverman of Marl Oak Dr.,
program
chairman,
and
Mrs.
Daniel Halpern
of Summit
Ave.,
art chairman.
The Mardi Gras at the Highland
Park
American
Legion
Hall
in
February was a huge social success, Mrs. Stone reports, and raised

over $500, She credits the coopera.
tion

of

the

Legion

and

local

mer-

chants who donated prizes.

Complete Selection

POLAROID 808
KITS

Of Pre-Recorded

useo — $9450
New

Laurel

college of business administration.

STORE
¢

Segal

Deerfield,

Ln.,

daughter,

Miss Segal and Mr. Wayne are
both in their junior year at the
University
of
Miami
in
Coral
Gables, Fla., where he is in the

PARK
STORE
«
ID 2-8550
©

in honor

job.”

They

HIGHLAND
589 Central
“

5 p.m.

their golden wedding anniversary.
The Strengers were married May
17, 1911, in Oak Park and moved
to Highland Park eight years later.
Still active
at the
helm
of his
business,
the
Edward
Strenger
Plumbing and Heating company in
Highland Park, Mr. Strenger looks
forward to.several more years ‘“‘on

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NOTICE

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PUBLIC

“Da-

Highland

Park

AUCTION

WHEREAS,
the following described automobiles which had been abandoned, lost,
stolen or unclaimed, were delivered to the Chief of Police of the City of Highwood,
the municipal officer charged with the keeping of such property.
MG Roadster, Motor No. 480764, Model XPAG-TF-36467, Vehicle Id. No. HDA-4616893
AND,
WHEREAS,
within five (5) days thereafter due notice was given to the
owner or other person legally entitled to the possession of the aforesaid automobiles
as required by law:
A
WHEREAS,
the aforesaid
automobiles
have
remained
unclaimed
by the
owner or other person legally entitled to the possession thereof for a period of thirty
(30) days or more from the day when such notice was given and, under the law, it has
become the duty of the undersigned, Ted Benvenuti, Chief of Police of the City of
Highwood to cause such automobiles to be sold at public auction to the highest bidder,
for cash.
THEREFORE, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the automobiles above described
will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder, for cash, on the 17th day of
June, 1961 at 10:00 A.M.
(Central Daylight Time) at 412 Green
Bay Road,
Highwood, Illinois.
Any such automobile not sold at this sale may be offered for sale
and sold at any subsequent sale without further notice of publication.
Dated at Highwood this 18th day of May, 1961.
5/18/61—128
TED
BENVENUTI,
Chief of Police and Constable

Thursday, May 18, 1961

�Expert Hair Coloring
and

Hair

Cutting

Specializing
High

in

Blonding

In All Shades

Permanent

Waves

Hair Cutting
All

Branches

of Beauty

Culture

Beauty SALON

CLASSIQUE
North

Shore

Group

Photo

by

Garden

they pack

club

up fresh

planners

blooming

®

as

S

r

served under
dd there’ll b

aa he

a

|

Save Money 7in May!

e
°
in Every Department!
Savings

| Tremendous

Village

Gree
the
old
North Shore station from 8 am.to||
4 p.m. Lunch will be
rer of the statio:

é

plants

for the 32nd plant sale on the Ra-

inia

OPERATORS

EXPERIENCED

Zeloof-Stuart

“Come to our Garden Fair Saturday!’’ choruses
this quartet
ot

Ravinia

2-1603

ID

Avenue

Johns

St.

1815

TARE”

Featuring

All Summer

More

.
The Outdoors
Enjoy

Shown, from left, are Mrs. Walter
M.
Buchroeder
Jr.,
general
chairman;
Mrs.
Robert
H. Ruhl,
president;
Mrs.
Frank
M.
Fucik,
plant chairman; and Mrs. Richard
R. Little, general co-chairman.

A remarkable special purchase of all the
most popular sizes of stockade and rustic
picket make these great savings possible.

Paul Powells Are

PEELED

IS HAND

FENCE

OUR

Hosts At Golden

Wedding Dinner
One

tives

hundred

joined

Powell

ner

friends

Mr.

of Park.

and

Ave.

Wednesday

rela-

mages

Paul

STOCKADE

Westi for

evening,

at the Northmoor

help them

and

Mrs.

May

Country

celebrate

din-

10,

Club

their

to

golden|}

wedding day.
The

were

married

Dis Taree

een

Chicago

having

her

The

moving

netka
tka

Powells

SAVE

ye

:

7

___.........2......-

:

‘.

19.62

15.70

ice:

WAS

20%

$16.28

All Sale Items in Stock.

Price

includes

delivery

on

5 sections

have

sixsi years

lived

more
on

the

REDWOOD

,

thi
this

ago

summer.

12c

side-the-home career of volunteer
work with the American Red Cross.

1x

The family has three sons, all of

6

8

Swe

whom served overseas with military forces in World War II, and

Boa rds

Tne

Baoras
:

Ree

et

ee

............:...

cae:

49

Poets

Also

2.00.

30c

SALE

f

r

ft.

Re

per ft.
f

12¢
12

ft.

per

ft.
ft

¢ per

per ft.

for your

convenience:

service,

posthole

diggers.

‘

Free

24c

pe

r tt.

special

jigs, plans,

Financing.

delivery.

SERVICEABLE

6’ CERTIFIED
REDWOOD

TUBES

Now

We

and

Thursday

—

Evenings

Are Open

$26.95

$19.50

SALE

Friday

CHECKING

AAAAARBNUAGE

Radio Dispatched
TY &amp; Radio Service
VRARAATEAG

GRANT &amp; GRANT
Highland

| oy ey yy)
Thursday, May

16c

16¢ per

Was

Central,

9c

e

available

cutting

20% OFF

708

WERE
per ft.

f

nine grandchildren.
The sons include Paul Jr. of Marion Ave.; Robert and Donald of Winnetka.

VARA

USE

FENCE

AND

Park from Win-

FREE... TUBE

bs

ESPECIALLY SELECTED GRADE FOR GARDEN

LUMBER FOR FENCES

1x

3

25%

$13.05

or more

Mrs. Powell has had a 43-year out-

ALL

SALE

S AVE

Rail and picket fence also on sale.

Shore for the past 43 years,
to Highland

STOCKADE

grandparents

been born in the city

than 100 years ago.
North

6’

$1 1.20

reas

May

to a five-generation

family,

ee $13.88

Seteiieiiiciieieiahdede te

Chicago. Mrs. Powell, as Sadie Lehbelongs

Sale

-§

10, 1911, in the Standard Club of

man,

Were

‘

Beek

Powells.

=

PRICES

18, 1961

Park

winter company, Inc

CRAFTWOOD
Just west

1590

of Route

Deerfield

41

—

Road,

Phone

IDlewood

Highland

2-0140

Park,

539

Hours—Monday

_ Thurs.

thru Saturday,

and

Fri., until 9

Sunday, 9-1

Ill.
P age H

17—D

25

�sy
oy

ae

see

Officers of Green Bay chapter,
ORT, will be installed at a luncheon meeting in Green Acres Country Club Tuesday,
May 23, at 1
p.m. Reservations for the luncheon
should
be made
by calling Mrs.
Earl Kahn, ID 2-7968, Mrs. Marvin
Mendelson, ID 2-7354 or Mrs. Donald Hurwich, ID 2-5966.
Mrs. Calvin Stone will be installed president and Mrs. Sam Rose,
executive vice-president. Other officers who
will be installed
are
Mrs.
Morris
Draft,
Mrs.
Martin
Hayden, Mrs. Donald Hurwich, and
Mrs. Arthur Lipski, vice-presidents;
Mrs. Earl Kahn, financial secretary;
Mrs. David Zoller, treasurer; Mrs.
Lionel Weiser, recording secretary,
and
Mrs.
Ralph
Berman,
corresponding secretary.
Mrs. M. Draft and Mrs. Sidney
Winters have been named
representatives to the Region Board.

Ni
a

“Pm sorry, friend — but the
nearest doctor is down the
road about 50 miles.”

*

|

Idlewood

Frontier Inn‘’s Famous

| TUB O’ CHICKEN
|

Chapter

The
newly
elected
Idlewood Chapter will

officers
of
be installed

18 Pieces

of Wonderful
- ‘Chicken to

536“On The
163
Ridge Between

&amp;&lt;

To
Living

Hills Country

on
at

Club.

Mrs. Benjamin Brodsky will be
installed as president.
Others are:
vice-presidents, Mrs. Jerry Weissman, Mrs. Irving Simon and Mrs.
William Lerner;
executive vicepresident, Mrs. Murray Rae; recording secretary,
Mrs.
Leon
Meyer;
corresponding
secretary, Mrs. Erwin
Bachrach;
and region representatives, Mrs. Alvin Lerner and
Mrs. Charles Rothenberg.
Call Mrs. Murray
Rae for reservations
at
ID 2-7081.
A _ very
entertaining afternoon is~ planned
with Mrs. Leonard
(Marge) Birnbaum presenting “‘Life With Hymie
Kaplan.”

Ravinia

Chapter

The
members
of
the
Ravinia
Chapter
of Women’s
American
ORT invite the public to its open
meeting dessert luncheon at 1 p.m.,
Tuesday, May 23 at the home of
Mrs. Philip Chess, 112 Ravinoaks
Lane.
Mrs. Del Markoff, 454 Broadview,
program chairman, points out that
this is an unusual opportunity to
hear Rabbi Arnold Jacob Wolf explore ‘‘The Sin of Suburbia.’’ Rabbi
Wolf
is spiritual leader
of Congregation Solel.
He was seen recently
on
a special
nation-wide
television
program
“Politics
and

Lawrence

A New
For

the Vernon

in their honor
23,
12:30
p.m.

to several publications.
The
chapter’s president,

Peano

a

at a luncheon
Tuesday,
May

Pulpits” and on WTTW’s “Trumpet
in the City,” and is a contributor

Highland Park“ne Deerfield”

Charcoal’ STEAKS *

| Civic

Lake County Region ORT Chapters Hold Installations

| Our
MAVERICK
By THE FRONTIER [NK

990

Wildwood

Own

Particular

Requirements

Bedrooms

Designed
STEWART

and _ Halls

that preceding
will be a brief

business meeting at which time the
slate of officers for 1961-62 will
be presented for election:
president, Mrs. Marshall Paskind, 523
Kincaid; vice-presidents, Mrs. Ellis
Friedman,
405 Oakland and Mrs.
Philip
Chess,
112 Ravinoaks;
recording
secretary, Mrs. Sam
Abrams,
784 Pleasant; financial
secretary,
Mrs.
Gershon
Feigon,
440 Pleasant; treasurer, Mrs. Mark
Markey, 100 Lakewood; corresonding secretary, Mrs. Morris Nelson,
171 Blackhawk.

Braeside

Chapter

The following new officers will
be installed at Braeside Chapter’s
Installation luncheon on Tuesday,
May 23, at 12:30 p.m.:
president,
Mrs.
Carlisle
Wesse;
executive
vice-president, Mrs. Julian Roseth;
vice-presidents,
Mrs. Jay Mills,
Mrs.
Philip Koenig,
Mrs. Ear]

Belofsky

and

Mrs.

Robert

Saltiel;

financial
secretary,
Mrs.
William
Pollack;
corresponding
secretary,
Mrs.
Irving Naiditeh; treasurer,
Mrs. Herman
Seeman;
parliamentatian, Mrs. Albert Rosenthal and
recording
secretary, Mrs. Allen
Silverstine.
The luncheon will be held in the
Pewter Room of Le Manior, Marshall Fields at Old Orchard.
For
reservations, please call Mrs. Robert Saltiel, ID 3-0059.

Evergreen Chapter
Evergreen Chapter
American
ORT, Lake

of Women’s
County Re-

gion, will have the annual

installa-

tion luncheon Tuesday, May 23 at
12:30 at the home of Mrs. James
Weiss, 804 Kimballwood Lane.
Mrs. David Krichiver, vice-president of the Chicago Coordinating
Council, will install the following
officers:
president, Mrs. Harry
Eisenstein, 926 Rollingwood; executive-vice president, Mrs. Burton
Sokolsky, 850 Kimballwood Lane;
vice-presidents,
Mrs.
Howard
B.
Franklin,
379
Dell
Lane,
Mrs.
Erwin
Kohn,
1732
Elmwood
and
Mrs.
Richard
Bass,
1280 Lincoln
Ave. South;
financial secretary,

Concept of Seating

Fit Your

Rooms,

Charak,

Mrs.

Lane, announces
the program there

by

MacDOUGALL

Association

Discusses Schools

Af Tonight's Meet
The
ation

Highland
expects

Park
to

Civic Associ-

hold

the

largest

meeting in its history this evening
at the Recreation Center, 8:30 p.m.
The theme of the meeting will be
“School
Consolidation,” and all

residents

of

Highland

surrounding
vited.

Park

communities

are

TV

‘The program will be preceded by
Election of officers and directors
of the Civic Association.
Edward
Stern, chairman of the nominating
committee has. announced the following nominations made thus far:
Ist vice president,
Robert Fitzsimon;
treasurer,
Donald
Geiser;
two year directors, Remo Pichetti,
Melvin
Berlin,
Doris
Bernstein;
one year director, Norman Schlossman.
Holdovers for another year
include
directors, Ralph
Eisenschiml, Robert Chatz, Marvin Freeman; secretary, Mrs. Lewis Pollock;
second vice president, J. Gordon
Smith
and
president,
Robert
M.
Buhai.

Mrs.

David

Weiss,

1254

Crofton;

treasurer,
Mrs.
Harold
Birnberg,
810 Bob-O-Link;
recording secretary, Mrs. Howard Garnitz, 574
Kincaid;
corresponding
secretary,
Mrs. Ted Forman, 633 Onwentsia;
and parliamentarian, Mrs. Stanley
Goldberg, 830 Kimball.

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19” Portable TV Prices are LOW-LOW-LOW
ADMIRAL, Lightweight
... regular $179.95 ... now
boat free plus 1599 S &amp; H Stamps
ADMIRAL STYLEMASTER

$159.95
$164.88

. regular $179.95 .. . now
boat free plus 1648 S &amp; H Stamps

AVAILABLE

YOUR

CHOICE

$

—

3 Upholstered Slats
3 Plastic Tops

2 Seats
2

54”

Long

— Walnut

and

Plastic Tops

Finish.

1 Plastic Top
and

Tufted
Tan

Plastic Tops Available

648 N. Western, Lake Forest

Also available with Drawer

1 Seat

Units, Slightly Additional

Plastic Seats
or

FREEMAN’S TV &amp; MUSIC

9°

are Available

in Black,

White,

Orange.

in White,

Black

or

Walnut.

CE 4-0519

BLACK
DIRT
(Screened,
CALL

Stock

Piled)

&lt;.:.

MENONI &amp; MOCOGNI
2200 Skokie
Open
Thursday and Friday
Until 9

we H 18—D26

495

Central

ID 3-1550

Highland

Park

in-

The Civie Association asked the
Education
Committee
of the
League of Women Voters to present the results of their year long
study of Redistricting at this meeting.
A panel
discussion
by Mrs.
Robert
Palmer,
president
of the
education
committee,
Mrs.
Harry
Janis, League
vice-president,
and
Mrs. Pierre
Cassidy, education
committee will present and discuss
the facts obtained in their School
Consolidation
Workshops.
Afterwards, a critique and commentary
will be offered by Harold Norman,
prominent
school problems
attorney, followed by an open question
period.

pee

TV SALE

and

Hwy., Highland

ID 2-0850

Park

Thursday,

May

18, 1961

�Senior

Honored

Moose To Enroll
New Class and

Richard
and Mrs.

Hear Top Speaker

Delta

St.

The Highland Park Moose lodge
will enroll a class of new members
in honor of Robert H. Hanke, a
graduate

of

Mooseheart

Johns

Chi

A. Stein, son of Mr.
Joseph Stein of 1766
Ave.,

received

the

Theta

versity—given annually to a nonmember of the fraternity. He will
graduate in hotel management in

go on to University

June;
cago

Law

of Chi-

School.

evening,

May

20,

at

8

p.m. The announcement was made
by Anthony Porco, Governor of
the

An

Lodge.

anticipated class of 25 mem-

bers will
Order of

be added
Moose by

to the Loyal
the Highland

Park Degree Staff directed by Donald Robert,
Hanke
will
be
the
featured
speaker

for the

evening.

After

his

graduation from Mooseheart Hgh
School, he attended North Central
College, Milwaukee Teachers College, Northern Illinois University,
and the University of Wisconsin.
“James Wahlman
p
Beverly
Mrs.
was
February
of
month
the
of
BEST DRIVER

courteous

assistant superintendent

of

education

of

the

City of

Children. He also is a member of
the Board of Educaton of the Batavia, Ill., public schools, and in
1960 was appointed to the Board
of Vocational Education in the office of the Superintendent of Pub-

It
Yourself”

lic Instruction.
The speaker holds master’s degrees from both the University of
Wisconsin and North Illinois University.
After the program refreshments
planned by Joseph E. Brooks and
his committee, will be served, and
dancing will follow.

County

Lake

Landen,

Eugene

by

driver citation

is the

director

schools of the famed Moose

a

Here she is awarded

W. Maling of 255 Lincolnwood Ave.

He

and

We
believe
in
“Do

High

School at the Highland Park Lodge,
Saturday

Uni-

at Cornell

Award

Cyrus Mead
her for the

Safety Director, in the courtroom of Magistrate
lll. Officer Nicholas Cascarano recommended

award after she stopped for school children at an unguarded
corner, drove and parked with unusual care in the business
district.

Dance

U of I Honors
Rudolph

L.

Engman,

435

Pleas-

ter

ant Ave., was one of 353 freshmen
and sophomores to be honored by
the University of Illinois Chicago

division tomorrow, Friday, May

Club

Miss

Officer

Nancy

of Mr.

Jo

and

Michaels,

Mrs.

daugh-

Ralph

Mich-

aels, 90 Lakewood
Pl., has been
elected
president
of
the
Dance
group of Wheaton College, Norton,
Mass. Nancy Jo will be a junior
year, and will be responsible for
directing the group’s annual presentation.

12.

Ceremonies

will be held in the
auditorium on the Navy Pier camare
class honors
Freshman
pus.

awarded
to students who
have
maintained a “B” or better average
during their freshman year.

BUY

U. S, SAVINGS

BONDS.

MUTUAL SERVICE

GET

THE

FINEST

SHREDDED
TOP SOIL

PREPARED BY MACHINE. Easier to Spread
Growing. Most uniform, perfectly processed

SPECIALLY
—Improves
soil

obtainable

cost.

at

no

extra

MANURE

—

FERTILIZER

...

ID 2-0027
PARK

Phone

SERVICES

MUTUAL

OF HIGHLAND

SIDIANIS TWALNW

e MUTUAL SERVICES @

BECAUSE
Guardian

of Nature's Most Precious Gift . . . Your Eyes

The eye physician is qualified to distinguish between
your need for glasses and medical treatment. He is
qualified to detect early symptoms of threatened eye
diseases and

check

their progress.

The

eye

physician

can help you protect your eyes for the years ahead
by proper examination at regular intervals. Almer Coe
will be glad to provide the names of eye physicians.

@ MUTUAL SERVICES ©
x
‘;

CALL
ID 2-3310

q

prota

ah
jee

es

a

(
LE

a

.

7

;

In answer

7

at Villa Mederme
FASHION SHOW
Luncheon
Every Thurs.
Reservations

1-2:30 p.m.
Suggested

In Our New Cocktail Lounge

i)

HEIDELBERG
:

“International Cuisine
at Moderate Prices"
in the

HUNGRY FOUR

Music — Vocals — Comedy

Tues, Thru Sat.

On EDENS EXPRESSWAY
at LAKE COOK RD,
BR 3-4626
VE 5-3353
18, 1961

KOKIE
VALLEY
Laundry &amp; Dry Cleaners, Inc.

the

plus the
SINGING WAITERS

&gt;
| Rooms
[5 to 500

requests

the Finest in Glasses

RATHSKELLER

THE THREE TWINS
Ray, Len &amp; Doug
Tues,
6 Private ng
Accommedations

to the

of eye physicians and
many friends, Almer Coe
have opened a fantastic
budget
eye-frame
bar
in each store.
Fashion
frames for men, women
and children at $5 to $10
Charge accounts invited

since 1/886

Thursday, May

AT
SKOKIE VALLEY
LAUNDRY...

, 3 Private Dining Rooms
accommodating
50-250 people
Reservations

Fi

6-8080

14 W. RANDOLPH

EVANSTON (next to Cooley’s Cupboard)
1629 Orrington
Open Monday and Thursday until 9:00 P.M.

SKOKIE,

North

Mall, Old

Orchard

Open Monday, Thursday and Friday until 9:00 P.M.

CHICAGO,

10 North

Sen

Michigan

Avenue

Main Office and Plant:
IDlewood 2-3310

Deerfield Call Enterprise 1616
512-51 phere

ighwoo

Ave.

(Just west ef State)

‘Page 27

�WOOD
34""

SHUTTERS

THICK—TOP
QUALITY
PANELS
MOVABLE
LOUVERS

rHeight

mo divider
rail

6”

12”
96}
ie
116
ae.
146
+24"
1.62
ae
hat
32"
2.07
ad
.37
[ae
BA
or ,
4.28
e450

52”

4.73

56°

5-18

divider rail
in center

4 60”
oF

5-63
BS

divider rail
36" from
bottom

Te
ee
(80%
J84"
96”

tote
BSP
889
9.45

OS

7.

WITH

8”

9”

140
(1.50.
446
NA
BOR
44
1.92
2.07
Bak)
S82
2.34
2.82
ay Wee
417
439
4.39
4.50
6
78

484

§=5.29

5.07

5.85
COE

ae
BIO
9.00
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Bay
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9.68

10”

5.63

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sin

608

6.53
F68:

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78R

6.53

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Se
OSS
9.34
9.79

Bat

NB
BIR:
8
9.56
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10.24
10.58

y

ibbea

5.63

Each

MILLWORK

Co.

Panel

TO

ta"

3,78°
198
E10
AS
28
xan
82
bas.
386
2.37.
3.04
3.15
Be
SO
OS
3.27
4.05
4.50
|; ae A
ee
495
518
531
5.18
5.51
5.96
6.29
5.74.
6.30

6.08
FAR

BOR se Tae.

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VAG:
07
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e: Gaee
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455

5.18

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CBR

«+ PRE-SANDED—READY
¢ AMERICAN
MADE
Panel Widths

STAIN

OR

14”

PAINT

ee

16”

4.73
IMPORTED BRASS
SHUTTER HARDWARE
ay
a

664

mt

7.76
821

4 panels) ........ $1.49
Set. No. 6 (comp. set for

7.09

Bees

ey
eee
10.35
11.14
14.90
Can

Be

oe eee tes

set No 4 (comp. set for

panels)

PEE:

12.40
Trimmed

729 Ridge Rd.
Estes Ave. &amp; Skokie
ID 2-1283
_—

seen

12.60
13.87
15.50

$1.79

13.40
14.03
15.75

1” Width—3”

Height

Highland Park
Hwy. — Gurnee
DE 6-4121

North

Shore

Group

Photo

by

James

Wahlman

RIDING SURF at Central Ave. beach in a 12-foot “Aqua-

cat," these yachtsmen

DRIVE CAREFULLY — THE LIFE YOU SAVE
MAY BE YOUR OWN

had the cold lake to themselves

last

month. The boat was brought from Stamford, Conn., by
William S. Mills, who builds them, to show to Joe Joseph of

626 Rice St., who hopes to sell them here.

Smee

Cadillac has achieved a degree of durability still sought by
other cars. Through every phase of its careful manufacture
and assembly, Cadillac is in the capable hands of proud
and devoted craftsmen. And all along the way, there is

the protection of more than 1,400 separate inspections.
This excellence translates itself into superior operating
economy and resale value... two qualities among many
that make Cadillac your soundest motoring investment.

:
.

VISIT YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED

_

So

Ciadlloo

DEALER

CADILLAC MOTOR CAR DIVISION
2050

Page

28

FIRST

STREET,

HIGHLAND

PARK

e

PHONE

ID 2-3442

Phursday, May 18, 1961

a

ow

�Name Bensinger to

Nurses Meet

Bank Directorship
B. E. Bensinger, 945 Dean St.,
has been named a director of the
American National Bank and Trust
Co., Chicago, by
LawrenceF.
Stern, chairman
of
the
Board.
Bensinger
is president of
the Brunswick
Corp.
Bensinger has

The 16th District Illinois Nurses
Association
met
for
their
bimonthly
meeting
at Victory Memorial Hospital in Waukegan May
8. After a business meeting the
group
viewed
a film,
‘Hospital
Sepsis” (infection) by Johnson and
Johnson Company. A panel of rep-

resentatives of the various
tals discussed the problem.
Refreshments

nurses

of

were

Victory

hospi-

served

Memorial

by

Hos-

Caboose Stoned;
Brakeman Injured

Waukegan
estimated

pital.

Nagel
Carol Bl‘ock jate
0
NG BLOr CKgene
RUTH lysis ed
hai

Two boys about seven years old
throwing stones at a Northwestern
freight train passing Mulberry PI.
Wednesday
afternoon
last
week
scored a bullseye on the caboose
window,
Edward
Ohrnund
told
Highland Park police.
Flying glass cut the thumb
of
W. J. Gasparin of Park City, the
brakeman.
He
was
treated
at a

hospital.

Damage

m

nt
il] remove unwa ws shaped, legs, eyebro
Method
h the Newer

o

restyled geWE ERMANENT

soho ave

REMOVAVAL
HAIR
Short Wave (Dios Sheridan

haha X11
Highland Perk

Rd.

is

at $15.

been connected
with Brunswick
since 1927. He
B. E, Bensinger
was
elected
to
the company’s board of directors

in 1930, and served as assistant
secretary and assistant treasurer;
general

manager;

vice-president

and

executive

of Brunswick

to his election as president

He

has

cer

since

been

chief

June

executive

offi-

1954.

A graduate of Yale
Bensinger is a director
cago
Council
of Boy

America;

prior

in 1950.

Illinois

University,
of the ChiScouts
of

State

Chamber

of Commerce;
Inland Life Insur_ance Company; Michael Reese Hospital; and the Yale Club of Chicago. He is also currently active in
the Chicago Educational Television
Association;
Crusade
of
Mercy;
Lyric Opera; and the National Conference of Christians and Jews.

President Named
By 30 Settlements
William R. Heinsimer of Comstock Pl. was elected president of
the Chicago Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers

at the annual meeting this month.
He is president of the insurance
firm of Haskell, Miller, Grossman
&amp;

Co.

The

federation was

organized

in

1894 by Jane Addams and six settlement leaders to share ideas. It
now includes 30 houses and centers throughout Chicago and other
Illinois cities.
Current major problems the settlements
are attacking
are high
school
dropouts,
nursery
schools
curtailed for lack of funds, nonparticipation of senior citizens in
programs
for them, housing and
orientatioin of newcomers to the
city, the public assistance program,

financial

problems

neighborhood

CITY

OF

which

Gain

prevent

work.

hour a day...

HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS
NOTICE TO BIDDERS

Public notice is hereby given that_ the
City Council of the City of Highland Park,
County of Lake, State of Illinois will receive bids for the installation of a new
electrical service to the City Hall and miscellaneous electrical installations within the
City Hall.
Said bids will be received
until 12:00
Noon, C.D.S.T. May 29, 1961, in the Council Chamber,
City Hall,
Highland
Park,
Illinois, at which time and place bids will
be publicly opened and read.

Specifications and proposal forms will be
furnished at the office of the City Clerk,
City Hall of said City.
The City reserves the right to reject any
and all bids, or increase, decrease, or omit
any item or items.
BY ORDER OF THE CITY COUNCIL:

R. W. Snyder
City

Manager

$/11-18/61--125

(or more) to do as ycu please on new
North

Western Pusi-Pull Streamliners

LEAVE YOUR CAR AT HOME AND ENJOY YOUR COMMUTING
ABOARD MODERN AIR-CONDITIONED DOUBLE-DECKERS

PARK, ILLINOIS

NOTICE TO BIDDERS

Public notice is hereby given that the
City Council of the City of Highland Park,

County

of Lake,

State of Illinois will re-

ceive
bids for liquid
asphalt
sealcoating
and bituminous concrete surfacing of existing bituminous and concrete surfaces on
various streets and areas in Highland Park.
Said bids will be received until 12:.00
Noon, C.D.S.T., May 29, 1961, in the Council Chamber,
City
Hall,
Highland
Park,
Illinois at which time and place bids will be
publicly opened and read.
Specifications
and
proposal
forms
will
be furnished at the office of the City Clerk
in the City Hall of said City.
The City reserves the right to reject any
and all bids, or increase,, decrease, or omit
any item or items.
BY ORDER OF THE CITY COUNCIL:
R. W. Snyder
City Manager
§/11-18/61—126

Thursday, May

18, 1961

TIME

In today’s fast-paced business world, personal time is at a premium more than ever.
That's whyit makes so much sense to commute aboard one of many
new North Western
°
... and gain‘ an hour or more to do as you please.
streamliners

sc pocoaneeneenen en.

ooces
oo obs

Settle down into a comfortable seat and read without eyestrain under glareless,

shadow-free lighting... or catch up on office work on the train instead of at home. Meet
friends for casual conversation .. . or simply gaze out the wide picture windows at the
.

“e

°

°

.

°

passing scene. No more traffic jitters or parking worries when you step into the luxurious interior of a modern North

CITY OF HIGHLAND

an

408

:
commuting

Western double-decker!

to do-what-you-want

GONEW NORTH
R
E

COMMUT

.
commuting...

tomorrow and every day!

PVESTERN
INERS

4960.

since August 1;

ae.
Whatever your pleasure, take it aboard the new North Western. Change from do-

:
it-yourself

new double-

deckers added

192
service
:
coming

now

in

and more

every week

to replace

s!
all old coache
peer

L

STREAM

ND Noturst wr,

__ (SU
5y
Page 29

�Church
HOLY

Directory
FIRST

CROSS
CATHOLIC
CHURCH
North Waukegan Road

Windsor

Sunday
: 42315,
gaa
9)

Masses:
Masse: s:

7,

6:30

First Friday of © sco
te,6:30 a.m., 8:30 a
Saturday:

5-0430

8,

9,

and

10,

8:30

month,

4 cal. ‘and

7:30

11:15

and

a.m.

Masses

p.m.

at

Confes-

et
j

NORTH SUBURBAN
EVANGELICAL
FREE
CHURCH
Rey. Vernon Olkon,
280 County Line Rd.
Church Office—WI 5-4640
Parsonage—WI 5-4641
i- SUNDAY
: _ 9:30 a.m. Sunday School.
a a.m.
Worship Service.
.m. Worship Service.
oe ——
Groups.

"
&gt;
ee,

Bhs p.m. ‘ible
7:30 p.m.
“er

Study.
Crusaders.

THURSD
_

6:45

p.m.

gade.

Pioneer

Girls

:

and

Boys

Bri-

THE HIGHLAND
PARK
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
ID 2-1695
Dr.

William Atkinson Young
Rev. J. A. Miller
Ministers

SUNDA Y
9:30 am.

for

and

toddlers

m.

ys 11: oll a.m,
School. Group

?—
o
'

Church School
grade at 9:30
simultaneously with the

11:15

a —

up through 8th

meet at 9:45

te Sunday

REDEEMER TN

i.

evening

oly

gsc

(Mincort

ii
iy

a.m.

and

CHURCH

Synod)

Rev. Robert A. Wendelin, Pastor
aig Deerfield Rd.—ID 2-6848
service, 10:15 a.m.
Holy Comion, "first Sunday of each month.
Sun-

‘day School, 9 a.m.
ST.
i

JOSEPH

CATHOLIC

181

al

W.

Dundee

171

WD

cores

Sisters,

THE

WORKER
Wheeling

J.Mulcahe

Masses: 6:3 rt 9:30, 11, 12:15
ay Masses: 6:30 8, 9:30, 11 a.m,
ep
oh
AS nally

CHRIST,

THE BETHLEHEM CHURCH
(Evangelical United Brethren)
Rev. Eugene M. Wykie, Minister
Rev. R. C. Grigereit, Asst. Minister
801 Rosemary Terrace
Church—WI 5-007:
Parsonage—WI 5-2221
1861 — Our Centennial Year — 1961
THURSDAY, May 18
7 p.m. Boy Scout Troop 51.
7 p.m. Youth
Choir rehearsal.
SUNDAY, May 21—Pentecost Sunday
9:30 and 10:55 a.m.
Services of Divine
Worship.
Reception of members
at both
services.
9:30 a.m.
Church school for nursery (2
yr.
old)
through
6th
grade,
and
adult
classes.

CHURCH

Rd.,

CHURCH OF
SCIENTIST

155 Deerfield Road
SUNDAY—11
a.m. Services.
Children
are cared
for during
Church
service,
9:30 a.m. Sunday School,
For pupils up to 20 years of age.
WEDNESDAY
EVENING
MEETINGS—
8 p.m.
——
testimonies of healing
through Christian
Science.
All are welcome to attend these services
and to use the reading room. For further
information call WIndsor 5-1626.
READING
ROOM
3 to 5 p.m. Daily.
9 to 9:30 p.m. Wednesday:
LESSON--SERMON
Unchanging
beauty
is a theme
of the
Lesson-Sermon ‘“‘Soul and Body” to be read
at all Christian Science churches Sunday.
Included in the Bible selections will be
these verses from Psalm 90: ‘‘Let thy work
appear
unto
thy servants,
and thy glory
unto their children.
And let the beauty of
the Lord our God be upon us: and establish thou the work of our hands upon us;
yea, the work of our hands establish thou
ti"?
One
of the correlative
passages
to be
read from “Science and Health with Key
to the Scriptures”
by Mary
Baker Eddy
states (pp. 247,248): “The recipe for beauty
is to have less illusion and more Soul, to
retreat from the belief of pain or pleasure
in the body into the unchanging calm, and
glorious freedom of spiritual harmony.’’

6:30, 8:30 a.m.
Thursday" before the first
the month: 4, 5:30 Lhe 9 Bis

10:55
a.m.
Church
school
classes
for
nursery (2 yr. old) through high school.
p.m.
Intermediate Y.F. and Y.F. leaving Deerfield
to see Zion
Passion
play.
Tickets must be obtained in advance.
MONDAY,
May 22
3:30 p.m.
Girl Scout troop 172.
6:30 p.m.
Men’s Softball.
WEDNESDAY,
May 24
7 p.m. Chorister rehearsal (Grades 4-7).
7:45 p.m.
Chancel Choir rehearsal (adults).
ST,

society
David

“SUNDAY
9:45

4 m.

OF
FRIEND s
Stickney, Clerk
Lake Forest

Sunday

| SUNDAY

School.

10 a.m. Friends meeting in Deer Path
| School Library in Lake Forest.
For information call WIndsor 5-1774,
NORTH

SHORE

UNIT. ARIA N CHURCH
Rev.
For
UNDAY

10:45

11

Russell R. Bletzer, Minister
Ferry Hall Chapel
Lake Forest
Information Call WI 5-3332

a.m.

a.m.

Church
Church

School.

Service.

B’NAI TORAH
2789 Oak Street
Highland Park
Sholom

Hs
j

Singer,

School,

$

Rabbi

Saturday

and

Sunday

AY

8:30 p.m. Sabbath eve services.
_ Hebrew
School,
Wednesday afternoon;
For information’ call WIndsor 5-5466.
WASHBURN
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH

SUNDAY

a. 9:30 a.m, Church School.
9:30 a.m. Worship Service.
a

Worship

god f

Service

tyis provided

Ditapirone WI
THE
Hint

Sak
oy

Church

for small

children.

5-4179 for more information.

NORTH

SeURPAN

BAPTIST
CHUR
American
Baptist Church)
Lane School, Midway Road
Northbrook East
CR
Donald E, Thurston, Pastor

10 Fa
i
us

and

Sunday

“a.m.
and

School

for children

Worship
Service
adults.
Extended

TRINITY

UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
638 Waukegan Road
Rey. Philip A. Desenis, Minister
Parsonage—1139 Elmwood
Ave.
Telephone WI 5-5050
THURSDAY, May 18
7:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
SUNDAY,
May 21
Pentecost-Communion
9:30 a.m. Family worship.
9:30 a.m. Church — school
for
nursery
through juniors.
1 a.m.
Worship.
11 a.m. Church
school for junior and
senior high, nursery provided.
MONDAY,
May 22
4 p.m. Cherub
choir.
WEDNESDAY,
May 24
8 p.m.
Circle 1 at the home of Mrs. L,
Rectenwald; co-hostess, Mrs. P. Zuehlke.
THURSDAY,
May 25
7:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.

DEERFIELD

CONGREGATIONAL
CHURCH

In South Park School
1331 Hackberry Road
Rev. John S. Usry, Minister
Parsonage Telephone WI 5-0176
THURSDAY
7:45 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
SUNDAY
10:30 a.m. Worship
Service.
10:30 a.m. Church School.
7 p.m. Pilgrim Fellowship.

and

for
young
session for

ren,

KINGDOM

GREGORY’S
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
Wilmot and Deerfield Roads
The Rev. J. D. Parker, Rector
The Rev. E. G. Wappler, Curate
The Rev. G. W. Robinson, Assistant
Rectory Telephone—WIndSor 5-1881
Church Telephone—WIndsor
5-1678
DAILY
9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Morning and Evening
Prayer.
THURSDAY, May 18
7:30 p.m.
Boy Scouts.
SUNDAY,
May 21
8 a.m. Holy Communion.
9:30
am.
Holy
Communion—Church
school and nursery care.
11:15
am.
Morning
Prayer
— Church
school and nursery care.
MONDAY,
May 22
Afternoon—Girl Scouts.
WEDNESDAY,
May 24.
1 p.m. “Just for Fun’
luncheon.
8 p.m. Choir rehearsal.

EVANGELICAL

Woodland Park Schooi
Stephen G. Bodony, Pastor
aching the Gospel of the Kingdom.

GRACE

DAY
a9 10 a.m. Bunday School.
7 p.m. Evening Service.

For
4-3060

6-DAYS

A

LUTHERAN
CHURCH
(Missouri Synod)
Walters Ave. at Fourth St.
Northbrook
further information call CRestwood
or WIndsor 5-1323.

Page

30

FRIDAY

EVENINGS

’TIi

FIRST

Ho age dull soggy CHURCH
Waukegan Road
Bernard F. Didier, Pastor
Rev. Hugh Jeffers,
Minister of Christian Education
Manse—1218 Walden Lane
Church phone—WI 5-0560
Manse phone—WI 5-0107
THURSDAY, May 18
1 p.m.
Women’s Assn. spring luncheon.
3:45 p.m. Jr. Choir rehearsal (4th and 5th
grades).
4:30
p.m.
Westminster
choir
rehearsal
(6th, 7th and 8th graders).
Both under the direction of Mrs. Edward
Alder.
SUNDAY,
May 21
9, 10 and 11:30 a.m.
Morning Worship
and Church School.
Nursery for children
1, 2 and 3 years. Kindergarten and classes
for alll other grades through high school.
9 a.m.
Leadership training classes.
10 a.m. Adult Bible class.
7-9:30
p.m.
New
members
meet
at
church.
MONDAY, May 22
3:30! p.m. Girl Scout troop 11.
3:30 p.m. Girl Scout troop 127.
3:45 p.m. Communicant’s
class.
: p.m. Adult Bible class.
8 p.m. Trustees meeting.
TUESDAY,
May 23
3:45 p.m. 8th Grade Communicants class.
4:45 p.m. 8th Grade Communicants class.
7:30 p.m.
Boy Scout troop 52.
WEDNESDAY,
May 24
9 am.
Women’s Prayer group.
9:30 a.m.
Women’s Bible study class.
3:45 p.m. 7th Grade Communicants class.
4:45 p.m. 7th Grade Communicants class.
Rev.

ZION
LUTHERAN
10 Deerfield
Road,
Rev. Paul V. Berggren, Pastor
George
Jacobson, Intern
Telephone: Windsor 5-2009
THURSDAY,
May 18
8 p.m.
Meeting of board of deacons.
FRIDAY, May 19
6:30 p.m.
Annual Mother-Daughter banquet, sponsored by the A.L.C.W., who will
present a style show—the cycles of womanhood: mother and baby, the Sunday school
child,
first day
of school,
the teenager,
graduation, the bride, and the first baby—
three generations.
The Deerfield Melodeers
will provide the music.
8:30 p.m.
The Luther League will depart
from the church for their annual
spring
retreat, at Camp Augustana, on Lake Geneva, Wis.
The theme, “A Faith for These
Times.”
About 55 young people from the
congregation plan to attend.
SUNDAY,
May 21—Whitsuniday
8 a.m.
Celebration of Holy Communion.
9
am.
Family
Worship
service
with
church school for children three years old
through 7th grade; eighth graders to attend
worship service.
Cry room facilities available during this service.
10:45 a.m.
Family worship service with
church school for children three years old
through 7th grade; eighth graders to attend
worship service.
Bus transportation is provided for this service only.
Please contact
the church office for schedule.
5:30 p.m. Family night supper, sponsored
by the Altar Guild—light supper, individual
programs for adults and children, concluding with short devotions.
MONDAY, May 22
1 p.m.
Deborah Circle at the home of
Mrs. Charles Middleton, 1104 Kenton Rd.
7:30-9 p.m.
School for Christian Living.
Tuesday, May 23
1:30 p.m.
Dorcas Circle at the home of
Mrs. Axel Erikson, 1353 Golf Ave., Highland Park.
7:30 p.m. Boy Scout troop 150.
8
p.m. Mary Circle at the home of Mrs.
Fane Short, 1246 Kenton Rd.
8 p.m. Ruth Circle at the home of Mrs.
Paul Hultman, 1635 Dun-Lo Ave., Arlington
Heights.
WEDNESDAY, May 24
8 p.m. Adult choir rehearsal.
8 p.m. Adult instruction for church membership—June
4.
THURSDAY, May 25
8 p.m. Meeting of the administrative committee.
CHRIST

METHODIST
CHURCH
Maplewood School
Clay and Alden Cts.
Rev. Richard F. Mellor, Interim Pastor
Parsonage—1652 Pear Tree Rd.
lage et we ae
5-5203
SUNDAY, April 2
9:30 a.m.
Church school, children
two
and three years, kindergarten and classes
for all grades through high school. Adult
Bible class.
10:30 a.m. Fellowship coffee.
11 a.m. Morning
Worship
service. Reception of new members. Sitters for children will be provided.

Carol Feagan, Mrs. Norbert Dompke and her daughter
Pam, Judy Feagan and Mrs. John Feagan are pictured looking over some of the recipes submitted by the women of
Bethlehem church to be used for their annual spring luncheon
on Thursday, May 25, from 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Travel

This

Preview

Highlights Meet
A

preview

will

of

summer

highlight

traveling

the

May

23

meeting of the Holy Cross Mothers’ club. The meeting will begin
at 8:30 p.m. and will be held in
the parish hall.

“Holiday

in Hawaii,”

a travelog

movie,
will be shown
after the
club’s final business
meeting
of
the year. Mrs. John F. McGuire,
1915
Meadow
Ln.,
Bannockburn,
will preside.
An
informal
coffee
hour
will
terminate Tuesday’s meeting. Mrs.
James
M.
Wetzel,
650 Pine
St.,
will act as hostess.

The

club’s

traditional

Potluck

room

and Mrs.

Mother-Daughter

C.W. of Zion Lutheran church, will
be held on Friday evening, May
19, at 6:30 p.m.
at the church.
Tickets at $2 for adults, 75c for
children under
12 years of age,
may be purchased from Mrs. Henry

5-3766.

The program
will consist of a
style show—cycles of womanhood,
mother
and
baby,
the
Sunday
school child, first day of school,
the
teenager,
graduation,
the
bride, and
the first baby—three
generations. A quartette, the Deer-

Melodeers,

will

sing.

GONGREGATION
BETH
OR
In Trinity Unfted
Church
638 Waukegan Road
Dee
id
Telephone WI 5-5070
bbi David Cederbaum
antor Jerome
Frazes
FRIDAY
8:30
p.m.
Sabbath
Eve
Service.
Oneg
Shabot following service.
SATURDAY
9:30 a.m. Religious school.
11 a.m. Hebrew school.
Board
of
Directors
meetings
are
the
first Wednesday of every month. Sisterhood
general meetings are the second Monday
of every month.

Robert

service

will

Camp,

be

the Nursery Room

pub-

available

8 P.M.

Building of Bethlehem
Rosemary Terr.

this

luncheon,

Guild, sponcordially

has

invited everyone to attend. Tickets
are

available

from

Guild

mem-

bers or at the door.

Washburn

Church

Has Program
About Russia
e

The

Reverend

will present

Virgil

A.

a program

Kraft

on

life in

Russia, “Adventure in Russia,” at
the
Washburn
Congregational
church on Friday, May 26 at 8 p.m.
Rev. Kraft is the associate pastor

to The Peoples church of Chicago.
This program is based on studies
he made while on his second study
tour

of

Russia.

Colored

slides, movies,

recordings

tation

are

of this

used

Receives

New

in

and

the

tape

presen-

program.

Congregational

Church
Members

Additional
members
were
received into the Deerfield Congregational church at the 10:30 a.m.

worship

service

Those
Mr. and

joining the church were
Mrs. Donald
Holdridge,

of May

7.

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Ullmann,
Mr.

and

BANKS HIGHLAND
1771 Second St.
Member

at

in the Christian

Bethlehem Women’s

Church

The
annual
Mother-Daughter
banquet,
sponsored
by
the A.L.

field

being

For mothers of young children—
sitter

soring

WI

is

licity.

Terr., and Mrs. Max A. Houston,
944 Rosemary Terr., are chairmen.

Wiegmann,

idea

man,
are
Mrs.
Orville
Whildin,
decorations, Mrs. Donald
Larson,
tickets,
Mrs.
Al
Breuer,
dining

Education
church on

Fete At Zion

new

man, and Mrs. Dompke, food chair-

Dinner
has
been
scheduled
for
May
29 at the parish hall. Mrs.
Paul
J. Riordon,
921
Rosemary

Hold

a

and salads, etc. will be made from
favorite recipes and served buffet
style
in the
theme
of the
old
“Tasting
Bee.”
Recipes
will
be
available to take home.
The Field House in Jewett park,
complete with spring flowers, will
be the setting.
Weather
permitting, there will be tables on the
terrace as well as in the field house
itself.
Working on this project along
with Mrs. Feagan, general chair-

Of Mothers’ Club
fun

year

used. A variety of hot dishes, meats

Mrs.

William

and

Zechel.

“The Service Bank Of Highland Park”

WEEK

FULL SERVICE BANKING
PLUS

Rev. Robert Humrickhouse, Pastor
Office Telephone:
Windsor 5-0708
We Preach Christ
Crucified. Risen and Coming Again
FRIDAY, May 19
7:45 p.m.
Ladies Missionary meeting at
the home of Mrs. Ruth Collier, 1047 Wilmot
Rd.
Mrs. George Esplin is in charge of
devotions,
SUNDAY, May 21
9:30 a.m. Sunday School providing classes
of Bible study for all ages and nurseries for
the young.
10:45 a.m. Worship service.
7 p.m.
Evening Gospel service.
7:45
p.m.
Berean
class meeting.
Mrs.
George Hardman and Mrs. Albert Arterbury
are co-hostesses for the meeting.
TUESDAY, May 23
7 p.m.
Awana Youth club award night.
All earned awards will be made at this time
as well as camp contest awards. Rev. Roger
Williams, pastor of the First Baptist church
of Menomonee
Falls,
Wis.,
will be our
speaker. Refreshments will be served at the
close of the meeting.
WEDNESDAY, May 24
7:30 p.m. Prayer meeting and Bible study.
8:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.

BANK—POST OFFICE BLDG.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

PARK
IDlewood 2-7800
Thursday, May 18, 1961

�X

Announce New
Members Of

32 Confirmands
Honored At Zion

Trinity Church

League Banquet

Trinity

on

A total of 32 members
of the
confirmation class of 1961 at Zion
Lutheran
church
were
guests
at
the
Luther
league
annual
confirmation May 6.
The confirmands this year
Holly Arnold, daughter of

and

Mrs.

Lee

Arnod,

ship

are:
Mr.

Iola

Carr

Ford,

Deerfield;

706

Kipling

St.,

son

following

persons:

M. Barkus,

Mr.

and

Mrs.

and

Mrs.

John

Warren

Louis

Mr.

and

Fritz,

Mr.

Mr.

and

Harder,

Mrs.

The

New

Mr.

Cassell,

Mrs. Della
Ronald Na-

Caryl

Reaver,
Mr.
and
Jr.

and
Mr.

Members

The following young people were
received into membership on May
14: John
Siffert, Nancy
Sticken,
Walter
Sticken,
Steve
Williams,

Stuart Bennett,
Sandra
Thompson,
Linda
Rectenwald,
Carol
Kapschull,
Jim
Beloian,
Robert
Hertel, Ray Nielsen, William Niel-

of Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Deutchmann, Lake Forest; Judith Dutcher, daughter
of Com.
and
Mrs.

sen

and

John

Flint.

Donald E. Dutcher, 925 Castlewood

Gary

of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Longren,
Highland Park; Charles Lutz, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Reinhard E. Lutz,

1356

Confirmands

Grinde,

son

of

Mr.

son

of

Mr.

and

and

Mrs.

George
G.
Johnson,
Highwood;
Virginia
Johnson,
daughter
of
Mr, and Mrs. Norman E. Johnson,
1335 Central Ave., Deerfield.

Janet

Keller,

daughter

of

Hazel

Ave.,

Deerfield;

Alan

Matter, son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert
W. Matter,..500 Longfellow Ave.,
Deerfield,
Alan
McNeil,
son of Mr.
and
Mrs.
Raymond
L.
McNeil,
1137
Laurel Ave., Deerfield; Dean Miller, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold
P. Miller,
Highland
Park;
Joyce
Neugart, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Donald T. Neugart,
1115 Kenton
Rd., Deerfield.
Elaine
Olson, daughter
of Mr.
and Mrs. Alfonso Olson, Highland

Mrs.
Eldon
Hinde,
Highwood;
Douglas Hanneman, son of Mr, and
Mrs. Dan B. Houser, 1305 Carlisle
Pl.,
Deerfield;
Betty
Johnson,
daughter
of Mr.
and
Mrs.
Lennart H. Johnson, Highwood; Jack

Johnson,

Mr.

Park;

and
Mrs.
Robert
F. Keller,
428
Willow
Ave.
Deerfield;
Rene
Kiehl, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Earl
F.
Kiehl,
Highland
Park;
Dennis
Lampi,
son
of Mr.
and
Mrs,
Joseph
Lampi,
Highland
Park; Dolores Longren,
daughter

The first annual business meeting
of the
Deerfield
Congregational church will take place Sunday,
May
21, at 8 p.m., in the
Jewett
Park
fieldhouse.
At
this
meeting, the church officers and
the members of boards and standing committees
will be elected.
Arrangement

Previous
to this
meeting,
the
activities
of
the
Congregational
church have been directed by a
nine member steering committee.
After the May
21 meeting,
this
church will be a duly constituted
Congregational
church
and
will
endeavor
to promote
a program
which will not only be beneficial
to the members
of this church,
but that will make
a significant
contribution to the life of our com-

Stephen

Poindexter,

Mr. and Mrs. John H.
1561
Woodbine
Ct.,

Sharon

Powers,

son

of

Poindexter,
Deerfield;

daughter

of

Mr.

and Mrs. Guion Powers, Highwood;
Christine Rahn,
daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Rahn, 453 Hermitage
Ave.,
Deerfield;
Claudette

Usry,

Harvey
Samuelson,
son of Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Samuelson, Highland Park; Ronald Schroeder, son
of Mr. and Mrs, Alvin C. Schroeder, 1438 Sumerset Ave., Deerfield;
Charles
Wetzel,
son
of Mr.
and
Mrs.
Robert
Wetzel,
Highwood;

and

Norman

Wetzel,

son

of

Mr.

and
Mrs.
Russell
Wetzel,
1403
Woodridge Ct., Deerfield.
The
banquet
committee
was
headed
by
Conrad
Petzel
with
Rudy Deutschmann
as master of
ceremonies.

When

you are ill

Camp

church

on

peo--

the
week
end
at Lake
Geneva.
This year the leaguers from As-—
cension Lutheran church in North-_
field, a new mission congregation, —
will also attend and share in the

their

retreat.
Augustana

worship

and fellowship

of a youth |

retreat.
;
The entire group will return to

The
retreat
this year will be
held at Camp Augustana, on Lake
Geneva, Wis.
The theme will be “A Faith for

the
church
Sunday.

about

6:30

p.m.

on

Northshore Garden of Memories
A

Surprise
THIS

Awaits

You

BEAUTIFUL
Very

Green

Bay

Rd.

&amp;

If You
GARDEN

Reasonable

18th

Have

Not

Visited

CEMETERY
Prices

St.

Phone

DE

6-6500

When

He

| FOUND
ONLY ONE
CAN BE

Call your Doctor
Prescribes

Call Morrie!
at ID 3-2525
Park-Sheridan

-..tf.

AND

Funeral

Jewish

NORTH

Directors

Community

COMPANY

to

‘

Free

the

SERVICE

with

Wife Missing
Last

seen

d

arrive

Transfer

:

Green

Lice ne
Metderal Cliapelh

PHONE

NUMBER—VErnon

or

1-4740

Broadway,

Chicago

&amp;

Storag

Bay Rd., Highl

and

Park,

Phone Today ... ID 2-4551
Bay Rd., H.P. — AMPLE

for

SSS

5S

5

35

ANOTHER SATISFIE
CUSTOMER

SS

(Just north

in your

NORTH SUBURBAN
TV SERVICE
Where

5-2221

if we

cannot

your home.
of Foster)

There

Is

NO CHARGE
repair your TV set in

Service call $4.95 only

when set is repaired to your satisfaction.
;

ID

:
ig S

Thursday, May 18, 1961

FREE PARKING

Ss

¢ Parking adjacent to building

LOngbeach

Serving the North Shore Over 60 Years

©

small or large attendance

¢ Funeral consultation and arrangements may be made
own home with our North Shore representative.

SUBURBAN

nen North Amerihome

2226 Green

¢ Perfect accommodations

¢ Convenient to North Shore
and Downtown Chicago

W

ne haem: @

»

ou
ate

Delivery

reverence.

South Shore Chapel: 2100 East 75th Street, at Clyde Avenue

¢ Most Complete Funeral Home
in Metropolitan Area

Pharmacy

at Sheridan Rd.
Phone Service

Prescription Service” means
“Park Sheridan”

Complete facilities in your community
for prompt service . . . Lee J. Furth,
Jules L. Furth, and their staff, will
personally arrange and conduct the
entire funeral—a service of warmth
and beauty, observing customs and
ritual

3

Park Ave.
24 Hr.

Since 1865

SHORE

Call Midway
3-5400

North

from

spring

55 young

the church plan to spend —

pastor.

Raven, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Arno Raven, 1141 Rago Rd., Deerfield; Charles Russell, son of Mr.
and
Mrs.
Charles
R.
Russell,
Northbrook.

J

§206

depart

Times.’”’ About

ple from

munity, according to the Rev. John

Ln., Deerfield; Arthur Fess, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Owen B. Fess, 1100
Castlewood Ln., Deerfield.
Other

will

annual

Previous

these

On Friday evening, May 19, immediately
following
the
MotherDaughter
banquet,
the
Luther
Leaguers of Zion Lutheran church

member-

Mrs.
Heinz
Schneider,
Mrs.
Matthew
Schmidt,
and Mrs. Paul Zuehlke,

Mrs.

Mark Deutschmann,

the

of Christ

into

and Mrs.

gel,

Lake;
Nancy Anderson,
daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Arnie C. Anderson, Highland Park; Gregory Bergmark, son of Mr, and Mrs. Eugene
R.
Bergmark,
1327
Carlisle
PIl.,
Deerfield; Virginia Carlson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ossian Carl-

of

Church

7 received

Mrs. Warren Korsvik,
Leliosh, Mr. and Mrs.

Crystal

son, Highwood.
Holly Carr, daughter

United

May

Luther Leaguers Leave For Retreat

Congregational
Church Holds
Annual Meeting

S

=

=SSeS
SS

BS

SwT
SS SS

=

�Jehovah Witnesses
Gather at Three-Day
Conclave in Suburbs

FREE STORAGE

Jehovah’s Witnesses in Highland
Park and Deerfield have been in-

Of Out-of-Season Garments Cleaned by Us.
e Not Box Storage. Each Garment Individually
Stored on a Hanger by Itself.
@

Garments

SAVE
No

harsh

not

pressed

CLOSET

chemicals

of SPOT REMOVING
FREE
PICK-UP &amp;
DELIVERY

are

used

until ready

vited to attend the three-day training program June 2-4 at Carpentersville,
it was
announced
this
week,
Harry McClure, 1674 Green Bay

for use.

SPACE!

in cleaning.

Our

exclusive

Rd.,

Northbrook

method

leaves wools &amp; cashmeres naturally SOFT.

Experienced
to answer

Dry Cleaner on route
all your

dry cleaning

problems.

ROESSLER’S EXCLUSIVE CLEANERS
727

ST. JOHNS

AVENUE,

HIGHLAND

ID 2-0352

assistant

PARK

hovah’s
equip

us for

of

congregation

Witnesses,

said

object of the program

the

the

of

that

Je-

“the

is to further

ministry

that

is

designed to fortify spiritual morals
of people in our community.”
Announcements came as climax
to the
weekly
ministry-development
program
at
Long
Grove
school, 1000 Phingsten Rd., Northbrook.
Approximately
1,400
delegates

from

ID 2-0312

minister

18 nearby

congregations

will

attend the conclave in Carpentersville,
he
estimated.
Conference
theme will be “Walk in the Name
of Jehovah Forever.”

Bethany Honors
‘Women
Five

of Year’

women

of

Bethany

Metho-

dist and Evangelical United Brethren church were named
‘‘women
of the year’ in the recent MotherDaughter banquet at the church.
Designated for their outstanding
unselfish
service
to the
church

were Mrs. Joseph
A.
O,
Christman,

Baruffi, Mrs.
Miss
Olive

Frantz,
Mrs.
John
McLeran
Mrs. Orville Wessling.
Cited

and

for Dinners

Mrs. Baruffi was cited for preparation of dinners for church and

the Women’s Society of Christian
Service; Mrs. Christman for her
work

on

gifts

for

missions

and

missions;

recruiting

Miss

Frantz

for her work in church missions
and on the board of trustees.
Mrs.
McLeran’s
award
was
earned primarily for her planning

of successful
suppers;

church

Mrs.

family

Wessling

for her many
years’
church school teacher,
and choir member.
Mrs, E .H. Amick,
organist.

night

was

cited

career as
as pianist

Her daughter,
is the church

‘Integrated Housing?’
Circle Topic Tuesday
“Are You Your Brother’s Keeper?” and “Is Highland Park Ready
for
Integrated
Housing?”
are
topics
to be discussed
by
Mrs.
Sidney W. Mandel, 1534 Knollwood
Ave., for the program meeting of
Patience circle for young mothers
of Bethany church Tuesday
evening at 8 o’clock. Meeting is in

the home

of Mrs, Leon

Pleasant

Gillen, 826

Ave.

On Human Relations Board
Mrs. Mandel is a member of the
North Shore Board of Human Relations. Since her topics may appeal to many, members have been
invited
to
bring
guests
to
the
meeting.

Reservations may be made with
the chairman, Mrs, Clifford Moore,
ID

2-6954,

May

on

21.

served

or

before

Sunday,

Refreshments

by

Mrs.

will

be

Gillen.

Painting
Outside?
YOU'LL

SAVE

MONEY

Our combination of thorough surface preparation and
first-grade materials will last
longer. You'll save because

FLAMELESS
ELECTRIC COOKING
So Clean, So Safe; So Modern

TRY

AN

ELECTRIC

RANGE

IN YOUR

KITCHEN

- MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE

FOR

60

DAYS

your painting dollar must be
—
by the years it will
ast.

And our fully insured, guaranteed work costs the same
as ordinary

You'll

painting.

get

money

more

from
FOR

If you’re

tired

of

scrubbing

kitchen walls and looking up
at dirty ceilings, change over
to electric cooking. There are
no flames, burners or pilots
to create dirt or soot. Your

kitchen stays clean twice as
long.
You cut painting and

ALL

PAINTING
THE

PEOPLE

NEEDS
TO

SEE.

days of clean, fume-free electric
cooking will prove the difference or all your money back.

GO Public Service Company
32

WE’RE

your

decorating costs in half. Sixty

See your electric appliance dealer today—Ask him to SHOW
You may win a FLAMELESS electric range

Page

YOUR

for

Bloom!

and TELL

bloom painting
company
Thursday,

May

18, 1961

�| Shabuoth Brings |
Confirmation Rites

Missionary to Japan
Miss
ton,

Among
temples
tions
observing

Feast of Weeks)

and
congregaShabuoth
(the

with confirmation

rites Sunday are North Shore Congregation
Israel,
Glencoe,
and
Lakeside Congregation of Highland
Park.
Lakeside
Dr.

Philip

Congregation
S.

Gershon,

newy-

elected rabbi of Lakeside
Congregation for Reform Judaism, will

Bertha

Kolbenson

Saskatchewan,

Canada,

Park

President

High

Bert

at

8

as

co-hostess.

at

7

under

5 p.m.

Highland
Park
confirmands
among the 32 in the class are
Geoffrey S. Gluck, Linda Goldman,

Ori-

o’clock.

Annual Tea
Friday evening at 8 o’clock, the
Aedus
Hebrew-Christian
Fellowship of Chicago will hold its annual tea at the church.

the

p.m.,
women

of Mrs.

with
will

Nels

Mrs.

James
from

today,

meet

in the

home

sewing

etc.

Fishing,

Boating, All Sports, Crafts, Golf,

Hot

—

Weekends available to organizations for parties —
Directed by Teachers—Program Fitted to Child —
All activities conducted on our Country Estate |
in Northbrook,

1155 Ridgewood

Dr.,
for luncheon,
bandage-rolling.

Teacher-staff, Transportation,

Ultra Modern Outdoor Swimming Pool
Swimming, Horseback Riding (2 Corrals),

Kirk

A week
Dahl,

Lunches,

and

Illinois

j

Camp Season: June 26 thru Aug. 18, ‘61

|§
Pi

Phones:

OR

4-9789

or OR

4-3829

Put pride in

Wallenstein

people will be given in the West
end of the high school from 3 to

the

TRAIL BLAZER DUDE RANCH
AN EXCLUSIVE DAY CAMP FOR BOYS AND GIRLS—5 thru 12.

Meets

Evangelical church Sunday evening

Japan

and Secretary Richard Fechheimer will present confirmation certificates and gift Bibles to confirmands, A reception for the young

Group

ental Boat Missionary society, will
give a talk illustrated by on-thescene films
at the First United

to

School.

M.

mis-

Night

Woman’s

Tuesday evening, May 23, the
Woman’s Christian Fellowship will
meet in the home of Mrs. William
Diener, 1321 Somerset, Deerfield,

sionary

conduct
the
confirmation
and
Shabuoth service Sunday at 10:30
am.
in the main
auditorium
of

Highland

Speaks Sunday
of Foss-

your front la Wh

|

William A. Guthmann, Susan Lee
Klein, Stanley H. Korshak, Kath-

erine E. Levi, Katherine D. Lewis,
Chris Marder, Susan Hope Meyer,
Mare
B.
Nathanson,
William
E.
Newmann,
Jeff
Perlman,
Nancy

Lee Pollock, Ned Robertson, Richard E. Simon Jr., Cathy L. Stein,
and

Robert

M.

Unger.

Congregation Israel
North Shore Congregation
rael’s

Shabuoth

and

Is-

confirmation

service will be held Sunday

morn-

ing at 10 o’clock in New
Trier
High School auditorium, Dr. Edgar
Siskin, rabbi, announces. Cards of
admission
are
available
at
the
Temple office.
Sabbath eve services tomorrow

at

8:30

of

consecration

is

the

It will be held
of the temple.

traditional
for

service

confirmands.

in Michaels

Court

Make it a habit to read the Want
Ads every week before laying your
paper aside!

e t ORS

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mr

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Phone for appointment,

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im Opedes

1091 SHERIDAN RD., HIGHLAND PARK
61¢ CHURCH 9T., EVANSTON
46 NORTH WABASH AVE., CHICAGO

Thursday, May 18, 1961

Craberass Ml

| price.

fERTILIS
Budget-priced lawn
food; also for gardens, shrubs, trees.

MELLOGREEN
The high-quality

voip
Thesafeand sure,

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post - emergence
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feeds! Lightweight,
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as

eepe

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it

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FOR EVERY LAWN AND GARDEN NEED...
Remember—we

have the best of everything

in bedding

|
+

GREENHOUSES
Corner of Park Ave., West and Ridge Rd.

3 ‘

:;

plants.

1911

pRie's
KS

VIVA
Compact highanalysis
lawn
food.
Popular

OR YOUR
MONEY BACK!

vf ,

aaestatehte

i

bases BAS

for you, from start to finish
in our own laboratory by
expert technicians. And with

IMC
GUARANTEES
RESULTS

Wena

types. H.0.V., you know, was
one of the two pioneers in
the successful development
of contact lenses in this country.
Here your contacts are
custom made, especially

RIDGE

ROAD

ID 2-3400

�Ne Ree

CS

eH

MONM,

}

A ae

A

177

=

—__——HOUSE

HOUSE

BOATS

BOATS——_-_—-

Indian

Shore
club

holds

the
W.

MISSISSIPPI CRUISES — FLORIDA WINTER SEASON
OZARK LAKES (Season) — NEW EQUIPMENT, LIVING
FACILITIES FOR 6 PERSONS, Renftal....... $150.00 per wk.
PONTOON BOATS Daily Rental Rate:
$20.00 wk. days, $25.C0 Saturdays, $30.00 Sundays &amp; Holidays,
(rates do not include insurance charge)

Alger
One

Welte or Phone for Information:
1621

Green

HOUSEBOAT RENTALS, ING.
Bay

Rd.

Highland

IDiewood

2-8029

Park,

its

In

when

North

Israel

Men’s

annual

meeting

Club,

addition

to

Goldfarb

Park

holding

also

has

in

Ave.
many

been

active on the temple building fund
drives
and
public
forum.
Major
outside interest is the Blind Service association of Chicago.

your ehoice in Wiseonsi n
and
Tilinols
for
slig ht
additional ¢eharge.

WEIMAR

Dr.

Birchwood

offices,

:

Tree

Congregation

of three to receive a service

award

Ulinois

Daughter

D. Goldfarb

for

outstanding

service

the temple

and the Men’s

night

be

will

Alger

D,

to

club toGoldfarb,

Visited

Mrs. Jacob Fell of 360 Vine Ave.
was at the annual Pembroke College
mother-daughter
weekend
with her daughter, Greta, a freshman. there.

fF

ETE eed PALS
es

i

na

OMEMAE BOT pA a

ies

EEO‘id

ead

VASE

Pentecost Sunday
At NS Methodist;

To Confirm

14

Pentecost Sunday at North Shore
Methodist church will mark confirmation of a class of 14 young
people, Dr. G. Clifton Ervin, minis-

ter, announces. He will have
sermon topic in both 9:30 and

as
11

a.m. services, “This Is That!”
The minister’s confirmation class
will be received into church membership in the 11 o’clock service.

Four

of

the

group

are

Highland

Parkers, including Gail Allen, Kris-

tine Larson, Edwinna Robinson and
Susan

Ward.

Following the worship service, a

DRAPERIES

&amp; FABRICS

to

had

WHERE

Ui

INTER

LOR

§

We Custom Make

|

¢ Draperies
© Slip Covers
© Bed Spreads

¢ Upholstery
° Carpets
° Custom
Furniture

890 Linden Ave.
ID 2-3430
Hubbard Woods

DOOR

e
¢

RCA

OPERATORS

Approved

iS
CORNER

20AS

Leading
Offictal

Watch.

Inspector

DISPOSAL

REPAIRS

OPEN

RAVINIA

Road

Deerfield

GARDEN

SERVICE

NEEDS

—

COMPANY
ID 2-2079

Phone

—

Catch

STOP

Conference

STORE

Stump

To Shavings

Glencoe,

will

be

potluck supper, sponsored by
commission
on
membership

and

CITY

OF HIGHLAND
PARK, ILLINOIS
NOTICE OF LETTING
Public Notice is hereby given that the
City Council of the City of Highland Park,
County of Lake, State of Illinois, will receive sealed proposals for the resurfacing
with
Sub-Class
1-11
Bituminous
Concrete
of existing bituminous surfaces on various
streets in Highland
Park.
The
proposed
work will be done under the Motor Fuel
Tax law and is officially known as Section
40-C.S.
Said proposals will be received until 12:00
o’clock
Noon,
Central
Daylight
Saving
Time, May 29, 1961, in the Council Chamber of the City Hall, in Highland Park, at
which time and place bids will be publicly
opened and read.
Plans and proposal forms will be furnished at the office of the City Clerk in
the City Hall of said City.
Payment will be in cash. All bids must
be accompanied by cash or certified check
for 10% of the total bid.
The City reserves the right to reject any
and all bids, or increase, or decrease, or
omit any item or items.
By order of the City Council.
R. W. Snyder
City Manager
5/11-18/61—127

Dependable Service Is Our Quality
—

TOYS

Serving Highland Park

Over 40 Years

ID 2-4387

EXPERTS

PAINTING

BONDED

DUTCH
A

Basins

Aves.,

NOW...
The World’s Largest

Now is the
DORMANT
From

Road

Septic Tanks Pumped

HARDWARE
HOUSEWARES

Deerfield

GARBAGE AND RUBBISH
REMOVAL

1 P.M.

Licensed by the State
Introducing a new power stump

Refuse
Rubbish

ID 2-2883

1683

WING’S TREE EXPERTS

a Smile

Residential - Commercial
454 Central

9 A.M.

INSURED

SERVICE
*
*

ONE

TREE

REFUSE

With

YOUR

447 Roger Williams

eertie

HIGHLAND

SUNDAYS

SERVICE

FRED A. COLEMAN

Store Hours Daily 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. — Wed. ‘til Noon

Nursery

ee
Deerfield

* Septic Tanks
* Catch Basins
Pumped

WwW. H. LINCOLN
Appraiser &amp; Auctioneer
One Mile North of Route 45
On Highway 21—Halfday, Il.

&amp;.R,.

Keys Made To Order While You Wait.

1885

Office and

Service

Western

Replace Broken Windows
Fix Storm Windows and Doors

Established

;

A quaint little antique shop where you
will be pleased to find the unusual in
glassware,
silver, china,
bric - a - brac,
brass,
pewter,
furniture,
prints
and
paintings at reasonable prices.

Gr aftsmen

North

contralto

and evangelism, will precede the
meeting at 6:30 p.m. in the church
dining hall.

Shop

TLL.

We Repair Screen Doors and Windows

NURSERIES

DISPOSAL

PARK,

Destoners

forthe

A
the

Antique

— LET US DO| IT —

Inc.

West

Lincoln

2-2628

Repai ri

Jewelry

also

held Monday evening at 8 o’clock
with Dr. Birger A. Dahl, district
superintendent, for the Northern
district of the Rock River Conference of the Methodist church,
presiding.

ANTIQUES

HIGHLANS
PD

is

Annual conference of the North
Shore Methodist church, Hazel and

BS THe
SG

Ce

} f]

SHERIDAN

SCREEN

F. D. CLAVEY
ig

and

Annual

,

Geweters

Watrh

und

LANDSCAPING

RAVINIA

Se

REPAIR

¢

TELELCHONE

COMPANY

HI 6-5080

4

&amp;

CENTRAL

U.L. Approved
1 Yr. Guarantee

SERVICE

]

Dr.,

soloist, will sing “Eye Hath Not
Seen” by Gaul at both services.

The

RCA
RADIO CONTROLLED
¢ FCC

choristers,

Greenleaf

JEWELER — WATCH

the

director of music, will conduct the
Junior choir and Adult choirs in
special
numbers.
Mrs.
Mildred
Kemp,
who
trains
the
Junior

BE DONE

IT CAN

ELECTRONICS

GARAGE

reception
will
be
given
in
church dining hall,
Edwin Kemp, 176 Edgecliffe

time to
SPRAY

ELM

thm

POWER SPRAYING

order
and

gh

ro oy

FERTILIZING
SERVICE,

PAINTING
Reasonable

@ Excellent
@

Free

WING‘S TREE EXPERTS

Rates

References

Estimates

Wall

oo

Washing

BERNARDI
ID 2-8917

Phadies:
ID 3-1622

Lawn Spray Company
Offers You a Professional

DECORATING

INTERIOR - EXTERIOR

@

CONTROL

TRIMMING
PATCHING

cutter

&amp;

&amp; KI 6-2292

7-WAY

PROGRAM

of fertilizers in care-

fully planned combinations throughout the

season. Your lawn grows healthier, greener

—

pews

DRESSMAKERS’

SERVICE

MONOGRAMMING
On

Linens,

Blouses,

Towels,

Shirts,

Pleating —
Buttons —

Sweaters,
etc.

Belts

Hand Bound

&amp; Machine Button Holes

Vogue

Fabric Shop

722 Main
UNiversity
‘Page

34

Evanston
4-3034

LETTER SHOP

REAL

SERVICES

due

“A Complete Letter Shop Facility”

J &amp; K ADDRESSING &amp; LETTER SHOP, INC.
Fast, Automatic Machine-Production
ADDRESSING
¢
INSERTING
¢
SEALING
POSTAGE METERING
e
FOLDING
Mimeographing
° Adv. Inserts Imprinted
MAILING LISTS MAINTAINED
¢ PHOTO COPYING
Automatic Addressing by Name Covering:
Highland Park, Highwood, Deerfield, Glencoe, Northbrook, Lake Forest
&amp; Lake Bluff
701 PLEASANT AVE.
°
PH: ID 2-7717
Wedding Invitations
*
Personalized Stationery
*
Business Cards

nena.

WILLIAM
REAL
1084
LAKE

W.

PITTENGER
ESTATE
EVERETT

FOREST,

stays that way through summer heat

and into late fall.
AMAZINGLY LOW COST

ESTATE

ROAD

ILLINOIS

to

scientific

LAKE

TELEPHONES:
FOREST—CEdar

DEERFIELD—Windsor

4-0249

1¢

“te

proven in over

14-billion sq. ft. of lawn treatments yearly.
ACT NOW
1. Electronic Soll Test

2. Uming or Acidifying

GET FREE

Put your lawa problems in the hands of
Write or calls

GENERAL

Sales-A ppraisals
Mortgages

auto-

mation—as little as
GUARANTEED RESULTS

OF

SPRAY

SERVICE

DEERFIELD

ID 2-7766

5-0308

Thursday, May 18, 1961

eR

�aad

enon

°

S

feet lle

Famous Jewel Steak
f)

These are the finest, most tender steaks you can buy.
Jewel buyers know good beef, the kind that's bright red, firm,
fine-grained, well-marbled with creamy white fat. And skilled
Jewel market men give you more eating meat for your money
by trimming off excess fat and bone before weighing.
This weekend treat your family to delicious Jewel Steak!

U.S. CHOICE
EXTRA VALUE TRIMMED

Round Stcak

U.S. CHOICE
EXTRA VALUE TRIMMED

Sirloin Steak

U. S$: CHOICE—TAILLESS
EXTRA VALUE TRIMMED

Porterhouse

Ib.

S THE NEW CROP!
Best Potatoes
a

ne

d
g for the kind of goo
If you've been waitin
makes your pota to

In Six Months!

FANCY
CALIFORNIA
‘

otatoes that
ili
i
new crop of
iti no longer 1 The
—wa
ous
e
fam
d
u
sala
l has em! Fancy U.S.
potatoes is in—and Jewe
oe
e potatoes just made
#1 California long whit
me
that
es
ato
pot
tin
au gra
avory potato salad,
es
'n simple boiled potato
n
plai
or
th
mou
ss
se
for dinner tonight—
rolled in parsley. Boil some
or will be bursting
flav
ato
pot
e
whit
that delicious

es

tat

Pp

White

0

0

:

POUND

VENT-VIEW

out of every jacket!

KRAFT

SALAD

DRESSING

Miracle Whip

DEMING'S SOCKEYE

~ Red Salmon
FACIAL TISSUE

Sable Soft
LAUNDER

Whip
Salad Dressing

obo

MAID

*

~ Gal. of Bleach
12

OZ.

BOTTLES
. of

Pepsi Cola

=O"

PLUS

12 739

39Y&lt;

JEWEL

TEA Con

We reserve the right to limit quantities. No sales to dealers.

Food Costs Less At Towel
3 Fine Food Costs Less At Jewel

Fine Food Costs Less At Towel

�HP Varsity Nae” "Parkers Kocond] fe District
Are Champions
Track Meet, Qualify Eight
Of District
For State Competition

relay

of

im Murtfeldt, Larry Kanouse, Joel

ewitz

and

Weinert

nother mark

Other

off with

Winners

_ Other Highland
re Dale

ran

at 3:31.7.

Zech

Park

winners

in the shotput

with

1’ 7%” effort, a personal record,
witz in the 880
ne 2:03.0 time,

yard run
and Jim

with a
Stern-

ield, number three ranked discus
in in the state, remained unten with a 151’ 7” toss.
Point scorers for the Giants inuded:
Chuck
Redman,
second,
380 yard run; the 880 relay of Tony
herman,
Ed
Gamson,
Joe Wolk

d Ron

Joseph,

fourth;

Larry

anouse, fourth, 440 yd. run; Jamie

eGregor,

second,

discus throw;

seph,

second,

broad

jump;

Mike

aeske,

fourth,

pole

vault;

Nils

{agberg, fourth; shotput; and the
osh-soph 880 yd. relay of Jay
vey, Russell Winters,
en
Brecher, second.

Complete

scores

Wolk

for

the

and

meet:

| Highland Park 4414, North Chicago
| 3742, Waukegan 36, Zion-Benton
42, Libertyville 15, Lake Forest
Barrington 12%, Antioch 1214,
| Grayslake
9, Grant 4, Wauconda 4,
fo

2erfield High
Despite victories by Randy Bax
d Neal Hirsch, Deerfield dropped

|its third consecutive tennis match

by a 3-2 score, this time to Prosa: ct High School last Wednesday
deft
Mander.
number
three
ngles player, rallied to take the
ond set of his match with John
haefer, only to be blanked in
he decisive third set. Neal Hirsch
vas carried to three sets by his opment before he won his ntatch.

;

&amp;

Doubles
Set

ani

Lincoln

Four Games,

2-2

Playing
in two
meets
Monday
and
Tuesday,
May
8 and
9, the
Highland Park golf teams won 2
and lost 2. Both losses incurred on
Monday
were
against
Waukegan.
The victories were by the junior
varsity and frosh teams in a meet
with
Warren.
At
Waukegan,
the

varsity

score

was

Peter—Shurberg,

Jon—Burnett,

Jim

Jon...

Gewe ke, Wayne—
aechelt, Louis
7
ek, Frank—Keough.
ie
eerfield Game Score—2.
rospect Game
Score—3.

Oy

5

Box Score
HIGHLAND PARK
AB

League

Eddy’s Liquors,
Wally Stein,
manager;
Mary Jane Lanes, Sam
Ori, manager; Washington Gardens,
Sam Belmonti, manager;
and Art
Arkush, Art Arkush, manager.
Games Scheduled for
tonight
(May 18, 1961) are:
7:00 p.m. Diamond No. 1
Quidi Vidi vs. Club 7
7:00 p.m. Diamond No. 2
Nite ‘N’ Gale vs. Charlie Wenks
8:30 p.m. Diamond No. 1
Santi’s Cafe vs. Gormet Corner
Umpires for this year’s leagues
are:
Al
Danakas,
Norm
Geske,
Charles Schramm,
and Earle
Hodgen.

Waukegan

914,

Highland Park 51%, and the Parker
frosh lost 9 to 6.
Point-winners
for
the
Giants
were Joe Hurst, George Cimbalo,
Bill Hutchinson, and Ricky Ascher.
Soph winners were Roger Cimbalo,
Marty Becker, Harvey Kinzleberg,

| and Larry Moss.

ae a

on pba, Dick
Se: badter.Mike

raig,

Sunset League
Santi’s Cafe,
Angie Passuello,
Manager;
Quidi Vidi,
Robbie
Moroney, manager; Nite ‘N’ Gale,
Dan
Herz,
manager;
Charley
Wenk’s, Bob Merens,
manager;
Club 7, Norbert Ferraro, manager;
and Gormet
Corner,
Ned
Siegel,
manager.

Golf Teams Split

Tennis Match

Bas.
ax,

The Sunset Park 16” softball
league, sponsored by the Highland
Park Recreation Department, will
start its 1961 season tonight with
all six teams seeing action.
There will be two twilight games
starting at 7 p.m. followed by the
nightcap game at 8:30 p.m.
The Lincoln School 16” league,
also sponsored by the Recreation
Department, will begin its season
on the 25th of May.

At Highland
Park in the meet
with
Warren
the
Junior
Varsity
won 1214 to 2% and the Frosh shut
out their opponents
15 to 0. JV
Set
Set
winners
were
Steve
Gross,
John
0
| Lawrence,
Paul
Kentor,
Bucky
2
| Lauer, and Glen Harris. Frosh winners were Roger Cimbalo, Buddy
Block, Marty Becker, Norman
Simon, and Larry Moss.

al) AUTO
fp 1 LOANS

Henderson, ss
McLaughlin, 2b
Fiocchi,
Player
Johnson, rf
Greengard, 1b
dams,
cf

Oppenheimer

....

rpo
Mitchell,
Winning pitcher:
Mitchell.
Highland
Park

Fiocchi;

HIGHLAND
Player
Adler, If
Kadison, rf
Panther, 1b

3
losing

concococoos

mile

in

ecoscococeosoo™®

the

seconds

pitcher:

...

Is Medalist

In District Meet
Sherman
Finger,
an
Evanston
junior, won the medalist honors at
the New Trier District State Golf
qualifying meet with a 72 as Highland Park’s team finished a disappointing third with a 316 last
Friday. New Trier won the meet
and the right to go down
state
with
an
impressive
302
total.
Evanston
was.
second
at _ 307.

Finger

was

qualifier in
Trier squad.

the

only

individual

addition to the
Highland Park’s

New
total

Warrior Trackmen
Impressive In Win
Over East Leyden
Sweeping three events and winning individual firsts in five other

21’

events

allowed

Deerfield

High

School trackmen to score an impressive
74-44 victory over
East
Leyden High School last Tuesday
night.
A sparkling 10.5 second time in
the 100 yard dash was turned in by
Jim
Grossfeld
who
also ran the
220 yard dash in 24.5. Joel Brash

took

two firsts in the

and the discus

shot

(36’6’’)

(132’8’’).

John
Stanger,
Rick
Schreyer,
and Dave Mitchell ran one, two,
three in the 880 yard run. Dave
Crowell, Tee
Newbrough, and Dave
Wilson swept the pole vault. Joel
Brash, Tom Brown, and Al Breuer
captured the first three places in
the discus.
The
two
Warrior
relay
teams
triumphed also: the 880 yard team
in 1:40.5 amd the mile relay in
4:06.7.
“This victory,”
Knilans,
“was
a
one for our team.

for the

said Coach
Bill
very
important
We are building

conference

at Maine

West

meet,

High

May

25,

School.”

In Highwood
interested in playing Pony
baseball in Highwood this

are

urged

tryouts

next Monday,

Any

13

up

should

or

report

for

and

registrations

Tuesday

or Wednes-

day evenings
park.

sign

to

at
14

for
bring

Highwood’s
year

this
their

old

boy

activity.
own

ball
may

Boys

baseball

glove, shoes and a cap for the
initial tryouts. The Highwood Community
Center,
sponsor
of Pony
league
baseball
for the past
10
years, hopes enough boys will report that two or more teams can
be organized.
Highwood will again compete as
a free lance Pony league team this
season. Last year the team played

.500

ball,

and

had

more

than

the

1014”

broad

20

home games before it went out of
town for its first away game,
Any boy unable to report for a
tryout can obtain additional information on PONY
league ball by
contacting
Highwood’s
recreation
director, Don Skrinar, at the Community Center any evening after
8 p.m,
ranked 6th in the state as Waukegan paced all the schools with a
297 total, The New Trier District
was held at Skokie Play Fields in
Winnetka.
Highland Park’s totals were Dick
Campagni 77, Rick Asher 79, Joe
Hurst 80; and Jeff Marks 80.

jump

with

Other

qualifiers

included:

Sternfield
and
Jamie
second and fourth in

146’ 5” and

Jim

McGregor,
the discus,

143’ 514” respectively;

Dale
Zech,
fifth in the shotput,
52’ 1144”; Joel Lewitz, third in the
880 yd. run; 2:02.0; Ed Gamson,
sixth in the 220 yd. dash,
:22.3;
and John Pettingell, second in the
high jump, 5’ 10”.
Complete
scores for the meet:
New Trier 38, Highland Park 24,
Maine
West
19,
Waukegan
18,
Maine East 17, Palatine 17, Evans-

ton 15, Zion-Benton

14, North

Chi-

cago
131%, Niles 10, Prospect
5,
Lake Forest 5, Arlington Heights 4,
Antioch 4, Glenbrook 314, Barrington
2, Notre
Dame
of Niles
1,
Grant,
Warren,
Libertyville,
and
Wauconda, 0.

Deerfield Golfers
Beat Glenbard East
Deerfield
High
School
golfers
scrambled their way to their fourth
victory
last
Thursday
night
at

Country

Club

by

out-

scoring Glenbard East, 186-199.
Again
the combination
of two
sophomores,
John
Fleming
and
Mike Hadjak, and two freshmen,
John Feagan and Skip Godow, provided the victory margin.
After the match, Coach Ted Repsholdt announced the starting five
for the conference meet to be held
at Arrowhead Golf Course on Tuesday, May 23. The four low golfers
plus Don Clark will be the starting

line-up. Mark

Biega will be the al-

ternate.
Player—DHS
Fleming, John
Godow,
Skip
Hadjuk, Mike
Feagan, John
Biega, Mark
Team Total:
Player—GHS
Wieting,
Mark
Lagacki,
Jim
.

Zite

AN

Se

Klink, Jim ....
Cunningham, George
Team Total: 199

Warrior Thinclads

Looking for First
Conference

Win

New and inexperienced, the DHS
track team
held its fourth
duai

meet
East

is

of

the

Leyden,

preparing

1961

season

Tuesday,

for

its

May

against
9

fifth

and

meet

against Maine West, Tuesday, May
16. Currently the Deerfield squad
has an 0 and 3 record for the sea-

son.
The Warriors dropped the season
opener to Glenbrook, 64-54; then
lost to Waukegan, 73-43; and last
week were trounced by Prospect,
(Continued on page 45)

BANK? HIGHLAND
1771 Second St.

BANK—POST

Federal

OFFICE

BLDG.

pepeett Insurance

a

effort.

Thorngate

Register for Pony
League Next Week
Boys
league

taking

“The Sésuice Bank Of Highland Park”

Member

| Page H 44—D 36

for the

Jim Weinert
highlighted the
meet from the Highland
Park
standpoint winning the mile in a
fine
4:32.3
clocking, beating
his
arch-rival Weymouth
Kirkland of
New Trier for the second time this
season to remain the favorite for
the state championship. Ron Joseph
was the only other Parker winner,

initial

Henderson,
ss
Mc Laughlin, 2b
Z
EVANSTON
‘
Player
Werner,
Feldman,
3b |
Gernand,
ss .
Oost
{De i.
Paulson, 1b ....
Mac Donald, 2b
Jacobs,
If
Durschlag, rf
Hall. c
Winning pitcher: LaBuda; Sein pitcher:
Corbett.
Runs batted in: Corbett, Pascal, Bodle (2).
Two-base hits: Panther, Bodle.
Highland
Park
Opponent

Fineer

Highland Park’s track team took second place in the Evanston District Saturday as it qualified eight individuals
trip downstate this weekend.

summer
PARK
AB
SooorRCCOCOS

and

two

-OoooCoOSDOSD00

event,

by

Oe

is

mark

ee

old

CORR

e

16” League Play
Starts Tonight

ee

state, ran a 4:35.8 clocking to better

Pitcher
Jim
Corbett
held
the
Giants
hitless
for six innings
against Evanston, but the Parkers
broke loose with a bang to score
three
runs
in
the
last
of
the
seventh to win the game.
Steve
Kadison
led off the inning with
the game’s first hit and was sent
to third on Mickey
Panther’s
double to deep left. Chuck Pascal
followed
with
a hit to drive
in
Kadison
after Tom
LaBuda
had
walked
to fill the
bases.
Willie
Bodle then broke up the ball game
with a smash over third to score
two runs and end the contest.
The
New
Trier
game
was
a
pitcher’s battle with Marvin Fiocchi hurling for Highland
Park
against the Indians’ Bob Mitchell.
Chuck
Adler
scored
the
game’s
only run in the first inning for the
Parkers.
From
then on Mitchell
pitched hitless ball. Fiocchi threw
a one-hitter at the Green and Gray
to win the game.

ee

‘Two meet records were establish“i by Parker
contestants.
Jim
Weinert, number one miler in the

with

total

ms

of 3714,

May

OF

consecu-

COSCON,

its second

OORRO

captured

epee.

Park’s track team

$a

Highland

ve Lake County track and field championship Tuesday,
at Libertyville. The Little Giants took meet honors
441% points compared to North Chicago’s second place

SOOO

re Lake County Champions

SOOSSSSCSSOW

Little Giant Thinclads

Highland Park’s varsity baseball
team
captured
the Evanston
district
baseball
championship
and
qualified
for
regional
play
this
week at Maine West by defeating
Evanston 3 to 2 last Tuesday and
New Trier 1 to 0 last Wednesday
at Evanston.

PARK
iDlewood 2-7800

Corporation
Thursday, May

1, 1961

�ea

ee

;

es

SEY,

He a

se Ean Wa4 ea

SE

ota

ee

ROE

oye

y

pecan

Miner FeO

A

ai

ng pa

ar SS

See

ki

ee

es TS

Si

“PAINTINGS

Name Grunska as DHS Golfers Drop
1961 Director of
Elm Swim Club

Glenbrook Match
Deerfield
golfers,
trailing
by
three strokes at the end of nine
holes, collapsed on the back nine to
drop a 367-381 decision to undefeated Glenbrook last Friday night
Again Fleming,
Hadjuk, and
Feagan
played
good
sophomore
golf, but high scores by the fourth
and fifth men brought about the
Warrior downfall.
“Our
biggest
problem,”
commented
Coach
Repsholdt,
“is to
find a fourth man who can con-

The Elm Swim Club announces
the appointment of Jerry Grunska.
a teacher and coach at the Highland Park High School, as director
of the Elm Swim Club for the 1961
season.
Thepoolis
of Olympic
dimensions,
and
|
plans are being
|
worked out for
parking
an additional 35 cars. |
The
Elm
Swim
Club has
received as new iia e
members — the
Jerry
Grunska
Harold Dobrikin Family, the
Burt W. Marx Family, and the Nat
Resnik Family.
Weather
permitting,
the
pool

will

open

for

Memorial

Day,

of

the

pool

are:

and

presi-

dent, Harold Liebenson; vice-president, Tom Crews; secretary, Junc
Lerman; treasurer, Edward Norton
and financial
secretary, Jane
Brinkman.
Grunska had four years experience as guard and Red Cross Water Safety Instructor at Erb Park
pool, Appleton, Wis., while in college.
He also served as aquatic
director, swimming coach and instructor
at
Lincoln-Belmont
YMCA in Chicago. He holds a B.S.
degree in physical education from
LaCrosse State College, Wis., and
a Master’s degree from Colorado
State College.
He has served as instructor at
other recreation and summer camp
spots for the past few years. Presently, he is a teacher of English.
and assistant basketball and football coach at Highland Park High
School.

T
«F054
90 |

PAG HROM,

43

87

47

102

55

“Where

possible, so boys are urged to sign
up
so that
play
can
open
very
early in June.

the

100

yard

and

page

200

44)

yard

league

play

TO

THE

BE YOUR OWN

Aroma

The

You

Tells

It’s Baked

LINZER TORTES

started

WE

the discus

was

as

quickly

107 feet 74

while in the shot
twelve pound ball
Freshman
Tee
become the team’s
far this season he
in the iow hurdles,
the 220 yard dash.

French
Bread

BAUMS
h 620 Central

Ave.

as

Open
&amp;

HE

WILLIAMS
Next
nena.

FOR
ne en

Herr: A.
35 yeuis

7
3

Thursday, May

room
apartments,
one on
nice bedrooms, 1% baths.

ee Sa

ee

apartment

Many

other

18, 1961

contains

2

features.

Location

BAIRD
REAL

283

ccnecueanmenemmnanes

ESTATE

SALES

E. Deerpath,

ment

is

in

©

will

$54,250.00.

conditioners.

air

rent for $250.00

month.

financing

Attractive

Price

available.

the
Call

HOURS

L. Sylvester, R.Ph.
&lt;5 years experience

each
side.
Kitchen has

built-in oven and range with fruitwood cabinets. Large mahogany paneled recreation
room, Powder room is off the kitchen. Each

Door ta Ravinieo Medico!eee

Stine, R.Ph.
experience

South East section of Lake Forest proper.
Close to schools and playground. All landPrivate
scaping is in and lawn seeded.
road for homes in this section. Lot approximately 10,000 square feet.
One apart-

This beautiful New Orleans Colonial is two

IS

1D 3-3212

SERVICE AYTER
iD 2-9126

Sunday

(Illinois Road to |
Washington Road to
Maywood)

eae eae an cneree nw emer cemere

EMERGENCY
CALL

me

548 lvy Court —

sick room supplie
We Deliver.

AVE.

Saturday

2-6 p.m.

inches

he tossed
the
38 feet 1 inch.
Newbrough
has
handyman. Thus
has won points
pole vault, and

DOCTOR IS OR WHERE
ARE PREPARED TO FILL
PRESCRIPTION

Surgical ond
precise Prescription service Needs
—- Vitomins - ~ Cosmetics —- Films

“QGER

“69 |

Sour Dough

Roger Pharmacy
645

Reg.
90c

nered points for DHS in both shot
put and discus. His best heave in

YOUR
YOUR

Featuring
inby

Kitchen”

Our

SEVEN SISTERS COFFEE CAKE

THAT PRESCRIPTION
MATTER
WHO
LOCATED.

In

dashes

this spring. In the Prospect meet
he
was
clocked
in 10.6
seconds
which
is exceptionally
fine time
for a freshman.
David
Crowell,
Warrior
sophomore, also remains undefeated in
the pole vault.
In the Prospect
meet he vaulted 10’6” which is excellent for a sophomore.
Weight man Joel Brash has gar-

iC

PUBLIC

Boys may form their
if they desire and a

track power in the Interim Conference.
Jim Grossfeld, Deerfield sprinter, has been
undefeated
in both

from

MAY

Highwood will attempt to form
a Prep League
of four or more
teams
of boys,
15 thru 18, who
might
be
interested
in
playing
baseball, not softball, this summer.
Director of recreation, Don Skrinar, hopes enough boys will be interested in the activity to play a
regular
schedule
throughout
the
summer months.
The league will be formed
to
give the older teenagers the opportunity
to play
baseball
with
boys of their advanced ages. There
has been a lack of baseball activity
for this age group, and Highwood
will attempt to fill up the vacuum.
Any boy 15 thru 18 that wants
to play should see Mr. Skrinar at
Highwood’s ball park any evening

week.
teams

OPEN

|

To Form Prep League

next
own

Park

DRIVE CAREFULLY — THE LIFE YOU SAVE

Highwood Attempts

814 to 3014. Prospect is the leading

Wares Thinclede

SALE

18
50-42

Rianenik
“Rene sA3.. 46.5
Shearer, Jim
Team Total: 367

Avenue

JUDY LOEB

T
83
93
96
114
109

eres 44

Central

ONE MAN SHOWING

18
40
47
49
54.
59

cs ccakinsn

HOUSE

Highland

Deerfield
9
Flemisig, JOR 4 ci..is;-secn,--2s 43
Pragink
VAG
Sain
a 46
POA
FOI
&lt;0 cccck..
00. epeentes 47
Beas
WISI
oes sce cat atey 60:
eo Paahy ( 1 | » a eR EET as ey ep ee ae 54
Team Total: 381
Glenbrook
9
Brows
Pet se
51
Moredock, Glen. ...............-..---- 48

very nominal league fee will be
charged each team entered.
A set of rules will be used to
streamline
all
league
activity.
Games will be played under a time
limit
and
will
be
twilight
and
night encounters, The league will
not be uniformed, so all a boy will
need to play will be his glove, bat,
and spikes.
The
center
is anxious
to get

(Continued

495

tried six boys already this year, but
haven’t found the right combination.”

TRIO”

Exhibiting

RANDOM

sistently shoot in the low 90’s. I’ve

will be open week-ends until June
16. The
official full season
will
open Saturday, June 17, and will
continue through Labor Day.
The membership is comprised of
159 families, and there are a few
additional memberships
available.
This is the second year of the pools
operation.

Officers

Now

NOt ee eS

eee

aes

¥

&amp;
MORTGAGE

Lake Forest

Mr.

Tracy.

WARNER
©®©

MANAGEMENT

°*

CEdar

INSURANCE

+

4-1855

_

Page H 45—D 37 |

�DON’T

LOSE

YOUR

oe

Py

RAE

Ves

I

©
Kod

D
i AM
(@) N
D. S
Bring Your Rings-and Jewelry tn,

[.

We Check Them FREE.

_

H.. NEMEROFF
JEWELERS - OPTICIANS

©

Highland

Park

do

Have

ern

our own diamond
your

settings.

RF

OIE

EE

OF

I

:

‘

:

21

te

|, IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
,

arranged.

|b

|

DHS

Swamp

|

by a score

§

May

19 thru

doubles

al

Jon

matches

team

Eaton

of

Jon

romped

— ONE
On

Our

WEEK

Panoramic

:
STOCK

by

May

sid

RACES

|

NITE

Wat

te

oe

ep

Family

se

felt) feleleo)
a
- BA 3-855)

GRAYSLAKE

NOW—ENDS

Added

Event —

W.

Washington

Races

- Free

Parking

St.

FRI.

18

Advance

Showing!

19-25

May

THURS.,

thru

The story

WAUKEGAN

of a man,

|

a land,

GLENCOE || ~~.

SEXES

KER

eT

MAY

“ELMER GANTRY” &amp;
“THE APARTMENT”

pas

Amateur

Children 25¢

Adults 1.50

Screen

ONO

THEATRE — GLENCOE
ID 2-0605

ae
Fe
xhibit in
Our

Liable by

June 9—"Absent Minded Prof.” | ¢ Goulton,
June 16— "Gone with the Wind”

VErnon

5-0605

FRI. thru THURS. May 19-25

:
in CinemaScope and METROCOLOR

FREE PARKING!

Fri. thru Thurs., May

:

19-26!

ADULT

FOR ONE BIG WEEK!
FRIVOLOUS

ENTERTAINMENT!

NOT FOR CHILDREN!

PAREE

IN

THE

NAUGHTY

90's!

Smiervev

PR

-

emer

Pufet

, “RONNIE ORLANL

bei

a

| AMM

cence! CHEVALIER, Scns:
x

JOURDAN

£

%

:
*

:

LTHE

ppt
REA
Stars)

ANNE BAXTER ARTHUR O'CONNELL

KING-SIZE DRINKS
Po
ot served by-tie
cexciting new CREV WA:

ae

TWIT!
;
® EONTINUOUS
4

ae

Game Score: 0

Time Trials 7:15 — Races 8:30

- 10:00
Night’

LAST DAY!
“GREAT IMPOSTOR”

GAY

ui

CAR

:

Deerfield
Set
Eaton, Jon
ADPROO
SORES
a Re itt 6
Craig, Pete
‘
PDO,
SON
ic Gai
ee ee 6
Game Score: 0
East Leyden
Set
Hebenstreit, Herb
SOU WOTT, Al aii.
vsti i aslaachtaaseons 0
Forfeit
0

:

=

re

2—’’Cimarron”

June

ALWAYS

fe

Sang

25

Week days— ‘The Trapp Family’ begins at 7:25 and 9:35
Saturday and Sunday—’’The Trapp Family’’ begins at 2:00 - 4:00 -

itd

ae laches haomvhdaatiae pie aiey gi.

6-1

t

— SCHEDULE —

Family

and

r

story . . . a happy nun’s story — a wonderful
it is true!
Family entertainment as you like it.

6:00 - 8:00
26—" All i

:

RUSS TAMBLYN » MERCEDES McCAMBRIDGE
po-starring VIC MORROW » ROBERT KEITH » CHARLES McGRAW

ec

:

with HENRY (HARRY) MORGAN « DAVID OPATOSHU
ALINE MacMAHON « LILI DARVAS » EDGAR BUCHANAN

| com

:

No cover—No-inivin 3
Fae
ee
ee
SAS
oe
.

‘

&amp;

ee.

SAT.

May 20
CHILDREN’S MATINEE
6t.2:00 pm.

Help
| ism

by.

P

defeat

the

buying

U.

com
2c 2 threat cheges of
taal ton aad at
S.

Companion

Feature

Fri—6:05-8:10-10:15
Sat.—4:25-6:20-8:20-10:15
Sun.—2 :35-4:55-7:15-9:35
Mon.-Thurs.—7 :10-9:30

5300 North Sheridan Road,

“Public

Bonds.

Pigeon

Plus Cartoons

!

only

No.

1”

&amp; Comedy

© WALT DISNEY PRODUCTIONS

PLUS—LATE

SHOW

FRI. &amp; SAT.

Starts FRI., MAY

26

MARLON BRANDO in
“ONE EYED JACKS”

|

Debghtful
e

Gourmet

648

e

Dining

ff

i
/

“

6

a

* K

|

NOTHING CUT

-9:14

Coming
Page

H

46—D

Sat. Kid Show May 20

|

May
38

26th!

“THE

aoe

Luncheon

4 W

Pines

wens
796233 | nurPRICES!mae |,Es inf
oe
Sun., 1:50-4:18-6:46
aera. Bt Cot.
Feature Times:

Breakfast

Afternoon Tea

with JULIET PROWSE

Kidd’’ —

HOODLUM

DEERFIELD

RD.,

block East of Waukegan
Let’s

Get

DEERFIELD
Rd. stoplight)
Acquainted!

FREE

COFFEE from
and 2 to 5 P.M.

Late Snacks
WIndsor

(4

8 to 11 A.M.

3 Cartoons

PRIEST”

Set

re

RTS..120 &amp; 21

Starring—Ruth Eluwerik, Hans Holt, Marion Holst, Josef Meinrod,
Friedrich Domin and Hilda Von Stoltz.

Ratin

6-0,

SPEEDWAY

screen
all of

P
Guidepost

a

4a%

DeLuxe

An
inspiring
story because

Johnson

to

{Hi

—

Wide

Set

FURY | cas catcciommapsstak Rcclaahgehenion ss

Bob 001

y

SUNDAY

May

Singles

the | Brinkworth,

pes

“The Trapp Family”
Color

while

=

6:30
1:40

Leyden

won easy victories in | Kast bexden.

singles

a

Thursday,

Fa

bs

POLICY

East

the team is gaining strength commented
Karl
Wildermuth,
tennis

as_ they
last night | peerfiela

of 5-0.

the

Open Daily 6:00 to 12 Midnight — Curtain at
Sunday Continuous 2 to Midnight—-Doors Open

over

Randy Bax, Neal Hirsch, and|Mande, Jett U8

IEERPAT
Friday,

netmen

victory

to straight set victories, los- | egach.

North Shore’s Most Beautiful Theatre
Lake Forest, Ill. —- CE. 4-2106 or CE 4-2107

THEATRE

School

swept

:

12——-$1.00

Leyden

was Deerfield’s second successive
triumph and seems to indicate that

ing
only
three
games,
whitewashed East Leyden

Adults—$2.00
ee

victory.
“The

q

Jeff Mandel

under

;
High

Teams

4
‘

4

i

East

;
Deerfield

AUDITORIUM

| (Children

ee

*
Tennis

Ie

PARISH

SUNDAY,
MAY
3:00-7:00
P.M

.

oe

Payments

OE

CONCEPTION

P
HB

setting:

TCC

ORF

SMORGASBORD

Across. from bank over:35. years.”
We

I

OMMITTEE

4

“3

Ame

OF

} VOLUNTEER FUND RAISING |

5-9751

OPEN DAILY
Including Sundays)
8:00 A.M. to 10:00 P.M.
Thursday,

May

18, 1961

Set
6
6
Set
0
0

�Ela-Vernon High School Board |
Studies Advanced Student Plan
Along with the experiments being conducted in the use of
teaching machines, laboratories, and programmed studies, a
great deal of study and some progress has been made, particularly in the east, in programs of advanced study for high school
students. In such programs a high school student may earn
advanced placement in college courses or credits which may be
applied toward a college degree.
4

The Ela-Vernon High school administration,
board
of education,
and faculty are now investigating
the advisability of instituting such
a program at Ela-Vernon.
On Thursday, April 27, Dr. Her-

man

Muelder

of Knox

college,

ad-

dressed
faculty
on the advanced
placement program. A member of
the advanced placement committee
of the College Entrance Examination board, Dr. Muelder outlined
the program as it exists today.
To stimulate greater articulation
between colleges and high schools,
a eommittee
composed
of repre-

sentatives

of a number

of colleges

and high schools met about seven
or eight years ago with these objeetives in mind: 1.) to enlarge the
appreciation
of teaching
done
in
good high schools, 2.) to satisfy the

growing

Robert

Beighley

Robert
E.
Beighley
has
been
named
to the
sales
promotion
staff at General Binding Corpora-

tion,

Northbrook,

manufacturer

of

office binding
equipment,
it has
been announced
by W. L. Fritz,
the company’s
advertising
manager.
Beighley
was
formerly
managing editor of Industrial Research
magazine, Chicago, and has. nearly
10 years experience in writing and
editing for the American
Society
of Safety Engineers and the National Safety council. A graduate
of
Northwestern
university,
he
holds a masters degree in journalism,
In the new
post
he will also
edit The General, General Binding
Corporation’s employee house organ, according to Fritz.
Beighley
lives at 2785 Daquiri
Dr.

R. Richard Reticker
Appointed Brokerage
Manager In Chicago
R. Richard Reticker, has been appointed brokerage manager of the
La Salle Street, Chicago,
branch
office of Occidental Life Insurance
Company of California, it was announced
by
J.
Edward
Carnal,
branch manager.
Reticker, who has been in life
insurance in the Chicago area for
nine years with New
York
Life,
Manufacturers Life, Berkshire Life,
and Occidental, has been assistant
manager of the Occidental office
for the past year.
Born and educated
in Chicago,
he is a graduate
of Loyola University and a veteran of two years’
service in the Army. He is a member of the Chicago Association of
Life Underwriters.
Reticker and his wife reside at
261 Pine St. with their seven children.

Robert Hollmann

Pledges Fraternity
Robert
Hollmann,
son
of
Mr
and
Mrs.
Walter
Hollmann,
920
Knollwood
Rd.,
has pledged
Phi
Delta Theta fraternity at Stanford
university, Stanford, Calif.
Bob
is also a member
of the

freshman
and

first

baseball

team
18, 1961

for the

necessity

of accelerating advanced programs,
and 3.) to do something
for the
gifted student.
They
planned
the
advanced
placement program which is now
recognized
by about 600 colleges
who grant and/or advanced placement
to students who
have
successfully
completed
an
advanced
course.
If an advanced placement program is to be instituted in a high
school, it must be presumed that
the school offers a course comparable to a college course, that student preparation previous to this
course is adequate, that the course
is organized to make it like a college course, and that the materials
essential to a college level course
are available. The college entrance

examination board offers

Shown above at a recent meeting are members of the building committee of the First
Presbyterian church of Deerfie Id. From left, the com mittee members are: Paul Martin, chairman; Rev. Bernard F. Didier, pastor; James Tibbetts, Paul Brown, Robert York and Richard
Wolfe. Absent from the picture are Michael Palmer and Richard H. Thompson, Jr.

Half Day School
Anticipates 500

Students In Fall
A total of 492 students are expected in school in the fall by the
board of education of district 103.
which
serves
Lincolnshire,
Half

Day

and

Prairie

J. Howard

to superintendent

District

103,

according

View,
the

Half

Quick.

Day

dis-

trict, services school children from
kindergarten through grade eight.

47

a summer

Since

A copy

of the

essay

exam

courses

in colleges.

which
The

confirmation

of

Consumer Econ

architect
for the
new
sanctuary
several
weeks
ago,
the
building

committee

At Ela-Vernon
A new course
nomics has been

terian

in consumer
added to the

ecocur-

riculum of the business education
department
of
the
Ela-Vernon
High
school.
A
one _ semester
course,
consumer
economics
will
be
open
to juniors.
and
seniors

who

have

not

taken

Franklin
church

general

busi-

of

the

chureh

of

Olson,
disdesigner,
as

First

Presby-

Deerfield

has

proceeded
rapidly
with
Olson’s
assistance in the preparation of
preliminary
plans
for the
new
building.
It is the hope of the building
committee,

according

to

chairman

Paul Martin, that the plans will
be ready to submit to the congregation

for

approval

Construction

early

should

in

start

June.

in

the

fall, he said, if the program
is
approved.
New pledges are coming in continually, bringing the total amount
pledged in the building fund canvass to $314,362.

Models

In Show

Barbara Jean Bradbury, daughter
of Mr.
and
Mrs,
Edwin
J.

Rd.,

Ban-

nockburn,
was
one
of the
els
in
the
fashion
show,

Bradbury,

1565

modpre-

sented
by the
Convent of the
Barat

college,

Robin

auxiliary of
Sacred Heart
Lake

Forest,

the
and
May

12:
principles a citizen encounters
today’s business society.

in

for the

student is also forwarded
to the
college to be read by the the college professors.
Dr. Muelder stated that the advantages
of the program
include
the recognition of different levels
of preparation,
the revelation of
character attributes of students who
are enrolled in the program, and
the increasing respect for teaching
in the high schools.
It also reduces the number of in-

troductory

final

Add baie 4

ness.
The
objectives
of
the
course
are to provide the terminal student with a basic analysis of the
business: world and guides to live
efficiently within our business society, to provide the business education major with a comprehensive analysis of the business world

Eligible

its

Benjamin
tinguished

A total of 47 names of students
program
to prepare
teachers
for
eligible for kindergarten in Sepsuch a course.
tember have been tabulated by the
Advanced
placement
programs
are
available
in
the
following board of education. The board has
asked
that
families
which
have
areas: American history, European
history, English literature and com- moved
into the area, who have
position, foreign languages, biology, children of kindergarten age, conin which he will be earning a
physics,
chemistry,
and
mathe- tact the school so that their name
living, and to provide the collegematics.
can be placed
on the invitation
bound student with the basic prinThe C.E.E. board provides an ex- list
for
kindergarten
round-up,
ciples of our business society to
amination program for the students May 31, at the school.
provide a more liberal education.
enrolled in such courses. The exam
Here is the expected breakdown
The textbook will be ‘“‘Consumer
committee is composed of special- of grades one through eight:
Economic
Problems”
by
Wilson
ists from
the educational
testing
Grade one will have an estimaand Eyster. In the second semester
service, the C.E.E. board representted
total. of 71
students.
There
the department
will offer a one
atives, and classroom teachers from
will
be
three
classes
for
first semester course
in business
law
selected colleges and high schools,
‘graders.
to
provide
the
student
with
a
They hold a series of meetings to
|
Grade two will have two classes. | fundamental
background
of legal
formulate an objective and an esare 62 students
who
will
say test in the course areas. The There
essay portion of the examination is enter in the fall, according to tabulations.
weighted most heavily.
In grade three, two classes have
A committee
of readers,
composed primarily of classroom teach- been established for the estimated
61 students that the district exers from colleges and high schools,
pects to enroll.
first sets up standards for the exam
Grade four, with 48 expected
and then reads the papers. The stuwill
have
two
classes;
dent is awarded high honors, hon- students,
ors, satisfactory, pass or fail on his and grade five will have two rooms
for the expected 51 students.
paper. At the end of the summer
Grade six, which expects 46 stuinformation on the exam results is
sent to the college in which the dents, will have two rooms as will
student has enrolled. Each college grades seven and eight which exdetermines its own policy for grant- pect 54 and 52 students respective- |
ing credit or advanced placement.
ly.

taught

baseman.

Thursday, May

as pitcher

concern

must

high

be

school

benefits by offering a higher level
vile
of training, giving its teachers th
opportunity to teach a college level
course, and demonstrating its ability to provide stimulating courses. |

After Dr. Muelder’s

address,

de- |

partment heads, administrative
sonnel, and members
of the

perEla- |

Vernon

met)

board

of

education

with Dr. Muelder to discuss more |
detailed
aspects
of the program. |
Further investigation into this prozram will continue.

Library volunteers of the West Deerfield Township Library were honored May 4 at a luncheon at the Deerpath
Inn. Seated from left are Mrs. Carl Jaeger and Mrs. Elmer
Pope,

volunteers;

Mrs.

George

Haney,

librarian; Mrs.

Vaughn

Spriggs of the library board; and volunteer Mrs. Arno Wehle.
Missing from the picture were volunteers Mrs. O. L. Henninger,
Wilson,

Mrs. Carl Martin and Mrs. Ronald Bean. Mrs. Percy
a board member and a volunteer, was also absent.
Page

H

47—D

39

—

�DEERFIELD

&amp;

RIDGE

ROADS

ID

2-9712

Park

and

Little Giants tennis team in Cham-

Steve

paign this weekend. Next Tuesday,
the
netmen
take
on
Oak
Park
there.

for a match.

Saturday,

May

18

On
and

Friday
19,

Simons will compete in state championships.,

Glenbrook

freshman

qualified

they

Box

invitational.

Early
this
week
the _ baseball
team was in regional play. If they

Score

HIGHLAND

PARK

Player
Abrams,

B

will be in sectional

cocoon

Tubs.
SS
Daydif, 3b
Hall, c
Mitchell,
Kirkland,

wes

play next week,
On Monday the golf team will
host Morton
as both the varsity
and Frosh-soph compete.
Steve Simons will represent the

eight men in seven events, has the
best chance to cop some laurels
at Champaign
Friday and Saturday. On Monday, the frosh track
team will participate in the annual

Errors were costly to both Parker nines as in the yearling tilt the
Baby Giants made
10 errors and
the sophs
had
6 miscues.
Both
Waukegan
teams played errorless
ball.

emnmooemn

“til 6

Sunday
‘til Noon

qualified

ia
Sl

y

which

7 to 1.

eooooccoco™

Monday to Friday
“til 8:30 P.M.
Saturday

team,

Park

High
School
both
lost games
to
Waukegan
last Saturday, May 13,
at Waukegan,
as the sophs were
defeated 12 to 0 and the frosh fell

ooony,

WEEK

track

sophomore

Highland

cococcocony

A

The

and

at

cocoon

7
DAYS

All spring sports teams at Highland Park High School will be in
state competition this week.

teams

vn]

FOR YOUR
CONVENIENCE
WE ARE NOW
OPEN

Evanston’s defending state tennis
champions
visited
Highland
Park
Tuesday
and
defeated
the
varsity
netmen
4-1.
The
Parker
frosh-soph
turned
in a _ sterling
performance,
handing
Coach
Anderson
his
first
defeat
in four
years. The score read 3-2.
The varsity had only one winner on Tuesday. Ken Cousens won
his match, the second singles,
Jeff Gluck took his match for
the sophomores,
and the doubles
teams of Dan Wagner and Trevor
Weiss, and James Levin and Art
Alschuler
won
their matches
to
wrap up the victory. This put the
sophs
in a first place
tie with
Evanston.
On
Monday,
May
15,
Morton
brought its Mustangs to Highland

freshman

|

ONE-STOP
SHOPPING

The

baseball

ms

Have Busy Week

Frosh-Sophs Drop
Pair To Waukegan

noconmyy

GARRITY'S

Spring Sports Are
Now In State
Competitions

|

mre

HP Tennis Teams

(Rene

oO

a

Because he wanted the finest, Carl Nauta chose year ‘round
Gas air conditioning for his new office building at 300 Belvidere, Waukegan. Year ‘round Gas air conditioning means
perfect indoor climate ... winter or summer. And Gas air
conditioning equipment is designed to last. No need to replace after a few years. No major moving parts to wear out.
That's why smart business owners — and homeowners, too
— are “going Gas” for year ‘round air conditioning needs.
But be sure to get your name on the Gas heat waiting list.
Applications are now being accepted for residential, commercial, and industrial heating.

SRR

Kriesel;

000
000

“42
pitcher:

00— 0
54—12

SERRE

WE
LEASE

RDS
THUNDERBIRDS
FALCON

HOLMES
MOTOR

CO.

1909 ST. JOHNS
Highiond Park, (Il.
ID 2~8640

Contral
UTinnsre
éx Laundry

SINCE 1926
FOR

FURTHER

INFORMATION,

CONTACT:

1 Day Laundry Service

Company
“The Friendly People’’

Call For and Deliver

ID 2-0305
1873 St. Johns Ave.
Highland Park

Page

H

48—D

46

a

TT
=) st
al consoqnoes®
ol

26 = 11
losing

Thursday,

May

18,

1961

MeL

p

TOTALS
Winning pitcher:
Panther.
Highland Park
Waukegan

re ay
RNOSCONHWN

wl

WNOWWWNAWW

Dethorwg,

Gilroy,
Kriesel,

HOF Om
POONNE

AB

ceogpoecooocom

-

coccoccceoy

3
1

TOTALS

ss

el

al

eo

E

smononocomon

Beslow,
1b ....
Zahnile, cf, lf
Levin, c
Robertson, 2b
Panther, ss, p
Rubin, ss, lf
Cohen,
Russell,
p
Dubach, rf

Liskus,

if
pitcher

losing

=

Grampo;

ol

TOTALS
Winning pitcher:
Molner..
Highland Park
Waukegan

�Player
Bernstein, 3b
Maggio, 2b
Davidor,
1b
meee

league—(Boys

12 years)

e. Pony league—(Boys
14 years)

£. Prep league—(Boys

13

and

Sh
Lahti,

15 thru

p

years)

For the first time this year, the
Highwood Pee Wee league will be
divided into a major and minor
division. With a heavy influx of
new seven year olds expected to
register, they will be assigned to
the Minor Pee Wee loop. Eight
year olds, plus seven year olds with
some experience, will be assigned
to

ss

Heckstrom,

the

major

Major

Pee

Pee

Wee

Wee

circuit.

players

are

onmmnonnoool
ul

league—(Boys

coonoHoncoom

TOTALS

TOTALS

29

Winning pitcher:
er: McLaughlin.
Runs Batted in:

Heckstrom;
Bodle,

losing

Henderson,

al

Major

and

18

olds

10 years)

Little

11

year

boys)

Minor

9 and
d,

7%

old

wl

Little

year

HK Urwy

c,

8

OH

(Experienced

Plus

league—

SSSCORN

Major

* FAMILY AND RECREATION
¢ ROOM ADDITIONS

1
1
1

Seen re

28:

0
0

4.4.2

pitchPap-

pas (2)

q

o’clock

initial

to

report to Highwood’s
on Saturday
at one
register

practice

and

hold

their

session.

This summer

Younger seven year olds, playing for the first time this season,
should report to the park Saturday
at 3 p.m.
Boys
should
bring
a

cool your whole

glove with them,
Any youngster unable to register

house with—

YAS
2.5 BA eaeoe
We,
ere:
ae,
Winning pitcher: Taylor; losing pitcher:
Panther.
Runs Batted in: Smrtnik (3), Adler.
Double Plays: Bay to Smrtnik to Jelinek,
Panther and LaBuda.
Three Base Hits: Crane, Smrtnik.
Highland
Park
000 000 01— 1
Waukegan

Highland Park
Lane Tech

urged
to
ball park

Saturday

may

Saturday

do

so the

afternoon

at

following

the

same

H
RE
2
83.0
6.0
-8
QO:
Gt
04:8
ig
0:
0°
0
Seca
| Sea |
Loa
Saas) Saas I
Lt aie | ares
OS
ee

eer
ose
McLaughlin, 2b
PIORGCTEOH
6h

JUST OFF THE PRESS!
New, colorful literature describing

1961 Great Lakes and
St. Lawrence Seaway
Cruises
*

Get your free copy today from your
LOCAL TRAVEL AGENT
or write

GEORGIAN

BAY

LINE

Total Receipts
DISBURSEMENTS
Deerfield-Bannockburn Fire Department, Fire Services .......
State of Illinois, Truck License Fees
Fire
Association
Dues
Board of Supervisors, Lake County, Radio Rental Contract
Illinois Municipal League, collection fees
Printing, Stationery, Postage, etc.
Illinois Bell Telephone Co., Telephone services
Telephone
Secretarial Service
Escrow
Equipment
Fund
Conferences &amp; Training Programs for Firemen
Building
Maintenance
Expense
Fuel Oil, heating building
Maintenance of Trucks
.
Equipment Purchased, repairs &amp; replacements
Building
supplies
Premiums on Insurance Coverages
Medical
Services,
Firemen
Attorney’s
Services
Secretary’s Services
Services of Fire Chiefs
Services of Fire Marshal (2/13/61 to 4/30/61)
$28,781.57
Total
Disbursements:
2
We, the undersigned, duly elected and qualified Trustees of the Deerfield
th
burn Fire Protection District of West Deerfield Township, do hereby certify thethatDeer. —
of
disbursements
and
receipts
the
foregoing is a true and correct record of
on ©
field-Bannockburn Fire Protection District of West Deerfield Township, as shown
;
the books and records of said District.
Presid
N. KELLEY,
HUBERT
:
GEORGE
W. WARD
JOHN W. CARLSON
j
State of Illinois)
) SS
County of Lake)
and
The undersigned, John Carlson, being first duly sworn on oath deposes
of
that he is the Secretary of the Deerfield-Bannockburn Fire Protection District that
District;
said
of
Deerfield Township and keeper of the books and records
|
with
together
subscribed,
him
by
disbursements
and
foregoing record of receipts
other two Trustees, is true and correct.
SO}
JOHN W. CAR
(SEAL)
Subscribed

AN

118 W. Monroe St.
Chicago 3, fil.
RAndolph 6-2960

BARK

You may be surprised at how
much the price of top-quality
central air conditioning has
come down .. . thanks to the
big volume of Mueller Climatrol units in Chicagoland.
The public acceptance of
Mueller Climatrol is based on
the quality built into every unit
—and the integrity of Authorized Dealers, like ourselves.
Look around and you'll see
the 102-year-old Mueller name
on air conditioners in luxury
mansions, in modest bungalows,
in huge new suburban developments. Only a quality product

rates such recognition, Get our

estimate before ‘you decide!

RE) radon

e FOR GARDEN

may

Available

WALKS

for

Immediate Delivery

SMITH

CO.

5844 N. Western Ave., Chicago
Phone: LO 1-8066

Me

‘Thursday,
May 18, 1961
ee!

Ba

before

me

this

11th day
AGNES

d
Notary ra
5/18/61—D13

of May, 1961.
P. TENNERMANN,

BY &gt;
AND
ORDINANCE TERMED THE ANNUAL APPROPRIATION BILL INSUCH
SUM
WHICH THE CORPORATE AUTHORITIES DO APPROPRIATE TO
DEFRA
NECESSARY
DEEMED
BE
MAY
WHICH
OR SUMS OF MONEY
DEERFIELD
ALL NECESSARY EXPENSES AND LIABILITIES OF OFTHE WEST
DEERFIEL)
DISTRICT
PROTECTION
FIRE
BANNOCKBURN
OF
FIRST DAY
TOWNSHIP, FOR THE FISCAL YEAR BEGINNING THE DAY
OF APRIL, |
THIRTIETH
THE
ON
MAY, A.D. 1961, AND ENDING
WHICE
A.D. 1962, AND SPECIFYING THE OBJECTS AND PURPOSES FOR

be

authorized

by law,

be

and

the

same

are

hereby

THE

AMOU!

&lt;s
O 4
OF
wee
thereof

TRUSTEES
DISTRICT

appropriated

much

for

the

oo

Lake Forest Materials Co.
Phone

al for your copy.

A.

to

1080

N. Western

objects

F—SALARY
FUND
1—For salaries of fire chief, firemen and miscellaneous agents, etc.....
2—For salaries of trustees
a
G—INSURANCE FUND
For insurance premiums
H—CONTINGENT FUND
and general unforeseen expenses, not
For contingent, miscellaneous
included in any item above
be
%
I—Installation, maintenance, rental and operation of a fire alarm system

TA 46

V.

sworn

for —
liabilities, and
and purposes herein specified to defray all necessary expenses and
District of
all corporate purposes of the Deerfield and Bannockburn. Fire Protection
first
the
beginning
year
fiscal
West Deerfield Township, Lake County, Illinois, for the
:
day of May, 1961 and ending on the thirtieth day of April, 1962.
.
A—ADMINISTRATION EXPENSE FUND
as
and
postage
printing,
supplies,
office
records,
For stationery, books,
WOES
as
etc. ....
office expense,
miscellaneous
a
B—LEGAL EXPENSE FUND
For miscellaneous legal services
C—FIRE PROTECTION FUND
1—For the purchase of fire fighting equipment
2—For rental of fire fighting equipment
OF NEW FIRE STATION
AND COMPLETION
D—FOR CONSTRUCTION
FUND
E—FIRE EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE
of fine fighting equipoperation
and
1—For expense of maintenance

e PLAY YARDS
Now

and

WITH
TOGETHER
MADE,
WERE
APPROPRIATIONS
SUCH
APPROPRIATED FOR EACH OBJECT OR PURPOSE.
OF
BOARD
AND
PRESIDENT
BY THE
BE IT ORDAINED
PROTECTION
FIRE
BANNOCKBURN
AND
DEERFIELD
THE
ILLINOIS:
TOWNSHIP, LAKE COUNTY,
WEST DEERFIELD
1. That the following sum or sums of money, or so
SECTION

QUIET

Mueller Climatrol
AIR CONDITIONING

ID 2-6800

Park

a
DISTRICT
PROTECTION
a
fers
o
es
WEST DEERFIELD TOWNSHIP
a
Annual Statement
Fire |
Deerfield-Bannockburn
the
of
Trustees
undersigned
the
Statute,
to
Pursuant
|
do
Illinois,
of
Lake County, State
District of West Deerfield Township,
Protection
said District
hereby submit the following statement of receipts and disbursements of
ea
for the fiscal year ending the 30th day of April, 1961.
RECEIPTS
Balance on hand May 1,
County Collector,
Taxes
Illinois Municipal League, Fire Insurance Companies payments
Insurance Premium Rebate

time.

TAN

Highland

DEERFIELD-BANNOCKBURN

0109
1

INC.

BUILDERS

West

Ave.,

Park

1550

¢ KITCHENS
¢ BATHS

ROOMS
¢ GARAGES

PEERLESS HOME

Se
et
atk
88
2
ake
2
OME
0
i.
0 2 O38
O28
eS

Prehrre:
s is
Belgrado,
rf
ThVl6t
PD St
Jorgenson, rf
Wirtanen,
p
Yi 55 oF. 4 A.

cat PEERLESS ‘*

|

b,

©!

Wee

Rogers,
2b
Henderson, ss
McLaukhlin, p
LaBuda, p

al

Pee

be-

other

ginners)

4
ES

WAY Means
and Supervised

The PEERLESS
Architect Designed

E
Moan

o=.0

42°92

On

and

PARK

a

olds

HIGHLAND

AB
H
R
y ee eee
3

Comm

year

(7

Scores

TOUCH!

with the CUSTOM

The
Highland Park Recreation
Department
Little League season
opens Saturday morning with the
initial practice
at Sunset
Woods
diamonds.
Times are as follows:
Minor League, Boys 8, 9, 10, 9:00
to 10:30 a.m., Sunset Park
Major League, Boys 10, 11, 12,
10:30 to noon, Sunset Park
Pony League, Boys
13 and 14,
10:00 to 11:30, Lincoln Park
Boys who are hesitant to sign up
for Pony League because of summer jobs are reminded that Pony
League
games
in the
Inter-City
League will be played on Tuesday
evenings and Sunday afternoons at
4:00.
Players in all leagues may still
register for the baseball program
at the Recreation Center office.

WAUKEGAN

Box

x

afternoon.

Mr. Skrinar also plans
a PONY
league for boys
13 and
14, and
a PREP league for boys 15 thru
18. Boys in these latter age brackets may appear at Highwood’s ball
park
next
Monday,
Tuesday
or
Wednesday evenings for tryouts.
Listed below
is the Highwood
baseball program to be offered for
boys this summer:
a, Minor
Pee
Wee
league—

01

register on Saturday

HENRY

minor or Little major loops.
The latter two leagues will hold
registration after school Thursday
and Friday, May 18 and 19. Highwood’s Pee Wee candidates should

HOME IMPROVEMENT

Practice

Hours For Leagues

CoCOnH

Little

mvp

the

2

for

p renee

register

Ee

may

SS

12

ee

Boys seven and eight years of
age can register for Highwood’s
Pee
Wee
league.
Those
nine to

See

in playing baseball in the city this
summer.

OCC

Highwood’s
recreation director,
Don Skrinar, has sounded the first
call for Highwood boys interested

Announce

The
Little
Giant
varsity
nine,
after
winning
two
big
district
games
with
Evanston
and
New
Trier,
dropped
two
straight
last
week when Lane Tech outslugged
them 9 to 8 on Friday, May 12, and
Waukegan took them 4 to 1 on Saturday, May 13 at the local athletic
field.. Mike McLaughlin and Tom
LaBuda shared the pitching duties
for Highland
Park
while
Willie
Bodle was behind the plate.
Against Waukegan, Mickey Panther pitched excellent baseball for
eight
full innings
allowing
only
four hits including a wind blown,
bases-full triple which broke the
scoreless deadlock in the Bulldog
eighth—none of their four tallies
were earned runs, however. Chuck
Adler was the leading Giant hitter
with 2 for 3 and an RBI.

&gt;
Es

For Highwood

Varsity Nine Drops
Two After Winning
Two Straight

wowwwwu

Smiter Baseball ,
Plans Outlined

CE 4-0888
Lake

Forest

a

appropriation made by this ord
3.
SECTION
passage. approval
4.
SECTION
District.

This ordinance shall be in full force and effect
and publication in accordance with the law.
That this ordinance be published in an official

Passed: May 8, 1961
Approved: May 8, 1961
Published, May 18, 1961
ATTEST:
ROBERT S. RAMSAY
Secretary of the Board of Trustees
Approved as to form May 8, 1961
(SEAL)
FRANCIS J. NOSEK
Attorney

$26,501.50;

HUBERT
President

and

from

newspaper

N. KELLEY
of the Board

its,
com

after

of

sa
:

ef

Truste

$/18/61—D1 i

Page H 49—D 41

�we

ey

ty

GUA
! {

}

“eM

hy

Yast cant beat that National Meat”

ea
a

AN Ws

.

At National we consider no sale of our “Walue-Way"
Meats complete until thé items purchased have
rendered complete satisfaction.

Colorado Corn-Fed

4
24
g

Beef .. . Value-Way

Cut And Trimmed

Refund or replacement, National's courtesy way, if
you are not fully satisfied with your purchase in
our Meat Department.
SE

Colorado

Corn-Fed

CUBE

Beef

STEAKS

|

j

Top quality beef from National...
Lean and taste-tempting with all the
natural juices and flavor of corn fed
beef! Value-Way trimmed to save
you money ...
Buy it today at
National!

...*

NATIONAL'S 100% Pure— Lean

GROUND

BEEF..."
5-Lb,

TOP

TASTE

ALL

Bag

MEAT

SKINLESS WIENERS

I-Lb,
Pkg.

TOP TASTE...

Buy It By The Piece}

MICKELBERRY'S

Old Farm

LIVER

SAUSAGE.

. ”

BOILED HAM... . sx 69°
6-02,
Pkg.

e

SWIFT'S PREMIUM

SLICED BACON
SO FRESH
FISH STICKS.

Lub. 59°
BS

Pkg.

...

10-02,
Pkg.

PERCH...

t-Lb,

SO FRESH = FILLETS

OCEAN

COOK
Colorado

27

35°

Pkg.

OUT SPECIALS

Corn-Fed

Beef

Rib Eye Steaks

The "King Of Steaks" —Value-Way Cut &amp; Trimmed

PORTERHOUSE...
RUMP ROAST...

Boneless
— Rolled...

Value-

Way Cut &amp; Trimmed

ip, 91.69

Rotisserie — Rolled... Boneless

SIRLOIN TIP ROAST

.

Folding Aluminum

- $yis

LAWN

| CHAISE LOUNGE |
Folding

CHAIRS
|
$398
Ea

Sturdy and stable... Buy
several at this low, low pricel

a

Aluminum

eal
for t the patio
tle:
es or
backyard relaxing... Avail-

ae

|

a

You Get 39 Stamps With Purchase Too!

You Get 88 Stamps With

$@se

THE fitisnal

of

thie

FOOD
STORE

Flenily

;

Purchase Too!

379:
DEL MONTE DRINK.
19:
.3
DEL MONTE CORN... 4...79:
TOMATO SAUCE.... 3 = 25&lt;|
Yellow Cling
— Halves Or Sliced

DEL MONTE

i- sACHES

No. 2!4
Cans

Pineapple - Grapefruit

02.
Cans

12-02. Whole Kernel Or No. 303 Cream Style

DEL MONTE
— The Light Dessor?

FRUIT

COCKTAIL

3:98:

PEAR

&lt;&gt;.

«=

4

HALVES.

98°

AMERICAN

DeLUXE

SALAD

DRESSING

.%' 39°

Decorator

400.

2.2. 49°

GET A 2-PAIR SET
OF LIFETIME

:

REDEEM

GOLDEN SCISSORS

With The Purchase Of One 3-Piece Set

SAUCE

Colors—Faciai

KLEENEX TISSUE.

CREDEEM THIS VALUABLE COUPON FOR
25 EXTRA S&amp;H STAMPS
ENAMELED

PANS
S&amp;H

with

Inlaid stainless steel blades
Razor sharp lasting edges
* Rustproof radiant golden finish
New shaped bows that make cutting easier

Green

Stamps
THIS

25 EXTRA

VALUABLE

S&amp;H

With: The Purchase

Of One

HIRES ROOT

COUPON

STAMPS
6-Pack

BEER

Come in for your copy TODAY! 132 exciting colorful
packed with famous pies

Ctn,

Limit One Coupon Per Customer—— Coupon Expires May 20un

REDEEM

THIS

VALUABLE

COUPON

Purchase Of One 1722-02,

One Coupon

REDEEM

Per Customer — Coupon

THIS

YALUABLE

Expires May 20th

COUPON

REDEEM

GARDEN
Limit

=\

ho

Page

One

BOOK

Coupon

REDEEM

Per

With

Only $298
$15.00

In Cash

Register

TOP

Reduce”

THIS

50 EXTRA

YALUABLE

S&amp;H

COUPON

Per

THIS

With The

Loaves

—

Pack

FOR

FIRM—LARGE

BROCCOLI
25¢
Head

2

SIZE—-HEAD

LETTUCE
for

29c

We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities... Prices Effective Thru May 20th. ., la Sheen
Lansing, S, Holland, Calumet City And Chicago Heights

Limit One Coupon

CALIFORNIA

&gt;
‘)

FOR

IZB

VARIETY

May

20th

FOR

Instant Chocolate

MILK
Expires

May

COUPON

20th

FOR

STAMPS
BLUE

RIBBON

Asst.

Colors

TISSUE

Per Customer—- Coupon

Expires May 20th

STRAWBERRIES
3

LOPS

$1.00
Redeem

fet Winois Suburban Stores Exeep?

100

*

636 DEERFIELD ROAD
DEERFIELD, ILLINOIS

“ty

STAMPS
Jar

YALUABLE

BATHROOM

4G

ROLLS
Expires

MALTED

Purchase Of One 4-Roil

ANY

COUPON

S&amp;H

Per Customer — Coupon

THIS

i

LPOUC

OR
Coupon

VALUABLE

HORLICK'S

With

Pkgs.

BREAD
Customer

ctn.

May 20th

STAMPS
Or

Purchase Of One 15-oz.

Limit One Coupon

24th

FRESH

Expires

COUPON

S&amp;H
Two

25 EXTRA S&amp;H

GARDEN BOOK ENCYCLOPEDIA (&amp;

H 50—D42

Coupom

REDEEM

STAMPS

With The Purchase Of SECTION 8

YALUABLE
Of

TASTE
One

REDEEM

FOR

May

THIS

Purchase

25 EXTRA

7

Expires

The

Limit

Tapes

ENCYCLOPEDIA

Customer
— Coupoa

Per Customer — Coupon

25 EXTRA
With

FOR

STAMPS

HL

50 EXTRA S&amp;H STAMPS
With The Purchase Of SECTION

COUPON

S&amp;H

purchase of one -gal.
TOP TREAT ICE CREAM

Limit One Coupon

FRESH TOMATOE

Frozen Strawberry

VALUABLE

construction

6-Inch Scissors
7-Inch Shears
Packed In Gift Box

pages
eons

Yost cant bd

FOR

DRESSEL'S SHORTCAKE
Limit

bearing

gifts. New compact book form for
easy reference. Get your free copy today!

25 EXTRA S&amp;H STAMPS
With The

Spring

IDEABOOK

FOR

THIS

50 EXTRA

Limit One Coupon Per Customer
—— Coupon Expires May 20th

REDEEM

BUTTER

8-02.
Cans

No,
303
Cans

SSE

FRESH

“&lt;

DEL MONTE

No,
2'/2
Cans

DEL MONTE

HILLSIDE

BA
a

This

Va

Extra

S&amp;H

Stamps

With A $10.00 or More Purchase
Excl. purchase of beer, wine, liquor
&amp; cigarettes. Limit-1 cpn. per cust.
expires May 20.

Thursday,

May

18, 1961

�.

IMPERIAL
MASTERCRAFT
24 hour

swaging

DINGHY

service

SHOP

Daily

9-9;

Sun.

3 Lines

50c per additional line:

$1.75

.

Permitted)

(Up to 10 lines)
25c Service Charge for blind ads

Ads containing 11 lines or more are charged at the inch rate. Contract
rates for 4 or more consecutive
insertions available on request.
1 inch
Minimum.

Your

Wi

Ad

| 7.

ill

Yat

WIGHLAND PARK KaWs

Appear

WVorrn

gu

HOHWOOD NEWS

THE LAKE FORBSTER

In

All

CAKE BLUFF RiVIEW

Uuore

AL

DEORriMD REVIEW

Tuesday,
DEADLiNE

FOR

BUILDING

ADS

—

3

Insures

Ad —

Work

e

Free

Estimates

SILVER

CEdar 4-2300

610

LAUREL

PHONE

DE

&amp;

ALTERATIONS
TINA

YOUR
for

* TWEEN

ID 2-7118

~

HIGHLAND

Largest

PARK

11-14

ALTERATIONS?
Come and see Eda at our New Drive In.
Zengeler
Cleaners,
2020
First St., Highland Park.
ALTERATIONS, expertly, in my home. For
appointment, Maria Ori, ID 2-4553. 2528
Green Bay Road, Highland Park.
DRESSMAKING
and alterations done in
my home. For appointment call ID 2-2206.

AUTO

TRAILS

As
Bank

Body and Fender Repair
All Makes - All Models
Complete Painting,
Undercoating and Touch Ups

JACK

FRECH

i87 E. Park Ave.
AUTO

as 10%

financing

AUTHORIZED

1961

down
up

Wide selection
prices.
CH

ID 2-5845
LOANS

LOW COST AUTO LOANS
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF LAKE FOREST
LAKE FOREST CE 4-5100
BOATS
RENT a Houseboat-Cruiser or Pontoon boat
for your vacation. For information or brochure write Weimar Houseboat Rentals,
Inc. 1521 Green Bay, Highland Park or
phone ID 2-8029.
16 FOOT Fleetwind Arrow, class boat of
North Shore Yacht Club, stainless steel
centerboard,
many
extras.
Reasonable.
Call ID 2-5857 or *SHeldrake 3-4820.
FOR sale: FOLBOT 17 ft. aluminum mast
and spars, sloop
sails, condition
as
new, $225. CE 4-51

Thursday, May 18, 1961

of

used

to 36 mos.

DEALERS

boats

at

SKOKIE HIGHWAY &amp; CLAVEY RD.
HIGHLAND PARK
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
ALL 1961 MODELS OF
CRUISERS INC.
LARSON
DORSETT
LONE STAR
GATOR &amp; MICHIGAN TRAILERS
ALCOURT SAILFISH &amp; SUNFISH

BANK FINANCING AVAILABLE
JOHNSON SEAHORSE
SALES AND SERVICE
ID 3-0880
THURS.
&amp; FRI»
UNDAYS
10 TO 4

CONTRACTORS

WOOD

"TIL

&amp;

j30F

All

competitive

ID

2-3383

AARNOS &amp; SORENSEN. Homes our Specialty. Remodeling. Finishing. ONtario 26812.
HOME
remodeling, additions, repairs and
design and construction of modern homes.
Free estimates. WI 5-1511.
FOR building that new home, addition or
yee
be
it large
or small,
call
V &amp; F Construction Co. Telephone ID
2sat7 or WI 5-2980.
BUILDING
and
jacabdatinas
Recreation
rooms and cabinets, floor and wall tile,
window awnings, door hoods and carports.
Free estimates. Telephone TRinity 2-7313.

HERB

BLOMQUIST

carpenter, quality cus-

tom homes, additions, porch enclosures,
rec rooms, custom cabinets; also remodeling and repairs. Telephone WI 5-2830.

3

O’DAY DAY SAILOR, used 1 month, dacron sails, nylon spinnaker (never used),
custom
trailer,
3 HP
Johnson extended
shaft motor, other equipment, i
value at $1900, or best offer. ID 2-100.
CUSTOM built 14 foot runabout with RIE
er, 18 hp Johnson motor and accessories.
Call WI 5-3856.

CHRISTO-CRAFT
REMODELING
CO.
WI 5-3273
ID 2-2319
Remodeling and home maintenance is our
business. Porch enclosures, basement paneled room additions, kitchen cabinets, or
just that one door that doesn’t close right.
All work guaranteed.
CONCRETE
and carpentry, residential tile
and sewer work, free estimate. Steve E.
Sabol, ID 2-7604.
CEMENT

WORK

EXPERT on cement patios, sidewalks, steps,
garage floors, etc. L. Gulbrandsen. Phone

WI

5-4458.

and

The

No

1640

MOVING &amp; HAULING _

We haul anything, anywhere.
call, we haul. Phone VE 5-3815
VE

}

5-3824.

LIGHT

general

hauling.

We

also

types of household sppliances.
6098 or ID 2-4917.

C

THE VILLAGE DECORATORS:
INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIO!
FULLY INSURED
REASONABLE
PRICES
5
QUALITY
WORKMANSHIP
MATERIAL
*LOCAL REFERENCES
Chuck Yingling
Jim:
BA 3-0954
WHY
paint? Perfect
1 day wall
service,
ceilings,
walls,
woodwor

rooms

$95;

5 rooms

$45;

Beenie.

pine 1-4636.
PAINTING and decorating; 25 years |
North Shore; outside a specialty.
EXTERIOR and interior painti ng. ae
orating. Hubert Johnson. Cali
PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING.
terior and exterior painting. For quali
workmanship
by
experienced,
abl

men call W. C. Varney, WI 5-0654.
PAINTING
and decorating,
interior
exterior, natural or bleached wood

expert

mates.

Decorating,

painting

Call

TRinity

interior

and

2-7332.

C.

and

paper_he

PIANO

LOTHER

5-5606

PLANTS

idcanies

SE

TUNING

PIANOS expertly tuned,
of satisfaction or no
phone ID 3-0608.

WI

:

fin

ishing;
quality
workmanship.
For es
mating, a
Eric Schneider, Libertyvil
“EM 2-85
PAINTING
and paper hanging, reas
prices; f
gry
Telephone
GALLOS, CE 4-015
PAINTING NS “DECGORAT
N
Thorough preparation
Clean, careful, workmen
‘
Best materials, applied properly
Sensible prices
i”
BLOOM mis
co.

ior,

Estimates

R. Dawson

Soils

Highland —

prompt
free estimates;
reasonable —
LE 717-0737 or PE 6-0461.
:
HOUSE painting and decorating.F

¢ SODDING

Top

Road

FURNITURE
Refinished,
Repaired.
tiques Restored. Merit Furniture §
TRinity 2-7322.
{

e LEVELING

Free

SERVICES

charge for estimates
Call ID 2-3550

Deerfield

BJORNSON

4-3213

¢ GRADING

CONTRACTORS

5-4145

Very Best
Quickest

NEwton

prices

Call ID 2-8

Free estimates. Phone any time. CE

Top Soil—Humus

Types

:

located

lawn

PAINTING &amp; DECORATING

LANDSCAPING

and
WI

4-3826.

NEWSPAPERS

REMODELING
BUILDING

$1.75. NEwton

25c per CWT brought to our door.
Highest prices paid for all types of junk
brought to our door, such as rags, iron,
metals, etc. Or call ID 3-1466 for truck
pick-up.
Hours
daily
including
Saturday,
8:30 to 5:30 p.m. Sun. 11-2.
HIGHLAND
PARK WASTE
MATERIAL
1466 Berkeley Rd.

The

roto-tilling.

for

General Hauling

JUNK

For

i

is now

Road

WASHER DRYER
REPAIRING

MAINTENANCE

PIANO
INSTRUCTION
Hank
Winston,
staff pianist
at WBBMCBS. Adults mornings and evenings, children
after school. Call WI 5-0244 after 7:30 p.m.
NORTH
SHORE MUSIC STUDIOS
(formerly Garino’s)
North
Shore’s
finest.
Inquire
about
our
liberal trial plan. Instrument furnished.
GUITAR-ACCORDION
ID 2-0015
If no answer, ID 2-1498
VIOLIN-PIANO INSTRUCTION
Tutoring in Music Theory
Shirley Harris, B. Mus.
Phone ID 2-1939

FENCING

Free - estimates,

BOAT HOUSE

i

M TWEEN CAMP

CARPENTERS,

attractive

4-1310
2927 Belvidere
(Rte. 120) just east of Green
Bay Rd., Waukegan, Ill.
Open Mon.,
Thurs., Fri.: 9-9
. Tues.,
Wed., Sat.: 9-6
Sunday: 12 noon to 5 p.m.

OPEN

3-4919

OUTPOST DAY CAMP
:
Open House June 3, Visit the grounds, ride
Little Fire Engines, experience blast off at
Little Cape Canaveral, see Little Nurse Corp,
Tents and the Indian Village. Program for
boys and girls 5 to 12 will be on display.
For Deerfield and Highland Park brochure
on request CR
2-4422.
APACHE
DAY
CAMP
Co-ed, ages 4% tolage Lag och ge = Beautiful camp site with
deluxe pool.
lessons, sports, crafts, dramatics. Brow
for
brochure: ORchard '5-2935.

Mercury Outboard Motors
Grady White Boats
Dorsett Boats
Stamcratt: Bows
oe
cs Balko Trailers

Auto

FOR

low

rate

H

and

ss

Woody’s

Station,

Bay

MISC.

INSTRUCTION

*

Dinner served at fine restaurant. Private camp grounds and pool. All sports,
canoeing, riding, special trips, dancing,
bowling.
Max Neiberg
DAvis 8-9037

SERVICE

WM. RUEHL &amp; CO.
GENERAL BODY SHOP
NOW OPEN

ASK

selection

size kitchen,

BOYS AND GIRLS 11-14 YRS.
5 days or Mon., Wed., and Fri.

boats and motors
to choose from

REPAIR

SAILS

Give Your Tween A Wonderful Summer
Experience While Living In The City

CIRCLE

Service

Green

of

A &amp; A REPAIR SERVICE

$20 per ton;
ID 3-1622.

FURNACE

Highland

formerly

1749

WOOD

Have any of your floors professionally cleaned, waxed, and polished;
latest equipment. Trial offer; any

A New Concept
In Tween-Age Recreation

of Waukegan

ABBOU

&amp;

it to

LAUNDRY _

Place

Park

service

ELECTRIC

try

LAWNMOWERS
WOODY,

HOUSEWIVES

6-0788

&amp; GIRLS

Elm

Park

Maintenance

CHICAGO

SET

anes

$25 SPECIAL, furnaces and flews cleaned;
or gutters cleaned and rust proofed; or
chimneys tuck pointed and repaired. Floors
washed and waxed, $10. Call AL 1-4636

Grounds

NORTH

BOYS

BELVIDERE
BOAT WORKS

AVE.

DRESSMAKING

GUTTERS

desired,

SAM WOO
590

REPAIRS

FIREPLACE

CAMPS

BOATS

NEEDLE

CLAUSING

services

All types of electrical work,
post lights,
wall outlets, new circuits, repairs. Reasonable prices. Telephone ID 2-627.
any

HOME

It!

ee

FAST, FAST SERVICE
if special

2-63

SEASONED
fireplace wood,
tailgate delivery. Telephone

IR 8-8150

THE

pes
Diewood

SHIRTS

CLOWN-MAGICIANS, Bands, Pianists, Vocalists, anything!
Call hdo Productions,
ID 2-1240. Your entertainment specialists,

for Building

Lawn

LAUNDRY

NEEDS

ELECTRICAL

&amp; MAINTENANCE

Windows,

&amp; SUPPLIES

ALTERATIONS

Roger ba

Rd.

scaping
jobs;
or
1 day service
clean-up yard work, gardening, clean
painting, $2.25 an hour. AL 1-4636.

ASSOCIATED
RENT-ALLS
651

“Day

5-

5-3824.

RENT FROM OUR NEW ASSORTMENT
of adult and child sized tables and chairs;
fine china, silver, linens and 100’s of other
items.
WE DELIVER

Guaranteed

And

the publisher and which substantially
impairs the value of the advertisement,
on the advertiser's request, the publisher will ant!
the error by publishing
the corrected
ad in the next regular
issue without
additional
charge.
All
claims for adjustment must be made
within five days of the date of publication in which the error occurs.

BUSINESS SERVICE

—

Contracting

ads)

Windsor 5-4500_

Advertising of any kind is accepted for
publication in this newspaper with the
understanding
that the publisher assumes no responsibility for omission or
for errors ‘and shall be under no obligation or liability of any kind whatsoever,
either to the advertiser or third parties.
However, in the event of an error in
any advertisement, clearly the fault of

All

for ‘Business
Monday).

We'll Charge

(except situation wanted

°«

Bonded

JANITOR

TUESDAY

CANCELLATION
DEADLINE
—
NOON
TUESDAY
(except
Services &amp; Supplies’ ads which may be cancelled until Noon

Phone Your Want

—

iateag

roa b&gt; et
THE YARD BIRD
Perpetual or one shot maintenance
and gardens; mowing, tilling, er
No job too big or small. EM
1932.

ENTERTAINMENT

SUPREME

4:30 P.M.

P.M.

estimates.

PARTY

MAINTENANCE

run during the week
at no extra charge.

Monday,

CONTRACT

IDlewood 2-4500

phone Miriam Booth, HIllcrest 6-3848.
BEFORE you buy an Encyclopedia, you owe
it to your children to see Compton’s Pictured Encyclopedia. ID 3-1910.

“Business Services &amp; Supplies’’ Classifications Will Be Accepted Up To

4:30 P.M.

VE

you want your child to be “better than
average,” give him World Book/Childcraft,

AD DEADLINES

All Classifications Except ‘’Business
Services &amp; Supplies” Will Be Accepted Up To

Phone

Free

the finest in home educational help. Tele-

VERNON REVEW

! U EWSPAPERS

*Fort Sheridan Tower is published every other Friday. Ads
in which the Tower is publishéd will appear in the Tower

WANT

IF

OT. SHERIDAN TOWER

Urour

ete.

BOOKS

*

Seven

walks,
floors,

CATERING

THIS IS IT!
17 foot 1956 off shore cruiser by Cruisers,
Inc. Twin Evinrude 30 h.p. Larks. Electric
starting, remote controls, Big, sea worthy,
ideal fun and family boat. Convertible top,
kapok cushions, life jackets, deluxe extras,
skis, ladder.
TeeNee
trailer. All perfect.
Price $1,450, just 1/3 of today’s cost new.
ID 2-2910.
NEW
14 foot aluminum boat and trailer;
excellent for fishing ‘and general boating;
complete set for only $350. Call ID 3-2161.
18 FOOT Arrow Day Sailer, solid mahogany;
new rudder and mast; 2 sets Murphy Nye
sails. This
big,
beamy
beautiful
sloop
with trailer only $645. CE 4-9439.

AD RATES

work,
walls,

12-4

:

(No Abbreviations

:

All types of cement
driveways, retaining
3815 or VE

591-B Roger Williams (rear)
Highland Park, ID 3-2620

WANT

Patio Time

RACE-LITE

&amp; %
e+e

O'DAY

&amp;

ROSEBUSHES

with the gua
charge. $10.

BULBS

GALORE!

Gravel Drives
Tractor Work | Everblooming Hybrid, Tea, Florabunc
awn Rolling
Tree Removal
GrandiFlora.
Priced from
to
each. Call ID 2-7837 or write Centu
Hl Dirt
Wrec:
P.O.
Box.
14,
Highland
Park,
Ill.
:
nM
BEINLICH
TRUtKING—VE Tio
cover, beautiful shooting —
YARD maintenance, shrub pate. tree re- GROUND
plants for sale. 125 North Ave.,
E
moval and trimming. Call C
opp, ID
wood. Telephone ID 2-3936 after 5
2-3227
all day Sunday.
PRAIRIE ACRES
LANDSCAPING
SERVICE
Black soil, fill dirt, manure,
top dressing
and rolling lawns. Byergreens, ” we oun trees.
ROTO-TILLING; expert garden, lawn
For estimate phone WI 5-081
aration for seeding; brush clearing. —
MODERN Landscaping, Jack Veae Call me
cials for new sub-divisions. Contract for the best in lawn maintenance
and
lawn work. EM 2-0472, CE 4-2846.
svery thing in garden and patio work. ID

ROTO TILLING

WOODY,

NOEL
TEAGUE
LANDSCAPING.
~—
lawns; black soil; evergreens; shrubs and
trees;
lawns
re-seeded
and
fertilized;
stone work; ng We:
tree work; patios.
Telephone ID 2-7619
LANDSCAPING
Garden
plowing
and
harrowing;
grading,
| disking, driveways dug and widened; patios
dug and new lawns. Roads gradéd &amp; maintained. Phone WI 5-5831

formly of Woody’s Highland

Service Station, is now located at
Green Bay Road for lawn mower serv
and roto-tilling. Call ID 2-8029.
:

TELEVISION
NO CHARGE
if we cannot repair your TV set
home. Service call $4.95 only when
to your satisfaction. ID 3- 0608.

NORTH

SUBURBAN

te
rep

TV SERVICE

Page H 51—D Ba

�eine5

. 2 ;, a'

01

pee
sae

Sone

Sy

ie

Muse

Pec

5

FA

PERT TREE REMOVAL

LAKE

COMPLETELY EXPERIENCED
ed

men.

Modern

Power

equipment.
VE

OR

the best in tree surgery
_telephone
S

Howard

5-1195

and roto till-

J.

Lewis,

WI

5-

TREE
EXPERTS.
Cutting, trimremoving,
feeding
and
repairing,
stump removing
and power spray-

ing,

FOREST

NEW LISTING!

VALUES

GRACIOUS BRICK spacious living
room, f/place, dining room, 3 bedrooms, 2 ceramic baths, PLUS cedar panelled family room, f/place,

~ REAL ESTATE
COONS,

OWNER

closets, 1144 C.T. baths, pan. family

A GOOD

Realtor

garage

. ..

many

WITH

111 basement and quality construc-

tion

in this five room

convenient-

located Ranch on wooded lot. Athed garage—under $20,000.
AIR
of

ve

CONDITIONED

the

nicest

Split

levels

we

bedrooms,

t. bath,

had the privilege of offering
sale; Living room with sliding

ors
2d

to yard and
bedrooms, 2

ily

room,

S home

garden, 3 good
baths, finished

attractive

is

centrally

kitchen.
air

condi-”

ed. $29,000.
PICTURE
view

thru

the

from

2

BOOK
the

picture

living

reath
taking.
Separate
om, kitchen, 3 bedrooms;

:

room

windows

is

dining
2 baths

off master
bedroom).
Full
ement.
True
Colonial
Ranch.
odland Park (yes the lot has
!) $27,500.
,
~ HOME OF THE WEEK
brick Ranch that) has had imulate care. We have just listed
Briarwoods Ranch and nom-

nate it for honors. Seven rooms (including separate breakfast room).
en has wonderful exposure to nice
wooded lot. 3 bedrooms and bath
Dlus powder room, attached garage.
arpeted living room. Looking for
ething special with a down to
h price—see this. $29,500.

2 STORY COLONIAL
is six room traditional Colonial
ith 3 bedrooms and bath on secand

powder

room

5,000. Living room

Full basement,

AS YOU
LIKE IT
‘B ‘and new in appearance, but lived
n just long enough for everything

down to the

storms and screens
landscaping. Brick

and
and

‘ame
Ranch,
in Highland
Park
rth, convenient to railroad staLion. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, kitchen

with built-ins
$26,000.

and

SAVE

eating

space.

MONEY

sh the recreation

room

and

ex-

bath to suit you. This brick and
me 3 bedroom Split-level is comp
In
every other detail. 22x24
alousied and screened porch; builtarbeque on patio; pretty kitch-

aed
“3

| has
stove
need-in yard;
Be. $27,500.

and
2 car

$f

age

old, 2 story frame, 3 bedrooms,
dining room, sunroom, fireplace,
nt, oil heat, 2 car attached garage

acre,

$29,500.

H

near Ridge
Call

52—D

ID

44

Road.

20474

GAS

NEEDS FIXIN’—This compact wee
house has entry hall, living room,
16 ft. dining room, lg. kitchen, 3
bedrooms, base, garage . . . ONLY

$12,500.

JUST
LISTED
this pretty
brick
house, entry hall, living room, 15
ft.
dining
room,
family
activity
room, PLUS 20 ft. panelled family
room, 3 bedrooms, baths, GAS heat,

2 car garage
adjoins
ered.

... buildable

property

..

Excellent

or

WI

5-

to

every

If

you’re

location
Just

Mrs.

Lindenmeyer,

H.

D.

Olson

Waukegan,

-S115....

CE

&amp;

4-0969

Co.

An inviting brick and cedar ranch
in most immaculate condition and
with quality construction thruout.
3 good bedrooms, 114 cer. tile baths.
Wonderful family room-dining room
comb., tiled kitchen with dishwasher and eating area. Pan. rec. room
in full basement. Att. garage. Bluestone patio and TRULY professional landscaping. $34,500.

RENTAL

Rustic home on ravine in wooded
area. Perfect for family who wants
to get away from city living. Master
bedroom and bath on Ist. 4 nice
bedrooms, 2 baths on 2nd. June 15
to Sept. 15.

H. and R. Anspach
INC.
ID 2-1212

BY OWNER
Barrington

for

this is the

one

block

Priced to
$25,500
quality

home

from

lo-

distance

the

lake

beach rights. 3 bedrms.,

and

for you.
with

3142 baths;

den on main floor. All very large
rooms.
Centrally
air conditioned.
Superb
log pan. family room,
2
car attached garage. Price well be-

low reproduction cost _..._.$67,500

NORTHBROOK—NEWLY
brick

ranch

LISTED

ic
Ae

;
athe

4

1

aa

NEIGHBORHOOD

STORE

Be your own boss! and purchase
this established meat and grocery
business with all stock and equipment included. A real opportunity

Member

area—Timberlake-

8 room custom Colonial on 11/3 wooded
acres. 4 huge bedrooms,
2 deluxe baths.
Large kitchen; built-in oven and range. Crab
orchard fireplace; panelled recreation room
with bar in basement. Rights to private lake,
swimming
and fishing. School bus at the
oor Priced in the lower 40’s. JAckson 6-

The 34 ft. living room brings the
garden area into the house through
huge glass panels. There is a lge.
natural wood din. rm. or den, completely
equipped
natural
wood
kitch. w. brkfst. area. 3 bdrms. and

Short on cash? Here is an opportunity to buy a beautifully maintained well built home by assuming the present
mortgage
for a
nominal fee—$190 per mo. pays all.

2 cer.

Brick

Rd.

ID

2-0880

L. Ringer
SUDDENLY

IT’S

SUMMER!

This AIR CONDITIONED home
has a 16x34 ft. SWIMMING POOL
with filtering system; 3 bedrooms,
2 complete
baths;
wood
burning
fireplace,
recreation
room.
Best
buy on the North Shore in low 30’s.
CALL today: move in tomorrow.

What
makes
this house
different
from the other Contemporary Split
Levels?
1. On a street where all the houses
are not similar
2. On a street with beautiful old
trees.

3. Sub-basement

playroom

as well

as a lower level family room.
. Natural wood kitchen, 6 burners (not 4) oven and rotisserie.
5. $500 worth of landscaping.
. Mood lighting.
. Hi-Fi wired family room, bedrooms; porch and patio and of
course all the regular features
you expect in a 3 year old house
such as AIR CONDITIONING,
thermopane windows, etc.

L. Ringer

457 Central

ID 2-6600

ELEGANT—is the word for this immaculate
Sheridan Road property. From the 33 foot
living room right down to the finished playroom this 4 bedroom, 3% bath home is perfection
itself.
Separate
dining
room,
of
course, cozy den, screened porch and patio.
Beautifully landscaped
%
acre lot. MR.|
HA

ae
1157 Waukegan
PArk 4-1855

&amp; Warner
Rd.,

comprise

patios,

carpeting,

ances, etc.
Reduced

the

drapes,

main

appliSEES

to the

LAKE
Ranch

mid

50’s

BLUFF
in

the

30’s

In southeast Lake Bluff, handy
to Lake Forest High School, this
attractively
designed
traditional
ranch is an excellent buy with its
32x17 ft. liv. rm. with full pnid.
frpl. wall, mod.
kitch. with din.
area, 3 bdrms. and excellent closet
space.
Utility rm., warm
air gas
heat.
The 1% acre is beautifully wooded and there are many special fea-tures—parquet
floors,
patio, fine

alum.

screens

In

30’s

the

HIGHLAND

REALTORS
Sheridan

t. baths

floor, together with oversize 2 car
gar. The full basement has laundry,
spac. pnid. rec. rm. w. frpl. and
wet bar.
Warm air gas heat. Many extras:

and

storms.

Earhart &amp; Company

Glenview, Ill
IRving 8-2204

REAL estate investment available that offers safe 20%. Your investigation invited.
Minimum $5,000 needed. Write Box D-35,
c/o Highland Park News.

Deerfield

tional with pleasing effect.

carpeting,

Inter-City

Built Ranch
If Contemporary
architecture
appeals to you, be sure to see our selection of homes in a variety of
price ranges.

Realtor Referral
Service

1899

FOREST

Surrounded
by an acre and a
half, artistically
landscaped
with
fine trees, this 5 year old brick
ranch combines modern and tradi-

in excellent

condition. Unusual decorating.
Lovely dead end cul de sac street.
Home fully equipped with built in
electric oven and range, refrigerator, washer and dryer. Brick patio
16x20.
Attached
garage.
Walking
distance to shopping, schools and
trains. Only
$23,750

MODERN SPLIT LEVEL
IN ESTABLISHED
EAST NEIGHBORHOOD

Ill.

Realtors

SUMMER

convenience.
looking

track

consid-

$14,750—Living
room,
f/place,
3
bedrooms,
bath,
basement,
REC
room panelled, dry bar. 2 car garage plus loft. Gas heat.
3

Triple

Wonderful

lot...

. offers

OD RENTALS ..;:.. L000.
$225 monthly.

walls.

screens.

cation within easy walking

A TREASURE
on lovely property.
Spacious living room, dining room,
panelled play room, lg. kitchen, 2
master
bedrooms—PLUS
another
bedroom. GAS heat. $25,000.

463 Central Ave.

THE NAME WITH
THE TRADE-IN PLAN
623 Deerfield Road
W1 5-5100

one

Basement

closets and attic storage.

refrigerator;
attached ga-

John Coons, Realtor
YEAR
oe

rooms.

and

3 bedrm.

oversized

financing.

inum
a-nice

spacious

on Ist is only

‘age, summer house, good sized
rd for the kids to play in. Excel-

») be complete—right

BUYS

and SUNSHINE—4
bedrooms, 214
baths, 23 ft. dining room, PLUS
den and 2 f/places. This house sits
majestically near the water. SEE
the sun rise, ships that pass. All

has fireplace.

attached

BLUFF

VIEWS—LAKE—TREES—

heat, many

Plastered

storms

BUY 3

LAKE

TRANSFERRED

Brick split level with BIG kitchen,
3 twin size bedrooms with lots of
room.

2 car att.
40’s...

LAKE
Beautifully

ment,
trees,

FOUR BEDROOM, house in excellent condition. Living room, dining
room, out sized kitchen. Base, gas
h/water heat. PLUS features that
you must see. Good neighborhood
per. lS.

HOMES FOR SALE

~

NO CHAUFFEURING
FOR MOTHER!

equipped kitchen, tremendous base-

plus sleeping porch, 15 ft. dining
. Fully insured and. bonded; free esti- room, family sized kitchen, pantry,
mates;
seasoned
fireplace
wood.
Telebase, shower &amp; lav. PLUS PLAY
hone ID 3-1622 or
ball 6-2292.
N TREE EXPERTS. Trimming, feedROOM.
Hot
water
heat,
garage.
epairing, guying and removal. Fully
Low
taxes
and
offered
in LO
ured. FREE
ESTIMATES.
Telephone
_2-8750; ID 2-5481.
s 20
8
:

JOHN

WT

yi
f

PARK

In the finest East Central location, this 5 bedroom home is close
to stores, station, school and the
lake; on % acre of beautifully landseaped and secluded property.
The first fl. has ige. liv. rm. and
dng. ell, mod. fully equipped eating kitch., 3 bdrms. and cer. t. bath,

porch, 2 car gar., radio doors. The
2nd fl. has 2 unusually spac. pnld.
bdrms., luxurious t. bath and sundeck. Rec. rm. with frpl. in basement, sep. laundry.
The finest of brick construction,
heavy
duty
electric
service,
low
cost heat and taxes. In the 50’s.

Only $21,000
An attractive small ranch close
to Lincoln School and the park with
good trees and unusually nice yard.
The living room has fireplace and
paneled wall, dining room, kitchen,
2 bedrooms
and bath and
small
playroom,
screened
porch.
Full
basement.

Can

be

bought

for

small

1925

PHELPS.

Sheridan

Rd.

Well

2-4580

3

bath,

2

other twin size BRs w/CT bath,
ear att. gar., circular drive.

BR

suite

w/own

CT

2

$37,500-Firm
Deluxe
is the only word
to deseribe this fabulous split level with
magnificent
views
from
all windows. 2 huge BRs each w/its own
CT bath on upper level; entry hall,
LR 24x30 w/f.p., den, built-in kit.
w/brkfst. rm., full CT bath, laundry rm. on Main. Most attractive
family rm. w/corner f.p. on lower.
HW radiant ht. 2 car att. garage—
panelled &amp; easily converted to 2
more bedrooms. All this on 2 beautiful acres
$44,500
NEW LISTING—This 70 ft. ranch
on 1 acre. Nicely landscaped yard.
For the family that likes country

charm yet close to town. Nice family rm oft ‘kit. tie. din. 1, :-2 BRs.
At one end of house is extra 16x23

room

finished

except for ht. could

make 2 more BRs
ALG, Bars sae

or

hobby

room.
$22,800

PIERSEN REALTY
REALTORS
Deerfield

Commons

LAKE

WI

5-1670

BLUFF

First time offered, attractive 4 bed-

kitch-

A charming New Orleans Colonial
on over one acre off South Green
Bay Road. 10 rooms, 4 baths. 2-car
garage. Lovely terrace and landscaping.

Gilbert Rayner.
266 E. Deerpath
Kathryn Jaicks
Carmen

Keck)

Custom built for a beautiful wooded
acre
&amp;
quality
construction
thruout.
Interesting
features
are
dining
rm.
w/f.p.,
huge
picture
book kit. w/CT
and walnut cabinets trimmed in maple, family rm.
w/sliding glass doors to patio, mas-

room
French
bungalow;
separate
dining room, fireplace, full basement,
two
car
detached
garage;
convenient
to schools and transportation. Price $22,900.

KNOLLWOOD

414 baths. Large living room-dining

REAL

(Architect

$28,750

EAST

A fine new architecturally designed
house in the French Regency manner, located on three acres on Onwentsia Road in a well established
residential
area.
Five
bedrooms,
library,

street.
w/built-

Out of town
owner has just reduced this brick ranch and can give
immediate occupancy, so drive out
&amp; see it. Lots of extras are included such
as carpet,
drapes,
elec.
stove.
3 BRs,
2 baths
plus
lge.
beamed
ceiling redwood panelled
family room w/sliding glass doors
opening onto fenced yard for the
little ones. Full bsmt., att. gar. &amp;

down

LAKE FOREST

room, family room,
en. 3-car garage.

designed

UNC.
ID

established
full bsmt.

bedroom brick home on tree lined
street within walking dist. to stores
&amp; train. Lge. square living room
w/f.p., kit. w/brkfst.
nook,
huge
util. rm., scr. pch.—easily converted to family rm., att. gar. Beautiful property

payment.

PAUL

on

2 baths,

$25,900

ter

Secluded

const.

3 BRs,

2

bedroom

room,

LAKE

ranch

with

BLUFF
recreation

1 car garage. Price

$16,900.

2 bedroom
brick
with
fireplace,
full basement, 2 car detached garage, large lot. Price $20,000.

HARLAN &amp; HARLAN
104 SCRANTON AVE.
LAKE BLUFF
CE

4-1387

or

CE

4-2331

ESTATE
CEdar 4-0382
Berenice Ressinger
Burgess Olson

HIGHLAND
PARK:
new brick ranch, 3
bedrooms (1 paneled),
large kitchen, liying-dining room, 1% baths, basement, garage, decorated, near schools, transportation. $27,900. Builder, ID 2-1338.

Thursday, May 18, 1961

�Th

7ANDER-OMMEN

John Griffith, Inc
Realtors —
LAKE

FOREST

OFFERINGS

349 HILLDALE
... Custom built
brick and frame contemporary on
a wooded acre—terrazzo entrance

hall, living room with fireplace,
dining room, fully equipped kitchen,
panelled
den
with
built-in
bookshelves,
TV
and Hi Fi cabinets, C T bath and utility room.
Three
bedrooms—C
T bath.
Oil
heat.
Over-sized
2 car
garage—
black top driveway. Everything in
best of condition.
Open
Sunday,

May 21st—2-4 P.M. Priced $54,900
SPRAWLING
Entrance

SPLIT

hall,

LEVEL

...

room

with

living

fireplace, dining room, porch, kitchen,

huge

place,

family

three

room

large

with

fire-

bedrooms,

214

C T baths, utility room and a 2
car
attached
garage.
Large
lot.
Open Sunday, May 2lst—2-4 P.M.
Unparalleled value at just $59,500

LAKE

BLUFF

NEW LISTING... 1959 Clapboard
Colonial Ranch—Convenient to
town, with country setting. Sunny
living room with fireplace, spacious
modern kitchen, separate wing with
three bedrooms—2 C T baths. Many
wardrobe closets. Full basement—
gas heat—attached
2 car garage.
Low maintenance. June occupancy.
Offered in
lower thirties

John Griffith, Inc.
2 OFFICES TO SERVE YOU
678 N. Western
Lake Forest
CEdar 4-0485

Ave.,

12 bagel ps Ave.
ake Bluff
CEdar 40816

EVENINGS
M.

C.

Lackie

CALL

CE

4-1380
Paul LeRoi CE
N. Starosselsky CE “4-1181
een
Kelley CE
Mary Griffis CE 4-033
Gercidine Moyer CE
Frances Rutgers CE 4-1075
June Enos CE
Nancy Appleton CE 4.3974

4-0104
4-1082
4-5132
41117

Member

REALTORS
of the Evanston-North
Multiple Listing Service

DRIVE BY AND
FOR AN APPT.
713 Chestnut St.
1 Bedrm.
Bath.

Sep.

Shore

CALL US
TO SEE

Dining

$9,750
Garage.

rm.

1010 Springfield Ave.
2 Bedrms. Sep. Dining

rm.

2

$18,000
Porches.

700 Osterman Aye.
3 Bedrms. Older home

zoned

$18,250
2 family.

FOR
THE
PARTICULAR,
BUT
ECONOMY-MINDED young couple. With its large
kitchen, LR-DR
comb., and full basement
this 3 bedroom ranch offers plenty of living
space for this price. In addition it has a
screened and glazed porch for glorious summer living,
;
ANOTHER EXCELLENT BUY! If you are
looking for an older home with a private
yard, see this 3 bedroom, 1%
bath home.
Large separate DR, sun room, full basement,
living room
w/FP
completes the picture.

1,

IMMACULATE
SPLIT-LEVEL
on lovely
quiet street 114
blocks from the bus &amp;
school. 3 bdrms., 2 baths, large kitchen-DR
comb., family room, att. gar. Many vient

Porch

&amp;

$18,750
Garage.

good

location.

1030 Chestnut St.
3

Bedrms.

Ranch,

$18,750
Garage,

1452 Greenwood Ave.
3 Bedrms. Entrance hall,
1126 Linden Ave.
3 Bedrms. Woodland

Park

1124 Greenwood Ave.
3 Bedrms. 1% Baths,
1124 Williams
3 Bedrms., full

wants

nice,

Basement,

1440 Greenwood Ave.
3 Bedrms., 1144 Baths,

Car

940 Central Ave.
4 Bedrms., 2% Baths,

4131 County Line
4 Bedrms. Ranch

$18,950

Area,

$20,750
good buy.

may

$21,000
rent.

Plaster

$23,950
walls.

Port,

$26,500
Ranch,

$26,500
lots of storage area.

569 Whittier
3 Bedrms., Fireplace,
1115 Montgomery
3 Bedrms. Bi-level,

offer.

$27,700
sep.

Dining

rm.
$28,000

Rec

rm.

att.

839 Rosemary Terr.
4 Bedrms., Fireplace,

Garage.

Garage,
Rec.

rm.

30 Cumberland Dr.
3 Bedrms., 11%4 Baths,

att.

2583 Elmwood Lane
3 Bedrms. Brick Ranch,

Garage,

Large

SEE
THIS
DREAM
HOME.
Solid_ brick
ranch with full basement, 3 bdrms., LR, DR,
extra large kitchen, 14% car gar. w/screened
porch on beautifully landscaped lot. $28,000
ALMOST NEW BI-LEVEL close to schools.
Finished family room w/crab orchard FP,
LR, kitchen w/blt-ins &amp; plenty of eating
area, 3 A pian
Downstairs
powder
room

ZANDER- OMMEN
Evanston-North

1090 Ridge Rd. H.P.
3 Bedrms. Mod. Ranch,

close

$39,000
tran.

to

DEERFIELD’S
OPEN

SUNDAYS

Thursday,

OLDEST

Road
May

WI

5-0984

12 TO 5:30 P.M.
18, 1961

A HOUSE.

A
warm,
charming
custom
built
Brick
Ranch on choice corner Lot. Comb. LivingDining room; wall to wall carpeting; birch
cabt.
family Kitchen;
2 large Bedrooms,
plenty Closets; cer. tiled Bath, extra Powder Room; full Basement; att. heated Garage; near School, Stores and Transportation
$26,500.

NORTHBROOK:
CAN

TELL

Waukegan

&amp;

Board

Listing

Deerfield

of

Realtors

Service
Rds.

WI

5-5700

HIGHLAND
PARK
TWO
FLAT:
Live in one apartment
let rent from other pay off building

and

NEED A LARGE HOME AT LOW COST?
4 bedrooms,
2%2
baths.
Most
convenient
location, basement, 2 car garage
Sage Soucy esha eS
EA aaa
only - $25,500.
ACROSS
FROM
PARK.
bath, 2 story brick. Lots
money

3 bedroom,
1%
of house for the
$23,750.

THREE BEDROOM BRICK AND FRAME
ranch built on 2 lots. Modern kitchen, living room with fireplace, heated breezeway,
2 car garage
$29,900
BRICK
COLONIAL,
NEW
MODERN
kitchen, separate dining room, living room
with fireplace, den, 3 plus bedrooms, 212
baths. Large lot. Prestige location $37, 650.

$19,900 JUST DECORATED, TAXES $356.
Lovely area, close to transportation. Living
room, fireplace, separate dining room, paneled den, 2 bedrooms. Full basement, fruit

WARM

AS

7 ROOMS,

4 ey
$38,500.

Dorsey Husenetter

Carlarge
Gas
Lot.

St.

Johns

Ave.

ID

Would
too

you

large,

like
with

a

spacious

three

master

home,

yet

bedroom

REALTOR
Member of Multiple Listing
Waukegan Road
Deerfield

2326

OPEN
SUNDAY
2-5
ASH LANE, NORTHBROOK

(Edens
to Dundee—W.
Waukegan to Ash Lane)

on

Dundee

past

A
REAL
VALUE—Here
is a _ delightful
Northbrook home. 3 excellent bedrooms, 2
full baths. This home features a streamline
knotty pine cabinet kitchen with Frigidaire
dishwasher and eating area, handsome family
room,
gas
heat,
carpeting
included.
Wonderful area for children. Priced in low
30’s. HARRIET STEVENS.

LAKE FOREST
575 FOREST HILL ROAD
OPEN SUNDAY 2-5
a

a

FRAMED

WITH

HIGHLAND

HIGHLAND

(Edens to Westleigh—Westleigh to Beverly,
Right on Briar, left on Forest Hill)
Custom
built Bi-Level in choice location.
Charming living room with fireplace, dining
room, ‘“‘Mengel Cabinet’? kitchen with eating area,
powder
room.
Mahogany
panelled
family
room.
4 bedrooms,
2 C.T.
baths. Attached
2 car garage.
Gas heat.
oy
occupancy.
HARRIET
STE-

Baird and Warner
576 Lincoln Avenue
Winnetka, Illinois

Hillcrest
SHeldrake

6-1855
3-1855

Service
Wi 5. 3200

PARK

HIGHLAND

PARK

White

ranch.

Beautifully

close

to

paneled

Finished

and

for

Living

bath,

low

recreation

powder

wooded

school.

dining room

rooms

bed-

upkeep.

room

room

with
$20,000

Dorsey Husenetter
Realtors

AM

2-7873

1954 all
attached
hot water
4 large
beautiful

Road
AL

Glencoe
1-3430

VE

5-1971

CUSTOM BUILT 2 FLAT
brick building with plastered and
2 car brick garage. Full basement,
heat, 6 large rooms on first floor,
rooms on 2nd floor, situated on
lot 109x150.

LOOK! ONLY $18,900
:
This dandy ranch home has 3 large bedrooms, a dream kitchen and full basement.
Near Maplewood
School just 3 blocks to
R.R. station.
BARRINGTON-McHENRY COUNTY
For choice Fox River frontage or Fox River
Valley property, visit our Viking office on
Rte. 14 in Cary, Ill. or phone ME 9-2011,

Viking Realty
Realtors

Since

826 Deerfield Rd.
PARK
OPEN

GRETA

Rec

rm

Cabinet

able.

Kit w/good

Private yard,

seaping.

with
golf

$19,000

PRICED

eating

excellent

land-

mortgage

...&lt;-

RIGHT!

LOW

OWNERSHIP”

WI

5-5300

SURREY
DAILY

RIDGE

A story-book Cape Cod on beautif
landscaped acre. Entrance hall, living room with fireplace, dinin
room,

electric

kitchen,

threebe

rooms, two baths and a breezewé
enclosed as a porch. Gas heat.P.
tial basement with utility co
Two-car

attached

garage.

Priced at

SPELLS
Completely

remodeled,

frame

on

house

Entrance

fireplace,

two-story

a 71x279

porch,

living

dining
with

magnificent
course.

trees

Winnetka
$99 Linden

has

three

with

foot le

room

room,

with

cabin

dishwasher,

ut

Gas

overlooking

SECURITY

6-7274

LOngbeach

1-4463

hall,
dining

inet

kitchen

ARNOLD

PEDERSON
Custom

LEDERER

Two

room

with

yard with patio and play area
children. In the 20’s. Call for
pointment. ID 2-8461.

fireplace,

dining

room

new kitchen, utility room, oa
playroom,

jalousied

room,

maids’

two
second

Two-car
Priced

porch,

rooms

powéd

and bath.

floor has six bedroo

attached

beautiful
for
ap-

ms

he

garage.

at

three

three-year

OF

MIND

bedroom,

old

Brick

two

ba

Williamsbu

Colonial
over-looking
Onwent:
Club Golf course. Perfect in eve
detail. Designed for a family wi
teen-age

children

as

there

is

of the most delightful family roo
imaginable. Gas heat. Three-car
tached garage. Ample
eral more bedrooms.
Priced

room for sé

at

Parking Space Available
For

WI 5-1238

Directions—Edens highway north to Berkeley, Berkeley age
to Ridge rd., Ridge rd.
south to 1260 &amp; 1
VE 5-0344 Sat. &amp; Sun.
Eves VE 5-0343

awnings,

ga-

Six bedroom, five bath, two-stor,
brick Colonial. Entrance hall, livin

Our

_

Customers

Hart, Shaw &amp;
Company

Builders

top

Gas

attached

ve

Deerfield

Sherwood
Forest:
3 bedroom,
2
bath bi-level, wall to wall carpeting, Youngstown
cabinet kitchen
and paneled rec room, new black

drive,

a half

at

Luxury

Jr.
ID 2-0596

4 bedrooms,
2 tile baths,
walnut
family
room, large living room with bay, dining
room,
Provincial kitchen with dishwasher,
disposal,
oven
and
range
top,
separate
utility room, carpeted living room, dining
room
and
master bedroom.
Vinyl in all
other rooms included. 2 car garage. Over
1850 square ft. living area.

side

and

and bat

storage.

rage.

HIGHLAND PARK
BY OWNER

$30,800

maid’s rom

PEACE

NEW
CALIFORNIA REDWOOD
RANCH HOMES

909

ca

level there is a family room,

room,

heat.

room,

built-ins. —

five baths. Full basement. Gas

LEONARDI AGENCY
Est. 1927

MODEL AT
Appletree Lane,

with

laundry,utility and

The

CHILDREN

Leonardi,

living

Entrance
fireplace,

a ha

AND

and desire a good neighborhood
close to
a park, schools and
shopping,
then you
will want to see this 3 bedroom ranch less
than
4 years old.
Modern
kitchen,
oak
floors, beautiful recreation room. Low 20’s.

F.

and

with

? ?

Start out right.
Build
up
equity
instead
of rent receipts in this charming 2 bedroom
home. Living room with fireplace, separate
dining
room,
plastered
walls,
hardwood
floors, modern cer. bath, finished basement,
gas heat, combination storms and screens,
beautifully landscaped. Low
20’s.

John
ID 3-1000

three

rary.

ground

Hillcrest

HAVE

room

full ba
$47; UY

bedroom,

hobby

Broadview

IF YOU

one

and

at

Four

MARRIED

dressing

bath

heat.

Priced

Priced

GETTING

bedrooms,

half

20’s.

Immediate occupancy in Deerfield. 3 and 4
bedrooms;
oak floors;
1%
baths, ceramic
tile; natural fireplace; full basement; large
landscaped lot; low down payment.

1946

a

avail-

L. Ringer

FOR THE FIRST TIME
EXECUTIVE RANCH HOMES
INCLUDING 100 FT. LOTS

AT

at.

kitchen

ATTENTION! *
1% Split level, Paneled

3 bedrm,

809

Lang Real Estate

screened porch,

room, library or bedroom and batl
and screened porch. Second floc

PARK

On
1 acre with view of lake. Marvelous
home for large family. 10 bedrooms, 4'4
modern baths, library, screened porch; gas
heat. Completely
carpeted.
Excellent condition. $46,500.

Glencoe

combination,

kitchen, patio, paneled recreation
room in basement, oil heat, one-ca)
detached garage. Lovely flower
trees
in back
yard.
Wonder

5-0236

An excellent building site, 90x190

It invites you with
its beautiful exterior
and excellent
East
location.
5 bedrooms,
3% baths, large library, beamed ceiling in
living room, screened porch. 2 car garage.
Terrific value in 30’s.

712

room

Priced.
VErnon

HIGHLAND PARK
VERY INTERESTING PROPERTY

area.

Top location as well as quality in this 6
year old custom built home. 3 twin sized
bedrooms, 214 cer. tile baths, separate dining room,
screened porch with barbecue,
2% car att. gar. Near lake. Lovely grounds.
In the 40’s.

HIGHLAND

BEAUTIFUL

Bldg.

BUILDING?

not

suites,

a family room with fireplace just off the
modern kitchen, a den, large living room
with fireplace,
stately dining
room,
mud
room, powder room, plus handsome paneled
recreation 100m with bar and fireplace. A
large or small lot as you wish, a circular
driveway. Best of all—FULL AIR CONDITIONING. Call GEORGE
RUMSFELD.

..

Arthur C. Ullmann

2-1484

HIGHLAND
PARK
WANT
THE
UNUSUAL?

Theater

And for the builder there are 4
nice wooded lots available. Price
for the 4 lots. .:)2.cncass
2k: $27,750

You this exciting buy on a 135x180 foot
Lot. 3 twin Bedrooms,
plus large Family
or T.V. Room,
with built in Bar; comb.
Living-Dining room; Fireplace; large cabt.
Kitchen;
tiled Bath
and
Powder
Room;
Gas Heat; att. 2 car Garage. 2300 sq. feet
rey
roof. COME
AND
SEE age
pica

Realtors

HOME
Charming three bedroom, one b
Colonial ranch in East Lake Bh
Entrance hall, large living-dinin

value.

REALTORS

room,

TOAST...

OFFER

trees.

BRICK AND FRAME,
rooms, 3 baths

J-H Kahn

property

’

216

SNUG
AS A BUG,
this FIRST HOUSE
for a young family in convenient Ravinia.
Living dm. with dining L, 3 bedrms., 1%
baths.
Screened
porch
and
fenced
yard.
Excellent financing available. Only $19,950.

Hart, Shaw

.

Your best friends about this lovely Brick
Ranch.
Comb.
Living-Dining
room; . cabt.
Kitchen; 2 twin Bedrooms; full Basement;
1% car Garage; on landscaped lot. Walking distance to Stores. ALL
THIS
FOR

WE

NOTHING PRETTIER than this LANNON
STONE home set well back from the street
on a lovely, high knoll. Beautiful bay windows in the living room
and the dining
room, panelled family room with fireplace,
4 bedrms., 34% baths, panelled game
rm.
Excellent eating space in the well cabineted
kitchen. See in the 50's.

Glencoe

You'll be in this cozy Frame Ranch.
peted
comb.
Living-Dining
room;
family
Kitchen;
2 nice
Bedrooms;
Heat;
Garage;
on large
landscaped
PRICED AT ONLY $16,500.

Garage.

Carr Realty Co.
701 Waukegan

Shore

Multiple

$31,750
Garage.

$36,000
wooded lot.

MORE—
THAN JUST

LIBERTYVILLE:

$30,900
lot.

$35,000

J-H Kahn Realty

NICE.

Nested
in a friendly
neighborhood.
This
Frame Home has Living &amp; Dining Room;
2 nice Bedrooms; tiled family Kitchen; modern tiled Bath; large enclosed Porch; full
Basement;
Gas Heat; 2 car Garage; outdoor Barbecue on nicely landscaped lot.

YOU

723

649 Central Ave.
3 Bedrms. plus Den,

OLDER BUT
$19,750

10% DOWN, LIKE NEW RANCH. FULL
basement, 2 gorgeous ceramic baths, 28 ft.
living room, large kitchen, built-ins, breakfast area
29,500.

Carr Realty Co.

Bm

DEERFIELD:

DEERFIELD

EAST

ee

C.

Richard
Howard

B. Hart, President
ReQua, Vice President

Mrs. Stuart R. French
Ruth E. Henderson
260 E. Deerpath
Lake Forest, CEdar

Milton McN. Traet
Kenmore Thorsen

135
4-1000

S. La Salle
RAndolph 6-71!

Members of the Evanston-North
Multiple Listing Service

Shore

.

\

Page H 53—D 45_

;

—

�oe,

‘

sf

E FOREST FINDS
500 Ridge Road

e

Easily

Shown

on

by

Appt.

5 acres deca

with

iWighied Bark
WONDERFUL
tall

_ colorful gardens with broad meadows
ound this TRADITIONAL WHITE

residence

to

have

a

TENNIS

“as well as
a SWIMMING
POOL!
the home itself is enchanting. 2 extra
oor rooms, one of the SHORE’S most
porches, 6 bedrooms and 3% baths.
stefully decorated and perfectly main-

990

Northcliffe

Way

EN

3

with

all “built-ins”

bedrooms,
the 50’s! See

2

baths

plus

and

a fire-

a

2

FAMILY

AMbassador 2-5540

COMMERCIAL
RESIDENTIAL
po.
VACANT
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
CALL

rm.

on

1st.

Master

suite,

bath,

3

other bdrms., bath, att. gar. Lovely
yard for children. Near school and
trans. $35,000.

L. Ringer
666 Waukegan
Deerfield

Rd.

WI 5-3650
Realtors

You cannot appreciate what is offered until
we show you through this 5 room, 2 bedroom Ranch, situated on 75x159 foot lot in
Loch Lomond. Just a phone call and we’ll
make
arrangements.
No _ obligation
of
course.
Contact

Mr.

Estate Service

602

FRANK PEERS
FRANK ANDERSON

EM,

Dennee

REALTY

REALTORS
N. Milwaukee
Libertyville

CO.

Ave.

2-2015

LO

BERKSHIRE
f

$22,500. Details

Guy Viti
REALTOR
Highwood

ID

AE IMPROVEMENT

2-3933

HUGH C. MICHELS
&amp; CO.

LOANS

751

Elm

St.

Winnetka
HI

SAVINGS &amp; LOAN ASS'N
Lake

6-7100

BY OWNER

Be

CE

REDUCTION

And very low taxes, on this charming center
hall Colonial which overlooks the EVANSTON
Golf Club. Beautifully shrubbed, inclosed back yard. 3 bedrooms, 1%
baths,
good
expansion
possibilities.
Many
inclusions. Well below mid 30’s.

LAKE FOREST

3 Western

BUILDERS

:
1600 Grove
PAlisade 5-8440
ORchard 6-2596
(Take Edens to Clavey, Clavey west to
Ridge Road, Ridge north to Grove)
Open Sunday 1 to 5

TERRIFIC

Forest

4-4200

Colonial house with extra lot, 3 bedrooms,
bath, den, 2 car garage. Convenient to trains
she, Henk $25,500. Call Lake Bluff, CE 4bedroom

living.

home

; 2%

ready

Family

with ae

for

room;

fireplace;

gracious

living

room

separate

dining

EXCEPTIONAL

tile baths. Large basement. Over-

-car garage.

LOW

Many

extras,

40's.

A VALUE

Realtors
1-0228

851

GReenleaf

KIMBALL

diate

possession.

5-1080

ROAD

Brick

porch; nice neighborhood.
tails call WI 5-0493.

and

dern

attached

kitchen

d

lot

with

80x200

11 ID 2-7281

2 car garage,

built-ins;
feet.

a

HIGHLAND

¥ Il take your house in trade and allow
the “APPRAISED VALUATION”
for
ir property.
j
LIGHT BUILDERS
. 209, 262 E. Deerpath, Lake Forest
Ae
CE 4-0192—UN 9-1266
or call Rayner Real Estate, CE 4-0382

ISTA
d

of ravines,

carriage

house

this completely
has

3% baths, big family
own beach; $48,500

12.

4

to

room

5

room

54—D

46

655

Vernon

Ave.

VF. 5-4121

GRAHAM

REALTORS
HO

CUSTOM

BUILT

For well known architect. Most unusual 4
bedroom contemporary split level, especially
designed for its beautiful wooded acre. Panelled living room with huge stone fireplace,
and beamed cathedral ceiling. Separate dining room, intercom and sundeck, large family kitchen with all built ins, family room
opening onto screened porch, unusual ceramic baths, 2 car garage, basement, carpeted, Many extras. Priced far below appraised value for immediate sale
$37,5

Woodland

Lane

WI 5-3063

LINCOLNSHIRE

AREA

Attractive
4 Bedrm. Colonial
sale by
5-4347.

owner,

Will

Gl 0655

5-0655

HIGHLAND

PARK

EAST

Don’t rent. Now you can own a new 3
room brick split-level with no money
and same monthly payments. Carpeting,
ins and improved lot included.
Eden’s to 22, right to Summit, left to
right to:
500 HILL LANE
Open Sunday 11 to 6

4 BEDROOMS

—

ONLY

beddown
built-

PARK

A full acre of property in Ravinia. The red
brick house has 5 bedrooms, 314 baths, a
modern kitchen with a dishwasher. The 1st
floor has a cozy den with fireplace, and a
T.V. room. Priced in the low 40’s.

ldlewood Realty
653

Roger

REALTORS

Williams
IN

HIGHLAND

ID

2-6776

PARK

3 bedroom house with living room, kitchen,
full basement, and 2 car garage, close to
schools, price $18,500.
Lovely 2 bedroom home, immaculate
tion, price $16,500.
e
BARACANI REAL ESTATE
ID 2-8077

condi-

Hill,

$29,900

You
must
see this
attractive
Cape
Cod
home on a quiet winding road in south
Highland
Park. Full basement, 2 car garage, heavily wooded lot. Close to Eden’s
and new shopping center. Almost ready for
occupancy. Well priced with flexible terms.

L. H. BAMBURG,
342 Park

Ave.

Realtors

Glencoe

VE

5-2600

HARD-TO-BEAT
4 Bedroom split, fireplace, panelled
rec
room,
dishwasher,
disposal,
built-in range. Excellent neighborhood
(south
of Deerfield
Road).
Under 30. WI 5-2725.
LAKE FOREST, 7 room custom brick/frame
split level; lovely Northmoor subdivision;
middle $30’s. CE 4-9484.
LAKE BLUFF Open House—1 to 3 Saturday and Sunday. 3 bedrooms, lovely kitchen, 2 way fireplace separates dining-living
room; basement designed for in-law apartment; good loan commitment. 310 Woodland; $26,000. Offers welcomed.
LINCOLNSHIRE:
$25,500, ranch on wooded
%
acre, 3 bedrooms,
den, ceramic
bath, thermopane window wall in living
and dining,
attached garage and patio,
electric appliances
and drapes included.
Low taxes. Near park, pool, trains, Edens
and Toll Road. WI 5-4134.
HIGHLAND
PARK:
4 bedroom
bi-level,
244
baths,
completely
air
conditioned,
built in electric kitchen, lot 76x170, adjacent to park, near transportation, schools.
ID 2-8477.
HIGHLAND
PARK—LAKE
AREA —
Charming,
rustic 3 bedroom
home,
sacrificed for immediate sale; outstanding value
$22,500; firm. 1262. St. Johns, ID 2-7967.
HIGHLAND
PARK
East: Nestled among
oaks and maples, 3 bedrooms, 2 ceramic
baths,
24%
car garage,
1 year
custom
ranch, northeast corner of Moraine Road
and Waukegan Ave.
DANISH
country house
in beautiful Ravinia neighborhood
of estates and fine
homes. Large woodland lot. Walking distance to schools, station and béach. Spacious 2 story panelled living room, leaded windows, unusual fireplace. Large dining room, 3 bedrooms. All on 1 floor.
Flagstone patio. Furnished, including 214
ton air-conditioner,
dishwasher
and appliances. One of the North Shore’s most
charming homes. $42,500. Box D-75, c/o
Highland Park News.
HIGHLAND
PARK:
on lovely
% acre,
Finest construction, many interesting features. 3 bedrooms,
one 12x22, 2 baths.

Kitchen with dining area, utility room

HIGHLAND

_re-

brick ranch, full basement, 114
ace, side drive. Construction to
Long term financing. $24,900.

HERBERT
&amp; SONS
oe
SPring 4-5611
se

SEYMOUR

bed-

SP 17-4030

PARK

Red brick Dutch Colonial home in friendly
neighborhood
of
young
families.
Living
room with fireplace, separate dining room,
3 bedrooms, 114 baths, large screened porch
facing lovely wooded yard.
29,500

kitchen,

RAVINIA
soon.

FIRST NATIONAL BANK
LAKE FOREST CE 4-5100

for appointment to

“TRADES”

de-

For
prompt,
personal,
service when
you
buy—build or refinance in the Lake Forest
Lake Bluff area—See us.

$60,000.

your home is for sale and IF it is too
too small and IF the “Best Bid’? was
we possibly can solve your probu would be -interested in building

For

MORTGAGE
LOANS
CONVENTIONAL
OR FHA

5 bedrooms, 31% baths, large
y room,

BUY

Deerfield: 3 bedroom frame ranch;
living room dining room combination with fireplace; large screened

- McGUIRE &amp; ORR

Spacious 3 bedroom, 2 bath

6-6720

$22,500
foom: Cape Cod, full basement, approxiately 1 acre,
1%
car detached garage,
jailable immediately. Down payment $2,monthly
payments
$150,
complete

$19,900 ON YOUR

-

By selling direct, (no agent’s fee) we are
able to offer you our lovely home with its
many improvements for $33,000. It is a 2%
yeac old 3 bedroom, 2 bath, split level in
like new condition on a _ beautifully landscaped % acre lot; expensive Acrilan carpeting, GE kitchen including a 15 cubic ft.
refrigerator and built-in breakfast bar; aluminum storms and screens, panelled family
room; basement floor completely tiled, builtin cabinets for work and play area; finished
laundry room and garage; gas heating and
other extras. Near good schools, transportation and Tollway. Street to be repaved soon
(no assessment).
WI
5-3907.
922 Wilmot
Road, Deerfield.

YN the country. For
accept best offer. WI

Highland Park brand new tri-level, 3 large
bedrooms, 2 full baths, paneled recreation
room,
large wooded
lot. Low
down
pay-

Highland Park
ID 2-2682

Ti5

OWNER

RIVERWOODS

3 bedroom Ranch on 100x125’ wooded lot
in West Shore Park, Mundelein. Fireplace,
separate dining, cabinet kitchen with breakfast area, enclosed porch, rights to private
beach. Gas incinerator,
%
ton air-conditioner, softener, gas range and carpeting included.
$19,500.

SCHWANDT

Real

HOME

att.

RS REAL ESTATE CO.
t 6-2900

BY

Enjoy the sunsets from the beautiful
terrace
(with
Lannon
stone
barbeque)
of this truly
Colonial
home. Unusually large living rm.
frpl., din. rm., utility rm., powder

Easily Shown by Appt.
AIR-CONDITIONED
all brick 5: year old
LONIAL RANCH with a paneled family
and fireplace in the basement, a patio
large dining area, beautifully apliving room,
a grand COUNTRY

f

(&gt;

ad-

jacent.
Full
basement.
Low
30’s.
1471
Ridge Road, Highland Park.
HIGHLAND
PARK:
Elm
Place _ District.
1768 Clifton, Sunset Terrace.“ID 2-4853,
Tri-level, 2100 sq. ft. living area, 3 bedrooms, 17x30 family room, 2%
baths, 2
fireplaces,
11 closets, gas heat, air-conditioned, all windows thermopane.

RAVINIA—777

DEERFIELD

Shei brick and

east;

Park.

finest location, by own-

er; 3 bedroom brick ranch; all thermopane; large rooms and closets; basement
storage; fenced yard; patio; attached garage; vacant, $25,900. Will dicker. HIilcrest 6-7996.
DEERFIELD,
by owner. Thousands under
cost. 6 room brick ranch; excellent
financing available, $28,500, 640 Warwick,
WI 5-5874. Open Sunday 12 to 7.
HUMRICH
designed cypress house,
glass
walls, stainless steel kitchen, area for 5
bedrooms, 2 baths, %% acre woods. Studio
on % acre available. CE 4-9108.
DEERFIELD:
3 bedroom brick Georgian,
separate dining room, drapes, carpeting,
attached garage, patio, low 20’s, owner
anxious, will consider contract. WI 5-3291.
CALIFORNIA contemporary; 4 bedroom, 2
bath, ranch home; fully air conditioned;
beautifully appointed; priced to sell. Shown
by appointment only. WI 5-2324. Lincolnshire area.
BY owner, charming 6 year old brick ranch.
Paneled living room, large family dining
room
combination,
kitchen
with
eating
space, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, full basement,
screened porch, covered patio. Near park
and transportation. Low down payment.
$32,500. ID 2-4302.
RAVINIA
New 3 bedroom, 2 bath, brick and cedar
ranch, built in kitchen with spacious breakfast area. Attached car
tt. Conveniently
located at 523 Green Bay
Rd. $27,500. Open.
Al Richman, Builder. ID 2-9249.
HIGHWOOD:
2 bedroom frame, basement,
1 block to Catholic Church and _ shops.
Excellent condition. Call Agent ID 2-0474,
HALFDAY:
3 bedroom frame ranch, 2 car
garage attached, 114 acres, gas heat. Priced
for quick sale. Call WI 5-0254 or ID 20474 for details.
DEERFIELD:
4 bedroom
older
2 story
frame, tiled bath, full basement, hot water oil heat, 1 car garage, low taxes, near
schools, shopping and transportation. 1146
Chestnut, $16,900. Call WI 5-0129.
LAKE
FOREST:
In exclusive
residential
area, practically new brick ranch, large
living room with fireplace, 3 twin sized
bedrooms, mahogany paneled family room
with 10 foot bar, den, ceramic baths, cabinet kitchen ceramic tiled, wall oven and
eating area, 2%4 car attached garage, carpeted, full basement, all gas, completely
landscaped, stockade fenced, storms and
screens. $54,900. CE 4-4427.
DELUXE 3 bedroom ranch house on beautiful wooded lot. Living room with fireplaice, dining room, 2% baths, full basement with recreation room and bar. Attached garage, patio and barbecue. $32,500. Telephone ID 2-4043.
comTerrace,
PARK-Sunset
HIGHLAND
pletely air-conditioned
3 bedroom
Cape
Cod ranch, full basement, gas heat, priced
to sell, low 20’s. By owner. ID 2-8270. _
Subdivision, Highland Park, livSUNSET
ing-dining, 2 bedrooms, den, kitchen with
eating area, attached garage. ID 2-5235.
533 CLAVEY
LANE
Contemporary modern ranch, 3 bedrooms,
panelling, thermopane. Reduced to $31,500.
Call ID 2-2739. Open house Sunday 1-5.
BY OWNER:
Quality constructed 7 large
rooms, 2 story, 3 extra large bedrooms,
214 baths, separate dining room, attached
garage, near schools. priced way below
actual value. ID 2-4387 or ID 2-5914.
HIGHLAND
PARK:
Offered
by
owner
choice East Ravinia location, 3 bedrooms,
2 baths, family room, living room with
beamed ceiling, glass and screened porch,
patio, attached garage, large tool shed,
spacious grounds, beautifully landscaped,
many other extras. $42,500. ID 2-6215.
HIGHLAND
PARK:
solid brick ranch, 3
bedrooms; 114 baths; full basement; com’ pletely redecorated. Cost $23,500 in 1955.
Will sacrifice for $21,900. Mortgage can
be assumed. Call today. ALpine
1-7876.
LAKE BLUFF EAST: 7 room older home,
2 baths, excellent condition, mewly decorated, well located, low 20’s. CE 4-2334,
for appointment.
LAKE
FOREST:
owner being transferred,
41%4 year old story and a half custom
built brick, 3 bedrooms and bath up; ist
floor, 4th bedroom or den and bath, living-dining room, kitchen and utility, full
basement, radiant heat, middle 30’s. Call
CE 4-0601.
LAKE
FOREST,
French
Norman,
imperishable stone and beam:
needs interior
decorating; lends itself nicely in antique
styling; must be sold. Open from) 9 to 7;
north of Deernath on 42A, 580 Greenvale. Sudoinik Realty, MA 3-1302 and CE
4-4033:
LAKE
BLUFF,
moving
May
29;
solid
brick ranch, 2 years old; 3 twin bedrooms,
2 full ceramic baths. kitchen with eating
area, living room and dining L, full basement; quality construction; landscaped 70x
165’ lot. Mid $20’s or best offer. Call CE
4-4076.

LIBERTYVILLE:
3 bedroom ranch, heated
breezeway, gas heat, 2 car attached garage. Good location. EMpire 2-0745.
BY
OWNER,
LAKE
FOREST
7 YEAR
OLD
spacious 6 room
bilevel; 2 large
bedrooms. 2 baths, separate dining room,
panelled family room with fireplace, builtin appliances in efficient kitchen, 13x24
foot
living
room
with
fireplace,
newly
carpeted:
on wooded
%
acre in lovely
area. CE 4-4841.

BUSINESS

PROPERTY

FOR

ST.” JOHNS

Just finished.
Modern
contemporary
built
to overlook ravine. All rooms
are large.
Living
room
and den
are oak panelled.
Kitchen
with built in oven, range,
dishwasher and disposal. Air condition unit in
bedrooms. Zoned hot water heat. Landscaped
Lot includes 188 feet across ravine. $35,500
with low down
payment.
EVANSTON BOND &amp; MORTGAGE CO.
1732 ORRINGTON GR 5-5600 EVANSTON
TWO
apartment
brick duplex
in a new
Lake
Forest area; air conditioned; recreation room; 3 bedrooms in each unit; full
basement; good mortgage available. Call
Ted Gabanski, CE 4-3737.

LOT

cedar ranch, 523 Green Bay. oe
Al Richman, builder, ID
2-9249.

SALE

This
brick
building
suitable
for
light manufacturing,
laundry,
garage or similar business is in the
center of Highland Park business
area. First floor 4500 sq. ft., second
floor 1500 sq. ft. For immediate occupancy. Excellent financing.

PAUL
1925

PHELPS,

Sheridan

Rd.

INC.

ID 2-4580

Older

home converted into 5 rental units—

$310 income monthly, or owner may use 2
BR. apt. for self and take $230 monthly.
Convenient
location.
Call
Mrs.
Svendsen
Quinlan &amp; Tyson, Inc., 735 Deerfield Rd.,
Deerfield. Windsor 5-3750.

VACANT

PROPERTY

BANNOCKBURN
5 acres on Wilmot Rd. in exclusive
lovely
homes.
4 acre
residential
$27,500. Call Mr.
Robinson.

McGUIRE

&amp; ORR

Realtors
ALpine

area of
zoning.
:

1-0228

GReenleaf

5-1080

3 beautiful lots, rolling wooded estate area.
Each lot approximately 1 acre. Near schools
and
transportation.
Unbelievably
priced,
under $8000.

HOMEFINDERS,
AL

111 Green
1-1111

EAST

Bay

Realtors

Road,

LAKE

Wilmette
BR 3-3333

FOREST

A very choice piece of vacant property. 2
plus acres or 4-% acre lots. Nicely wooded
and in an excellent area.
Call

Mrs.

Ludwig

QUINLAN &amp; TYSON, Inc.
1571 Sherman Ave.,
UNiversity 4-2600

Evanston
ALpine 1-6700

IN

Lake Bluff, beautifully wooded lot, 100
x 247 ft., on east Sheridan Rd. Make offer to owner. CE 4-5250.
FOX RIVER frontage, choice. Jerry Matos.
Crystal Lake 459-4646.
LAKE FOREST. Wooded acre lot in established suburb, $5000. Box 66, Palos Park,
Ill. Phone GlIbson 8-8567.
LAKE BLUFF, ravine lot on private lane,
improved, 5/8 acre; CE 4-1117 evenings
and weekend.
DEERFIELD, 900 Beverly, 90 foot lot in
finest section of Briarwoods subdivision.
Terms or will trade towards house. HIIlcrest 6-1646.
AM sub-dividing a more than % acre property and offer inside lots for sale, Private and quiet, zoned for 1 and 2 family
residence.
Several nice trees, many
interesting possibilities.
Write
Box
R-15,
c/o Lake Forester.
WOODED vacant lot for sale southeast corner Green Briar Lane and Winston, Lake
Forest, $6,950. CE 4-0192 or UN 9-1266.
FOR
SALE
one acre or two half acres,
choice property on Duffy Ln., Deerfield.
Terms. By owner. WI 5-1721 after 5 p.m.

SUMMER

&amp;

WINTER

RESORTS

ANTLERS
Resort,
modern
housekeepin
cabins,
reasonable.
Food,
fishing
an
swimming.
Rustic bar. Information, call
ID 2-5553, or write Antler Resort, Route
2, Eagle River, Wis.
BUSINESS

OPPORTUNITY

A TRULY good investment. I need $65,000.
Am willing to pay 6% plus. Write Box
D-40, c/o Highland Park News.

OFFICES,

STORES, &amp;
TO RENT

STORAGE

SPACE

STUDIOS

IN LAKE

FOR-

ES:
Centrally located 252 East Deerpath to 638 North Bank Lane,
Lake Forest. Approximately 2,000
square
feet or possible
to divide.
Present
usage
television,
music
records,
radio,
luggage

merchandise. ‘Available August 1,
1961.
WRITE complete information to
Mr. Albert L.
North County

Illinois,

or

Hall, Attorney, 25
Street, Waukegan,

WRITE

650 North Bank
est, Illinois.

Lane,

“OWNER,”
Lake

For-

STORE,
1931 Sheridan Road in the heart
of
Highland
Park’s
Shopping
Center.
Laser &amp; Company, WHitehall 44318.
STORE
18x40
heated;
$160
per month;
Offices 1 to 6 room suites; paved parking for tenants and customers. 460 Central Ave., Phones ID 2-0150, ID 2-2358.
WORKSHOP
25x32, heat, light, water furnished. 774 Central, Highland Park. Telephone ID 2-2397.
OFFICE for rent, suitable for business or
professional use;
225
square
feet;
2nd
floor; elevator service; excellent location.
Luce, Room 206, 1811 St. Johns.

APARIMENTS

TO

RENT

(Unfurnished)

HIGHLAND
PARK:
3 bedroom
duplex,
close to transportation, no pets, $135 per
month. Call ID 2-7597.
HIGHWOOD: 4 room apartment for elderly
couple; heat and water furnished. Call ID
2-0506.
HIGHLAND PARK: pleasant kitchen, bedroom
apartment
with private
bath;
includes range, refrigerator, and all utilities;
partly furnished. Call ID 2-6914.
HIGHLAND
PARK:
4 room, 2 bedroom
apartment, $110 a month, gas, water, heat
furnished. Telephone ID 2-5175 after 5.
HIGHLAND PARK: 4 room apartment, heat
and water furnished, available June Ist.
Telephone ID 2-2241.
655 CENTRAL AVE.
2144 room apartment in center of Highland
Park for immediate
occupancy.
$85.
See
Mr. Crowell on premises or call Baird &amp;
Warner, Evanston.
GReenleaf 5-1833
524 Davis St.

Thursday,
May 18, 1961 _

�3

ee

ss
: :

;

MENTS TO RENT (Uatarashed
HIGHLAND
Ravinia

_ HOUSES TO RENT (Furnished)
HIGHLAND

PARK
Area

Air Conditioned

APARTMENTS

HOUSE

6791.

Deerfield

Apartments

Modern 2 bedroom apartments. Excellent location, convenient to schools, shopping and
transportation. Ceramic tile baths. Cabinet
kitchen with refrigerator, disposal, built-in
oven aes range.
Off-street parking. Decorate

to suit.

QUINLAN &amp; TYSON, Inc.
735 Deerfield Road

WI

5-3750

GLENCOE
BEL-AIR
DELUXE
HOUSE—S

APARTMENTS

VE

5-2565.

garden.

Eves.

&amp; week

$225

per

ends

VE

1896

month.
5-0343.

3 room
unfurnished,
English basevery close in, rent $75 a month,
2
in advance. For further information

ANCHOR REAL ESTATE
Sheridan Rd.
ID 2-0093
Res. Ph., ID 2-0037

DEERFIELD
apartment, 6 rooms, wall to
wall carpeting, heat and hot water furnished, near transportation and shop) ing,
A
gga July 1,
$150 per month.
WI 5*

ATTRACTIVE 3 room apartment available
June ist, rental $93 per month, 2 year
lease. Call ID 3-1140.
HIGHWOOD, 4 room apartment, heat, light
and water furnished, quiet location. Call
ID 2-5242.
DEERFIELD:
2 bedroom apartment, first
floor, heated, modern 2 year old building,
living room, dining L, cabinet kitchen,
basement
storage
room,
parking
area.
$145. WI 5-0012.
HIGHLAND
PARK—318
TEMPLE
AVE.
OPEN FOR INSPECTION MAY 21, 2 to 5.
Duplex: each unit 3 bedrooms,
1% baths,
kitchen with built-ins, reasonable
rent.
GUY VITI
Realtor
226. Green Bay Rd. Highwood
ID 2-3933
2 ROOM apartment with private bath near
trains and stores for 1 or 2 adults. Telephone ID 2-4672.
HIGHLAND
PARK
5
New
bedroom
townhouse, gas heat, air
~
conditioned, private patios, 9 closets, close
to
schools,
shopping
and_
transportation.
Model now open at 625 Mulberry. ID 2-0946
or CEntral 6-1900HIGHLAND
PARK
DELUXE
TOWNHOUSE
Newly constructed, 2 bedroom, large living
room with diming area, 142 ceramic baths,
fully equipped kitchen with eating area, full
basement, garage. $200. Call ID 2-9049 or
ID 2-3426.
HIGHLAND
PARK:
6 room,
2nd _ floor
apartment, attached garage, heat and water
furnished,
$165.
ID
2-4771,
after
5 p.m. or weekends,
HIGHLAND
PARK: 4 bedrooms, 4 baths,
powder room. First floor: 2 wood burning fireplaces, electrically equipped kitchen, dishwasher,
etc. Private
laundry,
2
garage stalls included. Gas heat. Deluxe
2 apartment building with gorgeous garden. 2 blocks to lake, 2 blocks to station.
Large newly decorated rooms. Some carpeting. Sun porch. Nothing like it. July
possession, $325. ID 2-3607.
34% ROOM modernly decorated, private entrance, near hospital and town, nice location, adults, no pets. ID 2-3417.
LAKE
FOREST:
entire 2nd floor apartment, spacious and pleasant; living room,
dining room,
kitchen,
2 bedrooms
and
bath. Large screened porch, basement and
attic space, close in. Adults only, please.
Call CE 4-1174.
HIGHWOOD,
2 bedroom
apartment,
gas
heat,
private drive,
available
June
Ist.
Rent $85. Call ID 2-0474.
1 ROOM efficiency apartment with bath and
private
entrance,
near
Lincoln
School,
references required. Telephone ID 2-9219.
ROOM
first floor apartment,
heat and
water
furnished,
close to transportation
and shopping. WI 5-0535,

LAKE,

FOREST,

4 room

apartment,

newly

decorated;
‘gas
range
and_
refrigerator;
available June 15. Call CE 4-2700.
LAKE FOREST:
Modernized apartment in
Market Square available June 1. Living
room, dining room, kitchen, 2 bedrooms
and bath. Heat and water supplied. Call
Market Square, Inc., CE 4-0485.
LAKE
FOREST: 3 room, 2nd floor apartment;
kitchen-dining,
living,
bedroom.
Stove and refrigerator. Available July 1st.
Minimum lease 1 year, $110 per month.
CE 4-1377, after 5 p.m.
;

GLENCOE,

NEWLY

(Furnished)

DECORATED, 310

TUDOR COURT, 5 rooms, immediate
--cupancy,
near
Northwestern
station
_
Green Bay Road.
VE 5-2043.

HOUSES

3 bedrooms,
conditioned,

11% baths, recreation
June Ist. $200.

Carr

Co.

Realty

HOUSES
Small
ment,
=
call:

RENT

3 bedrooms, living room, dining
basement. Immediate possession.

AIR-CONDITIONED
TOWNrooms, 1% baths, living room,

Beautiful

FOR

TOWN

dining area, equipped kitchen and full basement.

second

HIGHWOOD—4
rooms,
heat
and
water
furnished. Telephone ID 3-1396.
3 ROOM furnished apartment in Highwood,
residential
district. Call
ID
2-3544,
or
ID 3-0173.
LOVELY
2 room
apartment,
tile. bath,
pretty view, adults, no pets, $100 including utilities, parking. ID 2-7596.
HIGHLAND
PARK,
large
living
room,
kitchen, ceramic bath, utilities furnished,
close to transportation, $95. ID 2-2965.
MODERN
kitchenette sor segge located in
Highwood
business district, 214
rooms;
1 or 2 adults. Phone
CE 4-0136 after
5:30 p.m.
Small attractive East side 2 room garage
apartment, rent $90 a month, 2 months in
advance.
:
ANCHOR REAL ESTATE
1896 Sheridan Rd.
_ ID 2-0093
Res. Ph. ID 2-0037
LAKE BLUFF, 26 Washington St., 3 rooms;
beautifully furnished and decorated; private patio, washer and dryer; convenient.
Call Kenosha, OLympic. 2-7282.
HIGHWOOD:
3 rooms and porch, 1 bedroom, kitchen and living room. Telephone
ID 2-4192 or CE 4-5260.

central TV antenna, indv. dryer and
washer, private garage, near trains
and
shopping.
ID
2-6790,
ID
2-

Garden

bedroom

HIGHWOOD:
3 room furnished apartment,
—
immediately. Telephone
ID

2 bedrooms, 112 baths, gas heat,
fully
equipped ~ kitchen, _ living
room, dining room, tiled floors,

Deerfield

2.

floor knotty pine apartment; range; heat
and electricity furnished. ID 2-2111.
DEERERELD:
2 bedroom apartment, $145
per month,
including heat, gas and hot
water. Near
Schools, shopping and transportation. WI 5-2419,

Modern

TOWN

PARK:

WINNETKA

ocat

TO

room,
$175.
room,
WI

RENT

full
air

5-0984

(Unfurnished)

LAKE FOREST, three bedroom, 114 baths,
available now. New, with full basement
and air conditioned. CE 4-3737.

for

1 year,

4 bedrooms,

ao

HOUSES

&amp;

APARTMENTS

WANTED

ROOMS

TO RENT

NICE large sleeping room, close to shopping, transportation. ID 2-1229.
PARK HOTEL sleeping rooms, by day or
week, free parking, 511 Waukegan Ave.,
Highwood. ID 2-9862.
VEL-WOOD
Motel, 500 Waukegan
Ave.,
Highwood,
Air-conditioned,
kitchenette
rooms for overnight guests and travelers.
TV and shower baths. Telephone ID 25328.
ROOMS
for rent near transportation. 214
Green
Bay Road,
Highwood,
Ill. Telephone ID 2-7000.
SINGLE room for rent,
near transportaber gentleman preferred. Telephone ID
ROOM for rent 1 block from Lake Forest
business district, gentleman preferred; tele-

phone CE 4-2305.

a

A DISTINCTIVE OFFICE PL

MENT SERVICE.

Here is ie top position that every
ambitious

apartments,
and
WANT
to rent: Rooms,
houses for employees of
IC AND
TENTHOUSE THEATRE,
Telephone
VErnon 5
i
SUMMER rental for 2 women, small home,
East. Highland Park area, will take excellent care, best references. Write Box
D-60, c/o Highland Park News.
RESPONSIBLE business man wants to rent
furnished or unfurnished 2 bedroom home
for 2 months June 16 to August 15, will
post bond if desired. MOhawk 4-6130.
occupancy,
WANTED
to rent: September
3 bedroom house and garage, Red Oak
District, rental $200. ID 2-8336 after 6
p.m.
JUST sold home, adult couple wants small
furnished house or 2 bedroom apartment,
June 20th occupancy, summer rental or
short term: lease. ID 2-3209.

es

SECRETARY
TO
PRESIDENT

14%

baths, tear shopping, transportation, public and parochial schools; $250 per month.
Hillcrest 6-0786 after-4 p.m.
ON
Lake
Michigan
at Shoreacres,
Lake
Bluff; modern
house on 5 wooded acres,
attached greenhouse, 6 bedrooms, 6 baths,
furnished or partly furnished, for 1 year
starting June 16th, $425. CE 4-2094.

secretary

has

been

pre-

paring for. Our President who is
Chairman of the Board requires a
personable

young

lady

(25-32)

with |

executive
shorthand
and_ typing
skills (IBM Electric), some college
training, and who is well versed in
executive

ties.

secretarial

Salary

will

responsibili-

correspond

with

your background
and experience.
Please
submit
complete
resume
and recent photo.
For further details
fidential. interview.

phone

for

con-

A POSITION
ENJOY.

THAT
:

EMPLOYER PAYS FEE

\ FITZGERALD
\ PERSONNEL
SUITE 215 NORTH SHORE BLD:
1866 SHERIDAN ROAD
Highland Park

APECO
2100 Dempster St.
Evanston

UN 9-9000

:

WANTED
Experienced bookkeeper’, part:

SECRETARY
Challenging

reer

minded

assuming

utive

or full time.

—

ID

opportunity

for

a

ca-

woman

capable

of

responsibility on an exec-

level.

Shorthand

and

typing

required.
Pleasant
surroundings
and excellent company benefits.

KLEINSCHMIDT
(Div, of Smith Corona
Lake
Cook Rd.

Marchant)
Deerfield

CLEAN
furnished room, ample closet and
WI 5-1000
drawer
space,
parking
space
in
rear,
kitchen privileges if desired. ID 2-4275.
HIGHLAND
PARK: modern, like new 2
sleeping
room,
private
entrance,
bedroom stone ranch, patio, garage, dec- LARGE
parking.
available,
downtown
Highland
orated, near town, adults only.
ImmediPark. ID 2-9492.
ate. $150, or partly furnished. ID 2-8917.
NICELY furnished homelike sleeping room,
SALE OR RENT, big older home, 5 bedample drawer and closet space, hot water,
rooms, tiled baths, plenty of waste space;
single only. Telephone ID
2-0405.
modern kitchen, fireplace, garage. Telephone ID 2-0212.
2 SLEEPING rooms plus bath for rent in POSITION
FOR
A
YOUNG
WOMAN
residential
area
of Deerfield,
close
to with initiative who
likes to work
pretty
2 BEDROOM
modern brick bi-level with
town and train depot. WI 5-5509.
much
on
her
own.
College
background,
garage, close to schools, shopping, park
some
foreign
language
ability,
good
typist.
and transportation. ID 2-5443.
FURNISHED bedroom, bath, sitting room;
$75
per month
payable
in advance;
3 Duties include preliminary searching, veriMODERN
ranch, 3 bedrooms plus maid’s
of Serials and Monomonths contract, renewable; garage space, fying, and routing
room, 214
baths, recreation room, bar,
graphs, maintaining correspondence includseparate
entrance;
no
kitchen
privileges
patio, many extras. Year lease, July ocbut breakfast facilities may be arranged.
ing requesting and acknowledging gifts, and
cupancy. $325. ID 2-0786.
Heat, light, water; bed and bath laundry
expediting of the library’s exchanges with
HIGHLAND PARK, new 3 bedroom Ranch,
included; nurse or teacher preferred. Call other institutions.
11%
baths, large kitchen with built-ins,
EM 2-2828 before 8 a.m. or after 6 p.m.
gas heat, attached garage. Option to buy
for appointment to see.
available. Call ID 2-1338.
Apply:
FURNISHED room with kitchen and launRAVINIA: 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, oil heat,
Personnel Department
dry
privileges.
304 Washington
Street,
11% story, full basement.
Rent $150 or
Northwestern University
Highwood. Telephone ID 3-1628.
will sell. Telephone ID 2-2194.
Evanston, Iil.
LAKE
BLUFF,
pleasant
room
for rent;
HIGHWOOD:
conveniently
located,
clean
og
bath; near transportation. Call CE
and modern 3 room apartment; heat, gas,
4-2971.
water, garbage, stove and refrigerator inpleasant
room
in quiet
home.
cluded. Adults, reasonable. ID 2-1007 or CLEAN,
To work in Sales Promotion and AdvertisPhone CE 41113; 657 Bank Lane, Lake
ID 2-4714.
ing Department.
Forest.
DEERFIELD:
available now, immaculate 3
IN
LAKE
FOREST:
will rent room
or
or 4 bedroom, 2%
bath, 2 car garage,
Pies house with employed woman. CE
brick house, near schools, transportation.
724 Jonquil Terrace, $225, WI 5-3420.
42
For
interesting
Amusement
Film
DepartHOUSE
FOR
RENT—LIBERTY VILLE
LARGE
front room
with large closet, 4 ment. Some experience in inventory, good
blocks from Business District. Telephone
Have small home available, reasonable. rent,
at figures. Typing essential. Excellent for
beautiful surroundings. For further details
ID 2-3527.
movie fan.
contact Mr. Halperin. EV 4-1400.
HELP
WANTED
FEMALE
5 day week, excellent fringe benefits. CONLAKE
FOREST:
4 room
cottage, 2 bedTACT
PERSONNEL
OFFICE.
rooms, bath, $100. Call CE 4-0722 after
2 p.m.
LAKE
FOREST:
2 bedroom
duplex, full
basement, garage, oil heat, near schools,
train. Telephone CE 4-4433.
LAKE
BLUFF:
3 bedroom house; recreation room; screened porch off dining rooin;
11%
baths;
garage;
gas heat; basement;
new carpet and draperies; available July
1150 Wilmette Ave
ALpine 1-8700
1; $240 per month. CE 4-3576.
Wilmette
Interesting position for woman to
DEERFIELD; brick ranch in excellent conassist publications director .
dition. Living room-dining room combination with fireplace; nice kitchen; 3 bed- Typing,
paste-up
and
layout
of
rooms; full basement with recreation area.
publications. Advertising
Close to town and school; June 1 posses- company
sion.
$200
per
month.
Call
PIERSEN
or production experience desirable.
REALTY, WI 5-1670.

GIFTS AND EXCHANGE
ASSISTANT

CLERK TYPIST
ASSISTANT

PUBLICATIONS
ASSISTANT

ING
WILL

IT IS DESIG

ENCYCLOPAEDIA
BRITANNICA
FILMS

Call

Miss

Kench:

2-6600.

z

L. Ringer
457

Central

DENTAL assistant wanted, full or
experience not necessary. W:
c/o Highland Park News.
DOCTOR’S
OFFICE.
Woman,

in some

phases

of medical

part
¢

bs
if

ke

éxperi

office ro

(laboratory or X-Ray technician or
Must
be willing to learn. Top
Phone ID 2-7880 and ask for Jz
life insuram
FULL
time
secretary,
perience, preferably age 35 or over.
ton office. IBM machine. Telephc
vis 8-1511.
a

EXPERIENCED

waitress,

full time,

lent salary and tips, no nights. Apply
lers, 349 Park Avenue, Glencoe, or
VErnon 5-1000.
$
TELEPHONE
operator for
private
club, experienced in P Bx full t
extra. Call Manager
at
between 9 and 5.

TO

RENT

Duraclean Co.

(furnished)

SUMMER
rental: July and August;
comfortable
6 room
furnished
home.
1221
Griffith
Road,
Lake
Forest.
Telephone
CE 4-1793.
LOVELY
2 story home on % acre, ravine
property, 3 bedrooms, living room, separate
dining
room,
breakfast
room,
screened
porch,
1 block
to
shopping,
churches, transportation, available June 1st
aie
1st, $275 per month. ID 2BEDROOM furnished house in Highland
Park; 244 baths, gas heat; 2 open screen
porches,
June
15th
into
September
or
early October. Phone ID 2-0921.
LAKE FOREST, 5 room cottage nicely furnished, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large living
room, kitchen, 2 car garage space; available May 15, $165 monthly; no children;
middle aged couple preferred. Call CE 41971; after Friday, call CE 4-0029.
SUMMER
rental home near Braeside transportation, Ravinia Park, cool lake breezes,
4 bedrooms, 2%
baths, screened porch,
patio. Lease,
$375 a month,
references.
Phone ID 2-3360 or Write Box D-50, c/o
Highland Park News.»
DANISH.
country’ house
in beautiful Ravinia neighborhood
of estates and fine
homes. Large woodland lot. Walking distance to schools, station and beach. Spacious 2 story panelled living room, leaded windows, unusual fireplace. Large dining room, 3 bedrooms. Alll on 1 floor.
Flagstone patio. Furnished, including 214
ton air-conditioner,
dishwasher
and
appliances. One of the North Shore’s most
charming homes. $325 a month or $275
unfurnished or $1000, June 15 to August
31. Box C-60, c/o Highland Park News.
\

839 WAUKEGAN RD.
DEERFIELD
WI 5-2000, MR. LYONS
HIGHLAND

PARK

HOSPITAL

FOREST

college

needs

women for dining room. Ap)
Mrs. Krol, CE 4-3100, ext.

WOMAN—PART

fu
62.

TIME

For
counter
work
in cleaning
perience preferred but not necessary.

VOGUE

565

Roger

CLEANERS

1:

Williams

SALESLADY
Steady work.
Baum’s Pastry
Shop,
Central, Highland Park. ID 2-0815. __
TELLER
Five day week, closed Saturdays;
working conditions; many
fringe
excellent opportunity. Apply in p
call CE 4-5100.

OF

LAKE

FOREST

25 to

AMBITIOUS
active women
customer service work, full or pa
Poise and personality more impo
previous business experience.
C
muneration. Call WI 5-2324 for
ment.

RECEPTIONIST
Top
salary commensurate with
for full time, 5 day week in plez
dren’s dental office.
ID 2-9276

WAITRESSES

and

hostesses

wanted

Crossroads

Shopping

Center

manent full time; apply Mrs.
0713, evenings.
%
PART time woman for general of!
knowledge
‘of adding machine
nt
28 hour, 5 day week.
ply in
Sears, Roebuck &amp; Co., 153
Skoki

Road,

land Park.

All

shifts,

full

NURSES.
and

part

time.

Interesting work
in pleasant environment.
Why
commute
when
you can work close to home?

CALL

PERSONNEL

ID 2-8000 FOR

OFFICE
APPT.

SECRETARY
Part Time
Experienced and expert secretary to do work
at home on IBM electromatic executive typewriter. Shorthand r equired. Please write

Box C-85, c/o Highland

CULLIGAN, INC.

Park News.

IBM Operator
(WE WILL TRAIN)
THE FIRST
~ NATIONAL BANK
HIGHLAND PARK
EXPERIENCED
woman for general office
work including typing, bookkeeping, dictating, and payroll. Must have own transportation.
This position is with a well
established local firm and will be permanent. Please write giving qualifications,
age, salary expectations, etc., Box D-90,
c/o Lake Forester.

Sh

oS

HELP WANTED MALE

~—

LIKE WORKING
WITH
INTERES
PEOPLE? A permanent full time s
sition im Deering Library open soon.
with student assistants in training
izing, and
supervising
the shelv i
shifting of books in the stacks and |
least2
at
ground storage building. Man,
so
years of college, good health, stamina,
:
library experience desirable.
Apply:
Personnel Department
Northwestern University
Evanston, Ill.

NORTHBROOK
CRESTWOOD 2-1000

NEEDS
REGISTERED

Opportunity for a key punch operator with 1 year experience operating 024. Top salary and benefits including profit sharing.

N

VErnon

LAKE

Key Punch Operator

HOUSES

seeUy

SALESMAN
Outside

building

sary.

selling

plumbing,

on

materials.

Draw

heating:

Some experience

against

comission.

sary. For interview contact Mrs.

WI

5-4600.

MORTGAGE

LOAN

ASSIS

Lake County financial institution lookin;
aggressive young man 24 to 30. Good
pearance, personality, and handwri

sential. Person who can type preferred

complete resume by letter, including |
tional
background,
marital
and mil
status, a recent snapshot, and yours:

requirement.

Write

Box

D-80,

c/o

Forester.

MALE

hairdresser,

$125 Salary, plus_

commission, Busy Deerfield
4466, ask for Mr. Bill.

shop.

�aes

RES

HELP

AMBITIOUS
.
TEACHER

|

organization,
leading
supplier of
materials, has openings in its Sales
otion Department
for 3 experienceders. Must have taught at least 3 years,
good knowledge of curriculum, have
revious business experience, and be
ble for 2 months full time work this
er. Position
will pay $450-$625_
per
depending
on qualifications.
Write
teaching
and other experience
c/o

and Park News,

Box D-65.

PERT FLOWER GARDENER (individu1

day a week. No lawn or general
References required. ID 3-1314 after

:
CAREER IN FINANCE
:
vith large financial institution. Essentiality
of
our product under all economic conditions
assures high level of sales production.

HELP

ce or finance background.
Starting
y salary of $650. Excellent training
ram, many fringe benefits. Give qualifi-

ms
in first communication. All replies
id aut Write Box D-55, c/o Highland
ws.
will pay top wages for an all-around
A-1 mechanic. See John Breen, Holmes
Motor
Co., 1909 St. Johns. No phone
ealig.

DF

CAB

DRIVERS: full and part time, days
nights, ages 21 to 50, hospital group
surance plan, year round work. Highland
itk-Highwood
Yellow
Cab
Co.,
214
reen
Bay Road, Highwood, III.

\NTED:

male

grocery

clerk,

must

have

perience. Phone WI 5-0707.
MANENT
full time chefs wanted for
w
Pancake
House;
griddle experience
ssary. Call ID 3-0587, Mr. Kraemer.

ERIENCED

gardener

for Tuesday

day; good pay. Call CE 4-2868.

and

NTED:

Man for general gardening care,

turday

or

Sunday. . ID

.RDENER,
ionths;

year

round

experienced;

HELP

2-3845.

or

summer

references

required.

WANTED—DOMESTIC

D

ACTICAL
nurse
or
capable
woman,
white,
to care for 3 children and help
new baby, 3 weeks starting middle

a,

wad

cleaning

woman

employed.

woman
who will take interest in
neat thorough cleaning
%
day a
, must provide own transportation, $2
hour to the right person. Call ID 3T
irl;

time mother’s helper;
high school
Thursday night through Sunday; light

yusework

and child care. ID 3-1459.

JOK,
general housework, live in, no launry; own room, bath and T.V. Experimoed; references. CE 4-2916.
}
G and general housework, current
OK,
white, experienced, temporary June
5 to August 1; other help
ept; recent
ferences required. Telephone
CE 4-0875.
day or Wednesday; white; references
ired. Phone CE 4-0327.
D maid, white; upstairs work and
ng;
stay;
references
required.
Mrs.

ke Williamson, CE 4-5590.
ISEKEEPER,

cook, general, white only,

|

adult; live in; recent references;
salary;
near
transportation.
TeleJIC
CE 4-1014.
KING, housework, must like children,
1 room and bath, top salary, references

wired. VE 5-0827.

:

Li

BLE

woman

for

general

housework.

like children, stay. Own room and
ID 2-6288.
YUSEKEEPER, white, middle aged, livein, man and 2 teen age boys; West Lake
1

area. Write
-Park News.

Box

D-80,

c/o

for adult household,
12 p.m. to 8 p.m., own
. ID

High-

clean and
transporta-

2-5207,

ENCED

GIRL

FOR

ah |

‘AY,

REFERENCES,
$45. ID 2-1358.
RAL housework, child care, live in,
room, TV, recent references required,

Working

VE

fenera:

emia’

diher

‘required, VErnon 5-1401.
EEPER,

good

WEEK,

have

help,

room

ID

Pa

for

references

SITUATION

cook,

6

room

girl

wanted

BE

gh

July 5;

for,

e CE

for

. teporary,

2

in family;

@Xperienced

general

46453.

June

excellent

white

1

person.

experienced,

every

Thurs-

local references, own transportation
ferred. Call CE 4-3241.
BRAL housework, child care, stay, rereferences required, own room, bath
TV. ID 2-4179.

.L woman with own car to work from

to 1 and return to cook and serve 6
‘
prner, 5 day week. Salary open.

ING and some housework, top wages,
er help, references. CE 40221.

NDRESS
ily;

no

rred;

459-5054,

KAPERIENCED
man
will do your
maintenance.
Telephone
ID 2-8114

for

sheets;

summer

references.

pick

months;

up

Please

and

call

2

in

CE

4-

deliver

AL housework, must like children,
home, permanent position, top sal-

my own room, bath, TV, references
ed. ID 2-1995.

‘ a 56—D 48

lawn
eve-

ninog,

EXPERIENCED
gardener will do gardening,
landscaping,
fast
and
dependable.
Own truck. ID 2-7698 or ID 2-6668 after
EXPERIENCED
cabinet maker will repair
all types of furniture in his home. Call
ID 3-2742.

SITUATION

WANTED—DOMESTIC

REFERENCES

CHECKED

NO FEE!
LIVE IN GIRLS

General

DAY WORKERS
Housework, Child Care,

all ages.

1310

Expéfis

9-1467

RMPLOYMENT

Chicago

Avenue,

|

YOUNG

wohN

Evanston

HIGH
school
graduates
desire
work
as
mother’s helpers for the summer.
Contact
Mrs.
skil
Bostrum,
Ishpeming,
Michigan, HU 6-6446 after 6 p.m.
MOTHER’S
Helper,
experienced,
17 year
old, senior, work
summer
months,
call
or write Shirley Schnoor, Owen, Wisconsin. CAstle 9-2910.
MOTHER’S
Helper: experienced;
17 years
old, work summer months. Call or write
beye
Petke, Withee, Wisconsin, CAstle

man

wants

day

work

cleaning

or

BABY

27—6

May

28—10

Lower

mink

and

condition,

matara
size

16,

seal

coats,

exWI

Sale by HAZEL

ANN

STUPPLE

Furniture
and
antiques for sale:
Removed from my home several mahogany
18th Century lamps and end tables, hanging
wall shelves, antique Victorian walnut spindle bed, antique Victorian walnut sideboard
with
what-not
shelves,
Victorian
antique
mirrors, pair antique English foyer chairs,
large wood four fold hand
decorated screen,
pictures, lamps, antique bric-a-brac, etc. All
reasonably priced, may be seen Monday thru
Friday. 10 a.m.t 0 5 p.m. at 7438 Milwaukee

ies,

c/o Michel

Kay

Studios,

sacrifice $100. ID 2-5050.
COUCH,
chairs,
tables,
lamps,
rotisserie,
baby furniture, and miscellaneous; men’s
clothing, size 42, extra long. Best offer
accepted. Call ID 3-1678,
SERTA
double
foam
mattress
and
box
spring, walnut
headboard,
2 years old;
new orange silk spread, $150. Telephone
ID 2-8475.
2 FRIGIDAIRE
air conditioners,
1 ton,
$100; 34 ton, $75, perfect working condition; 72 in. rustic man picnic table and
4 benches, $40; misc. outdoor furniture.
ID 3-2591.

Toys
Jewelry
Book Nook
Furniture
Electric
Leather

Saws
Gds.

DOOR
FOR

BAR

PRIZES

ALL
OR

STORE WIDE
REDUCTIONS
ON
FLOOR SAMPLES

John R. Whalen
Furniture
808

Waukegan

Deerfield

Rd.

WI 5-1915

BRUNSWICK
POOL TABLE
FULL SIZE
Complete equipment,
brushes-etc.

cues

- balls

REAL BARGAIN
1142 Sheridan Rd.
ORT

VALUE

- racks-

ID 2-2044

CENTER

1905 SHERIDAN RD. HIGHLAND PARK
Spring
bargains:
very
reasonably
priced.
Conlon
ironer,
portable
GE _ dishwasher,
washing
machines,
electric stoves,
Italian
dining set, drop leaf extension dining table,
kitchen sets, bedroom set, headboard, sofas,
2 baby chests and crib in excellent condition, leather top
end
table,
corner
step
table, coffee tables, lamps, new draftsman
drawing board, gas incinerator, formals.
DRASTICALLY
reduced!
Sale—Sisal rugs
from Holland. Ideal for sun porch, covered
patio, famiy
room
or recreation
room.
Beautiful natural color, Block design. Extremely durable; resistant to moisture. 9
ft. x 15 ft., $39.88; 9 ft. x 12 ft., $29.88;
8 ft. x 10 ft., $27.88; 6 ft. x 9 ft., $19.88.
The Fair, Old Orchard.
3 PIECE bedroom set. 1 hospital bed, practically new. Telephone ID 2-1483.
REFRIGERATOR,
Frigidaire, good condition, $50; Air conditioner, Coldspot, 1%
ton, $100, ID 2-9862.

SOFA

bed

$15;

portable

sewing

machine

$35;
crib, playpen,
highchair,
$3
bookcase $6; chest $5. ID 2-2739.

DAYSTROM

round

formica

36” plus leaf, like
lounge chair, $15;

Nlles

6 PIECE s@ctidnal sofa, like new, cost $1200,
aaerifice $200; 83 in. commode, cost $600,

House

SPONSORED BY
CONGREGATION BETH

'HOUSEHOLD GOODS
FOR SALE
THURS., FRI., &amp; SAT., 10 A.M.-4 P.M.
143 OAK KNOLL, HIGHLAND PARK
(At
corner
of Sheridan
Rd.,
2nd _ street
north of County Line Rd.) Pair tufted back
beige
easy
chairs;
mahogany
2 pedestal
table, 6 chairs &amp; sideboard; 3 cushion down
filled Lawson Couch: brass fender &amp; screen;
pair tall plant stands; custom made plate
glass wall cabinet; single studio bed; small
tables;. small
pine chest;
pair twin beds
complete;
double
bed
ends
only;
Rattan
porch furniture; lots of good drapes; 18th
Century Engilish style walnut chest, dresser
mirror &amp; 2 night tables; 4 chrome breakfast chairs; leather topped brown mahogany
drop end table-desk; table model radio-recpa a changer;
some
miscellaneous.
ID
279.

p.m.

SNACK

CLOTHING

SALE

reasonable.

Discount

BAKERY

SHEARED
Raccoon coat, size 14-16, cost
$625, will accept reasonable offer. Like
new. Call WI 5-4101.
PROM and graduation dresses, skirts, etc.,
sizes 11 to 14, value to $50, sacrifice $2
to $12. Telephone ID 2-9250.
3 BEAUTIFUL
Mink stoles. 1 Beaver jacket, excellent condition. ID 2-2089.
EXCEPTIONALLY
fine
men’s’
Brooks
Brothers winter and summer
suits, size
36-38 short, shirts, underclothing, sweaters.
318 Maple, Highland Park.
re

Than

chest of drawers,

kitchen

each;

table,

new, $20; modern red
green Hide-a-bed $45;

green

$12; power mow-

ér, brand new, $12. Telephone ID 3-1181.
MOVING
sale — miscellaneous
household
goods,
including
box springs
and
mattress, Nesco
roaster,
child’s playground
equipment and 65 yards used high grade
carpeting in good condition, ID 2-4624.
MILANO tables; cocktail with marble top,
54x16; commode,
beige distressed finish,
24x24. {1D 2-6888,

8

SCREENS

and

screen

doon

7? it.

refrigerator,

apartment

size

10

cubic

practically

gas

stove,

new.

small

refrigerator, 1 twin bed, mattress, springs,
1 roll-away. Caill after 5:30, ID
2-1874,
INCH Universal gas stove, perfect condition, 2 years old, immediate sale, $50.
Call ID 3-0424,
ANTIQUES; several pieces in Early American country pine; some cherry and walnut; 1485 N. Green Bay Rd., CE 4-2559.
LARGE claw-footed round coffee table, antique dresser, new fur jacket with mink
collar, gray lamb coat. CE 4-2073.
REDWOOD
furniture: love seat, 2 chairs,
corner table, end tables, excellent condition; rug of hemp squares. CE 4-0681.
PRESSURE canner; blancher; miscellaneous
canning
supplies;
walnut
kidney shaped
desk
with
leather top;
3 piece
walnut
French Provincial bedroom set; mattress
and box spring; nightstand; maple chest;
miscellaneous chairs; odd dishes; lamps;
3 piece “Rustic
Man’
patio furniture;
luggage. 318 Maple, Highland Park.
CALORIC incinerator, boy’s 24 in. Schwinn
bike, Craftsman rotary power motor, like
new Wedgewood Holly, built-in gas range
top, unused bathroom fan. ID 2-0576.
CABLE NELSON small grand piano, $300;
beds, davenport, stove, washer, ice box,
porch furniture, odds and ends. Call CE
4-1259 for appointment. Can be seen any
time Friday.
,
NEW
Hoover vacuum cleaners as low as
$49.95; 24 in. TV, reconditioned, $49.95;
new refrigerators and freezers as. low as
$149.95; wholesale prices; our 25th year
in Lake
Forest.
We
give
S&amp;H
Green
Stamps.
Freeman’s TV
and Music,
648
Western, Lake Forest.
MOVING:
must sell power mower, 3 piece
sectional
sofa,
bookcase,
TV _ console,
drapes, miscellaneous bargains. ID 2-3691.
SETH THOMAS clock; variety crystal glassware in sets; cut glass; all perfect, sale
Pay 20. 1010 Springfield Avenue, Deerield.
6 YEAR crib with extra junior side, matching maple chest on chest. WI 5-5517.
KIMBALL grand piano, sofas, lounge chairs,
tables, draperies, English dishes, service
for 15; silver coffee set, miscellaneous. ID
2-4777.
24 INCH
cabinet TV, excellent condition,
$50. WI 5-5916.
TABLE, formica top, 1 leaf, excellent condition, $12. Telephone CE 4-3663.
CUSTOM
sofa, needs slip cover, $50; or
trade for Hide-a-bed. 1472 Lincoln Place,
Highland Park.
‘G.E. AUTOMATIC
washer and dryer set,
like new; Philco 9 foot refrigerator, new
condition;
good
dinette
set;
occasional
chairs;
Waring
blender;
accordion
and
miscellaneous. Hales, 1920 Sheridan Road,
North Chicago, DE 6-2353.
FOR
sale, mahogany, Duncan Phyfe drop
leaf table with extra leaf, 6 dining chairs.
Call CE 4-4035.
:
PORCH glider and 2 matching chairs, $35.
Call ID 3-0523.
’
1 RUSKO white enamel combination storm
and screen door, like new, size 32x80%4,
$50; 7 porch bamboo
blinds, with concealed hardware, 1 year old, various sizes,
£45. Call ID 2-3112 after 6 p.m.
GE ELECTRIC range, 40 in. with grill and
meat thermometer, like new. WI 5-2075.
MOVING
sale—dining set, server, antique
tables,
dressers,
commodes, _ bric-a-brac;
large davenport, bunk beds, bed; miscellaneous;
power
mower,
washer,
dryer,
freezer,
dehumidifier;
clothing,
boy’s,
girl’s, women’s; mink and broadtail jackets, bargains. Saturday and Sunday, 1 to
5. 211 Linden Park Place, Highland Park.
FRIGIDAIRE Imperial electric range, G.E.
electric drier in excellent working condition. WT 5-1308.
MODERN
glass and ebony cocktail table,
planter lamp, shopping cart, pink drapes
and bed spread, men’s tailor made clothes,
9 foot garage door. WI 5-2639.
MUST
sell 6 rooms furniture, leather top
occasional tables, $15 each; almost new
white dinette set, cost $170, a buy at $70;
1 year
old
Hotvoint
refrigerator,
cost
$385, now $200. Many more bargains. Call
WI 5-5566 before 6 p.m. and WI 5-5319
after 6 p.m.
CRIB,
mattress,
Baby-Tenda
and _ chair,
Pet ts picnic table, desk and chair, WI
~4388.
DINING set, oak, table with custom made
pads, 6 chairs with attractive washable
seat covers and buffet, $45; cocktail table,
mahogany finish, stain resistant, $3; TV,
17 inch table model for bedroom or child’s
room, $5; fireplace set, like new, black
and
brass,
screen,
tools,
aridirotis,
log
40

a.m.- sell out

KIDDIELAND

GIRL’S clothing, size 2-3 years; boy’s clothing, size 4-5 years; lady’s dresses, size 12,
prom dress; men’s shirts, white and coloe
size 15 and 16; toys, tricycle. WI 5-

RANCH

COUCH,

p.m.-11

Kit. Wares
Hardwares
Gift Wares
DrugsSundries
Electric Drills ®
Power Tools
@

WHILE
you golf, shop, spring clean, or
work day or week, your children can play
here. CE 4-0521.
SISTERS, age 20 (college), 17 (high school
senior) desire summer employment caring
for children; references. Teal, 712 N. La__ fayette, Sandwich, Ill. Phone 5231.
RELIABLE
woman
wanted
to baby
sit
for 2 well behaved children, good hourly
wages. Send name and phone number to
Highland Park News, c/o Box D-70.
WOMAN to care for bov of working mother. Telephone WI 5-1797.

FOR

May

COLDSPOT

feet, used only 2 months,
Telephone ID 3-1088.

American Legion Hall
849 Waukegan Rd.
Deerfield

SITTING

CLOTHING

Sat.,

§

HOUSEHOLD GOODS FOR SALR

1959

Bargain Bazaar
And Auction
Sun.,

ci

FOR SALE |

HOUSEHOLD Goops

yard
work.
References.
DExter
66742
after 5 p.m.
WILL do ironing in my own home; call
between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. CE 4-9086.
TWO
girls 17 desire cooking, housework,
child
care,
together;
can
drive;
references; experienced; call Westfield 97J or
write Gini Clark, Westfield, Wis.
EXPERIENCED couple wants cleaning and
yard work. Please call between 6 and 7
p.m. ID 3-2109.
HOUSEMAN
wants
general cleaning
and
household duties by day. References. Call
DExter 6-5167 after 6 p.m.
IF you are going away on vacation or coming home with a new baby and want help
with your children, call GReenleaf 5-7119.
A-1 references.
WILL do laundry or ironing in my home.
Pick up and deliver. Telephone ID 3-0302.
RELIABLE
woman
wants
work
Monday,
Tuesday
and Wednesday.
Call Charcie,
ONtario 2-2043.
HIGH School graduate desires summer job
as mother’s helper or baby sitter; stay;
references. KImball 6-1024 after 4 p.m.
CHAMBER
maid or second maid; experienced;
references. Write Box R-25, c/o
The Lake Forester.
WHITE
woman
desires work
by day or
week; experienced; references. Telephone
ONtario 2-3559.

Pyey,

SERVICE

DOWNSTAIRS
work, start immedy until June 20th; recent references.
ase call Mrs. McLaughlin, CE 4-0153.

SEWORK.

MAN, white, will do yard and lawn work,
%
days
fine;
also
screens
and
storm
windows. Call ON 2-3757.
GARDENER-CARETAKER
25 years landscape plus
10 years carpenter experience
Dan T. Close, CE 4-0126
PO. Box 311, Lake Forest, Ill.
CUMPrikNi
man desires opportunity to
contribute
effectively to your
organization. Experienced administration, purchasing, inventory control. 2 Years college,
44, married.
Call collect, Crystal
Lake

COOPER

ae

maid,

WANTED—MALE

UNiversity

quarters,
required.

ork and child care, own room, 5
references, $45 a week. ID 3-2034,
‘SEMAID immediately for ont Week,
il or part time, for One Yeak Old boy.
AL.

SITUATION

.

PONSIBLE

WANTED—FEMALE

ONE
day service on: cleaning, gardening,
odd and skilled jobs, by expert workers,
$2.25 an hour. ALpine 1-4636.
RELIABLE white man wishes interior painting,
paper
et
and
wall
washing.
Telephone ID 2-8917.
RELIABLE
single man (white) will barter
and exchange free ldbor (40 hours per
month) for free living quarters on Lake
Forest estate (furnished). Now employed
22 years with same company. Write Box
R-20, c/o Lake Forester.
PETERSON’S Professional Gardening Service.
Member
National
Association
of
Gardeners. Flowers, lawns, trees and shrub
| a
emus
MUlberry
5-3525,
Chicago

enced,

10use. stay, beautiful living
Its, $45. Local references
&gt;

AGENCY

VACATION
bound parents, do you need
a capable proxy mother to care for your
children while you are away? Good driver,
excellent references. Telephone ID 2-8152
or ID 2-7597.
TWO
college girls want summer
employment from June 12 to September 2. Contact Rose Kunos, c/o Suomi College, Hancock, Michigan.
HIGH
school senior wishes summer, work,
caring for children, will live in. Experienced, reliable. WI 5-2322 after 5.
LANGUAGE
can be fun! Let this Purdue
“language bug” bite and you'll not only
learn Spanish and/or French, you'll love
it. Available June
1-September
15. Get
full treatment or just “booster shot’ to
help over that final hump. ID 3-0422.
PERSONABLE,
intelligent
young
woman
desires part time work as receptionist in
medical office. Days flexible. ID 2-4239.
EXPERIENCED
student nurse desires job
as a receptionist in doctor’s office for
summer and part time all year. ID 2-0162.
2 GIRL’S want summer employment beginning
June
12 through
August;
contact
Salome
Makela
or
Sarajean
Bordeaux,
Suomi
re
Hancock,
Michigan,
Houghton 2506.
PERSONABLE,
dependable
High
School
senior for summer work; consider any type
of work; have own car. Call CE 4-0471.

5-4172.

housework,

EMPL.

APPLICATIONS
being
accepted.
Kathryn
Dowse Employment Agency &amp; Secretarial
Service.
273
E.
Market
Square,
Lake
Forest. CE 4-1148.

GENERAL

NAI
per week.

WANTED

eh

SITUATIONS WANTED—DOMESTIC

DOMESTIC

ALL FREE—NO FE B
20 cook, General Maid Jobs
ots wk.
Nursemaids and second maids
50-55 w k.
A-1 COUPLE JOBS $450-500 mo.
MRS. BAKER SHORELINE AGENCY
525 Lincoln, Winnetka
HfMlicrest 6-5818
EXPERIENCED woman for generaj housework and plain cooking to live in 5 days,
own
room
bath
overlooking
lake,
references required. ID 2-8728.
GENERAL maid; reterences; experience unnecessary; plainest cooking;
light housework; first floor only; no laundry;. own
room and bath; 2 adults; 2 school age
pS
Telephone Mrs. Blackwell,

refer applicants with accounting, real estate,
It

WANTED

high

for 11 ft. by 11 ft. poroh,
$20. Call ID
2-6280.
USED couch,
gray with floral print, good
condition afid
reasonable. Call ID 2-4296.
COMPLETE
set of wrought
iron porch
DELUXE
automatic washer, 3 years old,
furniture with upholstered cushions, like
needs some répair, any reasonable offer
new: Craftsman rotary mower. ID 2-6167.
accepted. WI 5-4516.
;
AUTOMATIC.
washer, 2 years old, looks
LARGE
bed chair with ottoman, excellent
new, $60; Baker desk, cost $375, best ofcondition and reasonable. Call ID 2-8415.
fer; aquarium 20x12x11, never used, $20;
very old English bow front chest, $200;
BEAUTIFUL English type baby carriage in
pair
bamboo
and
cushion
chairs,
$10
perfect condition; some cool summer maMOTHER’S
Heiper: experienced, 17 years
each. ID 3-0471.
ternity
shorts
and
tops.
ID
2-6942.
old, Senior, work summer months. Call
ELECTRIC stove and refrigerator; no reaPRICED to sell: loungé chair with ottoman,
or write Beth Westendorf, Withee, Wissonable offer refused. Call CE 4-2724.
blond mahogany corner table, lamp, Filter
consin, CAstle 9-2042.
Queen
tank
type
vacuum
cleaner
with
atGARAGE
SALE
TWO young
men want to do lawn mowing.
tachments, double bedspread, lined drapes, French Provincial dining room table, $35;
Call MAjestic 3-9483 and ONtario 2-9674,
mangle, highest offer. Call ID 2-7828.
assorted tables and chairs. 2620 Roslyn CirWOMAN
will take care of children while
QUEEN
wringer washer, excellent cle. Highland Park.
mother works, references. Telephone WI | SPEED
condition,
reasonable.
Wanted:
portable
REALLY
iow mileage
1955 Chevy; work5-4672.
laundry tub, 15 gallon capacity. WI 5-4073.
bench; tool chest; tools; garden
equipWOMAN desires position as cook; local ref: BEIGE rug, pad, 11x15; play pen; G-E
ment;
!awn
chairs;
dresser;
beds: rugs:
erences; experienced. Cali CE 4-9157,
electric stove, miscellaneous
items.
Call
desk;
chairs;
tables;
sofa;
bookcases;
MOTHER'S
helper,
age
17, experienced,
WI 5-5706.
dranes;
new
basketball
backboard
and
wishes work for summer. Will live with FOR sale in perfect condition a complete
basket; kitchen stool; cork bulletin board;
older sister in Ravinia. Patricia Niesen,
tovs; games; bridge table; rummage. ID
set of Youngstown steel kitchen cabinets
Ravinia Orthopedic Clinic, ID 2-7600.
2-5643.
including cooking top, gas oven, stainless
HIGH school girl from Michigan would
steel hood
and fan and Formica tops.
COME early. Bargains galore. Glencoe PTX
like job as mother’s helper for summer
Will sell for half price or will take best
Half Price Sale, Friday, May 19, 8:30 to
‘months, Walking distance of Immaculate
offer. For appointment
call ID 2-5570, |
11:30 A.M., Central School, Greenwood
Conception Church. Evelyn, ID 2-9872.
evenings call ID 2-1287.
and Hazel, Glencoe.

grate, $10; Metronome,
new,

$4.69 WT

ANTIQUE
Colonial

Seth Thomas,

like

§-1135.

low-poster twin beds; 4 drawer
type desk. excellent condition;

girls hicycle. Call CE 4-1669.
DELUXE
RCA Estate stove, excellent condition, 4 burner, grill, deep well, double
oven. $60. ID 3- 2118.
END
tables,
chairs,
desk,
electric Nesco
roaster, rotary lawn mower, miscellaneous,
Call ID 2-2822, 904 Park Avenue West.
VUHILD’S double swing set with glider, good
condition. reasonable. ID 2-6618.
GENUINE antique Louis XIII dining room
set, table. 6 chairs. buffet. Purchased in
France. Call WI 5-5661.
WESTINGHOUSE washer - dryer combination, about 4 years old, needs some repair,
$50. Call WI 5-3173.
3 PIECE
bedroom
set, mahogany,
good
condition, fairly priced. ID 2-4553.
ELECTROLUX sales and service representative in your locality! Bob LeClair, telephone ID 2-6367.

MISCELLANEOUS

BRAND
24”
24”

FOR

SALE

NEW—PERFECT
POWER MOWER
RIDING MOWER
1/3 OFF
ID 2-1716

|p Bureaey, May,

�"MISCELLANEOUS
FOR SALE

MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE
PLANTS
Giant

FOR

YOUR

Pansies

and

Violas

in flats

and boxes.
Tuberous
Geraniums,
Impatiens,
Begonias and Lantanas.
Flats of Annuals: Hybrid Petunias
double Petunias, Snapdragons in
separate colors and mixed, carnations, marigolds, asters, verbena,
ageratum, coleus, dwarf dahlias,
many others. Tomato and Vegetable plants.
Hardy Chrysanthemums and Cushion Mums, Phlox, Daylilies, Veronicas and many other choice

perennials

ready

for your

selec-

tion.
Ground Cover plants; Bowle’s Vinea, Pachysandra,
Euonymus
Vegetus, E. Coloratus, E. Kewen-

sis, Baltic Ivy and Ajuga.
We

FOR

GARDEN

grow
always

our own plants; they
fresh and healthy.

are

Drive
FARM,

to
OMAN’S
FLOWER
located on Rt. 83, 1% mile

south of Rt. 22, near Long Grove.
Open week days and Sundays 8

A.M. to 8 P.M.

MUSICAL
Must

SALE

HARDY

PERENNIALS and ROCK
GARDEN PLANTS
ALSO PANSIES ALL COLORS
GERANIUMS ALL COLORS
VINCA VINES
TOMATOES
All

kinds

of

annuals

and

shady

545 Broadview

plants
ID 2-2936

FRENCH
and Spanish tutoring; prefer beginners and children ages 9 to 14 that
have a sincere interest in learning a second
language. WI 5-1497.
FREE estimates, painting, wall-washing, window washing; builders welcome. J and R
Painters. Call KImball 6-1171 collect.
STAINLESS steel storm doors and windows
expertly installed; also embossed
aluminum siding. CoAlume. Call CE 4-1750.
WHEEL P aces
an
HOSPITAL BED
Deluxe equipment used 6 months. Collapsible
chair, has demountable
arms,
rigid form
rubber seat. Bed adjusts height and multiposition. Includes table. Price % cost. Phone
CR 2-4526
MIMEOGRAPH
MACHINE,
Speedoprint,
Liberator 200 Model, ar
a condition.
$50 or best offer. VE 5-3410
PERSIAN
Lamb
%
length coat size 12;
Persian lamb jacket, size 14-16; formica
table and 6 chairs; Eska mulching lawn
mower, 1 year old. Call mornings or after
6 p.m., ID 2-7785.
May
20,
320
CARPORT
sale
Saturday,
Hirst Court, Lake Bluff.
REFRIGERATOR,
$35; girl’s bicycle, $10;
stroller, $5; clothing. All excellent condition. WI 5-5052.
COMBINATION
T.V., record player, AM,
FM radio; girl’s clothing, size 12. Call CE
4-3753.

SUMMER
PORCHES
This
with
A

summer enjoy outdoor
indoor convenience.

screen

enclosed

porch

living

on

your

patio is the answer.

Completely in-

stalled

for as little as

and

finished

$15.95 Per Month
FREE ESTIMATES

Northbrook Lumber
Company
(Skokie &amp;
Northbrook,
IIl.

HOGAN’S

1390

Rds.l,
2-3000

Road,

line of annuals
choice color

READY

HAY

GREENHOUSES

Duffey

way

Dundee

FOR

SPRING

Complete

Deerfield
and perennials
geraniums

PLANTING

Assortment

of

All Annuals and Flats
TUBEROUS BEGONIAS

Impatiens
Potted
Mile

south

planting

of 22 off Saunders

Williams,
IDlewood

SAVE

RUMMAGE SALE
Road

SELLING
Sundays

10-3

Highland

Park

2-6333

ALMOST

HARDWARE

— PAINTS
SUPPLIES

OUT
wae

P.M.

plus shift
firm. ID

$220

Plants
service

ASSOCIATED
RENT-ALLS
Roger

TRUCKING—VE. "51195

TRANSMISSION for sale. 4
er
ig still in car. Price

RENT EVERYTHING FOR THE HOME
FROM YOUR ASSOCIATED STORE
Portable TV Sets
Foldaway Beds
High Chairs
Reducing Machines
spital Beds
Heavy Duty Vacuums
Floor Waxers
Power Tools
Wall Paper Equip.
Moving Equipment
heel Chairs
Rug gg po 2 po
Floor Machines
Ladders
WE DELIVER

651

BEINLICH

HALF
—

GARDEN

ENTIRE
oe
Daily

12-7

P.M.

NORTH SHORE HARDWARE
1238 Skokie Valley Road
Highland Park

FENCES
“YOU

SELECT—WE
ERECT”
WOOD
OR WIRE
nr
ites" aL
aad
CABANAS GARDEN ULLITY. SUI
DINGS
For Free Estimates Call
Mike
Estate Fencing
CE 4-1283

OUR

BIGGEST

RUMMAGE

RUMMAGE sale Thursday, May 18, 9 a.m.5 p.m.; Friday, May 19, 9 a.m. to noon.
Union Church, Prospect Ave., Lake Bluff.
WILMOT School Thrift Shop final liquidation sale. Good buys in children’s summer
wear. Wednesdays from 9 to 3 at South
Park School.
INSTRUMENTS
EXTRA

FOR

SALE

SPECIAL

Limited selection of Lowrey Holiday Organs repossessions
and
trade-ins.
Nothing
down—take
on monthly payments of only
$25.30. Regular new organ guarantee.
SUMMER
Brand new
month.
Mason
grands

PIANO

Cable

pianos

SPECIALS
only

$16.86

per

&amp; Hamlin and Knabe floor models,
and consoles, greatly reduced.

9-9 Daily

Sat.

MOVING SALE.
of 90 new and used

pianos.

New spinets, 88 note ...-....----.--- from $395
Used spinets and consoles ............ from $295
15 used grand pianos ..............--.-&lt;« from $295
Used player uprights ...:..........---..sc00- from $195
Practice uprights
from $ 79
See the new Hardman Duo Player ——
Mon.-Thurs.
9-9, Sunday
11FIELDS PIANO CO.
2921 W. Touhy Chicago AMbassador 2-2023
USED
HAMMOND
ORGANS,
with neworgan guarantees from Lyon-Healy. Hammond
chord
organs,
$785, low
as $30
Aa
Hammond
spinet
organs,
$1225,
low as $45 down. Lyon-Healy, 1843 Second
Street, Highland Park; ID 2-3434.

MUSICAL

INSTRUMENTS

WANTED

CHICAGO a
GALLERIES WILL PAY
CASH
FOR
PIANOS,
ALL
MAKES,
STYLES. BONUS FOR STEINWAYS AND
OTHER
GOOD MAKES. CAL L_ LONGBEACH
a.
EVENINGS
ROGERS
PARK 1
PIANOS wanted: bonus prices for Steinway
and Baldwin. VErnon
5-¥640 eves. and
Sunday. AMbassador 2-2023 days.

WANTED

TO

CANGE wanted. WI 5-5606.
GIRL’S 20 in. bike in good condition. Telephone ID 3-0767.
“Let us handle the sale of your household
furnishings in your home.” Personal following
ROCHELLE KAGAN &amp; RITA FIELD
For details call AL 1-7639.
BIKE, 26 in. boy’s and 20 in. girl’s. Nylon
net playpen. WI 5-1239 or WI 5-4322.
LARGE play pen, metal high chair, car seat,
double stroller, must be in good condition. Telephone ID 2-8505.

LOST

AUTOMOBILES

FOR

SALE

Mercedes-Benz
of
Lake Forest
We

Will

European

Arrange

Delivery of

Your Mercedes-Benz at the
Advantageous European
Retail

Price...

Then We will Service It
On Your Return Home
NOW

FEATURING

The new ultra modern service facilities for ALL imported automobiles. German
mechanics
able to
take care of ANY and ALL import
car problems.

9-5

KNAUZ
1060 Western
CE 4-2800

MOTOR
Ave.
Open

SALES

Lake Forest
evenings, Sundays

Holmes Motor Co.
North Shore’s
Ford Headquarters
We
offer for sale the following
like new 1961 executive driven cars
and demonstrators. All of these cars
are fully factory guaranteed by the
second oldest franchise dealer in
the United States.

1961
1961
1961
1961
1961
1961

Thunderbird, full power.
Sunliner convertible.
Falcon 4 dr., auto. trans., radio, heater.
Country Sedan, 9 passenger.
4 door Galaxy.
2 door Galaxy hardtop.

These cars can be purchased
less than factory invoice.

for

ee

PATIO chaises, large tricycle, lamps, bowling
' ball and case. All reasonably priced. Telephone ID 3-1323
1958 SKYLINE mobile home, 45x10, front
kitchen,
2 bedrooms,
small
equity
on
take-over payments. For information call
ID 2-5000, ext. 8151.

‘Thursday, May 18, 1961

LOWREY
Organ Studios
Of Highland
1795

St.

Johns

Ave.

Holmes Motor Co.
1909 St. Johns
ID

Park
ID

2-2510

LAKE

Highland

Park

2-8640

1957 FORD convertible, clean, original owner, radio, heater, new whitewalls, power
steering, low mileage, must sell this week
ae $950 or best offer. Call VErnon 5-

MOTORS

Authorized
Chrysler Corp.
Dealer
First Street
Highland Park, Ill.
Hours—Weekdays 9-9
Sat. 9-6
Sun. 104
1766

98

Top

Allowances

New
Open

wake

Made

On

cOnveRIeg:

The

WENBAN BUICK
589 N. Oakwood
Forest
CE

St.

Johns

hard
52,000
some
offer.
4-1258

cash and 1955 Buick Super

top, power steering, power
ake:
miles, excellent condition but nee
fender work or willmake all ca
Call Al at CR 3334. ‘tas or P.
eves.

9

BICYCLES
BIKES—Used
4-5770

CASH FOR YOUR CAR
ANY MAKE OR MODEL

1909

Private Party—

Must be like new, low mileage one 0
car—prefer
1959 but will consider 1

BICYCLES

Until

Breen—ID

WANTED

WANTED—By

Buick

Evenings

Call Mr.

AUTOS
CADILLAC

or 1958—Have

WE NEED USED CARS’

Holmes

LOST—pair
lady’s
eye
glasses,
bronze
aluminum frame, vicinity of Roger Williams. Call ID 2-5810.
LOST in A &amp; P Grocery: sun glasses in
white frame. Reward. ID 2-7776.

OLDSMOBILE,

power, light blue, white top, real be
1958 Buick special, 2 door TP ie whi
Eliminate the guessing when you buy your
full power, like new. 1D 2-8118.
used car. Select from over 45 cars in the
1955 CHEVROLET 8
cylinder convertib
comfort of our indoor showrooms.
auto, new top, excellent running co’
transferred
to
California,
asking $550, ;
1960 Valiant V200 4 door sedan, over
3-6389.
$400 below cost, our last 1
Model, auto., pow. steer, radio,
11960 CORVETTE, 4 speed, 4:11 eee io
heater, w/walls. Full price
radio, red and white. I'll match this
1959 Rambler 2 dr. sedan, lite green.
condition against any Corvette in Chic
This car must be seen to be aparea, private, $3,300 firm. ID 2-1038.
Full
préciated. Radio, heater, w/walls.
COURTESY special, 1957 Ford 2 Gite
Full price
$
Call
ID
2-6300.
price,
73.
1955 Chevrolet, 6 cyl. 2 door sedan,
g
pow.
glide, radio, heater,
MOTOR TRUCKS &amp; MOTORCYCLES
tires. Full price
$ 395
hardtop,
Rambler
Metropolitan,
1957
1961
Competition
Bug We
GO-KART,
heater,
coral
&amp;
white,
radio,
slicks,
mechanical —
engine,
MC-6
w/walls. Just like new
$ 8
brake, live axel, quick change 80-84 to of
1957 Austin, 2 door, green. Just right
sprockets, excellent condition and clea
for a 2nd car, full vinyl interior ..$ 345
Ready to race and win, reasonable.
pire 2-4019.
eo

&amp; FOUND

LOST:
Diamond
and platinum cross with
platinum chain in the Deerfield Shopping
aes
Friday, May 12th. Reward. WI 5-

1961

SPRING SPECIALS

BUY

CHICAGO ART GALLERIES WILL PAY
CASH FOR OnE
Tak RUGS, FRENCH
FURNITUR
ANTIQUES
ETC,
CALL
ae
estes TEVENINGS ROGERS PARK

AUTOMOBILES
FOR SALE

AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE

FOR SALE |’

A Car Is Only As Good As
The Dealer You Buy It From

SALE!

French
Room -— Treasure
Trove — Bakery
Goods, Piants .
Snacks served.
Thursday, May 25th. 7 A.rg Sa 9 P.M.
Friday, May 26th. 9 A
1 P.M.
To be held at Woman’s AeMab ot Wilmette.
930 Greenleaf
Wilmette
(Near bus, ‘L’ and Rail transportation)
Sponsored by The Principia Patrons Committee North Shore Suburban

MUSICAL

dispose

RACK

Sleigh ark | asda facilities. Happ’s Hollow, CR 2
ROAR a
worn out sink tops with
sparkling Formica or Ceramic tile. Also
cabinets,
sinks,
wall
and
floor
tiling.
25 years on North Shore. Free estimates.
Snazelle, CE 4-3237.
ALUMINUM
windows, doors, siding, awnings and
screen
houses;
en
Spring
prices. Call CoAlume, CE 4-1750.
COINS For Collectors—Buy and Sell. Larson’s Store, 1783 St. Johns Ave., Highland Park. ‘Saturday and Sunday only.
Top Soils
Manures
Gravel Drives
Tractor Work
Lawn_ Rolling
Tree By aeiacd he
Fill Dirt
ecking

tIM

Plants

Tomato

Complete

ELEGANT dinner ring with 3 large stones
and 18 others, best offer will take, also
beautiful wedding ring set. ID 3-2475.
NATIONAL electric adding machine, touch
keyboard, value $450, sacrifice $195, used
6 months. ID-2-9250.
KENMORE washing machine, $25; base cabinet, $5; red 1950 Plymouth convertible,
$85; 2x3 ft. mirror, $5; bureau, Ree photo
enlarging equipment, $25; CE 41352.
ENGLISH
bridle and saddle, good condition. Call WI 5-1092 Friday.
5
SWIMMING
pool, Doughboy 24 ft. diameter, 4 ft. deep;
pump,
filters, ladder,
test ‘kit, etc. $250. WI 5-0714.
POWER
LAWN
ROLLING-FERTILIZING
Let us take the humps out. Save your back.
Jim Beinlich, VErnon 5-1195.
EVERGREENS for sale, yews only, dig —_
own and save, $2 to $4 each. ID 2-2412.
EXPERT
Ceramic Tiling. Bathroom
walls
repaired, reasonable
prices. Free estimates.
Snazelle Kitchens,
CE 4-3237
POLAROID camera, model 150, with flash,
wink light, and carrying case, 6 months
old. Good condition. Call WI 5-4432.

INSTRUMENTS

2-8640

—completely

Highland

CYCLE

&amp; HOBBY

New

&amp;

Used

Bikes

Ranger Bicycles
Guaranteed

MERCEDES-BENZ 300 Cabriolet 1954. Rare
4 door convertible; an elegant touring car
but very practical for everyday use. Black
exterior, red leather upholstery, AM-short
wave radio, self lubricating, gas selector,
steering wheel lock, polaroid sun visors,
many other features. Must be seen if your
not familiar
with
this car.
By private
party. Evenings
ID
2-4588, days DElaware 17-0737. Price $3950.
1953 FORD 9 passenger station wagon, V-8,
automatic transmission,
radio and heater, $225. CE 44324.
1960 DODGE
Dart Phoenix, 2 door hard
top, V-8, stick shift, yellow with white top,
whitewalls,
tinted
glass, back-up
lights,
radio, heater,
special
interior,
excellent
condition—only 15,000 miles. $2150. Call
WI 5-3195 after 5 p.m.
1951 CHEVROLET
2 door sedan, 82.000
miles of loving care. Best offer. WI 5-3275.
REDUCED $450 to $425, 1955 Pontiac convertible; full power, nylom top, new tires,
must sell. WI 5-3782.
1953 FORD
V-8, 68,000 miles; shows age
but engine good; voltage regulator, generator, battery, radiator recently replaced.
$125 or best offer. WI 5-0027.
FOR sale, 1959 White Cadillac convertible,
full power, perfect condition, can be seen
Saturday or Sunday after 5, at 1114 Davis
Street, Deerfield.
1955
DESOTO,
full-power,
good
condition, $575. Call WI 5-3386.
1958 JAGUAR,
3.4 litre, white, automatic
transmission,
original
owner.
Excellent
condition, reasonably priced. Call ID 27510, a.m. or after 6.
1960 T BIRD, jet black, full power , low
2mileage, like new condition. Call ID

SHO

ID 2-1369

“BIG WHEEL”
BIKE SHOP

Park

1953 CHEVROLET
2 door, power
glide,
radio, heater, excellent condition. CallWI
5-0502.
TRIUMPH TR3, 1958, red. with black leather, real sharp, low mileage. WI 5-1967.
1952 FORD
Ranch Wagon;
radio, heater,
__whitewalls, $195 or best offer. CE 4-4401.
DODGE 1951, 2 door, very clean, runs good,
very degpendable ttransportation, $185. Telephone
1960 T BIRD, mint condition, must see to
appreciate. Call ID 2-6300.
1953 STUDEBAKER
Champion,
tudor, 6
cylinder with automatic transmission. Asking $125 or best offer. Call CE 4-4938
after 6 p.m.
1953 OLDSMOBILE, 2 door, stick, new engine, 4 inch bore, 4 racing cam ’and solid
lifters, $275 or best offer. ID 2-5793.
1958
CHEVROLET
Impala _ convertible,
bright red, V-8, full power, Turboglide,
exceptionally clean. ID 2-4044 after 6.
1950 PONTIAC, radio, heater; new battery
with guarantee; running condition, $75 or
best offer. CE 4-2976.
1955
NINE
_ passenger
Mercury,
fully
equipped, $650; 1950 Chrysler, 6 passenger station wagon, $200. CEdar 4-1143.
1955 CLEAN
CHEVROLET,
low mileage,
new seat covers, original owner, used between home and station. ID 2-5643
1958 RAMBLER 4 door, 1 owner, fine secoe ond car. Call ID 2-6300.
1960 PONTIAC
Ventura, one owner, immaculate
condition,
all
power,
Regent
black with red interior, reasonable. ID 2-

re-built—some

486 Central at Sheridan

4 new
ID 2-

1959
BUICK
convertibie,
full power, excellent condition. Call ID 2-6300.
FOR sale 1957 Lincoln convertible, excellent
condition, $1195. Call ID 2-5094.
1957 MERCURY
Monterey, 4 door sedan,
Mercomatic, radio, heater, whitewalls, original
owner,
24,000
miles,
immaculate
condition. $950. Call ID 3-2558.
1959 CADILLAC,
white, 4 door sedan de
Ville, one owner, excellent condition, low
mileage. ID 3- 1614, or 1615 Berkeley Road.
1956 BUICK convertible, good second car,
power
seats,
windows,
steering;
new
wake new snow tires, year old top. ID

Reconditione

new.

Motor Co.

1947 PONTIAC, mechanically good,
pity
needs clutch work. Phone

and

Good selection of Boys or Girls 1
in., 20 in. or 24 in. Many Schwinns

during

Free Pickup
1844

First

your

ownersh

&amp; Delivery

sey

ID a1

St.

PETS

ee

EBENHOLZ KENNELS
4085 DUNDEE RD.
NORTHBROOK
CRESTWOOD —

;

TRAINING

3 Miles

west of Waukegan
On Dundee Road

Road

URSAFELL eens 7,
BOARDING AND T
Expert

grooming,

oe
AIN

ne 09

BOARDING

@2

all breeds, sind

country kennel. Telephone, WI 5BEAUTIFUL
Bedlington
terrier

pu

AKC
registered,
champion
sto
:
like lambs, don’t shed At pine sia
BOXER, 6 months old, male, brindlec
AKC ‘registered. Telephone ID 3-081¢
TOY poodle, male, cream, 1 year; house:

broken;

wonderful

1 year

old,

dissposition,

shies bee:

dren; all shots. WI 5-50.
PERSIAN
kittens, pedigreed, Round
KImball 6-2815.
LABRADOR
retriever, black, male,
dren.

champion

stock,

3
Lak
i:

loves

ct

ID 2-6288.

POODLE

at stud, toy, silver, son of Ch
of Sassafras. Pupp!

nk
pion Silver Swank
usually
available.
Lake 459-4646.

MINIATURE

Mrs.

Matos,

rys!

schnauzer, championship blo

line, male, 9 months old. WI 5-5 783.
a
12 month
COLLIE,
thoroughbred,
male,
old, good with children. Telephone
(1D
0306.
POODLES, French miniature, silver, i
black females, AKC, 8&amp; weeks old.
prays

KITTENS,

unusually

tame,

healthy,

ly, lively; grey striped, mother
sian. ID 2-7985 after 5 and wee

WANTED:

fri enc

pa

Loving home for 2 cute 6

trained kittens, free. ID 2-3845.
POODLE
puppies, small miniature,

he mi

raised, excellent pedigree, AKC register
Call

ID

3-1686

MINIATURE

litter,

8

after

poodle,

weeks,

black

pick

cae che

female,

$75. ID 3-0176.

MINIATURE

6:30.
C

0

Schnauzer pups, male aad te =e:

male; sire: Int. Ch. Hellary’s Dark —
tory.
Quality
pups,
reasonably
pric
pee
home. Northbrook. CRestwood
477
GERMAN
Shepherd, cross breed,
bia
weeks, $5. NEwton 4-3399.
3 ADORABLE
6 week old kittens to
given to good home; 1 calico and 2.
tiger, weaned and trained. WI 5-1587.

WANTED, home for Dalmatian male, need
adult family, BN
space,
care. WI 5-58
champion
ae
PUGS, apricot, NG
weeks, males and female, WI 5-321 4,
5:30 p.m.
COLLIES, 9 months; excellent femperai
champion bred; would like families of th
own; exceptional quality; youn
park

usually

Ring

available.

Call EMpire

2-8529,

Unearthed

Donald

Bernardi

of

2754

Clinton Rd. was mowing the High
land

Park

American

Legion

lawr

last week when he found a gold

ri:

with a blue stone buried in the di
An

inscription

the owner,
Niles

provided

clues

and police have asked

Township

High

School ta

look for a “B.J.N.” among the co
of

54.

Page

H

57—D

49

—
—

�Top Performances
Recorded In Tryout
Field Day May 13
An enthusiastic group of Highland Park Recreation Department
baseball program
participants attended the 1961 Tryout Field Day
at Sunset Park Saturday morning.
Several outstanding times and distances
were
recorded.
Fourteen
year old John McGuire toured the
bases in 12 seconds flat. In batting
for distance from a batting tee, 9
year old Rich Clark topped all participants in all age groups with a
clout of 150 feet.
In the baseball
throw for distance, Bob Gandy almost put one in orbit with a toss
of 211 feet, about 25 feet farther
than any competitor was able to
throw.

We know your
interest is in the
t_—maWCll being,
health and safe-

ty of your child.
future happiness of

aa

For

the

your loved one, the best is the
only answer. SUNSHINE VALLEY requires and gets the finest from each counselor. We
have had long experience (as
well as lovely grounds and
ample equipment) in seeing

Results

that YOUR CHILD is kept busy
and happy, but have no

fiercely competitive activities.
We also keep you informed of
YOUR child’s progress.
We
give

results,

not promises.

SUNSHINE
2600

VALLEY

Half Day Road, Deerfield
CEdor 4-3120

Mr. and

Mrs.

J. R. Thompson

Visiting all Sundays in May
P.M.
SORCER
oh
Y SHA are
SEMEN,

Girls —
Ferry

are

as

Si

/

Day

cilities.

Swimming lessons and recreational swimming in
which your child will increase her confidence and
skill.

Special tutoring in developmental or remedial
reading and mathematics will be available.
Co-Directors
FRANK McCORMICK

pee

MRS.

BARBARA

Lake

Forest

MURRAY

.

. CEdar

4-481]

church,

Madrid,

took place
there.

Mrs.

Morelli

e: weae

poe

WALTER’S
711

MAY

BARBER
Central

WILL

Take

Over

=

SHOP

Avenue

MOVE

TO

1820 SECOND
And

22

STREET

the Management

of

SMITTY'S

‘

A...

cordially invite all of our old customers
at our new location.

a

3

a

We

EXPERT BARBERS
TO SERVE YOU

Page

H

58—D

50

to come

to see us

Mt.

and

burial

Hope

cemetery

died May

11 at the

Hannah

Feis

Graveside rites for Mrs. Hannah
Feis, 84, of Abbott House, Central
Ave., were held May 12 in Rosehill cemetery, Chicago.
Mrs.
Feis, the mother
of Karl
Feis, 235 Pierce Rd., has been a
resident of Abbott House for the
past two years. She died May 11
following a lingering illness.
She was born April 9, 1877, in
Chicago where she lived most of
her life.
She leaves in addition to her son,
two
grandchildren,
Helene
and
Janet Feis.
2. John Britt, Green Bay, 120 ft.; 3. Frank
Menduno,
Green
Bay,
110 ft.;
4. Tom
Rogan, I.C., 105 ft.; 5. John Conrath, I.C.,
102 ft.
Boys 10-11-12—1. Kim
Schimmel,
Elm Place, 140 ft.; 2. Bob Sedik, Immaculate Conception, 130 ft.; 3. Mike Goldman,
Edgewood,
120 ft.; 4. Steve Harris, E.P.,
118 ft.; 5. Charles Cochrane, E.P., 117 ft.
Boys 13-14—1. Bob Gandy, Elm. Place, 140
ft.; 2. Mike
McComb,
E.P.,
135 ft.; 3.
John McGuire, I.C., 130 ft.; 4. Dan Danane —
120 ft.; 5. Larry Bernard, E.P.,

Highwood Community Center|
Activities

For The Week

Your correspondent, who left the
local
scene
amid
the
rains
and
snows of mid-April, returned Saturday afternoon, and was greeted
by that “high 80 degree” weather.
*
*
*
This coming week end, Saturday
and Sunday evenings, Mary Mazetta presents
“Girl
Crazy”
in the
Center at 8 p.m. sharp, each evening.
Featuring
a host of local
girls and boys, mostly girls, “Girl

Crazy”

is a spectacular

Broadway-

type revue.
Its Comedy
and exhilirating song and dance numbers
have never been seen on the local
stage.
Co-director Camille Catchpole, has helped whip “Girl Crazy”
into a warm,
captivating
musical
spectacle.
The revue will be presented into
two acts with inumerable song and
dance numbers.
Proceeds
will
benefit the Community Center.
Tickets will be available at the
door for
Saturday and Sunday
night
performances.
Last
year’s
audiences numbered well over the
600 mark,
a figure that predicts
early arrivals will turn out to get
the best seats.
*
*
*
Boys and girls have an opportunity to sign up for the center’s Day
Camp this summer. Two four-week
sessions will be offered, with the
first held from June 26 thru July
21, and the second session July 24
thru August
18.
Boys
and
girls
may attend either or both sessions.
Interested youngsters can be registered Saturday morning, May 20,
from 9 thru noon. The next regis-

tering session will be the following
Saturday,
May
same hours.
*

27th,
*

during

the

*

A dance for grammar school students will be held tomorrow night
(Friday,
May
19)
in Highwood’s
Community Center. The event will
be the final dance
prior to the
annual Grammar School Prom on
June
10th.
Tomorrow’s
informal
dance will be open to sixth thru
eighth grade students of the area,

and will last from 7:30 thru 10:30
o’clock.
Sixth graders must leave
the dance one-half hour earlier
than the upper grades.

*

*

Pa

The Hagen Bros., a three ring,
“under
the big top” circus, will
play a one-day stand in Highwood
on Thursday,
June
1. Afternoon
and evening performances will be
scheduled. Tickets are available in
advance at Highwood’s Community
Center, and at Fell’s Clothing store
in Highland Park.
;
®
*
*
Boys interested in playing little
league baseball in Highwood this
summer, may sign up for the various leagues on Saturday, May 20
from 9 a.m. thru 5 p.m. at Highwood’s
Community
Center.
Boys
may register for one of the four
leagues offered in that age group.
Seven year olds may register for
the
Minor
Pee
Wee
loop
while
eight year olds may sign up for the
Major Pee Wee League. The Little
Minors will be open to nine and
10 year olds, while 11 and 12 year
olds may
sign for Little Majors.
The
only equipment
needed
will
be the youngsters baseball glove

and the boy himself:
*

*

*

At the April meeting of the Community Center’s Board of Director’s
meeting, that body ruled that boys
living outside of the city limits of
Highwood, would have to pay the
regular
non-residental
fee.
This
will include the summer baseball
program.
*
*
*
The Community Center’s Board
of Directors, will hold their regular May meeting tonight, Thursday,
May
18th
in the
director’s
office.
Chief topic up for discussion will be a report on the coming
June
ist, Hagen
Bros. circus.
A

report

on

Little

Guys

the

recent

International

basketball

tournament;

a new budget for the 1961-62 fiscal
year; Community Chest allotment;
summer program; and other items
will be on the agenda.

J,
Toy ORCHID
Airlift

oT
se

MONDAY,

Iowa

Highland Park Hospital.
She was born July 15, 1916 in
Orlabor, Iowa.
She
leaves
in addition
to her
husband, two daughters,
Mrs.
Eileen
Bonk,
Waukegan;
and
Sandra Lee Morelli, at: home.
She
also leaves two grandchildren;
a
sister, Mrs.
Alberta
Pugl, and
a
brother,
Domo
Pagliai,
both
of
Madrid, Iowa.

SHIRT

BUTTONS

TTtt

ON

in

REPLACED

THAT
WE'RE MOVING

Morelli

Funeral services for Mrs. Bruna
V.
Morelli,
44,
wife
of
Bruno
Morelli, 2656 St. Johns Ave., were
held May
16 at St. Malachy’s

4

nnouncin

V.

Throw for Distance—Judges Gerald LaBorde and Carl Hartman.
Boys 8 and 9,
Group A—1. Rich Clark, Immaculate Conception, 131 ft.; 2. Jerry Carlson, I.C., 111
ft.; 3. Tom
Leahy, I.C., 110 ft.; 4. Dan
Kilkenney, I.C., 105 ft.; John Luick, I.C.,
100 ft. Boys 8 and9, Group 8—1. John
Conrath,
Immaculate
Conception,
121 ft.;
2. John Britt, Green Bay, 106 ft.; 3. Frank
Menduno,
Green
Bay,
94
ft.; 4.
Scott
Sailini, I.C., 89 ft.; 5. Steve Milton, Green
Bay, 81 ft. Boys 10—1. Craig Wilson, Lincoln,
142 ft.; 2. George
Ferrari, Wayne
Thomas, 139 ft.; 3. Rich Weinstein, Ravinia,
138 ft.; 4. Bill Bradford, Wayne Thomas,
130 ft.; 5. Brad Lind, Elm Place. 125 ft.
Boys 11-12—1. Bob Sedik, Immaculate Conception, 184 ft.; 2. Mike Goldman, Edgewood,
145 ft.; 3. Dennis McDonals,
I.C.,
144 ft.; 4. Mark Ugolini, I.C., 143 ft.; 5.
Mike Maiman, I.C., 127 ft. Boys 13-14—1.
Boy Gandy, Elm Place, 211 ft.; 2. John
McGuire,
Immaculate
Conception,
175 ft.;
3. Larry Bernard,
E.P.,
174 ft.; 4. Dan
Danakas, E.P., 170 ft; 5. Mike McComb,

A complete program of sports, games, and handicrafts on a beautiful campus with the proper fa-

PHONE:

Bruna

he

Camp

(Member of the American Camping Association)
For six wonderful weeks beginning June 19th your daughter
can enjoy:

MR.

Mrs.

Mrs.

follows:

Base Running, Howard Copp, Judge; Boys
8 ad 9, Group A—1. Frank Menduno, Green
Bay, 144/5 sec.; 2. John Conrath, Immaculate Conception,
15 sec.; 3. Gary Cahn,
Lincoln, 15 2/5 sec.; 4. Mike Davis, West
Ridge, 15% sec.; 5: Bill Kaye, Indian Trail,
15 3/5 sec. Group B, 8 and 9—1. Tom Leahy, Immaculate Conception, 13.4 sec.; 2. Jim
Neal,
I.C.,
13.6 sec.;
3. Richard
Clark,
I.C., 14,1 sec.; 4. John- Luick, 1G,
4a2
sec.; 5. Kevin Hokinson, West Ridge, 14.3
sec.
Boys 10—1. Rich Weinstein, Ravinia, 12.6
sec.; 2, Brad
Lind, Elm
Place,
13 Séc.;
3. Craig
Wilson,
Lincoln,
13.4
sec.;
4.
Don Dal Ponte, Elm
Place,
13.6 néo.e§
Bill Bradford,
Wayne
Thomas,
13.8 sec.
Boys 11-12—1. Mark
Ugolini,
Immaculate
Conception, 12.6 sec.; 2. Bob Sedik, LCi, 13
sec.;
3. Ted
Cornell,
I.C.,
13.8 sec.; 4.
Mike Goldman, Edgewood, 14 sec.; 5. Clyde
Whitman, Elm Place, 14.1 sec. Boys 13-14—
1. John McGuire, Immaculate Conception,
12 sec.; 2. Bob Gandy, Elm Place, 12.8 s€¢.;
3. Dan
Danakas,
E.P.,
13 sec.; 4. Kim
Schimmel, E.P., 13.2 sec.; 5. Charles Cochrane, E.P., 13.4 sec.
Batting for Distance—Judges, Al Danakas
and Chuck
Schramm.
Boys
8 and 9—1,
Rich Clark, Immaculate Conception, 150 ft;

6 to 14 Years of Age

BT

OBITUARIES

ONE-DAY
SERVICE

LAUNDERING

EXACT

-STARCHING
“EXTRA
CAREFUL”
Since

191C

Incoming

president

Anthony

Porco

gavel from outgoing president Miller
ceremonies for the Moose lodge.
Highland
stalled

CELLOPHAN

PROTECTED
DIV.
RAINBOW

:
WEEKLY
” OF
LAUNDRY

ORCHID CLEANERS
NEXT

TO’ SUPERMART PARKING
1862 FIRST STREET

Park

officers

Moose
May

Lodge
7.

in-

Anthony

Porco was installed as governor.
Officers were installed by Marshall
Meckley,
past
governor
of
the
Lodge. He was assisted by Russell

Early,

installing

Officers
Kaufman,

sergeant

at arms.

installed were:
Elbert
junior
governor;
Cecil

(right)

at

recent

receives

the

installation

Baker,
prelate;
Arthur’
Blong,
treasurer; Vern Clark, trustee for
one year;
and
Donald
Ebelsisor,
trustee for three years.
Holdover officers of the Lodge
are:
Lester
Marshall,
secretary,
and
Albert
Del
Ponte,
two-year
trustee,
Women. of the Moose served as

escorts

for

the

evening.

Thursday,

May

18,

1961

�“Stephen A. yb

Attend

To Be Ordained |
As Rabbi June 3

Men

in

Receive

The

with

a future,

a U.

5.

WAIKIKI—9 DAYS AS LOW AS $68.60 plus tax and air
fare. Includes fine hotel, tour of Oahu, visit to Pearl
Harbor, fabulous luau (Hawaiian-feast). Enjoy the rolling surf of famed Waikiki Beach. Relax in tropical
splendor. Enjoy a vacation you'll never forget, via swift
United jet. Extra days in Waikiki as low as $3.75.

SAN FRANCISCO—5 DAYS AS LOW AS $36.50 plus tax
and air fare. Includes hotel and deluxe tour of this cos-

mopolitan

city. You'll see Golden

Gate

Park, Ocean

Beach, Seal Rocks and the Cliff House, Palace of Fine

Arts, Marina Yacht Harbor,

Palace of the Legion of

Honor. Other California tours available, too.

(HAP-8-4)

(UAH-32)

When You Travel
By Air, Make Your
Reservations and Pick
Up Your Tickets
Right Here on the
North Shore

Has

will be followed

present

Savings Bond.

Supper—Election
supper

19 Adults

Nineteen
adult
members
were
received into metmnbership at Trinity United Church of Christ, Deerfield,
Sunday,
May
7, the
Rev.
Philip
A.
Desenis,
pastor,
announces.
Fourteen
young
people
comprised
the
confirmation
class
received last Sunday.
Among adults were Mr. and Mrs.
Caryl Reaver, 943 Lilac Ln., Highland Park.

A member of the student senate
at Beloit, Arnold also was active
in
Summer
and
Winter
theater
and was elected to National Collegiate Players.
After graduation
in 1954, he served for a year as
assistant to the alumni secretary.
Before
entering
Hebrew
Union
College, he held a scholarship in
anthropology at Northwestern University.
While preparing for his ordination, young Arnold served the Cincinnati
School
and
Congregation
for Judaism, North Shore Congregation Israel in Glencoe and Congregation Beth-El, Winchester, Va.,
as student rabbi.

Box

FUN WAS NEVER SO WEAR BEFORE

At Trinity United

Theatre

Couples Club

FLY UNITED JETS...

of Trinity Episcopal church

have been invited to attend the
Church of Chicago’s annual meeting Sunday evening at 5:30, Buckingham Gunn, the club’s representative at Trinity announces.
He
asks
those
interested
in
riding to Oak Park for the evensong,
dinner
and
annual
session
contact him at ID 2-7106.

Stephen A, Arnold, son of the
Leonard H. Arnolds
of Highland
Park, will be ordained as a rabbi
by Hebrew
Union College-Jewish
Institute
of Religion,
Cincinnati,
Saturday, June 3, it was announced
this week.
Arnold, a graduate of Highland
Park High School and Beloit College, plans to enter the U.S. Air
Force soon after graduation for a
two-year tour of duty as chaplain.
Active

Club ‘Binnec

by

(No Service Charge)

election of officers for the Couples’
club of North Shore Congregation
Israel Sunday evening at the Temple.
Mr. and Mrs. John Strauss will
Share the office of president; Mr.

Lake Shore

|

Travel Service &amp;

and Mrs. Ferd Isserman Jr., that
of vice-president; Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Ex, secretary; and Mr. and
Mrs, Bernard Schubert, treasurer.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Strauss are
chairmen of the nominating committee.

341

Park Ave.,

VE 5-3888

GLENCOE

WE'RE THE FOLKS
YOU SHOULD MEET, AND
WE'RE NEIGHBORS, TOO!

LOS ANGELES—5 DAYS AS LOW AS $40.05 plus tax and
air fare. This one low price includes hotel, tour of
movie studio, visit to Beverly Hills, trip to Disneyland.
Enjoy the glamour and excitement of Southern California...or take it easy on a sandy beach. And you can
spend extra days in Los Angeles for as low as $5.50.
Make plans now for sun and fun.
(SLA-4A)

BOSTON—4 DAYS AS LOW AS $29.50 plus tax and air
fare. Includes hotel and complete sightseeing tour of
Historic and Modern Boston. See Bunker Hill Monument
.. Old North Church . . Paul Revere House. Vacation
with history ... where it actually happened. Spend extra days in Boston for as low as $8.25
(HAP-1-3)

NEW YORK THEATER

WASHINGTON, D.C.—3 DAYS AS LOW AS $25.50 plus
tax and air fare. Includes hotel and sightseeing around
nation’s capital. And, during this Civil War Centennial
year, you can add a full day’s tour of Gettysburg Battlefield for only $15 additional. Also inquire about 3-day
tour of historic Williamsburg, Virginia.
(VN-3)

Bccs

~H. endTRAVEL
R-ANSPACH
BUREAU

ID 2-121}.

Riverview

463°Ceniral

Ave., Highland

Park

iargest

THERE'S A MAN

al

FA

r-Vaalet-i-vaat-1a) ai eltal .4

” Calypso.

SSRid
OPENS

AMPLE

11:30°A.M.

* CLOSED.

PARKING

MONDAYS

RHUMBA
ON
EXCEPT

WHEELS!

LABOR

DAYS AS LOW AS

seats for 2 Broadway hits, and a tour of the UN Building or a yacht cruise around Manhattan Island. Plus
dinner, dancing and the show at the Latin Quarter...
and a breakfast served in your room. Extra days as low
as $11.00
(GS-2)

"Aegis YouR_ TROUBLES
Away-at

world's

HOLIDAY
—3

$57.75 plus tax and air fare. Includes hotel, orchestra

YOU SHOULD

...to get the most out of your vacation.
Your Travel Agent will help you choose
from the Mainliner Holidays above, or
from
tours

the many
available.

longer, more extensive
He’ll make jet reserva-

tions on United, serving you with the
world’s largest jet fleet. If you wish, use
United’s “Fly Now
— Pay Later” plan.

SAMPLE

UNITED

From

ROUND

MEET
TRIP JET

PRICES

To

Chicago

Hawaii

$466.60

Chicago

Las

$180.60

Cleveland

California

$235.00

California

$160.80

Omaha
Prices are Custom

Coach,

Vegas

plus tax.

Ny

DA¥Y

+ Western and.Beimont

—

THE

EXTRA

CARE

LINE

~

�and Body’ Is
NS Mental Health ‘Soul
Lesson-Sermon
¥

Bs wei

Templ

foreiniah

Assn. Annual Meet

Elect Officers
Robert B. Cook, 273 Park Ave.,
was elected president of Temple
Jeremiah in the annual congrega-

tional
dinner-meeting
in
Villa
Moderne May 7. He succeeds Fred

Coat of arms of
Baron

Henschel

de Lehoczky

at the helm.

Richard

family, 1710

Dr.,

L. Kahn,

238 Woodland

elected

vice-president;

was

Julian S. Weil, 665 Melody Rd., re-

BARONESS

SCIENTIFIC
CLINIC

AND

cording secretary.
Elected to serve on the board of
directors
for
a three-year
term

de LEHOCZKY

FACE

RESTORATION

FACTAL

were

Leslie

Sanford,

444

Laurel

Ave., and Walter F. Hammel
390
Moraine
Rd.,
who
was
elected.

PRODUCTS

Serving

a two-year

term

Jr.,
re-

will be

Bert
Herakee,
1827
Clavey
Rd.;
and Louis S. Gilbert, 1667 Northland. Other officers and directors
are from Winnetka
and Glencoe.
Dr. Alan Tarshish is the congregation’s rabbi.

Set Next Monday

The nominating committee will
present the names of new board
members as well as the following
slate of officers for the coming
year: For president, Mrs. Charles
Morse,
Winnetka;
vice-president,
Mrs,
Arthur
Sawers,
Winnetka;
treasurer,
Phillip
Kauffmann,
Kenilworth
and _ secretary,
Mrs.
Milton Minkin, Winnetka.
Informal

The program

feature

Talks

for the evening will

informal

talks

by

staff

bor Ave., was elected and installed

members
of
the
Irene
Joselyn
Clinic which
is operated
by the
association. Each will speak to the
general topic ‘Auditing Our Psychiatric Books,’’ and will discuss
some phase of his activity, or special concentration, in the psychia-

president

of the

Guild

the

tric field during the past year.

Mary-Martha Guild
Elects Officers
Mrs,

Lloyd

of

M.

Botker,
Mary

First

1213

and

Ar-

Martha

United

Evan-

gelical church last evening in the
annual
meeting
in
the
Botker
home. The Rev. Alfred E. Anderson, pastor, installed the officers.

Mrs. Howard

Walker was elected

LANCER-BIG

Body”

will

be

theme

Hazel Ave., Sunday in the 11 a.m.
worship service.
Verses from Psalm
90 will be
read, including this: “Let thy work
appear unto thy servants, and thy
glory unto their children, And let
the beauty of the Lord our God
be upon
us:
and
establish thou
the work of our hands upon us;

yea, the work
lish

thou

Richard

ern

estab-

Group

A. Giangiorgi,

337 West-

Highwood,

has _ been

Ave.,

elected to membership in Pi Delta
chapter of Pi Tau Sigma, national
honorary
mechanical
engineering
fraternity at Marquette University,
Milwaukee. Giangiorgi is a senior
in
the
School
of
Engineering.
Membership
in the fraternity
is
based on sound engineering ability,
scholarship and outstanding character of students,

Tuesday
The

vice-president; Mrs. David Patterson, secretary; Mrs. George Rundell, treasurer; Mrs. Pervis Swain,
program chairman.

of our hands,

it.

Joins Honorary

the

CAR

and

of the lesson-sermon at the First
Church of Christ, Scientist, 493

The North Shore Mental Health
Association
will hold
its annual
meeting on Monday, May 22 at 8
p.m. in the Winnetka Community
House.
All interested persons in
the eight villages served by the
association will be most welcome.

Feature

“Soul

&gt;

ve

Group

Tuesday

Highland

Evening

Park

group

of

Presbyterian

church will meet in the home of
Mrs,
C.
C.
Eiker,
1114
Oxford
Rd., Deerfield, for a social evening
following a program on Japanese

art.

Program

begins

at

As seen

RIDE

7:30

p.m.

in

Suburbia

Today

Ugly Skin Does Not Exit...

|

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and dermatologist, | have helped people with almost every conceivable skin problem from scientific face treatments to scientific face-peeling. With my proper facial
treatments, cosmetic preparations and asidious care, there
are only a few skin problems that | cannot help.
Since | prepare and personally administer my own
_ BARONESS

de

LECHOCZKY

cosmetics,

| am

able

line of
to offer

every type of skin care treatments. There are very few
women
in America scientifically trained to do this work

'

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SORENSIS
ONE

122

which requires such special talent.

OF

N.

LAKE

COUNTY’S

Sheridan

OLDEST

Rd., Waukegan,

DODGE

DEALERSHIPS

Whit
MAjestic 3-1107

Illinois

| have maintained my scientific clinic at 222 East Ontario
St. in Chicago since 1956. Last year | received my Face

Restoration License in the state of Florida where | intend to
open

my Palm Beach Face Restoration Clinic next October.

1am
offering my talent for beautifying and correcting
healthy and damaged skin. | help improve the condition
_ of skin which has crowsfeet — giving a better, fresher,
cleaner and more youthful appearance. Large pores,

blackheads

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BARONES

SCIENTIFIC
CLINIC

222
a

FACE

AND

LEHOCZKY

FACIAL

H 36—D 52

PRODUCTS

Chicago
SUperior

Feed Grass, Kill Weed

RESTORATION

E. Ontario St.
Also licensed in Palm

Page

de

7-1013
Beach, Florida

See your hardware dealer,
garden center, or nursery
Products

of

Smith-Douglass

“ Wedlo

Company,

Incorporated,

Distributed by GEORGE

Norfolk

A. DAVIS

1, Virginia;

b Vaaa
|

CHECKERED

Columbus

PACKAGES

16, Ohio

Chicago 30, Ill.
Thursday,

May

18, 1961
toes

�be

_

bas

Christian Science

é

se
me:

ti
aye

yan

EP

aoe

a
Oh

4

Pe

eek

Ge

on

ean

eA

3

bes

truth that God’s kingdom is everpresent, Jesus of Nazareth found
nothing
impossible,”
Riley
de-

Lecturer Cites

Materialism

a

rae

elared.
“The
acts
of
his
early
followers
recorded
in the
Bible
constitute
further
proof
of
the
great
spiritual truths
which
the
Bible declares
and which
reveal
God’s kingdom in all its power.”
In this kingdom
of God, Soul,

Cure

‘Mankind cannot be cut off from
peace,
freedom,
and
purposeful

living,’ Wilson M. Riley of Kansas
City said in a public lecture in

he said,

the First Church of Christ Scientist, Highland Park, Monday night.
“Barriers of greed, lack of communication and gross materialism
are
being
removed
through
the
power of spiritual enlightenment.
“The remedy for overcoming the
gross
materialism
in the
world
today will be found,” he declared,
“in the coming of the Christ to

there

is no ignorance,

no

poor vision, no lack of proper action.
“Knowing that Soul and its attributes were
forever manifested
through
man,
the Master healed
the sick, gave sight to the blind,
hearing to the deaf, feet to the
lame, thus bringing to light the

scientific action of the divine Mind
on human minds and bodies and
giving a better understanding of
Soul and salvation,” he declared,

the human consciousness, revealing
the
harmony
and
goodness
of
God’s ever-present kingdom.”
A Christian Science teacher and
practitioner, Mr. Riley is on nationwide tour as a member of the
Christian
Science
Board
of Lectureship.
He
was
introduced
by
Mrs. Howard R. Will, 161 Laurel
Ave.

quoting from

“Science

and

Health

with Key
to the Scriptures”
by
Mary Baker Eddy, discoverer and
founder of Christian Science.
Founder “Opens Doors”
“Through her great revelation,”
he said, ““Mrs, Eddy has opened the
door to the kingdom.
It is now
possible
for
each
individual
to
prove for himself at least in part
that God’s kingdom
is not away
off somewhere
or held in abeyance,
obscured
from
view
until

Spiritual Advance Possible
Taking note of the exceedingly
swift progress being made today
through
material
inventions,
the
lecturer stated that these new advances have always been possible.
“How
wonderful
to know,”
he
said, “that human thought can be
so enlightened
through
spiritual
understanding
as to bring
com-

some

dim

future

time, but is here

now in its entire perfection and
harmony.”
Continuing he said: “‘God’s kingdom is not hidden; it is at hand.
It
includes
nothing
detrimental

parable advances in the demonstra-

and

tion of love, peace, universal brotherhood, freedom and purposeful
living!”
“Fully aware of the underlying

no inharmonies.

Ultimately

it

will be understood that this kingdom
contains
no illness, no sin,
no lack, no parting, no death.”

From

May

Returning
first

combined

salist May

from

the

Unitarian-Univer-

meeting

Kee

former

president

Unitarian

of

Church was

the

40

YAS Apvernistd WEE

wy

AME
re
a)
:
PARENTS) —
By

&lt;&lt;

National

ae
—_—

elected pres-

ident of the newly-merged

TNTOR A REFUHD
x
ora

© Guaranteed by ©
Good
Housekeeping
rh

of the national

merged church body, the Rev. Russell R. Bletzer will be back in the
pulpit at Ferry Hall school Sunday at 11 a.m. Dr. Dana Greeley,

church.

Jet-styled for
fleet, swift
running and

ce
mk

j

Current plans call for the congregation to move into their new
building
on Half Day
Rd., near
Telegraph Rd., the following Sun-

riding fun.
@ Perfect balance
eliminates loads on shafts.
@ All steel construction

day.

for rugged durability,

Tuesday
evening,
May
23,
at
7:45, the church education board
is
meeting
in
the
Ruben
van
Leeuwens’ home, 289 Laurel Ave.

MODERN
FUR
STORAGE

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Nylon bearings for easy pulling.

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ae

Victor Furs

458 Central Ave.
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For the Physician

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Tuesday

+

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oe

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Gasual

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Highland Park.

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PHARMACY
Highland

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M. J. Dray, R.Ph., Manager

Park

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Sunday

JOHN FIORE NURSERIES
840
ee

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Thursday,
\

PGemer AO Tar Sarl

May

sh

wa

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18, 1961

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es
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633

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Hubbard Woods )
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Page H 37—D 53
mo

�Encyclopedia in Braille
Is Given to Blind Children

Boy Hit by Car

50th Year of Successful Teaching

SECRETARIAL, STENOGRAPHIC,
TYPING, ACCOUNTING, AND
BRUSH-UP COURSES. GREGG AND

Robert E. Natkin, 8, of 1474
Linden Ave., was hit by a car
Tuesday evening last week at the
corner of Forest Ave. and Sheridan

EVANSTON
BUSINESS COLLEGE

Rd., Highland Park police report.
The boy started into the street
when a southbound driver stopped
and

waved

him

across.

He

The first volumes of the Braille World Book Encyclopedia,

largest single undertaking in the history of Braille, were presented recently to the Dawes School of Evanston
sightless children in this area.

was

brushed by the northbound car of
Thomas Weinberg, 16, of 745 Edge-

1718

Sherman

Ave.

Wm.

UN 4-3004

H.

RAVINIA HARDWARE
HEADQUARTERS

FOR

SCOTTS

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wood Dr., and knocked back onto
the parkway, police say.
Robert said he wasn’t hurt, and
went home, according to the report.
Police listed it;as an injury accident; are still investigating.

Bottled

Water

Naturally
Delivered

Sparkling
Mineral

By...

Spring

Water

Co.

1629 Park Ave.
IDiewood 2-0042

R.

Named
Luke
has

Williamson,

been

with

Art Director
appointed

484
an

responsibilities

Corporation

account

Clavey
art

on
at

Fuller

&amp;

Williamson was formerly a free
lance artist and art director. Prior
to that, he was with Leo Burnett
Company, Chicago, as an art director.
A member of the Art Directors
Club of Chicago, he attended
d-agr,- (fo2manu-bS__I

Northwestern

University

after

the
American
in Chicago.

W.

Damron,

manager

Educational
World Book

of

supervising
Field

divi-

Enterprises

Corp.,
publisher
of
who made the presen-

tation, said that shipments are also
on

their

way

to institutions

for the

‘plind in other U.S. cities, as well
as in Canada,
Europe.

Latin

America

and

Claud C. Ruch, division manager,
of the Corporation, added that distribution
of the
145-volume
sets
would
be completed
in the fall,
when, for the first time, blind students
will have
an authoritative
source for independent study. The
size of the publication requires 18
separate shipments; shipping costs
alone will total $45 in the U.S. and

$100 in Canada

and abroad.

A letter from a volunteer Braillist in New York touched off the
project, which has been called the
most important contribution to the

education

of

the

blind

since

the

development of Braille. The Braillist requested a set of World Book

Install Quiet, Dependable

for

Mueller Climatrol
NT wees hirey vite

roars...quiet—as only quality can be.

women’s

group,

which

The
publishers
of World
Book
conferred
with
educators
of the

__, FREE!
(S|
soar
wo

| “Longer

Get our estimate now—no obligation.

life

Conditioning.”
Call for your copy.

L: R. GREGORY

her

planned to transcribe the encyclopedia into Braille by hand.

the heart-easing relaxation

of the finest in home air conditioning.
And Mueller Climatrol Central Air
Conditioning is considerate of your
neighbors, Outdoor unit purrs, never

998

Oliver

Smith
&amp; Ross
Inc., Chicago,
according to David H. Echols, vicepresident and manager.

graduating from
Academy of Art

deserve the comfort,

Ln.

director

the

Don’t Swelter this Summer

You

sion

which serves

&amp; SON

N. WESTERN AVE., LAKE
Phone: CE 4-0216

FOREST

blind throughout the U.S., who confirmed
the
urgent
need
for
a
Braille encyclopedia. The publishers decided to go ahead with the
publication
to provide
a general
reference work which would permit
the sightless to pursue independent
research and study.
The scope of the project can be
seen in the Braille encyclopedia it-

self. It comprises

145 volumes

38,000 pages and spreads
feet of shelf space.

and

across

BES |
Why now’s the time-weed as you feed

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they’re entrenched, much of the damage is done.
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us about

8 a.m. to 5:30

with

clean,

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it.
p.m. — Wed.

‘til Noon

OPEN SUNDAYS 9 A.M. — 1 P.M.

RAVINIA HARDWARE
YOUR

ONE

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447 Roger Williams

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Sizes 8 to 20. 21.95
Without monogram, 18.95
Mail and phone orders filled
Specify monogram color
when ordering
Please underline initial of last name.
No C.O.D.’s on monogram orders

TOYS

ID 2-4387

Bring your lawn problems to our Lawn Program Advisors.
They have the know-how and the experience to help you achieve
the kind of lawn you want.
Page

triacetate sharkskin, that drips

Allow 2 weeks for monogramming.

STORE

HOUSEWARES

in the sun. This frosty cool
summer classic is Arnel

OLD

ORCHARD

at Skokie

© ORchard 6-3060
Thursday,

May

18, 1961

43

�ime core

{PAT PATTERSON'S

i.

Annual

Art Fair on

For Sunday,
The

~

fifth

May

annual

21

:

Village

Green

.

[nooks
May #1, on the Vilage Com:

Steak House &amp; Liquor Store

mon in Winnetka. Those who like |} pupecued Chickens (with trimmings) .......----------------- $1.25
their art in an informal atmosphere
5
*
.
$1.1.25
will find over 150 artists from the || '7Bome Steak (with trimmings) -.........----.------------+-:-0--North

Shore

and

ing their paintings

The public is invited
| browse or buy.

|

Special

|in-aetion,

features
a

to

come

painting

Deliveries

| booth and refreshments. The Win|netka

Woman’s

Club

made

afternoon.

ore

Summer

Readin

nte
adingProgramCenter

Begi

° Study
$

e

land

Park

of the Month”

Citizen

at the

Highland Park Chamber of Commerce

aine-on-the-Lake.

last week at Hotel Mor-

The award and an honorary membership

in the

z

by Norman

Completes

Course

in

ee

ment
the

lishment
estab 18

and

eee

3

eeupe

°

Northbrook

or

more.
:

Vernon

Rd.

Line

County

&amp;

Skokie

Edens,

.

5:

6]

]

Ice

3

oa

2
3

Nuts

Salted

Cream

NA‘

2&gt; :
5$ »

PARK

e4 Cookies
;

$

y

HMAN

$
S$

HI

6-3775

3

=

$
$

944

PRE

Sa

Linden

seme

Ave.,

ee

Hubbard

Woods

$

sakeracniveeissautise

ANNOUNCES

RAMBLER
VW

CS

{Q)

2

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OT

2. AY

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9

9

a

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V1

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TT

1

2

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operations

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&gt;

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Step into a new world of motoring fun in the
freshest convertible under the sun——the one

:

of trade unions. It studied the fed- || completely custom convertible
eral and state anti-injunction laws, |# than most 2-door sedans.

the National Labor

$10.00

Ee)

directly affect

of laws which

of

° Chocolates

:

Glencoe

LAKE

Bernard
Sheehy,
1046
Ridge
Road, Highland
Park, received
a
certificate for completing an eightweek, University of Illinois course
on “Protective Labor Legislation”
May 10 at the last meeting of the
series. A total of 44 members of
Retail Clerks Union locals affiliated with the Chicago Area Council will receive the certificates.
The course covered the develop-

Deerfield,

DELIVERIES IN HIGHLAND
EVERY SATURDAY

|$¢/3
3
$

+ Advanced

Junior High School Thru College
~ 706 Glencoe Rd. VE
5-4248

Hirsch, vice president of the Chamber.

orders

FREE Ice Cubes with
Each Liquor Purchase

$
:

fridiiauste ar Sined

Chamber were conferred upon Schetzley for over 50 years of service to the organization and to the community.
The award was}!

presented

ension

speed
= Shea

Math.

of the

meeting

general

Methods

.

Reading

ee a special‘al award ac as ich
stabi received
Lielau
Cl arence SebSchetzley,
“Highright,

with

:

Park,

5

Tutoring

—

Highland

is sponsoring

| School student. In the event of
rain, the Art Fair will be held the

ort

:

to

or Glencoe

peed ehened tg raise funds for “a nahi
|scholarship for a New Trier High

| following

plate

and

will be artists-

children’s

Sees
75¢ per

3. ....cls- docs
11 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Lobster (with tritmrsings):
Luncheons Served from

‘hi
exhibitand sculpture.

‘
Chicago

Relations Act,

that

costs

less

Think what you get with the Rambler Con-

|

||

|

||
|H

}

/
|

’

the Taft-Hartley Law, and public |} vertible! The top economy, high performance
agencies for conciliation, mediation || of the 125 H.P. overhead valve Six that again
amd arbitration.
topped all cars in the Pure Oil Economy Trials.

heating

Matic transmission . . . power steering...
power brakes——at surprising low cost. And remember, Lake Motors has all models in stock

. . . gas-saving

Overdrive

or Flash-O-

——ready for immediate delivery! Come in today!

‘5

A

AAA

AA

A

The convenience of the automatic power top.
The option of individually adjustable front seats
. , Airliner Reclining Seats . . . Weather Eye

AA

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rs
Be:

vy

\

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... absolutely new - and lowest priced, too!

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When you move
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of Lincolnshire

hhh

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. . . just a little above

the

:

:
Ss
Se

\

}

¥

f

EES

.
—

hh

:

eA.)
on

hhh

on

hh

nn

hhh

on

Pega

the

North

Shore’s

taste.

FOR ‘61

,

F :

9
fs

Bry

Grease for your car
Our Service Department offers facilities in keeping with

;

=\(
\
momen ememn\\\

O

%
‘ad Brits

See this still more beautiful version of the best of both: big
car room afd compact car economy. The Rambler Classic
offers new styling. Ceramic-Armored muffler and tail-pipe,
and Cushioned Acoustical molded fiber-glass ceilings are
_ standard on all 14 Classic models.

Rambler—World Standard of Compacét Car Excellence

LAKE

RAMBLER,

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“The LARGEST Auto Dealer on the MORTH

OPEN DAILY 9 to9 — SATURDAY9t.6
1778 FIRST ST.

ID 2-2500

—

SHORE”

4

“

SUNDAY 10 to 4

HIGHLAND PARK

“v9

yyy
oy
vw bbb

bb

yoy

bb

WELCOME WAGON

outh 4-door sedans
small compacts.

i
ee

hh

Highland Park
Mrs. Mitzi Lavin
Mrs. Dorothy Darling
ID 3-2253

hhh

be

eo

moving,

hhh

are

bb

know,

sure to phone Welcome
Wagon.

$5000 Mile Gucsoniel:
Inquire about our exclusive 35,-

car than the old “‘low-priced”’ cars, prices begin
at least $212 below Ford, Chevrolet arid Plym-

dihlcamesm cers or

hhh

a

en

will call with

basket of gifts...and
friendly greetings from
our religious, civic and
business leaders.
If you, or others you

:
THE
va

hb

Hostess

Wagon

bb

Welcome

hh

Your

hh

a new home...

Superb Quality — Compact Price
Although the roomy Rambler Classi¢ is a finer

Thursday, May 18, 1961

Page

&amp; 39—p

55

�ee

B. M.

Boxer Bites

ORI

CHIMNEY—FIREPLACE
Repair—Cleaning
£
Es

morning.
tried

by

BASEMENT

ID 2-4553

Park

to pull

jumped

leaks repaired

friend,

Call

'

Highland

FLAT ROOF
hot tar recoating

the

on

her

Joyce

berry.

The

a ticket

N. Shore Art Leag ue

| Crash at Vine

Mrs. Dorothy Kay of 365 Barberry Rd. was bitten on the right
arm by Fred Dwyer’s boxer from
1660 Ridgelee
Rd. last Thursday

TUCKPOINTING—Masonry

4
y ;

police
dog

say

away

when

daughter’s

Karlin

dog was

of

she

Eugene Black of 546 Green Bay
Rd., Highwood, westbound on Vine
Ave., turned north at Green Bay
Rd. last Thursday
afternoon
and
stopped te pick up a hitchhiker.
Thelma
Pfister
of
590
Skokie

it

Ave.,

following

school

turn,

looked

282

Bar-

impounded

and

collided
Park

from

for

the

around

the

traffic

and

rear,

police report.

for following

issued.

him

left

She

Highland
got a ticket

too closely.

Plans Installation
Mrs.

Thomas

Art
On

the

Critic

program

by Mrs.

Talks
May

Doris

20

Lane

will

be

Butler,

critic for ‘Art in America.” A
tire on art will be presented
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Norman
Arons
Winnetka.

STEE
and

Lake-

Mrs. Carlin has been chairman
of the class schedule committee for
the past two years, has served on
other committees, and is an active
participant in painting classes herself,

a talk

Restaurant

91

view
Terr.,
will
be installed
as
president of the North Shore Art
League at the spring dinner, Saturday, May 20, at Winnetka Community House.

ID 2-0300

Crossroads Shopping Center

Carlin,

©

saby
of

Mrs.
Phillip
T.
Phillips,
188
Lakewood, exhibits chairman, will
assist in announcing
winners
of
the annual member’s show which
was juried by Max Kahn, Eleanor
Coen, and Richard Hunt.

Delicatessen

To Hold Children’s
Program Tuesday
The Men’s Garden Club of the
North Shore invites school children
to attend their annual Children’s
program to be held in the Highland
Park Recreation Center on Tuesday, May 23, 1961, at 7:30 p.m.

Color

motion

pictures

entitled

“Flowers
at Work”
and ‘Growth
of Seeds” will be shown. Clayton
J. Sandel, one of the Club’s gardening experts, will describe how to
plant
a garden
and
will answer
children’s
questions.
Each
child
will be given a packet of flower
seeds and some tomato plants for
his garden.

Another

phase

of

the

Garden’s

Club program for children is the
special classifications for children
in the annual Garden Show to be
held Aug. 26 and 27.
Children
flowers and
this Show.

are
urged
to
grow
vegetables to enter in

BY POPULAR* DEMAND
*(Two

|

customers

and

my

brother-in-law)

The Steer Is Now

| OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK!
Hours

We’re mon., TuEs., WED., THURS., SUN.

OPEN—
WE

FRI.

8:30 a.m.-Midnite

CATER

TO THOSE

WHO

cater to Bar Mitzvahs and sales meetings.

LOVE

8:30 a.m.-2
TO

EAT
— THE

The ultimate in Western

is—

&amp; SAT.

a.m.

BEST

dining pleasure.

Q2Z—-AOmMZAS

pnxm
p&lt;-xa
QOZ—

ae TIS
RN

ge ee
ee

ERS
Sa

ee

FO

ae

We

Be OE

The only problem now
when do we sleep?

A New Hammond Organ
at a new low price reeeyy

NEW HAMMOND

EXTRAVOICE®

JUST $25 DOWN
Now you can own the new Hammond

Organ at a new low price

eg

‘a

@ GRADING

a

@
@

great saving! 4 Hammond

|

DRIVEWAYS
PARKING LOTS

New Hammond tone! The exciting tones of three
keyboards . . . yet you play only one!

TAZIOLI

New Hammond styling! Lovely new lines, and so

compact it fits into the smallest living room.
po——

ID 2-3785

4
*

Page H 40—D 56

FREE

HOME

TRIAL

Call Lyon-Healy in Highland Park and we’ll bring the new
Hammond Extravoice right to your home. See it, play it,

EXCAVATORS

=
tot wees

&amp;

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way...

CALL FOR AN ESTIMATE WITHOUT OBLIGATION

GLADER

Extravoice

—only $595!

And what a wonderful organ you will have at this

@ CRANE RENTAL

@ ROADS

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learn

what

Open

fun it is.

Thursday

LYON-HEALY
1843

Second

No

cost, no deposit, no obligation.

and Friday

to 9:00

P.M.

in Highland Park
ID 2-3434

St.
Thursday,

May

18,

1961

—
Rie

�g

eee

bsph:

SRS

BOONE

oe

RS
5

aT ee
aes

e

Pat

VTS

SNe

ees
Nae

seg

EL
fee

Ss.

ie Nae
a aR

i

ai

Vit

Summer

School

(Continued

from

offered at Deerfield)

page

Swimming:

22)

to

all

pupils

Swimming is offered
residing

within

the

Car Hits Apartment
The

brake line burst on the car

Typing: Classes meet five days a high school district. Ballet for girls of Suzanne G. Gaines, 240 Moraine
week for 114 hours daily. Besides and water safety for boys will be Rd.,
Wednesday
afternoon
last
one hour per week.
All week as she approached the corner
learning to type before he enters offered
other swimming classes meet one of Green Bay Rd. and Central Ave.
high school, a pupil may improve
his spelling, punctuation, and com- hour a day, twice a week, for eight from the west, Investigating Highposition.
Credit is given for one weeks.
land Park police found drops of
General Science: This class meets hydraulic fluid on the pavement.
full
year’s
work
only;
however,
three hours daily for 8 weeks.
A
pupils may register for the summer
She swerved to avoid a truck,
year’s credit in science
is given
course
with or without taking
crossed the intersection, went over
upon
completion
of
the
eight
week
credit.
the
southeast
curb
and
hit the
Exceptional work in this
English Review:
This course is course.
apartment building at 672 Central
course
may
enable
a
student
to
designed
to help
pupils
prepare
Ave.
themselves for high school English take Physical Science in SeptemDamage to the car was listed at
Spelling,
grammar,
and ber.
' courses.
$175—proof that she was driving
Special Dates
composition will be stressed.
This
slowly, police said. No ticket was
The important dates concerning
course does not carry any credit.
issued.
Classes meet daily for one period. summer school are:
Conversational French or Span- Friday, May 19
First formal registration for stuish: A non-credit course designed
of Highland
Park
High
to help the student learn to speak dents
the
language.
Grammar
will not School and Deerfield High School
be taught.
This course is primar(3:20).
Chuck
Mullaney
a_
foremost
Saturday, June 3
ily for beginners.
Classes
meet
teacher and artist on the Hammond
Registration for
graduating
daily for one period.
Organ,
has
joined
the
teaching
9am.
Highland
Home
Economics: A double pe- eighth-graders;
staff at Lyon &amp; Healy, Second St.,
riod course covering introductory Park High School, Main AuditorHighland Park.
ium; Deerfield High School, South
home
economics
—
cooking
and
Mullaney
has
instructed
adult
sewing.
Classes meet daily for 4 Cafeteria.
education classes at numerous inFriday, June 16
hours; fee: $30.00.
Final
registration
for all high stitutions, including Waukegan and
Industrial Arts: A double period
Glenbrook high schools. He holds
course covering woodworking, me- school students; 10:00 a.m. at each
a masters degree
in composition
chanical
drawing,
electricity, and higth school building.
from Chicago Music College, where
auto mechanics. Classes meet daily Monday, June 19
he majored in piano and organ.
First day of summer session.
for 4 hours per day. Fee: $30.00.
Arithmetic Review:
This course Tuesday, July 4
No school.
is designed to help pupils prepare
themselves for high school math- Monday, July 17
Start of second-half of summer
ematics courses, particularly if they
session.
have had difficulty with elementary school arithmetic. This course Friday, August 11
Final day of 1961 Summer Sesdoes not carry any credit.
Music:
Beginning instruction in sion.
Inquiries concerning
summer
stringed instruments.
The course
school should be directed to Robert
will consist of individual and group
lessons
and
supervised
practice. Benson, Deerfield High School, or
J. Perry,
Highland
Park
This is a non-credit course. Classes Harold
meet daily for one period.
(Not High School.

seneral
health
sreat bearing

Lyon &amp; Healy Adds
To Teaching Staff

Diabetes and diseases of the arteries, for

example, are more prone to attack after middle
age, and can lead to blindness. Sometimes these
diseases are detected by your eye physician (M.D.)
during a routine eye examination before any discomfort or symptoms might lead you to consult your family

physician. Discovered in time and brought under control,
these diseases need not Jead to loss of vision. Health
hazards increase with ege and the wise person avoids
or minimizes their consequences by having regular
periodic health checkups as well as eye examinations by an eye physician (M.D.) If glasses are
prescribed, give your eyes the advantage and
seeing comfort of the H.O.V. technically
accurate kind.

TYPEWRITERS

che Ffouse of Vision ™

AND
ADDING MACHINES
SALES

TV

e

670 Central

Ave.,

H.P.

e

RENTALS

ID 2-2042

645 CENTRAL

radios, tvs,

phonograph

radio

records,

and

-

REPAIRS

Craftsmen in Optics

Chandler's

the north shore’s smallest discount house!
Moley

-

°¢

1891

SHERIDAN ROAD, HIGHLAND PARK
610 CHURCH STREET, EVANSTON
135 NORTH WABASH AVENUE, CHICAGO

ID 3-0230

@H.O.V.

tv service

oi

=

&gt;&gt;

ISI

&gt;

| to MR. DUFFY
... for

Gentle,

Easy

... for Complete
... for

AIR CONDITIONING

with

Look forward to a cool, refreshing summer with Bryant whole
house air conditioning installed by factory-trained men. We
guarantee the installation...our prices are reasonable. First
step to summer comfort—call us for a FREE comfort survey.
No obligation. LOW DOWN PAYMENT—5 YEARS TO PAY

FOR

OUR

FREE

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ESTIMATE

BISH OP'S
Tir Conditioning
1741

Second

Thursday, May

St.,

and

Highland

18, 1961

Heating

Park

Engineers
Phone

ID

2-0407

Know-How
Decorator

... for Drapery Cleaning

Care.

Finishing.
Pleating.

EXCELLENCE.

duffy
cleaners
Across
Highland

TODAY

Dependable

Handling

from the
Park Library

=

CALL

MR.

DUFFY

ID 2-1820

”~ s

2

=)
Page

H

41—D

57

�SWIMMING POOLS |&lt;t:#.
Burglar Collects

reported
steel

Ss 3

Glas

Crete

Chubee’s

:
Exclusively
to

Your

Styled

Taste

and

Landscaping
Fiberglass

Construction
40

Plus

insures

a

POOLS

lifetime

BY

of

pleasure

BORREGARD

R. J. BORREGARD CO., INC.
a
Glen

1233

.
Rock

|

La}

ay
DElta

®
5333

4

pod

Waukegan,

missing

when

Kitchen,

he

from

opened

561 Roger

a
up

Wil-

liams Ave., last Thursday morning.
Highland Park police found no
sign of forced entry, but believe
a burglar would
have
had
little
trouble getting in.
The cabinet was not locked for
the night. The rear door was left
unlocked by the burglar when he
took his loot away.

YEARS’

EXPERIENCE
...

$414.12

cabinet

~

Illinois

Boy Hit with Bat
isles Rare Biepcengeyr
te sb
Sheridan Ave. was hit eaebySah atokthrown
bat in a playground accident last
Wednesday, Highland Park police

| “i:.:i

He suffered deep lacerations inside his upper lip; was taken to

Highland

and

Park

Hospital

treatment

according

to

of
the

for

possible

x-rays

shock,

report.
North

Now’s
empty

the
your

time

Shore

Group

to

closets of

Club.

Other

Judy

Siffert

winners

and

were

Kathy

by

Bob

Grossman

Joyce

Moeller,

Virginia

Mordini,

Haugh.

Winter Clothes and Blankets

Crash on Curve
Two
Flavored

the

for you

with bits of

YRANGE AND gi
SPICE

FE

YOU...

YOUR

FAMILY... YOUR

SUNSET

FOOD

1812

accused

Bay

Highland

GUESTS

4-bedroom
baths,

wrong

age.

new

land

Park

was

bi-level,

Kitchen

space,

range,

2-car

with
oven

sideswiped
of 75

other

side

of

police

on

St. John’s

Dr.,

was

of

the

being
road,

on

High-

report.

J. Marks,

16, of 77 Oak-

northbound;

of 340

southbound,

Park

basement,

each

the

|J. Bushey

Road

UNUSUAL

who

in front

' Jeffrey

SUPERMARKET

Green

drivers

curve

Ave. Wednesday morning last week

dale

with $100.00

Photo

Bertha Bradt (left), president of the Highland Park High
School Girls’ Club, presents one of five $500 scholarships to
Anne Winkley. These scholarships are provided by the Girls

police

Carol

Albert

Ct.

say.

No

was
ticket

issued.

DEVELOPMENT

2

gar-

eating

and dish-

washer. Lovely family room
with fireplace. Nine trees on

insurance coverage

OS, i145 eotiat

$38,950
@®

Last

season

your

response

we repeat the offer!
cleaning charges)

(Pay

@

Each

20

@

Cleaned and Refreshed
(“Tender, Loving Care”)

with

“Vault-Stored”

to

was

so

only

the

good—
usual

BRIARWOODS ESTATES
A spacious deluxe split level
with four large bedrooms and

@

Box

holds

15

even

to

up

baths.

Excellent kitchen

with large eating area.

Pan-

eled family room with fireplace.
2%
car _ garage.

T.L.C.

Beautiful

*Fill as many boxes as you wish—2,
at all 3 Vogue

2%

Garments**

November

landscaping.

$46,500

Ist
Beautifully Maintained

3 even4...

Here’s

Stores

bedroom

an

almost

split

level

new

four

in

East

Deerfield.
Two baths, two
car
garage,
birch
cabinet
kitchen with all the extras,
family room and lovely carpeting
make
for gracious

**Sorry, furs and fur-trimmed garments not included
(we'll gladly Fur Storage them the deluxe Vogue way)

SEPARATE

DINING

ROOM
An immaculate all brick 3
bedroom
home
with
that
much wanted separate dining
room. Living room with fire-

place.

Kitchen

with built-in

oven and range, disposal and

eating

area.

11%

baths,

$35,500

Watt
2061

Green

Drive-in

Bay

too)

1D 2-3900
ew

Page

.

5

H 42—D

WEST

RAVINIA

NORTH

Plant

565

and

Drive-in

Roger

Williams

1p. 23710

RAVINIA
A87

éx

Cag:

See

REALTORS &amp; BUILDERS

EAST
Willi

R

ee

earns

D 2-3903

a

|
¢

999

Waukegan

Road

Glenview

PArk 4-3000

ES

58

Thursday,

May

18, 1961

�n!

Jt Spring.

se

ccase

dl

$

Fi

ee

SLnLEL

as

=

photo

by Milton

Merner

the trees and shrubs are in leaf... Flowers are blooming...

Here at DEERFIELD SAVINGS

and ED

ng

is Growing!

That means your savings are growing, too, at Lake County's Largest Savings and Loan where
your savings . . . with generous dividends compounded semi-annually . . . have
365 growing days every year!
Here at the DEERFIELD SAVINGS South Entrance you'll always find ample parking space . . .
And inside you'll find the friendliest people . . . dedicated to help you
keep your money safe and growing.

Assets

E F R F| f |

fy

(

745 DEERFIELD ROAD,

and
is ALWAYS

MONEY

Mon.,

Sat. —- 8:30

Tues.,
to

Thurs.,

12:00;

Fri.

Phone:

Fri.
— 8:30
eve. —

Ciesod Wednesday

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AVAILABLE

DEERFIELD, ILLINOIS
Hours:

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�summer ! ? ? !
we've got the answers

Send them to camp in our sturdy camp clothes, fully equipped
with all the blankets, sheets, towels and other things they’ll need
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aid

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3.95
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Knit

brief

undershorts,

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Flannel

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69c

Terry

fronk
check

wie

neck

shirt

8-16

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2.50

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on
what you need and call

4700.

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Girls

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Girl

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1.95
ID 2-

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Khaki

1.25

wndhereniete

brief

3.95

al te BHU csc
ct ined
ane

or

trunks

Poplin jackets, lined, .... 5.95-7.95

:

Cet +o

boxer

swim

pet nig Tex'n
WEN
ys a

: Ae

Sere ey

fe ore

trunks,

Stretch

3.95
3.

ig ei Ha

verry

Swim

5.95-8.95

INT

..........

CIN

jacket

Poplin raincoats, lined

8-18

a

poplin

Boys

Ee

Lined

7-14

tai

Girls

leg-size

Your chance to save
fitting, long wearing
the FIRST TIME:

seamless
OG.

1 OGe

Park at

reg. 4.99

Garnett « Co.
Enjoy 2 Hours Free Parking in Our Lot — ID 2-4700

on -these perfectbeauties! And for

walking

sheers

se eI
3 pr. 3.50

Nylon

you'll find it in Highland

stockings

Support

now

1.17

stocking

565 ye ey
3 pr. 11.85

now

3.95

(Hosiery)

Open

Thursday

nights

until 9

�</text>
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                    <text>�The big bank that grew up
with Highland Park

STARTING

JUNE 3

The First National will observe the
following banking hours ...
MOngay...... 08 8:30 to 2:00 p.m.
TUS

ci

ee. ss 8:30 to 2:00 p.m.

Wreeanesdny. ois...6s. not open
POMTRORY 6. 5 6 oa ss 8:30 to 2:00 p.m.
Wee.

cysfos 8:30 to 2:00 p.m.

Friday night..... 5:30 to 8:00 p.m.
MPG

4 s,s cvs
sd 6: 8:30 to noon

THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK fies
Our 62nd year—Complete Modern
Member The Federal Reserve System and
The

Federal

United

States

Deposit

Insurance

Banking

and

Trust

Services

O

Hh

hland

Ee:
|

pie
—

Corporation

Depositary

WEEKEND

Park

BANKING

HOURS:

Friday 8:30-2:00 &amp; 5:30-8:00 pm, Saturday 8:30-Noon

es”

4

ae

�Vol. 36, No.

Thursday,

© 1961 by Highland Park Co.

12

Weber

Refuses Comment

a logical developmental

The
will

of

from

the

560

proximately when

to

ap-

the new annexa-

The 235 acres, located northeast
of the village is bounded roughly
by Duffy Ln. on the north; Saunders Rd. on the east.
Many
of the residents
in the
area
which
was
annexed
were
members of the Riverwoods Resi-

Association,

the

forerunner

of the village. The association was
instrumental in incorporating the
village initially.
However, because the newly annexed
area was within the mile
and a half of Lincolnshire, Bannockburn
or Deerfield,
it could

not be made
‘ when

of

a part of the village

incorporated

1959.

in

Approval

December

from

within a mile and
required to annex

a
to

villages

half is not
an existing

village.
The

the

annexation

was

recommendation

made

of

on

the

plan

commission, following a ruling by
County
Judge
Minard
E. Hulse
April 24 which found the petition
to annex valid and in conformity
with state statutes.

Another

petition

is

pending

in

the Riverwoods area. This is the
petition
from
the
Bannockburn
Country club which seeks to annex
to the village of Riverwoods, This
petition has been sent to the plan

commission for
ing
considered
trustees.
However,

on
@

the

no

days from
the village

study before beby
the
village
action

petition

can

formally

be taken

until

30

today, the date when
ordinance will go into

» effect, according to village of Riverwoods authorities.
Including the golf club and surrounding houses, land use in the
country club area would be more
than two acres per house, sources
said.
In other action at the adjourned
+
meeting,
village
president
Clendenin reappointed Robert Babcock
as chairman of the plan commis-

Jaycees Continue

4.

Bernie Forrest, sales chairman,
has reported that orders may be
placed by calling WI 5-2880.
Jaycees will also be selling the CharkO-Chick
in
Deerfield
Commons
and downtown.
Dinners

precise

will

be

at

Two

new

members

of the

com-

mission were appointed. They are
, sherman
Richardson
and
Dan
Stuka.
The board denied a request to

approve
up

by

a subdivision plat brought
Julian

Degan.

The

lot

sizes,

according to village
authorities,
» did not conform to the minimum
one-acre
as
» ordinance.

required

Applications

by

village

Available

Applications
for
summer
swimming

high
school
program
will

be available at the elementary
schools of district 113 after May

Jewett

on

a

Park

and delivered at any hour requested between
noon and 6 p.m.
In
addition to a full one-half chicken,
dinners will include
cole slaw
salad, potato chips, roll and honey.
Chark-O-Chick
is the
Jaycees’
major
fund raising event
of the
year. Money from the project will
finance
the club‘s civic service

parade will be between 9:30 and
10 a.m. at Jewett park west of the

Robert
tee
and

joined

Projects carried out last year or
now
underway include
Operation
Santa Claus, the Deerfield Easter
Egg
Hunt,
a Children’s
Reading
room in the new library, the GetOut-The-Vote campaigns and visual
aids for the schools.

“Deerfield

residents

planning

to

use our mail order coupons should
send them in as soon as possible to

beat the late rush of orders by
people who
have changed
their
plans for that Sunday,” said John
Ely, Chark-O-Chick chairman.

Annual Dance For

Krase,

assistant

ment’s

of the

annual

1961

chief

fire

will

and

depart-

be

held

June 24.
As in previous years, the dance
will
be
held
at
the
American
Legion hall in Deerfield with dancing from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.
This
dance
is the fire department’s only appeal for funds, and
proceeds from
dance tickets, are
used by the department to supplement tax funds for the purpose of
buying new equipment and maintaining the high level of efficiency,
according to chief Jan De Jong.

Proceeds
have

from

provided
(Continued

previous
the
on

23, son
Winston

Deerfield

Altman

in

Before

of

dances

department’s
page 2)

TrusPorter,

police

de-

15. Porter,
who
the former Joyce

1959,

has

coming

a son,

to

the

Tom.

Deerfield

police department, Porter was in
the insurance business. He was
graduated
from
Highland
Park
High school and attended Southern

Illinois

He

University.

is a marine

reserve

officer.

flag pole.
At 10 a.m. the annual flag raising
ceremony will begin the events of
the day. Following the flag raising,

speeches

will

precede

A 32-year

old Prairie View

ing

at

car

was

hit

an

unguarded crossing by a fast-moving passenger train at the Sioux
Railroad tracks and Prairie View
Rd. in Vernon township, police
said.
Mrs.

Katie

Leggett,

Rt.

struck by a southbound
car

was

the

carried

crossing

found

132

350

and
feet

sheriff’s police
Police said
who was in a
police arrived,

45,

was

train. Her

feet

south

of

her

body

was

from

the

ar,

reported,
that her husband,
state of shock when
may have witnesed

accident. He was not in
at the time of the crash,

to

officers

the
ac-

from

the

was

in-

the

Legion

will be

building

served

tonight

in a joint meeting

Sara

Lee

seeks

on

a tract

to

east

and

cokes

youngsters

parking

for the

lot on Wau-

parade

the

is Jack

two

partici-

Civic Calendar
Thursday,

Park

High

7

build

new

presently

own-

June

p.m.

1

Deerfield

Grammar

School ice cream social, Parents,
Teachers and Children, back parking

lot

weather

permitting.

has petitioned

light

industry.

The hearing may
be stopped
before it is started, because the
village of Northbrook, which is
within a mile of the brickyards,
was not advised of the hearings
according
to
Deerfield
manager, Norris Stilphen.

Stilphen,

Deerfield

who

at

the

will

village
ne

represent

hearing,

said

Monday that both Deerfield and
Northbrook are in opposition

the proposed

dry sanitary landfill

operation.

Northbrook will seek answers t
questions
relating
to
drainage
which would go into the west for
of the north branch of the Chicago river, according to Stilphen.
That ditch travels through North
brook, he said, and the liquid
wastes from any operation would
go into the drainage ditch, untreated.
Stilphen said that he will present resolutions opposing both petitions which were passed May
16 at the village board meeting.
He said that he will ask that the —
petition on the dry sanitary land- —

fill be
chapter

denied on the basis of |
38, section 466A of the

Illinois Statutes, which says that
no sanitary landfill within a mil
of a village without the village’s
permission,
The village contends, Stilphen

said, that a dry sanitary landfill
would also come under that ruling
and that the special use permit
denied.
The
village
resolution
sta

Deerfield Man Killed
In Automobile Crash

that:

when his car veered off the road
and struck a concrete pillar on the

1. a dry landfill would lead
the dumping of infected elm wood
which would provide a menace
the healthy trees of the commun-

north

ity;

William
Sunset

C.

Tr.,

edge

Faverty,
was

who

Co.,

on

Thursday

Gurnee,
was

advertising
at

of 2705

according

police.

Faverty,
Case

35,

killed

of

to sheriff’s

viaduct

to pre-

25

school.

Thursday,

deputies

asked
down

May

8 p.m.
Highland
Park
High
School
P.T.A.
board,
Highland

found

pare the final commission report
and recommendations on the Sara
Lee rezoning issue.
According
to village
president
David Whitney, the meeting may
lead to a June 3 decision on the
Sara Lee rezoning case.
facilities

where

for the

in the Legion
kegan Ave.

I.

Aid With Report
commission has
trustees
to sit

on Park

on Park,

Central Ave., where ceremonies
will be held.
The parade will then go back to

the

Plan Commission
Asks Trustees For
The plan
the village

will form

north

10:45

wom-

morn-

her

At

pating ministers will be the Rev.
Vernon Olson and the Rev. Robert Humrickhouse.

an was killed early Monday
when

made.

on Hazel, and south on Waukegan
with Assembly at the cemetery on

Anderson,

Prairie View Woman
Killed In Accident

be

a.m., the parade

Ave.,

Marshall

sheriff’s department.
No
one
in the
train
jured, police said.

dance committhat the Deerfire
depart-

dance

Porter,
Mrs.

the

cording

Funds Is June 24
Elmer

Porter

partment
April
was married to

the
car

Fire Department

Robert

Brickyard

a special permit to operate a dry
sanitary landfill operation at the
site and rezoning of the present
R-4B
residential district to I-3,

Tuesday,
Memorial
Day,
will
bring the annual American LegionAm
Vets’
sponsored
parade
to
Deerfield.
The
assembly
for the

program.

chairman

group.

prepared

schedule

ment fund raising
tee, has announced
field-Bannockburn

that

Memorial Day Is
Highlighted By
Annual Parade

Junior
Chamber
of Commerce
members will continue their house
to house drive on Deerfield homes
this
week-end,
selling
Chark-OChick barbecue
chicken
dinner
orders for delivery on Sunday, June

a

of

The

Chark-0-Chick
Sales Campaign

sion. Robert Billeter was appointed
member

Inc., refused comment Monday on the two petitions which will
be the subject of a zoning board appeals hearing by the county
in the Deerfield village hall today at 1:30 p.m.

village |
900

tion ordinance takes effect 30 days
from
today,
according
to village
clerk Russell A, Benedict.

dents’

Bernard Weber, president of the National Brickyards Co.

pattern in the village

235 acres were annexed into the village Tues16, according to president Robert G. Clendenin.

population

increase

On Brickyards
Today inDeerfield VillageHall

Adjourned Meeting Tuesday Night
Following

25, 1961

He'll Tell His Plans At Hearing

Riverwoods Annexes 235 Acres At
of Riverwoods,
day night, May

May

employed

department

of

Racine,

by

of

Wis.,

the

in

J.
was

5

a.m.

at

the

Milwaukee

Rd.

Skokie

Highway,

they

sheriff’s

said.
Survivors include his wife, Barbara, and
a son, Christopher,
2.
Also surviving were
his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Burke of Glenview; a sister, Mrs. Dorothy Corbin
of
Pennsylvania
and
a _ brother,
Harold, of Florida.
His death raised the Lake county
toll to 24, double the figure of last
year at this time.
Services for Faverty were held
Saturday
at the Lauterburg
and

Oehler
gan

funeral

Rd.,

ed by Anthony Mercurio on Waukegan Rd. at the south end of the

officiating.

village.

Skokie.

with

home,
Rev.

2. the burning of combustible
materials would constitute a nuisance;
(Continued on page 2)

825

Wauke-

Jack

Parker

Interment was in Memorial

Park,

Three-Letter Word
Changes Meaning
Can an obscure three-letter word
change the entire meaning of a
sentence?
It can if the word is
“non”

—

rR

Through a typographical error in

last

week’s

REVIEW,

the

word

“not” was left out of a statement
in which Norris Stilphen concluded

that village facilities would not be
overloaded by the addition of the
Sara Lee plant — if the board
approves the rezoning issue currently at hand.
;
The REVIEW regrets that the
obscure

omitted.

three-letter

word

was

‘

�Your Village Government
Included

budget

in

for

1962,

is

the

the

recently

fiscal

a new

passed

year

program

1961which

should do much to improve the
condition of sidewalks throughout
the community.
It provides

that

repairs

to

exist-

ing sidewalks can be made on a
- 50-50 basis, with the village assist_ ing the property owner. This is not
|

a luxury

hard

program

economic

involved.

but rather one

of

facts for everyone

Should

a

passerby

be

injured due to a fall on one of the

sidewalks of the community, both
the village and the abutting property owner can be sued.
Some
time
ago the
vestigated the cost of

_ insurance
and
cess

such

accidents

found that it would
of $10,000 per year.

be in exAlso, the

fact

to

had

cover

village inliability

no

im-

provement in the condition of
walks
would result from the

to be

the
ex-

- penditure

faced

that

of these funds.

Trustee Winston Porter studied
a program of shared sidewalk re-

pairs
it

in La Grange and found that

had

application

in

Deerfield.

Here is the way the program operates: The property owner who is
concerned about his sidewalk has
but to contact the village.
An inspection will be made to determine
the number of concrete slabs which
have to be removed and replaced.
The property
owner will be

notified

~

will be withheld
known

these

days of the cold war,
catastrophe, terrific competition,
and a general dog-eat-dog attitude,
it is a pleasure to be able to tell the

_ following story which I feel should
be made public.
For

several

months

I have

had

a

illness of which I am still

One

- time I was overwhelmed with kindness from my neighborhood. As all
_ suburbanites do, we frequently dis_ cussed our various summer projects

when the fellows came to call. It
had been my plan to put a new finish coat of paint on my house, doing it weekends and holidays.

Two weeks ago, in an attempt to
speed my recovery, my wife and I
“eame
to Minnesota
to visit my

family. We have now learned these

wonderful

neighbors

on Parkside

Ln., as well as a friend just around
_ the corner and a former neighbor,

proceeded to take matters into their
hands and have painted my
house.

own
tire

It is
feelings

difficult to express
have
I
because

en-

Gina—The

Forbidden

Man

Amis, Kingsely—Take a Girl Like You
Brand, Christianna—Heaven Knows Who
Burnford, Sheila—The Incredible Journey
Coxe, George—One Way Out
Dos Passos, John—Midcentury
Evans, Fallon—The Trouble with Turlow
Gary, Romain—Talent Scout
Godden, Rumer—China Court
Gordon, Richard—Doctor on Toast
Green, Gerald—Heartless Light
at
“Mozart”
Leaves
Greene, Harris—The
Nine
Grubb, Davis—The Watchman
Hulme, Kathryn—Annie’s Captain
Johnson, Nora—A Step Beyond Innocence
Leslie, Doris—Prime Minister’s Wife
Longman, M. B. The Power of Black
Loos, Anita—No Mother to Guide Her
Maclver, Joyce—Frog Pond
Maxwell, William—The Chateau
, James—Branching
Coral
Miller, Merle—Gay and Melancholy Sound

_

-

Mitford, Alfred—Don’t Tell Alfred
Narayan, R. K.—Man-eater of Malgudi

Pakington, Humphrey—Catherine Chailey
Rawls, Wilson—Where the Red Fern Grows

Remarque, Erich Maria—Heaven Knows No

Favorites
Sherman, Susan—Give Me Myself
Snow, C. P.—New Man
|
:
:
Spencer, Elizabeth—The Light in the Piazza
Stegner, Wallace—Shooting
Star
Stone, Irving—The Agony and the Ecstasy
Swados, Harvey—Nights in the Gardens of
Brooklyn
;
Herrard—The
Hunt
for Richard
Tickell,
7
Thorpe
:
Tregaskis, Richard—Last Plane to Shanghai
_ Wilson, Mitchell—Meeting
at a Far Median
er, John and Esther—Gift of Rome
Hugh—First on the Moon

-- Wright,’ Richard—EFight Men

Yates,

Richard—Revolutionary Road

Page

2

anything

thing

the

like

this

before.
that

they not only preach it but practice the Golden Rule completely.
Very truly yours,
Charles R. Rinker
1219 Parkside Ln.

To the Editor
In

the

middle

of

the

night

last

week I received a phone call from
the Deerfield
Police.
They
informed me that they had accosted
two persons driving a car that
they had “borrowed” without perThe
to
to

borrowed

car

be mine; the car
me promptly.

turned
was

out

returned

It is one thing to report a stolen
car to the police and have them
recover it .
. it is another to
be

called

by

the

police

and

to

be

told that they have recovered your
car before you even know
it’s
been

stolen!

My

hat’s

off

efficient Deerfield Police
bless

to

..

the

. God

’em!

Yours truly,
Sheldon H.

Kamin

Plans Progress
For Ice Cream

Social At DGS
Plans

are

well

under

way

for

an ice cream social sponsored by
the P.T.A. of the Deerfield Gram-

mar school, to be held the evening of June 1, on the parking
lot

at

the

back

of

the

school.

Mrs. Wessley A. Stryker and
Mrs. Charles Fahrenholz are cochairmen.

out

the

This

event

year’s

will

P.T.A.

round

activities,

providing an evening of fun for
the whole family—parents, children and teachers.

At R.R. Station
Deerfield

unit

legion

738

of

auxiliary

the

Am-

will

dis-

tribute poppies at the Milwaukee
road station on Thursday morning, May 25, and in the remainder
of the village all day Friday, May
26.

a good
to Fred

May

opening

28,

will

be

day

for

the

the

of-

entire

Boys’ Baseball program
in Deerfield.
There
will
be
a
parade,
scheduled to start at 1 p.m. at the
Deerfield Grammar
School, which
will proceed to Jewett Park where
opening
day
ceremonies
will be
held.
The association expects to have
the village manager, the president
of the park district and a member
of the clergy of Deerfield in attendance
for the
ceremonies.
Games
will
follow
at
Wilmot,

and

National

Jewett

parks.

League

W-L:

PeT.
1.000
AeOO0
.500
.000
1000
.500
.000
.000

Results for the past week were:
Tuesday—Dura-Clean, 4; American
Holding,
3 (7 innings);
Deerfield
Savings, 13; Kleinschmidt, 5 (5 innings); Wednesday-—Allis-Chalmers,
7; Pederson, 5 (4 innings); Pilot, 8;
Am-Vets,
6 (5 innings); Friday—
Savings, 11; Holding, 3; Pederson,
6; Am-Vets, 5; Saturday—Pilot, 2;
Dura, 0; Allis, 3; Kleinschmidt, 2.
Intermediate

cially began

League

its season

offi-

May

15.

Old
man
weather
held
off long
enough
so that
all games
were
played according to schedule, with
two tied games to be played off at
later ‘dates.
This week
the scores.

there

is just

a list

of

Hank Hakewell hit a grand slam
homer in the Tiger-Yankee game
to highlight the week.
Giants
6
Braves 11
Orioles 9
Dodgers 8
White Sox 6
Pirates 6
Tigers
19
Senators 3
Red Sox 4
Giants 5
Phillies 10

Red Legs 2
Cardinals 3
Indians 4
Phillies 7
Athletics 6
Cubs 3
Yankees 13
Red Legs 1
Orioles 4
Braves 4
White Sox 9

District 110 Plans
Summer School For
Wilmot School will be the
a summer school program

sored

by

district

110

The

subjects

scene
spon-

beginning

June 26 and continuing
4, from 8:30-11:15 a.m.

until

offered

will

Aug.

in-

clude: remedial reading for grades
two through eight; remedial arithmetic
for
grades
two
through

arts

and

crafts

for

kinder-

garten through eighth grade; science for tomorrow for grades four
through eight; physical education
for boys from grades four through
eight; creative dramatics for grades
four through eight; and instrumental music for grades three through

eight.
Enrollment

in

one

he

offered

the

to listen
how and

$100

bond

prize for the finest looking lawn
in the manor.
The outstanding feature of his
plan was
that the
money
is to
be for residents
in both
of the
units instead of just unit two as
was the first understanding of his
plan.
Both
he and
John
King
have
undertaken
this idea with hopes
of beautifying
the
manor
as
a

whole,

Second

prize is a $50 bond,

donated by King. An outside garden club will inspect the manor
within
the
next
few
days
and
enter
judgment
about
August
1
for
the
winner.
Prizes
will
be
awarded August 12. If it rains that
day, the following Saturday, August 19, will be the day for the
outdoor party on Sherrer’s lawn.
President Ed Golien has requested that as many
residents
and
board members as possible be on

Saturday Morning
Dog Show Slated At

class

Saturday, May 27, is “Dog Day”
at the Deerfield Commons
shopping center, when at 9:30 a.m., the
canines of Deerfield and the North
Shore area get a chance to strut
their stuff.
The Deerfield Commons in conjunction with the Quaker Oats Co.,
is sponsoring a gigantic kids amateur dog show to be held in the
parking lot of the Commons.
Any child can enter any kind of
dog and the best of the show winner will receive
a giant trophy.
There will be gold and silver loving
cups, T-shirts, ribbons and other
prizes,

Countdown Days
Planned Here By
Deerfield Shops
An exciting new retail event is
being
prepared
for launching
in
Deerfield’s
business area.
The
week-end of June 8, S and 10 will
be proclaimed “Countdown Days”
with participating retail
stores
offering ‘out of this world’ values
in graduation,
wedding,
Father’s
Day and all merchandise catagories.
Highlight’ of the three day Shop
in Deerfield promotion will be a
series of contests.
Each _ participating store will display a container with a variety of items which are
to be “counted” by shoppers and
guesses entered on coupons available in the store.
Each store will
offer a prize
and
everyone
may
enter “guesstimates”
in as many

stores

Area Youngsters
of

why

crowd on hand
Sheercr explain

Deerfield Commons

LEAGUE

Deerfield Savings ........ 2
0.
Allis-Chalmer's : 2.2... 22.22. 2
Pederson Construction 1
1
Kieinscnmiat,
yo. Oa
American League
Pilot Productions .......... aU
DUFAM
GAR. 30)
anise 3 ae |
AMMAN Cte he
ced O2.
American C. Holding ..0
2

eight;

Legion Auxiliary
Distributes Poppies
erican

Sunday,

ficial

The

mission.

Manor was held Sunday night with

Intermediate
league
games
are
played for the most part at Woodland fields—three
of them—with
weekend appearances at the Jewett
Park
diamond.
The
Major
league will play its games on Wilmot Park diamond and on Jewett
field.

MAJOR

however,

The first regular meeting of the
new
administration
in Deerfield

Regular season play got underway this week in both the Intermediate and Major leagues in spite
of the weatherman.

Woodland

if requested

is certain,

one’s
never

NEW FICTION AT
PUBLIC LIBRARY
Allen,

of

in at least my section of Deerfield,

slowly recuperating. During all that

E

cost

have less than 300 words. They
should contain the name and address of the writer, whose name

expressed in these
not necessarily con-

To The Editor:

serious

total

FORUM

stitute the opinions of the paper.
Letters
should
be brief and

In

the

work
which
is necessary.
If he
wishes to go ahead with the repair,
he then sends
or pays
into the
village one half of the amount of
the cost estimate.
Once this has
been done, the work will be scheduled.
Should
the cost be lower
than that anticipated, any excess
payment over one half of the cost
will be returned to the property
owner.
Everyone Gains
Everyone gains from a program
such as this as in time all of the
walks of the village will be brought
into A-1 condition.
Suits will be
avoided, appearances will be improved,
and property values will
be
increased.
This
should
be
a
popular
program
which
will
do
much good in the community.

DEERFIELD
Opinions
columns do

of

Deerfield Manor News

Two Leagues Get
Early Start In
Baseball Assn.

is

enrollment in two is $40; and
rollment in three is $50,
To register, call WI 5-2580.

$20;

en-

as they wish.

Hundreds
of dollars
worth
of
prizes will be awarded.
A special section in the Deerfield REVIEW will kick-off ‘‘Countdown Days” in two weeks, which is
sponsored by the retail division of
the Deerfield
Chamber
of Commerce, under the direction of John
Lindemann.

Plan Annual

Dance

(Continued from page 1)
1955 rescue unit, wheel-drive jeep
truck, electric hose washer, electric hose dryer, electric door openers,
truck
chargers,
and
a_ substantial
contribution
toward
the
last Seagrave pumper.
The department expects to mail
tickets to all residents in the Deerfield-Bannockburn
fire protection
district.
The chief hopes for the
same
strong
support
which
the

department
ous

years.

has

received

in previ-

hand tonight, May

25, at the audi-

torium of the Lake County civic
league on Grand Ave. in Waukegan to hear the Secretary of State

Charles

Carpentier

threatened

senator

state

Robert

discuss

income

the

tax.

McClory

Local

and

for-

mer district attorney of the United
States,
Robert
Tieken,
will lead
in the question
and answer discussion following the talk by Carpentier.
Senator

why

he

McClory

disagrees

will

also

with

tell

Governor

Otto Kerner and is presenting his
bill to create
a state crime
investigating commission.
It was brought out at the meeting that an official survey of Lake
Ccunty’s total area of 468 square
miles showed 366 square miles or
80 per cent of the total area is
still devoted
to agricultural
and
open use. President Golien pointed
out that it was the job of associations such as the manor’s to keep
blighted lands from
coming
into
being,

The

executive

committee

asked

that a motion be placed before the
members
to
have
the
publicity
officer
correct
the
error
which
appeared in our last news column
which was unfair to the residents
of unit two. Unit two is all paid
for pest control with the exception
of one
resident,
who
also owes
the block board member for the
fee which was paid for him last
year, according to manor sources.
The paper stated that only one
resident in unit two had paid for
pest control.
It was
agreed
at the meeting
that
a
letter,
expressing
the
thoughts
of the
citizens
of the
manor
on the extension
of bus
service
to
Milwaukee
Ave.
and
Deerfield Rd., be sent to residents
of Riverwoods and Lincolnshire.

Brickyards
(Continued

from

page

1)

3. failure to cover properly disposed material would lead to the
breeding of rats;
4.
drainage
water
would
be

passed

in

to

the

Chicago

river

without treatment of any sort; and
5. the operation of a dry landfill
would lead to excessive truck traffic in the area.
For
these
reasons
the
village
has passed a resolution asking that

the special use permit be denied.
The village also has opposed
the
proposed
change
of
zoning
from R-4B to I-3. The area which
the brickyards seeks to rezone is

roughly

north

and

drainage
Weber

ditch.
said

that

east
his

of

the

oe

company

will disclose its plans for the area* q
at the hearing today, He
issue no statement Monday.

The

brickyards,

which

would

dis-an-

nexed from the village of Deerfield
in
1949,
has
been
openly
opposed by the village since 1947
for creating smoke fumes, burning,
and unsanitary conditions, sources

have
said.
However,
once
annexed
from
the
village,

disthe

brickyards were free from village
health codes.
In
1952,
the
village
had
the,
county
prosecute
the
brickyards

for

operating

Chicago

a

Cowhey,

order

ran

by;

William

operator of the Glenview

dump.
Again
in 1961,
was.
discovered,

was

yards.
The
rezone

dump,

ex-alderman

put

hearing
wil be

when
dumping
a_
restraining

against

the

brick-~

on the petition to
heard at 1:30 p.m.

and the petition for a special permit

for a dry

sanitary

landfill

will

follow at 2 p.m. Both hearings will
be in the board room of the village
hall

in

Deerfield.

Thursday, May 25, 1961
ESP

aie?

�MORSE:
“ONT

Ela-Vernon High School Senior Wins
Society's Award As Outstanding Student

Rev. Fred Conger Assumes Duties
As Pastor Of Methodist Church Here
Effective June 1, 1961 the Rev.
Fred H. Conger will assume duties
as Pastor of the Christ Methodist
church, Deerfield, as announced by
Dr. Birger Dahl, district superintendent of the Chicago
Northern
district
of the
Rock
River
conference.
Since
1958,
Rev.
Conger
has
been pastor of the Julia Gay Memorial Methodist church, Chicago.
He is a member of the Rock River
conference
board
of public
relations, the conference
commission
on camps and institutions, is director of the jr. high camp at Wesley
Woods and was district director of
camping for the southern district.
Born in Jackson, Tennessee, Rev.
Conger began his ministry in 1950
where for two years he was pastor
for three rural churches in Jackson,
Tenn. and then became pastor for

|

For Your

|

in

Lake

her

test;

aptitude

scholastic
The

| ceived

in

society
by

L.

E.

the

Wesner,

notice

principal,

dent and the school. Only highest
ranking students of the school, se|lected senior members of the Na'tional Honor society, can compete
in the national contest, and all of
the participants are considered the
highest ranking students through.
out the country.
|

Rev.

Fred

Conger

On June

4, the Rev. Conger

activities

senior

members

of the

Model

The

so-

'dary-school
principals,
Washing'ton, D.C.; the L. G, Balfour Company,
Attleboro,
Mass.;
the Josten
Company,
Owatonna,
Minn.;
the
National
Sales
Executives,
New
York
City;
and
Scholastic
Roto of New York City.
The fund is administered by the
scholarship board of the National
association
of
secondary-school
principals, composed of nationally
known
school administrators.
This is the second high honor
Mary Lou has received this spring.
She
has
already
been
named
a

SPE

If you insist on the best of every{ thing for your family — you send
your clothes to us regularly for dry
cleaning! If you haven’t yet made
week.

We

know

our methods
perior.

you'll agree

that

service

su-

—our

are

EXTRA KING KORN
STAMPS WITH ANY
PURCHASE AT

(Customer's

Rev.

Ate

put,
U,

4

‘a

D

y
Nb

o,

4
e@

RST
'e

&amp;,

COMP
D

RR

UO

&gt; ©

479°

D

Don

Wise,

lege.

Ke

tC

lca eee

He

has

taken

further

gradu-

THESE
PRICES!
While They Last!
List

NOW!

for you

Goodpastures,

guests

and

Marion

(who

are,

ment

there).

Rev,

and

Paul

Hospital,

it was

for

just

I

the

saw

smiles.

Many

as you

have

had

as

Lyle

their

Fordham

Berggren

in

cause

the
it.
love

considering

Birthday

re-

to be

they

just

also,

him,

seems

retire- —

spent

his

Highland
a joyous

the

Park
occasion

same,

him

and

I

he

know,
was

all

more

to you,

Pastor,

brought

many

a happy

May

25,

1961

—

to others.

There are many who have Birth- —
days
this week—my
sister, Ann —
Alonzi,
my
grandson,
Johnny,
a
real nice gal, Jacquie Lassen and
Dr. Dean Psaras. (can’t put all the
nice
things
about
Dean
in this”

short strip.)

Did you know that our own nice
new Jail was so over crowded with
Delinquents

and

drunks

that

some

of them had to be loaned to Highland Park. (This was last week,
for
room
this week they have
strays and etc.) ... and that Hard
Hats were purchased for the Public Works Dept. Employees so they
can be distinguished from ordinary
people—soon
they will have uniforms, too.

Postmaster
tended

a

Chris

Willman

Postmasters

at-—

Convention —

in Rock Island this past week. He
took his wife along.) . . . Lucille

is

Savings)

(Deerfield

Anderson

down at Monticello tg a Savings —
and Loan and Real Estate Meeting.

... Lt. George Hall went to Michigan State U for continued train-—
ines ys Harry Williams (Williams
went fishing, after the
Florist)

OPTS Pes er

113.50

75.50

een cea ees

119.95

79.95

you don’t believe
it—ask
she has it in the freezer.

93.50

MOU

Elbert EVAT. ou

159.95

109.95

Ei) RE Seep
ip omni en eh erat 172.90

114.95

ae cosa:

Zion Lutheran
Church
had a
wonderful Mother’s and Daughter’s
Banquet,
served
by the
fathers,
Mrs. Bernera (August) Bensen was
the eldest Mother, 94 years young.

Mrs, Bensen makes her home with
her daughter, Mrs. Olga Nash.

19.95
21.95

12.95
14.50
11.95

Wink Lights
AVAILABLE.

Small

Deposit

Will

Hold!

We

PHARMACY

wood

many

new

storms and

listings

screens.

rage. Very nice little
priced at $9,750. Now
per

in

l-car

ga-

house and
rented for

month.

Spring is here,
keep fighting?

Photo Dept.

have

fun

and

Carr Realty Co.

WI 5-111]
Deerfield

have

our office, here is one that anyone
could buy: 4 Room Ranch, 1 bedroom, 1 bath, Living Room, and
separate
dining room.
All Red

$75

Rd.,

Helen,

REALTORS
701

Waukegan

Road

WI

5-0984

Page

2-A

SS

Thursday,

—
©

Mother’s Day rush and honestly
caught a 16 pound Muskie (in Wisconsin) on a fly line (?) anyway if

139.95

Rd. at Deerfield

Fla.—this

—

64.95

(EMGt, Evercool,

Waukegan

Court,

days,

there

Have

28th

97.715

Bo

FOR

the

these

down

day

E.

to Florida

thing

Dottie

nue

aus

ACCESSORIES

N.

Beach,
of

tiring

from

$33.50

OY

OTHER

a card

Goodpasture—We

$76.85

No. 383 DeLuxe Fitted Cases...
No. 310 DeLuxe Fitted Cases ..
ALL

received

Ray

friends

a member

ate
work
at
Northern
Baptist
seminary and is now working toward
a Ph.D. in early Christian
literature
at
the
University
of
Chicago.

Accessories

Signature)

O

ae

oi icus, Oka alpGi nea

CLEANERS

One to a customer—Adults
only—This
coupon
redeemable
only
for
King
Korn
Stamps.
All rights reserved
in the King Korn Stamp Co.
—Coupon
valid only when
signed by customer.

0

Ai

|B 9 dr pany reer

&gt; oe

ALPHA

ae

Just
and

Pompano

of the faculty of the Moody Bible
Institute,
Chicago,
will speak
at
the
Community
Baptist
church
this Sunday, May 28 at 10:45 a.m.
and 7 p.m,
A
former
pastor,
Rev.
Wise
served three churches in Wisconsin and Illinois before joining the
staff at MBI
as an instructor of
Greek and New Testament. He also
serves
as a counselor
to ministerial students and is faculty adviser for the school yearbook. In
addition he is a member
of the
Midwest committee of the Africa
Inland Mission.
After
graduating
from
Moody
Bible Institute where he was active
in gospel
team
work,
Rev.
Wise went on to earn both his b.a.
and m.a. degrees at Wheaton col-

Suggested

No.

B.

Carr

Impressions,

Faculty Member Speaks
At Community Baptist

The
National
Honor
society
| Scholarship program is made pos‘sible through
funds provided by
the National association of secon-

hold his first service at 11 a.m. at
the Maplewood school following his
Adult Bible class at 9:30 a.m. and
a fellowship coffee at 10:30 a.m.
A reception for the minister and
his wife will be held by the church
congregation the same day between
3 and 5 p.m. and all interested in
meeting them are invited to attend.

We

this

By
lola

Moved—1471

\ciety
by
achieving
the
highest
'seores on the preliminary
scholastic aptitude test.

will

including

NEW Polaroid Land Cameras

us

an

the
literary
magazine,
and
dramatics. In the fall she will be enrolled
at
Carleton
College
in
Northfield, Minn,

Mary Lou is one of the 497 win‘ners of awards. These students are
| the highest ranking students in the
national general aptitude test ad-ministered March 11, 1961 to 2,398
|students who
qualified from the

65,000

9 months and will be living at the
parsonage at 1652 Pear Tree Rd.
He is a member of the Masons and
Lions and has been active in the
Jr. Chamber of Commerce and Boy
Scout work. Mrs. Conger received
her B.S. in Education at Normal,
Ill. and then taught at the Meadowbrook School, Northbrook, Ill. for
two years. She later taught for one
year in Clifton, Ill. and one year in
Jackson, Tenn.

Polaroid

try

High

receive

school career she has maintained
a high scholastic record and participated in many extra-curricular

said, ‘““We believe that this is an
unusually high honor for the stu-

Available Through Sunday!

—

to

scholastic record; and her school
record.
reMerit Scholar. During her high

OMPAR
acquaintance

Ela-Vernon

CARRying
On

activity leadership, and service

FAMILY

our

at

County

niWn

award in the 16th National Honor Society scholarship program.
Her certificate of merit was awarded on the basis of her score
on the General Aptitude Test ; her score on the preliminary

two years at the Trinity Methodist
church in Henderson, Tenn.
In 1954, Rev. Conger was minister
for
the
Clifton
Methodist
church, Clifton, Ill. and the Ashkum
Methodist
church,
Ashkum,
Ill. Later he was Associate Minister
at
the
First
Methodist
Church,
Jackson, Tenn. Rev. Conger then
became Minister of the Oakhaven
Methodist church which he helped
to build in Memphis, Tenn. in 1958.
Graduating
from
Lambuth
college, Jackson, Tenn. where he received his Bachelor of Science, he
then graduated from Garrett Biblical Institute, Evanston, where he
received
his bachelor
of divinity
degree.
The Rev. and Mrs. Conger have
two boys, Scott 3 years and Steven

students

two

of

is one

senior

Smith,

Patterson

Lou

Mary
'School,

on

4

�Pee

A

Bee

BOARD

OF

ZONING

Present One Act

As Festival Part
The
fer

APPEALS

By: Robert E. Bowen
Building Commissioner
_$/25/61—D137

All

of the

Southwest

Quarter

of Section

Name

State of Mlinois.

of

said

Village

to

better

serve

the

by ‘public interests and
promote
the general
_ welfare within said Village of Riverwoods.
Bs,
NOW, THEREFORE, the President and
5, Board of ‘Trustees of the Village of River-

Re woods do ordain:
_
Section 1. That

the

aforesaid

cal

of Riverwoods

1961.

on

Recorded,

the

described

16th

deposited

day

and

of

filed

«xxx

OPEN:

SUN. &amp; MON.

4

p.m.

9 a.m.—1

p.m.

Stager members handling techniaspects of the festival are Tom

For further information or tickets call Tom Tibbetts, ID 2-7835.
Tickets will also be available at the
door.

_ Riverwoods
this 16th day of May,
1961.
_ APPROVED this 16th day of May, 1961.
ROBERT G. CLENDENIN, President
_ Attest:
RUSSELL A. BENEDICT, Clerk
5/25 /61—D136

9 a.m.—6

Girls’ State Rep
For Ela-Vernon

In McCurdy Home
Wednesday Night

Glenna Simpson, a junior at ElaVernon High school, has been selected
as
the
representative
to
Girl’s State announced Mrs. William Sessons of the selection committee
of
the
American
Legion
auxiliary.

which

Glenna was selected after an interview with the selection committee. The selection was based on her
scholastic record and her demonstration
of
leadership
ability
through her participation in extracurricular activities.
She will attend the Girls’ State
conference on the MacMurray college campus from June 19 through
June
24. At the conference
the

“World

*
a
FOLGER’S

aS

2

$119
or Drip

Reg.

|

SALE

45c

PRICE

ea.

pate in a study of American government by setting up their own
government patterned after that of
the State of Illinois. Students will
have the experience of running for
office
and then
serving
in their
elected capacities, but no student
will be without a government position.
Last year Mary Ranking was ElaVernon’s
representative
to Girls’
State.

Receives

Degree

Anton
Longhini,
son
of
Mrs.
Julia
Longhini,
1305
Knollwood
Rd., received his master of business administration degree in marketing at the 291st convocation of
the University of Chicago.
The winter convocation was held
at 3 p.m., March 17 in Rockefeller
Memorial chapel in Chicago.
A
total
of 194
students
were
awarded degrees.

Mrs.

|.

'|

YOUNG

FRESH

CRISP

FIRM

‘i
'

Deerfield

Page

2-B

RD.

has

been

f

At present she is
Auxiliary
Board
States, and, served
as a member of the
ual
Assembly
of
the United States.

an

a member of the
for
the
United
for many years
National Spiritthe
Bahai’s
of

=

®

oe Ss
FROZEN

Our

Cover

DEERFIELD
REVIEW

|
|

During the past year, Mrs Mc-|
Vol. 36, No,
Cormick traveled to many parts of Thursday, May 25, 1961
the United States as a teacher and
Published Weekly every Thursday
lecturer.

“The unity of the human race,”’
she
said,
“as envisioned
by
Baha’u’llah, implies the establishment of a world commonwealth in
which all nations, races, creeds and
classes are closely and permanently
united, and in which autonomy of
its state members and the personal
freedom
and initiative of the individuals that compose
them
are

«xxx

608

HIGHLAND
PARK OFFICE
Laurel Ave., Highland Park,
Telephone ID 2-4500

Ill.

MEMBER
National Editorial Association
IHinois Press Association
Local Subscription Rates—$3.50 per year
Domestic Rate—$5.00 per year
Single Copies—15c
Foreign Rates on Application
“one
class postage paid at Deerfield,
inois
Unsolicited manuscripts or photographs
are sent to the North Shore Group newspapers at the sender’s risk.
The North
Shore Group
Newspapers
assume
no responsibility for the publication of such materials or their return to the sender.

MEAT DEPT.
OPEN DURING
EVERY STORE
HOUR

THURS., FRI., SAT. &amp; MONDAY
MAY 25 - 26 - 27 and 29
Wek
eH eS
wR
Re
U.S. GOV'T. GRADED CHOICE

PORTERHOUSE

FRUIT

PUNCH

lb. OQ:

GREEN

RADISHES

ONIONS

2
2

bunches

bunches

lIc
19¢c

12

PUBLICATION
OFFICE
699 Waukegan Road
DEERFIELD,
ILLINOIS
Telephone Windsor 5-4500

“Everywhere I travel,’ she said
last night, “I find the desire for
peace to be uppermost in the minds
of all peoples, be they black, brown,
yellow or white, and regardless of
religious background.

SIRLOIN

Ib. 39&gt;

Oscar Mayer

CRISP

WAUKEGAN

McCormick

$1.00

FRESH

732

&amp;

HAWAIIAN

3

On

Two
Jaycee
members
are
hot
after a chicken for their annual
Chark-O-Chick, which will be delivered Sunday, June 4. The members are Bernie Forest and Frank
Corbin.
The main project of the
Jaycees to raise money to support
their civic activities, the Chark-OChick orders are currently being
taken by group members.

17-0z. Pkg.
Reg. 89c
SALE PRICE

RIPE OLIVES
Cans

is now

On June 14, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
A. Glauder, members of the Waukegan
Bahai
Community,’
take
you on a ‘Camera Safari in Africa,’
to meet your neighbors.”

girls, who represent the finest girls|

STRAWBERRY
SHORT CAKE

COLOSSAL

303

toward

in the state of Illinois, will partici-|2¢t've
teacher and lecturer for the
Bahai World Faith for many years.

DRESSEL’S

FRANCISCAN BRAND

‘|

goal

humanity

Mrs.
McCormick’s talk, “The
Origin and Destiny of Man,” opened a series of Wednesday evening
firesides to be conducted
by the
local Bahai group.

COSMAS

x

COFFEE
Reg.

a

is the

definitely
and
completely
safeguarded.
“In keeping with its central purpose to promote world unity,” Mrs.
McCormick concluded, “the International Bahai Community is now
an accredited member of the nongovernmental
organization
of the
United
Nations.
The
Bahai’s are
looking for the unity of nations
and the unity of religion . . . then
we will have world peace.”
The fireside series will be held
at Bahai homes in Deerfield. The
public has been cordially invited.

striving.”
So
said Mrs.
Margery
McCormick,
Wilmette,
last night
at a fireside meeting sponsored by
the
Bahai’s
of Deerfield
at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Richard A.
McCurdy, 849 Osterman Ave.

| MEMORIAL DAY SPECIALS
Kr.
Ke

unity

a harrassed

GROCERLAND

TUESDAY

i

Cast

Other
groups
participating
on
Friday evening are Winnetka Drama Club and Morton Grove Community
theater.
Saturday
night
Threshold
Players,
Experimental
Theater, and Wilmette Little Theater Association will present their
plays.

of pie the office of the Clerk of the Village of

i

the

co-ordinator;
Larry
McChesney,
Northfield, lighting; and Bill Olendorf Jr., Highland Park, sound effects co-ordinator.

territory be and the same
is hereby an-nexed to the Village of Riverwoods, Lake
County,
Mlinois:
_
Section 2. Whereas the certain thoroughfares that have been privately maintained
- according to County records as of this date,
fy the Village of Riverwoods does not assume
any maintenance of these rights-of-way or
any
appurtenances
or
structures
located
ie
inAt therein;
;
Section 3. That this ordinance shall be
| in full force and effect from and after its
£ _ passage, approval and posting.
PASSED by the Board of Trustees of the

_ Village

of-

of

Tibbetts, Highland Park, production

“

fe- May,

will

Charles Palmer of Libertyville is
directing the cast which includes
Guy
and
Bill Geleerd,
Highland
Park; Bob Weiner, Chicago; Mike
Barney, Marshall Philyew, and Ray
Fry, North Chicago; Bill Walbaum,
Northbrook; Mrs. Charles Palmer,
Libertyville;
Mrs.
Harry
Mazur,
Mrs.
Edward
Jaeggi,
and
Paul
Pearson, Deerfield; and Mrs. Ralph
Schlote
and Al Capelli,
Lincolnshire.

|
WHEREAS
Petition
Number
18379
re|
questing annexation has been filed and dei
ared to be in conformity with the Illinois
Ret Wavined Statute C24, Sec. 7-1 to 7-4 by the
County
Court
of
Lake
County,
Illinois,
“t April 24, 1961 and
.
WHEREAS
the petition for the aforesaid
3 annexation has been referred to the Presi_ dent and the Board of Trustees of the Village of Riverwoods, on May
3, 1961 and
ce
WHEREAS,
it is desirable that said territory should be annexed to the Village of
|
Riverwoods to enable the corporate authori-

ties

“Moon

The action of the play involves
a group of cargo freighter seamen
who have put into port in the West
Indies and it conveys O’Neill’s insight into the human soul.

19, Township
43N
Range
12, E. of the
oe
Principal
Meridian,
West
Deerfield
Township; and alll of the ‘South Half of the
_ Southeast Quarter of the Northeast Quarter
a of Section 24, 43, N., R11, E. of the third
uM Principal Meridian, Vernon Township; and
all of the Southeast Quarter of Section 24
i and all of the South three-quarters of the
East Half of the Southeast Quarter of the
Southwest
Quarter
of Section
24, T43N,
R11
E. of the Third
Principal Meridian,
Vernon
Township;
all
in
Lake
County,

_

of Deerfield

O’Neill’s

Caribbees”
as part of the Little
Theater Festival of six one acts at
Herb Rogers’ Tenthouse theater tomorrow, May 26 at 8:30 p.m.

os:
AN ORDINANCE
amnexing
to the
Village
of
Riverwoods,
| County
of Lake,
State
of Illinois,
The
Territory properly described: as:

mY

Stagers

Eugene

i

Glenna Simpson Is Bahai’s Hold Meet.

Deerfield Stagers

NOTICE
OF HEARING
June 19, 1961
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
by the
_ Board of Zoning Appeals for the Village
of Deerfield, Illinois, that a public hearing
will be held by said Board on Monday, June
19, 1961 at 8:00 P.M. in the Village Hall,
850
Waukegan
Road,
Deerfield,
for the
D dallowine application:
a
One (1) sign, 12 ft. x 36 ft., on the east
side of Waukegan Road (100 block), NixOn
Slietz,
2
At said public hearing, or any adjourn- ment thereof, all persons interested are in- yited to be present and be heard.
_

ee
Rees
erect
Aids
Ys

i ris
oS

FRANKS

Moe, Nalral Name tn foods.

Phone:

Whdsor

0707

5-

Thursday, May 25, 1961

�HPHS Elects New
Officers To Head

Olson, secretary, James Murtfeldt,
treasurer and Tom Huxley, social
chairman.

New Pep Club officers will be
Carole Magnus,
president,
Nancy
Mead, vice-president, Mary Feutchwanger, secretary, Allison Lauter,
treasurer,
Nancy
Wands,
senior
Charles Pascal was chosen presi- representative, Carol Hammerman,
dent of the senior Class of 1961-62, sophomore representative and Nancy Hexter, publicity chairman; Aras
Highland
Park
High
School
cheology Club, George Etu, presistudents voted in the annual all- dent, Hunter Johnson, vice-presischool elections, May 17, 1961.
dent, Louise Smith, secretary, and
Papierniak,
treasurer;
Other senior class officers will Kathy
Bridge Club, Edward Stone, presibe
Robert
Rigler,
vice-president,
‘dent,
John
Lawrence,
vice-presiJudy Peterson, secretary, Andrew
dent and Neil Stone, tournament
Andonadis, treasurer, and Margery director;
Band,
Edward
Sheftel,
Caldarelli, social chairman.
Fred- president, Linnea Gibbs, vice-presrick Gruber will head next year’s ident,
Margaret
Pierce, secretary
junior class with Robert Russell, and James Murtfeldt, quartermasvice-president,
Susan
Fell, secre- ter; and Orchestra, Judith Becker,
tary, Kay Landau,
treasurer and president, Ellen Falkof, vice-presiEllen Katz, social chairman. Offi- dent-social
chairman
and
Wendy
cers of the sophomore class will be Krueger, secretary-treasurer.

Classes, Clubs

Martin

Becker,

president,

David

Smith, vice-president, Andrea Lew
inger, secretary, Laura Greengard,
treasurer and Patricia Schofler, social chairman.
Other club officers include, for
Girls’ Club, Rona Echt, president,
Betsy Dawe, vice-president,
Mary
Amedei,
secretary,
Penny
Weisbard, treasurer, Jonlee Nelson, social chairman
and Barbara Aten,
publicity ehairman; for Boys’ Club,
board, Dennis Giangiorgi, Robert
Picker,
Tony
Sherman,
Thomas
Weinberg, Renny Werrenrath, for
senior members,
and Arthur Altschuler, Leon Chikerneo, Ned Robertson, Bob Ruder, for junior members.
Officers for HGA
are Marjorie
Berkson, president,
Maria Tatar,
vice-president,
Nancy Lawrence,
secretary, Susan Dawe, treasurer,
Karen Grais, social chairman and
Mary Winthrop, publicity chair-

man,

and

for

Jim
Weinert,
Goodman,
vice

Varsity.Club,
president,
president,

Steve
Barney

In

Boys’

Steve

Rifle

Simon.

president

and

Club

secretary

is

Krueger

is

Wendy
Hillary

Carp

Nominate Marshal
Candidates for

Linn,

phen

vice-president

Boren,

secretary,

and

of

James Rosenbaum,

A
the
sion
girl,

in

all

senior

sessions,

Mon-

Shine

and

Mr.

Floyd,

final list will be compiled by
executive board, and each seswill vote for one boy and one
May 22. The two marshals will

day, May 15. One boy and one girl
were chosen by each homeroom on
the basis of poise, posture, voice,

head the procession down the aisle
at graduation, June 15, and read
the names of the graduates.

$2,200,000

REWARD
SEE ME
HENRY

HAKANEN

board of Garrick; and Joan Rothenberg, president, Katie Levi, secretary,
Karen
Winters,
treasurer
and
Meryl
Greer,
corresponding
secretary, of Creative Arts Club.
The

the

elections

Student

were

handled

Council

825

wwe)

is sec-

1-HOUR

Chess

vice-

Mutual Automobile Insurance Company
Home Office: Bloomington, Illinois

IMAGINE!

MARTY

Ste-

president and Jan Bernard, secretary, of Parnassus; Stuart Rosenberg, president and Henry Hansnrann,
vice-president,
of Science
Club; Mary Pottker, Jim Bernstein,
Hunter
Johnson,
Barbara
Kratz
and
Jeff
Perlman
make
up
the

|

Deerfield Rd., Deerfield
Deerfield

Ph.: WI 5-1383
STATE FARM

by

Executive

Board.
Students
voted before
school, during session and during
study
halls
and
lunch
periods
through seventh period.

Club; Michael Bauman, president,
Al Stern, vice-president and Michael Bauman, Pat Oswald, Kathy
Levin, Cheryl Raff, Barbara Roessler
and
Beth
Derby,
executive
board, Library Board;
John Halperin, president, Tim Dawe, vicepresident and Lou Ellen Halperin,
secretary-treasurer, of Math Club;
Kent Lawrence, president, William
Weese,
vice-president
and
James
Reinach,
secretary,
of
National
Forensic
League;
Mary
Pottker,

president,

and Miss
sponsors.

Senior Class Marshals were nominated

to

Senior Exeecutive Board submitted
the number of votes each person
received to the executive
board,

HPHS Junior Prom

retary of Girls’ Rifle Club.
Officers of other clubs are Robert

diction and appearance.
The session representatives

A complete

dry cleaning

service

in just one

hour!

Yes, it does seem hard to imagine that your soiled
garment can be restored to its original beauty in just
60 minutes .
. and completely free from tell-tale
odors. This service is available to you anytime—at no
extra charge.
Hard to imagine?
Why not stop in and let us
prove to you the speed and quality of this revolutionary process.
oa

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at
the moment,
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Honor, they're discussing the many
advantages of having one’s drycleaning
done
at ONE
HOUR
MARTINIZING!”’

j
i

708

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en

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Deerfield

CLEANINGae
! the mostin DRY
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WI

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GOOD INVESTMENTS FOR YOUR FAMILY
ms

HIGHLAND
PARK:
$41,500. is a value for
this red brick traditional 3 bedrm.
(plus pan.

rec. rm.)

beautifully maintained home

in finest

DEERFIELD:
Low 20's. Walk to all conveniences from this 3 bedrm. quality built brick
ranch in finest sch. district. Liv. rm. w/stone

DEERFIELD: Lower 40's. 6 bedrm. 22 bath
split level w/family rm. children’s playrm. ade-

DEERFIELD:
2 or 3 bedroom
Centrally air conditioned. Huge

quate din. space in cabinet kitchen, liv rm. with
fireplace, large din. L. scrnd. porch, patio &amp; 2

room with stone
in
appliances.

a buy

cellent

fireplace.

contemporary.
ra
paneled living

Kitchen

with

built-

east location.
Full basement.
Of note are: 2 fireplaces, sep. fireplace, kitchen w/din. area.
din. rm., full basemt., scrnd. porch overlooking Hardwood floors throughout. New 2 car garage
a
secluded
yard
resplendently beautiful.
2 and wide blacktop driveway merit inspection,
blocks from the lake.
Owner
leaving state. too.
Call today to see this good investment.

Delightful
breakfast
room.
car garage. Located on 3% acres. Landscaped Beamed ceilings throughout. Located in lovely
w/roses, flowering shrubs G evergreens. Truly wooded section of the village, and in very ex-

WEST BANNOCKBURN:
In the 20’s. A gem
nestled on 21%
wooded
acres,
this
Indiana
Limestone home has charm, beauty &amp; livability w/raised stone frpl., kit. w/din. space, scrnd.
pch. &amp; expansion possibilities. Decorated in soft
tones &amp;G immaculate.
Built for present owners
w/numerous custom features. A treasure to own.

RIVERWOODS:
In the 20’s. This area west of NORTHBROOK:
$20,500.
Attractive interior
Deerfield village G south of Deerfield road af- G&amp; picturesque exterior w/sweeping countryside
fords privacy &amp; full enjoymt. of nature’s wood- vistas. Large liv. rm. looks out on magnificent

y

LINCOLNSHIRE: In the 40's. Transferred owner wants a fast sale on this red brick colonial
designed w/details too numerous to mention

family.

which enhance a home for fine living &amp; enter- lands to the family who seeks an investment in
taining. Spacious entr. hall, liv. rm. w/marble a home w/acreage.
3 bedrm. contemporary on
frpl., sep. din. rm., fam. rm., huge sernd. pch. 2 wooded acres only a few minutes from all
w/sliding glass doors. Just reduced. See it today.conv. Liv. rm. w/frpl., fam.-din. rm., elec. kit.

school

district.

Priced

in

the

mid

20's:

weeping willow tree. Good sized kit. G 2 bedrms. but much
room’ for expansion with an
oversize 2 car garage &amp; exceptional storage
space.
Also tiled patio.
YW acre.

Quinlan. and LYS ON, Inc

YEARS
of

for the growing

SERVICE

Cuicaco

4

Quinlan.
‘and LYSOMN Jae.

Thursday,

May

25,

Rea

735
1961

Deerfield

Road

Deerfield Office —

Open

Weekdays

9 to

5 —

Sundays

10 to 5
Page

H

Estate

rey

19—D

|

©)

(ANY

3

�Washer

Load

(9 Ibs.)

DEERFIELD

COUNTRY

ESS
.
:

+

.

One

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fe
OE d an

ore

EMIS

EA eT TE
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ee

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e Coupons good thru Saturday
e Clip and Save

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q

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&gt;

q

Worth

=

ba

Deerfield Commons — Lower (West) Terrace

Coupon

AM

hel nemane

Missi

Friday, May 26 — Saturday, May 27, 1961

=

On EACH ten dollars in purchases .. . May 26 G 27,

q

=

1961

&amp;

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iia
¢
Pes

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DISCOUNT

50

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May 26, 27, 1961 — With This Coupon only.

&gt;
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ee

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price of THREE

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Bring this coupon to your

SLACKS

JEWEL

vet” 2 pair $6

Si

8-12

YOUNG

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Official Boy Scout Headquarters
Boys to 16 —

Page

H

20—D

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FOOD

at 748 Waukegan

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Pint of YUMMY

ICE CREAM

with this coupon and a purchase of $5.00 or more
on Friday or Saturday, May 26, 27, 1961.

ee

=

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SAVE 15c

°

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DARING:

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Lapeer

Thursday,

May

25, 1961
ith

“

�\NOTHER FAVORITE VALUE EVENT!
ESE
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ee
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RT
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RI

ire)

$é

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ee

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neraies ve
sem

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gery

t

bi

SRI

spe
ee

Peers

oy

cine

ba

aw"ge
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Ht

:

wien
ie ee

ear
ete

f fa

S

ner

‘

/

| ge

sy

sea
is
hs Sic

bi

Prick

DOG

@ ENTER YOUR

OUR BIG

IN

. Kes

and

a riday

a

a

m

=
ee

saturday only
Naturday,
Shop and Save in all
Deerfield Commons Stores

|

pe

Saturday

Show

7

(Each Store Reserves the Right to Limit Quantity.)

au
Entry

ap

» May 97-9:30 AM
Stores

Commons

at Deerfield

Level

Lot—Lower

Parking

In Our

Morning

Blanks

;

EY ARIERGENIENINIENIENVERI IND ;
DARPARPANPARPARPARPANPANP:RPAPANPANPANPRSARPARILRPAUIRIERS: FAZETEEVET
RPARPNIRPNDNPLRPNPERPANPLRPARPLRPRPARPLRPARPANDRD!
3
=
=
"Faste The Rest — Then Eat The Bes!”
mS
THE GIFT LANTERN
= 3
SAVE DURING WARDS
g
—
:

=

Ward

YNNNN,

WO LY

“LILAC SHOES |
Guaranteed

to

Wear

Men's

2

Years...

Socks

THE

é

‘eo

4

ARG

pA

a

Reg.

69c

Ib. SAVE

M&amp;M

Een
ep

«§-—« PONT

nn

22c

with

this

2
g

Z

ga

Tere

PQA

Wf

i

NLENIEN

EGGS

Lakes

or more

imit 1 coupon

ee

ZIVAY/

AY)

iyi

eg

FOOD
Vi

¥

wi

RT INOT ANC

“Ay

FRI, SAT., MAY 26-27
W

This coupon good only May 26, 27, 1961

On ANY

:

j

A)

yy

ih)

WW

AK

"

|

EN

We

a

Brought

Order

at Deerfield Commons

INT

INTI

In

CLEANERS

ANY

IN

AG)

As

on

NG

We

NY

&lt;8

ss
S

4

Store Only.)

We Give SGH Green Stamps!

y(

:

a

On May 26 or 27, 1961

SHORELINE

IY

NO

©

—

=

=

Nr iY

QPRINISRPAPLAPRPINPSUPLNPNIERIRIRPLNPRPENPARIASANT
&lt;eS

DELICIOUS STRAWBERRY

£2

COFFEECAKE
6 9
.

:

With This Coupon — May 26, 27, 1961

19c

ALGREEN’S
S

ss 2

&lt;

ot

arth.

Dry Cleaning

(Good

SZ

Reg. 33c¢ Inflatable, 3-Color, Beach

PLAYBALL

ivy i

Oc

5

g

MART

.

mi
§

-

NI NIPNININININIAININPAPNIAINIRIRIAIAPNPND:

47c lb.

|

&lt;i

s

=|

May 31, 1961. Offer qood at Deerfield

Ndi Hy)

zi

D

q

ay,

A)

A

ae

VX

:

?

minimum - purchase

W/ 4

This Gace

per family. Offer expires Wed.,

SURE SAVE

OV ix 7)

o7

yt

VENER:

; AI

AQ pa

24/4

&lt;

1 doz. FREE

Sati — .00

|

7

»(

i

NY

FRESH

Land O’

2

=

NOYiN

aN

STRICTLY

“A”

:

&lt;&lt;

5-0575
Oy

gn

With This Coupon

LARGE

coupon

S. S. KRESGE

ae

Ut

WI
Wavy

:

1\\7

~

te ite $1 40

pie Poe EI

“4

~

LANTERN

Commons

°,

ee

CANDIES
- neon eee nn nnn

°

GRADE

S$

.

6

°,

Vi

y

One pair with this coupon—May 26, 27, 1961.

AVAVAVAVAVAAVAVATAVAVAAVAVZALZ. VAAL

GIFT

Deerfield
Ni

1

pr.

69c

Mi

=

Lepiapiag!

WARDS—Montgomery

OF $5.00 OR MORE

2

, GNLY «3

s

STAse

8 8

=

2

Box of

ASSORTED CHOCOLATES

= s

Gt ANY. PURVES

:

ARPANIANIAND aN =

4. 9

$1

ANPANIARIANIANY.

10 ft. x 20 ft. PATIO ROOF
SAVE $65.00

1 Ib. Packed

50c

&gt; §

Reg. $215.00

-“

This Coupon Worth

pee

SALE

ei
BOW,

&gt;

&amp;%

COVER

&amp; PATIO

AWNING

—

sees

:

SARANY

~

LY

WW LVL) NONWOADAAMN Vila anvil TYAN

DEERFIELD
Thursday, May 25, 1961

COMMONS

SHOPPING

CENTER—

DEERFIELD

AND

WAUKEGAN

ROADS
Page H 21—D

5

iE
ah

Spire!
%

�SURE
SAVE

pure. fruit Novo

HAWAIIAN PUNCH
POTATO CHIPS. st

jays—reg.

Loe uypile

great

price

59c—save

10c

lakes

BARBECUE BRIQUETS
OF

WITH

THIS

COUPON

LARGE

EGGS

shee

te

at
cillaetl

ee
mem
a

ann—made
orchard-ripe apples

from

oe

—_— ish 1 Se

sient

ripe olives

hills

bros.—drip

or

x coffee

4.2). 99e
tall

cyl.

“&gt;...

Everything you need for picnics and outdoor

regular

cooking

an SL.19:

Sure

f 7 instant coffee

$1.29

U. S. GOVT. INSP. GRADE A——FRESH

pik

nik

mpencostring

_

-

2 ‘cm 35¢

potatoes

-realemon

| lemon juice

__ no.” 39c

heinz—-vegetorian or with pork.

baked beans
halters—3

varieties

/ pretzels...
my

Re 106

i aluminum foil
:

From

Dept.
PIPING

HOT—READY

vis. ‘govt. insp.

grade

a—fresh

u.s. govt. insp.

grade

a—fresh

SMa

e

mart—at

insp.

grade

TO EAT

» 23¢
' whole

- frying chickens » 33c
columbia—u.s.

3

29c

choice—boneless—deckel

mild or delicatessen

off

style—brisket of

; mae CS eee

and all summer

and

~ ARMOUR

STAR—SLICED

-_eVLOGNA
|

FRESH—PIPING

APPLE PIE
,

|
2

thie

PAD

OR PIECES |

and

tasty

». 59¢

‘Meat pind grocery prices available Fiitedoy: May 25th
_
thru Wednesday, May 3 Ist.

fresh and

vac” 5c

crisp—ruby-red

RADISHES

FREE!
“Crystal

Ice” Milano Design
Hocking Glasses

cach FOC

These exquisitely beautiful Anchor Hocking
glasses are new and smart and Sure Save has them
for youu—ABSOLUTELY FREE. This week clip

coupon No. 2 and redeem it at any Sure Save
food mart for your beautiful free ‘Crystal Ice’’
Milano design 12.02. beverage glass.
No purchase is required. Coupons are good only
on the weeks indicated. Only one coupon
redeemed each week per family. It’s our way

of saying ‘Thank You” to old customers
and
““Welcome”’ to new customers.

Complete your set of “Crystal
Milano Design Glasses

Friday and

Ice”

15-ox. tall

drink glass

ALL

Saturday only.
We' reserve the right to limit quantities

4 SIZES
ONLY

EY j ? ror 29

FRESH—LAKE SUPERIOR
WHITEFISH
ey
WH 22—D 6

S

"WS

fashioned dbl.
juice glass
SS

SHOPPING
716

Fresh Fish

Page

Anchor

5-oz. juice
cocktail glass

HOT 8-INCH—DEEP DISH |

CENTER

Waukegan

SPACIOUS

ncn we

long—

green

_ FRESH—HOMEMADE

CHOPPED LIVER

lowest possible

GREEN ONIONS

a—fresh

Produee prices available Thursday,

Barbecued CHICKENS - 89¢

fresh

sae |
up

the

CUCUMBERS |... 2 Msc 19¢

es

cut

“rol 29¢ |

Our Delicatessen.

i

for you at your nearby

For Crisp Summer Salads

“chicken breasts ..... » AYc
Cee

u.s. govt.

Dare A9c.

|alco
mapkins

a—fresh

hl

chicken wings

4° A9c

blue ribbon

U.S. govt. ‘insp.

chicken livers. ......

pride of spain—imported—queen

oe

Save food

full of flavor—fresh

Lb.
grade

alae

2 39c.

stuffed olives

waiting

try us now!

3d

,

Legs

Chicken
i

—

prices—this weekend

maxwell house—special offer

iz &amp;

2s

COOK!

“8% 89c

mellow

applesauce

6 it.is, 39g

GET READY
GET SET

nme

an

_ grape drink 3
_

tasting

LEMONADE:

' : .: 7 welchade—delicious

i Se faggedy

clean

country’s delight—frozen

Vane

wa

bracing,

:

PEPSLCOLA.

nerllU

=

\

ae

FREE
tet

MAAVOMMAICR
light,

real

(plus dep.)

Offer
good
with a $5.00 or more
minimum purchase only, Limit one coupon per family. Offer good at Deerfield
Sure Save only. Offer expires Wednesday, May 31Ist 1961,

et.

hellman’s

lll

oo

Uk

lc

Grade A Strictly Fresh
Land O’ Lakes — 1 Dozen

lf

ees
lUl

eS

400

PARKING

Rd.
FOR

CARS

Thursday, May 25, 1961

�HERSHEYS Ss

piMuns.

Mimones

|

~

Ivy Plant. oer

Chocolate .,, .."
Almonds °*

TWO
PAIR

a

Plant

Both for

Eh

20:|

86-oz.
Pitcher

15 denier

94-02.
Glasses

TWO Extra
CUPS -

First Quality, Ultra Sheer!
Slenderizing Dark Seams!

Medium
Lengths

Mist-Tone, Suntone, Tahiti

S.

Basket

chs

Second.

Seventh

Dishcloth

Bras"

Both for 58s
A

Yonnlly

1c

Wr:

Thursday, May

Boxer Shorts 3 for ‘1.17

OH
‘White,

&lt;te%

or

Blue

Ballerina

Boudoir

Fourth

Lamp

Four for

‘1.18
HOURS:

Style

Shade

Second Shade

Pair

Nylon‘in Black
White, Pastels,

Pink

25

Salisbury Steak Luncheon
Pie or Sundae
Both for

Polyethylene.
RN
x %

FOUNTAIN
SPECIALS

Both for $1.30
OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.

S. S. KRESGE
Jeeviteld Commons

Saturday,

[&gt; Ic

Snopping

Cente

Both for

60+

VY Ib. Ham Dinner
Pie or Sundae
Both for

SATURDAYS 9 A.M. to 6 P.M.

COMPANY
*22

Waucegan

Roac

May

27

�YOU'RE ALWAYS WELCOME AT
youhay ""Zebco"

a

.e

g

FS Kae

) Reel at *5*

Right

No Need to Pay $9.93 7

Reserved to Limit Oaisieiteinn

Highland | Deerfield | Northbrook
Park | Commons | Meadows

Self

Downtown —|

Lower

601 Central

e

Deerfield, 744 | Northbrook —

‘nal
ser

$4.29 Henry Clay

BOURBON

Prices

86 proof, Fifth.

| Waukegan Road § 1975 Cherry Lane ©

oe
.

oe ae

London dry.
Fifth, only

&amp;

DISCOUNT SPECIAL!
AYTINAL
Vitamins

&amp;

Minerals

Olafsen’s dowble health
boost for your daily diet,

Reg. $328

_100%

Deodorant
vist Tex” 100-foo

ast

“ke

23¢ eel

Now

1 -Pound

cohors.

in

"Chefline”

AA

only

;

&amp;

3 Potato Chips
ispy Flake”... in
rity esh twin pak,

ie lots:cat
cream,

£ over 20 flavors!
ious Cherry
*

oi
ry

Flag &amp; Pole
Mm

” GOLDEN
Go-Farther
covers

pai
0
Tseant”

Formula

5,000

sq.

Sem

ft.

4

E REGULARLY $3.95

&lt;P Sa

fe

:

|

|

Powered

e

pst

5x3 foot. 6-foot pole.
A Compare to $5.95............

ba 8* slate

Wye

flag... .87

by pressure pack—

has no hose to drag! Use
liquid.
for any dust or

FILM for LESS!

it

or any dustor liqui

e yAF Kodacolor

Formerly
Adv.

at

$1.25

$42.98

list price

Gallon Picnic Jug
insulated to keep food or drink
hot or cold. Baked enamel finsh. Non-slip grip at bottom

Buy all the film yo
need. Return any unopened
for a full cash refund .
%..
FAMOUS BRANDS.

Floa
Za

i

Compare

with

=

$2. 95

f AIR
MATTRESS
Inflatable
fea ea
ae rg

7

ND

Bit

Compare
with $2.98
Tennis Racket

a

he ese
Li ightweight,
leather grip

legal

7

————
Petar
FER

Ff

cara

pi.

|

PTS PaaS evi
Ep hes Sa SPR
ee ik eee

88

No

Need

to Son

—

Cowhide

cover » Not $2.50
but rs

$6.95

: 3

ICE

poles.

No»

|

:

ec

77
—

LN
}
,

ee

|

F

) {

85c
om

.

voll
rh:

Pure.

33¢.

U.S.P.

t-ounce

quality

B IODINE
[*

Reguiar

at

bottle at Walgreen

low

RATION

brand

69c. Bottle of 125 tablets at real savi a

Get

thin again

purity

with

by

ultra-violet

THINAGEN .

rays.

Now

ameiner

only...

99.

3:

eet

pe

Walgreen

Fear

Wg

#

5

2

ea,

Drug Store

”

J

Lawn Chair

$6. 95

A

QUALITY

Agate

2

tants

er

A

ie

‘ae

\

sé)

ILLE

with Motori
Elevating éeéinke zed Spit

©

Coppertone color

7

® Grill wind hood

a

::

7

af

one

TORCH
Pels insects,

Provides

light!

Basket

5

-

;

tj
gah

t=

:

eg:

2

‘

as

:

i bi 'Ch| efl erFE. oil. 55e
ine’: : 25°
foot relat Savings!

CI ‘si ‘Heatflo" Electric

Charcoal Lighter

two- stones

Re

fe

CHAIR

Sete 4°

psy de
: .

36
365)

99

Not $2.98 but
Rattan

ayes

$16.95 Quality
Pa

* i” aluminum tubing
® Full 5-strand web

si

i

f

| ;

WE e

|

com apac ct!

Cooppe ttone

i

Our Sol A Price!

wee

=
NS
\
aa

rat

Extra

Grill ey

Quality

f 2 20.

Plates

Paper

pack. 9 inchers.

FOLDING WEBBED7
*

ee

j
iy

TABLE
4
Fold and carry any- We
where! All-metal.
24x60 in. size.

ae

pes

sc] SANy
$

a

$4. 98

—_—

¥Or Get Above
ighter for

¢

222

When

99

;

You g uy

Motorized

An
Seti :

Re uartat ret 38°

a: pA

;

.

a

77

man SINE Ls et for sing
a
i ae
rf Ae PATIO

YOUR DOLLAR BUYS MORE [f-°
at your

ai
Seth

Tae)

St

900 CALORIE DIETARY
for

WY,

Giane

® Handsome

i

TABLETS

§ 33&lt; PINT WITCH HAZEL
Processed

vi

p

low price!

price! “Worthmore”

19

i

—

Portable

Price!
) 58

150

Food Bag

16x10x5 12"

sures

os

oT

at
12x18x10
in.
Low
size. Sturdy
&amp;&amp; roomy. Tan
or ark. red.

Se

ifs

| TINCTURE MERTHIOLATE
39: PINT MINERAL OIL
Regular

insulated

:

yi

’

~

88
—

f

sey

Measures

B: *

wel

Golf feerdier

ss. 95 Qualit

Picnic Basket

CHEST

Sabswich

|of

DMINTON

birds
net, metal

asad

Pa

aN

!

{ 18: SOFTBALL 1] SETFORG f SS
BA

3

SERRE Soe
Compare to $18.95

“is

rolis

_—
.

a

-

-

grams

: gore
i SPECIAL!
@
a

"BOOK
|MATCHES}

Double Value. Rejects of
famous 2 for 25c¢ brand.

om

Y

es

REGULAR
CARTON OF

|

15c¢
FIFTY

2:19:

�Plans for Annual
Prom
The

on June
Junior

Park

High

Miss

Eylse

will

3, 1961

Highland
and

by
John

this

Side

from

3.

sponsored

hold

“Southern

June

of

School,

hard

3

Rinkenberger

Broming,
Prom,

Class

The

year’s

O’ Heaven,”

nine to midnight

at the high school.
Prom

Court

conducted

by

tive

representatives

in

Board
all

The

junior

sponsors

ballot

nominations
Junior

Class

were
ExecuMay

15

homeroom

sessions.

will compile

the final

consisting

of the

names

of

the eight boys and eight girls receiving the most votes in the May
15 election. Monday, May 22, each
junior will vote for four of the
eight nominees. The boy and girl
receiving the most votes will become King and Queen. The other
three couples will be their court
attendants.

-Nominees
basis

of

were

charm,

chosen
poise,

on

the

personality

and ability to serve their class.
The sponsors will tabulate
final ballots and the results

the
will

committees
to finish

Heads

Reinish,

are

their

Judy
Ann

until the
working
by

June

Krichiver,

work

Jim

Scassellati,

Cynthia

Wax and Tom Weinberg have been
working
hard
to
publicize
the
dance. They headed a tag day on
May
8 and are planning several
skits.
Chairmen
Andy _ Andoniadis,
Ellen Cholewa, Rona Echt, Harvey
Gould,
Lynn
Moses
and
Nancy
Saletra have started making the
decorations which will carry out
the southern theme.
The

bids

by Glenn
Betsy

committee

Harris

Dawe

the heads

and

and

is

headed

Maren

Marshal

Oson.

Ragir

are

of the ticket committee.

Jeanne Hurvitz, Joan Neiman, Jill
Rubel and committee will provide
the food. The technical directors
are Burton Ruder and Jeff Server.
mittee headed by David Pepperberg and Bob Rigler will have the
job of cleaning up.
Tickets
are being
sold at the
book store of Highland Park High
School.
Students
and
alumni
of
Highland Park and Deerfield High
Schools are invited to attend the
dance.

OUPONY

to Decorate

REG. w. 5, PAT, OFF

New creamy-thick “Lucite”
Wall Paint gives rich, flat
finish with brush
or roller.
Doesn’t spatter like ordinary
paint. No priming or stirring. No messy clean-up.
Dries for use in 30 minutes.

days

I. Libman

eae

ae

216

of

Calderelli

Lawrence

G.

Ulysses

New DuPont“Lucite”
House
Paint brings totally new
beauty to brick, stone or
stucco. Extremely easy to
apply, “Lucite” House Paint
dries in 80 minutes, gives a
lovely, flat finish, retains the
distinctive texture of the
surface, lasts for years and
years!

U.S.

Heavy .. . durable 2-ply Tiger cotton buntins!

.
$11.50
8’ Size
‘
see
3
$
:
~*
x 5° Size $5.85
6’ Flag Poles, $2.25... 8’ size, $2.95... 9’ size, $3.25
Flag Staff Window Brackets, 50c

+

9

1560 || 4

of

Woodbine Ct., Arthur R. Scheskie
E.
of 626 Jonquil Ter., Frank
Schwartz

of

1146

ID

Carl G. Sundvahl of 1523 Shawnee

Trail and Leslie H. Acox of 721
Hermitage

3-0230

On the

N

CENTRAL

SAS

h

a

rs
a

hy

é

Rd., || »#

Deerfield

*
+

4 x 6’ Size $7.95

2 x 3’ size $2.95

Ave.;

—From is Deerfield, George Costan of 1553 Woodbine Ct., Robert
of 1223 Arbor Vitae,
W. Hyde

FL AGS

Super strong, beautiful, too! Double stitched for endurance!

ee:

and Charles Elstrom of 245 Ash- ||
land

ae

Star

50

|

a eh

Sheri he

.

_

LY

St.

of 771

:

Me

+

.
Memorial Day .

3

se

—Hugh

pride

American

of solemn

Scottish Rite ceremonies in Chi- |}
cago recently were ten local resi-

dents:

ur

Show yo

bo

initigted tuto the Bend doeres
in two

Z

Ny

Rite

Join Scottish
of Masonry

*

+

Area

from

Ten

North Shore since 1895

AVE.
ag

Ds

Ave,

When the dance is over the com-

Amazing New
House Paint by

No-Mess Way

W,
ALL

to anyone

ee

eee

tLe

TTT TT

PTT TTT

lll

Ls

TV
with

BILL
By Bill Stirewalt
WORLD TELEVISION
There’s much talk about people understanding people around the earth to
solve the world’s troubles. And the one
way that would improve the relationship
is not being encouraged to any degree.
That
is the exchange
of television
programs.
Although other parts of the
world do not have complete coverage
like we do in America, there is TV programing going on around the globe in
some degree.
With the fine electronic
recording processes available, programs
could
easily be exchanged
and made
understandable by interposing the languages
of the area.
These
programs
would
be highly
interesting
and
less
costly than many of the “who dun it”
and ‘‘bang-bang” productions.
Yes, that TV in your living room has
a great potential in this world.
But,
the servicing of TV for the best viewing potential has improved.
FLEET TV
has the latest and finest servicing equipment and know-how to maintain your
TV
set for the best picture viewing.
Phone CE 4-0143 next time and see the
difference.

a)

Bi

|

MEN’ s
WEAR*

ADIE2S'

oy

ps

“ih

|

S

Srontecs

ZAR

719

,
9

|

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4

)

al
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ane:

ae
OPEN

&lt;SRS

rhe oe pee

per

NN

FRIDAY

NIGHTS
|

not be known
crowning.

MTT TTT IIIT

Juniors Complete

PAIN’ T

S40, sane, aurea wee

"4

LUCITE
WALL PAINT
19 lovely colors and white
For matching woodwork—
“Duco” Satin Sheen Enamel

HOUSE

PAINT

Watch amazing demonstration on TV!

16 Beautiful Colors
and White

DEERFIELD
PAINT

DEERFIELD
PAINT

Headquarters for Wallpaper, Glass
Table Tops, Mirrors, Picture

Frames, Custom Picture Framing
and Artists’ Supplies
810

Waukegan Rd., Deerfield
Phone: WI 5-2286

@p
Thursday,

Paints
May

25, 1961

Headquarters
Table Tops,

for Wallpaper,
Mirrors,

FOR THE QUALTY-MINDED

Glass

Picture

Frames, Custom Picture Framing
and Artists’ Supplies
810

Waukegan Rd., Deerfield
Phone: WI 5-2286

qQipPAINTS

BUYER! This extremely well built builder’s home

has many extras—thermo-pane windows throughout, plastered walls, a second
kitchen off the family room, large patio for ideal summer living, 8 shade trees
located in Briarwoods on quiet street only one block from school. This three
bedroom split-level has three full ceramic tiled baths, living room, separate dining room, family room with fireplace, 20’x12’ glazed porch, and an oversized
$49,500
attached two car garage. Excellent neighborhood.

ZANDER - OMMEN,
Corner

of Waukegan

&amp;

Deerfield

Roads

INC. Keal Estate
Phone

Windsor
Page

H

5-5700
25—D

9

�JOSEPH HAS EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO

for back yard fun y
and Privacy Now e

34

$

EVERYTHING YOU NEED
TO BUILD AN 8 FOOT
ECONOMY
PICKET
FENCE 36” HIGH

HERE'S

WHAT

YOU

”,

GET!

YOU GET 20 PIECES 1°x3"-36" GOTHIC POINTED
ECONOMY PICKETS, 2”x4” STRINGERS, CEDAR
POST ... EVEN NAILS!

CYCLONE CHAIN

FREE!

LINK FENCE

DO-IT-YOURSELF MATERIALS INCLUDING WIRE,
TOP RAIL, LINE POST AND
FITTINGS

26"/11-GAUGE

36” HIGH
Everything you need to build
an 8-ft. Quality Section ...

¢

# includes Top Rail, Line
t Post and Fittings; per ft.
42" HIGH, 9-GAUGE
includes Top Rail, Line $4 %
A Post and Fittings; per ft.
48" HIGH, 9-GAUGE $
13
includes Top Rail, Line
1
| Post and Fittings; per ft.

Posts Set in Concrete;
BEF ABOT: : ioc = 0s cacuee
INSTALLED with Line
Posts Set in Concrete; $450
Bor FOO cscs ae
'!NSTALLED with Line $
88
Posts Set in Concrete;
Per fOOTe &lt;h6 hed Save

Terminal

Posts

&amp;

Gates

Extra,

Minimum

Labor

17}

on

a

WALNUT

Lavan

Thick

Y-PLANK

Paneling.

Per

gi

Par Sef F ee

natural

or

Simulated

4'x8'-1/,
Oak

Sq.

Ft...seescceees

tens

:

V-Plank.

LOCATED

Ave.,

Per

Per

Sq.

Sq.

American
Pee

3
soe

1x3"

—

48”

Ea.

Gothic Pointed
Quality Grade

a.

High

Cc

d
Ec:.

ete

ee

ery

Cae

Our experts can advise and soundly
construct extra bedrooms and bath—

layout engineer

plan—and

our experts can

can help design

build

or even an income

low

with

JOSEPH’S

Specials.

.

Daily 7:30 to 5 — Friday

se

Call

l/c
2

5
c

OR

39

INdependence

3-6000

|

the whole

ROR

can do

MAIL COUPON)
TODAY FOR

gp

ADDRESS

e

CITY

te

:
foe

Re eee

ee

ee

Ge

eee

ee

ee

eee

ee

ee

ee

ee

c.cecctccccccccecencs Cit

|

sea eri eewa

ee

2. fdocaisstc.t
ae
eee

a

Interested

1 Am

In These

5

Projects

©) Addition

[jBasement Apt.

m

(Cj Garage

| mt Ciece Porch
®

7-

(Fence

hake

(Check

[] Rumpus Room

C) Porch Enclosures

Squares)

‘

®

(1 New Siding

“s

M612 WAVERLY COURT

.

C)Fomily Room &amp;
(Attic Apt.

sou ioorisbtn, Jan rcumen ge Tick mace fitaie' Ie

JOSEPH

&amp;

[] Dormer

LUMBER

CO.

DEERFIELD, ILL.

w

*
=

BREeEHRBHREeHeeReeReee
eee
eee
ee
8

Page 26

rR

EE

«

MONE

a

‘

job.

a
NAME

*
C0.

apartment in your

B

ponte

al nt BER

ROOM

unused attic space. JOSEPH

cn

a

:

at

LIVABLE

asse you“viet &lt;interested
Do-It-Yourself
Webivdaded in in a dectek:
Guntrk Project?
Bakae
A[J

"G4

3220

and

HR ERR

2

ee

|
:

NAtional 2-3000

a

Winker.

:

a

‘til 9 p.m.

cost

SERB

aes

AMERICAN WALNUT
Genuine
American
Walnut

Windsor 5-3200

Chicago

Cc

Are you looking for that extra ‘bedroom, or maybe a family room? Our

Neuss
ner cei
lle, | Dl

YARDS:

612 WAVERLY COURT
Kimball

High

E

......

DORMERS
LET
JOSEPH CONVERT
UNUSED ATTIC SPACE

:

N.

G.

ROOM ADDITIONS
SAVE COST
MONEYOF INMOVING
THE HIGH

27°

Ash cobs
Paneling.
Coy teas puae
oes

Thick Genuine

V-Plank.

PREFINISHED
4'x8’-I4,
Thick

3333

36”

Gothic Pointed
Quality Grade

E

INTO

Cc

Walnut

PREFINISHED AMERICAN OAK

:

—

— 42" High

G3"

tinted

finish.

Prefinished

Hise ae yy

N. Narragansett Ave., Chicago

...---

FIRST QUALITY

yuan

4'x8'-Y/4

2001

Gothic Pointed
Economy Grade

EA.
c

FULL 4" THICK

light

peo

:

HIGH

Cc

)

PANELING

siggy inden Sibert
ee
Ash Paneling. Ready for a

DARK

:

.
$94

$50.00

J
!

ILL.

48” HIGH
Everything you need to build
an 8-ft. Quality Section ...

Gothic Pointed
Quality Grade

/

DEERFIELD,

$4

1"x3"—36"

1x3"

\

CONVENIENTLY

|
shi4

ECONOMY GRADE
1x3" — 48” High

ASH

3

54%

LOW PRICES!

P

E 42" HIGH, 11-GAUGE

DIGGER

42" HIGH
Everything you need to build
an 8-ft. Quality Section ...

FENCE PICKETS!

PER FOOT

Pi a tae
INSTALLED with Line $466

USE OF A POSTHOLE

CASH AND CARRY
BECAUSE OF LOW

INSTALLED!
|

WEEK

48" HIGH
Everything you need to build
an 8-ft. Economy Section ..

Thursday, May 25, 1961

.

�He

=

%

sy

52)

Board of Zoning Appeals Expense
Board of Building Appeals Expense
Rights of Way, Easements
Sarety.. COUnCT
BRpOnee ek
Cink ks Aires
Board of Police Commissioners
Building &amp; Grounds Maintenance ...........
Municipal Building Bonds—Principal ....
Municipal Building Bonds—Imterest : .2.2..-.-.2...actl
ek
ea eet.
Municipal Building Bonds—Miscellaneous
Expense ....

00.
26.94

Court Suit—Progress Development Corporation ..................
Prost “Parking Sot (Biss, sistas: kc. Shi ac oeneteck
Breitling

Parking

Lot

Delenee

ian. she

.....

a

Parking

Lot Improvement—Breitling ..

TOTAL

GENERAL

CRAlaH

FUND

sa

aaa

EXPENSE.
STREET AND

esa

aa

9,791.09

age Nope ses
sig

Fuel

Saiatins

Members of the student government for the

coming

year

pose

for

a

REVIEW

photogra-

Gamm,
Neal

Martha

Rudolph,

Hirsch, Joan

Events

The

following

activities

fay

31,

garten
Day

is

for

1961,
in

the

the

schedule

children

for

Round-up

school

the

and

Tea

Prairie

on

Kinderat

Half

View.

Schedule

1 to 1:15 p.m, —

assemble;

1:15

» 1:45 p.m. — bus ride; 1:45 to
p.m. — rest room, wash hands;
2 to 2:20 p.m.—milk,
cookies
in
cafeteria; 2:20 to 2:50 p.m, — outdoor play and tour school grounds;
and 2:50 to 3 p.m. — return to

kindergarten
While

‘their

the

room

and mothers.

children

activities,

Seated

the

be filling registration
having tea.

are

from

and Michaele

left

are:

Alan

having

mothers

will

papers

and

Reeder,

Sherry

Tax

Half Day Community
Club Entertains

Begins Season

The
Half Day Community
club
entertained the faculty of Ela-Vernon High school on Thursday, May
11, at the Half Day grade school
when
the members
of the eighth
grade class there were presented.

With Breakfast

Club
Tennaqgua
will
begin
its
fourth
season
with
a continental
In addition to presenting their
breakfast on May 27, beginning at
10 a.m. and continuing until noon, | graduating class, the purpose of the
|
was to present the high
Robert Gesler, chairman of the ten- ‘evening
;chool faculty to the parents of the
nis committee has announced.
“community.
The breakfast will consist of cofDuring the
evening the special
fe
‘
:
ae
fal
rve
|
‘4
e and doughnuts and will serve /chorus of eighth graders presented
as an opportunity for new members
; several numbers. Harold Banser and
to become acquainted with the faMrs. Sonia Fisher of the E. V. Guidcilities of the club, according
to
ance department explained the tests
Gesler.
which
had
been
administered
to
Members
who
have
made
ar- the eighth grade students and the
rangements for the breakfast are uses which would be made of those
Mrs.
Edward
Bac,
Mrs.
Edward
test results. They
also explained
Carvill,
Mrs.
Samuel
Eaton
and the curriculum of the school and
Mrs. Harold Driscoll.
the services of the guidance departImmediately following the break- ment.
fast, a tennis exhibition has been
Members of the Community club
arranged
through
Claire Riessen, served dessert, coffee, and punch
tennis coach at Northwestern uni- during the social hour. This evening
versity.
Members
have
been
en- is the climax of the club’s activities
couraged to attend the exhibition.
for the vear and is an annual event.
The courts have been used this
spring
by
the
Deerfield
High
| compete
with
other clubs in the
school squad.
area. Charles Shepard is in charge
Tennaqua will also have a swimwall, ‘of the pool.
ming
team
this year which

|

VILLAGE
RECEIPTS

OF

OF DEERFIELD TREASURER’S
ANNUAL
AND
EXPENDITURES
FOR THE FISCAL
VILLAGE OF DEERFIELD
DEERFIELD, ILLINOIS
GENERAL FUND

REPORT
YEAR
1960-61

REVENUES
Tax
Levey
;
Municipal
Sales Tax
Interest
Earned—Sales
RMN
aes aren sy icant

$ 77,304.29

sd tt 2, “Rea aU Re i Ses termy mane ny Caen UAE
OOS i ey
ideas apane shows
Ordinance

Violation

aire
ee POE OP?
Miscellaneous
ROGUE

Jennifer

King

Jennifer King, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Franklin R. King, 2730

Wildwood
popular

Ln., was
vote

as

a

“Promy

Queen”

spring
Shimer

formal
held
College, Mt.

nominated

by

candidate

for

for

the

annual

recently
Carroll.

During
her first year
on
Shimer
campus,
Miss
King
aiso worked with lighting and

cial

effects

ions.

She

on
was

dramatic
listed

as

at
the
has
spe-

produc‘master

‘electrician” on the program for
“The Student Prince’? on May 2.
She
also
worked
with
the
cast
of Christopher Fry’s ‘‘The Lady’s
Not For Burning,” presented May

12 and

13.

. ‘Thursday, May 25, 1961

OTE
SEARO

PPOUNG. | oer

Fines

odd wero dnlues tata kale ini SULEE STR

Es ore area

i
).

Beare coins

a

,

Gao

14,726.00

5. fth
Uke cacti an, scutes eee dg does aa
APA ES Se pele Are ahaa ap Naan Re eh EPS ANANDA PLR NERO RO RU
ie at

ete

ee cea

se ee

eae

Rea

ERTS

1.47
799.59
56.06

TOTAL—GENERAL
FUND
REVENUES
$177,893.90
EXPENDITURES
MRIGTORR
i
BEE
there PEAR eR OD, ETE A Se RG Ce
Uae oe
$125,635.98
Part Time -Temporary Help. IGE ONT gE OEE ERE ay Eee ad RE
SEA Rey
9,306.78
PROT GHSIOM AR: 7
rk
12,815.43
Insurance
and Bonds
desis Vine Gy edu see twang SECLeRS Naeead Nvaak the eee Uae R DS ee olan ecg
3,644.15
PAR MRRM TUN, C OTIEEROUS 5: HE L0 a aco irsk ek sccae pai bs vo And abs abet oe GEL Te eee Re ae ae
383.07
PeVGrtbee
NOUBOR i
AlS as
SS a
a aac
429.58
PONTE
ia sat peace ee Fok aca AS eae
Ae
EL aa ee
esc
343.67
Telephone,
Telegraph
«:....025:.
pf foes ae
3.615.98
Maps, Periodicals &amp; Printing ........
1,218.76
Postage
a tee Rey” cay ates
365.45
Radio Service
kt
Tops Reema
SF Cleon Bee, wees RIPEERON FN eat e BaD er
534.00
License Plates. Badges ...........
36.50
New Motor Vehicle
Serene
1.840.80
Matdr. Vehicle: Maiitenance sn
on eo
a
ee
ee
2,531.49
Other Equipment
Maintenance ©
o0..2000000000.
441.67
aa &gt; POLED
oka
ie enka oe
re ean ih SO
960.93
Ly
2 5
Se Se EP eg ae RE eR RNID &lt;3 368 Wem aye
Beoe &gt; ah
4,364.86
Meters,

Parts,

“Signs:

ai

pS

Seahee) | Rene

eee

BRS n” cele RR W th, 2

sia caat

Chase ae A et Pia

BS
Ts |: RERIPR ay cee eREDe SiGe nat ei ah pte Eee Nea
Fawipment:
Rental
60 Sis 2s Beek,
Election Board Expense ................
Legal Fees &amp;. Retainer. i....::::/......
Planning Commission Expense

eis Re casey

rep a ene

3

See ese ee

2,810.02
2,500.43
T3335
311.50
1,466.98
91.22

142.58
262.00
447.49
8,016.85
2,276.80

mara

een eat

Va

Rete =

...$° 22,734.28

1,561.83
2,427.76
3,995.04
15,510.50 |
991.42
1,670.56
14,694.50.
68.
629.83
1,279.92
11.15.
5.20
36.293
95.48
1,026.99

Service® 2222 Eira

STREET

&amp;

i

sien ee

BRIDGE

eich

tcc cets woticaipiguchpuslgat eeaKetalN

FUND EXPENSES.
WATER FUND

....00..200

02

$83,217.72

.-$191, phe ‘Fees

TOTAL

WATER FUND EXPENSES 530 siissncccken cust
SEWER FUND
RECEIPTS
Na dhae
daca Steg. an ae ERS aes [ee Sep RRC aati nt Uae Sure team
POR GIONES
2500s. oahu
aie eae
PORN
8 oo. a aeakuslas
ve woke
Acreage
Development
Fees

age) Acs | &gt; Oem gy meuniere.

70) $ 66,626.54
243.20
6,566.14
2,200.03
$ 75,635.91

BU xe

weit Hs

Engineering,
Contracts
Advertising,
Notices © ..:..0&lt;..0..cilik
ks
Maps, Periodicals, Printing, etc
Ligt (1 (RR broker ae eee SOMO maT Fria ts gr neers
Motor Vehicle Maintenance
..............
Other Equipment Maintenance ..........
New: BHouipment
3 icc tia
ei
Materials,
Sore
Fe
RCT
(sasoue.
OM
oe ich a
Wearte | Aonarel 23)
)c......).seaeackee
Chemicals,
Aggregate,
etc.
.2........
BGT | POO
oc
a ee ie
Sewer Revenue Bonds &amp; Interest ...
Bond
Ordinance—Depreciation
.......
Ejoerses,
Pinte): Paoeee ai
ee
ccs ak ewsdatier bes ea
MUEALES
OI OTIE PRIME 0. sles facegs vas hadech pcg FL ea Deae ae begba te MATS, cot vc Resu “an bs dal aes Sais
Lag
Lely 3 ane
Seti OVE OOPS AOA Zo REM I Br ROL SEE ear ge
Water Purchases ....
fy ge OCT SERN
Sis egies Pomel 2 Aah nae NR ak el Oe OBER iS
Boneivue
Grounds Mawmeenanie ic
ic
Saba
abe
ae
TOTAL

eae Eee

SEWER

iar ee

FUND

Re PDN

eOy SUR

ee, eM

GN

eT

ta

Interest

on

39.
301.01 —

Poh

121.00

5

$
fe

Rereeen

Investments

.......

State—-Winnot”

Ba.

Betapace has rains

Construction:

EXPENDITURES
Chas. W. Greengard—Wilmot
E. Bolander Construction Company
Maintenance Arterial Streets .

56,982.74
ray eS

eas Me eae ht,
a Lae ae
SOLAS ee SOE! Be SOMME MEAT OE ee 6

re tacaes erat

2 cca

aay

iy

See

382.30
2,106.47
. 569.14
$

:
ILLINOIS MUNICIPAL
RETIREMENT
FUND
REVENUE
SXOMNEOL, CANOES
oi tiel
Mee. ade adnk Casas eines Las ee Pa CLAN aA
ieee
EXPENDITURES
Wa we RES «10: TNEIEE ks mieten
aa uke
te
ON ha
a
MOTOR
FUEL TAX
FUND
REVENUES:
Ree’d « from’

3
‘i
.00
.03
i
:
:
.
‘
%
05
a
€
A
:
eK Pc
3

EXPENSES oe
ee
ie lees
PUBLIC BENEFIT FUND

REVENUE
General Taxes
.
See
ase
Epa
WES
EXPENDITURES
Paving—Colwyn Terrace ......
Spec. Assess. No. 92 (Hazel, “Wayne &amp; Holly) . ING
Spec. Assess. No. 95 (Willow Avenue)

.$

3,057.91
11,459.67
10,268.01
:

hee oe ee

eee

$

971.44

| AST S72 Se
$138,343.74

eds:
...

Pe

Sees
PDE
BOCES

fv.
ie SOR BON aK

Pees:
i

3

SA63.25
22.646125
14,733.35
$ 42,942.83

BOND

AND

BOND

INTEREST

FUND

REVENUE
Apacs:
TROCOLVE
DRE ii) oe aah Sr
ee a
a
ee
aaa
EXPENDITURES:
Bond
Principal
Payment
‘
inte
aa Re anbic
cc
NGAGE BEE
Interest
Payment—Service
Charge

Judgment
Funding
So G.3TEs!
5,500.00
134.26

ANN
8S. OLESAK
Treasurer of the Village
Lake County, Illinois
5/25

—

...$211,919.14

TOTAL
RECEIPTS
EXPENDITURES
EOIN. © Fi cccatessarnbagh ck ccc uk sddccecsaupees sales sis band acces ae odebuisbes hake ly adutucy-aiyceaoees cece teak wht aa
marries
Part time &amp; Over Pinte o2sc0 is
ii a eave
a
PCOPSSGLONAL- fsciiantts

os § a OES

3

35.02)"

fas. Coenen oagiirer tran Cassie (2 iesrOnl rt mie eve TOGO ar eye. Arete
$208,886.81
TOTAL
REVENUES
EXPENDITURES
13,232.38
Salaries
3,428.91
Salaries—Part Time
Professional
Insurance,
Bonds
Engineering,
Contracts
Advertising, Notices ........2...:...000....
Maps,
Periodicals,
Printing
OI
ecco Ecce PR as
Se Lads cho dake Renae Reps ch move seh sagan tech naive we tongshen bnathene dete
Motor Vehicle Maintenance
Other Equipment Maintenance ...
New
Equipment
Materials,
Supplies
Meters, Parts, Gauges, Signs
Water
Purchases
Gasoline, Oil
Travel
Mipdtepeest
REVEL LQVOUB vi rouerdadeckoarshe
RMental-Or Poulnment. i2k Po
aie
Bond Ordinance—Interest | Expense
Bond
Ordinance—Reserve
Account
Bond Ordinance—Depreciation
Licenses, Plates &amp; Badges
Telephone—-Telegraph
Electricity
pret
Pa TEE Ea PETAR GLEN ee PET Ne BP
Land, Rights of Way,

96.00

Cea
a
Eo
eh ei
on ach dee oe ca
a
eae Be
ROE i
see eas cide, tia as | rae Cee
eect! ult sok aE, oe fens an PN he
Wearing
Apparel
Dues.
Memberships
Travel, School Expense

—

Motor - Vebicle . Matritenanie jis arc
partake coe es Bees aie tateis eq
Other: Eovtement
Maittennnce’ iii.5 2
8 Ci cias Bc
ea anaes Sea
NOt PN
ICONE cha cabssdzs, ger ied Wak pate sanqreles
NEAT
ee RRP
oi ieacs
sii A ALZs Las pumcaatscccoucicake cabana ea ed mages ena
CPOE
ONE
ct ace aicass lao With abhcea oeaed cde Pas Tas PaO ana Geos 4 cli ewe
RTE ico hea
PEP at's
gah. oOe 8 jt Seep MN ate a pone ea Seance: MLN EMAOE Fate CAMO CSP RENG Ore nT ce Sars RCo
te (IE
Lagid:* Basements: &amp; &gt; Risht-of-ways 23.85.4658
a Rik
iN
cca
Chemicals
Sth Sa cade ig Shan S54 fev an hse i Ba me ak ea ea tok duthias Skctas Cosecct sted castes bas Sapa Ganeioee Camille
Small Tools ......
Lesadlk gh. Ska’ cua Sut tee dnc scakiouick wane bemase Azicistika sooth RE Oban A se bdat csv cond opti ceicee
tesla
Equipment
Rental ....
si ak eedccpaiicas ile La LUCIE deTSAN be AAW ce akeibic
Tisdnese,
“Plate de homes
Ss sak
an
ee
en
ei
apa
a
Advertisine-—Distch:
Elm © :-..c. 0c
cae
Travel &amp; School Expenses ..............
PAM OTEL &lt;&lt;. c2isi ce hiataloe
ibeireTi io
Pitch
Woo
Oe
et
casket ate Seay ca Avani: lav eves taee

hy
Tax
...
ta da Svat s pnd co We AMIR RSE

14,412.65

...$ 75,095.00

REVENUES
Water
Consumed
Penalties
Permits
Acreage
Development
Miscellaneous
Water
Charges

Rubin,

..$ 16,611.60
44,070.75 |

6,112.59:
1,055.99
4,157.23
,100.75
16.88.

TOTAL

Wondreis.

ClubTennaqua

Kindergarteners

In Half Day School
of

West.

Scheffer, Jon Johnson

List Scheduled
For

Bonnie

me.

Baer a

Salaries—Part Time .&amp; Over Time: ccscoccccccclescsuectethesccsscestcsccaee
Tiserance: Onde (35.
a
aati See ae, A hci
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5
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Maps,’ Periodicals;
Parvitinhg: Bites eGo.
aaa as lee oaks atl rcal oetaemaaptaaallt

Radio.

pher. Standing, from left, are Pete Frantz, Brad Schlesinger, Jim Grossfeld, Charles Burkhardt,
Chip Bale, Kris Randerson, Paul Hess, Fred Teeter, Bonnie Betterman, Kathy Magruis, Annette

|

44.00

ica ccusg’ aside csstdesdahasls Sane

REVENUES

TOTAL
REVENUE
EXPENDITURES

750.00

eee

BRIDGE

gs eS -' aee hearts ema ori ce taerar AGeane tines eae Siac cy Meh her ee gabe Sy aes, See
Vehicle Licenses
Motor

7,891.20
33,727.42

Sewer
Improvement
$ 34,966.68
’
25 .000.00
5 80x SN
5,923.50
of

Deerfield

/61-D133

Page

H

3—D

11

�THURS. &amp; FRIDAY —
NEW

OWNERS!

COMPLETELY

NEW!

JOHN
JIM’S GROCERY

yx FOLGER’S COFFEE
%

Each

% Wyler’s PARSLEY FLAKES, . 25c
Day

PRODUCE

PLUS!
e Bowman’s

COTTAGE

e BALLOONS

&amp; HATS

SUGAR

TRY OUR PERSONALIZED SERVICE!

| us

Tt

Tn

==
==

—
=—
—
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=

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=
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==
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=—
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=

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19¢

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box

ti

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4

==

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SS

=

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Su

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}—

12

=

ACCA
Grand Opening Special ! !

», 15¢

+ MUSHROOMS

¢ Pizza
Sausage

| Hl lite

¢ Coffee
¢ Vienna

4—D

__ 10, 39c
. 10¢
ean, 19

Ke TOMATOES \,,. ripened

e SAMPLES

H

SPECIALS

% RED POTATOES
*% BANANAS |
x ASPARAGUS _

CHEESE

for the children

Page

Land O’ Lakes BUTTER _,, 69c

+ Fox DeLuxe MEAT PIES 6, $1.00
%&amp; CHARMINTISSUE
4... 33c

ORCHIDS
To First 300

2." $1.19

lise

ae
bi) 3

:

0

bie,

:

te

oa

814 Waukegan
Rd
ae

;

5

gti

¢

:

i

¥,

%

FS)

wk

fis

,

AZ

f

4

*

Fa

Phd

:

(We

Reserve

the

Right

to

Limit

Quantities)

Thursday,

May

25, 1961

"

�MAY
|

25th &amp; 26th

NEW POLICIES!
COMPLETELY RENOVATED!
-JOHN'‘S MEAT

RIB ROAST

x cuore

G 3c bb.

ORRELL

PRIDE

100% SLICEABLE
CONVENIENT

CANNED

e A BASKET OF
GROCERIES
10 to be given

,

EASY
EASY

TO OPEN--TO CLOSE--

@ '/ Gal. of ICE CREAM

@ Qts. of SODA POP

rane.

5 Qe

®@ Boxes of COOKIES
iil,

CALL FOR DELIVERY SERVICE — WI 5-0266

| atc
Grand Opening Special !!

NYLONS
Deerfield, Hil.

15

Denier
an
fi}

it.

Thursday, May

25, 1961

RTT TR eT TTT
HM
l

Page H 5—D

13

�ae

TIAA

pial ta

ees
Rg

List Prize-Winners

Barbershoppers

In IC Art Exhibit

Sing Second Best

Prize-winners in the recent exhibit of art staged by sixth, seventh
and
eighth graders
of Immaculate Conception school, Deerfield Rd., included the following:
First,
Monica
King;
second,
Terry Sedik and Vincent Marcuccilli.

County
Line
Chapter,
for the Preservation and
agement
of
Barbershop

Singing

Thaddeus

Munn,

Steve

Honorable

the

Baker,

mention

Nancy

was

Breitenkamp,

Amendola,

given

Mary

at
in

up May

area choruses

Notre

Dame

High

Niles.

11. Arlington Heights beat

local

singers

for first,

however.

Besides the contesting choruses,
the Area Eleven meet was entertained by four quartets, including
the
local
Firehouse
Four—Joe
Warren, Bob LeClair, Bob Carlson
and Ron Anderson. The Firehouse
placed among the top ten in recent
state-wide competition,

to

Andres,
Barbara

Ellen

13

the

Donna

David

May

placed second

Chicago

Director
Joe
Warren
and
the
chorus
performed
at
Maplewood
School, Deerfield, for a final tune-

Edson.

following:

of eight

School

Blue
ribbon-winners:
Nancy
Burck, Sue Schwalbach, Tim Doyle,
Steve Poppe, Wiltred Kracht, Michelle Vyn.
White
ribbon-winners:
Valerie
Vyn, Mike
McKillip, R. A. Mor-

rison,

in America,

out

Society
EncourQuartet

Brown,

Mike
Cortesi,
Alice
DeLamar,
Carol Demma,
Bill Foster, Mary
J. Harcke, Linda Lovison, James
Levernier, Megan McArdle, Kathy
McCarty,
George
Olander,
Peter
Tarpey, Marie Trogi, Jim Schwantes, Danny Williams.
Judges were three well known
local artists: Mrs. Kay Lillie, Mrs.
Barbara
McGivern,
Mrs.
Howard

County
Line
chapter
| 8 p.m. every Monday in
field American
Legion
Waukegan
Rd.
Visitors
come.
|
Paule.

All

art

classes

were

super-

Mrs.

Stuart

vised this semester by
M.

Baker,

Hazel

meets
at
the DeerHall, 849
are wel-

Ave.

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North Shore

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¢ NeHi—Root Beer, Orange, Grape, Strawberry
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combine

controlling elasticity of '@ orint 6n acetate,
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at Crossroads
Skokie

at 2 P.M.,
BOZO

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Shopping

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the Clown —

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Our

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Ave.

‘TIL 9—-MONDAY

ID 2-5300
ry

ef

Also

EVE.

oS ARE Ge

and

Glencoe

PARK

Crabs are

H 6—D 14

Jewel

Tea

stores.

ID

phone:

2-9311

now

in bloom

WE INVITE YOU TO VISIT OUR
NURSERY
THIS
WEEK
AND
SHARE
THEIR
BEAUTY
WITH
US.

JOHN FIORE NURSERIES
840 S. Waukegan,

Page

both

Our Flowering French Lilacs

7-9

HIGHLAND

i

Winnetka

or

and

(Prices will be higher at the door)

Service

and

595

SISTERHOOD

or information

ID 2-6790

Use

EL

at Crossroads

Adults—95c.

For tickets

by

CE 4-0476

Lake Forest
Thursday,

May

25, 1961

�Fleming In Top 10
Golfers In District
Meet At Winnetka
John
Fleming,
Deerfield
High
school’s
leading
golfer, placed
among the top 10 in the’ district
meet at the Skokie Playfields in
Winnetka last week.
Fleming shot a 78.
Winning
team
was
New
Trier
with a team total of 302. The low
‘score for the afternoon was a 72,
shot by Evanston’s Sherman Finger.
Fleming, a sophomore, was conference champion last year in the

frosh-soph division.

with. paul leeds
It will be nice “rushing the S

son” by attending the Theatre F
tival at Tenthouse
Saturday.

Supt.

Fritz

taining

0675.
North

Shore

Giceie

Photo

by

Jay

Steinberg

Elected to Honorary

Park High School

students will be selected the King and
Queen of the Junior Prom, as well as the escorts. Voting to decide the selection will be held
this week, but the names of the King and Queen will not be revealed until Prom night. Standing, from

left are

Mickie

Maiorano,

Steve

Atlas,

John

Holder,

Ronnie

Cavaliers, senior men’s honorary
society at Northern Illinois Univer-

sity, has announced

Beecher,

Jim Weinert ‘
Grais. Seated are

Littedius Nabbed

Debaters Win 2-1

Rubbish strewn on his front yard
included a construction horse with
a blinker on top, Theodore Bergs-

ma

of

1840

Park

Ave.

told

High-

land
Park
police
Saturday
evening.
The litterbug, who also pushed
Bergsma’s mailbox post down with

his car, was

identified

through

li-

cense plates as Bergsma’s son-inlaw,
Charles
W,
Harms
of 1097
Sandwick Ct.
Harms
was
released
on
$200

bond

for disorderly conduct.

Husband

Frank Freehling of 6011 Laurel
Ave. was brought to the station at
2:30 a.m. Sunday, and held until
evening pending
$50 bond
on a
charge of assault, Highland Park
police report.
Police went there as an escort

with
for

Mrs.
help

Freehling,
in

getting

who
hers

phoned
and

her

daughter’s clothes out of the apartment. Freehling was “very intoxicated,” police say; tried
two officers around.

to

push

Motel TV Taken
A

an

17-inch

ivory

RCA

cabinet,

$125,

set

in

was

missing from Room 11 of Shoreline
Lodge Motel Friday, Evelyn Olson
told Highland Park police.
The
occupant
registered
from
Milwaukee; signed a license number that doe not exist in Wiscon-

sin,

Notice to Bidders
Sealed proposals will be accepted
by
the City of Highland
Park,
Illinois until
12 o’clock noon C.D.S.T. on Monday, June
12, 1961 in the Council Chamber
at the
City Hall, 1707 St. Johns Avenue, for furnishing motor vehicle equipment as follows:
2—1 Ton Dump Trucks
2—Compact 2 door sedans
1—Compact
Station Wagon
and will then and there be publicly opened
and read.
Specifications
and
proposal
forms
are
available at the office of the City Manager
and all proposals must be submitted upon
the forms provided.
At a subsequent meeting, the City Council will award a contract to purchase to
the lowest and best bidder. The City Council
reserves the right to reject any or all bids
and to change,
increase or decrease
any
item or items pursuant to award of bid.
BY ORDER
OF THE CITY COUNCIL
R. W.
SNYDER
City Manager
§/25 6/1/61—140

nee

Piaainet

fps 25, 1961

debaters,

won

the

quarter-final

fais

SUMMER
PORCH

The Downey Veterans Administration Hospital will dedicate the
five
new
treatment
buildings
which have been completed in the

first phase of a modernization

round in the television debate in
Chicago last Saturday on WBBM-

gram.
house

pro-

The
dedication
and
open
will take place Sunday, May

28.

Extend

Debating the affirmative side of
the
subject
‘Resolved:
that
the

United

States

World

Court

Gerry

and

should
without

Bob

Next

accept
a

2

to

June

1

from

is invited

to

Ave

STATE

OF

of interesting

at Ontario.

170-hospital

Expended
inson &lt;for-

paper,
postigit:

addressing,
mailse es
ar ae $257.26

by William
postage 20

B. Hutch&lt; Pee ore

-76

Total .
$317.02
Affiant further. ‘states that the following persons
contributed
funds
for said exvenses:
W. B. Hutchinson Camnaign Fund.
Sidney Robbins, Treasurer _........ $257.26
William
B. Hutchinson
................
59.
OUR

rector

the
by

JOE

&amp;

Dundee

CRestwood

the

ent

Chapter

WARREN

audience
the

to

popular

And

on

also

special

r

*

trea

selecti

Firehouse

oK

Four

a

*

Saturday

nite the Ita

Womens’ Prosperity Club will
holding their dance at the
wood Community Center. Cha
man, MRS. JOHN BALDI and
committee have planned a gala e
ning with music
ZINYVS band.

by

VIRGIL

*

%

LE

*

They can really pick ’em! Th
Highland
Park Jaycees will
t ye
honoring

DAN

VETTER,

outgoin;

president and DON MOONEY whi
takes over the gavel at their
nual Presidents’ Nite next Mond:
It will be a banquet at the Vern
Restaurant.
*

*

Perfect for Graduation Giving—
This

weeks

Keeping

Time

Spe-”

cials that include genuine cultured
pearls for her at only $24.50, Fine
©
17 jewel watches that are guaran- ~
teed shockproof for Him or Her
at the same low $24.50, and many —

Room

other “just right”
during this sale.
*

*

gifts

fea

de

*

It’s always a “swinging” rg
When my band plays for the O
Elm annual dinner dance. It’s Monday nite at Adria Restaurant or
Skokie. See you there!
:

Financing
ESTIMATES.

Northbrook,

*

*

*

Artist of the Week—“HAZEL,’
another talented

Rds...

student of HILD

RUBIN. You'll enjoy her oil m

Of

Hil.

2-3000_.

dow.

ee
hs ary Gach ae hea $317.02
WILLIAM
B. i
ab i ne
SUBSCRIBED AND
SWORNt
hefore me this 22nd day of Mag: 1961.
ROY MILLEN
Notary Public
35 /25/61—139

Railroad

Illinois

Salvage
HOURS:

50 Star CLOTH

&amp;

Tuesday,

Sunday

)

WILLIAM B. HUTCHINSON. being first
duly sworn, deposes and savs that he was
elected Councilman of the City of Highland
Park, Illinois at the General Election for
City ’ Officers held April 18. 1961 and that.
pursuant to Chapter 24, Section 19-31 of
the Illinois Revised Statutes, the following
is a statement of all his election and campaign expenses including those of the Primary Election:
Expended
by W.
B. Hutchinson
Campaign Fund for newspaper advertising,
TG
Aid

Skokie

to

Line

*

NORTHBROOK
LUMBER CO.

areas

chain.

SS
LAKE

hospital

to follow.
Downey Hospital started in 1926
with 325 beds. Today, its 2,487 beds
for the treatment of mental illness,
make it one of the Veterans’ Administration’s
two
largest
in
a

ILLINOIS)
OF

FHA
FREE

*

of the SPEBSQSA who placed s
ond in the recent area contest.

Hills

Enclose Open Porch
Screen In-Porch, |
Add A Porch

as well as state

commanders of veterans organizations also will be on the speaker’s
platform.
The ceremony will be held in the
huge new auditorium with guided

STORE

COUNTY

@
@
@

S. Gleason, Jr., Administrator of
Veterans Affairs. Other dignitaries
from the federal, state and local
governments,
the
military
and

tours

Your Living
Outside

Speaks

speaker will be John

ou

.

attend

these debates. No tickets are required. The studio is at 630 Mc.
Clurg Ct. in Chicago, a block east

of Michigan

Gleason

medical profession

8

If the team wins that debate it
will advance to the finals scheduled for Saturday, June 10.

public

John

Dedication

reservation,”

won

Debate

the

Next
debate
in the series entitled ‘‘Rebuttal’’ will be telecast
at 12:30 p.m. on June 3. The team
will debate in the semi-final round
against Proviso West High School
on the negative side of the question
“Resolved:
that the United
States Should
Initiate
a Federal
World Government.”

The

television

value

Gerry Mindell and Bob Sandy,
Highland Park High School senior

decision over their opponents
Blue Island High School.

Arrested

Dedicate New Unit
At Downey Sunday

Decision on TV

the election of

21 junior men to membership for
the
coming
year.
Members
are
chosen from junior men with top
scholastic averages.
- New
members
include
Gerald
Zar of Highland Park.

Harvey Gould, Burton Ruder, Renny Werrenrath, Glenn Harris and Karen
Barb Feder, Diane Winters, Stephanie Rudo, Barb Kreinberg, Jill deJong and Ann Scassellati.

County

will illustrate his talk

‘on Hawaii with photos in color.
' Persons
needing
transportation
‘are asked to call the YWCA, ID 2-

From this group of Highland

*

Congratulations

Circle

The
Golden
Circle
will
hear
David
Fritz,
superintendent
of
parks
in
Highland
Park,
when
imembers meet this afternoon at 3
‘o’clock in the Recreation Center.

‘Sup’t.

a nt

of

BILL.

Fritz Talks

Golden

many

neighbors who are featured in on
act
plays
are
those
popula {
GELEERD
brothers,
GUY and.
*

To

this Friday

Among

Discount
Friday

10-9,

9-9-——Wed.,

CLOSED

FLAGS, 36” x 57”

Anniversary . greetings to MR. ;
and
MRS.
WALTER
MICHELA ©
and to JACQUELINE and SERGIO —

Store |
Thurs.

&amp;

Sat.,

CARANI.

MONDAYS.

Bargains

SPECIAL!

Westinghouse AUTO HEADLAMPS
1.59 to
Scenic Pictures in Beautiful Frames, 30x36, reg. 19.95 .... NOW
Bolta-Flex &amp; Naugahyde FURNITURE COVERING,
54” wide
run. yd. 1.50 FOAM CUSHIONS, igs sae WW
La 64”
ea.
Johnson’s Model 50 SPINNING RE BL, P09. 14.95: cou _NOW
Airex MARK IV SPINNING REEL, reg. 14.95

Phone LOcus' t 6-7325
on

Rte. 83, one

MUNDELEIN,

block

South

ai “49
1.89

land

and

2.70
6.95

Snack
*

9.95
1.75

nite and Sunday —

at the Deerfield American Legion. 4
Chairman MRS. EDWARD SLAV-—
IN and her committee have planned —
lots of extras including a kidaieg

TABLES, 30’ x 30’, wood frame, plastic top apnea
$2.98
4-player BADMINTON SETS, compl. with zipper case, 8.95 val. 4.88
Westclox CHILDRENS ACTION CLOCK,. reg. 4.98
: 2,88

Located

Galore! At the Beth Or ©

Bazaar Saturday

(slight water spot)

HOUSE SLIPPERS

-

*

CARD

Men’s LEATHER

|

9-6

-

Bar.

;

*

A perfect time to shop! For your
convenience
we
are
now
open |
every Friday Nite...
and...
tem- —
porarily,

during

the seasonal

grad-

uation rush we will also remain—
open. from 6:30 to 9:00 on Thur
:
day

nite.

of Rte. 45

ILLINOIS

We buy factory surplus and store stocks.

Page H 7—D

1

�At Spring Buffet
For the Physician

Of Mt. Holyoke Club

and his Patient
Mrs.
of

Prescription
Service

|

ALL
ID

M., J. Dray,

Brown,

board

Artem

John

G. Sickle
invited

were

to

the club’s
The annual
home

PHONES
2-9000

of

Zenbei

discuss

party
Mrs.

mem-

Holyoke

Mrs.

at

luncheon.

was

Philip

“The

Japan”

in

buffet

Spring

the

Mount

Women

of

Education

Mrs.

and

among

hear

Chicago

of

directors,

Grossman

Richard

Furuya

a member

of

bers of the Chicago

PROFESSIONAL ARTS PHARMACY
1895 Sheridan Rd.
Highland Park
FREE, PROMPT
DELIVERY

M.

club’s

Mrs.

Club

Secundum

Allan

the

held

in

Cochran,

Hinsdale.

Currently

R.Ph., Manager

the

a graduate

University

of

Furuya attended Kobe
Japan for four years.
Mount Holyoke, it is
much

in

senior

women’s

common

student

Chicago,

since

colleges

at

Mrs.

College in
Kobe and
said, have
both

and

are

both

have
benefitted
through
a farsighted
1868 graduate
of Mt.
Holyoke, Mrs. Moses Smith, a Chicagoan. Mrs. Smith helped found
the Kobe College Corporation of
Chicago, the Chicago Mt. Holyoke
Club
and Mt.
Holyoke
Alumnae
association.

Top Ranking
Free

Outdoor cooling unit can’t annoy neighbors.
tial system. Runs only 14 speed of ordinary

ay

propelier blowers, minimizing noise.

$&amp;L

HOME

7611

HTG.

Connie Leuer, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Herman Leuer, 500 Broadview, was one of five Beloit College
students to make perfect academic
records when the Dean’s scholastic
honor list was announced.

life through

Air Conditioning’
Experts tell how air conditioning affects your health,
saves you money.
your copy.

Biggest centrifugal blower of any residen-

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The
top five students
had
straight “A’’ averages. Miss Leuer,
a member of Phi Beta Kappa, ranked first in her class. She is a senior.

W. leving Park Rd.,
Chicago

Phone:

Student

TU: 9-8824

Milton

Mr.
James

Visoky,

and

Mrs.

A. Frederick

are at home

riage in mid-March

James

and

The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. John Visoky of Kenmore
Ave.,
Deerfield;
Mr.
Frederick’s
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Alex W.
Frederick of Deerfield Rd., Highland Park.
The bride wore
a white satin
gown
with Chantilly
lace bodice
and skirt of net with Chantilly lace
panels
over silk.
She
carried
a
white orchid surrounded by white
roses and stephanotis.

NEW

HOSPITAL

Mildred

following

ceremony

Ww

MODERN

EQUIPMENT

NURSING

REFRESHER

Ww

HOURS

Grove

Nancy

Vi-

cool your whole

wore gowns of hot pink over taffeta with accessories to match and
carried carnations in varying tones
of pink.
The
junior
bridesmaid
wore hot pink cotton with white
cotton lace.
A. Robert Easton was best man;
ushering was William Visoky, the
bride’s brother.
The reception and dinner following the ceremony were held in the
home of the Glenn E. Millers, the
bride’s
brother-in-law
and _ sister,
in Lang Grove.
Both Mr. Frederick and his bride
are
graduates
of Highland
Park
High School.
Among
parties
given
for
the
bride was a miscellaneous shower
with Mrs. Roger Hunt, Mrs. Donald Visoky and Mrs. Harold Visoky as hostesses.

Promotes

Prom

Walter
Stein,
son
Mrs. Walter Stein of

house with—

Ave., was

promotion

“ONE-EYED

COURSE

YOUR

Ann

their mar-

in Long

co-chairman
of the
College Junior Prom
urday.

AUTOMATION

Your

Miss

bride’s
niece,
junior
Senior
attendants

This summer

BUILDING

¥

TO SUIT

and

soky,
the
bridesmaid.

YOU:

&gt;

*

OFFER

Photo

church.

sister

WE

Park

in a candlelight

Merner

Frederick

his bride, the former

in Highland

Her
maid
of honor
was
Miss
Pamela
Frederick,
the _ bridegroom’s
sister;
attendants
were
Mrs.
Roger
Hunt,
the _ bride’s

NURSES NEEDED ...

A.

of Mr.
and
1177 Linden

and

publicity

Lake
Forest
held last Sat.

JACK”

QUIET

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hospital aor

you,

You may be surprised at how
much the price of top-quality
central air conditioning has
come down. . . thanks to the
big volume of Mueller Climatrol units in Chicagoland.
The

public

acceptance

of

Mueller Climatrol is based on
the quality built into every unit
—and the integrity of Authorized Dealers, like ourselves.

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PARK

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Call for your copy.

Phone

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—

ID

2-8000

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Ave., Chicago

Phone: SP 4-3300

Page

H 8&amp;—D 16

CO.

Brando

Rio

in

the

is

seen

new

above

as

technicolor

western
‘‘One Eyed Jacks‘’’ starting
Friday at the Family Outdoor Theatre.

Karl Malden and Pina Pellicer co-star.

Thursday, May 25, 1961

�Mobile X-ray Unit Hwd. Aldermen

chairman

new

neer

of

the

multi-million

printing

plant,

board.

dollar

Pio-

to house

the

nue,

during

of June.
years of

a chest

the

All
age

first three

residents
are urged

x-ray

at this

days

over
18
to have

time,

Registration will be
volunteers
inside
the

made with
store.
No

undressing

for the

is required

ray
which
minute and

x-

takes
less
than
one
is absolutely free. Dr.

Cc. K. Petter, head of the Lake
County Tuberculosis Sanatorium,
will
The

read and diagnose all x-rays.
results are confidential.

Hours

will

be

as

follows:

Thursday, June 1—2 to 4:30 p.m.
and
5:30 to 8:30 p.m.
Friday,
June 2—10:30
a.m. to 12 noon
and 1 to 4 p.m.
Saturday, June
3—9 a.m. to 1 p.m. In addition a
special hour will be set aside for
the
Highland
Park
City
employees only.
Mrs.
Horace
Avenue, who is

Illinois

Gov. Otto
.

Kerner

publishing company’s offset facilities, is to be on a 12 acre site on
route 59 just south of the EastWest tollway and the Burlington
railroad
tracks
a short
distance

west of Naperville.
Ralph Snyder, city manager of
Highland
Park; William Douglas,
city manager of Lake Forest; Nor-

village

Stilphen,

ris

manager

of

Deerfield; John Frantonius, mayor
of Highwood, and Col. J. M. House,
Post
Commander,
Fort
Sheridan
also will participate in the ceremonies.
Gov.
Kerner’s presence
at the
ground
breaking
emphasizes
the
interest shown
in the company’s
project by the chief executive of
the state.
Pioneer
Publishing
Co.,
which
publishes a group of
suburban
newspapers,
including The
North
Shore group, as one phase of its
activities, decided recently to build
a new commercial printing plant
and acquired the Naperville property for this purpose.
The North
Shore Group Newspapers, however
will continue to be printed locally.
A modern glass and steel structure will house a five unit Miehle
web
offset perfecting press com. plete with two folders and a flying
paster. The original plant was designed to be expanded as the company’s
business
grows
and
will
house several additional web offset
presses
to be added
within
the
next few years.
Pioneer Publishing
company,

founded

60 years ago in Oak Park,

has a sizeable commercial printing
operation in St. Charles. This plant
prints, binds and mails circulars,
catalogues,
magazines
and
newspapers.

Javcees To Install

Officers Monday at
Dinner Meeting
Highland
President’s

Park Jaycees will note
Night, Monday,
May

29, with a dinner and dance
at
the Vernon Hills Country Club.
Don Mooney is the new presi-

dent.

Other

officers

will

also

be

installed during the evening.
Joe
Rafferty is in charge of the event.
Reservations
may
be
made
by

calling him at ID 2-8733.
Thursday, May 25, 1961
a‘
ARS

; ae
ASTI

ee

a

]

tae

a

S.
Vaile,
Secretary

Tuberculosis

Maple
of the

Association

said that Lake County has a higher
case rate of Tuberculosis than that
of the state as a whole.
Tuberculosis is a highly contagious disease but Chest specialists believe
that it can be stamped out through
early detection. Yearly chest x-rays
will disclose cases before serious
damage occurs.
Highland

of

the

Park

Lake

representatives

County

Tuberculosis

Association are: Mrs. Herman
F.
Anspach, 171 Bloom St., who was
recently elected a director; Mrs.
Richard S, Lunn, 340 Flora Ave.,
a member of the executive com-

mittee;

Mrs.

Horace

past president

and

lagher,

St.

2157

S.

Vaile,

William

Johns

a

H. Gal-

Ave.

Dr.

George
E. Wendel
is a director
representing
the medical
profession.
How

because

the

letter

mixed

in

with the bills.
Zanotti has done an outstanding
job as public works foreman, the
mayor said, adding that he tried to
talk Zanotti out of quitting. Zanotti’s work at the union hall is now
full-time, however.
Alderman
Dominic
Cantagallo
proposed a letter of appreciation.
Alderman
Marino
Maestri moved
authorization for Emil Ugolini to
to get help on current street patching.
Name

Police

Sergeant

Appointments made by the council included police sergeant Charles
Maestri
as
juvenile
officer
and
Mrs. Ray Gardini as secretary to
Peter Carani, police magistrate.
Patrolman
Kenneth
Hogan
finished a correspondence course in
police
work
with
a score
of 88
per cent, Maestri told the aldermen.
Credit for the department’s
high morale
should
go to his
predecessor as police chairman,
former
alderman
Jack
Peterson,
Maestri added.
Alderman David Santi’s recommendation
that
Hogan
be reimbursed the cost of the course was
referred to Maestri’s police committee.
Santi brought up the proposed
extra half-cent municipal sales tax
again, urging the council to go on
record
opposing the legislation.
Mayor
Frantonius
again
said he
favored the permissive tax, since it
is needed by some downstate cities.
Other
council
members
took
no
stand.
Study
Several
ment

Conversion

aldermen

careful study

Financed

got

asked

of a proposed

conversion

of the

for

apart-

old

Spear-

The Lake County
Tuberculosis
Association receives no income of

head Tavern building by J. Affrun-

any

gested the building be studied by
Health Inspector Raymond Unbe-

is

sort

from

financed

and

taxes.
solely

by Christmas

All

its work

by

donations

Seals purchased

in Lake County by Lake County
residents,
During
the
past
year
over
12,500 Lake
County
school
children were
given free Tuberculin Tests and over 40,000 free
chest x-rays were
taken
on the
mobile unit in the fight on this
dread disease. In addition a size-

able

contribution

research
and a
health education

Ravinia

was
fine
was

ORT

made

for

program
of
carried on.

Ravinia

Plans

chapter,

Women’s

Roger
26.

Rolls

Franco Lamberti of 215 Llewellyn Ave., Highwood, stopped to let
a Highland
Park city truck pull
into a driveway
at 321
Temple
Monday;
then tried to get past.
The truck rolled back, police were
told,
and
the
tailgate
did
$125
damage
to his aerial and windshield.
Hermitage
Ave.,
truck driver, told

of

715

Deerfield,
the
police he braked

as soon as he heard
“Stop.”

Cantagallo

sug-

same

$582

fee

as

last

year.

has

signed
any

by

local

business-

influence.

Amer-

Home-baked
cakes,
pies and
cookies
will
be
featured.
Mrs.
David Sparks, 373 Flora Ave., is
chairman.

Abrahamson

the

petition

at the Jewel Food store on
Williams Ave. Friday, May

Harry

and

haun.
—Every
week,
Maestri
amended.
Frantonius
was
congratulated
on his election as sergeant-at-arms
of the Illinois Municipal League.
In another election, he was chosen
vice-president of the Lake County Municipal League.
City Sanitary Service will begin
cleaning
Highwood
catch
basins
soon,
the
council
was
told,
for

men

will sponsor a bake sale

City Truck

however,

The
Northwestern
station may
also get a face-lifting, if Maestri’s

Bake Sale Friday
ican ORT,

ti,

Lamberti

yell,

Journalism

Honors

©

Jamie
Rubenstein,
son
of Mr.
and Mrs. Sidney Rubenstein, 2345
Maple, a senior at the University
of New
Mexico,
was
selected
to
receive the LOBO award for “‘outstanding service’ by members
of
the paper staff.
Editor-in-chief
of the LOBO,
Rubenstein was given the award at

the

annual

Student

when

the

editor-in-chief

resigned.

daughters, Sam and Frank, both at a
Glencoe; Herman, Highland Park; a
Leon, Los Angeles; Mrs. Willosene se
Olson, Chesterton, Ind.; and Miss — a
Alberta Drew, Highland Park. He a

es

Ts

Kerber

Funeral services for Herbert E.
Kerber,
1265 Linden Ave., Highland Park,
a member of the board
of directors of the Highland Park
Community
Chest
and
a
Chest
founder, were held May 20 from
the
Highland
Park
Presbyterian
church.
Burial was in Mt. Hope
cemetery, Chicago.
Mr. Kerber died May 18 at his
home.
A resident of Highland Park for

was

duty in Highland Park for many
years until her retirement, were
held in St. Joseph, Mo. in April.
Miss Waters died at her family

Mar.

25,

She leaves two sisters, the Misses
Elizabeth, and Josephine Waters. ©
Highland Park friends may con-

dan Rd., Highland Park, and inter- |
ment was in Memorial
mausoleum, Skokie.

1890

Mrs.

He

also

Irwin

sented

Frank

four

sons

Mrs.

Blanche

and

an

L.

Stryker,

active

member

March

©

10,

field Rd. with her husband es
who preceded her in death March —
12.

They had lived in Deerfield 55 —
Ze)
:

Survivors include two sons and —
three daughters: Wesley, Deerfield;
John H., Navesink, N.J.; Mrs. J. K.
Haehlen, Long Lake, Minn.; Mrs.
D. P. Easton, and Mrs. A. K. Con,

a

Chi-

both of Deerfield.
nine

She also leaves ©

grandchildren.

A sister, Mrs. Milton Frantz of |
Deerfield, also survives.
Service
at 2 p.m. were held at the Bethle
hem church with the Rev. Eugene |

Wykle

officiating.

Interment was —

in the north Northfield cemetery. |
Mrs.

Maria

Pedrucci

Requiem Mass for Mrs. Mari
Pedrucci, 85, of 121 High St., High
wood,

was

offered

at

She

building
two

St.

Jame

church May 23, and burial was in’
Ascension cemetery, Libertyville. |
Mrs. Pedrucci, the widow of 1
Amileare Pedrucci, died May 20 at
the Medical Pavilion
lengthy illness.

and

|

association
+

years.

trades.

leaves

for

Born

He was born Feb. 8, 1880 in Iowa.
Until his retirement, he was a con-

He

manufacturers.

of the parent-teacher
and the Red Cross.

Villa.
the

several

W.S.W.S.,

Drew

in

—

Services were held Tuesday, May
23,

81, former Highland Park resident,
were
held
yesterday
from
the
chapel at 1913 Sheridan Rd.
Mr. Drew died May 22 at Hampstead House
rest home
in Lake

worker

until her last illness,

Mrs. Blanche L. Stryker. .

Funeral services for Frank Drew,

struction

:

She leaves two daughters, Mrs.
Fred
R. Lindenmann
and Mrs.
Jack Whichman,. both. of Deerfield. 2s—
She also leaves one sister and two 4
:
brothers.

in

leaves

Newman,

Zangs,

Park

had offices in the Merchandise
Mart. The Zangs Company repre-

Mr. Goodhart, a resident of High-

Ariz.

information.

Beverly Pl., Deerfield, president
of Zangs Co., Inc., Chicago, died ‘
May 20 in Highland Park Hospital. i—
Funeral services were held May —
23 from the chapel at 1913 Sheri- 4

J. Goodhart

Mrs.

the hours of 9 a.m. and 2

p.m. for more

land Park for 15 years, was a salesman for the plastics industry.
He
was a veteran of World War I in
the Air Corps.
He
leaves
his
widow,
Myrtle;
one son, Arthur K. Levy Jr., Highland
Park;
two
daughters,
Miss
Arlene
B.
Goodhart,
Scottsdale,
Ariz.; and Mrs. Charles Whitehill,
sister,
cago.

2-3551

ID

Marks,

Ruth

tact Mrs.
between

Hal
J. Goodhart,
61,
of
1900
Linden Ave., Highland Park, died
suddenly at his home May 19.
Private
funeral services were
held,

Tucson,

her |

make

seph five years ago to
home with her sisters.

Waukegan.
Mr.
Iverson
leaves his widow,
Victoria;
and
two
sisters,
Mrs.
Mabel
Sackman
and Mrs. Lillian
Bishop, both of Waukegan.

Hal

—

home, 1025 Henery St., St. Joseph,
Mo. She had returned to St. Jo-

Iverson

born

Waters |

Funeral services for Miss Kathleen Waters, a nurse on private —

Oscar Iverson, 71, of 1467 Green
Bay
Rd.
a 40-year
resident
of
Highland Park, and 50-year North
Western
railroad
conductor
died
May 21, at the Highland Park Hospital.
Funeral services were held yesterday from
the chapel
at 1913
Sheridan Rd., and interment was
in the Northshore Garden of Memories, North Chicago.
The Rev.
A. F. Johnson, former minister of
Bethany
Methodist
church,
conducted the service.
Mr. Iverson was well known to
commuters
and travelers
on the
Chicago and North Western railroad.
He
retired five years ago
after his 50-year career aS conductor.
He was a member of Highland
Park Post 145, American Legion;.
the 40 &amp; 8 club of the Legion;
Waukegan Lodge 78, A. F. and A.
M.;
Highland
Park
Chapter
226,
Royal
Arch
Masons;
and
the
Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen.

He

grandchildren.

15

Kathleen

Miss

34 years, Mr. Kerber was a retired

Oscar

leaves

also

agency manager of Equitable Life
Assurance Society with offices in
Chicago.
Until his last illness, he
continued his work on a part-time
schedule with the insurance firm.
He was a member of the Highland
Park
Presbyterian church
and
a
veteran member of Exmoor Country Club.
He
leaves
his widow,
Isabelle
Macfarlane Kerber, and two daughters, Mrs. Richard E. Welch Jr.,
Lake Forest; and Mrs. Robert P.
Hastey Jr., Glencoe. He also leaves
six grandchildren and two sisters,
Mrs. Eda K. West and Mrs. Lewis
D. Suhr, both of Evanston.

Publications

Board banquet, where he also received a certificate for four years
of service. His name will be added
to the plaque kept in the LOBO
office containing the names of the
recipients of the award each year.
Rubenstein
served as editor-inchief of the summer session editions, and was managing editor of
the publication during the greater
part of this year.
He
again assumed
the editorship last month

E.

ee

The Highwood city council forgot
to read the resignation of Battista
Zanotti the previous week, Mayor
John Frantonius explained Friday,

Herbert

oe

Pioneer

The Lake County
Tuberculosis
Association’s
mobile
chest
x-ray
unit will be stationed in front of
Garnett and Co., 590 Central Ave-

Zanotti’s
Public Works Job

ee

Three Days in June Commend

Governor Otto Kerner will turn
the first shovelful
of dirt in a
formal ground breaking ceremony,
attended by many public officials,
business and civic leaders, at 10:30
a.m. Friday, May
26, it was announced by W. Newton Burdick Jr.,
The

OBITUARIES

was

born

Sept.

apenas

To Be in HP for

following

24,

1875

ao

i

peli

Break Grund Fa
Pioneer Plant

Italy, and had lived in Highwood
nine years. Her husband preceded +
her in death July 21, 1961.
“ sy
She

leaves

two

sons, Tino,

Deer- i

field; Virgil, Prairie View; . and —4
three daughters, Mrs. Eva Mancini —
and Miss Sally Pedrucci, High- #
wood; and Miss Eleanor Pedrucci, —

Nokomis,

Ill.

She also leaves five |

grandchildren, eight great-grand- |
children and one sister, who lives _
in

Italy.

ie

Page

H 9—D

17

�Spring Sports At DHS Bring
First Winning Team Home As
Net-Men End With 5-4 Record
With
this

conference

past

league,

the

season

at

regular

come

to

one

sport

on

the

standings.

a

loss

squad

ning

season

short

DHS

It

in

sports’

High

school

level,
a five

for

a

Story

for

DHS

the

the

The

the

Golf Story
The golf
second
in
squads with
team
won
competition

2

es

Sg

Passing the baton are members of the DHS 880 yard
relay team Jim Grossfeld and Tee Newbrough.
Both are
freshman track men. Jim is undefeated this season in the

100 yard dash and the 220 yard dash.

handy man on the thinclad squad.

Tee is the all around

Sharp plays
when he isn’t
said.

team

Crowell,

vault, has gone
H

10—D

sophomore,

undefeated

in

10 feet 6 inches in a meet this year.

his best jump.

Page

a

the

pole

Track
ship

This was

Lee,

Pedro

Craig,

and

Eaton, Jon Shurberg
18

and

of

two

were
Joe

in

the

Sophomore
half

miler

John
and

His

best

season.

Os-

Fred
Terter, a sophomore,
has
competed
in the high jump
and
440
events.
Dave
Johnson
has
aided as the miler for the team.
Another
miler, Dave
Mitchell,
a
sophomore,
has also competed in
the 880 yard run, along with Rich
Schryer,
who
also runs the 440.
A

relay

team

Ferguson,

Newbrough

2:17

the

DHS.

this

Chase

were

is

for

ac-

first base for DHS
pitching, the coach

times

Stanger

miler

two

sophomores

Story

...

this

afternoon

at

4:30

Jim Grossfield, a freshman
is undefeated in competition
spring, ran the hundred
in
seconds. This was his best
He is also undefeated in the
yard dash. His best time in
event was 24:0.

of

and

Grossfield,

Terter

has

5:17

and

aided

the

Tee
DHS

cause.
All

team
dition

around

was
to

handy

man

Newbrough,
forming

who,

the

on

the

in ad-

fourth

in the pole
220
hurdles
dash.

vault
and

on

event,
in the
the
220
yard

p.m.

who
this
10:5
time.
220
that

Sophomore Joel Brash, who won
his last three times with the discus, threw it 132 feet as his best
time this season. He also throws
the shot for DHS, His best throw
was 40 feet.

tennis

coach

mainstay

is

who

Coach Bill Knilans team, which
has a one win, four loss conference
record,
has been
aided
by
several thin-clads who will form
the basis for next year’s squad.

Coach Ted Repsholdt pointed to
John
Fleming,
a sophomore,
as
his top man for the 1961 season.
Fleming, who won the frosh-soph
district meet last year as a freshman at Highland Park High school,
has won meets this year.

DHS

named

the

athlete

sophomore,

for the conference
championship
which will be held at Maine West
High school.

squad at DHS ranked
the
competing
school
a .500 average. The
five and
lost five in
in the interim league.

of the

this

The DHS track squad will compete for the conference champion-

ac-

son, are pictured from the left.

coach,

proved

a

the relay team, has proved himself

a long way
season

team

Dahnson
is developing
into
a
good hitter, according to Ostrander, The
baseball
championships
were also played during the week.

...

Members

Dave

come

coach

.

a record

undefeated

Crowell,

|pole vault event. His best height
ithis season was 10 feet six inches.

centerfielder,

the

Dave
has

..

losses,

a

the

Jeff Rubin and Ray Sharp, pitchers, and Roger Dahnson, a centerfielder, as his most valuable players.

sophomore
for

of the
coach.

to

cording

Doubles teams of Jon Eaton and
Jim
Burnett,
sophomores;
Jon
Shurberg, frosh, and Pete Craig,

have

and

trander.

in

had

at

club.

baseball

eight

pitchers

four

Coach Karl Wildermuth pointed
out that Jeff Mandel
has shown
“tremendous
improvement”
as a
freshman. Mandel was expected to
hold his own in tournament competition
which
was
held
at the
first of the week. The preliminary
matches
were
Monday
and
the
finals are tomorrow.

since the start
cording to the

and

win-

was
Randy
Bax.
Freshman
Neal
Hirsch, undefeated in singles play,
ranked
high
on the DHS
squad.

sophomore,

which

wins

first

history.

play

year,

wins,

Tuesday

Story
the

Another

championship

held
Golf

Sparking

sports

team

was

Baseball

of

...

at

conference

golf

Arrowhead

only
end

the

the

sports

singles

with

spring

was

Outstanding
level

spring

all

had

season.

Tennis
Joel Brash, who has won his last three meets in the
discus event, prepares to throw for DHS. Joel, a sophomore,
has thrown the discus 132 feet. He also throws the shot put.

in

The

Interim

winning

frosh-soph

tennis

the

close

the

Competing

the

in

Deerfield

has

at

championships

week

team,

Karl

Fleming

which

had a record of 5 wins against 4 losses this seaJon Johnson, Randy Bax, Neal Hirsch, Roger
Wildermuth.
Kneeling are Jim Burnett, Jeff Mandel, Jon

Standing

manager

John

are:

Bill Kurfirst.
Thursday,

May

25, 1961

�S
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PARKING

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‘Til 9 P.M.

ALWAYS

RMR
se

May

25, 1961

Page

H

11—D

19

�Homemakers’ Week

SYDET

uf

a
Ee

ee
eg

-J

won

Ba)

in the Crossroads

ee

Center

RE IR A EE WEE
crue
RM

the

$12;

the

RIAN
fees

|

Foods

names

bras, girdles,

lin-

SYDET
"

a

Open

/

Mon., Thurs., Fri., 9:30

gift

certificate

from

contestants
Mrs. C. V.

won two
Fleming

and

a.m.

Toy

a

$20

walking

horse

Heaven.

Mrs. H. C. Dorrington of 956
Maple Ct., Deerfield, won the $50
cultured
pearl
necklace
from
Leeds

Jewelers.

J,

B.

Cupp

984 Deerfield Rd. won a $50 gift
certificate at Arends Sewing Machine Co.
John Dwyer of 1133

pad

to 9 p.m.

Open Tues., Wed., Sat., 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.

and

cover

set at J. Blumberg

Inec., value $25, was won by Mrs.
Helen McMaster of 2694 Western
Ave. E. Lipschultz of 846 Moseley
Rd. won $25 worth of dry cleaning
at Roessler’s
Exclusive
Cleaners.

Katherine Kuchling of 1636 McGovern St. won $24 worth of wallpaper from Hi-Land Paint Co. S.
Carani
of
1923
Green
Bay
Rd.
;won
a $16.95
steam
iron
from

|Highwood

Radio.

Mary

Ladurini

GIFTS FOR GRAD &amp; DAD
a
be
2
f
pT

a int al RR eed Re

dozen

336

golf

balls

won

by

Grace

Delta

Rd.

from

Kai ape
fe ee

WITH

LP RECORD

worth

$15

Holland

of

Professional

Golf School, A Better Homes &amp;
Gardens
Gardening
Book,
Cook
Book

and

Handyman’s

Book,

worth

Congregation Beth Or will have
items for everyone at the Bargain

$13.85, was won by Mrs. H. C.
Eitner of 846 Pleasant Ave. from

the American Legion Hall in Deerfield.
The bazaar will feature houseand
toys
hardware,
and
wares

at Inman’s Paint Shop. A $10 tub
of geraniums from Bahr’s Greenhouses was won by Mrs. W. S.

games, a snack bar and kiddieland
for the little folks. Books will be

on sale, and door prizes and special auctions will be features of

Aldridge of 442 Woodland Rd.
Ten dollar gift certificates were
won
by
Anne
Fenelon
of 2170

Green
dred

Pl.
by

Bay

Rd.

Henthorne

Second

A

St.

at

$10

Henry

of

1666

William

Jewel

Beverly

J.

went

Tilden

of

from
to

1582

Five

pounds

were

of grass seed

Hardware,

won

by

Ann

worth

from

host to more than 150 delegates of

the Chicago Federation of Temple
Youth.
Rabbi Sholom Singer will con-

of

Felsenthal

of

888

of

nicking and
grounds.

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ID 2-7222

PRESS

3906 W. Chicago Ave.

GUITAR

“GRANT &amp; GRANT. INC
es $42.50

on the lakeside

Nour Baek Buy
Sherwin-Williams Paints

PURCHASED

aye

weecenw coor cons

a

| only

pic-

EACH

TRANSISTOR TAPE
RECORDER

Bat.—Case—arphone
$14.95
$9.95

games

the

spent

of all reform
Representatives
temples in the midwest will be attending the annual affair Tuesday,
the rabbi said,

ball Rd. at The Fell Co. Mrs. D. J.
Cunningham
of 1924 Ridge Rd.
won a $5 case of dog food at
Garrity’s.

THURS. — FRI. — SAT.
&amp; :

day

the

and

held

be

will

of

election

service;

religious

officers

remainder

aN

T TRANSISTOR RADIO

a

duct

by Lee Hilfman of 1619 Rosemary
Rd. at Craftwood Lumber Co., and
Nancy

is

temple

the

when

Day

morial

243 North
Ave., Highwood.
Five
dollar gift certificates were won
by Anna Bernabei of 201 Sheridan,
Highwood, at Baum’s Pastry Shop;

by

parking.

free

of

B’nai Torah Reform temple and
grounds, 2789 Oak St., will be
overflowing with teen-agers Me-

$7.50,

Cimarrusti

where

Road,

B'nai Torah Host
To Youth Federation
On Memorial Day

Mrs.

Arbor

Ave. Mrs, Clarence Potter of 1364
St.
Johns
Ave.
got
the
$9.95
cigaret table from Random House.
Garnett &amp; Co.’s $7.95 blanket went
to Shirley Cabri of 50 Michigan
Ave., Highwood.
Sherony

Hall

Legion

The

Waukegan

plenty

is

there

Store.

plant

Weiland

849

at

is

Sunday.

on

out

Co., and
of 1675

Food

blooming

C.

the bazaar.
p.m.
Hours are from 6 p.m. to 11
sell
to
a.m.
10
from
and
Saturday,

at Billie’s, by Mil-

at Earl W. Gsell &amp;
Mrs. C. Hargreaves

at

28,

and

27

May

for

set

Bazaar

Larson’s.
Two
gallons
of
house
paint
worth $13.30 were won
by Mrs.
B. C. Maxey of 1662 McGovern St,

FREE! AMAZING
COLOR HARMONY

6 PACK CARTON
COCA-COLA

cae

ii a

A

were

FREE

peer
ee gis

I I

of

Greenwood, Deerfield, won ten LP
records, value $40, at Moley TV
&amp; Appliance Co.
The steam iron, ironing board,

Crossroads Shopping Center, Highland Park
ID 2-5565
:

4

con-

from Thayer’s. Mrs. A. G, Seaberg
of
1530
Arbor
Ave.
got
a $25
basket of groceries from
Sunset

gerie, etc., at moderate prices.

4

Week

of 240 Sheridan Ave., Highwood,
fot the $15 lazy susan from The
Street and a $5 bag of groceries

Voi

advertised

in dresses, sportswear,

$10

Fashions.
Two other
prizes each.

Louies

nationally

Homemakers’

test in three of the 30 participating stores. She got the two throw
rugs from John B. Nash Co., value

from

Featuring

Elliott of 522 Burton Ave.

The Style Shop, and the $5 certificate from
Rosby’s
Suburban

Hath Slant
Jasin

Wg
t

Shopping

IS NOW OPEN

ASOT SORE, Se CA RY,
Sh
i
a:

ARI

Sees
a “a Ey

SO

x

Winners Announced
Marie

Beth Or's Bazaar
Set for May 27-28
In Deerfield

of 941 Deerfield Rd. won a $15.95
Ansco Cadet reflex outfit from
Powell’s Camera Mart.

Anthony Abbatiello,

Prop.

CLAVEY’S TREELAND
EVERBLOOMING
Hybrid Tea

10%

Climbers

ON

POTTED

ROSES

OFF

Floribunda

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MORE

WEEKEND SPECIAL ON SHADE TREES
PIN OAK
GREEN ASH
MAPLE
Skokie
Highland

Highway

&amp; Clavey Rd.

Park
Thursday,

ID

2-4664

May

25, 1961

bo

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oe

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Views

G

Silent Auction
Held In Nelson

Deerfield Center Discusses Its
Plans For Featured Events At

Home Thursday

Meeting In Mrs.

Mrs.
Roger
Nelson,
projects
chairman of the Deerfield Wing of
Infant Welfare Society of Chicago,
is opening her home
in Lincolnshire today for an “Elegant
Elephant,”’ a silent auction.
Mrs. Fred Balzar, past president,
and Mrs. Joseph Perry, hospitality
chairman,
both
of the
Deerfield
Wing are assisting. Admission and
departure
is by
‘elephant,’
big
or small, new or old, with proceeds
to benefit the Infant Welfare Scciety. Refreshments will be served.

Ravinia’s 1961 coupon book sales campaign got under
way at.a kick-off luncheon in the Casino, Tuesday, May 16,
attended by more than 100 volunteer sales workers from the
North Shore, Chicago, and Western suburbs, who were
guests of the Ravinia Executive Committee. The Deerfield-

i.

_

Bannockburn coupon

book sales committee was represented

;
by (left to right) Mrs. Edwin Avery, co-chairman, and Mrs.
Joseph’
Powell, chairman.
Ravinia’s 26th Festival season
opens Tuesday evening, June 27. Sale of coupon books will
continue until July 2.

At
the
monthly
meeting,
also
held at the Nelson home, on Tuesday May 25, plans for the fall benefit will be discussed. Mrs. William
Krucks is co-hostess. Mrs. Victor
Turner,
assisted by Mrs.
Charles
Foelsch, displayed the new spring
and
summer
candle
collection, a
year round project of the Deerfield Wing. The by-laws committee
consisting of Mrs. William Nelson,
Mrs. Henry Staats, and Mrs. Thomas Wood are to report and propose
changes. Mrs. Earl Baird and Mrs.
William Mankin did volunteer service this month and attended conferences at the Sprague Station on
Grand Avenue in Chicago.

District 110 ‘Artiste Go
Ge On Panic’

Mrs. Edward Borre
Re-Elected Head

Today At South Park School At 2 p.m.

Of Bridge Group

“Junior Art” of Wilmot,
- schools,

Woodland

will go on exhibition

today

Park and South Park

at the South

Park

school

_ from 2 to 4:30 p.m., tonight from 7 to 9 p.m. and tomorrow,
| May 26, from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. The public is invited to attend
- the special showing
district 110. A wide
Phy the children from
_ be represented at this

of creative art done by the children of
variety of art techniques and media used
kindergarten through eighth grade will
show. Among these are: oils, water col-

_ ors, pastels, sculpting, modeling and crafts.
“Under

the

auspices

of

the

will

| the

have

an

opportunity

wonderful

_youngsters,’’

talents

executive

board

of the

Deer-

of Chicago.
The

College Taps Local
Alumnae To Aid In
Capital Fund Drive
Mount
Hadley,

Holyoke

college,

Mass., announced

these

Visgatis,

_ praise of the creativity evidenced in
all grade levels.
George Chlebak, |
art instructor assisted Visgatis in

talents

| will act as hosts

Arts

along

Mrs.

Donald

Dahlstrom,

_ work

Mrs.

/an

in

the

‘They hope to establish
_ supply of artwork.
Page

H

14—D

22

district.”
a

reviews

will

Sun”

by

meeting

will again

Inn.

The

be changed

once

a

Oriel

it was

be held

at

time,

how-

from

11:30

month

November.

award

|Golf

luncheon

club

on

from

There
at the

December

May

will

be

Evanston

6.

vachenbetie

| May-Day Court Member
At St. Mary Of Woods
Miss
named

|

on the project of “pictures for|

classroom

formal

some |

Robert
Hausner
and
Mrs.
Gay |
Hastings, are also continuing to!
| every

of the

Deerpath

‘through

| of the room mothers and will serve |
refreshments at the evening ses- |
sion.
The
committee,
which
in-}
_ cludes: Mrs. Leo Sazonoff, chair- |
man, Charles Barnett, Charles Vis- |
gatis,

The

| play

committee |

with

the

'that the Deerfield center bridge
/tournament is underway and that
ithe
participating
players
would

|

Fine

for

|
Mrs. Frank Zellet, vice president
lof the center, announced this week

trict.

PTA

William

| the summer.

_ study.”’ Bedrosian, in addition to
| his work as principal is the testing |
and guidance consultant for the dis- |
The

Mrs.

jam.
to 11 am.
and membership
will be limited to 100.
Invitations
| for this event will be mailed during

- and expressions of children through
art are most interesting to see and

|

the
939

as co-hostess.

At the last board

lever,

ay pleased to cooperate both with |
| our own art department and with |
| the PTA Fine Arts Group in pre-

The

at

Voll,

;announced that there will be another series of six luncheon-book
reviews
starting
in October
and
that Mrs. Hoppe
would
again be
ithe reviewer.
Mrs. Leon Sherman,
president of the Deerfield Center,
appointed
Mrs.
George
Niblock,
chairman for the 1961-62 book club
jseries and Mrs. Joseph Hruby was
| appointed assistant-chairman.
|

| is being held said,.‘‘We are especial-

display.

with
plans

| May, “Horses
| Malet.

ithe

show.

|
Osear Bedrosian,
principal of |
South Park, where the exhibition |

this

Ln.,

serving
overall

held

The center is again asking the
people of Deerfield and vicinity to
help with their annual Infant Welfare rummage sale by donating any
used furniture,
clothing, kitchenware, jewelry, linens, toys, books
or other saleable items which they
have decided they no longer need
!as a result of spring housecleaning.
To Increase Salaries
| Mrs. Charles F. Parsons, WI 5-0039
president | o1 - Mrs. Warren Coray, WI 5-1962,
According
to college
for prompt
pick-up
Richard G. Gettell, increasing fac- will arrange
ulty and staff salaries is the pri- service, starting immediately.
mary goal of the fund, but large |
Mrs. Robert Ramsay of Ramsay
sums will also be used for scholarRoad and Mrs. George Niblock, coships, new buildings, and support chairmen of the Deerfield Center
of curriculum projects such as four- of the Infant Welfare Book Reviewcollege cooperation with Connecti- Luncheon
series,
will give
their
cut Valley neighbors Smith, Amfinal report today.
Mrs. Laurene
herst, and the University of Massa- Hoppe has given six reviews during
chusetts.
the 1960-61 season: in October she
involved
in or- presented “The Lovely Ambition”
Local
alumnae
area
cam- by Mary Ellen Chase; in November,
ganizing
the
Chicago
of Lonesome
Lake”
by
paign are Mrs. Bayard E. Wynne | “Crusoe
and Mrs. Francis M. Compton, III, lataia Stowe; in December, selectThere were
of Deerfield, and Mrs. G. Richard ed Christmas stories.
no reviews in January or February
Bowen of Barrington.
and in March Mrs. Hoppe reviewed
the Pulitzer Prize Winner for this
field Woman’s club will meet on year, “To Kill a Mockingbird” by
Tuesday, June 6 at 9:15 a.m. in the Harper Lee.
home of Mrs. Albert R. Dawe, 1153
In April, “Return to Japan” by
Oxford Rd.
Elizabeth Vining was given and in

Standing of-all forms of art,’ continued Visgatis. He was high in his

| senting

The

be

Cedric

dinner
dance
to be held
at the
Lake Forest academy on June 24,
1961,
will
be
presented
by
the
dance
chairman, Mrs. Frederick
Faulkner of Brierhill Rd.

that it will
launch
a $17,750,000
capital funds drive in September.
Designed to run until 1963 and correspond with the 125th anniversary
of the
college,
the drive,
to be
known
as the “Fund for the Future,’ is under the national direction of Mrs.
Edward
R. Murrow,
alumnae trustee of the college and
wife of the director of U.S.LA.

| ehildren in appreciation and under-

the

Seaman

will

Mrs.

of

Westcliffe

South

_ art superintendent for the district.
“Through
shows such as this, we
_ hope to encourage both adults and

_ arranging

meeting

home

this week

On Ten-Day Cruise

to see

of

said Charles

The

The annual benefit formal dinner dance, the September
rummage sale, the book club and the bridge tournament will
be among the main subjects discussed today at the regular
meeting of the Deerfield Center of the Infant Welfare Society

art;

- department of district| 110 and the
PTA Fine Arts committee, the pubhie

At the final meeting of the bridge
group
of the Deerfield
Woman’s
club, held on May 11, Mrs. Edward
M. Borre was re-elected chairman
for the coming
year. The bridge
group is open to all members of the
Deerfield Woman’s club. Any member
interested
in
joining
this
group may contact Mrs. Borre at
WI 5-1897.

Voll’s Home

A

Court

Mrs. William Baxter, 1321 Greenwood Ave., and Mrs. Al P. Wetle, Chicago, are pictured
aboard the SS Evangeline sailing from Miami. Mrs. Baxter and Mrs. Wetle are on the swimming pool deck of the boat. They were aboard for a 10-day cruise recently to the West Indies.

a

Lynn
Fruehauf
has been
member of the May Day

reigning

over

the

May

Day

i festivities May 20, at Saint Mary-of| the-Woods College, Saint Mary-of-

| the-Woods

(near Terre Haute), Ind.

| She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
|H.

B.

Seymour

‘Lincolnshire,

of

27

Deerfield,

Thursday,

May

Oxford

Dr.,

Ill.

25, 1961

�Auxiliary’s Prize

Ravinia Auxiliary,
Chicago Commons
Meeting Tomorrow

Car Goes to Races

Mrs. Lloyd Vinyard Sr., 775 Kimballwood Ln., will open her home
to members of the Ravinia Auxiliary to the Chicago Commons Association tomorrow afternoon at 1
o’clock.
Assistant hostesses will be Mrs.
Warren Wilner and Mrs. A. Gordon
Humphrey.
Dessert-luncheon
will
precede the business session and
the making of cancer dressings for
the Highland Park Hospital.
Commons

The
eago

parent
is badly

Needs

Aid

association
in need

in

Chi-

of more

than

£12,000 to meet its current budget,
Mrs. Pauline M. Raff of the auxiliary pointed out. Some of the services have had to be curtailed this
year because
of reduced
income,
she added.
“As there is much unemployment
in the area where the Chicago Com-

This quartet of young Highland Park matrons are among
founding members of the Junior Division of the Chicago
Women’s
Committee for the National Jewish
Hospital in
Denver. They were photographed at last week’s Springtime
tea given by Mrs. Joel Goldblatt in her Lake Shore Drive
apartment. From left are: Mrs. John F. Nathan, Greenwood
Ave.; Mrs. Stephen M. Sickle, Balsam

Rd.; Mrs. Eugene

Bob-O-Link

Karon,

Rd.;

and

Mrs.

Sheldon

It was an enthusiastic group of
young women of Chicago and the
North Shore who gathered in the
near North side apartment of Mrs.
Joel Goldblatt last week to map
plans for a Junior Division of the
Chicago
Women’s
Committee
for
the
National
Jewish
Hospital
in
Denver.
Like
the
hospital
they
serve,
members of both senior and junior
groups are composed of women of
all faiths, nationalities and creeds.
Said Mrs. Nathan B. Bederman,
22 Lakewood PIl., the vice-chairman
of the Chicago Women’s Committee:
“The newly-formed Junior group
will plan a fund-raising project for
next
Spring
to aid the hospital
which is a free-care medical center in Denver, which helps tuberculosis,
asthma
and
heart
cases
amenable to surgery.
250,000 From Here
“Chicago alone has had over a
quarter of a million days of free
patient care at the National Jewish Hospital in Denver.
Patients,
like committee members, have always
been
non-sectarian,
since
‘pain knows no creed,’ has been a
philosophy of NJH since its founding and also the creed, ‘None may
pay who enter.’ ”

Among

other

young

Rd.,

Florsheim,
served for
sors of the
mittee.

and

Mrs.

Harold

Sheridan
Rd.,
have
several years as sponChicago Women’s com-

Mary Martin the actress, is national
president.

Two graduations, a month’s holiday in Europe to celebrate their
25th
wedding
anniversary,
a reunion with their son on the Spanish
Riviera, a wedding to attend and
two camping trips all add up to a
busy and happy summer for the
Alfred S. Alschulers Jr. of Sheridan Rd.
Their oldest son, Alfred III, will
be
graduating
Sunday,
June
11,
from Amherst College in Massachusetts; three days later, their daughter, Marilynn, will graduate from
Edgewood
school.
Another
son,
Arthur,
will
be
confirmed
next
Sunday at the North Shore Congregation Israel.
Their
son,
Lawrence,
missing
from all these gatherings, is presently living in Paris and studying
at the Sorbonne. (He’s a sophomore
at Wesleyan
University
in Connecticut.)

tary

of

Commerce

by

Wohne

evs

eR

s

May

25, 1961

benefit

and

which

is $15,000

$100,000

of the Auxiliary’s

pledge

to

‘the

building

his home in Highland Park, is @onating three hours of his famous
sweet

the

fund.
Musician

Brandon,

who

makes

the raceway
.

music

that’s

country

in top

known

across

entertainment

spots, as well as on TV

and radio.

there

the young point of view in shoes

President

University.

He

was

one

of 17

WHITES . . .

out

of 500 applicants to be selected for
admission
to the Department
of

Psychology

at

Harvard

Graduate

School next fall.

On

June

schuler

will

30,

Mr.

leave

and
for

Mrs.
Europe

Alto

celebrate their 25th wedding anniversary of Aug. 12. They plan to be
reunited with son, Larry, late in
July on the Spanish Riviera. Later,
he plans to go on to Italy to continue his studies.

For the hectic man

who has decisions to make and is

tired of twirling pencils, biting fingernails, chewing erasers,
tweaking

mustaches,

pulling

ear lobes, picking

lint off

suits, chomping cigars, scraping heels, cracking knuckles,
polishing

glasses,

winding

watches,.—-an

answer

might

be found here:

MID

An antiqued gold yo-yo*

made

in France that sells

to be coordinated,

we recom-

litmus paper.

Open

Inc.

Cobey’s

478 Central
(Open Thursday Nites)

Highland

HEEL

Thursday

AND
and

HIGH

Friday

Nights

“Waltins Sévcs)
THE

4 CE 4-3249

Thursday,

the

Racing their own sports cars will
be “Pete” Ludlow and Don Lightner of World Motors, who is providing the Auxiliary with the brit
liant red Triumph-Herald.
e

STONE

_

to

Woman’s Auxiliary, will feature the
music of Henry Brandon, his piano,
a bass player and a drummer, it
was announced this week. The fiveto-eight benefit will be held in Le
Pavillon, Northbrook, Monday evening,
June
5, financial
goal for

John F. Kennedy). The next day,
Arthur and Marilynn will leave for
their respective camps in Minnesota and New Mexico; Alf will take
off for summer school at Harvard

BRICK

blurr

tickets

will get a ride around
between races.

On June 26, the family will be in
Milwaukee for the wedding of the
Alschulers’ nephew, Jon Gudeman
to Joyce Lieberman
(Jon’s father
recently was named Under Secre-

mend this yo-yo as a deskweight, particularly suitable for

CONCRETE

BLUFF

sell

The
Highland ,Park Hospital’s
June
benefit, sponsored: by the

A Gift For the

* For the executive, too busy

Estimates

Richard A. Myles,

volunteers at the Highland Park —
Hospital, will have a chance to —

Brandon

Travels for Alschulers

for only 2.50.

PATIOS
Free

is located,

Henry

is even greater need for the services given the community,” she concluded. “It is hoped that generousminded citizens of Chicago, Highland Park and other North Shore
communities will make
donations
which will help balance the budget.”

Ln.

Mrs.
Albert
E. Jenner Jr., of
Kenilworth
greeted
guests, while
Mrs.
Nathan
Bederman
of Lakewood Pl., a senior sponsor, poured.

Graduations,

settlement

the benefit sponsoring committee
said.
:
ee
yes
Junior auxiliary ‘‘candy-stripers,

Highland

Parkers attending the tea, where
a color film of NJH, ‘They Go to
Live” was shown, were Mrs. David
D.
Matz,
Cloverdale,
a
charter
member with Mrs. Kenneth R. Rusnak (the former Sally Florsheim)
of Roger Williams Ave.; and Mrs.
Alfred N. Bederman
of Lakeside
Pl. Mrs. Percy Wilson of Bannockburn returned from California just
in time to attend.
Mrs.
Herbert
Altholz
of Dale
Ave., a member of the Senior committee for several years, will transfer her allegiance to the new Junior division. Mrs. Melvin
Straus,

Sheridan

mons

Pekow,

Rollingwood

The Triumph-Herald which th
Highland Park Hospital Auxiliary |
is giving as top prize in its June
5 benefit party at Le Pavillon res- —
taurant, Northbrook, will be going
to the sports car races at Meadow- —
dale Raceway in Carpentersville
Sunday Mrs. Irving Soboroff of —

YOUNG

POINT

Highland

Park

OF

VIEW

IN

SHOES

Park

499

Central,

ID 2-0172

Page H 15—D 23

|

�eH

te

At Home in Highland Park :
Following

Smoky
LA AAA AA

OS

&gt;THE

STEE

Restaurant

LOX

OF

O

and

LUCK!

You'll slowly lose your mind if you‘re hunting
a late snack anywhere but at The Steer.
. .. the sidewalks are rolled up.
We're open l-a-t-e !!

Reason

Delicatessen

But

not

for
here!

Complete delicatessen and bakery—
plus one heck of a good

restaurant.

a wedding

Mountains,

trip

Mr.

and

to

the

Mrs.

Carl E. Bernardi are at home at
2020 Green Bay Rd.
The bride is the former Wanda
Manfredini,
daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Natale Manfredini of Onwentsia Ave., and her husband is the
son
of the
Marco
Bernardis
of
Temple Ave.
They were married
April 8 in Immaculate Conception
church with the Rev. Donald
B.
Runkle officiating.
The bride wore an ivory satin
gown with Alencon lace insets and
seed
pearl
trim,
designed
with
chapel train. Her matching crown
held an illusion veil and she carried Amazon lilies, carnations and
stephanotis.
Miss Enrica Bernardi was maid
of honor;
bridesmaids were Miss
Carol Benvenuti, Miss Sharon
Margelli, Miss
Carla
Rossi, Miss
Betts’ Photo
Peggy Cortesi
and Miss Cheri
Cortesi. They wore bouffant-skirted
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Bernardi
lilac silk organza
gowns
with
matching tiaras and carried pink
and lavender carnations in cascade
bouquets.
Ronald Bernardi was best man;
ushering were Peter Dugan, Samuel
Manfredini, Edward Pasquesi, William Cortesi and Richard Watson.
A reception at the Highland Park
Woman’s Club followed the cereAdults
interested
in
Summer
mony.
painting and sketching classes are
Both Mr. Bernardi and his bride
invited to call the Suburban Fine
are
graduates
of Highland
Park
Arts Center, ID 3-1404, since the
High School.
schedule now is being prepared.

Adults’ Painting,

Try us!

Sketching Classes

We're

mon., Tues., WED., THURS., SUN.

OPEN—
WE

8:30 a.m.-Midnite

CATER

TO THOSE

WHO

LOVE

We cater to Bar Mitzvahs and sales meetings.

Begin June 26

FRI. &amp; SAT.

8:30 a.m.-2
TO EAT
— THE

a.m.

BEST

Dylan Thomas Play

The ultimate in Western dining pleasure.

At Country Day
School for May 26

DRIVE CAREFULLY — THE LIFE YOU SAVE
MAY

When
the
play,
“Under
Milk
Wood,” written by Dylan Thomas
shortly before his death, is given
Friday evening, May 26, at North
Shore Country Day School, Winnetka, almost all of the 36 senior
students will have a part on stage
or behind
scenes.
Curtain
is at
8:30 p.m.
Elizabeth Ames, daughter of the
Warren W. Ames of Central Ave.,
is one of the seniors working on
the
production.
Gerald
‘Terry’
Ostrom, son of the senior Gerald
Ostroms of Prospect Ave. will be
seeing the production but is too
busy with the school’s Spring baseball schedule to take part.

BE YOUR OWN

HARDWARE — BUILDING MATERIAL
LAWN &amp; GARDEN AND PATIO MATERIALS
TRAQE

new or EOE

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|

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DECORATIVE WALLS
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49c up

HARDWARE

08.55 cack leks Vinsisds dcssedansl $2.23 Qt.

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CLIPPER—25%

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a ‘Page H 16—D 24
ARP

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Breakers
NAME

IT!

CLIPPER AND

of

Mutual

Services

OFF—THIS

WEEK

SUPPLY ,.4,

Highland

Is Ticket

Chairman

Mrs. Edward Chase Jr. of Green
Bay Rd., is in charge of tickets and
reservations for the benefit. Mrs.

will
for the

Their exciting plans for an informal
country
benefit
at Wild
Rose
Farm,
in St. Charles, September
30, were
discussed
Monday afternoon when
members
of

Mrs. Stephen Sanders of Maple
Ave.
was
among
Highland
Park
volunteers who served at the Alice
Wood
Infant
Welfare station the
past month.

be

one

of the

meeting

co-host- ,

Monday.

GARRITY'S

Park »

Inc.

Open 7:45 to 5:30, Monday through Saturday.

Sunday,

10 to 12

N.W. Corner Skokie Highway &amp; Half Day Rd., Highland Park

We

;

Have

EVERYTHING
FOR

ONLY.

MUTUAL
of

Deerpath Center of the Infant Welfare
Society
met.
Mrs.
Charles
Cederberg,
Lake
Forest,
opened
her home for the meeting.

esses

GRASS

MOST COMPLETE SELECTION OF
MATERIALS IN THE AREA

TOOL RENTAL

will begin the week of
and
continue’
through
according to Mrs. Ruud,
secretary.

Chase

EP

Reg. $34.95 ...... ON SALE ONLY $26.20

BUILDING A
PATIO?

Classes
June
26
August 18,
executive

By Deerpath Group

A

EVERREADY WEED KILLER
A

3, 10

William Laurie will instruct
adults Thursday
afternoons
from
1 to 4 o’clock; Carl Schwartz,
Wednesday
afternoons
and
evenings.
Registration
for
Summer
classes will be held at the Center, .
654 Deerfield Rd., Highland Park,
Saturdays, June 3 and 10, from la
to 4 p.m.

f 5 5 0”

f-] SOLAR SCREEN BLOCKS FOR

LAWN &amp; GARDEN SPECIAL

Register June

+

~

Hours

‘

OUTDOOR

R

COOKING

ll

but the Grill!

|

T

From Charcoal to Steaks
From Lighter to Hot Dogs.

y’

Complete Line of Meats and Groceries.
——

S$

STOCK UP NOW ——

We will be closed all day Memorial Day,

DEERFIELD G RIDGE ROADS
Open Monday-Friday to 8:30

—

Sat.

to

6 —

Sun.

Thursday,

ID 2-9712
to Noon.

May

25,1961
3 asc

SORE aN

Soe

�says

ALL

FOR

Frolics

“FUN,

and

Fash-

ions in the Suburbs” was the
membership luncheon and style show
which
Highland
Park
B’nai_
B'rith
Women sponsored
Wednesday
noon,
May
24,
in
the
home
of
Mrs.
Seymour Cousin,

256

Oak

Knoll

Terr. From

left, are

Mrs. Samuel Robbins, vice-presi dent,
Mrs.
Jack
Ru bin, president;
Mrs. Leonard Levin,

program
man;
rome

chair-

and Mrs. JeFactor, show

commentator.

North

Shore

Group

Photo

Varied Art Program
Planned for Fall
Plans
for
a wide
and
varied
program in the arts to begin next
Fall are being
mapped
by new
committees of the Highland Park
Associates of the Woman’s Board
of the Art Institute of Chicago,
according to Mrs. Richard Ettling-

er

of

Wade

Street,

Associates’

chairman.
Study

groups,

exhibitions

at the

Recreation Center and trips to the
Art Institute are among highlights
of the program, in charge of Mrs.
Saul Bernstein of Waverly Road.

Serving on her committee are Mrs.
Myron
Melamed,
Mrs.
Maurice
Pollak,
Mrs.
Herbert
Baker
and
Mrs. Louis Heller.

Art at ‘Rec’

Center

Next year’s ‘Art at the Recreation Center” program will be in
charge of Mrs. J, Parker Hall. On
her
committee
for
this popular
activity will be Mrs. Bernard Nath,
Mrs. Ralph Ettlinger Jr., Mrs. Wil-

liam Anixter, Mrs. Henry Getz and
Mrs.

Glenn

Keats.

Other new chairmen and their
committees
include:
Mrs.
Glenn
Chell, by-laws;
Mrs.
Oliver Tut-

hill,

membership,

old Hughes

with

and Mrs.

Mrs,

Har-

William

Gold-

smith, members; Mrs. Baker, public
relations,
with
Mrs.
Robert
P.
Palmer, Mrs. Albert Kurtzon, Mrs.
Robert Schulman, Mrs. Leon Baker
and Mrs. Edwin Baker as members;
and Mrs. John Laurie, telephone
committee chairman.

by

This Pair of Busy
Young Matrons
Find Job Fun
Two
talented
young
Highland
Park matrons, Mrs. Frederic Pol-

lock, 2023 Linden Ave., and Mrs.
Leslie Axelrod, 1417 Ferndale, dea few

weeks

ago

to band

choreography and dance direction
for both children’s and adult thea-

One

of their

earliest

and

most successful ventures was doing
the choreography
for the recent
ORT musicale, “The Lady Is for
Learning.”
Mrs. Pollock, who is the mother
of
two
daughters,
studied
with
Merriel Abbott and Charles Bachman
and during
World
War
II,
choreographed shows at the Portsmouth Naval Base. Since then, she
has worked with many children’s
groups. She is a member of the Ex-

perimental
Shore

Theater

Dance

and

Hear

Highland

candy

Ravine

are

R. Sordyl

Drive

at

are
graduates
of
High School and

Juniors
Park-Ravinia

of
the
Highland
Center
of the
In-

fant

Society

Welfare

of

Chicago

who
have
worked
at
the
Thrift Shop in Highland Park during the past two months are: Mrs.
Strecker, Mrs. Edward Olson, Mrs.
Warren
Wilner, Mrs.
Jack Copp,
Mrs.
Max
Harnden,
Mrs.
Harold
Phillips, Mrs. Chester Jones, Mrs.
Henry Chase and Mrs. J. E. Hunt-

and

er.

speech
in the

directed

both
and

home

at

and

The
FOR

North

Shore

ise
“a
ICE

Thursday, May 25, 1961

of the Glencoe

Public

Library
scheduled
for June.
Included
are
some
of his
photographs of actors, children and abStract art.

notes that Stein does a lot of youth

“more

our

coin-op-

dispens-

ales

KING

‘
CUBES

SIZE

LARGE

BAG
ICE

|

DAILY |
BAG

CRUSHED

CUBES

ICE

175

ice

DISPENSER

2037 ST. JOHNS
AVENUE
Just

North

of

Elm

St.

DRIVE CAREFULLY— THE LIFE
MAY BE YOUR OWN

Aroma

MEMORIAL

Tells
DAY

You

It?s Baked

WEEKEND

OUTDOOR

In

Our

YOU SAV ‘:

Kitchen”

EATING!

[9
Reg.

GERMAN
CHOCOLATE
CANASTA .....

F. Stein Jr. of 275 Laurel
has an exhibit in the Ham-

work
and
that children
are
his
main
photographic
interest;
but
describes the theater pictures as

Lake Forest; Mrs. Chase, Mrs. J.
E. Hunter, Mrs. Van Dobeus, Mrs.
Harnden and Mrs. Robert Moore.

ice

OPEN

HIGHLAND PARK
ICE CO.

Dance

Cunningham,

Chell,

of

in strong,

ICE
DISPENSER

choreog-

A, J. Freiler, chairman of the
library’s art selection committee,

Glenn

supply

HAMBURGER BUNS — HOT DOG ROLLS

the
the

Recent
Infant
Welfare
station
workers include: Mrs. Donald King,
Mrs. Harold Phillips, Mrs. James

Mrs.

night, you can
get
an
ample

COIN OPERATED

the

Highland
Park
Mrs. Hirsch at-

“Where

Stein’s Photo Art
In Glencoe Exhibit
Room

Anytime, day or

erated
er.

raphed city-wide playground festivals in Racine, Wis, Before moving
to Highland
Park,
she produced
musicals in Skokie, and at the U.S.
Naval Training Cenrter in Great

mond

chute

Workshop.

modern dance group at
University
of Wisconsin
University of Missouri.

B.
Ave.

Brethren

ICE CUBES
ALWAYS ON TAP

at

of

tended the University of Michigan.

dance, taking part in Orchesis, the

ident of the
Workshop.

United

waterproof bags

Lakes. She is immediate past pres-

Juniors at Work

Au

of the local club.

Mrs. John

now

in August

5 in Bethany Methodist and Ey
gelical

Park.

Wed

plan to be married

cubes

and also the

late Mr. Hirsch.
The
young
couple
were
married in Chicago and honeymooned
at Palm Springs, Calif.

They

St.,

t

MecDaniels
Ave.,
are
announcing
the
February
marriage
of their
daughter, Marlene Fay, to William
R.
Hirsch,
son
of
Mrs.
Joseph

of

Bloom

DISPENSER

Sordyl-Hirsch Vows
Read in February

Hirsch

of

To

They

al

‘Summing-Up’

tion; the Juniors

and

Winklers

Both Joyce and her fiance
graduates of Highland Park
School.

the North

University of Wisconsin in
and drama
with a minor

has

Charles

scholarship
fund
for teachers
of
exceptional children.
Several Juniors of the Highland
Park
club
attended
the banquet
with Mrs. Katie Ozborn, president
of the General Federation of Women’s Clubs, as special guest.
Dr.
Bergen
Evans, speaking on “The
Responsibilities
of Being
Intelligent,”
was
the
popular
banquet
speaker.
Also starred at the convention
was
Dr.
Bowden
Hunt
of
the
Juvenile
and
Domestic
Relations
Court in Florida.
It was through
his efforts that ‘‘A Day in Court”
program was begun by the Federa-

Mr,

Engagement Revealed

Mrs. Louise Buss of Owen, Wis.,
is announcing the engagement of
her daughter, Joyce, of Washington
St.,
Highwood,
to
Charles
Winkler
Jr.,
son
of
the
senior

The girls heard reports and final
summing-up
of state Junior projects including service to the Brai
Research
Foundation
by _ selling

Mrs.
Axelrod,
who
has
four
young sons, has a degree from the

She

Buss-Winkler

to-

gether and become career girls.
Now, as Leah, Inc. (each has that
first name), the duo is providing

tricals.

When the 66th annual convention
of the Illinois Federation of Women’s Clubs was held recently in
che Sherman Hotel, Chicago, severil members of the Junior Auxiliary of the Highland Park Woman’s
Club took part.
Mrs.
Daniel
MeGavock,
newlyinstalled president of the Juniors,
and Mrs. Russell Meyers, retiring
presidet,
were
delegates.
Taking
part in the fun and glamour
of
“Junior
Day’
were
Mrs.
Gale
Hansen, Mrs. Remo Picchietti, Mrs.
Thomas Ducey, Mrs. Eugene Negro,
Mrs. Fred Harris and Mrs. Dudley
Clausing.

“trick-or-treat”

Zeloof-Stuart

cided

Junior Auxiliary Has
Part in Federation
Convention in City

mM
&amp;
{

IT’S ON THE FIRE! A familiar phrase
that will be oft repeated now that the
popularity of hamburgers and weiners
are at their seasonal height.
And our
convenient
size big yp
packages
of
hamburger buns and hot dog rolls will
add to the pleasure of your out-ofdoor eating.

90c

NORMANDY COFFEE CAKE
Plain or Blueberry
We

Will

Be

Closed

All Day

Memorial

Day,

Tues.,

May

30. |

BAUM S PASTRY SHOP.
620 Central

Ave.

hi ) 2.0815 |

sophisticated.”
Page

H 17—D

25
ge

es

+: ‘al

�er

Parents Are Told

x

Name Gary Woolley

Home Ec Students

As President of
Opinions expressed in this de-

Mike

Editor,
have read
k

news

in

the

about

Highland

the

aining

to the

for

Lieutenant

on

partment

Bonamarte

controversy

recent

examina-

of

Police

t.

I

realize

lecide
,

that

a legal
but

as

a

ce
ion

one

the
for

felt that

retired

courts

it was

only

Highland

Park

Captain,
to
voice
on this matter.

my

e of my duties while
ain
of
the
Highland
ce was to be in charge
onnel.
Chief
Schmieg

had

many

discussions

I

was
Park
of all
and
I

on the

mat-

rer before a Juvenile Bureau

was

‘reated on the Department as
would be the best officer
force to handle the position
penile Officer. There was
2 else, in my

ualify

for

opinion,

the

position

e Bonamarte,

Sr.

-all patrolmen
wished

motional
of

0

to,

the

could

except

It was

agreed

should

take

the

for

the

examination
to

Juvenile
Sr.

be

assigned

Bureau.
placed

promotional

to
on
of
no

(not Sergeants)

Sergeant

onamarte,

who

Mike

second

examination

on
giv-

the Civil Service CommisThe
Officer
who
placed
ighest on the test has since left

the Highland

Park

Police

Force.

liscussion which
indicated
that
he officer appointed to this posiion would come to a “dead end”

y accepting the position of JuvenOfficer,

Therefore,

according

0 all Civil Service Rules and
state Statutes, our Highland Park
Juvenile
er

n

a

Officer

must

patrolman

or

1959 when
given
for
geant,

the
the

everyone,

now
a

be

sergeant

examination
position
of
including

my-

, considered the Juvenile Offia Sergeant of Police, there, it was out of the question

_he should take a competitive
ination

for

sergeant.

His

were staggered
in such
a
nner that it would permit him

be on duty as Sergeant when
r sergeants were off-duty. For
past 34%4 years he has been the
Sergeant on duty on Sundays
» Chief,
Captain
and
other
all matters requiring an imate Sergeant’s decision were
rred to him. This also gave

opportunity to hold conwith parents who could

be available on any day except
sunday. He also acted in a super-

isory capacity by conducting

“in

service”

the

fodd

training

shift”

classes

for

patrolmen,

ie.,

1imal Warden, the Meter
the Motorcycle Officer,
sidentally,

are

doing

the
Man,
who,

“different”

k but are considered qualified
take promotional examinations.
would

my

further

opinion,

like

Sgt.

e, Sr., is one

to

add

Mike

of the

that
out-

ding policemen on the Highind
Park Department
and _ his
years of experience in police
k should surely qualify him to
the examination
for Lieunt, even though he is now
ened to the Juvenile Bureau.

lis knowledge of police work is
xcellent but he has an unusual
ibility for handling juveniles and
his, together with his knowledge

all police work,

including laws

aining to adults as well as
iles, should make him doubly
ed
for
any
promotional
mination.

Earl U. Lempinen, Retired
Highland Park Police Capt.
ge

H 18—D

Editor,

On

DHS Council Board
Gary
Woolley,
Deerfield
High
School
sophomore,
was
elected
president
of the Deerfield
High

School Student Council Executive
Board for the school year 1961-62
by the newly elected council board
ed

Monday,

tended

a

May

City

15,

when I

Council

at-

meeting

for the first time, I was amazed
and chagrined to see the belligerance
with
which
Councilman

Barret

Mason

greeted

Tom

Gor-

don
who
was making
a plea in
behalf
of
Sgt.
Mike
Bonamarte
Sr.
In a sententious tone Mr. Mason
asked Mr. Gordon, “What is your
interest in this?” as though Mr.
Gordon were a bookie asking for
permission to open a new establishment!
With
great
forbearance,
Mr.

Gordon

explained

that

he

is

have

been

delighted

that

a

citi-

zen is concerned with the retention of outstanding policemen like
Sgt. Bonamarte, particularly since
there is an appalling turnover in
the 32-man police force (17 have
left in five years).
With regard to Sgt. Bonamarte,

he

not

only

officer,

made

but

the

on

May

only

recorded

at

28,

perfect

the

Institute

police

throughout

the

Despite

of

Ap-

departments

world,

the

fact

that

he

wears

sergeant stripes on his police
form, receives sergeant’s pay

uniand

passed the test for juvenile officer with the rank of sergeant, he
was

told

take

that

the

he

was

civil

ineligible

service

to

test

for

lieutenant.

The
Frank

technical reason given by
Nosek of the Civil Service

Commission

marte
test

was

that

Sgt.

Bona-

had never taken the regular

for

sergeant.

At

the

time

this

made sense to me, although I later
learned that Bonamarte had taken
and passed the test in 1946, but
perhaps

In

it was

any

mains

in

“Can

a

outdated.

event,
our

officer

sergeant

city—

the

not

be

Allan

I, Simon

is no

Bonamarte

excellent job
our town, He

police

Sr.

that

has

Mich-

done

an

for the citizens of
is a credit to our

department

and

to the

city

of Highland Park. The first people
to acknowledge
this fact,
I am
certain, are the very people who

he now accuses of unfairness.
It is not my intention to delve
into

the

as to why

highly

Mike

technical

treas-

of Boys’

Club.

reasons

was not permitted

A
170

“Fashion
Fantasy” featuring
home
economics
students
at

Highland

Park

High

School

will

Hess,

social

Sophomore

students

selected

Bole, treasurer; Kris
social chairman.

the

Rander-

Boys’ Club officers for next year
will be
James Grossfeld, vice-president;
Charles
Burkhardt,
secretary; Brad Schlessinger, treasurer.
Girls’
Club
leadership
is vested
in Kathy Magnus,
vice-president;

Bonnie

West,

secretary;

Bonnie

Betterman,
treasurer;
Annette
Gamm, publicity chairman.

Italian

Women

Meet

Italian Women’s Prosperity Club
will meet
Thursday,
May
25, at
8 p.m. in the Community Center.
Mrs. John Baldi, chairman of the
benefit dance to be held May 27
will report.
A
special
program
mothers
of the
club

passed

the

age

of

honoring
who
have

70,

has

been

arranged by Mrs. Gene Pedrucci,
social chairman. Refreshments will

sewing

phase

of

her

home

eco-

nomics course this year. Girls were
allowed to choose their own patterns and materials and work with

minimum

help

from

the

teacher.

Clothes to be modeled
represent
from eight to 12 weeks from planning and construction to working
on actual modeling.
Mrs.

Joanne

Plimpton

and

Reid,

Miss

Mrs.

Francis

Gladys

Cairn-

A

reception

is

planned

the
sing.

after

the

show.

Three Hich Schoo!
Winners in Annual

Writing Contest
Three Highland Park High school
students
were
award
winners
in
the
thirty-first
annual
writing
tournament of the Scholastic Press

Guild

of Chicago.

Tom
Elias, a senior who
next
year will be editor of Shoreline,
the
high
school
weekly
newspaper and who at present is sports

editor of the paper, won first prize
in the sports writing class in
extemporaneous
division
of
tournament,

Daryl

MaclIntire,

a senior,

the
the

won

to take the Civil Service examination for lieutenant,
if in the
considered judgment of the com-

mission
further

in

by

daughters

of

the

mothers.

board,

he did not qualify.
prove the fairness of
the

chairman

stated

To
the

in pub-

lic that he hoped that the courts
would overrule their decision.
I am

deeply

concerned

over

the

effect that confusing headlines and
unsubstantiated
statements
garding
our
City
Manager

reand

Chief

the

of Police

may

have

on

morale
of our citizens regarding
our system of government and its
officers. Both Snyder and Schmieg

were

publicly

pressure

of the
cuser

to

accused

influence

commission.
was

asked

of

the

the

ac-

substantiate

his claim, he again referred to that
mysterious

“someone.”

of the Crop” luncheon of the Guild
the

It is

again

bers

that

confidence

that

the

accuser

the

council

in such matwas to shake

we

have

in

our
form
of government
or its
people, I am most confident that

this action

has failed

to do so.

The citizens of Highland
Park
have high regard for their officials

and recognize their integrity and
sincere devotion to duty, Until
such
the

time we
contrary,

have
evidence
to
let
us
encourage

them to continue
in our behalf.

at

Co.

Mr.

Carson,

Lloyd

Plan Field Trip
To Wisconsin

administration,

for

Room

and

HS Archaeologists

land

well

Scott

Wendt, editor of Chicago’s American, was the main speaker at the
luncheon.
A total of 397 entries were received in the contest, 209 in the
submitted division and 188 in the
extemporaneous division. Dr. John
Munski,
publications
director
at
the High
school, assisted in the
judging
of material
in the contest.

the unanswerable smear of, “when
did stop beating your wife.”
The entire matter was obviously brought to the attention of the
council to embarrass Ralph Snyder, Chief Schmieg and the city
full

Highland

Pirie

decision

When
to

using

our message
community.

to
In

would

second place in the poetry class in
the extemporaneous
division. Michael Feingold,
a junior,
gained
honorable
mention
in the
essay
class in the submitted division.
The awards were announced last
Saturday, May 20, at the “Cream

served

again direct
adults of the

Each girl will model,at least one
garment she has fashioned in the

During
the
intermission,
high school boys’ chorus will

Paul

We
the

an article in the NEWS last week,
we explained the organization of
the 1961 Junior Prom, “Southern
Side
O’Heaven.”
We
hoped
this

Bob
son,

treasurer;

chairman.

Party Plans

be held this evening, May 25 in
the main
auditorium.
The
show,
open to the public without charge,
will start at 8:15 p.m.

following slate: Neil Hirsch, vicepresident; Sherry Rubin, secretary;

dreis,

the
question

president

has no jurisdiction
ters. If the intent

Editor,

There

ael

re-

wear
and

Sharp,

About After-Prom

Show Tonight

cross of the home economics department, have assisted the girls.
Lesley Jones, Suzanne Hemsworth,
Judy Osborne, Peggy Womack and
Gail Kroll have planned and directed the production.

knew

Mrs,

Dear

enigma

All-American

police

chevron of a
a sergeant?”

the

Ray

elect-

Johnson,

Other
junior
officers
will
be:
Jon Johnson, vice-president; Joan
Schiffer, secretary; Michaele Won-

honored

he

and

was

Jane

ever

He is also the identification officer of our police department and
his name
is prefaced by sgt. on
an
identification:
booklet
which

to

Frantz,

1959,

score

Fleming

All school
elections, sponsored
by the Student Council, were completed yesterday, May 17, at Deerfield
High
School.
Fred
Teeter
was elected president of the junior
class; Alan Reeder, president of the
sophomore class; Martha Rudolph,
president of Girls’ Club and Peter

be

plied Science, School of Scientific
Crime Detection, Chicago.

goes

secretary;

juvenile

is a unique

John

vice-president;

urer.

the

father of three children. Also, in
coaching the Mighty Midgets—12
to 14-year-old football players at
the
Recreation
Center—he
has
worked
with
Sgt. Bonamarte
on
several
occasions
and
is greatly
impressed
with
his
outstanding
qualifications.
Mr. Gordon, who is a graduate
of the University of Illinois with
a
B.S.
in
Education
and _ postgraduate
credits
in political science, is a respectable businessman
and
taxpayer.
As
a_ responsible
and dedicated citizen of our community, his reasons for appearing
before
the
Council
should
NOT
have
been
questioned,
especially
NOT in a surly fashion!
Indeed, the Councilmen should

Bona-

truly

reflect

members.

Dear

Zeants are off duty on Sundays)

the
rences

always

the views of the NEWS. Letters
must be held to 250 words and
signed with the correct name
and address of the writer, whose
name will not be printed if good
reason for withholding is given.

question
the

not

on

» Highland Park Police Departow

do

Present Fashion

The

Archaeology

Park

High

Club

of

High-

School

is

spon-

soring a field trip to Wisconsin
on Saturday, May 27.
The trip is open to both memare

of

the

Club

and

those

who

interested.

The tour will include a visit to
the Milwaukee
Public
Museum,
where
is displayed
the world’s
largest collection of Indian
artifacts, and to Aztalan State Park,
where
a
restored
village
of
a
branch
of the Aztec
Indians
of
Mexico is located.
Tickets
for the
excursion
are
on sale in the High School Book
Store for $1 per person. The bus

will

leave

from

the

bus

work

at 8 am.
and return at 5 p.m,
George
Etu, Club president,
has

Lou

Kahn

advised.

the fine work

done

in

Prom as
for local

teens.

This week, we would like to discuss
after
prom
entertainment.
This is the part of the evening that
many parents fear. In many areas,
parents feel forced to give in to
their childrens’
bizzare pleas for
more
money
so
that
they
may
attend night clubs and adult spots
after
the
dance
“because
everybody’s doing it.”
Parents in Highland Park should
feel free to let their children do
what
‘everybody’s”’
doing
after
Prom in Highland Park.
The Student Activities Committee is sponsoring an after prom party for all
Township High School District No.
113
students
right
in
Highland
Park.
Student
Activities
Committee,
which
sponsors
events
including
the High School New Year’s Eve
party, during the year, is holding
the after-Prom
in ‘Honor of the
Juniors.
Mrs.
Donald
Sims
and
Newman
‘Red’
Fell
have
helped
SAC in planning this party.
So that students are not tempted
to spend the early morning hours
driving
into the city, the
afterProm party is traditionally a continuation
of Prom.
It is festive,
well-chaperoned
and
welcomes
well behaved young men and women.
The
after-Prom
will
be
held
in the
main
ballroom
of Hotel
Moraine-On-The-Lake, less than six
blocks from the site of Prom itself.
Students who drive will have their
cars parked in the well guarded
area provided by the hotel.
The after-Prom dance is open to
students
and former
students
of
HPHS
and Deerfield High School
and their dates.
The tickets will be sold at the
door. This is certainly better entertainment for less money than could
be found in a reputable Chicago
night spot.
The band of Henry Brandon, who
will provide
dance music
at the

Prom,

will

have

a smaller

combo

for dancing at the after-Prom.
The party at the Moraine
will
begin
at 12:30 am.
a half hour
after the high school dance is officially over.
This will give the

students
with

adequate

time

to

chat

friends,

leave

the

high

arrive

at the

their

school

and

Moraine,

but only the most determined will
have a chance
to find trouble
either
in
parked
cars
or
with
liquor.
Any teen-ager with liquor on his
breath will be denied admittance
to the SAC
sponsored after-prom
party.
The 3 a.m. closing hour of the
after-Prom
can
make
the
two
dances a long glamorous evening
for many
and may obliviate the
need for a barrage of parties beginning at dawn.
Chaperones for the after-Prom
have been chosen to represent the

parents

of students

in each

of the

four classes.
This is not ‘a party
only
for
juniors,
though
their
wishes have been given consideration in planning theme and decor.
Simple food will be provided by
the Student
activities committee.
Decorations
will carry
out the
antebellum theme of the Prom.

entrance

their good

show

organizing and conducting
a safe, glamorous evening

(This
the

article,

NEWS

pared
School

last

and

the

week,

by
Highland
students.)

26

Park

ursday, May
Mead

ix

‘4
By obaN ae en
to aha
BN

‘

story
were

is

i

;

in
pre-

High

25, 1961

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i coats

Girl Scout Camping Program

Beach

For Summer Nears Completion
Girl Scouts from 18 neighborhoods in Moraine Girl Scout
Council are checking their camping gear for those adventures
Plans for Council-operated established
camp, troop camp, and day camps are nearing completion and
registrations are already being received in the Council offire
at 580 Central Ave., according to Mrs. Robert Nereim, volunin

the

out-of-doors.

teer coordinating the Council camp program
Miss Frances Kinnett, a teacher
in the Crestwood school in Northbrook, has been employed to direct
Established
Camp
to be held at
Camp
Kiawassa
near
Woodstock.

She

is a former

Girl

Scout

this year.

help the troops with their program.
Registrations
for
this
event
are
being accepted in the Council office and will close June 6.

profes- |

Day

sional with 18 years camping experience in Iowa,
Indiana, and
Alabama.
Having come in to the
Girl Scout program as a 9-year-old,
she brings to the camp
program
some special skills in crafts. Questioned about her hobbies, she revealed she loves singing and music
and also admitted with some hesitation that she can play the bugle.
First
session
of Established
Camp will be held from June 29 to
July 12 and the second session begins July 13 and lasts until July
26. Registrations are made by mail
only to the Moraine Council office
and will be made on a first come,
first served, basis until they are
closed June 5. The camp site is a
wooded tract with natural springs,
stream and pond about one mile
west of Woodstock.
Campers live

xas'y

Pele |

Camp

Safe

Has Thorns

Two

out-of-town

registered

beach

users

with

High-

complaints

land Park police last weekend.
Stephen

returned

McPartlin

to

his

Hawthorne

Ln.

to find

back

cubes

the
on

the

of Lake

car
at

Bluff

parked

on

2

a.m.

Sunday

seat

torn

and

ice

floor.

Mary
Smith,
18, of
vale,
Skokie,
reported
from her purse.

7824
$4

Kedtaken

Driver

Honored

G. J. Hammond of 612 Pleasant
Ave.,
having
driven
without
an
accident for 23 years, was honored
by the Shell
Oil Co. He
is an
aviation
representative
for
the
firm.

Engineer

Honored

Richard Giangiorgi of 337 Western
Ave.,
Highwood,
is a new
member of Pi Tau Sigma mechanical engineering
honor society at
Marquette University.

When

you are ill

When

He

Call your Doctor
Prescribes

Call Morrie!
at ID 3-2525

Park-Sheridan

Pharmacy

Park Ave. at Sheridan Rd.
24 Hr. Phone Service
Free Delivery

“Prescription Service” means
“Park Sheridan”

Program

Day
camping,
to
be
held
at
several sites throughout the council jurisdiction, is camping by the
day
under
the
supervision
of a
trained director
and qualified
counselors who help girls learn to
live simply and happily in the outof-doors. The program will include
outdoor cooking, songs and games,
camp-crafts,
dramatics,
nature
study
and
handicrafts.
Locations
already announced are at Ft. Sheridan,
Lake
Bluff
and
Mundelein.
Registrations will be accepted until
June 1.
Further
information
and
camp
folders are available
at Moraine
Council headquarters, Mrs. Nereim
announced.

Two

Hurt in Crash

in tents on wooden floors, arranged |
Richard Kauchak of 1816 Davis,
Whiting,
Ind.,
was
ticketed
for
negligent
driving
after
colliding
with
a utility
pole
on Lambert
Tree Ave. at Groveland at 7:12 a.m,
Saturday, Highland Park police report.
He suffered
lacerations to the
knee and hand. His passenger, Judy

in units.
Prepared meals will be
served in the dining hall, except
when
the
units
plan
their own
cook-outs.
Troop Camp Slated
Three sessions of a Council-operated Troop Camp will be held at
the same
site, beginning
Sunday,
June
18 and
continuing
through
June 24.
Each session will be of
two days duration. Troop camping
is an experience in which the troop
with its leader spends an overnight
or longer in the out-of-doors, with
troop members cooking their own
meals, and planning their own program for each day. A camp director, a nurse, and volunteer program
consultants
will
be
available
to

Jancosek of 258 Indianapolis, Whiting,
suffered
facial
lacerations.
Both
were
treated
at
Highland
Park Hospital.
Damage
listed at $550 totalled

the car, and $60 damage to the pole
is

listed.

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Assembled

Introductory offer saves you $5.00.
Ask us about it.

ID 23001

Je
1833 Second St.
Thursday, May 25, 1961

O'NEILL'S
ACE

iwen
Highland

1746 SECOND
Park

ST.

HARDWARE
ID 2-1150

Bring your lawn problems to our Lawn Program Advisors. They have the
know-how and the experience to help you achieve the kind of lawn you want.

‘
.

Page

27

�—
esi

aya
MR

Administered

al

write

the

by

BALDRIDGE READING SERVICES

2

of Greenwich, Connecticut

Improves

comprehension,

rate, and

enhances

makes painting.

‘50 easy!

JEWEL
INSTANT

4-3000

Suspend

flat finish for walls and ceilings

DRIVE CAREFULLY — THE LIFE YOU SAVE
MA’ BE YOUR OWN

For nearest Jewel dealer, see
Phone Book Yellow Pages,
or phone SEeley 3-2430,

| Paul
bt el

ll

a

al

a

i

Damage

Licenses

Sargent

of 850

Dean

Ave.

ee

ABBOTT

HOUSE

Fiberglass

POOLS

1233

a

lifetime
BY

BORREGARD

R.GlenJ. RockBORREGARD DElta
CO., 6-5333
INC.
Illinois

;

oN

Q Waukegan,

| 25,000
E Choice Color

GERANIUMS
|

elie
elie
ele

are just completing another brand-new wing with even
finer accommodations, including air-conditioning, intercommunication

i

al

a

Plus

of ‘pleasure

Friendliness

system, etc.

Almost all are single rooms—occasional doubles.
Yes, Abbott House is a nursing home. But people see it also
as a dignified residence, a fine hotel, a place to rest and
recuperate, a haven for the elderly, and a friendly, comfortable dwelling, all rolled in one.
In addition to modern beauty, convenience, comfort and friendliness, we offer Registered Nurse supervision and 24-hour
nursing care. Ask your doctor about us.

F
}
}
)
P
: From residents, their doctors, their relatives and their friends,
we get compliments and thanks.
If you have a problem which Abbott House can help you solve,
we shall be happy to have you contact us.
i
j
d
d
j IDlewood

2-6080

OR

SSE

ABBOTT

PES

HOUSE

whe.

. insures

— BEAUTIFUL

Now Abbott House is even newer!

We

40 YEARS’
EXPERIENCE

MODERN

Comfort — Convenience —

to Your Taste and
Landscaping

Construction

—

sie

NEW

Styled

site... ste.

Exclusively

alia

The Highland Park Nursing Home
Glas Crete

The Highland Park Nursing Home
Oe

405
ae

ES

mL

NER

GE AEM UgERN

Seder

SQEee

MRP

Central
Tee

agree

ae

Avenue
a

Commencement

eager

Is

Friday, June 2
Commencement exercises for 22
Hebrew
school students of North

Suburban

Three Highland Parkers
are
named
on the current list from
Springfield of drivers’
licenses
revoked
for three
moving
violations.
They
are
Alice
Davis
of
1799
Rosemary
Rd.,
Eugene
J.
O’Riley of 2419 St. Johns Ave., and

PAINT

enjoyment

Small

cause.

Delroy
Mayer
of
Green
Bay,
Wisc., was waved around by a fellow trucker as the northbound Half
Day Rd. light turned green. Nate
Pastel of 1099 Merrill St., Winnetka, started to pass Mayer at the
same time.
A trailer tire rubbed Pastel’s car,
doing $20 damage.

him.

NEW!

Dean

as to the

oiia

ag

or

clues

but

afin

CE

call

Valley

ole

information

few

Skokie

afternoon,

ele

detailed

with

on

pie

For

cense

a car

Thursday

semi-

ote

BARAT COLLEGE

found

Crystal Lake as he turned west
out of the cutoff.
Howard was ticketed for failure
to yield or have his driver’s li-

and

last

a

ste

ADULTS

July 11 to July 31

a

Rd.

between

ofte.

—

trailer

report.

She was a passenger of westbound
Anne
Caringello
of
117
Maple Ave., Highwood, whose car
was
hit
by
Walter
Howard
of

brush

investi-

ote.

GRADES

June 19 to July 10

police

a

police

.stte.

:

Individual Programs for:
10-12 — COLLEGE STUDENTS

Park

gated

Park

she.

land

Students Learn
SUPERIOR READING SKILLS

Highland

ttie..wie... sie... wie... ste..otte...sthe

[SUMMER READING PROGRAM

May
Morelli was bruised in a
crash at Skokie Valley and Half
Day Rds. Tuesday last week, High-

afte.

|

Beth El School's

Car, Semi Bump

| Crash at Cincke

Synagogue

Beth

El will

be held Friday evening, June 2, at
7:30 in the auditorium with Rabbi
Philip L. Lipis giving the charge
to the graduating class.
Dr.
Louis
Katzoff,
director
of
religious
education,
will
present
the class; Bernard H. Sokol, chairman of the school board, will distribute diplomas. Eli Field, president of the congregation, will accept the class gift. Cantor Jordan
Cohen, with Arnold Miller as accompanist, will participate in the
Sabbath Eve service.
A reception following the service will be given by parents in honor of the graduates.
Following
are the graduates:
Fred Benson, Jerrold Carl, Jeffrey
Edelman,
David
Eisenberg,
Paul
Eisner,
Kerry
Frumkin,
Michael
Goldman,
Alan Gordon, David
Hazelkorn, Philip
Heller, Lloyd
Kasper,
Jason
Kravitt,
Benjamin
Kugler.
Also, Marvin
Lerner,
Linda
Reuben, Marc Ringel, Alan Robin,
Leslie
Schwartzman,
William
Shapiro, Rodney
Slutzky, Jerrold
Stempel and Leah Zell.

Eisen

Is Elected

Student

Chairman

Stephen Eisen, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Eisen, 149 Deere Park
Ct., junior
at the
University
of
Pennsylvania, recently was elected
chairman
of Houston Hall board,
the undergraduate student governing body of the school.
In mid-May, he was elected to
Sphinx,
the honorary
society for
next year’s senior men.
He also is
president of Phi Epsilon Pi fraternity and a member of Phi Kappa
Beta, junior honor society.

Captains

Golf Team

Peter Cimbalo, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Peter Cimbalo,
580 Chicago
Ave., a junior
at Western
State
College
in Macomb,
IIl., is cocaptain of the school’s golf team,
which has won ten matches, tied
two and lost one.
The team has
toured a number of cities, the first
visit being Houston, Texas. Cimbalo
is majoring in physical education.

ee
ave

ready for spring planting
Smaller cog Geraniums :
3 for |$1.00
.00 co

e STEERING
e SHOC K ABSORBERS
e FRONT END SUSPENSION

_ANNUALS- PERENNIALS

s

SEEDS
SHRUBS
SHADE TREES
TUBEROUS
BEGONIAS
EVERGREENS
FERTILIZERS
GRASS SEED
IMPATIENS
PLANTS
Complete Planting Service

‘
aa

MAKE

Let our experts put your car

in perfect shape for summer driving.

We have Hellwigs and Overload Springs
in stock for all ‘61 Cars!

KINDLEIN S FLORIST
}
Free Delivery © Open 7 a.m.-9 p.m. 7 days a week.
ce.
Flowers by Wire
CE 4-2764
|
1390 Skokie Hwy., Lake Forest

SAFETY A BY-WORD

DAHL'S
2058

FIRST ST.

AUTO

RECONSTRUCTION
ID 2-0077

i L

ea
oi
is
ye

pia

Page
a

28

Thursday, May 25, 1961

�Radios
When

Charles

radio missing

Healy

Phone

Gone

he

has

Theel

from

for

Someone

noticed the

the red Austin-

there,

sale

Earl

Crash

Annoys
has been phoning
544

Schwartz

of

over

past

the

County

three

Line

months,

Jack
Rd.

and

breathing heavily instead of talking, Highland Park police are told.

Podolsky, assistant sales manager,
checked around the World Motors
lot on Skokie Highway and found
a radio missing from a black Triumph also.

As many as 50 of the annoying
calls have
been received
on a

weekend,

police

say.

at Hickory

Edward A. Greenwald of 1477
Arbor Ave. got a ticket for negligent driving after a rear-end collision

with

Henry

Santostefano

of

885 Central Ave. Monday last week
turned
as Santostefano
driveway, Highland Park
port.

into his
police re-

Two Highland Park residents were among the 38 Lake
Forest College students honored for outstanding scholastic
achievement and participation in campus activities during the
past year. They were singled out for recognition at a special
Honors Day Convocation May 9. Left to right: President William Graham Cole congratulates Mrs. Robert Breger, the former Diane Siegman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl H. Siegthe

McPher-

son Prize for Excellence in Scholarship in Philosophy

by Pro-

man

of

176

Sheridan

Road,

who

was

awarded

fessor Robert L. Sharvy; and Gerald M. Panter, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Daniel A. Panter of 162 Prospect Ave., who was awarded

a

Sao

ee

:

Home Interphone lets caller identify himself through outside speaker
while you answer the door confidently by picking up the nearestphone.

Room to room calls can
_ be answered hands-free.

,

the Sterling Price Williams Prize for Merit and Promise in the
Study of Psychology by Dean Howard H. Hoogesteger. Mrs.

FAIR BRINGS YOU
Breger iso January grads of Lake Fores Colle, while | = SPIRING PHONE
FULL”
A “HOME

DRIVE CAREFULLY — THE LIFE YOU SAVE
MAY BE YOUR OWN

any

Bell Chime—Centrally located in your home,
it announces calls with a pleasant chime.

Wonder-

sounds. A pleasant chime, a loud
bell to bring you from outdoors and

with

most all of us after forty—just means the eyes can no
longer focus from far to near objects. So see your

eye physician (M.D.) for eye examination. If he
prescribes bifocals, remember there are umpteen
kinds—but only one bifocal right for your work,
your kind of play, your way of walking or reading
a book. Here at H.O.V., we take infinite care to select

just the right one for you. That’s why you enjoy
wearing H.O.V. bifocals.
FOR EYE EXAMINATION

che Hfoyse of Vision ™

Bell’s

ILLINOIS

BELL

the familiar telephone ring.

a

Extra Lines permit two people to
phone at the same time. Each line

can have its own number and share
all your extensions.
Additional Listings in the telephone directory make it easy for
other people to find any member of
your family.

Call your Illinois Bell business
office or ask your installer-repairman about the many new services
that cost so little—yet do so much
for you. Better still, come

Bee:
—

on down

to your telephone business office
and see for yourself, at the Spring
Phone Fair.

eens

out in order to read, you probably need bifocals.
Diminishing flexibility of the eye muscles is probably
the cause of your seeing difficulties. Happens to

Illinois

ee

realize you are holding books and newspapers way

miss

ful Spring Phone Fair. Fill your
every need in home communications from this colorful carnival of
telephone services.
Home Interphone lets you use
your phones as a handy home communications system.
Color Extensions for comfort and
convenience. A variety of styles and
colors to choose from. You'll especially like the Princess extension
phone... the dial lights up when
you pick up the receiver—it’s ideal
for your bedroom.
Wall Phones to save you space
and steps. Perfect for busy activity
centers in your home.
Bell Chime has three different

ee See

oe

harmonize

CONVENIENCE

TELEPHONE

Ne

Don’t

If you’ve worn glasses up “til now but suddenly

(M.D.)

TELEPHONE

Color Extensions—to
room in the home.

may be in
order

CONSULT AN EYE PHYSICIAN

OF

Craftsmen in Optics
1891

SHERIDAN ROAD, HIGHLAND PARK
610 CHURCH STREET, EVANSTON
135 NORTH WABASH AVENUE, CHICAGO

Telephone service makes a thoughtful gift for a June Bride or Grad.

@H.O.V.

Page
Thursday, May 25, 1961

29

�aS TO
ad
zi

us

tl

en

ee

.

i

Chad
aaa

HOLY

aa

a

a

aa

Masses:

7,

8, 9,

nnn

10,

11:15

and

_ Daily Masses: 6:30 and 8:30 a.m.
| First Friday of each month,
Masses at
6:30 a.m. and 8:30 a.m.
_ Saturday: 4 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Confesions.

f

EEE

ce

NORTH

Ene ae
FREE CHURCH
Olson, Pastor

Boys

UNDA

aor
1.

i

THE
HIGHLAND
PARK
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
ID 2-1695
Dr. William Atkinson Young
Rey. J. A. Miller
Ministers

a.m.

and

11:15

a.m.

Church

School

toddlers up through 8th grade at
and
11:15
a.m. simultaneously
church services.

High

on

School

Group

alternate

meets

Sunday

at

9:45

9:30
with

a.m.

evenings.

-REDEEMER
XG
a
3
Rey.
1717

Sunday
munion,

LUTHERAN
CHURCH
Highland
Park
(Missouri Synod)
Robert A. Wendelin, Pastor
Deerfield Rd.—ID
2-6848

service,

10:15

Berar matny
49
fam.

of

JOSEPH

THE

a

ve

/
i

i

a

i,

ee

ek

am.

Holy

Com-

each

month.

Sun-

ST.

ar

RSE

eT

er

cnt

ee

ae

- 7ION LUTHERAN CHURCH

id

SATURDAY,

SSDS

May

vided

Briefing
May

38

conference in Barrington. | worship service.
.

COMMUNITY
BAPTIST CHURCH
1250 Waukegan
Road
Rev. Robert Humrickhouse,
Pastor
Office Telephone: Windsor 5-0708
We Preach Christ
Crucified, Risen and Coming Again
FRIDAY, May 26
7 p.m.
Recognition service for the Mt.
Pleasant
Baptist church
of Chicago, 6601
S. Honore.
SUNDAY, May 28
9:30 a.m.
Sunday school classes of Bible
study for all ages.
Nurseries are provided
for the young.
10:45 a.m. Worship service. Rev. Donald
Wise, professor of Greek at Moody Bible
Institute, will be bringing the morning message.
7 pm.
Evening Gospel service.
WEDNESDAY, May 31
7:30
p.m.
Prayer
meeting
and _ Bible
study.
8:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
FIRST

WORKER

‘0

ey,

for

Services of Divine | the church
of Choristers
at | MONDAY,

only.

office for
May 29

Please

MORTGAGE LOANS from

Twenty-three

their

GREGORY’S
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
Wilmot and Deerfield Roads
The Rev. J. D. Parker, Rector
The Rey. E. G. Wappler, Curate
The Rev. G. W. Robinson, Assistant
Rectory Telephone—WIndsor 5-1881
Church Telephone—WiIndsor 5-1678
DAILY
é
9 am. and 5 p.m. Morning and Evening
Prayer.
THURSDAY, May 25
7:30 p.m.
Boy Scouts.
SUNDAY, May 28—Trinity Sunday
8 a.m.
Holy Communion.
9:30
am.
Holy
Communion—Church
school and nursery care.
11S)
4m.
Morning
Prayer—Church
school and nursery care.
MONDAY, May 29
Afternoon—Girl Scouts.
WEDNESDAY,
May 31
8 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
NORTH
SHORE
UNITARIAN CHURCH
Russell R. Bletzer, Minister
Ferry Hall Chapel
Lake Forest
For Information Call WI 5-3332
SUNDAY
10:45 a.m.
Church School.
11 a.m.
Church Service.
Rev.

B’NAI TORAH
2789 Oak Street
Highland Park
Sholom
Singer, Rabbi
Religious School,
Saturday
and
Sunday
mornings.
FRIDAY
;
8:30 p.m.
Sabbath eve services.
Hebrew
School,
Wednesday
afternoon.
For information call WIndsor 5-5466.
WASHBURN
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
Half Day
Rev.
Lewis
Wakeland,
Pastor
Route 22
SUNDAY
9:30 a.m.
Church
School.
9:30 a.m. Worship Service.
Worship
Service
and
Church
A. nursery is provided for small children.
Telephone WI 5-4179 for more information.
NORTHERN
SUBURBAN
BAPTIST
CHURCH
(An American Baptist Church)
Oak Lane School, Midway Road
Northbrook East
CR
2-4623
Rev.
Donald
E. Thurston,
Pastor
SUNDAY
10 a.m.
Sunday School for children and
adults.
11.
a.m.
Worship
Service
for
young
people
and
adults.
Extended
session
for
children.

grade

children

received

first-year

eee

i

AEDT RE
Sats

a

er

haa

ean

vt

lves

work

ita
a
Phe ere a

eatin
a5,
yee

Hk

of | ~

confirma-

under the direction of James Ferch
and the Rev. Robert C. Grigereit,
assistant pastor.
Ferch’s
class
gave
answers
to
oral questions during the 9:30 a.m.
service and received their certificates. These students were: Kathy
Brady, Jeff Breuer, Gregory Clarbour,
John
Fess,
Diane
Foote,
Thomas Goodwillie, John Lee, Jay
Mandler,
Nancy
Schaid,
Merrilu
Steege and Roger Voight.
Those in Rev. Grigereit’s class
who participated in the exercises
at 11 a.m. and also received their
certificates, were: Barron Breuer,
Martha Busse, Janean deJong, David Gates, Susan Hildebrandt, Michael LaChat, Lance Ohman, Harold
Schramm,
Pamela
Sembach,
Gerry
Slattery,
Theresa
Ventura
and Karen Winfield.
Susan Hildebrandt and Thomas
Goodwillie were unable to be present. Those two received their certificates from the Rev. Eugene M.
Wykle during the following week.

Pastor Returns
The Rev. Bernard F. Didier and
Mrs. Didier will return today from
the General
Assembly
of the
United Presbyterian church in the
U.S.A., which was held during the
week of May 17-24 in Buffalo, New
AL OCG,

Bethlehem

Church

Couples Club Has
Treasure

Total

Persons”

Hunt

is

the

at Redeemer
Park, tonight

The speaker is chairman of the
department of pastoral care at the
new
Lutheran
General
hospital,
Park Ridge.
Next fall he will return to Luther Theological seminary, St. Paul, Minnesota where he
is a professor in the department of
practical
theology,
teaching
psy-

of the sev-

recognition
in

as

Norstad will speak on
Deerfield Rd., Highland

tober during the church school hour

chology,

training.

:

counseling

“ea

and

clinical

Dr. Norstad was a Navy chaplain
during
the second
world
war,
serving in the South Pacific and
the Mediterranean area.
He has done graduate
psychology
at
Andover
Theological
Seminary,
Mass.

work in
Newton
Boston,

His professional experience has
been broad. He has been director
of chaplaincy service for the Lutheran Welfare
society of Minn.;
president of the Minn. Association
for mental health; president of the
association of Protestant hospital
chaplains; and at the present time
is the chairman of the commission
for research and social action of
the American Lutheran church.
He has served as a member of
the
advisory
committee
for corrective institutions of the state of
Minn. and is a member of the advisory committee of the National
Conference on
Clinical Pastoral
education.
Dr. Norstad’s brother is General
Lauris
Norstad,
Supreme
Commander of NATO, with headquar-

(Continued

on page

31)

Holy Cross Mothers
Hold Pot Luck Supper
At Church May 29
The
Holy
Cross
Mothers
club
will hold its Old Fashioned
Pot
Luck Supper May 29 at the parish
hall at 7 p.m.
The parish priests, nuns and the
lay teachers
in addition
to the
school nurse and the crossing
guard have been invited to attend.
The new mothers of the children
who are enrolled in the school for
the coming
year have also been
invited to attend.
Chairman of the pot luck supper
is Mrs. Paul J. Riordan.
Her cochairman is Mrs. Max D. Huston.

The members of the board of the
Bethlehem
Church
Couples
club,
supplemented
by the services
of
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Anderson, are in
the process
of planning
the difficult clues for the club’s annual
treasure hunt.
Mr. and Mrs. Winfield Fairchild,
program chairmen state that this
will be the “most interesting and
For its
regularly
scheduled
difficult hunt planned in the seven monthly meeting, the Couples club
years of Treasure
Hunts for the of Zion Lutheran church is sponclub.”
soring a square dance, on Saturday
Couples will meet at the church evening, May
27, beginning
at 8
at 7:30 and will hold the annual p.m.,
in the church’s recreation
election
of officers.
Robert
Mc- room.
Clellan,
chairman
of
the
nomiHap Hampton, noted Northshore
nating committee will present the caller, will preside in the dancing.
slate.
Soft drinks will be served throughFollowing the short
business
out the evening, with refreshments
meeting, couples will leave for “the at the close of the evening. Donahunt”
and
refreshments
will be tions are $1.50 per couple.
served
to close the evening and
Committee members of the Couthis sason’s events.
ples club, responsible for the proOutgoing
officers are Mr.
and gram, are:
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Mrs. Jack R. Gagne, co-presidents;
Killelea, WI 5-3825; Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Winfield Fairchild, Charles Clements, WI 5-4361; Mr.
co-vice-presidents;
Mr.
and
Mrs. and Mrs
Jack
Short;
WI 5-0812;
Walter
Strub,
co-2nd_
vice-presi- Mr.
and Mrs. Paul
Hultman,
dents; Mr. and Mrs. Harold Neal, LE 17-1099.
co-secretaries
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Reservations may be made by
Raymond Demarest are the incum- calling anyone of the above combents on the slate.
mittee members.

Schedule Square

Dance At Zion

“The Service Bank

Of Highland Park”

HIGHLAND

BANK—POST

Member

Ourse

:
eon
tion
studies
at
the
Bethlehem
church on Sunday, April 30.
Classes have been held since Oc-

ST.

1771 Second St.

A

in Church Services

UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
638 Waukegan
Road
Rev. Philip A. Desenis, Minister
Parsonage—1139 Elmwood
Ave.
Telephone WI
5-5050
THURSDAY, May 25
7:30 p.m.
Choir rehearsal.
SATURDAY,
May 27
3:45 p.m. Cherub choir.
SUNDAY, May 28
9:30 a.m. Family
worship.
9:30 a.m. Church school—nursery through
juniors.
11 a.m. Worship.
:
11 a.m. Church school junior and senior
high, nursery provided.
MONDAY,
May
29
8 p.m.
Plans and construction.
THURSDAY,
June 1
1:30 p.m.
Afternoon circle.

BANK?

Theage
Pe Re

Receive Recognition

TRINITY

KINGDOM
EVANGELICAL
Woodland Park School
Stephen G. Bodony, Pastor
Preaching the Gospel of the Kingdom.
SUNDAY
10 a.m.
Sunday School.
7 p.m.
Evening Service.

VERE

'23 Seventh Graders

6:30 p.m.
Softball—Zion
vs. Presbyterians at Deerfield Grammar school. |
7:30 p.m.
School for Christian Living.
TUESDAY,
May 30
7:30 p.m. Boy Scout troop 150.
WEDNESDAY,
May 31
8 p.m. Adult
choir
rehearsal.
8 p.m. Adult Instruction class for church
membership on June 4.
THURSDAY,
June 1
8 p.m. 4-H
Club
Achievement
at
the
church.
8 p.m. Meeting
of the A.L.C.W.
Board
at the home of Mrs. Robert Pearson, 502
Radcliffe circle, Deerfield.

THE

ASEM
Fn
ee

“Understanding

contact

schedule.

gn

topic Dr, Frederic M.
Lutheran Church, 1731
at 8 p.m.

Bus transportation is pro-|enth

this service

NI!iui ata
eC Nh eee CO

com-

27

SUNDAY,

p.m.

EETcoe:

Understanding A urselves As Total
Persons Is Church Topic Tonight

8 p.m.
Square Dance sponsored by the
Couples club—in the recreation room; Hap
Hampton
the caller.
Refreshments—donation, $1.50.
SUNDAY, May 28—Trinity Sunday
8 a.m.
Celebration of Holy Communion.
9
a.m.
Family
Worship.
service
with
church school for children three years old
through 7th grade; eighth graders to attend
worship service.
Cry room facilities available during this service.
10:45 a.m.
Family worship service with
church school for children three years old
through 7th grade; eighth graders to attend

DEERFIELD

‘e

Le aay

ae

THE
BETHLEHEM
CHURCH
(Evangelical
United
Brethren)
Rev,
Eugene
M.
Wykle,
Minister
Rev.
R. C. Grigereit,
Asst.
Minister
801 Rosemary Terrace
Church—WI = 5-0078
Parsonage—WI
5-2221
1861 — Our Centennial Year — 1961
THURSDAY,
May 25
11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. ‘‘Tasting Bee’? luncheon at Jewett Park fieldhouse.
7 p.m. Boy Scout Troop 51.
7 p.m.
Youth choir rehearsal.

CHURCH
OF CHRIST,
SCIENTIST
155 Deerfield Road
fay
CATHOLIC
CHURCH
SUNDAY—11
a.m. Services.
|
181 W. Dundee Rd., Wheeling
Children
are cared
for during
Church
| Rey. George J. Mulcahey, Pastor
service.
_ Rey.
Raymond
Nugent,
Assistant
9:30 a.m.
Sunday School.
tory,
171
W.
Dundee
Rd.,
Wheeling
For pupils up to 20 years of age.
‘
LEhigh 7-2740
WEDNESDAY
EVENING
MEETINGS—
nday Masses: 6:30, 8, 9:30, 11, 12:15.
8 p.m.
Including testimonies of healing
through Christian Science.
Oly Day Masses: 6:30, 8, 9:30, 11 a.m.,
0 p.m.
All are welcome to attend these services
Weekdays: 6:30, 8:30 a.m.
and to use the reading room.
For further
| Saturday and Thursday before the first information call WlIndsor 5-1626.
READING
ROOM
‘riday in the month: 4, 5:30, 7, 9 p.m.,
ronfessions.
3 to 5 p.m. Daily.
9 to 9:30 p.m. Wednesdays.
LESSON-SERMON
CONGREGATIONAL
How
individual
rights
are
defended
Fie
CHURCH
through
spiritual
perception of God’s comIn South Park School
plete power and wisdom
will be brought
1331 Hackberry Road
oo at Christian Science churches this SunRev. John S. Usry, Minister
au4
ay.
Parsonage Telephone WI 5-0176
Es _
T
Keynoting
the
Lesson-Sermon
entitled
[URSDAY
“Ancient
and
Modern
Necromancy,
alias
7:45 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
Mesmerism and Hypnotism, Denounced’’ is
DAY
the Golden Text from Proverbs (21): ‘“‘There
10:30 a.m. Worship Service.
is no wisdom nor understanding nor counsel
:30 a.m.
Church school.
against the Lord.’
/ p.m. Pilgrim Fellowship.
Selections from ‘“‘Science and Health with
Key to the Scriptures’? by Mary Baker Eddy
BS
hg
GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH
will include (pp. 234, 235):
‘Evil thoughts
i
(Missouri Synod)
and aims reach no farther and do no more
Walters
Ave. at Fourth
St.
harm
than
one’s.
belief
permits.
Evil
Northbrook
thoughts, lusts, and malicious purposes can|For further information call CRestwood not go forth, like wandering pollen, from
one human mind to another, finding unsus3060 or WIndsor 5-1323.
pected lodgment, if virtue and truth build
a strong defence.”
_ CHRIST METHODIST
CHURCH
From the Bible will be read these verses
ie
Maplewood School
from I Peter (5): ‘Be sober, be vigilant;
We
Clay and Alden Cts.
because your adversary the devil, as a roarRev. Richard F. Mellor, Interim Pastor
ing lion, walketh about, seeking whom he
_
Parsonage—1652 Pear Tree Rd.
may devour: Whom
resist steadfast in the
;
Membership—WI 5-5203
faith, knowing that the same afflictions are
UNDAY,
accomplished
in
your
brethren that are in
9:30 a.m.
Church
school, children
two
the world.”
three years, kindergarten and classes
ee
ences through high school.
Adult
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
ble class.
824 Waukegan Road
30 a.m.
Fellowship coffee.
Rey. Bernard F. Didier, Pastor
il
a.m. Morning Worship service. ReRev. Hugh Jeffers,
ption of new members.
Sitters for chilMinister of Christian Education
will be provided.
Manse—1218 Walden Lane
Church phone—WI 5-0560
CONGREGATION
BETH
OR
Manse phone—WI 5-0107
In Trinity United Church
THURSDAY, May 25
638 Waukegan
Road
4:30
p.m.
Westminster
choir
rehearsal
Deerfield
(6th, 7th and 8th graders).
Telephone
WI 5-5070
SATURDAY,
May 27
Rabbi David Cederbaum
9 am.-5 p.m.
Tuxis Car Wash.
Cantor Jerome Frazes
SUNDAY,
May 28
9,
10
and
11:30
a.m.
Morning worship
30
p.m.
Sabbath
Eve
Service,
Oneg
and church school.
Nursery for children
abot following service.
1,
2
and
3
years.
Kindergarten and classes
£
:
LTURDAY
for all other grades through high school.
Religious school.
30 a.m.
New members will be received at 10 and
Hebrew school.
a.m.
11:30 services.
bard
of
Directors
meetings
are
the
9 am.
Leadership Training classes.
Bt Wednesday of every month. Sisterhood
10 a.m.
Adult Bible class.
he!
meetings are the second
Monday
MONDAY, May 29
avery month.
3:30 p.m. Girl Scout troop 11.
3:30 p.m. Girl Scout troop 127.
QUAKERS
3:45 p.m. Communicants class.
SOCIETY
OF FRIENDS
Pea
8 p.m.
Adult Bible class.
David Stickney, Clerk
WEDNESDAY, May 31
i
Lake Forest
9:30 a.m. Women’s
Prayer group.
INDAY
9:30 a.m. Women’s
Bible study.
5 a.m.
Sunday School.
3:45 p.m. 7th grade communicants
class.
Friends meeting in Deer Path
as! a.m.
4:45 p.m. 7th grade communicants
class.
10 &amp;
Library in Lake Forest.
7:30 p.m. Tuxis choir rehearsal.
information call WIndsor 5-1774.
ba,
8 p.m. Chancel choir rehearsal.
ade

CP
bit

10 Deerfield Road, Deerfield
Rey. Paul V. Berggren, Pastor
George Jacobson, Intern
Telephone: Windsor 5-2009
THURSDAY,
May 25
‘
j
8 p.m.
Meeting of Administrative
mittee of the board of administration.

Bri-

ge.

| 9:30

a

10:55 service.
9:30 a.m. Church school classes for nursery (2 yr. old) through 6th grade, and adul t
classes.
10:55
a.m.
Church
school
classes
for
nursery (2 yr. old) through high school.
6:30 p.m.
Youth fellowship.
MONDAY,
May 29
3:30 p.m.
Girl Scout Troop 172.
6:30 p.m. Men’s softball.
WEDNESDAY,
May 31
7:45 p.m.
Chancel
choir rehearsal.

|

}

a

9:30 and 10:55 a.m.
Worship. _ Recognition

200 County Line Rd.
Church Office—WI 5-4640
Parsonage—WI 5-4641
SUNDAY
9:30 a.m. Sunday School.
10:45
a.m. Worship Service.
7 p.m. Worship Service.
| 8:15 p.m. Youth Groups.
WEDNESDAY
7:30
p.m. Bible Study.
7:30 p.m. Junior Crusaders.
URSDAY
- 6:45 p.m. Pioneer Girls and

a

Sr

8

SUBURBAN

EVANGELICAL
Rev. Vernon

a

Directory

CROSS
CATHOLIC
CHURCH
North Waukegan Road
Rev. John O’Mara, Pastor
Rev.
Edward
Reilly, Assistant
Rectory, 724 Elder Lane
Windsor 5-0430

Sunday
12:15,

i

Federal

OFFICE

BLDG.

Deposit Insurance

PARK.
IDiewood 2-7800

Corporation
Thursday,

May

25, 1961

�OUSEHOLD:

Pp:

ANTS

ONTROL

protects your home
against insect damage
Among the most common insect pests around all homes
large and small alike, are ants. One of their cozies’
refuges is around the kitchen sink where they posi:
tively revel in the moisture and warmth. Of course
they journey to other parts of the house too. They ara
frightfully unpleasant and downright dangerous, but
now

you

can

get

rid

of

them

easily,

quickly.

Just

Pest Control, division of Aerosol Exterminators.
end

to your

waterbugs,
insect

ants,

but

carpet

pests that

their

HPC

beetles,

invade

spiders

Plan

will

and

our homes.

get

all

HPC

phone

Household

They’‘ll not only put an

the

rid

of

moths,

other

chemicals

roaches,

f

damage-dealing

are safe for people

. . murder for insects. The HPC Plan is inexpensive, too—as low as
$20.00 per year for two complete treatments inside and out for most
poe homes . . . $2.00 for each additional room. Don’t delay, call
today!

HOUSEHOLD

PEST CONTROL
7 DAYS A WEEK

—

HI

f

~

6-6173

Northshore Garden of Memories
Chairmen from the North Shore are planning
and
directing the
flower show, “Old Orchard In Bloom” which will be presented June 15,

Orchard
clubs.

shopping
From

Deerfield;

left,

Mrs.

center.
the

John

Entries

women

are:

Hazlehurst,

to

the

Mrs.

show

Edward

Kenilworth,

come
H.

from

Welch,

seated;

and

nearly

100

Glenview;

Mrs.

Curtis

A

standard
community
16 and 17 at the Old

North
Mrs.

Shore

L.

general

(Continued

Rice,

Very

ters

in

Paris,

page

Bay

If You

Rd.

&amp;

Have

GARDEN

Reasonable

18th

Not

Visited

CEMETERY
Prices

St.

Phone

DE

6-6500

Chosen Reporter

Program
from

You

BEAUTIFUL

chair-

Green

Redeemer

Awaits

THIS

garden

George

Nillings,

Surprise

California

30)

France.

The
Lutheran
Church
of
the
Redeemer
has invited the people
of the communities to attend this
Convocation
Lecture
which
is a
part of the 70th Anniversary celebration
of the
founding
of
the
church.
After the speaker‘s lecture, opportunity will be given for questions from the audience. The meeting will be held in the lower level
of the church.
Refreshments will
be
served
at
the
close
of
the
|
meeting.

Tour

Miss

Marine
Lance
Cpl.
Claude
R.
Willet, son of Mr. and Mrs, Leo
Willet of 1026 N. Dogwood Ave.,
is serving with the First Marine
Division
from
Camp
Pendleton,
Calif., participating in Phase
III
of “Exercise Green Light” off the
Coast of California.
Scheduled from May 8 to June
8, this phase of the exercise in-

volves

Navy

and

Marine

Corps

undersea, surface, air and ground
forces, supported by minesweepers
of the Royal Canadian Navy.
Highlights of the operation will

Mr.

Kay

and

Stumpf,

Mrs.

604 Westgate,

Leo

was

P.

daughter

of

Stumpf

of

recently chosen

as one
of the reporters
on the
Lake
Forest
college
newspaper,
The
Stentor,
for
1961-62.
Miss
Stumpf,
a junior, is majoring in
English at LFC.

tll
tf,

AND

Fun2ral
be a large scale amphibious landing by the First Marine Division in
the Camp Pendleton, Calif., area.
The
landing
foree
will be
supported by an amphibious task force
and aircraft.

Jewish

Directors to the

Community

NORTH

COMPANY

Since 1865

SHORE

SERVICE

Complete

facilities in your community

for prompt service . . . Lee J. Furth,
Jules L. Furth, and their stoff, will
personally arrange and conduct the

Call Midway
3-5400

entire

funeral—a

service

and beauty, observing
ritual with reverence.

of

|

warmth

customs

and

South Shore Chapel: 2100 East 75th Street, at Clyde Avenue

full-formula

|

Stas. Haas

Memonial

* Most Complete

Funeral

Chapels

¢ Perfect accommodations

Home

* Convenient to North Shore
and Downtown Chicago
¢ Funeral

own

consultation

home

SUBURBAN
See your hardware dealer,

garden center, or nursery
Products of

Distributed
Thursday, May 25, 1961

Smith-Douglass Company,

by

GEORGE

Incorporated, Norfolk 1, Virginia; Columbus

16, Ohio

A. DAVIS,

30, Iil.

INC.

Chicago

5206

North

with

for

small or large attendance

in Metropolitan Area

¢ Parking adjacent to building

and

our

arrangements

North

may

be

made

PHONE

NUMBER—VErnon

or

1-4740

LOngbeach

Broadway,

in

your

Shore representative.

Chicago

(Just

north

5-2221

of

Foster)

Page

31

| |

�Lakeside’s Annual

Has Post of Checking
1,400 Coats, Hats
Checking coats, hats, umbrellas
and
briefcases,
by the hundreds
will be the responsibility of Harry
McClure,
1674
Green
Bay
Rd.,
assistant minister
of the Northbrook
congregation
of Jehovah’s
Witnesses, June 2-4.
Mr. McClure
has accepted the

job

PHOENIX

2-DOOR

fs

HARDTOP

6 or V-8
cars . . . and, it’s much
Phoenix is in every way a

THE DART PHOENIX looks expensive but costs no more than low price
more car in room, in performance and in pure richness of appointments.

SORENSEN4,4.

mI

full-size luxury Dodge and offers you the choice of three superbly crafted V-8 engines including the
See the Phoenix TODAY plus the excellent sales and service

os

sizzling D-500
Ram-Induction.
facilities at Sorensen Motors.

ONE

OF

LAKE

COUNTY’S

122 N. Sheridan

OLDEST

Rd., Waukegan,

DODGE

DEALERSHIPS

Illinois

MAjestic

1

3-1107

MAY BE YOUR OWN
ELECTRONICS

=

RCA

|

RADIO

¢ FCC Approved
e U.L. Approved
¢ 1 Yr. Guarantee

RCA

SERVICE

supervisor

Exhibits

IT CAN

COMPANY

Hilda (Mrs. Charles) Rubin, well
known Highland Park artist, is exhibiting a collection of her new
paintings in the Sherman art galleries of the Sherman Hotel, Chicago, throughout the month.
She
is meeting
the
public
Mondays,
Wednesdays and Thursdays from 1
to 4 p.m. at the exhibit.

RAVINIA

Repair Screen Doors and Windows
Replace Broken Windows
Fix Storm Windows and Doors
Keys Made To Order While You Wait.

Inc.
Office and

1885

Store Hours Daily 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. —

Nursery

OPEN

Deerfield

Road

GARDEN

447

Deerfield

SUNDAYS

RAVINIA
YOUR

WI 5-0035
West

Roger

|

a

Williams

1D 2-3430

HOUSEWARES

—

TOYS

ID

Introducing

Now

is the

a

the

new

PAINTING

to

stump

sage

Tee

“aie

oo

=——s«éPOWER SPRAYING
TRIMMING

ee

E

®
@
®

Reasonable Rates
Excellent References
Free Estimates

Wall

ee

WING’S TREE EXPERTS

Washing

BERNARDI
ID 2-8917

Phones:

PATCHING

Hubbard Woods

&amp; DECORATING

PAINTING

cutter

order

DORMANT SPRAY and
DUTCH ELM CONTROL

wee

Woman’s

Club,

1991

Sheri-

dan Rd.
A reception at 6 p.m. will precede the dinner at 6:45. The an-

nual

meeting

will

begin

at

Candidates

Listed

List of candidates being presented

by

the

nominating

committee

under the co-chairmanship of Harold L. Newman and Richard E.
Simon
(for

of Highland

M.

Park

are:

Wallenstein,

re-election)

president

Seymour

ton, vice-president;

Harry

I.

Bur-

J, Levi,

secretary;
and
Lee J. Loventhal
II, treasurer.
Three
Highland
Parkers
are
nominees
for
directors:
Edward
Marder,
Raymond
Perlman
and
Merwin Shurberg. The three are
nominated for a three-year term.
The faculty of Lakeside’s religious school, who are extended a
special invitation, will receive special recognition in the service.

ID 3-1622 &amp; KI 6-2292

Evangelical church will attend the
annual Memorial Day picnic at the
Rock River Bible Camp in Dixon
sponsored by the Illinois district
of the church.
Sunday Services
Sunday evening at 7 o’clock, the
Rev. Alfred E. Anderson,
pastor,
will present the first in a series of
sermons on ‘“‘The Tabernacle,” built
by Moses and the children of Israel.
The public is invited to attend. His
sermon topic Sunday morning at
10:45 will be ‘“‘The Price of Peace.”

DECORATING?
We’re the people to see.

Our Service Features...
THOROUGH PREPARATION
Each surface is given the
proper basic work to insure
successful painting.
CAREFUL

WORKMEN

Your

property

each

step

is protected

of the

way.

BEST MATERIALS, PROPERLY
APPLIED
We pay for and get the best
paint and apply it as it’s supposed to be applied. The result — your work will last
longer.
You pay no more than for
ordinary
painting
and
because your work is done thoroughly it will retain its beau-

ty.
DISPOSAL

JEWELER — WATCH

SERVICE

REPAIR

DRESSMAKERS’

FRED A. COLEMAN
COMPANY
Phone
hi

1683

Deerfield Road

GARBAGE AND RUBBISH
REMOVAL
4

;

Catch

Basins

Septic Tanks

| Page 32

whl,
CORNER

CENTRAL

&amp;

Leading

Pumped

SHERIDAN.

Watch

HIGHLAND

ID

Jewelry

Inspector

for

PARK,

North

Blouses,

ILL.

Shirts,

Pleating —
&amp; Machine

Vogue
Western

R.R.

Sweaters,
etc.

Belts

Buttons —— Hand

2-2028

Designers
the

Linens,
Towels,

Watch Repair Craftsmen

and
Official

On

4 less

TELEPHONE

and

Dependable Service Is Our Quality
Serving Highland Park
Over 40 Years

SERVICE

Call us today.

MONOGRAMMING

ID 2-2079

8

o’clock. Seating will be arranged
for members
who
cannot
attend
the dinner.

Refuse
Rubbish

INTERIOR - EXTERIOR

State
power

time

*
*

Residential - Commercial
454 Central
ID 2-2883

2-4387

BONDED

by

a Smile

Pumped

EXPERTS

Licensed

We Custom Make

| 890 Linden Ave.
|

1 P.M.

WING’S TREE EXPERTS

INTERIORS

¢ Upholstery
* Carpets
° Custom
Furniture

9 A.M. —

With

° Septic Tanks
* Catch Basins

‘til Noon

INSURED

Cot? wreaesss

|| © Draperies
| © Slip Covers
* Bed Spreads
ba

—

TREE

4

:

Wed.

Service

HARDWARE
ONE STOP STORE

NEEDS

DRAPERIES &amp; FABRICS
;

HIGHLAND REFUSE
SERVICE

We

NURSERIES

Established

DISPOSAL SERVICE

REPAIRS

— LET US DO IT —

F. D. CLAVEY

Park

Many families of the First United

BE DONE

SCREEN

Lakeside
Congregation for Reform Judaism will mark its first
six years
of congregational
life
Sunday evening, May 28, with a
dinner-meeting
at the
Highland

Plan District Picnic
For Memorial Day

Hi 6-5080
LANDSCAPING

of

at Sherman

WHERE

CONTROLLED

| GARAGE DOOR OPERATORS
: ;
He |

assistant

Is

Sunday Evening

Bert

DRIVE CAREFULLY — THE LIFE YOU SAVE

a

of

checkroom and lost and found department for the Witnesses’ scheduled district assembly in Carpentersville at that time. More than
1,400
delegates
are
expected
to
attend the assembly. A lecture on
“The 20th Century in Bible Prophecy”’
will
be
keynote
lecture
Sunday, June 4, at 3 p.m.
The Witnesses’ assistant minister expects to find his convention
post a pleasant change from his
job
as part-time
machinist
with
the
American
Evatype
Corp.,
Deerfield.

Dinner-Meeting

Button

Bound
Holes

Fabric Shop

722 Main
UNiversity

b
Mf iDiwd 25544

Evanston

bloom painting
company

4-3034
Thursday,

May
i

25, 1961

�Junior

Jewish

Women

Benefit

Hear Neighborhood

A

land

Presbyterian

church

for Church

“Dance

fire, will

Rev. Ross Lyman, director
House, and William J. Neal,
Neighborhood
House
diwill give members
of the
Woman’s group of the High-

Park

On

Plan

N’Rally”

to

la-

test news of the settlement houses
tonight in the monthly program at
8 o’clock in the church.
Members are bringing handmade
dolls, stuffed animals, aprons, place
mats ani other gifts they have designed and made for the Firman
House June bazaar. Mrs. Kenneth
Peer is the group’s bazaar chairman.

be

given

Saturday,

in
by

May

27, at 8 p.m. by the Youth groups
of North Shore Congregation Israel,
840 Vernon Ave., Glencoe. Madie
Jensky of Highland Park is chairman. of the benefit, to which all
area synagogue and church Youth

groups

are

Dinner

Committee

David
L. Kreiter,
8 S. Deere
Park Drive,
Highland
Park, is
among the Chicago area residents
sponsoring a dinner paying tribute
to Eleanor Roosevelt on Saturday,
June 10, in the grand ballroom of
the Hotel Sherman.

benefit

St. Paul’s
Evangelical
church
Northbrook, seriously damaged

House Directors
The
of Erie
Firman
rector,
Young

Youth

The occasion is the Second Annual Founders Dinner sponsored by
the Midwest Advisory Board of the
Eleanor Roosevelt Cancer Foundation.

invited.

Kreiter
Souvenir
tee.

Folksong Festival
The Alumni (high school juniors
and seniors) also are inviting North
Shore youth to attend their folk
music festival Monday, May 29, at
8:30 p.m. ‘We Come For To Sing”
is title of the program in Michaels
Court, North Shore Congregation

is Co-Chairman
of the
Program
Book Commit-

Israel.
Frank
Hamilton,
featured
folk singer at the “Gate of Horn,”
will highlight the program, which
will include a late barbecue supper.

DRIVEWAY CONSTRUCTION
Old

Parking Areas—
Drives Refinished

@

BLACK

TOP

@

CONCRETE

@

CRUSHED STONE

ih

Call for

FREE

Estimate

% Metered

24 Hour FUEL OIL Service +

SILJESTROM
1930 First St.

FUEL CO.

ID 2-0065

Highland

Park

The young women have invited
the Tuesday Evening group of
business
and professional women
to the program tonight.
Mrs. James Badertscher will lead
devotions; Mrs. Sabin Taplin and
Mrs. Frank Scherwermin
will be
hostesses. Mrs.
John Lindquist and
Mrs. Robert Frey are the group’s
leaders.

‘Suburban

Captivity

Of Churches,’ Topic
Rabbi
Jacob Arnold Wolf of
Congregation Solel will have ‘The
Suburban
Captivity of the
Churches” as his topic Friday evening in the Sabbath Eve service
in the
Highland
Park
Women’s
Club at 8:30.
Mrs. Al Lipman
will bless the
candles; Mrs. Seymour Banish will
read her creative prayer. Hosts for
the reception after the service will
be Mr. and Mrs. David Joseph and
Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton Loeb.

painti
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JEWEL
INSTANT

PAINT
flat Anish for walls and ceilings
For nearest Jewel dealer, see
Phone Book Yellow Pages,
or phone SEeley 3-2430.

wy ORCHID
4

SHIRT

BUTTONS
REPLACED
ONE-DAY
SERVICE
by
request

LAUNDERING

&amp;

Commodore living at runabout co st!
ALL BUICK IN COMFORT,
RIDE AND GO, YET THE
SPECIAL TAKES YOU THERE ON SMALL CAR GAS!

twice the pow per pound of many compacts (yet topped

Boating, fishing or heading for the open road, the fun
starts the instant you step into the Buick Special! Its
112” wheelbase makes child’s play of traffic—still you
ride in Buick luxury. And, out on the highways you
move right along. The Special’s sizzling 155-h.p. alumi-

shift V-8 compact cars with 25.09 mpg)! And, you get

num Fireball V-8 and aluminum transmission* give you

*Aluminum Dual-Path Turbine Drive—optional at extra cost.

Class C of the Mobilgas

Economy

Run for automatic

Buick comfort for six big sportsmen. Road-smoothing
Buick Control Arm ride. Lush Buick interior. The pride
of Buick’s Clean Look. Price? You can live the Buick
life for less than most models in the low-price field!

BUICK SPECIAL
Exciting new proof...when better automobiles are built, Buick will build them.

35,000
SHIRTS
IRONED
WEEKLY

CELLOPHAN
PROTECTED

piv.
RAINBOW

ORCHID CLEANERS
NEXT

TO
1862

SUPERMART PARKING
FIRST STREET

Thursday, May 25, 1961

Sees

eee

sees

eseseeeseses

eee

Re

eee HEHE

EERE

HSH

ESSE

SESE

SESS

EOS

HHT HHSOSESOEESSOSEHHEHHEHHOHSHHSHHSHHSHHOSHHHHESHEHEHHSOHTHEHEEHEESHEHEHHHHTEHEHHHESEHESHOEHEEES

KLEEBURG BUICK, INC.
1732 First Street,

Highland

Park

Big selection! Big values! See your Buick Dealer for Double G

ID

2-4800

Check Used Cars!
Page

33

�Collie Bites Two

A one-year-old collie owned
by
School District i11 will be alEdward
Shriver
of
941
Central/lowed
to
build
an
addition
to
Ave. bit Nancy Johnson, 7, of 1313 | Northwood School, Highland Park’s
Division
St. May
13 and
Debra|zoning
board
of
appeals
ruled
Rodgers, 7, of 1340 Division May
|Tuesday evening last week, even
16, Highland Park police were told.| though the roof will overhang the
Nancy
tried
to
separate
two}|required side yard to the west.

ail

frolicking
Schmieg

o

he

died

so

that

peace.

Anthony

The board continued the appeals

Debra

of Harold H. Kerman for a building permit on Sheridan Rd. south
of Waverly Rd.; and Sam Leshtz for
a
building
permit
next
to
321
Hedge Run.

TRAIL BLAZER DUDE RANCH
AN

VALOUR
IN
PEACE
in

Chief

said.

+

live

dogs,

reported.

stopped
i
;
to pet the dog while Pat Miller of
1334 Division had him on a leash, |

nell
MEMORIAL DAY

Men

School Roof Allowed

EXCLUSIVE

DAY

CAMP

FOR

BOYS

AND

GIRLS—5

thru

12

Lunches, Teacher-staff, Transportation, etc.
Ultra Modern Outdoor Swimming Pool

Students of Elm Place School recently presented in musi-

Swimming, Horseback Riding (2 Corrals),
Fishing, Boating, All Sports, Crafts, Golf, Hot
Weekends available to organizations for parties

we

might

They

have

One of

Fitted to Child

the scenes as caught by photographer Percy Prior is shown.
In the front row, kneeling, from left are Lucy Soboroff, Tina

Camp Season: June 26 thru Aug. 18, ‘61
Phones: OR 4-9789 or OR 4-3829

Stubenvoll, Janet Schmidt, Steve Geller, Sara Cochran and
Claudia Kramsky. Standing, from left, are Charles Goodman,
Greg Bantin, Jane Dobbin, Gary Niblock, Sudi Ferry, Mike
McComb, Charles Eichler, Brent Dubach and Anne Schwartz.

Directed

Wey
‘aA

’

cal form the fascinating story of the “Wizard of Oz.”

by Teachers—Program

All activities conducted on our Country Estate
in Northbrook, Illinois

charged us with the difficult
task of maintaining
peace
among ourselves and with our
neighbors.
We
must
fight
| with weapons of peace to ful| fill our trust.

AT
SKOKIE VALLEY
LAUNDRY...

|

CALL
ID 2-3310

a

Sarr

FLAMELESS
So Clean, So Safe, So Modern

TRY

AN

ELECTRIC

DRYER

IN YOUR

HOME

FOR

60

DAYS

MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE
KOKIE
VALLEY
Laundry &amp; Dry Cleaners, Inc.

Main Office and Plant:
IDlewood 2-3310

]| Deerfield Call Enterprise 1616
512-518 Waukegan Ave.

Highwood

The

cleaner

sweeter

your

the

heat,

the

clothes

come

out.

And there’s no cleaner heat under
the sun than the radiant heat in
an electric dryer.
Electric dryers burn no fuel,
create no dirt or fumes. Nothing
but 100% clean, electricallyheated air ever mixes with your

clothes. There’s no pilot to light
or flicker out. No fuel pipe to
get in the way. And electric dryers
cost $30 to $50 less to buy.

Try a flameless electric dryer
in your home

for 60 days. Prove

to yourself that there’s no cleaner,
fresher or faster way to dry clothes
—or all your money

back.

See your electric appliance dealer today

OY Public Service Company
@Commonawealth Edison Company

Page

34

Thursday,

May

25, 1961

�Earns

Yale

Degree

50th Year of Successful Teaching

David Schuman, son of Mrs. Bernard Blacker, 269 Green Bay Rd.,
will be a member of the graduating
class

of

Yale

University

June

SECRETARIAL, STENOGRAPHIC,
TYPING, ACCOUNTING, AND
BRUSH-UP COURSES. GREGG AND

12.

EV ANSTON

He will receive a pre-medic degree,
and

in

bia

the

College

will

medical

degree.

summer

shortly

enter

of Physicians

in

after

and

work

David

will

Europe,

BUSINESS

Colum-

his

to complete

geons
the

fall,

Sur-

2

.

2 YS 1.4 8

a

for

COLLEGE

spend
leaving

1718 Sherman

graduation.

UN

Ave.

Wm. H. Callow, Prin.

4.3004.

~ SUBURBAN FINE ARTS CENTER
654

Deerfield
Tel.

Summer

Rd.
ID

Highland
3-1404

or

EM

Park,

Ill.

2-2463

Fine Arts Program

for Children

REGISTRATION—Saturday, June 3 and Saturday, June 10—1 P.M. to 4 P.M.
(Because of limited classes, registration will be accepted on above dates only.)

Day

‘

Highland

Park

part in the 1961

students

freshman

the campus May 20.
Rd.,

Jon

Ave.

and

From

es
400-A

Leon,

at Northwestern

Barbara

John

took

carnival “Joust in Jest” held on

Park

Ave.,

Greenfield,

is dressed

fi

left are Hal Brown, 592 Cherokee

dressed as the carnival’s symbolic

Ho, and

‘

University

Tom
136

Stone,

1676

Lakewood

Pl.

SUBJECT

INSTRUCTORS

10 a.m. - 12 noon

Outdoor Sketching &amp;
Painting

Jane Rosenthal—ages 7-11
Janet Satz—ages 11-15

TUESDAY

10 a.m. - 12 noon

Creative Dramatics

Dorrie Gelden &amp;
Sydney Price Berz

WEDNESDAY

Ya bienis | i shihon

THURSDAY

10 a.m. = 12:noon

.m. -

imensi

. iil

2

hey

ty

Rose

ne

Creative Dance

I—7-11

tee vane

Alta Shepard

we

rire (ecraner

is

Tuition for

knight, Knight lvan-Gung-

8 Week

Term—5

Mrs. H. Walton

Conversational French

a.m.
Ae Vestal gas

10 a.m.-11

FRIDAY

:
Linden

Hal

TIME

MONDAY

Cocvarentionsl Rieneh

Beginners &amp; Advanced

Days per Week, Materials Included

$150.00

Friday Afternoon—Extra Class in Guitar &amp; Folk Music—by Jane Rosenthal—$30.00

as its jester, Fester.

Children and Adults

Burglars Seen

CONGREGATION

Mrs. John B. Nash of 2146 Sheridan Rd. investigated noises downstairs
Friday
night;
saw
the
shadows
of
two
men
leaving
through the back door.
Her husband traced the break-

DOOR
PRIZES

BETH

in route through the basement door
and the locked
to kitchen.

door from

basement

Highland Park police took one
clear footprint from the kitchen
linoleum.

AND

PRESTIGE

AUCTION
“The Event of
The Year!”

THIS EMBLEM

SATURDAY AND SUNDAY—MAY 27 &amp; 28
KIDDIELAND

firms of prestige in the
business and civic life of
your community.
For information, call
Highland Park
Mrs. Mitzi Lavin
Mrs. Dorothy Darling
ID 3-2253
Deerfield-Bannockburn
Grace Clark
WI 5-0887
Grace Grady
of Lincolnshire

E WAGON

Thursday,

May

25,-1961

JEEP

@Dea
JEWELRY

BELOW

rs

piel

i

xevs

@ HARDWARES

identifies your

WELCOME WAGON
SPONSORS...

e Cola ‘

‘

SAT

e

6

p.m. = 1]

p.m.

pooK NOOK]

@

GIFTWARES

\

ee

tgs

«uw,

BOOTH

@ SUNDRIES
eee

@ POWER SAWS

® TOOLS

BAKERY

° LAWN

SCOOTER; rane

TABLES

SU

oe

10

a.m.

SNACK

N.

-8

p.m.

BAR

|

Clothing for the Entire Family

DEERFIELD
AMERICAN LEGION
HALL
849 WAUKEGAN
DEERFIELD
Page 35

�ai

Willard Gidwitz, 405 Sheridan
Rd., has been elected president of
the board of trustees of the Chicago Institute for Psychoanalysis.
He
succeeds
Lawrence
F. Stern,

atVillaMederme
FASHION

HEIDELBERG
. “International Cuisine
at Moderate Prices”

SHOW

Luncheon
Reservations

a

%
@

6 eleete Bilas ticun

3

Accommodations

a

BR Sane

sity

POPE

Tues. Thru Sat.

exhibits

at the

Health

Mu-

8

Oil Paintings at
Random

House

A
one-man
showing
of
Judy
Loeb’s
oil paintings
at Random
House,
495
Central
Ave.,
is announced by Don Alport, manager.

seum tell the story of the normal
human body and its functions.
Supplementing the exhibits are unusual films from the Museum film
library which are shown only in
the adjacent
Museum
Theater.
Star attraction in the Theater is

conducts basic research in human

|°f @ woman whose organs light up | American Academy of Art, also at-

and

psychoanalysis,

of

specialty

serves

further

the

as

she

Alport said the Loeb paintings
would hang about two weeks, after
which another artist would be invited to hang paintings in Random
House.

tells

wonderful

the

of

story

Loeb,

Miss

a life-size, pleziglas figure

Valeda,

classes

tended

the

at

the

of

alumni

an

Institute

Art

of Chicago and the University of
Chicago. Most recently she has
director of | Studied with Claude Bentley, at the

in

Workshop

Art

Contemporary

Chicago, and presently she is asso-

ciated with Bentley in the Work-

|. 2 Privete: ining Rooms

shop. She has exhibited in several
Chicago locations and at Edwards

Ya
cng A srsa

the

at

a

will have

She

Orchard.

in Old

show:

Ta, W. RANDOLPH.

in

Hotel,

Sherman

November.

Ciuat west ef State)

«

t

The

Gerhart Piers, M.D., of 1706 East | the Institute since 1956.

SINGING WAITERS

15 to 500
,

On EDENS EXPRESSWAY

:

[Artist Exhibits

Eight
members
of
Cub
Scout
Pack
No.
135,
Den
No.
2 were
escorted on a tour of the Hinsdale
Health Museum, by their den mother, Mrs. Walter Gip, 1185 Beech
Lane, Highland Park.

a low-cost |e human body.
through
community
clinic and referral service for persons who need psychiatric help. | 56th Street, has been

the
HUNGRY FOUR
plus the

9

Mestad

ng

— Comedy
=©Music — Vocals

m

pe’

retires as president of the In-

behavior

RATHSKELLER

Suggested

in Gur New Coektall Lounge
THE THREE TWINS
Tat &amp; bel
eek

iz
Rd
7.

x ty

stitute’s board.
The Chicago Institute for Psychoanalysis is the oldest psychoanalytic training and research center in the middle west founded in
1932.
The
Institute
offers
postgraduate training to physicians in

the

in the

may tee nee Oe

.)

pe

Scouts See Museum

Elected President
Of Institute

who

y

Elected

President

of

Art Association
Don

Le
eae
3

ee

ar
.
ty

"2

816

Broadview,

Chi-

Flax was chosen for the position
at the eleventh annual convention

‘

of

Ss
eee

|

Flax,

cago artists’ materials distributor
and dealer, has been elected president of the National Art Materials
Trade Association for a one-year
term.

the

organization

Angeles last week

held

in

Los

and attended by

pers S55

representatives of art supply
from all over the world.

The Association,
made
up
of manufacturers and dealers who
provide the materials with which
works of art are created and which

RELAX--

“Sunday painters” use in their hobbies,

si
Guardian

of Nature’s

Most

Precious

Gift

. . . Your

laundry

is dedicated

quality

after you've sent
your

firms

to improving

of materials

avenue, Chicago, and also
Flax Company, retail store
North Wabash avenue.

to...

the

and their disof
at

the
176

Flax is president of Regent Products Company at 251 East Grand
Ave., Chicago.

Eyes

Buy

The eye physician is qualified to distinguish between
your need for glasses and medical treatment. He is

and

hold

U.

S.

Savings

Bonds.

qualified to detect early symptoms of threatened eye
diseases and check their progress. The eye physician
can help you protect your eyes for the years ahead
by proper examination at regular intervals. Almer Coe

will be glad to provide the names of eye physicians.
Serving the North Shore Over 60 Years

Phone Today

.. . ID 2-4551
For nearest Jewel dealer, see

2226 Green

ye epe ay Wee,

%4"" THICK—TOP QUALITY PANELS
MOVABLE LOUVERS

FREE PARKING

WITH

* PRE-SANDED—READY
* AMERICAN MADE

rHeight

TO

STAIN

OR

PAINT

Open Monday and Thursday until 9:00 P.M.

CHICAGO,

Page 36

10 North

Michigan

Avenue

WESTSIDE

MILLWORK

Co.

Panel

Oe eee et ee
DD ees
A=ANUOAWOUVUD—
O=—A-AORON=U

DV YHOUINAAMVIDDE

OUNIAIN

Each

CO=A—ABABWVWoh=

divider rail
36” from
bottom

UO=ANBOUSIN

EVANSTON (next to Cooley’s Cupboard)
1629 Orrington

Ph OOVUIWOOW
UO

Orchard

RAC

Mall, Old

&lt;

4.
4.
5
5.
6.
6.
7.
7.
8.
Bu

—

North

Open Monday, Thursday and Friday until 9:00 P.M.

‘

28”
32”

OYKONINAAUUER
WW
ek
a tobe tb bat anes

SKOKIE,

&lt; 24”

rail

6

A\wer Coe

no divider

aed ek at ah Bt

fantastic

a

a

16”

16”

WWoOUWONn=O
4p W 00 a N00 W 00 UI

opened

bar
eye-frame
budget
Fashion
in each store.
frames for men, women
and children at $5 to $10
Charge accounts invited

1 5”

20”

©
~l
~o

have

since /886

14”

RK QUI
POUWNI
VIVUONVIOUWOWS

aye

In answer to the requests
of eye physicians and
many friends, Almer Coe

1 Fabel

divider rail
in center

ek

Phone Book Yellow Pages,
or phone SEeley 3-2430.

.

Panel Widths

ine
ay

Bay Rd., H.P.— AMPLE

4.73

IMPORTED BRASS
SHUTTER HARDWARE
Set No. 2 (comp. set for
2 panels)
$1.39
Set. No. 4 (comp. set for
4 panels)
$1.49
Set. No. 6 (comp. set for
6 panels)
12.40

12.60
13.87

15.50
Can

Be Trimmed

729 Ridge Rd. —
Estes Ave. &amp; Skokie
ID 2-1283

13.40
14.03
15.75

1” Width—3”

Highland
Hwy. —

Height

Park
Gurnee

DE 6-4121

Thursday, May 25, 1961
ide

ia eaelie lee
hed ess aa
A

�Highwood Carousel
To Raise Funds
For Girl Scouts
Twenty

been

Carousel

day,

booths

planned
June

to be

for
held

have

the

the north shore’s smallest discount house!
Moley TV

Scout

all day

Satur-

3, in the city park

Lady”

next

Car Hits Boy

radios, tvs,

orth
BUENA

ID 2-2042

phonograph

records,

radio

and

ty service

FORTUNA,

LETIZIA,

it said

years,

someone

calculated,

HOME

ee

CALL

she

cake

when

18

million

silver

TOUCH!

WAY Means
and Supervised
FOR:

ROOMS
¢ GARAGES

PEERLESS HOME

3 Hour Laundry Service

set

PEERLESS

* FAMILY AND RECREATION
* ROOM ADDITIONS

SINCE 1926

the

IMPROVEMENT

The PEERLESS
Architect Designed

cLaundry

on

contacts in the switches the firm makes.

Cobalt
IAEA

¢

Shore Group Photo by James Waldman

with the CUSTOM

ro

H.P.

Letizia Pattarozzi retired from the Cherry Electrical Products
assembly line. Here she prepares to cut it while Samuel
Minorini, Walter L. Cherry and the girls look on. Among
several presents were luggage for her trip to Sestola, Italy.
In eight

Charles
Feinberg,
14,
of
941
Ridgewood
Dr., was bumped
but
not injured by an eastbound “late
model” car while crossing Central
Ave. at Green Bay Rd. Wednesday
last week.

éy

Ave.,

with a skirt

full of prizes.
A play will be put on once an
hour. A plant sale is planned, with
plants donated by Clavey’s Treeland and Kolbeck’s.
The general admission proceeds
will go to the Moraine Girl Scout
Council.
Funds
raised
at
the
booths will go in individual troop
treasuries.

2

670 Central

already

Girl

to
the
Highwood
Northwestern
station,
Fort
Sheridan
troops
will exhibit dolls
collected
while
their
families were
at army
posts all
over the world.
Other troops will sell camping
equipment,
barbecue
equipment,
ballons, hot dogs, soft drinks and
many
craft items.
One of the features will be the

“‘Pick-A-Pocket

¢

¢ KITCHENS
* BATHS

BUILDERS

1550 Park Ave., West

INC.

Highland Park

ID 2-6800

Call For and Deliver

ID 2-0305
1873 St. Johns Ave.
Highland Park

Vi () R
:

contact

Bs COOLING
= COOLING
= COOLING
COOLING
COOLING

lenses ?

COOLING - COOLING
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1

COOLING F EL

with ACEICEA AIR CONDITIONING
ACTUAL

SIZB

&amp; To mention just two exclusive Bryant features that hold down
Mm operating costs: (1) Two-in-One condenser coil cuts operating
i costs by a good 10%, (2) the “Mixed Flow” blower moves %
# more air. Let us tell you the full story of Bryant economy.
No obligation. LOW DOWN PAYMENT—5 YEARS TO PAY

Ask us about the different
kinds of contact lenses.
H.O.YV. contact lenses
are safe because they are
fitted under the supervision of your eye
physician. Get the
benefit of our 27 years of
contact lens experience.

aia

takes a pleasant

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Air Conditioning

3691 SHERIDAN RD., HIGHLAND PARK
616 CHURCH 8T., EVANSTON
188 NORTH WABASH AVE., CHICAGO

1741

Second St., Highland

and
Park

Heating

with

gets dra-

matic results: dandelions and similar weeds vanish,

erass grows greener, everyone oh’s and ah’s!

She

drives to the store and back, asks no thanks, and
counts it all in a day’s work.

Husbands, want to

swap?
More and more folks are coming to us for advice on improving their

lawns through an easy-to-follow Scotts Program. Come in anytime.
We'll be glad to prescribe the correct Program for your lawn.

Save *5.00! Scotts Spreader (16.95)
plus Bonus (5.95) together only 17.90
Store Hours Daily 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. — Wed ‘til Noon
SUNDAYS

YOUR
GARDEN

Engineers
Phone

the lawn

9 A.M.

—

1 P.M.

RAVINIA HARDWARE

TODAY

BISHOP'S

de

Craftsmen in Opeies

ESTIMATE

stroll across

and the Scotts Spreader—and

OPEN
FOR

Phone for an appointment

The

He

ID 2-0407

447

ONE

NEEDS

Roger Williams

—

STOP STORE
HOUSEWARES

—

TOYS

ID 2-4387

onoy

Thursday,

May

25, 1961

Page

37

�* On Badger Staff

SUBTLE

and NATURAL
HAIR
TONES

Miss Billie Rosenhouse, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Seymour S. Rosenhouse, 476 Lincoln Avenue
West,
f? | has
been
appointed
Promotions
Manager of the 1962 Badger, the
{| University of Wisconsin yearbook.
Active

brought out
beautifully
by the use of

MAGIC
SCISSORS

ID 2-3814

(| out,

3

BEAUTY SALON
1394 Deerfield Road
Highland Park

“i's MAGIC”

Campus

Miss Rosenhouse
is also active
in other campus activities. She has
recently
been
appointed
to
the
executive board of the Associated
/; Women
Students and is also Personnel Chairman of that organiza/\tion, both for the 1961-62 school
This year she was arrange“| year.
ments chairman of Senior Swing-

our expert
tinting service

CALL

on

: AMPLE FREE PARKING |

an

honors

program

for

out-

standing women students. She also
served
as
publicity
secretary
of
the Wisconsin Hoofers Ski Club.

Buy

and

hold

U.

S,

Savings

North

20% OFF

Camp Headquarters

ALL

dent,

Fred

Elected

TUBES

Mom,

preerything

-@

NAME

our

worries

are

over!

we need for Camp.

Gentlemen,

Jr.,

has

and

Let’s go there today!”

CER NT aT
EE

your

convenience

we

will

be

open

Thurs.

Eves.

during

ed

69 Linden Avenue
IN

THE

VErnon 5-3181
HUBBARD

WOODS

FASHION

Beta

Line

Robert
has been
semester
years. He
Kingsley
ciety and

May.

Hubbard Woods

Glenn

FREE . ..- TUBE

+tate
:

Radio

CHECKING

Dispatched

son

of

Baumann,

Road,

was

| Windows

Central,

Highland

621

initiated

on

May

10,

at

Sheridan

room and one bedin her house at 412

Rd.

had

bb-gun

holes

|

Ro|seth Mondtold
9°”, last
3S) Weekk, Geraldine
m
Highland Park police.
ture series sponsored by LambertKingsley at Tufts.
In the Fall, Robert will attend
Western
Reserve
Medical
School
at Cleveland, Ohio.
He is a 1957
graduate
of Highland
Park High
School.

is a senior at Tufts and
on the Dean’s List each
during
the
past
four
is President of LambertHonorary
Biological Sohas chaired several lec-

Z

Golf Shoes

Park

Latest Bermuda

ID 2-7222

CENTER

Shorts

Sweaters
Windbreakers
Nylon

spiced with red embroidered
monogram, red stitching

a

and a red elastic belt is a

Ka

summer prize of cool cotton
for Young Cosmopolitans®.
Sizes 5 to 15. 16.95
Without monogram, 14.95

arrived!

Golf

Lessons

Also
Men's

Contact

Steve

New
&amp;

shipment

Men’s

Golf

Caps.

Carry

A

Full

Golfing

Sidari

at

of

Straw

Line

of

Apparel
ID

2-4330

PRO Golf School
463

Roger

Williams

ID

2-4330

PAT PATTERSON’S

Mail and phone orders filled.
No C.O.D.’s on monogram

4

We

Group Lessons
Available

For

Socks

Ladies’

PETE MAZZETTA
STEVE SIDARI

Shirtdress

---

Just

Teaching
Professionals:

Blue chambray

|

orders. Allow 2 weeks for
delivery on monogram orders. f

Steak House &amp; Liquor Store
Barbecued Chickens (with trimmings)
T-Bone Steak (with trimmings) ..........-...222------2---00000---LOmOr CViily TIMMINS)
i
eee ee
$1.25
Luncheons Served from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. 75¢ per plate

Deliveries made to Highland Park, Deerfield, Northbrook
or Glencoe with orders of $10.00 or more.

OLD ORCHARD at Skokie * OR 6-3060 * Chicago Phone CO 7-061 I
Mon., Thurs. and Fri. 9:30-9:00

Page

38

¢ 9:30-5:30 other days

Prior

Shot

Two living
room window

Mr. |

GRANT &amp; GRANT
708

by Percy

Women's Golf Apparel

3

TV &amp; Radio Service

Photo

Harris.

Kappa

Baumann,

Stephen

of Phi Beta Kappa
Medford, Mass.

Geutlemeu Yr.

and

into the Tufts University Chapter

TAGS SEWN FREE OF CHARGE
WITH CAMP ORDER

@ TEE SHIRTS WITH CAMP EMBLEMS
@ ALL CAMP EQUIPMENT
@ COMPLETE CAMP WARDROBE
For

J.

Mrs.

County

Harris

Phi

Robert

“Hey

Shore Group

Rotarians and Rotary-Anns entertained 15 foreign exchange students from Lake Forest College at their evening
meeting Saturday, May 6, in the Officers Club at Fort Sheridan.
Shown are Hiroshi Iwamoto, Japanese exchange stu-

Bonds.

Edens,

FREE Ice Cubes with
Each Liquor Purchase

Skokie

&amp;

County

Line

Rd.

VErnon 5-161]
Thursday,

May

25, 1961

�Yast cant beat that National Meat”

FOR

GUARANTEED TO PLEASE OR YOUR MONEY BACK!

Purchase Of One 6 Btl. Carton

=———a
The

STAMPS

Purchase Of One 4 Pak

Cin.

ICE

BARS

CREAM

Limit One Coupon

TOOTSIE

Per Customer
— Coupon

Expires

May 29th

Sane

PP

HAM

National's TOP

TASTE—AIl

VALUABLE

COUFON

NATCO COFFEE

REDEEM

Per Customer
— Coupon Expires

THIS

VALUABLE

25 EXTRA
With

The

Limit

OSCAR MAYER—JUBILEE

BRAND SMOKED

FULLY

Soe

Puitak oC

SHANK
PORTION

HAMS

COOKED

te

Purchase

:

B\TOP

REDEEM

Of One

Ib. 39c

THIS

Ponti » 4 9e

With

The

TAS
— Hamburger
TE

Or

Hot

Quart

Jar

EASY

COUPON

S&amp;H

of the Fansily paca

YALUABLE

Win

Not

COUPON

A

Contest

TABLE NAPKINS . .

Box

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—

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°

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RELISH
NATCO

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Buy

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12
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ya

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No bottle deposit . .. no need
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used before, never used again!
re
No Deposit . . . No Return

00
$ j

sig
e

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4Oc

COOKOUT

SPECIAL

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1

&amp;

May

29th

ae

sntgesht

BH

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rer

SOP

{-Lb,

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vi ae

Bils.

&amp;

COOKOUT

SPECIAL

PICNIC

1)

24-02

PICNIC

€
FREE

f

:

VAN CAMP'S

PIT

bean

tender

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juicy

ad

BARBECUE 9§ \\2) BRIQUETS

HUME PEACHES 3'2-'89°

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45°

Each

—

len

CHARCOAL

1

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PICNIC

&amp;

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SPECIAL

KINGSFORD

ORANGE

REALEMON

Expires

PACK

MAID

...

Coupon

BEVERAGES
at

A See

c

46ot
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3

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sot

Sees
-

‘

TAS

Can

SHORTENING
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cveouves....2=
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HUE RIECK

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FOR

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They're the light . . . crisp kind
everybody enjoys! Serve So Fresh
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for snack-time while watching TV!

Get entry blanks at your National Food Store or at
the Model Home In Glendale Heights . . . Enter
Today . . . Enter Often . . . Home Completely
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interiors, if entry blank of winner is PINK,

A

One

TI

mz)

ay
&gt;
PS
reo)

nnn

To

Limit

29th

STAMPS

POTATO CHIP

Enteprises Development Area in
Glendale Heights
4 NICKEY CHEVROLET IMPALAS
24 LINDSAY WATER SOFTENERS
8 VACATION FOR TWO AT MIAMI BEACH,
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1840 WINNERS OF 1000 S&amp;H STAMPS

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in Midland

.

23¢
Z|

WIN A HOME |
©

....

May

L
ERTOCR

With The Purchase Of One 3-Lb.

Pkg.

FAIR

Expires

ee

25 EXTRA S&amp;H

8-Count

FOR

Pak VANITY

;

ENING
THIS

‘

TISSUE
Coupon

NATIONAL

REDEEM

29th

STAMPS

Of One 4-Roll

Per Customer —

Dog

May

LY

BATHROOM

YIN

LIFE

Expires

RON

YALUABLE

Purchase

FOR

DETERGENT

Per Customer — Coupon

25 EXTRA

t

COOK-OUT BUNS

*
*
*

29th

STAMPS

OS
rapsisssns
SPEEA
SSC

pine

Hol.

One Coupon

Limit One Coupon

2 GRAND PRIZES _

May

COUPON

S&amp;H

LIQUID

Meat

Skinless WIENERS 2 52° 89c
100% Pure—Lean
. . . Fresh
GROUND BEEF eee etstie oe 49c

THE Riss

FOR

STAMPS

With The Purchase Of One 1-Lb. Can

Limit One Coupon

vie 99c

FRYERS

Cut-Up

$3.79

5 ee

THIS

25 EXTRA S&amp;H

nic!

. 59

Oi

CANNED

REDEEM

The favorite of the family for the
picnic... fried to a golden crispness! Save at this special low
price for the Memorial Day pic-

ROLL

AGAR’S ... Boneless . . . All Meat

HAM
CANNED
LAL ADAM

FRYERS

GOs

With

S&amp;H

FRESH

FOR

S:

Te

25 EXTRA

COUPON

ENVIS

‘a

VALUABLE

cust.

cigarettes. Limit 1 cpn. per
Coupon expires May 20.

&amp;

ae

THiS

‘

Cay

REDEEM

Sh bg
Gi fehe

pret bree of beer wine. leet

For Wholesomeness

Inspected

USDA

eat act TE

Savin ure

LS

2 ALS

oy

With The

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ute,

.

y

Wis Sirssit Some
SIS

AN

ee

COUPON

Th

ff

VALUABLE

.

es"6

THIS

25 EXTRA S&amp;H STAMPS

SNES

|

REDEEM

.

Red ... Ripe . . . Juicy
— HOT HOUSE

REDEEM

THIS

50 EXTRA
With The

VALUABLE

S&amp;H

TOP TREAT
Limit One Coupon

COUPON

TOMATOES

FOR

STAMPS

Purchase Of One Half Gal. Ctn.
Expires May 29th

THIS

VALUABLE

50 EXTRA

S&amp;H

COUPON

STAMPS

Per Customer —- Coupon

Whole

GARDEN

S&amp;H
Purchase Of

STAMPS
Section 10

BOOK ENCYCLOPEDIA

Limit One ‘Coupon Per Customer — Coupon

Kernel

SWEET CORN .

Purchase

Of

One 6-oz.

BOETJE'S

5°

We
cago

Reserve The
And

Illinois

Right To
Suburban

Relish Tray...

Limit Quantities
Stores

Except

5

. . . Grocery
Lansing,

S.

COUPON
Jar

FOR

Dutch

Style

Expires

May

MUSTARD

Per Customer — Coupon

THIS

25 EXTRA

YALUABLE

S&amp;H

Sweet

And

Juic

Limit One Coupon

HONEY DEW MELONS « 49°
Plump

— Ripe

Prices Effective

Holland,

COUPON

29th

Calumet

Thru
City,

May
Chicago

29th
Hts.

..

. In Chi-

And

Expires May 31st

9°

Dolton

gassse
.

sa

a

FOR

STAMPS

With The Purchase Of One 3-oz. Jar Stuffed

GREEN ONIONS. 5° SWEET CHERRIES. . = 59°

REDEEM THIS VALUABLE COUPON FOR
EXTRA
With The

The

HOLSUM

Expires May 31st

For The

50

REDEEM

Lb.

BOOK ENCYCLOPEDIA

Limit One Coupon

YALUABLE

.. .
extra

flavor in soups and stews—
buy National's HOT HOUSE
Tomatoes .. . Low priced at
Nationall

With The Purchase Of Section 9

GARDEN

With

Limit One Coupon

A salad favorite . . . loaded

FOR

THIS

25 EXTRA S&amp;H STAMPS

ICE CREAM

Per Customer— Coupon

with natural goodness
Livens any meal! For
REDEEM

REDEEM

Manzinilla

OLIVES

Per Customer— Coupon

Expires

May

29th

ENSRS val

h

REDEEM THIS YALUABLE COUPON FOR
STAMPS
25 EXTRA S&amp;H
With The Purchase Of One 6-0z.

1890 FRENCH
Limit One Coupon

Bil. MILANI

DRESSING

Per Customer— Coupon

Expires May

29th

636 Deerfield Road, Deerfield, Hlinois
Thursday,

May

25,

1961

Page

H

47—D

39

�Softball League | Jim Weinert Sefs New Record i
Opens Season Play For Mile Run at State Meet
in

6

runs

:

hditin

Lanabile,

Cee

ae

Two

0

1

Oe!

Oe

3

0

0

RS

Beer

Hits:

Corbett,

Robinson.

DOO 30.

201

shad on Nusa go's ses the

000

44—11

| Open Ball Games
With Out of Town
Games May 30
pair

of

Memorial

oon baseball games
-town

competition

all

star

Day

after-

will open outfor

teams

two

on

High-

Tuesday

ternoon.
_ Highwood’s
omposed
of

ayers, meets

Pony
league
team,
13 and 14 year old

a Chicago

parochial

y team at 3 p.m., while Highood’s Little Major all stars will
ngle with the Chicago small fry
1:30 on Tuesday.

While it is a bit early for all
star competition, Highwood is making every effort to ready its two
ams for out of town
play this
eek end.
Boys will spend extra
riods of practice this week and
lope to be ready for the opening
zame.

_ Local
or

Totals

fe

Player
Wr
OUR
Fischer, ss
PMN
i
Reece,

boys

Highwood

interested
Pony

in playing
league

this

occoco=-co~S

as

!

coonesco-6om

ae

inn.),
inn.),

rf...
p ....

ase Gee 2),
EVANSTON
tie

eae

ees

hes ek

MacDonald

Base

| wood

0

Batted in: Corbett (2), Werner (2),
(2),
LaBuda,
Panther,
Robinson.

Three Base Hits: Panther.
Highland WORM ees facet
iocks
OE

A

0

Jackson (Sub 4th
Barker, (Sub 7th

Reeder.
Ewan sn os
Schwartz, pr ..
Morthard (Sub 4th), 5 ee ee
Mallow (Sub me 3 UP
Swanbeck,
If
ieccias
Reciepian,
Totals ....
Winning Pitcher:
Molner.
Yiehland

9)

Park

CARIN

Co

Feldman.
_

0
0
0
0
0
1
1
0

27
Bi
he
A
Losing pitcher:

f LaBuda.
_ Runs
le

0
1
1
0
1
1
0
1

ey
cee

Totals
..
se
Winning Pitcher: ‘Paulson:

|

E

Mt Mater | vaee | PPaea |

they

Te

0
0
1
1
0
0
0
0

8

R

Schwartz;
aE

losing

Sxl

pitcher:

Se

being

a

Wenks

Wins

Charlie Wenks used the power
hitting of Bill Janis and Jim Libman
to
down
a very
stubborn
Nite ‘N’ Gale team 8-6. Each player
named hitting for the round tripper
with two men on base.
The game was tied three times
and
the timely hitting by Janis
and Libman proved to be the important factor in the decision.
Ed Dick blasted a home run for
the losers.

Santi

Beats

Gormet

In the
nightcap
game,
Santi’s
Cafe exploded for 30 hits and 20
runs to trounce Gormet Corner 20
to 13.
Each
of Santi’s 10 players hit
safely three times.
The Coleman
brothers, Dan and Don, Dan Loizzo,
Harold Freberg, and John Sayad
hit home runs for the victors.

The
home
could
base.

Gormet

team

matched.

the

run output of the victors, but
not hit them with men
on

Hitting
the round
trippers for
the losing team were:
Joe Siegle,
Fred Dickman, Dan Heltzer, Ned
Siegle, and Ivan Kushen.
1st Round Standings
Won Lost
Sand’s -Cafe
i.
ee |
0
Charlie Wenks
1
0
Club 7
1
0
Quidi Vidi
0
1
Nite ‘N’ Gale
ma)
1
Gormet Corner
ay
ee
Schedule for May 25
7 p.m. Diamond No. 1
Charlie Wenks vs. Gormet Corner
7 p.m. Diamond No. 2
Quidi Vidi vs. Nite ‘N’ Gale
8:30 p.m. Diamond No. 1
Santi’s vs. Club 7

Set
2
6
6
Set
6
4
0

Deerfield
Set
Jon Eaton, Jim Burnett ......... 4
Pete Craig, Jon Shurberg ... 1
Game Score:
3.
Maine West
Set
Ken Kelly, Keith Gaverth ... 6
Andy Amant, Chick Manly .... 6
Game Score: 2.

Set
3
6

Set

Set
6

Set
5

Doubles

than his previous best mark.

Set

6

points, ranked sixth, followed close-

To be eligible for Pony league
Xaseball, boys must be either 13 or
14 years of age as of this coming
August Ist.
Boys may register to
»Xlay in Highwood by reporting to
the ball park next Sunday after100n or Monday evening.
Highwood’s
recreation
director,
Don Skrinar, is hoping enough
Pony
age
boys
will register
for
‘eague
play so that a four-team
‘eague can be formed.
The league
will play its games at least once a
week at the ball park, and an all
star team will represent the city in
out of town competition.

EARN MORE at

their

children

to

get

the

applica-

tions
at their
schools.
Complete
explanation
and
instructions
are
printed on the application blanks.
Swimming
registration
will
be
conducted
by mail.
Students are
eligible to register at either high
school, Highland Park or Deerfield:
however,
they
must
attend
the
classes at the place of registration.
Additional application blanks
may
be obtained
at either high
school after Friday, May 26.

by

hit were

chalk up two runs in the first plus

feat.

insurance counters
seventh innings.

Warriors

Walks,

in the sixth and

Member

Joe

a timely

to cause

Ostrander’s

last

Monday

base

the

night

6-4.

in

the

second

and

again

BLDG.

Insurance

in

the sixth,
Ray Sharp and Steve Stolle, Warrior hurlers, managed to hold East

Leyden

to three

control

kept

hits,

them

but

in

lack

hot

of

water

Outfielder

Roger

Bahnson

col-

outs.
Deerfield
Brandwein:

AB
2
3
4
1
ra |
2
ee |
3
2
3
v4
1

R
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
2
2
0
0

H
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
2
1
0

E
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
2
0

Ot
Re
ee 26
East Leyden
AB
Rirchoff | (2553. Raa
2
Ricco 3 2.aa
4
Benedetto
vie |
UIT
oe hae
ie
2
GIO
iid ieccoricahsaees.
eee i
shainbarger:: &lt;2... sco keto. 3

4
R
2
1
1
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0

4
H
1
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0

3
E
0
1
0
0
0
0
v0
0
0
0
0

6

3

1

jo... ici.

WANG

isic inchs aig

Towonen

Evanston,

Powers

eventually

took

the singles crown.
Simons earned two points for the

Parkers, giving them a
place

in

the

tie for 13th

state.

Of Highland Park”

OFFICE

de-

Deerfield

lected two of the four Deerfield
hits and scored twice on infield

Steve Simons represented Highland
Park
at
the
state
tennis
championships
at Champaign
on
Friday and Saturday. He won the
first two matches to gain the quarter-finals.
In the quarter finals round he
bowed 6-3, 6-0 to Dove Powers of

Deposit

and

during most of the game.

Evanston Netman

Federal

errors,

enough

of

pair

Simons Loses State
Tennis Match To

BANK—POST

and

eight.

East Leyden clustered two runs in
the first, second, and fifth innings
while Deerfield punched across a

The Warriors wound up the 1961
season with a record of two wins
and eight losses in their first season of Interim Conference play.
Deerfield

Prospect

Urbana

with

Loses Game 6-4

Prospect
capitalized
on
five
Deerfield errors and five hits to

Halvorsen ...
ce,
gaa
Dahlgren ...
Mitchell
La Rocco

each

East Leyden But

BANKS HIGHLAND
Second St.

Trier,

DHS Nine Outhits

In
the
season’s
final
baseball
game, the DHS Warriors dropped
a 4-0 decision to Prospect last Friday night on the home field.

“The Service Bank

1771

Zion-Benton,

New

RES, oti Scere im Tae

3eason are urged to report to the
yall park Sunday
afternoon at 4
9m.
for
a tryout
session.
The
Pony team will also work out next
Monday
and Wednesday
evenings
at 6:30.

Kack

Rock Island and Lyons Township
of La Grange tied for meet honors
with
14 points
each, the lowest
winning totals in the history of the
state meet. Taft and Marshall, both
of Chicago
tied for third places
with 12 points each, and Glenbard
West was fifth with 11. Highland
Park’s
Little
Giants,
with
nine

Set

ly

oe

in 1956.

Honegger
of Forrest-Strawn-Wing
took first place with a 166 feet 5%
toss, which bettered his previous
best mark by eight feet.

Deerfield Nine
Drops Last Game

Schaps

of DeKalb

clocking was among the
prep miler in the nation
Kirkland, coming in sectopped Bowers’ time in
it wasn’t good. enough
Highland Park speedster.

Jim Sternfield took second place
in the discus throw with a 160 feet
11 inches effort, two feet better

1

Summer Swimming

Highland Park and
Deerfield
High
School
swimming
programs
for elementary schcol students will
begin on Monday, June 19, at both
high schools.
Application
blanks will be distributed to all elementary schools
in the high school district
on
Thursday, May 25 and on Friday,
May 26.
Interested
parents
should
urge

Bowers

Weinert’s
best by a
this year.
ond, also
4:19.4, but
to top the

Singles
Deerfield
Set
BURR
ARB IOED oc cishcaedis
b cacsal oscdues as 1
PEMD:
INOT ES Goris
cut
ey
IRON.
MELE esi
ty ean
6
Maine West
Set
AIDS
“BOW Sisk
ar
6
oe
go ct
MORES ERPS age eer kee
1
SPUR OS. PE Ss ee
ea
0

Sharp

Programs at Both
Hi Schools June 19

by Jim

noe

oe ORS ath Rt Fae CED

venll ME

11
H

4
2
E |
3
3
2
1
1

Ny Hiei orcad
Nh Suess)

dee

ds

| PARK
AB

one

LaBorde.

au

i

1
0

8 hits,
Jerry

ee

ew

0
0

to
by

Rallying to win the second and
third
sets, the
doubles
team
of
Pete Craig - Jon Shurberg provided
the
winning
point
as
Deerfield
High School eked out their third
consecutive
victory of the tennis
season.
Neil
Hirsch
and
Jeff
Mandel
scored individual triumphs in singles matches to provide a 3-2 margin over Maine West.
Deerfield depth was the decisive
factor in their match as Maine’s
No. 1 singles player defeated Randy Bax and No. 1 doubles team defeated the Deerfield
combination
of Eaton and Burnett.

|

RE

1
0

95
6
Totals
Winning Pitcher: Leister; Losing pitc
Russell.
Highland Park APH cic cays Med aicnteag 100 003 1—5
RPTIONIONNE ii se cee et
. 203 100 0—6
FRESHMAN
HIGHLAND
PARK
Player
AB
Pott 11)
aed: Reese aang mn tmnt eametEs
S,
OS
MB a fork ee ee eae
Lodge, cf
3
ADPCM AE cde.
ue
ee
Pett, rf
1

i]
—_

oe

j

9

run

Weinert,
who
has
consistently
improved in each meet this Spring,
recently
outdistanced
his
archrival, Weymouth Kirkland, of New
Trier, in a dual meet,
and then
went
on to take the top honors
in the state meet.
His mark
of
4:16.2 is more than four seconds
under the old record of 4:20.4, set

Deerfield Netmen
Win Third Meet

be

eho

HIGHLAND

0

ossoscosoooNnNS

© 60.00.00.

0

1

&gt;.

al

1

MOMS

2

1

1

Robessesonsososa™

0

SS

1

oN

3

2S

1
0

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1

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e

fae
2

Sesoososoosoocoy

2
0
1

oi

1

0
1
Bog

=

2

E

Player
Brownlee, 2b
Hamilton, 3b ....
Mc Culloch, lf _.
Hoist ge
88...
Jackson,
ee ket
(Sub), 3b
Jarjorian, cf
Gussin, 1b
Parker,
G.

oscoe+c0cccm

R

Cl

Totals

The Little Giants end their regular season with a double header at
Oak Park this Saturday at 10 a.m.
EVANSTON se
H

7
p

|

Dubach,
Russell,

Ni

the

s-$SoNNeeNS

on

~~]

started

&gt;
=

Fiocchi

NOOR

PARK

Rk

HIGHLAND

held

home

Charlie

Bob Russell pitched for the soph
nine
with
Mike
Levin
catching.
The
sophomores
also lost by
a
score of 6 to 5. Both teams got six
hits and made two errors.

however, which the Little Giants
were this time unable to match.
Marvin

The

frosh pitcher was Jeff Molner; Jim
Bernardi was behind the plate.

more runs in the top of the eighth,

hill for HP but was relieved by
Tom LaBuda who took the loss.
Willie
Bodle
caught
the entire
game.

hit.

were

University of Illinois last Saturday.

Seer

Parker

team defeated Quidi Vidi 17 to 9 in
the Highland Park Recreation Departments 16” Sunset Park Leaguc.
Club 7 was able to take advantage of two errors on the part of
the Quidi Vidi boys and scored 5
unearned
runs
in the
Ist three
innings.
The
clutch
pitching
of
Midge Giarelli and fine defensive
work on the part of Babe Ugolini
worked toi perfection as the losers

onds, Jim Weinert, Highland Park High School’s mile runner,
provided the top performance at the state track meet at the

o|

only

ieee

advantage,

the

Chaim-

sho

to take a three run

- but three Giant runs in that same
% inning deadlocked the score at 7
an,
Wildkit bats produced
four

got

9 to 0. Fred

a

_ing earned a hit off Wildkit hurler
John
Knepper.
Evanston
tallied
_ four times in the top of the sev-

son

shut-out

a

_ After six complete innings, Highland Park led 4 to 3 without hav-

enth

ton last Saturday. The Baby Giants
were

Uw! OH Sone

played last

nee

game

Se

11 to 7 in a home
: Friday, May 19.

The
Highland
Park
frosh
and
sophomore
baseball
teams
both
lost games to Evanston, at Evans-

ee

in-

|

late

0

Wildkits’

wwNhwWUUBADRPY

Evanston

ning
hitting attack overcame
an
- excellent Highland Park comeback

+l

The

Wildkits

Sooo

Evanston

|

a

Lose A Pair of
Baseball Games

So

5

With

2}

Drops Game

Frosh and Sophs

7

moOoooocoocnNeo

_ HPHS Varsity Nine

Topping his own record for the mile by a full eight sec-

and

coohHononm

drove

|

Kuhn

Seow

Wilt

hit safely four times as his Club

PARK
[Diewood 2-7800

Corporation
Thursday, May 25, 1961

�Dad's Club Award ‘Highland Pk. Hosts
Suburban

Dinner Is June 9

Mothers
of all award
winning
boys are invited to the 6:30 dinner
for the first time, along with the
fathers.
Tables will be set in the
student auditorium, as well as the
north
cafeteria,
to
accommodate
the expected crowd of about 450.
Friends
and
other
relatives
are
welcome for the after dinner ceremonies and subsequent speech by
Nick Wasylik, athletic director and
head football coach of Lake Forest
College.
This dinner will mark the final
appearance of Sidney Stackler as
president of the Dad’s Club, as he
moves up to the position of chairman,
replacing
Bernard
Pollack,
honorary chairman.
who becomes
The new slate of Dad’s Club officers for the school year 1961-62 is
headed by Samuel A. Pascal, president; Willard L. Hemsworth, vicepresident;
Sidney
H.
Glickman,
secretary and Jerome Margulies, a
hold over, as treasurer.
Other officers for the new year
chairman
Roger Tauman,
include
of insurance, and Joseph L. Kadison and Bernard N. Buchholtz as
co-chairman of athletic department
liason.

Yachtsmen Schedule
Chores, Cruise, Race
The

North

season

day

and

helping

Yacht

underway

Sunday
put

grounds
W.

Shore

got

the

Satur-

all

hands

clubhouse

shipshape,

Haskins,

Club

last

with

said

publicity

and

Robert

chairman.

A hot dog lunch for workers was
served both days. A full turnout
left the rest of the summer for
boating.
Saturday,
May
27,
the
power
fleet will take its second cruise.
Starting
at Savannah,
Ill. they

plan

to go up the

Trackers

This Saturday

Friday evening, June 9, marks
the Third and final Sports Award
Dinner of the school year, to be
given by the Highland Park High
School
Dad’s
Club.
All boys
of
all four grades winning
recognition, will receive
their school
letters or certificates
from head
baseball coach J. W. Sanders, head
golf coach Ralph Cianchetti, head
tennis coach Robert Skrainka, head
track coach Dick Ault, or their assistants.

Mississippi

A

Registration for this league will
be Monday, June 19th, at the following playgrounds: Sunset Park,
West Ridge, Mooney
Park, Braeside
School,
Ravinia,
Old
Elm
Park,
Morgan
Park
and Lincoln
school.

The

trip

twelve
On

the

halted

holes

because

backside,

and

at

the

Louis

ready carded
three straight
before play was halted.

TV

TUBES

—

Get

‘em

pars

RADIO

SAVE
Tested

N. Western,

and

Highwood

recreation authorities hope that at
least
four
or
more
teams _ will
register for play in this baseball
(not softball) loop this summer.
Boys interested in playing are
urged
to
see
Highwood’s
Don
Skrinar, at the ball park next Monday night. Additional details are
available at the park at that time.

Boys may form their own teams,
or

may

report

and

be

assigned

over 15 a chance to play
regardless of how good

baseball,
a player

they

had

are.

Boys

have

not

opportunity
to
play
leaving
pony
league
matter
where
players

2 p.m.,

can join this informal Prep league.
NO

A

baseball uniforms

boy

needs

only

are required.

bring

and

the third

better

on

Games

light

will

and

be

under

this

year

has

than

week. They
time
limit
along.

of the

club

will

Action

is

VFW

planned

To

for

early

Elect

Post

of

the

Veterans

of

TUBES

—

HI-Fl

TUBES

Counter

RANCH

“THIS

MIGRATING
Packing
goods

y°
for

ur

service
bY
Transfer &amp;

a

Lines &gt;

150

Circular

Drive

over

rooms,

The

25% ——plus green stamps

Lake

Radio Tube

Sales
CE 4-0519

Forest

WITH

OVER

100 TREES

SAFETY
LANE
CHECK

best

2

4

experts.
Rafferty
Storage COo., 2123

&amp;%
¢

move,

Park.

ge

1954

o
C)
®

400

ft.

fireplaces

9 room

@

©

offering
LIONEL

&amp;
BAIRD
e
MORTGAGES

REAL

ESTATE

SALES

576

Lincoln

Avenue

Family Room 20x20
Sep. den with fireplace
2 beautiful baths
Fabulous kitchen, cost $10,000
Full length rear terrace

WARNER
»®

MANAGEMENT

ee

®

OPEN

INSURANCE

Hillcrest 6-1855

Winnetka

SUNDAYS

@

1!

a.m.

to

5

p.m.

First St. Between
Central &amp; Laurel Aves.by bei
baie

Saturday, May 27

WATSON

@

Re
Thursday, May 25, 1961

IS A GEM”

trees

Call
%&amp;

“Wifecomplete

Highland
Green Bay R ai.
1D 2-0507.

Nea iin
et
aa

over

own
move

ds!
for the bir
Van
American

Approved”

built

Ranch

acres,

9

household
is_ strictly
Ge t a North

ft. long

CHECKED

FREE!

on

100

Foreign

Wars this evening, May 25, in the
VFW
Memorial
Home.
The unit
also
will
make
plans
for
the
Memorial Day parade and services.

al- |

board at the Memorial Day Breakfast to greet new and old members. Chow-time is 8:30 to 11 a.m.

2

June.

Election of members
to the
Board will be a part of the business
meeting held by the Highland Park

and

be

twi-

each

will be played under a
to
speed
the
action

the Fleetwind Arrow skippers have
a year’s experience;
so a larger
turnout is expected.

Officers

at

lights

been

last,

glove,

played

the

the 30th.

weather

a

shoes and cap.

begin the sailing seaam. Sunday, May 28.
race will be held at

Fitting-out

this

ball
after
ranks.
No
live, they

Reeder, DA 8-3293, will captain.
The
three-day
Memorial
Day
Regatta will
son at 10:30
The second

to

one of those that will be formed.
The prep league will give boys

Over Our

Freeman’s
648

play in this league

—SAVE—SAVE

SAVE

of

Highwood
still needs teams of
boys interested in playing in its
Monday
night
prep
league.
The
league will comprise teenage boys,
who will play their games at Memorial Park in Highwood.
Boys 15 thru 19 are eligible to

Boys wishing to play should see
Don Skrinar as soon as possible.

Boys between 15 and 16 years of
age who want to play in the Colt
league baseball group this summer
are asked to come to Sunset Park
at 10 a.m. Saturday, May 27, for
tryouts. Boys are asked to bring
their own gloves and spikes, if possible.

of darkness. |
had

Cubs-St.

Colt League Tryout
Saturday Morning

100 FT. LONG

camp
out at Cassville,
Four-day
weekenders will continue up-river
while the less fortunate come back
to
work
Monday.
Ed
and
Gin

the

they

end

Fleming

to

Cardinals
game
will
be
Friday,
June 30 and to the Braves-Philadelphia game
on Thursday,
July
6. Register now at the Recreation
Center if you wish to go on these
trips as space is limited.

Se.
was

boys

Besides
piaying
in games
the
boys will go to Cubs and Braves
games as part of the program.

finished the season with a five won
and five lost record in dual meets.
John Fleming again paced the
local team with a three-over-par
39
on
the
tough
front
side
at
Thorngate.
Godow
carded
a 47,
trailed by Biega’s 50, and Hadjuh’s
Play

for

of age will be

All boys interested will get a
chance to play on the local playgrounds
and _ inter-playground
games will be organized as soon
as the boys form organized teams.

The DHS
divot diggers blasted
out a 250-288 stroke victory over
East Leyden
H. S. at Thorngate

as

league

to play at 9:30 a.m. and the 9 and
10 year olds at 10:30 a.m.

DHS Golfers End
Season With Five
Wins and Five Lost
last Friday

softball

6 to 11 years

Boys for Prep Team

conducted
at eight Junior
Playgrounds this summer.
Games
will
be
played
under
Highland Park Recreation Department supervision on Monday, Wednesday and Friday mornings, Boys
6, 7 and 8 years old are scheduled

Sternfield is a clear-cut favorite
in the discus throw.
Scott Etnyre
of New Trier and Chuck Horton,
tied for fourth in the state high
jump
will
fight
it out
for
the
league title in that event.
Nilsen,
is the favorite in the pole vault.
Weinert
and Weymouth
Kirkland
of New Trier, first and second in
the state should
bring the meet
to a fitting climax in the mile run
if their performances are anything
like last weekend when Weinert set
a new state record and Kirkland
was second in 4:19.3, also under
the old mark.

Club

12”

from

Highland Park High School plays
host Saturday to the Outdoor Suburban League Track Meet, which
annually features some of the best
track men in the state of Illinois.
This year is no exception, as 13
men who placed in eight events in
the 1961 state track meet will participate.
Two
of these
are
Jim
Weinert,
Highland Park’s star
miler, and Ed Nilsen, Oak
Park
pole vaulter, both state champions.
Jim Carter of Waukegan, fifth in
the 100 yard dash at Champaign,
will be the favorite in that event
and in the 220 where he and teammate Ron Bild finished third and
fifth. In the shotput Bob Pickens
of Evanston and Chuck Mercein of
New Trier, second and third in the
state, should
fight it out.
Niles
and Waukegan,
third and fourth
in the 880 relay downstate,
rule
the favorites in that event.

Country

Highwood Seeking —

Plan Softball for
HP’s Younger Boys

�HPHS Tennis Teams

Little Giant Nine
Loses to Niles

Pole Vaulter

Tom Ross, son of Mr. and Mrs.
ohn T. Ross, 2353 Exmoor Rd., is
a member
of the track team
at
Denison
University,
Granville,
Ohio. Ross, who is a freshman, has
become
the
school’s
top
pole
aulter.

Summer

Fun.

N. Western,

Lake

GUITARS
plus 150

reg. $24.00
S&amp;H Green

May

16,

frosh

the

golf

junior

teams

to Donald

of

Highland
Park High School each
hosted and defeated Lake
Forest
teams.
The junior varsity won 10
to 5 and the frosh won 12 to 3.
Steve
Gross,
Barry
Grossman,
Don Platt, and Bill Glickauf were
Parker junior varsity winners while
Roger Cimbalo, Buddy Block, Larry

dio

truck

Moss, and
frosh.

ooce

it

evening

was

Jim

os

Top
ae

on
Dobrowski, B Onk ae EDR atk
PRODRIOG, 2 chien
case tab

Kenton

parked

Watson

won

last

behind

for the

Benefit

Chicago Child Care Society

THE
KINGSTON
TRIO

NEW YORK CUT
STRIP STEAKS
“"There’s

Choice,
no

Aged

better

McCormick

anywhere”

SARATOGA

om

Davis, cf of ih aialiiaiacle
kek
Artwick, 3b .

of 1045

Thursday

week while
the store.

Ss
So

ah lies A

Naylor

Ave., Deerfield, disappeared from
the back of the Lowrey Organ Stu-

o

pohg Pea |» AM
Henderson,
ss...
dT RD
ipa

Totals
Winning
pitcher,
Sabey;
LaBuda.
Runs batted in: Sordyl.
Three base hits: Sordyl.
Three-bas hits: Sordyl.
Score by Innings
Highland Park
Niles

. . easy

to buy

25

losing

Highwood

Lake

FRIDAY,

JUNE

Place

Soe

8:30

$4, $6, $8
at

ID 2-0440

McCormick Place
Grant &amp; Grant,
Lake Forest
Deerfield Record,
WI 5-0048

Chicago Child
Care, MI 3-0452
Grant &amp; Grant,
Highland Park

North Shore’s Most Beautiful Theatre
Forest, Ill, —- CE 4-2106 or CE 4-2107

6

THEATRE

at

Friday,

Forest

ONE

CE 4-0519

HAL

POLICY

May

26

WEEK—On

thru
Our

Thursday,

Panoramic

June

Wide

1

Screen

WALLIS‘

“ALL IN A NIGHT’S WORK”
in

technicolor

Starring—Dean

Martin

and

Stamps

Shirley

—

MacLaine

SCHEDULE

—

Weekdays——"‘All in a Night’s Work’ begins at
:30 and 9:30
Saturday—’’All in a Night’s Work’’ begins at 5:20-7 :30-9:30

value
Stamps

Sunday—’’All

with

Guidepost
*

ALWAYS FREE PARKING!
LAST DAY!

and

ult

June

Bob

2—’’CIMARRON”

| June 9—" ABSENT MINDED

FOYES”

Exhibit in Our

PROFESSOR”

Lobby

we

Wind’

June 30—"The

LITTLE

Hope

June 16—"GONE WITH THE

M.Y.

x
eeetatetes)
Reateterne

in a Night’s Work’’ begins at 2:00-4:00-6:00:00-10:00

Saturday Special Children’s Matinee 2 to 4—’’SEVEN

rien

Young Savages”

Bob

b

Spitz

“CAN-CAN”

SKY
ee
r |
Fi2 120: &amp; 219 GRAYSLAKE -. BA 3-8551

ENDS

mily Outdoor |

to JUNE

THE

MAY

Feature

26

Times:

Week Days—7:17-9:20

Sat.—5 :45-7:44-9:40
Sun., 1:30-3:29-5:28-7:27-9:25

2nd!

MOST FANTASTIC STORY THE SCREEN HAS
TOLD RIGHT DO WN TO ITS LAST JOLT!

EVER

MAY

CS

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&amp; Disney's “JUNGLE CAT’

ORKoY
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,

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ADVANCE
SHOWING!

MARLON

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THURS.,

STARTS FRIDAY, MAY 26
THE MOTION PICTURE THAT STARTS ITS OWN TRADITION OF GREATNESS!
Paramount presents

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QO

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WORLD OF
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No. 2—’’ADVENTURES OF CAPT.
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3 CARTOONS
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42

ON
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DON

NAME

IN THE

Page

30

Day

Continuous
from 1:30!

STRANGEST

SAT., KIDDIE SHOW—May
“BOBBYKINS”

MAL

Memorial

STORY
OF THE

“THE i

P.M.

tickets

Open Daily 6:00 to 12 Midnight — Curtain at 6:30
Sunday Continuous 2 to Midnight—Doors Open 1:40

FREE—BOAT . . . $24. VALUE FREE
with 19” TV, reg. $179.95 . . . both
plus 1599 S&amp;H Green Stamps

FRI., thru THURS.,

Theatre

2

pitcher,

45 RPM RECORDS at FREEMAN’S
plus 8 S&amp;H Green Stamps
UKULELES reg. $9.50
plus 79 S&amp;H Green

and

A set of golf clubs, a golf bag,
and
a golf
cart
complete
with
bolted-on ash tray, all belonging

Park

FREEMAN’S TV and MUSIC
648

Tuesday,

|

|

Top

Highland

OHOOSS

Meet

s

Last

oma on ma | mH

Park

Ed Sordyl was the leading Parker hitter with a triple and an RBI.
Tom
LaBuda
was on the mound
with Willie Bodle behind the plate
for Highland Park. LaBuda allowed
only four hits, but two came
in
the final inning which contributed |
to Niles’ winning tally. Two errors
were costly to the Parkers.

On
varsity

oom aH ome!

Oak

Jeff Gluck, Hal Ross and Paul
Wolffe
won
singles
matches
for
the sophs. Dan Wagner and Trevor
Weiss
took
the
second
doubles
match
as did
the
first team
of
James Levin and Art Alschuler.
Last Tuesday, May 23, the netmen went to Oak Park for the final
dual meet of the season. A victory
would give the frosh-soph a first
Place tie with Evanston.
On Saturday, the Suburban League meet
will be staged at Oak Park.

The
Niles
Trojans
ended
the
Little
Giants
hopes
of
entering
state baseball competition by topping them 3 to 1 at Maine West
on Tuesday,
May
16, in regional
play.

Golf Gear Gone

COD

Season

Last
Monday
the
varsity
and
frosh-soph tennis teams hosted the
Morton Mustangs.
The varsity was
victorious by a 4-1 score and the
underclassmen won 5-0.
Ken
Cousens
and
Steve
Atlas
won singles matches for the varsity.
The doubles teams of Jim Gray and
Ken Lehman
and Renny Werrenrath and Ron Panter also won.

Coc

For Current

BS

Near End of Play

Golfers Win Two
From Lake Forest

|

COMING:

JUNE

“THE TRAPP

2nd!

FAMILY”

ING-SIZE DRINK.
KATY JURADO: de GAS10insOn THE -PINA
PELLICER- een
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A PEHREBAKER PRODUCTION:
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PLUS—COMPANION

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STEWART GRANGER — HAYA HARAREET
“THE SECRET PARTNER”
ALSO—BONUS

FEATURE —

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nga

served. by the

‘sexciting ‘new CREWMAIES

ARONNIE ORLAND
oe

atthe PIANO: BAK

“* BUFFET
"No

FOOD SERVE

cover—No minimy.:

EDGEWATER
BEACH
a
HOTEL
5300: North

Sheridan

Thursday,

May

Road

25, 1961

�ray

lacerations

Pole Hit; Two Hurt

and

John

C. Rusk,

22,

of the
USAG
RFA
Detachment
suffered a bruised head in a crash
with
a
utility
pole
on
Skokie
Valley Rd. at 1:30 am.
Monday
last week,
Highland
Park police
report.

Emelia Huizik, 20,
a WAC from
Fort
Sheridan,
suffered forehead

The

22,

STOCK CAR RACES
SUNDAY NITE

driver,

of

was
fort,
driving.

he

say

he

the

passed

Blessum,

819
for

at

the

reckless

thought

Clavey

he

cutoff

had

when

Deerfield Rd.; braked
slid
sideways
off the

suddenly;

y?

A.

Space

ticketed

Police

missed

oe

Roger

Trailer

pavement.

|
|

Foot Slips; Crash
Anelia Hurst of 3393 Old Mill
Rd, said her foot slipped off the |
brake onto the gas pedal as she
was backing out of a metered parking stall on St. Johns at Central
Highland
Ave.
Friday
afternoon,
Park police report.

Time Trials 7:15 — Races 8:30
Added Event — Amateur Races
Adults 1.50
Children 25c
W. Washington St. - Free Parking

- WAUKEGAN
SPEEDWAY

She got a ticket. Her car hit the
passing car of Kenneth Browning,

698

ONE

DAY ONLY
at the

Highwood

Ball

Dr., Wheeling.

DON’T LOSE YOUR
DIAMONDS

HIGHWOOD
——

N. Green

——

Bring

Your
We

Park

Rings and

Check

Jewelry

Them

tn.

FREE.

‘Tl. H. NEMEROFF

THUR.
JUNE 2

JEWELERS -. OPTICIANS.
Highland Park.

Tel, IDlewood 2-0630

Across

from

-bank

over

35° years.

We do our: own diamond setting.
Have your diamonds sct in. modern settings;
Payments arranged.

Discussing

HAGEN BROS- GLENCOE

CRS

THEATRE

— GLENCOE

ID 2-0605

VErnon

Fri.-Thurs.,

The

5-0605

May 26-June

ONE

3 RINGS 3
20 BIG ACTS 20

offer

1

HIS GREATEST HIT
SINCE
“HIGH NOON”!

HIGHWOOD __
COMMUNITY CENTER

GARY
COOPER

———Presents———

“America’s

‘ul

Stagers
Eugene

of

Deerfield

O’Neill’s

will

“Moon

of

the Caribbees”’ as part of the Little
Theater Festival.
Charles
Palmer
of Libertyville
directing
the
cast
which
includes Guy and Bill Geleerd, Highland Park; Bob Weiner, Chicago;
Mike
Barney,
Marshall
Philyew,
and Ray Fry, North Chicago; Bill
Walbaum, Northbrook; Mrs. Charles
Mrs.
Harry
Palmer,
Libertyville;
Mazur,
Edward
Jaeggi,
and
Mrs.
Paul Pearson, Deerfield; and Mrs.

FULL WEEK

Finest Family Circus

arrangements

for

the

one-act

plays which

will be presented

Friday

and

Sat-

.

urday evenings at Tenthouse Theatre as a part of the area Drama Festival are, from left, in
—
the back row, Raymond Perlman, 852 Ridge Rd., Mrs. Perlman, both of Experimental Theatre,
Seated
are Mrs.
and Tom Tibbetts, 1962 Green Bay Rd., representing Deerfield Stagers.
Donald Ruhman, 678 Roger Williams, of Threshold Players, and Herb Rogers, of the Tent- 4
house Theatre.

TWICE DAILY—3:30 &amp; 8 P.M.

Ralph Schlote and Al Capelli, Lin-| bers of the cast.
colnshire.
Stager
members handling
technical aspects of the Festival are
Tom Tibbetts, Highland Park, Production Co-ordinator;
Larry McChesney, Northfield, Lighting; and
Bill Olendorf Jr., Highland Park,
Sound
Effects Co-ordinator.
Experimental Theatre’s selection
is “Hangs Over Thy Head” by Ruth
Angell Purkey, directed by Maxwell J.
Kelley.
Harry Perlman,
Raymond
Perlman
and George
Perry, of Highland Park, are mem-

Threshold

Players

have

selected

“A Trap
Is a. Small Place,”
@
dramatic human interest play. Mrs.
Frederick

Mandel

Asher,

and Mrs.

of Highland
the cast.
Tickets

Mrs.

Park,
are

Edward

Donald Ruhman,
are members

available

at

of
u

Fells

Clothing Store and Leeds Jewelers,
and

also

will

be

sold

at

the

door

Additional information on the plays
may be had from Tom Tibbetts,

FRIENDLY

———Featuring———

The Santiagos Family
of Bareback Riders

PERSUASION
SN

AN ALLIED ARTISTS PICTURE

Feature

Times:

Fri., 5:30-7:55-10:20
Sot,

5:1.027 -40-10:15

Sun.-Tues.,

2:00-4:30-7 :00-9:30

Mon.-Wed.-Thurs.,

6:45-9:25

Sat.

May
CHILDREN’S
at 2:00

100

OF

ELEPHANTS

~

Never has there been so much to
see—and never has the cost been
so little for so much to see.

‘DON’T FORGET THE DATE
RAIN OR SHINE
Admission

$1.25 — Children

Advance Tickets . . . $1.00 at The
Co. and the Highwood Community

Thursday, May
\

25, 1961

only

plus Cartoons

CONGRESS OF CLOWNS

Adults

MATINEE
p.m.

“THE YEARLING”

PERFORMERS AND
TRAINED ANIMALS

TONS

27

COMING:

Fell
Cfr.

B. SAVE MOTHER
FROM CHAUFFEURING!
An immaculate ranch with 3 bedrooms,
114 baths, large livingdining area, modern kitchen with eating area, first floor
laundry, attached garage, nice patio, aluminum
storms
and screens, professionally landscaped.

THE
TERRIFYING
TRUE
STORY OF

A

Call

HITLER’S
REICH!

75c

AMINERVA INTERNATIONAL PRODUCTION A COLUMBIA PICTURES RELEASE

C. PLENTY OF BEDROOMS! Brick and Timber split level
on 1% wooded acre in beautiful area of new homes.
Five
bedrooms on 2nd floor, 2 baths, living room, separate
dining room, wonderful screened porch, lower level family
room, small bedroom and bath.
2 car attached garage
with automatic door.
Thermopane
windows.
Hardwood
floors, electric kitchen.
Low 60’s and anxious owner!
D.
A SWIMMING
POOL AND REAL COUNTRY COLON|AL white brick expandable
ranch with ‘shake’
roof,
built in 1959.
3 bedrooms
(unfinished 2nd floor) 2Y%
baths, lovely living room with fireplace, separate dining
room with bay, master bedroom suite has sitting
room
with fireplace and bath plus bedroom.
Excellent kitenan
and family room, opening into large screened porch. Pool
completely
enclosed
with
decorative
bamboo
fencing.

A. EXCELLENT
CONTEMPORARY
IN CHOICE WOODED
AREA.
Beautiful slate entrance, large living-dining room
with dramatic
fireplace wall, and
inside balcony room
over dining area, 4 large bedrooms plus family room on
upper level, 21% baths, partial basement, 2 car garage
with electric door.
Be sure to see this glamorous house.

BAIRD
REAL

ESTATE

SALES

576

Lincoln

Avenue

°

MRS.

OPEN

—
s
|
vy

WARNER
¢

MORTGAGES

MANAGEMENT

e@

INSURANCE

Hillcrest 6-1855

Winnetka

SUNDAYS

—
—
—

house!

ROESING

&amp;

@

dreamy

—

11

a.m.

to

5

p.m.

5

as

Page H 51—D 43

�\DHS Sweeps Five
PARK DISTRICT OF HIGHLAND PARK
STATEMENT OF RECEIPTS AND DISBURSEMENTS
FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDED APRIL 30, 1961
RECEIPTS
;

Tennis Matches

neral
Taxes
Revenue,
$75,111.62;
Golf
Course
Revenue,
$74,586.39;
Bathing
Revenue, $16,028.50; Swim Pools Revenue, $24,627.95; Sunset Woods Revenue,
; Special Assessment Costs, $1.00; School Rinks Maintenance Revenue, $2,935.12;
aneous
Revenue,
$33,963.06.

DISBURSEMENTS
;
ost,

er.
$13.5
icket Co.,

$53.85; Albany
Fixt,
$78

an,

iis

.

M.,
annex.
exp.
a
roll $496.84;
uiger, J., $106.00;

$20.00;
Brown,
Bush,

Brand
Bros.,
Wm., payroll
J. L., anuex.

Ison, R. C. E., contr.
$2,150.00;
Carter,
J. C., $4.80;
Central
Decal Co.
00; Central
Tire Co., $195.84;
Chambers,
J. W.,
payroll $2,418.00;
Chambers,
-, $671.00; Champion
Rec. Eqpt. Co., $718.46; Chapman,
J., payroll $4,075.55;
ms, $91.57;
Chi.
Fence
&amp; Equip.
Co.,
$5,589.00;
Chi.
Rawhide
Mfg.
Co.,

Chi. Title &amp; Trust, $6.00;

City of H.P..

“eng. services $12,671.35;

City of
water
$1,813.31;
Clavey,
Elmer,
$95.00;
Clavey,
Gordon
E.,
Imc.,
$225.00;
in,
J., payroll $55.35; Coleman,
Judy, payroll $773.12;
Cont’l Ill. Nat’l Bank
Co.,
$30.00;
Corwith,
N.
&amp; Co.,
$85.32;
Cole,
V.,
annex.
exp.
$25.00;
twood
Lbr. Co., annex.
exp.
$12.00;
Davis,
George
A., $3,703.72;
Dickelman,
, $190.00; Dierking, J., payroll $512.28; DiPietro Plbg., contr.,
$1,210.00; Dischner,
payroll,
$61.05;
Doetsch
Bros.,
0.00;
Drake,
Benj.,
payroll
$1,606.00;
kK, M. L., payroll, $412.25;
Duffy, G., annex. exp. $20.00; Durham,
E. W.,
yroll, $120.45,
hart,
Rob’t
S.,
&amp;
Co.,

Ts
My
» $1,304.95; Fritz,
Funspot, mag. $4.00.
yametime, Inc., $653.55; Gamlin, H. N., $191.00; Garrison Sewer Serv., $25.00;
» Otto
E., $90.00;
Gilader &amp;
Tazioli,
$877.15;
Glader,
Wm.,
$11.25;
Globe
Co., $492.39; Golden, E., annex. exp., $20.00; Gmenier, M. L., payroll $519.10;
n, $3.50;
Gourley,
John
&amp;
Co.,
$56.87;
Grabin,
M.
D.,
payroll
$64.50,
Elec., $60.76; Greeley &amp; Honson, $518.68; Green, J. M., payroll $1,470.70;
_
exp. $25.00; Greenwalds
Sport Shop,
$6.30; Grimes,
D: ° L.,
; Grinnel Co., Inc., $21.30; Gsell, Earl W. Co., $12.32; Halogen
»., $900.08; Hank’s Serv. Sta., $12.00; Harris, A. T., Jr., payroll $1,134.66;
» D. A., payroll $266.40; Harris, J. P., Inc., $468.00; Harris, Fred
A., payroll
Harvey
Lbr. Co., $31.20;
Hackett,
Marg.,
$20.00;
Heating
Serv., $95.50;
Tas
payroll $759.67;
Highland
Park
News,
$543.88;
Highland
Park
$4.12;
Hill &amp; Stone,
$803.94;
Himmrfelblau-Byfield
&amp;
Co.,
$3.84:
Hines
,
; Hoffman,
L.,
payroll
$772.19;
Holland,
G.,
annex.
exp.
Ollister, Inc.,
$6.60;
Holmes
Motor
Co.,
$26.48;
Homelite,
$22.63;
Huey
50; Huntington Lab., $971.58.
ewood
Elec.
S’ply,
$4.43;
Ill. Assoc.
Park Exec., dues $175.00; Ill. Bell
$1,295.76;
Indianapolis
Badge
&amp; Name
Plate Co.,
$224.29; Indian Hili
Inc., $7.73; Ind. Engine &amp; Parts, $15.00; Inman’s Paint Spot, $271.82; Interec. S’ply, $248.83; Izenstark, R. C., payroll $366.75; J &amp; K. Address.
Serv.,
Johnson,
G.
E.,
payroll
$1,938.05;
Johnson,
Neis
J., $228.00;
Jones
&amp;
contr. $5,654.50; Juul, J. E., payroll $51.20; K &amp; R Delivery, $4.72; Kelling,
OO ane
$5,241.95; Kerns, J. F. Chem, Corp., $59.00; Kiefer, Adolph &amp; Co.,
;
dew,
Chas.,
payroll,
$2,500.57;
Kiemp,
S.
G., annnex.
exp.
$25.00;
Sid, $85.00; Konsler Storm Window
Co.,
; Krauser, Mary
Lou, payroll, $949.26;
Lake Co
M., annex.

0.00;

‘

i

$717.80; LeMay,
ae otae
5 On
X. exp.,
di,
ie BP

Deerfield
High
School
netmen
swept all five matches, losing only
a single set, last Monday night at
vast Leyden High School to chalk
ip their fourth consecutive
conference triumph.

$0.00;

H.
$44.94;
Leusk,
0., $390.00,
L.O.O.M.,
annex.

$

The
Warrior
season
record
in
dual meet competition now stands

it five victories against four losses.

Single
Deerfield
Bax, Randy
Hirsch, Neil
Mandel,
Jeff
East Leyden
Dieke, Richard
Hebenstreit, Herb
Southworth, Jim

Set
6
6
6
Se
0
0
0

5
2

Set

contr.

$14,992.80;

Sears,

Roebuck

&amp;

Co.,

$550.12;

Secrest,

J.,

payroll

$427.00;

Thatcher

$285.72;

TireMart,

Eng.,

Eng.

Serv.

$12,835.00;

Three

Soring

es
«6S0.7(:
The mo-Fax
Sales
Corp..
$5330:
Thomsen
Automotive,
$700.17;
20th Centurv
Paint Co., $104.48:
Tropical
Co., $184.75;
Chem.
pson-Hayward
Radio Co., $17.85; United Pencil Co., $100.00; Univ. Brush Mfg. Co., $47.50;
Inc., $12.00;
Vandervoort,
R. C., payroll
$249.60;
Walker,
Richard,
$45 00;
Bros.,
Ward
$54.40:
Inc.,
Tiernon,
&amp;
Wallace
$608.56;
payroll
Richard,
Waterite, $1,105.05; Waukegan
Roofing Co., Inc., contr. $280.00: Waukegan
$24.85;
Co.,
Pumn
Weil
$408.18;
L..
E.
Weeks,
$1,352.58;
contr.
‘Sales
, R. E., payroll
$39.60;
Weiner.
F. K., payroll $718.49;
Weinfeld.
A.
S.”

$191.40;

Werner

Transp.

Co.,

$4.95;

Williams,

A.

J.,

payroll

$5 69600;

West

hey, $16.82: Westerbeck &amp; Son, Inc.. $150.25; White &amp; Assoc., $102.20; Winn.
Dist., $187.50; Witty, D., pavroll, $666.95: World Drver Corp., $22000; Y-ung,
payroll $669.48; Zacharias, N. A., payroll $22.50; Zellmer, J., payroll $739.91.
ILLINOIS MUNICIPAL RETIREMENT FUND
,
DISBURSEMENTS
RECEIPTS
ed from Taxes ................$2,506.69
Ill, Mun. Ret. Fund ................$8,926.22
FUND
REDEMPTION
BOND
RECEIPTS

ved from taxes... $33,790.20
DISBURSEMENTS
met am, ats
“Bank:
t’l Bank

&amp;

H 52—D

Trust

44

m@

Co.

Trnst:
of

Co)

Chicago

ioc

cS

hake soneoeeee-Principal
Interest
Principal

$10,000.00
$
950.00
$10,000.00

Deerfield

High

School

netmen

turned

in the

first winning

in

short

history

the

dropping

Prospect

of

DHS

High

3-2

matches,

the

Warriors,

der Coach Karl Waldermuth,
to five

straight

Set Set Set
Jon Eaton, Jon Johnson ...... P|
6
6
Pete Craig, Jon Shurberg ... 6
6
East Leyden
Set
Set
Set
Bob Hanson, Bill Brenecke .... 7
1
Al Puden, Paul Polgar
0
0
Game Score—Deerfield, 65; East Leyden, 12

Varsity and Soph

un-

swept

victories,

Singles players, Randy Bax, Neal
Hirsch, and Jeff Mandel, turned in

The Lake
Association’s
Unit

will

County
Mobile

on

whole

confer-

the

city,

The

netmen

traveled

to

ence prelims on Monday and will
wind up the conference finals tomorrow,

Sinales

be

in

Tuesday, June 6 at the Highwood
Community Center, 428 Green Bav
Road, from 11 a.m, to 3 p.m. All

free.

the

culosis

Dr.

Lake

following

diagnose

all

on

the

various

For

boys

of

the

volunteers

registering

of

Unit,

who
those

years

of

age.

ing

at

9:30

finger

morn-

Bring

a

Maior

Pee

bovs
up

Wee

League

of eight

Friday

years

of act.

afternoon

at

at the ball park. Bring your
for

five

glove.

For
Sign

Saturday

am.

a

workout

at

that

3:30

glove

time.

including

will

do

desiring

all

the
an

LEGAL
SPECIAL ASSESSMENT
Collections for the fiscal

ASSESSMENT

Valley,

and

County

has

20

two

or

pieces,

total-

acres,

which

30

golf
is

course.
heavily

Pony
For boys
Youngsters

league
vark

should

Leaque
report

to

afternoon

Prep

the

ball

4

p.m.

at

Leaaue

For boys 15 and older, interested

any

should

ball park.
of

the

above

be raining,

boys

dates,

can

if it

regis-

ter at Highwood’s Community Center. Highwood
program will give
hoys 7 thru 19 a full summer of

baseball,

but you

must

register to

play.
berculosis

of

three

Association

for

a

term

years.

Interest
FUND
WARRANT
NO. 7
year ending April 30, 1961
DISBURSEMENTS—None

WARRANT

EDWARD

proposed

Rd. neighbor, Mrs. Les-

Protests

against

rezoning

were

directed only to the proposal for
one-sixth-acre
development
just
south of Sunset View subdivision.
Attorney
Russell
Engber
represented the owners in approving
this proposal of the city’s planning
consultants.

Members of the audience had
questions about many of the other
“D”

change

to “C”’?

Marion

It would

houses there
—Why was

“A”?

on

smaller

is now

proposed

“B-1”

from

many

nonconforming,
Village of the Woods

zoned

partly

Ave.

make

It

is

developed

lots

for

than

‘“D”,

a change

to

(half-acre).

—Why

rezone
Golf

a

strip

Course

of

along

BobSkokie

Rd. from “C” to “B’? It ought
to be Office and Research if anything, neighbors suggested.
—What’s
the advantage of the
proposed new “P” zone for public
property and cemeteries?

Professional
Rupp

planner

explained

indicate

land

that

Marwood
“P’’

would

effectively

out

of

real
estate
speculation;
indicate
potential development more clear-

ly

on

the

zoning

map.

Rupp
also
explained
that
the
comprehensive plan would
result
in a net reduction
of potential
housing density from present zoning; would be more defensible when
zoning is tested in court. There

is a vending

case within the area.

Mrs.
Mildred
Riddle,
whose
property
in
Manus
Northmoor
Manor
subdivision
would
be re-

zoned

“C’’,

brought

a

sketch

of

replatting
to
conform.
The
old
subdivision has never been built.
She
would
be verv
happy
with

NOTICE

FUND

two

kind of zoning he would like. As
the
comprehensive
map
now
stands, he would be left in the
3-acre district.

O’Link

13 and 14 years of age.
interested
in
this

Sunday

suggestion,

the two country club pieces. The
NEWS
phoned
Alexander Kleine
at the number on the sign; learned
that he does not yet know what

ever

League

For 11 and 12 year old bovs.
Youngsters will register and workout today (Thurs.) at the ball park,
after school,

NO.

$ 9,845.60

9

RECEIPTS—$55.14
DISBURSEMENTS—None
STATE OF ILLINOIS)
COUNTY
OF LAKE )
PARK
DISTRICT OF)
HIGHLAND
PARK.
)
I, Ivy J. Shuman, being first duly sworn, depose and say that I am the Treasurer
of the Park District of Highland Park, that the foregoing statement is a statement as
to said Park District of Highland Park of all monies received and from what sources
received, giving items, particulars and details, and of all monies paid out, giving the
name of each individual to whom paid, on what account paid, and the amount that
such statement is for the fiscal year ending April 30, 1961.
I. J. SHUMAN, Treasurer of the Park District of Highland Park
Subscribed and sworn to before me this 23rd day of May, A.D. 1961

5/25/61—138

club

some

changes:
—Why

Leaauve

Highwood

x-ray. Mrs. Nustra who has taken
part in many Civic activities in
Highwood, was recently elected a
Director of the Lake County Tu-

RECEIPTS—$856.81
SPECIAL

eight

up at the ball park

At

the

that

are

Tuber-

will

Mrs. George Nustra, 28 Webster
St., is in charge of all arrangefor

groups

For boys seven years of age. Sign

confidential.

ments

age

will be formed into teams and the
times boys may register for play.

Results

Petter,

films.

on

and

K.

Sanatorium

is information

read

C.

of

Rds.

The

A Clavey

in playing baseball, not softball,
this summer. This will be a Mondav night league. Boys will not be
uniformed.
Interested players may
register next Monday night at the

County

Skokie

Deerfield,

of

sixth

lie Blackburn, reported a sign seeking inquiries on 25 acres between

Highwood’s Baseball program this
summer. It contains information

quired for this x-ray which takes
less than one minute and is abof

Line

rezoning

wide belts of half-acre on either
side of the drainage ditch will
extend into the 3-acre-zoned flood
plain to the ditch itself.

Hiahwood’s

for a practice.

solutely

between

Bay,

Kahn’s

Doubles
Johnson—Eaton
Craig—Shurberg
Campbe!l—Laechelt
Merek—Barr

residents over 18 years of age are
urged
to have
a chest x-ray at
this time.
No
undressing
is re-

head

week

wooded, Occasionally, Kahn said,
members ask about putting a house
on it.
If the plan commission adopts

Little Maior

on

last

south-central

are not used for the
Most
of
one
piece

For boys 9 and 10 years of age.
Candidates may register next Monday afternoon after school.

Highwood

asked

Commis-

evening

comprehensive

Green

ing

Deerfield

Plan

from 3-acre to half-acre residential; but said subdivision of the
land was considered only a possibility for future years.
That evening’s public hearing
the

in hard-fought

Little Minor

Tuberculosis
Chest X-Ray

Tuesday

was

The

Rick
Ascher paced
the varsity
with a 74. Other winners were Jeo
Hurst, George Cimbalo, and Dick
Yampagni.
Soph winners
were
3arge
Ori,
Harvey
Kinzleberg,
Roger Cimbalo, Marty Becker, and
3uddy Block on a forfeit.

sion

Park

to consider rezoning of part of the
Northmoor Country Club property

matches.

lost

Will Function

On Monday,
May
15, the cold
ind windy weather did not bother
fhe Highland Park golf teams as
-he each notched wins over visiting Evanston. The varsity won 814
o 614 and the sophs posted their
‘econd straight shut-out, 15 to 0.

Highland

berg

Raseball Programs

With Evanston

the

victories while the doubles teams
of Johnson-Eaton and Craig-Shur-

How

Golfers Win Games

Attorney Richard L. Kahn

by
last

Friday night.
After losing their first four conference

On Unused Acres

season

Deerfield

Center June 6

Seyl Outboard: Motors &amp; Boats, Inc., $212.00;
Shaw,
D.
+, amnnex.
exp.
Shoreline
Blue
Print
Co.,
$17.44;
Short,
E.
B..
payroll
$953.64;
Shuman.
, Treas., $200.00; Sienerth, S., payroll $4.618.46; Siljestrom Fuel Co., $297.69,
eer
24
Simonsen’s
Nursery,
Inc., $21.00; Sinclair Refining Co., $2,623.77:
- &amp; Pbishg., $67.68; Skidmore,
J. M., annex. exp. $20.00;
Skidmore,
E.
Sons, $368.91; Smith, Alan R., $36.00; Snow, J. C., III, payroftl $774.80; Sordyl,
‘payroll
$7,023.00;
Stachovak,
V.,
payroll
$4,774.17;
Standard
Oil,
$420.00;
l,
D. C.,
payroll
$783.00;
Stefke
Fyeight
Co.,
$9.40;
Strenber,
Ed.,
contr.
00; Syson, H. K., payroll $1,469.40.
foi
Tonics
contr., $3 283.91; Tazioli, M., annex. exp. $20.(0: Tellman, D. F.,

in

Doubles

At Highwood

Co.,

Change of Zoning

Turn

Set

Mobile TB Unit

co Bronzecraft, $81.00; Nash, J. B., $576.00; Nathan, J. A., payroll, $382.50,
hemsearch Corp., $56.88; Nat’l Conf. on State Parks, Dues $10.00; Nault, P.
Nem
G., $95.00°
Negro.
roll $323.75; Neary, T., payroll $4.773.45:
$735.15; Nelson, I. J., annex. exp. $20.00; Nicholson, M. E., payroll $39.60;
ook
Lbr. Co., $19.50;
North
Shore
Gas
Cu., eee WES
IN
ee
bite
, $63.50; Nustra, Frank J., $2.00;
O &amp; O Const. Co., contr. $16,744.00; QOuiaia,
annex. exp. $20.00; Olsen, A. R., annex. exp., $20.00; Olsen, Edward, $6,892.,0;
g. Co., $1,135.60; Oppenheimer, H. D., $85.00; Ostman Pibg. Co., Inc., $78.00.
ama
Beaver,
$52.62;
Pasquisi
Elec.
Co.,
$230.00;
Patten
Tractor
&amp;
Eq;t.
7,654.62; Patterson, H. F., payroll $225.28; Pavlik Bros., $364.86; Peck, Michael,
$686.25;
Peerless
Home
Bldrs.,
annex.
exp.
$15.00;
Permalawn
Products,
Peterson, M. R., payroll $4,293.00; Pettibone, P. F. &amp; Co., $64.20; Pilgrim
Co.,
$4,112.00;
Platt,
G.,
$80.15
(payroll);
Postmaster,
Post
Office
H.P.,
Powells Camera Mart, $30.84; Press Prtg. Co., $103.65; Price, Wm., payroli
1;
Prior, Percy H., Jr., $37.50;
Public
Service Co., $2,435.14;
Public
Woxks
12.00; Quigley &amp; Schneider, $840.00; Quirk, T. J., payroll $5,889.24.
nbow Elec. Co., $93.00; Rathburn, A. S., payroll $2,670.64: Ravinia Plbg. &amp;
:
, Inc., $487.88; Ravinia
School,
annex.
exp,
$17.00;
Redwine.
B-bby
K.,
ol $51.15; Reiland &amp; Bree, Inc., $551.46; Reliable Laundry, $9.88; Rink, M. L.,
x.
€xp. $2000; Robbins, J. M., payroll $692.52; Roberts, D. W., payroll $6,120.00;
erts,
Geo.
W., $5.00;
Rochester
Ropes,
Inc., $31.69;
Rockwell
Standard
Corp..,
0; Rose,
Arnold
M.,
Co.,
Inc.,
contr.
$7,936.00;
Rotary
Evec.
Coy:
aes
; Roseman
Tractor
Equip.
Co.,
$32.02;
Sanders,
I., annex,
exp.
$20.00;
_T.,
payroll
$465.01;
Sanders,
S.
A.,
payroll,
$4,163.54;
Schachtner,
L.,
‘Scheski, I., annex. exp. $20.00; Scotch Highland Laundry, $5.70; Scott Concrete

Country Club Asks

Teams

First Top Season

Randy Bax and Niel Hirsch, Nos.
1 and 2 singles players, ran their
personal victory
string to five
straight.
Hirsch, a late comer to
che squad, remains undefeated in
eonference play.

44

Deerfield Tennis

D. GOURLBY, JR., Notary Public

“C”

zoning,

she

told

the

commis-

sion.

Wallet

Taken

His wallet
with
$5 was
taken
from the glove compartment of his
car (Michael
Bass, 17, of 6505
Kolmar,
Lincolnwood,
told Highland Park police, Saturday
night
while he was parked at the foot cf

Ravine Dr. attending a Niles Township High School beach party.

Thursday, May 25, 1961
Var

Ny

�Fine Food Costs

Jewel Ham Does Doub le Duty
— Cold On Memorial Day!
Serve It Warm On Sunday
Jewel brings you Swift's Premium Holiday Hams, tender and juicy with that deep

6 TO

smoked-in flavor you've come to expect from

8 LB. SIZE

Butt Portion

Jewel Hams. Buy a large one, serve it warm
for Sunday dinner, and slice it cold for your

Ib, 3%

Memorial Day picnic. The low low price is just
Jewel's way of wishing you a happy Holiday!

6 to 8 lb.
Shank

SMOKED HAM

arte

Slices

lb, TQ

Portion

Ib.

—16 TO 18 LBS.—SHORT SHANKED
SMOKED

Swift’s Premium Ham
Hamil Peper Stuppolico!
CUT RITE

Wax Paper
FONDA

NOTTY

en 25¢

PINE

ben 79:

Paper Plates

VAN

Paper Plates

Scoities

of 400

23:

1 Pork &amp;
Beans

Paper Cups

12:
Tapuah Yours [iat /
SUNSWEET

Prune Juice

GRAPE

on. 45¢

DRINK

Welchade
97%,

CAFFEIN

2 OO

FLAVORS

Waxed Paper

2°":

©

Salters
SWEET

ht
FRESH

Pickle Slices

DEL MONTE

WYANDOTTE

29
‘'i," 19.
49:

=

MEDIUM

Ripe Olives

of 8
2:39:

7 or.
cans

VET

Dog Food

Bluebrook

2

HALVES &amp; SLICES

Cling Peaches
large 29 oz. Can

Sox 1B&lt;

GATEWAY

i

FARM WHIPPED

CASH REFUND
SHORTENING

Swiftning
3 Ib. Can

. os ae &amp; ne

Tewaloll 7telpow /
Calgon
m1 6 Be
CONDITIONER

FLEECY

WHITE

Liquid Bleach

FOR

BEAUTIFUL

SrA

PLANTER'S

STRAWBERRY

Preserves

LIBBY'S

Sweet Relish

‘2° 45-

3 Lt S$yoo

27% 29-

| ReaLemon

CALIFORNIA

FROZEN

Press Juicy

Lemonade
6 oz. Can

2 $y 00

= **' 39.
a nciat weirs

:

JEWEL

MAID

Potato

Chips
1 Ib. Box

Milnot
8

OSCAR

f

wea 1O&lt;
¥

MAYER

Luncheon Meat

‘33" 33&lt;

FRENCH'S

Mustard

sr 10

KITCHEN

“ar 29-

Klenzer
GLISTENING

oe 15&lt;

appier Families Shop At Jewel
Thursday, May 25, 1961

Kraft Dinner

:

TG

Make Siupper Samaurchos!

ae

Hot House
Tomatoes

‘xs, O9&lt;

Liquid Starch

Margarine

a.

con BO

WASHES

Rinso Blue

IMPERIAL

mie Qe

FANCY

MACARONI

;

Aerowax
WHITER

Butter

fess

LABEL

€ 29:

FLOORS

Be

WO servings

Potatoes

Fluffo

WATER

Be

Corn Flakes

Soup

si: 29s
bes 49¢

oer.

KELLOGG'S

“bc OFF”

25¢

Peanut

Hamburger &amp;
Hot Dog Buns

;

ms 49&lt; y

Bluebrook

iy

Barbecue Sauce '};* 29«

9 ‘i&gt;

Tomato Catsup

1Q&lt;

All Meat Wieners
Ib.

JEWEL MAID

:

Pepper

=

SKINLESS

JEWEL

HINES SMOKY

nt a

MORTON’S

BUDLONG

|

YUMMY

COFFEE

ve, OD

Tomato Soup)

2's, 25«

MUSHROOM

Beverages

YUMMY

Starlac
DUNCAN

‘an Be :

Tea Bags
ALL

Paper Napkins

RAP-IN-WAX

pn

Royal Jewel

_ 3," 33:

HEINZ

i, OYe

Coffee

Large Prunes

aa AQ¢

Tablecloths

FREE

Sanka

ee

BORDEN’'S

MORTON'S

16 oz. Can

om

SUNSWEET

JEWEL

CAMPBELL'S

CAMP

Pork &amp; Beans

"3, 89«

BONDWARE

PAPER

pkg.

Nore Lewel Unbueo/

Tov Faente Radkedi /
JEWEL WHITE 9 INCH

WINDOWS

Windex

an

ree

eS

$° 13

/EWe

TEA

CO.

&gt; Happion Families Sinp At Jowal
We reserve the right to limit quantities. No sales to dealers.

Page

H

53—D

45

�Fe
Sie fu ial oa Ke , CNA
oh
te \e
¥

GET SET FOR
THE NEXT
HEATING SEASON

Uy

That
1,

Wire brush and vacuum
heating surfaces of the

2.
3.

clean the
Boiler or

Clean the smoke pipe and chimney
base,
Seal air beaks around the furnace
doors so you will have better combustion.

. Test and adjust the draft control so
heat
isn’t extravagantly
the chimney.

9. Clean

the

oil burner

sent

nozzle

up

so ol

—~

will
ignite more
quickly,
cleanly
and completely.
- Clean and flush the burner strainers to prevent burner clogging.
. Clean the fan housing and turbulator and adjust the air shutter to
help make
certain of the right flow
of air for proper combustion.
8. Clean, test and adjust the oil burner controls.
9, Adjust the oil burner so it will operate with maximum efficiency.
1 0 . Lubricate the motor bearings.
| i Make an operating test to be sure
that everything is running correctly,
ABOVE AVAILABLE
ON CALL OR
AGREEMENT BASIS

BRAUN
1961-62

AVE. —

HEATING

BROS.

OIL AGREEMENT

You can count on “Care-Free” fuel oil delivery to keep your
supply adequate in any weather. Years of experience and
carefully maintained temperature charts assure you of a
worry-free winter.
ANNUAL

BURNER

SERVICE

AGREEMENT

Expert maintenance men are on the job now and all year
round. Don’t wait till cold weather hits to have your furnace checked.
A Burner Service Agreement insures the
peak performance of your furnace next fall and all winter.
CONVENIENT

MONTHLY

BUDGET

PLAN

An easy way to make even payments throughout

the heat-

ing season at no extra cost.

Telephone

BRAUN
444 CENTRAL

RATa
Sat i, 9

aUI

NGS

GA ae
te oie

ee

:

rt

Afternoon

Here’s an 11-Point Program
Assures You Top Performance
From Your Heating Plant

ROE

For The Week

The
Community
Center
will
sponsor the one-day appearance of
the Hagen Bros., Circus at Memorial
Park
on Thursday,
June
1.

TIME FOR
FURNACE CLEAN-UP

Furnace.

Ee
ceLRaah

Activities

with...

ANNUAL

Fi

Highwood Community Center

we

NOW

ARa ReaF wil

BROS.

ID 2-3804

CARL

DRIVE

CASEL,

ID 2-3804

OIL
DIV.

CO.

MANAGER

HIGHLAND

PARK

evening

perform-

The Center’s Board of Directors
meets tonight at 7 p.m. in the director’s office.
The meeting was
scheduled last Thursday.
*
*
*

ances
are
scheduled,
starting
at
3:30 and 8 p.m.
The
Community
Center
shares
50% of all advanced tickets being
sold for the circus. Center authorities urge local residents to get their
tickets in advance in order that the
center share the greater portion of
the tickets sold.
The Hagen Bros. circus is a real,
live, circus,
with
three
rings
of

continuous

entertainment.

It

The
Senior
Prosperity
Club
holds its May meeting in the Community
Center
tonight,
and
will
honor a group of its most distinguished
Highwood
and
Highland
Park members tonight.
The meeting will center around a Mother’s
Day
theme,
according
to Mrs.

will

be the only tented circus in the
area
this
year.
Tickets
can
be
obtained at Fells Clothing in Highland
Park
or at the Community
Center in Highwood:
*
*
*

Phillip

BE YOUR OWN!

*

Tuesday, June 6.
Program chairman Bob Wolters
announces
games
and
races will
provide
entertainment
beginning

to supplement

6

Years

old.

tained

Proof.

30-oz.

from

to

for

sale

fare.

BONDED

Italy

by

members

of

the

PTA

8-Yrs.

Old.

BOURBON
100

the

faculty

at

the

recognition

Juncheon honoring those who have
contributed much to the success of
the past year’s activities.
On Monday, June 12, the present executive board members will
meet with the 1961-62 officers. The
meeting will be held at the school
at 8 p.m.
The regular monthly cookie sale ||

LOG CABIN

VERMOUTH
Imported

picnic

Executive Board.
On Wednesday, June 7, the executive board will again be hosts

BOURBON
86

will offer

dogs

This will be the last social event
on
the
regular
PTA _ schedule,
Faculty
members
will be enter-

KENWOOD
STRAIGHT

PTA

will

Proof.

Brel.

continue

through

Tuesday,

June 6.
The
final event
of the
year for Green Bay Road

school
School

students will be the Flag Ceremony
on Friday, June 16, at approximatelv 10:30 a.m. The children will be
dismissed following the ceremony.

Two

Turn, Crash

Many sophs were confirmed last
weekend. Everyone had a gay time
making the party tour afterwards.
Seen dashing from one to another
were Sue Rae Bartlett. Harvey
Kinzelberg,
Robert
Owen
Ruder,
Donna
Beaudin,
Richard
Samuel
Schwab and Leona Mary Christine
Cioni.
Poys get your tures and girls your
formals
for the Juniors’
big extravaganza.
Better get your dates
first though. The plans for ‘‘Southern
Side
O’ Heaven”
are
really
moving.
Graduation

|15.

The

ifrom jail.
temporary
college.

c

| 1106 Green Bay Road
Page H 54—D 46

Highwood

police
after
yield

say.
the
the

Walther

was

collision for
right-of-way.

ticketed
failure

to

coming

will

up

be

June

released

Hope they enjoy their
parole
before entering

Somewhere in this promised land,
A star is shining bright,
But there’s no joy at old H.P.
| Cause finals will kick and smite.
|
| We’re

Clarence Walther of 235 N. LaVergne,
Chicago,
northbound
on
First
St.
Thursday
last
week,
stopped for the Central Ave. sign;
let
a
couple
of
cars’
through:
turned left.
Westbound Bruce Larner, 16, of
1082
North
Ave.,
turned
left at
the
same
time,
Highland
Park

is

Seniors

poets

know

| AL &amp; JANE'S Cut-Rate LIQUORS

*

Winners! Losers! Non-nominees!
Welcome to Echoes!
The familiar
halls of H.P.H.S.
have lost their
walking billboards.
You can now
walk down the halls, resting your
eyes. All “John Doe for President
of the Junior Spacemen of America, (H.P. Branch)”
and ‘Susie
Smith for Social Chairman of the
H.G.A.
Jump-ropers”
signs
have
disappeared.
You'll
be
glad
to
know
that
both
Susie and
John
won. Our deepest sympathy to all
the unfortunate losing candidates,
including ourselves.

on

hot

*

ee

should ran, the picnic will be held

The

*

HPHS

The annual picnic for Green Bay
Road
School
students
and
their
families will be held on the school
grounds on Monday, June 5. If it

and

*

*

School on June 5

drinks

of the

You may register your youngster
for day camp on Saturday from 9
thru noon at the Community Center. Boys should be between the
ages of six and ten, while
girls
should fall in the same age group.
Camp will run for two four-week
sessions, starting Monday, June 26.

Plans Picnic at

soft

president

You may register your boy for
Little League baseball, which includes PEE WEE
baseball in the
Community Center Saturday morning, from
9 thru noon.
This
is
registration
for
boys
7 thru
12
years of age.

The Community
Center’s twonight presentation of “Girl Crazy,”
the annual dance recital by pupils
of Mary and Camille, was a rousing
success.
The show was a farewell
performance
for Mrs.
Camille
Catchpole, and for her two daughters, Cindy and Sandy.
The trio
appeared in several numbers. They
will move to Washington, D.C. at
the end of the school year.
The
Community Center
thanks Mrs.
Catchpole for the fine job she did
while
working
with
the
center
dancing classes, and wishes her and
her family well in their new loca-

at six o’clock.

Pasquesi,

senior group.
The club will also
sponsor a public dance in the Community Center on Saturday night.

Green Bay PTA

CAREFULLY

THE LIFE YOU SAVE—MAY

and

tion. Mary Mazzetta will continue
to hold the classes as usual, starting next October.
*
*
*

But

but

the

world

don’t

cause

we’re

it,

our feet
ECHOES

Bellringer

show it
writers.

Bitten

Gloria Campos of 2936 Warbler
Pl. was collecting funds for mental
health
Friday
afternoon;
reached
down to pet a pekingese when Elio
Mordini of 2929 Warbler answered
the door.
She was bitten on two
fingers.

Thursday,

May

25, 1961

�ELECTRICAL REPAIRS”
CLAUSING ELECTRIC
All types of electrical work, post lights,
wall outlets, new circuits, repairs. Reason
able prices Telephone iD 2-6287

BOAT HOUSE
SKOKIE HIGHWAY &amp; CLAVEY RD.
HIGHLAND PARK

Week-End

SPECIAL

FIREPLACE

3 Lines

Permitted)

WITH

50c per additional line.
(Up to 10 lines)
25c¢ Service Charge for blind ads

$1.75

.

FREE

RATES

(No Abbreviations

~AT

OMLAND

Will Appear
a

PARK DWE
THE LAX

BANK

SALES

AVAILABLE

eave

REviEw
PT, SHERIDAN TOWER

a:

BOOKS
IF

Uroue

*Fort Sheridan Tower is published every other Friday. Ads
in which the Tower is published will appear in the Tower

————-WANT
4:30

DEADLINE

FOR

‘Business Services &amp; Supplies’’ Classifications Will Be Accepted Up To

Saturday

P.M.
CONTRACT

CANCELLATION
DEADLINE
Services G Supplies’ ads which

Phone

run during the week
at no extra charge.

AD DEADLINES

All Classifications Except ‘Business
Services &amp; Supplies’’ Will Be Accepted Up To

Monday,

you want your child to be “better than
average,” give him World Book/Childcraft,
the finest in home educational help. Telephone Miriam Booth, Hlllcrest 6-3848.
BEFORE you buy an Encyclopedia, you owe
it to your children to see Compton’s Pictured Encyclopedia. ID 3-1910.
COMPLETE set of Child Craft books. Excellent condition, best offer. WI 5-2033.

[Vewspapers

—

3

P.M.

NOON
MONDAY
may be cancelled

Your Want
(except

ADS

Ad —

Noon

BUSINESS

(except
for ‘Business
until Noon Saturday).

It!

ads)

OUTPOST DAY CAMP
Open House June 3, Visit the grounds, ride
Little Fire Engines, experience blast off at
Little Cape Canaveral, see Little Nurse Corp,
Tents and the Indian Village. Program for
boys and girls 5 to 12 will be on display.
For Deerfield and Highland Park brochure
on request CR 2-4422.

CEdar 4-2300

CARPENTERS,

WOOD

&amp; SUPPLIES

Come and see Eda
Zengeler
Cleaners,
fand Park.

ALTERATIONS, expertly, in my home. For
appointment, Maria Ori, ID 2-4553. 2528
Green Bay Road, Highland Park.

AUTO

SERVICE
Authorized

Auto

Body and Fender Repair
All Makes - All Models
Complete Painting,
Undercoating and Touch Ups
ASK

FOR

JACK

FRECH

‘SY E. Park Ave.
AUTO

As

&amp;

swaging

DINGHY

SHOP

591-B Roger Williams (rear)
Highland Park, ID 3-2620
Daily

9-9;

Sun.

12-4

RENT a Houseboat-Cruiser or Pontoon boat
for your vacation. For information or brochure write Weimar Houseboat Rentals,
Inc. 1521 Green Bay, Highland Park or
phone ID 2-8029.
16

FOOT
Fleetwind Arrow, class boat of
North Shore Yacht Club, stainless steel
centerboard,
many
extras.
Reasonable.
Call ID 2-5857 or SHeldrake 3-4820.

NEW
14 foot aiuminum boat and _ trailer;
excellent for fishing and general boating;
complete set for only $35. Call ID 3-2161.

Thursday,

May

25, 1961

10%

down.

Bank

rate

Boats
Boats

financing

USED VALUES
equipped from anchor to spotlight ....$2895

1959—-17
foot Lone Star, full canvas, 40
H.P. Mercury electric and generator, sterling drive-on trailer, beset Other extras
Nadcert cicbe
3
---§1795
Other

used

boats

in

all price

classes.

FREE—FREE
CH

4-1310
2927 Belvidere
(Rte. 120) just east of Green
Bay
» Waukegan, Ill.
Open Mon., Thurs., Fri.: 9-9
Tues., Wed., Sat.: 9-6
Sunday: 12 noon to 5 p.m.

17 FOOT raised deck flush Cruiser with
vertible top, 60 horsepower, Flying
electric
controls;
tilttype
trailer.
Rosemary
Road,
Highland
Park.
phone ID 3-2169.
14

conScott
1674
Tele-

FOOT
1959 Admiral runabout, Tee-Nee
trailer, 30 H.P. electric starting Johnson,
boat fully equipped with running lights,
horn, remote control, etc. ID 2-2053.

14 FOOT Glasspar Sports Lido boat, 35 HP,
Evinrude-Trailer-many
extras.
ID 2-4044
after six.
OUTBOARD motor, 25 HP Mercury, needs
some
assembly, repair manual
included,
$70. Telephone WI 5-4273.
19 FOOT
Thompson
cabin
cruiser,
1959
model, with trailer. CE 4-3895,
18 FOOT Arrow Day Sailer, solid mahogany;
new rudder and mast; 2 sets Murphy Nye
sails. This
big,
beamy
beautiful
sloop
with trailer only $645. CE 4-9439,
CUSTOM built 14 foot runabout with trailer, 18 hp Johnson motor. and accessories.
Call WI 5-3856.

ID

AARNOS &amp; SORENSEN. Homes our Speyn
Remodeling. Finishing. ONtario 2812.
HOME
remodeling, additions, repairs and
design and construction of modern homes.
Free estimates. WI 5-1511.
FOR building that new home, addition or
eee.
it large
or small,
call
V &amp; F Construction Co. Telephone ID
2-5477 or WI 5-2980
BUILDING
and
remodeling.
Recreation
rooms and cabinets, floor and wall tile,
window awnings, door hoods and carports.
Free estimates. Telephone TRinity 2-7313.
HERB BLOMQUIST carpenter, quality custom homes, additions, porch enclosures,
rec rooms, custom cabinets; also remodeling and repairs. Telephone WI 5-2830.
on

5-327

ace

aerators

4

EXPERIENCED
tutor, languages.
French,
Russian native. 20 years Paris. Call Professor
Ouroussoff,
CEdar
4-9043
after
noon.

‘JUNK

NEWSPAPERS
25c per CWT brought to our door.
Highest prices paid for all types of junk
brought to our door, such as rags, iron,
metals, etc..Or call ID 3-1466 for truck
pick-up.
Hours
daily
including
Saturday,
8:30 to 5:30 p.m. Sun. 11-2.
HIGHLAND
PARK
WASTE
MATERIAL
1466 Berkeley Rd.

LANDSCAPING

co.

Top Soil—Humus

2-2319

Remodeling and home pa
ER
is our
business. Porch enclosures, basement paneled room additions, kitchen cabinets, or
just that one door that doesn’t close right.
All work guaranteed.
CONCRETE
and carpentry, residential tile
and sewer work, free estimate. Steve E.
Sabol, ID 2-7604.

CEMENT

For

The

NEEDS

RENT FROM OUR NEW ASSORTMENT
of adult and child sized tables and chairs;
fine china, silver, linens and 100’s of other
items.
WE DELIVER

ASSOCIATED
RENT-ALLS
Highland
2-6333

Free

Park

Dawson

DRY

CLEANI

590 Elm

Place

Highland

‘LAWNMOWERS
WOODY.
formerly
of Woody’s
g
Park Service Station, is now locat
1749 Green
Bay Road for lawn
mot

service

and

roto-tilling.

Call ID 2-80:

EXPERT
sharpening
and
repair on
makes. A. J. Landwehr, WalterA:
and Pfingsten Road. (Just South of
Harbor.) CR 2-0523.

- MISC.

SERVICES

A
1640

charge for estimates
Call
ID 2-3550

&amp;

A

REPAIR

Deerfield

MOVING

call, we
VE

SERVICE

Road

Highland ©

&amp;

HAULING

haul. Phone

VE

5-3815

5-3824.

general

hauling.

PAINTING

&amp;

LIGHT

We

mov Gee

also

Call:

types of household appliances.
6098 or ID 2-4917.

;

DECORATING

THE VILLAGE DECORATORS
INTERIOR &amp; Ly A neaags
FULLY INSURE
REASONABLE PRICES

IAL
*LOCAL REFERENCES
:
Chuck Yingling
Jim }
BA 3-0954
PAINTING and decorating; 25 years o
North Shore; outside a specialty.
Free estimates. Phone any time.
EXTERIOR and interior painting and
Orating. Hubert Johnson. Call ID 2- " ?
PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING
terior and exterior painting. For q
workmanship
by
experienced,

men

call W.

C. Varney,

WI

5-0654.

PAINTING
and
decorating,
interior
exterior, natural or bleached wood
ishing;
quality
workmanship.
For
mating, call Eric Schneider, Liberty
EM 2-8592.
PAINTING
and paper hanging, rea
prices; free estimates. Telephone
GALLOS, CE 4-0156.

PAINTING

AND

DECORATIN:

Thorough preparation
Clean, careful, workmen
Best materials, applied properly
Sensible prices
wean etd” Re
i
Neh co.

Decorating,

interior

ai

ior, expert painting and paper hang
prompt
free estimates;
reasonable |
LE 7-0737 or PE 6-0461.
HOUSE painting and decorating. Free
mates.
Call
C.
LOTHER
SERVI
TRinity 2-7332.
RANCH style homes painted, $125. Win d
puttied,
painted,
calked,
$3. 5

washed,

¢ SODDING
R.

&amp;

Special: Men’s Suits
—
Cleaning and Pressing $1.2

BJORNSON

4-3213

e LEVELING
walks,
floors,
VE 5-

CATERING

Williams,
1IDiewood

The

¢ GRADING

EXPERT on cement patios, sidewalks, steps,
garage floors, etc. L. Gulbrandsen. Phone
WI 5-4458.

Roger

and

WORK

All types of cement work,
driveways, retaining walls,
etc. Free estimates. Phone
3815 or VE 5-3824.

651

Very Best
Quickest

NEwton

Patio Time

PARTY

SAM WOO
LAUNDRY

No

INSTRUCTION

2-3383

SERVI

WASHER DRYER
REPAIRING

FOLK MUSIC BLUES—LEARN TO PLAY
THE GUITAR
NOW!
Classes, adults or
children; private or semi-private lessons.
In
home
or
my
studio.
EVERYONE
GUARANTEED
to learn!
Will furnish
instrument if necessary. Call at once. ID
3-0084 after 5 p.m.
JACK. MOORE
GUITAR
SCHOOL
By teachers who have produced solo and
band
national
championships
from
1955
thru 1960. Lessons in your home or studio.
Instrument furnished. Phone HI 6-373.
PIANO
INSTRUCTION
Hank
Winston,
staff pianist
at WBBMCBS. Adults mornings and evenings, children
after school. Call WI 5-0244 after 7:30 p.m.
NORTH
SHORE
MUSIC STUDIOS
(formerly Garino’s)
North
Shore's
finest.
Inquire
about
our
liberal trial plan. Instrument furnished.
UITAR-ACCORDION
ID 2-0015
If no answer, ID 2-1498
VIOLIN-PIANO INSTRUCTION
Tutoring in Music Theory
Shirley Harris, B. Mus.
Phone ID 2-1939

CONTRACTORS

5-4145

Demonstration rides every week-end, (weather permitting) at the Waukegan harbor, foot
of Madison St. Bring entire family.

SUPPLIES
RACE-LITE
MERRIMAN
INTERLUX
service

as

White
Alum.

1960—19 foot Thompson open cruiser, camper top, Gator trailer, 75 H.P.
Johnson
engine,
electric
and
generator;
fully

BOATS

O’DAY
IMPERIAL
MASTERCRAFT
24 hour

low

LOANS

SAILBOATS

WI

for:

Mercury Motors Bae as nee Grady
Dorsett EE
aside Star Craft

ID 2-5845

LOW COST AUTO LOANS
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF LAKE FOREST
LAKE FOREST CE 4-5100

dealers

prices

Shel

and

BUILDING

of Waukegan

WM. RUEHL &amp; CO.
GENERAL BODY SHOP
NOW OPEN

competitive

REMODELING

BELVIDERE
BOAT WORKS

at our New Drive In.
2020
First St., High-

JOB

Types

estimates,

BOATS

ALTERATIONS?

&amp;

FENCING

All
Free

ALTERATIONS

CONTRACTORS

R. E.

only.

LANDSCAPING

LAUNDRY

SERVING
ENTIRE
NORTH
SUBURBAN
AREA
State Licensed Instructors
Beginning and Refresher Courses
Free Classroom Instruction
642 Green Bay Rd., Kenilworth
ALPINE
1-6403

M TWEEN CAMP

Dinner served at fine restaurant. Private camp grounds and pool. All sports,
canoeing, riding, special trips, dancing,
bowling.
Max Neiberg
DAvis 8-9037

the publisher and which substantially
impairs the value of the advertisement,
on the advertiser’s request, the publisher will rectify the error by publishing
the corrected ad in the next regular
issue without
additional
charge.
All
claims for adjustment must be made
within five days of the date of publication in which the error occurs.

SERVICE

Wihnelies Prive

BOYS AND
GIRLS 11-14 YRS.
5 days or Mon., Wed., and Fri.

MONDAY

Windsor 5-4500

IDlewood 2-4500

Advertising of any kind is accepted for
publication in this newspaper with the
understanding
that the publisher assumes no responsibility for omission or
for errors and shall be under no obligation or liability of any kind whatsoever,
either to the advertiser or third parties.
However, in the event of an error in
any advertisement, clearly the fault of

CIRCLE

We'll Charge

situation wanted

NEW
METHOD
Prefer beginners and children, ages
9 to 14 that have sincere interest
in learning a second language. WI
5-1497.

CAMPS

MOWED

mower. Jim Beinlich,

BLACK DIRT - GRADING &gt;
eet
~ sopn a

&amp;

iJuore

POWER

NELSON

%

Wort

WEEDS

L

PONIES

FRENCH &amp; SPANISH
TUTORING

Or.

$2.25 hou

non 5-1195
ROTO-TILLING—gardens
_ dau, WI 5-0764.

INSTRUCTION

SERVICE

MON.,
THURS.
&amp;
FRI.,
SUNDAYS
10 TO 4

&amp;

all day

By tractor wad

$20 per ton;
ID 3-1622.

STALLION, % Arab, roan with black mane,
tail and points; gentle, intelligent, showy;
small horse for parade; can be trained for
tricks;
must
sell before
June
10, need
money for college education. Call NEwton 4-3674 evenings and weekends or write
Kathryn Cordo, Route 1, Box 207A, Mundelein, Ill.

SEAHORSE

AND

ID 3-0880
OPEN

AZ

Dae

LAKH BLUFF REVIEW

FINANCING

JOHNSON

In All Seven*

lal

News

FORESTER

EACH
NEW
RUNABOUT
OR CRUISER
THROUGH
MONDAY,
MAY 29th.

SOLD

Ads containing 11 lines or more are charged at the inch rate. Contract
rates for 4 or more consecutive
insertions available on request.
1 inch
Minimum.

Your Ad

HORSES

$3 hour,

*

AD

WOOD

SEASONED
fireplace wood,
taileate delivery. Telephone

NEW 11 FT. SAILBOAT
WITH NYLON SAIL

WANT

os

CLOWN-MAGICIANS, Bands, Pianists, Car
Parkers,
Portable Dance
Floors, Wocalists, anything. Call hdo Productions, ID
2-1240. Your entertainment specialists.

*

Memorial

ENTERTAINMENT

THE YARD BIRD |
Perpetual or one shot fine plese
and gardens; mowing, tilling, er
te:
No job too big or small. EM
2-1932.
SHIRLEY’S White Expert Gasdadiag”
ice.
Pruning,
trimming,
Shout. Al

$45;

also

1-4636.
INTERIOR
painting
, aes
Expert

Estimates
WI

5-5606

YARD maintenance, shrub planting, tree reci
and trimming. Call C. Kropp, ID
-3227.
PRAIRIE ACRES
LANDSCAPING
SERVICE
Black soil, fill dirt, manure,
top dressing
and rolling lawns. Evergreens, shrubs, trees.
For estimate phone WI 5-0818.
MODERN Landscaping, Jack Vena. Call me
for the best in lawn
maintenance
and
Svprrusns in garden and patio work. ID
NOEL
TEAGUE
LANDSCAPING.
New
lawns; black soil; evergreens; shrubs and
trees;
lawns
re-seeded
and
fertilized;
stone work; driveways; tree work; patios.
Telephone ID 2-7619
LANDSCAPING
Garden
plowing
and
harrowing;
grading,
disking, driveways dug and widened; patios
dug and new lawns. Roads graded &amp; maintained. Phone WI 5-5831.
GENERAL
i
Ae New jobs. Gabriel
Ruffalo,
909
Half
Day
Rd.,
Highland
Park, ID 2-7817.

floors,
:

and
wall

windows.

decorating.
washing.

FREE
estimates,
painting,
wall-wa
window washing; builders welcome.
R Painters. Call KImball 6-1171
coll
MODERN
trailer with awning; oil drv
gas tanks,
duel;
ideal for lake
or
home; priced for quick sale, $400. Mus’
to appreciate.
203
Skokie
Hwy.,

Bluff, Ill. CE 4-2768.
PIANO

PIANOS

TUNING

expertly tuned, with the guara

of satisfaction or
phone ID 3-0608

PLANTS
GROUND
cover,
plants for sale.
wood. Telephone
all day Sunday.

ROTO

no

charge.

$10,

&amp; BULBS
beautiful
shooting
125 North
Ave.,
ID 2-3936 after 5

TILLING

ROTO-TILLING; expert garden, lawn p
aration for seeding; brush clearing.
cials for new sub-divisions. Contract
lawn work. EM 2-0472, CE 4-2846, —

�ROTO
‘Sere
ervice
|

TILLING

HOMES

teen Bay Road for lawn mower
and roto-tilling. Call ID 2-8029,

Deerfield

a
NO CHARGE
we cannot repair your TV set in your
Ca Service call $4.95 only when repaired
9 your satisfaction. ID 3-0608.
ORTH SUBURBAN TV SERVICE

&amp;

TRAILER

SPACE

DERN
trailer;
awning;
on
nice
lot;
eal for couple or bachelor. 203 Skokie
+» Lake
Bluff, Ill. CE 4-2768.

st

TREE

SURGERY

PERT TREE REMOVAL
COMPLETELY
ed

men.

Power

R

a

the

VE

5-1195

best in tree surgery and roto tillrrnode Howard J. Lewis, WI 5-

G’S TREE
EXPERTS.
Cutting, trim» Temoving,
feeding
and
repairing,
power stump he ide
and power spraying. Fully insured and
bonded; free esti-

‘mates;
phone

seasoned

ID

fireplace

3-1622

or

Imball

wood.

6-2292.

Tele-

N TREE EXPERTS. Trimming, feed-

;
he

thsired FREE ESTIMATES Tolepnons
red.
2-8750;

iS.

ID

Telepho
itans

2-5481.

REAL ESTATE
HOMES

FOR SALE

FOREST

ESTIGE,
ME

in

GEORGIAN

desirable

house

east

has

location.

five

master

ooms, four baths, maid’s
‘s and bath all on second

quarfloor.

rst floor has large entrance hall,
der

ft.

room,

with

living

room

fireplace,

38

oval

ft. x

dining

m, a fine library with fireplace,
ing porch, kitchen and butler’s

try. Beautifully situated on 41%
es of wooded land with the potial sale of two valuable tracts
uld owner desire to divide. A
hionable home for the discriming and prudent buyer _ $110,000

1 down

and

2 bedrooms

with

a

h upstairs? Then you will want
; sturdy
ement;

brick

Cape

screened

Cod.

porch;

Full
excel-

nt location between schools. Only
ththtpicinciniy

e

ULD YOU LIKE a
brick Biel heavily shaded by big trees
overlooking a ravine? Then see

‘this nice older home
and

2

baths.

John Griffith, Inc.
OFFICES

TO SERVE

78 N. Western Ave.,

12

Forest

YOU

Scranton

Ave.

a:
Lake Bluff
CEdar 4.0816

oes Rutgers SE
incy

Appleton

CE

oats
4-1082

ete

over

me

Pa)

sage

adn

eee

COMMERCIAL
RESIDENTIAL
VACANT
| PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
|
CALL
_ Real

Highland

2-0344

Page

din. rm.

H 56—D

ID 2-2682

48

opens

L.,

onto

adequate

nice

Full bsmt. completely
elled rec. rm.

scr. pch.

w/f.p.

tiled w/pan-

plus 2 car gar.
oe
OO

A large panelled recreation room
w/built-in bar is one of the many
extras
in this well built quality
brick ranch on a tree lined street.
Liv. room w/f.p., well planned kit.
w/eating space, large family room,
2 bedrms. &amp; bath, garage. Beautiful landscaping ..
__._._.__ $23,900

PIERSEN REALTY

FOR

SALE

HIGHLAND
A

Luxury

HOMES

Deerfield

Commons

5-1670

LAKE FOREST
Six room modern white brick house
on attractive 100 foot lot. $34,000.

10

room

New

Orleans

Colonial on over 1 acre, well landscaped.
Property can be divided.

luxurious

master

Custom

ing room-dining room, family room,

Gilbert Rayner
ESTATE
CEdar 4-0382
Berenice Ressinger
Burgess Olson

DEERFIELD:
3
bedroom
ranch.
house, Sunday 2 to 5, 1262 Arbor

WI

5-0493.

Open
Vitae.

w.

frpl.,

Ranch

Here is a beautiful white ranch
on a double lot, exquisitely landscaped, and perfect in every respect
with 1 exception. The construction
is of the finest; beautiful carpeting
covers natural wood floors on concrete base.
Lge. liv. rm. with bay and frpl.,
comfortable din. area, mod. natural
wood kitch., 3 good sized bdrms.
and
2 baths.
Unusually
spacious
screened porch, oversize 2 car gar.,
34 bsmt., radiant gas heat, alum.
storms, screens and doors.
A beautiful home at ___.. $45,000

LAKE

FOREST

Beautifully

Built

Ranch

Surrounded
by an acre and a
half,
artistically
landscaped
with
fine trees, this 5 year old brick
ranch combines modern and traditional with pleasing effect.
The 34 ft. living room brings the
garden area into the house through
huge glass panels. There is a lge.
natural wood din. rm. or den, completely
equipped
natural
wood
kitch. w. brkfst. area. 3 bdrms. and

2 cer.

t. baths

comprise

the

main

floor, together with oversize 2 car
gar. The full basement has laundry,
spac. pnid. rec. rm. w. frpl. and
wet bar.
Warm air gas heat. Many extras:

patios,

carpeting,

ances, etc.
Reduced

PAUL
1925

50’s

Rd.

2-4580

ranch

on deep

and fenced lot, 1 block

‘| from school. ‘‘Model Home’”’ interior with smartly
decorated
living
room
and dining room, beautiful
brick kitchen with spacious eating
area, 3 good bedrooms and 2 full
tile baths.
Screened
carport and
large patio for summertime
fun;
full basement with tiled floor for
wintertime play area. Owner wants
immediate sale. $27,950.

SIZZLE?

just

listed.

Located

in

the

beautifully wooded area of WOODRIDGE on a nicely landscaped lot
it contains 3 twin sized bedrooms,
2 ceramic tile baths, birch cabinet
kitchen with eating area; for entertaining or family fun a king sized
living room
with fireplace, large
dining L, screened porch and lovely patio. $38,500.

Central

the benefit.

Anyway,

Split-level is one of the most popular Deerfield Park models. Three
bedrooms, 2 baths, family room-or
4th bedroom,
play
area, kitchen
with built-ins and eating space. An
added feature is the living room
fireplace. We agree with our client
a . it should move fast at $26,750.

SO
in

this

MANY

EXTRAS

tastefully

decorated

room

year

MOST
POPULAR
two story Colonial

old—3

bedrooms

only

with

LUXURIOUS
Seven
room
brick Ranch
with 3
bedrooms, 2 ceramic tile baths has
all the features you are looking for.
Family room with nice fireplace,
carpeted living and dining room.
Master bedroom has complete bath
with
tile
shower,
completely
equipped
kitchen,
full basement,
large bedrooms, 2 car attached garage, slate entry hall. Over 100 ft.
landscaped lot. $38,500.

OUTSTANDING
This brick Ranch with full basement and 2 car attached garage offers space and value that is not
easily found. Living room has fireplace. Carpeting in living room and
dinette included. 3 good sized bedrooms; light and spacious kitchen
with
breakfast
area
overlooking
fenced patio area; large lot. For
value in excellent neighborhood see
this—priced right at $26,500.

BEAUTIFUL

COLONIAL

in Deerfield’s

2

baths;

finest

area.

family

ID

2-6600

3

room

w/fireplace; Mutschler cabinets in
kitchen
w/disposal,
dishwasher,
oven and range; 2 car attached garage. Choice wooded lot. $39,900.

PARK

EAST

In
the
much-wanted
Elm
Place
School District: Older residence, in
sound condition, with 3-plus bedrooms and lots of living space for
the
larger
family.
2-car
garage.
Wonderful
yard.
Close to everything.
Vacant-transferred
owner
has bought another home and must
sacrifice. $28,900.

John Coons, Realtor)
THE NAME WITH
THE TRADE-IN PLAN
Deerfield Road
WI 5-5106
IN

HIGHLAND

PARK

3 bedroom house with living room, kitchen,
full basement, and 2 car garage, close to
schools, price $18,500.

IN
Beautiful
on large

HIGHWOOD

2 bedroom
lot.

Baracani
ID

iannon

Real

stone

house

Estate

2-8077

MORTGAGE
LOANS
CONVENTIONAL
OR FHA

FIRST
LAKE

NATIONAL BANK
FOREST
CE 4-5100

REALTORS
of the Evanston-North
Multiple Listing Service

Shore

DEERFIELD
THIS CAN BE YOURS
We would like to show you this 8 mo old
brick &amp; frame Bi-level, owner transferred
and anxious to take family with him. 3 bedrms., 1%
baths, Liv.-dining comb. Built-in
Kitchen, eating area, large patio and yard
(80x120). Home in excellent condition. Present mortgage can be assumed 54%.
Ask for Elvine Larson
$28,

FULL

PRICE

$9,750

Will buy a real nice little home, screen
porch, living rm., dining r., kitchen, one
bedrm., partial basemt.
and
garage. Low
taxes, a good buy
to live in or rent.
Ask for Francis
Carr

DAY

Would have been the time to buy MOM
this two story Colonial brick and frame
home in pleasant Deerfield Park. 3 large
bedrms. with 2 baths upstairs. Liv.-dining
comb. with fireplace, plus family rm. Roomy
kitchen with built-ins and eating area. Additional % bath on Ist floor. Unusual oak
floors naturally finished present striking appearance. Full basement with partially finished recreation rm. Immediate possession
as owner transferred.
Ask for Paul Hamer
$29,000

1

2%

baths.
Master
bedroom
has
own
Bath.
Powder
room
just off lst
floor family room. Formal dining
room; entrance hall; full basement.
Located
on high terrace in fine
neighborhood of comparable homes.
Over 1,600 sq. ft. of living space.
$7,000 down. Price $29,000.

located

SALE

MOTHER’S

den or 4th bedroom, play room, 2
baths,
attached
garage.
All
draperies, inside shutters, carpeting,
dishwasher, disposal, oven, range,
and refrigerator are included in the
realistic price of $29,500.

7

Member

home

make it a real bargain. 3 bedrooms,

For
prompt,
personal,
service
when
you
buy—build or refinance in the Lake Forest
Lake Bluff area—See us.

L. Ringer
457

get

lower than that which his Realtor
felt could be justified in today’s
market.
This
handsome
Colonial

623

when you can enjoy the cool comfort of this custom built AIR CONDITIONED
brick ranch which we

have

If so, you

FOR

Carr Realty Co.

Realtor

here’s one of those rarities: A price
set by the owner that’s actually

HIGHLAND

LISTING

old BRICK

landscaped

ID

HOMES

SALE

COONS,

bedrooms;

INC.

FOR

UNDERPRICED?

appliaie

mid

PHELPS,

Sheridan

5 year

drapes,

to the

WHY

kitchen, maid’s room &amp; bath, master suite, 3-car garage. $118,500.

suite

dressing rm., htd. sleeping porch,
3 baths; 2 servant’s rm. w. bath.
3 car att. gar. w. gar. apt., elec.
eye door. Many
extras incl. new
carpeting,
drapes,
g.h.,
circular
driveway, patio., etc.
:
A luxurious
house
realistically
priced in the 70’s.

$80,000.
A fine new architectually designed
house in the French Regency manner, located on 3 acres. 2nd floor—
3 bedrooms, 2 bath. 1st floor—Liv-

JOHN

Home—Northeast

NEW
WI

PARK

This
beautiful
English
brick
home
on over an acre of attractively landscaped ravine property
in the finest section of Northeast
H.P. In a secluded location close to
schools,
2 blocks from
lake. Interior recently remodeled without
regard to cost.
The
house
contains
entr. hall,
lge. liv. rm. with frpl. and bay, sunny din. rm. with bay, mod. kitch.,
den w. frpl., 2 ser. porches. The
2nd floor has 4 lge. bdrms., incl.

REALTORS

266 E. Deerpath
Kathryn Jaicks
Carmen

Park

din.

Master bedrm, has adjoining bath,
2 other twin size bedrms. &amp; full
bath. Panelled den with 1% bath.

Estate Service

Ave.

large

REAL

FRANK PEERS
FRANK ANDERSON
Laurel

been

This ranch has all of the features
a fine home should have—fine construction,
large
rooms
&amp;
charm.
Liv. rm. has raised hearth f.p. &amp;

Charming

EVENINGS CALL
©. Lackie CR 4-1380
Starosselsky ce atta sei bans
¥ Griffis CE ain”
Kelley CE

has

baths,
bsmts.,
in
fine
neighborhoods. Since these homes are owned
by transferred
owners
who have
left town, they are easily shown:&amp;
quick occupancy.
Asking __.........$26,750 and $26,900

base-

nt and 2 car garage. Owner will
ID spies oe sivas... 694,000

2

Colonial

Because
this
huge
Roman _ brick
ranch in one of the town’s most
beautiful areas needs a little paper
&amp; paint, the owner has reduced
the price $3,000. His loss can be
your gain if you’re handy with that
brush.
All the rooms
are large.
Cent. hall, liv. rm. w/f.p., sep. din.
rm., 3 twin bedrms., 2 baths, lovely
family room, gar. Asking ....$31,900

with 3 bed-

Partial

older

well maintained. It offers spacious
living
for
the
growing
family.
Large liv. rm. &amp; din. rm. have fireplaces as well as the master bedrm.,
3 other bedrms. Lovely landscaped
yard with rose bushes &amp; many perennials. Close to churches, schools
&amp; transportation
ih eee

kitchens,

BRICK

s lovely

Ewha, Ali geese aeahckchc
a Re

4 bedroom Split Levels in the midtwenties are a rare find and we
have two of them—in fact one could
even be called a 5 bedrm. Both are
completely
modern _ w/built-in

John Griffith, Inc.
a
Realtors
KE

ieee

Charming

equipment,

BEINLICH

Impressive
4
bedroom
brick
&amp;
frame
Colonial ranch on wooded
acre
in
beautiful
Riverwoods.
Among the outstanding features are
the huge picture book kitchen with
built-ins &amp; sep. brkfst. room, 2 fireplaces—1
in the liv. rm. &amp; 1 in
the full bsmt., encl. brzwy., 2 car
att. gar., plaster walls, hardwood
floors, HW ht. Unbelievable value

I

EXPERIENCED

Modern

HOMES

SALE

PIERSEN REALTY

service

TELEVISION

TRAILERS

FOR

——

formly of Woody’s Highland Park
Station, is now located at 1749

BI-LEVEL

COLONIAL

Perfect home for a large family with eptrance hall, large liv.-dining comb with corner fireplace. Kitchen w/breakfast area, 4
bedrms., 2 plus baths, rec. rms., attached
garage plus large storage rm. w/outside entrance. Close-in location to school and shopping. Priced right to sell for $31,750.
Ask for Paul Hamer

HIGHLAND PARK
SPACIOUS LIVING
We have a large lot in convenient location,
with a spacious ranch home of 3 bed rmms.,
”
2 baths, 37 ft. living rm., 15x15 dining 2
family rm., large kitchen, basmt., 2%4 car
attached garage. Park area across the road
for your children’s winter &amp; summer recreational activities.
Ask for Irene Clavey
$39,000

EXECUTIVE’S

HOME

Just listed this; lovely 2 year: old. 8.room, 4
bedrms., 3 bath home. A true Cape Cod
Colonial with 2nd story unfinished wing for
expansion. You must see this home for gracious family living in an ultra exclusive
area facing Northmoor Country Club. Corner lot, 2% car garage
basement.
Ask for Irene Clavey
65,500

NORTHBROOK
SUBURBAN LIVING
Owner will help with financing on this attractive ranch home. Four bedrms., 2 C.T.
baths. Living &amp; dining comb.
with large
thermopane sliding door to patio. Pleasant
built-in kitchen with separate breakfast area
and utility rm. Full basmt. with rec. rm. 2
car attached garage. Living rm. draperies,
all carpeting,
storms
&amp; screens
included.
Priced to sell NOW.
Ask for Elvine Larson
$30,900

WHITE

RAMBLING

RANCH

This
glistening
3 bedrm.
ranch,
carpeted
Liv.-dining comb., tiled kitchen with eating
area, utility rm., enclosed
breezeway,
attached 2%4 car garage on lot 126x238. Country living in an area of nice homes.
Ask for Irene Clavey
$22,500
NEAR
MUNDELEIN,
in the Province of
Illinoif, there if a very good 5 acref of
wooded land, having on it a well built Brick
houfe with 3 bedrmf., and another good
large building by it For horfeleff carriagef.
Large Kitchen. Full Cellar. Inside Plumbing.
Living
room
with
ftone
Fireplace.
Houfe
on
hill
overlooking
lovely
pond
ftocked with baff. Ideal for raifing horfef,
dogf and/or children.
Inquire, and know further
$34,000

Carr Realty Co.
DEERFIELD’S
701

Waukegan
OPEN

—

WI

SUNDAYS

GETTING

809

OLDEST

Road
12

TO

5:30

MARRIED

5-0984
P.M.

? ?

Broadview

Start out right.
Build
up equity
instead
of rent receipts in this charming 2 bedroom
home. Living room with fireplace, separate
dining
room,
plastered
walls,
hardwood
floors, modern cer. bath, finished basement,
gas heat, combination storms and screens,
beautifully landscaped. Low 20’s.

IF YOU

HAVE

CHILDREN

and desire a good neighborhood
close to
a park,
schools and
shopping,
then you
will want to see this 3 bedroom ranch less
than
4 years
old.
Modern
kitchen,
oak
floors, beautiful recreation room. Low 20's.

LEONARDI
John
ID 3-1000

AGENCY

Est. 1927
F. Leonardi,

Jr.
ID 2-0596

REAL
estate investment available that offers safe 20%. Your investigation invited.
Minimum $5,000 needed. Write Box D-35,
c/o Highland Park News.

Thursday,

May

25, 1961

�HOMES

FOR

HOMES

SALE

FOR

HOMES

SALE

FOR

HOMES

SALE

FOR

HOMES

SALE

see

ALL

LAKE BLUFF
OUTSTANDING BUYS
LAKE

MICHIGAN

to

the

east;

the blue rippling waters. This dignified 8 room spacious home 212
baths, Living room, 23 ft. dining
room, study, 2/f/places, exceedingly lg. kitchen, base, gas heat, garage. Cool summer breezes, be 10
degrees cooler during summer heat.
FOR RENT with option to buy this
3 bedroom home 11% baths, living
room, f/place, dining, family kitchen, enclosed heated porch 12x18,
all windows THERMOPANE, 2 car
garage.
20’s. Walk to trains.
room

estate this QUAINT
house

window,

has

living

f/place,

room,

bay

room,

base,

towering

WEE HOUSE—needs
rooms, base, garage

fixen.

3 bed-

BRICK
3 bedrooms, baths, 24 ft.
living room, f/place, 15 ft. dining,
music room, plus 25 ft. panelled
family room, gas heat, 2 car garage.

Plus

extra

buildable

lot.

Land-

secaped grounds.

LAKE

FOREST

VALUES

SOLID BRICK COLONIAL has 24
ft. country kitchen, f/place, dining
room, slate entry hall, 4 bedrooms,
(Master 21 ft.) 2 full baths, 214
baths, porch, basement, gas heat,
2 car att. garage. Carpeting, range,
2 ovens, refrigerator, automatic ice
maker, d/washer, disposal, 2 fans,
hood, woodsey property ... window THERMOPANE
... COIL in
furnace for placing air-cond. City
water &amp; sewer.
NEAR
HIGH
SCHOOL
this spacious
4
bedroom brick, 3 baths, base, porch &amp; patio.
Modern kitchen, range/oven, d/washer etc.
RANCH 5 rooms, 1% baths, base, att. garage . . . Mid
20’s. Also immaculate older,
A rooms, 1144 baths, base, garage... Low
’s.
SEVERAL
monthly.

Mrs.

RENTALS.

. . 100-150-225-250

Lindenmeyer,

H.

D.

CE

Olson

&amp;

Waukegan,

session.

Priced

SPACIOUS

Deluxe

4-0969

Co.
Ill.

May
be
custom-built
to
order on your site or any
of
many
choice _ sites
throughout
Highland
Park,
Glencoe
or
Lake
Forest.

4 large bedrooms;
ous baths (add’l

home

month

including

4

BEDRMS.

Created

Manilow

and

built

Low

down

2

BATHS

IN EAST
CENTRAL
HIGHLAND
PARK
1 block
from
Elm
Place
School. Has fine investment potential as is. Apt. zoned for 9 apts.
Full 7 rm. and 2 porches. Immaculate modern condition
$34,500

BANNOCKBURN

if you are looking for the usual sterotyped
ranch, split level or new home on a postage
stamp lot. This home is for a discriminating
person who likes the spaciousness, both inside and out, of an older home, extensively
modernized and on a large piece of property
in excellent location. Fully air conditioned,
family type kitchen with adjacent ‘‘keeping
room” with fireplace, a den with loads of
bookshelves, large living room with fireplace,
full dining room, mud room
and powder
room.
Upstairs are three bedroom
suites,
fireplace, many closets and two baths. Lower level paneled recreation room with fireplace and bar. This is not an ordinary home,
and if you want quality and the unusual,
call
for
appointment
today.
GEORGE
RUMSFELD

LAKE
FOREST
Contemporary Ranch
On 2 Acres With 150 Trees

500

Timber Lane
Open Sat. &amp;

ID

$27,500
Dutch Colonial: 3 bdrms., 14% baths,
DEN, mod. kitchen, lovely garden.

Office Open
666 Waukegan Rd.
Deerfield

EAST

LAKE

bungalow;

4 bed-

separate

to

portation.

Price

schools

KNOLLWOOD

and

trans-

$22,900.

LAKE

BLUFF

2 bedroom
ranch with recreation
room, 1 car garage. Price $16,900.
2 bedroom
brick
with
fireplace,
full basement, 2 car detached garage, large lot. Price $20,000.

HARLAN &amp; HARLAN
104 SCRANTON AVE.
LAKE BLUFF
CE

4-1387

or

CE

in addition to the above
‘‘carrot’”
can one get so much in the $30’s?
4 bedrooms
2% baths
Fireplace
Large recreation room
Plus panel play room
Basement
Large fenced patio
% acre
Two car garage
Just perfect living for children in a quiet
street and a very short walk to schools.
Loads of plus features and ready to move
into and hang up the hat. Alum. storms &amp;
screens.
Built-in Kit—the
whole home
is
tip top.

Construction

Co.,

Inc.

CONVENTIONAL MORTGAGES
HOME IMPROVEMENT LOANS
LAKE FOREST
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN ASS’N

Phone for an appointment at
your
convenience.
ID
2-8711
500
NAVY TRANSFER
2%
year old, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, splitlevel. Landscaped half acre lot, Acrilan carpeting, GE
kitchen with
refrigerator
and
breakfast bar, storms and screens, panelied
family room, plus many extras. Priced to
sell. WI 5-3907.

hursday, May 25, 1961

N. Western
CE

SUNSET
dining
en

Lake

Fores!

4-4200

Terrace,
Highland
Park, livingroom, fireplace, 2 bedrooms, den,
re-decorated, attached garage. iD

of

Shore

Board

Evanston-North

Multiple
&amp;

Deerfield

6-1855
3-1855

DEERFIELD—HOME
PLUS INCOME
Live in 1 apartment rent out the other.
All brick building built in 1956 with plaster
walls, full basement, attached 2 car garage,
separate utilities. 6 large rooms on Ist floor,
4 large rooms on 2nd floor. Room on 109
ft. lot for additional 2 units.

DEERFIELD—CHOICE LOCATION
New
custom built deluxe split level. Top
quality
home
throughout.
Lovely
family
room, 2 beautiful C.T. baths, magnificent
kitchen with built-ins, full basement, 2 car
attached garage. Builder will consider trade.
LAKE FOREST—-ROUTE 22
Just west of Toll Road. 40 wooded acres,
adjacent to established area. Will split acreage into 2 or 4 parcels,
VISIT OUR OTHER OFFICE
On Route
14 in Cary, Illinois for choice
Barrington-McHenry County properties, Fox
River Valley homesites and river frontage.
Phone ME 9-2011.

Viking Realty
DARE

Hillcrest

6-2900

Estate

Rds.

WI

5-5700

bedroom, 3 bath
wonderful patio,

ond. Basement with
recreation
room with fireplace and a utility
room. Gas Heat. Two car attached

hall, living room with fireplace, dining room with bay window, kitchen,

lent storage throughout. Full basement with unfinished family room
with fireplace. Oil heat. One car
attached garage.
BS
Priced

LISTING

at

Central

bath

ID 2-1212

Ave.

JOHN

COONS,

WOODED

Realtor

You'll find this 4 bedroom, 2 bath Contemporary split level a top value. Patio doors
of dining room, den, attached garage, gas
et
nicely landscaped and excellent located,

John Coons, Realtor
THE NAME WITH
THE TRADE-IN PLAN
623 Deerfield Road
WI 5-5100
990

on

and

top

Lake Forest
NORTHCLIFFE
SHOWN

BY

WAY
APPT.

Like a raindrop in a crystal vase, this shrimp
colored
brick RANCH
on
¥%
acre truly
sparkles! Interesting fireplaces in the COUNTRY KITCHEN, the LIVING and paneled
GAME rooms. In addition are 3 twin sized
bedrooms, 2 baths, a large patio and a 2
att. gar. Not
5 years
old—AIR-CONDITIONED and only $59,500!

ESTATE

AREA

Here’s a charming quality WHITE BRICK
home with a genuine feeling for the best
traditions of COLONIAL architecture. On a
beautiful 5 acre setting of tall trees, broad
meadows and many gardens, it contains a
first floor arrangement perfect for extensive
entertaining or for just pleasant family living. 2 extra 1st floor rooms and a_ huge
screened porch, 6 bedrooms and 3% baths.
Priced accordingly. See

Real

Estate

6-2900

possession.

Co.
3-2666

Two

more acreage
Prired Oboe

car

roo

detache

plus

acres

wit

available.
Se oe

IN
Four bedroom three bath frame Colonial remodeled in 1954. Entrances
hall, living room
with
fireplace.

dining room, kitchen with dishwasher and disposal, utility room,
family room and bath on first floor.
Four bedrooms and two baths
on&gt;
second. Two car attached garage.
Oil heat.

Priced

Realtors

eae

FOREST!

Three bedroom, two bath picture
book farm Colonial over west with
over eight and a half acres with
more

acreage

available.

A very

un-

usual house and must be seen to be
appreciated. The garage buildin:
has extra space for two rooms wit
bath. Entire property is zoned for
two acres.
Priced at

i.

Parking Space Available
For Our Customers

Co.

BRoadway

McGUIRE

at

LAKE

3-2666

Hart, Shaw &amp; |
Company

DEERFIELD EAST

1-0228

off living

Three

garage with work shop. Immedia

New 4 bedroom home ready for gracious
family
living.
Family room;
living
room
each
with own
fireplace;
separate dining
room; 2% tile baths. Large basement. Oversized 2-car garage. Many extras.
A VALUE
IN THE
LOW
40's.

ALpine

a balcony

level.

WONDERLAND

This 3 bedroom,
1%
bath Contemporary
Ranch
is situated on 3 acres of wooded
fairyland. Brick and redwood construction
with brick accent wall and fireplace in living room. Large screened porch, 2 car attached
garage, gas heat. Offered
at only
$29,750. Owner may consider possible rental
at $200 per month.

EASILY

and bath on first floor level. Living
room with fireplace, panelled study

5-5300

BRoadway

|

priced. $40,000.

INC.
463

HIlicrest

In a more than 3 acre “PRIVACY
SETTING” of lovely natural beauty enchanced
by the professional
touch
of the expert,
stands this unique ENGLISH COTSWOLD
home. Superbly constructed and exquisitely
appointed,
it contains
a 34x25
bleached
wood-paneled
living room,
an inviting library, spacious dining room, 4 plus master
bedrooms, each with a bath, adequate servants rooms, a screen porch as well as a large
and secluded blue stone terrace. Fully airconditioned by Carrier. Offered at less than
1/3 of today’s reproduction cost! See

Real

fireplace, panelled TV room, dining
room, den or extra bedroom, pow
der room, kitchen with eating area.
Three bedrooms, two baths on sec-

Realtors

H. and R. Anspach

Sears

1946

Lake Forest East
TO OWN
THE FINEST!

Sears

of

Highland Park

NEW

and

Service

OPEN SUN. 2-4
236 Elder Lane
see this 3
with den,

two

garage.
Priced at .....__.....-_._
$43, ae

$29,500

Baird and Warner

WI

Listing

bedroom,

ABROAD

Members

Call Lionel Watson
if after hrs. WI 5-2700

at $50,400

by...

never regret inspecting—just go
West of Wilmot School on Deerto Castlegate, then 2nd on the

826 Deerfield Rd.

three

REALTORS

old—unbelievably

Hillcrest
SHeldrake

Attractive

a half bath Colonial on wooded tot.

4 bedroom
Split-level, 242 baths.
With
family
room,
music
room,
wonderful yard
and barbecue.
3ton air-conditioner. Marvelous kitchen. Carpeting, etc. Only 5 years

Now!
where

Since

ADS

etc. Fully air-conditioned. $39,500.

Immediate possession
Owner will finance or
consider contract sale!
or take over 444% Mtge.

Realtors

4-2331

OUR DISPLAY
THIS ISSUE

ZANDER-OMMEN

Come
ranch

DEERFIELD
OPEN SUNDAY 2-6 P.M.
1622 VILLAGE GREEN

You will
one block
pe
Rd.
right.

SEE
IN

Waukegan

5

3 BEDROOM
RANCH—$18,900
Full basement, dream kitchen, top location.
Large rooms.

BLUFF

room, fireplace, full basetwo
car
detached
garage;

convenient

offers

11-5
WI 5-3650
Realtors

&gt;

OWNER TRANSFERRED.
See this attractive split-level brick &amp; frame 3 bdrms., 2
bath
home.
Situated
on beautifully
landscaped spacious lot. Many extras including
built-in kitchen
&amp; pleasant family room.
JUST REDUCED TO $29,900.

Hillcrest 6-1855
SHeldrake 2-1855

576 Lincoln Avenue
Winnetka, illinois

offered, attractive

French

dining
ment,

Sun.

to

Baird &amp; Warner

2-0880

UNUSUALLY
GOOD
BUYS
$26,500
CUSTOM
built
Brick
Ranch:
3
bdrms., Cer. Bath, att. gar. Liv. rm.,
lannon
stone
fireplace,
beautiful
kit. brkfst. space.

HAVE CHILDREN? NEED HOUSE? Home
built &amp; situated to accommodate children.
5 bedrms., family room, w/FP, separate DR
plus eating
area in kitchen.
Located
on
quiet street close to school. Many extras!

FOREST

576 Lincoln Avenue
Winnetka, illinois

REALTORS
Sheridan’ Rd.

2

TRAVEL

DEERFIELD

Brick &amp; redwood: split, 6 bedrms., 3 baths,
family room, separate dining room, thermopane windows, patio, wooded % acre. Asking low 60’s and anxious.
MRS. ROESING
if after hrs., CE 4-2665

Earhart &amp; Company
1899

Sun.

REALTORS

ALSO

a delightful setting just perfect for entertaining. 3 bedrooms, 2 ceramic tile baths,
study or 4th bedrm., large family room, library
with
fireplace.
Living
room
with
raised stone fireplace and dining room with
sliding glass doors to patio. St. Charles kitchen with beautiful built ins including refrigerator, dishwasher, disposal, etc. 2 car garage. Long circular drive. Priced in 50’s.
ya
LIONEL WATSON, if after hrs. WI
5-2700.

SALE

Hart, Shaw

ZANDER-OMMEN

HIGHLAND
PARK
Don’t Answer This Ad

LAKE

On exquisite 24% acres with outbuilding suitable for horses, this
Cape Cod country home has 3 bedrms. plus panelled studio room over
2 car attached garage, 3 baths, panelled den, separate
dining room.
Fruit
orchard,
berry bushes,
perennial gardens. Only two blocks
to grammar school ______.__--.$54,500

First time

212 glamormaid’s rm.

value

taxes.

payment,

room

and bath optional); TWO large
wood panelled family rooms, 1
with massive stone fireplace;
custom island kitchen; Travertine marble foyer and powder
room; plank and beam ceilings;
tremendous living and dining
rooms;
abundant
storage and
closet space.
An unparalled
plus site.

basement,

L. Ringer

Contemporary

distinguished

2 BATHS,

very large dining area and kitchen, entrance hall, basement. 4127
financing to assume, $173.50 per

Park

Split-Level
featuring
over
3,000 square feet of luxurious
living
area
plus
full
bright
basement and 2% car garage.

This

$31,900

$46,500
Custom Built TRI LEVEL: 4 Bedrms. (one could be DEN), FAMILY
rm.,
2 car
att.
gar.
Essence
of
charm. Under 5 yrs. old. CALL:

Presentation

10 room

‘ato

RANCH—$28,900

3 BEDRMS.,

900 Green Bay Road
Highland

COL.

$35,500
COLONIAL:
East _ Location—2
baths, Pnid. DEN, 4 Bdrms., Ser.
porch, etc., etc.

Realtors
Premiere

BEDRM.

ment, 2 car attached garage. Large
bedrms., modern equipped kitchen
with ample eating area, near park
area. Red brick and white frame
construction. $5,000 to $7,000 cash
down will handle. Immediate pos-

3 bed-

dining

built-in range/oven,
trees. Lower 20’s.

4

IUST LISTED with 2% baths, base-

beautiful VISTA VIEWS, &amp; steps to

SMALL

NEW

FOR

C.

GReenleaf

Richard
Howard

B. Le
ReQua,

¥ pda
Vice

mies
Presi

ae

Mrs. Stuart R. French Milton MeN. Traee_f

&amp; ORR

Ruth

5-1080

TWO
apartment
brick
duplex
in a new
Lake Forest area; air conditioned; recreation room; 3 bedrooms in each unit; full
basement; good mortgage available. Call

260

E.

E.

Henderson

Deerpath

Kenmore

135

S. La

Tho

Salle

Lake Forest, CEdar 4-1000 RAndolph 6-71
Members of the Evanston-North
Multiple Listing Service

§

Shore

Ted Gabanski, CE 4-3737

Page H 57—D 49

�E

*

HOMES
Aes
bedroom

HOMES

HIGHLAND PARK
ranch, paneled living room

with

replace, panelled dining room together with
our
additional nice building lots ....$45,750
and lot can be purchased separately
dice
ne,

haded

residential area,
4 bedrooms,
3

lot, many

2

extras

story brick
baths,
large

and
tree

$38,500

HIGHLAND

PARK

Ready

1260

For

RIDGE

$30,800

GRETA
basement,

_ That

2

2

car

story

garage

brick

at

bedrooms,
1%
baths,
lace, separate dining
bedrooms,

frame.
will

landscape

ranch

right

price.

3

VErnon

living
room
with
and den .... $23,750

2 ceramic

Young

Weekdays

$29,900.

the

tile

close

baths,

to

brick
20’s

incoln,
School
District:
Two
bedroom
ich, 28’ living room with fireplace, base» garage. Excellent location. Attractive
19,500
arge
home at an attractive price. 3 bedms and den or 4 bedrooms, full base» 2 ear attached garage ............ $25,500
tiful white Southern Colonial. Spic and
new modern kitchen, separate dining
living room with fireplace, rec room
| fireplace
$34,900

and
by

appointment

5-2565
Evenings VErnon
Open Sunday 2-6

BUILDER
No

MUST

Reasonable

ORIGINAL

Offer

PRICE

5-0343

SELL
Refused

$24,000

Brand new tri-level, 3 large bedrooms,
2
full baths, panelled recreation room, large
wooded lot. Low down payment.

BERKSHIRE

46 «. 3Z

Northbrook: 2 bedroom cabana with utilities, weeping willows, fenced yard compliment attractive 3 bedroom, 114 bath home.
Family room, screened porch, wall-to-wall
carpets,
drapes,
disposal,
dishmaster,
airconditioned, combination storms, screens; 50
gal. hot water heater, gas heat. Many beautiful built-in planters, aquariums, etc. Living room has flagstone patio with pond,
paneled fireplace wall. Attached garage. A
story book dream house, offered well under cost by owner
leaving
city. $35,000.
CRestwood 2-3934,

Built

HIGHLAND PARK
LAST HOUSE LEFT

school.

upper

LEDERER

Designed

POOL

Occupancy

New
wife-saver
home
all on one
floor.
Kitchen family room, utility room, all adjoining. 4 beautiful bedrooms, 2 tile baths,
living room, dining room. No compromise
on beauty
and design. Prestige
of Highland Park yet in an area of large lots. Carpeting and appliances. Excellent financing.

‘Brick and frame ranch. 3 bedrooms, wonderful kitchen, large heated breezeway, full

FOR SALE

BUILDERS

LINCOLNSHIRE:
$25,500, ranch on wooded
%
acre, 3 bedrooms,
den, ceramic
bath, thermopane window wall in living
and
dining,
attached
garage
and patio,
electric appliances
and drapes included.
Low taxes. Near park, pool, trains, Edens
and Toll Road. WI 5-4134.
HIGHLAND
PARK:
on lovely
%
acre.
Finest construction, many interesting features. 3 bedrooms,
one
12x22, 2 baths.
Kitchen with dining area, utility room adjacent.
Full
basement.
Low
30’s.
1471
Ridge Road, Highland Park.
HIGHLAND
PARK:
Elm’ Place
District.
1768 Clifton, Sunset Terrace. ID 2-4853.
Tri-level. 2100 sq. ft. living area, 3 bedrooms, 17x30 family room, 2%
baths, 2
fireplaces,
11 closets, gas heat, air-conditioned, all windows thermopane.

RAVINIA—777

ST.

JOHNS

‘HOMES FOR SALE

__

DEERFIELD:
attractive 3 bedroom, year
old split level, by transferred owner, attached garage, assume GI. WI 5-0439.
DELUXE 3 bedroom ranch house on beautiful wooded lot in desirable Woodridge
section. Living room with fireplace, dining
room, 2% baths, full basement with recreation room and bar. Attached garage,
wi
Pea barbecue. $31,900. Telephone ID

2nd MORTGAGES on homes or businesses
to buy _ build, or refinance, by private
individual. Write Box R30, c/o the Lake
Forester.

OFFICES,

STORE

LAKE BLUFF, custom built deluxe ranch,
1 year old; 3 bedrooms, 2%
baths, full
basement,
garage.
Reduced
below
cost,
must sell, make offer. Open house Sunday
2 to 5:30, 41 West Sheridan Place, CEdar
4-5839.
HIGHLAND
PARK,
1032
Ridge
Road.
Large
living-dining
combination,
2 bedrooms, den, kitchen with eating area. $15,500. Telephone ID 2-6409.
LAKE
FOREST:
lovely southeast section,
brick/frame
3 bedroom
split level,
1%
baths, fireplace, plus den and recreation
room, basement, middle 30’s. Owner, CE

Just
finished.
Modern
contemporary
built
to overlook
ravine. All rooms
are large.
1600 Grove
Living
room
and
den
are oak panelled.
ORchard 6-2596
O FLAT:
A good
investment
with a PAlisade 5-8440
Kitchen
with
built in oven,
range,
dish(Take Edens to Clavey, Clavey west to
small down payment, will pay for itself
washer and disposal. Air condition unit in
Ridge Road, Ridge north to Grove)
bedrooms.
Zoned
hot
water
heat.
Landscaped
Open Sunday 1 to 5
Lot includes 188 feet across ravine. $35,500
Id: 2 story, brick and stucco, nice
with low down payment.
modern
kitchen,
also
includes
full Navy officer transferring to Oregon offers
EVANSTON BOND &amp; MORTGAGE CO.
very clean brick Cape Cod with full baseBUSINESS
PROPERTY
1732 ORRINGTON GR 5-5600 EVANSTON
ment,
3 large bedrooms,
1% baths, fireplace, separate dining, enclosed porch, 2 car
$19,900 ON YOUR LOT
|
garage
on
beautifully
landscaped
lot
in Spacious 3 bedroom, 2 bath press brick and
FOR SALE
choice section of Libertyville. Many extras
cedar ranch, 523 Green Bay, Highland Park.
will be included. Asking price $26,500.
Al Richman, builder, ID 2-9249.
This
brick
building
suitable
for
Realtors
RAVINIA
Contact Mr. Dennee
New 3 bedroom, 2 bath, brick and cedar
light manufacturing.
laundry, garanch, built in kitchen with spacious breakSCHWANDT
REALTY CO.
723 St. Johns Ave.
ID 2-1484
rage or similar business is in the
fast area. Attached car eet
Conveniently
REALTORS
located at 523 Green Bay
Rd. $27,500. Open.
center of Highland Park business
602 N. Milwaukee
Ave.
Al Richman, Builder. ID 2-9249.
WARD WINNING HOME!
Libertyville
area. First floor 4500 sq. ft., second
Featured in many national magazines, this EM 2-2015
LAKE
FOREST:
In exclusive
residential
LO 6-672C
distinctive contemporary home nesfloor 1500 sq. ft. For immediate ocarea, practically new brick ranch, large
tles among big trees on almost an acre.
living room with fireplace, 3 twin sized cupancy.
Excellent financing.
A few of the most unusual features include
bedrooms, mahogany paneled family room
s free-standing fireplace in the large
with 10 foot bar, den, ceramic baths, cab-room; three walled courtyards; stepinet kitchen ceramic tiled, wall oven and
down tub in the master bath; underground
eating area, 214 car attached garage. carsprinkler system. 4 bdrms.;
214
baths;
peted, full basement, all gas, completely
1925 Sheridan Rd.
ID 2-4580
huge family room; complete air-conditionlandscaped, stockade fenced, storms and
ing. All priced at less than you would exscreens. $54,900. CE 4-4427.
100’
FRONTAGE
by
400’
deep
on
Milpect, too!
Custom
brick
ranch
on
1
acre,
13x27
HIGHLAND
PARK-Sunset
Terrace,
comwaukee Ave. with 2 houses income $170
swimming
pool, attached garage, screened
pletely
air-conditioned
3
bedroom
Cape
per
month.
%
mile
south
of
Half
Day,
24,500 BUYS A FINE HOUSE!
porch,
3 bedrooms,
2 baths.
NO
TWO
Cod ranch, full basement. gas heat, priced
price $24,000. Telephone WI 5-0530.
You'd certainly expect to pay more for wim
IT, JUST GOTTA
SELL.
to sell, low 20’s. By owner. ID 2-8270. _
a lovely white Colonial home with a big
VACANT PROPERTY
—~LAKE
BLUFF,
moving
May
29:
solid
ving room with fireplace; separate dining
brick ranch, 2 years old; 3 twin bedrooms,
; TV
sunroom;
cabinet kitchen;
3
2 full ceramic baths, kitchen with eating
rooms and 1%
baths. The full basearea, living room and dining L, full basent has an ideal area for a rec. room.
Walk
to trans.,
shops
and
ment; quality construction; landscaped 70x
5 acres on Wilmot Rd. in exclusive area of
165’ lot. Mid $20’s or best offer. Call CE
lovely
homes.
4 acre
residential
zoning.
4-4076.
$27,500. Call Mr.
Robinson.
533 CLAVEY
LANE
Colonial house with extra lot, 3 bedrooms,
Contemporary modern ranch.
3 bedrooms,
bath, den, 2 car garage. Convenient to trains panelling, thermopane. Reduced to $31,500.
905. peneh. $25,500. Call Lake Bluff, CE 4- ID 2-2739. BY OWNER.
Realtors
REALTORS
1-0228
GReenleaf 5-1080
LAKE
BLUFF,
3 bedroom. 2 bath brick ALpine
Spanish Ct., Wilmette
ALpine 6-0750
ranch on wooded lot in Terrace section
IN Lake Bluff, beautifully wooded lot, 100
of village. Living room has raised hearth
x 247 ft., on east Sheridan Rd. Make offireplace, large dining “L’’, kitchen with
fer to owner. CE 4-5250.
HIGHLAND PARK
EXCEPTIONAL BUY
family
eating
area
and
birch
cabinets,
FOX RIVER frontage, choice. Jerry Matos.
mahogany
trim throughout,
hard
wood
Crystal
Lake 459-4646.
erfect home in perfect condition. Custom
Deerfield: 3 bedroom frame ranch;
floors and plastered walls; full basement
5 room brick ranch, lange living room
LAKE FOREST. Wooded acre lot in estabwith
large
recreation
room,
excellent
for
living room dining room combina.
marble fireplace, separate dining room,
lished suburb, $5000. Box 66, Palos Park,
entertaining or children’s playroom; carble
bath
and
marble
window
sills tion with fireplace; large screened
Ill. Phone GIbson 8-8567.
peted and draned; gas heat. Navy orders
out, streamlined kitchen with breakLAKE BLUFF, ravine lot on private lane,
put it in the 20’s. Call CE 4-5713.
porch; nice neighborhood. For defast area, screened porch, att. garage, large
improved, 5/8 acre; CE 4-1117 evenings
HIGHLAND
PARK
zrounds. A luxury home at $33,500.
tails call WI 5-0493.
and weekend.
3391 Summit Avenue
DEERFIELD,
900 Beverly, 90 foot lot in
GLENCOE
finest section of Briarwoods subdivision.
Brick
ranch.
3
bedrooms,
214
baths,
famHIGHLAND PARK
LAKE AREA
Terms or will trade towards house. HItily room, fireplace, central air conditionfove further south in this charming ranch
crest 6-1646.
ine. low 30’s. owner. ID 3-0235.
n
Glencoe.
Custom
built
with
quality
DEERFIELD—4
bedroom
older frame
in
‘oughout. 3 twin size bedrooms, 2 ceramic
village, tiled bath, hot water heat, 1 car
baths, large screened porch,
attached
AMID
RAVINES
in completely remodeled
garage, fenced in vard, $16.900. Low down
ve, beautiful grounds. Near school and
LAKE BLUFF
carriage house with 4 bedrooms, 314 baths,
navment.
1146 Chestnut. WI 5-0129.
ortation.
Lot 66x140 nicely wooded, excellent neighfireplace living room, family kitchen; sharMODERN
luxury ranch. 4 bedrooms, 314
borhood, fully improved. Call MRS. ROEing own beach, $47,
baths, paneled den, heated jalousie porch,
SING
full basement, radiant heat, 1% acre woodID 2-0212
ed lot. beautifully landscaped. East Ravinia. Unver $60’s. Owner, ID 2-0399,
HIGHLAND
PARK: For sale or rent with
Lincolnshire Area
d
option to purchase 6 reom brick home.
2-1873
‘AL 1-3430
VE 5-1971
Lincoln
Avenue
HIllcrest
6-1855
3 bedroom, 11% baths. living, dining. rec 576
Illinois
SHeldrake
3-1855
room, 2 car garage, choice location, near Winnetka,
Shopping.
and
schools.
Nice
neat
area,
reasonable.
must
sell.
ID
2-1415.
NO
IN| HIGHLAND
PARK
WE
HAVE
18
REATTORS
PLEASE.
acres zoned 1 acre residential, with sewer
RAVINIA:
Uniouely
charming.
Spacious
In the country—last chance to buy from
and water along the front. Very reasonable
owner. Will accept best offer. WI 5-4347.
single story. 3 bedrooms. Convenient and
terms, to a responsible purchaser, and
a
VE YOU AN: EYE FOR A BUY? See
finest
location.
Beautiful
secluded
survey is available in our office.
A want bedrm. RANCH
with a lovely den,
erounds. £42 500. ID 2-2472.
baths. Patio nestled in seclusion with
RAVINIA—CONVENIENT
LOCATION
ng shrubs. Finished basement.
AIR
7 comfortable
rooms,
beautiful
jalousied
DITIONED.
So—HURRY.
$44,500
family room, basement play room, extra lot
available. low 20’s. ID 2-1403.
SUAL STONE HOME
in EAST RA$13 Davis Street
GReenleaf 5-1617
PARK, mear lake. 1 year old
For well known architect. Most unusual 4 HIGHLAND
A. Bit. by disciple of Frank
Lloyd
ranch, 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, 244 car gabedroom
contemporary
split
level,
especially
ight, this
home
offers
lovely
ravine
designed for its beautiful wooded acre. Panrage. 30 foot of sliding glass overlonk. Stunning liv. rm. with stone frpl.,
APPROXIMATELY
2.5 acres, west Lake
elled living room with huge stone fireplace,
ing beautiful wooded
ravine.
30’s. Call
parate
dining
rm.
opens
to
screened
Forest
location.
All
improvements _ in.
ID 2-8453.
and beamed cathedral ceiling. Separate dinrch, brkfst. rm. easy-work kitchen, powPhone CE 4-1536.
ing room, intercom and sundeck, large famimm.
LARGE
PANELLED
DEN
OR
ROOM
ranch,
1%
baths,
3 bedrooms.
HIGHLAND
PARK—EAST
DRM.
3 other bedrms. 2 ly kitchen with all built ins, family room
full basement
with recreation room, at- Ideal location
near
lake,
shopping,
Elm
opening onto screened porch, unusual ce.
:
500
tached garage, on large lot. May pick up
Place School, high school. 152 foot frontage.
ramic baths, 2 car garage, basement, carG I mortgage at only 414% interest. Verv
Fully
improved.
Private
lane.
235
Park
Avepeted. Many
extras. Priced far below aplow
taxes.
Was
$23509.
now
$20,800.
nue. $12,000. ID 3-1352.
praised value for immediate sale
$37,500
1213 Woodruff. WI 5-5010.
Woodland Lane
I 5-3063
DEERFIELD Riverwoods, 2 acres in beauRAVINIA
$15.900
tiful location, high and heavily wooded,
6 rooms, lovely neighborhood, oil heat. fireat bargain price. WI 5-5552.
vlace, 2 car garage, wooded lot 50x200, 3
HARD-TO-BEAT
FOR
Sale:
IRREGULAR
SHAPED _ lot.
REALTORS
blocks to beach, 2 blocks to RR. near school:
Averages 75 ft. width by 190 ft. deep,
refrigerator,
washer,
dryer.
electric stove,
on Waukegan
Road,
Northbrook.
Near
ncoe Theater Bldg.
VErnon 5-0236 4 Bedroom split, fireplace, panelled
cenorans and drapes included. Call ID 2schools,
churches,
transportation,
shop4.
rec
room,
dishwasher,
disposal,
ping. City water and sewer. Reduced to
LAKE
FOREST:
English
white brick
on
$5,500. ID 2-1953.
built-in range. Excellent neighborheautiful wooded
ravine. Entrance
hall:
HIGHLAND PARK HIGHLANDS
hood
(south
of Deerfield
Road).
living room, dining room; screened vorch;
t rent. Now you can own a new 3 bedsuper modern kitchen, including refrigerSUMMER &amp; WINTER RESORTS _
Under 30. WI 5-2725.
m.
brick split-level with no money down
ator; pantry; full basement with play room;
Same
monthly
payments.
Carpeting,
5 bedrooms;
4%
baths; dressing room:
COTTAGE
FOR RENT—July 1 to July 15
uilt-ins and improved lot included. Eden’s
3 BEDROOM
RANCH,
3 years old, near
sleeping porch and sun porch. Attached
at Crystal Lake, Mich., in) Crystalia near
2, right to Summit, left to Hill, right to:
schools, $16,500. Open house Saturday and
garage and store playhouse. Walking dislake,
sleeps
8, completely
modern
with
267 WESTERN AVE.
eed
1 to 5. 539 W. Hawley, Mundetance to Sheridan School;
$49,000. Call
fireplace,
linen,
silver,
bedding,
$275.
a
Open Sunday’ 11 to 6
;
ein,
CE 4-4509,
Write Box D-90, c/o Highland Park News.

$45,000

Home

for

PAUL

PHELPS,

INC.

$36,500

BY OWNER

ing’s Court Corp.

square

LEAFY

— JH Kahn Realty |

Baird &amp; Warner

Unusual
4 Bedroom Colonial

RIVERWOODS

CUSTOM

J-H Kahn

Page

H

58—D

50

&amp; ORR

PRIVACY

Lang Real Estate

BUILT

feet

Hokanson &amp; Jenks

FOREST

or

possible

to

di-

STORE,
1931 Sheridan Road in the heart
of
Highland
Park’s
Shopping
Center.
Laser &amp; Company, WHitehall 4-4318.
STORE
18x40
heated;
$160
per
month;
Offices 1 to 6 room suites; paved parking for tenants and customers. 460 Central Ave., Phones ID 2-0150, ID 2-2358.
OFFICE for rent, suitable for business or
professional use;
225
square
feet;
2nd
floor; elevator service; excellent location.
Luce, Room 206, 1811 St. Johns.
DEERFIELD:
803
Waukegan
Road.
2nd
floor, office or shop, heated, electricity
furnished, $60 per month. WI 5-5300.
APARIMENTS

TO

RENT

(Unfurnished)

HIGHLAND PARK
Ravinia Area

Modern
Air Conditioned

TOWN
2

bedrooms,

HOUSE

1%

baths,

gas

heat,

fully
equipped
kitchen,
living
room,
dining
room,
tiled floors,
central TV antenna, indv. dryer and
washer, private garage, near trains
and
shopping.
ID
2-6790,
ID
26791.

Deerfield

Garden

Apartments

Deerfield

BANNOCKBURN

McGUIRE

IN LAKE

vide.
Present
usage
television,
music
records,
radio,
luggage
merchandise. Available August 1,
1961.
WRITE complete information to
Mr. Albert L. Hall, Attorney, 25
North County Street, Waukegan,
Illinois,
or WRITE
“OWNER,”
650 North Bank Lane, Lake Forest, Illinois.
f

Dorsey Husenetter

SACRIFICE

SPACE

STUDIOS

Centrally located 252 East Deerpath to 638 North Bank Lane,
Lake Forest. Approximately 2,000

4-9484,

DEERFIELD
- BRIARWOODS
By owner: 900 Westcliffe. Stunning ranch,
exclusive section,
near everything,
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, family room,
immaculate
condition. Owner retiring. WI 5-1467.
LAKE BLUFF, by owner, new brick veneer
ranch of the finest construction. 3 bedrooms, 2% tile baths, 2 fireplaces, 1 with
marble, family room, dining room, kitchen with breakfast area, full basement, all
Thermopane windows, gas heat, 2 car attached
garage,
on
%
acre
landscaped
wooded lot. In the thirties. 1115 Foster
Ave. West of Waukegan Rd.
REDUCED TO $28,750
:
Deerfield: by owner, brick and frame splitlevel, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large living room
and dining room, family room with built-in
stereo and bar, all electric kitchen,
1800
square feet plus basement, garage and laundry room, 2 blocks to fine schools, many
extras, immediate occupancy. WI 5-3646.

STORES, &amp;
TO RENT

Modern 2 bedroom apartments. Excellent Iocation, convenient to schools, shopping and
transportation. Ceramic tile baths. Cabinet
kitchen with refrigerator, disposal, built-in
oven and range.
Off-street parking. Decorate
to suit.

QUINLAN &amp; TYSON, Inc.
735

Deerfield

Small
ment,
ae
call:
1896

Road

WI

5-3750

3 room
unfurnished,
English
basevery close in, rent $75 a month, 2
in advance. For further information
ANCHOR REAL ESTATE
Sheridan Rd.
ID
Res. Ph., ID 2-0037

2-0093

Highland Park: 4 Bdrms.
4 Baths — Powder Room
First floor. 2 blocks to C. &amp; NW,
and
lake. Elm Place School.
Electric kitchen,
dishwasher and finest Frigidaire. 2 car garage. Gas heat. Private laundry. Finest 2
apartment
building with extensive garden.
2 wood burning fireplaces. Large, bright,
newly decorated with some carpeting. Sun
porch. Nothing like it. July possession. $325.
ID 2-3607.
ATTRACTIVE
3 room apartment available
June Ist, rental $93 per month, 2 year
lease. Call ID 3-1148.
DEERFIELD:
central location, newly constructed deluxe town house, 3 bedroom,
1% ceramic baths, fully equipped kitchen,
full basement, garage, $200. Call WI 5-

HIGHWOOD:

5

room

apartment,

second

floor, 2 bedrooms, garage, screened porch,
available June 1st. 11 Prairie Avenue. Call
after 6, ID 2-5958.
BRIGHT, attractive 2 room apartment with
stove
and refrigerator,
near trains and
stores. Call ID 2-4672.
HIGHWOOD:
conveniently
located, clean
and modern 3 room apartment; heat, gas,
water, garbage, stove and refrigerator included. Adults, reasonable. ID 2-1007 or
ID 2-4714,
HIGHLAND
PARK:
4 room
apartment,
heat and water furnished, available June
Ist. Telephone ID 2-2241 after 4:30 P.M.
LAKE FOREST, 3 room; living room with
fireplace;
bedroom;
kitchen
with
stove
and refrigerator; screened porch; available
June 15. CE 4-3812 after 6 P.M
HIGHLAND
PARK,
four
room
garage
apartment, $70 plus utilities. Call ID 31449 after 2 p.m.
UPPER
5 room, unfurnished flat and gaPa 77 ig utilities; adults; references. CE
ATTRACTIVE
east side garage apartment,
partly furnished, rent $75 a month, all
utilities included. ID 2-4590 after 6.
EXCEPTIONAL 5 or 6 room ground, floor,
including heat, water, garage, ultra modern kitchen, full basement. Available on
or about June 15. Lake Bluff. CE 4-4818.

Thursday, May 25, 1961
acy

�-s

-APAR
DEERFIELD

apartment,

6 rooms,

wall

HIGHLAND
PARK
4
New ~ bedroom townhouse, gas heat, air
conditioned, private patios, 9 closets, close
to
schools,
shopping
and_
transportation.
Model now open at 625 Mulberry. ID 2-0946
or CEntral 6-1900.
HIGHLAND
PARK
DELUXE TOWNHOUSE
Newly constructed, 2 bedroom, large living
room with dining area, 1% ceramic baths,
fully equipped kitchen with eating area, full
basement, garage. $200. Call ID 2-9049 or
ID 2-3426.
HIGHLAND
PARK:
6 room,
2nd
floor
apartment, attached garage, heat and water
furnished,
$165.
ID
2-4771,
after
5 p.m. or weekends.
LAKE FOREST: 3 room, 2nd floor apartment;
kitchen-dining,
living,
bedroom.

Stove and refrigerator. Available July

1st.

Minimum lease 1 year, $110 per month.
_ CE 4-1377, after 5 p.m.
;
GLENCOE,
NEWLY
DECORATED,
310
TUDOR COURT, 5 rooms, immediate occupancy,
near
Northwestern
station
at
Green Bay Road. VE 5-2043.
HIGHWOOD: 4 room apartment for elderly
ye
heat and water furnished. Call ID
“

655 CENTRAL
AVE.
2%
room apartment in center of Highland
Park
for immediate
occupancy.
$85.
See
Mr. Crowell on premises or call Baird &amp;
Warner, Evanston.
GReenleaf 5-1833
524 Davis St.
HIGHLAND
PARK: finest east side location, 3 bedrooms,
114 baths,
all large
rooms, AIR CONDITIONED. Call ID 22226 after 6.
HIGHLAND
PARK:
recently built 3 bedroom,
114
bath apartment
in northeast
section. Reduced to $185 monthly. Guy
Viti, Realtor. ID 2-3933.
LAKE FOREST, second floor; 5 rooms and
bath;
roomy,
pleasant;
large
screened
porch, attic and basement space; close in;
adults. Call CE 4-1174.
HIGHLAND
PARK: 3 room apartment on
Vine Ave., refrigerator and stove furnished.
Call ID 2-5909; after 6 p.m., ID 2-6453.
DEERFIELD:
modem
2 bedroom
apartment,
first floor, heated, $145.
WI
50012, or VE 5-2113.
APARTMENTS
FOR
RENT
(Furnished)
HIGHWOOD:
3 room furnished apartment,
o-*
immediately.
Telephone
ID 2-

wa

HIGHWOOD—4
rooms,
heat
and
water
furnished. Telephone ID 3-1396.
MODERN
kitchenette apartment located in
Highwood
business district, 2%
rooms;
or 2 adults. Phone
CE 4-0136 after
5:30 p.m.
Small attractive East side 2 room
garage
apartment, rent $90 a month, 2 months in
advance.
ANCHOR REAL ESTATE
1896 Sheridan Rd.
D 2-0093
Res. Ph. ID 2-0037
LAKE BLUFF, 26 Washington St., 3 rooms;
beautifully furnished and decorated; private patio, washer and dryer; convenient.
Call Kenosha, OLympic 2-7282.
ROOM
newly decorated furnished apartment, heat, hot water and other privileges
furnished;
close to transportation.
Must
be seen. Call ID 2-8476.
ROOMS;
1 bedroom reserved for owners
use; call ID 2-1056 after 8:30 p.m. Friday,
or anytime Saturday or Sunday.
2% ROOM completely furnished, all utilities
paid, available June
1lith, seen
by appointment after 4:30 p.m., $105 per month.
Telephone ID 3-1888 or ID 2-7817.

SMALL

2

room

apartment

suitable for

couple. Telephone ID 2-3512.
LAKE
FOREST;
modern 2 bedroom,
1%
bath
duplex near high school:
refrigerator, range and garage. CE 4-1083 or CE
4-3936.
LAKE
BLUFF:
furnished modern
Mobile
home. Reasonable. Clean. Telephone
ID
2-8917.
z
ROOM
apartment.
utilities
furnished.
adults. Telephone ID 2-0668, after Friday
ID 2-2421.
HIGHLAND PARK:
3
room
furnished
apartment, $110 per month. utilities included. References required. Call ID 2s
7587.
HIGHWOOD:
3 rooms and porch, 1 bed«
room,
kitchen
and
living
room.
Telephone ID 2-4192 or CEdar 4-5260 evenings only.

214

ROOM furnished apartment, near town
and
transportation.
elderly
ferred, $75. ID 2-2861.

HIGHLAND
kitchen,
close to

CLEAN

PARK.

large living

ceramic bath,
transportation,

nicely

woman

furnished

room,

ment, convenient to Great Lakes and
Sheridan. Telephone MAiestic 3-8192.

3 ROOM furnished apartment
Call

ID

pre-

utilities furnished,
$95. ID 2-0915.

1 bedroom

HOUSES,

BEL-AIR TOWNHOUSES
One house available in this exclusive airconditioned building. 5 rooms,
1%
baths,
maintained for the most fastidious. $225 per
month. Open Sunday 2? to 6. Weekdays by
appointment.
VErnon

Evenings

5-2565

DEERFIELD

©

VErnon

5-0343

| TOWN HOUSE

2 Blocks from town, 3 bedrooms, living-dining room “L”, kitchen with built-ins, 1%
baths,
basement
with
paneled
recreation
room. $200 per month including water.

CARR

REALTY

CO

WI

5-0984

DEERFIELD—TOWN HOUSE
2

"HELP WANTED FEMALE

VEL-WOOD
Motel, 500 Waukegan
Ave.,
Highwood.
Air-conditioned,
kitchenette
rooms for overnight guests and travelers.
co
shower baths. Telephone ID 25328.

WE OFFER

Bedrooms, 1% baths, full
heat, lovely grounds, close
your broker or WI 5-1952.

basement, gas
in, $155. Call

CE

HART,
4-1000

SHAW

&amp;

COMPANY
RO 1-2500

HIGHLAND
bath, near
peting and
occupancy.

PARK, deluxe 4 bedroom, 4
lake, 1 year or longer; cardrapes available. September 1
Rent $375 month. ID 2-2821.
DEERFIELD
Rental option or purchase, the top neighborhood, owner’s 6 room ranch, 3 bedrooms,
11%
baths, deluxe
kitchen, 2 car garage,
$260. WI 5-5874.
LAKE
FOREST, duplex; 2 bedrooms, full
basement,
garage,
patio, oil heat, near
schools, train. CE 4-443
3 BEDROOM
house with garage in Highwood. Call ID 2-9823.
MODERN
ranch, 3 bedrooms plus maid’s
room,
2%,
baths, recreation room, bar,
patio,
utilities,
carpeting,
and
drapes.
Year lease, July occupancy, $325. ID 2LAKE FOREST, three bedroom, 1% baths,
available now. New, with full basement
and air conditioned. CE 4-3737.
HIGHLAND PARK, new 3 bedroom Ranch,
1%
baths, large kitchen with built-ins,
gas heat, attached garage. Option to buy
available. Call ID 2-1338.
RAVINIA: 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, oil heat,
1%
story, full basement. Rent $150 or
will sell. Telephone ID 2-2194.
HOUSES

TO

RENT

LAKE

(Furnished)

FOREST

A gem in south Lake Forest, 2, bedroom,
1%
baths, den, living room, dining room,
kitchen; beautiful yard. July 1 thru Labor
Day. Gardener included, $325.

home, for July and August,
3 baths; beautiful property.

3 bed-

HART,
SHAW
&amp; COMPANY
CE 4-1000
RO
1-2500
SUMMER rental, July and August, walking
distance
to
town,
transportation,
and
shops. Modern, all wood paneled, 3 bedrooms, 1% baths, air conditioned, dishwasher, all other appliances. Patio, large
grounds. $350 per month. Write Box D-85,
c/o Highland Park News.
RAVINIA:
Uniqueiy charming. Convenient
location. 2 bedrooms.
Beautiful grounds.
Spacious. Furnished, $1,000 for summer
season
or $325
a month.
Unfurnished
$275 a month. ID 2-2472.
SUMMER rental; 3 bedroom country home;
a family room, patio, play yard;
fully
equipped kitchen, July 1 to September 1;
CE 4-3461.
FURNISHED small 3 room house, June 16September 1, $150 a month plus utilities.
Call after 5 p.m. ID 3-2816. 561 Ravinia
Road.
FURNISHED house, summer rental, 2 bedrooms, June 10 through September 10, WI
5-3529 after 4.

SUMMER

rental: July

fortable
ates

and

August;

839

ASSISTANT
For
interesting Amusement
Film
Department. Some experience in inventory, good
at figures. Typing essential. Excellent for
movie fan.

3 room
and
5

Wilmette

ROOMS TO RENT

LAKE

FOREST:

Room

Private
entrance.
Call CE 4-2393.

near transportation.

Gentleman

preferred.

CALL

part

ALpine

1-8700

reer

SECRETARY

and

position in
requiring

judgment.
than

Duties

average

our Sales
mature

ca-

woman

capable

of

and

typing

surroundings

require

secretarial

better

benefits.

NORTHBROOK
CRESTWOOD 2-1000

Bookkeeper
5

Day

GIFTS AND EXCHANGE
&gt;
ASSISTANE

Apply:
Personnel Department
Northwestern University
Evanston, Il.

IBM Operator

THIS FIRST
NATIONAL BANK
HIGHLAND PARK

(WE

5-1990.

ALLIS CHALMERS
MFG. CO.
Deerfield Works
Deerfield, Mlinois

Key

Pu nch

Operator

for a
installation

Good
starting salary. Many
company benefits including free group
insurance, profit sharing, cafeteria,
and so forth.

The

Frank

G.

7th and Sunnyside

Hough

J.
2020

Steady

or

part

time.

ZENGELERS
CLEANERS
First St.
Highland Park
ID 2-2800

OFFICE

POSITION

NEW TRIER HIGH SCHOOL
An office position is open for a woman or
girl. Typing is required. No dictation. Fuil
year employment. Generous vacations. Good
salary. Phone Mr. Gibson, HI 6-7000.

Experienced girl
new

TRAIN)

SEAMSTRESS
Experienced.
Good pay.

Co.

TELEPHONE

SOLICITORS

Work part time at home, no selling, must have metropolitan phone
service. Call Mr. Hepner, Ploneer

9-1195.

Libertyville

STORE and assembly girl wanted for Roesler Cleaners.
Apply
in person
727 St.
Johns Ave., Mr.
Roesler.

ler2

3 to 5 years

complete

charge

of

ex-

books

including profit and loss statements

and balance sheet. Prefer someone
with some cost accounting experience. Please write giving qualifications—age—salary

expectation

an

references. Cherry Electrical Products
Corporation,
P.O.
Highland Park, Tlinois.

ESTATE

Box

66,

—

SALESMAN

Full Time Only
;
Have opening for aggressive man or woman
for our Deerfield office. Need not be e:
perienced; every assistance will be given t
make and close sales. Call Francis Carr. —

REALTY
WI

COMPANY

|

5-0984

Electronic

Technician

with
Manufacturing

Experience

_

SCHWALM
ELECTRONICS
1640 Deerfield Road
ID 2-3910

and

THE FIRST
NATIONAL BANK
HIGHLAND PARK

CLERK-TYPIST
our producfor a womskills. LibHours 8 to
Personnel,

WILL

and

—

WANTED—Salesmen,
salesladies,
dis
managers. To demonstrate the new and
amazing J-C. Insect Inhaler. J-C combin
the new “Black Light” with super fan suc- —
tion that attracts and inhales most typ
of night flying insects. This is the moc

Week

We have an opening in
tion control department
an with typing or office
eral employee benefits.
4:30, 5 day week. Call

perience,

CARR

TRAIN)

MALE

in the stacks

or Female,

REAL

POSITION
FOR
A
YOUNG
WOMAN
with
initiative who
likes to work
pretty
much
on her
own.
College
background,
some foreign language ability, good typist.
Duties include preliminary searching, verifying, and routing of Serials and Monographs, maintaining correspondence including requesting and acknowledging gifts, and
expediting of the library’s exchanges with
other institutions.

“Machine
WILL

Marchant)
Deerfield

skills.

CULLIGAN, INC.

(WE

(Div, of Smith Corona
Lake
Cook Rd.
WI 5-1000

—

Seeiaitiont

ACCOUNTANT

KLEINSCHMIDT
Responsible
Department

WANTED

of books

Male
a

company

girl or woman to sit

Apply:
Personnel Department
Northwestern University
Evanston, II.

for

excellent

speaking

ground
storage building. Man, at least
years of college, good health, stamina,
so
library experience desirable.

OFFICE

Shorthand

for

ALTERATIONS SEAMSTRESS 4 or 5 days
a week. Call CEdar 4-9100 during day.

APPT.

Pleasant

wanted

with a 4 year old and a 2 year old so they
can learn German language. 2 or 3 days
a week, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Own transporta-_
tion. Mrs. Heiby, WI 5-3329.
as cs
CASHIER, Lake Forest college, permanent,
full time, accounting experience, typing.
—
apes to Mrs. Krol, CE 43100, exte
a!

shifting

responsibility on an exec-

level.

required.

teacher

a

opportunity

minded

assuming

head

LIKE
WORKING
WITH
INTERESTING
PEOPLE? A permanent full time staff po-—
sition in Deering Library open soon. Work
with student assistants in training, organizing,
and
supervising
the
shelving
and

SECRETARY
Challenging

VISION.

STACK SUPERVISOR

time.

PERSONNEL

school

HELP

NURSES.
and

ID 2-8000 FOR

utive

WI

NICE large sleeping room, close to shopping, transportation. ID 2-1229.
PARK HOTEL
sleeping rooms, by day or
week, free parking, 511 Waukegan Ave.,
Highwood. ID 2-9862.
ROOM for rent 1 block from Lake Forest
business district, gentleman preferred; telephone CE 4-2305.
ht
NICELY furnished homelike sleeping room,
ample drawer and closet space, hot water,
single only. Telephone ID 2-0405.
2 SLEEPING
rooms plus bath for rent in
residential
area
of
Deerfield,
close
to
town and train depot. WI 5-5509.
CLEAN,
pleasant
room
in quiet
home.
Phone CE 4-1113; 657 Bank Lane, Lake
Forest.
ROOM for one or two refined women, private bath, TV, laundry privileges, in lovely
home, bus at door. WI 5-5571.
ROOM
in lovely home for refined woman.
With or without garage, laundry privileges,
bus at door. WI 5-5571.
ONE block from Central, on Second Street;
close to transportation and shopping. Call
ID 2-7468.

Ave
Wilmette

full

OF

ID 2-3340.
SALESLADY:
childrens shop, 5 day week,
a real opportunity for the right person. —
No summer help please. Apply in person
Mr. Hansen, Hansen’s Young Folks Shop
277 Deerpath, Lake Forest.
%

GERMAN

Interesting work
in pleasant
environment.
Why
commute
when
you can work close to home?

CON-

ENCYCLOPAEDIA
BRITANNICA
FILMS

com-

furnished
year
old

fringe benefits.
OFFICE.

All shifts,

ance, pension plan. HOUSE

mornings or afternoons beginning September 1961. Experienced, trained in chil
development, prefer piano player. VErnon at
5-0537.
Rapes

HIGHLAND PARK _
HOSPITAL
NEEDS
REGISTERED

and hostesses needed, full

time, new pancake house. Mrs. Krol, W
5-0713, evenings.
GENERAL office work, must be good typ_
ist. Small office in manufacturing plant +
can use your best talents to g
dvantage. Steady work. WI 5-5600. .
RECEPTIONIST:
Pleasant
air-conditioned |
office, 5 day week. Paid vacation, insur-

NURSERY

SUITE 215 NORTH SHORE BLDG.
1866 SHERIDAN ROAD
Highland Park

For Sales Service Department. Handle own
correspondence. Good typist with figure aptitude. Experience
in general
office procedure preferred.

1150

FEE

FITZGERALD
PERSONNEL

SALES
CORRESPONDENT

5 day week, excellent
TACT
PERSONNEL

PAYS

ID 2-4461

WAUKEGAN RD.
DEERFIELD
5-2000, MR. LYONS

WI

BEDROOM
furnished house in Highland
Park; 24 baths, gas heat; 2 open screen
porches.
June
15th
into September
or
early October. Phone ID 2-0921.
SUMMER
rental home near Braeside transportation, Ravinia Park, cool lake breezes,
4 bedrooms, 214
baths, screened porch,
patio.
Lease,
$375 a month, references.
Phone ID 2-3360 or Write Box D-50, c/o
Highland Park News.

need 2 or
for myself
ID 3-0176.

EMPLOYER

Duraclean Co.

4

URGENTLY
apartment
child. Call

A DISTINCTIVE OFFICE PLACEMENT SERVICE.
IT IS DESIGNED
TO REPRESENT YOU IN SELECTING A POSITION
THAT YOU
WILL ENJOY.

Interesting position for woman to
.
assist
publications
director
Typing, paste-up and some lay-out
of company publications. Advertising or production experience helpful.

6 room
furnished
home.
1221
prem
Lake
Forest.
Telephone

WANT
to rent:
Rooms,
apartments,
and
houses for employees of MUSIC
AND
TENTHOUSE THEATRE.
Telephone
VErnon 5-4040,
WANTED
TO RENT
FURNISHED
Will pay $1000 for the month of August.
A family of six plus chauffeur, cook and
nurse needs a large house with a minimum
of 6 bedrms., preferably with swimming pool.
io Nita Lesney. Baird &amp; Warner, CE 4-

FEMALE

PUBLICATIONS
ASSISTANT

June 15 thru Labor Day; 4 bedrooms,
3
baths, TV
room,
study;
pleasant wooded
area, $250.
Luxury
rooms,

WANTED

WANTED FEMALE
WAITRESSES

scientific

way

to destroy

lawns,

6 p.m.

windows

ID 2-6668.

CADDIES needed
Lake Forest, on

and

odd

school,

for

jobs.

:

Knollwood
June 2nd,

Assignments
at 7:30
plus tips.
YOUNG
man,
junior

A.M.

in-

Call

after

Se

Golf

Club,
Day.

$4.00

a

ba
%

or

maintenance

senior

and

in

general

h

¢

ties at day camp. Must have own transportation. Telephone CEdar 4-3120.
hs
MALE
hairdresser, $125 Salary, plus
50% —
commission. Busy Deerfield shop. WI
5
4466. ask for Mr. Bill.
CAB
DRIVERS:
fuil and part time,
or nights, ages 21 to 50, ue
insurance plan, year round work. Hi
Cay
Park-Highwood
Yellow
Cab
Green Bay Road, Highwood,
Ill.
WANTED:
male grocery clerk, must have

days:

experience. Phone WI

HELP

a

5-0707.

WANTED—DOMESTIC

COOKING
and general housework; modern —
home;
small grown
family; stay; recent
references. Call CE 4-1012 before 9 a

or after 5 p.m.

UNUSUAL opportunity for dental assistant
in suburban office. Typing necessary, experience desired. Call CE 40394’ between
9 and 5 weekdays.

harmful

sects. There is no bother or guesswork of
spraying. J-C Inhalers make outdoor liv.
a pleasant reality instead of having to stay
—
indoors because of pesky, harmfu a
Write box 635, Arnolds Park, Ia., or
2-2952.
SENIOR
or junior college student w nted_
for outside yard work. Mowing, wee
cultivating. Start Saturdays now, 35
/
week during summer, $1.50 per hour, mu
have own transportation. WI 5-3811. |
AGGRESSIVE young men for summer sell
ing. Part or full time. Excellent pay po
tential.
No
experience
necessary. M
have car. EUctid 3-0331, Mr. Wallin.
RETIRED
part-time
man
for
hardwar
clerk. Must be responsible.
ae
1238 Skokie Highway
ID
Om
MEN for general maintenance including t

GENERAL
perienced

own

room,

:

a

housework, plain cooking, ©€:
girl, references, stay, 5 days,

T.V.,

new

house,

$45.

ID 2-

TAA8.

Page H 59—D 51

hursday, May 25, 1961
ee

HELP

Libertyville countryside: 6 year, one story
in good location; 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, el
kitchen, TV room, full basement, garage. 1
year lease, $270. Call

Fort

in Highwood.

COUNTRY?

If you have little ready cash and not more
than 2 children, this 3 bedroom brick ranch
near Northbrook is for you! Now available
at less than $150 a month (if you are a
good credit risk). To see interior call
L. H. BAMBERG, Realtor
342 Park Ave.
Glencoe
VE 5-2600

apart-

2-9823.

"TOWN

LIKE THE

to

wall carpeting, heat and hot water furnished, near transportation and shopping,
7
gua July 1,
$150 per month. WI 5

_

ROOMS TO RENT

TO RENT (Unfurnished)

‘A

é

�a

rp

ee
Tye

ee

HELP WANTED DOMESTIC
OK, general housework, live in,
dry;

own

room,

bath

and

is

no laun-

T.V.

Experi-

__enced; references. CE 4-2916.
‘
COOK, white, experienced, temporary June

15 to August 1; other help Kept; recent
_ __ references required. Telephone
CE 4-0875.
_
COOKING and some housework, top wages,
other help, references. CE 4-0221.

ALL

FREE—NO

FEE

cook, General Maid Jobs
$50-65 wk.
; ursemaids and second maids
$50-55 wk.
A-1 COUPLE JOBS $450-500 mo.
MRS. BAKER SHORELINE AGENCY
5 Lincoln. Winnetka
Hillcrest 6-5818
PERIENCED GIRL FOR ADULT FAM_
ILY OF 3 FOR GENERAL HOUSEWORK,
_
PLAIN
COOKING,
PERSONAL
LAUNDRY,
5
DAY
WEEK,
STAY,
REF_
ERENCES, $45. VE 5-0344.
ERAL housework, stay, own room and
bath, references, good salary. Call ID 28910
Ne GENERAL
housework-cook, live in, Thursdays and Sundays off, own room, bath and
_
TV, school age children, other help. Ref_

_ erences. VE 5-2163.
MAID: must be able

os

_ small family,

~VErnon

good

to

cook

and

serve,

salary, to go. Telephone

5-1209.

COND maid, experienced. 2 adults. Keep
white cook and gardener. Own air condi_ tioned room, radio, TV.
References re_ quired. Telephone collect ID 2-2323.
WANTED, experienced cook for 3 months

,) ‘Starting June 18. I have a kitchen maid.
_ __Telephone Mrs. Blair, CE 4-1416,
CLEANING
woman, white, some laundry,
he

or

3

ferred.

days;

own

References

transportation

required.

Mrs.

C

pre-

ReQua, EM 2-3354 before 10 a.m.
K, must have experience and recent ref_ erences; second maid, must have experience and recent references. Call CE 4-2098
u collect.
_
GENERAL housework, plain cooking, white
only.
Attractive living quarters; 2 adults;
references;
Mrs.
C.
ReQua,
phone

___

_

EMpire 2-3354 before 10 a.m.

LAUNDRESS, experienced, white, 2 days a
a itis References required. Telephone CE

COUPLE,

only;

cooking

must

and

first

be experienced.

CE

floor

duties

4-0652.

: | WHITE woman wanted for summer months.
_ General housework, laundry, some cooking.
Must like bovs and dogs. Tuesdav
_ through Saturday, 8 a.m. to 4
ot $55
_
a week; own
transportation. CE
4-2716
matter S‘p.m.

_ CLEANING
woman;
Monday,
Tuesday,
_ Wednesday, 8:30 to 12:30. Phone CE 40198,
eh
RARY cook; other help employed.
a

‘

room

and

bath.

Phone

CE

4-0198.

GENERAL houcework, assist with children,

;

aa

x

room

OMAN

and

bath,

stay,

good

for general housework,

salary.

ID

own room

and
bath, 2 school
ese
boys,
wages, stay. Call ID 2-0052.

current

STELP WANTED EMPL. AGENCY —
APPLICATIONS

_

being

accepted.

Kath

eC

Dowse Employment Agency &amp; Secretarial
ice. 273
. Market
Square,
Lake

-

SITUATION WANTED—FEMALE

__

Forest. CF 4-114

“IF YOU ARE PARTICULAR . . .”
:

then you want the finest

we

yard

8

ie

é

0

SITUATIONS WANTED—DOMESTIC |

REFERENCES

CHECKED

NO FEE!
LIVE IN GIRLS
DAY WORKERS

General
Housework,
enced, all ages.

Child

Care,

Experi-

UNiversity 9-1467
COOPER EMPLOYMENT
SERVICE
1310

Chicago

Avenue,

CLOTHING FOR SALE
CLOTHING | sale.
1008
Bluff. Phone CE 4-5386.

9-1467

Sat., May
Sun., May

WORKERS

to your

Lower

27—6 p.m.-11 p.m.
28—10 a.m.- sell out

Than

Discount

House

door

BROWNSKIN SERVICE
DElta 6-8314
HIGH
school
graduate
going
to college
wants summer work caring for children.
Can give references. Write Miss Susan
Hagan, 298 E. Williams St., Argos, Indiana; phone 892-5545.
LADY would like to do general housework,
3 or 4 days a week, experienced, references. Call DExter 6-8964.
SIX
ambitious
17
year
old
girls
from
Northern Wisconsin would like summer
work. Write to Bonnie Goodbrand, c/o
Dave Goodbrand, R.R. 1, Loyal, Wisconsin.
HOME Economics college girl wishes summer job, child care, housework,
experience,
references. Virginia Thomas,
Palmyra, Wisc.
BABYSITTING
and
light housework
for
two girls for the summer.
Phone Medford. Wis. 6468 or write Charlotte Piller,
126B North Main Street, Medford, Wisconsin.
LOCAL
high school girl looking for daytime babvsitting job for summer,
references, call after 4, ID 2-8173.
GENERAL home maintenance, interior, exterior painting, yard work, window washing. Call DExter 6-2799.
WOMAN
desires
day
work
every
other
Thursday, cleaning and some ironing, refA
aged
Braeside-Ravinia.
ATlantic
5EXPERIENCED
maid wishes work 4 or 5
davs a week; local references. Telephone
DExter 6-5766.
DAY workers, cooks, maids, couvles. Mrs.
Baker, Shoreline Employment. Phone HIIIside 6-5818, 525 Lincoln, Winnetka.
NEAT, reliable, honest
girl wants day work.
$10, carfare. Call DExter 6-4801 after 7
p.m.
WOMAN
wants cleaning or ironing 2 or 3
days per week at one home. References,
transportation. Call ONtario 2-2028.
YOUNG lady would like general housework,
baby sitting; 5 day week: live in. References. Call MAjestic 3-9648.

®
®
®
®

Kit. Wares
Hardwares
Gift Wares
Drugs-

@
@
@
@®

®
©

Electric Drills ®
Power Tools
@

Toys
Jewelry
Book Nook
Furniture

Sundries

' TI

KIDDIELAND
BAKERY

fy Spee

Electric
Leather

DOOR

CLOTHING

Saws
Gds.

SNACK

FOR

BAR

PRIZES

ALL

SPONSORED BY
CONGREGATION BETH

OR

STORE WIDE
REDUCTIONS
ON
FLOOR SAMPLES

John R. Whalen
Furniture
808

143

Waukegan Rd.
WI 5-1915

Deerfield

SATURDAY 10 A.M. to 4 P.M.
OAK KNOLL, HIGHLAND PARK

(At corner of Sheridan Rd., 2nd street north
of County Line Rd.) 18th Century English
dining room set, mahogany table, 6 newly
Let
us roll out a carpet of green
upholstered
chairs,
in white,
magnificent
that
is inlaid to look as though
it belonged. We use ONLY Warren
EXPERIENCED
woman
wants work on Sheraton buffet; pair of beige down filled
lounge
chairs,
green
down
filled
lounge
Sod registered with the State of IlliMondays and Fridays, A-1 references, will
set,
nois Agriculture.
stav some week-ends. Telephone MA
3- chair, studio couch, walnut bedroom
pair
of
Hollywood
beds,
box
springs,
mat0879.
tresses and headboards, dresser, high boy
KNEIPS LANDSCAPING
EXPERIENCED woman for general houseand pair of end tables; double bed, custom
work and plain cooking, live in, 5 day made plate glass wall cabinet for curios;
SERVICE
week, 3 in family. ID 2-0726.
many
end tables, lamps, pictures, drapes,
mf
(State Registered)
brass fender and screen for fireside, table
EXPERIENCED
laundress.
Monday
and
model
victrola and radio combination. YD
a
McHenry, II.
Tuesday open, will accept ironing and light
2-0579.
housework; references. Call Thursday and
__Friday only, TRinity 2-5924.
ELECTROLUX sales and_ service representafter 7:00 P.M.) EVergreen 5-1889
ative in your locality! Bob LeClair, teleEXPERIENCED,
reliable
woman
wants
phone ID 2-6367.
__work by the day. Call evenings. ID 2-3382.
VACAI 1UN
bound
parents, do you need
_ @ capable proay mother to care for your
ELECTRIC range, 2 years old, perfect conHOUSEMAN
wants general
cleaning
and
_ children while you are away? Good driver,
dition, $125. Call WI 5-5844.
household duties by day. References. Call
excellent references. Telephone ID 2-8152
DExter
6-5167
after
6
p.m.
ADMIRAL 21 inch, dual channel 700 stereoor
mW
2.78907
honic Theater TV set, perfect condition,
IF you are going away on vacation or comOFESSIONAL
decorating, interior and
$150. WI 5-3731.
ing home with a new baby and want ey
_
exterior painting, wall washing and
paper
with your children, call GReenleaf 5-7119.
PUTTING goods in storage; selling electric
hanging. UNiversity 9-2361 (AM), DExter
A-1 references.
refrigerator, electric range; rug 6x9; card
60416
(P.M.)
tables;
end
tables;
washing
machine;
CHAMBER
maid or second maid; experiWHITE
expert workers, % days $3 hour;
steamer trunk; Wardrolet; Scotch cooler;
enced;
references. Write
Box R-25, c/o
all
day $2.25 hour. We
do anything—
window fan. Call WI 5-1468.
The Lake Forester.
_ everything—everywhere. ALpine 1-4636.
HAM
transmitter, Globe Scout model 65,
H
school boy would like lawn jobs in
CW output, 75 watts. Whirlpool washer,
BABY SITTING
erfield. WI 5-3694,
needs timer. Call WI 5-5229.
ISTIAN colored man desires part time
16 YEAR
old girl wants work as daytime
COUCH, Valentine Seaver, maroon slip covvie
ork; office, housecleaning or yard work.
mother’s helper, July
16 through summer,
er, $35; Speed Queen ironer, $20; drop
all MAjestic 3-6918.
Prefer Highlands. ID 2-8216.
leaf mahogany table with pads, $20. WI
5-3473.
COLLEGE girl desires summer employment
EXPERIENCED
college girl available for
_ working with children; exverienced, recent
MATCHING
sofa and chair, cheap; baby
a
A wai after June 2nd. Telephone CE
__ references. Call CE 4-1720 after 3 p.m.
scale and cordless Electricarver knife set,
never used. Telephone ID 2-6235.
oe
ICAL nurse. Infant or child care.
EXPERT child care in my home while mom_ Invalid,
convalescent.
Reasonable.
A-1
9 PIECE 18th Century mahogany dining set;
my works. By the hour, day or weekly.
_
references. DE 6-1790.
References. Phone ID 3-1596.
Weiman
mahogany leather tooled coffee
and end tables, excellent condition; lamps;
PING—EXPERT.
ID 2-0280.
BABY sitter wanted 5 days per week. Hours
2
slipcovered
chairs and sofa; priced to
vee
ie to 6:15 p.m. Call evenings, ID
sell. Telephone ID 2-0616.
-8114,
DINING
room
table; lawn
spreader
and
PRACTICAL nurse will care for infants and
2 q 3LIABLE white man wishes interior paintlawn roller. Call ID 2-0146 after 6.
children here while you work, shop or vaing,
paper
oh AN
and
wall
washing.
mahogany bedroom
set, with 4
2
I’m highly recommended.
WI 5- 7 PIECE
elephone ID 2-8917.
poster bed, $75. CBs4-4411.
EXPERIENCED
gardener will do garden- MATURED woman would like evening work, MOVING,
must sell, Saturday only. 1960
ing,
landscaping,
fast
and
dependable.
Valiant Sedan. Duncan Phyfe mahogany
transportation
needed,
to sit with chiltruck. ID 2-7698 or ID 2-6668 after
dining table $20; 1 year old» custom Imdren. WI 5-3133.
perial Frigidaire washer;
13 cubic foot,
WOMAN
will care for your child in her
self defrosting 2 door refrigerator; birch
TWO
experienced men desire work. Storms,
home, by day or week. $20 week, $.50
baby
crib;
Sear’s
1
wheel
trailer and
_
$creens, windows washed. Yard work.
hour. Call ID 3-0180.
hitch; various samples, ceramic gifts and
References. Phone CE 4-1536.
MOTHER’S helper age 17, senior in High
glass; living room chairs $20 each; ZenWINDOWS
washed and lawn maintained,
School; work during summer months; exith 17” TV $20; 2 power mowers $20 and
en
references. DExter 6-0788.
perienced with children; light housework.
$30 each; wheelbarrow $5. 2249 HeatherVirginia Nelson, Box 92, Owen, WisconYOUNG married man with good references
cliff Drive., Libertyville. EMpire 2-3714.
sin, or call CAstle 9-2413.
wants
part time job doing wallwashing,
ANTIQUE
walnut
bed
and
marble
top
painting, tiling, ceramic work. ID 2-8173.
COLLEGE girl working mornings at Winter
dresser; maple hutch; muffin stand: pie
Club wants afternoon job with children.
GARDENING, landscaping and housework
crust
table;
perfect
condition.
CE
4
Experienced. Call Kay Colby, CE 4-9808
for afternoons, early evenings and weekbetween 4:30 and 5:30 p.m.
__ ends. Call ONtario 2-3977 after 3 p.m.
FRIGIDAIRE
air-conditioner, 1 ton, $100;
wants part time garden work in ex-|
perfect
working
condition;
72”
cedar
CLOTHING FOR SALE
che ae. for room or apartment. N.Y. Box
picnic table with 4 benches. $40; miscel191,
Wilmette, Illinois.
laneous outdoor furniture. ID 3-2591.
DRESSES, suits, coat, cocktail dresses, 16YOUNG
man would like heavy cleaning,
18; junior size 13 party dresses; skirts 12- LARGE
semi-round
sofa
in
red_
velvet,
_
gardening, lawn work, Saturdays. Call aft14; slacks 14; very reasonable. Telephone
drapes to match and slipcover, $75. TeleID 2-467
phone ID 2-0002.

SITUATION

er 5:30,

WANTED—MALE

DE 67928,

Page H 60—D 52

GOODS

wae

FOR SALE| HOUSEHOLD GOODS FOR SALE

THURS., FRI. &amp; SAT., 10 A.M. TO 4 P.M
233 BRIAR LANE, HIGHLAND
PARK
(Go west of Skokie Hwy. on Clavey Road
to about No. 1880, then turn sowth.) Fireplace set; 2 Early American “ye benches;
antique pine commode;
3 ali
wool hand
made braided rugs; room size carpets; set
of 6 antique farm chairs; antique Boston
Rocker;
kneehole
desk;
Vietorian
marble
topped chest and bed; double maple spocl
bed; 2 inexpensive walnut twin bed sets;
Cheval
mirror;
Westinghouse
washer
and
dryer; 21 inch screen TV; GE refrigerator
with separate freezing compartment; all the
curtains and drapes; single Hollywood bed;
lamps; pictures; miscellaneous. ID 2-4926.

Sale by HAZEL

American Legion Hall
849 Waukegan Rd.
Deerfield

Women: $10 per day
Men: $12 per day
Delivered

Lake

Bargain Bazaar
And Auction

COOPER EMPLOYMENT SERVICE
1310 CHICAGO, EVANSTON

DAY

Plaister,

HOUSEHOLD
GOODS FOR SALE

SUMMER GIRLS UNIVERSITY

HOUSEHOLD

NATURAL Ranch mink straight stole, like
new, snaps into cuffs, originally $500, only
$175, payments acceptable. ID 2-9260.
NATURAL mink coat in perfect condition,
size 8-10, $700 or best offer. Telephone
ID 2-4147.
TWIN girl clothes, size 3-4; boy’s, 6-8 and
14-16; miscellaneous furniture. WI 5-1918.

Evanston

Good calibre, experienced school girls from
Wisconsin available within the next 2 weeks
for a job as mothers’ helpers. $25 to $30
per week.

EXPERIENCED

eile Ak

ak

Dee

ee

ANN

STUPPLE

ANY
small offer takes most things; Fine
French violin, rebuilt sofa, Bendix washer, antique bed, Syncro jig-saw, 2 ‘For
Sale” signs, 50 feet outdoor lighting cord
with sockets, gateleg table, coffee table
portable phonograph, pin-up lamps, custom
drapes
and
valances,
H-O_
transformer, drawing board with stand and T
square,
hunting
bow,
8 inch
furniture
legs,
tree
ornaments,
paints,
levels,
hinges, Jocks, drawer pulls, other small
findings
and
rummage.
Salvation Army
gets anything left Saturday. No telephone
oe
1329
Sherwood
Road,
Highland
ark,
HOTPOINT
electric range, perfect condition; GE refrigerator, excellent condition;
washing machine, needs repair. ID 2-4485.
FAMILY room furniture, 2 section sofa, 2
end tables. coffee table, $130 complete;
matching dinette set, 42 inches round with
lazy susan top, 4 chairs, $75; 2 bar stools,
$15; 3 lamps, a pair $15, 1 $10; Turquoise formal, size 9, $15. CE 4-4788.
BEIGE wool and rayon carpeting, approximately 45 yards, $25. WI 5-0867.
HIGH-RISE twin beds, $30: bedside table
and chintz boudoir chair. $10; miscellaneous items. Call after 5:30, ID 2-4783.
BRAND new bunk twin $40 mattress, $15;
tawny walnut double bookcase headboard,
brand new, originally $65, only $18; $65
Rotisserie, used 5 times, $12; $180 ReEe gated used 12 times, only $30. ID 2-

DINING ' table, 4 chairs; electric range, refrigerator, dropleaf table. 4 lawn metal
chairs, good condition. CE 4-2917.
FUR
scarves,
floor lamps,
electrical
appliances, kitchen utensils, curtains. 8 a.m.
Friday.
1463
Sherwood
Road, Highland
Park.
Hoover vacuum cleaners as low as
NEW
$49.95; 21 in. TV, reconditioned, $49.95;
used automatic washer. $25; used electric
new
$25;
refrigerator,
used
stove, $25;
refrigerators and freezers as low as $149.95; wholesale prices; our 25th vear in
Green
S &amp;
give
We
Forest.
Lake
Stamps.
Freeman’s TV
and Music,
648
Western, Lake Forest.
WESTINGHOUSE 21 in. TV, on mahogany
ay) table, $35. Call after 6 p.m., ID 210 PIECE set upholstered white rattan porch
furniture and valances, $150: sofa, $75;
sofa, $25. Telephone ID 2-3976.
GAS
range, good working condition, $20.
Call ID 2-1327.
FOR sale: sofa and chair, $15; priced for
quick sale. Telephone ID 2-2646.
MOVING: sell perfect 17 ft. upright freezer:
also sax with case, used 2 months;
18
In. jig Saw
with
motor;
6 in. tiltine
bench saw; fish spears; ice chisel: fish
house stove, etc. Call ID 2-2799 evenings.
NEW
Simmons
double
mattress;
wrought
iron step table; iron driveway gates; bookcase; record cabinet; large electric roaster;
deep fat fryer; electric bean pot; electric
animal clipper; crvstal glassware; antique
art wares; lamps. WI 5-3699.
GARAGE Sale: hide-a-bed. cocktail and end
tables; dresser; large window fan: electric
Studebaker,
1951
grill; Gladiron ironer;
$100;
chairs:
linen;
dishes;
etc.
1049
__ Greentree. WI 5-2906.
EASY washer with spin-dry, good condition,
$30; hand mower and grass catcher, $5;
Storkline
baby
carriage with
wad,
$15;
car bed, like new, $4. WI 5-3933.

SIMMONS

Hide-a-Bed

for immediate

and
Call

gas

stove,

2 ovens.

clock. like new
WI 5-5824.

PORTABLE

40 inch.

condition.

$65

sale.

Hoover

light

firm.

Hotpoint dishwasher. with cut-

ting block top; excellert condition, reasonable. Phone WI 5-5115.
MOVING,
must sell: walnut round cocktail and step end table. used 6 months,
$10 each; 2 occasional chairs, $10; Kroeha high oe
as weve He mattress,
ike new,
; plai
uggy,
$10. Call ID
seis
3-2742.
English, mahogany.
furniture:
BEDROOM
double dresser with mirror. double hed
with headboard, chest, 2 night stands, box
spring and mattress. svread. drapes, wall
to wall carpeting. ID 2-8443.
2 BURNER
gas laundry
stove
and. tnh:
draneries, cornices; 2 lounge chairs, slipcovered; pictures, lamp shades. suitcases;
silver coffee service; nest of tables; books,
miscellaneous.
ID 2-8725.
DELUXE
RCA
Whirlpool
electric range.
40 in.. white, snotless and in excellent
condition. Cost $350, will sell for $100.
Deen well cooker, oven. automatic clock,
griddle broiler
ard
drawer
snace,
214
vears old, available July 1st. Moving. ID
3-1409,
TWO
9x12 rugs and pads, 13 storm windows screens and combination door. For
rent: 2 room furnished apartment. private
ertrarce.
on May
29th.
1546 Oakwood
Ave., ID 2-2571.
General Electric automatic washer, 4 years
old, perfect. $35. Call TD 2-3550.
A &amp; A REPAIR SERVICE
KENMORE 4 burner stove with grill in middie for bacon, pancakes. Wash tubs. Call
CE 4-1286 after 6 p.m.
21 INCH
gas range, 4 burners and oven,
excellent condition. uses natural or Propane
gas, $50;
G.E.
refrigerator,
good
condition, 9 cu. ft., $35. Call CE 4-3895
any day after 10 a.m.

Bikes,

trikes,

sweeper,

training

toys,

stroller,

wheels,

fireplace

screén, mower, rummage. CE 4-3774.
LYON AND HEALY apartment size grand

piano, excellent condition,
$300;
in,
walnut frame sofa, $75; 4 Windsor chairs.
CE 4-2906.
PORTABLE sewing machine, $30; 5 drawer
chest; 2 black end tables, black desk, $5
each; Walker-stroller, $3. ID 2-2739.
3 PAIRS antique satin drapes, lined. Perfect condition. $50. ID 2-8048.
SANDALWOOD textured silk couch, 8 feet
long, 3 months old, sacrifice $400. Telephone ID 3-1323.
MOVING
sale: Lawson couch; leather top
end table; custom made draw draperies;
ranch oak bedroom set; French Provincial
bedroom
set;
limed
oak
bedroom
set;
large double mirror; pictures; lamps; 2
school desks; 5 red metal kitchen stools;
Roper 6 burner gas stove, double oven;
Crosley Shelvador refrigerator, etc. Many
bargains. 935 Fairview Road. ID 2-4636.

MISCELLANEOUS

PLANTS

FOR

FOR

YOUR

SALE

GARDEN

ANNUALS—Flats
of Hybrid
Petunias, Double
Petunias,
Snapdragons, Marigolds, Dwarf Dahlias, Carnations,
Asters,
Salvia,
Verbena,
Lobelia
and _ others.
Geraniums,
Tuberous
Begonias,
Lantanas,
Impatiens.
Tomato,
Pepper
and
other
Vegetable
plants.
PERENNIALS—Large selection of
field-grown plants. Hardy Chrysanthemums and Cushion Mums,
the new ‘Harvest Giant” Mums
too.
GROUND
COVERS—Bowle’s Vinca, Pachysandra, Euonymus Vegetus, E. Coloratus, E. Acuta, E.
Kewensis, Baltic Ivy and Ajuga.
YEWS—in
containers, $2.50 each.
Cotoneaster
Apiculata,
$1.25
each. Golden Vicari Privet, 75¢
each.

OMAN’S

FLOWER

FARM

Located on Rt. 83, 42 mile south of
Rt. 22, near
Long
Grove.
Open
Weekdays and Sundays 8 A.M. to

8 P.M.
We

grow

our own

plants;

they are

always fresh and healthy.

KITCHEN
REMODELING
Enjoy the convenience
up-to-date kitchen.

of

a modern

A new kitchen with beautiful wood
cabinets, formica tops and built-in
appliances can be installed in your
home for as little as $19.95 per
month.

FREE

sale,

in good condition, best offer. Telephone
ID 2-4383.
FINAL clearance. Come early. Bargains 2alore. Glencoe PTX Half Price Sale. Friday, May 26, 8:30\ to 11:30 a.m. Central
School, Greenwood and Hazel, Glencoe.

ROPER

FOR

ESTIMATES

Northbrook Lumber
Company
(Skokie
Northbrook, Il.

BETH
1175

&amp;

EL

Sheridan

Dundee

Rds.)
CR

GARDEN
Road,

2-3000

FAIR

Highland

Park

Flats of Annuals: Ageratum, Allysum, Asters,
Balsam,
Marigolds,
Pansies,
Petunias, Salvia, Snapdragons, Zinnias
Annual
Plants in
pots: Begonias, Coleus,
Dahlias, Dasies,
Fuschia,
raniums, Impatiens, Lantana, Vinca Vines
Perennial Plants in pots: Chrysanthemums,
Columbine, Delphinium, Phlox
Perennial
Ground
Cover:
Myrtle,
Pachysandra, Euonymous, Ivy
Potted Roses: All Patent varieties
All plants grown especially
for us
SPECIAL SALE a
ae
N MOWERS
—1/3
O
REGULAR RETAIL PRICE
SALE DAYS: gas"
pe May 28, 9 A.M.-1

MONDAY,, May 29, 9 A.M.-2 P.M.
TUESDAY,

are?

tg

5

Day)

May

30,

9

One piece construction, a beautiful improvement on your home, safety features, guaranteed against cracking. For free estimate,
call franchised dealers:
SVOBODA REALTORS
916 Glen Flora
MAiestic 3-6270
EVERGREENS
FOR SALE, low Me Te
Pfitzer junipers, 3 to 5 years old. WI
0314.

BABY carriage. Good condition. CE 4-3866.
POWER

lawn

and Stratton
WI 5-2953.

mower,
engine,

Thursday,

18 inch

reel,

excellent

May

Briggs

condition:

25, 1961

�May
China

SALE

27th thru 31st
Open 9-6

Sets
Crystal
Odds

Drastic

&amp; Ends

Reductions

Park

in

Rear

Dirigo, Inc.
FINE

TABLE

APPOINTMENTS

170 N. Milwaukee Ave.
(1 Block North of Dundee Rd.)
Wheeling, Ill.
Phone LEhigh 7-1978.
RENT EVERYTHING
FOR THE HOME
FROM YOUR ASSOCIATED STORE
Portable TV Sets
Foldaway Beds
High Chairs
Reducing Machines
Hospital Beds
Heavy Duty Vacuums
Floor Waxers
Power Tools
Wall Paper Equip.
Moving Equipment
Wheel Chairs
Rug Scrubbers
Floor Machines
Ladders
WE DELIVER

ASSOCIATED
RENT-ALLS
651

Roger

Williams,
IDlewood

Highland

Park

2-6333

SAVE ALMOST HALF
HARDWARE — PAINTS — GARDEN
SUPPLIES
SELLING OUT ENTIRE
STOCK
Sundays

10-3

P.M.

Daily

12-7

SAILBOAT,
Fleetwind
Arrow,
new
last
year, deluxe fittings, fully equipped including
trailer and cradle, owner moving. Sacrifice, $1100. ID 3-0892.
ELEGANT
silver plate salver (tray) with
Gadroon border, beautifully chased; h
crocheted
Colonial
bedspread;
‘child’s
camp
trunk. Telephone
ID 2-6787 after
5 P.M.
GREEN
satin tufted king size headboard,
$50; matching king size spread and dust
ruffle, $20; 2 Harvard
bed frames,
$5
each;
maple
chest,
$25;
natural
birch
chest, $20. Call ID 3-1530
TRAMPOLINE,
Nissen,
7x12,
complete
with pads, etc., 8 months old, $200. WI
5-3724.
WALNUT
copper lined humidor end tabie,
$4; maple night stand, $4; 2 skin Stone
Martin scarf, $2; mink dyed squirrel stole,
$40; Ekco pressure cooker, $5. WI 5-5754.
POWER
reel lawn mower,
36 in. roll-away bed, child’s whirligig, Lionel train
set. ID 2-7287 evenings and week-ends.
SWIMMING
pool, Doughboy 24 ft. diameter, 4 ft. deep;
pump,
filters, ladder,
test ‘kit, etc. $250. WI 5-0714.
POWER
LAWN
ROLLING-FERTILIZING
Let us take the humps out. Save your back
Jim Beinlich, VErnon 5-1195.
HAY
RACK
Sleigh searen party facilities. Happ’s Hollow, CR 2 3131.
ALUMINUM
windows, doors, siding, awnings and
screen
houses;
peas
Spring
prices. Call CoAlume, CE 417
COINS For Collectors—Buy snd Sell, Larson’s Store, 1783 St. Johns Ave., Highland Park. Saturday and Sunday only.
TRANSMISSION for sale. 4 speed plus shift
ene!
still in car. Price $220 firm. ID
RARE
12 gauge double barrel Ithaca shotgun, fancy engraved; excellent condition.
CE 4-1538
ZEISS CONTAX IIA 35 mm. camera; Sonnar F 1.5 lens with flash gun and light
meets like new condition, $135. CE 4

P.M.

NORTH SHORE HARDWARE
1238 Skokie Valley Road
Highland
Park

~ RUMMAGE
USED

FENCES
“YOU SELECT_WE ERECT”

FOR

of

annuals

and

shady

plants

stereo head, plastic cover, rn Stan
ite
speakers, $40. After 6 p.m., ID 2-3582,
WEEDS
POWER
MOWED
__—By tractor rotary mower. Jim Beinlich, VErnon 5-1195.
TD
14 WITH
2 yard Drott skid shovel
loader, A-1 shape, $5500 or best offer. 671
Dundee Glencoe. VErnon 5-1195.
24 INCH
rider mower
with blitz fogger,
power trimmer and edger, perfect condition, both used only 2 months. Also set
of new custom women’s golf clubs. Phone
ID 2-8959, evenings.
CHAIN Link ferce. ae feet, $100 or best
offer. Call WI 5-1285
3 SPACES in lot 128 of section CC at North
Shore Garden of Memories. Call NEwton
BRAND
new,
in original
carton,
24 in.
tad
MOWER,
45. RIDING MOW, $99.50, 1/3 off. Call ID 2-1716.
WEDDING
ring set, 11 diamonds, sacrifice
$250 or best offer; also beautiful diamond
dinner ring. Call ID 3-2475.
arate.

train set, will sell complete or sepTelephone

FLAGSTONES;

ID

Top

2-7454 after

6.

Soil. $12 per load.

used,

approximately

WI
250

square feet at a bargain for quick sale.
CE 4-3366
LARGE office desk; Paymaster check writer;
BUILDING
MATERIALS, | stone,
brick, block, wood trim, drain ‘tile. CE
KITCHEN SINK TOPS
One day installation on Formica Sink and
counter tops. Worn
out counters covered
with Ceramic Tile for less. Also, cabinets,
sinks, and dishwashers. Free plans and estimates. Snazelle Kitchens. CE 4-33237.
MASSEY-HARRIS tractor, model Pacer, CE
4-3895.
THOMPSON
and Shell Lake boats, Evinrude
motors,
Gator
trailers.
Wenban
sou
589 Oakwood, Lake Forest. CE 4HOT
water heater.
electric,
good
condition; drop leaf ‘ning table; reasonable.
Telephone ID 2-9151.
1949
FORD,
needs
work,
make
offer;
Ricoh-Diacord
camera,
like new,
case
and attachments. Telephone ID 3-1473.
8 CUBIC
foot Montgomery
Ward _ refrigerator. Excel’ent condition $30. Call CE
4-1998 or CE 41498 after 5 0.m.
EARNING MY WAY TO SCOUT CAMP
making incinerators out of 55 gallon heavy
steel drums. Trash burns fast. Safe. Side
handles
and
cover.
Satisfaction
guaranteed. 2nd vear in huciness. Onlv $4.88.
delivered FREE. Call SKIP at EMpire 24234
CAMPER for pick-up truck; sleeps 4, cooking,
refrigeration,
$995.
Hales
Trailer
Sales, 1920 Sheridan Road, North Chicago, DExter 6-2353.
baby
car bed.
BABY
carriaee;
playpen;
Telephone ID 2-8648.

Thursday, May 25, 1961

Falcon demonstrator, 4
door deluxe, automatic,
fully equipped,
factory
guarantee.

NORTH

Mason
grands

pianos

SPECIALS
only

$16.86

Sat. 9-5

St.

ID

SALE —MOVING
JUNE ist—

2-2510

SALE

USED
HAMMOND
ORGANS,
with new
organ guarantees from Lyon-Healy. Hammond
chord
organs,
$795,
low as $30
down.
Hammond
spinet
organs,
$1225,
low as $45 down. Lyon-Healy, 1843 Second
Street, Highland Park: ID 2-3434.

INSTRUMENTS

Chevrolet
A limited

PIANOS wanted: bonus prices for Steinway
and
Baldwin.
VErnon
5-1640 eves. and
Sunday. AMbassador 2-2023 days.

WANTED

TO

$1295

mileage,

Nomad station
production car

wagon.

1958

Rambler station wagon, whitewall
tires, stick shift, sclid black and
$1295
beautiful

1958

Volvo 2 door,
tires. A find

black,

inacoteimen

TYPICAL LAKE FOREST OWNED
AND SERVICED CARS

GIVE YOURSELF A TREAT.
COME IN AND DRIVE THE
SENSATIONAL MONZA
FOUR SPEED

Every

Nite

INC.
4-3200

SPECIALS
when you buy your
over 45 cars in the
showrooms.

Pontiac Bonneville conv., powder
blue, bucket seats, pow.
steer.,
pow.
seats
amd
windows,
3
deuces. Full price
1955 Chevrolet V-8 Bel Air hard top,
auto., radio, heater, W/W
tires,
ps
turquoise
&amp;
white.
.
$ 545
rice
1957 Sieroass 4 door. nice snow white
car,
auto.,
radio, heater,
pow.
steer. pow. brakes. Full price ....$ 645
1956 Oldsmobile Super 88 cony., snow
white with new
black top, all
power. Must see to appreciate ....$ 995
1949 Plymouth 2 door. Good cone
tation car
45

LAKE MOTORS
Authorized
Chrysler
Corp.
Dealer
1766 First Street
Highland Park, Il.
Hours—Weekdays 9-9
Sun. 10-4
Sat, 9-4

WE HAVE TWO LARGE EXPERIENCED SERVICE STATIONS WITH
24
MERCEDFS
MECHANICS
TO
SERVICE YOUR CAR.
North

MARTIN

LOEBER

5625 Broadway

(Oldest M.B.

&amp; SONS,
.

Service

INC.

&amp;2, 16750

in the Midwest)

Station

Deal

wih

MOTORS,
INC.
St.
WH 4-0500

you

can

ard

OP

USED

Ford
;

or

Holmes
1909

St.

1953

a,

heater,

Evenings

$

radio ....$

Until

695]

395

9

WENBAN BUICK
589 N. Oakwood
Lake

Forest

CE

2-8640

Highland

CADILLAC,
ID

1959,

3-1614.

Call

white,
after

6

sedan

De

ID

Park

Ville.

ID

4-5770

1957 FORD
convertible, blue, brand new
white
nylon
top,
guaranteed
3 years;
white-wall tires, Thunderbird motor; car
in excellent
mechanical
condition
with
low mileage; very clean throughout. Prvate owner, no dealers. Call ID 2-5140
after 5 P.M.

“BIG WHEEL”
BIKE
New

&amp;

2-6300.

2-8885.

1959 ALFA ROMEO, 2 liter roadster, excellent condition, 16,000 miles, beautiful Italian red, originally $5600, must sell immediately, $2750, or best offer. For appointment call GLadstone 1-0111 evenings,
or WHitehall 4-6809 days, Mr. Gibson.
1959 BUICK
convertible. full power, FM
radio. Telephone ID 2-6300.
1960 MORRIS
MINOR
convertible, blue,
radio, heater, perfect condition, by owner.
Call DElaware 7-3571 evenings.
1961 RENAULT Caravelle sports car, only
4000 miles; 2 tops. ID 2-2821.
1900 RENAULT-DAUPHINE, 4 door hardtop, 1860 miles, excellent condition; to
settle estate. Call ONtario 2-7843.
1957 DODGE
V-8,
% ton pickup, 15,000
miles. $875. Call ID 2-2682.
1¥60 VOLKSWAGEN
sedan, radio, whitewalls and heater blower, in excellent coner
$1,250, must sell this weekend, WI
1960 T BIRD, like new, $3175. Telephone
ID 2-6300.
1957 LINCOLN Premier convertible, beautiful,
mechanically
excellent,
full power,
__Teasonably priced. ID 2-5094
1956 BUICK Special, 2 door hard top, white,
full power, original owner, spotless $790.
WI 5-3016.
1957 MERCURY, Colony Park station wagon, 9 passenger. Telephone ID 2-6300.
1954
WILLYS
Overland
station
wagon;
good running condition. CE 4-9128.
1957 CHFVROIT ET. 4 door Bel Air; silver
and
white;
6 cylinder,
standard
shift;
radio, heater; white walls; snow tires and
wheels
included.
$975. CE
43056
eve-

SHOP
Used

Ranger

:

Bikes

Bicycles

e

Guaranteed during your ownership
Free

Pickup

1844 First St.

&amp;

|

Delivery

ID 2-1750.

PERSONAL
I WISH to thank the thoughful yg
he ke :
returned my driver’s license.
Erikz
Campbell.
&lt;
TO Whom it may concern: We will not
beresponsible or legally liable for any
p nd
chases made or debts contracted
for
anyone other than ourselves. Donald 4
Raye Korshak.

PETS

P.M.

1960 VOLKSWAGEN,
silver gray, whitewalls.
radia;
heater,
perfect
condition,
original owner, only $1400. ID 3-2056.
1949 DESOTO,
$75, 4 door sedan, fluid
drive, 75,000 total mileage, radio, heater,
good running condition
for local driving.
ID 2-9324
1957 Chrysler hard top 2 door, power steering, power brakes, radio, heater, reasonable.

like
;

CYCLE &amp; HOBBY IDSHOP
ata

STATION wagon, Dodge Sierra, 1959, power equipped, tinted glass, electric seat and
rear window, radio, snow tires, under floor
luggage storage, excellent condition, $1750.
ID 3-1318.
1959 CHRYSLER
Saratoga, power steering,
power brakes, fully equipped, one owner;
immaculate; $2595; private. ID 2-3582 after
6 p.m.
1959 DESOTO Fire Flite, 4 door hardtop,
Telephone

re-built—some

186 Central at Sheriaan

1958 RAMBLER 4 door, 1 owner, fine second car. Call ID 2-6300.
MERCEDES-BENZ 300 Cabriolet 1954. Rare
4 door convertible; an elegant touring car
but very practical for everyday use. Black
exterior, red leather upholstery, AM-short
wave radio, self lubricating, gas selector,
steering wheel lock, polaroid sun visors,
many other features. Must be seen if your
not familiar
with this car. By private
party. Evenings
ID
2-4588, days DElaware 7-0737. Price $3950.
1960 DODGE
Dart Phoenix, 2 door hard
top, V-8, stick shift, yellow with white top,
whitewalls,
tinted
glass,
back-up
lights,
radio, heater,
special
interior, excellent
condition—only 15,000 miles. $2150. Call
WI 5-3195 after 5 p.m.
1957 LINCOLN Premier coupe, full power,
pe sell this week-end. Telephone ID 2-

URSAFELL
KENNELS
BOARDING
AND TRIMMING
Expert grooming, all breeds, individual
country kennel. Telephone WI 5-5035.
PERSIAN
kittens, pedigreed, Round
KImball 6-2815

POODLE

at stud, toy, silver, son of

Cl

pion Silver Swank ‘of Sassafras. Pupp
usually
available.
Mrs.
Matos,
Crys
Lake 459-4646.
SCHNAUZERS _ miniature_
pups,
champion sired ,top quality, fine aa :
PP
home raised, no shedding.
E
11
BEAUTIFUL
black miniature
poodles,
weeks, old; reasonable. EMpire 2-313
WEIMERANER pups, AKC registered.
tioch 635-J-2.
3 FEMALE pedigreed Siamese eo
trained, must sell this week, no rea
offer refused. WI 5-2956.
TWO,
sweet, yer
old kittens want
good home. WI 5-3358.
5 BEAUTIFUL % collie pups, 4 weeks o

Ped

and

female,

$10

each.

Call

1D

POODLE,
standard
male _ puppy,
trained,
AKC
champion
bred,
temperament, loves children. WI
ADORABLE Kittens want loving home. G
ID 2-6615 after 5:30.
2 SIAMESE kittens, female sealpoint, ma
om
champion dam and sire,
CE
MINIATURE
poodles, 2 black males, 3%
months old. paper een
shots,
AK
registered. CRestwood2Coe

DACHSHUND,

3% ii ae

son of

champion
Sara,
home
raised,
excel
with children, health guaranteed.
1027
PUG puppies, apricot. AKC chan sto.
8 weeks, males and female. WI 5YOU got mice? We got cats! Four x ;

aged two months need home. WI pach

Honor Local Mend
At Annual Meet
Of Scout Council

nings.

| CADILLAC,
power,

jow

1958,

sedan

mi'eaee,

like

de

new

Ville,

full

condition.

1957 PLYMOUTH, | rg
2 door, grey
shift.
black
and
white. white walls,
heater. Good condition. Must be seen to be
7
pera
$600. CE 41998 or CE 4p.m.

Premier, 4 door, full power,

aoe mae oy ~ 288

Buick Super 4 door sedan,
automatic
transmission,

’

cellent condition. DE 6-3080 from 8 to 5,

3

heat

n., 20 in. or 24 in. Many Schwinns

Motor Co.

Johns

BICYCLES
3IKES—Used
and econditianale
ood selection of Boys or Girls 16
—completely
aew.

$695. Telephone ID 2-6300.
1959 CHEVROLET Biscayne 2 door, radio,
bak aa
Sc
olive green, bee 13,000
miles,
like mew, 1 owner. 6 cylinder. ex-

CARS

POSES
transmission,

PRCIO

Breen—ID

1956 LINCOLN

u
;
CLEAN

Open

party will pay up to $100 for

very sharp 1949 to 1952 Chevy,
Plymouth. Phone CEdar 4-3078.

Call Mr.

&amp; MOT

~~ BICYCLES

Park

CASH FOR YOUR CAR
ANY MAKE OR MODEL

after

s, Manic

Highland

ID 2-8640

:

BUY

ROUND
36 to 40 inch pine or maple table
with 4 to 6 captain chairs; also patio metal
table and chairs. Call evenings, ID 3-1342.
WANTED to buy used Gravely garden tractor. Must be in good condition. C. Shippel,
2238
W.
Lyndale,
Chicago,
BRunswick
8-4695.
GOOD pedestal bird bath; croquet set; and
20 feet of used stockade fence. Telephone
CE 43373 evenings.

St. Johns

Best offer over $2500. Call CE 4-3896.

Loop
LOEBER
1111 N. Clark

Holmes Motor Co.
1909

$1295.

CE

WANTED | 1955 Bel-Air 6 cylinder, 4Sah 7 PAY
door Chevrolet, stand-

&lt;HICAGO ART GALLERIES
ASH
FOR
PIANOS,
ALL
MAK
STYLES. BONUS FOR STEINWAYS AND
JTHER GOOD
MAKES. CALL LONG3EACH
1-5092,
EVENINGS
ROGERS
PARK. 1-4400.

PRIVATE

1956

low

big

MAY WE BE OF SERVICE TO YOU
IN THE PURCHASE OF A NEW OR
USED
MERCEDES)
BENZ
MOTOR
CAR. FOR DOMESTIC OR FOREIGN
DELIVERY.

Rent a piano $5 a month
Must dispose of 90 new and ered” pas
New spinets, 88 note -.................$39
Used spinets and consoles ..
a was $295
15 used grand pianos ...
fr. $295
Used player uprights ....
fr. $195
Practice uprights
fr. $ 79
See the new spinet player piano
FIELDS PIANO CO.
2921 W. Touhy, Chicago
AMbassador 2-2023

MUSICAL

Buick
convertible,
excellent condition

shift,

Exclusively

Park

Johns

stick

MERCEDES-BENZ

LOWREY
Organ Studios
1795

door,

1959

per

&amp; Hamlin and Knabe floor models,
and consoles, greatly reduced.

Of Highland

SALE

1958

SPECIAL

PIANO

4

SPRING

Limited
selection of Lowrey
Holiday Organs repossessions and
trade-ins.
Nothing
down—take
on monthly payments of only
$25.30. Regular new organ guarantee.

Cable

Corvair
engine

Eliminate the guessing
used car. Select from
comfort of our indoor

QUALITY

SUMMER

1960

SALE

ORGANS — PIANOS

Brand new
month,

FOR

McCALLUM CHEVROLET
PRESENTS

Open

SHORE’S

EXTRA

FOUND

McCALLUM
CHEVROLET,
191
E. DEERPATH

WOMEN

FOR

&amp;

AUTOMOBILES

GOODS

JEWISH

INSTRUMENTS

ID 2-2936

SPECIAL OFFER: Garrard Turntable, base,

PULVERIZED

COUNCIL

OF

LOST

LOST:
solitaire diamond
engagement
ring
in Sunset Food Market ladies’ washroom,
Friday about 5:30. Reward. ID 3-1034.
LOST: Porter Cable electric handsaw, May
18th between Highland Park High School
re Roger Williams Ave. Phone ID 304
FOUND:
gold earring. Owner
may have
same by &lt;n
and paying for this
ad, IDA 2-288
FOUND:
camera and red and grey wallet,
Market
Square,
Lake
Forest,
Saturday,
May 20. To Claim, phone CE 4-3957.
LOST: | bi-focal
prescription
sun
glasses,
Friday . Saturday in Lake Forest. Phone
CE 4011
LOST:
black male cat, “‘Nickey,”
liberal
reward. WI 5-0236, 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

1st—9 A.M. to 9 P.M.

Largest Dealer

545 Broadview

LIONEL

MUSICAL

ROCK

ALSO PANSIES ALL COLORS
GERANIUMS ALL ese cy
VINES
OMATOES
kinds

NATIONAL

SALE

VINCA
All

JUNE

AMERICAN LEGION HALL
1957 SHERIDAN ROAD
HIGHLAND PARK, ILL.

STANDARD
OR CUSTOM
CABANAS - PATIOS
GARDEN
UTILITY
BUILDINGS
For Free Estimates Call
Mike
Estate Fencing
CE 4-1283

PERENNIALS
and
GARDEN
PLANTS

1961

GO-CART—4.5 h.p., Slicks tires upholst
in good condition, $90. WI
94,
Me
1958 WHIZZER, 1600 “miles, =a condi
cost $220 new, will sell for $75. bia
2-3499.
bt
2 WHEEL garden tractor, 3 h.p. with —
plow and rotary mower attachments, $1
Whizzer motor bike, just overhauled, $:
WI 5-0310 after 5 p.m.

1-4400.

SALE

CLOTHES—HOUSEHOLD

THURSDAY,

HARDY

“inbok TRUCKS

Falcon, 2 door __..___--$1595

ie

WAREHOUSE

AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE
1960

MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE

MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE

glide,

steering

ahaa

mpala_
convertible.
and brakes, 14,000

power
miles,

private party, reasonable price. Call ID 2-

1946 between 6 and 7 p.m. any evening.
1960 PONTIAC
Catalina convertible, light
blue,
full power,
all extras,
like new,
private party, $2595. Phone WI 5-4567.
LATE
1959
190SL Mercedes convertible
roadster; white with black ton; red leather
interior;
Blaupunkt
AM-FM
radio;
low
mileage, top condition; never raced; original owner.
4-4064.
1956 FORD, Country sedan, full power. Telephore ID 2-6300.
1957 CHEVROLET
4 door. new large engine, good ean
radio, heater, low
mileage. WI 5-4567
°55 DESOTO,
4 door, automatic transmission, power steering, power brakes, nice
we
clean, used as second car, $395. ID
-270
VOLKSWAGEN,
1960 station wagon, 241
model, red and grey, sun roof, extras, low
mileage, radio. Telephone ID 27177.

The annual meeting of the No}
Shore

Area

Council,

Boy

Scouts

America, was held May 17th at
Fort

Sheridan

Officers

liam
D.
Shaw,
elected Council

Eisendrath,
Scout

Libertyville, bid
President; Joseph

Jr.,

Highland

Commissioner;

Langdon,

Wilmette,

W.

Kenyon,

Lawrence

Wilmette;

|

The

|

vice-pre
Winne

Libertyville

Paul
Hakanen,
Glenview;
Montgomery
III, Winnetka;
Vorreiter,

|

Park,&amp;

treasurer.

following were elected
dents: Victor J. Killian,

Bruce

t

Club.

A.

M.

Jo.
Carl,

Bride

Highland
Park;
Geovil
Nereim,,
Libertyville; Robert Klemm, Gler
view.
Lawrence W. Gougler, Winnet}
Council
President
presided.
ports were received from co

tee

chairmen,

and

officers.

district
Gougler

chairmen,,
presente

President’s Oscars to Ben Rau
Highland Park and
Mr. Rob
Klemm of Glenview in recognitio!
of

their

service

as

District Chair

men.

Page H 61—D 53

:

�Police Lieutenants
Sworn In Friday

Four-Hand

Recital Saturday
In Rec Center

Three
Highland
Park
police
sergeants were sworn in as lieutenants Friday afternoon last week,

in ceremonies
same
were

At the

Two
Clara

Highland
Park
pianists,
(Mirs.
Oscar)
Geller
and

sergeants

Bertha

(Mrs. David)

at city hall.

time,
three
appointed.

new

Piano

Platoon
leaders
Michael
Bonamarte Jr., David Dalziel and James
Berube are now lieutenants, a new
rank created
in the 1961-62 city
budget.

Bush will pre-

sent a four-hand piano recital Saturday
evening,
May
27, at 8:30
in
the
Recreation
Center
as
a

Promoted
from
patrolman
to
serve as second-in-command of the
platoons
were
Frederick
WwW.

Hamm,

Donald

Charles

F.

G.

Walker

and
Robert

Connally.

One
of
the
three
lieutenants
may
be
promoted
again
in the
fall when Captain Raymond Lange
retires.
Sergeant
William
True,
who
placed
fourth
in the
lieutenant examinations, may then also
be promoted.
Barred

Michael

the

annual

dance

in

Indian

Trail

School,

May

6.

on the stage of the auditorium, are Robin White,
John Harris and Craig Bielert.

From

taking

the

Sr.,

exams,

juvenile

officer, has filed a protest in the
circuit court and subpoenaed the
three civil service commissioners.
The case was reported
in last
week’s issue of the NEWS.
This
issue contains letters from readers
on the subject.

Elm Place eighth graders raided their parents’ attics to
up with a variety of “Roaring Twenties” costumes for

come

from

Bonamarte

left,

Peter Cohn,

been
Mrs.

Geller

benefit
Temple.

Bay Darne!! Wins
Main Event at

for

Classical,

and

B’nai

Mrs.

Bush

Torah

romantic

Reform

and

modern

music
will
be
featured
in
the
program, As Mrs. Jack Solomon,
co-chairman,
pointed
out,
“fourhand
piano music
is enjoying a
revival and there is a large repertoire
of music
written
for
this

Speedway Sunday
Veteran race driver, Bay Darnell
of Deerfield, broke into the winner’s circle with a victory in the

medium

from

Bach

to

the

ent.”

stocks at the Waukegan Speedway
Sunday night. His win registered
the first feature run of record for
the 1961 season in the second program held at the local track.

Mrs. Geller, a pupil of Rudolph
Ganz, made her debut as a concert pianist at the age of 16. She
is organist and choir director for
Temple B’nai Torah and director
of music for the temple’s religious
school.

m.p.h.

in winning

Sorority

the

main

she
a

taught

teacher

14
in

years.

She

Highland

Shore

Group

Photo

by Milton.

the

Old

Elm

now

Gatzert

field of business and estate
analysis, have released production figures for 1960.
Total sales amounted
to
13% million of ordinary insurance. Two of the principals Robert Nathan
and
Robert Gatzert, are Highland Parkers. Blitzen lives
in Chicago.

is

Park.

Miss Donna Leonardi, 1640 Hick- |
Sponsors of the concert include|
ory, has been initiated into Zeta /Mr. and Mrs. Jack Solomon, chairPhi Eta,
national
Professional men;
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Werspeech sorority at Marquette Uni- theimer; Mr. and Mrs. Russel Hatversity, Milwaukee.
Miss Leonardi
tis; and Mr. and Mrs. Mortimer
is
enrolled
in
the
university’s ' Berlin. Tickets may
be obtained
school of speech.
}from them or at the door.
North

of

The firm of Steiner, Nathan &amp; Blitzsten, insurance
consultants, 29 S. LaSalle
Street, specializing
in the

University
School
of Music,
has
appeared as soloist with the Chicago Symphony
orchestra and in
Chicago
and
Minneapolis,
where

Initiate

resident

Nathan

Mrs. Bush, a graduate of DePaul

event.

a

area of Highland Park for several
years.
The bills are designed to help
small business
firms by offering
tax relief by allowing any businessman
(retailer,
service
establishment, wholesaler or manufacturer)
to “plow back” into the business
earnings before taxes.

pres-

25 lap main event for the modified

Darnell grabbed the lead on the
8th lap and held it for the rest of
the distance. He was piloting his
Corvette
powered
1955
modified
Chevrolet
and
averaged
48.91

Friedman

Robert
Z.
Friedman,
609
Hill
Street, has been sent to Washington, D.C. by the “Automotive Service Industry Association” to testify
before the House Ways and Means
Committee in favor of the IkardCurtis-Sparkman Bills (H.R. 2 and
S.2) on Thursday, May 18th.
Friedman is executive vice-president of the Everhot Products Co.
of Chicago, manufacturers of automotive replacement parts and has

Merner

A waiter complete with vest and sleeve garters, reminiscent

of days

when

their

parents

were

teen-agers,

or almost,

serves a table of guests at the Elm Place School Dance May 6.
The event was held in Indian Trail School. From left are Ellen
Gelberin, Tony Levy, Bob
son and Jane Dobkin.

Gandy

igh School Elects |

Elected

John P. Gnaedinger of 1441
en Ave.
has been
elected

ice

president

Page

H

of

62—D

the
59

Illinois

Lin.
first

En-

Greg

Nathan-

Is Paratrooper
son

The Highland Park High School
Ptudent Council
Executive
Board
hose
its officers
for
1961-1962,
ay 15, 1961.
John
Holder will
e president, Barbara Feder, viceresident, Susan Siegel, secretary
nd James Reinish, treasurer.
The
Executive
Board
for next
ear, selected April 12, 1961, will
clude
senior
members
Alice
kscher, Hope Binner, Glenn Harris,
onald
Joseph
and
Joel
. Lewitz,
nd juniors, Karen Brecher, Keneth Brecher, Kathleen Keare, Jay
evey, William
Newmann,
and
harles Redman.

waiter),

1

Army

Officers for New
Student Council

ngineer

(the

of

Pvt.
Mr.

Charles
and

Mrs.

W.

Capitani, |
Eugene

E.

Capitani,
1925 Deerfield
Rd., recently
was
graduated
from
the
101st Airborne Division
Jump
School
at Fort Campbell,
Ky.
Capitani received his paratrooper
wings after completing three weeks
of
intensive
ground
and _ aerial
training which included five parachute jumps.
The
101st, a major
Strategic Army Corps (STRAC)
unit, maintains a constant state of
readiness
to move
anytime,
anywhere, in case of national emergency.
He entered the Army last
October and received basic training
at Fort Riley, Kan.
The 18-yearold soldier attended Highland Park
High School.
gineering Council, a council of engineering
societies.
He
works
at
Soil Testing Services Inc.; repre-

sents the Western Society
gineers on the Council.

of En-

North

Highland

Park High School class of 1951

Shore

Group

Photo

by

Percy

Prior

recently held its 10-year reunion, and one of the

events was a workout by cheerleaders who were active during the time the class attended the
school.

Mary

From

Jardine

left

are

Cahill

Gina

and

Salbego

Diane

Lazzaretto,

Forsythe

White.

Ernest

Rabbitini,

Peggy

Loewenthal

Thursday,

May

Juda,
25,

1961

�(many

of us don't read ‘open’ letters)

Dear Friend, Neighbor, Customer,

Client, Reader — uh — Dear Everybody:

(don’t want to miss anyone)
There’s an old saying: “IF YOU CAN’T BEAT ’EM—JOIN ’EM” And so, a lot of us discovered that for reasons of
convenience, “‘because it’s payday,” or “that’s when I bank” or “that’s when I shop for groceries” or because it’s just too
hard to break a long standing habit or tradition—that most of you like to shop on Friday nights.
After many meetings, surveys, and luncheon discussions a preponderant

number

of central

business

people have

—

decided to continue or re-institute Friday Night Openings.
Here are a few, but by no means all, of the reasons why
(in addition to lots of free un-metered

Friday night is a good time to do business in Highland Park

parking):

ART OLSON &amp; CO.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
FELL SHOES
CHANDLER’S
WOOLWORTH’S
STYLE SHOP
LEEDS JEWELERS
WALTERS SHOES
SUNSET FOODS
T. S. DUFFY FURN. CO.
RANDOM HOUSE

GREENWALDS SPORT SHOP
CHESTNUT COURT BOOK SHOP
CYCLE AND HOBBY SHOP
TOY HEAVEN
JEWEL FOODS
GSELL’S DRUGS
CHARLIE WENK’S
LEO’S DELICATESSEN
LARSON’S
HI-LAND PAINT CO.
BANK

(and probably many more which may

Some

of the above

are also open

on Thursday

have

been

ACE HARDWARE
ELLANGEE SHOES
WALGREEN’S
SERVICE STATIONS
ZELOOF-STUART
I. H. NEMEROFF
ALCYON THEATRE
COLUMBIA RADIO
MOLEY TV
A&amp;P
OF HIGHLAND PARK

overlooked—sorry !)

nights.

And for those of you who have been kind enough to read this far in our “closed letter” your reward will be fabulous
Friday Night

Specials—watch

THE

ART OLSON
AND COMPANY}

3
2
eee

FOLLOWING

MOLEY
TV

ID 2-0638

ee

‘
.,

ERLE

¥

|

STORES WILL CLOSE WEDNESDAY
BEGINNING JUNE 7TH

LEEDS
JEWELERS

1.3. DUFFY
FURNITURE CO.

ie. eeeatay, Bay M8, 2068
Fee
Be peligy so
oe
crore
SS
See
van
Sena eee Near

for them!

es

|

AT NOON

ACE
HARDWARE

HI-LAND
PAINT CO.

CYCLE AND
HOBBY SHOP

BRAND
BROS.

GREENWALD‘S
SPORT SHOP

ELLANGEE
SHOES

oon

i

piers

:

ess tae f

Page H 39—D 55 &lt;

�Expert Hair Coloring
and

Hair

Maj. David S. Oppenheim, U.S.
Army Reserve, returned last week

Cutting

to his home

Specializing in
High Blonding
In All Shades

Permanent

from two
Lee, Va.

Waves

All

of Beauty

St.

Johns

Sheridan

active

duty

conducted by the Army,

Rd.

at Ft.

Branches

Beauty SALON

In

ID 2-1603

Avenue
EXPERIENCED

with. more

than 6,000 regular and reserve officers and men taking part.
The
exercise this year simulated a war
situation in western Europe, posing logistical problems which the
participants had to meet and solve
realistically.

Culture

CLASSIQUE
1815

at 1415

weeks’

He participated in Logex 61, one
of the largest peacetime exercises

Hair Cutting
Featuring

|Research Group

hot Part in ‘War’
At Fort Lee, Va.

OPERATORS

his

civilian

Oppenheim

is

of Bageraft
Chicago.

Corp.

capacity,

marketing
of

Major

director

America

in

David Holland of Skokie, who is
a member of the board of directors
of the Children’s Research Founda-~
tion, presented a. check to Dr. Leo
Abood
of
the
Illinois
Research
Hospital on April 15. The money
will be used by Dr. Abood to purchase new equipment for his research on Tay-Sachs disease. TaySachs is a fatal congenital metab-

olic

disease

which

affects

its

victims at birth and prevents them
from living much past the age of
two years.
Children’s Research

disease

the

when

son of one

it

Founda-

aware

was

ROTC

J. Maiman,

|

an engineer-

ing senior at the University of Illinois, is cadet major and group

Tay-Sachs Study

tion recently became

GO MODERN...

Thomas

Gives Check for

The

"

Commands

of this

learned

that

of the local Karen

Brown Chapter members
was afflicted with it. The money which
was given to Dr. Abood is in addition to a grant being given to the

commander of the 400-cadet 190th
Air
Division
Reserve
Officers
Training Corps in Urbana.
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.

M.

J.

Maiman

of

1761

Clifton

Ave.; will be commissioned
as a
second lieutenant in the Air Force
in June,

Bobs

Roberts

Children’s

is a unique

Hospital.
Research

Foundation

organization in that no

specific research is slated to receive the funds available. As it becomes evident that funds are needed more urgently in one field than
another, it is possible to transfer

them

to the needed

areas.

Among those attending the presentation were Mrs. Leonard Stone,
3543
Old
Mill
Rd.,
Mrs.
Bert
Braverman, 2743 Marl Oak Dr., and
Mrs. Daniel Halpern, 3268 Summit,

all

members

Brown

of

the

local

Karen

Chapter.

Gas:
Whether you're looking for a “dream house” or a “dream of a
home’,

your chances of finding just what you want are greatly

enhanced
Home

when

Award.

you

visit new homes

Every Blue Star Home

bearing

the Blue Star

has a modern Gas range

with automatic oven and broiler ignition, and a “family-rated”
A

Gas water heater. Many have Gas heat, Gas yard lights, Gas
refrigerators, and Gas clothes dryers.
,

THESE QUALITY BUILDERS FEATURE BLUE STAR HOMES:
Highland

Deerfield
DeMar Construction
507 Warwick Road

Rix and Company
Waukegan Rd. &amp; Greenwood

Lincolnshire
Birchwood Builders
7 Portshire Drive
Prairie
Jack Krisel,
154 Prairie

View

Ave.

Ebony:

Builder
Lane

Mahogany

$ 49
$515, walnut $525.

As little

as $25 down with three years to pay!

Ideal for the family with young children! Made
expressly

for

us

by

a famous

piano

manufac-

turer, this piano meets all of Lyon-Healy’s
quality standards: excellent construction; rich,
full tone, and smooth, responsive action. You'll
like its clean, trim lines and rich finish. Here’s
an investment in years of pleasure and benefit
for all your family: come see it Monday at
Lyon-Healy in Highland Park!

Open

BLUE
a)
STAR

in three handsome finishes

Park

Greta Lederer
384-7 Pines Circle
Manilow Construction
1075 North Avenue
Northern Construction
1690 Edgewood Road
Peerless Home Builders
295 Charal Lane

Company

WASHBURN spinet piano

Thursday and Friday noon

to 9:00 p.m.

~
sf

HOME &amp; a ¢

LYON-HEALY
1843 Second St.

in Highland

Park .
ID 2-3434

Thursday, May 25, 1961
-

�YWCA Board Elects
Officers for ‘61-'63;
Chairmen

Named

Mrs. Robert Billeter, Deerfield,
was
elected
president
and
Mrs.
Clifford Makelim, Highland Park,
vice-president by the board of directors
of
the
Highland
Park
YWCA in its May meeting.

Other

officers,

who

two-year

terms,

serve

for

Mrs.

Glen

Harris,

also

will

include:

second

vice-

president; Mrs. G. S. Laing, secretary; and Mrs. Warren
Wilner,
corresponding secretary.

Mrs.

Kahn,

575

a Highland

Clavey

Park

resi-

grounds;
Mrs.
Theodore
Osborn,
special
gifts;
Mrs.
Edwin
Rowe,
devotions; Mrs. Harry Wolters, activities;
Mrs.
Harrington
Yost,
World Day of Prayer.
Miss Musa I. DeMouth, executive
director, gave a report on the national convention held in Denver
May
8-13.
She
pointed out that
the over 2,500 women and girls at-

the Bank of Highas assistant to the
a member of the
Township
Finance
and active in vari-

ous civic groups. He was formerly
president
of
Clavey
Acres Improvement Associa-

tending

H.

Kahn

&amp;

Sons,

from

all

over

the

United

States and the 75 countries around
the world where YWCAs
are established
had
rededicated
themselves to the work that lies ahead
in the ‘“‘soaring 60’s.”’
Mrs. Forrest Zimmerman, house
director, in her report pointed out

tion, a member of Mayor Daley’s Committee of 500 and retired as chairman of the board
of Louis

fol-

painting

since

retirement

from

full-time
work
as a bank
trust
officer. He is a member
of the
Men’s
Club
and
Men’s
Painting
Class at the Senior Center in Win-

netka

sponsored

Shore
Adult.

Committee

by

the

North

the

Older

on

that 2,281
persons
had
attended
meetings in the YWCA during the
past year.

Also, Mrs. Paul Irvine, house and

dent for seven years, has joined

the staff of
land Park
president.
Kahn is
Deerfield
Committee

the

week.
The
four prize-winners
among
several
hundred
entrants
were
honored
at a tea at McCormick
Place Saturday.
Mueller has done
most of his

Inc.

Shore

Summer

Reading

Tutoring

Begins June

Center

Program

19 &amp; July 25
* Study Methods
e Comprehension

e
Reading

e

Math.

e

pit

¢

Reviewing

e

All Levels

Moffett KNOWS

e Remedial

_ Diagnostic

706 Glencoe
Glencoe

Rd.

To

a wonderful

acquaint

Frank

Staff

time

yourself

Through

years of experience, working constantly with

VE

to achieve remarkably
able portraits.

young

5-4248

“OUR CHILDREN NEED THE
BEST OF TEACHING!” You Say

the Moffett photographer

is able

life-like and memor-

make

You'll

your choice

from

an exciting

selection of proofs in breath-taking directcolour or black and white. Phone STate 28750 or Hllicrest 6-3871 today for an ap-

How About
Yourself?
CREATIVE

men,

Years from now, you'll cherish your boy‘s
relaxed, natural smile as he “‘sat’’ for one
of Moffett’s famed photographers amid the
familiar surroundings of your own home.

TEACH-

-

pointment.

ING and a COLOR[FUL
APPROACH
¥7 combined
with the
use
of AUDIO
EQUIPMENT
will
make
your
lessons
at
the
SIGHT
&amp;
SOUND
a WORTH
WHILE
EXPERIENCE
you'll
tell
your friends about.

Ask about

State

2-8750

‘’The Seven

Ages”

or Hillcrest

MOFFRETF

FOR INFORMATION write to Sight
&amp; SOUND LANGUAGE STUDIO, 706
Glencoe Road, Glencoe, Ill. Or phone
VE
5-0978
Monday,
Wednesday,
Thursday 5 p.m.-7 p.m.

What

does

Moffett

Yes,

Boys!
boys.

know

Testing

Individuals
or Small
Groups
Junior High School Thru College

DnooODONNOODONEUONODOO

of Chicago.

North

i]

Court,

H.

appointed

Rudie Mueller’s painting, “Still
Life with Tealeaf Coffee Pot,”
won third prize at the exhibit of
“Adventures in Living for Senior
Citizens” at McCormick Place last

4

Louis

Billeter

lowing committee chairmen:
Mrs. H. F..D’Sinter, nominating
committee; Mrs. Edward Goodkind,
personnel committee;
Mrs. Makelin, membership
committee; Mrs.
George
Harrison, Community
Chest representative;
Mrs. A. C.
Kelly, Fall card party.

Grandma Moses
Rival Discovered

6-3871

STUDIO

30 South Michigan Avenue, Chicago 3, Illinois

to invest in a Fresh new Look!
the talents of our Thomas
Artists; Please visit our Salon.

with

of Coiffure

Permanent Waves

3.50

Shampoo &amp; Styling
Hair Shaping

the way your fine draperies
look after they’re cleaned by . . .

MR. DUFFY
The

"Beauty
1711

Sherman

Evanston,
GReenleaf

—

Thursday, May 25, 1961
‘

Walk"
Ill.
5-0005

Salons
Ave.

duffy cleaners
(across

from

Highland

Park

Library)

*It takes tender, thorough care
plus gentle deep-down cleansing!

Page H 41—D BT
nen e ry

�HPHS Honor Roll.

Chipmunk Jailed
A

wish to express our deepst thanks and appreciation
©

recent

Bruno

and

bereave-

Sandra

girl

will

that

be

bit a five-year-

in

custody.

For Fifth Period
Is Released

long

enough
to see
if it has
rabies,
thanks to an unidentified passing
motorist, Highland Park police report.

our many friends for kindand sympathy shown
our

chipmunk

old

Highland

Last week when Susan Melvoin
of 358 Flora Dr. was bitten on the
thumb at 610 Melody Ln., the chipmunk ran and hid in a shoe box.
The unknown passer-by put the lid
on.

Morelli

Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Bonk

released

Park

the

the
roll

Annuals

in pots

Perennials

School

students

has
who

current
students

school
are:

year.

Honor

Honors

5 Solids: Vivian Banish 2, Giorgiana Boren 4, Kent Cooper
3, David
Cowan
3,
Mark Dubach2, Steven Gross 3, Frederic
Gruber 2, lon
Hirschfelder 4, Richelle
Jacobs 2, John i
3, Jo Ann Lee 4,
Carole Magnus 3 Nancy Mead 2 , Donald
Metzger 2, Jean Milligan 2, a
Mitchell
K
George
Park
2, Heidemarie
Rupp
4,
James Sebben 4, Ben Stackler 4, Neil Stone
3, William Weese 3 and Laurel Whitted 3.
4 Solids: Fred Addison 2, David Altschul
2, Diana Beins 2, Anna Bernardi 1, Lawrence Bloom 4, Michael Bohn ¥, Stephanie
Brent 4, Mary Brown 4, William Buchholz
2, Ellen Buchman 1, Frana Cahn 1, Frederic
Chaimson
i, George
Cimbalo
4, Vivien
Clair 2, Jane Cohn 1, Dennis Coppi 1, Dianne Corwith 1, Diane Dray 4, Rena Echt
3, Kathryn
Edmonds 4, Ellen Felman
4,
Timothy Fiocchi 4, Joel Fischer 1, Theodore Fischer 2, Victoria Franks 2, Sharon
Friedman. 1.
Diane Gabel 4, Kenneth Gaines 4, Paul

BETH-EL
ARDEN FAIR
in flats

of

attained scholastic excellence during the fifth six-weeks period of

First

Annuals

High

list

Bottled

Water

Naturally

in pots

Perennial Ground Cover
(2-yr.

old

stock)
Delivered By...

Potted

Sparkling

Roses

Tomato

Mineral

Plants

Water

LAWN

MOWERS-—1/3

SEE

YOU

AT

THE

off

regular

GARDEN

retail

price

Learn

With

FAIR

For

Sunday, May 28—9:00 A.M.- 1:00 P.M.
Monday, May 29—9:00 A.M. - 2:00 P.M.
Tuesday, May 30—9:00 A.M.
- 3:00 P.M.

ON

THE

SYNAGOGUE
1175

Sheridan

Highland

GROUNDS

2-0042

John

Sasa

1, Derrie

Gilden

Heies

4, Joel Gin 3, Guy Golan 3, vateat Golday: 2, Jan Goldsmith 1,
Gould
Florence Harmon 4, ‘se rtlora ih
4;
Racer Hexter 1, Michaele Hicks 4, Kathleen Howard 1, Malinda Hunting 4, Chris—
Tsely 3, Frances Kahn 4, Stanley Kain
Michael Kasman
1, Harvey Kinzelberg
? David Klorfine 4, Gerry Kraatz 1, Lynne
Kulieke 4, David Kutner 1, Linda Larner
3, Kent Lawrence 3, Nancy Lawrence
1,
Kay Lehman
1, Frank Lennox 4, Annette
Lenzi 1, Nancy Leonard 4, Ronaid Lev :
Neil Levin 1, Andrea Levinger :; Michele
Lichter
3, John
Lieberman
1, "Elizabeth
Little 3, Steven Loewenthal 2.
Brian Marcus 2, Chris Marder 2, Stephen
Mitchell 1, Bette Myerson 1, William Newmann 2, David Pepperberg 3, Willis Phillips 3, Robert Picker 3, Gail Rademacher
pn Charles
Redman
2, James
Reinish
3,
Elaine Resnick 3, James Rissman 1, James
Rogers 3, Lucy Rogers 4, Joyce Root
i:
Arthur
Rosby
2; Michael Rosenhouse
1,
Marc
Rosenstein
1, Gary
Ross
1, Susan
Rutter 4.
William Saari 3, Judith Sachs 2, Robert
Sandy 4, Lynn Schechter 3, Edward "Schweitzer 2, Sue Shapiro 1, Jeremy Siegel 2, Lynne
Silverstine 2, Ann Simon 1, Jan Siater 4,
Edwin
Smith 1, Laurie
Spiegel
1 Mark
Steinberg 1, John Swartz 1, Maria Tatar 2,
Carl Urist 3, Daniel Wagner 1, Alice Watrous 3, Esti, ‘Rose Weiland 1, Linda Weiner
3; Rachel Weisbard 3, Nancy Wertheimer
1, Alan Winkley
1, Janice Wolfe
3 and
Robert Zartler 3.

Second

Foa 2,

Richard

Foa

©&lt;

Charles

Freedenberg
4, Nancy
Freeman 2, Joyce
Geminer
3, Ronald Gidwitz 2, Carolynn
Glueck 1, Nancy Gordon 2, Stephen Gordon 1; Michael Gottfried 6. Joel Graff 3,
Annabet
Hall 4, Lou Halperin
2, Carol
Hammerman
1, Daniel
Harris 4, Robert
Harris
1, James Heisler 1, Mary
Hexter
4, John Holder 3, John Horwitz 1, Susan
L.
Johns
3, Hunter
Johnson
3, Martin
Johnson 3.
Mary Kaplan 1, Hilliary Karpe 1, Ronnie Katz 3, Cecelia Kenney 3, Diane Kiver
2, Kay Kohler 2, Roger Kohn 1, Ralph Koransky 1, Robert Lawrence 4, Brian Leahy
1, Carol Leonard 2, Joel Lewitz 3, Pana
Mabrey 1, Eva Maiorano 3, Richard Marshall 3, Adrienne Mayer
1, Kathleen McGuire 2, George Mendelson 2, Jill Nathan
2, Nancy Neal 4, Frances Nelson 4, Jennifer Nielsen 1, Ronald Panter 3, Katherine
Papierniak
1, Audrey Pearson
1, Pamela
Picker 1, Mary Alice Pontius 4, James
Rainwater 4, Jean Roberts 1, Peggy Rose
4, David
Rosenfield
3, Roger
Rubin
2,
Judith Russell 4.
Frances Santi 4, Leila Scher 4, Richard
Schloss 1, Nadrian Seeman 2, Tommy Segall 3, Donald Shankman 4, Ellen Shapiro
2, Susan Siegel 3, Joan Silverman 2,
Paul
Slater 2, Dale
Smith 4, David
Smith
a;
Elizabeth Ann
Smith
3, Louise Smith
1,
James Souby
1, Robert Stebbings
1, Joy
Stiglitz 3, Anna Tatar 4, Jerome Taxy 2,
Katharine Thomas 4, C. Alan Thorson
1,
Richard Ulrich 4, Martha Wagner 3, Nancy
Wands 3, John Warton 3, Alan Wehle 3,
Mary
Ann White 4, Fred Wolff 3, Roy
Zaborowski
1, Doris Zahnle 4 and Richard Zwirner 4.
:

Honors

5 Solids: Margaret Baldrey 2, David Benson
3,
Karen
eee
Richard Carlin2, Andrew Cassidy 2, Robinson Craig 3, Arthur
Friedman 4, Randy Gabel 3, Raymond Hadrick 4, John Halperin 3, Gerry Heyman 2,
Alan Jacobson 4, Ronaid Joseph 3, Ellen
Katz 2, John Markoff 3, Georgia Marks 3,
Robert Rigler 3, Peter Shaw 3, Alan Stern
3 and Peter Yurkonis , 3
4 Solids:
Shelley Albin 4, Arthur Alschuler 2, Sandra Annes 1, Karen Arne 4,
Alice Asher 3, Stephen Atlas 3, Stephen
Baim 2, Lauren Bateman
1, Katharine L.
Baum 4, Margery Berkson + Albert Bernard 2, Robert Bernstein
1, James
Bierfeld 4, Hope
Binner 3, Neal
Blacker 4,
Harry "Block 1, Robert Block 1, Kay Blosten 3, Stephen’ Boren 1, Judy Borinstein a
Harry
Bosley
2,
Bertha
Bradt
4,
Bartholomew
Bresnehan
3, Ellyn
Brown
1;
Charles Buening 4, Peter Caplow 4, Louise
Carlin 4, Wendy Cassidy 1, Leon Chickerneo 2, Roger Cimbalo 1, ‘Jane Collins 2,
Lynda’ Cooper 1, Kenneth Cousens 4, Kathlyn Domoracki
4, Lois Duman
3, Susan
Ekelmann 3, Jimmie Ellis 2, Ronald Emanuel 1, Daniel Epstein 1, Laura Epstein 1,
Alan Exelrod 4
Thomas Pace 24 Barbara Feder 3, Charles
Feinberg
1, Janet Feis 1, Gary Fields :

The Honor Roll is based upon
the following point system:
A—3
points; B—2
points; C—O
points.
First Honors:
10 points for 4
solids, 12 points for 5 solids; second Honors: 8 points for 4 solids,
10 points for 5 solids.
Students

with a “D” or “E” in any one solid
are automatically disqualified.

Breather

Phones

A caller on the phone asked if
it was
Mrs.
Lorien Rice of 668
Homewood
Ave.
who
answered,

but had nothing

more to say—just

breathed
heavily—she
told Highland Park police.
She and other
local people have had many calls

from

the

breather.

Italian

Atomic

Speed

Travel or Pleasure
3,000 Words in a
Few Hours with

“SHORT

CUT

TO

ITALIAN

LANGUAGE”

Vorth

$4.75—Written

Shihan

Synagogue

THE

New Approach to Language Study

Road

Park,

Co.

1629 Park Ave.
IDiewood

POWER

Spring

Garfield 2

Beth

by

Ss

Vursery

Maj. W. A. Rigal

Ill.

Mt.

Pulaski,

IIL.

our thirteenth

year

SN
Now accepting applications
for

AN/NOULN

1961-62

school

Mrs.

LIVE

MAIN
FRESH

BUSINESS HOURS
JUNE 5, 1961

LOBSTER
DAILY

“Fit For A King”

SARATOGA

Beginning

Highwood

ID 2-0440

9 A.M. to 4 P.M.

9 A.M.
CLOSED
9 A.M.
.. 9 A.M.
5:30 P.M.

WEDNESDAY

_ THURSDAY|
FRIDAY |

FRIDAY NIGHT
SATURDAY .

.

i oay

A

P.M.
DAY
P.M.
P.M.
P.M.

AVENUE,

DIRT
(Screened,

Stock

Piled)

CALL:

ates

and

1888

HIGHLAND

MENONI &amp; MOCOGNI
2200 Skokie

ee

Established

ST. JOHNS

to 4
ALL
to 4
to 4
to 8

. 9 A.M. to 12 Noon

tghtand pP Sr

1811

Herzog

ID 2-8900

CEMENT

MONDAY
TUESDAY

Pearl

year.

PARK

—

ID 2-0361

Hwy., Highland

ID 2-0850

Park

Thursday, May 25, 1961 _

�PROMPT
DELIVERY
SERVICE
SINCE 1909
SERVING THE PHYSICIANS and
, PATIENT

MEMORIAL

DAY HOURS

WE WILL BE OPEN
10 a.m. to 1 p.m.

¢ HIGHLAND
CONSUMER BUYING field trip took one of Miss Karen
Drew’s five seventh grade home economics classes from Oak
Terrace School to the John A. Stevens shop every morning
last week. Here Rose Deliso admires a summer frock while
Miss

New

Drew

(right) and

the class

© RAVINIA DRUG STORE

PARK

IDlewood 2-2300

IDlewood 2-2600
1831

St.

Johns

493

Ave.

Roger

Williams

look on.

Realty Members

Evanston-North Shore Board of
Realtors has added 14 new mem-

bers

during

the

month,

including

Mrs. Miriam E. Schmidt and Mrs.
Marywanne
White, affiliated with
the L. Ringer Realty Highland Park
office, and Mrs. Viola G. Weinruss,
who is in the Deerfield office of
L. Ringer.
The group’s Board of Directors
also approved Frank W. Anderson,
Real Estate Service, Highland Park,

as an active-associate

member.

B. M. ORI
TUCKPOINTING—Masonry
CHIMNEY—FIREPLACE
Repair—Cleaning
FLAT

Internationally Known Hair Stylists

ROOF

hot tar recoating

BASEMENT

leaks repaired

are now with their staff

Call ID 2-4553

at 661 Vernon Avenue, Glencoe

Leo,

in

Maréh

ed Hair

nacors rlete o
or phone SEeley soso”

Franz,

;

wide
ing

Winner

acclaim
for

four

of

in

hair
years

been appreciated
Shore’s very own.

TYPEWRITERS

world-

stylhas

as North
His career

—the

world’s

dustry’s

way

Oscar.

196i,

éleét=

Dresser of the year
beauty

in-

of awarding

an

This is the climax tc

date of a career
high honors

marked

in France,

by
Eng-

land, Germany, Switzerland,
Holland, Belgium, Italy and

_includes honor-studded trav-

here

els through Paris and all the

made

in

other capitals of Europe.

in Evanston.

his

U.S.

where

home

since

he

has
1959

LEO

FRANZ

AND

ADDING MACHINES
SALES - RENTALS - REPAIRS

Chandlers
645 CENTRAL
Thursday,
“

°_

. We look forward to serving the women of the North
Shore, the most discriminating of clientele.
Call for an appointment

NOW

VErnon5-1688

ID 3-0230

May 25, 1961

Page

H 43—D 59
NH

�Ba oper itb shaa os

ier Si

ee
oaSOP ss De eS
&gt; Weseet, SiFEE ehNE

A

gE
ed

We
ee

tasSas ee is Ht
oan OeVia ewe

pe
hs

me

eke
eae
a

Vege

:

~ World’s Foremost

z

Resort

’

Day and Night you get so much
more for so little. Splash away
your cares in 3 pools under

The world's

direction of BUSTER CRABBE.
Golf on 2 great courses where

foremost resort HOTEL
Kiamesha
Lake,
New
York
Ray Parker, General Manager
Only 90 minutes from New York City.
in the heart of the Catskill Mountains.

JIMMY DEMERET is head pro.
Thrill to lavish Big-Name-Shows.

Full American

Plan at the

For

_ RIVIERA OF NORTH AMERICA.

Information

See:

and R. ANSPACH
TRAVEL
4

;
t

BUREAU

| 463 Central Ave., Highland

ID 2-1211

Park

A

aa

hhh enh hhh hhh hh
hhh hrrt4444-thtsbrarsstsstittssr
ARABAAABAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
AA
£AALAAAALA LL AL)

:

a

“

CM
ae

do
this

happens

YOUR

house?

at

you

Cy Wit
ay
‘

Cina

a
Ee
tne

a

tae

A

te

‘4

%

ie

Fa

tA

ae

&gt;

canes
x

es le
e
ais te ig
ls ork

Legislation Faces
Bitter House Fight
Two

good

bills

citizens

government

with

more

than

were

introduced

interested
should

in

in

the

[Illinois

McClory

PROFESSIONAL HOME
— GUIDE for PROTECTING
YOUR FINEST FABRICS

courts have ruled, and requires
federal gambling stamp.

own

not

says

necessarily

it is

almost

TOTAL

used

MAY

Se

ge

ee

Ng

pe

Teacher
Course

School,

District

111,

has

of 21 being
will be held

teachers

to

initiate

program

or

their

to

im-

existing programs.
Among
to be discussed
are:
im-

increasing

reading rate, developing meaningful vocabularies, building effective

a

study
habits,
identification
reading difficulties, and survey
reading

gamb-

He

ee

eats
Wi

f

of
of

tests.

Collie Bites
Kathy Gifford of 2599 St. Johns

cites

Ave.

was

nipped

on

the

arm

Thursday last week by Dr, George
Wendell’s
collie
dog,
Highland
Park police were told.
be held on the bills soon. It will
be apparent then how much opposition the gambling gentry can
muster,

Simon's

letter

31, 1960
per

notes.

CASH

AVAILABLE
thru

31,

937

YEAR

$9,965.54

issued

$,441.32
eee

1961)

$5,141.32

sccs.

$4,824.22

PROOF:

with
But

fabi¥ie@%

You

there i% a safe
when

way

stains

can *2il at a flash

a

to proteet

occur.

how

to treat

a
TOTAL

stain— the way spottitig
cialists would
—= wher you
ve the new, professionally de-

Signed
your

DAVIES

SPOTGHART

home.

¢
a

BALANCE

in

These are among the 60 most
common stains covered in the
SPOTCHART:
cans.

COMBINED
An

SYRU
COSMETICS
GRAVY
:
BEER, WINE, LIQUOR
CRAYON

oe
ig?

:

wehiccthes ciate

glee M urs cating

the complete laundry and cleaning service
( DAVI ES for a discriminating clientele _
' 2349 §S. Cottage Grove Ave.

ge

H

'
;

Chicago 16

4)

:

ev

{Please rush, without obligation, my free Davies SPOTCHART, with the safe, sure

oe

"

i

oe

; NAME

i

of Davies specialists.

___APT

ADDRESS

4
}
=

spot-removing techniques

‘

if you’d

,

ZONE

city
rather

| Page H 44—D 60

just

phone,

call

Barbara

$4,824.22

ANNUAL

BUDGET

AND

APPROPRIATION

1.

ORDINANCE

Park Mosquito Abatement
for Its Corporate Purposes
va

TRUSTEES

OF

THE

HIGHLAND

That the following be and hereby same is adopted as the Budget
Park Mosquito Abatement District for the fiscal year ending May
31,

1. Balance of Cash om Hand December 31, 1960 ooo.....c..c.ccccccccccccccccscceccesccdenss $19,000.27
2. Final Receipts in February 1961 for Taxes .........2......ccccccctkccecbedonsskscocssssecsetee
3,732.17
3. Estimated
Revenue from County Treasurer based on a valuation of
$195,019,717. @ .Olc per $100.) 90% of levy expected to be collected)
(1960 collection was $16,732.17
niescheishpcse
in aik reso. a eR Oe

Simply pull the tab te
et detailed instrucions on what to use,
and how to use it.
a

........

Ordinance by the Board of Trustees of the Highland
District Adopting a Budget and Appropriating Money
for the Fiscal Year Ending May 31, 1962.

SECTION
ras ~~

FAST!
SURE! SAFE!

om

387.40

OUTSTANDING

BOOK

BE IT ORDAINED BY THE BOARD OF
PARK MOSQUITO ABATEMENT DISTRICT:

YORART is designed to save you time and peace of mind
when accidental spots occur — and they do!

eee

CHECK

5/25/61—134

Here ae @asy-to-use, step-by-step Instructions for the removal @# spots and stains from clothing, carpets and
, using materials you have in your home.
The

4

PER

;

DAVIES
SPOTCHART

ee

Yo. 930
CHECKS

Martin,

CA

5-4204

i

Walter E. Parker, 595 Braeside,
who is director and superintendent of the Illinois State Employment Service, will take part in
the Adult Education Council program May
18-21 in McCormick
Place, Chicago. Parker will discuss
“How

To

evening

Find

a Job”

session

coming

to

during

May

Chicago,

18.

the

Before

Parker

served

as manager of the Champaign local office, as supervisor of emoffices

in

Central

Illin-

as

administrative

secretary

Director of the Illinois
partment of Labor.

to

State

the

De-

Business Women See
Films Of India Tonight
At
§:30
nity

tonight’s

dinner

meeting

at

in Room 101 of the CommuHouse, Winnetka, the North

Shore Business and Professional
Women’s elub will complete plans
for its annual money-raising white
elephant sale to be held in June.
The sale is benefit for the club
itself.
After a short business meeting,

ape eaeree $5,211.62

Did you Kirew that there are six

basic types of stains, each
its ewh SRecial treatment.

Parker

5,218.00
DURING

DISBURSEMENTS

MARCH

E.

ois, for three years as chief of the
State Division of Placement, and

$5,218.00

Deposits

Walter

ployment

$4,747.54

Bank

RECEIPTS

TOTAL

oP

t

PARK FIRE FIGHTERS BENEVOLENT
ASSOCIATION
RECEIPTS &amp; DISBURSEMENTS
STATEMENT
June 1, 1960 thru March 31, 1961

TOTAL

BALANCE

de

Lege
;

proving comprehension,

illegal.

for

exclusively.

DISBURSEMENTS:
Checks numbered 838

your free DAVIES SPOTCHART

Tit

y

reading

prove
topics

Illinois courts say it may be
playéd without a payoff, and is

RECEIPTS:
From ‘all sources

ey

Se is
A
wey

High

abling

of pinball machine which uses one
ball and lists free games won. It’s
a gambling
device,
the federal

BALANCE

“y

ss

in Chicago. It will be led by a
specialist in the field of reading.
The program is aimed at en-

of

McClory’s bills have passed the
Senate and now face a fight in the
house for passage. Two years age
they passed after a bitter struggle,
only to be vetoed by Gov. William
Stratton, Simon writes.
House committee meetings will

= as

a
Ths

The institute, one
offered this summer,

interest

machine,

a

Soe
je

registered for a five-day Reading
Institute
sponsored
by
Science
Research Associates, of Chicago.

expert opinion that such pinballs
can take money faster than a slot

AG

a

ior

Lake
Bluff,
reports
Rep.
Paul
Simon of Troy in his “Sidelights
from Springfield” column.
The bills would outlaw the type

Simon

do

ae

Mrs. Mary E. Glathart, language
arts teacher, at Northwood Jun-

watch

casual

Senate by Sen. Robert

HIGHLANP

|g...

jhe

Northwood
McClory’s Pinball | Takes
SRA

ling

. i; 4

when

Woe

therefore

HEAVENS! and on my
good dress!
What

TAF
¢

announces Miss Janet Colvin, president, there will be pictures of unusual persons and places, shown by
a seasoned traveler, D. J. L. Walther of Evanston.
A member
of
the Pan American
Clipper Club,
and a three time traveler around
the world,
Walther
has selected
pictures taken in India on various
trips for the program.

Thermopanes Shot
David
Fargo

Park

T.

Superfine

Ave., Chicago,

police

two

of

2841

W.

told Highland

Thermopane

win-

da bo RANI ERaF GN Aimer ries praeaese aY SUy oan to Pace
ae ee
284. 00 | dows valued at $200 were shot full
4, Estimated Expenditures as set forth im Section 2 hereof a
ey oe 40,284.00
yf bb-gun holes last week in his
3 Estimated balance of cash on hand at close of the fiscal year, if collections are normal
new house at 476 Clavey Rd.
SECTION 2.
That the following amounts or so much thereof as may be
Earlier, three windows valued at
authorized by law and as may be needed, be and the same are hereby appro$12 were broken by thrown stones,
panee for the corporate purposes of the Highland Park Mosquito Abatement
istrict as hereinafter specified for the fiscal year ending May 31, 1962.
he added.
Field supplies and expense
Field Wages
*Garage rent
AN ORDINANCE
AMENDING
AN ORMaintenance &amp; Repair of Equipment
DINANCE
ENTITLED,
“AN
ORDIPurchase and replacement of equipment
NANCE DEFINING AND DECLARING
Contingencies
CERTAIN
THINGS
TO
BE
NUIAudit
(2 years)
SANCES;
PROHIBITING
AND
PROAuto expense allowance
VIDING
FOR
THE
ABATEMENT
OF
CLO TIOL SHEEN
So ehccsacecs ic cuchaaiohascancacduapianonpuuppaciac
des tens Geecurts oh annie in Keo then NE
Ramer ts
THE
SAME
WITHIN
THE
CITY
OF
Insurance—Public liability, fire, casualty Bonds 2000...00.00..cc.cccecceecceeeteeeeeeeeee
HIGHLAND
PARK”
(superseding
and
EGR.
OT VIOOO iii toics gcc ctcnns
bscde
Nu steanss HOM Teak. Seka ak eee cite
eee
repealing Chapter 35. Sections 1206-1212
Office expense and supplies
Highland Park City Code)
Printing and publishing
otice Annual Meeting
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE COUNCIL
RL
PT NS
grace eae Seca MR
SY Rte nace jack UES CESAR RUS
OF THE
CITY
OF HIGHLAND
PARK,
Provision-i0r -modviting land: for Sites 66sec kk.
a
Oa
Gahan
COUNTY
OF
LAKE,
STATE
OF
ILLIProvision for acquiring office and garage building and supplemental equipNOIS:
1
REP Sie SRE SWE An ogg Br Mba ote NRE Bt Tat Maen oo ROMS IR "Tema ieee Oa RSM MeO Pes 6,509.00
SECTION I. That Sections 2, 3, 4, 5 and
(ay Boelat. Beourity: Tax: Expense o8 5 ho
a aia lak did uninner
475.00
6 of an ordinance entitled, “AN
ORDINANCE
DEFINING
AND
DECLARING
$40,284.00
CERTAIN
THINGS
TO
BE
NUISANCES;
*Temporary Quarters
PROHIBITING
AND
PROVIDING
FOR
580 Glenview, Highland Park
ABATEMENT
OF
THE
SAME
This Ordinance shall take effect and be in force from and after THE
SECTION
3,
WITHIN
THE
CITY
OF
HIGHLAND
its passage, approval and due publication.
(superseding and Pe a | Chapter
HIGHLAND
PARK
MOSQUITO
ABATEMENT
DISTRICT PARK”
35, Sections 1206-1212 Highland
Park City
(SEAL)
Code) be and they are hereby repealed.
By William C. Heinrichs, President
SECTION II. This ordinance shall be in
ATTEST:
full force and effect from
and after its
MARJORIE L. BELLEI , Secretary
passage, approval, recordation and publicaPASSED: May 15, A.D. 1961
tion as provided by law.
PUBLISHED:
May 25, 1961
FRED E. GIESER. Mayor pro tem
Meeting to approve levy: June 5, 1961, 7:00 P.M., 1896 Sheridan Road, Second Floor,
Attest!
ROY MILLEN, City Clerk
Room 14, Highland Park, Hlinois.
Passed:
May 15, 1961
Approved:
Miay 15, 1961
MARVIN WALLACH,
Attorney for said District, 1896 Sheridan Road, Highland Park,
Recorded:
May 16, 1961
Illinois. Phone [Dlewood 2-4160.
Published: May 25, 1961
5/25 /61—132
$/25/61—135

Thursday,

May

25, 1961

�es

Fgry Roan st "Dedication ae
Hospital’s New South Wing

Two
to

Brown

“When the South Wing is completed and the existing hospital has
been remodeled, the hospital will
have
190 beds, not counting the
beds at the Medical Pavilion. The
breakdown of beds will be as follows:
third
floor
east
wing-32
beds,
third
floor
south
wing-32
beds; total medical beds will be
64.
Second
floor
east
wing
32
beds, second floor south wing 32
beds, second floor former OB wing
13 beds; total surgical beds will be
77; obstetrical, 30 beds; pediatrics,
19 beds.

the

“Patients
phones

have

with

individual

which

direct outside

they

can

telemake

calls to surrounding

ommunities or private calls within
he hospital to the nurses or other
departments.
The
remodeling
of
e existing building will create
mew labor and delivery room suites,
urseries and rooming-in units on

he first floor of the east wing.
“The Woman’s Auxiliary Offices
and dressing room will be moved
o the remodeled area of the present first surgical floor. The Nursng Office, Medical Records, and
e
Administrator’s
Offices
will
also move to the first floor.
The
business
offices will occupy
the
area
from
the
present
doctor’s
lounge down to the cashier’s office.
The
business
office
annex
which has been temporary for the
last
five
years,
will
finally
be

demolished

and

occupy

remodeled

the

fice area.

its occupants

lobby
The

from

their

labor

present

and

delivery

rooms

of

of
of

at the

classic

was

northbound;

southbound,

when

from the stop
police report.

he

bowl,

Highland

which

will be

style.

Helene

Stone,

3543

road,

Two

Glass

replacement

plastic

flamingos

valued at $7 were removed from
her lawn last week, Lena DeMillio
of 361 Temple Ave. told Highland

Park

police.

MODERN
FUR

STORAGE

re

area

CALLIN
ALL
FURS
For

one

son

W.

of Mr.

Wurm,

a sophomore,

is

low

storage

cost,

your furs are stored and thoroughly checked. And we do

class
is a

transferred
College
in

held at the Country Store restaurant
in Chicago.
Formal
installation of new officers and a delicious luncheon topped by an ex-.
citing review of. the best seller,

and

“The

Agony

Irving

Stone,

meeting;

On
June
3, the
long
awaited
earning-fund
luncheon
will
be

the
will

Greta

best book
will bring
the Karen

awarded to the top bowlers.

and

Ecstasy”
feature

Wiley,

one

$21.95

FORDS
:
THUNDERBIRDS
FALCON

John B. Nash

HOLMES

Carpet &amp; Linoleum Co.
626 Roger Williams Ave.
Highland Park
ID 2-8701
Thursday,
With

WE
LEASE
CARS

&lt; B oe

May

25, 1961
¥ce

\

MOTOR

CO.

1909 ST. JOHNS
Highland Park, Ill.

ID 2-8640

“

12 DELTOX

STORE
iD ¢- 330

PARK

this

reviewers in the area,
this book to life for all
Brown members attend-

e

WINNETKA
847 Ele
*

STORE
Hi 6-5

ing,

STEVENS
Announcing Our | —

OPEN

As
others

Are unsightly unwanted hairs on your face, your legs, your arms—hiding the real your Wouldn't you like them removed forever? Of course!
And our expert technicians can do it—safely, gently permanently.
They can even reshape your hairline, make you a new feminine you!
Come in for a revealing complimentary trial treatment, at no extra
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15-Minute Treatment $5.00
You

Chas.

A.

May

Use

Stevens

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:@

Charge

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Hubbard

Woods

Account

Hubbard

Woods

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SERVICES

SHREDDED

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SOIL

SPECIALLY PREPARED BY MACHINE. Easier to Spread
—Improves Growing. Most uniform, perfectly processed
soil obtainable . . . of no extra cost.
MANURE — FERTILIZER

Phone ID 2-0027
MUTUAL

SERVICES

OF HIGHLAND

PARK

e MUTUAL SERVICES @
LIST YOUR

|

Powell's Will Be

OPEN
Both

THURS.
and

PROPERTY WITH

ka

(even where price
is concerned!)

sume
TET
FRE FINEST
MUTUAL

WHY

458 Central Ave.
Highland Park
ID 2-0351

9x

HIGHLAND

by

of the

all small repairs at NO EXTRA

Victor Furs

Deltox &amp;
Imported Sisal

423

a member

1961, pledge
Epsilon. He

COST.

SUMMER
PORCH RUGS

‘

Chicago.

Mrs. Jerome Don, 623 Hill, members of the committee
are busy
gathering
prizes
which
will
be

cost

Flown

pink

S rs

oR

business major, having
from
Wright
Junior

in Mor-

raffle

in Murray Theater at Ravinia Park
last week, Manager John Laurie
reported to Highland Park police.

Flamingos

be

supper

ay BA tae ceta Ae

Park

Five triangular windows, four of
them of stained glass, were broken

No estimate ef
was available.

in

to

box

Mill

e a A oP Bae
ORR eM ase
oaha
e

both started up

sign,

Stained

fun”

away

Old

aeame

Wurm,

William

of the Spring,
of Sigma Phi

27,

given

Earl

Mrs.

Wurm,

ton Grove is the first event. Shaarlene Rose of Morton Grove, chairman of the Bowl, invites everyone
to join in the fun by bringing a

chicken

Oe er

was

He turned left; got a cut chin
and a ticket for failure to yield the
right-of-way.

Smash

May

Bowl

Piguet
Ae

ee

Broadview, was one of the 150 men
to pledge Valpariso (Ind.) university’s social fraternities this spring.

Karen

plain

Scotch

Donald
and

Childrens

On

eee
eae

: Pledges Fraternity

planned

the

the.

“just

a

Bay Rd, and Bloom St. Friday eve-

of-

location.

form

been
for

Foundation.

evening

held

year

Alberta Pottor of 4411 N. Kenneth Ave., Chicago,
and Willard
Hemsworth
of 165 Edgecliff Dr.
collided at the corner of Green

The admitting office will

be in what is now the Alcove Gift
Shop. The new Alcove and Coffee
Shop
are being kuilt across the

area

Crash at Stop Sign

will

business

lounge

doctors and other rooms,
“The second floor of the center
wing will be remodeled for pediatrics.
The blend from the older
area to the new and the remodeling
has been carefully planned to eliminate any harsh change of decor.
When completed, your community
will have an efficient unit housed
in a modern physical plant, staffed
with
competent,
reliable
persons
| . offering you the very best in
safeguard to health.”

ning
She

&lt; ee

J

S—DIANIS TyniNW ©

“The new wing and remodeling
gives us eight additional lounges
or waiting rooms, each floor will
have its own examination
rooms
and
storage
areas for stretchers
and wheelchairs so that corridors
can be cleared of this equipment.
The latest in electrically operated
beds have been obtaind with button control to be used by patient or
nurse.

office,

for

Research
an

have

the

chapter

MUTUAL SERVICES

“Of these 190 beds, 53 will be|
in private rooms, which is 28%.
The
national average
for private
rooms is 10%
of the total beds.
The Highland Park Hospital has a
great demand
for private rooms.
Approximately
50%
of the beds
in the new area will be private.

move to their new location and the
vacant area will. become minor operating room, a cystoscopy room,

affairs

end

Highland Park Woman’s Auxiliary at their quarterly meeting
May 10. Given by Masaichi Tasaka, assistant administrator
of the hospital, he reported:

supervisor’s

‘

Children’ s Research.
Group Plans Two
Big Summer Events

The new South Wing of the Highland Park Hospital to
be dedicated in August was the subject of a talk given to the

a

ak hate

!

FRI.
till

9 P.M.

» +» every day your local
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market values... he
screens the prospects
IT PAYS

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3009

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Page

H 45—D

61

�TWO OF THE YOUNGEST entrants in the recent puppet
contest at Santa’s Village in Dundee were Tonya Sve Marchi,
3, and

her brother,

Gregory,

2, children

of the John

C. Mar-

chis of 2586 Oak St. The little folks won second prize for
the best foreign made puppets with their tiny hand puppets
made in Japan. Puppet Day is an annual activity at the 55-

acre fantasy land based on the Santa

legend.

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weeds, grass,
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|

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|
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HIGHLAND

Page

H

46—D

62

PARK

DEERFIELD

Ace Hardware
Borchardt Fuel
Craftwood Lumber Co.
Ravinia Hardware

Sears

Roebuck

available at

&amp;

Co.

Village

Hardware

LAKE
O'Neil’s

FOREST
Hardware

Wells

&amp;

Copithorne

Thursday,

May

25,

1961

�Save

What

iz Figs

Your

E?

tuing :

Wetter

for

WOULD YOU LIKE

We

Invite
You
To
Borrow
This

Book
og

MONTHLY CHECK
AT RETIREMENT AGE?
DEERFIELD

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a New

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iy 6

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Hours:

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Fri.

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creat Weniailinn

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at DEERFIELD

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wearing It
“Hawaiian

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'
:

~~

s

go-togethers
cottons

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i

batik

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ar

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Men's
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4.

Girls’

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3.50.
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Matching sleeveless
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Matching hat, 2.95.

tailored

Batik-collared
Sizes 8-14.

with

print

walkers,
knit

shirt,

belt,
shirt,

4.95.
2.95

you'll find it in Highland

Park at

Guu =Co,
Enjoy 2 Hours Free Parking in Our Lot — ID 2-4700

Open
Thursday
nights
until 9

Last 4 days Belle-Sharmeer Hosiery Sale!

|

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Thursday,

June

Ly idl Keview
SHY RARE

ROLY

1, 1961

�The big bank that grew up
with Highland Park

STARTING

JUNE 3

The First National will observe the

following banking hours ...
MODOGY.s

6 &lt;i ae 8:30 to 2:00 p.m.

TMMIOY co sas. 8:30 to 2:00 p.m.
Wy OGHGEOGY

©.

in vi wo not

open

Tpuredac ss &lt;. 8:30 to 2:00 p.m.
PGAy

tae. os 8:30 to 2:00 p.m.

Friday night..... 0:30 to 8:00 p.m.

TU

oe eh cee

8:30 to noon

THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK ly
veh ms

rapes plete Mo me n Banking and Trust Services
vee

of

Hh igh

land

Park

J

J i

The Federal Deposit Insurance y sec
United States prams

WEEKEND

BANKING

HOURS:

Friday 8:30-2:00 &amp; 5:30-8:00 pm, Saturday 8:30-Noo

a

�Vol,

36, No.

© 1961

13

by Highland

Park

Co.

Brickyards Hassle Comes To
Thursday,

The first zoning hearing was a
petition from the Brickyards to rezone 80 acres, west of the extension of Pfingsten Rd., from R-4B
residential to I-3 manufacturing.
Opposed
by the village, Weber
introduced
Fink,
who
seeks
to
erect a radio tower on 10 acres of
the property.
Outside of the 10 acres which
Fink has optioned, Weber said he
has no definite plans for the remaining 70 acres.
Walter T. Popjoy, secretary and
a member of the Cook County zoning board,
said
that zoning
the

tract I-3 would not be the “highest
and best” use of the area. He called
the
move
“speculative
zoning,”
which would
give
owner
of the
tract
Weber,
“higher
monetary
gain.’’ He said that Weber was not
thinking of the people in asking
for the rezoning.
Weber rebuffed: “We were here
first.
The
residential
grew
up
around the brickyards,”’
he said,
pointing out that he did not feel it
was a good residential site.
Troy Miller, village manager of
Northbrook, asked that the recommendation of the zoning board be
put off until his village, which was
not officially notified, had time to
act on the two petitions.
Harold
Wexler,
of
Deerfield,
summed it up: “I would hate to see
industry in my back yard.”
Mrs.
O’Leary’s
cow
became
a
part of the testimony when Johnson, proposed
operator of a dry

sanitary
second

land
hearing

fill
was

for
held,

which

the

and

Stil-

phen entered a verbal battle.
Stilphen pointed out in answer
to Johnson’s
statements
that the
Brickyards was in Deerfield first
that if this was the case, descendents of Mrs. O’Leary’s cow would
roam the streets of Chicago.
Johnson laughed. ‘‘That isn’t the
case at all. Cows wouldn’t fit into
the scheme of Chicago,” he noted.
Stilphen countered, neither does
the Brickyards in Deerfield.
He
said that areas change and as they
change,
the
nature
of the
area
changes.
The
hearing
to operate
a dry
sanitary landfill, which would demand
a special permit from the
county,
was
opposed
by
Cook
County’s zoning board, the village
of Deerfield, and local citizens.
A
petition
has
been
started
throughout the village backing the

trustees’

opposition

to the

special

permit.

Popjoy, who formally objected
for Cook County, backed Johnson
(Continued on page D 2-A)
ty ie
Wane

hited

Brickyard

Petitions

Circulated in Village
Petitions
are
being
circulated
in the village
this week
giving
citizens an opportunity to endorse
the village board’s opposition to
operation of a landfill at the National Brick Co. pit and the proposed change from residential to
industrial zoning for land adjoining Forestway
Dr. and the new
Alan B, Shepard school site.
Addressed to the Lake county
board of supervisors, the petitions
were prepared as a public service

by the

Deerfield

Karl

Berliant,

club,

said

field

must

so many

Democratic
president

Monday
unite

club.

of

that,

again,

as

the

“Deerit

has

times in the past, against

the threat of zoning and land use
in the brickyard area that would
be harmful to the best interests
of the village. We hope that 500

signatures can be obtained as a
demonstration of wide support for
the

village

board.”

Berliant
invited
individuals
or
groups who are interested in sign.
ing or circulating petitions to call

him

at

WI

5-4320.

Petitions

signing

will

be

available

at the Deerfield

1

7 p.m. Deerfield Grammar school

The saga of the Brickyards—complete with an analogy to
Mrs. O’Leary’s cow—unfolded in rapid-fire order at a Lake
County Zoning board of appeals hearing in the Deerfield village hall last Thursday.
The zoning board, under the gavel of chairman pro-tem Max Pilz,
heard
two
pleas
from
Bernard
Weber, who acted as a master of
ceremonies for his two witnesses:
Eli Fink and Kenneth P. Johnson.

June

for

Commons

on Saturday June 3, and a
to-door canvass will contact

dooraddi-

tional citizens in areas neighboring the brickyard.
Signed petitions will be presented to the Lake county board
of supervisors prior to the June
meeting at which it will consider
action on brickyard recommendations made by the zoning board of
appeals.

ice cream social, Parents, Teachers and Children, back parking lot,
weather permitting.
Friday, June 2

8

p.m.

Deerfield

High

Plan Commission Recommends Denial 4
Of Sara Lee Rezoning; Board's Decision
May Come Monday Night At Meeting
Complete Text of Plan Commission Report on Page D2B.

school

P.T.O.
board,
Deerfield
High
school cafeteria.
Monday, June 5
8
p.m.
Bannockburn
village
board, Bannockburn
school.
Tuesday, June 6
7:30
p.m.
School
district
113
board, administration building.

8 p.m. School district 113 general
meeting, administration building.
8 p.m, Deerfield village board,
village hall.
Thursday, June 8
3:34 Deerfield Grammar
school
P.T.A. board tea for teachers, home
of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Greenfield,
1075 Hillcrest, Highland Park.
8 p.m. Deerfield Board of Zoning Appeals, public hearing, village hall,

The

seven-months

whether

long,

or not the Kitchens

often

of trustees

at the

Unit In Deerfield
June

13 And

is

14

made

help

register

John

Kies,

should

WI

available

contact

Mrs.

5-0608.

License

The office
Charles
F.

of secretary
Carpentier,

of state,
has
an-

nounced through its Drivers License division that the license of
C.

Grant,

put

1016

Sheridan

Ave., has been suspeneded.

down Days” begin Thursday, June
8 and end Saturday, June 10. Dur-

ing the event, merchants will be
offering out-of-this-world values in
all merchandise categories.
Full details of the unique ‘‘Countdown Days” contest will appear in

Announce Tax Rates For Deerfield

next

week’s

REVIEW.

Fabulous

prizes will be offered to the people

Walter Smith, head of the tax extension department of the
Office of county clerk Garfield R. Leaf, has announced rates
for computation of 1960 tax bills, expected sometime in July.

who

can

number

which

most

nearly

of items

will

be

participating

guess

in the

the

containers

displayed

in

merchant’s

each

store.

Those of interest to Deerfield residents are for grade school
districts 109 and 110. The following is a comparison of 1960 and

Among the prizes are: a GE 19 in.
portable TV; a Sylvania 17 in. port-

1959

grill; an Admiral table model radio;
a Ronson electric hairdryer with
hood; a coaster wagon; and a $10
merchandise certificate. Many more
will be announced next week.

rates:

District
1960
1959
Increase
Percent
TOR ee
ea aro
4.621
4.237
.384
.09063
TAG 2h
ee Ae ee. 4.908
4.631
277
.05981
Those residents of Deerfield who wish to estimate their
1960 bill for real estate tax should add approximately 9 per cent
to the 1959 bill if in district 109, or approximately 6 per cent
if in district 110.

For new residents or purchasers

of new homes

the follow-

ing is a recommended formula for estimating the tax bill: Multiply the purchase price by 55 per cent to estimate the Assessed
Valuation, then multiply that amount by the 1960 rate, as men-

tioned above, depending on the location of the property.

For

instance,

109

if you

purchased

a new

home

in School

district

for $30,000 it is likely your assessel valuation will be $16,500.
The assessed valuation of $16,500 multiplied by the announced
rate of $4.621 produces a bill of $763.52.

plan

commission

able

TV;

a

Benzomatic

barbecue

So watch for the special, “Countdown Days” section in next week’s
REVIEW. And plan to cash in on
the values and prizes which local

merchants
To

easily

will be offering.
identify

in the ,

issued by the
which

three-zoned strips
ufacturing zone.
This

recom-_

to a single

recommendation

several months
issue which at

man-_
o ey

followed

of “talks” on
one time had

“Countdown

mission,

that

Sara

issued

in

Lee

had

February,

not

sai

divulged —

sufficient information for them to ©
make
a recommendation.
Three —

months
later, following several —
joint meetings
of trustees-plan
commission and Sara Lee officials,—
the plan commission said that their —
mendation.”
At that time,

a resolution

was
the

“no

recom-— _

trustees

which

stated

passed

that

an

ordinance to rezone the area would —

be drawn up and a request by Sar. a
Lee to have 70 per cent density would be sent to the plan commis- —
sion for its recommendation.
But at the same time, the pla
commission had a hearing in whic
it considered changing the densit, :
from the present 60 per cent to he
‘

mission, however, prepared oe a
hearing the case for 70 per cen
density, recommended complete denial of any rezoning of the area |

west of Waukegan Rd. at the south —
of the village.

Se

Members of the plan commission sf
said that in making this recommendation, they did not feel that |

the

character

of Deerfield

would —

be maintained if the zoning of the —

Mercurio property was made completely

manufacturing.

;

%

The present zoning of the tract |
is a combination of residential, of-

fice and research and manufact
i
ing. It is a strip zoning used as a.
protective “gimmick” according to.
testimony by members of the platy
commission.

However,

James

Mitchell, preie

dent of the Deerfield Park district,|
stated that if the Sara Lee rezoni: :
is denied, Deerfield will end a

hopes

of

bringing

in

a

suitable

manufacturer in that area.
.
‘“Who’s going to go through bee
mess
that
Sara
Lee
has
g
through?” he asked.

President

of the

(Continued

on

village,

page

D

peel

2-A)
Sat

Days” participants, just look for the
bright, window posters which will

Rescind Revocation

be displayed throughout the business district. Stop in at each store
and enter your “guesstimate.”

Carpentier
has
Drivers License

“Countdown Days” is sponsored
by the retail division of the Deerfield Chamber of Commerce,

|

the —
ap-

peared solved, according to sources. —
The first report of the plan com- —

limits

shop-

pers into an orbit of values, “‘Count-

development

is the report

per cent.

Days” will begin in Deerfield just one week

Deerfield

recent

issue

recommendation

Suspend

Arnold

board

mends denial of the rezoning of the
Mercurio property from its present —

The Lake county X-ray unit will
be in Deerfield June 13 and 14 at
the corner of Waukegan and Deerfield Rds. The hours on both days
will be from 2-5 p.m. and from 68:30 p.m.
Any person, 18 years or older,
is eligible to have a chest X-ray.
No disrobing is required.
There is no charge for the X-ray.

service

Deerfield
Most

Lake County X-Ray

“Countdown Days” prizes is already beginning to build.
to

a part

on the matter is expected
meeting June 5.

from today, according to the dozens of local merchants who
are participating in the new retail event. And the array of
Planned

—

to —

A decision —

Countdown Days To Offer Dozens
Of Prizes In Deerfield Next Week
“Countdown

as

of Sara Lee will become

by the purchase of Christmas seals.
Volunteers
who
would
like to

Rates for computation
of 1960
tax bills in Bannockburn have been
announced by Walter Smith, head
of the tax entension department of
Lake county.
Bannockburn residents living in
school district 106 will have a rate
of 3.905, and residents of Bannockburn in district 109 will have a rate
of 4.128.

hassle

of the village appears to be nearing conclusion.

The

Set Tax Rate

stalemated

ae het

Zoning Board Hears Case for
Rezoning And Special Permit

beh

Civic Calendar

Secretary

office

has

of

state

Charles

announced
division of

rescinded

|
Fr
the
his

the revoca-|

tion of the license of Charles H.

Groezinger, Jr., 632 Warwick Rd.
eS ta

Re

�geohe

hin

pi

ne ae

mei,
ee!

7

p

bal

i

Se

Bes bet
29

as

ips

7,

AA

fi

Ale i

OR ed

hs

Pia

ca

HAS Ae

cg

AU

;

REY Mee Ty a
Poe
Rie

OE

WM CERY UO MQE OES (ENPnt
rash
te

cok

SAE

ERR

a

og, CO
‘

i

— Your Village Government

Americanism Essay Winners Feted
By Unit 738 Of Legion Auxiliary

a Wilmot Roaders and those who
_ live in the general area could hard-

guests at the May meeting of the American Legion Auxiliary,

A

ly belive their eyes a few days ago
when
snorting diesels descended

on

the

and

area—pot

proceeded

holes

to

and

scrape

all—

the

road

up by bits and pieces and haul it off.
To Highland Park went load after

load of bumps

destined to provide

fill for a bridge abutment.
)

Spring

which

breaking

jolted

many

chuck

holes

a Model

T Ford

of yester year were uncovered as
the accumulation of gravel from
past
town
road
budgets
was
stripped away. Beneath all of the
| frustrations of many a road com-missioner was found the good black
dirt where the moccasins of the
Pottawatomies trod; and beneath
this, the virgin clay of Lake

county

- laid down as sediment on the bot| tom of a greater “Great Lake” than

any now to be found.

Lest there be those who wonder
where all the excavation will end,
let me say that they have reached
the sub-grade of the road in the
area

of

deepest

excavation

from this point on will be building
it up with select gravel for incorporation into the soil cement base
which will serve the finished road.
The purpose in cutting so deep is to
assure adequate drainage from the
adjacent residential properties onto the road instead of the reverse,
as has occurred in the past.
That this improvement
will be
appreciated is perhaps the understatement of the year. The planning
has been long and the way arduous
as various legal and other difficulties had to be overcome.
However,
a fine
new
road
is
about to emerge which will make
the memory of the old just a bit of
the nostalgic past of the community. In microcosm, this is the very
history of our country.
Difficulties overcome, trials and
tribulations
weathered
and
continued improvement the rule rather
than the execption. How fortunate
you are that you can say with the
confidence and wisdom of age—‘I
can remember Wilmot Road when

and}.

Deerfield Manor News
_ The great day in the lives of the
/youngsters
and environs
of the
Manor took place last night when
the class of 1961 of the ApptakisicTripp School, in district 102 received

diplomas,

the

climax

to

a

| wonderful

program

given

by

pupils

teachers

of

school,

and

under the leadership
Michael DeVincenzo.
Deerfield

the

the

Mrs.

C.

Fougnies,

and

singing

the

National

Anthem.
Invocation was by Rev.
| R. Humrickhouse, after which Billy
-Pekara gave the class will, followed

by

the

class

prophecy,

recited

by Linda Majewski. After singing
of the songs, “Climb Every Moun-

tain”

and

“Green

Cathedral”

by

the 6th and 7th grade classes, the
Vernon Post 1247 of the American

Legion,

under

the

command

of

Cletus Mert gave a “Citizenship
| Award” to Linda Pruitt.
- Diplomas were then presented to
Cheryl Arterbury, Marian Becker,
Patricia
Bell, James Carlino,
Thomas DeMarco, William Diggs,
Barbara Dulski, Leon Estep, Gerald Fulmar, Kyren Helgesen, Williamina Holmes, Richard Holzem,
David Huber, Apolino Lopez, Linda
Majewski, William Pekara, Michael
‘Phelps, Robert Pierce, Linda Pruitt,
Robert Ruley, Jesus’ Serna, Eugene

Shouse, James Stover,
| Steinback, Jeffery
_ John Pekara.
These

ed

motto,

were

banners

“We

wearing

red

and

surround-

displaying

Strive
and

Jerome

Wikstrom,

youngsters

with

their

to

Succeed,”

white

carnations

which are the class colors.
After
monies,

the

close

DeVincenzo,

of
who

the

cereis

com-

-pleting his second year as principal, gave thanks to Mrs. B. Gomerg, Mrs. T. Weidner, Mrs. J.
Heinsohn, Mrs. V. Swanson, Miss
-B. Richter, Mrs. B. Mockler, Mr. J.
|Garl and Mrs. C. Fougnies, his
staff, and the entire school board
for their help in these past two
years.
Our own Vernon Post 1247 of the
American
the many

Legion, presented one of
Decoration Day parades

this past Tuesday.
The line of
march was from the Chicagoland
Airport north on Milwaukee Ave.,
to the Half Day Cemetery north
of route 45.
The guest speaker
was J. Harold Quick, the new principal of the Half Day school.
Others in the line of march,

Page 2

and

the

plus

the

by the pledge to the flag
of

school,

having

| followed
the

high

of principal

Manor,

by

Ela-Vernon

Hampton school just north of our
township.
The
boy
scouts
and
girl
scouts
of Vernon
township,

largest number of children in the
school, took part in the program,
which was opened with the pro-cessional

were George Stancliff, Vernon
township Supervisor; from the village of Indian Creek, its president
Richard
Prince
and
Fred
Balzer
president of Lincolnshire.
The featured bands were from

the

First

Missile

is a neighbor of the folks in the
Manor,
and lives just south of
us

on Milwaukee Avenue.
A letter has been
sent to Al
Swanson president of the American
Garden
club requesting
his club
to be the outside judges
in the
contest now on in the Manor for
better lawns and living areas.
The prizes offered by Mr. Sherrer and John King
have started
the folks off with added incentives
that
has
not
been
witnessed
in
many years.

Erlo, The Clown
Entertains Dads,
Sons At Banquet
7

Friday

p.m.

will

evening,

the

be

dads

feted

June

with

at

a

9,

their

banquet

at

sons
spon-

sored by the Zion Lutheran church
boards.
Responsible for the programing
are Ted Repsholdt, 853 Todd Ct.

and Woody
Ln.

Rupp,

Members

Ruth

of

Circles

serve

the

1004 Castlewood
the

will

dinner.

Deborah

and

prepare

and

Tickets

may

be

purchased at the church between
the 9 and 10:45 a.m. services of
worship

Sunday.
Known

Erlo,

the

Clown,

PTA
other

affairs,
events,

grand
will

well known

in

appearances
church and

openings
provide

the

and
en-

tertainment for the banquet.
In addition to these events, Erlo
recently appeared with Ben Alexander on About Face, an ABC-TV
production out of Hollywood.

Erlo, a victim of polio when a
child, overcame his handicap and
fulfilled a lifetime ambition to become

a clown.

Family

C. King

Finnell

C. King Finnell of 1714 Garand
Dr., has been promoted
to manager of broker sales for The Quaker Oats
Company’s
grocery
products division.
In his new position, Finnell will
be responsible for the sales activities of Puss
’n Boots
cat food,
Chuck
Wagon
charcoal
briquets
and the company’s Aunt Jamima
frozen food line. These items are
handled
by more
than
90 food
brokerage
concerns
in _ offices
throughout the United
States.
Finnell joined Quaker in 1945
as
a retail
cereal
salesman
in
Sherman,
Texas.
He
advanced
through various sales positions in
the company’s Houston and Mem-

phis

offices

named

and

charcoal

position

he

in

1957

sales

held

he

was

manager,

until

his

the

recent

promotion.

and

Participates In
Summer Government

Program

Miss Elizabeth Wolfe of ‘Leatherwood,”
320 Portwine
Rd., who
will be a senior at Wellesley college
in the fall, will be in Washington,
D.C., June 7-July 18 as a participant in the Wellesley-Vassar summer internship program in government.
She is one of 30 students from
Wellesley and] Vassar colleges who
for six weeks will hold unpaid positions on the staffs of members
of both houses of Congress and in
various
government
departments
and agencies.
Miss Wolfe has been assigned to
the
staff
of Illinois’
Republican
Congresswoman
Marguerite
Stitt
Church. Mrs. Church is a graduate
of Wellesley college.
Assignments
have been coordinated as much as possible with the
specific interests of each intern. To
broaden their experiences beyond
their specific positions, all 30 interns will meet two or three times
each week for informal discussions
with persons prominent in the government,
including
Theodore
C.
Sorensen,
special
counsel
to the
president, and Senator Barry Goldwater of Arizona.
Miss Wolfe is the daughter
of
Mr.
and Mrs.
Richard
R. Wolfe

and

is

majoring

in

French

at

friends

frowned upon this idea because
of his handicap, but this made
Erlo all the more determined to

at

the

Kingswood

School

Cran-

he _

always

brook, in Michigan.
become
wanted

Erlo’s

the
to be.

clown

program,

a

pot-pouri

of

fun and antics includes magic, balloon
sculpturing,
and
a lecture
about some of his experiences with
the circus, along with color slides
showing scenes on the lots as well
as equipment and other perform-

ers.
Erlo
thas
also
appeared
with
many of the nation’s top circuses,
including
Hagen
Brothers,
Mills

Brothers,

and

Adams

and

Sells.

essay

winners

Jacobs,

treasurer;

Mrs.

Robert

Broege, chaplain; Mrs. Leslie Behrens,
historian; and
Mrs.
Joseph
Schuessler, sergeant at arms.

St. Andrews To
Hold Meeting At

St. Gregory’s Church

assembly
on

at

Sunday,

St.

Gregory’s

June

4

at

2

p.m,
On May 27 a meeting was held
at St. Gregory’s church under the
direction
of the Rev.
Edwin
G.
Wappler
for those
eighth
grade
confirmands who expressed a desire
to
become
an
Acolyte
for
the coming years. Those boys attending
were
Paul
Schlenker,
Randy Pfeiffer, Brian Gunderson,
Lee Fox, Tom Wells, Paul Stewart
and Jeff McCulloch.
This
was
the
first
training
pericd for the new acolytes.
The 15 acolytes who have served
this
past year
at St.
Gregory’s
church were invited as guests of
the brotherhood of St. Andrew to
attend a baseball game at Wrigley
field on Saturday, June 10. Those
boys are: Curtis Tucker, Douglas
Dale, Philip Cromwell, Jim Bur-

Mike
Bill

Cramer, Milton GaebSherman,
Rick
Von

Kutzleben,
John
Warton,
Bill
Couch, Wally Davies, Chuck Kafadar, and Chris Robinson,
The
final
youth
congregation
meeting of the year was a barbecue held at St. Gregory’s church
on May 14. About 70 young people attended this meeting including the
members
of the
eighth
grade class who will go into high
school next fall. After a delicious
supper the vestry for 1961-62 was
announced.
Those
elected
were:

Jan

Persson,

senior

warden;

Di-

ane
Hansen,
Jr.
Warden;
Lori
Whitted,
secretary;
Chris
Robinson, treasurer; delegates at large,
Barbara
Jean
Abbott
and
Cathy
Wilson;
freshman
representative,
Teena Weisert.
The women
of the church met
for a “Just For Fun Luncheon”
at St. Gregory’s Parish house on
Wednesday, May 24. There was no
program but a delicious luncheon

was

their

parents

were

served

Guilds
tended
fall of

by members

of all the

and about 60 women
atthis final get-together until
next year.

At the final meeting

of the year

St. Agnes Guild elected the
lowing officers: Lucy Fellows,

Statue Of Liberty
By Adrienne

folwill

Friedman

Entering the shores of America
after being in a country where freedom was just a word, the Statue of
Liberty gave me new hope for a
better life. I can even recall arriving in New York and seeing this
great symbol of freedom it was impossible for me to turn my eyes
away from that wondrous site. It
appeared alive and shining in the
sun with its symbolic hand reaching up to touch the sky. The greenish hue of the copper added color
to its magnificent splender.
I could visualize the historic day
in July 4, 1884 when France presented to America the statute as a
sign of peace. The creator, Frederic Auguste Bartholdi, made the
trip for the presentation.
This
statue
is a figure
of
a
proud woman and stands on Bedloe
Island. One hand is held up high,

holding

Jennifer
Lynn
Sime, _ infant
daughter
of Mr,
and Mrs.
John
Robert Sime, 145 Birchwood Ave.,
was baptized on May
21 by the
Rev. Jack D. Parker at St. Gregory’s Episcopal church. Her sponsors
were,
Philip
Sokody,
Judy
Robbins and Ginger Altera, all of
Lake Forest.
Rev. Parker has announced that
The
brotherhood
of St. Andrew
of the Chicago Diocese will hold

nett,
ler,

and

738.

church

In Congress

Americanism

Mrs. Kenneth Hunter, Americanism chairman, introduced the winners and their essays were read.
The essay subject was ‘‘The Statue
of Liberty, What it Represents, and
its History.”
The prizes were awarded as follows: first— Adrienne
Friedman,
Bannockburn
school;
second—
Adele Chunn, Deerfield Grammar
school; third—a tie between Rose
Marie Sternberg and Gerald Kessler, both from Deerfield Grammar
school.
In other action at the meeting,
officers for 1961-62 were nominated: Mrs.
John
Klemp
for president; Mrs. Ralph Nelson, first vice
president; Mrs. George
Beckman,
second vice president; Mrs. George

its

Wellesley where she is an honor
student. She prepared for college

in Midwest

the midwest for his
at fairs, celebrations,

unit

Battalion

202, Ill. National Guard, Commander, Cletus Mert of the legion post

On

The

a

torch

to

welcome

all

ships entering
America’s
harbor.
In the
other
hand
is America’s
Declaration of Independence and at
her feet lay the broken chains of
hardship and toil which helped to
make this new country free. The
robe worn, by our Lady of Liberty
is loose and flowing and the crown
radiates as if it were a miniature
sun.
Just imagine the cost today of
our great Lady when at that time
the cost to France was $450,000.
It was and is the largest statue
ever made. It towers 152 feet over
the busy harbor and is sometimes
called the Lady of the Harbor. I
am sure it is a coincidence that the
price and the weight of the statue
are about the same. Gustave Eiffel
made this great prize of three hundred sheets of copper, which was a
total of eighty-eight tons.
Since 1924 the Statue of Liberty
has been America’s national monument and to all a sign of brotherhood, peace and liberty.
Many Americans take all this for
granted as part of their heritage,
but when one is from a different
atmosphere it makes one forget the
past and brings hope for a great
future.
The one thought uppermost
in
my mind was that if a country has
such an auspicious welcome for new
inhabitants, she will surely live up
to all the expectations of those who
enter her shores.

Deerfield Student Gets
Law Week Award
Robert
L.
Clifford,
908
Fair
Oaks, a senior in the Northwestern
university school of law (Chicago
campus),
this week
was selected

to receive

the

United

States

Law

Week award, it was announced by
John Ritchie III, school dean.
The award is given to the graduating student in law who, in the
judgment of the faculty committee,
has
made
the
most
satisfactory
scholastic progress in his final year
of school.
again

ell,

be president;

Artemis

vice-president;

Jean

secretary

and

Betty

Mitch-

Cooper,

Cramer,

treas-

urer,
St. Agnes Guild is an evening
guild
with
its main
purpose
to
contact new women in the parish
and welcome
them
to St. Gregory’s. During the past year they
sponsored both an afternoon and

evening
a

bridge

square

sage

dance

from

deaconesses
tions.

one

tournament,
and

of

as some

Thursday,

heard

the

held
a

mes-

Episcopal

of their func-

June

1, 1961
\

�LO of
i

vas

5

ee
oes ee
Lao
:
1
Weoae

ee
CO
Weiiaibest
Wic. 37nA

tor

EE

Elect Officers At
Meeting

In District

110

110

new

PTA,

final
16,

officers
who

were

meeting
are:

of

Jules

(Continued
Whitney,

bers

of

the

district

elected

the

year

Beskin,

at the
on

May

president;

‘Dr. Jack Holbrook, first vice president; Mrs. John Kittermaster, second vice president; Mrs. Richard
Entz, secretary and Ned Mitchell,
treasurer.
Richard McLean,
dent, has announced
raised by the PTA
during
the
past
turned over to the
for the purchase
teaching aids.

Donald G. Wise Named By University CARRying
i

Plan Commission

Final PTA
The

out-going presithat the money
for the schools
year
has
been
four principals
of audio-visual

Brown stated that the use of such
audio-visual aids is especially helpful in teaching in the lower grades.

has

of

from

page

1)

As One Of 25 Outstanding Alumn

sent a letter to mem-

village

clubs

and

official

bodies in an effort to obtain opinions on the Sara Lee issue before
the June 5 board meeting.
He stressed that the board will
not turn its meeting into a hearing on the Sara Lee issue. Here is
the text of Whitney’s letter.
“As you are aware, the village
government has been studying for
more than one-half a year a peti-

tion to rezone

a parcel

will be

by

announced

it was

16-18,

June

president

Dr.

Wise,
1333 Elmwood
Ave.,
has a private practice in Chicago
in addition to being an associate
professor.
Dental school, he has been secretary-treasurer of the Northwestern
Dental
Alumni
association
since

the

is presently
village

in

serving

this

please send them

as

If

members
Illinois

the

June 5 village board meeting.
“May I emphasize that the opinions of your organization should
be in writing, since it is NOT my
intent
that the
June
5 meeting
should become another in the long

hearings’

Dr.

chairman

Wise

has

on this

held

positions of responsibility in

Wise is an active reserve Lt.
Col. in the U.S. Army and a memPresbyterian
Fourth
of the
ber
church of Chicago.

Sincerely yours,
David C. Whitney
Village President

are expected
Lake
county

board

in July for a

of supervisors

Deerfield

See

Frank

Jacober

good

job

J

8th

has

done

a

very

our

Band

of Young

Sunday

the

Little

Leaguers

People.
Last

:

had a parade to celebrate the opening of the

baseball

field. Many
and

his

helpers

they put

season

in Deer-

thanks to Jim Johnson
for

the

time

into this project.

oo

that

Baseball

-

is very important to the growth of
our

little

dealt

the

boys

with

and

children

work

that

if

you

have

you

well

know

is put

into

a sport

ings
and

and tears. Get out sometime
watch
them
in action,
Of

course,—you

must

know

that

I am

a fan of the Giants—because
to be!

Ihave

_

(A grandson).

Lake

County

Pharmaceuti-

_

cal Association had Installation of
Officers at the Country Squire restaurant. This is a newly formed
Society of Pharmacists and if you

00

do

not

belong

it is a fine

group

ib
~
|

of —

of
Druggist—the Ford Pharmacy had
two winners in the National Velvet
professional

) é

oS Pharmacists

&amp;

with

The

Cs Prescription

Grammar—7th

Grades had their Spring Concert
Wednesday and Thursday Nite,

| like this—little boys with hurt feel-

OC

[|

B.

Carr

of

Dr.

matter.”

lola

Soci-

state and local dental societies; he
is a member of the American, Ilinois, and Chicago societies and of
InternaDentaire
the Federation
tional.
Active in the alumni of Xi Psi
Phi dental fraternity, he also writes
for the Illinois State Dental Journal and reviews French dental textbooks for the Journal of the American Dental association.

so,

in writing to the

‘public

past

the

In

many

them to the village trustees before

of

group,

Dental

ety.

village manager so that he can send

series

Chicago

the

pres-

matter?

the

ety

1953.
He

of

State Dental
Society
Table Clinics, and chairman of the
scholastic committee of the North
Side Branch Chicago Dental soci-

of the Northwestern

graduate

A

ident

week

. . speaking

men.

—

contest.

Mrs. Henry Holland of Vancou-— a
ver, B.C., returned home Tuesday ~
after having visited for a month
with her daughter and son-in-law,

that the hole might be
retention of flood run-

Both of the issues
to come
before the

By

Dr. J. Roscoe Miller.

190 feet from the center of Waukegan Rd.
(Continued from page 1)
‘He has also asked that our manzoning
ordinance
be
against the wall with a rapid-fire ufacturing
series of
questions,
ended
only amended to allow a 70 per cent
when a zoning board member ob- density of coverage of the area by
buildings instead of the presently
jected to his line of questioning.
Johnson told the board of ap- allowable 60 per cent.
“The plan commission has. come
peals that he had access to 3,000
to the conclusion that such rezonyards of ash per week which would
ing would change the planned charbe dumped at the site.
acter of the Village, by reducing
Weber said that a landfill would
the amount of office and research
be the “ideal and most objectionarea facing Waukegan Rd. As a reable way to fill the area.” Howsult, the plan commission is recomever,
Johnson said that the making
mending to the Village Board that
of brick would not stop while the the petition be denied.
hole was being filled.
“Because, in my opinion, the peAccording
to
Johnson,
there titioner deserves a final answer
would be no garbage in the dumpeither to deny or accept his reing.
quest at the earliest possible date,
Stilphen asked that the petition T would hope that the village board
be denied under chapter 36, para- will act at its meeting of June 5.
“Does your organization have any
graph 466A of the Illinois Revised
Statutes, which
states that there expression of opinion that can help
guide the thinking of the board of
shall be no dumping
of garbage
and other materials within a mile trustees as to the best interests of
of the village without village con‘sent.

final

campus

Evanston

at least

Karl Berning, chairman
of the
eounty board of supervisors came
up with
a conclusion:
leave
the
hole
there.
Filling
it, he
noted,
might polute wells as far west as
Milwaukee Ave.

On

try at Northwestern university has been named as one of 25 of
He will be
Northwestern university’s outstanding alumni.
on the
weekend
Alumni
for
slated
es
honored during ceremoni

of land on

set back

dentis-

42, associate professor of operative

G. Wise,

Donald

Waukegan Rd. to enable the building of a multi-million dollar food
processing plant, by Sara Lee. The
entire parcel of 30 acres is at present zoned in three strips—residential, office and research, and manufacturing.
“The petitioner has asked that all
thirty acres be zoned for manufacturing, and has agreed that any

buildings

Brickyards Hassle

He noted
a place for
off waters.

mY

ae

:

Kathy

and

Bill

Bernardi.

Frame Bi-Level — 8 rooms — 4
bedrooms,
room,

212

storage

baths,
room,

entrance

into

hall, Living-din- |

Entrance

garage,

©

recreation

fireplace,
with
combination
ing
kitchen with eating area. Beautiful
condition and very good location—

decision.

—

near school and shopping. All this
for

Charm

Chats

the

price

If I don’t

of

$31,750.

run

out

of family—I

won’t run out of Birthday

Greet-

—

ings. Many more Happy Birthdays
to Frankie
(my
grandson)
and

Marilyn (his mother) Carr. Carol —
Seiler is having her Birthday this —

THE MARK OFA
REALLY SMART PERSON

Sunday.

Belated

Greetings

Sharon

WVanSickle

Wiltse

to
(my

niece). (Few people bother to call
Follow
his directions
Visit him frequently.
carefully. Bring your prescriptions to us to be

of a really smart person is not
a college diploma or a Phi Beta
It might be simply a record of
Kappa key.
carefully considered actions.
To “‘know it all’’ would be wonderful—if we
humans could absorb that much knowledge in
The mark
necessarily

ANNOUNCEMENT
Hello

ladies!

Since

| am

start-

ing to write a beauty column here
each Thursday, introductions are in

and

we

Service’

have

is

our

built our

TAKE ADVANTAGE

motto,

reputation

acquainted.
CHATS.
Start
look.’’

ing

Watch

summer

for

Let us assist you

this

goal

through

a

‘new

in achiev-

corrective

beauty care.
You
have
pointment
with
beauty.
Corner Beauty Salon, 666

gan
Road,
5-1525.

insurance

CHARM

with

Deerfield.

an apBeauty
Wauke-

WIndsor

Prescription

© Individual

on it. All the latest beauty methods are used.
Come
in and get

you

or tax

OF THESE
Records

and

take

the

medicine

he

prescribes

regularly.
Such cooperation is the best course possible
for preservation of your health, and it marks

a lifetime. Next best is to seek and accept the
advice of experts, particularly your Doctor.

order. As hair designer and cosmetologist, I’ve served this North
Shore area for the past 20 years.
“Personal

filled,

as a really smart

FORD

for each

person.

calendar

year

for your

available

use.

e FAST, Efficient, Free Delivery.
It’s Handy to Pay ’em Here:
PUBLIC

SERVICE

* NORTH

SHORE

DFLD.

DISPOSAL

* DFLD.

NEWS

bills
GAS

bills

SERV.

AGENCY

bills
bills

FORD
PHARMACY
Waukegan

&amp; Deerfield Roads

We

also can

supply you with:

¢ MONEY
¢ PUBLIC

A

Convention

of

Did

you know

Kaehler

County

is and

did

Deerfield

June

1,

1961

.

that Officer Paul

has been

teaching

Look for bouquet for the
Foree in this weeks issue
Review.

ORDERS

a

Police
of the

—
—

Carr Realty Co.
REALTORS
701

Waukegan

Road

WI 5-0984
Page

Thursday,

~
©

class in First Aid—if you haven’t
had this course you should contact
Paul about the next group. (FREE)

SERVICE EXCHANGE
LIGHT BULBS

WI 5-1111

Lake

Firemen was held Saturday at Lake
Villa—understand they had various
contests—how
fare?

SERVICES:

PHARMACY

—

about the Birthdays of their loved
ones—so have to dig up my own.)

2-A

,

�to

studied

the

Commission
petition

has

of

Johnson property in Cook County)
would render the Village’s position
ridiculously inconsistent. This matter must not be disregarded, since
it has farreaching effects on the

Manufacturing classification, as reby the

Board

of Trustees.

Burden Of Proof
any
consideration

In

| petition,

it

certain

is

well

basic

to

facts.

of

this

start

with

The

Village

ption

to

purchase,

to favorable

1961,

the

_ pany, Mr.
uestions

of

the

President

Plan

audience

use

the

of the

com-

and

the

company’s

site.

There

was no specific presentation of the
plans for the development of the

.

no definite statements regard-

ng products, no certain
tion
regarding
facilities

| by

_

the company

informarequired

to be furnished by

the Village. Moreover, there has
been no clarification of these
points

with

at

subsequent

representatives

and

the

parent

discussions

of

Sara

company,

dated Foods.

Lee

Consoli-

Zoning

Road

will

require

subject

a

tract will inevitably

invite

demands for the same zoning for
the whole
area, which
has been
protected by
the
present
zoning
districts of R-2 and O &amp; R.
The experience of the Village of
Skokie proves that it is not possible

to be only a little enceinte in indus-

With

most

of the

900

boys

and

girls participating in the parade
and opening day games, the 1961
season of the Deerfield Boys’ Baseball Association was officially
opened last Sunday.
Following the parade, which led
from
Deerfield
Grammar
school,
through downtown Deerfield to
Jewett
Park,
opening
day
ceremonies were held. Rev.
Eugene
Wykle, park district recreation director David Carr, and village
president David Whitney took part
in the season’s kickoff.

Morton

similar
rezoning
of all property
south
of
the
tract
in
question.
Therefore, it is apparent that the
espousal
of or opposition to the
rezoning requested by Sara Lee is
not the basic issue. The decision
made
at this time is irrevocable
and for all time, the character of
the village as a residential community
will
be
altered
by
one
zoning change. The rezoning of the

At

answered
members

Commission

regarding

proposed

of ‘the

Charles Lubin,
put to him by

development.

Of Industrial

to Waukegan

presumably

| the public hearing held January 5,
|

its

Opens On Sunday

The
executive
board
met
last
Thursday
to nominate
a replacement
for
assistant
commissioner

Any broad rezoning such as extending the Manufacturing District

petition

rezoning.

and

Expansion

was filed by the company with an
subject

encroach-

rom the Village (except for the Phil

Sara Lee, Inc. for the rezoning of
he Mercurio-Mirabelio tract to the
quested

the

property and the new Park-School
site to the north.
For the Village
to recommend O &amp; R as a County
classification while eliminating it

re-

of Kitchens

by

ment of industrial zoning upon immediately
adj
oining
residential

Recommendation Re:
Petition of Kitchens of
Sara Lee, Inc. for Rezoning

Gentlemen:
_ The Plan

deterioration

Season Officially

This

Kienniger

who

has resign-

ed.
The board will nominate
director Dan Mayworm to fill Kienniger’s
unexpired
term
and
minor league president Al Soule
to fill the directorship vacated by

Mayworm.

This slate will be pres-

ented to the membership for election at a general meeting on June
16 at 8:00 p.m.
at Jewett
Park
field house, at which time other
nominations may be made from the

the community through the
ervation of property values
residential suburb.

Furthermore,

it is

presas a

questionable

that industry results in a lower
tax rate.
The
tax rates of four
Lake County municipalities provide
an example:
North
Chicago
—
3.810, 3.749,
3.799.
Lake Forest — 3.697, 3.964, 3.902.
Waukegan — 4.363, 4.127.
Deerfield — 4.237, 4.631.

strial zoning—such zoning changes
_ No effort was made by the peti- grow and expand. In Skokie, zontioner to justify the proposed re- ing changes to industrial and comzoning on any grounds other than mercial uses, which were intended
e petitioner’s desire for rezoning. to be limited in extent, spread to
properties.
The
limited
On the basis of petitioner’s failure nearby
Sewer And Water
(1) to recognize the necessity of rezoning was justified as being
Questions
of sewer
and
water
maintaining O &amp; R zoning in the beneficial to the residential prop- facilities to meet the demands of
erty
owner
by
a
reduction
in
taxes.
area, and (2) to make a full and
a large food processing company
fair disclosure of its specific plans The several school districts then are yet to be answered. We submit
in the area, it is our opinion that supported pleas for industrial and it would be no tax asset to the
petitioner has failed to discharge commercial rezoning within their Village if further additions to the
‘its burden of proof. The petition own districts, to broaden the tax sewage treatment plant and water
therefore should be denied on base. As a result of this poorly storage facilities were required as
conceived planning, there was enprocedural grounds alone.
the result of the operations of
croachment of manufacturing and
“*
Analysis On The Merits
Kitchens of Sara Lee, Inc. Proteccommercial
uses
upon
residential
_ Not withstanding the procedural
tion is given the Village by the
i
ficiency of the record of this property, depreciating its value as Ordinance Regulating the Use of
roceeding, the Plan Commission residential property, and there has Sewers, which requires pre-treatWe
Tecognized
that,
because
of
the been no reduction in taxes.
ment of sewage of undue strength,
that
broad public interest in this matter, have families in Deerfield
but the volume of wastes might removed
from
Skokie
to
get
away
it was obliged to deal with the
quire additional capacity, since the
from
these
conditions.
petition on its merits.
present
plant
was
designed
for
Random rezoning should not be
Basic Zoning Issue
maximum land use under present
entertained
for
Deerfield
as
this
The character of the Village as
zoning. New processes, such as the
a residential community was estab- would in effect negate the entire “dry freeze” processing of meat,
Master
Zoning
Plan
of
the
Village.
lished by the 1924 zoning ordimight overload the planned capacnance, reaffirmed in 1953 by the Any considered change would re- ity of the sewage treatment plant,
quire
review
and
alteration
of
the
option of the Kincaid plan, and
making
mandatory
the
construcMaster Zoning Plan to conform toa
gain reaffirmed by the Rockwell
tion of additional facilities at the
different
philosophy
of
zoning,
in
| study. A total and complete reexpense of every taxpayer and resi| study of the entire village would which the predominantly residen- dent of the Village.
tial
character
of
the
Village
would
ave to be undertaken if zoning
Further, the costs of additional
changes such as this requested by be changed to reflect a different water storage, which may be reconcept
of
Village
development.
&lt;itchens of Sara Lee, Inc. were to
quired
under
the
terms
of the
Mr.
Matthews’
statement
at the
be considered for enactment.
agreements
with
Highland
Park,
regular
Board
meeting
on
May
We?
O &amp; R Rezoning
would be borne by all taxpayers.
15th,
pointing
out
that
a
busy
high_ The elimination of the O &amp; R
The storm drainage of large buildfice and Research District in this way might not be sustained as an ings and parking areas would have
area which would result from the adequate buffer between manufac- to be taken into consideration,
tioned rezoning is a matter of turing and residential properties, since the company has stated they
that
ve importance
to the Village. is a clear note of warning
would bear the cost of storm sewis use district was established rezoning does not stop at the limits ers only to the edge of their propter long deliberation by the Plan of one piece of property, or one erty. These are some of the physommission and the Board of Trus- side of a street.
ical facilities which must be taken
Tax Benefits
es, and was held to be the reason-

le answer to good zoning in this
rea. The Plan Commission’s report
of January 28th stated the imporance of preserving this classifica| tion for a reasonable depth in order
to retain this higher land use and
support the residential district

along

Waukegan

Road.

This

re-

irement for the O &amp; R classifica-

tion

is reaffirmed.

lequate

setback

of Waukegan
the residential
ide.
The Village
Page

2-B

The

on

Road

190

ft.

insure
an
the west side

and

zoning

safeguard
on

the

east

requested

the

into

The
Plan
Commission
is sympathetic
to the desire
of taxing
bodies
for increased
tax money,
and to the desire of residents seeking lower taxes.
However,
any
additional
revenue
that
may
be
received from
such
a change
in
zoning affecting the character of

the whole village is illusory.

desirable residential municipalities,

among

them

Glencoe,

Winnetka, Oak
and Flossmoor,

sible
no

has

Many

and

Ridge,

Park, River Forest
have found it pos-

practical

industrial

Park

zoning,

to
by

exist

with

maintain-

ing the stability of the tax base of

this

consideration

in

evaluating

petition.

Conclusion
It is the recommendation of the
Plan Commission that the petition
of Kitchens
of Sara Lee, Inc.
therefore
be
denied.
We
submit
that the zoning change
proposed
by the petitioner would be detrimental to the Village as a whole,
.and would change the character of

the

Village

as

we

have

and as it is presently
the Master Plan.

set

known

it

forth

in

Respectfully submitted,
Deerfield Plan Commission
Peter C. Weinert, Chairman

for June 30. “Tickets will be available soon,” Mrs. Coffey said, ‘and
we
are
anticipating
the
largest

crowd ever.

We hope that all Base-

ball parents and friends will plan
to inaugurate the 4th of July weekend with this traditionally gay eve-

ning.”
The minor, intermediate and major Leagues-all played last week.
The tabulated results follow. Pony
League play started this past week-

end.

Scores

appear

next

The

and

standings

will

week.

Deerfield

Colts

will

get

under
way
next
Sunday
with
a
double
header
scheduled
against
the Evanston Federal Savings team.
The games will start at 3 p.m. at
the new Pear Tree park.

Minor

League

pitching
don

of

on both
the

sides.

Senators

Rick

gave

Lon-

up

only

one hit.
The White Sox defeated
Orioles 18-4 and collected 10

the
hits

while

the

allowing

none.

Five

of

White Sox players had a perfect
day at the bat.
In a high scoring afternoon game
the Tigers defeated the Red Sox
18-9. The Tiger batters were lead
by Guy Mandler who hit the first
home run of the season.
The Athletics gave the Indians a
four run advantage in the first inning, but Scott McFarland settled
down and, allowed no hits or runs
for the balance of the game.
The
Athletics went on to win 5-4.
American

League

Teams
White Sox
Tigers
Athletics
Yanks
Senators
Red Sox
Orioles
Indians

wy,
1
1
1
@D
0

League
and
snowplayed on,

cancelling but two games this week
in

the Intermediate League.
The White Sox seem destined to
a slow
start.
Tying
their f irst
game and loosing a heartbreaker to

darkness and a “no contest” ruling.
Outstanding this week
Cardinal-Giant game with
plays. A triple by Malizio

was the
two fine
with the

Cards

won

Intermediate
NATIONAL

economic problems in a fast chang-

wick, Mitchell and Co., accountants

for Deerfield Savings, he also has
had
wide
experience
with
other
savings and loan associations.

Alumnae

;

Standings

Phillies
Braves
Red Legs
AMERICAN
Orioles
Athletics
..

Indians
White Sox

Major
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Deerfield Savings
Allis-Chalmers
Pederson Construction
Kleinschmidt
Pilot Production
Duraclean
Am-Vets
American C. Holding

SUNDAY

WEEK’S

Board

Annual
The

Chi

Deerfield,

and

Highland

Park.

....

27.

Mrs.

Peter

Dunn,

Section

On

Our Cover

Preparing for Home
Economics
4-H classes’
annual
achievement
night June 2 are the girls on our
cover. The event will be held at
Zion Lutheran church.
The
girls are Lauren
Werner,
Judy Hamilton and Virginia John-

son,

who

-|have

demonstrate

learned

in

4-H

what

they

classes

here.

DEERFIELD
REVIEW
June

1,

1961

Vol.

36,

No.

13

Published Weekly every Thursday
PUBLICATION

1

Chicago

Jack Hoffman,
720 Apple Tree
Ln., has been appointed chairman
of the home builders’ section of the
building trades division of the Combined Jewish Appeal.
The division’s share of the fundraising goal is $486,000.

Ww.
7

Meet

Omega

Heads Appeal

Thursday,

League
...

Holds

Luncheon

Alpha

9-7.
League

Ath-

ing world.
Augustine,
who
has been with
Deerfield Savings for about four
years, holds a B.S.A. degree from
Walton school of Commerce. Formerly associated with Peat, Mar-

bases loaded and a sharp double
play zipping from Boch to Koetz.
The

of Georgia,

ens,
Ga.,
where
representatives
of savings
and loan
associations
from 28 states and the District of
Columbia attended a National Executive
Development
school
for
savings and loan executives. This
course, held for two weeks every
year, provides intensive study of

The Homestead Hotel in Evanston was the scene of the installation of several new officers. Cochairmen
of
publicity
for
the
group
are
Mrs.
Victor
Carnelli,

0
0

Intermediate

Daniel K. Augustine,
treasurer
and comptroller of Deerfield Savings and Loan association, has returned to his desk after two weeks

new officers on May

0

Winter
winds
blew
flakes fell but baseball

Augustine

Area alumnae board held its an.|nual luncheon meeting for old and

Standings

bie

Daniel

at the University

The Yanks and the Senators
opened the American
division of
the Minor League with a tie game
3-3.
The game featured excellent

WNNNNNKOm

Village of Deerfield

use.

classification was proposed to the
County as a reasonable use to safeguard nearby residential properties
in the Village that would be subject

May 25, 1961
of Trustees

Board

this

mm

and

for

by-laws.
Mrs. Richard Coffey, president
of the women’s auxiliary, has announced that the date of the Annual Baseball dance has been set

OSS

President

property

floor according to the Association’s

PRN

pany

Deertield Baseball

HIGHLAND
PARK OFFICE
Laurel Ave., Highland Park,
Telephone ID 2-4500

608

Ill.

MEM
National Editorial Association
IHlinois Press Association

RESULTS

Am-Vets 11, American C Holding 1; Pederson Construction
11, Deerfield Savings 4;
TUESDAY
Duraclean 9, Am-Vets
8; Kleinschmidt 3
Pederson Construction 3;
WEDNESDAY
Deerfield Savings 4, Allis-Chalmers 2:
FRIDAY
Kleinschmidt 6, Duraclean as
SATURDAY
Pederson
Construction
17,
American
C
Holding 0; Deerfield Savings 6, Am-Vet 4.

OFFICE

699 Waukegan Road
DEERFIELD,
ILLINOIS
Telephone Windsor 5-4500

PRNOMNNE

County to establish a zoning classification similiar to the Village’s
O &amp; R classification, and to rezone
a part of the National Brick Com-

Local Subscription Rates—$3.50
Domestic Rate—$5.00 per year
Single Copies—15c¢
Foreign Rates on Application

Second

class

postage

paid

Ilinois.
Unsolicited manuscripts or
are sent to the North Shore

Papers

at

the

sender’s

risk.

per
—

year

at Deerfield,
Pp news-

The

North
sponsibility, ms the publ loatien of adc mo:
Shore

G

N

Thursday,
¥

)

if

i

June 1, 1961

�Board of Appeals
Tests City Order

were delayed by a major fire in
January, 1960, Podolsky explained.
He will lose money if he is required to join the four remaining

To Reunite Lots
Must Charles Podolsky put back
together
a lot which
he resubdivided into five a year ago? Under
Highland
Park
ordinance,
passed since then, the owner of
two or more contiguous lots must
join them to comply with current
zoning before building permits will
be issued.

Whether
enforced

the

ordinance

is currently

can

being

be

tested

before the zoning board of appeals.
The case began Wednesday evening last week,
tinued to June
Three

has

Public

Podolsky’s

cepted

and
6.

been

was

city when

three

the

ac-

area

was zoned for homes
on 12,000square-foot lots. It was rezoned to
20,000 in October, after extensive
study of the entire east side riparian and ravine area,
Three public hearings were held
on the rezoning. Podolsky wasn’t
represented at the one involving

be

;

the

His

fifth

for

$14,000

and

is

there.

purchase

plans

and

money

|

CARS

;:
En

sFORDS

=

man John Vander Vries and the
appeal board that he has $56,000
invested in four of the lots; has
building

Sizes 4-6X
®
| |

=

Chair-

that

Cabana
Suit

ammunition,

:

a

sold

appear

provide

LEASE

eve-

now

to

could

WE

|

anyone

told

they

with

it would not

them

:

was

Podolsky

for

but

Compere

=

by

necessary

again;

fact, no objection

offered

lots.

tions were on record;

his property—in
ning.
Last week,

more

Corporation
Counsel
Thomas
Compere was present for the city,
to contest the appeal. Neighbors
were told that since their objec-

aoe

Hearings

subdivision

by the

con-

lots into two, he asserted.
All the immediate neighbors of
the
property
were
present
and
objected to four more lots on the
southwest
corner
of Maple
Ave.
and Sheridan Rd. All were asked
their own lot dimensions, and all
said they
live on 20,000
square
feet
or
more.
Some
neighbors
were
willing
to compromise
on

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HOMES:

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“KRESGE

5-2286

Deerfield Commons
_ Thursday,
:

NO

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AY

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rial

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Tas)

June

1, 1961

to 9 P.M.

Shopping

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Road

Page H 19—D

3.

�Hostess

to Dorcas

Members

Zion
in

of the Dorcas

Lutheran

the

son,

home

1353

ernoon

Scouters’ Weekend

church
of

Golf

at

Mrs.

Ave.,

circle

meet

Axel

Erik-

aft-

Some 200 men from widely
separated sections of Lake County

near Antigo, Wis., this summer.
The date for the Scouters’ Week-

and

end this year has been moved

Northeastern

Cook

will pack sleeping
rolis early in June

1:30.

trip

North

May Have Cheaper
Air Parcel Post

2-4

of

will

Tuesday

Set for June

Shore

County

bags and bedfor a weekend

to camp.

DRIVERS!

wise

getting

things

ready

for

the

vanguard of 1,500 Boy Scouts who
will attend the North Shore Area
Council’s Camp Ma-Ka-Ja- Wan

TURNER'S

weekend

The first readjustment of international air parcel post rates since
1948
for mail
from
the
United
States to 156 foreign destinations
has been revealed by Postmaster
Sheahan.

work

crews

are

all

Cook

County

vol-

piece handling costs and by reductions

in

transportation

at the North Shore Area
Office, 724 Vernon Ave.,
—VE 5-4125 or 4124.

1-HOUR

you stand. Call today!
HENRY HAKANEN

825 Deerfield Rd., Deerfield
WI

5-1383

STATE
eke

FARM

Automobile insurance Ca,

Sr

JUNE

~,

Council
Glencoe

the

13th

attic

fell

many

the

weekend

through

the

of the

ceiling.

parts of the world.

For example: Postage for a two
pound
package
to
Australia
at
present is $10.51 but, under the
proposed change, postage on the

same
On
the

parcel

would

be

only

$6.98.

the other hand,
postage
for
same package bound for Mexi-

co is now $1.90
creased to $2.66.
The
pareel

and

will

be

in-

volume of international
post has jumped from

air
%

million pounds in 1949, the first
full year of operation, to more
than 21% million pounds today.
The public is invited to address
comments

to

the

Post

Office

De-

partment within 30 days.

know that...

MONEY

.

When a group of people discuss TV
prograins
and
personaMties,
you'll always
notice that they get around
to
the fabulous money that is paid to certain actors.
A seasoned star will get
$100,000 for a single one hour effort.
Just a personal appearance for a few
minutes demands $20,000.
For us that struggle along with numerous
payment
booklets in the desk
drawer,
these
figures are colossal
to
say the least.
But, let’s look on the other side of
this so-called rosy business.
According
to a public survey, the average actor
earns $750 per year.
He must hold a
side job to get by. Of course, this big
dough keeps him struggling and reaching for the big time that so few ever
reach.
So, the next time you watch these
expensive actors, think of the thousands
that mever reach
it.
And
if the TV
picture is distorted or hazy, and
the
audio
is poor,
remember
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MARTY

697 Waukegan Rd.
WI 5-1401 — DEERFIELD

TV’S

costs

communities.

Registration
by adult
Scouters
who want to aid in the annual camp
maintenance project may be made

By William Turner

proposed
by
Day, to take

effect July 1, would result in increased postage for lighter weight
parcels, in many
cases, and
decreases
in
postage
for
heavier
weight parcels. These changes are
generally necessitated by increased

unteer Scouters of the North Shore
Area
Council which includes. approximately western Lake County,
the North Shore from Lake Bluff
to Wilmette and other northeast-

ern

TV-LAB

Foreign Rates

The
new
rates,
Postmaster General

Ceiling

Mel Ames, foreman for Marlen
Construction Co. on a new house
at 1152 Thorntree Ln., told Highland Park police someone explor-

back

to June 2, 3, 4. Tilden Batchelder
of Libertyville,
Council
Camping
Chairman, announced.
The weekend
usually
has been
scheduled
early in May, but unexpected cold
chilled Scouters and dumped wet
snow on activities last year.
This
was a principal reason for switching to a more
temparate
month
this year.
The men who volunteer for the

Instead of enjoying a leisurely
few days of fishing, campfires, and
talk, they’ll be pounding nails, fixing hinges, trimming tree branches
too near power lines, painting, fixing plumbing, cleaning and other-

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with 3 BRs, lovely living rm, with Colonial fireplace,

panelled

dining

rm.,

large

kitchen,

ex-

DEERFIELD: A jewel-like home—it fairly sparkles—so tastefully decorated &amp; well maintained.

Face

Just a good iron shot to the
RIVERWOODS:
country club &amp; a minute or so from the tollway.
A wonderful home for a large family—-7 rms.,
4 twin BRs, 2 stunning baths w/vanities, large
fully equipped kitchen. Youngsters will adore
the Huge: S4°xZ
frees frist... ig.c's .....$41,500

scaped

to

preserve

its

pristine

lightful

bird

sanctuary.

4-5

naturalness.

friends in de-

BRs,

2+

baths,

fam. rm., din. rm., air cond, ............-- $53,000

YEARS
SERVICE

oi”
UY

735

and TYSON, Inc.
H

20—D

TINA

enclosed

delightful
patio

&amp;

large
yard,

as scined canap tha seca sseebooenens $25,500

Quinlan.

Quintan

Page

OO)

rm.,

2

WEST BANNOCKBURN: Enjoy the four seasons
in large luxury home, 2 wooded acres land-

SF IRB

overlooking

living

awnings,

car

kitchen,

spacious

w/permanent

cellent traffic pattern, thermopane.
Wooded
site 75’x200’ in area of custom homes and
friendly neighbors
$23,750

Thrill to songs of our feathered

gar.,

brick

4

Deerfield

Road

Deerfield Office —

Open

DEERFIELD:

An

unusual

a brick

home

in this price

school

&amp; bus;

amount

of space

range.

8 rms.,

living rm., din. rm., 4 BRs
family rm. 27'x15', kitchen
GIEEE

walking

3 baths,
19’x10’.

distance

for
large

panelled
Close to

to village shop-

CORT IEG: Aosta vinta euinalb ataekiaiee $32,500

DEERFIELD:

A

beautiful

rural

setting

will

be

yours with this all brick ranch and its 2 car
attached garage on 14 acre. Carpeted living
rm.,

din.

rm.,

kftchen

w/eating

area,

fam.

rm.,

plus rec. rm. w/fpl. One block fromy school and
DUS HLAMEDORO TION, iecadincctateoaetond $24,000

ano Tys
Weekdays

ON,, Inc

9 to 5 —

Sundays 10 to 5

:

Sa

=

eeSecamront

DEERFIELD: Excellent location for the family’s
varied daily activities—no need for chauffeuring. 2 story brick with attractive living rm.
w/fpl., din. rm., kit. w/brkfst. spot, 4 BRs (two
panelled),

2 baths,

for summer leisure.

$36,500

Just reduced.

DEERFIELD:
No need to cope with
of mud. Lawn is in and beautiful!
to

dig—no

porch

rec. rm., and a sernd.

evergreens

to

plant,

a season
No holes

owner

per-

formed that labor of love. Other extras you'll
treasure—storms, screens, fireplace. Colonial,
8 rms., 4 BRs, 22 baths, gar., bsmt. $32,900

WIndsor
UNiversity

5-3750
9-1112
Thursday,

June

1,

1961

�Expert on Greek
Art Is Speaker
At Library June 7

To Have Luncheon
For CJA Fund

A
public
lecture
on
‘Masterpieces of Greek Art’ to be given
by the author, the Rev. Raymond
V. Schoder, S.J., will be presented
Wednesday
evening, June 7 at 8
o’clock at the Highland Park Public
Library under the auspices of the
Highland
Park Associates of the
Women’s Board of the Art Institute.
An authority on classical literature
and
archaeology,
the
Rev.
Father
Schoder
is professor
of
classical languages at Loyola University and author of a new volume, “Masterpieces of Greek Art,”
a book that has been translated into
seven
languages.
The.
Jesuit
scholar’s lecture will be illustrated
with some of the 8,000 slides he
took in preparation for his book.
A
past
Fulbright
professor
of
Greek Art and Archaeology at the
University
of Nijmegen,
Netherlands, he has also taught a course
in classical archaeology for teachers
at the
Vergilian
Society
of
American School at Cumae, Italy.
The 30 members of the Associate’s course in Greek Study taught
by Joshua Kind, Northwestern University art historian, will be part
of
the group
hearing
the
Rev.
Father Schoder. Tickets for admission
may
be
purchased
by
the
public at the door, according to the
program chairman, Mrs. Saul Bernstein, 1411 Waverly Rd., Highland
Park.

The North Shore special gifts
luncheon of the Combined Jewish
Appeal Women’s Division will begin at noon,
Friday, June
9
The Pavillon,
According
to Mrs.
Samuel
Bergman,
Glencoe,
Chairman

FOR

FOR

N.
of

the CJA North Shore Special Gifts
Committee, “guests at this luncheon are expected to make a minimum gift of $100
combined Jewish

The

guest

Gerda

to Chicagoland’s
Appeal.”

speaker

Weissman

will be Mrs.

Klein

“All of My Life.”
The vice-chairmen

author

of

of the North

Shmikler
is a member
group of selected business

of the
execu-

tives

designated

to

impor-

tant

executive

positions

Federal
of

a

event

assume

Government

national
of

a

in

in

the

emergency.
national

the
event

In

the

emergency,

BDSA would provide the
of a production agency.

nucleus

Expert Hair Coloring
and

Hair

Sidney

Platt, 25 Sheridan

a

:

Permanent Waves
Hair Cutting
Featuring All Branches
of Beauty Culture

CLASSIQUE
1815

St.

Johns

Beauty SALON

Avenue

ID

EXPERIENCED

2-1603

OPERATORS

4

Road.
RD

Cutting

Specializing in
High Blonding
In All Shades

Shore
Special
Gifts
Committee
include Mrs, David Axelrod, 387
Moraine, Mrs. Gerald G. Bolotin,
215 Pine Point; Mrs. Norman Joffee,
546
Green
Bay;
and
Mrs.

SIE:

Ou re

Sniuthoak

for Coffee

... served

Continental
Thursday,
11

Friday and

CAFE

Coll

a.m.

COFFEE

1888
Sheridan
Road
Highland Park

in

Style
Saturday

to Closing

KOFFIE...

served in sophisticated P ORCE

| Speedwriting
TYPING

at

Gilbert Shmikler, vice-president
and secretary of the Illinois Glove
Co.,
Skokie,
participated
in
a
National
Defense
Executive
Reserve
Conference
in Washington
called by the Business and Defense
Services Administration of the U.S.
Department of Commerce, May 23
and 24.

LAIN

Comme

Is

TYPING

Attends Conference
In Washington

No. Shofe Women

PERSONAL

BUSINESS

SECRETARIAL

OR

sHortHand
SCHOOL

GREGG

USE

SHORTHAND

STENOGRAPHIC

(6 weeks)

(days only)

ACCOUNTING

Day and Evening

Classes

BEGIN ANY MONDAY EXCEPT SPEEDWRITING CLASSES
WHICH BEGIN JUNE 12, 26; JULY 10, 24; AUGUST 7, 21

EVANSTON BUSINESS COLLEGE
1718
W.

H. Callow,

Sherman

Ave.
UN

Prin.

4-3004

The new and delightful ways to have your coffee:
D. “Coffee break” E. Turkish

PRESCRIPTION

MATTER WHO YOUR DOCTOR IS OR WHERE
LOCATED—WE ARE PREPARED TO FILL
YOUR PRESCRIPTION

L. Sylvester, R.Ph.
35 years experience

Jerry Brody, R.Ph.
20 years experience

HE

IS

Henry Stine, R.Ph.
45 years experience

Three Registered Pharmacists Total of 100 Years Experience

Rogers Pharmacy
643 ROGER WILLIAMS AVE.
‘Thursday, June 1, 1961
iN

A. Cafe diablo B. Viennese

C. Hawaiian

G, Irish H. Cafe au lait I, Espresso. An elegant

collection for serving gourmet coffees. A “round-the-clock” variety of very, very correct white
porcelain coffee vessels plus 1. the Basic Coffee Server and 2. the Demi Server fitted with
colorful silk damask “obi” wrapper. All created by famous American designer... LaGardo
Tackett, and all handsomely gift packed.

ID 3-1212

A. Diablo C/S—6 for $6.00 * B. Tall Demitasse C/S—6 for $5.00 * C. Tall Icer—6 for $6.00
D. Java Mug—6 for $7.50 * E. Turkish C/S—6 for $4.00 * F. New Dinner C/S—6 for $7.50

G. Irish C/S—6 for $7.00 »* H. Continental Coffee Set (Ashtray) C/S—3 Pc. Set $3.00
I. Espresso C/S—6 for $7.00 * 1. Eight Cup Server $8.00 * 2.6 Cup Demi Server $7.00 (not
shown) Sugar &amp; Creamer Set $2.50

haben x
—rrrrcttp
SISTITTT x

THA
NO

F. Cappucino

Come in and see our lovely new collection appropriate for a multitude of international coffees... with each purchase receive your FREE copy of “SERVE COFFER
... INTERNATIONAL STYLE”, Contains over 20 recipes for exotic coffees and how

Yadd|\\|

to serve them.

ID 3-0300
Page H 21—D

5.

�ee

YOU'RE ALWAYS WELCOME AT

)

BEER

DREWRYS

q

retemmpn am (OLLGICCHA
ALFG

59

prcoany hare

i

}

nbreakable,

is
i

@

Ses

colors.

a ssortec d

in

pare

Pudi
ame

C

~~

REPUTATION

to Limit

Quantitie

Self-Servize! THUR. thrs
SUN. SALE

ai)

744
Northbrook —
Road | 1975 Cherry Lane

Discount Prices *.%.4 fe

»

ais [= » Di

ra

Reserved

ni

in
Deerfield,
Waukegan

lightwet sat t, snag- -proof.
omes

Bushsizes

2"

sgt gee

| La sent Basket

witha

Right

12-ounce ‘size throw-away boftles........

Round ePaivednviene

t

Ribbon

Blue

Pabst

:

i

|

DRUGS

p

-

Nhe

2

METRECAL seg

im

S
,

Liquid type, 8-ounce cans.
Ui

REGULARLY $2.09

i

we i
i\

6 3

[s $3: Liquid
: Detergent
Mm

OCC Sustrite”

4

ap

‘

ar

IGE CREAM

Walgreens,
—
Cw

aE
Di

y

"Society

ma

fara

we

‘

Fe

1,000"

TOILET
TISSUE

441°)
Regular 49c Pack

q

$e

4

roll

REGULAR 31

400 FACIAL

TISSUES

eae

ALUMINUM

esis

"Chefline” 25-ft. roll.

Z)

FOIL WRAP @

B setcees

2.3]

ADMIRAL
RADIO
ey

Cc

1

Reg 20¢

3

Non-breakable plastic.
Charcoal grey.

.

feo pats pa

wo need

b

ene

ad

‘

Ss

Tre, at.

ie

Rollers

‘sia
$

Fr

cE IE

ry it
pci Mea
—sturdy
2” saran.

“® INFLATABLE MATTRESS
mm

te

,

.

Speed Shave

:

wap. .

w,

~e

77

ren

wey.

i

R. -

WwW,—_—

41.00

60°

finest quality. QT.

sy

3

i.

Ne

Ke

‘Toiletrie

Pay

_——

,

Home

|

brand,

YOUR

100mg.

el | ss, 93°)
Large

~

;

“m

$1.56

KODACOLOR
Iced

A

;

Bottle 100 98

,

Tea

es

i

Ve

Ray

BUYS

at your Walgreen

MORE

Drug Store

size.

:

$1.25 List Price!

—_——

economy

B.. al

see

—6© BS
vw'®

fl

SANITARY
NAPKINS

Webster Golden Wedding—Dutch
Master President—Bock Foo
—El Producto Puritanos Finos.

KARAAAC
ANY

39:

DOLLAR

59¢ Eech?

Pack 48 "Nuvel'

\

FLASHBULBS
Save on miniature

120, 620 and 127 rolls..

Now

.
:

‘onl

LIST

M.2's.

packs @ 60

c

of 12

y

ren
eee

Pack of 200
ENVELOPES
REG.

of PNA

$1.05, Mineral Oil

and Office

Standard size for less!

,

[5c

REG.

.

{ forms a medicated film. .

Chocolate

$1

foo

a

as. =|
For Home

Hay

Res. 68¢,

to

f
:
*Harantee

b instant Ovaltine =» Fe

oz. push-button lather.

ax On

* CIGARS Phi

100°s

ni
tube,
Reg.
OR
de 31c.
Sh 2 1-ounce
SP
esc T
eer

L

+95...

a

pe
— ae a
a:
me

Freezone for Corns

Regular or menthol. 10

Kec

&lt;

Rg’

fun betoe ie

99

4 3,
1H} Zinc Oxide Ointment e
2

A:

;

F

ice

rigs

Gril lite i

For cold drinks

PO-DO

3

|

$2.95 quality. For sunning, floating

98c Paper Gups 88°

3

“Lakeside”

Why

24-in. GRILL | Pour Spout | ALUMINUM
f AT SAVINGS! | Gallon pe
WEB CHAIR 9GYs
76

“ i

eat

:

4

Aor
Deep inner
stopper ..
| baked enamel finish

x

N 4-4 COTTON BALLS F

Plus

88
~~

FT G oo

BE ccteserit PACK of 250 |

pene

Crank it
up, down.
Move on
aq
wheels

a

Baby and Cosmetic Use...

Te For

GA

Selig

Brush

mend

ot

Re

31.0...
00. stipes

i

[e

-~

.

Party

!

the Deluxe Quality

SHERBET

&amp; ounce—for A)

tall, cool:

[Som

Fag

&gt;

|

25c

Glass

Sundae Dish

Finish

a

TOILET SEAT
at SAVINGS!
Compare
Choice

decorator

colors .
‘Now

te $5.95

of
caly.

60

(|
|

.

�iy ly

|
Chicagoland
alumnae of Clarke
land Park Hospital who attended | College, Dubuque, Ia., will hold a
the Silver Anniversary Luncheon
tri-purpose
spring
luncheon
on
of the Chicago
Hospital
Council
June
3 at 12:30
p.m.
at 666 N.
were: Mrs. L. M. McAlvany, 2640
Lake Shore Dr., according to Mrs.
James
Smith,
665
Thacker,
Des
Forest Glen, Deerfield, the Highpresident
of
the
North
land
Park
Hospitals
selection
of Plaines,
Side Chicago Clarke Club.
Patient of the Year; Mrs. Theodore
Rehn,
175 Belle, Highland
Park,
The luncheon will serve to fete
President
of the
Highland
Park
June graduates of Clarke living in
Hospitals Woman’s Auxiliary; Mrs.
the Chicago area, to welcome pros» Harvey Cornelius, 2104 Park Lane, pective freshmen and their moth- |
Highland
Park,
Director
of the
ers and to reunite local alumnae.
Highland
Park
Hospital
VolunOver
1,000 Clarke
alumnae
teers;
Mrs.
Tony
Guglieimi
522 ithroughout
Chicago
and
suburbs |
Chicago,
Highland
Park:
Mrs.
are divided into three local clubs. |
Marge
Swansen,
Director
of
Nurses,
Highland
Park
Hospital,
Mrs. Barbara McGivern, 347 Elm
Place, Don Mensinger, Director of
The
Development, Highland Park Hospital;
O,
C.
Ayres,
Director
of
Housekeeping, Highland Park Hospital; Ken Eckliff, Purchasing Director,
Highland
Park
Hospital |
.
Shop
and A. G. Ballenger. president of
A quaint littl antique shop where you
.the Highland Park Hospital.
will be pleased to find the unusual in

daughter

DeGrazias,

“OUR CHILDREN NEED THE
BEST OF TEACHING!” You Say

Birch-

wood, Wilmette, was ticketed for
improper
passing
after
a_ colli-

776

Dean, was among the Mundelein
College
seniors
cited
at special
honors
day
May
25.
Miss
DeGrazia received an award for her
work
in speech,
and
also
as a
member of Kappa Gamma Pi, national scholastic and activity honor
society of Catholic women’s
colleges.

sion on Green Bay Rd. just north
of Oakwood Ave. Thursday evening

last

week..

The right front of her car
the left rear of one
driven

Lawrence
Gunther
of
Sawyer Ave., Chicago,
Park police report.

At the luncheon they will be joined
by 34 new graduates and 70 incoming students. Local Clarkites serving on the luncheon committee are
Miss
Kathryn
Holland,
544
Onwentsia, and Mrs. Allen Dorfman,
1268 Sheridan Rd.

Gas

Pedal

hit
by

4207
N.
Highland

pedal

removed

from

his

CREATIVE

TEACH-

ENCE
you'll
your friends about.

FOR INFORMATION write to Sight
&amp; SOUND LANGUAGE STUDIO, 706
Glencoe Road, Glencoe, I. Or phone
VE
5-0978
Monday,
Wednesday,
Thursday 5 p.m.-7 p.m.

Gone

Harold Schecter of 454 Burton
Ave. came out of the Aleyon Theater Sunday night to find the ac-

celerator
car.

How About
Yourself?

foo OooonoUucgooc

High-

DeGrazia,

Eugene

of 2734

B}\

the

Janet

the

Taradash

)

from

Miss

of

Jeanette

(

Representatives

In Reunion

Crash on Green Bay

at

College

|

Aid

Honors

ee

Anniversary Meet

Receives

Mundelein

go0goouc

Clarke College

of

(
|

Local Alosadas

Represented at

oNnoOooonoD0G0N00

Local Hospital Is

Buy

and

hold

U.S.

Savings

Bonds.

Antique

past

twenty-five

activity

was

years

in

IT CAN

glassware,
silver, china,
bric
- a - brac,
brass,
pewter,
furniture,
prints
and
paintings at reasonable prices.
W.
H. LINCOLN
Appraiser &amp; Auctioneer
One Mile North of Route 45
On Highway 21—Halfday, Il.

hospital |

Shore

Summer

Reading

Tutoring

Begins June

Program

¢ Study

:ee oe——

Math.

Methods
h

GARAGE

i
ension

Ve

FCC

*

es

COMPANY

701 PLEASANT AVE.
°
PH: ID
Invitations
*
Personalized Stationery

LANDSCAPING

ASK US ABOUT

TREE

i

Contact

| RAVINIANU RSERIES
Established

|

Office

|

and

i

1885

des:

7

Nen

Introducing a new
Now is the time

Ce

DORMANT

DISPOSAL

FRED
ACTUAL

Siza

We have all of the newest
types. H.0.V., you know, was
one of the two pioneers in
the successful development
of contact lenses in this country.
Here your contacts are
custom made, especially
for you, from start to finish
in our own laboratory by
expert technicians. And with
your House of Vision
eontact lenses go unlimited
service and genuine solicitous
attention for aa long as
yoa wear them.

&gt;

Teh

“y

1683

Catch

Septic

ee

Tanks

CENTRAL

Leading

Pumped

SHERIDAN

Official

Watch

Service

yoy

DRAPERIES

*

Catch Basins
Pumped

Residential - Commercial

454 Central
ID 2-2883

On

BUSINESS

|
We Custom
Draperies

*

* Slip Covers
* Bed Spreads

Make
Upholstery

* Carpets
° Custom
Furniture

in Opties

890

Linden

Ave.

Hubbard

BUSINESS
Fast

Jewelry

Inspector

PARK,

Pleating — Belts

ILL.

Buttons —- Hand Bound

2-2028

G Machine Button Holes

Vogue

Designers

for

the

North

*

Notary

Western

R.R.

Fabric Shop

722 Main

Evanston

591A

Roger

4-3034

FOR SALE: 11,786 SALESMEN*

SERVICES
Who w.!l work 24 hours a day 7 days a week canvassing all homes
Neat

2-0650
* Bookkeeping
@ Mimeographing

Pick-up &amp; Delivery

ID 2-3430
Woods

Public

Sweaters,
etc.

SERVICE

Tope Transcriptions
Dependable

ID
* Secretarial

SERVICE

Linens, Blouses,
Towels, Shirts,

UNiversity

&amp; FABRICS

a Smile
* Refuse
* Rubbish

DRESSMAKERS’

REPAIR

HIGHLAND

ID

HIGHLAND
*

With

* Septic Tanks

Watch. R epair Craftsmen

and

Park

and

ntons

TELEPHONE

and

Highland

&amp;

.

FIREPLA

af

Williams

Ave.

in

Highland

Park,

Highwood,

Deerfield

and

Vernon

*This is the circulation that your ad on this page

For Space

Reservation

Phone:

iD

Township.

will receive.

2-4500

n

Thursday,
wat

Be

CORNER

cutter

Over 40 Years

391 SHERIDAN RD., HIGHLAND PaRk
616 CHURCE ST., EVANSTON
486 NORTH WABASH 4VE., CHICAGO
Oxno%¥

a
i

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2

Road

Dependable Service Is Our Quality

ee

Craftsmen

Deerfield

SERVICE

MONOGRAMMING |

Lod

2-2079

2-8917

ape
ee
SERVICE

ID 3-1622 &amp; KI 6-2292

JEWELER — WATCH

GARBAGE AND RUBBISH
REMOVAL

let's talk about itl
Phone for appointment.

The

ID

ID

Phones:

PATCHING

A. COLEMAN
COMPANY

Washing

BERNARDI

Cards

WING'S TREE EXPERTS

TRIMMING

Road

SERVICE

Phone

SPRAY

T° mn” ——=«dPOWERR SPRAYING

Deerfield

MTT
mT

power stump
to order

DUTCH ELM CONTROL

isto ated

Deerfield

Wall

BONDED

)

Oe cee

Nursery

WI 5-0035
West

Reasonable Rates
Excellent References
Free Estimates

DISPOSAL

WING'SLicensedTREE
EXPERTS
by the State

Inc.
.

®
@
@

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INSURED

|

lenses

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—

PAINTING

SEALING

&amp; Loke Bluff

Wedding

;

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INS ERTING

&amp; DECORATING

INTERIOR - EXTERIOR

POSTAGE METERING
FOLDING
Mimeographing
«+ Adv. Inserts Imprinted
MAILING LISTS MAINTAINED
e¢ PHOTO COPYING
Automatic Addressing by Name. Covering:
Highland Park, Highwood, Deerfield, Glencoe, Northbrook, Lake Forest

Approved

HI 6-5080

5-4248

PAINTING

Fast, Automatic Machine-Production

ADDRESSING

OPERATORS

SERVICE

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1 Yr. Guarantee

RCA

SHOP

“A Complete Letter Shop Facility”

|

° U.L. Approved

Remedial
All Levels

Diagnostic Testing
Individuals
or Small
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Junior High Schoo} Thru College

prasemang oe

DOOR

*

* Reviewing
¢
e

LETTER

RCA
RADIO CONTROLLED

Center

19 &amp; July 25

e
Reading

=

BE DONE

given.

ELECTRONICS
North

Sie

WH

Lincoln

The luncheon
was held at the
Pick-Congress
hotel
in
Chicaco,
The “Patient of the Year’ and the
“Employee
of
the
Year”
were
honored and a presentation of the

ae

~ ANTIQUES

\

a

A
Ee

June

‘3

oR

SN

Se

pn
a

y

ee

et

1,
i

1961

Page

H

23—D

7

taht

�5

PP

Directory

HOLY
j

CROSS
CATHOLIC
CHURCH
North Waukegan Road
Rev. John O’Mara, Pastor
Rev.
Edward
Reilly, Assistant
Rectory, 724 Elder Lane
Windsor 5-0430

‘
Bee
:
vas

a.

S

7, 8, 9, 10, 11:15

12:15,

and

Daily Masses: 6:30 and 8:30 a.m.
First Friday of each month, Masses at
6:30 a.m. and 8:30 a.m.
Saturday: 4 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Confes-

sions.

NORTH SUBURBAN
EVANGELICAL
FREE
CHURCH

nee

yt

Rev. Vernon

4

Olson, Pastor

200 County Line Rd.
Church Office—WI 5-4640
Parsonage—WI 5-4641
SUNDAY
9:30 a.m. Sunday School.
10:45 am. Worship Service.
7 p.m. Worship Service.
8:15 p.m. Youth Groups.
WEDNESDAY
7:30 p.m. Bible Study.
7:30 p.m. Junior Crusaders.

|

THE
HIGHLAND
PARK
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
ID 2-1695
Dr. William Atkinson Young
Rev. J. A. Miller
Ministers
SUNDAY
9:30 a.m. and 11:15 a.m. Church School
for toddlers up through 8th grade at 9:30
am,
and
11:15
a.m. simultaneously
with

the church services.

_

High
and on

School Growp meets at 9:45
alternate Sunday evenings.

a.m.

REDEEMER

LUTHERAN
CHURCH
Highland
Park
(Missouri Synod)
Rev. Robert A. Wendelin, Pastor
1717 Deerfield Rd.—ID
2-6848
oer
service,
10:15 a.m.
Holy Communion, first Sunday of each month.
Sunday School, 9 a.m.
8T.

JOSEPH
THE
WORKER
CATHOLIC
CHURCH
W. Dundee Rd., Wheeling
George
J. Mulcahey,
Pastor
Rev. Raymond
Nugent,
Assistant
Rectory,
171
W.
Dundee
Rd., Wheeling
t
LEhigh 7-2740
Sunday Masses: 6:30, 8, 9:30, 11, 12:15.
a Sd Day Masses: 6:30, 8, 9:30, 11 a.m.,
:30
p.m.
Weekdays:
6:30, 8:30 a.m.
Saturday and Thursday before the first
Friday in the month: 4, 5:30, 7, 9 p.m.,
Confessions.

DEERFIELD

CONGREGATIONAL
CHURCH

In South Park School
1331 Hackberry Road
Rev. John S. Usry, Minister
Parsonage Telephone WI 5-0176
THURSDAY
7:45 tw
Choir rehearsal.
SUNDAY
10:30 a.m. Worship Service.
10:30 a.m. Church school.
7 pm. Pilgrim Fellowship.
GRACE

iene
a

For
4-3060

LUTHERAN CHURCH
(Missouri Synod)
Walters Ave. at Fourth
St.
Northbrook
further information call CRestwood
or Windsor 5-1323.

CHRIST

METHODIST
CHURCH
Maplewood School
Alden Cts.
- Rev. Richard F. Mellor, Interim Pastor
Parsonage—1652 Pear Tree Rd.
Membership—WI 5-5203
Rev. Fred H. Conger, Pastor
Membership—WI1
5-5502
SUNDAY, June 4
9:30 a.m.
Church
school, children two
high school. Adult Bible class.
10:30
a.m. Fellowship coffee.
11 a.m. Morning Worship service. Sitters
for children will be provided.
3 pm.
Reception
for
Rev.
and
Mrs.
4
er at the home of Mr. and Mrs. C.
M.
Meldahl, 880 Portwine Rd.
CONGREGATION
BETH
OR
In Trinity United Church
638 Waukegan
Road
Deerfield
Telephone WI 5-5070
Rabbi David Cederbaum
y
Cantor Jerome Frazes
i FRIDAY
Oneg
8:30
p.m.
Sabbath
Eve
Service,
ollowing service.
~ SATURDAY
9:30 a.m.
Religious school.
es
11 am.
Hebrew school.
ta)
Board
of
Directors
meetings
are
the

ia

first Wednesday

of every month.

general
meetings
of every month.

are

the

second

Sisterhood
Monday

QUAKERS
SOCIETY OF FRIENDS

ag

eh

David

Stickney,

Lake

Forest

Clerk

SUNDAY
es
9:45 a.m. Sunday School.
oa
10 a.m.
Friends meeting in Deer Path
A
School Library in Lake Forest.
:
For information call WIndsor 5-1774.

Thursday

evening,

June

at

On

the

regular

monthly

meeting

of

the

A.L.C.W.

Luth-

Zion

of

8,

devotions

following
church,
eran
by Pastor Paul Berggren, the memcircles will
of the various
bers
“June,

Brides,”

with

“mock”

wedding
father

of

Refreshments
hour

will

and
C.W.

bride.

with

a

conclude

will

also

fellowship

the

evening,

conclude

meetings

the

to

down

the

trap-

the

all

—

bride

from

pings,
“poor”

hilarious

truly

a

of

Month

the

present,

until

the

A.L.

fall.

The newly organized circles will
hold initial meetings under their
new schedules in June, then to
recess until the fall.
Pastor's

At

Class

Sunday

Graduates

Exercises

The
North Suburban
Evangelical Free church, 200 County Line,
Rd. has announced graduation ex-

ercises

of the

pastor’s

instruction

class of 1961, on Sunday, June 4,
at 10:45 a.m.
Miss
Patricia Hedstrom,
High-

land Park, Miss Rose Marie
berg, 839 Todd
Northbrook and

Ct.,
Ted

Stern-

Scot Krause,
Powell, 2735

Forest Glen, members

of the class

have completed
a year of Bible
study under the teaching of Rev.
Vernon E. Olson, pastor. Each stu-

dent will participate in the service, and will be given a life verse,
Bible

and

message

Diploma,

by

the

followed

by

a

pastor,

Early Service

Planned

For Summertime
At Washburn Church

Hold Reception For
Incoming Pastor
|Of Methodist Church

During
burn

the

summer,

the

Congregational

Wash-

church

in

Half Day will have a service of
worship at 8:30 a.m. This service
will

be

three

in length

quarters

of

an

hour

and the worshippers

welcome
to wear
golfing clothes.

are

gardening

and

Church school classes and worship will continue to be offered
at 9:30 am. during the summer.

The
and

11 a.m. church school classes
worship service will be dis-

continued
Rev.
tor of

until

fall.

Lewis Wakeland, the pasthe Washburn church, has

explained

that

the

church

adjusts

its schedule for the summertime*
but continues
to make
its serv-

ices

available

World

Tuesday

to the

Service

people.

Meets

In Lee Home

For Pot-Luck

Lunch

«

The
women’s
society of world
service
of the
Bethlehem
Evangelical United
church
will meet
Tuesday, June 6, at the home of
Mrs. George Lee, 850 Forest: Ave.,

J

a

Monthly Meet
\Ground Breaking e Hold
At Zion Lutheran
At Trinity Slated
For Sunday At 3

ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH
10 Deerfield Road, Deerfield
Rev. Paul V. Berggren, Pastor
George Jacobson, Intern
Telephone: Windsor 5-2009
THURSDAY, June 1
8 p.m. 4-H Club
achievement
night at
Zion church.
8 p.m. A.L.C.W. board meeting at_ the
home of Mrs. Robert N. Pearson, 502 Radcliffe Cir.
THE
BETHLEHEM
CHURCH
FRIDAY, June 2
Trinity United Church of Christ
8 p.m. 4-H Club achievement
night at
(Evangelical
United
Brethren)
Rev.
Eugene
M.
Wykle,
Minister
the church; Pastor Berggren will give the ‘will hold its ground breaking cereRev. R. C. Grigereit, Asst. Minister
invocation.
mony on Sunday, June 4 at 3 p.m.
:
801 Rosemary Terrace
SATURDAY,
June 3
Church—WI1
5-0078
9:30 a.m. High school youth instruction
The program will begin at the
Parsonage—WI
5-2221
class, preparatory
to church
membership.
present church with a congrega1861 — Our Centennial Year — 1961
SUNDAY, June 4
THURSDAY, June 1
tional meeting where the architect
First Sunday after Trinitv
8 p.m. Women’s Guild board.
8 a.m. Celebration of Holy Communion.
will present his final drawing for
SATURDAY, June 3
9 a.m. Family worship service with Holy
7:30 p.m. Couples club treasure hunt.
approval.
The
congregation
then
Communion.
Church
school
for
children
SUNDAY,
June 4
three years old thru 7th grade; eighth grad- will
proceed to the new
church
9:30 and 10:55 a.m. Services of Divine
ers to attend worshin service. Cry room
worship.
Dedication
of Ten Talents
and
site near the new high school in
facilities available during this service.
recognition of Acolytes.
10:45 a.m. Family worship service with the
Scatterwood
subdivision
of
9:30
am.
Church
school
classes
for
chilfor
Holy Communion. Church school
nursery (2 yr. old) through 6th grade and
Wyatt and Coons.
dren three years old thru 7th grade: eighth
adults.
graders
to attend
worshin
service.
Bus
LeRoy
Berning,
Lake
Forest,
10:55
a.m.
Church
school
ciasses
for transportation is provided for this service
nursery (2 yr. old) through high school,
of the
church
council
only. Please contact the church office for president
MONDAY,
June 5
schedule.
will preside at the congregational
6:30 p.m. Men’s softball.
MONDAY,
June 5
meeting and then turn the ground
TUESDAY, June 6
vs. Bethlehem
6:30
n.m.
Softball—Zion
1 p.m. W.S.W.S.
at the home
of Mrs.
breaking ceremonies over to Richat Woodland Park sonth
George Lee, 850 Forest Ave.
7:30 p.m. Deerfield Pioneers 4-H_ Agriard Evans, Deerfield, chairman of
7:30 p.m. Council of administration.
cultural group meeting at the church, unWEDNESDAY, June 7
the building
committee.
Officers
der the direction of Ray Schneider.
7:45 p.m. Chancel choir rehearsal.
of the various organizations of the
TUESDAY, June 6
7:30 p.m. Boy Scout troov 150.
COMMUNITY
BAPTIST CHURCH
church
will
participate
in
the
8 p.m. Meeting of the board of adminis1250 Waukegan
Road
ground breaking.
tration.
Rev. Robert Humrickhouse,
Pastor
WEDNESDAY.
June 7
Office Telephone: Windsor 5-0708
They
are:
Mrs,
Paul
Buller,
8 p.m. Adult choir rehearsal.
We Preach Christ
Highland
Park,
president
of the
Crucified, Risen and Coming Again
THURSDAY,
June 8
Women’s Guild, Mrs. Paul Shipley,
8 p.m. Monthly meeting of the A.L.C.W
THURSDAY, June 1
at the church. Program: “June, the month
8 p.m. Advisory committee meeting.
Lake
Forest,
superintendent
of
of Brides,’
mock
wedding
with
all the
SUNDAY, June 4
the church school, Henry Schwen930 a.m. Sunday school classes for all trappings. from bride down to the “Poor
father of the bride.’ Refreshments and so- necker,
ages and nurseries for the young.
Highland Park, chairman
cial hour to follow program. Pastor Berg10:45 a.m. Worship service. Communion
of the plans and construction comgren will give the devotions.
will be observed.
7 p.m. Evening Gospel service.
mittee and Joyce
Sticken,
Deer8:45 p.m. Young Peoples singspiration at TRINITY UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
field, president of the youth felCalvary Baptist church of Evanston.
638 Waukegan
Road
MONDAY, June 5
Rev. Philip A. Desenis, Minister
lowship.
6:30 p.m. Associational meeting at AirParsonage—1139 Fimwond
Ave.
The proposed new church will
port Baptist church. Each family is to take
Telephone WI
5-5050
a covered dish for the dinner hour. Rev.
include a fellowship hall, educaTHURSDAY.
June
1
Tom Younger, pastor of Emmanuel Baptist
1:30 p.m. Afternoon circle.
tional wing
and
sanctuary.
This
church of Fort Wayne, Ind., will be the
guest speaker, presenting the challenge of FRIDAY, June 2
has been a long awaited day for
8
p.m.
Deacons
meeting.
new churches.
Trinity United Church which was
SATURDAY.
June 3
3:45 p.m. Cherub choir.
organized June, 1959 and has been
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST,
SCIENTIST
SUNDAY,
June 4
meeting
in
the
church
at
638
155 Deerfield Road
10 a.m. Worship.
Waukegan Rd.
10 a.m. Church school for all ages.
SUNDAY—11
a.m. Services.
and
3 p.m.
Congregational
meeting
Church
Children
are cared
for during
It is hoped that the new church
ground breaking.
service.
will be ready
for dedication
by
9:30 a.m.
Sunday School.
MONDAY, June 5
For pupils up to 20 years: of age.
4 p.m. Cherub choir.
next Easter.
WEDNESDAY
EVENING
MEETINGS—
WEDNESDAY,
June 7
8 p.m,
Including testimonies of healing
8 p.m. Sunday school teachers at parthrough Christian Science.
sonage.
All are welcome to attend these services THURSDAY, June 8
and to use the reading room.
For further
8 p.m. Church council.
information call WIndsor
5-1626.
READING
ROOM
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
824 Waukegan Road
3 to 5 p.m. Daily.
Rev.
Bernard
F.
Didier,
Pastor
9 to 9:30 p.m. Wednesdays.
Rev. Hugh Jeffers,
LESSON-SERMON
Minister of Christian Education
the subject of the Lesson-Sermon
to be
All ministers
of the Deerfield
Manse—1218 Walden Lane
heard
at all Christian
Science
churches
area churches and Village officials
Church phone—WI 5-0560
Sunday.
Manse phone—WI 5-0107
Readings from the King James Version of
as well as all who are interested
the Bible will include this verse from RevTHURSDAY, June 1
in
meeting
the
Rev.
and
Mrs.
choir
rehearsal
elation (4): “Thou art worthy, O Lord, to
4:30
p.m.
Westminster
receive glory and honour and power; for (6th, 7th and 8th graders).
Fred H. Conger have been invited
thou hast created all things, and for thy FRIDAY, June 2
attend
a reception
given
by
pleasure they are and were created.”
7:15 p.m. Couples club progressive din- to
One
of the correlative
passages
to be ner.
the
congregation
of
the
Christ
read from “Science and Health with Key
SUNDAY, June 4
Methodist church at the home of
to the Scrivtures’’ by Mary
Baker
Eddy
9, 10 and 11:30 a.m. Morning
worship
states (p. 207): “There is but one primal
and church school. Nursery for children 1, Mr.
and Mrs. C. M. Meldahl, 880
cause.
Therefore
there can be no effect 2 and
3 years. Kindergarten
and classes
from any other cause, and there can be for all other grades through high school. Portwine Rd., Deerfield, from 3 to
no reality in aught which does not vroEighth
grade
Communicants
will be
re- 5 p.m.
on Sunday, June 4.
ceed from this great and only cause.”
ceived by congregation
at 10 and
11:30
Rev.
Conger
will
conduct
his
The
Golden
Text
is from
Psalm
72:
services.
“Blessed be the Lord God,
the God
of
9 a.m. Leadership training classes.
first Sunday service in Deerfield
Israel, who only doeth wondrous things.”
10 a.m. Adult Bible class.
at
11
am.
at
the
Maplewood
MONDAY, June 5
school,
He will also hold Adult
3:30 p.m. Girl Scout troop 11.
ST. GREGORY’S
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
3:30 p.m. Girl Scout troop 127.
Wilmot and Deerfield Roads
Bible class at 9:30 a.m. and will
3:45 p.m. Communicants class.
The Rev. J. D. Parker, Rector
pro- be available for visitation
6:30
p.m.
Women’s
business
and
at the
The Rev. E. G. Wappler, Curate
fessional circle.
The Rev. G. W. Robinson, Assistant
10:30
a.m.
coffee
fellowship.
8 p.m. Adult Bible class.
Rectory Telephonce—WIndsor 5-1881
Mrs.
Harriett Baker
and Miss
8 p.m. Building committee.
Church Telephone—WIndsor 5-1678
TUESDAY,
June 6
Ruth
Marquis
of
the
Women’s
DAILY:
6:30 p.m. Young Women’s business and
9 am. and 5 p.m. Morning and evening
Guild will be in charge of servprofessional circle.
prayer.
8 p.m. Christian education committee.
ing. Mrs. David Elmgren is chairTHURSDAY,
June 1
7:30 p.m. Boy Scout troop 52.
7:30 p.m. Boy Stouts.
man of the refreshment commitWEDNESDAY, June 7
SUNDAY, June 4
9 a.m. Women’s Prayer group.
tee.
Greeters
for the
afternoon
8 am. Holy Communion.
9:30 a.m. Women’s Bible study.
9:30 am.
Holy
Communion
—
church
reception will be Mr. and Mrs.
3:45 p.m. 7th grade communicants class.
and nursery care.
4:45 p.m. 7th grade communicants class.
William
Tallent,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
church
11:15
a.m.
Morning
prayer
7:30 p.m. Tuxis choir rehearsal.
school and nursery care.
Carl Skoglund and Mr. and Mrs.
8 p.m. Chancel choir rehearsal.
2 p.m. Assembly of the Brotherhood of
Carl Kuether.
St.. Andrew.
NORTH
SHORE
MONDAY; June 5
UNITARIAN CHURCH
Afternoon—Girl Scouts.
KINGDOM EVANGELICAL
Rev. Russell R. Bletzer, Minister
TUESDAY, June 6
Woodland Park School
Ferry Hall Chapel
9:30 a.m. St. Anne’s Guild—baby sitter.
Stephen G. Bodony, Pastor
Lake Forest
WEDNESDAY, June 7
Preaching the Gospel of the Kingdom.
For Information Call WI 5-3332
8 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
SUNDAY
SUNDAY
10 a.m.
Sunday School.
10:45 a.m.
Church School.
7 p.m.
Evening Service.
THE NORTHERN SUBURBAN
11
a.m.
Church
Service.
BAPTIST
CHURCH
WASHBURN
(An American Baptist Church)
B’NAI TORAH
CONGREGATIONAL
CHURCH
Oak Lane School, Midway Road
A United
Church
of Christ
Northbrook East
On Route 22 in Half Day
CR 2-4623
Sholom Singer, Rabbi
Lewis Wakeland, Pastor
Rev.
Donald
E. Thurston,
Pastor
SUNDAY:
Religious
School,
Saturday
and
Sunday
SUNDAY
8:30
a.m.
Worship service.
mornings.
10 a.m.
Sunday School for children and
9:30 a.m. Church school and worship.
FRIDAY
adults.
A
nursery
is provided for small children
8:30 p.m.
Sabbath eve services.
11
am.
Worship
Service
for
yourg
during the 9:30 a.m. service. Telephone WI
Hebrew
School,
Wednesday
afternoon.
people and
adults.
Extended
session for
§-4179 for additional information.
For information call WlIndsor 5-5466.
children.

for

a pot-luck

12:45

buffet

luncheon

at

p.m.

.

The program, ‘Convention Echoes” will be a report of the annua

WSWS

convention

in Kankakee,

May

which
9-11.

was held
Mrs,

Mar-

rion Steige, Jr., will present the
report in conjunction with Mrs.
Veon Zeck, local delegates to the
convention.

4

Mrs. Gene Kupt will present de‘

votions

for

the

group.

“The Service Bank Of Highland Park”

=

SAVINGS MEAN SECURITY
AND YOU GET MORE Q%

BANKSY

HIGHLAND

1771 Second St.

BANK—POST OFFICE BLDG.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Member
Page

H

24—D

8

PARK
IDiewood 2-7800
Thursday,

June

1,

1961
Sh

‘aang ty

ye tig

wee

�is ace

GN

ca

Pee
ae

RES

ERS

OME

ee
OE

e

AR OPER

pecan i
ia

ACE

ye

ee

tl

pee

ommon Froblents |
Of Teaching English
Aired At Meeting
Wednesday,

May

17,

French &gt; German

to

Whitney

and

INTENSIVE COURSES: 10 hours per week
REGULAR COURSES: 2 or 4 hours per week
Private lessons or small group.
Special classes for children.
Open 9:30-9:30. Free introductory lesson

Paine.

Elementary

and

SCHOOL

to

and

Ralph Nash, right, president of the Deerfield-Northbrook
Rotary club, presents films to Charles A. Page, council leadership training chairman of the North Shore Area council of
Boy Scouts of America. The community service committee
of the Rotary club has helped the council to purchase the
1960-61 National Council visual aid package plan, which is
available to boy scout units in the area.

Secondary

Teaching

Audio-Visual

Aids

English.

Toni

stock

council, an organization of school
administrators,
The
purpose
of
such a meeting is to increase the
degree of articulation between the
grade and high schools and to seek

solution

through
tion. At

be

problems

discussion
and
cooperaa later date meetings will

held

other

of common

for

areas

all
of

teachers

in

the

instruction.

Osterman In Toledo
For Product Seminar
Joseph T. Osterman of Deerfield
and central regional sales manager
of The Electric Autolite Company,
will

be

attend

in

Toledo

special

this

week

product

to

seminars

being conducted at the company’s
engineering center.
Latest technological strides incorporated
in company
electrical
products will be described by research and development engineers.
New
design
alterators,
starting
motors
and
generators
are
in-

Smale

and

respectively

equipment

field

Peggy

Mund-

received

first

Other stories and poems which
were selected for publication were:
“Messieur Arbre’ (Mr. Tree) by
Anita
Briggs;
‘“‘L’Histoire
d’un

Ours” (Story
colm Branch;

of a Bear) by Mal‘Place’ a poem by

W.

has

Evanston,

1405

elected

NORTH

Valley

vice

dent of the Dads’ Association of
Denison
university
at its recent
spring meeting in Granville, O.

THIS

Awaits

You

BEAUTIFUL
Very

Green

Bay

Rd.

&amp;

: y
if

SERVICE

Jules

L.

Furth,

and

their

staff,

will

|

personally arrange and conduct the
entire funeral—a service of warmth
and beauty, observing
ritual with reverence.

customs

South Shore Chapel: 2100 East 75th Street, at Clyde Avenue
Peter
Miller;
‘Juillet
a Paris”
(July in Paris) by Henry Johnson;
“Le
Meilleur Ami
d’un Garcon”
(A Boy’s Best Friend)
by Linda
Prouty;
“Quand
le
Printemps
Vient
a’ma
Fourmiliere”
(When
Spring Comes to My Anthill) by
Susan Holliday.

|
1

Memorial Chapels

i=

The
selections which
appeared
in the booklet were selected by
a student committee of four and
the teacher
Miss
Jenis
Stevens.

* Most Complete Funeral Home
in Metropolitan Area

e Perfect accommodations

The
ners

¢ Convenient to North

¢ Parking adjacent to building

I

first
were

and second
selected by

prize winthe French

If You

Have

GARDEN

for

small or large attendance

Shore

and Downtown Chicago

classes,

Reasonable

18th

COMPANY|)

Complete facilities in your community
for prompt service .. . Lee J i a

3-5400

a

own

consultation

home

SUBURBAN
Surprise

SHORE

Call Midway

Northshore Garden of Memories
A

Davis St.

Beecceecooece Severs eseesseneoeseve

AND

presi-

His
daughter,
Dorinda,
is
member of the junior class.

518

GReenleaf 5-4341

Funaral Directors to the
Jewish Community Since 1865

President

Bolton,

been

|

Ave.

FRanklin 2-4341

LANGUAGES

; ape

¢ Funeral

repre-

sentatives participating in the sessions which includes application
specifics for each of the markets
served by the company’s electrical

Vice

George

Rd.,

and second prizes for their contributions to a booklet which contained the best writing done by
the two French I classes at ElaVernon
High
school.
‘‘Messieur
Winkey
et
ses
Pendules’”
(Mr.
Winkey and His Clocks) was Toni’s
original story, while
Peggy
contributed “‘Seulement une Histoire”
(Only a Story).
These two people
will
receive
a free
subscription
to the French student newspaper,
“La
Jeunesse”
(Youth).

cluded in the special study.
Osterman will be one of thirty
original

Elected

Announce Winners
Of Creative Work
in French Lit.

This meeting, the first of its
kind, was sponsored by the newlyformed
Ela-Vernon
Educators’

the

OF

207 N. Michigan

TOSCHALOTSSSOKOSHASSESTHESOHESLESESOEHSSELESESESE

Schools;
Reading
Training
and
Remedial Reading; Classroom Use
of Literature Anthologies; Libraries and Outside Reading; Teaching Poetry; Creating Learning Attitudes;
Composition;
Sentence
Structure.
and
Sentence
Errors;
Spelling,
Punctuation
and
other

Mechanics;

Air
‘Conditioned
Classrooms

herlitz

After an introduction and welcome by Mrs. Catherine Lippincott
and Swen Saari of the high school
English department, the teachers
met in small groups for informal
discussions on many areas of the
English curriculum. Among those
topics for discussion were: Aims
and Goals of Teaching English in

the

LANGUAGE

eye

Lake,

ANY

Take advantage of our special intensive
Summer Courses.
Spend 2 hours daily
with us from June 26 to September 2—
and speak a new language this Fall!

enh

on

discuss
common
problems
in
teaching
English.
Invitations
to
the
meeting,
held
at the
high
school,
were
sent
by
the
high
school English teachers to interested teachers from the following
grade
schools:
Aptakisic-Tripp,
Half
Day,
Kildeer,
St.
Francis,
St. John’s, St. Mary’s, St. Matthew’s, Quentins Corners, Diamond

bessesses

met

and
area

cae
—

The
teachers
of
English
reading from the Ela-Vernon

Not

5206

North

arrangements may be made
Shore representative.

PHONE

NUMBER—VErnon

or

1-4740

Visited

CEMETERY

and

with our North

LOngbeach

Broadway,

Chicago

(Just

in your

5-2221

north

of

|

Foster)

Prices

St.

Phone

DE

6-6500

products.

344”

SHUTTERS

THICK—TOP QUALITY PANELS
MOVABLE LOUVERS

WITH

* PRE-SANDED—READY
* AMERICAN MADE

TO

In

STAIN

OR

PAINT

Panel Widths

bottom

96”

no divider
roil

divider rail
in center

6”
yf
6
80S
448
2 Ree
AME
DR
1.62
1.92
BFR
Bae
207:
284.
Bey:
gene
386.
437
4.28 °° © 4.39°«430.
4.62
4.73
4.84
5.18
5.29
5.63
5.74
6.19
653
6.75
6.98
252
Fee
2399
BiG
8.89
9.00
9.45
9.57

8”
1
OE
OSS
2.07
eee
282:
2.
4A
4.50
4.338.
5.07
5.40
5.85
6.87
7.20
ae.
Oh
9.23
9.68

9”
10”
86.
Le)
ORS
EL.
2
ee
2.22
2.37
ee
Bee
287.
82?
832,
Ae
Oa
Oa
484 = S48
408:
§.29:
5.18
5.63
5.63
6.08
6.08
6.53
7.32
7.65
7.54
7.88
Fee
8a
BSE
OS
9.34
9.56
9.79
10.24

i

WESTSIDE

Thursday,

June

1,

|
1961

11°
988
Ee
Bae
3.04
ee
48
eee
CO Ris
CSS)
‘S.74
6.08
6.53
7.09
7.88
8.21
Oe
88
9.90
10.58
Each

MILLWORK

Co.

Panel

Poa
2.10
2.48
2.59
3.15
3.83
4.50
4.

14”

15”

iy li
4.73

mee
5.96

IMPORTED BRASS
SHUTTER HARDWARE

6.30

Set No. 2 (comp. set for

7.09
7.76
8.21
8.66

Set.
4
Set.
6

6.64

9.11

9.68
10.35

2 panels) ........ $1.39
No. 4 (comp.
panels) ........
No. 6 (comp.
panels) .......-

12.40

12.60

set for
$1.49
set for
$1.79

13.40

11.14

13.87

14.03

14.90

15.50°

33.75

Can

Be

of need...

and Sons ine.

16”

De

divider rail
36" from

-Height
12"
16%
208
424°
200.
32°
ee
OOM
r4a”
46".
52"
56"
~ 60”
64”
68”
oo!
Leen.
(80%
J84”

time
Ee Cis
fa
ee eS

WOOD

Trimmed

729 Ridge Rd. —
Estes Ave. &amp; Skokie
ID 2-1283

1”

Width—3”

... complete funeral consultation
and arrangements may
be made in the privacy
of your own home.

3019 West Peterson Road
LOngbeach 1-1890

Height

Highland Park
Hwy. — Gurnee
DE 6-4121

HERSHEY WEINSTEIN, President
LAURIE WEINSTEIN, Funeral Director

Adjacent
parking for
over 200
Cars...
Page

*

H 25—D
&lt;

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THE NEST |
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soil

PREPARED BY MACHINE. Easier to Spread
Growing. Most uniform, perfectly processed

obtainable

. . . at

no

MANURE

Phone
MUTUAL

extra

—

cost.

FERTILIZER

ID

SERVICES

2-0027
OF

HIGHLAND

Recent events in Alabama will be

SADIAUIS TWALAW

MUTUAL SERVICES@

Alabama Events Are
Theme for Sermon

PARK

basis for the sermon text of Rabbi
Robert L, Samuels, assistant rabbi
of North Shore Congregation
Israel Friday
evening,
June
2, at
8:30.
At that time, Rabbi Samuels will
discuss ‘“‘When Thou Sittest Down
... And When Thou Goest on the
Way,” at the Glencoe temple.
Saturday morning at 11 o’clock,
man will assist in the service.

@ MUTUAL SERVICES @
CCHS

HHSOR

EEE

LEASING

eeseesesstees

no down payment
free loaner car
nation-wide service
your choice of a new
car
® we purchase your
present car
© insurance, license, and
taxes
* employ funds more
profitably

IMMEDIATE DELIVERY

NEW

1961

$ 1

19

T-BIRD
fully power

equipped—any

12, 15,

18,

21, 24

month

per mo.

color
programs

alse

PNDDISON
cuts lcringen
4709

Touhy

Ave.,

Lincolnwood,

available

SES

am

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ERESEEEEOD

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YOU’LL BE PLEASED WITH THE
CAREFUL
ATTENTION
YOUR
WORK WILL RECEIVE.
OUR SERVICE FEATURES:

Thorough Preparation
Each surface is given the proper basic work to insure successful painting.
Clean, Careful Workmen

Your furnishings are protected
each step of the way.
Best materials, properly
applied.
We pay more for our paint,
get the best and apply it as
it's supposed to be applied.
Your job will last longer.
Sensible Prices.
Neither the lowest

nor the

highest! You‘ll get a good
job for a fair price.

RY
Mf iDiwd 25544

bloom painting

Ill.

company

Trinity Members

Attending 1961
Bishop's Dinner
Several leaders and members of
Trinity Episcopal church will be attending the third annual Bishop’s
dinner
for _ Episcopal
charities
Thursday evening, June 8, in the
Grand
ballroom
of
the
Palmer
House. The Hon. Hugh D. Scott,
U.S. senator from Pennsylvania and
noted
Episcopal
layman,
will be
speaker.
A capacity attendance of 1,200 is
expected for the $25-a-plate din-

|-

ner befitting the nine church-spon-

Fy

sored social agencies in the Chicago area, according to the Very
Rev. W. S. Van Meter, executive
secretary, Diocesan Department of
Christian Social Relations.
Trinity members who have made
early reservations for the dinner
include the Misses Esther and Helen Bergstrom, Mr. and Mrs. Theo,dore P. Jardine, William O. Heath,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Perrigo,
Fred A. Cuscaden, H. Bowen Stair,
Mrs. Clinton T. Evans, Mrs. Alan
R. Kidd, John Hennessy, Mrs. Edward Goodkind, Mrs. Frank Peers
and Miss Adele Whitfield.

Jan

Barnard

Confirmand

Is

May

21

The name of Jan Barnard, daughter of Mr.
and
Mrs.
Richard
Barnard, 1861 Old Brair Rd., was
inadvertently omitted from the list
of confirmands of Lakeside
Congregation.
Jan
was
confirmed
in
ceremonies
Sunday
evening,
May
Bi
Rabbi
Samuels
will
morning
service
in
Howard
Zenoff,
son

conduct
the
which
Alan
of Mr.
and

Mrs.

will

A.

Mitzvah,

J.

Zenoff,

Cantor

Benjamin

be

Bar

Lands-

Cantor
The

choir

Synagogue

Jordan
of

Cohen

North

Beth

El,

Suburban

directed

Dr.
At

Young

Speaker

Commencement

Dr. William A. Young, minister
of the Highland Park Presbyterian

church,

will be speaker

for Tudor

Hall
School’s
commencement
Thursday, June 8, in Indianapolis,
Ind.

EFFICI ENCY!
that's what you get

QOa2-aA

Q22—-xXoaomnas

PLPaxkm

when we

do your
laundry!

Don’t let laundry become a problem in
your house. Call us and see how promptly
we pick-up, how quickly we deliver your
washables, laundered to perfection by experts.

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GLADER &amp; TAZIOLI
EXCAVATORS

ID 2-3785
Page

H

26—D

10

Serving the North

Phone Today
2226

Green

Bay

by

Arnold Miller, with Cantor Jordan
H. Cohen as soloist, will be featured on “Faith of Our Fathers,”
the weekly religious program aired
on Channel
9, WGN-TV,
at 8:30
a.m. Sunday, June 4.
Several prayers of the Hebrew
liturgy will be sung and there will
be special commentary on their significance and meaning.
Cantor Cohen, who is well known
throughout
the North Shore
and
Chicago area, is a fourth generation cantor in the Cohen family.
His father, Cantor Tevele Cohen is
cantor for the New Israel Congregation, Touhy Ave., West Rogers
Park. Cantor Cohen has been with
Beth
El Synagogue
for the past
eight years.

Shore Over 60 Years

. .. ID 2-4551

Rd., H.P.— AMPLE

FREE

Thursday,

PARKING
June

1,

1961

�Mostly for Women

Engagements

—

Weddings

eae

Cheb

Veins

Deerfield

Town-

Deerfield Center
Sends Invitations
For June Dance
The Deerfield Center of the Infant Welfare
Society of Chicago
this week sent out invitations for
their seventh Annual Formal Dinner Dance which will be held on
June 24 at the Lake Forest Acad-

emy,

1500 Kennedy

All

the

Reid

main

hall,

the

Road.
floor

rooms

verandas

and

of

the

surrounding gardens will be open
for this gala affair,
Cocktails will
be served on the veranda during
the social hour and dinner will be
served
in
the
fountain
room.
George Finelli and his orchestra
will
provide
the
music
for the
party.
Mrs.

Frederick

Brierhill

Road,

Faulkner,

chairman

459

of

the

dinner dance stated that Mrs. Gunnar Sundvahl, 1523 Shawnee Trail,
and
Mrs,
Norman
Bronson,
821

William Aiston, an 8th grade pupil, viewing the “Award
of Excellence” held by his teacher, Sister Josephine at Holy
Cross School, for his landscape drawing in pastels, which
received honorable mention in Class B (without regular art

Kenton

instruction) in the
Women’s clubs.

charge
of decorations.
The table
decorations were displayed at the
last meeting of the Deerfield Center
and
were
unanimously
approved by the members.

His
that

work
of

was

other
of

Robert

Dieterle,

contest

submitted

7th

pupils

state

and

Deerfield
art

by

8th

with
grade

Mrs.

H.

chairman

of

the Deerfield-Woman’s club, to be
judged
in the Tenth
District
of
the Illinois Federation of Women’s
clubs art contest. He placed second
in Class B which entitled
his
landscape drawing to be entered at
state level.
The award was presented to Mrs.
Dieterle
at the recent
IFWC
annual
convention
in
the
Hotel
Sherman, Chicago, by Mrs. Wilfred
Rice, art chairman of the Illinois
Federation of Women’s clubs.
In

interviewing William
Aiston
he said that his art work will be
a hobby
and
that he prefers to
draw landscapes. He hopes to attend
East
Troy
high
school,
a
Catholic
boarding
school in East
Troy ,Wis. 30 miles west of Milwaukee, when he graduates from Holy
Cross.

Thorngate Country
Club Season Opened
With Pep Breakfast
Thorngate
Country club women
golfers
opened
their golf season
with a pep breakfast on May 10 at
the club. The opening event was a
blind bogey won by Mrs. Robert
Marek
of Northbrook.
Mrs.
Carl
Novorska and Mrs. J. A. Mack, both
of Glenview,
and Mrs. John Belmont of Highland Park also were
winners.
Presiding
at the
meeting
was
Mrs. Thomas
Heffner, Northfield, |
chairman.
Other members
of the
golf committee are Mrs. Jack Baldwin
and
Mrs.
Nicholas
Teister,
Northbrook; Mrs. Byron Christman,
Park Ridge; Mrs. Wallace Young,
Mrs. Charles Baker, Mrs. Richard
Hooker, and Mrs. L. J. Maiorano of
Deerfield; Mrs. John Weare, Kenilworth; Mrs. J. M. Cullum, Evanston: Mrs. Lee Flynn, Des Plaines;
Mrs. Hurman
Schubert
and Mrs.

Carl

Schreep,

Wilmette;

Virginia

Wenger,
Skokie;
Mrs.
John
Belmont Highland Park; Mrs. Joseph
Cleary, Mrs. Thomas Sides, Glenview; and Mrs. Charles McGauran
of Northfield.
Thursday,

June

1,

1961

of

the

Illinois

Federation

of

Junior Auxiliaries
Aid Sales For Trio

To Benefit Society
The Junior auxiliaries of Chicago
Child Care society are getting practical training as future board members as they work with the senior
boards on the 1961 benefit featuring
the
Kingston
Trio.
The
big
night is to be June 2, and the scene,
the
large
theatre
at McCormick
Place.
The Bernadine club is the North
Shore junior auxiliary of the society and Nancy Schiller, Carol Askew,
Meg
Thullen,
Cindy
Craig,
Ginnie Moseley and Georgia Caldwell of the North Shore suburbs are
selling tickets in their school and
their neighborhood to their friends
who are fans of the Kingston Trio.
As a reward to these younger
members, Mrs. Richard H. Johnson
benefit chairman, says the trio will
be asked to dedicate one of their
numbers
to these junior
groups.
The young people look forward to
this, but really hope they will have
an opportunity to meet the trio at
|some time during the evening.
Tickets for the benefit
are on
sale through the offices of Chicago
Child Care Society or at McCormick Place box office.
The senior board members
are
also busy interesting their friends
in an evening with the Kingston
Trio. In Deerfield, Mrs. Reid A. Olson and Mrs. Percy Wilson have
tickets available, or can give information as to where the tickets
are available locally.

League Holds Gala
Dance In Chicago
Culminating
a season
of
hard
work
and fund
raising, members
of the North Suburban League of
the Jewish Children’s bureau celebrated at the Sarah Siddons Walk
of the Ambassador East Hotel. The
gala dinner dance, with its regal
decorations,
Was
appropriately
titled the “Embassy Ball.” Enjoying the evening are Mr. and Mrs.
Arnold
Cohn,
1425 Central,
and
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Berman, 130
Charing Cr.

Road,

are in charge

of in-

vitations; and Mrs. Bernard Smith,
1329
Oxford,
and
Mrs. - Robert

Ramsay

Mrs.

of

Ramsay

DeWitt

Road

Cregier,

are

in

Station

Chairman,
announced
that
the
volunteer
work
at the Armitage
Welfare Station was done in April
by Mrs.
Bruce
Brown
and
Mrs.
Howard
Hudson
and in May
by
Mrs.
Norman
Bronson
and
Mrs.
Warren
Coray.
This
necessary
work goes on in addition to any
special
projects
the
Center
undertakes,
The Deerfield Center extended
a vote
of thanks
to Mrs.
Paul
Brown,
Miss
Carol Bronson
and
Mrs. Jack Bakeman, of Ford Phar-

macy,

for their help

a window display
“Baby Week.’

in setting up

commemorating

Schedule Bus
For Kingston Trio
The Kingston Trio bus will leave
from
Deerfield
Village
Hall
on
Friday, June 2, at 7 p.m. Anyone
desiring
transportation
to
and
from McCormick Place have been
asked
to leave
name
and phone
number
at the Deerfield
Record
Shop. The Bannockburn-Deerfield
Trio fans are chaperoned by Mr.
and Mrs. George K. Ergang. Ergang who is principal of the Bannockburn
school has for quite a
few years encouraged
the junior
auxiliary—the
Bernardine
club.
The original members
are sophomores
at
the
Deerfield
High
school and are still actively participating in the Society’s Day Nur-

sery

school

Christmas

parties

and

helping with benefits. The president
of the
Bernardine
club
at
Bannockburn school is Miss Nancy
Schiller who is handling all bus
arrangements.
She and Joan Enures
have
been
most
active
it
ticket sales.

Kilted Clansmen Add
Glitter To Planning
Luncheon In Chicago
Kilted
clansmen
attended
the
Junior Friends of Orphans planning
luncheon at the Pump Room to announce the annual benefit—a cocktail dinner dance to be held Oct.

Richard

Longtin,

library

board,

ship

treasurer of the West

presents

“Little Men,”

by

Louisa

May

Alcott to Cheryl Neumeyer, 711 Byron Ct. Cheryl was the winner of the recent library drive held during National Library

week and sponsored by the American Association of University Women.

Looking on at the presentation is Mrs. Richard R.

Smith,

chairman

drive.

Cheryl is a fifth grader at the Kipling school.

of

13:,th

the

A.A.U.W.

Sy

library

RES

committee

eae

for

the

8

LORI AREN DEMAIN, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Sheridan Demain,
1319 Charing Cross Rd., was born
May 2 at Mount Sinai hospital in
Chicago.
Maternal
grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Max Weinstein,
Chicago; paternal
grandmother
is
Mrs. Dora Demain, New York City.

hospital.
Nancy,
8, is the other
child in the family. Mr. and Mrs.
Daniel J. Flanagan, Palo Alto, Cal.,
are the paternal grandparents and
Mrs.
Anna
B.
Helwick,
Shaker
Heights, O., is the maternal grandmother.

JENNIFER
WARTON, who was
born
April
18,
in Chicago,
has
come to make her home with Mr.
and
Mrs.
John
H. Warton,
1455
Stratford Rd. She has two brothers, John, Jr., 16, and Jeffery, 3.
Maternal grandfather is Reginald
G. Hammond, Evanston, and maternal great grandmother is Mrs. W.
A. Harbach, also of Evanston. Mrs,
Hearth
Warton,
Chicago,
is paternal grandmother.

ter

BARBARA ANN BESKIN, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jules Beskin,
713 Pine St., was born May 16 at
Wesley
Memorial
hospital.
Other
children in the family are Marilyn,
6, and
Karen,
4. Mr.
and
Mrs.
William S. Margolis, Chicago, are
the maternal grandparents. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Salvat, Chicago.
JOHN HOWARD
KIRST, son of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Howard
M. Kirst,
1100 Fair Oaks, was born May 5
at Highland Park hospital. Other
children in the family are Mary
Ellen, 11; Kathryn, 7; Barbara, 5;
and
Nancy,
3.
Paternal
grandmother is Mrs, Mildred Kirst, Fargo, N.D., and maternal grandfather

LYDIA
of

ROSE

Mr.

KIEBZAK,

and

Mrs,

daugh-

Walter

Kieb-

zak, 452 Longfellow, was born May
10 at Highland Park hospital. Other children in the family are Gary
Matthew,
13; Thomas
George,
9;
and Kim
Carol, 2. Mr. and Mrs.

Stanley

Kiebzak

of Detroit,

Mich.,

are the paternal grandparents and
Mrs. Rose Tokarsky,
also of Detroit, is the maternal grandmother.
JOHN
DOUGLAS
GRANT,
son
of Mr. and Mrs, Robert C. Grant,
1982
Rose
Terr., was
born
May
11 at Highland Park hospital. Other children in the family are Roberta Lynn,
9; and Richard
Edward,
8.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Luther
Cabbage, Lynnville, Ind., are the
maternal
grandparents
and
the
paternal grandparents
are Mr. and
Mrs.Onis
Grant,
Oakland
City,
Ind,

MAUREEN

PATRICIA

BURNS,

daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Burns, 1328 Oxford, was born May

12 at Highland
er

children

Kathleen,

Park
in

7;

hospital. Oth-

the

family

Michael,

6;

are

Mary

Ellen,
5; and
John,
2. Mr.
and
Mrs.
John
Conlin,
Chicago,
are
the maternal grandparents and Mr.
and Mrs. Michael J. Burns, Cicero,
is Albert Strand, Allendale, N.D.
are the paternal grandparents.
CRAIG
PEET,
son of Mr. and
EMILY
ANN
GALE,
daughter
Mrs.
Robert
Peet, 860 Appletree
of Mr.
and
Mrs.
Roy
E,. Gale,
Ln., was born May 7 at Highland
1629 Village Green, was born May
Park
hospital.
Scott,
20 months,
12 at Highland Park hospital. Jane
is the other child in the family.
Allison,
3, is the other child in
Paternal grandparents are Mr. and
the family. Mrs. Pearl Greenswag,
Mrs, Harold Peet of Deerfield.
is the
maternal
grandDANIEL
J.
FLANAGAN,
III, | Chicago.
son
of Mr.
and
Mrs.
Daniel
J. mother.
SUSAN
MELINDA
JENNETT,
Flanagan, Jr., 1503 Woodland Dr.,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
was born May 9 at Highland Park
Jennett,
1050
Linden,
was
born
May
20
at Highland
Park
hospital. Other children in the fam7 at the Saddle and Cycle club.
12, and
Steven,
Proceeds from the benefit will ily are Jeffrey,
William
Mooney
is the
paaid Lawrence Hall, Central Baptist 10.
Home, Illinois Lutheran Home, and ternal grandfather and Mrs. Vera
the Lydia Home, all orphanages for Jennett of Deerfield is the matergirls and boys.
nal grandmother.
Page

H

3—D

11

�4-H Groups Hold

Four Teams Head
Men's Softball

Achievement Night
Friday At Zion

League Play Here
After two league games, Longtin’s,
Bethlehem,
Redeemer
and
Zion remain unbeaten in:‘the Men’s
Softball league sponsored by the

Deerfield

Park

district

department.
Bethlehem placed
and will meet their

Monday’s

recreation

more
eee
are

0-2

0-2

games

in

the

Monday

throughout

ules may

men’s
parks.

be obtained

trict office.
The Children’s

league

evenings

the

at

7

at Park Dis-

summer

program

Fridays. In addition, a new program will complement it for boys
and girls from 10 to 16 years. De-

tailed

information

on

these

grams will be included
issue of the REVIEW.

in

a

prolater

Kleinschmidt Gets
Air Force Contract
Kleinschmidt

Laboratories,

Inc.,

The contract is for
kits to teletypewriter
mit the selection of
crypted or standard
of teletype messages
by the airways, air
tions service.

modification
sets to pereither entransmission
to be used
communica-

Administration
will be handled

of
by

the
the

air

district

contract
Chicago

office.

Picnic

plans

were

the

topic

of

discussion when these fathers banned together to work

Garden

Club To

Accept Donations
Of Flowers Here
week

from

now

until fall

‘the Garden club of Deerfield will
accept donations of flowers to be
sent to hospitals, sanitariums, children’s and old people’s homes.
Until further notice, the flowers
should be taken to the homes of
either Mrs. James Kraft, 940 Cedar
St. or Mrs. Robert David, 932 Rosemary.
Those who wish to give their cut
flowers to bring cheer to shut-ins
are asked to deliver the bouquets
on Wednesday so that Mrs. Kraft
and Mrs. David can properly prepare them for shipment to the Chicago Plant, Flower and Fruit Guild
for distribution.
There will be pails of water at
the residences to receive flowers.
Donations will be appreciated.

Dr.
director

Home

Eco-

Lyman

J. Smith,

of

Illinois

the

1248
State

ship program.

Dr. Smith

dents of promise.
His program will be conducted
on the undergraduate level to provide scholarships for students who

will enter medical school.
Dr. Smith, who came from

San

Francisco where he was a member
of the San Francisco State college
faculty in education and pyscholo-

gy,

obtained

his

masters

degree

and his undergraduate degree from
Illinois
State
Normal
university.
He was awarded his doctor of education degree from the University
of Illinois.

loan

program

scholarship

in

addition

to

program.

During the first year of the program, 250 honors students will be
selected. Of these, 50 will be award¢€1,000 per year four year scholarships.
in

Dr. Smith
Deerfield

will continue to
after
accepting

live
the

new post. His offices will be in Chicago. Dr. Smith
jane, have two
and Cheryl, 9.

and his wife, Alicechildren: Greg, 12,

the

back

parking

soon

lot at the Deer-

field Grammar
school (or in the
gym,
in case of rain), providing
as the year’s last P.T.A. event an
infermal, just-for-fun evening for
parents, teachers and children.
Home
baked
cakes
and_
ice
eream
will be served, beginning

at 7 p.m., until 8:30, according to
the co-chairmen, Mrs. Wessley A.

Discussing details of the Maplewood Family Fun Day
which will be held at Maplewood school Saturday, June 3
from 1-6:30 p.m. are committee chairmen for the event.
D. Paneraili, and

Mrs.

From
Harvey

Hayden. Missing from the picture are Mrs. George Young
and Mrs. Nick Leszko. In case of rain, the event will be held
the following week.

For Wheeling Area
open

today that the firm

a

branch

group

of

Zenko

county

and

leaders

10
in

girls

with

charge.

home

adviser

office

in

will

4-H
Camp
and
also

speak on 4-H work. The judging of
the Sewing and Cooking exhibits
will be done by Miss Dora Bean,
and Mrs. Karl Windberg, who have
majored in home ecenomics.
Skits will be presented by each
group. Refreshments
will be
served. The public is invited.
Mrs. Vito Padula is in charge of
all the Home Economics 4-H groups
in Deerfield.

Ray

Francis Carr, of the Carr Realty

Schneider

agricultural

is leader

group

called

of the

Deerfield

Pioneers consisting of 12 boys and
girls.

Wheeling on or about June 1.
The
office will be located
on
the southeast corner at the intersection of Milwaukee and Dundee
Rds. in the center of Wheeling.
Carr stated that Wheeling was a

Elect Church Heads
At Organizational

fast growing community which was

The
organizational
meeting
of
the Congregation church of Deerfield was held in the Jewett Park
fieldhouse on Sunday, May 21. The

in need of a local realtor to service the needs of the families in
the area as well as families moving

Church Meeting

officers

and

members

of the

var-

into the area,
The firm intends to concentrate
|‘
on the buying and selling of homes
in the Wheeling vicinity, but will

elected, and the Rev. John S. Usry
was officially called as minister

also

of

handle

rentals,

home

commercial

and

apartment

leases,

ious

farms

and vacant property.
In order to provide more adequate
service to the community,
Carr is transferring Paul Hamer

boards

and

were

the local congregation.
Worship
services
of the

congregational
ated

of

committees

last

this

church

October,

church

The

have

new

were

initi-

activities

been

under

branch office where
William Edwards.
Hamer is also an

will

join

the direction of a nine member
steering committee until such time
that a congregation could be gath-

attorney

and

church.

lives

Edwards

has

Rev. Usry was asked to serve
in Deerfield by the Illinois conference
of
Congregational
and
Christian churches until such time

of the Deerfield

in

office to the

Deerfield.

he

new

ered and formally constituted

been a member of the Carr Realty
Co. for over ten years and resides
in Northbrook.
The
office will be open from
9 am.
until
5:30
p.m.
Monday

ice Cream Social Set
At Grammar School
An old-fashioned ice cream
cial will be held this evening

1.

Local Realtor Has
New Branch Office

Co., announced

girls

show
movies
of the
SHAW-WAW-NAS-SEE

Carlisle, presently executive
Scholarship commission with

would

a

Louis

Lake

will assume his new duties July

Dr. Smith, who as directed the
state
scholarship
commission
for
three and a half years, will aid in
the formation of a brand new program to help locate medical stu-

10

Pastor Paul Berggren will give
the Invocation, Mrs. Helen Volk,

offices at 730 Waukegan Rd., has accepted the newly created
post of director of the American Medical Association Scholar-

the

12

Hands,

Dr. Lyman Smith Accepts New Post
With American Medical Association

dent

Page H 4—D

eight 4-H

having

Mrs.

In his new position, Dr. Smith
will head up a 12 million dollar stu-

left are: Mrs. John Abbott, Mrs.

p.m.

are

Mrs. Arthur LeFeuvre,
Mrs. Edward Lasek, Mrs. Robert Combs,
and Mrs. David Elmgren; and the
Happy Helping
Homemaking

out details of the Bannockburn school fathers’ club first annual picnic which will be held
Sunday from noon to 6 p.m. at the school. From left, the planners are: Bill Sales, Ray Dau,
Ted Harris, Keith Peter and Bud Grutza.

Every

Lake-Cook
Rd.
has
received
a
$26,400 negotiated Air Force contract it has been
announced
by
Colonel Robert V. Kirkland, director of procurement
and
production,
Rome
Air
materiel
area,
Rome,
N.Y,

procurement

ers

Sched-

(6 to 9 years) will begin June 26,
this year. .It will run Mondays to

7:30

nomics
groups in Deerfield, plus
one agricultural group. The groups
are as follows: Deerfield Darlings
consisting of 8 girls led by Mrs.
Ray Ferguson; Marigolds having 16
girls with Mrs. Matthew Midle and
Mrs. Hans Riess as leaders; Classy
Lassies, a group of 10 girls and
leader, Mrs. Russell Werner; Deerfield Dears, a class of six girls with
Mrs.
Angelo
Sebbens
in charge;
Deerfield
Needlers,
10 girls and
leader Mrs. Charles Walgreen III;
Eight girls in the Just Sew group
led by Mrs. Frank McGovern, and
Mrs. Howard Grossenheider; Cloy-

0-2

REARN SEIS Sec pantr ie ae oe ga

at

There

2-0
2-0
2-0
2-0
1-1
1-1
1-1
4-1-4
Y4-1-14

nN Spare

played

p.m.

Rd.

duel with Longtin.

eG

All

Zion Lutheran church, 10 Deerfield

first last year
runner-ups in

The standings are:
Longtin’s
Bethlehem
I
cs Se
kg
Redeemer
_
ill. Bell —_
Allis-Chalmers
Teen-Agers
Holy Name
Presbyterian
IN

The Home Economics 4-H classes
in Deerfield will hold their annual
achievement night tomorrow, June
2. The program will take place at

through

Saturday

and

until 5:30 on Sundays.
number at the Wheeling

be

LE

from

12

The new
office will

17-2200.

Road And Bridge
Budget On File
A
tentative
road
and
bridge
budget
and
appropriation
ordinance
for West
Deerfield
Town-

Stryker and Mrs. Charles Fahrenholz.
ship went on file Monday at the
Next Thursday, June 8, the out- town hall.
going executive board, headed by
The budget will be the subject
Mrs.
Harry
A.
Henderson,
will
entertain
the
grammar = school
teachers, administrators and staff Greenfield,
1075
Hillcrest
Ave.,
at a tea at the home of Mrs. Paul ‘Highland Park.

the church
choose its

could be organized
minister.

as a

and

The Congregational church of
Deerfield will be received into the
Chicago association of Congregational and Christian churches
fall. At that time the church
choose to become part of the

next
may
Uni-

ted Church of Christ which has
grown out of the union between
the Congregational churches and
the
Evangelical
churches.

and

Reformed

of a public hearing
at 10 am.,
Tuesday, June 20 in the offices at
858
Waukegan
Rd.
Final
action
on the ordinance will be June 27

at 10 am. in the clerk’s office,
according to Percy McLaughlin,
highway

commissioner,

and

Ruth

Vetter, clerk.
Thursday,

June

1,

r

1961

.

�Ratify Five Contracts For Teachers
In Half Day District At Special Meet
Five teachers

contracts

were

approved

at a special meet-

ing of the Half Day board of education, district 103, meeting
May 22. The teachers are: June Whirry, fifth grade; Mary
Lou Avelar, grade one; Carol Petersen, grade two; Daniel
Langan,

grade

six, and

Carol

Bonuso,

speech

Openings

district

Eighth Graders Get
The

eighth

grade

has

many

red

letter days in May. One of the most
important

the

was

May

Community

11, the

club

date

reception

of

for

students, their parents, and ElaVernon teachers. The speakers were

J. Howard Quick, superintendent,
Robert Gaffney, president of Community club, and two members of
the Ela-Vernon high
Mrs.
Mona
Holliday

school staff,
and
Renald

Amend, introduced the members of
the eighth grade class.
Sue Pochyly was announced the
valedictorian and Bruce Carlton the
salutatorian.

“The King’s Pie,” a medieval

comedy, was presented

On May

recently at the South Park school by

17 the class visited Ela-

Vernon high school. They had an
opportunity to observe the classes

the boys and girls of Monald Sindler’s sixth grade class during school hours. The play depicted life in the middle ages involving a king, queen, and lords. The children, pictured above,
made their own costumes, scenery and props.

in session and to have lunch in the
cafeteria.
The Community

club

is sponsor-

ing a luncheon at Rustic Manor
May. 25. This is traditional.

on

Other
interesting
events
were
Beanie Days beginning on May 26
and
Backward
Day
on
June
2.
Beanies in school colors, green and
white, will be worn until the last

day of school.
Promptly at 8 p.m.
ning

of June

bers

of the

on

the

2, the forty-one

Class

their official
school.

of 1961

farewell

evemem-

will bid

to Half

Day

Dennis

Herrmann

Dennis
Herrmann,
son
of Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph N. Herrmann, 1104
Rago
Ave.,
who
is majoring
in
industrial arts at Northern Illinois
university, DeKalb, Il., was awarded a graduate assistantship in the
ocational
rehabilitation
program
at NA.
Dennis, an honor student,
is
active in extra curricular
activities. He is president of the Industrial arts club, president of Epsilon
Pi Tau, an industrial arts honorary
fraternity
and
historian
for
the
Cavaliers, a senior honor fraternity.
He has assisted with “Shoptalk,”
a television program
on Channel
11. He is assistant resident advisor
for West Neptune
hall on the
Lcampus.

ard;
Lee

Pre-School

Mothers’

club

With the exception of presenting
the county library with a similar
check, this brings to a close the

tenth

season

of

meetings

for

Pre-School Mother’s club.
The purpose
of the club

the
is

to

Marine Pfc. Stephen B. Cole, son
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Cole of 1224

edge of our pre-schoolers.
Last
year’s speakers included John Suter, Deerfield’s piano pedagogue;
Mrs. Alice Rose Barman, North
Shore Mental Health Assn.; Mrs.

the coast of California.
Scheduled from May 8 to June
8, this phase of the exercise in-

and Marine

corps un-

dersea,
surface,
air
and
ground
forces, supported by minesweepers
ef the Royal Canadian Navy.
Highlight of the operation will

be a large

scale

amphibious

land-

ing by the First Marine Division
in the Camp Pendleton, Calif., area.
The landing force will be supported

by an amphibious
aircraft.

task

force

and

Moves Office
Dr.

Michael

has announced
Thursday,

Baran,

optometrist,

that his office has |

June

1,

1961

a check

for $100

to

Crisp;

Dar-

Doris

Zenko,

director

of Peter Pan

playschool; Dr. S. Kamin, Deerfield
pediatrician;
Dr.
Alvin
Altman,
pedonist from Highland Park; Mrs.
Martha Winch, director of family
service and Miss Isabelle Anerson,
speech correctionist.
In addition was the largest and
most successful fashion show, Buds
and Blossoms, of the club’s career.
The proceeds from the show are
being used to buy books that will
be reached by the greatest number
of children. And so it is that the
schools and the Deerfield Library
will be the benefactors. of the hard
moved from 762 Waukegan Rd. to
Deerfield Commons shopping center.

work
the

done

by

all the members

of the

excellence

of its

the community
each year. Most
meetings average 40 or more in attendance,
“There is always room for more,”
says Mrs. James Ferch, outgoing
president.
“There
is no limit to
what we need to know about our
pre-schoolers
and of course,
the
first five years are the most important. So the more mothers that

can
the

take

advantage

of

our

club,

better.”

Meetings

will

begin

again

in

September and will be held in Kipling school.

To Apprentice
Bill Ollendorf Jr., will apprentice at the Red Barn Theater in
Saugatuck, Mich., this summer. It
is his third summer of stock. Ollendorf has just finished designing:
sets for the stagers past show. He
has aided in numerous other Stager
shows.

and

fourth

school, which would be expandable.
An estimate of $8 to $10,000 for
sewer and water assessment was
made. The Board authorized
for a topographical survey.
Pass

$300

Resolution

A resolution was passed instructing the superintendent to confirm
in writing all acts of the architect.
Bus costs were presented in a
report by Supt. J. Howard Quick
showing actual and related costs of
$17,633. A proposed leasing plan
was presented and discussed. Safety and better service with economy
of operation was_set up as an objective. The effect of another plan
on
maintenance
costs
was
also

studied.

The

board

superintendent
to
lease presentations
a future meeting.

requested

the

ask for other
to be ready for

The
superintendent
announced
that an educatable mentally handicapped

teacher

had

been

hired

for

this area. The room would be lIocated in the Kildeer school. Chilare eligible would be able

to particpate in this program.

This

is part of the special education
trict of Lake county.

dis-

St. Joseph Parish

Women’s Club Has
Annual Meeting
At the May meeting of the Catholic Women’s
club of St. Joseph

the Worker

parish

a slate for the

Michael

president is Mrs. Henry Meindl.
Mrs. Bernard Sharkey has been

Mudaro;

Thomas

Nelson;

Petersen; Susan Poehyly;
Poplawski; Linda Raasch;
Linda

Rectenwald;

elected vice-president; Mrs. Nicholas DiGioia,
secretary;
and Mrs.

Frank O’Neill, treasurer.

Warner;

Robert

Westfall;

and

Ruth Wilkins.

speakers and lively interest in the
group taken by its members, the
club ‘continues to draw an increasing number of young women from

fifth

the

sci-

1961-62 officers was voted upon.
Replacing Mrs. Robert Schultz as:

rick

club.

Because

math;

in

grade

He listed the educational requirements
for
a K-5,
10
classroom

Wayne Sheppard; Eric Speidel;
James Taylor; Holly Ulrey; Dar-

of

seventh

Jeffrey McCulloch; Betty MeElroy.
Ralph Milliken; Barbara Moran;

Carol Rajamski;
Rick Ross.

club’s annual style show.
Presenting the check was Mrs.
Robert Roesch, right. Chairman of the show, Mrs. James Steward, center, looks on as Mrs. Emil Cederborg, librarian for
the school, accepts the check.

as a guest speaker each month and
thus broaden our views and knowl]-

Norman
Ln., is serving with the
staff of commander, Cruiser division one participating in phase III
bf the “Exercise Green Light” off

presented

ey for use in the revolving school library was raised at the

Stephen Cole Serves
Aboard Navy Carrier

Navy

Ronald

Cynthia Junius: James Kacer;
Loeschen;
Donald
Lynford;

Marcia
Jerome

the Deerfield Grammar school for use in the district 109 library in appreciation of the use of school facilities. The mon-

bring a noted authority on children

volves

Cook;

lene Dormeyer;
Richard Figura;
Gale Fischer.
William
Foote; Heather Frederick; Darlene Gaffney; Suzenne
Gleason; Pamela Hough; Jack How-

remaining

the

Curtis E. Meland of M. K. Young
Associates submitted a drawing for
the proposed school planned in the
Lincolnshire area.

dren who

The graduates are:
John Alveshire; William Blair;
Sue-Ellen
Boltz;
Bruce
Carlton;
Keith
Cloyd;
Kandy
Coleman;
Thomas

are

ence and
grades.

Diplomas Tomorrow

correctionist.

still

Local Girl To Attend
School In Austria

in

Vienna,
is the

Mr.

Eugene

Mrs.

this

daughter
C.

of

Becker,

2715 Daiquiri.
The summer students will sail
from New York on the M.S. Aurelia on June 9 and will return by
air from
Brussels,
Belgium
on
September 2, according to Dr, Paul
Fried, director of the program.
After arrival in France on June
17, the group will begin a study
tour through
France,
Germany,
Switzerland, Italy and Austria, The
trip will include visits to Paris,
Bonn,
Berlin,
Venice,

Installation of these officers will
take place on Sunday, June 4 at an
installation breakfast. to be held

dent of the northwest district of
the Archdiocesan Council of Catholic Women, will be the installing
officer.

Women
the

summer,
Miss Becker
and

Austria

Zurich,

Milan

and

While in Berlin, the group will
tour both East and West sectors,
visit a refugee camp and attend a
reception in the America
of the Free University.

Sunday

at St. Joseph the Worker parish
hall following the 8 a.m. Mass.
Mrs. Raymond
Humbert,
presi-

Miss Bonnie Jean Becker, a junior at Indiana unversity, will be
among the 51 students attending
the Hope college Vienna summer

school

Installation

Institute

On July 10, the students will
begin their six-week stay in Vien.
na where they will live in private
homes with Austrian families.

appointed

officers

ing year

to serve

on the board

are:

Mrs.

with

this com-

Charles

Walsh,

chairman of the civic committee;
Mrs. Leonard Kunowski, decency;

Mrs.
Mrs.

E.

Russell

Edward

Hedrick,

D’Argo,

library;

medical

mis-

sions; Mrs. Kenneth Carlson, Our
Lady’s
volunteers;
Mrs.
Eugene
Fogleman, St. Vincent; Mrs. Wallace Stryszyk, program; Mrs. Fred
Vaisvil, publicity; Mrs. George Pas-

solt, social; Mrs, Edwin Majkowski,
spiritual

development;

Mrs.

Ben-

jamin Yellen, ways and means; and
Mrs. Robert Benson, yearbook.

Awarded

Contract

An
army
signal corps contract
for $17,000 has been awarded to
Smith-Corona
Marchant,
(Kleinschmidt Division) Lake Cook Rd.,
for Fieldata paper tape devices, it
was announced May 2 by the Fort
Monmouth procurement office, U.S.
Army signal supply agency.
Page

H

5—D

13

�B‘nai Torah Lists

SL L, COMPANY

Four Major Events
A busy weekend is in store
B’nai Torah temple members.

Another colorful natural wonder:

night at 8:15, B’nai Torah

The “Mitten, Monument Valley, Utah

school

will

hold

open

for
To-

Hebrew

house

for

parents at the temple, 2789 Oak St.
Rabbi
Sholom
Singer,
spiritual
leader;
Robert
Cohen,
principal;
and the teachers will discuss plans

for the coming year. On the agenda
will be curriculum, texts and methods in use in the classes. Refreshments will follow.
Award

The WorLDS
LiGhTeST

_ SPOFT COar

Rabbi

Singer

Religious

school

Service
will

Donor

the

to-

Dinner

Dance

The temple’s annual donor dinner dance will be held on Saturday
at 7 p.m., at Le Pavillon Restaurant. Seymour Goldgehn is chairman of the event.
|

Sunday

- SPORTSWEAR ».

service

morrow evening at the temple at
7:30. Awards will be presented for
high scholastic achievements
and
perfect
attendance,
A _ fellowship
hour will follow.

Closing

Don’t envy Hsi:S.,.wear them ©

conduct

award

Day

morning,

June

4,

chil.

dren of the Religious school, kindergarten through grade nine, will
participate in a closing day pro-

gram.
The

.
classes will present

a series

of short sketches dealing with the
Jewish
Holy
Days
through
the
year. Each class has chosen one of

Play

it cool

in a natural-

look Odd Jacket by HeleS.
The
lightest sport coat
ever made, it’s almost supernatural how such slimcut lines can generate so

much high-powered fashion. Slightly cut-away
three-button

front;

shoul-

ders entirely your own;
flapped pockets;
center

vent. Striking

new pat-

terns in interesting colors.

Get yours—today!

$2795

as

advertised

the holidays to present in a dramatic form. Parents and guests are invited to attend the program which
will
take
place
on
the
temple,
grounds beginning at 11 a.m.
NOTICE
OF
PUBLIC
HEARING
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
that a
Tentative Budget and Appropriation Ordinance
for Road
and Bridge Purposes
of
West
Deerfield,
in the County
of Lake,
State of Illinois, for the fiscal year beginning April
1, 1961, and ending
March
31, 1962, will be on file and conveniently
available to public inspection at Town Hall,
858 Waukegan
Rd. from and after 9 0’.
clock A.M., Monday, May 29, 1961.
Notice
is further
hereby
given
that
a
public hearing on said Budget and Appros
priation Ordinance will be held at 10 o’clock A.M.,
Tuesday,
June
20,
1961,
at
Town
Clerk’s Office, 858 Waukegan
Rd.,
Deerfield in this West Deerfield Township,
and
that final
action
on this Ordinance
will be taken
by the Highway
Commissioner at a meeting to be held at Town
Clerk’s. Office at 10 o’clock A.M., Tuesday,
June 27, 1961.
PERCY
McLAUGHLIN,
Highway Commissioner
RUTH
E. VETTER;
Clerk
6/1/61—142

in

PLAYBOY

Use
OPEN

Our

Formal

THURSDAY

‘TIL

Rental

0
HIGHLAND

Service

9 — MONDAY

EVE.

589 Central
“

7-9

WINNETKA
847 Elm
°

;
PARK: STORE
*

ID 2-8550

®
STORE
HI 6-5141
Qa

595 CENTRAL

AVE.

ID 2-5300
Also Winnetka

Page H 6—D

14

HIGHLAND

PARK

and Glencoe
Thursday,

June

1,

1961

�Plan 1c Discuss

HPHS Frosh Picnic
Planned for June 3

Grouping Policy

The

At Northwood PTA
The

final

meeting

of

the

derground
courts.

will

explain

at
the

Northwood,
grouping

presently followed
trict 111.

in

in

Dis-

Waller,

principal

at Oak

errace

School,

will

Meyers

presenting

the

join

grouping

infor-

mation. The method
of grouping
next year’s eighth graders will be
presented and compared with the
grouping
for
acceleration
which
will take place in grade six. Along

with

curriculum

groups

and

and

the

tennis

The

Miss

Regina

Beckmire,

er, Richard Ault,
ucation teacher.

in each

boys’

physical

at

the

recital

Music

Center

stu-

27.

Theory

stu-

May

The
study
taken
Music

ed-

students, in addition to the
of their
instrument,
have
the course in Materials of
1, 2, or Advanced.

for

dried

home-owners

lumber

for

OPEN

A.M.

THURSDAY

- 5:30
&amp;

Park

and

SABOLD

ver

|

|

FOR

TIMBERS
P.M.

Sun.,

FRIDAY

Wedding

BRIDE

OR

ae

|

1 0%

i

|

x

TO

40%

*

9-1

last

|

|

*

*

a
Be

Sounds like great fun... and

EVENING.

_

ae

combination, reg. $89.50

something to attend this Saturday.

hourly

skits

of entertainment

sale

of

$9

95

$67.50

“|

Gl'with mite, corset, $33.95 |

e

’|

case

.

booths

rings

dreds

of

lar

Skyway

|! f+!

Atlantic

»

|

the

from

and
very

hun-—
popu-

$3.25.

‘

It sounds

=

like one

of the greatest

prom nites of all time for the High

ALL SPECIAL PRICED

. ,

Nationally

off

|

School

crowd

OFF

Grant gift certificate always makes
ideal gift.

this

great
prom
prom

“t
of

on

—E

nite.

—

Highland

BRANDON

*

and his ©

|
—

*

display

window

in

ppt

our

Sheridan

. . . Two

beautiful

|

oil paintings by “HAZEL,” talented student of HILDA RUBIN.

[ef
|, f

©

band will be playing for the
and the traditional afterparty at the Moraine Hotel,
*

Road

Saturday

prominent

Parker HENRY

*

Our
ANNE

*

sincerest
LOUISE

JUDSON
“Walking
urday,

others

$6.95

in

3 i

20%

©
—

eR

_........-

Girt CERTIFICATE — A Grant &amp;
an

and

week-

Other Tape Recorders from $89.50

up To

fe

our

*

from

styles

pendants

Still

)

including —a .

time for
plans.

*

e

Scores of Cultered Pearl and Birthstone

SPECIAL SALE ON ALL RECORDS

Wheary

many

specialty featured 17 jewel shockproof watch for Him or Her in a
variety of styles at only $2450. —

&amp;

RECORDS

Hartman

other’

plus

that traditional gift including our

‘

TAPE RECORDERS
atteries and

x

ee

and

This weeks’ Keeping Time Specials at Leeds are planned for the
“sraduate in your near future.”
With over 400 styles in watches for

ol

«|

Ss

nase

G a

ee See

°

LUGGAGE

have

- PHONO

‘
.

$42.50
OTHER

RADIO
We

GROOM

OFF ON ALL
i

a.

*

Anniversary

*

LUGGAGE—SPECIAL

Lee

BRAUN,

celebrated their 30th.

interesting

GRADUATE

JUNE

*

plants just in
end gardening

° © * FOR VACATION PLANS
eee

ERIC

week-end and to MR. and MRS.
MICHAEL BONAMARTE SR. who

types

:

3

*

LIS

*

ID 2-7222

THE

take

proud of Highland
BENNETT, PHYL-

CE 4-0658

FOR

*

so

__

The Girl Scouts Carousel at the : .
park near the Northwestern Station
in
Highwood.
They
have —

252 E. Deerpath, Lake Forest

eee

Highwood

We are all
Parkers REVA

long-run

GRANT &amp; GRANT, Inc.
Highland

the

It’s only for one day
“kids” (of all ages).

planned

708 Central Ave.,

for

Guild.

and

REDWOOD

°¢

STUDS

8:00

—

Park

Community
Center, 2 shows—at
3:30 and again at 8:00 tonite. It will
be a “3-ringer’ Hagen Bros, Cir-

who danced so beautifully at the
Studebaker Theatre in Chicago last —
Saturday
nite
with
the
Ballet"

Representative
Hours:

Baseball

Our warmest congratulations to
MR. and MRS. JAMES PATRICK
HICKEY who celebrated their Sil-

SHEATHING

BOARDS

_

*

economy.
SHELVING

Everybody loves the circus! And
today—It’s here! At the Highwood

cus.
the

LUMBER

materials

Kiln

builders.

with paul leeds

COMPANY

1590 DEERFIELD RD.
HIGHLAND PARK
ID 2-0140

Construction

KEEPING
TIME

dents receiving awards were David
Loft, Jeff. Stevens, Lois «-Zimmerman and Michael Zimmerman. Sue
Gidwitz earned
an award at the
First Level.

LUMBER

NEIL ZABOROWSKI
Day—ON 2-1275
Eve.—ID 2-9328

academic areas. Students in Mrs.
Barbara
Gianassi’s
sixth
grade
accelerated science class will take
part in the program
to demonstrate the value
of grouping
in
academic areas.

dent

of Accomplishment
five Highland Park

CRAFTWOOD

Authorized Sales,
Service and Supplies
Bonded

students

core teach-

ELECTROLUX

of the

Certificates
were awarded

picnic

developments,

there will also be discussion
on
the
developmental
reading
program which is being planned for
grades seven and grade eight.
Meyers will also report on how
the
junior
high
school
staff
is
developing
a curriculum
for the

accelerated

School

Free

will end with school cheers by the
group.
Committee heads are Ralph Koransky, entertainment, and Kay Lehman, food.
Class
officers,
Marty
Becker,
president, Ronald Lev, vice president, Kay Lehman, secretary, Cynthia Miller, treasurer,
and Ellen
Buckman,
social
chairman,
and
other executive board members are
working hard to make the picnic a
success,
Freshman
Class
sponsors
are

he

James

track

chips will be available.

policies

School

High

‘‘Frosh

doesn’t get
for a few

weeks, blame the robins.
Mama robin built her nest on top
of the stepladder in the carport of
Diana’s Beauty Shop, 524 Waukegan Ave., Highwood. Three babies
were found living there just when
the ladder was needed for spring
cleaning.

Each of the 18 freshman sessions
are either erecting booths or putting on skits for the event. Although
students
are
to
bring
lunches to the non-profit
affair,
cokes, ice cream, candy and potato

Russell Meyers, principal of the
school,
will
discuss
the
1961-62
school term plans at this meeting
which should be of particular interest to parents of present 5th,
6th and 7th grade students. After
a brief commentary on the build-

program

Park

picnic,

If Diana Bertacchini
her windows washed

Easy,” will be Saturday, June 3,
from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. on the un-

year

of
the
Northwood
Junior
High
School PTA will be held on Tuesday,
June
6 at the
Northwood
School starting at 8:00 p.m.

ing

Highland

Freshman

Receive Music Awards

: Birds Take ‘Ladder

*

good wishes tor a
STEVENS
and

MARTIN
down

a

ae

who

the

aisle’

*

+

will

be: a

this Sat—
&gt;

WGnhs
a é

.

Friday is a perfect nite for the
whole family to shop... And
Leeds
——

Jewelers

have

joined

their

neighbors who stay open on Friday
nite for your convenience. During
the seasonal graduation rush we
will also remain open on Thurs-

—-

day nite.

~ GRANT ry GRANT
252

CE 4-0658
Thursday,
aE

i

June

1,

1961

708

E. Deerpath,
Central,

Lake

Highland

Forest
Park

LEEDS JEWELERS
491 Central Ave., Highland Park
Page

H 7—D

15

|

;
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at

4

NITES

ATi

Resnick,

5

Ruekberg,
Janet
Schiff,
Martha
Turk and Peggy White.
Leaders of the troop are Mrs.

iad

Stanley

cad

WED.
AFTERNOONS

*

a

iis

Rosenbaum,

is an

all-day

project

Also

Louise

stands

Garrett K. Carter, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Gordon K. Carter of 365
Park
Ave.,
was
recently
elect-

%me

Rush

Mrs.

Each
quarter
tests.

Lane,

Now’s

empty

the

your

time

to

closets of

(|

received

a

B.S.

degree

in

Business Administration and Economics at the 105th annual Commencement at Culver-Stockton College, Canton, Mo., May
29.
While a student at Culver-Stockton College, Bowman is a member

of

Lambda

Two
ed co-rush
ing year,
fraternity
Garrett, a
land Park
sophomore

lasts an hour and a
15 minutes between

Edward
Weir Bowman,
son of
Edward
G.
Bowman,
913
Yale

gelical church in Northbrook which
Co-Chairman

exam
with

Received Degree in
Business May 29

will also be

recently suffered from a disastrous
fire.
Following the car wash program,
the alumni group will meet for supper and their annual election of
new officers and directors.

Turk.

and

to school only for marching.

Refreshments

Refreshment

Milton

Kramer

Senior
final
examinations
at
Highland Park High School will begin June 5, three days before the
start of finals for underclassmen.
They will continue through June
6, after which the seniors will come

con-

set up
in the
parking
lot, and
proceeds will go to the rebuilding
fund to benefit St. Peter’s Evan-

F

fa

Judy

This

HPHS Senior Exams
Start on June 5

ducted in the Temple’s South Parking lot.
The
teen-agers,
many
of them
Highland
Parkers,
will
roll
up
their sleeves and wash and polish
cars all day (10 a.m. to 5 p.m.) for
the benefit of the Combined Jewish Appeal.

en-

]

fag
onever" SN ese
CLOSED

ren
OPEN FRI.

all the cooking,

party. Taking part were the following girls:
Marilyn
Barmash,
Dorothy
Brown, Linda DeVroeg, Kathy Garling, Patty Kilkenny, Susan Kohn,
Julie Korpei, Debby Kramer, Nancy Longren,
Janice
Rabin,
Noel

\

ae

girls did

tertainment and decorations for the

=
=

r

=

4.
The

ee

rm)

Pee | |

24.

on

———=

ci

cy

‘

a
‘
*”

~SWean

Party

q

=

0

‘Wee Wash ‘Em’ Car
Wash By Temple Youth

Dads

“Wee Wash ’Em,” the annual car
wash project of the North Shore
Congregation
Israel youth group,
840 Vernon Ave., Glencoe,
has
been scheduled for Sunday, June

Ea
Ca
we
j

olla

Fete

Sixteen Brownies
of Troop
16,
Green
Bay
school,
treated
their
dads to a Father-Daughter Sing-aLong dinner at the American Legion hall Wednesday evening, May

*

Wiss

Ey

we

-

Brownies

At Sing-a-Long

Chi

Alpha

Fraternity.

Licensed

Probationary driving
permits
have
been
issued
to Richard
P.
O’Donovan of 538 Old Elm Rd. and
David L. Stein of 650 Blackstone
Pl., according to the current list
from Springfield.

chairman for the comof Tau Kappa
Epsilon
at Lake Forest College.
1960 graduate of HighHigh School, will be a
next fall.

Winter Clothes and Blankets

CRAFT

WOOD

LUMBER

PLAYGROUND
EQUIPMENT

1590 DEERFIELD RD.
HIGHLAND PARK
iD 2-0140

GOSHEN

AMERICAN

PLAYHOUSES

with

$100.00

insurance

Hours:

coverage

OPEN

GLIDERS

SWINGS

EARLY

We

COMPANY

°¢

FORTS

PICNIC

Deliver — Assembly
8:00

A.M.

THURSDAY

- 5:30
&amp;

P.M.

FRIDAY

TABLES

Optional
Sun.,

9-1

EVENING.

Last season your response was so good—
we repeat the offer! (Pay only the usual
cleaning charges)
Each

Box

Cleaned

holds

and

(“Tender,

15

Refreshed

Loving

“‘NVault-Stored”

to

20

Garments**

with

T.L.C.

Care”)

even

up

to

*Fill as many boxes as you wish—2,
at all 3 Vogue Stores

November

1st

3 even 4...
Unanimously

**Sorry, furs and fur-trimmed garments not included
(we'll gladly Fur Storage them the deluxe Vogue way)

endorsed

by students,
alumni,

faculty

our

sport coats

&amp;

traditional
&amp;

slacks in

neat

natural

patterns

have

been

enthusiasti-

cally accepted.

CLEANERS

Sportcoats from 35.
Slacks

from

15.

Serving Highland Park for 25 Years
NORTH
2061

Green

{Drive-in

RAVINIA
Bay
too)

iD a 3700.
Sore H 8&amp;—D 16

Plant»and_
565 Roger

WEST
Drive-In
Williams

RAVINIA
487 Roger

EAST
Williams

ID 2.3903

Cobey’s

478 Central
(Open Thursday Nites)

Thursday,

Highland

June

1,

Park

1961

�|jmetic review. If the enrollment

Highwood Community Center|
Activities For The Week

warrants, the high school will have
classes

in

conversational

Advanced
Highwood

Community

Center

now

swinging

into

its spring

letic

program,

with

most

is

ath-

emphasis

being placed upon the boys’ baseball program. Any boy between the
ages

of 7 and

in Highwood.
able

at

the

play

baseball

Information

is avail-

Community

Highwood’s
noon,

19 can

ball

Center

park

any

or

after-

after school.

*

*

*

Today is Circus Day in Highwood. Hagen Bros. circus, featuring
three
rings
of continuous
entertainment, brings its big tented show
to the city for a one-day stand.

tion

can

be

obtained

any

Center,

wanting

to

Tuition

Fees

The
tuition fee for semester
course is $15, for full-year courses,

19

$30. Checks should be made payable to Highland Park High School
or Deerfield High School.

The high school district’s summer school for graduating eighthgraders
will
run
from
June
19
through
August
11.
Registration

courses have been eliminated from

Tickets can be obtained at the circus, which will be located on the

urday,

Park,

in time.

main

Highwood
ball
park,
North
and
Western avenues. Show times are
4&amp;8p.m.

auditorium.

Questions concerning Saturday’s
registration should be directed to
Robert Benson at Deerfield High,

ok

*

June

3.

At

should

Highland

go

to

the

the

curriculum

terested

Among the traditional offerings
which have always been attractive

or

to September
freshmen
are art,
typing, English review, and arith-

x

HOURS

Registration will begin promptly
at 9:00 a.m. In past years potential

for these courses will be held in
both Highland Park and Deerfield
High Schools at 9:00 a.m. on Satstudents

NEW
SUMMER
SHOPPING

forms distributed during the past
week to the elementary schools.

District 113 Opens
Summer School for
Freshmen June

swimmers

eco-

enroll in water ballet or water safety should do so by mail on the

Saturday

morning at the Community
from 9 a.m.-thru noon.

French,

conversational Spanish, home
nomics, and industrial arts.

because

students

Harold

J.

did

Perry

enough

not

at

in-

EFFECTIVE
WEDNESDAY
JUNE 7th

register

Highland

Park High.

The
annual
Grammar
School
prom
to be given
on
Saturday,
June 10, will be for seventh and

eighth

grade

students

only.

A

CRAFTWOOD

dressed up, “date” affair, the prom
will be highlighted by the crowning of a Prom
King and Queen
from
St. James
and
Northwood
schools.
Seventh
grade
mothers
. will be in charge of refreshments
for the evening.
*

Miss

*

Little

LUMBER

the

1590 DEERFIELD RD.
HIGHLAND PARK
ID 2-0140

pups

last

around
Many

very
of

better
Guys

week,

after
is well

city’s

boys

and

Center’s

gram,
ages
days
p.m.
will
gram

for

WEDNESDAY

coming

that

*

room,

calecucchocd 9 A.M.

a

to 12 O‘CLOCK NOON

acess

9 A.M. to 9 P.M

and

fir plywood.

cutting

feel

Little

We

have

complete

A

FEES
oT gE eoe MET Senvaaes RRC twerr AOR
Clip above

and millwork facilities.

Prices

are

handy

reasonable.

schedule

spot

das sak ae ale

He

9 A.M,

and

for future

Foe te ce

to 5:30 P.M.

paste

in

eS

reference.

ee

ee

ee

*

still

girls to sign
Summer

iiss

TRIRGOAY

again.

*

of

is

youngsters

hearing

PLYWOOD

FRIDAY
Hardwood

well after the ordeal.

the

Plenty

but

! TUESDAY

center’s

miniature schnauzer, lost her litter
of

COMPANY

1 MONDAY

*

Guys,

aa

Day

youngsters

remains

up

IN STOCK

fer

OAK

for the

camp

pro-

between

the

of 6 and 10. It will run five
a week from 9 a.m. thru 3:15
on week days. The program
give each youngster a full proof sports activities. Informa-

@

Hours:

OPEN

Ebegance

®

FIR

WALNUT
8:00

°¢

A.M.

-

THURSDAY

in

@

MARINE

BIRCH

5:30°P.M.

&amp;

FRIDAY

CHERRY
Sun.,

We

are

NIGHTS

pleased
UNTIL

to

remain

9 O’CLOCK

open

LOUNGERS

REALLY

shopping

AND

FRIDAY

convenience.

Please note OUR STORE WILL CLOSE EVERY WEDNESDAY AT
NOON in order to give the ROSBY STAFF an opportunity to.

9-1

EVENING.

enjoy the summer sunshine.

Watrai
now

QUALITY

THURSDAY

for your

COST

JUST

A

LITTLE MORE

ILLUSTRATED SERIES AT PARTICULARLY LOW
FOR ONE WEEK ONLY — ENDING JUNE 7

PRICES

amounts

to

$850.00 |

_A ROSE MARIE
REID SWIM SUIT

(G4

Just bring this coupon with you when you shop in our store
on Friday nights from 5:30 P.M. to 9 P.M. and deposit it in
our
FRIDAY
NIGHT
CONTEST
BOX.
You may
be the
winner of a lovely Rose Marie Reid Swimsuit!

sikh

“Elegance in Walnut: with Crafts“smanship
_decorator

its.’
at
fabrics

finest.
expertly

“ored

provide

the

to

With
tail-

This ticket can be deposited on either Friday, June 9th
Friday, June 16th. You need not be present at drawing
win. You will be notified if you are the lucky winner,

finishing

touch.

ANDOM
HOUSE

See
them—compare.
Lowest prices in the
Chicago
area
on
QUALITY loungers.

“The
Open
Thursday and Friday
Until 9

North

495

Shore’s

Finest

Central

Center

for Casual

ID

ROSBY’S
1835 Second St.

Furnishings”

3-15 50

(Across

Highland Park

from

H.P.

SUBURBAN

or
to

FASHIONS |
ID

Jewel)

2-0788

a

Closed Wednesday at Noon ;
Open Thursday &amp; Friday Nights. |
Roe

Page H 9—D 17

|

�ab iy

i

2a

HPHS Second
Fine Arts Dinner

Awards 23 Keys
Students

who

excel

in

the

arts

were
honored
by the Highland
Park High School PTA at the sec.
ond annual fine arts dinner May
18. Those
who
have
made
outstanding contributions in various
fields received keys or honorable
mentions.
Honors were awarded as follows:
Art:
Keys,
Joan
Rothenberg,
Mary
Ellen
Brown,
Lynn
Moore
and
John
Paul;
honorable
mentions, Dale Smith and Mary Winthrop.
Home Arts: Key, Suzanne Hensworth;
honorable
mention, Lesley
Jones.
Letters, Creative Writing: Keys,
Daryl MacIntire and Lynne Kulieke;
honorable
mentions,
Lolly
Harmon and Sherry Ball.

Letters,

the Keys to Lynne Kulieke and
Daryl McIntire for creative writing during the second annual
Fine Arts dinner sponsored by the Highland Park High School

P

Dr. John

Munski

presents

P.T.A.

Journalism:

Keys,

El-

liott Baim and Susan Rutter; honorable
mentions,
Suellen
Bilow,
Diane
Gable,
Thomas
Elias
and
Kathryne Edmonds.
Music, Choir and Voice: Keys,
Jill Berquist, Helen Cox and Kenny Epstein.

Music,
Zahnle.
Music,

Orchestra:
Band:

Keys,

Key,

Doris

Frank

Len-

nox, Robert Sandy and Dan Harris.
Speech,
Debate:
Keys,
Robert
Sandy and Gerry Mindell; honorable
mentions,
Bud
Friedman,
Kent Lawrence and Bill Wiese.

Speech,

Individual

Speech

Events: Keys, Dorrie Gilden and
Bob
Wolfe;
honorable
mentions,
Barbara Katz and Kent Lawrence.
Speech,
Drama:
Keys,
Ronnie
Reisler,
Ed
Kemp
and_
Larry
Beighley.
Speech, Stage Crew: Honorable
mention, Rueben Goldberg.

Winners of speech and drama awards at the Fine Arts
dinner held at Highland Park High School are shown with

tN

Miss Bette Hubbs. From left are Miss Hubbs, Bob
Dorrie Gilden, winners of speech awards, Ronnie

Wolff and
Reisler, Ed

Kemp and Larry Beighley, who received awards for their work
in drama.

HP Students Win
Places in State
Latin Contest
At the State Latin Contest, May
13, in Bloomington, four Highland
Park High School students, Susan
Hirschfelder, fourth year,
Barry
Sussman, third year, Mare Rosenstein, first year, and Joal Fischer,
first year, won “superior” ratings
for outstanding achievement.
Arthur Rosby, second year, and
Jan Goldsmith, first year, received
“excellent” ratings, which were the
second division.
JoAnn Lee, fourth year, a “superior’ winner in the sectional contest, was not able to go because
of illness.
In the state contest, all six students entered won places. In the
Waukegan sectional, all 12 entries
placed. There
were several thousand students taking first in the
contests.

Invite 43 Girls
Into DHS Group

By.

North

Mrs.

Ruth

Esserman,

chairman

of Highland Park High School
Fire Arts dinner recently.

Bf

Screen
Mrs.

mac

Jimmied
Susan

of

829

Su-

Rd. left her front door and

Sereen

locked Wednesday morning,
returned
to
find
the
May
24,
- sereen had been pried open, kicked

out,

and

relocked.

police estimate
- the house was
Page

H

Highland

Park

$10 damage; believe
not entered.

10—D

18

of

Group

the

congratulates

Purse

Dirsmith

Shore

Photo

art
a

by

Milton

Merner

department

winner

at

the

Found

Henry Fellheimer of 687 Green
Bay Rd. found a purse belonging
to Elaine
Wagner
of 676 Roger
Williams
Ave. last week.
It contained $11, sunglasses, driver’s license,
chargeplates
and
miscellaneous papers, according to Highland Park police.

Forty-three freshman and sophomore girls were initiated into the
Deerfield
High
School
Girls’
Intramural
Association recently.
At the same meeting six officers
were elected for the next school
year:
Carol Kahn, president;
Marsha Meyer, vice-president; Barbara Hirschfelder, secretary; Nancy
Root, treasurer; Susan Dexter, social
chairman;
Joan
Dugo,
publicity chairman.
In order to qualify for GIA, a
girl must have earned fifteen
points
by
participating
in afterschool sports activities.

Currently

the girls are planning

Newly elected officers of the Deerfield High School Student Council Executive Board for next school year are shown
after results of voting May 17. Jane Johnson, the new secretary, is surrounded by Gary Woolley, the president-elect, John
Fleming, new vice-president and Ray Sharp, treasurer.

Name Five Seniors
As Graduation

More Scholarships
Offered Students for

Speakers in June

Use in Illinois

-Five Highland Park High School
seniors have been named to speak
at
graduation
exercises
at
the
high school, and at eighth grade
graduations
of
Highland
Park
grammar schools.
Buddy
Friedman
and
Frances
Kahn will speak at the high school
ceremonies June 15. Charles Buening will represent Highland Park
High
School
at the
Elm
Place
graduation. Lynne Finder has been
selected for the Northwoods school
and Nancy Zacharias will speak at
the Edgewood
ceremonies.
Students
from
Deerfield
High
School will be selected as speakers
for
the
Deerfield
grammar
schools.

HPHS Class of ‘41
Planning

Reunion

The Highland Park High School
graduate class of 1941 is planning
for a class reunion this summer.
On July 1, a reception will be held
at the high school, and on July 2
a dinner-dance is scheduled at the
Adria Restaurant. Entertainment by
talented members of the class will
be
the
highlight
of the
dinnerdance.
Any interested members of other
classes are invited and may get additional information by calling Donna Greene Hartman, ID 2-7010, or
June Dean Farmer, CE 4-5436.

Tapped

for Sphinx

John M. Newmann
was one of
eighteen students at Amherst College
recently
elected
to Sphinx,
junior honor society.
Primarily a
service organization, Sphrinx takes
an
active
part
in the
freshman
orientation program and the subfreshman guide service.
Members
are selected on the basis of outstanding
leadership
in academic,
athletic, or extra-curricular activities.
Newmann,
the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Harold L. Newmann
of 487
Groveland Ave., is a graduate of
Highland Park High School.
He is
on the swimming team at Amherst.
As a freshman he was a member of
a jazz group and earned his numerals in tennis.

a turnabout
dance
‘Passport
to
Hawaii” to be held May 27 in the

High

School

Cafeteria.

A supplemental
list of Illinois
high school students who will receive
Illinois
State
Scholarships
was issued this week, and includes
six Highland Park and Deerfield
students.
Nancy Frederickson, 1509 Woodland Dr., Deerfield, Jeanne L. Albert,
915
Baldwin
Rd.,
John
J.

Henderson,

594

Glenview

Ave.,

Lynne B. Kulieke, 3365 Old
Rd., Jerry R. Liebling, 334
Ln., and
Steve
P. Vaitonis,

Laurel,

all

Highland

named
All

on the list.
scholars
who

award

will

receive

Park,

Mill
Dell
655

were

accept

the

certificates

in

recognition
of their
promise
as
college students. There are 79 Ilinois
campuses
approved
by
the
State
Superintendent
of
Public
Instruction where the scholarships
may be used.

To Graduate From
Ill. State Normal
Nearly 500 students will receive
degrees at the 102nd annual commencement of Illinois State Normal
University June 10. One Highland
Park
student,
James
Greenwald,
604
Skokie
Ave.,
will
receive
a
bachelor’s degree.

Pack 250 Slates
Final Meeting
At Maplewood
Pack

250

meeting

Cub

of

the

Friday,

June

will

hold

school
2

at

its

final

year

this

Maplewood

school.

As previously announced
master

Ben

Block,

by cub-

this meeting

will

honor
the
cub’s
theme
for
the
month—Indian
Country. All Cubs
will be dressed in Indian costumes
and there will be a contest to judge
the best and most creatively outfitted
den.
Rules
state
that
no
money can be spent on the costume.
Plan

Summer

Activities

Even
though
there will be no
meetings until next fall, plans for
activities
during
the
summer
months
are being made and will
be announced
at the meeting by
Eugene
Kemper,
activities chairman.
Thursday,

June

1,

1961

~

�Save

$4.30

Yes, You Save $4.30 as Compared With Single
Copy Price When You Subscribe to the

DEERFIELD

REVIEW

DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME BY MAIL
EVERY THURSDAY MORNING
USE

ATTACHED

CARD—NO

POSTAGE

NECESSARY

�Enjoy The Convenience of
Regular Delivery to Your
Home Every Thursday Morning

Use The Attached Card
No Postage Necessary

�“Sun-Fresh”

Golden

Ripe

BANANAS

b iI

OMS
“Sun-Fresh”

U.S. CHOICE,

Sweet,

Juicy,

WATERMELON

Tender, Young

of LAMB

LEG

“Sun-Fresh”

p. 59°

Vienna Skinless Franks

|'WHITE
;
—_,,, a

U.S.

POTATOES

e
a
y
s
,
e
v
a

= OE

9 vx. 29¢

FARM

MAKES EVERYDAY
FOODS FLAVOR-HAPPY!

Se Relih 24%
&amp;

ge

BLUE

‘sie 63¢

Potato Chips

Wa,

(ply
Thursday,

June

1, 1961

wi
sy

C

CR
a 69c

Sine ee

49c

farkist

bia." 73¢

95

J Je

Starkist

ae

-

for

Pillsbury’s Best

« it)
UNTER.

3

Economy

Blackwell

LAYER CAKES...
ICE

«(t, SH

25

1 California

No.

3

BREAD = @ 1 ¢

PEPPERIDGE

Crosse

Ripe

i
1812 GREEN BAY ROAD — A CENTRAL FOOD STORE

TUNA

3 «on 79¢

|

Open Both Thursday and Friday Nights ‘Til 9 P.M.

PLENTY OF FREE PARKING — ALWAYS

:

Page H 11—D 19

�Summer

a
,

Music

&lt;p NEW YORK CUT
STRIP STEAKS

:

:

Top
“There’s

Choice,
no

better

$3.95

Aged
anywhere”

SARATOGA
Highwood

ID 2-0440

June

Sessions

Two Local Students

at

Center Open

To Receive

19 in Winnetka

The

summer

session,

June

19-

July 29, of the Music Center of the
North Shore Winnetka
will offer
private instruction in piano, voice,
string and wind instruments; class

instruction in dance, beginning instruments, sight singing, and theory,
recorder
and
other
instrumental
ensemble
chamber
music
and
Junior
Orchestra;
special
classes for adults in Chamber Mu-

sic,

recorder

theory,

ers,

string

Carl

ensemble,
methods

Two

From Marquette
Two

Highland

Park residents

are

included

in the largest

graduating

class

the

Marquette

in

University

history

of

in Milwaukee,

Wis.

They are Judith A. Schweiger,
628 Gray Ave., a candidate for the
degree of bachelor of science in
speech,
and Raymond
F. Fabbri,
2926 Western Ave., a candidate for
the bachelor of science in business

administration

degree.

teach-

Teacher’s

Riders Hurt

John Felicioni of 221 Prairie
Ave., Highwood, tried to pass a leftturning school bus at Half Day and
Ridge Rds. Wednesday
morning,
May 24; bounced off into the abutment on the southwest corner.

Italia Felicioni
on

the

head,

suffered

and

John

a bump

Hauschild,

10, of 3350 Old Mill Rd., a bus passenger,

got a nosebleed.

Highland Park police gave Felicioni
a negligent
driving
ticket.
They list $200 damage to his car;

Course

$150 to the abutment and city street

and Ravinia Preview Lectures.
Dance
department.
summer
classes will be headed by Ronald

sign; $100 to the bus driven by
August Ruelli of 438 Central Ave.,
Highwood.

Colton,

Orff

advanced
for

School Bus Hit;

Degrees

of Chicago,

while

Dr.

and

An

Mrs. Zipper are directing the summer festival in the Philippines.

Pre-summer

session

eight

auditing

participants.

1833

Miss

Schweiger

Miss

Sigma

Mr.

Schweiger

Alpha

is

Eta,

a member

national

and the Management

of

speech

Club.

Marquette’s record-breaking class
of 1,254 candidates for graduation
will attend baccalaureate services

AND

ADDING MACHINES
SALES - RENTALS - REPAIRS

Chandler's
645

CENTRAL

-¢

ID 3-0230

Deerfield

Miraglia,

Fabbri

correction fraternity, and the Avalanche ski club. Fabbri has been active in Delta Sigma Pi, national
professional
commerce
fraternity,

TYPEWRITERS

half

earlier

Miks,

that

18, of 364

Rd.

while

Frank

Miraglia
of 1300
Somerset
Deerfield, was passing.

through Friday, June 16, with both
and

and a

Bernard

Green Bay Rd., Lake Bluff, turned
left into the Standard station at

day

Chamber Music Workshop by the
Fine Arts Quartet will begin on
Thursday,
June
8 and
continue
active

hour

morning

in

Bruce

hall

Auditorium

June

of

the

at 3 p.m.

3. The

sermon

Milwaukee
on

Saturday,

will be

given

by His Excellency, the Most Rev.
Egidio
Vagnozzi,
papal
apostolic
delegate to the United States.

Archbishop

Vagnozzi

will be in-

cluded among six prominent people who
are to receive honorary
degrees as doctors of laws at the
Marquette
commencement
exer-

cises in the Milwaukee
p.m. on Sunday,

June

Arena

at 3

who

was

Ave.,

ticketed

for

improper passing, thought Miks was
slowing to pick up a pedestrian on

the

right,

were

Highland

Park

police

told.

Palsy Program
Awards
Three

To Three

area high school students,

Adeline
Fosdick,
1246
Woodland
Drive and Carroll Kopp, 1040 Wilmot Road in Deerfield, and Roberta
Shine, 433 Vine, Highland
Park,

have

received

certificates

of

pro-

ficiency
for
having
successfully
completed the Cerebral Palsy Mon-

itor Program

in Lake

County.

The program was designed to instruct interested and selected high
school students on how to handle
and baby-sit for handicapped children. Some 80 Lake County students
successfully
completed
the

course,

4.

NOW — AT TOY HEAVEN

Weed as you feed
this surprising way
Surprising, because instead of two jobs, weeding and
feeding are only one. Surprising, too, takes less than

half an hour for an entire 5,000 sq. ft. lawn!
Just fill the accurate Scotts Spreader with clean,
granular BONUS®, set the dial, and go. As you walk,
the tiny BONUS granules are distributed evenly over
every square inch of the lawn.

Waterfall
of Fun!

That way, BONUS weeds as.it feeds. Makes a surprising difference in your lawn. As you'll see yourself.

Store Hours Daily 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. — Wed
SUNDAYS

9 A.M.

—

YOUR
are

ee

A oe
Pisin

m9

aaa

iat

447 Roger Wil
Page

H

12—D

20

ONE

NEEDS
ip
4
PRRs 3
sae
e

—

30 Feet Long — 40” Wide!

‘til Noon

It’s Real Fun to “Slip ‘N Slide!”

1 P.M.

RAVINIA HARDWARE
GARDEN

surface,

Bonus (reg. 5.95) plus Scotts
Spreader (reg. 16.95) both only 17.90

Save 5.00

OPEN

Hundreds of water jets run the full length
of the specially lubricated “Slip ‘N Slide”

ID 2-3001

WE
DELIVER

STOP STORE
HOUSEWARES
ns
ia

09, Sorensen
ess sreuichmate me

—
sno

TOYS

1D 2-4387

toy
1833

Second

St.

heduen
Highland
Thursday,

June

Park
1,

1961

�ECT FOR«ws

RAGGEDY ANN—PERF
“SALADS OR DESSERTS

FRUIT COCKTAIL
RAGGEDY

ANN—IN

HEAVY

FRUIT C Z

—3

SYRUP
3 pyr tod st:

PEAR HALVES

DEL MONTE—PINEAPPLE-

GRAPEFRUIT DRINK “c=

RIGHT INTO THESE

BREAST

O’

CHICKEN

SURE
SAVINGS

THIN

SPAGHETTI

9!

94cm

CHUNK STYLETUNA
FOULD’S

23c

OR

ELBO MACARONI ~

SURE

SAVE’S GROUND

FRESH -

1, a

:

ne

COFFEE

From Our Delicatessen Dept. :
FRESH—-HOMEMADE—-CREAMED

POTATO

SALAD

or

COLE SLAW ..
ITALIAN

STYLE

ROAST

BARBECUED
FRESH

u.s.

choice—sure

save

., 59.

trimmed—

7 inch cut—standing

RIB

ROA

DORMEYER

,

,

COFFEE-WELL

fect coffee.

raggedy ann—garden fresh

peeweepeaS

e-z carve rib roast

» 79¢

raggedy ann

=m

TOMATOES ....... Sz 19

EACH

florida—sugar sweet—whole

$9

88
®

(Reg. $24.95

Value)

WATERMELONS .... = 69c
valentine—florida—fresh n’ crisp

GREEN BEANS

|

Sale
Here’s your chance

starts

the

right. to limit quantities.

produce

prices

Friday

and

Thurs.,

June

available

Saturday
Ist thru

Thursday,

eee

reserve
and

only.
Wed.,

June

7th.

=

=

=

=

:

que
oe

on

AL

_
—

you—-ABSOLUTELY FREE. This week clip coupon —
No. 3 and redeem it at any Sure Save food mart

for your beautiful free “’Crystal

nao

We
Meat

2-1b
ed eee

These exquisitely beautiful Anchor Hocking glasses
are new and smart and Sure Save has them for

eS

LOUNGE
CHAIR
to get some

Y Aseae 4

‘

MILANO DESIGN ANCHOR HOCKING GLASSES

Se

DE LUXE FOLDING

av

CRYST
“
|
F
ICE" =
F R I

Vegetables

all Sure Save food marts with a $5.00 or more minimum
purchase only. Hurry, get your beautiful Dormeyer Coffee
Well now, while the limited supply lasts.
ONLY

3

303
2 2

miracle whip

trimmed—lean

Fruits &amp;

sy

dressing

kraft—salad

ee

Fresh

Lb.

_—s- 33% .28 8

veeta cheese
vel
ee
™79c ”

ee

for thorough
Available at

.

peas and carrots

Probe control is removabie
so you can plunge the whole pot in the dishpan
washing.
Non-drip spout. Chrome finish. AC.

LJ

peach preserves

short ribs ......... ™ 29c

done—keeps it piping hot
for as long as you like.

°

kraft—chock-full of milk nutrients

trimmed

save

.

Fish

freestone peaches

raggedy ann—old fashioned

u.s. choice—sure

Signals when

.

raggedy ann—in heavy syrup—halves or slices
no

cube steaks ....... ™ 89c

makes 4 to:10 cups of per-

Fresh

inch cut

save

.

BEEF .

u.s. choice—sure save trimmed—7
back bone removed—standing

u.s. choice—sure

simply set the Perfect-Perk
Selector for the desired
strength. Coffee Well

°

OR

@

rib steaks .........

heard of low price. Brews
exactly to your taste—

s

WHITEFISH

u.s. choice—sure save trimmed

Never before at this un-

°

BEEF

Ice’? Milano de-

—

sign 7-oz. old fashioned double juice glass. No —
purchase is required. Coupons are good only on —
the weeks indicated. Only one coupon redeemed
each week per family. It’s our way of saying
“Thank You” to old customers and “Welcome” to —
new

customers.

.

Complete your set of Crystal Ice’”’ Milano
Design Glasses.

All 4 Sizes

beautiful
Poe

folding lounge chairs for
which you'll find a hundred
uses, at a simply unbelievable price.
Gorgeous, modern design

with heavy-durable, easy
to clean saran fabrics—
colorful striped material—
strong steel tubing with baked
enamel weather-proof finish. Available

at all Sure Save food marts with a $5.00
or more minimum

purchase only.

Hurry,

now

is the

time to get your lounge chairs with the summer months just
ahead,
EACH

2

$2

| Ss Rais

mpi

SPACIOUS

66

Open

°

(Reg. $3.99 Value)
Thursday,

June

1,

1961

SHOPPING CENTER
716 WAUKEGAN RD.
PARKING

Mon.,

9 P.M.

thru

FOR 400 CARS

Fri., 9 A.M.

to

Sat., ‘til 6 P.M.
Page

H

13—D

21

�“Micky” Chizewer

Karle Sproul

To Wed Ensign in
Naval Ceremony

To Wed Eastern
Girl June 24

The
U.

historic

S.

lis,

Naval

Md.,

main

chapel

Academy

in

will

be

wedding

of

“Vicky”

Chizewer,

Mrs.

Miss

Smith

man

Ave.,

the

Two

Annapo-

setting

for

Raquel

Suzanne

of

uates

the

daughter

Chizewer

and

of

Arden Shore Plans
‘Open House Sunday
For Two Graduates
Forest
of

of

at

Chize-

afternoon,

June

Miss

Maid

10.

Anita

bride’s

of

Leone

younger

a

Yolanda

Gadwa,

the

Riverdale,

Md.;

Miss Geraldine Hofer, Whitestone,
N. Y.;
Miss
Linda
Gay
Pickett,
Methuen, Mass.; Miss Judith Ann
Tattersfield,
Philadelphia;
Miss
Margaret
Ann
Theobald,
Oconomowoc,
Wis.;
and
Miss
Linda
Wakem, Manhasset, N. Y.
North

Shore

Group

Photo

by

Since hostesses will “float” through the gardens of the
E. Montford Fucik lakeside home on South Deere Park Drive
in beautiful trailing antebellum gowns for the Southern Comfort party Saturday, June 17, from 4 to 7 p.m., this quartet of
planners of the sponsoring Glencoe Auxiliary, Florence Crit-

tendon Anchorage, preview some of the lovely gowns.

The

party’s proceeds will go towards the Florence Crittendon
Anchorage for unwed mothers in Chicago. From left are Mrs.
Fredrick C. Kruger, co-chairman; Mrs. Bruce K .Thomas, auxilliary president; Mrs. Fucik, co-chairman and hostess; and Mrs.

Thomas J. Lynch, committee member.

Walk-Tung Vows ‘International’
Possibly the most international wedding to be held along
the North Shore this season will take place Friday afternoon,
June

9, at

12:30

in

the

Highland

Park

Presbyterian

church

when Miss Margaretha Walk, daughter of the Maurice Walks
of Sheridan Road, becomes the bride of Shao-Ling Tung, son
of Dr. and Mrs. Jen Chien Tung of Shanghai and Philadelphia.
Dr. William Atkinson Young will
read the vows as they are read in
a simple Dutch Reformed church
ceremony,
at the request
of the
bride, whose mother was born in
Holland.
Her
husband-to-be
was
born in China, the son of the former president of Shanghai University. His mother formerly was director of the Shanghai
Conservatory
of Music.
The
bride-elect’s
father formerly
was
in the US.
diplomatic service, traveling to
Germany,
Austria
and
the
Far
East.
Miss Walk, as well as her
younger sister, studied in Switzer-

land.
Reception
After

the

in Walk

Gardens

ceremony,

with

its

tendant reception in the narthex of
the

church

(according

custom), wedding

to

Dutch

guests will go on

to the beautiful lakeside home of
the Walks.
There, they will toast

the young

couple

with

champagne

in the French formal garden. Later,
they will move on to the lakeside
terrace for the wedding breakfast.
Ten days later, when the young
couple
have returned from
their
Maine honeymoon, the Walks will

host a second reception in the Warwick Hotel in Philadelphia so that
the

bridegroom’s

friends

Philadelphia

Symphony

(in

is first

which

Page

he

H 14—D

22

in

the

ofchestra

violinist)

other Eastern friends of the couple may greet the newlyweds.
Sister, Maid of Honor
Miss Walk is having her sister,
Cynthia,
a sophomore
at
North
Shore Country Day School, as her

only attendant. Mr. Tung

and

will have

no best man, since in the Dutch
ceremony,
the young
couple will
walk together
down
the aisle to

the altar.
Ushers will be two cousins of
the bride-to-be,
Max
Fleisher
of
Winnetka
and
Ronald
Adams
of
Glenview.
Among guests will be Mr. Tung’s
mother, Madame Tung; his brother,

Yuam
at-

Buffalo

Tung,
(N.

first cellist
Y.)

Brother,

Zeloof-Stuart

Symphony

Best

Man

William
Thornton Woodard
Jr.
of Evanston will be his brother’s
best man. Ushers will be Ensigns
William
S. Marker,
William
Mc-

Kay,

J.

M.

Rogers,

Lt.

Smith,

Midshipmen

Dustin

Sykes

and

R.

classmates

and

friends

all

Gibson

Ray

Theep,

B.

Cherry,
of

the

bridegroom at Annapolis.
Bridal dinner Friday evening,
June 9, will be given in the Maryland
Inn
in
friends of the
traveling East

Annapolis,
Among
bride-elect’s family
for the ceremony

Radcliffe
College,
was
studying
under Metropolitan Opera Baritone
Martial Singher at the time.

Beach,

Fla., announce

Miss
Collier is a graduate
of
Madeira School and Bradford Junior College in the class of 1960.
She is the granddaughter of Mrs.
Barron Collier of New York City
and the late Mr. Collier, and of
George Oliver May of Southport,
Conn., and the late Mrs. May.
Mr.

Forest

Sproul

is a graduate

Academy

and

of Lake

Trinity

Col-

lege in the class of 1953. He is the
grandson of Mrs. Irving E. Sproul
of
Chicago,
and
the
late
Mr.
Sproul, and the late Mr. and Mrs.

Frederick D. Vosburgh
He
is now
Paper Sales,

with

of Chicago.

North

Eastern

senior

year

at

Goucher

her

College

in Nowson,
Md., next Fall when
Ensign
Woodard
leaves
for
a
several months’
tour of duty
as

sonar officer on a Navy destroyer.
Both she and her younger sister
(at
Wheaton
College)
ceived scholarships for
their studies.

have
recontinuing

the

engagement
of
their
daughter,
Edith Juliet, to Earle Elliott Sproul
II, son of Mr.
and
Mrs.
Elliott
Sproul of Green Bay Road.

Cynthia Jacob Wins

enter

is

planned

for

Tennis Championship
Miss

Cynthia

the

W.

S.

and

a Vassar

Jacob,

Jacobs

of

College

Bonnie

Ellis, daughter

Ellises

of

Flint,

daughter

be

guests

afternoon

when

Association

open

house

for

entertains

them

from

Ridge

Road

friend,

Miss

of the Ralph

Mich.,

won

Vas-

will

include

Dr.

Clyde

‘Old Orchard’
Bloom

June

Will

15-17

Although Old Orchard shopping
center is a-bloom with tulips and
lilacs these days, it will bloom with
hundreds of other flowers Thursday through Saturday, June 15-17.

At a “launching” party last week,
executives of the Skokie center and
officers and chairmen of the Gar-

den

Club

of Illinois,

Inc., co-spon-

sors told of plans for this
in community flower shows.
More

den

than

100

clubs,

Shore

Chicagoland

including

Garden

‘‘first”

club

the

with

gar-

North

Highland

Parker Mrs. Jay Simon as chairman, will take part in the exposition in store and shop windows
and

along

the

ship

recently.

Cynthia
in

the

in

be

again
this

later

Miss
in

teach

Park

Summer.

attending

which

debut

malls.

will

Highland

program
will

lovely

the

She

supper

Ellis
the

tennis

recreation
also
dance

makes

her

season.

That big smile Mrs. B.
Edward Bensinger of Dean
Avenue is flashing means
that the 1961 Crystal Ball’s
recent
launching party
was “the most.”
George
Barr of Hazel Ave., chairman of the Medical Research Institute Council of
Michael Reese Hospital,

1961

chairman,

attractive

and dynamic Mrs. Nathan
Cummings.
Since
Mrs.
Cummings

was

in

Paris,

a

more-than-life-size portrait
in color was unveiled at
the party in the Rotunda
club’s
penthouse.
Mrs.
Bensinger,

Mrs.

4

Harold

Florsheim and Mrs. John
Wineman are among Highland Parkers on the Dec.
23rd Ball’s steering committee.
Lawrence

Phillip

Studios

2

McGovern
both out-

Carter,
superintendent,
and
Dr.
John Maloney, head of the guidance program at Lake Forest High
School;
members
of the school’s
faculty; friends of the boys; members of Arden Shore Association’s
Men’s board and the Arden Shore
board of directors and chairmen of
village committees.

of

sar’s all-college doubles champion-

hostess, assist Mrs. Bensinger in “unveiling” the

Marlborough Music Festival in Vermont. The bride-to-be, a junior at

Lewis of WashingBarron
Collier Jr.

Road.
bride-to-be

and Mrs. Henry Friend, co-

ter, Prof. and Mrs. Shan-Fu Shen
(he is professor of theoretical physics at the University of Maryland.)
His other brother-in-law and sister,
violinist
Si-Hon
Ma
and _ pianist
Kwong-Kwong Ma, will be unable
to attend
since
they
are
taking
part in the Casals Festival in New
York.
The young couple met last Summer while both were attending the

of Palm

Photo

Sumac
The

the

tra; and his brother-in-law and sis-

Mrs, Reeve
ton, D.C. and

Bachrach

Collier

The
wedding
June 24.

orches-

with

Bradford

Miss Edith

and wedding festivities will be the
Walter Lillies of 1277 St. Johns
Ave. and the Howard Lausches of
will

Shore

will

grad-

of Lake

standing
students and
prominent
athletes.
Bernie,
who
will enter
Coe College, Cedar Rapids, Iowa,
in the Fall, was a member of Lake
Forest track and football teams;
Paul was a grid star. He will continue his studies at Southern Illiinois University.

sopho-

more at Wheaton College in Norton, Mass., will be Vicky’s maid of
honor.
Bridesmaids
will be Miss

School,

Sunday

Guests

Chizewer,

1961

The boys are Bernie
and Paul Krstulovich,

Honor

sister,

High

boys,

of

The open house will be held in
the main
dining room
of Arden
Shore Association school for gifted
boys in Lake Bluff.

Ensign Woodard
and his bride
will walk out of the chapel following the 4 o’clock ceremony under the traditional arch of crossed
swords to Alumni House and gardens of the Academy
where the
reception
is to be
held.
Ensign
Woodard was graduated from the
Naval Academy in June of 1960.

Sister,

an

Shore
class

to 4 o’clock.

wer of Evanston, and Ensign John
Sanford
Woodard,
son
of. Commander and Mrs. William Thornton
Woodard of San Diego, Calif. Sat-

urday

the

honor

Arden

Marsh-

Bernard. S.

Arden
of

Photo

Thursday,

June

1,

1961

�Wed in Spring Ceremony

DAR’s Flag Day
Program Will Be
Thursday, June 8

Douglas Emenecker
and his
bride,
the
former
Constance
Weiland,
daughter
of the Henry
Charles Weilands
of Second
St.,
now are at home in an apartment
at 1030 Adams St., North Chicago.
The young couple were married
in an afternoon candlelight ceremony
in Immaculate
-Conception
church
Saturday,
April
15, with
the Rev. Donald Runkle officiating.
White
gladioli and chrysanthemums, and white candles at each
pew decorated the church.
The
bride
wore
a white
lace
full-length gown with chapel train.
Her lace-trimmed veil fell from a
pearl tiara and she carried white
orchids and love knot hyacinths on
her white prayerbook.

Flag Day will be observed
at
the June
meeting
of the North
Shore chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution, in the home

of Mrs. Henry

senior

Mrs.

Weiland

son

Between
the hours of 10 a.m.
and 3:30 p.m., there’ll be a garden
walk to the two lovely church gardens in Kenilworth Avenue, and a
visit to the beautiful rose gardens
at the homes of Mrs. Ardis Kennedy,
512 Roslyn
Rd., and
Mrs,
Anan Raymond at 547 Roslyn Rd.
in
Kenilworth.
Mrs.
Raymond’s
traveling in the Far East, but is
hoping for good weather to bring
her roses into full bloom.

Also
Mrs.
pool
Mrs.

open

for the

tour

will

Douglas

Mrs.

nut
of

St.,

will

show

Kenilworth

tree

Emenecker

her

4

H. Thompson,

Jr.,

and

A delightful
out

“butterfly

through

the

H.

&lt;

many

plan

to

be

in

attend-

Erskine

of Deerfield

and

Mrs.

Robert S. Prosser of Highland Park.

Attend

with

Graduation

Mr. and Mrs. Ray Suzzi, 32 Burtis Ave., Highwood, spent the Memorial Day weekend in Westfield,
Wis., visiting friends and relatives.

theme’’ is
luncheon

Amang enthusiastic guests attending the silver anniversary luncheon and Spring fashion show given by Friends
of Orphans recently in the Grand Ballroom of the Conrad
Hilton were Mrs. Robert Valiquet, left, and Mrs. Thomas
Gleed, 2000 Ridge Rd. The 25th anniversary party was one
of the most successful benefits ever staged by the Friends.

They also attended the alumni banquet and high school commencement in which Mrs. Suzzi’s second
cousin was graduated.

for reservations.

leat

who

Mrs. John E. Nohren, Jr. of Northbrook, chairman; Mrs. Stephen L.
Tedor of Lake Bluff; Mrs. Norman

in Mrs, Culver’s gardens. All members are asked to contact Mrs. Earl
Johnson,
205 Essex Rd., Kenilworth,

Elmhurst,

ance and will receive certificates
from the chapter.
Hostesses for the meeting are

stories for each.
carried

DAR,

in membership for 25 years or
more.
Special
invitations
have
been extended to these members

collection

pictures

chapter,

Stop in at BILLIE’S for brand new
“summer-go-rightly” fashions fea-

turing

the

latest

in

the time

Swimwear,

to have

Sportswear and lovely daytime cot-

eyes

tons!
From sun-up to
moon-down hours
— it’s BILLIE’S.

be

Daniel
Terra’s
inside swim
in a lovely tropical setting.
Fredrick Kilner, 2120 Chest-

eg

Richard

has
done
considerable
research
concerning our flag, will speak on
“Betsy
Ross—Fact,
Not
Fiction.”
A further highlight of the meeting will be public recognition of
two members who have been associated with DAR
for 50 years
and to 36 others who have been

SS ededers Plan State Garden Walk
Several
Highland
Park
garden
club women will be attending the
first Summer meeting of the Garden Club of Illinois, Inc., Monday,
June 12, at the home of Mrs. Richard D. Culver, 120 Melrose, Kenilworth.

Forest,
p.m.

Mrs.

beige sheath frock with matching
accessories; the bridegroom’s mother
wore
a lavender
dress
with
matching accessories.
Following the reception at the
American
Legion
clubrooms
in
Deerfield, the young couple left on
a honeymoon at Lookout Mountain
a} in the Smoky Mountains.

wore

ITI, 945

regent, will conduct the business
meeting. General William H. Wilbur,
retired,
of Highland
Park,
will
dedicate
the
chapter’s
new
50-star
flag...
Mrs.
Hilda
Ellis
Schulze, ex-regent of Martha Ibbet-

In Wedding Party
She had as her maid of honor,
Miss Maureen Carney. Bridesmaids
were
Miss
Pam
Weiland,
her
younger
sister, and Miss
Connie
Sander. The attendants wore light
blue organdy-over-taffeta
gowns
with white lace trim and carried
white butterfly roses.
William Doucette was best man
for Mr. Emenecker, who is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Isadore Emenecker
of Antigo, Wis. Ushers were Richard Doucette, and Jerry Emenecker.
The

F. Hillman,

East Illinois Road,
Lake
Thursday, June 8, at 1:30

oftener
=o

ORCHID
LAUNDERING

SHIRT

BUTTONS
REPLACED
"EXTRA
CAREFUL”

ONE-DAY
SERVICE

Since 1910

Sure to please the
Junior, Missy and
Half-size figure.

CELLOPHANE
PROTECTED
DIV.
RAINBOW

CONSULT AN EYE PHYSICIAN

1,

1961

STORE
9-5:30

Wed.,

FOR EYE EXAMINATION

Crafismen in Optics

HOURS
9-12:30

(M.D.)

che Hfoyse of Vision ™:

Ave.

ID 2-7020

" LAUNDRY

June

Highwood
HIGHWOOD

OF

TO SUPERMART. PARKING
1862. FIRST STREET

Thursday,

ph

ee

52

ORCHID CLEANERS
NEXT

Eye health, regardless of age, is closely related to general
health, Therefore periodic physical, as well as regular
eye examinations, are essential after 40. All of us,
in later years, are more prone to diseases of the
body, as well as the eye, and therefore it is only
common sense to protect ourselves against both,
Such sight stealers as glaucoma, cataract, diabetes;
diseases of the arteries are dangerous possibilities in
the after forty years. Thoughtful adults know that these
health hazards increase with age. Discovered in time
and brought under control, they need not lead to lose
of vision. So see your eye physician (M.D.) every
2 years (or oftener if he suggests it). If he prescribes
glasses, insist on the technically accurate H.O.V. kind,

1891

Fri.,

9-9

SHERIDAN ROAD, HIGHLAND
PARK
610 CHURCH STREET, EVANSTON
135 NORTH WABASH AVENUE, CHICAGO
@H.ON.

Page

H

15—D

23

�FREE
PROMPT
DELIVERY
SERVICE
SINCE 1909
SERVING THE PHYSICIANS and
PATIENT
REVLON

|

SATIN SET HAIR SPRAY

Lawrence

Phillip

Photo

Putting heads together over plans for Jewish Appeal’s
North Shore campaign Wednesday, June 7, is this sextet of
4

nd

on

bk

AE tena

Highland

se AE Sap

Joseph
Kroll,

Park

planners.

From

left, Mrs.

Allan

Terman,

Mrs.

Rosengarden, chairman for Highland Park; Mrs. Larry
Mrs.

Joseph

Allen

Rubenstein,

Mrs.

Sol

August.

and

Mrs. Sheldon Kamin. Not pictured is Mrs. Emil M. Faust, who
is hosting a meeting that evening for city residents. Speaker
at

® HIGHLAND

PARK

IDlewood 2-2600
1831

St. Johns

e RAVINIA

STORE

DRUG

IDlewood 2-2300

Ave.

493

Roger

the

Faust

home,

300

Moraine

Dr.,

will

Schrayer, chairman of the Appeal speakers
scheint. Chicago area Bei gts Mi 1961

be

Max

Robert

and orientation
drive is $7 mil-

—

Arden Shore Group’s Bridge-Tea Monday

Williams

Bridge at two, followed by tea | noon
at four, will be order of the after- | Shore

Arden
in the

Park
Highland
for
Association Monday

624

home of Mrs. Robert Johnson,
Briarhill Rd., Deerfield.
Mrs.

Kel-

logg Patterson, Mrs. William
bur and Mrs. Robert Herbst.

Wil-

Co-hostesses

Thank

you,

North

Shore

residents

who

seven years have given J. Blumberg—Highland

over

the

be

will

past

Park an oppor-

tunity to serve you! We want you to know that although we
have closed our store on Central Avenue, we are as near to
you as your phone (ID 2-9400) and just a few minutes away
by car, at 110-120 South Genesee Street in Waukegan. If you
have any questions on decorating and furnishing your home,
the entire J. Blumberg organization stands ready to give you

expert advice and service.

Matrons,

Patrons

Night Is June 7

be

Matrons and Patrons Night will
observed
by Campbell
Chap-

ter 712, Order of the Eastern Star,
Wednesday
evening,
June
7, at
7:30 in Hundley Memorial temple,
Laurel Ave.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
F,
Johnson
of
Grays Lake chapter will serve in
the East. A social hour will follow
the meeting. Mrs. J. Llewellyn is

Worthy

Matron

ter; Erwin
tron.

B.

of Campbell
Jordan,

chap-

Worthy

Pa-

you need

Mueller Climatrol

WELCOME
TO
WAUKEGAN

OPEN HOUSE THIS SUNDAY... your opportunity to browse
through our showrooms of fine furniture and appliances on

AIR CONDITIONING

five spacious air-conditioned floors. No selling will be allowed!

strain of sweltering Chicago
summers with our new Mueller
Climatrol air conditioner.

See all that is new in home furnishings plus floral and travel
displays, interesting demonstrations of appliances, plus refreshments will be served! Bring the family this Sunday to J.
Blumberg, Waukegan
Chicago

and

. . . the largest furniture store between

Milwaukee!

IT's TIME you put an end to the

WE

SELL

MUELLER

Highland

Phone

ID

Park

2-9400

J-Glatiber
~

Page

H

16—D

24

because

ter compressor, quieter fans,
the best controls . . : quality
you’d expect from a manufacturer that’s concentrated exclusively on residential heating
and air conditioning for 102
years! Yet, because it’s the

“brand

In

CLIMATROL

we know it’s better built. Bet-

in demand”,

we

can

install for no more than you’d
pay for an ordinary make.

S.

Genesee

Get our estimate now!
FREE! Call for your copy.

Waukegan,

Illinois

‘Longer life through Air Conditioning.”

110-120

S &amp;
7611

L HOME
W.

HTG.

CO.,

INC.

Irving Park Rd., Chicago
Phone:
TU 9-8824

Thursday,

June

1,

1961

�Area B'nai B'rith

Group To Install
New

Officer Slate

Suburban Lodge B’nai B'rith recently elected officers and directors

to serve

for

the

coming

year.

In-

Lester Wellmans Sr.
Return from Tucson
After 20 Years
Mr.

and Mrs.

Lester Wellman

Sr.

stallation
of
the
new
slate
is
planned
for
June
21,
at North
Shore Congregation Israel, in Glencoe. The hour will be 8 p.m.
Suburban
Lodge
now has over
1,300 members
and
recently
has
become the largest Lodge of the 55
Lodges comprising the Greater Chicago B’nai B’rith Council.
Jerome
L. Kohn,
1349
Arbor,

have returned to Highland Park aft-

Highland

or; as a founder

Park,

has

been

elected

new president, and vice-presidents
selected are Harry B. Mayer, 15 Indian Tree Dr., Highland Park, Terry
Terracina,
13
Webster
Ave.,
Highwood,
Victor
Jacobson
and
George Kennedy, Glencoe.
Other officers to be installed are:
Alex Levy, Jr., Glencoe, secretary;
Dr. Harold Gerstein, 211 Lincolnwood
Rd., Highland
Park, treasurer; Mark Blumer, 1360 Lincoln
Ave. So., Highland Park, warden;
Ernest Karmin, Glencoe, chaplain;
Isidore Buchman,
150
Cary
Ln.,
Highland Park, Eugene Flesch and
Monroe
R. Passis, both Glencoe,
trustees.
Directors
from
Highland
Park
are Marshall Domash, 905 Ridgewood, Melvin S. Harris, 738 Broadview, Jerome Kaplan, 1143 Sheridan
Rd., Herbert
Kreisman,
110
Lakeside Pl., Harold Lappen, 490
Ava,
Gilbert
Shmikler,
655 Kineaid,
Ramon
J.
Silverberg,
325

Green. Bay

Rd., and Harold

Seymour

Stern

living

in

and

Theo-

dore Weinstein.
James Byrne, Wilmette, Max A.
Holub and Melvin Zarbin, Winnetka,
Robert
Saichek,
Northbrook,
William E. Miller and Dr. Irving
C. Stone,
Chicago,
complete
the
board of directors.

Arizona

for

20

years.

Both want to be near their family.
Mrs. Wellman was very active in
social service volunteer
work
in
Tucson: as a founder of the section
of the National Council of Jewish
Women
there; as an organizer of
the NCJW Sick Room Loan Chest
which was later named in her hon-

of the Tucson

On

Call Employment Reserve—an employment service to older people.
Before moving to the West, she
was a director of the Sarah Hackett
Memorial Hospital for children in
Chicago, and chairman of a Chicago Salvation Army building fund
in 1929. She also organized social
service work at Fort Sheridan.
Mr. Wellman, a painter, served
on the advisory board of the Tucson
Fine Arts Association for several
years. His work has been shown at

jury

shows

of

Fair, El Paso

iature
ciation

and

the

Arizona

Art Association,

Painters

and

Gravers

Smithsonian

State
Min-

Asso-

Institute.

MODERN

FUR

STORAGE

CALLING
ALL
FURS

F. Tu-

ber, 703 Kincaid.
Glencoe trustees are Zev Braun,
Stanley R. Brook, William Glassberg,
Maurice
Glockner,
Milton
Joseph, Jacob Katz, Morton Koch,
David Metrick, Nathan Rosen, Howard Shapiro, Max
Sroge, Charles

Stein,

er

For one low storage cost,
your furs are stored and thor-

Professional
Presents An
Dr.

Hilbert

rick Howard

Group
Award
E.

Park optometrist,

Lang,

sor
Highland

president

of the

Tlinois Inter-professional Council,
presided at the Illinois Council’s
annual
meeting
May
23, at the
Swedish Club of Chicago.

Falls, emeritis profes-

of obstetrics

and

gynecology

the University of Illinois,
consultant, and teacher.

at

author,

includes representatives of the Illinois State Dental Society, Mlinois
State Medical
Society, Ulinois
State

Veterinary

Medical

Society,

Illi-

Illinois State Podiatry Society, and

nois
citizens
who,
during
their
lifetime, render outstanding service to the health and welfare of

Illinois State Optometric Association.
It
meets
each
month
to
further
cooperation
between
the
several health fields toward better
service to the patient.

This

selection

is made

from

BESTi &amp; CO.

He presented the annual distinguished service award to Dr. Fred-

our citizenry.
The

Inter-professional

Council

S

Now’s the time
for Sneakers

«+» when young feet are

hardest at play and need the
kind of cool, comfortable,

y

shock-absorbing support

I ,-

they’re sure to get from
either of these sturdy,
built-for-action shoes.
“U.S. Keds” high white duck
sneaker with shockproof
;
cushion arch, cushion inner £/
soles and moulded rubber
*
outer soles. Sizes 11 to2 5,75
Sizes 214 to 9 6.00
“PF cotton canvas oxford
sneaker with built-in spongearch. White, navy or red.
Sizes 5 to 12, 4.00 Sizes 1214
to 3, 4.25 Growing girls’
sizes 4 to 9 in white canvas,

loden green or black corduroy.

oughly checked. And we do
all small repairs at NO EXTRA

COST.

Victor Furs
458

Highland

Our
MAVERICK
By THE FRONTIER INN

Central

Ave.

Park

ID

2-0351

Mail and phone orders filled

OLD ORCHARD at Skokie « OR 6-3060 ¢ Chicago Phone CO 7-061 I
Mon., Thurs. and Fri. 9:30-9:00

© 9:30-5:30 other days

me

there’s a new stable in town for

Wheel Horse lawn &amp; garden tractors

NEW

AUTHORIZED

Wheel Sfarbee
SALES
“1 got it back at that saloon

SERVICE

CENTER

_ Power To Spare
For All Yard Care

you said was a mirage!”
Frontier

AND

Inn’s Famous

TUB O’ CHICKEN
18 Pieces
of Wonderful
Chicken to

We Sharpen and Repair
All Makes &amp; Models

Carry Out

of Mowers
16-

36

“On The Ridge Between

Hichland Park “Deerfield”

zy zee
Charcoal STEAKS *
Thursday,

June

1,

1961

j

_

POWER MOWER &amp; GARDEN CENTER
2210 Skokie Valley Rd. (U.S. 41) Highland Park, Ill.
Vy Mile South of Route 22 on US. 41

[Dlewood 3-2210
\

Page H 17—D

25

©

�ee

PR

IL

Pray

CM

ee

ney

ea

ee

fits

eR

ee

Sigs

8

PS

eee

So

ee

Veet

AVR?

ane

(Screened,

Stock

CALL:

Skokie

Piled)

Highland

ID 2-0850

Park

June
g|

a.m.

16.

| Barbecued Chickens (with trimmings)
| T-Bone Steak (with trimmings) ..........-.....---c---ccee0000---me mmmater (with trimmings) ..:.-...--.-.&lt;----c-ecseccecescecsescccooe. $1.25

from

11

a.m.

to 2 p.m.

75¢

per

plate

|

“Hey, Mom,
Wardrobe
last

@

Edens,

|

Skokie

&amp;

County

Line

VErnon 5-161]

Students Learn
SUPERIOR READING SKILLS

_

ES

BARAT COLLEGE
For

detailed

information

call

CE 4-3000

Administered

tion

Me-

write

the

from

Edgar
of

E.

North

Israel,

Siskin,

spiritual

Shore

Glencoe,

Congrega-

is

College-Institute.
Dr. Siskin recently

Gentlemen,

in

Cincin-

was

appoint-

ed an alumni overseer for the College-Institute.
The
alumni
overseers are called upon to interpret
to reform congregations throughout the country the policies and
programs of the College-Institute
with its various centers and academic activities.

We
Jr.

can still get our Camp
Let’s

not

wait

For

your

convenience

69

Linden

we

will

be

open

Thurs.

Eves.

until

the

during

May.

Geutlemen Yr.
Avenue
THE

VErnon

HUBBARD

WOODS

Hubbard

5-3181
FASHION

en ee

Ses

ee

READING

of Greenwich,
comprehension,

Woods

CENTER

‘ONCE OVER LIGHTLY’
IS NOT ENOUGH!

and

Seats

PN ESRS
Ee8

MC ee

TERE Oe

CE

RS

Sy
eeeeee eet
ee

eee

Planning

Summer Work
Regional

Director

Earl

F.

Hal-

verson of the U.S. Department of
Labor’s Wage and Hour and Public Contracts Divisions has reminded employers, teen-agers and their
parents that the Fair Labor Standards Act restricts certain jobs for
youngsters under 18.
“With the increase in the country’s teen-age population,” Halverson
said,
“more
youngsters
than
ever before will be competing for
summertime employment in a tight
job market.
It is important
that
they understand the provisions of
the Federal child-labor law.”
The Act sets a 16-year minimum
age for general employment and an
18-year
age
minimum
for
jobs
which have been declared hazardous by the Secretary of Labor. It
applies to employment in interstate
commerce or in the production of
goods for such commerce
Halverson said that the best way
for employers to protect themselves
against
unintentionally
hiring
an
underage child is to require an age
certificate showing that the young
worker is old enough for the job.
It will serve as proof of age for purposes of the law.
“Bach
State also
has
its own
child-labor law,” Halverson added,
“and if the State and Federal laws
differ, the higher standards should
prevail.”
For more information regarding
the child-labor, minimum wage and
overtime pay requirements of Federal Labor Laws, Halverson urged
employers to contact the Division’s
offices located at:
1lth
Floor
Bankers
Bldg.—105
West Adams St., Chicago 3, Illinois.
Room 205 Bradley Building—402
East Adams St., Springfield, I].

Room

423—Federal

Building, In-

dianapolis 4, Ind.
Mills Building—116 E. Jefferson
Blvd., South Bend, Ind.
Room 603 Calhoun Building—711
West Lake St., Minneapolis 8, Minn.
Room
338—Federal
Building,
Milwaukee 2, Wisc.
Room 203—638 State St., Madison, Wisc.

Help your

HEART

SERVICES
enhances

ee

Some Advice for —

Dean

slow down with

Connecticut

rate,

a

Teens

nati this weekend participating in
dedication
ceremonies
of the library of Hebrew
Union
CollegeJewish
Institute of Religion
and
in other meetings related to the

10

better hurry!
at

en

by

BALDRIDGE
Improves

or

se mae oe
teeth
*

SpE

TAGS SEWN FREE OF CHARGE
WITH CAMP ORDER
TEE SHIRTS WITH CAMP EMBLEMS
@ ALL CAMP EQUIPMENT
@ COMPLETE CAMP WARDROBE

IN

Individual Programs for:
GRADES 10-12 — COLLEGE STUDENTS — ADULTS
_ June 19 to July 10
July 11 to July 31

a

a

NAME

Rd.

{SUMMER READING PROGRAM

3
aa

daily

ase RR AE SE
te
ee

minute!’’

@

Deliveries made to Highland Park, Deerfield, Northbrook
or Glencoe with orders of $10.00 or more.

FREE Ice Cubes with
Each Liquor Purchase

It is open

RMN
ee
eae

Camp Headquarters

Steak House &amp; Liquor Store
Served

Reid

to 4 p.m.

PAT PATTERSON’S
luncheons

Somerville

morial Library on the middle cam-

3

Hwy.,

Dr,
leader

pus of Lake Forest College.
The exhibit, gathered as a part
of the city’s centennial,
includes
printed material, photographs and
artifacts
from
the
Lake
County
Museum of History and from individual collectors—tracing the cultural and social history of Lake
Forest from pioneer days, through
the Civil War and beginning of this
century to the recent past.
The exhibit will close at noon

MENONI &amp; MOCOGNI
2200

Arthur

Si Eas
RO

College-Institute

The Centennial exhibit of “Lake
Forestiana” will open June 9 at
the

Rats
SST

4
7

‘Lake Forestiana’
Exhibit Opening
June 9 at College

BLACK
DIRT

(ass

|Dr. Siskin Visits

‘

enjoyment

DRIVE CAREFULLY — THE LIFE YOU SAVE
MAY BE YOUR OWN

CRAFT

WOOD

LUMBER

1590 DEERFIELD RD.
HIGHLAND PARK
ID 2-0140

Skilled,

Mueller Climatrol

COMPANY

AIR
CONDITIONING

CARPENTRY

experienced

men

who are

part

Ask your doctor if it isn’t wise to
let central air conditioni
ame take
8
hot
weather strain off your
And you're wise to choose Mueller
Climatrol.
For instance, service will never be
a problem. Mueller units need less,
for one thing. They deliver all the
cooling you
ever want... smoothly,
quietly.
if you want service, our
expert factory-trained mechanics are
just a phone call away.
Parts? Mueller Climatrol has three
huge exclusive Chicago warehouses,
factory is only 80 minutes away,

of

Craftwood’s tradition of craftsmanship.
BUILDING
SMALL

¢

REMODELING

REPAIRS

©

GARAGES

¢

PORCHES

SHUTTERS

KITCHENS
Hours:

OPEN

8:00

A.M.

THURSDAY

-

5:30

&amp;

P.M.

FRIDAY

Sun.,

9-1

LEWIS

w= \ “Longer Life through

Air Conditioning”

Call for your copy.

L. R. GREGORY

EVENING.

CARPETS
Page H 18—D 26

thsVE 5-2400

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Phone: CE 4-0216

Thursday,

June

1,

Forest

1961

�Fine Food Costs Less At Jewel

Fine Food Costs Less At Jewel
GBF ine Food Costs less At Jewel

it's a JEWEL Ro:
Quality is your best beef buy—and that's all
you'll find at Jewel where all beef is U.S. Choice and twice
inspected by the government and by Jewel buyers. Then
Jewel meat men are specially trained to extra value trim
this quality beef for you, removing all unnecessary fat and
bone. Jewel's EVT round steak for instance, has only
enough fat on it to insure proper moisture and add to the
flavor. This weekend, while the price is extra low, try out
a new round steak recipe—it tastes so much better if it’s
Jewel quality round steak.

U. S. CHOICE—EXTRA

VALUE TRIM

Ib

Round Steak
U.S. CHOICE—EXTRA

VALUE

TRIM—

U.S.

BONELESS, ROLLED

USDA
CHOICE

Rump

Ib

Roast

CHOICE—EXTRA

Cube

A's

~

)..

VALUE

TRIM

Steak

lb.

100% PURE, FRESH

Ground Beef

|».

°$ OLD-FASHIONED I* SALE] Sweet 'n MeatyLe

SNOWY POWDER

15 oz.

Bleach
MORTON

HOUSE

Baked

a

3 for

¢

pkg.

aes

c

Beans

on.

¢

3

JENO'S

3
_

Pizza

15%

Mix

REG.

PRICE

for

SO.

2/35

f

REG.
PRICE

or

99

And the price of these jumbo melons at Jewel is a welcome
“ too!

REG
PRICE

Del Monte Tuna

2/98

Buy 2, Get 3rd for Ic

|

BRO

ok Bene
6% ox.

Tomatces

oP

)

Just bite into the sweet, unique flavor of a vine ripened
cantaloupe from Jewel and you're biting into pure pleasure.
Whether served chilled with salt, sugar, lemon or lime juice,
or served in combination with any number of fruits, berries or
ice cream, cantaloupe is a welcome addition to any meal,

$1.07 9/5106

2

C..
. $]31
5 f
or

can
|

YOU PAY

mayne

;

c A for 40:

pies

‘Buy 4At Regular: Price

|

Get the 5th For Only Ic

KRAFT RASPBERRY ae

cea,
aan
Ee ore OE
Applesauce hr

Praterves

:

REG. PRICE
2 FOR

78c

ie ix.

YOU

3

AIR

PAY

for79c|

MAID

Cleanser

—

Grapefruit

itede

Lux Soaps.
MILANI 1890

Dressing

|

“

qc: 4 for

2S.

Asparagus

QRS 8% st

Buy 3, Get 4th for Ic

4

Corn

Baby

:

= |

$

16 ox, can

“% =

Food

He

Cs. 12,°

Vacuum Pack 12 ox. can

REG.

40c

ve 1 g7for ME,

or Brine Pack

HEINZ STRAINED

vs».

PRICE

ROE Food me 7 for omHS.
MARY DUNBAR WHOLE KERNEL

oe
27s0e

va

REG.

ae arte

pkg.

Bie

PI

“« BhY 8

VA
CHERRY
CUT SPEARS, 5
HERRY VALLEY

07,"

Kooi Aid

REG.

= dex

4

URRY

ror
ab ROX

ALL FLAVORS

5 for

c 5 for

size

ue

i:

=°

CHERRY VALLEY SEGMENTS |

for

jor

Time!

Any

Good

Buy 3, Get 4th for Ic

7 for eeREG.
ie

«

eke

| Buy 5, Get 6th for lec

price

gS for Me.

4/98

-

forr}Ie
| Buy 4, Get 5th fo
“THUMPIN'

REG. PRICE

:

a

ae

5 FOR 95c

ones
can

RIPE"

Watermelon .

YOU PAY

BO 6 tor 96°

CRACKIN’ GOOD SALTINES os 2S
STICKS TO ITSELF

Saran Wrap
REG. PRICE

|

3 FOR 99

i;

25 ft.

|

|

ro

¢ -

YOU PAY
4 for $100

CRUSHED, TIDBITS, CHUNKS

Dole Pineapple
4 FOR 98c

YOU PAY

13% oz.

5 for 99

ca

ll

n

Happier Families Shop At Jewel
Thursday,

June

1, 1961

ae

REG. PRICE

;

te

ole

Jui

for mei
¢

suice

GRAPEFRUIT
PINEAPPLE2

Juice

See

on,
12wf

woe

12

or.

c

10 for

RES.

PRICE

91e 9/906

Hopper Families Shop
At Jewel

JEW

:

EL TEA CO.

TC:

Happier Families Shop At Jewel
Page

H

35—D

27

�gE

Se

%

seer

PNET

(&gt;

tare

E/F

Jam —™
eee

lt

Against Orioles in

Little Minor League
The Phillies opened Highwood’s
Little Minor league baseball season
with
a come-from-behind
7
to 6 victory over the Orioles, The
game
inaugurated
Highwood’s
baseball program for the season,
one
that
will
continue
through
next October.
The Little Minor Phillies, composed
of nine and
ten year old
boys twice tied up the ball game

then fell behind 6 to 3 as they
came to bat in the final inning.
With

two

outs the Phils took

of

three

Oriole

ad-

errors,

and pushed across four runs. This
gave the victory to Billy Digani,

the

winning

pitcher.

The game featured home
runs
by Francis Koopman and Joe Signorio, plus a triple by Bruce De
Santo of the winning Phillies. Don

Cowsgill’s triple along with Eugene
Voegs’ double, were the only extra base blows for the losers.
Highwood’s Little Minor league
will play a spring, summer and
fall schedule.
A winner
will be
named
from
each
of the
three

seasons.

Bail games

Monday,

are scheduled

Wednesday

afternoons

and

until school

Friday

is out, and

mornings of the same days
the summer vacation.

during

Team
aR
Orioles
Senators

Ga

aR rea

Giants

Last

Week’s

Phillies 7—Orioles
loser, B. Ritaoca).

Friday, June
lies

vs

Lost
0
1
0
0

Pct.
1.000
.000
.000

000

Results

6

Coming

Won
1
0
0
0

(winner,

B.

Digani;

—

Phil-

Games

2, 3:45 p.m,

Senators

Monday, June 5, 3:45
ants vs Orioles

p.m.

Wednesday, June 7, 3:45
Phillies vs Orioles

—

Gi-

p.m.

—

Seek Players For
Highwood Leagues
wood

prep league

(boys 15 thru

according

to

Don

19

Skrinar,

_Highwood’s Recreational director.
Boys

in

this

age

group

should

see Mr. Skrinar at the Highwood
ball park any evening during the

pe

week. They can learn the practice
times and other team information.

An
boys
Zames

All-Star team of pony
had
two _ out-of-town
during

the

Memorial

age
ball
Day

holiday period. The pony team will
play a home
at 6:15 p.m.

At

least

game

two

tonight,

teams

of

starting

boys

of

prep league age have indicated they
would like to play ball in the proposed Highwood league this sum-

mer.

No uniforms

will be required

for the loop. It is being formed to
ive area boys the opportunity to
continue playing baseball on an informal basis.

Information on pony and prep
league ball can also be obtained
from

the

Community

Center

DHS Golfers End
Season’s League
Games at Meet

ener

™Y,

a

Yea,

er
pg

3

ty

e
reece

Paced by John Fleming’s 75, the
DHS Warriors took individual first,
second, and fourth places as well
as a team first, at the Interim Conference sophomore golf meet last
Tuesday at Arrowhead golf course.

Still Registering
For Highwood’s
Pee Wee League
Registration continues in both divisions
of Highwood’s
Pee
Wee
baseball league this week. Boys 7
thru 8 years of age can register
after school or Saturday morning
at the ball park,
or Highwood’s
Community Center in case of rain.
Present plans call for the Major
Pee Wees to open their season this
week end. The Minor Pee Wee loop
will continue tryouts for the month,
and
won’t play their first game
until early July.
Boys playing in the Major Pee
Wee circuit will learn which team
they are assigned to tomorrow aft-

ernoon (Friday, June 9), when they
report to the Community
Center
between 4 and 5 p.m. Each boy will
get his schedule for the spring season, and find out when
he plays
his first game.
The Major
Pee Wee
league is
comprised of boys who played last
year,
and
who
haven’t
been
assigned to the Little Minor league.
Boys may still sign up for Pee Wee
play, but must see Don Skrinar for
registration information.
A spring
schedule
during
the

of May

and

June

will

be

followed
by
a summer
schedule
during
July
and
August.
A fall
schedule in September and October
will complete a six-month program
for this group.

Elks Sports Night
Will Benefit Boys
Baseball Program
Emil
“Dutch”
Leonard,
former
major league All-Star pitcher, currently
promoting
youth
activity
programs for Illinois, highlighted
a successful Sports Night event conducted by the Local Elks May 23.

any

evening after 8:30 o’clock week day
evenings.

mission.
Youth activity programs not only
develop children physically but, as
Leonard said, are means of curbing juvenile delinquency. After his

talk, he delighted the 125 Elks and
their friends with stories of his
baseball experiences.
Charles Crovetti acted as master
of ceremonies. He introduced Alvin

Singer,

Exalted

Ruler

of Highland

Park Elks No. 1362, and Dar Inman, representing the Boys Baseball Commission, who outlined the
Commission’s program, and reported a need for qualified men to assist with coaching boys in Pony and
Colt age groups. Anyone interested
in helping with this program should
call Inman at ID 2-3160.
Bill Chambers, golf pro at Sunset Valley, conducted a golf clinic,

assisted by the Elks’ secretary, Ray
“Shanker” Sheahen.
The Elks team, champions
Elks Traveling League, was

Fleming,
playing
conservative
golf, went
four-over par with
a
birdie, five bogies, and twelve pars
as he carded 39 and 36 for his 75.
As he birdied the 18th hole, Fleming became the first boy to win the

Suburban

League

pionship

wearing

the

white

Highland

Park

of

of the
intro-

individual chamblue

and

last

year

and this year to repeat as sophomore champ of the Interim League
wearing
the scarlet and gray of
Deerfield.
Freshman Skip Godow posted a
40-47-87 to win runner-up honors

while

Mike

Hadjuk,

sophomore

golfer from Deerfield High School,
totaled a 45-44-89 to tie for third.
In a sudden death play-off with
Feige
of Prospect
to settle for
fourth place. John Feagan shot a
46-47-93 to round out the Deerfield
team total of 344.
The
in-and-out
Warrior
squad,
five and five for the season in dual
meets, led Prospect and Wheaton
by 29 strokes as those schools tied
for second with 373. West Proviso
finished fourth with 375.
Wheaton fs First
Final
conference
standings
showed
Wheaton
first trailed by
Proviso West, Prospect, Deerfield,
and Glenbrook. Final standings are

determined

by

the

school’s

712

to

take

second

and

third.
At the varsity level Wheaton and
East Leyden were conference cochampions. Al Schultz of Wheaton
led individual scoring with a 3836-74.
Team Score
Deerfield ................344
Wheaton
................373
Prospect S652. t eo
Proviso West ........ 373.
Maine West .......... 377
Glenbard East
....379
Glenbrook ..............381
Willowbrook ..
382
Leyden
East
394
Morton West ........ 402
Leyden West ........ 410

Final Standings
Pts.
Wheaton
............ 3%
Proviso West .... 7
Oe eOt. Sas
Ti
Deertield * ois
8
Glenbrook. .......... 9
Maine .................. 10
Willowbrook ...... 13
Glenbard East ..17
Morton
.............. 18
Leyden East ...... 18
Leyden West ....21

Highland
Park’s
varsity
and
sophomore tennis squads went to
Oak Park Tuesday in their final
dual meet appearances of the present campaign and both teams lost,

3-2.
Atlas

won

the number

two

singles for the varsity. Jim Gray
took the third singles match.
Jeff Gluck was victorious in the
first

singles

The

number

match

two

doubles

for

the

Dan

Wagner

and

Trevor

sophs.

team

of

Weiss

al-

so won.
Ed

Hart,

Lewitz

Outdoor

Little Giant’s outstanding
athletes still are topics of
conversation

cles.

Georgeson,

in

sports

cir-

A few of the top per-

Jim
Wienert,
Highland
Park
MHigh’s
outstanding
miler, outstepped his closest
rival, New
Trier’s
Weymouth Kirkland, at the state
meet in Champaign, not only
to come

in first, but to crack

the old time record of 4:20.4
with his 4:16.2 performance.

Jim

Sternfield

Lee

La-

duced by Carroll Snyder, chairman
of the Sports Night committee, who
presented each member of the team
with a team picture. The winning
combination included George Bock,

Moran.
The evening was
the showing of the
ries film.

concluded with
1960 World Se-

who

has

been a constant threat in the
discus event, to ok second
place in the state meet with
a toss

of

Jamie
Earl

track season has

closed, officially,
but the
performances of some of the

formers are shown.

Tennis Teams Lose
Last Dual Meets

Steve

Joseph

160 feet,

11 inches.

McGregor

McGregor

also

qualified for state honors in
the district meet with his
throw of 143 feet, 514 inches.
Ronnie Joseph set a personal record in the district
meet with a broad jump of

21 feet, 1014 inches, to qualify for state competition,
and Joel Lewitz, half-miler
also earned a spot on the
team
which
competed
at
Champaign,

“The Service Bank Of Highland Park’

a

-OW-COST

LOAN

BANKS HIGHLAND
1771 Second St.
Member

28

Sternfield

posi-

Buda,
Rudy
Nessler,
Robert
Schwalbach, and the captain, Jack

IMPROVE Se

Page H 36—D

Weinert

tion in dual meet competition plus
their
position
in the conference
meet. Thus Wheaton’s first in dual
meets plus a tie for second in the
conference meet gave them a total
of 3144 points. Deerfield’s seventh
in dual meet competition plus first
in the
conference
gave
them
8
points. Proviso scored 7 points and

Prospect

The event was a benefit for the
Highland Park Boys Baseball Com-

Players are still needed for High~wood’s pony league (boys 13 and 14
years) and for the proposed Highyears),

oF a dit

months

Highwood Little Minor League
(For Boys 9 and 10 years)

OT

2

a

on bene

Phillies Win Opener

vantage

cane

&gt;

eee
re Mr

~~

i me

en:

BANK—POST OFFICE BLDG.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

PARK
IDiewood 2-7800
Thursday,

June

1,

1961

�Journalism

Over 200 HP Boys
Have Registered for
Little Leagues
The

Highland

Park

Recreation

Department
will serve the summer interests of a large number
of boys if Little League registration can be used as a criterion. The

opening practice session got underway this past weekend, with over
200
ing

boys reporting to the coachstaff. Total registration
will

exceed
June

350

scheduled

land

BOWLING

TROPHY

Park

team

Fuel

from

morning

date,

workouts

to familiarize

phases

coached
outfield

ing,

opening

19.

Saturday
all

before

of

play.

pitching

and

are

boys

with

Boys

are

in hitting,
infield
play, base running,

catching.

Scholarship

ATTRACTIVE
SECRETARIAL
POSITION

Eric Jon Engberg, son of the Eric
R. Engbergs, 1570 Northland Ave.,
was
one of the students
in the
University of Missouri School of
Journalism
to receive
awards
at
the
annual
Honors
day
assemby
May 25.
The John P. Herrick
scholarship for the 1961-62 school

year,

worth

$600,

was

awarded

to

Engberg.
tices will continue
June
3 and
June 10, Teams
will be selected
on Saturday, June 17. Season play

begins Monday, June 19.
Boys between the ages of 8 and
12 who have not signed up for
the

coming

season

should

An attractive secretarial position is now open for a girl who
is

ter in person at the Highland
Park Recreation Center as soon

Prac-

as.

for

others.

Appropriate
person

something

spe-

or

salary.
call

for

Apply

§

in

appointment

with Mr, Art Kick.

The

regis-

play,
bunt-

looking

cial. She-will work for a busy
executive and will have the opportunity to act on her own
initiative as well as perform the
usual secretarial duties.
Experience is essential plus the
qualities of poise, neatness and
the ability to converse with

Hy-Dynamic

Co.

Skokie Highway, near Rte. 176
Lake Bluff, III.
CE 4-5400

posible.

Al &amp; Jane’s went to the High-

of firemen—Walt

Tallon,

Al Pierantoni, Ed Shriver and Norm Freberg.

Marty

Netzer,

Absent from the

picture were Dick Castellari and Johnny Walker.

Nine Playgrounds

School District 108 in charge.
All playgrounds will be open
Monday through Friday from 9

Open on June 21

For Summer Sports
Nine

Junior

grounds

in

operated

Neighborhood

Highland

by

am.
to
through

the

Park

Playwill

Playground

be
and

Recreation
Board
this summer.
Registration day will be Wednesday, June 21, from 9 a.m. to 12
noon at the following playgrounds:
Braeside School with Susan Bass

of Mt: Holyoke

College

in charge;

Lincoln Park with Greta Fell of
Pembroke
College
in
charge;
Mooney
Park with
Arleen
Stein
of National College of Education
in
charge;
Morgan
Playground
with Mary Beth Ostrander of Wellesley College in charge; Old Elm

Park

with

ber
of
charge;

Diane

Phillips,

Northwoods
Port
Clinton

a mem-

faculty
in
Park
with

Cathy Meierhoff of Marquette University in charge; Ravinia School
with
Marjorie
Henle
of
Northwoods
School faculty in charge;

Sunset Woods Park with Rita Ronzani of Southern [Dlinois University in charge;
and
Park
with
Beverly

et

gots

West
Ridge
Mooney
of

12 noon
from
August
1 for

June
21
Highland

Park boys and girl 5 to 15 years of
age,
The program will feature games,
outdoor education, story hour, arts
and crafts, dramatics and dancing.
Trips in chartered buses will be
taken to the Cubs-St. Louis baseball
game
at Wrigley
Field
on
June 30 and to the County Stadium
in Milwaukee
to see
the
Braves-Phillies
game
on July 6.

Register for these trip at the playgrounds or the Recreation Center.
Other trips will be taken to Lincoln
Park
Zoo,
Hawthorne-Mellody
Farm,
Trail
Side
Museum,

and other places of interest.
Members of the Playground
Recreation Board are David
seph, Theodore Cornell
don Buchanan, Stanley
Chester Skidmore.

and
Jo-

Jr., GorLind and

Only the Want Ads offer amazing
values and opportunities not available elsewhere. Read them now!

&amp; the peak of hospitality at PIKES PEAK

ov

x

SUNDAY

RESTAURANTS

DINNER
AT
THE
No finer facilities anywhere
in the Pikes Peak Region.

250 fine rooms downtown. Steps
from theaters, night clubs, shopping,
banks, train and bus depots. Ample
Parking. Olympic size Swimming
pool, Cocktail Lounges. Nightly
Entertainment. Excellent
Dining Room.

=

FALCON:

ROOM

CRABAPPLE

Play host to your family at a delicious Sunday

dinner in the bright and inviting Apple Basket.
If you prefer, make it a gay Sunday Brunch

in

the Countryman Grill. Dinner from 12:30 untl
8 P.M.

Brunch

from

10:30 A.M.

until

1 P.M.

For reservations

write =

THE ANTLERS
HOON

Alia
a

ee

on

SORe bemrarmcm

COLORADO SPRINGS COLORADO

Thursday,

June

1,

1961

Page H 37—D

29

�Begs oe

ee

oe

Le

ee

Deerfield Takes

sa

ue

12 Inch Softball

Comes to Highwood
For One Day Only

Returns

League Tennis

12” softball, popular in post-war
years, will return to the local scene
this summer. Four teams will compete in the Highland Park Recreation Department’s newly organized
Prep League at West Ridge Park.

the DHS

tennis

team

to

second

place in the Interim League

meet

last Wednesday,

tennis

May

23,

Willowbrook High School.

_

In the two day competition

Hirsch

won

four

at

Neal

consecutive

matches to take first place in the
second singles competition. Thus
Hirsch,

a

promising

freshman,

re-

mains undefeated in singles play
for the entire season, having won
consecutive singles matches.
_ Freshman

Jeff

Mandel

advanced

to the final round of the third singles

bracket

Wayne

Gewicke

before

bowing

to

won his opening

match.
player,

two matches

be-

fore losing to Bob Maramba, Glenbard East, who ultimately won the

first singles matches.
These
singles
victories

plus

by the Warrior

dou-

les teams of Johnson-Eaton
and
wkerling-Craig
gave
Deerfield
if
meet points.

| The over-all record of dual meet
play and conference tournament
cores
shows
Deerfield
holding
second place in the final league

standings,

point

brook.

just

eight-tenths

behind

Managers
include
Steve
Carl,
Braeside Bombers; and Gary Salisbury, Mike Lazar and Tom Homma, whose squads are as yet unnamed.

information

may

be ob-

tained by phoning the Recreation
Department, ID 2-24492.

of Prospect in a

hotly contested three set
Randy Bax, first singles

points earned

to HP

Games will be played two nights
a week starting Thursday, June 15.
The age limit is 15 to 18 years, and
registration is limited to boys residing in School District 113.

Further

champion

of

a

Willow-

| Individual results at the
are listed below:
ment

tourna-

Ee ac.
falar

Real Live Circus

Second Place in
| Neal Hirsch and Jeff Mandel led

pis BRpe

aaa

Notice to Bidders
Sealed proposals will be accepted
by
the City of Highland
Park, Illinois until
12 o’clock noon C.D.S.T. on Monday, June
12, 1961 in the Council Chamber
at the
City Hall, 1707 St. Johns Avenue, for furnishing motor vehicle equipment as follows:
2—1 Ton Dump
Trucks
2—Compact 2 door sedans
1—Compact
Station Wagon
and will then and there be publicly opened
and read.
Specifications
and
proposal
forms
are
available at the office of the City Manager
and all proposals must be submitted upon
the forms provided,
At a subsequent meeting, the City Council will award a contract to purchase to
the lowest and best bidder. The City Council
reserves the right to reject any or all bids
and to change, increase or decrease
any
item or items pursuant to award of bid.
BY ORDER
OF THE CITY COUNCIL
R. W.
SNYDER
City Manager
5$/25°6/1/61—140

The Hagen
Bros. circus is appearing at Highwood’s
ball park
today (Thursday) in the only appearance of a live circus in the area
this summer.
The circus is sponsored by the
Highwood, Community Center, and
marks
the first appearance
of a
real live circus here since 1958.
Featuring a host of live animals,
clowns, acrobats, and other sawdust
performers
the circus
came
into
town early this morning, was set
up at daybreak and will be ready
for its two performances today.
A matinee show will be given at
4 p.m. with the evening performance starting at 8 p.m. Plenty of
supervised parking will be available near the circus grounds.
Many local youngsters were late
for school this morning since they
thronged the ball park where the
circus was
being set up. Others
were with the elephants when early

school

st round:
round:

Bye
Defeated

Fairclough

nd

rd round:
th

round:

is

: Defeated

Defeated

Defeated

Amant

Bemm
Carey

3 singles—Jeff

ist round:
ind round;
rd round!
th round:

6-0)

6-0)
3-6;

10-8)

Lyk ee 7.
round:

6-0)

t

to

No. 2 doubles

Priest-Spyrison

—

Peter Craig

Saga

Defeated

ind found:

Lost

Johnson-Jon

which

John

Eckerling-

Hesson-Heitsch

to Lincoln-Early

led

(1-6;

a block

a

pe

SAN

RN

wee
asi

os

Eh

Bis 5

Aa

pare

Bring

Your Rings and
We Check Them

Jewelry
FREE.

JEWELERS

“- OPTICIANS

Highland

of tickets
Tel.

from

We

our own

do

Park

IDlewood

Across.

bank

20630
over

35

diamond

«years.

setting.

Have. your diamonds set in modern settings.
Payments arranged.

MAIN

LOBSTER

$4.95
SARATOGA

FRESH

DAILY

“Fit For A King”

Highwood

gesture

of

Luncheon

ID 2-0440

appreciation

to

the

many

its service to include:

(Mon.-Fri. )

from

to 3 p.m.

11:30

a.m.

Dinner Every Night
Sunday Brunch
Our

new

From

chef . . . Hugh

YOUR

3 p.m.

Ton er has

added

these

new

con-

Roast Duckling Normandi
Coq-au-vin-rouge
Chicken Kiev
Pepper Steak Lance lot
Rainbow Trout Dori a
Scalopine de veau marsalla
Frog Legs Provinciale

WAY

by Charles Wenk, DCS*

Pancakes

are fattening

Spaghetti is too,
But our lovely Chow Mein
Won’t stay there with you!

v,

°

the CAMELOT

RY

We're low in chlosterol
And

240 SKOKIE

calories too!

You won’t know you’ve eaten
By the time you are through

IN

Last week a few of our

HIGHWAY

NORTHBROOK VE 5-3614
CHICAGO CALL BR 3-3614

]

(Indoors

if cloudy)

od NORTHWESTERN
| DRAMA FESTIVAL
Be
| —- Obey’s “NOAH”
uly 4, 7, 13, 16, 19, 22, Aug. 1
Gogol’s “THE INSPECTOR

2
GENERAL”
duly 5, 8, 11, 14, 20, 23
Richardson's “THE-PRODIGAL”
| July 6, 9, 12, 15, 18, 21, 26

Be hoe
pet ceatee

Seas

Ps

Moliere’s “THE SCHOOL FOR

HUSBANDS”
ly 25, 27, 28, 29, 30, Aug. 2

Single Admission $2.00
et of 4 tickets, one for each play $5.
(The number of sets available is
Be
limited)
Curtain Time: 8:30 P.M.
Mail Orders Promptly Filled

UNiversity 4-

1907

Bldg.,

Extension

282

| Page H 38—D 30
a

OD
SRK OSS
ates xX &amp;
SREKO

Remember we're here
To cater your party,
Come in for lunch
Or at dinner—eat hearty!

POLICY

Open Daily 6:00 to 12 Midnight — Curtain at 6:30
Sunday Continuous 2 to Midnight—Doors Open 1:40

&lt;x?

But where were you Wednesday
Nobody ate!

FRIDAY,
On
EDNA

JUNE 2 THRU THURS.,
— ONE WEEK —
Our

Panora mic

Wide

JUNE

8

Screen

FERBER’S

“CIMARRON”

During the summer,

in CinemaScope and Metro Color

We're going to close Monday
The story of a man, a land, a love from the pages of
Pulitzer Prize novelist Edna Ferber!

But Saturday nights—
We'll be open through Sunday!
(Late!

—

Starring—Glenn

that is)

KING-SIZE DRINKS

1908 Sheridan Rd., Highland Park
ID 3-1414
*Doctor

of

Chop

Suey

eo

7,

¥

THEATRE

food is so great,

tea house

=

a0

SSK© es
SSRN
CX?

Everyone’s raving
The

Charlie Wenk’s

a

| Northwestern Uniy., Speech
Boe”
Evanston

But keep coming in
We're giving great service—
The weekend crowds
Were making us nervous!

North Shore’s Most Beautiful Theatre
Forest, Ill. —- CE 4-2106 or CE 4-2107

NEERPAT
Lake

$,%.

Outdoor Garden Theatre

Pak a
ve

Clients were mad,

We couldn’t seat everyone
Boy were we sad!

AAA
AADAADAAAAAADADA)
ADA A DDD DA

exciting

served by-the
new CREWMATES

atthe
BUFFET.

PIANO
FOOD.

Maria Schell, Anne Baxter,
O’Connel
—SCHEDULE—
Weekdays—’’Cimarron’’ begins at 7:00 and 9:40
Saturday and Sunday—’’Cimarron”’ begins at 1 :30-4:03-6:46-9:30

No ¢over--No

June 9—" THE ABSENT MINDED PROFESSOR”
June 16—”GONE WITH THE WIND”

BAR
SERVICE
minimum

EDGEWATER
BEACH
HOTEL
5300. North. Sheridan Road

Ford,

Arthur

“RONNIE ORLAND

Guidepost

aang
A., MY., Y.

j June

30—"“THE

YOUNG

SAVAGES”

aire

In.

l. H. NEMEROFF

LIVE

a

ry

Ce
a) lead eee
cone eg a egeee os ‘ i's,

DON'T LOSE YOUR
DIAMONDS

for late arrivals.
Circus
authorities
state
that
plenty of entertainment
is available for early arrivals. Several side
shows will be featured.

(6-3; 6-2)

i

Pees

OES

She

a

will hold

(6-2;

.

reas
s
Ry
OTeFoe
Ag AN Wy

ee

released early.
Advance
tickets, at
reduced
prices, will still be available at a
special booth at the ball park, set
up
by
the
Community
Center,

Bye
Defeated Egner (6-1; 6-1)
Defeated Anderson (6-1; 6-3)
Lost to Gewecki (6-4; 1-6; 6-3)

ea

tinental items to our menu:
HOW TO EAT
TO SLIMNESS

Mandel

No, 1 doubles—Jon
_ Eaton
si

(6-4;

(8;
(6-0;

eee
aks

Camelot will extend

6-1;

Hirsch

eae4

P

fine friends we have made during our first year
in business, effective MONDAY, JUNE 5 the

rd round: Lost to Maramba (6-0: 6-0)
Yo. 2 singles—Neal
st round: Bye

ee
Gal
a

bells rang.

As

DRAWCWAAAAAAAUAAAA000000000004
(5-7;

rated

Since this afternoon’s performance is not scheduled to start until
4 p.m., local schools will NOT be

No. 1 singles—Randy Bax
md

Oe,

Phe

Exhibit in Our
Bob Spitz

Thursday,

June

1,

1961

�“MO
DIF
IED
STOCK CAR RACES

Big Red Vaulter
Tom Ross, son of Mr.
John

T.

earned

Ross,

2353

,
&amp;iid MFs.

Exmod?’

University,
Granville,
Ohio,
this
spring. A freshman, Ross was the
top pole vaulter for the Big Red.

SUNDAY NITE

Penny

Bros.

Gisy

Y CERCUS |

Time Trials 7:15 — Races 8:30
Added Event — Amateur Races
Adults 1.50
Children 25c
W. Washington St. - Free Parking

You'll

to

get $4

your

me

SUNDAY, JUNE 11

Savings

for $3

f,
a

One Day Only Rain or Shine
Crossroads

on

fi

NOT THE LARGEST
NOT THE SMALLEST
BUT ONE OF THE BEST

WAUKEGAN
SPEEDWAY
Hold

Rd.,

a letter in track at Denison

Bond.

if held to ma-

turity.

Shopping

Center

Skokie &amp; Edens, Highland Park
2 GREAT SHOWS
at 2 P.M., 4 P.M.
SPECIAL PRICE ON
ADVANCE SALE TICKETS!
Children under 12—70c
Adults—95c
(Prices will be higher at the gate)

GLENCOE

sponsored
by
No. Suburban
Beth EI Sisterhood
For tickets or information phone:

ID

2

THEATRE — GLENCOE
ID 2-0605

VErnon

FRI.-THURS.

5-0605

June

ONE

FULL

2-6790

2-8

WEEK

7

or

ID

Chevy, owned by Mr. and Mrs.
Mel Schlesinger, Wilmette, is giving Misty, the five month old pup
of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Baum, of
Highland Park, a few pointers in
carrying the dumbbell,
an advanced execrise in obedience training.
Chevy
has
her
CD
degree
(Companion Dog) and is now working for her CDX degree (Companion Dog Excellent)
When a dog receives the CD degree, he (or she) is a better companion because of learning his sits,

2-9311

FEATURE
ACTS

2 5

TRAINED
ANIMAL ACTS
CLOWNS
AERIAL

Wire

ARTISTS

Walking

WESTERN

ALWAYS

Wonders
REVUE

FREE

PARKING!

ie measaaels

June

thru

THEATRE

“THE
HOODLUM
PRIEST”

ENDS

FRIDAY

This Is How

HIGHLAND PARK

* * &gt; py ip. 2-2400

THURSDAY

2 thru June

8th

Sun.

FEATURE
TIMES
Weekdays 7:17-9:23
Sat. 5:30-7:31-9:30
1 :30-3 :31-5:32-7:33-9:30

downs,

stays

CDX

degree

work

such

standing,

as

It’s Done,
and

Misty
The

Dog

advanced

Mrs.

heeling.

involves
jumping,

retreiving,

sitting and staying —

all

great enjoyment in viewing this film
experience don’t miss “The Trapp

Mr.

Mr.

and

and

Mrs,

and

Mrs.

and
Mrs.

Frank
Lesley

Mrs. William Overman Andreychuk
and Deerfield: Mr. and Mrs. Dick

Chevy and about 50 other purebred German Shepherd dogs train
every Wednesday night from 7:30
to 8:30. New classes of the Shoreline German
Shepherd Dog Club
will start June 7 at West Ridge
School
in
Highland
Park.
Any
registered German
Shepherd
dog
over 6 months of age is welcome.
The summer beginner’s class will
be limited to 25.
For further information contact
any of the following members of
the
Shoreline
German
Shepherd

S

S

Water

Bottled

Naturally

Ziebell, Miss Pam

Rodbro, Mr. and

Mrs. Paul Martin and
Richard NeuKranz.

Mr.

and Mrs.

Pony All Stars
Open League Play
The

Star

Pony

League

teams

which

Baseball

will

All-

represent

Highland Park in inter-city competition this summer
are preparing
for the start of the season. These
squads
are
co-sponsored
by
the
Highland Park Recreation Department and the Youth Baseball Commission.

Practices

have

been

scheduled

for Lincoln Park on Monday, Wednesday and Friday evenings, at 6:30

p.m.
N

Delivered

N

Sparkling
Mineral

WA

By...

be

distributed

Boys wishing more information
about the program may obtain it
by phoning the Highland Park Recreation Center, ID 2-2442.

Co.

1629 Park Ave.
IDiewood 2-0042

Your

the beautiful girl who left her convent to

will

6

Spring

Water

Uniforms

on Monday, June 5, and initial
league action begins Tuesday, June

wonderfully uplifting story of

Best Buy

Sherwin-Williams Paints

give her love to a man~and her songs to the world...

Narrated by CLAUDE STEPHENSON
Written and Edited by ERWIN.LEISER
Produced by TORE SJOBERG
A MINERVA INTERNATIONAL PRODUCTION
A COLUMBIA PICTURES RELEASE

Ulm,

Mr.

Mr.

credit to the community.

Management

The happy, true, and

George

Lichtwalt,

Park:

Baum,

Kodner, Mr. and Mrs. Ferd Mann,
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Darcon, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Stoddard, Mr. and

23

The

Highland

Arthur

“off-leash” work. It is a rewarding experience and hobby to train
a dog to be a good citizen and a

ONCE IN A WHILE A GREAT FILM COMES
UNHERALDED INTO OUR MIDST, SUCH A
FILM IS “THE TRAPP FAMILY” .. .
“We’re certain that all ages will find
. for a truly wonderful movie-going
Family.”

club.

Are You
To

COMING:

Paint

Open

“GHANT

Friday

Going

This

Year?

Night ‘til 8:30
ID

2-3553

Hair Styling
Feature

Tinting

Times:

Bleaching

FRI.—6:00-8:05-10:10

Permanents

SAT .—4:15-6:20-8 :25-10:30

Manicuring

SUN.—-2:10-4:40-7:10-9:40
MON.-THURS.—7 :00-9 :30

SAT.

JUNE

CHILDREN’S
at 2 p.m.

“THE

:

only

plus Cartoons G Comedy

June

;

MATINEE

SEVENTH VOYAGE
SINBAD”

Thursday,

Evaughn

3

1,

1961

OF

SAT. KIDDIE SHOW—June
“Francis Covers

No. 3—"‘Ady.
3 Cartoons

3, 1: 30

Big Town”

of Capt. Kidd’

COMING
“ALL IN

JUNE 9th!
A NIGHT'S

WORK”

Beauty
(Open

508

Ne

Friday evenings by appointment only)

Central

ID 2-2330
Page H 39—D

31

�le

Hole in Ca

Levant of 187 Sheridan
d a noise downstairs but Sunset

investigate until children
family came home, reported
50
Thermopane
window

A curtain rod found os

Walley

League ill
son ‘f the
side
land

be off to a great seaperformance
of one

may have been used,
Park police report.

High-

~ |Rain a
Wash Out Most
Of 16-Inch League

-| Brash Sets Record

Stanley Line “1408 ‘Sheridan Rad.,
plunked a hole in one Saturday
afternoon, playing on the Sunset
Valley course. She dropped the
ace on the 140-yard sixth hole,
using a No. three iron.

Women’s “Golf

As Warriors Take
Sixth In Meet
Joel

Brash,

school
cus

a

the

Warriors

the

Interim

M\last

Friday

%

? | High
a

Deerfield

sophomore,

threw

record-breaking

took

136

sixth

conference

night

High

the

at

dis-

feet

as

place

in

Washington
circuit

and Wolf, scored a 19-9 win over
Dealer’s Ready Mix in the Lincoln

Jim
the

16”? Softball League sponsored by
the Highland Park Recreation Department. Frank Zinnzola smashed

garnered

Reg.

# | Newbrough

|

Finals

%
|

65c

CRISPY
FRENCH ROLLS

SOUR DOUGH
FRENCH BREAD

AUMS

LARGE

SELECTION OF TROPIC WEIGHTS
CASUAL AND GOLF SLACKS
SHORTS — REGULARS — LONGS

Lincoln

Deerfield
take

AFTERNOO

— WINDBREAKERS

cn te

—

Park

followed

1, Dealer’s
Restaurant.

with

18%

to

sixth.

by
Prospect
with
40.
boys
competed
in the
and evening events at

Over
500
afternoon
both divi-

| sions.

ART OLSON

oe
OPEN FRI. NITES
sl UM

Gormet

At the Varsity level Maine West
repeated as conference champion
with 41144 points followed closely

CE 4-3924
after 5 p.m.

+ CLOSED ees

Gale.

7% p.m.,
Diamond
Ready Mix vs. Steer

TT

a

— SLACKS —

’N

Our

R. B. Silver Club

INN

1

8:30 p.m., Diamond 1,
Corner vs. Quidi Vidi.

® Sterling

WRAPPING

Visit Our Conveniently Located Store
Where You Can Shop With Ease
and Confidence.

Nite

22.

@ Stainless Steel
e Silver Plate

FOR DAD!
GIFT

Pro-

with

tonight.

Sunset Park
7 p.m., Diamond 1, Santi’s Cafe
vs. Charlie Wenks,
7 p.m., Diamond 2, Club 7 vs.

3814
with
was

trailed

resume

Schedule—June

Silver Club

&gt;OPPING WITH
GIFTS
FREE

showed

East

Glenbrook

ID andl

PAUL OLSON

will

Tee

Willowbrook

Join

PASTRY SHOP

Central Ave.

and

30 while Glenbard

sllite

20

points.

|\third with

7\}and

The entire Sunset 16” League
card succumbed to the inclement
weather last Thursday and action

took another third.

standings

5/6

losers.

relay
Fred

|viso West in first place with
points followed by Prospect

”\35

7

Ferguson,

three hits, one a home-run, for the

a third

Z|in the pole vault and the
Ziteam
of
Jim
Grossveld,
Chase

by

East

* 100 yard and 220 yard dash. Fred
m | Teeter took fourth in the 440 yd.
®|dash, and third in the high jump
? |for the Warriors.

Teeter,

paced

Scornavacco

Maine

Previously
undefeated
|Grossveld took third in both

Crowell

from

meet

school.

David

Gardens,

blasts

track

FATHER'S
DAY
JUNE 18th
PLENTY

An

Institution
and

OF

PARKING

of “Built-In”?

Authentic

Quality

Styling

— SUITS —
PALM

BEACH

(Wash

PALM

BEACH

(Spring Weave)

H. FREEMAN

‘n Wear)

TROPICS

— SPORT SHIRTS —
THOUSANDS

TO

CHOOSE

INCLUDING

— BUSINESS SHIRTS —
IMPORTED TROPIC WTS, o.oo. -os--es-ssee---- $59.50
Wash‘ n Wear

*MANHATTAN

SHORT SLEEVE
BDC

FROM

KNITS

McGREGOR’S
HATHAWAY'S

— NECKWEAR

—

CAN’T BE A FATHER’S DAY
WITHOUT FRESH SUMMER
NECKWEAR.
*Wash

— GOLF

‘n Wear

$2.50

HOSE —

$1.00 &amp; $2.50

PHONE

ID 2-2871

-

$3.50

-

$5.00

ALL SILKS
HAND MADE

Thursday,

June

1, 1961

�Ham,

Swiss

Steak,

Sirloin

or

Pork

Swanson TV DINNER,

Loin

"04"

Wf

&amp;. 5F°

Whst

cot

beat : 4497

Nathtonal

tb

a

Bag

...

. $2.39

LURGHEON

SKINLESS
BEST

.

.

.

.

TASTE

WIENERS

KOSHER

SLIGED BOLCGNA.

.

.

LTE

Extra

S&amp;H

Stamps

With A $10.00 or More Purchase
Excl. purchaseof beer, wine, liquor
0", cust.
on per
Lint |1 cpn.
atte, Limit
&amp; cigarettes.
‘

Trimmed

PORK LOIN

49°
Shb,

Value -Way

LEALL

~ Redeem This Vehochis ousn a

ROAST
og

‘
Nafional’s
a

:

39°

:

MICKELBERRY'S
— Old Farm...
Summer Sausage... Or...

miSED

© out tet ace

100

ACHIGOLDEN — O
Read
pany
DUGKLINGS
UT RSD
e nse e's
:
: — 100%° Pure... Lean
National's
Sianiek
twice

National's -— TOP

We.

REDEEM

THIS

VALUABLE

50 EXTRA

COUPON

S&amp;H

FOR

STAMPS

With The Purchase Of One Half Gallon Can

AEROWAX

Limit One Coupon

Per Customer
—~ Coupon

Expires June 3rd

7 Rib
Portion

DALE

REDEEM

THIS
With

Lb.

we CLO aL :

ith Tenderloin Left In...

:

PORK LOIN ROAST. 2%,

Boneless .. . Butterfl

39°

PORK GHOPS . ...

PORK cHOPS ,.. . . .» 69°
PORK ROAST... » . .©29°
enter

ean...

Boneless... Rolled

Young

:

... Tender...

Porkers

The

COUPON

.» 98°

Limit One Coupon

HONEY

Per Customer
—~ Coupon

NC
a

$

Nos

REDEEM

Jar

Expires June 3rd

ae

THIS

VALUABLE

a

COUPON

FOR

25 EXTRA S&amp;H STAMPS
With

The

Purchase

NATCO

Tender ... Delicious

FOR

STAMPS

Purchase Of One 21-02.

NATCO

*

PORK LON... . x 49°
PORKLON. . . . "4" u 59°

Cu

VALUABLE

25 EXTRA S&amp;H

Limit One Coupon

Of One

18-oz.

PEANUT

Jar Creamy

Style

BUTTER

Per Customer
—~ Coupon

Expires June 3rd

KRAET'S

VELVEETA sma

REDEEM

yi 5 ©

a

1

THIS

VALUABLE

25 EXTRA

ait

With

The

COUPON

S&amp;H
Purchase

NATCO

FOR

STAMPS

Of One Quart

SALAD

Bottle

OIL

Limit One Coupon Per Customer
— Coupon Expires June 3rd

dials

OF

_NATCO

Lb.

HILLS

‘Lb.

COFFEE

Can

wired

BIRDSEYE

ORANGE
JUICE

| COFFEE Z, °"

Just add water andserve for a real taste
treat.

ETREIS.
See

STOKELY’S
PEACHES
Freestone ...

AMERICAN

DELUXE

SALAD DRESSING

cane
tapi

LENG

lest oan Find. Fresher Finer Prodtice *

‘

ne

U.S. No. I Size A California Long White

sToKELY pears. . 4°98" POTATOES ....

it

REDEEM

©

Lb.

Bag

25

SK,

STOKELY

a

. Fer

BEANS

AY

Limit

One Coupon

REDEEM

JELL-O its: TOMATOES...
Don't let the week

go by

Without JELL-O. Buy at
ational.

oS

Of One

PFCAN
Coupon

June 3rd

FOR

10-oz.

DRESSEL’S

Frozen

FANCIES
Expires

June 3rd

." 39
25

BP

THIS

VALUABLE

EXTRA

With

Ears

The

One Coupon

COUPON

S&amp;H

Purchase

Chocolate
Limit

Of One

13-oz.

Per

FOR

STAMPS
Pkg.

Covered

TOP

TREAT

CHERRIES

Customer— Coupon

Expires June

3rd

ELS

Pkgs.

&amp;

a

esuacion

G

TOP

«x 29°
STOKELY GORN. .

222 39°

STOKELY PEAS... 22. 39°
3

PILLSBURY MIX . .
a CRESH COOKIES42 25°
Pkgs.

Pkg.

Thursday, June 1, 1961

Expires

COUPON

Per Customer— Coupon

3-02,

Nut Bread, Date Bread Or Stressul

Bottles

CRUSH

VALUABLE

With The Furchase

¢
¢

Of Six 10-oz.

Customer
— Coupon

THIS

REDEEM

f /EET

Per

FOR

STAMPS

25 EXTRA S&amp;H STAMPS

Fresh——FLORIDA
GF

COUPON

S&amp;H

ORANGE

Limit One

Fancy...Red...Ripe

VALUABLE

With The Purchase

.

Q&lt;

4

THIS

EXTRA

A.

= ty:

Drink

MOTT’S

(BG FRESH peacnes .. 19

Jar

late

4

Fruit Juice

Fancy GEORGIA

soar Sates

tasting dressing.

7 farx

In Halves Or Slices

$700

TASTE

—

Enriched

—

Sliced

WHITE BREAD 2::39

REDEEM

With

Garden
“Limit

| Top Taste DONUTS &gt;
Sugar...

Golden Or Cocoanut

25°

BREAKFAST ROLLS 2

TOP

TASTE

—

Iced

or Cinnamon

Reserve The Right To Limit Quantifies . .. Prices Effective Thru June 3rd In Chicago And
Lansing, S. Holland, Calumet City, Chicago Hts. And Dolton

One

Coupon

Illinois Suburban Stores Except

Deerfield

Road,

Deerfield,

COUPON

S&amp;H

The

Purchase

Book

Of SECTION

. Coy

REDEEM

Per Customer— Coupon

50

THIS

EXTRA
The

11

ENCYCLOPEDIA

PEN)
S\

FOR

STAMPS

—

With

636

VALUABLE

35°

r
We

THIS

50 EXTRA

Expires

June

7th

sceERS

he

IF BE

VALUABLE

S&amp;H
Purchase

COUPON

FOR

STAMPS

Of SECTION

12

illinois
Page H 41—D 33 .

�WERBKE-BONNER
BRR
ER
RS

NOW RENTING — NEW

LEGEND

WEST - LANE APARTMENTS

B—Bed

AT

YOUR

FOR

DISCRIMINATING

Room: 7°6” x 5‘0”

D—Kitchen:
E—Dining

Wé
ARE PLEA&gt;&lt;O
To hav béen' Ghasen

OF EXCEPTIONAL

2

10’181’’x13’8”

7'6’'x7'8"
Area:

10’0’'x10'7"

ie

oe apartments
MOR
,

as the desighéeF builder of the new

West-Lané

(Minster, Lake worest.

;
t
Tins new prestige address roysresents the Rualast. in snultiole
Heuelie. ond Ataerues
to rank alongsid#
thé prestige eusrom ne UG terre.

TENANTS

CHANCE FOR A HAPPIER CLOSE-IN, TIME-SAVING APARTMENT!
SPACIOUS, WELL-PLANNED, ONE-BEDROOM UNITS IN THE
MODERN TREND.
INDIVIDUALLY CONTROLLED HEAT AND AIR-CONDITIONING
HARDWOOD FLOORS THROUGHOUT
DELUXE KITCHEN WITH STOVE AND REFRIGERATOR
PASTEL CERAMIC TILE BATH AND FIXTURES
LAUNDRY FACILITIES AND OFF-SEASON STORAGE
MASTER TV ANTENNA
RESERVED PARKING
EXCELLENT SHOPPING AND TRANSPORTATION

wood

Builders.

TW6

such

homies,

wk _—

now

near

9

gti

Linden Ave., Lake Forst, and 1316 South Esta *€ bane,
SHOULD YOU BE INTERESTED
‘
we a
In

the

Gonstruction

of

designed residence —
do just one thing,

GET

THE

Actually

a

quality

whéle

can

Service, Quality, Price.
know

——

petro

North Shore —

eli ‘To

or

custom

to yourself

to

STORY

story

SERVICE—Biréhwéod

goon

Marie

ial

buildifig-apartment,

anywhe#é on the

BIRCHWOOD
the

eget

be

is 4 complete

building,

ey

Be e e

suminh

financing

'

up

undéf

organizdtitye’
and

costs,

6st.

simple

BirchW9Sd

thy

wood 6ffers fhé finest in architectural
is safe Grid l6w

,

three

are

*@

i

headings

salesmen

264, only

custOmér-minded.

rvices.

Birehwood

PES

eireh-

finan

#9

Birehwood offers cor®Wete intérior design consui-”

tation at n@ additional charge,

\
,

.

RENTAL
pens,
fee

ey 9,

YY

QUALITY—Birchwood

INFORMATION

Whether

Applicatioris arid appointments for your
early inspection now being taken.

you

hd

built hundreds

aré’ siatirig

quality is always buil# i).
PRICE==Nie

TELEPHONE CE 4-0593

Birchwood

story

we contemplating
DECISION.

@

of custom

heme

here. Régardiess

in

homé on’ the

the

of the

GET Ot#® PRICE BEFORE

low
size

26
or

YOU

North

dh thé

kind’ $F

MAKE

Shore.

high

80's

bujidin

you

YOUR PINAL

}) BIRCHWOOD BUILDERS
TSO
‘

WAUKEGAN

ROAD

7

DEERFIELD,

Be

OW

he

ee

/

WINOSOR

5-2374

| Page H 42—D 34
Thwrsday, June 1, 1961

maa

UT TET
Pee

CHARM

APARTMENTS

Room:

C—Bath

WESTMINSTER and BANK LANE
LAKE FOREST, ILL.
ONE BEDROOM

Room: 12°6x19'2”

” a

LOCATED

A—Living

�Please have your
Thursday morning

Within
County

Lake

Elsewhere

newspaper delivered to my home
and bill me as indicated below.

£1 6 Mos., $2.00
in U.S.A.

[

6 Mos.,

[]1 Year, $3.50
$3.00

[1

Year,

$5.00

by

mail

every

[] 2 Years, $6.00
[] 2 Years,

$9.00

�First

SPUSILNESSE
No Postage

Necessary

REPLY
If Mailed

— POSTAGE

Permit

CARD

Highland

in the United States

WILL

DEERFIELD

BE PAID

BY —

REVIEW

Circulation
608

Department

Laurel
Highland

Avenue
Park,

Ill.

Class
221
Park,

Ill.

�.

j

aa

A

i,

1961 Version of
Branch

Program

Bank Bill

permit

nois

was

version

Eighth

branch

will
legislation

banking

defeated

on

in

May

IIli-

17

25 to 8 vote in the House

by

a

Banking

Committee.
The
First

grade

of

National

Directors
Bank

of

Fe i

eis

pis

On

and

get

of

The

Highland

Park and of many
other Illinois
banks protested the legislation to
permit branch banking in the state,
according to Jay J. Sherman, First
National
executive
vice-president.
He said that the local Chamber of
Commerce
adopted
an
opposing
resolution and many local businessmen
wrote letters protesting the
legislation.
Donald M. Carlson of Elmhurst,
outgoing president of the Illinois
Bankers association, led opponents
of the bill in testifying before the
committee
that
branch
banking
would lead to a financial monopoly
by big Chicago Loop banks.
“Branch banking would lead to
the
eventual
destruction
of the
community owned and community
managed
banking
system
of the
state,’ said Carlson, who is president
of
the
Elmhurst
National
Bank.

June
high

of

Girls

interested

in

\Cra

3

on

to meet
on

from

Lodge

a.m.

that date.

Mariner and Wing Scouting will
be outlined and requirements for
Senior

next

Roundup

year’s

applications

national

event

eae Se
RE

7

ee

es

ee Se

Me pe ees ag

—
ne

OPENING

CR
WI

a U-turning
swerved;

car

in

call

Buy

of

the

e Arpege
e
e Chanel No. 5 «
e White Shoulders
Purse

size

Week

| Family
120

&amp;

Freeman’s
648

N. Western,

——plus

FREE!

green stamps

Radio Tube

Sales

CE 4-0519 |

Lake Forest

100% WOOL CARPETING

$795

au

SPARKLING
COLORS

YD.

and

PATTERNS

the

Secon d

Floor

Howard R. Walker

LEWIS
CARPETS

thru Saturday,
Wed.

9 A.M.
at

Edens

to 6 P.M.

at Tower

Rd.

Northbrook

Noon

ANOTHER BIG REASON BEHIND THE BIG BOOM IN FORD SALES:

MART

1866 First St.
Highland Park
ID 2-3023-4
FOR
OUR
WEEKLY

RTS.

2.5%

SAVE

Counter

Flacon

COSMETIC

|

Over Our

My Sin
Sortilege
9

KAYMAC
WATCH

Tested

POST OFFICE BLDG.

Closed

ONLY

Get ‘em

5, 1961

Hours:

FRIDAY

SAVE —SAVE—SAVE

SQ.

Jeweler

Beauty

TV TUBES— RADIO TUBES — HI-FI TUBE “e

collided

2-0731 and in Deerfield
5-3846 or WI 5-1208.

JUNE

DEERFIELD

a

get-together. All girls are requested to bring food for stick cookery.
Dessert and beverage will be supplied. Those interested in making
reservations should call in by June
1; in Northbrook call CR 2-3787 or

for

at But-

ton Bay State Park
at Vermont
will be presented.
The program
for the day will also include games
and songs. There will be two trail
games
and
a
scavenger
hunt
planned
for those
attending
the

Monday

a

rear-end; skidded 120 feet into the
median strip cable, Highland Park
police found, May 24.
There was $500 damage to her
car;
$1100
to the
car
of Anne
Straub of 771 Sheridan Rd., Winnetka, who got a ticket for failure
to yield the right-of-way. No injuries were listed.

what

11

to avoid

Ave., Waukegan,

Girl

learning

Lane

Sa

h it U-Turn

Trying

school

Senior

at Sakajawea

Robinwood

mish
ae

a

on Skokie Valley Rd. at Park Ave.,
Kay
Karrison
of 1102 Ridgeland

lies ahead in Girl Scouting are invited

S
Byam ee
Taeai CN Bore

as
f
See

and Deerfield

a preview

— ea REP
i
r
Se Sige
a
ee

a

Scout program plans for 1961-62 at
an outdoor get-together June 3.

to 3 p.m.

Board

Preview

girls in Northbrook

of

ame

BUYS!

The 6l Ford gives you features now
that others can only plan for the future!

felt) relelel, |

21

GRAYSLAKE

-

BA

3-855!

HELD OVER!
ENDS JUNE 8th
Baanounl presents

MARION BRANDO
KARL MALDEN

BARBARA

RUSH

Strangers When
A BRYNA-QUINE Production * CinemaSco

A Late Show (Fri.-Sat.)
“THE BLOB” in Color
with Steve McQueen
Starts Fri., June 9
“ABSENT MINDED
PROFESSOR”
&amp; “TEN WHO DARED”
Coming
Thursday,

Soon—’’BEN
June

1,

HUR”

1961

three times as long as ordinary ones.
COLOR

Today

is the day to STOP.

..SWAP...SAVE
me

We Meetpe ¢ EASTMAN

Holmes
1909

St. Johns

Motor
Ave.,

Highland

Park,

Co.

ID 2-8640

a
4
€
me
&amp;
oS ?

HR

ERNIE

KOVACS

i

Kia

DOUGLAS NOVAK

RS Saal eo ME

enesenrs

es

PICTURES

No wonder Ford sales are at a new
5-year high. With such advanced features
the ’61 Ford is ’61 clear through!
Waste no more time! STOP putting
your money in an out-of-date car. SWAP
for a 61 Ford while sales are up and the
swappin’s good. SAVE with the car
that’s Beautifully Built to Take Care of
Itself—the ’61 Ford!

Epa

COLUMBIA

* _ KIRK

Before you buy any ’61 car, be sure it is a
°61. Discover, as hundreds of thousands
of others have, that the ’61 Ford has
new service-saving features most other
cars won’t have even next year!
It goes 30,000 miles between chassis lubrications, 4,000 miles between oil changes.
Brakes adjust themselves. Mufflers last

C2
Ne tase
faethe

to

1961

Vi

pea

Set Girl Scout Senior Camp

Dies in House
The

fm

mate
Saas

etiam
ae
MY GESTS
e

aaa
$

Page H 43—D 35 |
¥
Sy

�Bi

Bo
SAILBOAT,

Fleetwind

Arrow,

new

FRENCH &amp; SPANISH

last

year, deluxe fittings, fully equipped including trailer and cradle, owner moving.
Sacrifice, $1100. ID 3-0892.

FOR

sale,

two

man

inflatable

row

TUTORING

boat,

10 foot length, jointed oars, wooden seats,
with
3 HP
outboard.
Absolutely
like
__ new, $225. ID 2-5082.
16 FOOT Thompson boat, 30 HP Johnson
motor, Gator trailer, electric starter, fully
equipped. ID 2-7208 after 5 P.M.
OUTBOARD
motor,
71%
h.p.,
Scott-Atwater, self storing gas tank, very good
condition. WI 5-1326.

(No Abbreviations

: : 3 Lines . &lt;SbsS

you want your child to be “better than
average,” give him World Book/Childcraft,
the finest in home educational help. Telephone Miriam Booth, Hlllcrest 6-3848.
BEFORE you buy an Encyclopedia, you owe
it to your children to see Compton’s Pictured Encyclopedia. ID 3-1910.
COMPLETE set of Child Craft books. Excellent condition, best offer. WI 5-2033.

50c per additional line,
(Up to 10 lines)
25c Service Charge for blind ads

Ads containing 11 lines or more are charged at the inch rate. Contract
rotes for
or more consecutive
insertions available on request.
1 inch
‘Minimum.

CAMPS

CIRCLE

: Your Ad Will Appear In All Seven*
THE LAKE PORESTER

ORTH
wine

Fort

WJuore

Urour

All

ecesday,

4:30

DEADLINE

run during the week
at no extra charge.

AD DEADLINES———

Classifications Except ‘Business
‘ices &amp; Supplies’ Will Be Aced Up To

s
:

Dinner served at fine restaurant. Private camp grounds and pool. All sports,
canoeing, riding, special trips, dancing,
bowling.
Max Neiberg
DAvis 8-9037

f l EWSPAPERS

Sheridan Tower is published every other Friday. Ads
which the Tower is published will appear in the Tower

WANT

BOYS AND GIRLS
11-14 YRS.
5 days or Mon., Wed., and Fri.

VERNON REVIEW
PT. SHERIDAN TOWER

LAKE BLUFF REVEEW

"Business Services &amp; Supplies” Classifications Will Be Accepted Up To

P.M.

FOR

Monday,

CONTRACT

ADS—3

4:30

P.M.

OUTPOST DAY CAMP
Open House June 3, Visit the grounds, ride
Little Fire Engines. experience blast off at
Little Cape Canaveral, see Little Nurse Corp,
Tents and the Indian Village. Program for
boys and girls 5 to 12 will be on display.
For Deerfield and Highland Park brochure
on request CR 2-4422,
CARPENTERS,

P.M.

Ad —

(except situation

wood 2-4500

°

wanted

All

n or liability of any kind whatsoever,

r to
advertiser or third parties.
er, in the event of an error in
advertisement, clearly the fault of

WI

_CEdar 4-2300

the publisher and which substantially
impairs the value of the advertisement,
on the advertiser's request, the publisher will rectify
the error by publishing
the correct
ad in the next regular
issue without
additional
charge.
All
claims for adjustment must be made
within five days of the date of pub-.
lication in which the error occurs.

" DRESSMAKING &amp;
ALTERATIONS
TINA ABBOU
27118
HIGHLAND PARK
ALTERATIONS?
see Eda at our New Drive In.
Cleaners, 2020 First St., High-

and

ATIONS,

expertly,

in my home. For

ent, Maria Ori, ID 2-4553. 2528
Bay Road, Highland Park.

ERATIONS,
rienced;

dressmaking,

brimg

us

~ BELVIDERE
BOAT WORKS

AVE.

your

thoroughly

problems.

+5719; if no answer WI 5-1514.

WI

Mercury
Dorsett
As

4

IM. RUEHL &amp; CO.
ENERAL BODY SHOP
NOW OPEN
10 Body and Fender Repair
All Makes

Complete

- All Models

Painting,

as

Other

10%

down.

used

boats

H

44—D

36

Bank

White
Alum.
rate

im

all price

financing

O’DAY
IMPERIAL
MASTERCRAFT
24 hour

&amp;

All types of cement work,
driveways, retaining walls,
etc. Free estimates. Phone
3815 or VE 5-3824.
|

swaging

DINGHY

RACE-LITE
MERRIMAN
INTERLUX
service

SHOP

591-B Roger Williams (rear)
Highland Park, ID 3-2620
9-9;

Sun.

12-4

RENT a Houseboat-Cruiser or Pontoon boat
for your vacation. For information or brochure write Weimar
Houseboat Rentals,
Inc. 1521 Green Bay, Highland Park or
phone ID 2-8029,
16 FOOT
Fleetwind Arrow, class boat of
North Shore Yacht Club, stainless stee]
centerboard,
many
extras.
Reasonable.
Call ID 2-5857 or SHeldrake 3-4820.
NEW
14 foot aluminum boat and trailer;
excellent for fishing and general boating;
complete set for only $350. Call ID 3-2161.

‘JUNK

NEWSPAPERS

walks,
floors,
VE 5-

NEEDS

RENT FROM OUR NEW ASSORTMENT
of adult and child sized tables and chairs;
fine china, silver, linens and 100’s of other
items.
WE DELIVER

ASSOCIATED
RENT-ALLS |
651

Roger

Williams,
IDlewood

ELECTRICAL

Highland

Park

2-6333

REPAIRS

CLAUSING ELECTRIC
All types of electrical work, post lights,
wall: outlets, new circuits, repairs. Reason
able

prices

Telephone

ID

LANDSCAPING

© GRADING
@ LEVELING
® SODDING
Free
R.

WI

2-627

ENTERTAINMENT

on

Landscaping

DARTMOUTH graduate, math. honors, desires to tutor math. or English starting
June 17th. Pennett Tarshish, ID 2-4485.

Tractor

4-3213

A
1640

NOEL
TEAGUE
LANDSCAPING.
New
lawns; black soil; evergreens; shrubs and
trees;
lawns
re-seeded
and _ fertilized;
stone work; driveways; tree work; patios.
Telephone ID 2-7619.
GENERAL
landscaping. New jobs. Gabriel
Ruffalo,
909
Half
Day
Rd.,
Highland
Park. ID 2-7817.
THE YARD BIRD
Perpetual or one shot maintenance lawns
and gardens; mowing, tilling, nee
etc.
No job too big or small. EM
2-1932.
WEEDS
POWER
MOWED
By tractor rotary mower, Jim Beinlich, VErnon 5-1195.
NELSON
LANDSCAPING
SERVICE
BLACK DIRT - GRADING
SEEDING - SODDING
WI 5-5117
$95. SPECIAL
on labor. Complete
landscaping,
wholesale
on
seed,
fertilizer.
Andrews Landscaping Gardening Service,
AL 1-4636.
Peterson’s
Flower
Gardening
and
Landscape Service.
Lawn Renovation and Maintenance
Phones
MU
5-3525
or
SP _ 7-8540
after
6 P.M.

at

&amp;

charge for estimates
Call ID 2-3550

A

Deerfield

REPAIR

SERVICE

Road

Highland

Park

FURNITURE
Refinished,
Repaired.
Antiques Restored. Merit Furniture Service
TRinity 2-7322.

&amp;

HAULING

General Hauling
We

haul

anything,

call, we haul.
VE 5-3824.

anywhere.

Phone
VE

You

5-3815

or

LIGHT general hauling. We also move all
types of household appliances. Call ID 26098 or ID 2-4917.

PAINTING

&amp;

DECORATING

European

Craftsman

GUSTAV

by

HOING

PAINTING &amp; DECORATING
MARBLEIZING — STRIATING
WOOD FINISHING — MURALS
DIVERSEY 8-7409
THE VILLAGE DECORATORS
* INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR
* FULLY INSURED
* REASONABLE PRICES
*
QUALITY WORKMANSHIP AND
MATERIAL
*LOCAL REFERENCES
Chuck Yingling
Jim Mabie
BA 3-0954
BA 3-4636
PAINTING and decorating; 25 years on the
North Shore; outside a specialty. Insured.
Free estimates. Phone any time. CE 4-3938.
EXTERIOR and interior painting and decorating. Hubert Johnson. Call ID 2-1770.
PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING. Interior and exterior painting. For quality
workmanship
by
experienced,
reliable
men call W. C. Varney, WI 5-0654.
PAINTING
and
decorating,
interior and
exterior, natural or bleached wood finishing;
quality
workmanship.
For
estimating, call Eric Schneider, Libertyville,
EM 2-8592,
PAINTING
and paper hanging, reasonable
prices; free estimates. Telephone PETER
GALLOS, CE 4-0156.
PAINTING AND DECORATING
Thorough preparation
Clean, careful, workmen
Best materials, applied properly
Sensible prices
BLOOM
PAINTING CO.
ID 2-5544
BJORNSON Decorating, interior and exterior, expert painting and paper hanging;
prompt free estimates; réasonable rates,
LE 17-0737 or PE 6-0461.
HOUSE painting and decorating. Free estimates.
Call
C.
LOTHER
SERVICES,
TRinity 2-7332.

INTERIOR

PRAIRIE ACRES
LANDSCAPING’ SERVICE
Black soil, fill dirt, manure,
top dressing
and rolling lawns. Evergreens, shrubs, trees.
For estimate phone WI 5-0818.
MODERN Landscaping, Jack Vena. Call me
for the best in lawn maintenance
and
eae
in garden and patio work. ID

painting

and

decorating.

PIANO

TUNING

Clean

neat work. Expert wall washing. Call ID
2-8917.
WHOLESALE
to
alk
paints.
wallpaper.
Free delivery. ORchard
60078. For the
best
in
painting,
repairing
at
lowest
prices, look
at Olga’s Beauty, IGA store,
Skokie Real Estate, 4400 block on Dempster in Skokie. ALpine 1-4636.
CONGER
BROTHERS
PAINTING
AND
DECORATING
SERVICE.
Paper Hang-:
ing. Telephone ID 2-3452 or ID 2-3053.

PIANOS expertly tuned,
of satisfaction or no
phone ID 3-0608.

PLANTS
GROUND
cover,
plants for sale.
wood. Telephone
all day Sunday.

&amp;

;

with the guarantee
charge. $10. Tele-

BULBS

beautiful
shooting
125 North Ave.,
ID 2-3936 after 5

ROTO

star

daly,

TILLING

ROTO-TILLING; expert garden, lawn preparation for seeding; brush clearing. Specials for new sub-diyisions. Contract for
lawn work. EM 2-0472, CE 4-2846.
GARDEN
roto-tilled,
area
prepared
for’
seeding. Call us for estimate, ID 2-8029.

TILING

EVERY

service

construction,
tic, formica,
5-1895.

in tile,

Remodeling,

new

modernizing. Ceramic, plasetc. Fred’s Tile Service, WI

LAUNDRY
TELEVISION

SHIRTS

$20 per ton;
ID 3-1622.

INSTRUCTION

&amp;

YARD maintenance, shrub planting, tree reyes and trimming. Call C.
opp, ID

WOOD

SEASONED
fireplace wood,
tailgate delivery. Telephone

5-5606

Top Soil—Humus
Sod—Fertilizer

CLOWN-MAGICIANS, Bands, Pianists, Car
Parkers,
Portable Dance
Floors, Vocalists, anything. Call hdo Productions, 1D
2-1240. Your entertainment specialists.
FIREPLACE

Estimates

Dawson

NEwton

CATERING

PARTY

25c per CWT brought to our door.
Highest prices paid for all types of eg
brought to our door, such as rags,
iron,
metals, etc. Or call ID 3-1466 for truck
pick-up.
Hours
daily
including
Saturday,
8:30 to 5:30 p.m. Sun. 11-2.
HIGHLAND
PARK
WASTE
MATERIAL
1466 Berkeley Rd.

located

lawn mower
ID 2-8029.

SERVICES

MOVING

Free estimates
work,

EXPERT on cement potion sidewalks, steps,
garage floors, etc.
. Gulbrandsen, Phone
WI 5-4458.
:

classes.

SUPPLIES

WORK

Patio Time

4-1310
2927 Belvidere
(Rte. 120) just east of Green
Bay Rd., Waukegan, III.
Open Mon., Thurs., Fri.: 9-9
Tues., Wed., Sat.: 9-6
Sunday: 12 noon to 5 p.m.

SAILBOATS

School

PIANO
INSTRUCTION
Hank
Winston,
staff pianist
at WBBMCBS. Adults mornings and evenings, children
after school. Call WI 5-0244 after 7:30 p.m.
NORTH
SHORE MUSIC STUDIOS
(formerly Garino’s)
North
Shore’s. finest.
Inquire
about
our
liberal trial plan. Instrument furnished.
GUITAR-ACCORDION
ID 2-0015
If no answer, ID 2-1498
VIOLIN-PIANO INSTRUCTION
Tutoring in Music Theory
Shirley Harris, B. Mus.
Phone ID 2-1939
EXPERIENCED
tutor, languages. French,
Russian native. 20 years
Paris. Call Professor
Ouroussoff,
CEdar
4-9043
after
noon.
GUYS and dolls—want to model? Call ID
2-3830 between 9 and 5 for short course
and practical experience in fashion modeling.
EXPERIENCED
teacher
will
tutor
elementary school children in arithmetic or
reading
this summer.
Call
CE
4-3497,
after 6 p.m.
SPANISH
teacher
available
for tutoring
Spanish, Latin and French during June,
July and August. Write or call Mr. Francisco Cabello, Lake Forest Academy, CE
4-3210.
TUTORING for those final exams? Algebra,
eee
and English. Miss Frank, CE

2-3383

FOR building that new home, addition or
remodeling,
be it large
or small,
call
V_&amp;
F Construction Co. Telephone ID
2-5477 or WI 5-2980.
BUILDING
and
remodeling.
Recreation
rooms and cabinets, floor and wall tile,
window awnings, door hoods and carports.
Free estimates. Telephone TRinity 2-7313.
HERB BLOMQUIST carpenter, quality custom homes, additions, porch enclosures,
rec rooms, custom cabinets; also remodeling and repairs. Telephone WI 5-2830.

Boats
Boats

FREE—FREE

Daily

_ OF LAKE FOREST
LAKE FOREST CE 4-5100

Grady
Star Craft

Demonstration rides every week-end, (weather permitting) at the Waukegan harbor, foot
of Madison St. Bring entire family.
CH

SERVICE

low

ID

CEMENT

USED VALUES

7c

AUTO

Motors

Driving

SERVING
ENTIRE
NORTH
SUBURBAN AREA
State Licensed Instructors
Beginning and Refresher Courses
Free Classroom Instruction
642 Green Bay Rd., Kenilworth
ALPINE
1-6403

AARNOS &amp; SORENSEN, Homes our Spest
Remodeling. Finishing. ONtario 2-

for:

1960—19 foot Thompson open cruiser, camper top, Gator trailer, 75 H.P. Johnson
engine,
electric
and _ generator;
fully
equipped from anchor to a
«--- 2895
1959—17
foot Lone
Star,
full canvas, 40
H.P.
Mercury
electric
and _ generator,
Sterling ‘drive-on trailer, many other extras

ANTIQUES
ES
Show
sponsored
by
Skokie
Women’s Club, June 6-7, 10 A.M.
1 P.M. June 8th, 10 A.M. to 5 P.M.
eon
served daily, 4400 W. Grove.
:
e
Recreation
center.
Nearest
: ei
Dempster and Kildare. Do-

dealers

prices

is now

WASHER DRYER
REPAIRING
No

Winnetka

Station,

MISC.

5-1497.

CONTRACTORS

5-4145

of Waukegan
Authorized

competitive

CHRISTO-CRAFT
REMODELING
CO.
WI 5-3273
ID 2-2319
Remodeling and home maintenance is our
business. Porch enclosures, basement paneled room additions, kitchen cabinets, or
just that one door that doesn’t close right.
All work guaranteed.
CONCRETE
and carpentry, residential tile
and sewer work, free estimate. Steve E.
Sabol, ID 2-7604.
HOME
remodeling, additions, repairs and
design and construction of quality homes.
Free estimates. WI 5-1511.

BOATS

LAUREL

Types

formerly of Woody’s Highland

Service

1749 Green Bay Road for
service and roto-tilling. Call

and

BUILDING

a _ BUSINESS SERVICE &amp; SUPPLIES

610

JOBE

REMODELING

It!

ads)

Windsor 5-4500

ertising of any kind is accepted for
}
on in this newspaper with the
standing
that the publisher asno responsibility for omission or
errors and shall be under no obliga-

ny

We'll Charge

&amp;

FENCING

estimates,

~

Your Want

CONTRACTORS

WOOD

TUESDAY
Free

Phone

M TWEEN CAMP

Park

9 to 14 that have sincere interest
in learning a second language. WI

IF

Permitted)

WOODY,

NEW METHOD
Prefer beginners and children, ages

BOOKS

WANT AD RATES

ee

a

FAST,
if

special

FAST

services

SAM
WOO
590 Elm Place

NO CHARGE
if we cannot repair your TV set in your
home. Service call $4.95 only when repaired
to your satisfaction. ID 3-0608.
NORTH SUBURBAN TV SERVICE

SERVICE

desired,

try

it

LAUNDRY
Highland

today

Park

TREE

SURGERY

FOR the best in tree surgery and roto tilling, telephone Howard J. Lewis, WI 54267.

Thursday, June

rd

�BEINLICH

VE

cious
yard.
gage

&amp;

Free

Estimates

Established

MARTIN

SALE

surely meet your
$27,500 to $49,500.

today

to

ID

place;

~

Lake
4-4200 .

ready

for

gracious

;
5-1080

GReenleaf

PARK

1260

For

RIDGE

Occupancy

New
wife-saver
home
all on one
floor.
Kitchen family room, utility room, all adjoining. 4 beautiful bedrooms, 2 tile baths,
living room, dining room. No compromise
on beauty and design. Prestige of Highland Park yet in an area of large lots. Carpeting and appliances. Excellent financing.

Designed

VErnon
&lt;

and
by

heat;

room

in
appliances,
including
Oversized
garage with
3

$45,500

LAKE BLUFF
NEW

3 bedroom,

Ranch built
dining
L;

patio; full
scaped lot;
Offered

2 bath

in 1959: Living
large
kitchen;

basement; well landarea of newer homes.

at

$28,500

VACANT: Fully improved 75 ft. x
165 ft. lot in established neighborhood:

Out

of

town

owner

will

cept
(no

offers)

for

678 N. Western
Lake Forest
CEdar 4-0485

immediate

Ave.,

sale.

12 Scranton Ave.
Lak
ake Bluff
CEdar 4-0816

EVENINGS
M.

is

fire-

C.

Lackie

CALL

4-1380
W. Paul LeRoi
N. Starosselsky CE 41181
Donald Kelley
Mary Griffis CE 4-0339
Geraldine Moyer
Frances Rutgers CE 4-1075
June Enos
Nancy Appleton CE 4-3974

on

CE

3
UNIQUE

DOWN

Onwentsia

CE

4-0104

CE

4-1082

CE

4-5132

CE

4-1117

to

NEW

NEW

Road.

REMODELLED

SPACIOUS

5-0343

room,

$25,500.

$25,-

$16,500.

contain-

2 BATHS

_. $20,000.

Up-to-date older home

in two fam-

Earhart &amp; Company

ESTATE

full basement,

Bluff, CE

2 car attached

1899

Sheridan

Rd.

ID

with

f/p,

separate

dining
col....

$20,000
TWO FLAT: One apartment rental
for $1,300
year.
Move
into
the
other and cut your overhead

$24,000
SPANISH

ranch

nicely

located

in

an area of new homes. Good kitchen with eating area. Separate dining room, living room with fireplace, small paneled den, full basement
$19,900
The 2 bedroom ranch with it’s 28’
living room is situated in an excellent location on a valuable lot.
Stove, refrigerator, and wonderful
carpeting included
$19,500

Presently

listed

are

2

wonderful

Colonials. Both have been modernized and are in excellent condition.
Call for details. Both in 30’s.

A neat brick home

erty.
bath

On

F.P.

1

in liv.

acre

on large wooded

rm.,

2 nice

to

town.

close

Large

home has possibilities for expansion.
nts; &amp; family’ rm. - U2.
ckee

Picture book brick home. 2 bedrms.
rm.,

fireplace,

bsmt.,

location

huge

rec. —

A home with charm near school &amp;
LR-DR comb. w/f.p. &amp; pine pa
Family kit., 3 bedrms. ............--..

b

For the family that loves trees. On
corner lot. Many extra features. se
3 -bedrms:, 2 ‘car gars, acAchswen

}

Like-new
brick.
Immediate
bedrms.,
2 full baths,
redw
family rm. Just reduced to .......

tras.
den,

2 f.p.s,
panel. rec.

Ige.
mm, 2

rms.,
gar,

car

California style on large oomaes lot
beamed
ceiling
family
rm.,
baths, built-in kit., pch. eee enewen

Brick
and frame
ranch:
Modern
built-in kitchen with eating area,
large living room, 3 bedrooms, 2
ceramic tile baths, full basement,
attached garage
$29,000

Dorsey Husenetter

3 bedroom designed by
lot. Wonderful location.
porch,

att.

BE
ees: eae

.

Keck
F.P.

Small down payment. $190 per
all. 3 bedrms., 2 baths, bsmt.,

neighborhood
Unusual

on |
in-

gar.

custom

built ranch,

baths, family rm.,
On wooded acre

sep.

din.

St. Johns

Ave.

ID

2-1484

a
3

rm

Very deluxe split level on 2 soe
room,

2 bath

&amp;

family

Carr Realty Co.
REALTORS
Member
of the Evanston-North
Multiple Listing Service

HAS

F.

.

SS

Shore
Name
your down
payment
4 bedroom, 2 bath home.
kit., bsmt. Only

Ready for your summer enjoyment, spotless
Yellow Frame Ranch,
1%
Car garage, 3
Bedrms. Bath plus powder rm., Living rm.,
Dining rm. Kitchen and Utility rm. Thermopane windows also Screens, Close to public
and Catholic School. $18,750.

RANCH

Just reduced! Wonderful location for entire
family, Plenty safe play area for children,
Bar B Q corner for Pop to display his culinary talents, and Mom
can watch them
from her bright Kit. Entrance hall. Large
Living rm., Dining rm. “L” Shape, French
door opening to deep landscaped yard (293)
3 Bedrms. L C.T. Bath and Gas Heat. Plus
wonderful neighbors, all for $18,950.

EXPLOSION

den

SPLIT LEVELS

EVERYTHING

ATTRACTIVE

suites on upper.

rm.,

PROOF

8 room

4th

on

Colonial has 3 bedrooms,

bedrm.,

family

Nice

neighborhood

Well

maintained

room,

nice

bi

Peperrrrretrrtrer irre =:

on

exceptionally

wooded property. 2 bedrms., 1%
den. Large family rm. ...-.......:..

COLONIALS
4 bedroom ranch on
kitchen, 2 fireplaces,
tional value at ....

wooded acre.
2 car gare

Reinforced
concrete
beams
in this home
makes
the
basement
a home-proof_
shelter and 4 plus bedrms. make this a population-explosion proof home
for a_ growing
family. 1 small Bdrm., bath, plus 2 Bdrms.
on 2nd fl. of this Cape Cod. Living Rm.
with fireplace &amp; separate dining rm. on 1st
fl. Large Bdrm. &amp; Den or Bdrm. with bath
on Ist fl. Kitchen with eating area. Full
basement with rec. rm. &amp; % bath. Beautiful corner lot. We defy you to fill all 3f the

ner fireplace. Kitchen w/breakfast area, 4
bedrms., 2 plus baths, rec. rms., attached
garage plus large storage rm. w/outside entrance. Close-in location to school and shopping. Priced right to sell for $31,750.

For prompt,
personal,
service when
you
buy—build or refinance in the Lake Foresi
Lake Bluff area—See us.

|

FIRST

LAKE

NATIONAL

FOREST

BANK

CE 4-5100

Waukegan
OPEN

OLDEST

Road

SUNDAYS

WI
12 TO

60 acre close-in Lake

_ &lt;

County. Fine

ii

ings,
charming
remodelled
home,
sswimming
pool. Excellent day
tential
..:.
a ae
Many other farms &amp; outlying v

Carr Realty Co.
701

FARMS

5-0984

5:30 P.M.

PIERSEN REAL
Deerfield

Ww

Commons

H

1
=~

&amp;

REALTORS
CHARMING
home; east Lake Forest. For
rent, rental with option, or outright sale.
Call CE 4-4057.
:

Page
‘

bedrooms.
:

Three
bedroom
brick and frame
ranch
breezeway,
2 car attached
garage, full basement
$29,900

2-0880

MORTGAGE LOANS
CONVENTIONAL OR FHA

4-

RANCHES

$25,500

room, large modern kitchen,
ored bath, paneled ree. room

REALTORS

CEdar 4-0382
Berenice Ressinger
Burgess Olson

Call Lake

liv-

Low upkeep ranch on beautifully
wooded
property.
Paneled
living

COACH

RANCH

HOMES

attractive
baths,

garage

DEERFIELD’S

Aut

at
21%

ae

CUSTOM built frame &amp; brick.3
ily zoned area, easily convertible to
bedrms., 214 baths, sep. din.
two apartments, but perfect as is
kit. F.P.s in liv. &amp; familly sa
:
for one family. Living room, separate dining room,
large
kitchen,
In town on 2/3 wooded acre, D
ranch, 3 bedrms., 2 baths, sep. d
bedrm. and bath on first, 4 bedrms.
knotty pine kit., 2 car gar. cotncaomgie:
and bath on second. New roof, new
new.
wiring, | bed rooms.
siding
on
exterior,
; 00 | An older 2 story home but well main
triple
track
storms
and
screens
4 bedrms., huge liv. rm. &amp; din. rm. v
BI-LEVEL
COLONIAL
Close to schools &amp; tramsp. ......... S:
throughout, garage, gas heat. Perfect condition —
ready to move
Perfect home for a large family with enright in.
trance hall, large liv.-dining comb. with cor-

Gilbert Rayner
266 E. Deerpath
Kathryn Jaicks
Carmen

home

bedrooms,

OF

$22,900

rm.

$45,000.

5 BEDRMS.,

Interesting
and
Unusual
Small
Country Estate on wooded acreage.
3 bedrooms, 212 baths. Attractive
greenhouse and many other extra
features. Priced in the 60’s.

REAL

baths

3

LISTINGS

ing approx. 2600 sq. ft., 3 bedrms.,
2 baths, family room
15x21 with
fireplace, all big bedrms., 2 car garage. House, brick and frame Colonial designed
on large wooded
corner 216x154, includes new carpeting, draperies and lawn seed-

000.
——1 acre on Sheridan

family
4

den,

A FINE SELECTION

Realtors

HOUSE
just off south
Sheridan
Road, 300 to 400 feet from lake on
approx.
3/4
acre.
Most
flexible
room
arrangement
that
can
be
adapted to the 4 to 6 bedrm. use
plus a huge family room
20x40.
Modern kitchen, 3% baths $44,500.

located

Road.

1%

room,

pas

ing room with f/p, separate dining

723

LAKE FOREST
acres

ac-

$5,250

John Griffith, Inc.
2 OFFICES TO SERVE YOU

Colonial house with extra lot, 3 bedrooms,
bath, den, 2 car garage. Convenient to trains

, June 1, 1961

LISTING:

Brick
room;

THE NAME WITH
THE TRADE-IN PLAN
Deerfield Road
WI 5-5100

Built

5-2565
Evenings VErnon
Open Sunday 2-6

freezer.
storage

Large

dining

areas. Realistically priced at

JOHN COONS
Realtor

—3

separate

FOR THE LARGER FAMILY
REDWOOD and BRICK RANCH on
wooded 14 acre: Ideal home for the
growing family: Studio living room;
family
room;
5
bedrooms—2%4
baths; modern kitchen with built

nicely

ranch

f/p,

price,

Den;

this

3 bedroom

This

entrance
hall; living room;
with
fireplace; panelled library, dining
room, kitchen with breakfast area.
Basement and two car attached garage. Gas heat. Owner transferred.
Realistically priced in the 50’s

BY OWNER

appointment

Sane

gas

frame.

bedrooms,

in the center of Deerfield. Contemrporary
construction
with
Beam
Ceilings. Garage. $20,500.

$30,800
GRETA LEDERER
Weekdays

garage;

with

baths;

and

Deerfield

duced the price on this 2 story
brick and stone home. Across from
a park and close to schools and
transportation. Living room with

fully decorated home has four bedrooms and two ceramic tile baths
on the second floor. First floor,

—Vacant

Realtors

Ready

room

buy

Forest

McGUIRE &amp; ORR
HIGHLAND

Living

that

brick

ing

family
living.
Famify room;
living room
each with own fireplace;
separate dining
room; 2% tile baths. Large basement. OverA VALUE
sized 2-car garage. Many extras.
IN THE LOW 40’s.

1-0228

taste-

EARTH

that is all the cash required

623

DEERFIELD EAST

ALpine

ON

Yes

Highland Park
ID 2-2682

home

sta-

LIVING

$2,000.00

LAKE FOREST
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN ASS’N

4 bedroom

O’

4 Bedrooms—2

attached

CONVENTIONAL MORTGAGES
HOME IMPROVEMENT LOANS

New

to RR

Colo-

nial

landscaped;
walking
to schools,
/shops and transportation. $29,750.

FRANK PEERS
FRANK ANDERSON

600 N. Western
CE

LOT

a top value.

2-6600

Estate Service

Ave.

convenient

NEW LISTING
Contemporary Split Level

COMMERCIAL
RESIDENTIAL
VACANT
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
CALL

657 Laurel
TD 2-0344

in Highland

Beautiful
two
bedroom
spacious
ranch with wonderful grounds. 18x
22 ft. living room with picture window overlooking yard. Just right
for the
discriminating
couple--a
truly
terrific
buy
in our
finest
neighborhood. $28,500.

needs.

for appointment
choose:

Central

Real

north,

PARADISE

L. Ringer
457

Park

ranch

OWNER SAYS SELL
IMPRESSIVE TWO STORY

duced to $39,500.

PRICES

EXCEPTIONAL HOMES
BUILT SINCE 1950

Call

and frame

Southern Colonial Ranch high on a
hill surrounded by gigantic trees—
3 blocks
from
community
swimming pool and play area. Luxury
3 bedroom; 2 bath; Blue Stone 2
years old ranch offers ideal living.
Huge
stone
fireplace
in
family
room. Owner transferred; price re-

Call us for details.

will

IT

LINCOLNSHIRE

yours. The terraced patio on a 75x
155 lot gives you added comfort.
Near schools and transportation—

One

LIKE

500.

For $2500 down this 3 bedrm., 2
bath home built in 1957 can be

FIVE

at

Inside and out in this 3 bedroom
split level. 22x24 jalousie screened
porch; built-in barbeque on patio;
living room; pretty kitchen includes
stove
&amp;
refrigerator;
basement;
fenced in yard; 2 car attached garage. Space for family room. $27,-

3-0880

LOWEST

YOU

Brick

A

—L. Ringer

SEASON’S

Priced

tion. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, kitchen
with built-ins and eating space. 2
ear Attached garage. $26,000.

1945

FOR

value.

screens and extra-nice landscaping.

REAL ESTATE
HOMES

will sell for mort-

appraised

A. VEHLOW

BAldwin

rear
with

Brand
new
in
appearance,
but
lived in for long enough for everything to be complete—right down
to
the
aluminum
storms
and

Screens

Washing

Owner

AS

CLEANING

Storms

overlooking
garage. Patio

FOREST

LAKE

$29,500.

INSURED

Wall

Kitchen
Attached

Awning.

WINDOW WASHING

Servicing

one

in

located

ranch

re-

has

Owner

Sell:

Says

Owner

of the finest areas of the North}
Shore. Seven large rooms, 3 twin
size bedrooms, 114 Baths, Den, Spa-

5-1195

WING’S TREE
EXPERTS.
Cutting, trimming,
removing,
feeding
and
repairing,
wer stump removing and power sprayng. Fully insured and bonded; free estimates;
seasoned
fireplace
wood.
Telephone ID 3-1622 or KImball 6-2292.
G &amp; N TREE EXPERTS. Trimming, feeding, repairing, guying and removal. Fully
insured. FREE
ESTIMATES.
Telephone
ID 2-8750; ID 2-5481.

WINDOW

built

Custom,

equipment.

Power

Modern

men.

Insured
JIM

fais:

Realtors

:

BRIARWOODS

COMPLETELY EXPERIENCED

PIERSEN REAI

Dorsey Husenetter

JOHN COONS, Realtor | John Griffith, Inc.

EXPERT TREE REMOVAL!

boas

ee

o

a

PiheeN

)

2

A

~

ag

eo

�ae
:

ra

HIGHLAND PARK

LAKE
TRUE

s
2 on

tively

beautiful English brick
over an acre of attrac-

landscaped

ravine

property

n the finest section of Northeast
i.P

in

play

Cape

Cod

room, f/place, dining
kitchen
&amp;
full bath

area

&amp;

storage

compart-

In a secluded location close to ment. $22,500. Walk to the village.

hools,

2

blocks

from

lake.

r recently remodeled
d to cost.

In-

without

house
contains entr. hall,
. rm. with frpl. and bay, sunn.

w.

rm.

with

frpl.,

bay,

2

scr.

mod.

kitch.,

porches.

The

floor has 4 lge. bdrms.,

incl.

ous master suite w. frpl.,
‘ing rm., htd. sleeping porch,
hs; 2 servant’s rm. w. bath.
ear att. gar. w. gar. apt., elec.
door. Many extras incl. new
esting,
drapes,
g.h.,
circular
way, patio., etc.

A

luxurious

house

realistically

in the 70’s.

Custom
re

is

a

Ranch

beautiful

| double

lot,

white

exquisitely

land-

—

. liv. rm.

with

bay and

frpl.,

kitch., 3 good sized bdrms.
| baths. Unusually spacious
ned porch, oversize 2 car gar.,

LAKE

FOREST

FOUR bedroom immaculate older,
lovely entry, living room, f/place,
dining
room,
bas,
h/water
heat,
and garage. Low 30’s.
FOUR BEDROOM BRICK with all
large rooms; including family area
off kitchen, f/place, full basement,
gas heat, 2 car att. garage.

$45,000

bedroom house, 11% baths, 2 car garage.

$250.

Mrs.

Lindenmeyer,

by

an

acre

and

landscaped

trees, this 5 year
h combines modern

CE

4-0969

H.

a

Olson

&amp;

brick
tradi-

panels.

There

equipped
w. brkfst.

natural
area.

wood

3 bdrms.

comprise

the

and

main

together with oversize 2 car
he full basement has laundry,
pnid. rec. rm. w. frpl. and
zr.
air gas

heat.

Many

extras:

carpeting,
drapes,
applietc.
Reduced to the mid 50’s

IN HIGHLAND
house with
ement, and 2

lannon

stone

aracani

Real

Estate

2-8077

:

garage.

Brick

sta-

809

Broadview

right.

Build

up

equity

instead

HAVE

CHILDREN

ire a good neighborhood
close to
,» schools and
shopping,
then you
to see this 3 bedroom ranch less
years
old.
Modern
kitchen,
oak

beautiful recreation

room.

Low

C.

F.

1927

Leonardi,

REUSE

&amp;

COMPANY

322 N. Milwaukee

Ave.

LIBERTYVILLE
EMpire 2-2000

BUILDER
WILL
TRADE
New
custom
split-level
in
choice
East
Deerfield location, lovely family room,
2
teautiful
CT
baths,
magnificent
kitchen
with built-ins,
full basement,
2 car gar.
Name
your terms.
LAKE
FOREST—VACANT
Route 22 just west of toll road. 40 wooded
acres,
adjacent
to established
area.
Will
split acreage into 2 or 4 parcels.

On

14

OUR

in

OTHER

Cary,

OFFICE

Illinois

for

choice

Barrington-McHenry County properties, Fox
River Valley homesites and river frontage.
Phone ME 9-2011.

Jr;
ID 2-0596

apartment
brick
duplex
in a new
Forest area; air conditioned; recreaom; 3 bedrooms in each unit; full
nent; ; g good mortgage available. Call
Gabanski, CE 4-3737.

VISIT

Route

Viking Realty
Realtors

826

Deerfield

Since

on approximately 2 acres. Very large living,
dining
room
with fireplace, small family
room
(or dining
room)
with
bookshelves
and door to future patio or porch, excellent
kitchen,
laundry
room,
™%
bath,
3
bedrooms and 2 ceramic tiled baths, 2 car
attached
garage.
Looking
for the buyer
who appreciates charm
at a bargain!
IN
THE
MIDDLE
FORTIES.
Call
MRS.
ROESING, Ce 4-2665.

DEERFIELD

Rd.

WI

5-5300

OUTSTANDING
LOT on which to build
your dream home. VIEWS OF THE LAKE,
private beach
rights. 114x153. $20,000.

J-H Kahn
REALTORS
Glencoe

An immaculate ranch with 3 bedrooms, 114
baths,
large
living-dining
area,
modern
kitchen with eating area, first floor laundry, attached garage, nice patio, aluminum
storms
amd
screens,
professionally
landscaped. Call MRS. ROESING,
Ce 42665.

BLUFF

Hillcrest
Sheldrake

DEERFIELD

PRETTY
GEORGIAN
COLONIAL
w/6
rooms, 3 bdrms., full basement w/cypress
paneled rec. room on beautifully landscaped
lot. An exceptional buy at
23,500
OWNER-BUILT
TWO
STORY
COLONIAL—7
rooms, 3 bedrooms, 22 baths in
Woodland Park area. This charming home
also has a full basement, separate DR and
family’ room.
$35,500

REALTORS

Shore

Multiple
Waukegan

&amp;

of
Board

Listing

Deerfield

of

Realtors

Service
Rds.

HIGHLAND

WI

5-5700

PARK

Superb
English
stone
fireproof
home
in
choicest of areas! Transferred
owner
will
sacrifice
this
spacious
5
‘bedroom,
3%
bath home. Family room, kitchen and 2%
car garage. All new! Convenient to schools
and shops and around the bend from Imdex ee
Conception.
$60,000.
Tremendous
value!

HIGHLAND

PARK

a delightful setting just perfect for entertaining. 3 bedrooms, 2 ceramic tile baths,
study or 4th bedroom, large family room,
library with fireplace.
Living
room
with
raised stone fireplace and dining room with
sliding glass doors to patio.
St. Charles
kitchen with beautiful built ins including
refrigerator,
dishwasher,
disposal,
etc.
2
car garage. Long circular drive. Priced in
the 50’s. Call LIONEL WATSON, if after
hrs. Wi 5-2700.

Baird and Warner
576 Lincoln Avenue
Winnetka, Illinois

Road
AL

1-3430

VE

Hillcrest
Sheldrake

6-1855
3-1855

AWARD WINNING HOME!
Featured in many national magazines, this
most distinctive contemporary home nes_ tles among big trees on almost an acre.
A few of the most unusual features include
its free-standing
fireplace
in the
large
living-room; three walled courtyards; stepdown tub in the master bath; underground
sprinkler system. 4 bdrms.;
2%
baths;
huge family room; complete air-conditioning. Priced at less than you would expect.
$24,500 BUYS A FINE HOUSE!
You’d certainly expect to pay more for
a lovely white Colonial home with a big
living room with fireplace; separate dinin
room; TV
sunroom;
cabinet kitchen;
3
bedrooms and 1%
baths. The full basement has an! ideal area for a rec. room.
2 car gar. Near trans., shops and school.

King’s Court Corp.
936

Spanish

Glencoe
5-1971

Ct.,

REALTORS
Wilmette

ALpine

6-0750

HIGHLAND PARK
OPEN SUN. 2-4
1385 Ridge Road
3

ished

rec. room.

bedrooms,
Low

1%

baths,

fin-

$20’s.

Finest Colonial on large ravine lot
with plenty of play area. Gracious
living room, sep. dining room w/
fireplace,
unusual
Florida
room,
pan. den, Early American
family
kitchen;
4 bedrooms,
31
baths,
plus maid’s room. $44,500.

H. and R. Anspach
INC.
Central

HIGHLAND

Ave.

PARK

LEAFY

ID

2-1212

LAKE

AREA

PRIVACY

AMID
RAVINES in completely remodeled
carriage house with 4 bedrooms, 314 baths,
fireplace living room, family kitchen; sharing Own beach, $47,500.

ID 2-0212

Newly
listed,
well
planned
four
bedroom, two bath story and a half

Cape

Cod

in east Lake

Forest.

En-

trance hall, bath, den or bedroom,
living room with dining area, wonderful kitchen with plenty of electrical outlets
and
storage
space,
laundry area and space for a deepfreeze on first floor—Three pleasant bedrooms and bath on second
floor—Full basement—Three zone
control, hot water radiant ceiling
heat, oil fired—Thermopane
windows thruout—Nice outdoor patio.
Priced at

Nice summer rentals
to $700 a month.

SP 7-4030

from

$140

up

A
Three bedroom two and a half bath
Colonial on a quiet dead end street.
Entrance
hall,
living
room
with
fireplace, paneled TV room, dining
room, den or extra bedroom, kitchen with eating area on first floor.
Three bedrooms, two baths on second—Full
basement
with recreation room with fireplace—Gas heat
—Two car attached garage.
Priced at

Four bedroom, two and a half bath
Colonial on two thirds of an acre—
Entrance
hall,
living
room
with
fireplace,
dining
room,
kitchen,
den and powder room. Full basement with recreation space—Two
ear attached garage.
Priced at

Five
bedroom,
three
and
a half
bath frame Colonial. Entrance hall,
living room with fireplace, powder
room, combination breakfast room
and butler’s pantry, modern kitchen and utility area on first floor
plus a large screened porch. One
ear detached garage.
Priced at

YOUR

This 5-year old Bi-level on beautifully wooded lot is ready to move

into.

GRADUATE

5-0236

In addition to such terms will give 2 week
possession. This home in tip top condition,
has 4 bedrooms, 2% baths, large recreation
room, plus panel. play room, 2 car garage,
% acre. Total 8 rooms with loads of built
ins,
most
modern
kitchen.
Very
close
schools. Ready to move in and hang the
hat! All this for mid 30’sx—LIONEL WATSON, Wi 5-2700.

463

Terrific value. Wonderful home on 1 acre
of ground with view of lake. 10 bedrooms,
4% modern baths, excellent condition; completely carpeted. Perfect for a large family.
$46,500

712 Glencoe
AM. 2-7873

VErnon

DEERFIELD
WILL HELP FINANCE
OR
TRANSFER 442% MORTGAGE

DON’T LOOK AT THIS PROPERTY unless you have imagination
&amp; are willing
to put in'a lot of hard work. Lot is 70x220
—House is a mess! 3 rooms, no bath, 1%
car gar.
$5,500

Evanston-North

Bldg.

6-1855
3-1855

VERY
CHARMING
ONE
YEAR
OLD
SPLIT-LEVEL
5 bdrms.,
3 baths, family
room w/FP. Located in Deerfield’s finest
section. Owner Transferred.
$44,500

Members

Theater

LAKE FOREST
CONTEMPORARY RANCH
ON 2 ACRES WITH 150 TREES

SAVE MOTHER FROM
CHAUFFEURING!

Lang Real Estate

1946

Nestled back from the street, this air-conditioned all LANNON
STONE RANCH
is
built to take full advantage of the view—
tall old trees affording great privacy. Stunning panelled living rm., unusual stone fireplace, screened porch, separate dining rm.,
BIRCH
KITCHEN
with bit. in oven and
range, panelled den, also large game rm.
with
fireplace
and
bar.
4 bedrms.,
3%
baths. Expandable 2nd floor. See in 60’s.

OWNER

ZANDER-OMMEN

ZONED
FOR
DOG
KENNEL
Close in acre on main road NW of Deerfield, contains 6 room brick bungalow with
full basement plus several other buildings.
A real buy at $20,000.

20’s,

FONARD! AGENCY
John

J.

DEERFIELD—BRICK
2 FLAT
Live in 1 apartment rent out the other.
All brick building built in 1956 with plaster walls,
full basement,
attached
2 car
garage, separate utilities. 6 large rooms on
1st floor, 4 large rooms on 2nd floor. Room
on 109 ft. lot for additional 2 units.

room,
plastered
walls,
hardwood
modern cer. bath, finished basement,
combination storms and screens,
y landscaped. Low 20’s.

000

NEW WHITE PAINTED
BRICK COLONIAL RANCH

REALTORS

and 4 car

Hart, Shaw
On high ground, this most attractive CRAB
ORCHARD
STONE
and
brick
RANCH
gives
excellent
family
living.
Living
rm.
has
raised
hearth
fireplace,
dining
area,
streamlined birch kitchen with bit-in oven,
range, dishwasher. 3 bedrms., 2 tile baths,
PANELED
GAME
RM., pwdr. rm. Fully
ore aw
lioria wore
Carpets
incl.
at
34,500.

BEDROOMS

brick home built to stand a lifetime

house

i

Est.

OF

Brick and timber split-level on 42 wooded
acre in beautiful area of new homes. Five
bedrooms
on 2nd
floor, 2 baths,
living
room,
separate
dining
room,
wonderful
screened porch, lower level family room,
small bedroom
and bath. 2 car attached
garage
with automatic
door.
Thermopane
windows. Hardwood floors, electric kitchen.
LOW
SIXTIES and
anxious
owner.
Call
MRS.
ROESING,
Ce 4-2665.
;

pasture)

and in excellent condition. 414% master baths, maid’s room and bath.
17x30
carpeted
living room
with
mirrored
fireplace
and _ balcony
staircase. Beautifully decorated dining room with bay window, overlooking
Countryside
Lake.
Full
basement containing family CLUB
ROOM, fireplace, laundry, storage

HIGHWOOD

&gt; YOU

PLENTY

576 Lincoln Avenue
Winnetka, Illinois

$125,000.

PARK

receipts in this charming 2 bedroom
Living room with fireplace, separate

¥

COLONIAL

ZANDER-OMMEN

living room, kitchen,
car garage, close to

mF bedroom
‘ot.

out

COUNTRY

White brick expandable ranch with ‘‘shake”’
roof, built in 1959. 3 bedrooms, (unfinished
2nd floor), 242 baths, lovely living room
with fireplace, separate dining room with
bay, master bedroom suite has sitting room
with fireplace and bath plus bedroom. Excellent kitchen and family room, opening
onto large screened porch. Pool completely
enclosed with decorative bamboo
fencing.
A dreamy house! IN THE MIDDLE SIXTIES, Call MRS. ROESING, Ce 4-2665.

Baird and Warner

5 gently rolling acres (2%

$18,500.

ID

AND

completely fenced and bordering on
Countryside Golf Course. 15 minutes from Lake Forest. 6 bedroom

room

IN

REAL

POOL

Lot 66x140 nicely wooded. Excellent neighborhood. Fully improved. Asking $6500.00.
Call MRS. ROESING, Ce 4-2665.

Ill.

ble has 6 stalls and groom’s quarters. School bus. Early possession.

, price

SWIMMING

VACANT

EXECUTIVE’S
SMALL ESTATE

is a lge.

wood din. rm. or den, com-

e

Beautiful slate entrance, large living-dining
room
with
dramatic
fireplace
wall
and
inside balcony
room over dining area, 4
large bedrooms plus family room on upper
level, 214 baths, partial basement,
2 car
garage with electric door. Be sure to see
this glamorous. house. IN THE LOW SIXTIES, MRS. ROESING, Ce 4-2665,

LAKE

Realtors

le 34 ft. living room brings the
area into the house through

-t. baths

; Al

EXCELLENT
CONTEMPORARY
IN CHOICE WOODED AREA

Co.

Waukegan,

with

old
and

D.

with pleasing effect.

glass

FOR

Built Ranch

, artistically
mal

HERE IS A SPACIOUS RANCH OF
BRICK:
&gt; . 30: ft... living. room,
f/place, 15 ft. dining room, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, plus utility room,
and 2 car garage
Storms &amp;
screens, many fine plantings .
Lower 30’s.

alum.

_ LAKE FOREST
c ounded

available.

RENTALS—4
bedroom
Colonial,
214%
baths,
now
leasing.
Private
grounds near High School. Also 3

mt., radiant gas heat,
, Screens and doors.

eautifully

mortgage

ranch

, and perfect in every respect
exception. The construction

base.

Pink Brick with 3 nice bedrooms,
2 ceramic baths, (1 off master) a
lovely kitchen, with 12x14 eating
space. Living room is 15 ft. wide.
7 generous closets. Full concrete
basement, sump pump, gas heat. 35
ft. patio, many plantings, on 70 ft.
lot.
$27,500—out
of state
owner
wishes offer &amp; this home
has a

514%

MES

LAKE FOREST

this

down. Up are 3 bedrooms, attic
storage &amp; full bath. The basement
has

HO

BLUFF

VALUE

with living
room,
den,

i

OWN

Newly listed, three bedroom, two
and a half bath ranch with a flair.
Lovely large living room with fireplace, a Stanley Anderson designed
kitchen and a nice full basement.
Two car attached garage.
Priced at

Parking Space Available
For Our Customers

Hart, Shaw &amp;
Company
Richard
B. Hart, President
_
©. Howard ReQua, Vice President
Mrs. Stuart R. French Milton McN. Traer
Ruth E. Henderson
Kenmore
Thorsen
260 E. Deerpath
Lake Forest, CEdar

135
4-1000

S. La: Salle St.
RAndolph 6-7155

Members of the Evanston-North
Multiple Listing Service

Thursday,

Shore

June 1, 1961
%

or

�secre
LAKE FOREST
SUPERB

WOODED

SETTING

A
charming
home
traditional inside and
out. 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 244 baths. Mahogany panelled Family Room. Wonderful
“Mangel
Cabinet”
kitchen with delightful
eating area. Priced to sell. Inspect today
or evening. HARRIET STEVENS

Hlllcrest
Sheldrake

California owner offers 5 bedroom
Ca
Cod situated in North Shore Park, Mundelein. Separate dining room, full basement
with finished rec. room, screened porch, 1
full and two % baths, 2 car garage, convenient to schools
and
shopping.
Asking
$22,900 all offers will be considered.
Contact

Mr.

SCHWANDT

REALTORS
N. Milwaukee
Libertyville

602,
.
EM

Dennee

REALTY

CO.

2-2015

LO

Lake

107

6-6720

LAKE

A PRIVATE
PARADISE!
34%
acres of seclusion with THE
MOST
UTTERLY TOPS in living charm. Concrete
and
steel ‘constructed
ENGLISH
COTSWOLD
home.
AIR-CONDITIONED
by
CARRIER
with 4 plus master bedrooms,
each with a bath, servants quarters and a
first floor arrangement second to none! A
screened porch and bluestone terrace open
off the handsome
bleached
oak panelled
living room. There is a beautiful library, a
most inviting 25x17 dining room, and an
all-electric kitchen.
Offered
at less than
1/3 of today’s reproduction cost. See

Hilicrest

Real

Estate

6-2900

Co.

BRoadway

outside

No

MUST

3-2666

BUILDERS

:
1600 Grove
PAlisade 5-8440
ORchard 6-2596
(Take Edens to Clavey, Clavey west to
Ridge Road, Ridge north to Grove)
Open Saturday and Sunday 1 to 5

LAKE BLUFF
Road

Roger

Williams

to house
Station.

Domonicks

Call Financial
6-0606.
Shapiro, Executor.

JUST

Sin-

Phillip

A.

LISTED!

Delightful
2 BR brick ranch, spacious LR
w/fireplace, kitchen w/sep. breakfast area,
ceramic tile bath, hardwood floors, screened
porch for enjoyment of lovely landscaped,
bpp
grounds.
Lowest taxes—only $17,-

FIRST

TIME

OFFERED

Crisp
as new,
3 BR’s,
2 baths,
family
room, delightful kitchen, wonderful traffic
pattern plus basement and att. gar., excellent finaticing available. $29,750.

QUINLAN &amp; TYSON, Inc.
735

Deerfield

Road

CALIFORNIA

WI

5-3750

CONTEMPORARY

Fabulous
12 room
ranch on 24% wooded
acres in Woodley Road estate area. Built
of stone, redwood and sliding glass walls,
it’s practically
maintenance
free.
Double
front doors swing wide to welcome you to
one of the most exciting homes you’ve ever
seen. 100x40 foot swimming pool. Sleeping
quarters in separate wing. Upwards of $200,000. Owner leaving State.

Hugh C. Michels &amp; Co.
751

Elm

St.

Winnetka
HI

6-7100

LINCOLNSHIRE:
$25,500, ranch on wooded
%
acre, 3 bedrooms,
den, ceramic
bath, thermopane window wall in living
and dining,
attached garage and patio,
electric appliances
and drapes included.
Low taxes. Near park, pool, trains, Edens
and Toll Road. WI 5-4134.

‘Thursday, June 1, 1961

2-6776

GOELZER

AND

WILDE

REALTORS
790

Elm

Street

HONEYMOON

HI

6-5544

“D”

IN HIGHLAND PARK: Refreshingly clean
and neat ranch on a wooded and flowered
acre. Restful living room, paneled den or
dining
room, overlooking
stately trees,
2
bedrooms. (easly 3), kitchen and nook, full
bath,
partial basement,
2 car garage,
2
patios.
Reduced
to $23,750.
Brokers
cooperation invited.
Martin A. Vehlow, Realty, 433 Gages Lake
Road, Gages Lake, BAldwin 3-0880.

Open House Sun.—1:30 to 4:30
825
Holmes.
Beautiful
9 room
home,
4
bedrooms, 3 baths, 2 years old, beautifully
landscaped. Must see to appreciate. Good
mortgage. LOngbeach
1-8938.
HIGHLAND
PARK
HIGHLANDS
Clean 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch on
large
lot, air conditioned,
fireplace,
gas
heat, kitchen with dishwasher, refrigerator,
built-in oven,
full basement
with
washer
and dryer, porch, carport with large storage, near school, park and train. On quiet
street, priced in low, low 30’s including
carpeting and drapes. Immediate possession.
ID 2-8958.
PARK:
solid brick ranch, 3
114 baths; full basement; com-

pletely redecorated.
Cost $23,500 in 1955.

Knollwood

at

ID

Brick Dutch Colonial in popular Sherwood
Forest. The ist floor has a living room with
fireplace
and
adjoining
sunroom,
dining
room, modern kitchen and a powder foom.
There are 3 bedrooms and a bath on the
2nd, full basement, 2 car brick garage and
an unusually large screened
porch.
It 1s
priced at $27,500.

HIGHLAND
bedrooms;

Beautiful 7 room brick residence,
4 bedrooms, 2 baths. Oil forced air
heat. Attached garage. On ™% acre.
Possession immediately.
Key
clair

to patio with barbe-

REALTORS
653

SELL

Brand new tri-level, 3 large bedrooms,
2
full baths, panelled recreation room, large
wooded lot. Low down payment.

Shagbark

entrance

DEERFIELD
MUST SELL

Reasonable Offer Refused
ORIGINAL PRICE $24,000

BERKSHIRE

Ori

Illi-

cue, full dining L off large living -room,
large kitchen, with built-ins and_ breakfast
area. Plus completely AIR-CONDITIONED.
OWNER
ANXIOUS.

HIGHLAND PARK
LAST HOUSE LEFT
BUILDER

Nello

Highwood,

Idlewood Realty

The “DRIP AND WRINKLE” SEASON is
approaching. How about seeing this lovely
AIR CONDITIONED
3 bedroom, 2. bath
BRICK RANCH
with an “OUT-OF-THISWORLD”
kitchen and game
room,
both
with fireplaces! On beautifully planted 4
acre. In the 50’s!

Sears

Executor,

Avenue,

New home in an established neighborhood.
This 5 year old split-level has 3 bedrooms,
1%
baths,
beautifully
panelled
den
with
bar and plumbing roughed in for another

Rerant

THE

for the

Highwood

&gt;

EVANSTON BOND &amp; MORTGAGE CO.
1732 ORRINGTON GR _ 5-5600 EVANSTON
$19,900 ON YOUR LOT
Spacious 3 bedroom, 2 bath
press brick and
cedar ranch, 523 Green Bay,
Highland Park.
Al Richman, builder, ID 2-9249.
RAVINIA
New 3 bedroom, 2 bath, brick and cedar
ranch, built in kitchen with spacious breakfast aréa. Attached car port. Conveniently
located at $23 Green Bay Rd. $27,500. Open.

Al Richmaf, Builder. ID 2-9249.
LAKE

990 NORTHCLIFFE WAY
EASILY SHOWN
BY APPT.

NEAR

Attorney

nois, before the 28th day of June, 1961. All
bids to be opened on June 29th at 1:30 P.M.,
at Attorney Nello Ori’s office. Transaction
to be closed immediately after the closing
of the Estate of Ernest H. Ayers.
The house is open for inspection from 1
P.M. to 5 P.M., on June 3, June 10th and
June 17th, and from 9 A.M. to 5 P.M., on
June 18th. To be seen by appointment call
ID 2-2458.

bath,
Ave,

IGHLAND
PARK
Ravinia. Area

243 | Just finished. Modern contem
built
be to overlook ravine. All rooms ate large.
Have
you
always
wanted
to
ap- Living room and den are oak parelled.
the Kitchen with built in oven, rangé,
- build? Even if you are not planning
Estate of Ernest H. Ayers, Deceased. Bids
washer and disposal. Air condition unit in
should be mailed or delivered either to the bedrooms. Zoned hot water heat. Landscaped to build immediately, CHOOSE the
Executor, Eggert W.
Carlsen at 569 OnLot includes 188 feet across ravine. $35,500 site NOW as it may not be availwentsia Avenue, Highland Park, Iflimois, or with low down payment.
at

6-1855
3-1855

OUTSTANDING VALUES _
in ey Oi

House on Lot 25 ft. x 130 ft. at
Washington Street, Highw6ed, Illinois, to
sold to the highest bidder, s#bject to the
proval of the 3 legatees and
devisees of

to the

Baird and Warner
576 Lincoln Avenue
Winnetka, Illinois

ene
e
RAVINIA—777 ST. JOHNS

MEE

Will sacrifice for $21,900. Mortgage can
be assumed. Call today. ALpine
1-7876.
Owner
MUST
Seil
6 ROOM
ranch,
1%
baths, 3 bedrooms,
full
basement
with
recreation
room,
attached garage, on large lot. May pick up
G I mortgage at only 442% intérest. Very
low
taxes.
Was
$23,500,
mow
$20,800.
1213 Woodruff, WI 5-5010.
SUNSET
Terrace,
Highland
Park,
livingdining room, fireplace, 2 bedrooms, den,
kitchen.
Patio,
attached
garage.
ID
25235'.
NORTHBROOK:
Brick ranch, 2 large bedrooms, living-dining room 13x25, kitchen
with eating space, ceramic bath, utility
room, 22’ of closet space. Large screen
porch, brick garage
18x22, beautiful lot
85x130,
carpeting.
drapes,
other extras,
$21,000. 2300 Dehne
Road.
CR
2-5375.
NAVY
transfer: spacious 3 bedroom split
level, % acre lot, many extras, $31,500.
WI 5-3907. 922 Wilmot Road, Deerfield.
GRAYSLAKE
3 bedroom home and apartment upstairs, 2
car garage. Both lots zoned business. $3,000
down.
Martin
A.
Vehlow
Realty,
433
sanaee Lake Road, Gages Lake. BAldwin 3HIGHLAND
PARK:
Attractive
Lannon
stone, brick ranch; 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
dishwasher;
plastered
wails,
hardwood
floors;
wooded
area;
full
basement.
Porch and garage. Reasonable. Telephone
ID 2-5575.
RAVINIA:
Uniquely
charming.
Spacious
single story. Panelled. Studio living room.
Beautiful
fireplace.
Secluded
wooded
grounds. $42,500. ID 2-2472.
DEERFIELD:
3 bedroom ranch, living-dining combination, screen porch, large lot.
For details call WI 5-0493.
DEERFIELD - BRIARWOODS
By owner: 900 Westcliffe. Stunning ranch,
exclusive section, near everything,
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, family
room,
immaculate
condition. Mid 40’s. WI 5-1467.
BEAUTIFUL 4 bedroom year round home;
750 feet private shoreline; excellent fishing and hunting territory. Nice place to
retire or just to use for summer months.
Sacrifice for $45,000.
Write
Irving
W.
Smith, Lake Elwood, Spread Eagle, Wisconsin.
LAKE
FOREST
by owner:
$59.500; four
bedroom, 2 bath, 4 year old brick ranch;
pine paneled family room, separate dining, 3 large fireplaces, mahogany
paneled
recreation
room
with
South
Sea
motif,
%4, acre, 2 car attached garage,
beautiful
appointments,
principals
only.
CE 4-5391.

FOREST:

In

exclusive

residential

area, praca
new brick ranch, large
living room
th fireplace, 3 twin sized
bedrooms, mahiegany paneled family room
with 10 foot barf, den, ceramic baths, cabinet kitchen ceratnic tiled, wall oven and
eating area, 214 car attached garage, carpeted, full basement, all gas, completely
landscaped, stockade fenced, storms and
screens. $54,900. CE 4-4427.

HIGHLAND

PARK-Sunset

Terrace,

cort-

pletely air-conditioned
3 bedroom
Cape
Cod ranch, full basement, gas heat, priced
to sell, low 20’s. By owner. ID 2-8270. _
533 CLAVEY LANE
Contemporary modern ranch.
3 bedrooms,
panelling, thermopane, Reduced to $31,500.
ID 2-2739. BY OWNER.
LAKE
BLUFF,
3 bedroom, 2 bath brick
ranch on wooded lot in Terrace section
of village. Living room has raised hearth
fireplace, large dining “L”’, kitches with
family
eating
area and
birch
cabinets,
mahogany
trim throughout,
hard
wood
floors and plastered walls; full basertrent
with large recreation room, excellent for
entertaining or children’s playroom; cafpeted and draped; gas heat. Navy orders
put it in the 20’s. Call CE 4-5713.
DEERFIELD—4 bedroom
older frame
in
village, tiled bath, hot water heat, 1 car
garage, fenced in yard, $16,900. Low down
payment. 1146 Chestnut, WI 5-0129.
MODERN
ltuxury ranch, 4 bedrooms, 3%
baths, parteled den, heated jalousie porch,
full.basement, radiant heat, 12 acre wooded lot, beautifully landscaped. East Ravinia. Upper $60’s. Owner. ID 2-0399.
RAVINIA—CONVENIENT
LOCATION
7 comfortable
rooms,
beautiful
jalousied
family room, basement play room, extra lot
available, low 20’s. ID 2-1403.
HIGHLAND
PARK, near lake, 1 year old
ranch, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 24% car garage, 30 foot of sliding glass overlooking beautiful wooded
ravine.
30’s, Call
ID 2-8453.
DELUXE 3 bedroom rafich house on beautiful wooded lot in désirable Woodridge
section. Living room with fireplace, dining
room, 2% baths, full basement with recreation room and bar. Attached garage,
patio and barbecue. $31,900. Telephone ID
HIGHLAND
PARK:
on lovely
%
acre.
Finest construction, many iriteresting features. 3 bedrooms,
one 12x22, 2 baths.
Kitchen with dining area, utility room adjacent.
Full
basement.
Low
30’s.
1471
Ridge Road, Highland Park.
HIGHLAND
PARK:
Elm
Place
District.
1768 Clifton, Sunset Terrace. ID 2-4853.
Tri-level, 2100 sq. ft. living area, 3 bedrooms, 17x30 family room, 2%
baths, 2
fireplaces,
11 closets, gas heat, aif-conditioned, all windows thermopane.
REAL
estaté investment available that offers safe 20%. Your investigation invited.
Minimuiti $5,000 needed. Write Box D-35,

c/o

LAKE

Highland

Park

News.

FOREST;

FRANK

LLOYD

WRIGHT
style home,
by owner.
2300
square ft. In the 50’s. Phone CE 4-5348.
LAKE
FOREST:
best buy in select area,
contemporary 2 story redwood on wooded
%
acre, Iviing, dining, utility rooms, 4
spacious bedrooms, den, guest room, large
kitchen,
2 ceramic
baths,
carport,
low
maintenance, priced in 30’s. 1115 Valley
Road. CE 4-1811.
DEERFIELD:
exceptional value by owner
leaving city—newer 3 bedroom ranch, full
basement, spacious lot, major appliances,
carpeting. draperies, other extras. Under
$20,000. WI 5-2584.
6 YEAR
old, 2 story frame, 3 bedrooms,
separate dining room, sunroom, fireplace,
basement, oil heat, 2 car attached garage
on one acre, near Ridge Road. Excellent
buy. $29,500. Call ID 2-0474 or WI
50254.
HIGHWOOD:
2 bedroom frame, basement,
1 block to Catholic Church
and_ shops.
Excellent condition. Call Agent ID 2-0474.
HALFDAY:
3 bedroom frame ranch, 2 car
garage
attached,
114
acres,
gas_
heat.
Priced for quick sale. Call WI 5-0254 or
ID 2-0474 for details.

BUSINESS

PROPERTY

PAUL
1925

suitable

PHELPS,

Sheridan

Rd.

INC.
ID

2-4580

100° FRONTAGE
by 400’
deep on
Milwaukee Ave. with 2 houses income $170
per month. % mile south of Half Day,
price $24,000. Telephone WI 5-0530.

VACANT

PROPERTY

LAKE BLUFF, ravine
improved, 5/8 acre;
and weekend.

lot
CE

on
private lane,
4-1117 evenings

6791.

bi

Deerfield

L. Ringer
457

Central,

H.P.

666 Waukegan

Rd.

ID

2-6600

WI

5-3650

Deerfield

Garden

Deerfield

Apartment
ee

Modern 2 bedf#@om apartments. Exe

cation, conveniémt to schools,
transportation. Ceramic tile baths.

kitchen

with

'oven and
to suit.

LOT SALE

relieerator, disposa
f-street parking. I

range.

QUINLAN &amp; TYSON, |
wi

735 Deeffield Road

Highland Park: 4 Bderr

Closing out at fraction of original prices.
Beautiful wooded
and open lots. Some as low as

4 Baths —— Powder Ro
First
lake.

$9 per front foot and up. All
east of Green Bay Road. Shown
‘by appointment.
OWNER,

HArrison

BANNOCKBURN
5 acres on Wilmot Rd. in exclusive
lovely homes.
4 acre
residential
$27,509. Call Mr.
Robinson.

McGUIRE
ALpine

1-6228

east Highland Park. Ideal for you
rieds. First level includes large

with breakfast

GReenleaf

5-1080

=
lots

DORSEY
St:

HUSENETTER,

Johns

ID

rolling

countryside.

A

FOREST:

COZY
and

modern

2 bedroom,

three room
apartment
west exposures. on

1155

St.

Johns.

Living

v

:

room,

with refrigerator and stove furni
room and bath; private off st

2-1484

ing. Immediate

CHICAGOLAND
DELUXE HOMESITE
Estate-like

screened

LAKE FOREST, 5 rooms, gas heat, gara;
49 Washington Circle. Phone CE 4

Real Estate

Ave.

and

bath duplex near high school; refrigs
range and garage. CE 4-1083 or
3936.
rea

amen - $5,500
;

73’x190"
723

LAKE

$6,259
$6,250

ea.

nook

second
level includes living
room
room and bath. Attic and
:
included.
Private
drive,
beautiful
roundings. Available at $110 per
including heat, water, stove and
ator. Phone ID 2-2454.

VACANT PROPERTY
SIX LOTS--FIVE NICELY WOODED
ALL IN WOODRIDGE
WEST RIDGE &amp; RED OAK SCHL. DIST.
2

C. &amp;
Elestric

ENJOY privacy? Then you'll lové this
ing 3% room garage apartmentin

area of
zoning.

&amp;G ORR

Realt ors

floor. 2 blécks to
Elm Place School.

dishwasher and finest Frigidairé. 2
rage. Gas heat. Private laundry.
apartment building with extensive
2 wood burning firepl&amp;ces.
newly decorated with some carpeting,
petit
porch. Nothing like it. July’
ns
Brokers please cooperate. 15 2-3

7-8585

or more
3 ROOM

posséssion.

es

at $90 per month. ID
apartment,
walkin

;

3-11
distanc

tous and transportation. Telephot
phone

Worder-

HIGHWOOD:

land of majestic trees. Secluded and private:
Modern underground electricity and télé-

water

4 room apartmérit, F

furnished,

Telephone

conveniently

ID 2-5242.

phone _ service,
Highest
restrictions and
PARK, 725 St. J
building standards. 35 minutes from O’Hare‘| HIGHLAND
rooms, 1 bedroom, stove and re
Field Terminal. Matt Rodina, ANdover
furnished. Calt ID 2-5041.
5183, or CHestnut 6-1642.

SHERWOOD
réady

FOREST—Choice lot, 50x150

for

immediate

construction,

‘HIGHLAND
and. bath

on

price

on

Duplex,

2nd,

living,

655 CENTRAL

GOELZER

AND

WILDE

Eliti

HI

Street

6-5544

3

dining,

be

214

and

and
call

$85. See Mr. Créwell on
Baird &amp; Warnef, Evanston.

Park

room

apartments

in

for itfimediate occupancy.
.
S245B
Modernized apart

A very choice piece of vacant property. 2
plus acres 6f 4'4 acre lots. Nicely wooded
and in an excellent area.
CALL MRS. LUDWIG

Market Square, availablé June 1
room, dining room, kitchen, 2 b
and bath. Heat and water suppl
Marquet
Square, Inc., CE 4-0485.
5 ROOM, 3 bedroom, bath, all utiliti
oe
$100.
Carr. Realty
Co.,

1571
Sherman
Ave.,
UNiversity 4-2600

LAKE

4

QUINLAN &amp; TYSON, Inc.

Evanston
ALpine
1-6700

BARRINGTON
2%

acres.

ANdover

Lake

rights.

3-5183,

or

SUMMER

LOANS

&amp;

sefl.

CHestnut

$2495.

61642.

AND

RESORTS

INVESTMENTS

2nd MORTGAGES
on homes or businesses
to buy, build or refinance,
by private
individual. Write Box R-30, c/o the Lake
Forester.

OFFICES,

STORES, &amp;
TO RENT

STUDIOS

STORE,
1931 Sheridan Road in the heart
of
Highland
Park’s
Shopping
Center.
Laser
Company, WHitehall 44318.
STORE
18x40
heated;
$160
per
month;
Offices 1 to 6 room suites; paved parking for tenants and customers. 460 Central Ave., Phones ID 2-0150, ID 2-2358.

FOREST:

gas heat and

room

2

floor ap

garage included,

per month. CE 4-0911.
Sep Sea
DEERFIELD:
central location, ney
structed deluxe town house, 3 be
1% ceramic baths, fully equipped k
full basement, garage,
$200. Call

AREA

Must

WINTER

ment,

$

pre

GReenleaf 5-1855
LAKE FOREST:

EAST LAKE FOREST

k

AVE

1%

Highland

REALTORS
790

PARK

—

;

fst, Half basement. $135. ID 2-

se

COTTAGE FOR RENT—July 1 to July 15
at Crystal Lake, Mich., in) Crystalia near
lake, sleeps 8, completely
modern with
fireplace,
linen,
silver,
bedding,
$275.
Write Box D-90, c/o Highland Park News.

building

central TV antenna, indv. dryer
washer, private garage, near tr
and shopping. ID 2-6790, ID_

see:

light manufacturing,
laundry, garage or similar business is in the
center of Highland Park business
area. First floor 4500 sq. ft., second
floor 1500 sq. ft. For immediate occupancy. Excellent financing.

brick

TOWN HOUSE

2 bedrooms, 11%2 baths, gas
fully
equipped
kitchen, liv
room, dining room, tiled fle

borhood with beautiful trees—$20,000. Call and we will take you to

for

This

SALE

“™

Air Conditioned —
|

able later.
Let us show you some outstanding buys, priced from $6,000 up.
One especially pieturesque site
on a ravine has plenty of table land
and in an established EAST neighborhood—$19,500; another splendid large piece in PRESTIGE neigh-

HIGHLAND
PARK-NORTHEAST
Wooded lot, excellent location. Near lake,
shopping,
North
Western
station,
Elm
Place School, High School. 82 foot frontage on Sheridan Road, 160 feet deep. Fully
4
Whiass
$14,000.
2116
Sheridam,
ID 2-

FOR

Modern

e

IN

ca
are
HOUSE FOR SALE

3

:
NT

HIGHWOOD:
}.

5

room

apartment, _ sec

floor, 2 bedrooms, garage, screened
p
available June 1st. 11 Prairie Aven
after 6, ID 2-5958.
BRIGHT, attractive 2 room apartmer

stove

and

refrigerator,

stores.

Call

ID

2

New

HIGHLAND

2 bedroom

near

trains

2-4672.

PARK

townhouse,

gas heat

conditioned, private patios, 9 closets,
shopping
and
transporc
to
schools,
Model now open at 625 Mulberry. ID
or CEntral 6-1900.
:

GLENCOE,
NEWLY
DECORA
TUDOR COURT, 5 rooms,

ediate

cupancy,
near
Northwestern
stati
Green Bay Road. VE 5-2043.
HIGHWOOD: 4 room apartment for
couple; heat and water furnished.
2-0506.
:

HIGHLAND PARK: finest east side
tion, 3 bedrooms,
114_ baths,
I
rooms, AIR CONDITIONED. Call
2226 after 6.
oe

HIGHLAND

PARK:

3 room

apartme:

Vine Ave., refrigerator and stove furn’
Call ID 2-5909; after 6 p.m., ID

APARTMFNTS
HIGHWOOD:
i

FOR
3 room

immediately.

RENT
furnished

(Ft
apartr

Telephone

MODERN
kitchenette apartment
Highwood
business district y
1 or 2 adults.
Phone
CE
5:30 p.m.

BP

locate
;
re &amp;
ie

�pagan
le.

ies ©

PARK 3 room furnished apart-

er working
[WO “au

2

23530.

l,

emplo

[AND

couple.

large ome,
couple

PARK:

artment,

Call

$110

2-

all utilities

preferred.

3

per

ID

room

ele-

furnished

month.

Utilities

“References required. ID 2-7587.

;

-

in-

furnished apartment close to station
Sheridan. Call ID 2-3971.
OREST
apartment, suitable for 1
woman
preferred, June
17th to
r ist. CE 4-5843.
UFF, 26 Washington St., 3 rooms;
ully furnished and decorated; pritio, washer and dryer; convenient.
enosha, OLympic 2-7282.
newly decorated furnished aparteat, hot water and other privileges
ed; close to transportation. Must
.
Call ID 2-8476.
S; 1 bedrcom feserved for owners

NICE

large

or Sunday.

iM completely furnished, all utilities
d, available June
11th, seen by “a
intment after 4:30 p.m., $105 per month.
ephone ID 3-1888 or ID 2-7817.

TOWN

ROOMS

Evenings

VErnon

TOWN

5-0343

HOUSE

from

town, 3 bedrooms, living-dinphy
Ad
, kitchen with built-ins, 1%
basement
with
paneled
recreation
per month including water.

R REALTY CO

HELP

Ks

£0

KENT

basement,
in, $155.

ing

New,

with

full

1%

(WE

WILL

5 Day
Tele-

$225

per

Call

TY, WI 5-1670.

Uniquely
.

month.

charming.

Spacious

living

room.

ee

PIER-

autiful

Panelled.

or sell: exclusive 3 bedroom, carwith appliances, adults or 2 children.

2 months

on

lease.

1066

Marion

Ave-

ghiand Park.
2 bedroom newly re-decorated cotbeautiful 3 acres; refrigerator and
included. Ideal for young married
$80. ID 3-1496.
1D PARK:
3 bedroom,
den, 2

firenlace,

2 car garage,

$225

{00M furnished house in Highland
baths,

June

gas heat;

15th

into

2 open

screen

September

or

ctober. Phone ID 2-0921.

TACT

rental, Glencoe, Strawberry Hill
irnished ranch house, 3 bedrooms,
deluxe kitchen, central air condi-

, July and August. VErnon 5-2887.
2R rental home near Braeside transon and lake breezes; 4 bedrooms,
S$,

screened

porch,

June

patio;

$350

15. Phone

&amp; APARTMENTS

ID

2-

WANTED

rent: Rooms,
apartments,
and
or employees of MUSIC
AND
USE
THEATRE.
Telephone
-§-4040.
ED TO RENT
FURNISHED
» $1000 for the month of August.
’ of six plus chauffeur, cook and
ns., preferably

Lesney.

)

Baird

ROOMS

with

a minimum

with swimming

&amp; Warner,

ose

4-

TO RENT)

[, private bath, kitchen privileges,
1an only. Phone ID 2-1745.

‘GE room

pool.

CE

$10;

kitchenette, completely furto

ID 2-1229.

transportation

and

shop-

bedroom with 2 closets, close to
and transportation, 2011 Second
H ghland Park. ID 2-7468,

, H 48—D 40

week,

excellent

PERSONNEL

Wilmette

Park

fringe

benefits.

CON

514

2-3310

ALpine

WANTED—MALE

|

“IF

YOU

PARTICULAR.

. .”

Let us roll out a carpet of green
that is inlaid to look as. though
it belonged. We use ONLY Warren
Sod registered with the State of Illinois Agriculture.

KNEIPS

WANTED
Griddle

for interesting

located

in

educational

Deerfield

Com-

ILLINOIS STATE
SCHOLARSHIP COMMISSION

Fashion

Center

CASHIER
LAKE

FOREST

Permanent,
Experience,
Krol,

COLLEGE

Full Time, Accounting
Typing,
Many
BeneCE

Surroundings.
4-3100,

OFFICE
1-8700

ext.

Apply

62.

POSITION

NEW TRIER HIGH SCHOOL
An office position is open for a woman or
girl, Typing is required. No dictation. Full
year employment. Generous vacations. Good
salary.
Phone Mr. Gibson, HI 6-7000.

TELEPHONE

SOLICITORS

Work part time at home, no selling, must have metropolitan phone
service. Call Mr. Hepner, Ploneer

9-1195.

SEAMSTRESS
part

Woods

time.

J. ZENGELERS CLEANERS
2020 First St.
Highland Park
ID 2-2800
WOMAN
bath house attendant, 25 to 40
years of age, for summer employment. A
ly Park District, 1801 Sunset Road, Highand Park.

RECEPTIONIST—PART TIME
Personable young
woman
for receptionist.
Pleasant
working
surroundings.
Excellent
pay. Hours 1 to 4 daily, 9 to 12 Saturday.
Call Mr. Janczak for personal interview, ID
2-5466. Highland Park Conservatory of Music.
CLERK-TYPIST,
Lake Forest college, full
time, permanent. Apply Mrs. Krol, CE
4-3100, ext. 62.
WAITRESSES,
HOSTESSES,
CASHIER:
permanent, full time. New Pancake House,
WI 5-0713 evenings.
;
STORE and assembly girl wanted for Roesler Cleaners.
Apply
in person
727
St.
Johns Ave., Mr. Roesler. ID 2-0352.

Men,

McHenry,
*Phone

(after

WANTED:

middle

aged

woman

as a com-

panion, light household
duties, $25
week. Phone ID 2-1745.
GENERAL
housework, cook, 5 days,
Friday and Saturday nights, school
children, own room, bath, and TV,
erences. Call VErnon 5-2163.

woman,

experienced,

for

per

stay
age
ref-

cleaning

upstairs only on Mondays. ID 2-5912.
FINE
experienced
white
woman,
general
housework, plain cooking, child care, livein, 5 days, own transportation, recent references, 2 adults, 2 children,
8 and 2
years old. WI 5-2714.

HELP WANTED EMPL. AGENCY
APPLICATIONS
being
accepted.
Kathryn
Dowse Employment Agency &amp; Secretarial

Service.

7:00

Ill.

P.M.)

EVergreen

5-1889

EXPERIENCED
gardener will do gardening,
landscaping,
fast
and
dependable.
Own truck. ID 2-7698 or ID 2-6668 after
5
WINDOWS
washed and lawn maintained,
__g00d references. DExter 6-0788.
PROFESSIONAL
decorating,
interior and
exterior painting, wall washing and paper
nk ke
UN
9-2361
(A.M.). DE
6-0416
MAN
will do
Telephone ID

TWO

273

CE

E.

4-1148.

Market

Square,

Lake

garden
2-6398,

work,
experienced,
ask for Dominic.

men will do yard work, general house

cleaning, driving, any odd jobs, experienced. References. CHerry 4-0181.
HIGH school boy would like lawn jobs in
Deerfield. WI 5-3694.
MAN
wants part time garden work in exchange for room or apartment. N.Y. Box
__191, Wilmette, Illinois.
HIGH
school boy would like job mowing
lawns preferably. ID 2-4127.
EXPERIENCED man will do general house
cleaning, yard work, driving, any odd jobs.
References. ONtario 2-8784.

SITUAILONS WANTED—DOMESTIC

REFERENCES

CHECKED

NO FEE!
LIVE IN GIRLS
DAY WORKERS

WANTED—DOMESTIC

SECOND maid, experienced. 2 adults. Keep
white cook and gardener. Own air conditioned room,
radio, TV. References ‘required. Telephone collect ID 2-2323.
WANTED, experienced cook for 3 months
starting June 18. I have a kitchen maid.
Telephone Mrs. Blair, CE 4-1416.
SECOND
maid; must have experience and
__recent references. Call CE 4-2098, Collect.
EXPERIENCED woman for general housework and plain cooking, live in, 5 day
week, 3 in family. ID 2-0726.
GENERAL housework, child care, stay Monday through Friday, own room, bath, TV.
References required. ID 2-2217.
COOK
and general housework for woman
whose husband is employed elsewhere and
will give 1 day for room and board. 2
lovely rooms, TV and bath; other help,
references. VErnon 5-1401.
GENERAL
housework, must like children,
live in, own room, recent references re-.
__ quired, $45. ID 3-2920.
WOMAN for housework 1 day a week, 5 or
6 hours. 2 Adults, small house. Must have
own transportation. ID 2-9378.
DOMESTIC,
4 afternoons through dinner,
$25. Telephone ID 2-9285.
WANTED: woman, white, for 1 month, beginning June
12, for chamber
work,
hours in the morning. References, phone
Mrs. W. R. Carney, CE 4-1632..
CLEANING,
Tuesday
and
Friday;
references, south of Knollwood; own transportation.
preferred;
also somebody
for
le
beds odd weekends; phone CE 41
“
WOMAN
for upstairs work
and laundry,
Monday
and Thursday, must drive own
car, references. CE 4-2094.
COOK,
white, experienced, temporary June
15 to August 1; other help kept; recent
references required. Telephone CE 4-0875
before 10 a.m.

Forest.

LANDSCAPING

SERVICE
(State Registered)

Man-

COOK, general housework, live in, no laundry; own room, bath and T.V
xperienced; references. CE 4-2916.
ALL FREE—NO FEE
20 cook, General Maid Jobs
$50-65 wk.
Nursemaids and second maids
—$50-55 wk.
A-1 COUPLE JOBS $450-500 mo,
MRS. BAKER SHORELINE AGENCY
525 Lincoln, Winnetka
Hillcrest 6-5818
GENERAL housework, stay, own room and
path, references, good salary. Call ID 2-

LOCAL

ARE

then you want the finest

ID 3-0587, Mr. Kraemer.

HELP

Highwood

mons. Shorthand and clerical ability required.
All
modern
equipment. 12 paid holidays. 8:30 to 5:00,
No Saturdays. WIndsor 5-1500.

Mrs.

TRAIN)

or

SITUATION

Waukegan: Ave.

fits, Pleasant

THE FIRST
NATIONAL BANK
HIGHLAND PARK
Steady

Experienced

HOUSE,

ARNOLD’‘S

IBM Operator

Experienced.
Good pay.

CHEFS

ID 2-8

or ID 2-7597.
;
PRACTICAL
nurse
with good references
from North Shore residents. Convalescents
or chronics. Call DExter 6-6732.
CAPABLE and experienced girl looking for
summer job in the line of child care and
light household tasks. References. Write
to Kathleen Koschak, Box 35, Greenwood,
Wisconsin, or call COlony 7-6171.

MALE

MALE
hairdresser, $125 Salary, plus 50%
commission. Busy Deerfield shop. WI 54466, ask for Mr. Bill.
CAB DRIVERS:
fuil and part time, days
or nights, ages 21 to 50, hospital group
REGISTERED NURSES.
insurance plan,-year round work. Highland
All shifts, full and part time.
Park-Highwood
Yellow
Cab
Co.,
214
Green Bay Road, Highwood, III.
Interesting work
in pleasant en- DEMONSTRATE the new and amazing J-C
Insect Inhaler J-C combines new “Black
vironment.
Why
commute
when
Light”
with super fan suction that atyou can work close to home?
tracts and inhales most night flying insects. The modern and scientific way to
destroy
harmful
insects.
No
bother
or
CALL PERSONNEL OFFICE
guess work of spraying.
Make
outdoor
living a pleasant reality instead of stayID 2-8000 FOR APPT.
ing indoors
because
of pesky,
harmful
insects. Call WI 5-0082.
;
‘PART time man for hardware clerk. Must
be responsible.
North
Shore
Hardware,
1238 Skokie Highway, Highland Park.
CROSSING Guard, Park District Swimming
gone Apply 1801 Sunset Road, Highland
ark,
MAN wanted for cleaning, some gardening
and window washing, 1 day a week. References. Telephone ID 2-3866.
COLLEGE
men over 20 years of age, for
summer employment. Apply Park District,
Price Tickets
1801 Sunset Road, Highland Park.
Muse be dependable
.| BUS. BOYS, DISHWASHERS,
rmanent,
full time. New Pancake House.
I 50713,
evenings.

Hubbard

OFFICE,

WILL

WANTED

agement Trainee, $100 per week.
Also
COOK
TRAINEES,
DISHWASHERS.
NEW
PANCAKE

Our Hubbard Woods stors offers excellent
opportunity for one experienced in selling
handbags and accessories. Full time, 5 day
week, permanent. For appointment call VErnon 5-3500.

Works
Illinois

Ave
Wilmette

(WE

»

needs a large house

Highland

office

ENCYCLOPAEDIA
BRITANNICA
FILMS
1150

215 NORTH SHORE BLDG.
1866 SHERIDAN ROAD

Wanted

For
interesting
Amusement
Film
Department. Some experience in inventory, good
at figures. Typing essential. Excellent for
movie fan.
5 day

HELP

SALESLADIES

Deerfield
Deerfield,

Uniquely charming. Conveniented. Spacious single story. Panelled.
sigig Mita e Beautiful fireplace. 3
poms.
ooded
grounds.
Furnished.
) for summer or $325 a month. ID

. Available

SUITE

ASSISTANT

rental:
July and August;
com6
room
furnished
home.
1221
eee
Lake
Forest.
Telephone

2%

FITZGERALD
~ PERSONNEL

5-1990.

YUSES TO RENT (Furnished)

GIRL for general office and light typing.
Apply 530 Waukegan Avenue, Highwood.
Telephone ID 2-2747.
UNUSUAL opportunity for dental assistant
in suburban office. Typing necessary, expeer
desired. Call CE 4-0394 between
and 5 weekdays.

SECRETARY

ALLIS CHALMERS
MFG. CO.

per

Call owner, ID
2-5994,
'D PARK: very nice 6 room ranch
O01 quiet street; basement, garage,
85 s. $175. Available July 1. Call
after 4 p.m.

Idren while
are away
excellent references. Telephone

est.

ID

We have an opening in our production control department for a woman with typing or office skills. Liberal employee benefits. Hours 8 to
4:30, 5 day week. Call Personnel,

WI

t

Skokie Valley Laundry

,

CLERK-TYPIST

.fireplace.

oms. Wooded grounds. Furnished.
or summer or $325 a month. 1D
it

TRAIN)

Week

1

Good telephone voice important

Convenient-

story.

FEE

nte

at Briar-

COUNTER
GIRL

THE FIRST
NATIONAL BANK
HIGHLAND PARK

LD: Modern split level, 4 bed2 baths, family room, July 1st
,

help-

Machine
Bookkeeper

baths,

basement.

Advertis-

experience

839 WAUKEGAN RD.
DEERFIELD
WI 5-2000, MR. LYONS

basement

PAYS

HIGHLAND PARK
HOSPITAL
NEEDS

Duraclean Co.

gas
Call

EMPLOYER

FEMALE

publications.

or production

~

we

a
WI 5-2

WOMAN,
part time, wanted for our tacking department. Must be handy with needle
and thread. Mastercraft Furriers &amp; Dry
Cleaners, 1841 Second St., Highland Park.
ID 2-3122.
MEDICAL lab technician, full time, modern
hysician’s office in Highland Park, seryicing group of medical specialists. Well
equipped lab, close to transportation. Call
Office Manager, ID 2-4844.
SEAMSTRESS,
part or full time. CE 41300, Parker Boutin Cleaners, Lake For-

ID 2-4461

ful.

(Unfurnished)

three bedroom,

now.

WANTED

of company

A DISTINCTIVE OFFICE PLACEMENT SERVICE.
IT IS DESIGNED
{O REPRESENT YOU IN SELECTING A POSITION
THAT YOU
WILL ENJOY.

WANTED

Interesting position for woman to
assist publications
director
. .
Typing, paste-up and some lay-out

-_,
DEERFIELD.
ption or purchase, the top neighowner’s 6 room ranch, 3 bedrooms,
; Pad
kitchen, 2 car garage,

OREST,

to shop-

PUBLICATIONS
ASSISTANT

WI 5-0984

ns,
1%
baths, full
lovely grounds, close
er or WI 5-1952.

close

COUPLE
wants twin bedded room, Highland Park only, for summer months, to be
used week-ends and holidays. ID 2-5178.

HOUSES

available in this exclusive air1 building. 5 rooms,
1%
baths,
d for the most fastidious. $225 per
pen Sunday 2 to 6. Weekdays by

room,

ping, transportation. ID 2-1229.
HOTEL sleepi iB rooms, by day or
week, free parking,
1 Waukegan Ave.,
Highwood. ID 2-9862,2
NICELY furnished homelike sleeping room,
ample drawer and closet space, hot water,
single only. Telephone ID 2-0405.
2 SLEEPING rooms plus bath for rent in
residential
area
of Deerfield,
close
to
town and train depot. WI 5-5509.
LAKE FOREST: Room near transportation.
Private
entrance.
Gentleman
preferred.
€all CE 4-2393.
:
VEL-WOOD
Motel, 500 Waukegan
Ave..
Highwood.
Air-conditioned,
kitchenette
rooms for overnight guests and travelers.
BB
a
shower baths. Telephone ID 2-

-AIR TOWNHOUSES
arcs

sleeping

PARK

;call ID 2-1056 after 8:30 p.m, Friday,
anytime Saturday

counter girls

E Ss

start June 15. mags
wood Country Club.

General
Housework,
enced, all ages.

Child

Care,

Experi-

UNiversity 9-1467
COOPER EMPLOYMENT
SERVICE
1310

Chicago

Avenue,

Evanston

GENERAL home maintenance, interior, exterior painting, yard work, window washing. Call DExter 6-2799.
DAY workers, cooks, maids, couples. Mrs,
Baker, Shoreline Employment. Phone H1illside 6-5818, 525 Lincoln, Winnetka.
IF you are going away on vacation or coming home with a new baby and want help
with your children, call GReenleaf 5-7119.
A-1 references.
CATERESS will prepare dinners, luncheons,
buffets, etc., by the day; phone by noon
OL 4-6836, Kenosha, Mrs. A. Reinhard.
COLLEGE bound girl desires position doing
housework or as mother’s helper. Experienced, good references. Write Judy Peterson, Route 2, Chassell, Mich.

EXPERIENCED

girl wants day work clean-

ing or ironing, references. Call ID 3-0154.
EXPERIENCED woman desires cleaning by
the day and also baby sitting evenirigs,
Lake Forest only. Call CE 4-2376.
ALL types of white, experienced help. Floors,
walls, window washing, gardeners, painters, $2.25 per hour. ALpine 1-4636.

FINNISH

teen age girl wants

summer

time

job in nice home as baby sitter or mother’s
helper. Call DE 6-2821 after 5 p.m. |
EXPERT hte’: in my home. No pick up
or delivery. 1829 Hervey, North Chicago.
DExter 6-1574.
CHILD
care and housework, summer, experienced,
age
17. Write
Suzie
Dwyer,
en
Wis.
Phone
evenings,
Kendall
132.
WOMAN wants 4 to 5 days a week, expcrienced, references. DE 6-7781, do not call
after 6 p.m.
GENERAL
housework;
by day; by week.
Can stay nights. Good cook. Phone DExter 6-8142. »
\

THREE

17

year

old

girls

from

Wisconsin

would like jobs as mother’s helper or child
care for the summer. Call CE 4-3240,

BABY

SITTING

CHILD: care. Two young women, ages 20
and 21. Live in. References and experience. Write Jane Sikkila, Sandra Tamminen,
Suomi College, Hancock,
Michigan.
WANTED—experienced, reliable teenager to
care for 2 year old several afternoons
weekly, now, continue in summer.
References required, Ravinia area preferred.
ID 2-3913.
HIGH school girl desires summer baby sitting, daytime or evening.
Excellent references. Call after 6 p.m. CE 4-3497,
FORMER
teacher-governess
desires
child
care,
light household
duties
week-ends.
Call after 6 p.m. HEmlock 6-1949, Chicago.
HIGH school graduate wants Friday or Saturday night steady sitting jobs for the
months of July and August only. Call WI
5-0143 after 5 p.m. on weekends.

Thursday, June 1, 1961

}

�"portable eatin Fe10. “at met5-4091.
2 BIRCH folding cribs, % size, roll through
FOR

SALE

|

- TRICYCLE,
$3; ladies dresses and coats,
sizes 7 to 9; shoes, size 6% narrow; boy’s
summer shirts and shorts (new) size 12.
Telephone ID 3-2530.
MATERNITY clothes, all seasons wardrobe,
fair to excellent: 5 Yaga sizes 10 through
14. Phone WI 5-244
LOVELY lace bridal
own, worn once, cost
$150, size 10-12, $25; man’s fine summer
suit, smoky beige, 44 long, $8; wool sport
Boe
44 long, $6; both like new. ID 2-

HOUSEHOLD

| GOODS.

FOR

SALE

STORE WIDE
REDUCTIONS
ON
FLOOR SAMPLES

John R. Whalen

doorways, yet can be used until large bed
is needed. New plastic coated innerspring
mattresses. Originally $40 each, now $10
each firm. ID 2-7165.
WROUGHT
iron porch furniture, used 1
season, 3 piece sectional,
1 chair plus
cocktail and end tables. Wringer yee,
excellent condition. CE 4-3847.
4 PLACE settings of Easterling china; Cutco
steak knives and kitchen cutlery set with
racks. Both never used. Call CE 4-4418,
after 6 p.m.
PIECE
Krohler sectional sofa, excellent
condition; electric sewing machine; boy’s
20 in. Huffy bicycle, baby bed and mattress; play pen and door gate; Gladiron
ironer. ID 2-4874 mornings and evenings,
Saturday.
SOLID
maple
double
bed,
mattress
and
spring, studio couch, matching chintz coverlets,
2 pair
drapes,
$110;
mahogany
double dresser and mirror, $65; king size
headboard, $20; yellow and chrome kitchen set, $20; walker stroller, $3; CE 4
1921, 5 to 8 p.m.
66 LINEAL feet 6 ft. x 4 in. rubber pad,
__cheap. Telephone ID 2-61442.
ONE brown linen 2 cushion Lawson sofa;
1 brown tweed Simmons day bed, 2 bolpe
1 6 ft. Serval refrigerator. ID 26087.

w

CLOTHING

BABY

Furniture
808

Waukegan

crib for sale. Excellent condition. ID

3-0447.

MISCELLANEOUS

Rd.

PUBLIC AUCTION
Tues. Evening, June 6. 7:30 p.m.
Exhibition Days, Sat., June ad,
10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday,
10 a.m. to 4 pm.

GALLERIES,

‘HI 6-7444
Winnetka

ELECTROLUX sales and service representative in your peat
Bob LeClair, telephone ID 2-636
ELECTRIC ——
2 years old, perfect condition, $125. Call WI 5-5844

transmitter,

Globe

Scout

model

ee:

paint

40;

scraper;

men’s

miscellaneous

storm

items.

»

Thursday, June 1, 1961

(Skokie
Northbrook, Il.

Asters,

PERENNIALS—Large

Dahl-

Salvia,

selection

GROUND

COVERS—Bowle’s

ca, Pachysandra,

Euonymus

etus, E. Coloratus,

E. Acuta

YEWS—in

containers,

Cotoneaster

$2.50

Apiculata,

Dundes

516

N.
WE

ew
R_ 2-3000

MILWAUKEE AVE.
SELL ON TERMS

Mon., Thurs., Sat., Sun., 9-6
Tues., Wed., Fri., 9-9
Will take your clean used furniture in trade
or down payment on new furniture. Excellent buys -on sectional living room
sets;
maple rockers and chairs, $12.50 and up; 3
pce. maple bedroom set with canopy bed,
$179.50; mahogany drop leaf tables, $39.50;
large
asst. of bedroom
furniture,
dinette
sets, odd chairs, lamps, bedding, at discount
prices;
closet combination,
$ 4.95; 24 in.
vanity
formica
topped
lavatory
complete
with trim, $72.50; 66 in. 2 bowl cabinet sink
with trim, $97. 50; 2 bowl
stainless steel
aa
£12225 ft extension power cords, 75c
hoses, spades, rakes, $1.25 ea.; 6 tube
Toshansoeet lights, $5 ea.; filing cabinets, $10
ea.; baby cribs, $29.95 "and up; play pens,
$11.95; new and used gas stoves, asst. sizes,
very reasonable. Many other items too numerous to mention. Come in and browse.
|:
RENT EVERYTHING FOR THE HOME
FROM YOUR ASSOCIATED STORE
Portable TV Sets
Foldaway Beds
High Chairs
Reducing Machines
Hospital Beds
Heavy Duty Vacuums
Floor Waxers
Power Tools
Wall Paper Equip.
Moving Equipment
Wheel Chairs
Rug Scrubbers
Floor Machines
Ladders
WE DELIVER

ASSOCIATED
RENT-ALLS
651

Roger

Williams,
IDlewood

Highland

Park

2-6333

SAVE ALMOST HALF
HARDWARE — PAINTS — GARDEN
SUPPLIES
7
SELLING OUT ENTIRE
STOCK
Sundays

10-3

P.M.

Daily

48

but

FOOT x 8
ft. Trailers, can
platforms and bridges. Looks
120 and 41. ONtario 2-9337.

RUMMAGE
USED

they

MUSICAL

12-7

P.M.

NORTH SHORE HARDWARE
1238 Skokie Valley Road
Highland Park

FENCES
“YOU

SELECT—WE
ERECT”
WOOD
OR WIRE
bay
Vr
OR CUSTOM
CABANAS - PATIO,
GARDEN TLLIFY: BUILDINGS
:
For Free Estimates Call
Mike
Estate Fencing
CE 4-1283
EVERGREENS
FOR SALE, low ee
SOY
junipers, 3 to 5 years ol

UNIT

STEPS

One piece construction, a beautiful improvement on your home, safety features, guaranteed against cracking. For free estimate,
call franchised dealers:
SVOBODA REALTORS
916 Glen Flora
MAjestic 3-6270
WEEDS
POWER
MOWED
By tractor totary mower. Jim Beinlich, VErnon 5-1195.
ir itt? Suauee bbe Soil. $12 per load. WI
KITCHEN SINK TOPS
One day installation on Formica Sink and
counter tops. Worn
out counters covered
with Ceramic Tile for less. Also, cabinets,
sinks, and: dishwashers. Free plans and estimates. Snazelle Kitchens. CE 4-3237.
POWER LAWN
ROLLING-FERTILIZING
Let us take the humps out. Save your back.
Jim Beinlich, VErnon 5-1195.
ALUMINUM
windows, doors, siding, awnings and
screen houses;
special
Spring
prices. Call CoAlume, CE 4-1750.
TRANSMISSION for sale. 4 speed pine shift
oo
still in car. Price
$220firm. ID
ANTIQUES.
Open
NINE
days!
June
3
through
June
11,
1961.
The
GREAT
BARN
filled with over 2,000 SELECT
American antiques we just brought back
from “Down East.” Pine furniture, wooden ware, pewter. Toys, still banks, primitive lighting devices, paintings, tin, copper, brass and iron. Collection keys and
trivets.
Hemmed-In-Hollow,
Old
Rand
Road
(2
miles
north
of
Wauconda.)
JAckson 6-7575.
;
HAVE brand new outboard but family gets
sea sick, so best offer over $100 takes
my 1961 Johnson 3 horse motor. Never
used—still in original carton, with all the
guarantees. Phone
after 6:30 p.m.,
CE
i

PLATINUM 11 porch screens and 1 swinging screen door, 6 feet 6 inches by 3
feet; 1 screen 20 inches by six feet six;
also structure for lean-to awning; makes
porch 20 by 9 against the house. Best
Peo 690 Marion
Ave.,
telephone
ID
GARAGE
Sale: Tables, chairs, small Kent
sofa, needs refinisning,
recreation
room
furniture, Craftsman handsaw with table;
Electrovoice speaker and enclosure; etc.
Telephone ID 2-1004, 1773 Winthrop Road.
PING PONG set, like new, $25; Surfboard,
$10; pair living room chairs, $20 each.
EMpire 2-3714.
WARDROBE rack, 9 hanger capacity. Steel,
39 in. wide, 76 in. high, 16 in. deep; 3
‘shelves for hats, one for boots. Like new.
$25. CE 4-0485.
Riding mower, 21 inch Rotary, with electric
starter, good
ae
ada
1/3 of original
cost, $90. WI
BRAND
new,
in a
aaal carton, 24 in.
POWER MOWER,
$45; RIDING MOWhe $99.50, 1/3 off original cost. ID 21716.
HAYRIDES
Party Facilities
Happ’s Hollow, CR 2-3131
COINS For Collectors. Proof sets for Graduation Gifts. Larson’s Store, 1783 St. Johns
Ave., Highland Park. Saturday and Sun’ day only.
POWER MOWER
24 inch reel, self-propelled Suburbanite with
basket. Excellent condition. $50. Telephone
ID 2-2481.
G.E. DISHWASHER, counter-type, $45. WI
5-1779.
BEAUTIFUL English type carriage, perfect
condition. Telephone ID 2-6942.
DRAPERIES, slip covers made to order. Interior design
consultation;
let us serve
you. WI 5-5719 or WI 5-1514
BELL
&amp; HOWELL
stereo camera, brand
_ new, never used, original price $150, will
sell for $50. Call ID 2-0286 after 5:30
p.m.
QNE-TON
unit
air conditioner,
excellent
condition, used only two seasons, adjustable to fit any window, $100. WI 5-3844.
STAINLESS steel storm doors and windows
expertly installed; also embossed
aluminum; siding. CoAlume. Call CE 4-1750.

GOODS

1st—9 A.M. to 9 P.M.

COUNCIL

JEWISH

INSTRUMENTS

NORTH
OF

FOR

SHORE’S

Solitaire diamond
Sunset

10 DAYS ONLY
instruments to choose
LOWREY
ORGANS

small standard brown unolisper: n

AUTOMOBILES

Rambler station
sharp car

wagon,

1957

Rambler

station

Chevrolet
a limited

1956

Ford
Fairlane,
4 door,
steering, fully equipped
door. 4

McCALLUM CHEVROLET,
191 E. DEERPATH
Open

Every

Nite

CLEAN

USED

1955 Bel-Air

6

CARS

cylinder,

door
Chevrolet,
stand
ard transmission, er
er radio &lt;s. 35S) soe

Buick Super 4 door sedan,

automatic

trans

mission, heater, radio

$

4 door Super

Wagon, 6 cylinder, automatic transmission, pow-_
er steering, radio, heatEvenings

Until ee

BUICK

589 N. Oakwood
Lake

Forest

~
CE 4-5

2-2510

Eliminate
used car.

comfort

STYLES. BONUS FOR STEINWAYS AND
OTHER
GOOD
MAKES. CALL LONGBEACH
1-5092,
EVENINGS
ROGERS
PARK 1-4400.

PIANOS wanted: bonus prices for Steinway
and Baldwin. VErnon
5-1640 eves. and
Sunday. AMbassador 2-2023 days.

BUY

CHICAGO ART GALLERIES WILL PAY
CASH FOR ORIENTAL RUGS, FRENCH
FURNITURE.
ANTIQUES
ETC.
CALL
~. Ph egegs EVENINGS
ROGERS
PARK
WANTED by 9 year old: 20 gallon tropical
fish tank and equipment if et alae reasonable. Call Steve at WI 5-284
SET of children’s golf clubs. ce 4317.
WANTED,
piano, in good condition, for
Jewett Park Fieldhouse. Tax exempt donation preferred. Call WI 5-2409,

when you buy
over 45 cars in

showrooms.

|

Rambler Super Cross Country st
tion wagon, radio, heater, aut
trans. Last 1960— .....
bel
1959 Plymouth
Fury
conv.
Subur
Sharp. Radio, heater, auto., pow
steer., W/W/tiTeS
o.oo...
iced —
1959 Triumph 4 dr. sedan, radio, he
er, W/W tires, powder blue, lec
mileage

1955 Nash

Ambassador,

~ LAKE
1766

4

dr.

sedan,

factory air conditioning, like
tires, auto.,
radio,
heater.
price
:
Plymouth 4 dr. sedan, 2 T. Mae
like new tires, radio, heater.
ceptionally nice car Aeeeeeeneedeseeceee

Authorized

Sat.

WANTED

CHICAGO ART GALLERIES WILL PAY
PIANOS, ALL M MAKE S,
ASH
FOR

the guessing
Select from

of our indoor

1960

1954

TO

4

SENSATIONAL MONZA
FOUR SPEED

WENBAN

5 STRING Gibson banjo in excellent condition, complete with resonator and case.
Call ID 2-8557 after 5 p.m.
USED
HAMMOND
ORGANS,
with new
organ guarantees from Lyon-Healy. Hammond
chord
organs,
$795, low as $30
down.
Hammond
spinet
organs,
$1225,
low as $45 down. Lyon-Healy, 1843 Second
Street, Highland Park: ID 2-3434.

WANTED

v/8,

Peprrrrrrerer errr ret

1955

Open

—MOVING JUNE 15th—
SALE
Rent a piano $5 a month
Must dispose of 90 new and used pianos
New spinets, 88 mote ......-...cccacneeess fr. $395
Used spinets and consoles.
re
15 used grand pianos ........,.....
Practice upright players .
See the new spinet player piano
3 New
Electronic
Organs—Will
Sacrifice
FIELDS PIANO CO.
2921 W. Touhy, Chicago
AMbassador 2-2023
CONN
walnut Minuet electric organ, year
old, cost $1700, price $1200. Must sell.
EMpire 2-4398.
BALDWIN “‘Acrosonic”’ walnut spinet piano,
excellent condition, only $495. Lyon-Healy,
rer Second St., Highland Park.
2-

INSTRUMENTS

Nomad station binary
production car ..

Bel Aire
ready to go!

sedan,

a very_

er

SALE

MUSICAL

—

.............-....... se

1956

9-5

Park
ID

ae

se eeeenessone

Chevrolet 210-6-4 door,

1958 Rambler

Fall
Sat.

Johns

transmission

special automobile

LOWREY
Organ Studios
St.

custom

a

Plymouth
Belvedere
v/8, power
steering, automatic transmission ..

1953

Til

SALE

1958

1955 Chevrolet

9-9 Daily

1795

FOR

‘McCALLUM CHEVROLE
PRESENTS

from

.

Of Highland

wa

LOST:

Several brand new Mason &amp; Hamlin, Knabe
and Weber console pianos in all styles and
finishes.
Payment

:

ladies’

last Thursday. Please call CE 4-3
LOST:
parakeet,
light
biue,
an
name of ‘Pete.”” Reward. 26 W
Circle, Lake Forest. CE 4-1331. _
LOST: keys and glasses, at Cellar,
May 19th. Call CE 4-3710.

1957

PIANOS
Cable, spinit, walnut
a
$675 Now $545
Cable, spinet, Mah.
g. $645 Now $525
Cable, spinet, frtwd.
aor $695 Now $555
Cable, consoles, walnut. Reg. $870 Now $695
Kimball spinet, mah. Reg. $689 Now $545
Kimball, Early American
with Hutch
Reg. $1395 Now $995
Used Knabe console
mahogany
Reg. $900 Now $750
Knabe, grand, ebony. Reg. $2188 Now $1875
Mason &amp; Hamlin grand,
ebony.
Reg. $3525 Now $2995
Mahon &amp; Hamlin console,
ebony
Reg. $1494 Now $1195

Terms—No

eng

Market

19 about 5:30. Reward. ID 3-1
left handed fielder’s wes

1957

Holiday limed oak.
Reg. $985 Now $795
Reg. $945 Now $745
Holiday Mahogany.
Holiday Fruitwood
Reg. $985 Now $745
Holiday Provincial
Fruitwood
Reg. $1045 Now $795
Holiday White
Provincial
Reg. $1095 Now $845
Holiday Chord Organ
Ebony
Reg. $1085 Now $885
Holiday Chord Organ
Limed Oak
Reg. $1085 Now $885
Brentwood Mahogany Reg. $1195 Now $995
Brentwood Limed 7 a" $1235 Now $995
Festival, Oak.
$2775 Now $1995
Berkshire, Mahogany. reas. $1360 Now $750

Special

Food

May
LOST,

automatic

QUALITY

ALSO

in

SALE

AUTHORIZED SEMI ANNUAL
CLEARANCE SALE
50

tration tags; answers to
6-3500, extension 2598.

LOST:

WOMEN

ORGANS —PIANOS
over

joss, peritins Tables

poodle,
“Toni,”
green collar;
lost
urday ‘afternoon; vicinity Skokie | t
re: pe
22. Children’s pet; re

Largest Dealer

each.

are

JUNE

NATIONAL

and

FARM

SALE

AMERICAN LEGION HALL
1957 SHERIDAN ROAD
HIGHLAND PARK, ILL.

Veg-

$1.25

be used for
good. Route

CLOTHES—HOUSEHOLD

THURSDAY,

Vin-

each.

FLOWER

75 inch Locke gang mower sa
good condition, $100. WI
5

ia

Ajuga.

CONCRETE

ESTIMATES

&amp;

MOWER:

of

field-grown plants. Hardy Chrysanthemums and Cushion Mums,
the new ‘Harvest Giant” Mums
too.

We grow our own plants;
always fresh and healthy.

SHOP AND SAVE AT
STOCKADE TRADING POST
WHEELING, ILLINOIS

2-

BABY
bed ard mattress, Tag
excellent
__condition, $10. Call CE 4-42 89,
2 WALNUT end tables, walnut coffee table,
3 ging
ae lamas room chairs, davenport. WI 5-10
PUTTING
oie in storage:
selling vm i
tric refrigerator, electric range; rug 6x
card tables; end tables;
steamer trunk:
__ window fan. Call WI 5-1468.
DAVENPORT, 3 piece sectional, good condition,
$100;
2 blond
end ‘tables and
matching cocktail table, $15; wrought iron
bar with 4 stools, like new, $50. Telephone
CE 4-4017.
COUCH, easy chair, 2 lamp tables, 2 table
lamps, coffee table. air conditioner. Good
condition, reasonably priced. ID 3-1705.
HOOVER
clearer. $25; large fan, $5; sun
bowl, $5; electric roaster, $20; small Oriental rugs; some furniture. Sale 10 o’clock
Saturday, June 3. _WI 5-0460. 1010 Springfield, Deerfield.
WHIRLPOOL
automatic washer, needs $35
peceion. pew offer; ringer washer, $10. ID

Carnations,

Dwarf

app

_mond ring, half price. ID 2-3 20.

8 P.M.

Northbrook Lumber
Company

65,

ALMOST new Hoover Deluxe Upright Vacuum cleaner; Blonde solid mahogany dining room set with 8 chairs (2 host) upholstered in pink. Best offer. ID 2-3398 after
6 p.m. or Sundays.
2 LOUNGE
chairs, $20 each; draperies, $5
pair; cornices, free; nest of tables, $5; 3
piece silver coffee service, $15; ’miscellaneous items. ID 2-8725.
PORCH
furniture, upholstered in turquoise
and gray; dark mahogany dining room set
with 8 chairs; _Beautyrest double bed mattress and springs, good condition;
lawn
sweeper; wheelbarrows; spreader. Call ID
2-4813, evenings and week-end.
KENMORE
appliances, refrigerator 12.8 cubic feet, 70 pound freezer; 36 inch stove;
washer, 2 cycles; dryer, 3 cycles, 7 months
old. Available June 15. ID 2-8478.
GE REFRIGERATOR, 13 cubic foot, no defrost; James portable dishwasher, 18 inch
deluxe model, $75; lawnmower, new but
slightly used,
$50; boy’s 26 inch bike.
Call evenings, ID -7952. Or best offer.
BEAUTIFUL = $269
convertible-couch-bed,
aqua Danish style. $95. 7 piece birch moe
dinette set, $45. Bathroom scale. $2.50.
piece Fireplace ensemble, $15. CE L371.
COMBINATION
T.V., record player, AM,
FM radio; glass top coffee table; porch
Mert
girl’s clothing, size 12. C

Marigolds,

Verbena,
Lobelia
and_
others.
Geraniums,
Tuberous
Begonias,
Lantanas,
Impatiens.
Tomato,
Pepper
and
other
Vegetable
plants.

kitchen.

FREE

and

ID

ias,

of Hybrid PePetunias, Snap-

Located on Rt. 83, 4% mile south of
Rt. 22, near
Long Grove.
Open
Weekdays and Sundays 8 A.M. to

A new kitchen with beautiful wood
cabinets, formica tops and built-in
appliances can be installed in your
home for as little as $19.95 per
month.

CW output, 75 watts. Whirlpool washer,
needs timer. Call WI 5-5229.
NEW
Hoover vacuum cleaners as low as
$49.95; 21 in. TV, reconditioned, $49.95;
used automatic washer, $25; used electric
stove, $25;
used refrigerator,
$25;
new
refrigerators and freezers as low as $149.95; wholesale
rices; our 25th year in
Lake
Forest.
e give
S &amp; H
Green
Stamps.
Freeman’s TV
and Music, 648
~ Western, Lake Forest.
MOVING:
Sacrifice Sears 20 inch power
‘mower, $25; 26 in. girl’s Schwinn bike,
training pedals, basket, $23; garden tools,
terrace furniture, etc.; Sears deluxe child’s
pool, shower, ladder and cover, $20; swing
gym set, $10; sand box, $2; toy chest, $3;
American Provincial chest on chest, night
table, chair, antique shaving mirror, perfect, $75; wagon barbeque, $12. Call between 12 and 5, ID 3-2076
GOOD
BUYS:
Brown lounge chair; green
sofa; pair fireside chairs; 6 dining chairs;
adjoining
bed
frame;
high
chair;
card
table and chairs; draperies; Lionel train
set; stroller; girl’s ice skates, size 1; electric roaster; orange juicer; power mower;
electric

dragons,

-

Enjoy the convenience of a modern
up-to-date

Inc.

886 Linden Ave.
Hubbard Woods

HAM

SALE

KITCHEN
REMODELING

By order of various Executors and Consignors
complete
furnishings
from
Woodard
porch furniture to Oriental rugs. Don’t miss
this important sale.

ANNUALS—Flats
tunias, Double

OMAN’S

Deerfield

WI 5-1915

PICK

FOR

PLANTS, me YOUR ¢ GARDEN

First

9-6

Street

Corp.

Highland

Hours—Weekdays

BIG
1961

MOTORS ©
Chrysler

FORD

Deal

Pa

9-9

SAVINGS!
Falcons

FORD

Station Wagons

FORD

Convertibles

—

FORD
FORD

2 and 4 door sed
Executive Cars
—

FORD

Demonstrators

Holmes Motor
1909 St. Johns
Highland
ID 2-8640
1950 BUICK
Special 2 door—dyna,
heater. Mechanically sound. Ru
_ New
battery, brakes, plugs,
“ pump, windshield washers and | lights.
inside. Painted last year but hi
rust eink $100. WI 5-2875,.

Page

H 49—

�-

xe

aly agg

eas

ee

Gite¥ gee
Ree 71 8
Ae

pag

erty

SAP reR

ss

Po Se Speen

Stancaee
ek ee
Rhee, Bey

MERCEDES
i”

BENZ

1960 KARMANN
low

3906 W. Chicago Ave.
BE 5-7760
Chicago 51, HI.
Tipografia Italiana
Anthony Abbatiello, Prop.
dita

LOEBER

Broadway
(Oldest
M.B.
in the

&amp;

SONS,

INC.

LO 1-6750
Station

Service
Midwest)

buy

LOEBER

at

1111

N.

FREEMAN’S TV and MUSIC
648 N. Western,

Lake Forest

Deal

plus 8 S&amp;H
UKULELES,

CE 4-0519

plus

GUITARS,

Call Mr.

1909

Green

reg.

$24.00

Western,

value

Stamps

Lake

CE 4-0519

Forest

SUMMER
SESSION

OL
p

AW

Cc

A

Mi

JUNE

26—

AUGUST

&gt;

Our

can

%
~ %
%
x

and

GIRLS

42-13

St.

Breen—ID

2-8640

HOT

Highland

Park

13th

18
Season

1957 Chrysler hard top 2 door, power steering, power brakes, radio, heater, reason__able, ID 2-8885.
eh

gp

nen Speci, 2 door hard top, white,
ull
power, original
owner, spotless
$790.
WI 5-3016.
“e
d
1954
WILLYS
Overland
station
wagon;
good running condition. CE 4-9128.
1960 PONTIAC
Catalina convertible, light
blue,
full power,
all extras,
like new,
private party, $2595. Phone WI 5-4567.
LATE
1959
190SL
Mercedes
convertible
roadster; white with black top; red leather
interior;
Blaupunkt AM-FM
radio;
low
mileage, top condition; never raced; original owner. CE 4-4064.
VOLKSWAGEN,
1960 station wagon, 241
model, red and
grey, sun roof, extras, low
mileage, radio.
Telephone ID 2-7777.
1953
FORD
two door sedan, 6 cylinder,
automatic transmission, $140 or best offer.
WI 5-0923.

1958

KARMANN

with
new
white
heater.
Beautiful

GHIA

convertible,

blue

top,
whitewalls,
radio,
condition
all
around.

of AGE

LUNCH

SERVED

REGISTER
;

EVERY DAY
ROOM

NOW!

IN

LIMITED

Call or Write Today

for

a

OUR

2706

DIRECTOR

LINCOLN

DINING

ENROLLMENT!

Personal

... JERRY M. MORGAN,
High School

TRUCKS

&amp;

MOTORCYCLES

1958 WHIZZER, 1600 miles, good condition,
cost $220 new, will sell for $75. Call ID
2-3499,
HARLEY-DAVIDSON Hummer, 1958, many
extras, reasonable. Call after 4 p.m., VErnon. 5-2762.
2 WHEEL garden tractor, 3 h.p. with snow
plow and rotary mower attachments, $125;
Whizzer motor bike, just overhauled, $50.
WI 5-0310 or WI 5-4643 after 5 p.m.

PETS
SIAMESE kittens, female sealpoint, male
bluepoint, champion dam and sire, CE 44064.

URSAFELL
KENNELS
BOARDING
AND TRIMMING
Expert grooming, all breeds, individual runs,
country kennel. Telephone WI 5-5035.
POODLE at stud, toy, silver, son of Champion | Silver —
| saneestas. =
usually
available.
rs.
atos,
rysta

e
t
n
a
Lake 459-4646.

ane

Tak

ha

trained,

gentle with

children,

old,

black and white, champion sire, AKC regA lg
home
raised.
Call DUnkirk
11572.

MALE KITTENS—Clean,
ID 2-6998.

trained,

free. Call

CAROLINE
and Cosmo, 7 week old kittens
are
tired
of
living
with
mother.
Trained,
weaned
and
delightful.
ID
31589.
COLLIE, tri color, male, AKC
registered;
4 months; all shots; $60, free dog house.
CE 4-3947.
WEIMARANER
puppies for sale, top field
trial stock, grand sire field trial champion,
__Fritz don Wehmann, CE 4-4955.
KITTENS!
healthy,
happy,
handsome,
weaned. Free to good, permanent homes.
CE 4-5267.
4 SIX weeks old kittens want a home. Telephone WI 5-0701.
PUG puppies, apricot, AKC champion stock,
9 weeks, males and female. WI 5-3214.
BASSET
hound
pups,
AKC,
champion
stock, ready soon. Call EMpire 2-7492.
SCHNAUZERS
miniature
pups, champion
sired, top quality, fine disposition, home
raised, no shedding. EM 2-1168.
BICYCLES

BICYCLES
BIKES—Used
and
Reconditioned.
Good selection of Boys or Girls 16
in., 20 in. or 24 in. Many Schwinns
—completely
re-built—some
like
new.

CYCLE
486

&amp; HOBBY

Central

SHOP

at Sherilan

ID

2-1369

“BIG WHEEL”
BIKE SHOP
New &amp; Used Bikes
Ranger Bicycles
Guaranteed during your ownership
Free Pickup &amp; Delivery
1844 First St.
ID 2-1750
BICYCLES:
in. girl’s,
condition.
LADY’S J.
0923.

Only
values

206 in. girl’s Schwinn, $15; 24
$12. Both
in good
operating
CE 4-5372.
C. Higgins bicycle. Call WI 5-

the
and

Want

Ads

offer

opportunities

able elsewhere.

amazing

not

Read them now!

avail1

AS Ay

with WESTINGHOUSE

Coach, New Trier

LANE

1956 PLYMOUTH, 4 door, 2 tone red and
white, push button shift, 36,000 miles, very
clean, $575. ID 2-8127.
1952 CHRYSLER Saratoga, good condition,
reasonable. CE 4-2013.

MOTOR

shots,

Interview

Alpine 1-2802

CAMP

OWN

1960 FALCON, 2 door, radio, heater, standard transmission. Must make quick sale.
Call ID 2-4729.

x

Basketball

autotires,

WILMETTE,

ILLINOIS

Why swelter during the hot summer months when you can enjoy the cool comfort of Westinghouse air conditioning!
Don’t wait for the hot weather rush.

Act now .. . while we can serve you promptly!

COMPANY
aT

LUMBER

Adjustable
Custom

Stock

shelves

for

finished

in

OR

OPEN

any

sizes, or made

PREFINISHED

Hours:

every

8:00

DO
A.M.

THURSDAY

oi

room.

wood.

to order.

CALL

IT YOURSELF

&amp;

P.M.

FRIDAY

Sun.

“You can be SURE ...

‘

INSTALLED

- 5:30

oe

ws

Book Shelves

9:51

EVENING.

H

50—D

42

US

NOW

if it's WESTINGHOUSE”
FOR

FREE

ESTIMATE!

BISHOP'S
1741

Page

SSIS Sod

1590 DEERFIELD RD.
“HKGHLAND PARK
iD 2-0140

oO666%
TOMS

|

1959
AUSTIN-HEALY
Sprite,
owner
has
left country and wishes to sell. Less than
10,000 miles, chic, clean, and blue. Never
been raced, but could be! CE 4-2389.

1954 BUICK
Super convertible with
matic
transmission
and
whitewall
$150. Call ID 2-8275 after 7 p.m.

tered,

excellent disposition. ID 2-8660.
| COCKER
spaniel puppies, 10 weeks

MG MAGNETTE
4 door sedan, 1958, top
shape. Wood-leather interior, bucket seats.
$950. ID 2-3809 or MI 2-2779 after 6.
See at Robert’s Gulf Station, County Line
and Lincolnwood.

Motor Co.

Johns

Our Own Spacious Camp Site
. . 200 Acres of Land
Our Own Riding Stables
* Riflery
* Golf
Our Own Beautiful Swimming Pool
* Trampoline
Crafts
% Baseball
% Archery
% Tennis
%

fe

YRS.

2-6514

1953 PORSCHE
1500 Super. Shop manual
and set of metric tools. Call NEwton 4-

Best offer over $1550, WI 5-2507.

BOYS

ID

oo

"

ic

Call

COM S ~
Setatereecess
S253 Soe

ay

you

1957 FORD
convertible,
blue, brand new
white
nylon
top,
guaranteed
3 years;
white-wall tires, Thunderbird motor; car
in excellent
mechanical
condition
with
low mileage; very clean throughout. Private owner, no dealers. Call ID 2-5140
after 5 P.M.

FREEMAN’S TV and MUSIC
N.

sell.

1955 CHEVROLET Bel Aire 4 door sedan,
fully
equipped,
one
owner
car,
56,000
miles. Sell for $525. Phone WI 5-1949.

4-0500

Stamps

— Plus 138 S &amp; H Green

648

a dealer
TRUST!

Holmes

$9.50

79? S&amp;H

INC.
WH

CASH FOR YOUR CAR
ANY MAKE OR MODEL

Stamps

reg.

with

St.

GHIA, perfect condition, | BEAGLE, male, 10 months old, AKC regis-

must

3359.

45 RPM RECORDS at FREEMAN’S

|

Clark

MOTORS,

Se

PETS

o

easy to

Fun...

mileage,

PRIVATE party, 1960 Valiant, deluxe equipog
power steering, $1450. EMpire
23714.

Loop

Summer

te

1957 PLYMOUTH Plaza 4 door, 6 cylinder,
Standard shift, blue, original owner, good
condition, $395. ID 3-0081.

North
5625

cae

1959 MERCURY
Monterey
sedan,
fully
equipped, power steering, power brakes,
low mileage, immaculate, one owner suburban driven. WI 5-1563 after 6:30 p.m.

WE HAVE TWO LARGE EXPERIENCED SERVICE STATIONS WITH
24
MERCEDES
MECHANICS
TO
SERVICE YOUR CAR.

MARTIN

Sis

seat, windows, radio, heater, 4 door, low
mielage. VE 5-4141 days, VE 5-1246 evenings.

MAY WE BE OF SERVICE TO YOU
IN THE PURCHASE OF A NEW OR
USED
MERCEDES)
BENZ
MOTOR
CAR. FOR DOMESTIC OR FOREIGN
DELIVERY.

PRESS

ae

RON

after 6:30 p.m.
1958 IMPERIAL, excellent condition, power

N

THE ANTHONY

Ne ee

3

AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE,”

Exclusively

Memorial Cards
SEE US FIRST

age eR ge ode

ePapae
Me
RAS

AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE

When you need the finestin
Wedding Invitations
Social &amp; Business Stationery

ea

,

Second

St., Highland

Park

AIR
CONDITIONING
and

HEATING

ENGINEERS

Phone

ID 2-0407

Thursday,

June

1,

1961

|

�se

@

“Super’’-sized! Carving knife 1234”,
fork 11”, steak knives 8”

3
@

From New Instant
Chase &amp; Sanborn-

Famous Utica Super Edge stainless

:

steel blades with

:

@

Carver’s sabre hollow-ground Wave
Edge gives longer, sharper cutting

@

Steak-knife blades are
serrated to stay sharp

@

Fine imported Rosewood
are decorative, enduring

5
:

mirror finish

= Steak Set “oo
:

Carving Set plus 6 Matching Steak Kuve

precisionhandles

Evi

yours for only
and the inner seal from a jar of New Instant Chase &amp; Sanborn

What a fabulous offer! The sharpest steak
knives . . . the handsomest carving set
imaginable! Perfect on your table...
terrific for gifts. And the entire 8- piece set
is available now at this unbelievably low
price only with this offer from New Instant
Chase

&amp;

Sanborn,

the

rich

new

instant

with the pure coffee nectar.
Today’s New Instant Chase &amp; Sanborn
gives you the hearty flavor and aroma of

premium coffee beans... and for the first
time the richness of their pure coffee nectar.
Get it today! Send for your Steak Set now!
FINE

COFFEE

FOR

NEARLY

100

YEARS

OFFER

LIMITED!

SEND

TODAY!

Instant Chase &amp; Sanborn, P. O. Box 527, Utica 1, N.Y.
Please send me
STEAK SET(s). I am enclosing $2.00
plus inner seal from New Instant Chase &amp; Sanborn jar for
each STEAK SET ordered. (Do not send stamps please.)
Offer void wherever taxed, prohibited or restricted.
Name

Address
City

Zone

State

Allow 4 weeks for delivery. Good onlyin the United States,
mcneeitons

�FR

Plans Keunton

Of Children’s
“alumni”

of

the

National College of EduEvanston, are invited to

the

reunion

ton

Hotel,

Tuesday,

part

of the

75th

dinner

at the

of National

Everyone

June

that

20,

time,

as

cele-

attended

the

its foundthe years

is urged

to

make

reservations with one of the cochairmen,
Mrs.
John
Boetcher,
2845 Sheridan Place, Evanston, or
Mrs.
John
Evanston.

Loux,

2721

after

Scholar

Asbury,

addresses may have been lost from

recently;

records
School

the

43

years

of

the

Chil-

when

located

at

the

2944

scholarships

College

of

at National

Education

the

ceremonies

Elizabeth

North

Harrison

Mrs.

award
in
memory
of
the
first
N.C.E. president. The honors symbolize
donations
made
to
the
school’s program
for elementary
teaching students.

College

Michigan

Chicago.

AN

Lloyd Bergquist,

to decide

to send

FASHION

SHOW

quist, at right is Mr.

Acting
Eleanor
Meloun’s
are from
blem Club

Luncheon

their laundry to us...

Every Thurs. 1-2:30 p.m.
Reservations Suggested

forever!

in the

RATHSKELLER
the

In Our New Cocktail Lounge

THE

THREE

TWINS

plus the
SINGING WAITERS

Ray, Len &amp; Doug
he

le

ey

ve

Tues. Thru Saf.

Tue:
t Private Dining “Rooms
Roe
Accommedations 15 ¢

3 Private Dining Rooms
accommodating
50-250 people

|

On EDENS EXPRESSWAY
at LAKE COOK RO.

BR 3-4626

VE

Reservations

Fi

trustees;

Mrs.

Edward

marshal; Mrs. Fred
sistant marshal.

6-8080

4 wv. RANDOLPH
(Suet west of State)

§-3335

supreme
marshal,
Mrs.
Seebeck,
was Mrs.
assistant.
Both
officers
the Cicero-Berwyn Em169.

Also, Mrs. Peter Carani, treasurer; Mrs. Nicholas Miller, recording
secretary; Mrs. Benjamin Helke,
corresponding secretary; Mrs. Raymond
Sheahen,
Mrs.
Maynard
Schramm,
Mrs. James Watson,

HUNGRY FOUR

Also,

Mrs.

Thomas

pounded

on a neighbor's door, she

said,

Poodle

Bites

James
Silverman,
12, of
1029
North Ave. was bitten on the arm
by
David
Nemer’s’
miniature

poodle
last Thursday
afternoon,
while the two boys were playing
at Dave’s house, 985 Auburn Ave.,

A

FRIDAY.
FRIDAY NIGHT
SATURDAY

CR

Oe

Oe A

a

ee

9

OY

Highland
ee

ee ee

Os

OL

Ree.

oO

ee

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ee

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ae

Os

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eR

1811

ST. JOHNS

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ER

ee

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ee

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OY

ea

a

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ee

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ee

ei

9 A.M.
9 A.M.
CLOSED
9 A.M.
9 A.M.
5:30 P.M.
ae

ee

Ve

8

8

ee

to 4
to 4
ALL
to 4
to 4
to 8

P.M.
P.M.
DAY
P.M.
P.M.
P.M.

9 A.M. to 12 Noon

Be aye

Savings

ne

ht

exe

ae

5, 1961

Abetation
Established

44

sec-

Reported

next door when she came home
late last Friday night.
He ran toward her, but went away when she

AVENUE,

hhh

@”

ek

POO

512-518 Waukegan Ave.
Highwood

28—D

Prior

from

Park

police were

told.

4.

JUNE

Deerfield Call Enterprise 1616

H

Percy

looking into the first floor window

444

AS OF

Oy

Main Office and Plant:
IDlewood 2-3310

by

Mrs. Esther Larson of 2780 Loretta Pl. reported to Highland Park
police that she saw
a tall man

444444444444

BUSINESS HOURS

eo)

Laundry &amp; Dry Cleaners, Inc.

Roach,

Peeper

4644444444444

SN

a

KOKIE
VALLEY

Photo

Ave., second

ond assistant marshal; Mrs. Raymond May, chaplain; Mrs. Herbert
Moran,
organist;
Mrs.
James
Meehan, historian and press; Mrs.
Al Marks,
first guard;
and Mrs.
Harry Hall, second guard.
A buffet was
served following
installation of officers.
In its recent
annual
Mother’s
Day, luncheon, the club honored
mothers of Elks and Emblem Club
members.

Highland

OUN CEMENT
CALL
ID 2-3310

Lencioni,

Rivett, first as-

DRIVE CAREFULLY
THE LIFE YOU SAVE—MAY BE YOUR OWN!

SKOKIE VALLEY
LAUNDRY

Group

Dunham.

Installed with Mrs. Lloyd Bergquist,
new
president,
were
Mrs.
William Sarakenoff, vice-president;
Mrs. John Dunham,
junior past
president;
Mrs.
Carl
Arens,
financial secretary.

“International Cuisine
at Moderate Prices”

Shore

Central

left, receives a congratulatory bouquet from Mrs. John Dunham, retiring president, as she is installed president of the
Emblem club in ceremonies in Elks Hall. At left is Mr. Berg-

When Emblem Club 113, the organization of wives of Elks lodge
members,
recently staged its annual installation, the Supreme District Deputy of Northern Illinois,
Mrs. Laverne Meloun, was supreme
installing officer.

HEIDELBERG

Page

1013

1888

HIGHLAND

PARK

—

ID 2-0361

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When sa move

a

to town...or to
a new home...

‘
;
4
4

Your Welcome Wagon
Hostess will call with a
basket of gifts...and
friendly greetings from

&gt;

&gt;
a
a
&gt;
&gt;

4

&gt;

our religious, civic and

4

business leaders.
If you, or others you
know, are moving, be
sure to phone Welcome
Wagon.

a
&gt;
a
&gt;
d
,
&gt;
»
&gt;
&gt;
:
&gt;
&gt;
7

&gt;
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yp
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-

&gt;
a

Highland Park
Mrs.

Mitzi

Lavin

Mrs. Dorothy Darling
ID 3-2253
Deerfield-Bannockburn
Grace Clark
WI 5-0887
Grace Grady
of Lincolnshire

&gt;
r

Thursday,

June

1,

1961

hihi hhh
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Ave.,

during

founding

panel

4444444444444

dren’s

was

the

Chevrolet

44444444444144

since

a

Named

honorary

ithe

daugh-

Doreen Rademacher of Highland
Park
was
awarded
one
of four

especially
any whose

The
chairmen
are
eager to hear soon from

14-year-old

truck owned by the city of Highland Park rolled over in a ditch on
Half Day Rd. last Thursday.
She was not injured, according
to the report, but $200 damage was
done to the truck, Police say she
panicked and lost control while g)ing over the bumps in the pave| ment.

College.

who

Children’s School from
ing in 1918, through
since

driving

Orring-

Anniversary

Orsi,

4444444444444

bration

Sherry

ter of John Orsi of 1610 Robinhood Ln., was ticketed for driving
without
a license
and
negligent

Children’s

hrhe444444

School,
cation,

Girl Tips City Truck

School

ht

All

JUNE
IS THE
MONTH FOR
BRIDES ...

7

hhh

| NCE

Ne

�TiS
oe
De He ae es
AR
LO
aoa

h

¥i,

ie

te

noe)

'public health service traineeship
in preparation for a career in
social psychology.

Receive Degrees at
Commencement

at

Grinnell College

|on the staff of the campus

AN EXCLUSIVE

has

ys,

radio

| Macomb. Carlson will serve for the
on a men’s
and has served
Highland | station
from
1961-62.
On ee
(kat hall Gan
oerkidictal
07 Grinnell Col~
‘
:
é
|
candilege seniors who will be
|
for Spee
—
Drivers who narrowly escape an
dates for the bachelor of arts de- nnd pean
re- |

Two
students
Park are among

They are Walter Peak.
Both
of Mr. and Mrs. Walter |
tpe7

Ave.

Lincoln

1313

of

Jr.,

Frank,

¢
.
S, and Joel W. Goldstein, son
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Goldstein

of |
of |

| High

(oe
Frank’

graduates

School.

and
of

:
Galteesh
Highland

PY)

DAY CAMP

Swimming, Horseback
Fishing,

GIRLS—5 thru 12

Riding

(2 Corrals),

Boating, All Sports, Crafts, Golf,

Hot

Weekends available to organizations for parties
Directed by Teachers—Program Fitted to Child
All activities conducted on our Country Estate

wy,

| accident should take stock of their
own habits and not blame others.
se A “near miss” situation is rarely
Park | the fault of any one driver.
|

FOR BOYS AND

Lunches, Teacher-staff, Transportation, etc.
Ultra Modern Outdoor Swimming Pool

in Northbrook,

Illinois

Camp Season: June 26 thru Aug. 18, “61
Phones:

OR

4-9789

or OR

4-3829

Lane.

Rambler

560

re ee

exercises hobs i

at Commencement

gree

June 4.
IlI, son

aN

TRAIL BLAZER DUDE RANCH

Office

Jim
Carlson of Highland
Park
| is the
newly-elected
Ambassador
'at large of the Veterans Club, an
Interna- |
|organization of former service men
has been
at Western
Illinois University,

Goldstein

For three years
been
a member
of the
| tional Relations Club. He

|New

|

Frank
Frank is majoring

Goldstein
in economics

and plans to work after his graduation

he

June

This

Grinnell.

from

Miss Cecilia Belgarbo
Ill, also a senior at}

will marry
of Skokie,
Grinnell,

|

Four
years
a member
of the
swimming team, Frank has won a
freshman numeral and three var- |
sity letters. He was co-captain of

the varsity

squad

this

year.

a member of Men’s Honor
sity lettermen’s club.
He held the position of
auditor for a year.
Psychology

He
G,

is |

var-

student

Major

Goldstein is a psychology major
considerable
done
also
has
who
work in sociology and anthropology. He is one of six recent graduates in the social sciences to receive a summer
training fellowship with
the Bureau
of Social
Science Research
in Washington,
D.C.
In the
fall
he
will begin
graduate work
at the University

of Kansas

a United

under

States
Roasts

can’t

in the new

dry
on

IN

out

or burn

low-temperature

oven

5
‘eae

the

MEMORIAM

In loving memory of my beloved daughter, Gail Jo Sicilia,

who

passed

ago,

on

away

May

27,

one year
1960.
Rose

Sicilia

20% OFF

-€-- GOLD STAR
Everybody’s talking about the new “keepwarm”

as

140

oven that maintains

degrees.

Wonderful

temperatures

for

warming

as low

up

leftovers, keeping delayed dinners warm,
thawing frozen foods. It's just one of many

or

Gold Star features on this breath-taking new
30-inch Gas range’ by Caloric. Also has giant

24-inch oven
“burner - with
broiler doors,

with Observador window,
-a-brain”, removable oven and
and stunning backguard with

roast and bake guide, light, clock, and timer.
It's yours for only $5 down . . . $6.34 a month
FREE... TUBE

CHECKING

VARVHUAAAE

TV

&amp; Radio

Service

%¥

|GRANT &amp; GRANT
708

Central, Highland
| By ey fy 3

Thursday,

June

VISIT:

Novth Shote'Uias

1,

1961

!

sy

a
ie
4
ie
a

Company

fb fl
BFF

Radio Dispatched

|

“The Friendly People”

Park

OR

YOUR

GAS

RANGE

DEALER
Page H 29—D 45 ‘4

�TAHA

4a

TOOK

- . + The

*s

fOAN-

Finest of Everything

V

The deepest satisfaction of car ownership is yours
You will take pride in its quality, unexcelled even
of custom coachmakers, and, seemingly a paradox,
is one of the lowest in the medium price field. See
. . plus the excellent sales and service facilities

SORENSE
ONE

OF

122

N.

LAKE

COUNTY’S

Sheridan

Rd.,

Dodge

OLDEST

DODGE

Waukegan,

Illinois

when you drive the Polara.
by cars bearing the marque
the price of this automobile
it at Sorensen Motors TODAY
available.
North

Recreation Center
left, Richard Van

SENN,

MAjestic 3-1107

LAKE FOREST COLLEGE

SUMMER SESSION
SPANISH
Europe

First Year Course
Reading Course

Twentieth

America

THEATRE

Century

(1928-61)

Survey of the Visual Arts

History of Modern

BIOLOGY

MATHEMATICS
Introduction to Mathematics

General Biology

BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
Principles of Accounting
Business Law

Marketing, Principles and Case
Problems

Summer

Russia

ANTHROPOLOGY

MUSIC
Music Literature and Appreciation

Racial and Ethnic Group Relations

CHEMISTRY

NATURAL

General Chemistry
(second semester)

Introduction to Physical Science

SCIENCE

PHILOSOPHY

National Income Analysis
Problems of American

American Federal Government
International Relations

The American Public School System
Educational Psychology

Supervised Teaching
(Secondary only)

ENGLISH
English Composition
World Literature
American Literature (1776-1860)
The Modern Novel

SCIENCE

PSYCHOLOGY
Introduction to Behavior

‘

HISTORY
American History

Basic College Mathematics
(second semester)

TRAINING

OF

tei

SOCIOLOGY
The Family

Ist term, June 20

e 2nd term, August 4

Classes begin June 21

Classes begin August 7

SUMMER

SESSIONS,

ILLINOIS

or

SINCE 1926
3 Hour Laundry Service
Call For and Deliver

ID 2-0305
1873 St. Johns Ave.
Highland

LAKE

Telephone

al

PHYSICS

For folder describing these courses in detail, write:
FOREST,

éy laundry

Pork

FOREST
CEdar

SBS3

COLLEGE
4-3100

3 for
al

SSy

SS Set

lt

HHA I

S

ALS - PERENNIALS
SEEDS
SHRUBS
SHADE TREES
TUBEROUS
BEGONIAS
EVERGREENS
FERTILIZERS
GRASS SEED
IMPATIENS
PLANTS
Complete Planting Service

5
Re!

KINDLEIN'S FLORIST
Free

Delivery

© Open 7 a.m.-9 p.m.
Flowers by Wire

7 days

1390 Skokie Hwy., Lake Forest
Page

H

30—D

Group

planting
SS

Thermodynamics
POLITICAL SCIENCE
American State Government

Principles of Sociology

LAKE

irs

ready for spring

(1865-1961)

MATHEMATICS

Social Problems

DIRECTOR

CF

to Honor

William S. Leahy, son of Mr. and
Mrs. William Leahy of 1538 Sheridan Road, was one of seven Trinity
College juniors to receive the College’s highest undergraduate honor
when
he
-was
“tapped”
into
the Medusa on Wednesday, May 17.
Medusa
is
the
student
group
responsible for maintaining discipline and tradition in the entire
student
body.
An
estimated
400
undergraduates were on hand for
the ceremony which has been held
annually
on
the
College’s
guadrangle since 1893. New members of
Medusa were searched out of the
crowd and ‘tapped’ by members
of the outgoing Medusa.
Leahy is a Junior Adviser and
is on the varsity baseball team. He
is president
of
Alpha
Chi
Rho
fraternity.

er

RELIGION
Introduction to the Study of
the Bible
History of Protestant Christianity

SOCIOLOGY

REGISTRATION:

Lawrence Rubel of 1304 Lincoln
Ave,
plays flute in the band of
the
Chicago
Division,
University
of Illinois; which held a concert
at Navy Pier last Friday evening.

Pier

GERANIUMS

ECONOMICS
Introduction to Economics
(second semester)

Tests and Measurements

Elementary Typewriting

GERMAN
First Year Course

The Mitchell Blocks of 948 Wade
to
a weekend
from
St. returned
find their front porch light on, a
bathroom
window
open,
and
the
screen broken.

for

Choice Color

English Composition
(second semester)
World Literature
(second semester)

Development of Personality
Abnormal Personality

SECRETARIAL

FRENCH
Reading Course

of Metropolitan Chicago,
Officer Melvin Moon.

Flutes

ENGLISH

POLITICAL

EDUCATION

picture are, from
a representative

Break-in Suspected

Methods in the Elementary School

History of Modern Thought

Labor

Prior

25,000

ART
Sculpture Workshop I

EDUCATION

Logic
Introduction to Philosophy

ECONOMICS
Introduction to Economics
Money and Banking

Percy

SECOND TERM

Basic College Mathematics

Music for Elementary Teachers

Organic Chemistry

Repertory Theatre

Calculus

Private Instruction

General Finance

by

Cc

(1939-61)

Intermediate,

Photo

&gt;
ie
x

(Elementary,
Advanced)

HISTORY
American History
Twentieth Century

from the Citizens Safety Council
Nancy Burck, Louis Domenico and

SES

All courses are selected from the regular curriculum of the College and are equiv-

alent in quality and in credit to those given during the regular school year. The
Summer Session faculty is drawn from the regular faculty of Lake Forest College,
augmented by highly qualified specialists from outside the College.

ART
Drawing and Painting

Group

last week. Shown in the
Arsdale, Frank Burrows,

Tapped

Two Terms: June 20- August 4 - August 7- August 28

FIRST TERM

Shore

The boys and girls who watch school crossings during
the year, and help their classmates to cross safely, were
entertained by Police Chief Schmieg and other officers at the

}

POLARA

a week.
CE 4-2764

46
Thursday,

June

1,

1961

�fot

te
y

SAUTE

A
Re t

eat fe

See aK

Ee

sete tis
Ss

Ne

metas

bane

Car Borrowers Run

to see
lot.

Edward
Christensen
of
6118
Sheridan
Rd.,
Chicago,
an
employee
at
Bob-O-Link
Country
Club, walked out of the clubhouse
last Thursday morning just in time

He shouted “Stop thief,” he told
Highland Park police, and the car

his

stopped.

car

Four

leaving

the

parking

teen boys who

out and seattered
were not caught.

in

the

Christensen had left the keys in
his car,
said.

Chief

Anthony

Schmieg

piled
bushes

values
able

and

opportunities

elsewhere.

Read

not

them

avail

now!

WINDOW to a WORLD of
WONDERFUL Drapery Cleaning...

dl
North

Shore

Group

Photo

by

Percy

Prior

Members of the Moose Lodge winning bowling team met
recently at the Moose Hall to join their less fortunate bowling
brothers in the annual bowling banquet.
In the back row,
from
left are Larry Gumbiner, Tony Porco, Joe Brooks, the

captain,

and

Art

Bernardi.

In front

are

Wayne

Jahnigan

and Fred Sacco.
Attends

Conference

Howard
B. Franklin, CLU,
379
Dell
Lane,
attended
a
national
sales conference of Mutual Of New
York’s agency managers and leading
field
underwriters
at the
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, New
York
City.
Attendance at the week-long insurance meeting is based on 1960
sales achievements.
Franklin is a
member
of
MONY’s
Top
Club
Round Table, a sales-honor group
for which only the top three percent of the company’s 3,500 field
underwriters qualify each year.

WHY

LIST YOUR
PROPERTY

id idea
with peslhty
t be
mus
ns
sio
posses

that your
personally

Drapery

Transfer
Green Bay R
1D 2-0507.

the ultimate

DUFFY

IT PAYS

TO

LIST WITH

A REALTOR!

CENTRAL

© EVANSTON

ite

® GR

5-5343

Glas

Food

Crete

Fiberglass
Construction

lifetime
BY

of pleasure

R. J. BORREGARD CO., INC.

Pie

on
pe

.
Se

kt

4

ty

TR

1961

too!)

ACROSS

from

H.P.

LIBRARY

ID 2-0300

vvy

S)

6-5333

Napoleon

times

(krep’-lok)

filling,

and

Delicatessen

now

called

served

We

don’t speak

a French
hot,

ravioli

often

when

delicacy

made

in chicken

served

with

it.
of dough

soup.
sauce

in

SomeItalian

restaurants.

Hours

BORREGARD

DElta

fit for

to order in French.

and
Plus

40 YEARS’
EXPERIENCE

1,

garments,

served in the delightful atmosphere of
our new sidewalk cafe. Just don’t try

*kreplach

a

know-how.

AT OUR NEW, OUTDOOR,
FRENCH SIDEWALK CAFE

Exclusively Styled
to Your Taste and
Landscaping

June

patient

KREPLACH* Under The Stars!

|

SWIMMING POOLS

Thursday,

(for

CLEANERS

Restaurant

EVANSTON-NORTH SHORE
BOARD OF REALTORS

1233 Glen Rock
Waukegan, Illinois

thorough

requires

"&gt;THE |S

is in active

contact with property
buyers ... he knows the
market values... he
screens the prospects

POOLS

care,

VvYY

REALTOR

. insures

in tender

Crossroads Shopping Center

» «+ every day your local

3009

is a delicate art which

CALL MR. DUFFY - ID 2-1820

WITH

Lea

cleaning

We’re

OPEN—
WE

CATER

mon,., TUES., WED., THURS., SUN.

8:30 a.m.-Midnite
TO THOSE

WHO

We cater to Bar Mitzvahs and sales meetings.

LOVE

FRI. &amp; SAT.

8:30

a.m. -2

— THE
TO EAT

a.m.

BEST

The ultimate in Western dining pleasure.

Page H 31—D 47

—

�Stheee
creed

Carol
B )
Electrolysis
RUTH

You

will remove U

arms, legs, he
restyled WERMANENT

HAIR REMOVAL
Short

Wave

ri

(Diathermy)

Suite 111

Highland Park

i
North

" ;

Beth

be

Sisterhood,

these

new

women’s

officers

and

EN

install

El

aes

luncheon

at the synagogue.

vid White,

retiring

bach,

president.

new

several

Rabbi

president,

Beer.

Others,

more

of North

Tuesday

from

right, seated,

all vice-presidents, from
from

afternoon,

Shore

Group

Photo

Synagogue

June

by

Beth

Zeloof-Stuart

El, will

6, in the annual

Spring

Philip L. Lipis will be installing officer. Shown is Mrs. Da-

second

Standing,

Suburban

left, are Mrs.

Saul

passing

the gavel

to Mrs.

Max

Auer-

left seated, are Mrs. Leonard

Birnbaum

Kanh,

Mrs.

Mrs. Jack

Shapiro

and

Mil-

TY

Ee

OTR

ELT

and Mrs. Sam
ton Leeds.

organization

Now Showing—
Petite

complete

summer

shoes

wardrobes

by

ia

q
a

Ww

go calypso! with Doris Dodson’s sprightly calypso
print coordinates strictly on the fashion beat!
Gay fashion that’s for fun, and such fun to wear,
in Sailtone cotton! Sketched, from a mix-your-own
collection: deck pants and overblouse. All in

town

&amp; cou

ntry

i

shoe

.

in

whites,

pastels,

straws

sizes
"7 15.

¢
i

matching

}

blouse

$4.98

pants

$5.98

skirt

$5.98

shop now while
|

style selections

i

are complete.

ge

ig

‘ ;

} :

|

4
)
1

|

Crossroads Shopping

Highland

Open
Open

Mon.,

Thurs.,

Tues., Wed.,

‘
Fri., 9:30
Sat., 9:30

LEO

=|
a.m.
a.m.

p.m.

:
e

to 9 p.m.
to 5:30

FS

ei

\V
:

String

Up

Park

ID 2-5565

| Page H 32—D 48
be

Center,

flex

S h

ereee
0

e

$

633
932

Central
Linden

Highland Park
Hubbard Woods

|
Thursday, June 1, 1961
fata ee

�ST OA
Teh
Se

TE
See

MER

FE Me

eet

bs
ae UE

hanet ne

'
tea

eR

2

aX

ie
,

usar
dee

,

ae

ee
EEN

ee

4;

Crash at Laurel
Steven

Ave.

Hamel

was

of

ticketed

587

for

yield the right-of-way
lision with
Beatrice
Parkersburg, W. Va.,
week at Laurel and St.
He was westbound;

bound;

Highland

Park

police

WAY Means
and Supervised

cA PEERLESS '*

* FAMILY AND RECREATION
* ROOM ADDITIONS

ROOMS
* GARAGES

PEERLESS HOME

Call your Doctor
He

The PEERLESS
Architect Designed

re-

you are ill

When

IMPROVEMENT

with the CUSTOM TOUCH!

to

after a colDawkins
of
Tuesday last
Johns Aves.
she north.

port, He stopped for the sign, but
his car rolled into the intersection
when
he took
his foot
off the
brake.

When

HOME

Pleasant

failure

1550

Park

Ave.,

¢ KITCHENS
¢ BATHS

BUILDERS

INC.

Highland

West

Park

ID 2-6800

Prescribes

Call Morrie!
at ID 3-2525

Park-Sheridan

Pharmacy

Park Ave. at Sheridan Rd.
24 Hr. Phone Service
Free Delivery

North

HIGHWOOD

MAYOR

John

Shore

Group

Frantonius

Photo

by

(left)

James

“Prescription Service” means
“Park Sheridan”

Wahlman

is sworn

in

for another term by City Clerk Edgar Benson, also re-elected,
in recent ceremonies.

Indiana

Car

Honors

Eight area residents were honored for scholastic achievements at
Indiana University’s recent Founders’ Day, an annual convocation at
which tribute is
paid to students
whose
grades placed them
on
Deans’ honors lists and membership in scholastic societies.
Included from
Highland Park
were: Gary L. Auerbach, Carol G.
Gould, Allen R. Greenberg, Judith
A. Keen, Anne S. Lev, James A.
Nathan, Gail S. Steinitz and from
Deerfield, Bonnie J. Becker.

Numbers
The

address

Seifert’s

sign

lawn,

in

67

Ave., was removed last week; glass
broken
out;
thrown
down
the
street,
she
complained
to High-

land

Park

police.

May 24, 1961
Mr. Roy Millen
City Clerk
City of Highland Park
Dear Mr. Millen:
I hereby certify that the following is a
true statement of my expenses in connec.
tion with my campaign for election to the
&gt; § ag
of Highland Park, held April
Personal

Campaign

Expenses $101.64
Yours very truly,
Frances M. Arenberg
and sworn to before me this
Mav, 1961.
Roy Millen, Notary Public

Subscribed
24th day of
(Seal)

6/1/61—141

(Advertisement)

$5 to $10 Eye-Frame
Budget Bar Proving
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In

answer

to

the

requests

of

opticians,

have

frames

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hot weather

women

and

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Skokie;
1629
Orrington
Avenue (next to Cooley’s Cupboard),

1 ZEPHYR

Ave-

Free parking facilities are available
at Old Orchard and Evanston; both
stores open till 9:00 P.M. on Monday and Thursday. Old Orchard also open Friday evening.
June

1,

1961

447

a complete

it’s the ideal style for your

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Achieved with a perfect style cut which
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Get-acquainted

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special through June only:

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with their staff

SUNDAYS

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Thom...

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‘til

STOP

expert in permanent waving and
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Noon

¢

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NEEDS—HOUSEWARES—TOYS

Roger Williams

Paris,
well
known
and
trained through the haute coiffure
of Paris.

from

Miss Sonia...

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Miss

:
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Q
Sunday,

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Thursday,

created

2 Cans of HAZE
1 Box of DAWN Rose Food

chil-

Almer Coe stores are located at Old

Michigan

settles

ak

ID 2-4553

SAVE *5°°

opened

fashions;

10 North

Call

i

leaks repaired

This year can be different! That’s because Scotts,
the people who made having a good lawn easy and sure,
have developed a simple, scientific program for roses, too.
Now you can have better roses, more continuous
bloom—month after month—without worry or hard work.
These new Scotts Rose Program products are unique.
The Zephyr is a revolutionary new applicator that
lets you protect the tops and undersides of every leaf.
HAZE, Scotts new all-in-one protection against insects
and disease, comes in a container that fits snugly into the
Zephyr (nothing to mix, measure or spill).
Now’s the time to prepare for the best year ever
for your roses . . . wonderful success for beginner and
expert alike.

eye

dren. You will recognize why so
many are buying their second and
third pair of glasses.

Evanston;

BASEMENT

Introductory

newest

Repair — Cleaning
ROOF hot tar recoating

FLAT

Do your roses, like most people’s bloom nicely at the
very beginning of the season—then quit blooming once

You are invited to come in and
browse around. There are wide as-

of

— Fireplace

success with roses!

eye-frame budget bars in each of
its stores. The eye-frame budget bar
is part of Almer Coe’s 75th birthday celebration.

sortments

Chimney

Now everyone can have

physicians and many friends, Almer
Coe Optical Company, well-known
prescription

ORI

Tuckpointing — Masonry

police report.
The driver, Richard North, 22,
a
military
policeman
at
Fort
Sheridan, was ticketed for negligent driving.

Mar-

Laurel

B. M.

Meter

A car jumped
the curb and
bent a parking meter in front of
the First National Bank of Highland Park Thursday
last week,

Broken

street

jorie

Nicks

ID 2-4387

specialist in manicures, pedicures
eee

and

en
June

arching.

ay

see

4,

from

4

Refreshments

will

be

For appointments

call

to

6

p.m.

served.

VE

5-1688
Page

H 33—D

49

|

�Chief Warrant

Officer G. M. Van

Horn,

U.S. Navy,

dem-

onstrates a hand telegraph key and radio voice transmission
techniques to (left to right) Harold B. Hinds, Highland Park;
Lieutenant (jg) J. H. Blackford, Supply Corps, USN, Great
Lakes; H. D. Davidson, Deerfield; and
On
Saturday,
May
20,
Armed

Roy

Bell,

Lake

Bluff.

Forces Day
visitors
talked over amateur radio station W9JAM at the U.S. Naval
Electronics Supply Office, Great Lakes, and participated in
demonstrations of voice recording and high speed Morse code
transmission.

PATIOS
Free

Carrier

Estimates

BRICK
STONE

A.

ture

Flight students completing these
landings are qualified to proceed
to the advanced stages of aviation
training.

That Right
It’s no Secret!

Most

Graduates

will tell you they want this!
All New,

Elegant

Parker

With roses, the surprising secret of more blooms is—more leaves!
Now—with the new Scotts Rose Program—it’s so easy to keep

As

45

a Graduation

foliage strong and healthy, even a beginner enjoys success.

PEN
Gift

$500

This amazing applicator is the key. It’s called the Scotts Zephyr,
and it’s designed to apply new HAazE—Scotts all-in-one protection

plus tax

against insects and disease.

Here’s

The HAZE container fits snugly in the Zephyr. Nothing to mix,
measure, fill or spill. To apply, just point the deflector at the
base of the rose bushes, turn the crank gently, and walk along the
bed. An atomized dry mist envelops the plant—depositing a nearly
invisible HAZE film on both tops and undersides of the leaves.

neat,

Come see and save. You’ll find these new Scotts Rose Program
products at our big SUCCESS WITH ROSES display.

Inc.

WE 4.3249

LA

Let me show you
how to get better roses,
more continuous bloom

Myles,

Course

Naval
Cadet
Robert
C. Moore
Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
C. Moore
of 269 Vine., recently
completed six arrested
carrier
qualification
landings
aboard
the
anti-submarine warfare support
aircraft carrier USS Antietam operating in the Gulf of Mexico.

CONCRETE

Richard

Landing

why:

elegant.

looking.
choice

You
of 7

(superfine
broad).

barrel
the

new,
. . expensive-

have
Gold

to
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free.

it’s

a
points.

extra6

lustrous

And
45”

with
you

get

cartridges

Get

it...Give

it!

Introductory offer saves you $5.00.
Ask us about it.

O'NEILL'S
ACE
1746 SECOND
Page

H

34—D

50

ST.

HARDWARE

Serving the

ID 2-1150

¢ 645

Central

North

Shore

since

1895

¢ ID 3-0230
Thursday,

June

1,

1961

�Photo

by

Percy

H.

Prior,

Im

Jr.

a Flower

Guill

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�' | The

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#3

HIGHLAND PARK

NEWS

THE LAKE FORESTER

,

ORTH

Neck

oe

Magazine Supplement To
HIGHWOOD

HORE

NEWS

LAKE BLUFF REVIEW

=

OEERFIELD REVIEW

RouP

VERNON REVIEW

FT. SHERIDAN Tower

1 WEWSPAPERS

“My Idea Of A Good Time BY P. G. WODEHOUSE
_ The Kennedys’ Far-Out Suburb + Boating Must Be Safe To Be Fun

�Suburbia Today
THE

MAGAZINE

,

OF

PLEASANT

PLACES

Published Monthly

In

This

The

Issue

First

How

is

..

Family

.

Commutes

Middleburg,

Virginia,

o's

making

a page 6
out,

now

that that young couple with their two children havebeen spending their spare time there for six months?
Fitzhugh Turner, publisher of the local paper, finds,
this month, that it hasn’t made much difference at
all—which is exactly what both the Kennedys and
the townspeople were hoping would happen.
The

Pleasures

Of Wodehouse...

page /2

Pelham Grenville Wodehouse, eighty years of age,
grand old man of humorous letters, creator of Jeeves,
and author of almost a hundred books that have
delighted and enlightened three generations of people
all over the world, has, in his own words, slowed

down a
of

little. “What do you do for fun in the suburb

Remsenburg,

New

York?”

reply will both charm
Not

By

Bread

we

asked

him.

His

and amuse you.

Alone

... page 14

GETTING AROUND

We honor big biceps and small starlets and bestdressed women, but there are very few honors for
our teachers, the people who
beings out of our children,

Morris
to tell

make
says

literate human
noted attorney

Mr.

Ernst

proposed

that

:

... to Our Pleasant Places and People

Ernst. It’s because, he adds, most attempts
a teacher that he’s appreciated are called

“apple-polishing.”

we know, dear?”

“Anybody

SUBURBIA TODAY

annual

awards be set up in colleges through which a grateful
“student

body

members

Anchors
f

can

say

“Thank

you”

to

outstanding

HANKS

of the faculty.

In The Way

With pleasure-boating
sport that it has become

...

page

24

the gigantic participation
in the past few years, our

ing hours.

Many

-

areas

are waking

up

Tip,

Mrs.

Victor

Lehner,

of

peonies

were

overrun

with

ants.

She

dashed

to the fact

regulations are necessary governing licens-

ing, hot-rodding-on-the-waves, and proper policing
of the waters. Here is what is being done to see that.
boating remains both safe and pleasurable.

covered

with

ants,

leave

the

hard-working

it seems, because he doesn’t want to subject the
summer cars to the wear of salt spread on the
streets during the cold weather. There are six
cars in all—three Rolls-Royces and, says Mr.
Pope . . . three other cars.

into

the house for the spray gun but was stopped just
in time by her friend, who warned that the plants
would never bloom if the ants were destroyed.
- Ants, she explained, eat the waxy covering on the
peony buds. This turned out to be the best advice
Mrs. Lehner ever took because now, she tells us,
her peonies are the pride of the whole neighborhood. So, if you have peonies and you see the buds

waterways are becoming almost as jammed
and
hazardous as our highways are during peak commutthat some

FOR THE

Glenview, Illinois, who says that sometimes
you're very lucky if you have ants in your plants.
One warm day, when Mrs. Lehner was showing off
her lush garden to a friend, she noticed that her

Some

librarians can handle

anything.

For

in-

stance, the man who went into the Westport, Con-

necticut, library with a bagful of snakes, looking

OS

Se,

Ve

crea-

tures alone. They’re doing you a big favor.
Frederic

Marvin

Our brilliant young cover
artist’s beautiful multicolored
woodcut print was inspired
by a scene he observed while
on a train speeding towards

An
Mrs.

eight-year-old
Max

friend

Kloeris, of Fenton,

named

Billy, reports

Missouri,

wrote the

following essay on geese: “Geese is a low, heavyset bird which is mostly meat and feathers. His

| his parents’ home in Boulder,
Colorado,

one

LEONARD

month

5S. DAVIDOW
Publisher

MARION

where

he

each

DELMAR

Editor

Managing

CHRISTINA PAPPAS
Associate Editor

PHILLIP DYKSTRA
Art Director

summer.

Avenue,

New

York

22,

N.

Y.

Business

offices

head sits on one end and he sits on the other. Some
geese, when they get big, has curls on their tails
and is called ganders. Ganders don’t have to sit
and hatch but just eat and loaf and go in swimming, If I was a geese, I'd rather be a gander.”

LIPP
Editor

JOHN BAILEY
Humor Editor

SUBURBIA TODAY is distributed nationally with newspapers
in selected suburban communities. Editorial offices at 60 East
56th St., New York 22, N. Y. Advertising offices at 575 Lexington
at

153

North

Michigan Ave., Chicago 1, Ill. Walter C. Dreyfus, Vice President.
Patrick O’Rourke, Advertising Director: Ford King, Advertising
Manager. Morton Frank, Director of Publisher Relations. ©) 1961,
Suburbia Publishing Corporation, 153 North Michigan Avenue,
Chicago 1, Ul. All rights reserved.

to

Raymond

Ditmars’

then briskly shown

“The

Snake

Book,”

and,

the door.

When the five-year-old grandson of Mrs. Glenn
Nelson’s friend was asked to say grace, the Kirkland, Washington, boy thought a moment and then
slowly intoned: “God bless the food Mommy.
cooks and makes us eat.”

spends

ERNEST V. HEYN
Editor-In-Chief

LOWNDES

for a handbook on their care,was quickly directed

~

Mr. E. H. Pope of Irondequoit, New York, is
now driving his summer cars. He has put his winter cars in storage.

Mr.

Pope

maintains

this fleet,

The man who forecasts the weather for the
Maple Heights and Gates Mills and Chagrin Falls,
Ohio, area is called Charles Sprinkle.

Mrs. Saul Leabman, of Hyde Park, Massachusetts, has one room in her house called the “Pity

Room.” That, says Mrs. Leabman,
the room

is because it’s

where she keeps “all those things which

it is a pity to throw away.”
Continued on page 4

2

Suburbia Today, June 1961

~

�Outdoors

- New

or indoors, try new

Kraft Barbecue

Sauce

right at the table, too

Kraft Barbecue Sauce

simmers

real cook-out flavor

right into the meat!

Made with
nineteen herbs and
spices, and once it
starts to simmer
the flavor really
speaks up

�GETTING.

LaGtion Cis

gan, resident why
a

Louisville, a few miles from their parish.
Since many of the needy live in the center
of the city, they have set up a shop (the

he was weaving back and

forth in front of ‘the local beauty shop at
2:45 in the a.M.; the militant citizen replied
that he and his wife had had an argument
about her going to the salon too often. “So,”
he told the judge, “I went for a few drinks
to cool off. Next thing I knew, I was picketing the shop while waiting for her to come
out.” Fine: $15.00. Sentence: Go home and
arbitrate the matter with your wife.

“clothes

Hospital,

in New

Hyde

Park,

Jesse

+ TRINIDAD

SANTOS (SAO PAULO)

* BAHIA

reads:

“It takes

a

a

man

who

believes

has left Garden

in

City,

Minnesota, and is now in the heart of darkest

clinic, wait for them, and then bring them
home again. The ladies collectively make an
average of 60 calls a month, and their help-

ing hand-at-the-wheel is the pride
hospital’s out-patient department.

of the

elephants go to die. Although most people
think this elephants’ graveyard is a myth
or legend or part of the plot of an old

A little Indian boy at the Cerebral Palsy
Institute

in Norman,

Oklahoma,

was

over-

movie,

Mr. Cornish

thinks it’s really

has a practical side, too, since, as Mr. Cornish says, “whoever finds that graveyard can

lay claim to perhaps a million tons of ivory
—a million tons at $8,000 a ton.”
ae

11

ae

couldn’t he be the cowboy for a change?
The ladies of the St. Matthews,

=

ee

MARRIAGE
COUNSELLOR

hope

the next time the auxiliary of

for the volunteers. At the last spread, after
a record
1293
roast-beef suppers were

Episcopal Church believe that charity begins
where it is needed. One of their projects is
collecting clothing for needy children in

See ee

We

the Abington, Pennsylvania, Fire Company
holds a dinner, they put enough food aside

Kentucky,

ee

SN,

heard protesting to his playmates that he
was sick and tired of being the Indian, and

served, it was discovered that there wasn’t
anything left over to feed the hard-working
—and hungry—workers.

They
Diego

now

have

County,

machines,

California,

that

out

in

San

all

the

do

work involved in getting report cards ready
and out to the students. The machines do
everything but
the cards, type

take the exams—they sort
the student’s name and ad-

dress

separate

on

four

cards,

record

the

grade on the report card, put it in an envelope, address it to his parents, and stamp

+ RIO DE JANEIRO

* MONTEVIDEO

cen-

there, and he has gone to find it. The venture

Much more is offered: 4-deck playground with 2
outdoor pools. Superb food. Expert staff. Special
facilities for teenagers and supervised play areas
for youngsters. Ample time for sight-seeing and
shopping, with the ship your hotel in every port.
Remember . . . 31 days for as little as $36 per day.
BARBADOS

Colorado,

Cornish,

Tarzan

ss Brasil
a

of

Africa . . . looking for the place where old

88 Argentina
.

basement

14 seconds to pass this crossing
your car is on it or not.”

following his dream,

disabled people back and forth for treatment.

per day

AUGUST

the

New

These chauffeurs travel as much as 30 miles
to pick up their charges, take them to the

days

-

Ridge,

train only
—whether

York, is a pretty fancy title for a pretty
wonderful group of women who~ contribute
their cars and a lot of their time getting

All first class. All outside staterooms. Sail from
New York across the Equator in air conditioned
luxury in America’s newest cruise liners.

JULY 7

in

A sign at a railroad grade crossing near

The Motor Corps Service of Long Island
Jewish

closet”)

trally located St. Luke’s Evangelical and
Reformed Church, open each Thursday
from 10 a.m. till 1:30 P.M., from which
clothing, bedding, and blankets are made
easily available to nearby families who need
them.
ee
Wheat

Sail with Moore-McCormack
for as little as $36

coniswed srom page 2

f

When Judge George T. Martin patiently
inquired of the Romulus Township, Michi-

fe Soith Anata
for 31

AROUND.

» BUENOS AIRES

it. Out of 70,000 cards that went out la
term, only one mistake was made. A straight-

Ask your Travel Agent for literature or write to:
Dept. ST-3, at address below.

A student got a card that had a string of F’s
on it. He reported the error immediately—

but nobody’s heard a word from the failing
fellow who got a straight-A report card.

we

j

Baws

eae Fees

Za a

“It looks like my husband isn’t going to

&lt;9

come home from Irving (Texas),” said the
lady to the judge. “How long has he been
gone?”
asked
Judge
Hoyet
Armstrong.

Much

if

|

Two

“Forty

Moreonc

years,”

came

the

plaintive

reply,

Divorce granted,

Moore McCorm
Broadway,

N. Y. 4

Digby

What have you heard that’s new, unusual,
or funny? We pay $10 for each item we

4-5000

accept. Write to “Getting Around.” SUBURSUBURBIA

4

BIA

TODAY

Suburbia

York

Today, June

1961

TODAY,
22,

New

60

East

York.

56th

Street,

New

-

�SLACKS SHOWN: 55%

Suburbia—

“DACRON’* POLYESTER FIBER, 459

RAYON.

*Du Pont's trademark. Du Pont makes fibers, not fabrics or clothes.

Bon Appetit
eeecuaeeuaeeoeoeoeeoeeoeoeoeeeaeeoeee

“Wake me in six minutes so 1 can turn the hamburgers.”
&amp;

SOSSSSSHSSKSHSSSHSHSHSHSSSSSSSSESHSHSSSSSHSSESESHSEHSESSHSOHSEHEHEEHEHEE
2
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bee a

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“Those darn gophers are getting bolder every year!”

~~

S9CSSSSSSHOSSHSHESSSSSSSHSSSSSSESEHSESCSHSHSSSHSeseseseseseseeeeseses

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“We certainly envy you your privacy here, sir.”

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Suburbia Today, June.1961

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�_ The Kennedys’
~ Far-Out
— Suburb
Safe, sure way to

ALLEN

If it weren’t for horses, the
saying is, there would be
- no. Middleburg. This is the Piedmont
Hunt with which Mrs. Kennedy rides.

HOWARD

op

KILL
GARDEN
PESTS

Get more flowers to pick;

The President hoped nothing much would happen to Middleburg,

bigger yields of vegetables
for your table

Virginia, as a result of his renting Glen Ora—and nothing much has

End-o-Pest stops insect damage

BY FITZHUGH ‘TURNER

Prevents blights, rusts, mildews, too
SAFE—use

Publisher, Loudon Times-Mirror,

it even on edi-

ble vegetables.

T

EFFECTIVE—kills over 70
garden insects.
EASY to use— packed

WAS JUST
leased their

Leesburg, Virginia

BEFORE the inauguration
Middleburg estate, “Glen

that the Kennedys
Ora,” and Middle-

burg, when the word was out, went quietly mad. Some of its
millionaires—and the neighborhood is reputed to have more

in its

own dust-gun package.

millionaires per acre than Wall Street—worried that their quiet ~

At garden stores,
supermarkets, hardware and
variety stores—wherever

life might be interrupted. Because Jacqueline Kennedy is fond
of riding,

fox

hunters

worried

that

tourists

might

throng

the

back roads, frightening not only foxes but hounds and horses,
ruining the sport. Plain citizens, proud of their town and its
reputation for hospitality, worried that lack of overnight accom-

WIDE

WORLD

Continued

sate

Mrs.

the President and
Off to the races
Kennedy share their neighbors’ interests in
horses and country life (the President was

given some

new

riding clothes for Christmas).

Right: Glen Ora, where they come for weekends.

FOR GARDENS
End-o-Pest is a trademark of Swift &amp; Compeny

b

Suburbia

Today, June 1961

‘on page

‘10 «

«

�WHY DO SOME FAMILIES SEEM
TO GET MORE OUT OF LIFE?
Some families glow with the pure enjoyment of life. Everyone
who knows them is warmed by their vitality and friendliness. For such

a family, life is good and fun and exciting.
And every day, their lives grow more interesting . . . more
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Typically, both parents and children take a deep interest in each
other and the ever-changing world around them. They work together
as a team, sharing interests and opinions to strengthen the

bonds of understanding and respect that help build a happy home.
This kind of family usually owns Encyclopaedia Britannica.
And their set is continually in use. As in so many lively families,

“looking it up in Britannica” has become a familiar habit at
homework

time, during family discussions, and whenever complete,

authoritative information is needed on almost every conceivable topic.
They have learned to rely on Britannica for background data on
current events, politics, religion and history, for help with hobbies,
and for educational, enjoyable reading at any time.
Where you find a family that enjoys life, you’ll usually find
the Britannica helping parents and children fulfill their desires for
knowledge, self-improvement, and a better way of life.

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�A Cruising Class B heels under so hard
that she dips her spinnaker, as her crew

yah
.

Ve

2

HOWARD

ALLEN

take their chances on windy Lake St. Clair.

unlike

Gettysburg

The

after

the

Eisenhowers

Kennedys

modations

Continued

might give Middleburg

first

from

a bad name,

came.

page

6

and they

cocked horrified eyes at reports from Gettysburg, where,
it was said, hamburger joints, souvenir stands, and honkytonk growth mushroomed in the
hower’s arrival.
There was, in sum, quite a
brought the Kennedys from the
‘weekend, the press descended

communications
town jumped.

men

arrived

wake of President Eisenflurry. Then helicopters
White House for that first
in droves, telephone and

in squads,

and the whole

OULD THIS CONTINUE? Not so, said President Kennedy. And through his press secretary, Pierre Salin-

\ \

ger, he laid down the rules. Except for that first weekend,
no press conferences at Middleburg, no news breaks from
there, no Presidential opinions or decisions announced
there. Glen Ora was to be strictly for seclusion and rest.
So far, at least, the rules have been observed. And
nothing much has happened to Middleburg. The button

Mr. Kennedy

may someday have to push is with him at

Glen Ora as it is wherever he goes; his Army communications men can put him on the phone to anyone he wants

to call, anywhere in the world. Beyond this, the Secret
Service men and a few standby reporters and photographers, the arrival of the President of the United States
has made little difference thus far to a town long famous
for its brilliant hospitality and its horses, and long ago
accustomed to visiting celebrities.
President Kennedy’s attitude pleases Middleburg people
for the most part, and Middleburg’s attitude presumably
pleases the Kennedys, who want to be just another local

family when they’re at Glen Ora.

It’s great to take chances
but not on your bourbon

:

8
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STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY + 86.8 PROOF

© HIRAM WALKER &amp; SONS INC., PEORIA, ILL.

SUBURBIA

10

TODAY

Suburbia

Today, June 1961

|

�Cotiilion

Formais

diving...or dancing...

YOUFEEL THIS COOL, THIS CLEAN,THIS FRESH WITH TAMPAX. sof

The rush of water against your face—how cool, how clean! The floating dress you chose to wear
that night—how lovely it looks! And how nice to know that time-of-the-month need never interfere

—not with Tampax. Invisible, unfelt, Tampax is used by millions. Worn internally, it's the modern way.

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internal sanitary protection

is made

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{ncorporated,

Palmer,

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�Idea Of A Good
It’s not®

12.

the same as it used to be—the creator of Jeeves and Bertie

Suburbia Today, June 1961

/

A

�‘Time

BY P.G. WODEHOUSE

~ Wooster will be 80 “any moment now’ —but it’s just as good
DON’T KNOW

catch—or try to catch—Poona each night. We let
her out at about ten p.m. for a breath of air, and —
once out she hears the call of the wild and decides
that being at large is a good thing and ought to

HOw it is with others, but as re- .

~

gards myself I find that in the matter of recreation one tends to slow up a little when one reaches
the age of eighty, as I shall be doing any moment

be pushed along.

now. We octogenarians, when we get a bit of
leisure, don’t go in much for climbing trees or

And I have the job of catching her.
When you are eighty you have passed your
peak as a cat catcher. There was a time—say
between 1904 and 1910—when it would have
been child’s play for me to outstrip the fleetest

motor racing; we tend to light our pipes and relax
over a book. Our pleasures, in other words, are
mainly mental. To take an instance at random—
me—my idea of a good time is to settle down
with a couple

of Perry Mason

paperbacks

or to

an American

and

a red-blooded

one

at that,

cat,
“Our

watch ‘“‘Love of Life” (a daytime serial which nobody ought to miss) on the television set.
Having been born an Englishman, though now
I

used, when I was younger, to play cricket and,
until a stiff index finger made me give it up,
golf, and in my very early days, when I was a clerk
in the London office of the Hong Kong and
Shanghai Bank, I did a lot of running. It was
impressed on me by the authorities that if 1 got
to the office late three mornings in a month I
would forfeit my Christmas bonus, and one of
the great sights in the City of London in the-years
1901-1902 was me rounding into the straight
with my coattails flying and my feet going pitterpitter pat and just making it across the threshold

pleasures,

in other words,

are

mainly

mental.’ .

. plasticine and wanted me to finger out a model
of the Pentagon, you would be met with a firm
nolle prosequi. “Notin the mood,” I would say.

Probably because they
thinking of what they are
few authors have hobbies.
Kipling hadn’t. And, as far

are always writing or
going to write next,
Henry James hadn't.
as I know, the literary

artists who write “George Loves Mabel” or “Castro

Ought To Have
on the posters
Maugham plays
get a four, but
his spare time

His Head Examined” in pencil
in the subway haven’t. Somerset
bridge, and so do I when I can
as a rule what an author does in
is sit and think .. . or, at any

rate, sit. This is what

I do myself, except when

I lie at full length.
But even an octogenarian must have exercise,
and here I am fortunately situated: In Remsenburg, Long Island, where I have been living since
I became officially senile, we enjoy a number of
amenities such as fresh air, fresh eggs, and an
attractive

“Bill generally packs up after the first furlong.”

while thousands cheered. It kept me in fine condition and gave me a rare appetite for the roll
and butter and cup of coffee, which were all
I could afford for lunch in those days.
‘I have never had anything in the nature of a
hobby. When my day’s work is done, I do not
‘breathe a sigh of relief and say “And now for
an invigorating bit of fret-sawing,” nor do I model
things in plasticine. No particular reason. It is
just that these hobbies do not appeal to me. If
you were to come

to me

and say, “Hello, there,

Wodehouse, sawn any good fret lately?” I would
shake my head. And if you brought me a blob of

ILLUSTRATIONS

BY

WHITNEY

DARROW

JR.

waterfront

on Moriches

Bay,

but

we

have not kept up with the march of progress so
far as to have letter carriers. Mail has to be
fetched from the post office, and I walk there
every day to get it, accompanied by Poona, my
cat, and Bill, my foxhound, who generally packs
up after the first furlong or so. Someone tells me
that this is always the way with foxhounds. They
have to do so much bustling about in their younger
days that when they come to riper years their
inclination is just to lie around in the sun. Bill’s
age,

when

he

came

to us

as a stray,

must

but

now

the

joints

have

stiffened

a trifle,

and I am less of a force. The spirit is willing, but
the flesh doesn’t seem to move as it did. The
thing usually ends in a bitter “All right, stay out,
you cad” from me and a quiet smile from Poona.
And then the reproachful mew outside my
bedroom window as the clocks are striking five.
And if I leave the fly-screen open so that she
can come through the window, she jumps on the
bed and ‘bites my toes. There seems no way of
beating the game.
Still, things have brightened a good deal lately
owing to Poona having been bitten in the foot

by another cat, no doubt in some night-club—

brawl,

and being

able to operate

only

on

three

legs. One more such episode, and the thing, as I
see it, will be in the bag. I may not be the sprinter
I once was, but I feel confident of being able to
overtake a cat walking on two hind legs.

Meanwhile, the exercise is doing me all the
good in the world, for apart from the running there
is the falling. Owing to the activities of the hurricanes which enliven life on Long Island many of
the trees chez Wodehouse are shored up with
wire ropes, and any doctor will tell you there —
is nothing better for the liver than to trip over a
wire rope when going all out after a receding cat
and come down like a sack of coals. |
It amuses the cat, too.

have

been at least seven, so his days of activity are
long behind him, and it is rare for him to stay
the course. But Poona and I are made of sterner
stuff, and we trudge the two miles there and the
two miles back singing a gypsy song.
Also I still do my setting-up exercises before
breakfast,

as

I have

done

since

1919: without

missing a day, though it is an ‘open secret that I
now find a difficulty in touching my toes, and I

“The exercise is doing all the good in the world.”
Suburbia Today, June 1961

13

�a

SPEC%
PF

Honors :

“e

~-

ane

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ly or vertically

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AST SPRING at my alma mater, Williams

i College, I started an Educational Experiment (since I started it, I get to put
it in capital letters). It’s on a modest scale,
certainly, but an Educational Experiment
all the same. But before I tell you what I
did, let me tell you why I did it.
It’s beginning to seem that you don’t
really have to be a clotpoll to win honor in
America these days, but it doesn’t hurt any.
We salute athletes of remarkable agility and
starlets of improbable dimensions. Dress
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affectionately, “Queen of the Slumlords.”’)
In short, for a nation that did away with
patents of nobility right in its Constitution,
we manage to have quite a mixed bag of
royalty running around.

;

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ad{s).

SUBURBIA

TODAY

ADDRESS
ZONE

STATE.

so he can earn $25,000 a year selling insur-

ance” (or practicing law). Surely a lot of
our teacher troubles in this country will
disappear when we stop demanding that
our best men and women sacrifice earning
potentials of thousands of dollars for the
privilege of trying to educate our offspring.
Yet teachers, even more than most people, can’t live by bread alone. And oddly
enough, in our system, it’s remarkably
difficult to tell a good teacher he’s good.
We fix his salary on the basis of training
and tenure; certainly there’s no dollar
differential between the competent and the
incompetent teacher unless the latter is so
bad

as to manage,

against

all

+

.\

which the good

teacher values beyond emeralds, is immensely difficult to express. Should a
youngster put a bold face on it and actually tell a prof he likes and admires
him, he’s liable to the accusation of what

NAME

CITY.

pay our high-

school teachers $5,110 on the national average; our college teachers $6,810, and tell
them, “Turn my boy into an educated man

dent respect and acclaim,

\
=
\

on

,

right in their honoraria. We

likelihood, to get himself fired.
The student should be the main source
of a good teacher’s satisfaction. Yet stu-

C) Send a sample of Homasote, 7” square with
attractive beveled edges and suitable for decorating as a handy hot plate pad. Only 10¢, to

"os

the intellect. We fix our avid attention on
the 42-inch chest and give short shrift to
those classroom magicians who can bring
a whole five-foot shelf to life. And one day
I began to wonder why, if we’ll take a young
college sophomore with good synapses and
call him an all-American, we won’t pay any
attention to the professor of American literature who might just make.a human being
of him.
Now beyond any question, the first place
we've got to start honoring our teachers is

abysmally

r

Without obligation, send me the literature checked:

[) One-Man Panels

But, not to put too fine a point on it, our
present nobility is hardly an aristocracy of

F-16

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14

Suburbia Today, June 1961

we once called “apple-polishing.” (Some
of my younger friends tell me they’ve

�UPI

PHOTO

For ‘Teachers?
A noted lawyer argues
that an inspiring teacher
deserves a cum laude
at commencement, too
BY

invented a few less sanitary terms

to inflict Carl Sandburg and Thomas Mann

back).
For example, I ran across a survey this spring in which almost

It hasn’t worked quite that way
at Williams; the students decided
on a modification. They donate

three quarters of the 3,000 students

the hundred dollars worth of books,

age 8-18—-who were polled say

in the name of the honored professor, to their college library. No
doubt this is an equally worthy
plan, although in giving the books
directly to the teacher, I had no
idea of insulting him with charity
—TI just wanted him to read the

again

our youngsters

demonstrate

far more good sense than we give
them credit for.
Yet I wonder

how

many

of

these boys and girls, who talked so
freely to a magazine interviewer,
ever managed to make their views
known

to their teachers.

—

books.
But

on him.

,

however

it’s

handled,

babies

it

fessor he’s good, to honor him in

tion—on a somewhat smaller scale

the

——as an educational pioneer.
eae
I turned over to the
student body at Williams three
hundred. dollars. Each year for
three years (subject to extension)

and, incidentally, to let the whole
academic community in on the
important secret that our boys and
girls don’t want snap courses, that
if a teacher hopes to earn respect
and admiration in his life’s chosen

they were to select a teacher out-

work, he’s going to have to teach.

standing for his influence and his
inspiration. To him they would give
a hundred dollars worth of books
of his choice—the only restriction
being that the books be outside his
own field. I slipped in that proviso

OWES
rovemp etsy’

seems to me that a teacher-award

This is roughly the train of
thought that led me to go into
competition with the Ford Founda-

|

plan, at a nominal cost, gives students a chance to tell a good procoin

of

his

calling,

books—

Sie

Hints collected
by Mrs.

:

gineering reading “Dr. Zhivago”
and instructors in Elizabethan literature

meeting

John

Maynard

blue.

by

the

magnitude

of being

a mother,

and often worries unduly about her
|
ability to handle baby. Best advice I
know is to read authoritative articles
on baby care ... heed your doctor and

Watching baby’s diet

So

I wrote

to

set up
asked,
of the
The

the award program. How, I
are we doing? Here are some
things he told me:
award is presented by the

school’s

two

highest

honor

soci-

account on a bookstore; I hoped

the effort

and

accomplishment

of

Continued on page 29
Suburbia Today, June 1961

15

and

precious

drops

Vitamin

is overwhelmed

tional

Experiment.

formula

he

doesn’t

finish

it,

will be wasted.

and body tissues, is usually
recommended early in the new baby’s

mother

‘surprised how much it will teach
and tell you. It’s most reliable.

Harvard Law Review whether or
not anybody gives him a drawing

conscientious law
keep up with the

something

we wHY I thought other
parents and alumni of other
colleges and even high schools
might be interested in my Educa-

eties, Phi Beta Kappa and Gargoyle, to avoid any hint of a “popularity contest.” It is given as “an
articulation of student gratitude for

Keynes. The
professor will

borrowed,

Many a new

trust’

your

When

I’d like to see professors of en-

drops are best put in baby’s mouth
by dropper. If you put them in his

Another vitamin- viewpoint.

doctor’s

of

Vitamin viewpoint. Baby’s vitamin

Some mothers apply this charming
wedding custom to baby’s layette.
Nice sentiment for a new baby.

student at Williams who helped me

hope

Gerber,

Mother of 5

something

Matthew Nimetz, the young honor

the

Dan

Something old, something new,

breaking

in

Luminous paint on hall and kitchen
light switches will save many a
stumble in the dark.

bringing up baby

down some of education’s compartmentalization.

simply

on

L. ERNST

since I was in school a half-century

they prefer tough teachers. Once

aod

MORRIS

mother

(and

instinct.

your)

he gives you

cereal, you’ll want

Be

is one of your

primary

concerns.

the go-ahead
to try Gerber

on
Cereal

Quads—the variety package containing

small-size boxes of Rice Cereal,
Oatmeal, Mixed Cereal and High
Protein Cereal. Each one has a bland
but distinctive flavor—all four have
a smooth-to-the-tongue,

easy-to-swallow

. diet.

Gerber

Strained

Orange

_ -

Juice

selected for mildness, it’s ever so delicate

—the way it should be for a new baby.
Other good starting juices:
Gerber Apple Juice and Orange-Apple.
Here at Gerber we carefully prepare
over 100 cereals, strained and junior
foods to meet your baby’s nutritional
needs. We’re proud to say:
éé

Babies are our business . . .
.

«

our only business!.
e

Gerber
‘Me

calcium.

Night-feedings simplified. You can
take the grope and fumble out of
night feedings if you lay out robe,
slippers, diaper ete., in advance.

for sound gums

is an excellent source of vitamin C.
Made of tree-ripened fruit, specially

texture. Most important, they’re
enriched with blood-building iron,
important B-vitamins and bonebuilding

C, so important

FREMONT.

MICHIGAN

93

�CELESTIAL
TO PREPARE AND COOK:

X\

LEMON

CREME

20 MIN. TO CHILL:

ABOUT

SHRIMP APPETIZER
IN CHAFING DISH

I' HR.

1 pkg. lemon pudding and pie filling mix
Y%

TO

cup sugar

1%

cups

(12-0z. can)

Few grains
egg yolks
cup water

2
1

pineapple
[

CONVENIENCE
¥ FOOD RECIPE

1 cup chilled whipping cream
\%4 A cup sifted confectioners’ sugar
2 cups fresh strawberries, sliced
4

ladyfingers,

split in halves

1. In a saucepan, stir together pudding mix, 14 cup
sugar, % cup of the pineapple juice, and salt. Add
egg yolks and blend well. Stir in remaining juice
and water.
2.

Cook,

» is thickened.

Remove

thoroughly,

and beater,

beat whipping

WITH DAIRY PRODUCTS

consistency

(piles

until mixture

from

heat.

Cool

boils and

stirring frequently.
3. Using
cream

a chilled bowl

until

of

medium

beat in confectioners’
Fold

into pudding.

softly);

sugar with final few strokes.

Chill,

about

1 hr.

4. Spoon one-half of the pudding into a serving
dish and layer with sliced strawberries. If using a
crystal bowl, arrange some slices with the cut side
against the glass. (See photo.) Place ladyfinger halves

upright

around

edge

FEVOR
ABOUND IN DISHES MADE

stirring constantly,

of dish, allowing

about 1

in.

to extend above edge. Cover strawberries and lady. fingers with remaining pudding. Garnish with whole
strawberries, if desired.
4 to 6 servings

_ MELANIE DE PROFT
&gt;. Food

Editor

AND

COOK:

35

MIN.

1% cup butter
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 cup chopped scallions or green onions
1 lb. mushrooms, sliced lengthwise through
caps and stems

juice

salt

PREPARE

%4 cup finely chopped
Y% cup Madeira wine
‘4,

_\%
14

lbs. fresh

shrimp,

parsley
shelled,

deveined

under running cold water,
to 1 teaspoon salt
teaspoon

black

monosodium

1

sour cream

thick

drained

pepper

1 teaspoon
cup

and

glutamate

1. Heat butter and olive oil in blazer of chafing dish
over direct heat. Add scallions and cook for 2 min.
Add mushrooms and cook for 5 min. Mix in the
parsley and wine. Add the shrimp and cook until
shrimp turn pink. Season with salt, pepper, and
monosodium glutamate.
2. Remove from heat. Blend in the sour cream and
heat; do not boil. Sprinkle with an additional 2 teaspoons wine, if desired. Place blazer over hot water.
Serve on toast rounds.
About 12 servings
Note: For a luncheon or buffet entree, this delicious
shrimp mixture may be served in croustades. Make
them by cutting bread into 2-in. thick slices, then
hollowing out the centers to form a box or case;

brush with melted
lightly. browned.

butter

and

toast

them

until

A bright lemon
flavor distinguishes
Celestial Lemon Créme,
an easy-on-the-cook dessert.

SOUFFLE MONT BLANC

FRANKS

A cold cheese soufflé, light and delicate as summer,
is a perfect entree for luncheon on the patio or for

A midnight supper on a cool summer

a cold buffet supper. Add an interesting hot vegetable, quantities of tiny, buttery yeast rolls, and a
PREPARE:

15

TO PREPARE:

cup

MIN.

TO

ABOUT

1

3 HRS.

lemon

juice

grated

onion

Few

drops

teaspoon

1

1

Tabasco

1

4

in. slices

6-oz. can

tomato

paste

egg,

well

beaten

to drain.

~=2. Sprinkle gelatin evenly over milk; let stand 5 min.
to soften. Set gelatin over hot water until it is
completely dissolved.
3. Blend water, lemon juice, onion, Tabasco, and a
mixture of salt and mustard into dissolved gelatin.
Stir in cheese and fold in whipped cream.
4. Turn mixture into mold and chill in refrigerator
until firm, about 3 hrs.
5. Unmold onto a chilled serving plate and garnish
About

8 servings

tablespoon

parsley

flakes

1 teaspoon salt
¥% teaspoon black pepper
1%, cup grated Parmesan cheese
¥% lb. Mozzarella cheese, thinly sliced

1. Lightly oil a 114-qt. mold with salad or cooking
oil (not olive’ oil); set aside

Ib. frankfurters, cut in

12-0z. cottage cheese with chives

salt

cress.

30 MIN.

1 tablespoon parsley flakes
4 teaspoon salt
\% teaspoon garlic powder

\% teaspoon dry mustard
2 cups finely shredded Parmesan cheese
2 cups chilled whipping cream, whipped

with water

TO BAKE:

1 8-oz. can spaghetti sauce with mushrooms

water

1
1%

CHILL:

unflavored gelatin

1 teaspoon
teaspoon

30 MIN.

12-0z. lasagne. noodles

Y% cup cold milk
1 tablespoon (1 env.)
\Y%

evening calls

for an appetizing hot dish with iced relishes including
pickle chips and jumbo green olives.

_ tray of crisp relishes.
TO

LASAGNE

1. Cook lasagne noodles according to directions on
the package; drain and rinse.
2.

Meanwhile,

mix together the next six ingredients;

set aside.
3. Mix the egg with the next five ingredients.
4. Arrange noodles in a 13x9x2-in. baking
Spread

evenly

with

cottage

cheese

mixture

and

dish.
ar-

range cheese slices on top. Spoon frankfurter mixture
over cheese slices.
5. Bake at 375°F 30 min., or until mixture is bubbly.
Let stand 5 to 10 min. to set layers. About 12 servings
Continued on page 18

16

Suburbia Today, June 1961

�ings
s
s
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made
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the
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robust with ga
to mix. Easy di
oil,
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Mix.
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tle water with the oot her. You can use
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,
for suggestions.
substitute liquid
recipes below
the
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—se
s
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Good

4
i, ;
i

@
é

Dressing.

When

making

your

of tomato paste
Italian
one tablespoon
te
tu
ti
bs
su
rant taste,
Seasons dressing,
ds a spicy; frag
of the water. Ad
on
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po
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hr
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Wi
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Use white or red

green salads.
02. can of mushroom
y 2 dra ined 314
dressing. At
dressing. Empt
d cover with
an
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and some more
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Dr
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cheese.
Ch
Italian Blue
cr umbled blue
3 tablespoons of
u two
add
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blend of flavor
l
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favorite dressi
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decorative Go
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bu
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Get the new
yo
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marked, wh
Bleu Cheese,
n,
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On
measurements
c,
li
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Italian, Classi
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Garlic-. , Old Fash
Exotic Herbs,
l
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Recipes

recommend

on
me

“ene
Foods

Kitchens

�Pe

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aeneas

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we
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RICHNESS &amp; FLAVOR

“An Adventure in
Good Eating”

No delicious
they're
almost wicked!

FROSTY

1

Cointreau

:
e
4

5

make the delectable differ-

{|

in

main

dishes,

e7a

4

des-

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34 cup water
2 cups chilled cream

1

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Cook,
as

FIX IT QUICK!

eee

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Easy! No skill required.
Won’t chip or crack!
Nothing like it to

2.

§

:

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PLASTIC WOOD |
You

cloves

blend

in bouillon

SALAD

10 MIN.

1

buttermilk

eup

and

%-

4.

DRESSING

TOMATO-CHEESE

recipe)

at 400°F

10

to

12

min.,

or

and accompany with the remaining sauce.
One 9-in. pie

RAISIN-CARAMEL
TO PREPARE:

%

DIP

cup
cup

SAUCE

15 MIN.
firmly
cream

butter
packed

light

brown

With a fork, thoroughly blend cream cheese
and tomato; mix in remaining ingredients

1. Heat butter in a small saucepan. Add
brown sugar and heat over low heat, stirring
constantly, until smooth, about 10 min.
2. Remove from heat. Add cream very slowly,
stirring until blended after each addition. Heat about | min. longer.
3. Stir in the raisins and vanilla extract. Serve

and

warm

8 oz. cream cheese, softened
1 medium-sized ripe tomato, peeled and
cut in small pieces
1 teaspoon grated onion
34 teaspoon salt
1 or 2 drops Tabasco

chill.

About 2 cups dip

or chilled.

About

144

cups sauce

|
:

booklet covers such

179 WAYS TO ADD THE ZESTFUL FLAVOR OF CHEESE
TO SNACKS, FAMILY MEALS, AND HOME ENTERTAINING
From

Written by University especially for the
non-technical music lover, this unusual

‘‘most asked

. . . what it’s like to_

hear full range sound reproduction in’

MAIL TODAY
UNIVERSITY
A DIVISION

eee

'

FOR YOUR

LOUDSPEAKERS,

OF LING-TEMCO

ELECTRONICS,

:
-t

entrees

COOKBOOK

yours For ONLY DOG EACH Postpaid
TO:

INC.

SUBURBIA

Enclosed find $____

INC,

NAME. 0.0. eseececee sree cer sense

Cordials by Cointreau,
50 to 80 proof.

hearty

—

COPY &gt;

WHITE PLAINS, N. Y. DESK M-6
Gentlemen: Pleasesendmeyour “‘Informal guide to component high fidelity.’’

to

Zestful, exciting cheese recipes

eee

your living room. And it shows University’s full line of speaker systems in a}
variety of settings for the home.

quickies

179

The tremendous variety of available cheeses and the many ways to
. that is the scope
enjoy their golden goodness and piquant flavor .
of this cookbook by SUBURBIA TODAY’S own staff of food editors.

phonographs ...why the speaker sys- ”
tem is so important

delightful

THE CHEESE

©

about” topics as: what components are
... how they differ from ordinary radio-

book” @

TODAY
for which

BOOKS,

153

please send

me

N. Michigan

Ave.,

Chicago

1, Hl.

copies of “The

postpaid

50¢ each. (No stamps or C.O.D. orders, please; satisfaction guaranteed

Cheese

or money

Cook-

refunded.)

—

é

Seneiee Soe
ye
‘
tg eee 2ONE..°
STATE...... a

sugar

\% cup golden raisins, plumped
1 teaspoon vanilla extract

10 MIN.

Cointreau Ltd.,
Pennington, N. J.

tells you why music
at home sounds
better with high
fidelity components

until

temperature about
10 min. Garnish
with
several spoonfuls of Raisin-Caramel Sauce

1

an Oa eee

to taste, turn-

ing frequently and basting
with marinade... For your
free copy of “Gourmet’s
Guide,” write to Dept. 1.

Bake

3 tablespoons

TO PREPARE:

(see

lightly browned. Cool and chill.
5. Soften ice cream slightly. Spoon coffee ice _
cream into the chilled shell and top evenly
with vanilla ice cream: Set in freezer until
ready to serve. Allow pie to stand at room

Blend all ingredients together. Chill thoroughly. Stir or shake well before using.
About I cup dressing
TOTS

|

ture for two hours, turning
Broil

until peas are tender.

mixture;

TO PREPARE:

H
&amp;

and marinate meat in mixonce.

bouillon

tablespoons plus 2 teaspoons
prepared horse-radish
2 teaspoons sugar
% teaspoon dry mustard
% teaspoon salt
Y% teaspoon black pepper

THIS FREE BOOKLET

% cup dry mustard
2 oz. Cointreau Liqueur
Y% cup brown sugar
4 teaspoons paprika

beef

2

GROWING
AMERICA

4 teaspoons powdered

covered,

Puree

have

CONFIDENCE
IN A

Y% cup melted butter
4 cups Sherry wine

Combine sauce ingredients

bet we

SNA

eee

Sauce for Barbecue:

condensed

BUTTERMILK

Handles like putty—hardens into wood !

Marinade and Basting

can

pt. vanilla ice cream
Raisin-Caramel Sauce

1. Generously butter a 9-in. pie pan.
2. Beat the egg white with salt until frothy.
Add the sugar gradually, beating well after
each addition; continue beating until stiff
(but not dry) peaks are formed and egg
white does not slide when bowl is partially
inverted.
3. Fold in the chopped walnuts. Turn into |
pie pan. With a spoon, spread evenly over
bottom and sides of pan, building up sides.
Prick bottom and sides with a fork.

cup water. Chill. Before serving stir in cream.
3. If desired, serve soup from a bowl fashioned of ice, or surround individual servings
with finely crushed ice, topping them with
frozen whipped cream rosettes. 6 to 8 servings

y

—

101%-oz.

pepper

1. Put first nine ingredients into a large saucepan; bring to boiling, stirring occasionally.

:
eae

1

sugar

salt
black

Plat
‘

TO PREPARE: 20 MIN.
TO BAKE SHELL: 10-12 MIN.
1 egg white
\% teaspoon salt
% cup sugar
1% cups chopped walnuts
1 pt. coffee ice cream

lettuce, shredded

teaspoon

oh

FEE

head

1 teaspoon
\% teaspoon

ee

®

qi

serts, cocktails (you simply
cannot make a Side Car
or White Lady without
Cointreau Liqueur). Enjoy one tonight.

small

2 cups shelled fresh green peas (or
one 10-oz. pkg. frozen)
1 cup water
% cup chopped leek (green part only)
2 tablespoons butter
2 teaspoons chervil
1

ence

PIE SPECTACULAR
GOODHR
FREEZING

BARBECUE SAUCE

JUST-ENOUGH
HEAT-N-SWEET
oe

by

ICE CREAM

SAINT-GERMAIN
30 MIN.

(allow time for chilling)

TO PLEASE
EVERYONE

Cordials

POTAGE

TO PREPARE AND COOK:

coninced rom age 16

Se

ig

ee er eore

eer

es oe Meroe 1 Sead

Suburbia Today, June 1961

See

ee

meee

eee

eee

eee

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eseeeeeeeneeeeeaees

Print or Write Legibly

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Planted in a big-as-a-minute bed, they will |
a

B

Yat

T TAKES hardly any space at all beside the kitchen door to grow sufficient herbs to supply your table all summer and to provide enough for
winter use, too. One herb garden which we saw last summer in Ann Arbor,
Michigan, was only three feet by five feet; yet the grower reported that
she not only had plenty for fresh use but that by periodic harvesting, drying
and/or freezing, she obtained enough for winter seasonings, as well. Many
people start herb growing on too large a scale, she feels, but a minimum-

4

et

y

sized bed like hers will almost take care of itself. There was even room to

tuck in a couple of pots of colorful begonias and gloxinias, not to mention
a short row or two of salad lettuces, reseeded as often as harvested.

The seven herbs we. suggest here are by no means all you may want to
ei

ie

grow—they are offered as a good starter for a basic herb garden, in case °
you have no favorites of your own.

a,

LAUSTRALIA “a

Few herbs are fussy about soils or location, but as with most plants,
they'll do best in full sun in rich, well-drained soils. Mint and tarragon will
tolerate a fair amount of shade, and some others will do well in partly
shaded spots if they have sun for several hours a day. All may be grown

Sen

fie

he si saci

LET YOUR PENCIL TRACE THE ADDED DELIGHT

S of sailing farther on _

Matson’s famous ss Mariposa or ss Monterey. Starting from San Francisco (1)
or Los Angeles (2), you can map your extra-long route— for special fall cruises ©
only —on the chart above. Sixteen thousand miles of seagoing luxury, including
one thousand additional miles, two, or three extra days and a second visit to—
3. HAWAII: Laze in sunshine and surf at
Waikiki. Roam Honolulu’s throbbing night
spots and tempting restaurants. No hurry,
for you'll be here again on the way home.

8. NEW

4. TAHITI,
fabled mountainous isle of
Gauguin and beauty. A pencil can’t catch
the blazing scarlets and purple-green

9. F 13 1 — once the Cannibal Islands — is
now the Melanesian Mecca for shoppers.
Bazaars teem with silks, pearls, jade, ivory,
brass, teakwood — at enticing prices. Fiji

shadows of French Polynesia — the fragrance, the friendliness, the carefree life.
5. RAROTONGA: Handsome Polynesians
swarm aboard to entertain, offer timeless
handicrafts for sale and bring life to the
legend of their lovely island home.

6.NEW

ZEALAND

with its tranquil Old

English towns, picturesque Maori tribal
villages, glow-worm caves. A thousand
natural wonders make New Zealand one of
the most beautiful countries of the world.
7. AUSTRALIA, land of koalas, kangaroos
and cockatoos. Luxurious shops startle you
with bargains. The beaches are vast, the
people hearty. For sport fans there are
football, horse races, daredevil surf riding.

3

1's SPRINGTIME

ZEALAND:

Since we visit here _

—

ee:

twice, your plans can be flexible. Some ©
enjoy leaving the ship on the first call —
for an extended tour here or in Australia. |

is the colorful
where

in

British

crossroads

a morning’s

cricketers,

friendly,

©
|
—

walk

you'll

Hindus

see be

and ©

natives.

é

10. SAMOA, where the lotus-spell steals :
over you. This is the enchanted “land where e
it seems always afternoon.” You'll enjoy |
its drowsy harbor, its green-cloaked jungle
mountains, its smiling, slow-moving people.
Hl.
and
big
and

HAWAIL
again, a day in Honolulu
the second day in Hilo on Hawaii, the
island of fern forests, towering volcanoes
orchid farms. Then you’re homeward

bound

for San

you'll

treasure

WHERE

New Zealand is splendid with flowers. Sydney’s
South Sea islands are as you've always dreamed.

glorious

2
©
—
—

Francisco with memories —
for a lifetime.

YOU'LL

BE

Spring

POUTITTTITILITITITITITITITiiriiriririiririiiriiti

Basil

of the Pacific —

turbaned

bushy-haired

©

Festival

BASIL is a spreading annual 2
feet or more tall. Leaves add a
beautiful flavor to tomatoes.
PARSLEY, the ‘witches’ herb,”
is an important source of vitamins
and an addition to all main courses.
TARRAGON is a bushy perennial
1% to 2 feet in height. Buy
plants to start it easily. It's a delight in eggs, fish, meats, poultry,
salads, sauces, and soups.
MINT, best known as a julep

ingredient,

HY
is on. The

;
&amp;

ADD THE DIVIDENDS of 1000 extra miles of sea-going luxury, a second visit to ‘
Hawaii and Polynesia at its springtime best when the trade winds grow balmier, the ©
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aboard ships that are fully air-conditioned and gyrofin-stabilized; with every stateroom

|

featuring private bath, telephone, music selector, personal “climate control.” You sail
Sept. 16 or Oct. 3. Fares from $1125. See your travel agent today, or write Special Cruise ©
Dept., Matson Lines, 215 Market St., San F rancisco, for your South Seas Cruise Kit. —

has many

other

OF

LUXURY

a large flue tile in the bed to contain its invasive roots. You may
want to collect mints—peppermint,
curly mint, spearmint, applemint,
orangemint, or American applemint (often called pineapple mint)

20

Kir

eeeeoeeeeoeeee

Mint

which has a white-striped leaf.
DILL, cut up fine, is delicious in
mayonnaise, and fish and fresh dill
were made for each other.
CHIVES pep up appetizers, salads, dressings, eggs, soups, sauces,

and cheeses. They may be chopped ”
and frozen successfully.
BORAGE has an interesting cucumber-like flavor, but its heavenly
blue star-flowers alone would make
it worth growing.

uses.

It is superb with lamb, and used
fresh, or in mint syrup, it adds
piquancy to desserts or ice cream.
Grow it in a separate bed or sink

ILLUSTRATED

A TRADITION

Tarragon

Parsley

Suburbia Today, June 1961

Once you have found how useful
and downright wonderful herbs are,
you'll never be without a little
back-door bed. Early this fall you
can pot up your parsley and chives.

and tarragon and grow ‘them on a
sunny window sill for fresh herbs
all winter, and you can dry and
freeze a plentiful supply of the
others—all from the 3 X 5 bed!
BY GRAMBS

MILLER

�Herbs

™"

FOR

THE

MAN

OF

THE

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THE

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from seed, although mints and tarragon are best bought
as plants from a grower and set out in early spring to
allow roots to mature in the first season. Give tarragon
a leaf mulch in winter in the far north to insure its survival.

Another

watchmaking

triumph

by

® Zodiac

Sow seeds out of doors as soon as the soil is warm enough
for other seeds. Soaking parsley seeds in warm water for
a day before sowing will hasten germination.
Harvesting herbs is best done while the leaves and tips
are young and succulent. For freezing, cut and wash, then
follow the usual procedure (blanching, dipping in ice
water, draining) and then place in plastic freezer bags
~ and seal. Many cooks make up combinations to use in
stews or salad dressings, putting enough for one use in
each bag. Then it is a simple matter to open the bag after

defrosting and there you are, with just the right amount
for your dish. Others prefer to store the herbs in larger
quantities, using a few as needed.

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DAVOL —
Suburbia Today, June 1961

21

See

Store

Fe a ee

A

ON

Ee eet ie

OO

ee

EO

ee

oe

og

|

Se SO

Please send information on Matson’s Bonus Cruises, featuring
{] Sept.

16 sailing

[] Oct. 3 sailing

MY NAME
kpoeeen

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SC
yr,
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extra days, extra ports at no extra fare. There will be (no.)____
in my party. I plan a budget of $
__and am interested in

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MATSON
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CO.
215 Market Street, San Francisco 5, California

se

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ew

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PROTECTS
YOU INDOORS
against common household and
home work-shop dusts, non-toxic
paint oversprays and fumes.

=

SUBURBIA

insec-

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garden

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| WRITE FOR DETAILS
es!
prorects vou ovrooors | GRUISES DESCRIBED

�m@ UNUSUAL

~

Kabob

'n Grill

pats.

oe

ng

%, *

te
x

SUBURBAN

Se

HOME

@&amp;

F

“eis

on

a!

~—

as

he

e

:

Bs

:

ac

sf

re

vig

fe!

pend

Built on a hillside, the house looks over a man-made
pond stocked with bass for occasional quiet fishing.

A HOUSE
Inside and out, it reflects
pos

while
a

West

Bend

“hosts’

the

party

was
in

broken

Gates

for

Mills,

this
Ohio,

the. architect, Robert Little, spent more
than a year consulting with his clients, Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Griesinger. He walked and

Kabob ’n-Grill invites each guest to make his own shish kabob

ate and talked with them, saw

and grill it to his taste. Eight vertical skewers rotate automatically
around charcoal fire basket. Meat juices trickle down skewer . .

liked to live, and studied their hobbies and
activities, and then the plans were drawn.
Built in a U-shape, the house centers on
a large living room where the Griesingers
enjoy their considerable art collection and
often have informal chamber music con-

———— West'Bend,
916,

West

Bend,

PHOTOGRAPHS

BY

C. W.

Cleveland

Philharmonic

Orchestra. )

ACKERMAN
e

eae
tk

&gt;

Aa

te

ee Ae eRe

stainless
“party perk”

eR

i

&lt;

lt

:
Re

50 YEARS...

the

eee

es

‘

happier living

ta

3

fi
5

eaninesne
ne

iene

«

how they

certs. (Mr. Griesinger plays the clarinet in

Wisconsin.

Se,

j

house

West Bend makes “party giving” as much fun as “party going”
with these two new host-saving appliances.

can't cause flare-ups. Battery powered or plug-in models $29.95.
New buffet-styled stainless steel “Party Perk” brews delicious
coffee automatically for 4 guests or a dozen. Makes 12 to 30
cups of coffee before the party; keeps it hot as guests serve
themselves. $39.95 At housewares, hardware, gift and appliance
stores. Prices slightly higher in Canada and Hawau. THE WEST
BEND COMPANY (formerly West Bend Aluminum Co.) Dept.

f

GROUND

unusual

ei

aRRgRcceenes,
nee,
sf

aoe

*
|

�~=MINWAX:

Bow
Baa aa
cold water pipes
my

Turn your basement ‘gloom rooms’

s

into playrooms!
Greg

SS

Tips

woop
FINISHING
Floors never need rescraping

Atle

When
just

GOOD

LIVING

(

is given to individual interests and activ-

area, which look down on the living room,
turn into comfortable galleries.

ities, each child has a room of his own,
Mr. Griesinger has an informal study, Mrs.

The Griesingers like the feeling of a
“country kitchen,” so dining room and
kitchen are separated only by the center
‘fireplace, which lends warmth for pre-

Griesinger has her own sewing area, and
all have a screened geodesic-domed gazebo
beside the pond for reading and thinking.
“The key to the success of a house,”
says Robert Little, “is what happens to

conversation

as

well

as

pleasant

charcoal-cooking aromas. The dining area
looks out through an expanse of large
sliding windows to the pond, and from

the

their glass-walled living room

“we stay at home, sit on the patio, look out
over our green valley, watch the bass jump
in our pond, and thank our stars.”

they have a

wide view of the lovely Chagrin Valley.
In this house, where

so much

attention

people

Left—Living

room

accommodate

chamber

musicales

and

art

is designed

who’s concerned about the state

of the American economy and
what the future holds in store—
your best bet is to
get the facts.
THE

he says,

Write for the free
booklet “The Promise of America” to
Box 340, New York
18, New York.

PROMISE
OF
AMERICA

Published as a public service
eration with The Advertising

in coopCouncil.

Today’s trend is to paneling
Easy-to-use Minwax brings out wood’s
natural beauty. Simply apply Minwax
Wood Finish to the panel after sanding
it thoroughly. Then add a light touch of
Minwax’ Finishing Wax. The result is a
rich, hand-rubbed
look. For authentic
Colonial effects, try Cherry, Ipswich or
Puritan Pine. Modern effects include Driftwood, Straw or Spruce Gray.

to

treasures.
Unfinished

furniture

Minwax imparts a rich,
finished furniture . . .
shelves and wood trim.
uniform
grain
and
Finish as above in your
quick-drying colors.
QUICK!

Speed

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with just a few drops of
3-IN-ONE. Penetrates
hard-to-get-at

Dosen't gum up.

places.

S'IN-ONE OIL
REGULAP - Olt SPRAY - ELECTRIC MOTOR

HOW TO MAKE
HIM ANGELIC!

i
s

Two-way fireplace. opens on both dining
and “country kitchen,’ has an invaluable
third flue for incinerating waste paper.
Suburbia Today, June 1961

23

— IT’S

EASY!

Instead of letting him get
on your nerves just because he’s almost frantic
from his feet—get him a
can of Dr. Scholl’s Foot
Powder. Watch his face
light up with joy as this
soothing
powder
starts
acting.
Relieves sore, hot, perspiring feet
in seconds; eases new or tight
shoes;
helps
prevent
Athlete’s
Foot.
Get
Dr.
Scholl’s
Foot
Powder today. Sold everywhere.

warm glow to uncabinets .. . new
Choose wood with
sand _ silk-smooth.
choice of Minwax
=

For over 50 years Minwax Wood Finishes
have been the standard of quality with

architects,
dealers.

are

custom

Also

Minwax

paste, and

builders
and

Finishing

Wax,

that wonderful

for surface

antique

easy

to use

liquid

or

new repair stick

scratches

— Blend-Fil.

os

FINIWoopShing

a

FREE

=

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FOR NEW BOOKLET,
“Wood

and

economical

Finishing’

,

ea]
so
.

ie

tt

;

MINWAX,
Nae

area

last a lifetime.

A Roll

If you’re one of those people

inside.”
“In the summer,”

only ‘469

_ WORRIED ABOUT
THE ECONOMY?

Mr. Griesinger acknowledges the architect’s success.

will

__ At your favorite hardware or building supply dealer.

the hall and dining

dinner

floors

SNe

Se | Sta dees
‘'

—y

;

it—your

Plastic Cork
Pipe Covering—Applies By Hand!

the owners’ interests in music, art, and nature
‘On musical evenings

you put the finish in the wood—not

ov

Minwax goes deep into the wood .
.
leaves no brittle surface to scratch or mar,
You have a choice of Natural Minwax or
a wide range of color tones. Maintain
with liquid wax and you never have to
refinish your floors.

Above—The owners, and a view of the dining area where two sofas
and a bar make a pleasant gathering spot before or after dinner.

FOR

on

;

as

oe

Dept. ST-6

11 West 42nd St., New York 36, N.Y.

id

Send booklets on the Minwax Method
of wood finishing, with color card
showing all 14 stain effects. Also address of my nearest dealer.

i

oeSe

x

Se

Sees

SR

In Canada:

Sp

ONE Ri

ty

GRE 208 Set EE

British

Ree

i

Bie aes ee

Paints, Oakville, Ont.

�ROSENFELD
BY

MORRIS

SPRAY
DANDELIONS

PHOTOGRAPH

Just turn on
your hose and

Boating Must Be

SAF

AWAY

Enjoy a weed-free
lawn all summer long
End-o-Weed kills over 100
lawn weed pests
Harmless to grasses
FAST—weeds shrivel and die.
SURE—kills

BY

to Be Fun

ALFRED

BALK

From the Golden Gate to Long Island Sound, boatmen are working
to protect the 40,000,000 people who will be on the water this summer

roots, too.

EASY to use —in the handy hose
sprayer unit. Also available in
the economical concentrate form
for your own spray equipment.

At garden stores,
supermarkets, hardware and
variety stores—wherever
garden supplies are sold

I NEVER REALIZED what was happening on our waterways

Yet

despite

the chaos

and

congestion

on

many

water-

to intro-

ways, this year there seems real hope, not only for safety

duce my six-year-old daughter Cindy to the gentle art
of fishing. We had just anchored our rowboat in a glasssmooth cove a few hundred yards offshore and dropped our

who would enjoy the water. Where laws lack teeth or where

lines,

have taken a stand to crack down on waterway killing and

until

I went out on a sunlit lake last summer

when

we

heard

the snort

and

snarl

of speedboats.

Twin-engine outboards as powerful as autos roared full
throttle among the small fishing boats. Water “‘hot-rudders,”
some towing water skiers, whipped the lake’s surface so that
our little craft rocked wildly. I rowed to shore in frustrated

rage, and took Cindy home
“Does it have to be that
Millions have asked the
boom to the top of family
decade—40

in tears.
way?” she asked later.
same question. With boating’s
participation sports in the last

million Americans, or nearly one of every five,

now belong to families with boats—our lakes and shores
as idyllic settings for peaceful fun and relaxation seem lost
with the past. Worse, accidents have shot upward: boating
_ now stands ninth nationally as a cause of fatal mishaps. In
1960, on some holidays in some areas the water claimed
more victims than highways—Memorial Day weekend in
Connecticut,

for example,

and

July Fourth in New

York.

And the number of boats is expected to double in the next
decade.
24

Suburbia

Today, June 1961

and sanity but for peaceful, even pleasant, coexistence of all
official

action

has

lagged,

many

communities

themselves

maiming.

Take Hennepin County, Minn., where 72 lakes attract
hordes of boaters every holiday or weekend. Six years ago,
when

the boat population was only half what

it is today,

seven persons were drowned in boating accidents on Lake

Minnetonka alone. Long-time resident Dr. A. E. Allen, a
boating enthusiast, was appalled. “If something isn’t done,
and done soon,” he said, “nobody will be safe on our lake,

residents or visitors.” That winter he got in touch with property owners, mayors of 15 lake villages, and Sheriff Ed Ryan.
Together they knit a village association and voluntary water
patrol.
One official, a village attorney, drafted new water-safety .
and

antinuisance

ordinances.

Another,

a

police

chief,

screened and trained volunteer patrolmen. Each town appropriated $100 for expenses. By summer 30 men, deputized as sheriff’s patrolmen and using their own boats, fanned
out across the lake

in shifts, explaining

the laws

to new-

�comers,

curbing

“hot-rudders”

(first with warnings, then arrests),

and assisting boatmen, swimmers,
or skiers in distress. That was in
1955. Since then only six persons
have drowned on the lake—one
less than in the single year before

ee

the entire Detroit metropolitan
area within easy driving distance,

ee

the patrol.
Oakland County, Mich., with
427 lakes inside its borders and

felt the water-recreation explosion

early. Cars were lined up for six
blocks. near boat-launching sites.
In one season the county had 27
drownings.

Cottage-owner associations decided in 1958 that action was overdue and approached Sheriff Frank
Irons. “I can’t get funds,” he said.
“But if we can get volunteers, I'll
screen out the half-interested, and

we'll train the others.”
Now Oakland County

has one

of the nation’s finest water patrols.
As in similar groups, from Maricopa County, Ariz., to Hamilton,
Mass., the men donate time, mon-

ey, and the use of their boats. They
meet weekly for training in law,
* boatmanship, safety, and public
relations.
Oakland
businessmen
have provided bonding fees, an
ambulance, a mobile disaster-unit
trailer, two-way radios, even 22
new-model boats and outboard en-

gines at factory cost. And thanks
to a recently adopted Michigan

time can be identified), nation-

wide reporting of all accidents, and
personal liability for reckless or
negligent operation. Four-fifths of
our states have implemented this

for waterway

slaughter.
reckless,
damages

homicide

In 24 states,

and

B’

recklessness.
deaths,

more
danger

than
of

a dozen
drowning.

cases so flagrant that

every one was upheld in court.
Wisconsin, with its huge smallboat and tourist population, now
takes to the air with planes to en* force safety. When Conservation
Department warden-pilots spot an
accident or violation, they radio a
boat- and trailer-equipped warden
on the ground, take photos for evidence,

and

circle

until

their

col-

is

Half

of all boating

statistics show, are due to

incompetence.

holiday, for
sulted from
boat, towing
a companion
an outboard

In one

state on one

example, deaths restanding in a fishing
a water skier without
as observer, starting
with the gears en-

gaged, cramming ten persons into
an 1I1-foot boat, and a collision

while cruising at night with no one

the

waters,

New

York

including

—175,000

in

alae

SAFE BOATING requires more
than legal protection against

made—for

rescued

r

craft’s wake.

They issued 1000 warning tickets
(one-fourth the number required
the first year). Sixty arrests were

men

persons

ecvianas

if you’re

the requirement of a training
course before youngsters ten to 14
can go boating alone. Only onetenth of all boaters, one authority
estimated, ever have taken any approved training.
The U.S, Power Squadrons and
U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary, however, are increasing their coverage

safe operation than before. Patrol-

‘

you’re liable even for
resulting
from
your

at the wheel. All occurred in good

fatalities and three-fourths fewer
complaints of recklessness or un-

°

man-

weather and calm water.
Nowhere in the country is a
driver’s license or even a nautical
knowledge test required of pleasure
boaters. As of this spring only two
states, Nebraska and New York,
specifically ruled child boaters off

land, last summer, had no boating

any dishwasher can wash!

with their own laws. In six you
can now be sentenced specifically

counties earmark for boating law
enforcement, enriching Irons’ waterways budget by $5000 a year.
Z pte RESULT? In spite of lake
traffic so heavy, as one resident says, “you can walk across
without getting a foot wet,” Oak-

4

Guarantees the most

Bonner Act. It called for state or
Federal numbering of most craft
(so reckless operators for the first

funds that

law, the state matches

NEW! | q

league arrives. Using loudspeakers,
the pilots also warn of dangerous
conditions or emphasize safety procedures for boaters below. “Once
you've heard that voice from the
sky,” says Chief Warden George
Hadland, “you never forget it.”
Such local efforts to control the
waterways were given support by
a 1958 Federal boating law, the

boaters

took

x
ae.

this vol-

untary training last year. Coast
Guard stations in Boston, Chicago,
San Francisco, Miami, and elsewhere have telecast a series on
good boatmanship. And boating |

clubs in hundreds of localities have
sponsored /free schools and dockside question-answer sessions.
One of the most powerful in im-

pact, a Safety Day and tour of aContinued on page 26
Suburbia Today, June 1961

25

y

ot even hand-polishing gets glassware, dishes
and silver more sparkling than new Dishwasher a//,
Over half a million dishwasher owners are proving this
every day with shining clean glasses that formerly were
left spotted or streaked. Prove it yourself—this week !
Recommended by dishwasher manufacturers
Lever Brothers Company guarantees satisfaction or your money back

�{oa

Here's valuable
|

Continued from page 25

information about

river towboat co-sponsored by the Cincinnati Outboard Runabout Assn., helped re-

| swimming pool
|

duce boating deaths from 14 to none on a
stretch of the Ohio River. At Mamaroneck,
N.Y., on Long Island Sound, teen-agers
under yacht club sponsorship formed a
better-bgatmanship group. Now Harbor
Patrolman Jack Colety, who once considered the youths “trouble with a big ‘T,’ ”
says they’re among the area’s best boaters.

Chlorination
Learn how bacteria, green scum and odors all disap-

Hgoyetes

ae

pear with modern, dry HTH chlorination. The details

Parker

Pool Care.” It’s written with the home pool owner

_

in mind, no matter how big or small your pool may be.

Be

Why not get your free copy NOW? Just clip and

mail

Keep your pool ‘“‘drinking-clean’’ with

=

HTH.
;

realize a safe-boating course

Clin

ae&lt;0

DIVISION

lions

want

to

swim,

others

es

soon will be

to fish,

SIMILAR

REASONS, Yellowstone Na-

boats from portions of Yellowstone

and™

Shoshone Lakes. States such as Iowa, Indi-

ana, and Pennsylvania now prohibit motorboating on small lakes or impose such strin-

still

others to sail, cruise or skin-dive. Water
skiers alone numbered two million at last
count. Meanwhile, millions more prefer to

gent speed and horsepower restrictions
that noise and waves from high-speed boat-

feel the peaceful spell of a river or lake

ing are eliminated. In many localities powerboating is illegal during certain night-

from shore. How can such varying interests be accommodated?

time hours.

Others

confine

outdoors offers. But, as
tion Assn.,

says:

“To

water,

;BREEZY POINT
BANK &amp; TRUST

Olin Mathieson, Baltimore 3, Md.
Please send me your free booklet, “Home Pool Care.”

Z
x
3
@

DRIVE-UP

TODAY

Tee

SUBURBIA

26

Suburbia Today, June 1961

be fun

it must

be

safe. It will be—if we all join together to
make it so.”

For practical pointers on what to.do in an emergency
the

Joseph Prendergast,

executive director of the National Recrea-

annual benefit dance, was formed. This cut

on

activities such

as water-skiing and high-horsepower boating to specific periods of the day.
“With 300,000 new boats arriving on the
waterways each year,” says Parker, “some
kind of activity regulation probably must
come to every locality.”
Water recreation is among the finest the

west of Chicago, offers one answer. It
long has been a favorite fishing and water
playground for millions, but recently as
many as 30,000 boats have crowded in on
a single weekend. Congestion has been so
heavy that water skiers became entangled
in fishing lines. Seven years ago a voluntary
water patrol, financed by money from an

Pi

were

tional Park this year has banned power-

The Chain of Lakes, an area of 11 lakes
and the scenic Fox River, 45 miles north-

RF

already

channel, interviewing sportsmen, fish biolo-

as vital as driver training.”
Even if boating can be made safe, the
problem of sheer congestion remains. MileS

CHEMICALS

There

an

gists, resort and cottage owners. By Memorial Day he had 16 zones buoyed off for
fishing, still on-limits to all boats but
only at “no-wake” speeds. Less than five
percent of the lakes’ total surface, these
zones eliminated a long-standing conflict
of interests and at the same time, by keep- _ |
ing high-speed craft from churning up underwater growth, they preserve fish feeding
grounds for the future.

HE AMERICAN RED Cross, Boy and
Girl Scouts and similar organizations
have begun teaching motorboating in watersafety classes. The National Education
Assn. now has a nationwide Outdoor Education Project to assist in introducing such
courses. “We’ve made only a start,” says
Dr. Julian W. Smith, the project’s director.
“But many communities are coming to

the coupon below.

suggested.

swimming zones on the lakes. At the meeting, Parker suggested that fishermen, also,
be moved out of high-speed traffic.
Parker toured the area, exploring every

are yours to read in a helpful, how-to booklet, ““Home

_

a

boating fatalities to zero in 1960 but made
no dent in the conflict-laden traffic problem.
Last year residents took their dilemma
to Fred Parker, State Supervisor of Boat
Registration and Safety. “Let’s hold an
open meeting so everyone can talk it over,”

te

BOATING

ft

See

next page.

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PRESERVERS

crowded intoa small outboard, with waves

shore, stick with it. The Coast Guard
reports that 90 percent of the people lost

trying to swim to shore after an accident

and a girl were swept to their deaths.

swamped with three men and a 14-year-old
boy aboard, when struck by a squall off

an approved type. And no one, good swimmer or not, should venture far from shore

without one. Two years ago, when three
14-year-old boys were tossed into Lake
Huron after their speedboat hit a log and
sank, they survived until rescued by tying
kapok cushions together, and hanging on.
3) CHANGING POSITIONS NEEDLESSLY. Determine where everyone will
sit before casting off from the dock. “One
of the chief causes of drowning accidents
from rowboats and canoes,” warns the Red
¥

But an emergency can strike even the
most careful boatman. Anyone who uses
small boats should memorize the simple
techniques of self-rescue.
When a boat swamps or capsizes, even
though no more than 200 or 300 feet from

lappingat the gunwales, to cross a narrow
section of the Ohio River. The boat
swamped. Even though it fioated, two boys
2) IGNORING LIFE PRESERVERS.
No nonswimmer should ever embark in a
small boat without wearing a life jacket of

could have been saved had they clung to
the boat. Last August a 16-foot skiff was

Cape Cod. The three men, all good swimmers,

for

new

:

struck out for shore 500 feet away.

A short time later, a fishing boat rescued

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the boy from the water-filled, but still float-

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A swamped boat (or a capsized one that
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ders of ail occupants above the water. Hold
one gunwale a few inches under water,
enough so everyone can swim cautiously
into the boat. Once inside, all can sit in a
Continued on page 28

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most common reasons for tragedy:
1) OVERCROWDING. No boat at any
time should have the gunwales less than six
inches above the surface of the water. Last
summer, five teen-age boys and two girls

Cross, “involves exchanging positions by
the occupants.”

metallic decorated

- HEIRLOOM

of purchase

that most accidents on waterways are set up
before the boat has left the dock. The three

CROSS

or refund

OTH the American Red Cross and the
U.S. Coast Guard emphasize the point

BY WILBUR

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LIFE PRESERVERS

f

Continued from page 27

semifloating position, legs widespread. And once
balanced, you can move the boat towards shore by

~
©

_

and

parts for 5 years, ex-

he

_

cepting only cord set
and damage caused
by misuse.

paddling with the hands. A strong swimmer can
help by holding the stern and kicking rhythmically.
If your craft cannot be righted, stick with it anyway. If you are in a spot where help seems unlikely,
“swim” the boat towards safety, pausing frequently
to hold

onto

the

hull

and

rest.

Fatigue

is the

greatest enemy in these situations, like the case of
the father who lost his eight-year-old son when
their rowboat tipped over in Chesapeake Bay.
(“Finally my boy just slipped out of my arms and
was gone. I couldn’t hold him any longer.”)

As soon as possible after a capsizing, with all
occupants clinging to both sides, collect everything
that will serve as makeshift “rope”: neckties, belts,
handkerchiefs, strips of cloth. When strung over
the upturned bottom of the boat, these will be
handgrips (each line running from a person on the
starboard side to one on the port side). Loops tied
around the wrist may save a person even after he
has lapsed into unconsciousness.

it’s made by

HAMILTON ==

completely

BEACH

S

stainless steel

strength,” says the Red

="

you may have a makeshift life preserver handy.

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‘HAMILTON BEACH" is a registered trade mark of the
SCOVILL MANUFACTURING COMPANY
Racine,Wisconsin and St. Mary's, Ontario, Canada

Cross,

pointing

and floated on his back until he was rescued

A woman’s slip, tied or knotted at the waist, or
a silk scarf with the four corners drawn together,
will hold enough air to support an adult. Even an
oar helps, or a section of floor board. Containers
with corks or screw caps (like a one-gallon bottle)
can be emptied and wedged into your upper clothing to provide buoyancy. Even a blown-up paper
bag will help for ten minutes or so, if held gently.

REWARD

Above

all, don’t panic.

Remember

the Maine

farm boy who fell from a freighter in mid-Atlantic
some years ago. He had never swum a stroke in
his life. But by keeping his head and imitating the
paddling motions he had seen his dogs perform, he
stayed afloat for two and one half hours—until his
ship returned.

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�OTOP

TEACHERS
== LABELS 25¢

Continued from page 15

the entire faculty”—a bit
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�KENT with the |
‘Micronite’ Filter
REFINES away harsh flavor...
_ REFINES away hot taste RUELCISMUL SM EISIIS
of a cigarette mild!
tll“ee

et

ee

baa

~

THE CIGARETTE
THAT MADE THE
FILTER FAMOUS

.

*,
.

~~
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——
a

KENT
¢

View

~

ie

KING

mMICRONITE Frire ”

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KING-GIZE

Kent's famous ‘Micronite” Filter is made of pure all-vegetable

REGULAR-SIZE
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- THROUGH

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RESEARCH

© 1961;

P. Loritiard

Co.

-

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