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�Yes, our Gift Corner is helping early shoppers get a
head start on Christmas. With a beautiful selection
of those now-almost-extinct Chinese hand embroidered handkerchiefs, men’s initialed handkerchiefs,
gay hostess aprons, silk print scarfs, flowers and all
the little items that make you think of someone you
want to remember at Christmas.
1. Chintz-appliqued

organdy

hostess

gown,

2.00

up

2. Silk print 36” square scarf, 5.00.
Matching 18” square, 1.95
3. Just the flower for a suit, coat or dinner gown!

Comes

in the prettiest colors, too! 1.00
4. Men’s Irish linen handkerchief with hand-embroidered
initial, 1.50
5. Pure linen handkerchiefs

with Chinese hand

embroidery, 1.00 and 1.50
6. Sheer “chief value” linen handkerchiefs beautifully
hand worked with exquisite embroidery, hemstitching
and appenzel. 2.75, 3.50, 4.75, 5.00 and up

s

AN
Evanston

store

hours,

9 to

5:30;

Mondays

and

Thursdays,

9 to 9

Highland

Park

store

hours,

9

to

5:30

Monday

through

ee
Saturday

�ay

INA

to

MJOCKHE
Thursday,

Vol. 27, No. 36

Harold Wynkoop Appointed
Special Assistant State’s Attn’y.
At a meeting called by State’s Attorney Nelson at Waukegan on Saturday, Harold Wynkoop of 917 Oxford was appointed Special Assistant State’s attorney in and for Lake
County.
He will be charged with the special

duties

ducting

of

preparing

criminal

and

con-

-prosecutions

for

Thanks From

the illegal dumping of garbage on
the National Brick company premises, and to act as liaison between
the State’s Attorney and the West
Deerfield Township for the maintenance of health conditions at the
Cooperation
In

attendance

at the

meeting,

Harold

Tasker,

vice

president

of

all in attendance in his plan of procedure to bring about an early termination of this legal problem and
to abate what the Village of Deer-

field and West Deerfield Township
considered

its

greatest

a great

deal

growing

up

children

in a town

they can

have

cational

recreation.

for

healthy

where

and edu-

by in case of trouble.
Thankful
that there are organizations interested in family
welfare and nursing service in
the home.
Thankful that we are able to
help make these things possible.
The
Community
Chest thermometer hesitates at $9,000. If
you have not yet contributed, do
your part today.
Mail your donation
to
the
Deerfield-Bannockburn
Community
Chest,
Box 86, Deerfield.
Help make
the thermometer climb.

the Citizen’s Committee for a Better Deerfield, as well as Assistant
State’s Attorneys Richard Bairstow
and Eugene P. Daly.
The
fullest
cooperation
was
pledged
the
State’s
Attorney by

has

have

Thankful that there is a modern well-equipped hospital near-

W.
King
and
Eugene
Englehard
representing the Board of Trustees
of the Village of Deerfield,
and

public

nuisance.

Owners

The
monthly
meeting
of
the
Board of Town Auditors of West
Deerfield
Township
was
held
at
the Town Hall, Tuesday evening,
November 11th. Final report of the
collector, Mr. George A. Sticken,
was submitted at this meeting. Mr.
Sticken reported a total tax collection,
including
general
taxes,
penalties,
interest
and
costs
of

$522,010.59.

the

law,

from

two

all

percent

moneys

tax collector,

is deducted

collected

to cover

by

the

his fee

and

The
and

woods

to

over
will

lowering
next

Mr.

Sticken

a check for $7,025.07,
assist
materially
in

the

township

tax

levy

spring.

Amvets Change Dates
‘The

Amvets

have

changed

their

meeting
nights
from
the
second
and fourth Mondays of each month
to the second and fourth Wednesdays. The next meeting is to be on

November
urged

to

meeting.

26..

All

attend.

members
This

are

is a social
be

owners

call

“Briarwoods

protective
the
in

as-

residents
the

Briar-

subdivision

have

their
Home

organization
Owners

asso-

citation.”
next

meeting

at

the

Deerfield

in

the

gymnasium

mary
ber

building

be held

grammar

on

Temporary
The

935

will

of

the

school
new

Monday,

pri-

Decem-

1.

927

year

by

Estates

voted

the

This

property

formed

property

group

turned
which

new

sociation

expenses
of collecting,
and
any
amount in excess of these expenses
is. paid into the township treasury
for general uses and purposes of

town.

Will Meet

Monday, December 1

Their

The report showed expenses of
collecting, including tax collector’s
compensation, of $3,415.14. Under

temporary
Westcliff

Kenton,

R.

Chairmen
chairmen

comprise

erly place,

of

the

A.

O.

Andersen,

lane,

G.

C.

E.

Fidler,

Donald

Evans,
909

Kempf,

Bev-

820

Beverly place, W. H. Madden, 936
Westcliffe lane, G. B. Richards, 850
Westcliffe lane, H. F. Wegge, 915
Kenton and H. W. Wynkoop, 917
Oxford road.
The
names
of
the
temporary
chairmen are to be submitted
at
the meeting for your approval as
the officers of the committee.
The
Briarwoods
Home
Owners
association requests your presence

at this meeting, which is so important

operate

a

bus

this

to

all concerned.

committee

sent home

ques-

children would patronize a bus during the school year if a reliable bus
could be acquired.
One
hundred
and fifty families agreed to use the
bus if the schools could obtain one.
The
committee,
accordingly,
acquired the bus expecting to have
150 families using the bus when

the

school

term

and

opened

the

present

this

monthly

fall
rates

would have been sufficient to meet
the pay obligations submitted by
Mr.

Ritzenthaler.
Parents

Urged

to

Needed From

Cooperate

At

the

regular

Deerfield

Park

ber 20, William
ford

road

meeting

board

resigned
December

has been

granted

absence

pany

in

by

order

the

as

president.

1 Mr.

Gilmour

a six month
Inland

to

leave

Steel

serve

Dfld. Area
The

Novem-

B. Gilmour of Ox-

Effective
of

of

held

Com-

as

special

assistant
to the
Director of the
Iron and Steel Division of the National
Production
authority
in
Washington, D.C. Mr. Gilmour has
proven himself to be a most capable president.
The
board
feels
very fortunate that his absence is
only temporary. Mr. Lawrence W.
Raredon, 1100 Fair Oaks, was elected President.
Representatives of Kincaid and
Associates met with the board and
discussed
further,
more
detailed
plans
for
the
development
of
Jewett Park. The board voted to
accept their plans. The work to be
done in Jewett Park this fall by
Ward brothers is now completed.

When
the school bus started
however only 102 children paid to
ride on the bus and as a result the

Korean

war

has

touched

Deerfield through its young men
who are in Service, some of whom
have already returned from Korea,

some

now

are

out

there

fight-

ing, others who are about
some will not come back.
Fortunately

which
that

you
you

there

can

are

is

to

a

show

go,

way

these

interested.

in

boys

The

Red

Cross Bloodmobile Unit will be in
Highland Park on December 3 and
4 at the new American Legion hall.
At that time you can give a pint
of blood which is so desperately
needed

on the

Your

plasma
your

Korean

front.

gift will be administered

on

the

blood

is

battle
type

front
O,

it

or,
will

as

if
be

flown as whole blood to be used
at the hospital stations behind the
lines.
A Marine

Audas,
plasma

staff

sergeant,

John

whose life was saved by
said, “I could actually feel

life returning. Just as if warm water were flowing into my arm, my

chest, my head, and finally my toes.
I

issue John

committee has been unable to meet
their
monthly
payments
to Mr.
Ritzenthaler. The Deerfield school
board
and
the
Deerfield
P.T.A.
each gave
generous
donations
to
the committee in order to keep the

wouldn’t

weren’t

Doe

be

here

today

if

it

for that plasma.”

Mrs.

field

Warrants At Brick

Raymond

Meyer

says, “I can’t

of

donate

Deer-

but

I'll

do anything to help. My son’s life
was saved by eight transfusions before he got to Japan. My husband

Yards Monday
Harold
Wynkoop,
Oxford
road, acting on his appointment

donates every two months. He feels
can

It is up to the parents of the
school children who need bus service for transporting their children

as special assistant state’s attorney, gathered forces Monday
and aided by six squad cars of
the county police, issued John
Doe warrants to all trucks attempting to dump refuse at the

to

Brick

bus in operation so that the people
in our community could see what
a safe and dependable bus we have
at

Report of Tax Collector Briarwoods Home

At Board Meeting

to

It’s Thanksgiving week. We in

Thankful
that
there
are
strong girl and boy scout troops
for them to join.

addition to State’s Attorney Nelson
and Harold Wynkoop, were Joseph

spring
when
the
newly
bus committee started coldata for acquiring a reliable
our schools, bids were subby several different firms.
Ritzenthaler submitted the
bid for operating a bus each
and was selected by the

tionnaires with each child for the
purpose of determining how many

are

in

Board Temporarily

Resigns Park

Community Chest
which to be thankful.
Thankful. that our

Pledged

Of Parents For
School Bus

year.
The

Deerfield

brick yard.

Wm. B. Gilmour

committee

3

100 Donors

Support Urged

Last
formed
lecting
bus for
mitted
Lloyd
lowest
month

27, 1952

December

Here

Bloodmobile

November

our

disposal.

and

from

school

to

the

committee

bus.

The

best

vote

of

be

given

the

bus

could
for

their

ing

a

and

get

untiring

bus

for

yards.

this

be held on a $500

bond

that

until

is raised,

committee
in

secur-

children

is

the

to

Singers Invited

To Join. Choir for ‘Messiah’
To Be Presented December 19
The
production
of
Handel’s
“Messiah” to be presented by a
the

of community

auspices

of

the

voices

through

Inter-church

council, will be seen at the Deerfield grammar school December 19
at 8:15. The choir is under the direction of Chester Kyle, director of
vocal music at Highland Park High

school. Tryouts for soloists will be
held November 30 in the afternoon
at the Presbyterian church. All

money

or jailed

Mr.

Wynkoop
said.
4 arrests were
made and Justice of the Peace
Dan Hunt has set the hearings

for Monday.

Group

of education.

A
program
followed _
Members
of the
Wilmot

played

during

dinner.
school

the

din-

ner hour. . Seventh
and eighth
grade
girls’ chorus
sang
several
numbers. Mrs. Frank Rice directed
the music for the evening.
The theme of the meeting was

public relations. Dr. Paul Street,
DeKalb
State Teachers
college,
gave a talk on this subject. Mr. W.
C.

Petty,

of

schools,

county

was

superintendent

also

present

and

addressed the group.

singers in the community are cordially invited to join the chorus
especially tenors,
baritones
and
base.

thing

he

the easiest thing I do. I have never felt a moment’s ill effect. In
fact,

I enjoy

it.”

Mrs. Andrew

Bradt, who donated

for the first time, last week in Chicago, says, “It was one of the most

interesting experiences I have ever
had. After the donation I met several veterans in the Canteen. They

No

one of the Illinois Educa-

of boards

worthwhile

Hal Tasker, who donates in Chicago every two months says, “It is

told

tion
Association
held
a
dinner
meeting at the Wilmot school, Wednesday night. Dinner was served to
a large group of teachers and mem-

bers

most

do.”

me

.their

experiences.

They

knew how much blood meant on
the
battle
field.
Now
that they
have their medical discharges, they
donate every two months.”

1.E.A. at Wilmot
School Wednesday

orchestra

choir

violator will

thanks

support them to the best of our
ability. Any helpful suggestions in
keeping this bus in operation will
be welcomed by the committee.
Anyone desiring to use the bus
for the rest of the school term may
get more detailed information from
any
of the
committee
members.
Members
are Mr. and Mrs. Ross
Bellamy, 1427 Somerset; Mr. Frank
Curto,
1060 Elmwood;
Mrs. Fred
Ritter, 946 Clay; Mr. Wells Burnette, Sherry lane; Mr. Keniston;
Mr. Ernest Durava, 1210 Stratford;
Mr. Earl Sundberg, 1414: Berkeley.

Community

Each

support

efforts

the

behind

it is the

one

would

want

to

be

re-

sponsible for one of our boys dying.

Yet today there

is a shortage

of

blood donors in the Chicago region.
If there is a shortage of blood or
plasma at the front, the boys will

die,

and

those

at home

who

were

too busy or disinterested to give
will be responsible.
First read the requirements and

ask

yourself,

am

I able

to

give?

Then, if you are, sign the blank on
page 37 indicating
the
time
on
December 3 or 4 which you prefer,
tear it out and send it to Mrs. Robert Clark, 418 Brierhill road.
An

appointment will be made

for you.

In a quick, harmless and painless
way you can save a boy’s life.
If you need transportation or a
baby
sitter please
indicate
your

need on the blank.
We need over 100 donors from
Deerfield.
Will you be one of
them?

The Deerfield committee for the
(Continued

on page 6)

�Pause

for Thanksgiving
The

Rev.

H.

O.

William,

Pastor,

St.

. . .

National

Brick Dumping

Ground

Paul

Evangelical and Reformed Church
This week we celebrate the Thanksgiving holiday, connect-

ed in our minds with the American tradition of the Pilgrim Fathers. Being thankful for new homes, fruitful harvests and a
measure of security in a free land, they celebrated God’s goodness to them with a season of feasting.
Even in Old Testament days, the people celebrated Succoth, or the Feast

of Booths

or Tabernacles.

This

feast that included eight days of rejoicing,
after the harvests had been gathered.
Men and women from earliest history

was

a family

in

October,

late
have

paused

to

speak their thankfulness. We do offer prayers and give lip
service in sincere gratitude for a host of blessings both material

and spiritual.
But to what avail is this potential energy of thankfulness?

Let us compare it to a head of steam in a boiler.

ful locomotive,

a boiler

heat will pull a trainload

of steam

Inside a power-

if constantly

of freight

many

fed

miles.

with

new

Sitting by

itself, the same boiler will lose steam and become boiling water,
then lukewarm water, then cold water—unfit even for satisfy-

ing a man’s thirst.
Our Thanksgiving “steam” should be harnessed to “actions

which speak louder than words.”
a provident God is great. Rather

The debt which we owe to
than giving mere “thanks,”

let us give service where our hands and hearts are needed.

We

can offer friendship to our neighbors; we can support the deserving needs of our fellow men; we can bring a measure of
happiness to the sick and lonely; most of all we can set God and
His laws where they belong, first in our lives, our homes, our
churches,

our

community,

and

our world.

“ Our response to God’s goodness must be the giving of
ourselves in a spirit of thankfulness. This obligation is one
which we can never really pay. That is why it demands a

DAILY

giving

one-day
Day—or

“thanksgiving.”
daily thanks.

of ourselves

in THANKING,

Which

shall

it

rather

be?

than

a

Thanksgiving

Keep A Grateful Heart .. .
Dr. Paul J. Keller, The

Presbyterian
At

Thanksgiving

the benefits and
we

should

time

blessings

we

always—not

claimed

Watson,

man

looked

“I’m
his

sorry to hear
surprise

have

True,

a year.

But

no

obvious than complete.
of his parishioners. who
pastor found his friend
he said. “What!” ex-

that

while

all

your

Watson

wife

is dead.”

continued,

“I

am

doubly sorry and truly grieved that you have lost your character,” and the clergyman remorselessly continued to name one
thing after another until the man interrupted and protested that
all these things remained.

“Oh,”

answered

Watson,

“I thought

you said everything was lost. Actually you have lost none of
the things which are worthwhile.”
Christian thanksgiving should certainly penetrate deeper
than the surface conditions of affluence. In Our Lord we have
been given a Way of Life which may be triumphant under any

circumstances.
of the

So completely true is this that in the history

Christian

movement,

the

constantly

repeating

feature

is the thanksgiving and the sharing of the Good News to all
who will listen. The grateful heart will remember not only
material blessings, but also those gifts and mercies which the
world

cannot

public

the

take away.

Bannockburn

9:00

Recreation

basketball

and

volley-

10:15 a.m.-12:00
boys’ basketball.

p.m.-9

minton,

Wednesday
p.m. Teen

Agers

volleyball.

bad-

-

Thursday

6:30

p.m.-8:30

p.m.

7th

and

girls badminton, volleyball.
Friday
3:45 p.m.-5 p.m. 6th boys
girls badminton.
Saturday

9 a.m.-12 noon shop,
girls, 5th grade and up.
Deerfield
Page

4

grade

a.m.

high

Skating
will
be
Jewett Park on all
weather permits.
If

teen-agers

dances,
ranged

ball.
7

a.m.

boys’

basketball.

WINTER
PROGRAM
1952-1953
Program Begins
Saturday, November 22, 1952
Monday
6:30
p.m.-8
p.m.
7th-8th
boys,

badminton,

a.m.-10:15

Saturday
Grammar and

boys

8th

and

40th

for

provided
days that

indicate

etc.,

them

with

a

will
their

at
the

need,

be

arhelp.

Anniversary

Mr. and Mrs. Edward Selig celebrated their 40th anniversary Sunday.
Mr. Selig is one of the organizers of the Deerfield Savings
and Loan which celebrated 25 years

in
and

parties,

school

business

Friday

and

Saturday.

They spent the day very quietly
and were quite surprised when the
Presbyterian
church
presented

them with an anniversary book and
Wilmot

flowers.

hazards

dumping at the Nationa! Brick Company and to ‘’clean

existing

on

the premises.

Deerfield

National Brick Co.

To

Supervisor,

Deerfield Township

Petition No. 1:
Filed July 12, 1951; legal notice
filed December 13, 1951. Hearing—January 2, 1952. To re-zone
from
residential
to
heavy
industry.
Objection
filed—January 2, 1952.
Copy of resolution
by Village of Deerfield. Copy of
testimony produced
at hearing.
After discussion it was
agreed

by

the

board

to consent

to

with-

drawal of petition of Brick yards
and counsel for the objection then
introduced into the records various
objections and resolutions signed
by the village authorities opposing

the

original

request

which

they

asked to be made part of the record.
The same being accepted by
the board and as a result of the
action the amended
petition was

dismissed

for lack

of testimony

in

support thereof.
Hearing on Petition No. 2:
Filed January 17, 1952; legal notice, April 24, 1952; public notice
as to hearing, April 24 relative
to adjourned
session held May

15, 1952.

Deerfield

health

Report On Zoning
West

received.

just once

doubt the list of blessings is often more
Dr. John Watson went to visit one
had suffered a heavy financial loss. The
quite broken. “Everything is gone,”
The

in their fight to stop garbage

up”

Deerfield
about

29.
It shows raw uncovered garbage in a fly and rat
of the Company’s original property in the area still zoned as
have preserved the picture in their ‘‘portfolio of information”

for use

Edw. A. Reagan,

to think

taken August

clay pit, 200 feet north
residential.
Deerfield mothers

First

it is customary

material

do this, and

Church,

This picture was
ridden

Copy of testimony pro-

duced at hearing, objections, petitions,
resolutions
and
objections filed.
Petition of National
Brick company to rezone prop-

erty from residential to light industry. Zoning board of appeals
recommends to county board of
supervisors that the petition be
granted in part with the exception of the property 300 feet on
the north and west sides of the
Brick yards, that section to remain residential.
The
board
of supervisors in a
motion made by Supervisor Cook
and seconded
by Supervisor Von
Patten that the report of the zoning board of appeals be accepted
and a resolution adopted Aye and
Nay vote being made
Supervisor
Cook’s motion was lost.
National
Brick
vs. Board
of
Supervisors.
Filed for review of
the Complaint August 13, 1952.

National Brick company.
(Continued

on

page

6)

Filed

the Mothers,

Mothers

Grandmothers,

and

Speak

Homemakers

of Deerfield:

Do you get “white hot” when you think of Chicago garbage
being dumped on our doorstep?
Do you “boil” when you think of small children living under hazardous, unhealthful conditions near a rat and fly ridden
pit where 75 trucks from Cook County are already dumping

garbage daily?
Are you willing

to walk

to a Village Board

meeting

if

necessary to tell the Village Fathers that you want garbage
dumping at the National Brick Company stopped?
Are you ready to get up at six in the morning to write a

letter to your Bridge Club President and explain what the members can do to get action.

A GROUP OF US DO FEEL THIS WAY. WE HOPE
YOU
DO, TOO!
A STATE
LAW
PROHIBITS
THE
DUMPING OF GARBAGE ORIGINATING ELSEWHERE
WITHIN ONE MILE OF A VILLAGE.
OUR LOCAL
AUTHORITIES CAN SEE THAT THIS LAW
IS ENFORCED!.
Roll up your sleeves, and let’s get to work and see that this
law is enforced.
We hope to hear from you as soon as you've eaten your

Thanksgiving dinner!

Parents To Meet With
Teachers To Study
Development of Child
Last spring, parents
of

the

met

Deerfield

to

school.

discuss
The

and

school,

programs

in

agreed

the
that

Thursday, Nov. 27, 1952
Published

they would welcome an opportunity
to
study
with
the
teachers
the

different

phases

of child

develop-

ment. A schedule has now been
set up for these meetings. The topic
to be discussed at each of these
gatherings
is “Emotional
Factors
and Their Effect on Learning.”
Kindergarten,
ember 20, 3 p.m.

Thursday,

First and second grades,
day, November 26, 3 p.m.

NovTues-

than

Public

DEERFIELD
REVIEW

teachers

grammar

parents

The Public Press, no tess
Office, is a public trust.

1775

Weekly

Vol. 27, No. 36

every

Thursday

PUBLICATION
OFFICE
832 Todd Ct.
Deerfield,
Illinois
Telephone Deerfield 485
HIGHLAND PARK OFFICE
St. Johns Ave., Highland Park,
Telephone HI 2-4500

III.

MEMBER
ioe
National
Editorial Association
Illinois Press Association

Heather

Hartwig

Phyllis Russell
V. E. Deckert

els pebsvhiaes Editor
Managing Editor
Business Manager

Lecal Subscription Rates—$2.75
per year
Domestic Rate—$4.00 per year
Single Copies—10c
| Foreign Rates on Application
day, December 2, 3 p.m.
“Entered as second-class matter November 27, 1944, at the post office at DeerFifth and sixth grades, Wednesfield, Illinois, under the Act of March 8,
day, December 3, 3 p.m.
1679.”
Seventh
and
eighth
grades,
Copyright,
1952,
By
The Highland Park Company
Thursday, December 4, 3 p.m.
All Rights
Reserved

Third

and

fourth

grades,

Tues-

Thursday,

November

27, 1952

�Pre

Me

~

wee

6

ments

Recreation Center

‘Teen-Town”

may

be

purchased

at

6

erat

ERO

ee eSeae
PA

A,

: UE

OL eras

Lh

ne

Dees
AS SPT
GRR

7

Bry

Te
TAP

PN‘

HAE ° T AEN

er Pieaba

dare

rr
rr To
ERROR

Te

a

‘Mr. and Mrs. Paul Keller Jr.

the

snack bar. Potato chips are placed
No
on the tables with no charge.
smoking or intoxicating drinks are

me uth oo
For Teenagers held in Bethlehem inset
tesot wnie
—“tvese en'ttecommi

~ Church Every Saturday Night
:
;
After listening
adults

of

a group

banded

for the young

tion group
area.

. s
to the complaint
have

Headed

by

center

has

the

and

formed

and

Guither

Francis

composed

and

and

Hansen

Pat

Master:

of|Guither.

Mrs.

and

Rev.

the

Frost,

Mrs.

Bodmar,

Erwin

Mrs.

and

a .recrea-|y7.

of the Deerfield-Bannockburn|pruce

people

Rev.

of teenagers

together

chairman,

is

Thomas

Gaylon

| Mr.

John Lindquist, Mr. Mr.and andMrs.Mrs.Carl Michaels,
adults,. |include:

Misses: Jacqueline
members of the Bethlehem church who serve as a youth plan-|Larry Long.
Paula Peterson and Velma
Hansen,
|
church,
Bethlehem
the
in
held
is
which
center,
the
board,
ning
is open Saturday nights between 7 :30 and 11:30 p.m. The board | Pagel.
guild of the church
has been organized to counsel the activities of the teenagers. |. The Junior
The

i

-

named

been

-

-

-

——_————

~

act

to

women,

men

and

as chaperones

Sat-

volunteers,

for

asking

| 1S

by
are games of urday nights.:
There
youngsters they please.
the
There is a need for
of
theme.
The)
shuffleboard, ping pong, table soc- |donations or loans of games, sheet
ego
rhceepveagls Vo sre
eee
- Teen-Tow
radio, records and music, card tables, ping pong tables
n”
is informality;
a pa cer, table games,
SeUe
eae
ie aa
i
Soft drinks and refresh- ‘and potato chips.
a piano.
Anyone who is|

“Teen-Town”
itl th etd

by
tail.

~~

y

svers

y

pao

Hes

°

Youngsters Enjoy New

SS

Recreation Center

lable to help either in donations of |
itime or of games, please contact |
| either the Rev. Guither at Deer-|
field 78 or Mr. Thomas at 226J1.
|

|\Wilmot Mothers Met
| November 18
The Wilmot Mothers Club meetling on November
18th was
both
entertaining and instructive. Everett

Saunders,

Director

of

Art

for

Wilmette public schools, presented |
many new ideas and approaches to
lart in regard to children, as well
| as to adults. He is well qualified|
}in this field as he and Dr. McSwain
|of
Northwestern
university
have
|recently
completed
three
work-

{shops

Playing

a

recreation

new

table

game

center open

in

suburban

towns.

Mr.

+Saunders
showed
many _ colored
'slides of contemporary art done by
both children and adults.
Particularly fascinating were the
|versatile variety of materials used
in mobiles and stabiles which give
the facilities of the|a greater freedom in art expression
and enjoying
than ever before.
at Bethlehem
Saturday evenings
:
Preceding the lectures, the Moth-

meeting.

church for the young people of the community are Joyce Ward, | ers Club had a business
|The Spring Fashion and
Roger Burnell, Art Capitani, Allen Wilson and Toby Clark.

luncheon
|for March 17 was voted on and ap| proved. Tentative plans were made
| for a pot-luck supper in January.
Mrs. George Schmid gave a report
| on the brickyards and the club was

| united
|ever

ander.

At

Sunset

The

The

Ridge

Committee

held
Si

December
dire
ip

The

dance

dance

is

will

in

formal

Winnetka.

and

all

reservations
must
be
made
Mrs.
Leon Sherman,
Duffy
Deerfield 2242, by December

possible

in combating

this

[The BAN

to Deerfield.

Refreshments

were

provided

by

SS

| Mrs. Hugh, and Mrs. Sundberg.

Gy

of

the

}regular
monthly
meeting
at the
home of Mrs. Edward.E. Wood, 1200

| Fimwood, Tuesday December 2 at

ne

KER’S STO’ ] |
) BY THE MASSACHUSETTS
a

FOR YEARS THEY WERE

Wage
-

A) THE CHIEF CIRCULAT{ ING MEDIUM IN THE

'\ Halves and quarters of
these coins, cut to make

society.

} change, became known

| Garden Club to
| Have
The

|

will

as bits”and “2. bits?

Luncheon
cluh |

Garden

Bannockburn

luncheon |

its Christmas

have

| Wednesday,

at

3,

December

Our hardy forefathers recognized the value of

the

home of Mrs. William Sims, Valley
lroad. Mrs. Rosco Smith will speak
for
Home
Your
lon “Decorating
The dining arrange| Christmas.”
| ments
|Robert

by
handled
be
will
Farquhar, Telegraph

door

front

\'The
by

on

will
Rogers,

James

Mrs.

Home

Mrs.
road.

decorated

be

Lake

Bluff.

Leave

William

Gentry,

A/lic,

814

Spruce, is home with his sister and
brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Zellet, for a two month leave from

active

Shuffleboard enthusiasts
nell and Paula Carr.
‘Thursday,
a
maga

ie

Arh

t

aad

November

27,

1952

include

a.m.

with
Final
arrangements
for.
the
Lane,
Christmas
program,
December
9,
2.
| will be discussed.

“THESE HISTORIC SPANISH

2, in the Holy
| evening, December
|Cross Parish Hall.
Mrs. Ernest Rugen is in charge
lof arrangements and will be assistled by Mrs. Walter Krol and Mrs.
| Willard Meintzer and Mrs. John A.
| Robertson. Mrs. George Emmett is
president

Deer-

of the

[SQ COINS, FAMED IN PIRATE
RP LORE, WERE LEGALIZED

Tuesday

party

board

club will hold their

PIRGES OF FIGHT

The Altar and Rosary society of
Holy Cross church will hold its
Christmas

executive

_~

oad

Society To Hold
Xmas Party
annual

Club Meets Dec. 2

be | field Woman’s

5 at 9 at the Sunset
aie
ak
eietes
ae

idge country club

ithe
5th
Grade
Mothers.
On
the
committee
were
Mrs.
Patterson,

the

Woman's

Dance

Committee

in its desire to aid in what-

way

|menace
|

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Keller who have returned from their
wedding trip and are residing with the senior Kellers on Waukegan road until the home they are building on Oxford road is
Mrs. Keller is the former Barbara Alexready for occupancy.

duty.

He

has

just

returned

thrift.

We

problems...

|

i

Zz
y

can

help

you

solve

your

financial

.

Open A Savings Account at the

Deerfield State Bank
12% interest paid on savings
Deposits insured up to $10,000.00

from Korea and will be stationed
in Dayton after Christmas.

Page

5

�Cub Scout
News
Troop

3:

porter.

Sheila

Today

The

Robertson,

we

did

re-

stencils

for

meeting .was .called

Freda Kohlar let us use her textile
paints. Linda Meyer brought the

Troop 7: Janet Peterson, reporter. We played games and Sue Diamond
brought
the
treats.
Mrs.

treats.

worked

Johns

on the Hostess badge and the Child
Care badge.
Troop 76: Judy Portman, reporter. We collected our dues and had
refreshments which Sherry Long
brought.
We practiced stitches—
hemming
and patching, for our
Sewing badge. Then we dismissed.
Last week Denise Maitzen brought
the treats and we worked on our

troop.

our Interior Decoration

Last

week

badge.

we

also

Mrs.

mother’s aprons and decorated and
made pincushions.
Troop 14: Gwen Graef, reporter.

Optical

Service

Rosemary

Terr.,

PHARMACY

BRUCE
Registered

H. FORD
Pharmacist

Phone

in

1

our

The

troop

are

with

the

an

in-

Brownies

in

we

had

new
Patty

Mandel,

Troop
Diana

77:

the treat.
baskets for
of colored
legiance to

“Taps”

635 Deerfield Rd
Phone

DEERFIELD

1048

JEWELERS

ELECTRIC

brought

cookies

“Squeeze”

and

were
*

Troop
Kenneth
Carter.

Waukegan

Rd.

APPLIANCES

- Tel.

Deerfield

122

Inc.

735

Deerfield

Edward

H.

Selig
Harald
Tel. Deerfield 155

8:
Eighth
Timson.

graders,

High school freshmen,

Vam

14:

Sixth graders, Mrs. C.

Stewart.
Troop 15: Fourth grade Brownies,
a leader badly needed so Troop 7
can be divided.
Troop
76:
Sixth graders, Mrs.
Carl Running and Mrs. C. E. Still-

Mrs.

77:

Third

John

grade

Kenney,

*

you

may

everything
er

for

your

rest

from

your

car

assured

we

to

us,

check

bumper to bump-

added

Brownies,

Mrs.

Robert

safety.

Any

Girl

*

*

Scuvut

or

Brownie

troops who are interested in making tray favors for the hospital,
orphanages, etc., are asked to contact the Highland Park Girl Scout
office. They have a complete list
of the institutions which can use
them.

Midge’s Texaco
650

Waukegan

Road__‘Tel.

580

Any
intermediate
troops
who
wish to go to the hospital in the
afternoon to do bandage work can
contact

shame
oem

Page 6

‘The Villain Still Pursued Her’

the

the

scout

office

to

necessary arrangements.

7:30

p.m.

Con-

ST. PAUL
EVANGELICAL
AND
REFORMED
CHURCH
638
Waukegan
Road
Rev. H. O. Willman, Pastor
Deerfield 858
THURSDAY,
November 27
10:30
a.m. Thanksgiving Union Service at the Presbyterian church.
FRIDAY, November 28
7 p.m. St. Paul’s Bowling league,
SATURDAY,
November
29
9:30

Handsome Harry, (Sonny Johanson) has just rescued
Emily, (David Hartwig) from the clutches of the villain, Fred
die Jones, official sign holder, in the pantomime skit presented
by Den 6 of the pack 150 meeting.

make

am.

THERE

WILL

BE

NO

CON-

FIRMATION
INSTRUCTION.
6 p.m.
Evening
vesper chimes.
SUNDAY,
November
30
9:30 a.m.
Sunday school worship and
classes.
10:30 a.m.
Chime call to worship.
11.
am.
Morning
church
worship.
Kingdom
Roll
Call
cards
are
to
be
brought ot this worship
and turned
in
to the church council.
2 p.m.
Kingdom Roll Call workers are
asked to gather at the church to go out
by two’s
to collect the balance of the
roll call cards.
5 p.m.
Potluck supper for those working on the Kingdom Roll Call canvass.
MONDAY, December 1
3:30 p.m.
Girl Scout meeting in the
church basement.
7:30
p.m.
Sunday:
school
teacher’s
meeting.
|

TUESDAY,

December

2

8 p.m.
Men’s
Dartball league
church basement.
WEDNESDAY,
December 3
7:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal in the

in

the

church

sanctuary.

Mrs.

Pearson and Mrs. K. Knackstadt.
Troop 18: Third grade Brownies,
Mrs. Harold Connelly, Mrs. E. M.
Feil and Mrs. M. C. Cannanen.

bring

Sandy.

sopho-

Troop 9: Fifth graders, Mrs. W.
C. Swigart and Mrs. A. B. Herman.

Troop

you

At a recent meeting of pack 150, the various dens presented skits in which the cubs performed. _ Above is a scene
from ‘Little Black Sambo” presented by den 8. Bob Hollman
in the center played the jungle.
Crawling at his feet are
tigers Neil Robertson, Tom Wilson, Mickey McGuire and Bob

Lange.

son,

When

Re

Mrs.

Troop 7: Fourth grade Brownies,
Mrs. William Binard and Mrs. David Peterson.

Troop

til.

R.

school

and

NORTHFIELD
COMMUNITY
Sanders at Dundee
P.O. Deerfield,
Ill.
James Burford, Pastor
Telephone
Northbrook
935R2
SUNDAY
SERVICES
9:45 a.m. Sunday
school.
11 a.m. Morning
worship.
7:30 p.m. Evening services (monthly).
First and third Sundays: Evangelistic
services.
Youth
Second
and
fourth
Sundays:
fellowship
services.
If your church has no evening service,
we invite you
to join with
us in the
evening
service.
If you
do not attend
church, we give you a warm welcome to
visit our services.

Mrs.
John

Rodbro.

Loans

Deerfield,

graders,

p.m.

NORTH

seniors,

(not organized).
Troop 11: Seventh graders, Mrs.
Edward Palmer.
Troop
12:
Fifth graders,
Mrs.
Frederick Heintz.
Troop
13:
Sixth graders, Mrs.
Willard Langhus and Mrs. Lester
Marshall.

&amp; SELIG

Road,

High
Walter

Troop ‘10:

Established 1925
REALTORS
Insurance — Real Estate —

sa-

Troop 6: Fourth grade Brownies,
'Mrs. Hubert Kelley and Mrs. E. N.

1885

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

VANT

5:
Mrs.

Troop
Andrew

F. D. CLAVEY
RAVINIA NURSERIES,
Established

Troop 4: Seventh
I Cassady.

4

for

dismissed.
*

3:
Eighth graders,
Herman
and Mrs.

a.m.

Saturday:
fessions.

Troop
2:
High
school juniors,
Mrs. Maurice Allsbrow and Mrs.
Ear] Anderson.

mores,

Refrigerators - Ranges - Radios
Washing Machines - Vacuums
We Repair All Makes of Appliances
130

8

and candy for our treats.

and

Troop

FROST‘S
AND

CROSS CATHOLIC CHURCH
North
Waukegan
Road
Rev. John
O’Mara,
pastor
Rectory, 724 Elder Lane
Deerfield 430
Sunday
Masses:
7, 8:30,
10,
11:80.
Weekday
Masses:
7:30 a.m.
First Friday of each month, Mass at

Leaders of Girl Scouts in Deerfield for the 1952-53 season are:

R.

RADIO

HOLY

Mon-

We made little turkey
hospital tray favors out
paper. We pledged althe flag. Last week we

*

Jewelry
for the
Entire Family

Repairing

GREGORY’S
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
Wilmot
and
Deerfield
Roads
(Wilmot
School)
The Rev. J. D. Parker Vicar
SUNDAY,
November 30
9:30 a.m.
Faimily service.
Kindergarten
and
church
school
classes
for the
children.
Sermon
and
holy
communion
for adults.

Beth Derby, reporter.

Inman

Troop
1:
High
school
Mrs. Richard Senf.
Expert
Watch

CHURCHES

Karen

made hand puppets and Judy
ohan brought the treats.’

1884

Ml

DEERFIELD

ST.

Afterwards we sang “Happy Birthday” to Janet.
She showed us a
compass she got.
Then we practiced our Tenderfoot business and
wrote invitations to our mothers to
attend
the
ceremony.
We
sang

Deerfield,

Skit of Den 8

Arne, Sandra Hanson and Carol
Smith.
At that meeting we also

Brownies

Deerfield

KNAAK’S

Established

vestiture.

to help

week

Troop 12: Karen Feil, reporter.
Last week Janet Collins brought

Established in Deerfield Since 1942
Call Deerfield 674 for Appointment
857

there

Last

and we played
luted the flag.

OPTOMETRIST
Complete

was

talked
about
Armistice
day
and
talked
about our American
flag.
Kay
Freeman
brought
Brownies

DR. G. C. PARKNEN

Pack Meeting

to order

and the secretary read the minutes
and the treasurer made her report.
We had refreshments which Mrs.
Stewart
and
Laura
Bollenbacher
brought.
Afterwards we made little Indian suckers for hospital tray
favors.
We finished 150 of them
and will make more. The meeting
then dismissed.

¢?

the

“Today, as we give thanks
for the many blessings bestowed upon our country, let
us give thanks too, to our
men in uniform who are
fighting and dying in Korea
to preserve these blessings.
-Let us back up our prayers
for their safe-keeping by
pledging to give a pint of
life-saving blood when the
Bloodmobile unit visits Highland Park on Wednesday
and Thursday of next week.’’
This is the message that
one of Highland Park’s Gold
Star Mothers, Mrs. William
H. Wilbur (pictured on the
cover) hopes to get across to
each and every Deerfield
adult.
Mrs. Wilbur is coordinator on next week’s
blood donor program.
The American Red Cross
Bloodmobile unit will be located at the American Legion Memorial home on Sheridan road.
Red Cross leaders hope to sign up 500 donors for the unit’s two-day
stay here.
For the convenience of our
readers,
a
pledge card is printed on
page 37.
(Photo,

Layout.

Hello World

(aia

by

Wm.

Salyards)

FIRST

Stolle
Mr.

and

Mrs.

Don

Stolle,

Deerfield road, are the
a son born November
Highland Park hospital.

125

parents of
15 at the
The infant

has been named Paul Douglas and
he has two brothers, Michael, 3,
and Stephen, 7. Mr. and Mrs. Wil-

liam Wheat

and

Dayton,

the

are

Mrs.

Stolle, all of

grandparents.

| Blood Donors

Needed

(Continued from page 3)
Bloodmobile

unit

consists

of

Mrs.

Henry: Fisher, Mrs. Raymond
er, Mrs. Robert Clark, Mrs.

ert

Johnson,

Mrs.
mos,

10

Mrs.

MeyRob-

Andrew

Fred Nolde, Mrs.
Mr. Karl Berning.

Bradt,

Chris

Cos-

Time: Wednesday, December 3,
am. to 4 p.m. Thursday, De-

cember

4, 2 p.m.

Zoning

to 8 p.m.

(Cont.)

(Continued

from

page

of Deerfield,

field township
age

district

West

and Union

No.

1

THE BETHLEHEM
CHURCH
(Evangelical United Brethren)
Francis
Geo.
Guither,
Ministe
815 Rosemary Terrace
“Church Going Families Are Happy
Families”’

THURSDAY,
November 27
Union
Thanksgiving
Service
10:30
a.m.
Ist Presbyterian
church,
with Rev. H. O. Willman,
SATURDAY,
November
29
_ 7:30
p.m.
to 11:30 p.m.
Teen-Town
in Fellwoship hall.
SUNDAY,

4)

suit for declatory judgment, September
17, 1952, naming
the
Village

PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
824
Waukegan
Road
Phone
Deerfield
775
Dr. Paul J. Keller. Pastor
THURSDAY,
November 27
10:30 a.m.
Union Thanksgiving service, sponsored by the Interchurch Committee of Deerfield.
SUNDAY,
November
30
9:45 a.m. Church school for all grades
through high school.
9:45 a.m.
Adult Bible class under the
leadership of Mr. C. E. Piper.
11 a.m.
Morning worship.
11 a.m.
Nursery
school for children
8 to: 6.
7 p.m.
Tuxis society.
7:30 p.m:
Meeting of the Session to
receive
new
members
into the
congregation.
Those interested in uniting with
the church should call the pastor.
MONDAY,
December 1
p.m.
Girl Scout meeting.
7:30 p.m.
Boy
Scout meeting.
WEDNESDAY,
December 2
7 p.m. Junior
choir
rehearsal.
8 p.m. Senior
choir
rehearsal.
8:30
p.m.
Rehearsal
for
‘The
:
Messiah.”’

of

Deer-

Drain-

Deerfield.

November

30

9:45 a.m.
Church school for all ages.
10:55 a.m.
Divine worship.
7 p.m.
Youth fellowship.
TUESDAY,
December 2
1:30 p.m. Women’s Society for World
Service at the home of Mrs. Arthur Pagel; program, Mrs. A. Merner,
WEDNESDAY,
December 3
4 p.m.
Confirmation class.
7:30 p.m.
Senior choir reeharsal.

Thursday,

November

27, 1952

�Gilbert '
_ Capt. Richard

(Stan)

Gil-

ert, son of Mr. and Mrs. Rus-

sell S. Gilbert of 1277 Taylor

avenue, and husband of Mrs.
Violet Gilbert, 2665 Waukegan

avenue, who

died

in

crash November 7

a plane

in Italy, was

buried Tuesday in North Shore
Garden

of Memories.

Funeral services were held at
2 p.m. in Kelley and Spalding chapel,

with

the

Rev.

A.

P.

TOYS for “little ladies...”

Johnson,

minister of Bethany church, officiating. Pall bearers were air corps
men from O’Hare field.
Captain Gilbert’s body and that
of Maj. Jack Telford of Waukegan, pilot of the B-26 in which both
young men crashed to their death,
arrived in Chicago from Europe
_ Saturday by plane.
Recalled into active service April
1, 1951, as an Air Force Reserve,
after serving as bombardier-navigator during World War II, Captain Gilbert held the Air Medal for
meritorious service in Korea.
He
was sent to Bordeaux, France, with
the 126th Bomb Wing a year ago.
Besides his wife and his parents,
he is survived by three young children, David, Don and Sharon; one

TOYS for boys and tomboys .

TOYS for the baby...

come and see our large collection

ey

sister,

Mrs.

Carl

Aringdale

.

1. Beautiful
‘’Sweet
Sue’’
doll that walks, has hair she
can

wash

own

and wave,

chignon.

dressed

and

|

her

Glamorously

in satin and

lace.

13.95
2.

of Tay-

All

the

rage—

French

poodle that looks real. 6.95

lor avenue; and his grandfather,
Richard Gilbert of St. Petersburg,
Fla.

Nathaniel Leverone

To Speak Before
Men’s Fellowship
Featured speaker at the December 4 meeting of the Men’s Fellowship
club in the
Highland
Park
Presbyterian
church
will be Na-

thaniel
Leverone,
founder
chairman of the board of the

and
Au-

3.

Realistic

4.

Texan

covered

tomatic
Canteen
company.
“This
Freedom of Ours,” is his topic.

President

of Chicago

Youth

made,

Week, a director of the Chicago
Better Business bureau, and a director of the Chicago Crime Commission, Mr. Leverone frequently
addresses civic,
business,
service

and

social

groups

throughout

5. Music Maker book
The Mulberry Bush.

plays
1.00

must be in by next Monday.

Fred Greco

Takes

Basic

6. Colorful plastic tea set,
silver creamer and sugar.

Training at Fort Riley
Fred
road,

1.95

Greco, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Joseph

Greco

was

armed

of 2746

recently

forces

his basic
Kans.
Mr.

Port

Clinton

inducted

in the

and

is

now

taking

training

at

Fort

Riley,

Greco,

who

was

graduated

7. Gilbert
eGQinners:®

8.

Dial

chemistry set for
ics .cceeenss &lt;a: eee

phone

that

really —

race ie tishks a

Cisse

4 from Highland Park High school,
_ attended Wabash college in Crawfordsville, Ind., and was attending
_ the University of Illinois
at the

9.

|

10. Little
girl’s |) make-up
MIP cs Pract ca cone Lien

time of his induction.

He was pres-

ident of his fraternity, Phi Gamma
Delta,

at the

university.

Mr.

‘Potato’«

11.

Only the Want
and

able elsewhere.

CARD
We

Ads offer amazing

opportunities

Read

OF

wish,

deepest

to

thanks

express
and

cent

our

apprecia-

relatives and

friends for kindness
shown

avail-

now!

THANKS

tion to our many
pathy

not

them

during

bereavement.

and symour

re-

Head’

is

fun for all —- make funny
faces with vegetables. 1.00

Scrabble
— latest

popular word
values

set,

well

quality.

3.95

the

United States.
John
R. Haugan, president
of
the Men’s Fellowship club, has announced that appetizers
will
be
served at 6:30 p.m. and the Woman’s association will serve dinner
promptly
at 7 p.m.
Reservations

holster

excellent

wagon.
1.95

game.

most

2.95

�i'Christraas Clubl

Hold Exa iis for.
Annapolis, West
Point January
Representative

Church,

Order

NOW!

Many

of Our

=

Personalized Card Books

Close

December

Ist

BOX CARDS.
_ unique

which

features

ne

All

a
%a

Norman

candidates

center
Cook
ty.

i.

=

The

y

line

of

county,

a
a

HIGHLAND

PARK

Drive Carefully — The Life You Save
May Be Your Own!

Canfield

in 1953

be

actual

road,

all of Lake

applicant

temporarily

AVENUE

must

and

where it would
for him to take

4

645 CENTRAL

an-

residents of the 13th district, of
sound physical health
and _ good
moral character, and must be not
less than 17 nor more than 22 years
of age July 1, 1953. The 13th Congressional district is composed of
the townships of Barrington, Elk
Grove,
Evanston,
Hanover,
Leyden, Maine,
New
Trier,
Niles,
Northfield, Palatine, Schaumburg,
Wheeling,
and that part of Norwood
Park township west of the

RACK CARDS.
For those very special
persons for whom you want very special
.cards, be sure to choose from our fine
rack cards by Hallmark, Norcross, etc.
But hurry
visit us NOW!

ous
ie

Stitt

district,

the U. S. Military academy

Rockwell, Grandma Moses and many
others.
Prices to fit every purse.
But
hurry
visit us NOW!
a
|
x

Marguerite

13th

will be held under the auspices of
the U. S. Civil Service commission
on Monday, January 12, 1953.
The
examination will be held at Barrington, Chicago, Evanston, Highland
Park,
and
Waukegan.
The
place where the examination ‘will
be held will be furnished to applicants at a later date.

Choose from a charming,

selection

12

nounces that her competitive
examination
for all candidates
for
appointment to fill the vacancy for
the 13th district scheduled to occur
at the U. S. Naval academy and at

K

NOW!
While selection is complete!
Be
‘sure you make your Holiday Greeting
In just two weeks many
Card selection!
of our finest Personalized Christmas
card books close.
So hurry and visit
meee
sus
NOW]

(R.),

Depositors Cash
In This Week

should

in

coun-

designate

be most convenient
the examination. If

absent

from

the

13th

district, he may be examined elsewhere, at points where the Civil
Service
commission
maintains
an
officer or examiner,
or
in
the
armed forces under his commanding officer.
Letters
of application
must
be
postmarked
before
midnight,
December 10, addressed to Representative
Marguerite
Stitt
Church,

@ls Cola Same
AN

IN TIME

une

FOR

CHRISTMAS

One of America’s Choicest Collections
of New Decorative Fabrics
By
_ Without

obligation

the Yard
an

interior

Tee ae

eee

tes

prices

Custom

Re

4

$125.0-00

ey

Value.

4

Weeks

Value.

NOW—
—Telephone

samples

to your

home

at

yow’ll enjoy paying

Green

Bay

Road,

Wilmette,

Wil.

special

6006

34 Main Street, Park Ridge, TA 3-4357

Smart

Fabrics

Chicago Tel. HOllycourt 5-7071

*79
Delivery

$29.00
af

119-121

50

NOW—
Two

B

Quality

bring

Also extending our slipcover and drapery

SOFA and CHAIR
Including

will

SLIPCOVERS ® DRAPERIES
@® BEDSPREADS ® UPHOLSTERY

SPECIAL!

:

decorator

Made

@

Made

| | Slipcove

: i

or Custom

50
"7 7
Today—

P. ersona

least

Air Conditioned Showrooms

Diane.

NS

a
Ample Parking

The First National Bank of Highland Park distributed checks total-

ing

$85,084

during

to depositors

the

who

“Christmas

the

past

week

were

members

,Club.”

This

of

dis-

tribution represented
an increase
of 18 per cent to members
who
shared in the program the previous

year.
Over

the

years

more

and

more

bank patrons have turned to the
“Christmas Club” plan to make biweekly deposits of regular amounts
to accumulate a substantial balance
in order to provide cash for the

bulk

of

their

Christmas

shopping

needs.

The
now

1953
being

tional,
$20

weeks

and

“Christmas
formed

deposits

made

$1 to

every

two

to $500

at

Miss Ann Lawton, daughter
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lawton

of
of

this same

Miss

time

Lawton

Zeta Alpha

next

$25

is

First Na-

of from

regularly

will provide

Club”

at the

year.

Becomes

Member

1199 Lincoln avenue, has recently
become a member of Zeta Alpha
society,
extra-curricular
organization open to those upperclassmen
at Wellesley college particularly interested in modern drama.
Miss Lawton, a junior, is majoring in history.
She is treasurer
of Barnswallows, the campus dramatic organization, secretary treasurer of her dormitory and active

in the Wellesley Guild of Carilloneurs, students who daily play the
earillon
in the
Galen
L.
Stone
tower.
She is a graduate of Highland Park High school.

House

of

Representatives,

ington,

D.

C.

Wash-

�nn

Norman Cousins To Speak
tt

fire Causes $7,000 Wisnaue
To Waukegan Road Building

On World Peace Strategy
Norman

Saturday
unique

Cousins,
Review

editorials

editor
and

on

of

the

noted

for

the

A fire broke out Monday
little past noonin a multiple

ily dwelling
at 2695
Waukegan
avenue. The fire department determined that a defective oil heater

Mt. Holyoke Student To

was the cause of the fire which
sulted
in
damage
amounting

Be Guest of Roommate

problems

of world government
and human
rights, comes to the North Shore
Forum at 8:15 p.m. next Wednesday. He will speak in the North
Shore
Congregation
Israel
auditorium in Glencoe on “A Positive
Strategy for World Peace.”

Miss

Valerie

sophomore

at

Bloomstein,

Mount

Holyoke

a
col-

lege, South Hadley, Mass., will
the
Thanksgiving
Day
guest
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Russell
Estey

Mass.,

Besides his work with the Saturday
Review,
Mr.
Cousins
has
written
several
books,
including
“The
Good
Inheritance,’
‘The
Democratic Chance,” and “A Treasure
of Democracy.”
During
the
war he served as chairman of the

roommate,

Miss

Editorial

there, he also did a documentary
recording of the “Air Life,” broadcasting
from
flying
coal
cars,
transports, and P-47 fighters.

Board,

Overseas

Publi-

At
the
request
of
General
Lucius B. Clay, Mr. Cousins served
as a member of a three-man civil-

ian board to investigate and report
on the status of civil rights
western sectors of Germany.

in the
While

Jane

of

be
of
of

Norwood,

cation Bureau of the Office of War
Information and was accredited to
the Joint Task Force of the atomic
bomb test at Bikini.

parents
Ellen

her

Estey.

The daughter of the junior Max
Bloomsteins
of
Lincoln
avenue
south and the Esteys family will

spend

the

weekend

in

balance

of

New

York

the

at a
fam-

holiday

The second story of the
$7,000.
building, which is part of the John
Ori estate, was demolished.

Reports

Highland Park residents who are

Bike Theft

Mrs. Victor Weil of 203 Beech
street reported to police last Wednesday the theft of a blue and

A former resident of Highland
Park, Mrs. Gerald Reed, left yesterday for Atlanta,
and Mr. Reed have

the

past

Duraproofed
Mothproofed
Carpet Beetle
proofed
¢ Deep-suctioned
e 4-Year Money-back
GUARANTEE
e Costs
less than
applying some less
effective
solution
yourself.

year

after

¢ FREE Moth
Also

cleaned

Duraclean

from

Cantor
of

725

and
St.

white

girls’

model

from

Ravinia

school

bicycle

taken

Stanley Martin
avenue

are

an- —

the birth of their first
last Friday in Highboy,
a
child,
land Park hospital. Mr. Martinis
serving
burban

as cantor of the North
El
Beth
Synagogue

—
a

Suon

©

Sheridan road. Mrs. Martin is the —
former Suzanne Friedman, daugh- ri

and Mrs.

Manistee,

of

grandparents

Benjamin

on Monday.

Mrs.

Johns

‘

nouncing

man

are

Martin

Irving Fried- —
Paternal

Mich.

Rabbi
of

and

Mrs.

Norfolk,

—

Va.

*

|

—

Alen’, Pastry Shop

te)

WEDDING

and PARTY CAKES

OUR SPECIALTY

A
.

628
|

Inspection
and

moving

ny

ter of Mr.

e
e

e

Ga., where she
been living for

their home on Central avenue. Mrs.
Reed was the houseguest of Mrs.
George H. Rowe of Onwentsia avenue during her stay here.

;——Rugs, Upholstery
—

City.

members of the Forum Committee
include Melvin B. Todes of Sheridan
road,
D.
G.
Schneider
of
Ridgewood drive, George L. Weisbard of Lyman court and Samuel
J. Baskin of Moraine road.

reto

Martin

=.
fis)

ROGER

(55

revived,

WILLIAMS

HIGHLAND PARK
HI 2-4334

AVE.

“Just East of Jewel Tea”

ROBT.

if desired.

W.

ce

POLLOCK

Dfld. 444

Co.

©
¥

"
’

jf
Ks
ee
ia
ORs

‘

a
E

he

-any way you figure —
PRICE
‘LOCAL DELIVERED VICK SPECIAL
B
ror THE NEW 1952
ssenger
9-door 6-pa

SpECIAL Sedan
MODEL 48D
(IMustrated)

equipment,

$2246"

accessories,

omy
local taxes, ifi ¢
commun!
i
adjoining
ice.
without not

:
is

st ate and

be+»
sli
nge
ces MAY vary ces Pi
suPIe ie cha
additiona |. Pri
pri
charges- All
J
ng
pi
ip
sh
to

Optional

UMBER ONE item on most anyone’s list

of automobile “musts” is power—the
life and lift of your going.

In this Buick SPECIAL you get a valve-inhead high-compression Fireball 8 Engine

Buick ride features that cost, literally, more

than a million dollars to engineer.
Then there’s style, there’s room, there’s visibility, there’s handling ease—all part of your

travel — all helping to make the difference

that can pour out a wealth of the thrillingest

between good going and great going.

power

But price is very much part of the picture,

you

ever held rein on—more

power

per dollar than you'll find elsewhere.

too— what

you pay for what you get.

Number Two is ride—the way you go—the
comfort and steadiness and luxury of your
travel.

So when you add in the big horsepower rating you get in a Buick, plus the extra thrill

Every Buick has big soft coil springs on each:
wheel to cushion your way—and an unyielding torque-tube that firms and steadies your

When you measure the inches of room, count

ride.

Yet these are just two

of the fifteen

and thrift of its Fireball performance...
up the many hours of comfort through the
years, check off things like durability and
solid satisfaction and high trade-in value...

Two great television events: The TV Football Game of the Week

Kleeburg
1732

First

Thursday, November
5

TETyHe

Street

27, 1952

And when you put this total against the price
of a Buick—you’re going to say, ‘““Man!
That’s great going all the way!
1??

Come in and see us today or tomorrow,
won't you?
Equipment, accessories, trim and models are subject
to change without notice.

every Saturday and Buick Circus Hour every fourth Tuesday.

Buick,

Inc.
HI 2-4800
Page

9

1

�Mr. and Mrs. Bernard

- THANKSGIVING DINNER
AT VILLA MODERNE
. wonderful Turkey Dinner will
be served at the famous Villa for
only $3.25 a person. The menu will
include
Shrimp
Cocktail,
Roast
Vermont
Turkey
and trimmings
(all
you can eat), potatoes, vegetable, salad, luscious dessert and
verage.
Verne
Scott,
popular
ist

will

play

through

the

Wool

Dresses,

Winter

Tweed

Cotton

Skirts

650 N. Western

ave
you
ecorated

versity.

son of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Whitney of Ridge road; Larry Brown

Newey from Dartmouth,
son of
Mrs. Graham
Newey of Central
avenue; David Baum of Harvard,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Alvin H.
Baum

IT’S WINTER WONDERLAND
i
AT GRACE HERBST’S

Adlers

will return

Russell

Whitney

of

Lincoln

avenue

south;

of

Cornell

Sunday.

Jr.

of

university,

Princeton,

son

- Herbst’s
newly
enlarged
shop?
_ They truly portray the spirit of

you'll

find

mveniently
ying

-

delightfully

displayed.

becomes

a joy

Lite?

and

Se AtiopuitedNeo Solo42

Christmas
instead

of a

hore, leisurely shopping here. 563
ie and 565 Lincoln Ave. Winnetka.
WE
MUST GIVE THANKS
FOR TODAY’S BLESSINGS
How

wonderful

on

in

family

is the

this

great

with

an

transporta-

country.

Every

automobile

Americas Most Distinguished New Car

for

pleasure and business. For more
than 50 years Buick has ranked
Ps among the best cars made. Today Buicks are at their best and
ices

put

them

in _

Offers The Most Talked About New Features!

everyone’s

each. See the Buick models at
eeburg
Buick,
1732 First St.

sk

for

a demonstration

at

HI

00.
_ THE

HEART OF AMERICA
IS THE HOME

oy
year homes in this great
and of ours become lovelier, more
beautiful to live in. At the Studio
of Henry L. Barnitz you'll find so
“many carefully chosen Fabrics for

raperies, Slip Covers, Upholstering and the like. Mr. Barnitz to
assist in making your selections.
Also showing
French
which adds
in the house.

a delightful selection
Provincial
Furniture
charm to every room
912 Linden Ave. Win-

netka.

CHRISTMAS SHOPPING
FOR EVERYONE
At

Edith

Saletra’s

interesting

shop

are gifts for the fastidious
7omen and men whom you remember, and for children as well. For

EXCITING

the home is occasional furniture,
pottery, glass, China, lamps, ete.
;

e

loveliest

en, also

games,

Still time
7

dolls

to

istmas

have

Cards

St. Johns Ave.
us
THE DAYS
N

When

WE

you’ve

books,

the

ever

and

toys.

GROW

REACH

739

winter’s in the air, we must

most

delicious

Pizza

and

spa-

ghetti. Now located at her family’s
‘popular “Skokie Gardens” on SkoKie and County Line. Everything
cooked to order. Eat there or take
out orders.
DOGS

EXCITING ENGINE! America’s

New,

most powerful design . . De Soto
Fire Dome V-8 has the eighty 160
horsepower engine.
. produces
more power per drop of gas!

EXCITING NEW BACK! New,
longer, swept-back fenders ... new,
Sweep-around one-piece rear window ... new, large combination tail,
stop, and back-up lights . . . new,
wider, lower rear deck... over 40%
; {| more luggage space inside!

COLD:

DECEMBER

enjoy a hearty meal of Pizza! Rosie
Fantozzi, well known here, makes
the

FRONT!

chrome fender mouldings... new,
wide, one-piece curved windshield!

attractive

personalized.

NEW

wider, lovelier grille . . . new AirVent Hood .. . new, glamorous

1SEE

160

H.P.

EXCITING
EXCITING NEW INTERIORS!
Luxurious new upholstery . . distinctive new door panel... beautiful new grained instrument panel...
all harmonizing with body colors.

FIRE

DOME

V-8

and

FEATURES!

Full

Power Steering . . . makes parking
easy as dialing a phone! Power
Brakes ... give faster, easier stops!
Fluid-Torque Drive... lets you
start

like

a

shot!

See

the

Distin-

guished ’53 - Soto soon!

POWERMASTER

SIX

ARE THANKFUL
EVERY DAY

en you

send

your

Dog

to board

at Butterworth Kennels, he is deep-

ly grateful.

There

they

have

all

le comforts .known to the Dog
orld, plus kind care and attention.

2810

Park

-7. Sun.

Ave.

2-5.

HI

Closed

2- 1352.

“STE

Eton

an

Rye

Daily

holidays.

Rath Wahofell

HIGHLAND
1914

First Street

PARK

MOTOR

of

Mr.

and Mrs. Robert Brown of Lincoln
avenue; Martin Rosenthal of Dartmouth, son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel
R. Rosenthal of Baldwin avenue;
and Douglas Keare of Dartmouth,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Spencer R.
Keare of Linden avenue.

seen
the
beautifully
windows
at
Grace

Christmas. Gifts large and small
for those important people on your

m

for Colorado Springs, ‘Colo., wh
they will spend Thanksgiving. The."

ford, Conn., son of Mrs. D. J. Zimmerman
of
Cary
avenue;
Tony

Drive Carefully — The Life You Save
May Be Your Own!

giving.

Tu

New York City, formerly of Highland Park, are entertaining their
son, Joel, and his Highland Park
friends who are attending schools
in the East for Thanksgiving dinner. Joel is attending Brown uni- The other boys are Hugh Zimmerman of Trinity college in Hart-

Lake Forest 2168

din-

ner hour and all evening. This will
be
a happy, gala way to spend
Tr

and

‘Mrs.
lane left last

Davis of of bale

SALES,

INC.
HI 2-0580

�S
U
O
L
A
J
Q.

What

are

bi

f
A

Q.

By
How

whom

Glass louvered
windows.

Jalousies?

are

and
they

where

"

t

&gt; ey

:

Hid
BIPh

‘

oF

aleoe

¢
th

rt

2

°

By

Q.

x

oe wnt

¥

are

they

Weathermaster

America’s
jalousies.

made?

windows

oldest

with

built-in

Jalousie

and

Co.

finest

of

screens

or

Miami,

storm

Fla.

. . .

of

glass

manufacturer

To enclose breezeways and porches . . . giving
extra rooms at a nominal cost.
Jalousies furnish light, shelter, ventilation, beauty

used?

you
and

= |

add valueto your home.

ni
¢

KUM

ORDER YOUR

F. HA.
APPROVED

JALOUSIES NOW

*

NO
ICE, COLD AND SNOW
THIS WINTER

GLASS LOUVERED WINDOWS AND DOORS
Fresh, cooling air in summer and snug weather
protection
in the winter.
Weathermaster
“‘ialousie’’ windows and doors give you both
for

a

DRAFT-FREE VENTILATION even
during bad weather through adjustable glass louvers that let air in,
keep rain out!

53
S22
‘5 ox
2

Simple to clean, too.
“SUBURBAN” BEAUTY

describes
the trim, spacious look Weathermaster windows and daors give to
old and new

VO

s
SIs
es
5
at

INSTALLATION

*

life-time!

PROTECTION
from prowlers and
extreme weather with tight-closing
louvers, interchangeable screen and
storm sash.
EASY OPERATION with roto operator that adjusts 4’ or 5¥2"' width
louvers to any desired position :..

IMMEDIATE

DOWN

en

KEEP OUT THE

MONEY

0

E

S

w

T

i

F

R

E

Fr

Mi

A

T

FE

PHONE STare 2-8350

JALOUSIE
WINDOWS
made
with
heavy
aluminum
frames,
precisiondesigned
aluminum
hardware,
weatherstripping.
JALOUSIE
DOORS
have
weathertreated
hardwood
frames,
precision
designed aluminum hardware.

Call us for
prices and sizes

c

|

Ask for Jack Mills

Choice of clear or
obscure glass louvers..

[Mail

Coupon Today

Weathermaster Jalousie Co.,
188 W. Randolph St., Chicago
Please send
Jalousies.

Weathermailer
188

W.

Randolph

St.,

Jarousie
Chicago

Co.
1,

Illinois

more

information

|
1, Illinois
about

;
Weathermaster

�Ode

:

*

.

eH : ‘i aA

ETC

4 7

|

La

MAE

ce, re

ue

i A

r ie

. ay

Se

aa

es aS

ee

:

. Leas *

"i rae

one

y

m F vf

Heng nh

si

Ber

ae

, Lary

Pembroke Representative
Will be at High School
For Consultations
Miss

ARE YOU
PAYING MORE?

sions

Alberta
officer

women’s

co-ordinate
university,

Park
}|

Island,

High

Shore

will

school

admiscollege,

college

in

Providence,
visit

and

Highland

other North

schools on Monday

and Tues-

oy
Miss

2
HOUSE

Brown,

Pembroke

Brown _
Rhode

TELEVISION

F.

of

CALLS

Brown

will

school

officials

dents

on

and

consult

with

interested

stu-

admission

of Pembroke

requirements

college.

NOW

|

Are

SUBURBAN
Including

first

half

hour’s

labor.

You

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Models in the recent fashion show given at the annual
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ic

pela

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velvet

WAGON

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y

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Mrs. James Siljestrom shows a black

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d

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EXTRA

Mrs. Hoogstraal vis-

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here

| spent

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of

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for

months

/returning to Cairo.
|Mrs. Finis Hilt of
Go

the

Viste re
einke)
|
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,

td

black

Casual shop.
Don Cascarano wears a lounging robe from Art
Olson’s men’s shop and Karen Anderson wears a tucked dressup frock from The Style shop.

¢.)

IN YOUR
SAVINGS

halter and

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the

last

before

Her mother,
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week

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1952 CHRISTMAS
CHECKS

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a hobby, reading, visiting,
club work, learning music
or art!
Use it for ANYTHING but washing

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clothes .. . we do that job

better than you, anyway!

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the

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Club

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Waukegan

Ave.,

J. W.
Jesse

This

Week

Dant

Bonded

Moore

Straight

a
|
|

Yee

eI EET TE

Highwood
Thursday,

November

pA Sti
fd
Saks
Beds a=,

tie

27, 1952

4 Ste
at
2 tied Aetec)

os De Ho
cs ee a

AS

a
ean

�Story Of Church
Music Is Told By

“Church Music—Our Heritage,” the
presented

second

time,

by

request

for

was

written

by

Muriel
P. Henschen,
club
president, and given by club members.
Selections were taken from important periods in the history of
church music. A choral quintette
from the club opened the program
singing “The Lord’s Prayer,” set
to early Christian
plain song or
chant.
The

choral

divided

ensemble

to present

an

was

next

example

of

antiphonal singing, where one choir
repeats the chant of the other, customary
in
early
church
choirs.
Velma
Sonderman
sang the solo

part

with

the

chorus

descant,

the

hymn

plain

A history of church music was
presented
by the Highland
Park
Music
club
at the November
19
meeting held in the Highland: Park
Presbyterian
church.
Entitled,

the

of

sang
Ghost,”

HP Music Club

program,

ample

in

the

ex-

based

and

on

the

choir

“Come,

Holy

ancient

Greek

song.

Miss

period

of

church

music,

when
instrumental
music
held
sway, was exemplified by Evelyn
Dills’ two
violin
solos of SaintSaens’ “The Swan,” and Massenet’s
“Meditation” from “Thais.”
The folk tunes that found their
way into church hymns were expressed in the singing of the German hymn “A Mighty Fortress Is
Our God,” by Martin Luther.
Muriel P. Henschen was soprano
soloist with the chorus in the singing of “With Verdure Clad,’ from
Haydn’s oratorio “The
Creation.”
The program closed with her solo

Barbara

Miss

Clemence

is

her

studies

at the

of Indiana, Bloomington,
is a senior.

Miss

daughter

of the

ences

Port

of

LeRoy

Mr.

Mrs.

L.

road,

has

where

the academic
rence
college
for scholastic
the past year.

W.

she

is the

Clem-

road.

or

in

A
for

Minor
the

by

Cesar

church

music

who planned the program. Mrs. D.
G.
Schneider
presided
over
the
meeting.
:

hostesses

for

the

of

Moore,

of

C.
been

named

to

honor roll at Lawin Appleton,
Wis.,
achievement during
An average of 2.25

on

the

basis

of

a

3.

IMMACULATE
CONCEPTION CHURCH
Deerfield

and
HI
Msgr.

Green Bay Roads
2-0202
Rt. Rev.
Joseph P. Morrison
Pastor
Rev. Donald
B. Runkle
Rev. Bernard
E. Burns
MASSES
Sundays—6:15, 7:30, 9:00, 10:00,
11:00 and 12 noon
Holy Days—6 a
8:00, 9:00,

Weekdays—6:15, 8:15
CONFESSIONS
Saturdays,
Eves. of First Fridays and
Holy Days 4:00 and 7:30 p.m.

MAGIC SCISSORS
Beauty Salon

program was Mrs. Henry C. Howes,

Assisting

daughter

high, is required for honors.
Miss Moore is a senior at Lawrence and a member of Alpha Chi
Omega sorority.

Preceding the church music program, Doris Finch, organist, played

Chorale

better,

Honors

Moore,

and

of “The Lord’s Prayer,” in the
more modern version by Malotte.

Franck.
Narrator

Gains

Jill

Sheridan

holiday

Clemence

Clinton

Moore

Miss

en-

University

joying a brief Thanksgiving
from

“Lo, How a Rose E’er Blooming,”
by Praetonius was used to show how
the polyphonic chorale later held
sway in sacred music.
Organ and chorus of the Music
club took part in the presentation
of Bach’s ‘Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring,”
showing
the
intellectual
strides that music took. The more

frivolous

Holiday From Studies

HI 2-3814

1893

Hair styling should

tea

which
followed
were
Mrs.
Kenneth Lacy, Mrs. Frank Nelson, Mrs.
Virgil
Musser,
Mrs.
John
Man-

mean

Sheridan

Road

creating ...

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TARNOW

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Thursday,

November

27,

1952

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Page

13

�Centuries’ Old Tradition
Brings Families Together

Expressing your individual taste through
distinctive “Flower Fashions”.

More than 300 years ago the Pilgrim Fathers celebrated the

first Thanksgiving
Mrs. Julian Kramer and Mr. William Underwood

traditional

announce the opening, December 1, 1952 of

FLOWER

in the same

INC.

1821 St. Johns Avenue, Highland Park, Illinois
Telephone: Highland Park 2-8440, 8441

Join our “Flowers of the Month Club”

Drive Carefully — The Life You Save
May Be Your Own!

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Because International offers a complete
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©

wll

ib

na a
ae
OF
SS

Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Carlson of
Glenview avenue will drive to Wisconsin
for the weekend
to visit
Mrs. Carlson’s sister. Their daughters Sally, 14, and Nancy, 12, will
accompany them.

In

130,

142,

154,

and

Thanksgiving
ior

172-in.

wheelbases.

oN

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REILAND
1415 Waukegan

and

Road, Northbrook

BREE,

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Mr.

Northbrook

74

"Standard of the Highway”
14

here in

will be the

recall

that

other

ago.
Diane; and the Alfred Blomquists
of Pierce road.
Airman 3rd class Raymond Cimbalo, who is.
stationed
at
Scott
Field, Ill., is enjoying his Thanksgiving
turkey
at home
with
his
family
at 1287 Ridgewood
drive.

turkey

with

the

sen-

Berning.

The Lester Peterson family of
St. Johns avenue, will be the dinat

of Mrs. Peterson’s parand
Mrs.
Eggert Carl-

their

home

on

Onwentsia

road.

Mrs.

Grace

avenue
Mrs.
Berning’s
brother,
Robert
Trimble, has returned to his home
in Amarillo, Tex., after a 10-day
visit here as the Bernings’ guest.
Mr. Trimble was recently released
from
the air force
after
nearly
four years service.
He was feted

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Berning

at

Coale

traveled

of

to

Oakwood

Peoria

where

she is spending Thanksgiving with
her son and daughter-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. H. Kelso Coale, and her
three
grandchildren.
Mrs.
George
Schneider

of

St.

Louis is visiting in Highland Park
this week as the houseguest of her
a sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and

party
attended
by his numerous
friends in Highland Park.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Selby of
County Line road are entertaining
Mrs. Selby’s brother and sister-inlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Tumblin of
Knoxville,
Tenn., during the
Thanksgiving holidays.
Mr. and Mrs. Willard Ewing of
Lakeside place and their two children Scott and Lynn are driving
to
Milwaukee
for
Thanksgiving.
They will spend the weekend at the
home of Mrs. Ewing’s mother, Mrs.

Mrs. Marvin Cochran of Huntington lane.
The Marvin M. Cohns of Lakeside
place
are
enjoying
their
Thanksgiving turkey in Chicago to-

Walter

Mr. and Mrs. George J. Benedek
Jr. of Old Elm road and their two
children, Gretchen and Georgann,
are
spending
Thanksgiving
with

Kauwertz.

Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Farrell of
Northland
avenue
will spend
Thanksgiving
with
Mrs.
Farrell’s
family in Rogers Park. Their children, Susy, 6, and John, 2 months,
will accompany them.
Four generations will be present
tomorrow
at the family
Thanksgiving dinner
given
by Mr.
and
Mrs. Robert A. Churchill of Forest
avenue.
The Churchills’ children,
Bill and Jill, will welcome
their
maternal
great-grandmother,
Mrs.
Katherine
Kuehn,
and their maternal
grandfather, William Pfef-

fer, both

Tescoee Ure CG
Page

children

ner guests
ents, Mr.

by

"

as we

Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Earhart
of Krenn avenue will take part in
a family celebration of Thanksgiv- Mr. Cimbalo is the son of Mr. and
ing.
Mrs.
Earhart’s
father,
Dr. Mrs. Frank Cimbalo and the grandall
Harry C. Doyle, and her brother, son of Mrs. Charles Cimbalo,
drive
address.
Robert Doyle
are
coming
from of the Ridgewood
Chicago to join them. They are to Mr. and Mrs. Louis Marko of St.
be dinner guests of Mr. Earhart’s Johns avenue will also join their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ear- nephew and his family for the day.
hart of St. Johns avenue.
Mr. and Mrs. John R. Clements
Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. E. Carl- of St. Johns avenue are in Milwauson of Ridge road, and their two kee today where
they
and their
sons Bobby and Billy will spend children,
Thomas
and
April,
are
Thanksgiving day with Mrs. Carl- the dinner guests of Mrs. Clements’
son’s aunt, Mrs. Roy Garwood
of parents, the Thomas G. Adamses.
Chicago.
Mrs. Marie Casagrande of Laurel
avenue will be hostess today at a
dinner in her home
for her two
daughters and their families. Her
guests will be Mr. and Mrs. Tony
Mr. and Mrs. Frank V. Cargill of
Vole of Ravinia and their daughter Donna Jean, and Mr. and Mrs. Dato
avenue
and
their children,
Albert Guseldo of Sherwood For- Billy and Barbara, plan to spend
weekend
with
est with their two sons, Davey Al- the Thanksgiving
len and Victor Gene.
friends in Milwaukee.
Miss Jennie R. Carleton of Park
Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Berning of Ridge road are in North- avenue, accompanied by her sister,
will enjoy the holiday
in
brook today with their two chil- Maud,
dren, Sherry and Becky, enjoying Elm Grove, Wis.

Double-duty ! With a combination stock rack and
grain body, the L-160 series is a real favorite with .

—

and

son

farmers.

manner

with all the festive trimmings

turkey

center of attention as parents
Day of Thanks so many years

FASHIONS

Deliveries anywhere

much

Highland Park are doing today. Families gathered from near
and far away to attend church services last night, or this mornLater today the
ing, just as the Pilgrims did at Plymouth.

of Chicago.

Their

pater-

nal grandmother, Mrs. Guy Churchill, also of Chicago, is expected
to be present.
The Churchills have invited several other relatives from Highland

Park to join them for the holiday—
Dr. and Mrs. Jack K. Churchill
and
their
children,
John
and

day with Mrs.
brother-in-law,
ins.

the

senior

cago.

Mrs.

The

the

Old

joining

the

The
of

Mrs.

Mrs.

Elm
F.

avenue

Connolly’s

in

Bess

Coleman

address,
for

the

is

day.

Connolly
are

Chi-

maternal

road

Benedeks

Charles

Arbor

Benedek

children’s

grandmother,

of

Cohn’s sister and
the Bernard Rub-

family

entertaining

parents,

Mr.

and

Mrs. F. C. Fulham, and her brother, Richard,
of Waukegan
during today’s festivities.
Mr.
and
Mrs. Fulham will leave shortly for
England where they will reside for
a year before
retiring
to
their
Floria home.
Among the guests assembling today in the Gilbert Conover home
on St. Johns avenue, will be Mrs.
_sister-inand
brother
Conover’s

law,

F. Ken38)

Mr. and Mrs. John
(Continued on page

Thursday, November 27, 1952
eM
Ba

Fis

eAYe
DANTE
othe sa

nak

Aaetee Botex
Of 55 ea

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SHORE,

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562 Lincoln Ave. — Winnetka, Ill. — Winnetka 6-3070
Thursday,

November

27,

1952

| Page

15

�'

M

ost | y

for

W

OTN CTD

Mrs. Byron C. Karzas

Whess ie

Cegayenents

Weddings — Cab Vas
Mrs.

i Prikl, ;

Engagement ay

Neil James

Nichols

Sold

The engagement of their daughter, Ann Carolyn, to Meredith E.
Ostrom, son of Dr. and Mrs. Meredith
L. Ostrom
of Rock
Island,

Ill., is announced

this week

by Dr.

and Mrs. George G. Postels of Kincaid street.
Miss Postels is a senior student
at Beloit college.
Her fiance, an
alumnus
of Augustana
college, is
presently doing graduate work in
geology at the University of Illinois.
The young people have not as
yet set their wedding date.

Lt. James
Pays

Wonnell

Brief Visit

Here

Lt.
(j.g.) James
Edward
Wonnell visited his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Kent W. Wonnell of Dean ave-

nue,

for a few

days

prior

to leav-

ing November
16 for San Diego,
Calif.,
Naval
Air
station
to receive his orders.
Lt. Wonnell, who was in service
during World War II, has been stationed in Columbus since his recall into active air corps duty. His

engagement

to

Miss

daughter
of Mr.
Francis
King
of

Susan

King,

and
Mrs.
John
Lancaster,
has

been announced. The Wonnells attended parties in honor of the
young people when they were in
Ohio recently.
No date has been decided upon
for the wedding, since Lt. Wonnell
expects to be in service 18 to 24
months longer.

Photo

The

former

Diane

Stathas,

daughter

of Mr.

by

Koehne

and

Mrs.

Pericles P. Stathas of Ravine terrace, who became the bride
of Byron C. Karzas November 8 in Trinity Episcopal church.
The bridegroom is the son
A reception followed at Exmoor.
of Mrs. George Smainis of Chicago and the late Andrew KarThe couple returned from Jamaica this week.
eas:

Mrs. Pollen’s Rink

othe lions

Winner In Heather’s
Three-Day Bonspiel
Mrs.

Frank

the

Willie

off

last

skipped

Pollen’s

Brown

Bonspiel,

Friday

against

by Mrs.

John

Thi

rink

won

played
a _ rink

S. Morrissy

of
Belle
avenue.
The
three-day
event of the Heathers of the Chicago
Curling
club
opened
last

Tuesday
than

at

20 teams

the

clubhouse.

took

On the winning
Darwin Curtis of
Perry Pennington
and

Mrs. Walter

Mrs.

More

part.

rink were Mrs.
Winnetka, Mrs.
of Kenilworth,

Selck of Glenview.

Morrissy’s

rink

was

made

(Continued on page 23)

pledged

Sigma

Chi

fraternity and is a member of the
Naval ROTC unit at Purdue.
The

Krafts

are

also

expecting

Mrs. Kraft’s
brother,
James
R.
Preston and Mrs. Preston of Jackson, Miss., to be here for the holiday weekend.
Young Judy
Kraft
lis having a houseguest this weekend, too—a summer camp friend,
Miss Carol Meyers of Milwaukee,

Wis.

Page

16

The

3 am.

to

Whatheral Clubs

aise

Se

Ravinia

originally

was

party

scheduled

for the

North-

in time.
Eddie

Corwith Clan Gathers Today
For Thanksgiving Dinner
Mr.
Sr.

and

of

Mrs.

Nathan

Kimblewood

tertaining

the

Corwith

lane

are

members

of

entheir

immediate family today at Thanksdinner

Mr.

Corwith’s

their

of

Linden

children,

Diane,

avenue

and

Van

and

Debra.

The senior Corwiths will entertain a group of their friends this
Sunday
afternoon
in their new
ranch-style home.

Frank C. Randolphs Are
In Nassau for 10 Days
Mr. and Mrs. Frank C. Randolph
of Waverly
road
are
spending
Thanksgiving day many miles from
their home. They flew down to
Nassau, in the Bahamas, last Saturday for a 10-day holiday.

Berger

and

his

orchestra

will provide the music for dancing
and
special
entertainment
under
the direction of E. Drew Gourley
and Mrs. Robert Bartholomay will
include a talented group of Weatheral members.
Mrs. William Hammond heads a
committee of 20 workers who plan
to transform the Village house into
a “Pigalle” scene. A late ham and
turkey buffet supper will be served
to members and their guests. All
reservations are to be made as soon

as possible

by calling

Robert

Ear-

church.

Dr.

Nichols

and

his bride

With
Jour

their
de

annual

Fetes

successfully
bers

of the

cago,

have

of

benefit,
last

behind
Junior

them,
League

already

the

Saturday,

memof

made

Chi-

plans

for their Christmas meeting which
is to be held this year on December 2.
Charles

James,

designer

of wom-

en’s fashions, will speak on “Problems of Design,” at the meeting,
scheduled
for
Fortnightly.

10:30

Reservations

for

luncheon must
noon Monday.

be

a.m.
the

made

in

the

buffet

by

12

Highland Park members of the
League
planning
to
attend
the
Christmas
meeting
Tuesday
include Mrs. Buckingham W. Gunn

of

Gray

avenue,

Mrs.

S.

Parker

Mrs.
Gunn
was
a_
volunteer
saleswoman at Tuesday’s Christmas
Book
sale in the home
of Mrs.

best

costumes.

be at home

at

1724

Day at Lake Forest

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mueller of
Marion avenue were welcomed into
the club as.active members at last
month’s Hard Times party. After a
treasure
hunt,
via
Glencoe,
Orphans of the Storm, Ravinia and
other
surrounding
points,
the
group found themselves assembling
on McGovern
lodge
Elks
at the
street. Mr. and Mrs. William Martin were first to solve the clues and
were rewarded with a free admission ticket to the party. John Forrester and Mrs. John Lehman won

the

will

Gamma Phi Alans
Celebrate Founder’s

Johnston

for

Photo

McGovern street after Saturday.

hart.

prizes

Studio

The marriage of Miss Glenna Ebersole, daughter of Dr.
and Mrs. H. Glenn Ebersole of Monmouth, IlIl., to Dr. Neil
James Nichols, son of Dr. C. Vigo Nichols of Wade street, was
solemnized
November 15 at the Monmouth Presbyterian

Junior Leaguers’
Christmas Meeting
ls Set for Tuesday

western Country club but remodeling there will not be finished

Corwiths

freshman in the school of engineerhas

3 ti

mother, Mrs. Marcia H. Corwith of
Wheeling, Ill.; the junior Nathan

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Kraft of
111 Lakewood are expécting their
son, Kenneth Jr., home for Thanksgiving from Purdue university in
LaFayette,
Ind.,
where
he
is a
He

oe

Hawkins

Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Maxwell of
Highmoor road are host and hostess
to
two
visitors
from
South
Bend,
Ind., Mr. and
Mrs.
Frank
Willis.
The Willises expect to remain
in Highland
Park
through
the weekend.

Invitations are in the mail for Weatheral club’s New Year’s
eve dance to be held at the Ravinia Village house from 9 p.m.

giving

Kenneth Krafts To Have
Houseguests This Weekend

ing.

Year

Out

Have Holiday Guests

William

Jr.

of

Roslyn

the

Junior

League

The book shop, located in Lake
Forest,
is the
Chicago
League’s
only permanent fund-raising project. All proceeds go toward the
support
of the League’s
welfare
projects, the Child Guidance clinic
at
Children’s
Memorial
hospital
and the Nursery Center Counseling
service.

Lake
County
Alumnae
chapter
Gamma
Phi
Beta
celebrated

Founder’s

day

recently

with

an

annual
spaghetti supper at Lake
Forest college given for the active
chapter at the school.
Mrs, Charles Close of Clavey court was a
member of the committee in charge
of preparing the dinner.
Mrs. W. A. Gray of Libertyville,
president
of the alumnae
group,
presented the active chapter with
a silver tea service.
The college
girls provided
the
entertainment

for

the

tional
The

evening,

including

tradi-

singing.
Lake county group
(Continued on page

will omit
23)

Thanksgiving Dinner Guests

circle.

K. V. Volckens, Winnetka,

sponsored
by
Book shop.

of

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Robert

of Hazel avenue,

W.

Heck

and their children,

Billy
and
Honey,
will
spend
Thanksgiving day at the home of
Mr. and
Mrs.
of Ivy lane.

Ralph

H.

Mawbey

Journey to Cincinnati
of

Mr. and Mrs. Alfred
Braeside road and

John

and

Paul,

holiday
weekend
Ohio.
They
will

will

B. Gardner
their sons,

spend

the

in
Cincinnati,
be visiting the

home of Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Bartlett, formerly of Highland, Park.
Thursday,

November

27, 1952

�, rriage

.

Or,

Lohe

,

ad

Ct

Mr.

and

Roda

Mrs.

Walter

E.

Meier-

hoff of Orchard lane announce the
marriage last
Saturday
of
their
daughter,
Virginia
Ann,
to Carl
Roscher, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Roscher of Deerfield road.
The
Rev.
Lester
Laubenstein,
former minister of Bethany Evangelical United
Brethren
church,

returned

to

Highland

Park

from

Trinity church in Joliet, to officiate at the 8 p.m. ceremony, assisted
by the Rev. A. P. Johnson, present minister.

Mrs. E. Harlan Amick
Bay road, soloist during

SN

Sank:

mony,

sang

“At

of Green
the cere-

Dawning,”

“Ich

Liebe Dich,” and “O, Perfect Love.”
Miss
Meierhoff’s gown of white
satin

and

lace

was

fashioned

with

a full skirt and train. Her satin
tiara, embroidered in pearls, held
in place a fingertip net veil, and
she

carried

split

white

a

bridal

bouquet

carnations

of

centered

with a white orchid.
Miss Janis Wessling of Glencoe
avenue, the
maid
of honor,
and
Mrs.
Charles
Heinzelmann
of
Prairie View and Miss Ann Hecketsweiler of
Second
street,
who
served as bridesmaids, wore identically styled
floor-length
gowns
made
with shoulder capes.
Miss
Wessling’s dress was emerald green
and the bridesmaids’ dresses were
in gold. All attendants carried yellow carnations.
Douglas Dever of Sheridan road
was best man for
Mr.
Roscher.
Ushers were Charles Heinzelmann
and E. Harlan Amick.
Both
mothers
wore crepe
evening
gowns,
Mrs.
Meierhoff’s
in
royal blue and Mrs. Roscher’s in
wine color.
Their
corsages
were
of white Amazon lilies.

Wl. y “Wrman’

Chih

A trained observer, Deane Dickason is his own photographer.
He
has been a city editor, radio news
analyst,
a
foreign
correspondent

and publicity director

and lecturer

on seventeen
world
cruises.
His
recent color films, “Down
Singa-

pore

Way,”

were

released

After

and

“Beautiful

by Warner

World

War

II

Bali”

bros.

he

went

to

India where he acted as India correspondent for Pathe
and _ Paramount
news
reels, producing
“There
is No
India,’
and
other
films.
Later he flew to Egypt to

conclude
eant

production

of the

his

“Pag-

Nile.”

*
The

of

*

Collectors’

*
Study

group

will

meet at 10:30 a.m. when Mrs. David
Sanders,
chairman,
presents
Mrs.
Meyrich R. Rogers, more familiarly known as Helen Mitchell, in her
fifth appearance before the group.
Her talk will be centered on English and American furniture. It is
entitled “Antique
or
Antiqued.”
Miss Mitchell has spent 10 years
in decorative arts at the Art Institute of Chicago.

*
*
*
Woman’s club members will gather for luncheon at 12 noon. Mrs.
Kenneth

man,

B.

has

Lacy,

luncheon

announced

that

chair-

reserva-

tions
may
be
made
with Mrs.
Franklin V. Nelson, HI 2-3337, or
Mrs. Frank Zipoy, HI 2-2540.

known

appeared

November

14

that

Mrs.

C.

H.

Michigan

Michigan

State

university

is a senior. Miss Howard

member

of

Kappa

Alpha

STAG

where

is a
Theta

sorority.

The eye-catching,

Clnideias
have a son or

a sweetheart in the ser. vice?
Send him a portrait of

yourself or of the family.

| Percy H. Prior,
i}
PHOTOGRAPHY

Jr.

as

so-

5 at 2 p.m.

in the

Chicago, gift wrapping stylist, to
conduct
a demonstration
entitled
“Gift
Wrapping
Magic.”
Miss
‘Seguine
will show
how
to wrap
attractively packages of any shape
and size, and
will place special

cial

HI 2-4203.
Other members of the
alumnae from the Highland Park
area include Mrs. R. Bryan Mundell of Blackhawk road, Mrs. Ro-

memorial

broadcast.

After making her home in Highland Park she became soprano soloist in the Highland Park Presbyterian church and is now director
of the Highland Park Choral ensemble and president of the Highland Park Music club.

Tea will be served after the program.

feated season last Saturday agai

an all-star team made up of play:
picked from teams all along
North Shore.
re
Guest Day tea.
Highland
Parkers
on
the
Coun
Mrs. James L. Bowen Jr. of Winnetka, program chairman, has ar- try Day team included Gay Stirli
ranged for Helen West Seguine of Beth Jacobs and Nancy Clinton,
They and their parents, Mr.
Mrs. Louis Stirling of Roger

Mrs.

Theodore

L.

Rehn

of

Belle

avenue, and Mrs. Glenn Harris and
Mrs. Dudley Dewey of. Deerfield.
Tea will be served after the program.
Mrs. Myron G. Stolp of

Duane Clintons of Dale avenue, at-

tended the annual
at the school last

The

North

hockey banquet
Monday.

Shore’s

Exclusive —

Order-By-Mail Sentob
THE

\

Petal 0.
BOX

388,

EVANSIJON,

Gift Catalog

ILLINOIS

Free on Request!

Evanston, president of the group,
will be among those greeting members and their guests.

Lt. George Charney, USAF,
Home For Holiday Weekend
Lt. George Charney, member
the United States Air Force,

of
is

spending the holiday weekend with
his parents, the George J. Char-

neys of. Valley road. Lt. Charney
has been stationed at Castle Air
Force base in Mercedes, Calif., but
will

be

transferred

in Omaha
his leave.

parking

when

he

directly

to

an

air

base

has completed

North!

NS« co.

...and

4 worda—

december...

. with

its winter

winds, and excited
children . . . Santa
Claus and Christmas
gifts.
You'll enjoy The
Style Shop’s children’s clothing values more than ever
in December.

|

Girls

thru

infant

pre-teen

Boys infant thru
size 10.

in our exciting "hholiday collection!
Long or short, frothy-full
or siren-slim, the dress you’re

dreaming of awaits you at
Stevens— come see us today!

* FOR

anca.
Wil

liams avenue, Mr. and Mrs. Wy:
Jacobs of Lakeside place and

bert J. Christopher of Melody lane,

Sizes:

formal you
is here—

Do you

concerts

December

Chi Omega chapter house, Northwestern university campus, for a

beau-catching

want to wear |

Sas

many

meet

THE

of
of

No matter what you want to buy
or sell you’ find the Want-Ad section your best market place.

in

North Shore Country Day abhi
hockey team completed an un

STOP

| Lakeside place, will be home for
. the Thanksgiving weekend from
she

of

Chicago-North Shore alumnae of
Chi Omega have been invited to

Stevens formals

State U.

N
Miss Jean Howard, daughter
| Mr. and Mrs. Carl G.. Howard

circles

Team

then comes

LINES!

Miss Jean Howard Home

_ From

musical

Day's

Undefeated

emphasis on Christmas wrapping.
Reservations for the Guest Day
tea may be made with Mrs. Robert
A. Churchill of Forest avenue at

STE

Among the parties honoring the
bride prior to her marriage were a
shower November 5 at Miss Wessling’s house, given by the attend-

Hemple of Winnetka gave at home.
Mr. and Mrs. Meierhoff gave the
bridal dinner at home Friday night,
after the rehearsal.

the

On. any

loist with the Bombay Symphony
orchestra. At the time of Gandhi’s death she was asked by the
government of India to do a spe-

CHAS.A.

arrived home from Japan in August, after seven months of duty in
Korea. He received his discharge
early in September.

in

Chicago, Boston, Washington, D.C.,
and Bombay, India. In India she

bride will live at 933 Atlantic avenue, Waukegan.
The bridegroom,
a former corporal with the army,

ants and Mrs. Emich, and a shower

2

The afternoon program begins at
12:45 when Mrs. Irving Schur, music chairman, will present Muriel
Henschen, lyric soprano, in a program of songs. Mrs. Henschen is

Store Hours: 10 to 5:30 Free

When they return from a wedding trip,” Mr. Roscher
and _ his

on

Dec.

Deane Dickason, lecturer, will address the Highland Park
Woman’s club on Tuesday afternoon and will show spectacular natural color films of the oldest country in existence. His
subject will be Egypt’s “Pageant of the Nile.” Mrs. Clinton
Fritsch, president of the club, will preside at the 2 p.m. meeting.

orth
Chi nr Alumni
To Give Tea Dec. 5

CHILDREN

Open Friday Evenings ‘Til 9 P.M.
And All Day eet
ae Central Ave.

�2 we
ae

‘Miss Meitus Home
For The Holiday
Miss Lila Meitus arrived here
Tuesday to spend the Thanksgiving
holidays with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert B. Meitus of Ravine
drive. Miss Meitus is a freshman

student at Cornell university, Itha-

*

THD

neal
er

:

NS

sou .

Porges

Biltmore
ing spot

need to do is give us the picand

Miss

In New

York

is staying

at the

hotel, a favorite gatherof college students.

select the

card design you want. Prompt
service on all orders.

Winnetka Camera Shop

730 Elm St.

1617

Glenview

Rd.

GLenview

4-4279

Please

Breakfast-Matinee

Highland

Park’s

Settlement
Christmas

nesday,

is

meeting

at 11

December

decoration

W.

Wed-

home

Jones,

2320

Settlement
board
members
in
Highland Park have been knitting
and sewing on these gifts for the
Over-70 group all during the past
year.

George

Roswell

P.

for letters and

F. Fiedoral
bureau,

some

“Narcotics”

wipe

out

T.B.

en-

Since this is a busy time of
the year for all of us and the
T.B. Seals arrive early let’s
not forget to use them.
Our
remittance will aid and encourage those who work to
conquer T.B.

Gsell

W.

Mc-

Swazey

and

Junior Auxiliary
To Hear Narcotics
Joseph

&amp;

Co.

—Pharmacists—

SDE

a

Members
will
devote
most
of
the
meeting
to placing
wrapped
gifts into the gay, transparent bags
which will be taken to the Chicago settlement house for the 90
members of the Over-70 group.

Prevention

ai

a.m.

3, in the

packages while our contribution helps fight this disease
that has plagued man down
through the ages. Perhaps by
this yearly support we may
day

planning

Harry J. VanOrnum. Mrs. VanOrnum is president of the Highland
Park Settlement group.

The colorful T.B. Seals have
become a part of our Christmas

Northwestern

group

Sweeney,

Don’t Forget

Earl W.

SC

Christmas Meeting

Mesdames

tirely.

‘Whee Sensational

To Pack Gifts At

Luncheon at the Christmas meeting will be served by the following co-hostesses:

Winnetka 6-0929

Glenview Camera Shop

Friends of Drama

Are Planning a

of Mrs.
Charles
Linden avenue.

at Northwestern,

as part of each card. All you
negative

X a

A Highland Park visitor in New
York this Thanksgiving day is Miss
Adrienne Porges, daughter of the
Edward
D.
Porges
of
Oakmont
road.
Miss Porges, who is a junior

Your own snapshot is printed

ture

Caine

NWestern Settlement

MAE

Officer on Tuesday
at

the

of the Crime
will

speak

special

on

Men’s

Night meeting of the Junior auxiliary of the Highland Park Woman’s club
next Tuesday
evening.
Officer Fiedoral has been with the
bureau
for three years
after
18
years of investigation in the Maxwell street police district.
Members are asked to bring
nylon
stockings
and clothing
the Joanna
C. Mange
Home
Children.

old
for
for

ALTE REFN DPE

&lt;—

=

wALL BOUGHT
WITH

CHRISTMAS CLUB ‘

JOIN ONE OF THESE
CLUB CLASSES

a
WwW

Deposit
Bi-Weekly

COME IN—Find out for
yourself how you can get a
Closer, Cleaner shave in

ml amr st3

CLUB CLASSES

ayMey

aL am)

See
OO
MM
SO

talk by Judge

2

ee
8

$ 25.00
50.00
100.00

i

500.00

150.00
250.00

of

Pierce

Hieser

and

Stone

Mrs.

Mrs.

William

avenue,

of

Dudley

Lake

Mrs.

J.
Leo

Lincoln

avenue

Crafts Watson

of

avenue.

Forest

Drama

Group To Entertain
HP Members

of ORT

Sleeping
Beauty,
the perennial
favorite of childhood, will be performed by the Garrick Players of
Lake
Forest
college
under
the
auspices
of
the
Highland
Park
chapter
of
Women’s
American
ORT, on Sunday, December 7, at
three p.m. in Ravinia school.
A number of parties are planned

the

afternoon,

according

to

Mrs.
Arthur
Wollner
of Beverly
place, ticket chairman.
Mrs. Wollner may be reached by telephone
at HI
2-6900.
Mrs.
Samuel
S.
Cohn,
program
chairman,
is in
charge of arrangements.
Mrs. Sol Gerstel of Marion avenue, president, announces that refreshments also will be available
at modest prices.

Ads

Make it a habit to read the Want
every week before laying your

paper

aside!

\!

4)
is

RENT YOUR
FORMAL

| #&amp;
é.

y

Where
society’s
best dressed men
rent theirs—
Cutaways - Strollers
Single
and
Double
Breasted
Tuxedos
All Accessories

t

a.
Deposit

road,

of Marion

Gerald

4

Federal

of

D. Jensen of Braeside, Mrs. John
D. Stodder of Central avenue, Mrs.

A

of

J. Dunne

Afterwards,
Friends
of Drama
will attend the matinee performance of “Gigi” at the Harris theatre.
Guests of honor at the breakfast will include the star of the
play,
Audrey
Hepburn,
and
cast
members
Margaret Bannerman,
Bertha
Belmore
and
Josephine
Brown,
Robert
Shackelton,
Joan
Blondell and Evelyn Ward will be
there from
the cast of “A Tree
Grows In Brooklyn,” now playing
at the Shubert theatre.
Among the Highland Park members of the group are Mrs. R. U.
Baughman of Sheridan road, Mrs.
David R. Clarke of Cary avenue,
Mrs. J. H. Briggs of Deere Park
drive,
Mrs.
Fred
H.
Clutton
of
Kimball road, Mrs. Leroy F. Harza

1 é

LESS TIME than any other
method, wet or dry
Member

Robert

the Juvenile court, covering “Family Court and Its Problems.”

A
Receive

6062503.
10.00 = ..3 3.

eres

Mrs. Chell and Mrs. Ross will
join other members for breakfast
next
Wednesday
in the
Century
room of the LaSalle hotel.
On the
program
that
follows
the
group
will hear a number
of songs by
Miss Elva Gamble, soprano, and a

for

MONEY?

eee

Mrs. Glenn J. Chell of Cloverdale avenue and Mrs. Paul B. Ross
of Princeton
road
have
recently
become
members
of
Friends
of
Drama, a 30-year old organization
that helps to support the theater.
The group encourages young people to follow the theatrical profession
by
offering
scholarships
each year for that purpose.

Marshman

Members
of the auxiliary who
will visit
the
Juvenile
court
of
Cook county Wednesday to observe
juvenile cases and delinquent teenagers include
Mrs. Howard
Will,
Mrs. Robert Weinberg, Mrs. Nathan
Cohn and Miss Marjory Dean.

_

Insurance

Corporation

Ese
INCORPORATED

MOLEY

RADIO

‘‘The
1805
Page

House

St. Johns Ave.
18

&amp; APPLIANCE
That

Service

CO.

Built’
HI 2-2042

SOM
of HIGHLAND

eT
PARK

EVANSTON
1718
(Next

STORE

SHERMAN

to Varsity

7

Other Stores in
® OAK

ed)

Theat.)

PARK

© THE
®

LOOP

SOUTH

SIDE

Thursday, November 27, 1952
Pras

Rak

;

‘

dai

aN

Py

_
aes

�Fellowship Bazaar
To Aid World Work
Young
sociation
hold its

Proceeds From Bazaar To Aid YWCA's World Work

eee

: ‘YWCA Plans Party,

g

Women’s
Christian
Asof
Highland
Park
we
World Fellowship bazaar

on December 4, from 12 noon un-|
til 6 p.m.
Each of the separate |
YWCA clubs is planning a booth|
that
will
feature
homemade
ar-|
ticles, cooked food, white elephants, |

Christmas

cards

and

Christmas |

tree decorations.
During the afternoon a dessertcard party will be given, sponsored |

by

the

board

of

directors,

with |

Mrs. Theodore Osborn Jr. as chair- |
man.

Bridge, 500, canasta and pin- |

ochle

will

be

some

to be played

from

of

the

games|

1 until 4 in the|

UTUAL

afternoon.

Proceeds
go

to

YWCA

work

YWCA

from

pay

the

the

bazaar

will |

Highland

Park||

ANY

pledge to aid in the world |
of the

association.

The

World

works in 65 different coun- |

tries.

The

States

goes

money

contributed

Sowie

|

|

by |

the 2,000 associations in the United |
toward

training

4

eee

yk

:

.

p 0

WM

499

fe, tO

(479

VINE AVE.° 7%.

bal che Das
ea as

—

lead-

ers and helping to develop pro-|
grams which will lead to better |
Zi ee

understanding among people.
“Since
fellowship
is
attained |
through sharing and mutual faith, |

ey

—

‘
ERS

Ge

ss

#

as

i

:
Mrs. S. Raymon
ymond S eiffert and Mrs. Theodore Osborne
Mrs. Woodward Burgert ( (seated),
Highland Park YWCA invites its
will be on sale at the World Fellowship
that
ns
decoratio
s
Christma
the
of
some
display
yits)
a
;
;
Osborne is chairman of the dessert
Mrs.
YWCA.
the
by
4
December
sponsored
be
to
scaeiet escorts Otea ee Katana Baar
good will among all peoples,” Miss | Card party to be given that afternoon in conjunction with the bazaar.

Musa DeMouth, executive director |
of the “YW,” said yesterday.

HPHS Graduate Named
Freshman Post at Brown

to

|'Heads
iF
I

GOP

Publicity
ti

Mr. and Mrs. John L. Griffith Sr.|
| of 1825 Balsam road are the par-

ents of a son, John Lawrence Jr.,
Inauguration
or
Joel Davis, formerly of Highland
C. Austin, formerly of | born November 3 in Evanston hos-|
James
Park, is one of 25 men recently}
They have two other chil-|
chosen to serve on the Council of | Highland Park, is assistant pub-| pital.

the

Class

of

Uni-|licity

at Brown

1956

Providence,

versity,

man

Each|tional

I.

R.

for the Republican

committee

and

will

Na-|dren,

| Alice
handle

K.

Griffith

=

3.

Kit,

7, and

Jody,

of the 25 Councilmen was appoint-| publicity for Dwight D. Eisenhow-| the paternal
ed on the basis of past experience, | er’s inauguration in January.He has|

Association

TB

Griffith

C. Austin

'James

of

Mrs./

Evanston

Announces Start
Of S
1 Sal
aus
Sheets of the 1952 Christmas
Seal, featuring the Double-Barred

cross and

a glowing
brass

fashioned

is|ojq

were

Monday

residents

county

to

mailed

grandmother.
|

the

marking

in an

candle

candleholder,
start

of this

The
sale.
Seal
Christmas
| western university, is the son of | year’s
| been with the committee’s national
interest and ability.
for| Mr. and Mrs. Frank D. Austin of| campaign, conducted by the Lake
Washington
in
headquarters
was graduated|
Mr. Davis, who
to
Park High school/ the past two and a half years and | Deerfield, formerly of Wade street, | County Tuberculosis association
from Highland

in

June,

is

the

son

Mr.

of

and|

handled

press

relations

at the

Re-| Highland

Park.

He

also

has

two|

raise funds for its 1953 anti-tuber-

publican convention in Chicago last | brothers, John and Robert, of Deer- | culosis program, will continue unof New|
Davis
G.
Bernard
Mrs.
M.
Cyrus
25. Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Austin, their|til December
He had previously been with | field.
The Davis family for-| July.
York City.
Mrs.
and
road
Barberry
of
Avery
Olive,|
daughter,
and
James,
|son,
years.
20.
for
Press
United
|
Sheridan
975
at
resided
merly
| Horace S. Vaile of Maple avenue
Mr. Austin, a graduate of North-| reside in Washington, D. C.
|
road.

are members

Were

ey

_ RR OS LTR

PEE

ene

ed.
tatassociation

Pee

.
w Benefit.
They Plan Sneak Previe

of the executive com-

the

insignia of the
is the registered
association
Tuberculosis
National
its 3000 affiliates, including
and
the Lake County Tuberculosis association, and it is also the intermodern
the
of
symbol
national
campaign against TB,” said Arne
W. Makela, seal committee chairman. Since the early part of this
century the cross has served
as
the emblem under which the voluntary associations have fought the
communities
in
TB
of
spread
throughout the nation.
Seal sale being
Christmas
The
conducted by the association is the

only

source

of

funds

for

its

gram to prevent and control
culosis in this country.

You just can’t
a
i
“Classified
beat the

protuber-

HP Camera Club
To

No matter what it is you need,

Work

Study

You'll find it here—

Of Its Members
Members of
club
Camera

camera

work

the Highland
bring
will

to

the

meeting

with ease and speed!
Park
their

this

at 8 p.m. in the AmerMonday
Nathan T.
ican Legion building.
Rosenberg and his committee plan
to analyze the prints, 11 by 14 in
suggeshelpful
make
and
size,
tions for improving future prints.

-

_

Miss June Nelson and her com-

funds for the several wrath cee

teehee ee ya

theatre will raise
imacting. ‘whibh is
she
Their work includes transcribing of ee
Lodge.
a
Johann
Shore
North
the
of
philanthropies
ed photographinterest
all
to
open
the
s
for
teacher
and
ls
materia
special
ng
books and music into Braille for the blind, providi
lett na
Lipman,
Harold
Mrs.
students.
needy
to
ps
scholarshi
giving
and
hard-of-hearing,
Burton Lipman,| 4 print of the month and a slide
above, hands a poster to Barbara Norden who will place it in a store window.
as
Next Thursday’s sneak preview at the Alcyon

Mrs. Clarence Goldman seated beside him, is on the ticket|of the month will be selected
above, will usher at the event.
mentions
Sneak preview tickets at $1.80, including tax, are on sale at all of the Fell| well as three honorable
committee.
classes.
both
in
p.m.
8:40
at
place
take
to
scheduled
is
benefit
The
stores on the North Shore.
Thursday,

November

27,

1952

.

FLL

—the

the

in

LOOK
W

PA

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of your telephone directory—

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held at 4 p.m.
Bishop Magee, recently retired,
has been one of the leaders of the
_ church, having
served
in
New
x

Raymond

Bond,

and

Chicago.

district

Dr.

superin-

- tendent, and the Rev. Russell Lambert, minister at Glencoe Metho-

dist church,
will
participate
in
_ this special service. A representa-

tive

of the Ministerial Association

of Highland Park-Highwood
also
_ will be present, as well as Methodist ministers of the northern district.
They
procession,

will take part in the
symbolizing the unity

of the Methodist church.
A buffet supper will follow
;

service.

A

committee

will

OLN

TORR

UA PLS

Meg

ae

EG————
LT ee
CLIN

RTL

Trinity Episcopal

the

contact

serve Thanksgiving

all members of the church to find
out what dish of food they can
contribute
of

the

the

and

church

the
will

young
have

arrangements.

friends
invited

Members

of the church
to attend.

Morning

Services

are

At

of

and

cordially

Usual

of holy

and

a.m.

10

will ob-

day with a cele-

communion

at 7:30

will be a
the girls’

choir

hymns

providing

familiar

Time
Wednesday at 6 p.m. Italian dishes
will be provided by the individual
families.
Those whose names be-

Morning services on Sunday will
be
at the
usual
time,
with
the
church school under the leadership
of Mrs. Ruben
Olson, temporary
superintendent,
and
the morning
worship
service sermon
given by
the Rev. Donald C. Woods.
The church also is sponsoring a
family night
potluck
supper
on

gin with “A-M”

will bring meat

Following the supper there
be the “hanging of the

greens,”

with

all

ages

taking

part.

dante

What

Stands

Behind

~fhanksg

or

hot dishes, and those in the “N-Z”
group are asked to bring the sal-

ads.
will

|

iving
®

Held At Trinity Church
The community Thanksgiving Eve service was held at 8
o’clock last night (Wednesday) in Trinity Episcopal church,

Annual Sale and
Luncheon of Church

Guild on Thursday
Redeemer
guild
of
Redeemer
Lutheran church will hold its annual Christmas sale and luncheon
next Thursday in the church assembly hall. Mrs. Rudolph Netzger,
president of the guild, appointed

Mrs.

Louis

Wagner,

Mrs.

Bertha

Kittman
and
Mrs. Raymond
Rudolph
as general
chairmen;
and
Mrs. Charles Pantle and Mrs. Chris

Juul,

co-chairman

of

the

bakery

booth.
Mrs. George Shuman
and Mrs.
Harry
Eichler will be in charge
of the luncheon. Mrs. Edward Juul
and Mrs. William Herring will take
care of the apron booth; Mrs. Kittman and Mrs. William Remmert,
the fancy work booth.
Christmas
cards, wrappings and miscellaneous
articles will be available at Mrs.

Raymond

*

vin

Grossman

Lawrentz’s

and Mrs. Mar-

booth.

The sale will begin at 10 a.m.
and continue until late afternoon.
Luncheon will be served from 11:30
a.m. to 1 p.m.
The public is cor-

dially invited

to attend.

Lodge Meets Monday

Here is a holiday that commemorates no hero, celebrates

no battlefield.

No lobby is be-

hind it; no group or sect or
party.
It doesn’t even fall on
the same date twice.
Yet
Christmas cannot dim it nor
July 4th steal its glory.
And
all America loves it with a
quiet and intense affection reserved for no other day in the
year.

Ministers of various other Highland Park churches were invited
to

sit

A.

G.

makes

What makes
it real?

Thanksgiving
it beloved?

different?

What

makes

Perhaps the answer is simple.
Thanksgiving is an affirmation.
It is our heart’s
testimony to a deeply held conviction.
The conviction that these things we call
free and decent and American didn’t just
happen to us. We didn’t get them because we were wiser... or cleverer...
or even luckier.

As

we

give

thanks

we

take

stock

gogue

MESIROW

MOTORS,

INC.

KLEEBURG

Chrysler-Plymouth

PURNELL &amp; WILSON,

HIGHLAND PARK MOTOR

INC.

Ford

DeSoto-Plymouth

RAVINIA MOTORS, INC.

VAN GUILDER MOTORS
NELSON MOTOR SALES

MARCHI BROS.
Pontiac
Open

Fridays

Till 9 P.M.

BUY YOUR CAR IN HIGHLAND
22

INC.

Dodge-Plymouth

Studebaker

Page

SALES,

for Your

Oldsmobile
Convenience

PARK-ENJOY

LOCAL SERVICE

fellowship.

Annual

Pageant

Is Presented at
Lincoln School
“How wonderful are God’s gifts
man,
the grains that nourish

him, the fruits that solace him, the
flowers

that

cheer

him.”

Deep in the hearts of Lincoln
school children these familiar
words have become a part of a rich
heritage that has developed from
the yearly participation in a significant ceremony of giving thanks
together.
On

the

day

Lincoln

before

parents

children

assemble

gratitude

song,

Thanksgiving

school
for

litany

and

and

to

express

their

plenty

pageant.

In the program, the Goddess of
the
Harvest
welcomes
the
gifts

symbolizing

the bounty of the har-

vest..

The

made
world

the barren places of the
a fairer place to look upon

fruits and

presented

hymns

of

to

flowers

her

praise

amid

and

which

man’s

litanies

of

gratitude.

This pageant,

which

has become

a tradition at the school, was arranged by Mrs. Margaret Freeman

when
It

she was principal of Lincoln.

was

given

many

times

under

her direction and the school staff
as well as the pupils pays tribute
to her

as they

produce

it yearly.

Spend Weekend at Wis. Lake
2

the

a

good

time

LOCAL

to

things

way.

we've

Buick

United

Goddess of the Harvest

your

BUICK, INC.

First

El.

Ministerial

in

of

ASSOCIATION

Beth

their

liefs which have sustained us.
Of all of them and of that way of life
they have made possible, Thanksgiving
Day is our joyous affirmation.

DEALERS’

of the

church; the Rev. A. P.
the Bethany EvangeliBrethern
church;
the
Harris of St. John’s
Reformed church; the
Woods
of
Wesley

Rev. Linden Unable to Attend

their

We look ahead secure in the knowledge
that our children, in their turn, will bear
further and greater witness to the be-

AUTOMOBILE

the

The
Rev.
Herbert
W.
Linden,
pastor of the Zion Lutheran church
of Highwood, was unable to attend
because of illness. Members of the
congregations of all the churches
were
invited to participate.
The
service is sponsored each year by
the Highland Park and Highwood

paper

these things we believe in.
We renew
our faith in them.
We renew our confidence in ourselves, in our land, our
neighbors, our way of life under God.

PARK

during

Methodist church, and Rabbi Philip
Lipis of the North Suburban Syna-

all

is

HIGHLAND

chancel

Masser

Evangelical
Johnson of
cal United
Rev. Harold
Evangelical
Rev. Donald

Make it a habit to read the Want
Ads every week before laying your
aside!

the

Park Presbyterian church; the Rev.
William H. Remmert
of the Redeemer Lutheran church; the Rev.

to

Sheridan Rebekah Lodge 801 will
meet
at 8 p.m.
Monday
in the
Mason’s
hall
at
the
corner
of
Temple avenue and Lauretta place.
The losers in the attendance contest will give their skit which was
postponed
last meeting.

in

service. They included Dr. William
Atkinson Young of The Highland

are

What

eR

a

425 Laurel avenue. The service was conducted by the Very
Rev. Charles U. Harris. Col. William Sharpe, Episcopalian
of chaplain at Fort Sheridan, preached the sermon.

The 10 o’clock service
special family one with

the season.
Trinity church urges
both parents and children to come
to church together as their “fathers and forefathers did when they
first set aside this day to honor
God with their prayers of thanksgiving.”

couples

charge

bration

church

Ne

Thanksgiving Eve Service

Trinity Church to

f
Bishop J. Ralph Magee, former bishop of the Illinois area
_ of the Methodist church, will be present to dedicate the newly
remodeled sanctuary in Wesley Methodist church, Highland
Park-Highwood, on Sunday. The dedicatory service will be

Seattle,

Te

Have Family Service

Sanctuary At Wesley Methodist

England,

ey

% Seat,

; Bishop To Dedicate Remodeled

Dh

RENT

think

that

our

bit

of

Inc

all

have

come

to

think

like

We'd

added

TRADEMARKS

with

Mr. and Mrs. William
Mooney
Ridge
road
recently returned

of

from Lake
Kegonsa,
Madison, where they
weekend as the guests
Mrs. Fred Grabo.

Wis., near
enjoyed a
of Mr. and

service

that keeps you looking poised, attractive,

well-groomed

..

.

ex-

cima

bay atl neat maa ceed | ae

Ngee Pees SOOT

Order-By-Mail Service

on the yeer ‘round.
ITHE

P

(.\

Aya)

OTT

)

sox. 398, "EVANSTON, TLLINOIS.

HA

c

Cir scarmiwaTon

TAILOR

POEL

wal

ho
Thursday,

’

November

27, 1952

fe
'

PA

means

ce

soa

bk

sae

%

i

hay

:

Wale
Bn

feiss

AE

ae Bae

�Bonspiel Winner

Numerous Groups Plan Women Of The Moose
Service Club Snack
Bar Over Weekends
One

of

fea-

Next

meeting

of

Moose,

Chapter

806,

During

most

groups

popular

within

the

in

the

past

month

the

YWCA, the Junior Hostesses, the
Kiwanis club, the Highland Park
Woman’s
club,
the
American
Legion auxiliary and the Eastern
Star have all taken turns in supplying
home
made
cake,
sand-

wiches, cookies, milk and coffee
for the young men and women who
come to the club over the weekends.
Mr. Oscar Iverson and Mrs. Karl
Salo
were
chairman
and _ vicechairman last Saturday and Sunday for the American Legion auxiliary and Mrs. Joseph Lambert will
have charge of arrangements next
weekend for the Eastern Star.

Moose

Miss

comat

the

(Continued

Home Wednesday

tures of the Highland Park Armed
Services
club
is the
Snack
Bar
which is manned each weekend by

different
munity.

the

To Meet At Moose

guest

Women

home

Dorothy

Highland

speaker

at

of

will

be

the
held

Wednesday.

Teare,

Park

up

High
the

last

was

Women

of the Moose meeting. She was the
guest of Mrs. Theodore Anderson,
library
chairman,
who
also
was
responsible
for the evening’s refreshments.
Celebrates

J.

will

Keogh,

L. J. Stirling,

Roy H. Olson, Ted

John

W.

Connolly,

James F. A. Davis, Burt M. Smalley, Ralph A. Trieschmann, Robert C.
Warren

Wilson,
Horace
Peterson.

Only the Want

A.

the

meeting

meet

in

Mrs.

John

when

from

in

page

December

January

at

will

in

see

Gamma

Phi

camp

vileged

children

but

the

Woodman

they

16)
will

home

of

Waukegan

slides
for

of

the

under-pri-

in

Vancouver,

Wash.

Return From Eastern Trip
The
Bay

Wayne
road

D. Millers

recently

of Green

returned

from

a trip to New York.
Mr. and Mrs.
Miller combined both business and
pleasure during their week’s stay
in the East.

mo
Jackson

« Wabash

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Typewriter Repairs
Finest work by our expert
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4 elephone

Highland
Park 2-3100

On Civil Air Patrol

J.

is expected to run through December.
Among the Highland Park members of the Heathers are the Mesdames
R. C. Brown
Jr., Thomas

A dance
to an orchestra
furnished
by
Great
Lakes
was
enjoyed
by the young
people
last
Saturday night. The dance started
as usual at 8 p.m. ended at 11 p.m.

Special Broadcast

Mrs.

Sixteen rinks of the Heathers

Meyer,

Birthday presents were given to
the Mesdames Louise Carani, Catherine
Anderson,
Agnes
Jewel,
Wanda
Duffy, ana Arthur Booth.
The meeting was attended by 44
members
and
five
guests.
Mrs.
Joseph Volpendesta, Senior Regent,
presided.

members,

(Continued

16)

start a new competition, the Watson event, today (Wednesday) at
the Curling club. This competition

E.

Birthday

team

page

Stefan Jr., of Green Bay road, Mrs.
Myron F. Ratcliffe of Central avenue, and Mrs. Lewis E. Phennet
of Evanston.

librarian
school

of

from

Founders Day

To Be Beamed Sunday
Civic-minded young people from
the
North
Shore
are
invited
to
listen to a special radio broadcast
for the Civil Air Patrol Sunday
from 1 to 1:15 p.m. The program
will be broadcast over WKRS-FM.
Captain Jack Condon,
CAP, of
Deerfield, asks that young people
between the ages of 15 and 18 who
would like to be air cadets with the
CAP
pay particular
attention
to
the broadcast.

Typewriter Sales
Office machines, portables, adding
machines. Some excellent
buys in reconditioned
machines!

Central

645
Ave.

Get one now! Acar value that sings !
A buy youll talk ahout for years!
4/5 Quart

Pleasantly light, yet with a most satisfying
body

and

flavor, Bellows

is the thoughtful

choice

Partners

Choice

of discriminating

drinkers everywhere. This finely balanced
blend is finding increasing favor as the perfect all-purpose whiskey

and it represents

the best on the market today at no extra cost!
Illustrated: State Commander

V-8 Starliner. White sidewall tires and chrome wheel discs optional at extra cost;

Check Studebaker prices if you want real savings!

86.8

See how little it takes to drive home

RAVINIA
1778
Open

Friday

First St.

Evenings

until

9

ces
Thursday,

November

27,

1952

for

MOTORS,

your

convenience.

:

glare-reducing tinted glass—at extra cost.

SALES &amp; SERVICE
Phone HI 2-1854

Highland

Park,

Ill.

North

Western

NEUTRAL

GRAIN

SPIRITS

« 40%

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BALTIMORE

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All models offer Studebaker Automatic Drive or Overdrive—and

PROOF

Depot

teyond Question
MARYLAND
‘

Only the Bat is Labdld BELLOWS
Page

23

�Legion Auxiliary
To See Slides of
-Carrie

The North Shore’s Exclusive
Order-By-Mail

Service

scrim INnaToR
FOR

THOSE

WHO

CARE

BOX 388, EVANSTON,
ILLINOIS
Gift Catalog Free on Request!

Buck

of

Gohde

Wilmette

will lecture and show slides of
the Holy Land at the regular meeting of the Highland Park’ American Legion auxiliary next Tuesday at 8 p.m.
Following Mrs. Buck’s talk, mem-

bers

Men!

Baker

Members
Holy Land

of

the

Highland

Park

chorus, directed by Chester
will
entertain
with
songs.

After

the

the

and Mrs. Charles H. Gohde of 289
Poplar
road
November
16
in
Evanston
hospital. Charles’
older

brother, William, is 11 and his
sister, Kathy, is six. Mr. and Mrs.
Frederick
Calif., are

Harger
of
La_
the grandparents.

Jolla,

auxiliary

Elm Place Girl Scouts Help
Roll Bandages at Hospital
Members

recently

exchange

Christmas

had

last year’s

Carlson,
will

37,

have
been
rolling
bandages
at
Highland Park hospital.
The girls
are also working on their sewing
badge and have been making cooking mitts.
their

members
gifts.

of Girl Scout Troop

seventh grade at Elm Place school,

They

High

school
Kyle,

program,

Their third child and second son,
Charles Martin, was born to Mr.

who

a shower

leader,

announced

of a son last Thursday
Park hospital.

for

Mrs.

Peter

the

birth

at Highland

Enjoy the thrill of

10 HP Students
Are Enrolled At
Purdue University
~Highland Park students enrolled
in
Purdue
university,
Lafayette,
Ind., this semester include Carolyn
M. Botker, 661 Homewood avenue,
sophomore
in science;
George
»R.
Chapman,
291
Central
avenue,
freshman in engineering; William
J. Dobeus, 57 S. Deere Park drive,
sophomore in mechanical engineering; Charles F. Elbert, 753 County
Line road, freshman in engineering; Gordon S. Garrett, 11 Valley
road, senior in electrical engineering.
Also, John
A. Hansmann,
1290
Lincoln
avenue,
sophomore
in
mechanical engineering; Donald H.
Keller, 443 Burton avenue, sophomore
in mechanical
engineering;
Kenneth H. Kraft Jr., 111 Lakewood place, freshman in engineering; Peter Perlman, 333 Hazel avenue, freshman in engineering and
Joel M. Siegel, 111 Sheridan road,
junior in physical education.

The Charles Crooks

Entertain

Prof. and Mrs. Lyle A. Rose of
Champaign,
Ill.,
and
their
son,
Lyle
II, are
the
houseguests
of
the
Charles
Crooks
of Sheridan
road during this Thanksgiving holiday
weekend.
Prof.
Rose
is in
charge of the publicity department
of the University of Illinois and is
a member
of its engineering department.

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in

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no

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soap-and-blade

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Christmas

everyone's

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Morse Ave.
615
Devon Ave.
:

Thursday,

November

Suburbs

Toll
Davis St.
Howard St.

27, 1952

�Te

TMoemCboenrdsuhcitp D3-riDavey

Roose velt College
Scholarship Bazaar

A

Cie.

See

is

three day membership
drive
of the Oak Terrace Parent Teachers’ association will be conducted
by the membership chairman, Mrs.
Bruno R. Somenzi, beginning Monday and ending at 1 p.m. Wednesday,
December
3. Mrs.
Somenzi
announced at a recent PTA board
session that she and her commit-

Mrs. Abe Miller, 255 North Deere
Park drive, is serving as a neighborhood
committee
chairman
for
Roosevelt college’s annual scholarship
bazaar,
next
Thursday
and
Friday, December 4 and 5, at the
college, 430 South Michigan
avenue.
The bazaar, which will combine
tee hope to make the drive a com- early Christmas shopping with enplete success with every child of tertainment,
will raise money for
the school represented in the Oak the
college’s
scholarship
fund.
Terrace PTA by at least one of his There will be book booths, jewelry,
parents.
antiques, paper
goods, handmade
“Dues are only 50 cents for each items, food and toys. A fortunemother or dad,” she said, “and this telling booth and several games of
entitles them to membership
for skill also are planned.
the
entire
school
year.
Each
A new feature this year will be
youngster may bring the dues to a foreign booth, which will display
me in the school auditorium, Mon- and sell items contributed by forday, Tuesday or Wednesday before eign
students
attending the
colmorning classes, about 9 a.m., or lege.
before
1 p.m.
on those
days.
I
The bazaar will be open to the
will give them
receipts to bring public from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. both
home
and will mail membership
days with no admission charge.
cards to the parents later in the
week.”
Meet
The

Oak

In

January

December

Terrace

Mr., Mrs. Robert Magnus Jr.
Enjoy Thanksgiving in Fla.

meeting

PTA

has

of

been

the

post-

poned
until the second
or third
Tuesday
in
January.
The
exact
date of the next PTA meeting will

be announced

by the publicity

de-

partment. Walter Guthmann is program chairman. The December assembly was postponed because of
other conflicting events and the intensive preparation that must be

made

for

the

annual

program
Thursday
cember 18.

Christmas

evening,

De-

Children of the school will be
entertained
during the afternoon
of December
18 with
a _ special
Christmas movie selected by Richard Bennett of the faculty, chairman
of the
audio-visual
department of the PTA. Mr. Bennett is
assisted by two other faculty members Mrs. William Kolbe and Miss
Harriet
Hustvedt,
as well as by

John
PTA.

Schaeffer,

of

the

Lynn,

6, and

Patty

Ann,

Morris

road

From

combination

last

business

of

forces

of David

B. Winton,

former-

Old

week
and

Briar

from

a

pleasure

ties

office

students

been

announces

from

pledged

that
Park

have

by

Beta

Tau,

Zeta

social fraternity on the university
campus. They are Michael J. Bass,

Hamilton R. Wintons are residing
on Sherman avenue.
Pvt. Winton, who is 22 years of
age, was graduated from Highland
Park
High
school.
He
attended

son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel
Bass
of Sheridan
road;
Paul

Wabash
college,
Crawfordsville,
Ind.,
and
was
graduated
from

Isadore

Klein,
Klein

son
of

of Mr.
Oakland

I. Silverman,

son

Silverman

and

Mrs.

drive;

of Mr.
of Old

N.
T.

Elmer

and

and

Carol, born
land Park

Mrs.

Trail.

Northwestern university this past
June.
Pvt. Winton is undergoing
basic training at Fort Sill, Okla.,

where

he

is serving

Field Artillery.
Mr. and Mrs.

children

are

with

Winton’s

at home.

the

two

Joan

junior at Northwestern where
is majoring in education and

eldest
ness

brother,
in

Robert,

1st

other

is a
she
her

is in busi-

Chicago,

was rushed to Chicago immediately

after

care,

she

was

born

for

incubation

RESTAURANT

and

COCKTAIL

LOUNGE

5:00 to 7:00
Cocktail Time
6:00 to 9:00
Dinner Time
9:00
to 12:00
Supper Time
Snack Time
12:00 to 2:00
Delicious Steaks
Chicken
- _
Free Parking in Rear

KE MEY

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Gifts for Everyone ....
at Village Hardware
TOOLS FOR FATHER

Stanley

BY

3, were

Miller Falls

Delta

Black &amp; Decker

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POD

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OX

4

me

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The North Shore’s Exclusive

WHO

Ua

p.m.
p.m
p.m.
p.m.
Ribs

:

home
shortly
from
Presbyterian
hospital,
Chicago.
Sue,
who
weighed only two pounds at birth,

THOSE

CONSTRUCTION
MORTGACES

Cyril

September 8 in Highhospital, is expected

FOR

laying

three

Highland

ly of 2377 Pierce road, and now
of Evanston, where his parents, the

Service

Revere

ps Drscrimina TOR

Florida

Woskow

returned

Of interest to Highland Parkers
the induction into the armed

left in the care of their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert H.
Magnus Sr. of St. Johns avenue.
The youngest Magnus’ child, Sue

Order-By-Mail

Returns

trip
Fla.

treasurer

Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Magnus
Jr. of 180 Barberry are sojourning
in Miami
Beach where
they are
the occupants
of the Martinique
hotel
penthouse.
On
their
way
south, they visited in Washington,
D. C., and in Norfolk, Va., where
they were the guests of Mrs. Magnus’ mother, Mrs. Rose Spital.
The
Magnus’
children,
Kathy

is

: Ads every week before
paper aside!

a

CARE

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Gift Catalog Free on Request!

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He had been away for three

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Many

Others)

�Give Dinner Party
Mr.

and

Mrs.

Waverly

road_

couples

home

Roland

at

Wirt

entertained

a dinner

last Friday

party

of
six

in

their

evening.

STENOGRAPHIC-SECRETARIAL

(Four Months’ (Day)
INTENSIVE COURSE

@

Have Carnival
Next Weekend

Discussion Soon
Suburban

the

first

WaAbash 2-7377

Chicago

the

64

there

years

on

that

North

Clinic

night
(Wednesday)
Don
national
civic
affairs
for

the

Loyal

Order

to

his

credit,

has

also

have.

been

in Chicago.

city

from

rise

Great
the

Fire

man-

From

the
well

Moose
as

in

in

and

civic

and

Highland

Mr.
work

Mooseheart
community

Park.

Gov.

Meckeley presented the degree to
Mr. Singer at a special meeting
of the lodge.

saw the

ashes

become a

of

the

capitol

the

wonderful,

houses

around

old

of

Ads

Make it a habit to read the Want
every week before laying your

paper

aside!

first

families

to

jewels

they

bought

then

now

treasured

And
not

in

changed.
serve

ness

and

Today

foremost

importer

precious

stones

These

and
so

men

many

and

us.

a

only

collector
fine

Health

Discussion

including
Woodland

of

Miss
road,

Pierce

Ruth
Eugene

road,

and

William
Heinsimer
of
Comstock
place, will discuss the relationship
between
conditions
of
mental
health
and
prejudices
about
it.
Refreshments
will
be
served
afterwards.

Rabbi To Review

‘Witness’ At Meeting
Of Temple Sisterhood
North Suburban Synagogue Beth
El Sisterhood will present a book
review by Rabbi Lipis at the regular meeting next Tuesday, at 1175
Sheridan road. Refreshments will
be served at 12:30.
Rabbi Lipis will review the most
discussed book of the year, ‘“Wit-

Chambers.

Samuels

and

It is

of one
figures

to

many

are

Mrs.

Mrs.

Jo-

A

display

the

HI

JOHN
1891

Call

2-3500

B. NASH CO.

Sheridan,

Highland

Park

entire

of

Chanukah

family

will

gifts

be

for

in

the

foyer, for your inspection. There
will also be table and home decorations for the holiday.
Mrs. Harold Goldstein is social

chairman,
mark

and

Mrs.

is president

Harvey

of*the

Yor-

group.

beauty

they

and

we

ourselves

quality

Loop

Gail Compton, left, and Carl Urist, right, pin awards on
their Cub Scout sons, Don and Carl Jr., who are both students
at Elm Place school.
Maynard Marks is Cubmaster this year
and John Warton, assistant Cubmaster.

it’s

directly—and

save.
The

tide of commerce

away

from

the

once

North

Clark

son’s

remains

as

house

of

May

Street.

value.

of

serving

has moved
fashionable
But

a_

Levin-

traditional
we

have

the

you—soon?

PATENTED
CONSTRUCTIC
No filler —Smoother —
Helps keep foot in
belance.

\\" on

NI

")

i

)

eS

Zoom

honor

Jay Winogrond, left, and Ronald Axelrod inspect an electric train brought by one of the members of Cub Pack 30
to the first pack meeting of the year.
Each Cub displayed
his collection at the Moose hall on Green Bay road.

Chicagoans

of

buy

Mental
moderator.

though,
as

merchandise,

to

of

jewelry.

why

Since

with

smart

city’s

the

wise

number

jewelers

as

women,

That’s

Rappaport

be

from

seph Grais, both of Winnetka.

busi-

as well

of

Arthur

still proud-

and

other

with

supply

are

society,

and

value

quality.

shop

we

of

industry

appreciate

shop.

respect; time ’ has|’

leaders

panel

as

of our time, according
book critics.
Chairman of the day

heirlooms.

that

A

Lapine

in

will

a spiritual autobiography
of the most controversial

many

society’s

Panel

Henry

road,

Wall,”

Shore

serving

will be

representative

ness” by Whitaker

brown

us came

The

ly

on At-

world.

stone
of

to

Street,

degree

North

of

changes

We

the

as

Levinson’s

many

take place

for

governor’s

Mortimer’
Singer.
has been
active in

the

Decem-

p.m.

Last
Harvey,

affairs

Clark

8:30

and
mem-

Mrs.

Eastwood
“High

ary past

been

1002
at

their
of

a

torney
Singer

In

Stein,

Men
all

meeting

home

with

The
Supreme
Lodge
of Moose
in conjunction with the Highland
Park lodge has bestowed an honor-

has

the

film,

aged a Denver radio station. Dancing and refreshments followed his
talk.

Levinson

at

The

erns

Harry

to

The

shown

lic was
invited.
Mr.
Harvey,
a
former movie star with many West-

By

guests

and

ber 7 meeting.

Marshall

Moose,
spoke
during
a Moose
booster meeting to which the pub-

I Remember

bers

Meckeley have cordially invited the
public to attend.

chairman

Things

invites

Glencoe,

Gov.

B’rith

Lodge

set aside especially for the children. Vernon Johnson, chairman of

and

B’nai

Women’s

held

event,

Candidly Speaking—

Hold Mental Health

home on Green Bay road. Sunday
afternoon, December 7, has been
the

for college women
57 East Jackson Bivd.

Suburban Group To

The Highland Park Moose Lodge
will hold its Mid-winter Carnival,
December 5, 6 and 7 in the Moose

MOSER

A new class begins on
Monday in each month.
Bulletin T free

Moose Lodge To

x
&amp;

7 cts. emerald cut diamond. blue white
Wesselton gem, 2 tapered baguettes,
00 ct. ea., platinum mounting, $18,000.
Original price, $25,000

ae
Your
Jewelry

house
from

739-43

North

Page

26

$50

of

jewels
to

$150,000

Clark Street, Chicago

~

a

TIREE

--

WAY

Blue

TOE ROOM
Tied Piper —_ os

:
With

PLUS ceiling room ¥e
avoid

Suede
Leather

Mudguard

friction.

Willcox
FOOTWEAR,
335

Park

Avenue

INC.
@

Glencoe,

Illinois

Glencoe

2308

Chuck Steele, Marvin White Jr., and Richard Kubalek,
left to right, hold their new den flag which was presented at
the meeting.
Each den received a new flag. Parents, who are
urged to attend the pack meetings, watched the proceedings.
from the background.
Thursday,

November

27, 1952

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— wet or dry

ONLY Shavemaster
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men
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Sunbeam

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Shavemaster.
Even if you’ve got the toughest,
than any other method, wet or dry.
You’ll get

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Thursday,

November

27,

In 1952

have switched to

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If you

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shavers
with

take
a good

than ever before in history
too long and
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TIME
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dealer’s.

1952

Page

27

�Giants Open

Home

Cage

Jr. Italian Women’s

At Kkather-Son Dinner

Prosperity Group

Russ Clark
Co-Captain

Bowling League

Carleton Tankers

November 20 Standings
Team
Meat

MO,

Ugolini

ko.

W.)
21

oo

Construction

.... 201%

Russell
lane,

swimming

Robert’s

of Highland

Park

Kiwanis

their sons at a recent dinner meeting

club were

hosts to

in the Recreation

center.

a talk by Dave Floyd, varsity
football coach at Highland Park high school.
After hearing
the coach's interesting story, Walter M. Lillie and his son, Ted,
discuss Ted’s prospects for wearing a Li‘l Giant uniform some
day. Mrs. Lillie is a member of the Kiwanis board of directors.
Featured

on

the

program

was

Dry

The

Art

all

touch

championship

was

Finch’s

team

Mark
to

senior

won

L

...... 21

12

12%
13
16%

PPB RAO eo
ot ON 16
Leed’s Jewelers ............ 14
Puckett’s Boosters ........ 14
MOS BHC SC Ach
wees 9
High Series, Team

17
19
19
24

WIISON

S501? 717

738

776—2231

BOOTHS

0k!

779

703—2206

High Series, Individual
M. Crovetti .......... 206 169 159—534
Be F MUROE as, 129 145 193—467
High Game, Team
Iseeiia cy) 25 cos ares ke
787
TRODOLEAR ' cc ctectae
Og
eee 779
High Game, Individual
Mary (Tr OVEUEL 63.28 nia
206
Blame He MINMICR ised cc sada ian 193
The next Moose bowling party

Panther’s

by

three

downs

of

Team
Liebschutz Liquors ........
Larson Bros. Garage
..
Cortesi Plastering ..........
AAV ERS. os.ht aspect eae
DCAMGU Ra ils Ue
Anchor Insurance ..........
Hi-Neighbor Rec. Shop

Photography

Jay

....19

Sunset Food Mart ........
Pigati’s Juke Boxes ....
My Favorite Inn ............
Villa Moderne ................
The Style Shop ............
Bishop
Heating
............
The Fell Company ........

Somenzi

&amp;

Sons

By
10
11
16
16%
16%
17
17

17

18
18
17
19
17
19
16.
20
yi ca
16°
29
ia
Aa

............ te.

2a

High Series, Teanr
Anchor Ins. .... 875-811-844—2530
Liebschutz
Liquors
796-846-861—2503

High Series, Individual
180-179-162—521
154-184-177—515
167-127-206—500

Cortesi
Anchor

High Game,
Plastering
Insurance

206
186

Team

Harold

team

winner’s

scored

by

Was
26
25
20
191%
19%
19
19

defeated

junior
the

were

Ten Pin

High Game, Individual
Irene Plant...
cia Sak:
Olivia: Belmont:
5 eek

will be held at the Highland Ten
Pin on December 13, at 7:30 p.m.
This party will be “potluck.” Bowlers
are
asked
to register
early
with Helen Volpendesta, HI 2-3568.

20

6.
All

this

One of last season’s outstanding
lettermen, Clark was a member of
the 1951 Midwest conference championship squad. He took firsts in
the 220 and 440 in the conference
last year and will lead the distance
paddlers in the first meet of the
season,
the Carleton
Invitational.
December
6. He is a graduate of
Highland Park High school.

Wiasmentl 20s
Me ViOROe Est
2k es
Fo lamb ee:

football

who

college’s

co-captain

season.

Weinstein

school

as

and

Roslyn

Ladies’ League

Ww

Harold Finch’s
Seniors Take
Football Honors
By

Mr.

2611

to Carleton

team

Highland

Toby’s Cocktail Lounge 20%
Biagis Clothing 51.03. 20
Wilson Appliances ........ 164%

724

of

by

Preps To Meet
Grayslake;Bow
To Argo, 42-38
By Pierre Martineau
Tonight

Little

touchspeedy

the

Highland

Giants

will

be

Park

looking

for their first basketball victory
of the season when they face

Grayslake
home

in

their

opening

game.

Last Friday night the Little Giants were defeated by Argo, 42-38,
on the latter’s floor.
Fortunately
this game, like tonight’s, was a nonleague tilt.

Harold

17 Standings

Goods

son

H. Clark,

returns

Tonight

Named
Of

Clark,

Russell

121%

Women of Moose
Bowling League
November

Mrs.

oe.
12

Uptown
Grocery
.......... 20:
ts
© Oe. WE WiasOn. es
19
14
Linari
Construction
19
14
ALONG
SG? visi
oe
a 15% 17%
Scassellati &amp; Son ........ 14
19
ONUTE TOS: i ius oe 125
24
G &amp; L Body Shop ........ 126:
21
Bea
VISte
ps
12
aed
Irma Carra with 187 and Norma
Cassai
with
a 185
bowled
high
single games,

Members

Season

Freberg

headed

the

list

of scorers for the Parkers, rolling
up
11 points, Rollin Benson
was
next with nine, Eddie Capitani and
Howard Russell each had six; Tom
Phillips,
three;
Gino
Del
Ponte,
two, and George Burmeister, one.
Four

fouled

Highland

out.

They

Park

were

players

Capitani,

Freberg, Bob Troy and Burmeister.
Only one Argo player, Dick Dombrowski, was out on fouls.
Argo Leads
Argo jumped off to an early lead
when
Willie Gatlin sunk
a free
throw.
The Giants made the score, 4 to
1, on baskets by Freberg and Ben-

son.
Free
throws
by
Dombrowski,
Martorana
and Aldridge
put the
game at four all.
Capitani
Scores
A free throw and a twisting jump
shot by Capitani
put the Giants
back in front.
Another free toss by Aldridge, a
long shot from the top of the keyhole by Tom Hayes and two free
pitches by Freberg ended the first
quarter scoring with the Blue and
White in front, 9-7.

The
tack

Parkers’
stalled

as

second
they

quarter
scored

atonly

three points on free throws by Freberg,
went

Capitani and Benson.
They
to the dressing room as two

point underdogs.
The third quarter saw Freberg
and Troy fouling out.
Good Jump Shot for HP
Freberg opened the second half
with a jump shot that was good.
(Continued on page 28)

Emerson
Klein.
Emerson
took
a
short pass from
Lawrence
Servi
for the first touchdown. The extra
point
was
no
good.
His
second
touchdown came on a intercepted
pass. He took the ball at midfield

and ran untouched to the goal, this
time the extra point was good. His
third
tally was
a beautiful
run
back of the kickoff. He caught the
ball on his own goal line and raced
down
the sidelines behind
beautiful blocking for the touchdown.
In
the
Panther’s
freshmen

Finch’s

semi-final
games
Mrs.
team beat Don Burson’s
team 27 to 2, and Mr.

champions

triumphed

over

Rodney Leverentz’s sophomores 27
to 0. In the battle for third place,
Mr.
Burson’s
session
upset
Mr.
Leverentz’s team 14 to 8,
Time
Time

in
‘of

trials

the

year

for
at

in

Other

held

last

week

the

first

meet

Maine

tainment.
firsts

Trials

were

preparation

John Walker, club program chairman, had his brother,
Richard, as his guest at the annual dinner program.
Movies of
the Little Giants in action also were included in the enter-

Township

the

improvement
and

Jim

and

Woody

breaststroke.

season

will

good.

Swimming well in the trials were
John Gould and Allan Rubenstein.
Gould showed great improvement

over last year in the crawl. Rubenstein came very close to his form
of last year which won. him two
Page

28

be

Peter
are

two

Hughes

junior

and

Fred

Bob

in the

Other

used

Juniors

have

are

Stanwood

who

stroke

a

board

swimmers

who

captain;

Al

Davidow,

Hughes,

Bob

Peter

Wulfpromise

crawlstrokers,

Peter

Harris.

Ellenberger

Another

can

swim

five

he

to

Robert

Coach
pointed

but
due

swim

the

show

Fred

not

in

Bill

and

shown

backstroke,

Hansmann

Husting

sohn.

any

meet.
who

are

Barton

High school. The trials showed
that the prospects for the coming
are very

state

swimmers

Seitz.

will

’ aphas

Kendig
of

control.

The

John

Gould,

Rubenstein,

Peter

are

members

Danny

probably

illness.

Stanwood,
The

board

and
of

diver
control

picks the swimmers who pasticipate in the meets and see that
every member of the team obeys
training

rules.

ek

Mayor A, Gordon Humphrey and Jerry Leaming were
exchanging pleasantries when our photographer came upon
them.
Mr. Leaming was recently elected president of the
Kiwanis club.
Thursday,

November

27, 1952

�Fe

ee

ee

Highwood

Laundrettes .. 21%

ax ig

11%

Disby's
A.

W.

14

buildi eee

a

“

front.

"17

+16.

|free throw and Tom Hayes counted

Hospital

15 |, Aldridge followed with another

13.

20

|tWo and again Freberg knotted the

42
...... ii:

-gy_~—C«/
2

Score at 20-20.
Howard Russell, playing for Fre| berg who
| breakaway

High Series, Team

At the end of
the Giants were

sey, Dombrowski

Mordini
Morelli
:

values

and

The

Read

not

them

Lenzi

| night.”

AND

PACKING

OF

ALLIED

Central

Ave.,

Highland

and

Aldridge

passing

THIS

You

if You

BEAUTIFUL

GARDEN

18
18

14%

....

18%

8

25

VOR

ok

ceo 2557

Grocery

was

not

HI

................ 914
244
243

Joe Lazzaretto won high game
honors for the first place turkey
shoot with a total of 708 pins. John

Bosselli placed second with 683
pins followed by John Ladurini
in third place with 658 pins.

The
Highland
Park
American
Legion post has announced plans —
for a New Year’s Eve party to be
held in the American Legion building. The appointment of Robert
Klingeman
as_
party
committee
chairman
was announced
by Willard Hackbarth,
ways and means
chairman.

|
©

NORTH SHORE FURTH SERVICE
Funeral

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624

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AN

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

ALSO BENDIX
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10%

22)

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High Series, Individual

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Bros.

American Legion To Hail
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|
914

High Game, Individual
Gy POLO UED ssi tical biseadicas
aE TAD
oi Sods Soest

the third quarter
behind, 28-25.

HOUSEHOLD

VAN

Gros.
Ice

PAVOTITG

€
AGENT

........:.:

High Series, Team
My

IREDALE
MOVING

Bros.

Highwood

Coach Dorman Morrison explained
it “They just were not hitting to-

avail-

now!

22.)

Inn

Highwood Radio &amp; TV 15
Silver Dollar Tavern .... 15

sharp as it should have been and as

Ads offer amazing

opportunities

Giants’

Tavern:

Favorite

baskets by Russell and Phillips.
Baskets by Benson, Phillips and
Del Ponte were not enough to offset scores
by Dombrowski,
Aldridge and Hayes.

High Game, Individual

able elsewhere.

My

scored while only Phillips sunk a
free toss, to make the score, 35-26.
Highland
Park got a lift with

Team

Highwood Laundrettes
Highland Oil

Only the Want

scored
on a
Parkers back

W.

Fapori:

Argo Floods Baskets
Then
the
roof fell in on the
Parkers.
Wayne Bock, Mike Kirk-

High Series, Individual
V. Morelli
189-158-175—522
T. Voli
156-164-160—480
Game,

was
out,
to put the

in front.

Highwood
Laundrettes .. 695-750-803—2248
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P.
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shot from the top of back
the keyin
to put the Giants

151% 1714 08 a Push shot, Dombrowski hit for

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High

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Skokie Valley Laundry

19

Oil

Del Rio ;
Highwood

Team

BA.

bib

Moley Television &amp; Api 18

Highland

Aldridge then shot a good free
throw to put Argo ahead by a point.
Again Freberg put in a one-handed
jump
hole

Tavern

Freddies

oe

i

Lenzi

18 Standings

etek
* e ae
ae

$e

Wee

November

28)

Team

| Highwood Radio ........................

.

ee

Team

page

Game,

ee

J

18 Standings

from

High

i Te tC ec
Or Rak

as

(Continued

Marconi Bowling

Y

Tits

November

\Open Cage Season |

VPP
AEERGAE

UseYk

akg

Mary Jane Ladies
Bowling League

rae

eR
me

Not Visited

CEMETERY

Very Reasonable Prices
Green Bay Rd. &amp; 18th St.

Phone Maj. 1067

WIN A

\

serve |

oa

UNIVERSAL
Shtve

?

wl

NEW

su

=
PER-TYPE
vacuum CLEANER

VALUED AT $99.95
The highest 3 game series (open bowling)
Mondays thru Saturdays from November 13th
to December 6th wins.

right from

your easy chair!

Wonderful

Want ice, a cold drink, a snack? Reach
out from your easy chair — open the sleek
cabinet —help yourself! It’s the clever
new way to serve your guests!
You just plug it in! Permanently silent
freezing system carries 5-year warranty.
AC or DC—32 to 230 volts. Mahogany finish. Blond or white at
slight extra cost. Legs
or casters optional.

SEE

THE

NEW

$149°°
y

MARY JANE LANES
owner,

Jack

Passini

PRIZE

for

contest

DONATED

Highwood, Ill.

_ Thursday,

November
a

a

Saeed a Es

27, 1952

SILENT REFRIGERETTE

STYLED AS SMART

FURNITURE

WHEEL IT OUTDOORS!

SILENT AS A MOONBEAM!

IDEAL IN OFFICE, DEN!

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Smart way to entertain customers!

iy

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BY

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PORTABLE

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HIGHWOOD
See

ectric

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Pr
325

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5th Floor

Be
ST 2-3460
Page

29
i

"

�i

n

ree

SeNIGOGUE be
Hq
1175 Sheridan Road
Highland

LEY METHODIST CHURCH
hwood Avenue and Everts Place
he

Rev.

Donald

DAY,

Woods,

November

pastor

28

; :30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
UNDAY, November 30
0 p.m. Church school for

all

of him with whom
we have to
do” (Heb. 4:12, 13).
Selections from
‘Science
and
Health with Key to the Scriptures”
by Mary Baker Eddy, include:
“The looms of crime, hidden in
the
dark
recesses
of
mortal
thought, are every hour weaving

webs

45 a.m. Fifteen minutes of
mes.
1 a.m. Morning worship. Sernon topic: ‘The Soul’s Sincere De-

‘UESDAY,

December

2.

p.m. Meeting of the trustees.
WEDNESDAY,
December 3

tle

more

complicated

. . . Though

hind

a lie and

error

excuses

be-

guilt, er-

ror cannot forever be concealed.
Truth, through her eternal laws,
unveils error ... Let Truth un-

cover and destroy error in God’s
own way, and let human justice
pattern the
divine’
(pp.
102,
542).

6 P. m. Family night potluck supHIGHLAND PARK
PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH

Laurel, Linden

BETHANY CHURCH
(Evangelical United Brethren)
1704 McGovern Street
Rev. A. P. Johnson, Minister
_

The

Rev.

Dale

Church Telephone HI 2-1695
Dr. William Atkinson Young,
Minister

Zimdars,

SUNDAY, November 30
11 a.m. to 12 noon Morning worship service, Dr. Young preaching.
Church school classes for children

HI

2-3522

November

28

p.m. Nichols-Wessling circle at
‘three
home of Miss Helen Hill, 1825
grade
en Bay road.

JNDAY, November 30
:30 a.m. Church school directed
Dr. E. D. Fritsch, with classes
all age groups.
0:45 a.m. F. B. Schlung will pre15 minutes of organ medita-

Ss, preparatory

to the

1 a.m.

worship

h

the

Morning

minister,

nson

the

worship
service

Rev.

A.

P.

bringing the message.

p.m. Youth fellowship devotional service and social hour.

DNESDAY,
p.m.
tees

in

December 3

Meeting
church

of board

of trus-

office.

FRIDAY, December

5

years

old

up

through

third

also meet at this hour.
9:30 a.m. to 10:05 a.m. Chancel
choir rehearsal.
9:30 a.m. to 10:35 a.m. Junior department (4th, 5th and 6th grades)
and Junior high department
(7th
and 8th grades).
9:30 a.m. to
10:30
am.
Adult
class.

10:10 a.m. to 10:45 a.m. Froshsoph and varsity groups for high
school students.
10:10 a.m. to 10:45 a.m.
rehearsal at the manse.

TUESDAY,
7:30

Troop

December

p.m.

to

9

324—Lake

Quartet

493
DAY,

9:30
11

Shore

at Fort Sheridan.

portation

will

be

Sunday
Church

DNESDAY,
p.m.

school.
service.

November

Testimonial

26

meeting.

e belief that man

has

a mind

‘usion, whereas

ert

God,

the understand-

Spirit,

is

the

only

leads to the consciousness of
5os This will be explained in all
Churches
of Christ, Scientist, on

nday, November 30. The title of
me Lesson-Sermon will
be
ANENT AND
MODERN
NECROANCY,
ALIAS
MESMERISM
\ND
HYPNOTISM,
DE(OUNCED.

9:40

Religious

Late

9:30 a.m.

school.

SUNDAY, November 30
9:40 a.m. Religious school.
3:20
p.m. High
School
department.
7:30 p.m. Alumni.
MONDAY,
December 1
4 p.m. Hebrew classes.

8 p.m. P.T.A. board of directors.
9:30 a.m. Sisterhood board of di-

Candles
Service.

7:30

Deeper

Morning

Golden

Text

is

from

to

SUNDAY,

and

marrow,

and

of the thoughts

is a discerner

and

intents

of

_the heart. Neither is there any

A creature that is not manifest in
sight;
but
all things
are
| and opened unto the eyes

2:45 p.m. Girl Scout Troop 4.
4 p.m. Hebrew classes.
8 p.m. Adult chorus.
8 p.m. Men’s club board of direcCORB

8

k

November 30

a.m.

10:45

Sunday

a.m.

school.

Morning

to

12

noon.

GAN.

Hazel

REDEEMER
EV. LUTHERAN
CHURCH
587 W. Central Avenue
The
Rev. William
H.
Remmert,
pastor
Tel. HI 2-6848
Res. 1817 Green Bay road
THURSDAY,

November

27

10 a.m. Thanksgiving day service.
SUNDAY,

9:30
and

November

a.m.

Sunday

Bible

NORTH

worship.

Glencoe
Rev. Russell W. Lambert. Minister
Edwin Kemp, Director of Music
Glencoe 1227

bert

will preach

school,

December

p.m.

The

junior

council
meets.
will not

meet on the Saturday after Thanksgiving.

Rev.

8:30,

9:30,

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
CHURCH
Green

Rt. Rev. Msgr. Joseph
Rev.
Rev.

Bay

Roads

P. Morrison

Pastor
Donald B. Runkle
Bernard E. Burns

HI 2-0202
Confessions
Saturdays, eves. of First Fridays
and Holy Days 4 and 7:30 p.m.
Masses
Weekdays—6:15
a.m., 8:15 a.m.
Holy Days—6 a.m., 7 a.m., 8 a.m.,
9 a.m., and 10 a.m.

THURSDAY,

November

12

7:30

a.m.

Highwood

Community

Center

428 North Green Bay Road
Highwood

Tel. HI 2-8145
_| SUNDAY, November 30
11

a.m.

Sunday

worship.

organist.
Morning

communion

service. Message by the pastor.
7 p.m. Junior Christian endeavor.
7 p.m.

Evening

communion

serv-

ice.
ZION EV. LUTHERAN CHURCH
High Street and Oakridge Avenue
Highwood
Rev.
Herbert
W.
Linden,
SUNDAY, November 30
9:30 a.m. Church school.

10:45

Holy

communion,

9:30 a.m. Holy
Anivey Day.

communion,

Day.

a.m.

Morning

Pastor

worship.

Lt. (j.g.) Eugene Hotchkiss, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Hotchkiss of Baldroad,

has

completed

addition

to

the

i

benevo- —

lence funds pledged by the congregation

as

a. whole.

Mrs. Warren. Knapp
881 Kimball road heads
officers

as she

nears

her two year term
the association.
Other

Wilner of
the list of

completion

of

as president

of

Officers

Other officers include Mrs. John
Kuiper,
first vice president
(in
charge
of
groups);
Mrs.
Edwin
Hansbrough, second vice president
(in charge
of membership);
Mrs.
R. S. Owen,
recording secretary;
Mrs. Harrington Yost, corresponding
secretary;
Mrs.
J.
Franklin
Bickmore,
treasurer;
and
Mrs.
Howell Murray, stewardship.
Mrs.
William Atkinson Young, as wife of
the pastor, is an ex officio member
of the board.
Group leaders of the association
are Mrs. Carl Howard, Mrs. Karl
King, Mrs. A. S. Bauer, Mrs. Ray
Naegele, Mrs. William Ruffner and

Mrs. G. R. Parks.
Committee chairmen include
Mrs. Richard J. Seitz, activities;
Mrs. George H. Hartmann, budget
and finance; Mrs. A. G. Humphrey,
devotions; Mrs. J. W. Pugh, dinner

and luncheon; Mrs. Robert Herbst,
flowers; Mrs. Mark Brown, hospital
Mrs.

Lewis

B.

Mrs.

Harry

Pier,

Gordon

the

four-

week navy indoctrination course at
the Chemical Corps school, Fort
McClellan, Ala. During the course
he learned
the practical defense
against
chemical,
biological
and

Sinclair,

Fowler,

library;

program;

Mrs.

publicity;

Mrs.

Harry
G.
Pertz,
revisions;
Mrs
Frank Trangmar, sewing; and Mrs.
Charles E. Bletsch, social service.

Annual

Chanukah

Institute

Presented

Monday at Beth El

Third annual Chanukah Institute
at North Suburban Synagogue Beth
El will be presented Monday at 8

p.m.
The program
will
the Biblical story of the

which

typifies

the

include
Macca-

struggle

for
freedom
against
oppression —
found throughout history. A work_
shop for instruction in the rituals, —
songs, and festive crafts will also
be

Lt. Hotchkiss Completes
Navy Chemical Course

win

in

dressings; Mrs. J. C. Leach, hospitality; Mrs. L. Z. Howell, house;

FIRST UNITED EVANGELICAL
CHURCH
Green Bay Road at Laurel Ave.
A. G. Masser, Minister
HAT 2-1731
SUNDAY, November 30
9:30 a.m. Sunday school session.
10:40 a.m. Organ interlude. Mrs.
Lisle Hawley,
10:45 a.m.

work

bees,

noon.

7:30 p.m. Canterbury club.
MONDAY,
December 1
Andrew

SECOND BAPTIST CHURCH
OF HIGHLAND PARK
The Rev. William Giles Glover

27

6:15 a.m. Low mass.
8:15 a.m. Low mass.
10 a.m. Solemn mass of Thanksgiving.
SUNDAY,
November 30
Masses at 6:15, 7:30, 9, 10, 11 a.m.

and

Minister

30

9:30 a.m. Sunday school.
11 a.m. Sundav worship.
7:45 p.m.
Sunday worship.
TUESDAY,
November
25
8:30 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Missionary

Ass’t.

First Fridays and Week Days —
Masses at 7 and 8 a.m. Holy Days
—Masses at 6, 7, 8 and 9.
SUNDAY, November 30
Masses at 6:30, 7:30,
10:30 and 11:30 a.m.

Clineman.

November

Study class.

CHURCH

Rev. Arthur E. Douaire,
HI 2-0427
MASSES

Robert

SUNDAY,

146 North Ave., Highwood
Rev. James D. Gleeson, Pastor

and

services.

HIGHLAND PARK
BAPTIST CHURCH
486 Central Court
HI 2-2101

1

Church

meets.
8 p.m. Voters’ assembly
The Confirmation class

Deerfield

at both

Members

The association’s annual budget
is approximately $4,000, and 75 per
cent of it goes into benevolent

Name
WorLam-

30

10:45 a.m. Worship services.
7:30

November 30

9:30 a.m.
Sunday school.
9:30 a.m. and
11:30 a.m.
ship services.
The Rey. Mr.

class.

MONDAY,

SHORE METHODIST
CHURCH
and Greenleaf Avenues

SUNDAY,

service this Sunday.

of the organization throughout
the community are urged to attend the service at which officers, committee and group
chairmen and their families will
sit in a special section of the
church,

4.

rectors.

8:15 p.m. North Shore forum.
THURSDAY,
December 4

9:30

4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Hebrew school
Monday through Friday, Dec. 1-5.
9 a.m.

The widespread charitable
work of the Woman’s Association of the Highland Park Presbyterian church will be recognized at the regular 11 a.m.

communion.

Green Bay Road and
Homewood Avenue

on

meets
Dec. 1

Pro-

soul and spirit, and of the joints

Holy

JOHN’S EVANGELICAL
_REFORMED CHURCH
The Rev. Harold Harris, Pastor

TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH
8 p.m. Young people’s division,
425 Laurel Avenue
s (21:12) “God overthroweth Combined Jewish Appeal.
The Very Rev. Charles U. Harris,
wicked for their wickedness.” TUESDAY, December 2
Rector
4 p.m. Hebrew classes.
HI 2-6653
sla in the Lesson-Sermon in8 p.m. House committee.
SUNDAY, November 30
8 p.m. Experimental theater.
7:30 a.m. Holy communion.
‘For the word of God is quick,
8:15 p.m North Shore seminar of
9:15 am.
Family
service
and
and powerful, and sharper than Jewish studies.
church school.
uny two-edged sword, piercing WEDNESDAY, December 3
11 a.m. Morning prayer and serven to the dividing asunder of
4 p.m. Hebrew classes.
mon.
e

a.m.

Will Be F otod |

4:30 p.m. Girls choir practice.
ST.

worship.

“Great Jewish Books.”
7:15 am. Daily
Minyan
Monday through Thursday,

from

iiee POVEDIDOR ae

a.m.

p.m.

SUNDAY, November 30
8:15 a.m. Tephilin club.
10 a.m. Adult service.
10:30
a.m.
Seventh
lecture

Trans-

provided

Lincoln and Vernon Avenues
Glencoe, Illinois
Dr. Edgar Siskin, Rabbi
Benjamin Landsman, Cantor
FRIDAY, November 28
8:30 p.m. Services. Post service
forum discussion on religious observance in the home.

f his own with which to accom-|
Ban good or evil is the basis ues

p.m. Light

8:30

WEDNESDAY, December 3
7:30 a.m. Holy communion.
9:30 a.m. Holy communion.
THURSDAY, December 4
10:30 a.m. Holy communion.
11 a.m. Trinity guild meeting.
8 p.m. Parish choir practice.
FRIDAY, December 5

Meaning” a Thanksgiving message.
SATURDAY, November 29

Scout

NORTH SHORE
CONGREGATION ISRAEL

23

4:11

Sermon—‘Gratitude—Its

district—

Fun-O-Rol

CHRIST

Avenue

November

a.m.
a.m.

Hazel

Ross.

ST. JAMES
Boy

p.m. Guild board will meet in the church, leaving at 7:15 p.m.
Dubs room of the church with
WEDNESDAY, December 3
. Homer Sleeman as hostess.
9 a.m. to 9:30
am.
Sanctuary
ESDAY, December 9
open for prayer and meditation.
30 p.m. Christmas Bazaar, mis7:15 to 8:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
laneous items, food and baked
THURSDAY, December 4
s sale.
10 a.m. Woman’s service board.
5 to
7:30
p.m.
Smorgasbord.
6:30 p.m. Men’s fellowship club
ethany guild with Mrs. Paul Wildinner.
on ticket chairman, HI 2-0015.
T CHURCH OF
SCIENTIST

FRIDAY, November 28
Bas Mitzvah of Barbara Ross,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hyman

2

p.m.

ing.

Stanley Martin, Cantor
Conservative

Avenues

Assistant Minister

biay,

and Prospect

7: 15 p.m. Boy Scouts.
8 p.m. Church school staff meet-

Park

HI 2-5787
Philip L. Lipis, Rabbi

and subhides

EL

on

the

program.

The Chanukah Institute committee consists of Highland Parkers
Mrs. Herman J. DeKoven, chairman; Mrs, Seymour Tabin, co-chairman; the Mesdames Kenneth Arnolt, Albert H. Dolin, Sidney Falk,
Paul Finder, Bernard Fleischman,
Robert Kahn, Sol Shapiro, Leonard
Zieve, and Harry Hershman.

Msgr. Ligutti To Preach
At Thanksgiving Mass at
Immaculate Conception

The Rt. Rev. Luigi Ligutti, execuradiological warfare, both in the
classroom and the laboratory, the tive director of the National CathSt. navy announced. Lt. Hotchkiss will olic Rural life conference of Des |
report to his permanent station Moines, Ia., will preach the sermon —te
St. qualified as an assistant radiologi- at the 10 a.m. solemn high mass!
cal defense officer on ship or on eee,
d

�with Frep &amp; RED|
The

early

deadline

Thanksgiving

caught

us

unpre-

pared . . . So to make

“Botany” BRAND
Tailored of superb “Botany” woolens
“button

up”

Botany’s
neck

and

Anchor

Sash,

quality

single

up

special!

THE
SPECIAL!

ROBES

. . . featuring

|

|

to you readers ens going to |
give you something

MEN'S

)

|

needle tailorings.

$1995

Friday

and

Saturday

Only

im

Tio! (et; leg a\
The

First

for

Nighter

CHRISTMAS

PAJAMAS
By

: %

\&gt;

Welden

The famous knit top and broadcloth
bottom

pajamas

..

. perfect

for

sleeping or lounging.

$595

Arrow

Alpine Flannel

SPORT

SHIRTS

A virgin wool

flannel

and

nylon

sport

shirt that washes . . . and will never shrink.
A perfect gift for year round wear.

$150 - $900 - $950
AND EVEN SOME °3
Arrow

Washable

SPORT
Fine

weight,

Corduroy

TIES

SHIRTS
cor-

3

only to readers of this

duroy .. . comfort tailored by famous Arrow.

f

column.

A wonderful gift.

pin wale,

|

$895

Open Friday and Monday

THE
Thursday, November

sanforized

95¢
Evenings

FELL
27,

1952

Open All Day Wednesday

COMPANY

Tue Fext Go.
Page

31

|

�PAT
Le

Sophomore

Five Loses

Home

_ To Argo In Opener

Coach
Wally
Hammerberg’s
sophomore basketball
team
lost
their season’s opener last Friday
evening at Argo, 45-26.
The Blue
and White cagers got off to a slow
start and were behind by 17 points
at the end of the first half. In the
third and fourth quarters they began hitting Argo’s hoop but still
could not catch them.
George Moran scored
8
points
and
Ken

George

scored

5

during

the

L. T. Young, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Young of Delta avenue, spent
last weekend visiting his parents

a week

Madison,

tice

and

hopes

to

have

for

these

two

out

league
other

hard

games,

and

12 games

Freshman

Ohio.

Young

an

University of Wisas a graduate
of
High
school.
He

in football,

other

at

sports

is

both

track

The

prac-

a_

good

Sat.,
Sun.

for

the

1952-53

sea-

THURS.

From

Miss Carol
Bergsma
of
West
Park avenue and Miss Elaine Pellegreno
of 419 Bloom
street returned Sunday from a 10 day motor trip to Miami, Fla. Both young
women are employed by the Bell
Telephone company in Glencoe.

No matter what you want to buy
or sell you'll find the Want-Ad sec-

eT

SiGe =

CGB

ee) SE

TICKETS
BPC

MBE

ee,

theater

and

on

Evanston

sporting

sale

nee

events,

at

Ticket Service

North Shore Hotel Lobby, DAvis 8-8282
9 am. to 6 p.m. Mon. thru Sat.
Closed Sundays

ee

By JOHN

32

Arlene

FRI. thru MON.,
Marge

&amp;

Coach

John

as

an-

Vyn,

in-

Guentz and Jack
forward
slots,

at

Burnell

squad

the
A

MET

recent

is Jeff

position,
Don

and

Carlson

addition

to

Perkins.

Jane

Champion

&amp;

—

Kogan,

Leo

SUN-TIMES

Through

OPENS

DEC.

2

Nov.

FOR

By

Samuel

2:30

SATURDAY
Double Feature

GO

Marx,

Nov.

28-29

NAVY”
the Bowery
Feature

Boys

“WACO”
Bill

Elliot

and

Pamela

Blake

30

TWO

SUN.

WEEKS

&amp;

MON.

Noy.

“WHAT

Magner

James

Curtain: 8:30 (Sun. 7:30), Sat. Mat. 2:3U,
Eves., AExci, Sot,). $2.) $)..550, ae neat Eve.
$2.50, $2, $1.50. Sat. Mat. $1.
$1. No
der formance Mondays.
MAIL ORDERS ACCEPTED.
1716 Central St. (formerly Stadium Theatre), Evanston, DAvis 8-7440. Box
Office open daily, 10 a.m.—9 p.m.

TUES.,

PRICE

30-Dec.

1

GLORY”

Color by Technicolor
Cagney, Corinne Calvet,
Dan Dailey

Raphaelson

by Martin

Groucho
Sinatra

Gorcey and
Second

Wild

“HILDA CRANE”
Directed

from

Nov. 27
DYNAMITE”

Russell,
Frank

FRIDAY

SUCCESS”

Sunday

2-6228

THURSDAY
“DOUBLE

WED.

&amp;

THURS.,

“FIVE
Danielle

Dec.

2-3-4

FINGERS”

Darrieux,

Michael

Renie

Come in and try it at our

eae

Grand Opening Nov. 28th &amp; 29th

giucieg

@ FAMED ALLGAUER CUISINE
@ DISTINCTIVE DECOR
@ MODERN FACILITIES

1

Show

HI

Parties

ETT

f

Continuous

attend.

“LIFE WITH MOTHER”
by Lindsay and Crouse
With IAN KEITH

ee

ee TT Te
Ocial Affair
s
LCT

Dahl

HIGHWOOD
THEATRE

as

the

“LET’S

e

maT

a

(See

our ad

on pages

20-21)

@ EXPERT SERVICE
* ‘COME IN AND SEE FOR YOURSELF

Is Yours”

OR

CALL

US

FOR

RESERVATIONS

Technicolor

SUT a ae
to

and

The first game will be played at
4:15 p.m. The public is invited to

“BIG

tTe)
T ey

CT

“Everything | Have

TUE.

center

StodJohn

ws

Matinee

Gower

lineup,

rT DINING ROONS

Nov. 28-Dec.

Swan
Roger

THU.

Dec.

W. Somerset

2 to

4

SN

, 6666 NORTH RIDGE - BR-4-6666
LINCOLN at TOUHY - JU-8-8600

Maugham’s

“Encore”

Open

Daily &amp; Sunday

PARKIN
Space

CLOSER,

'

LESS

CLEANER

TIME

THAN

SARATOGA

SHAVES

Skip your next shave and visit
our store with a good 24-hour
beard. We'll be glad to have
you try the sensational new
Sunbeam. There’s none of this
**30-day trial period” necessary
—none of this much-talkedabout “‘breaking in’’;

1864

aaa

cs

bs

se aldad

Fe

ay

IN

SOAP-&amp;-BLADE

REYNOLDS

Once again the value of television,
its impact upon our social life and its
assistance toward the education of our
young, has been demonstrated through
the election returns.
Whereas
before
we had to rely on radio for mere words,
the telecasting
of the
1952
election
finals depicted with utmost clarity how
returns
are
counted
plus
the
high
drama attendant to
the results. In fact,
the entire campaign
as seen by the nation
through
television
has
proved
that our new communication medium
has
advanced
our
civilization
by
a
score of years...
One of the most
interesting
changes
brought on by television is the innovation in home decoration.
Not only are
architects designing houses with special
video rooms or living rooms with special
TV nooks, but the furniture itself in
these special rooms is being fitted to
the new mode.
Keeping
up with the new
in television: a company has perfected a device
which
perpetually
cleans
both
rotating and stationary contact points
inside TV sets—which, for the consideration of you laymen, means merely
continually improved reception. We say
merely, because good reception is something that all our customers
receive,
whether their sets be new or slightly
dated.
A good TV set and expert installation and service is the answer to
good reception
.
and _ believe
me
we've got all three of
these at 20th CENTURY
TELEVISION
G RADIO,
1858 First St. . . . Phone:
Highland Park 2-0341.

Page

by

Nov. 27

Holiday

In

“A TREE GROWS IN BROOKLYN”
“GIGI”
““FOURPOSTER”
“STALAG 17”
other

Special

place.
PENIWU MBER lle

market

%

Payne,

SOL MUELLER

best

eveiene

your

John

will

CER YOU THE FINEst IN

6

Color by Technicolor

Florida

squad

ALSO

1:30 to 6—40c
&amp; Holidays, 60c

LAST DAY

school

Finest Party Restaurants

40c to 6:30

the

in

at

High

ALLGARUER'S

2-0605

Mon.-Fri.

starting

cludes John
der at the

GLENCOE
Open

. oT “ei a

guards.

Heisler
Park

basketball

nounced

and

schools.

Park

TEACGes SPACE

sym.

last

Highland

ges

open its league
competition
next,
Wednesday against New Trier. The
game will be played in the local

“Caribbean”

Return

ee

Mr.

participated

son.

_ tion

Cleveland,

Jerry

Highland

suburban

also

of the

Wis.

alumnus of the
consin as well
Highland
Park

later the

entertain

crowd

wy &gt;

5, and

Little Giants
will
Oak Park Huskies.
The team worked

from

By
The

On Saturday he attended the Minnesota-Wisconsin football game at

half
for
Highland
Park.
Highscorer for the game was Novosad,
who sparked Argo
with
4
twopointers and 3 free throws for a
total of 11 points.
_ The Blue and White sophomores
will play at New Trier High school

December

here

ER ek Nk

f

Frosh Basketball League
Opens Season Wednesday

For Weekend

while

et: DEON
\

Pe isis

Sheridan

Highland Park 2-2028

Lake Forest, Dlinois — Lake Forest 2106
North Shore’s Most Beautiful Theatre

er
FOR

Nationally

AGED

Famous

STEAKS
AN D

FRIDAY,

November

The North Shore’s Tastiest

—

PIZZA
SEA

FOODS

e

OPEN
CLOSED

e

CHICKEN

SEVEN
ALL

DAYS

DAY

“MY
ITALIAN

A

CUISINE

THANKSGIVING

440 Green

Bay Rd., Highwood

Hayes,

Produced

SARATOGA

thru

ONE

THURSDAY,

WEEK

December

4

—

JOHN”

with

Helen

WEEK

SON

28

and

Van

Heflin,

Directed

LEO

McCAREY

who

Next

Week—“PAULA”

Robert Walker,

Dean

Jagger

by

gave

us “Going

with Loretta

My

Way”

Young

HI 2-0440
Thursday,
ae

Digit

he

ee

November
tamer

§

se 5

‘

a

4 PR

27, 1952
oP

hake

oe eet

a

5

|
rege.

fr St a

�TS

Cee ¢F

The

Want-Ad

interesting
tunities.

section

facts

and

is filled with

golden

Cal

ot

ase

Braeside

oppor-

Pupils

Braeside

—_—___—___———

| sented

school

(

Yy

()

the
. Thanksgiving
des

N

the

THEATRE
HIGHLAND
Dial

HI

Be"

MON.,

written

Dec.
for

Reserved

playlet

gnd

Sallis
aoe
were

‘

ame

Darrieux,

by

2

the

new

store

at

of Central avenue
road in Highland

Per-

Bruce

Under

War-

B=

L

F

G

Ed

f

S$

Here

and

There

be

;

en

the

and

corner

|

Sheridan

Pz

le

the

past |

of instrumental mu
month,
the’ new.
store
has
been |
.
if
letely
r
7
Phelps,
director of | completely
remodeled
and decor
Andy Voisard, creaated according to Paul Leeds’ speF
cifications. New fixtures and furni- |

Frances

Apitz,

deco-|

tyre are of grayed

—

|store this weekend

meer.

JOHANNA

Those

oak and

glass, |

Rennie

SNEAK

LODGE

diamond

El

PREVIEW

Comilix:

|

“THE PRISONER OF ZENDA”

|

be

will be eligible |

or

a

In

Lord

or

Lady

additi
node
provided
for

entering
Paul

the

Leeds.

store,
To

|

SRO
AS A MERA

ci

ING

SA CW)

1) SE MITRE

SR

A

BART

NR

every-

according

further

| “Flasho”’

Makes

A

Hit

With

The

Kiddies

augu- |

;

a|

‘

|/ ment the grand opening celebra- At Bruce ene rin Shoes’ First Birthday
tion, Mr. Leeds has declared
storewide

Fed,

sipaieieaiie
$1.80

MISTRESS”

ring,

will

one

Price

Ur

visit the new jewelry |

watch.

to

"UES:
DEC: 28:40 pm.
Alcyon Theatre
$1.50

who

to win one of two door prizes, a|
gift

FINGERS”

;
IRON

D

Friday and Saturday will mark |
grand
opening
of
Leeds |

| Jewelers’

:

ee

faery omeeeunentn —mnrnprrnerne

The StorySpy of intheHistory
Highest Paid ||}
“THE

10\the

Danielle :

Michael

“FIVE

i

From

sic

Marion

direction;

dance;

Dec. 3-4

Mason,
‘

S$

rations;
Darrell mae Beam,
property
:
softly
illuminatel
by
fluorescent |
|}and scenery;.
William Shorb, light-|;..,;
:
| 1
h
e Th
bas
.
|
ing;
and .accompanists
for chor—
.
ee
reer oe dark |
:
ike
green,
offset
by
a
pale
green
uses, Barbara Slepyan and Barbara
asphalt tile floor.

Show

&amp; THURS.

James

J

entitled |

C

U.O.T.S.

WED.

|

to

presented

se

play

tive

y

Benefit

program

oo

a _

nock, director
?
sic; Anne
C.
choral music;
;

Technicolor

Tr

r,

tion departments

s
Burt
Lancaster
in
“THE
CRIMSON
PIRATE”
‘

TUESDAY
Theatre

Noi

were
tree“America
re

Thank
aha
anksgiving

Yann
dish
. 4a8ER

Nov. 28, 29, 30, Dec. 1 || sson,

In

Vlorth
/

in the school.

Hymn,”

and

‘ow
on

2-2400

SUN.,

=

pre-|

selections

Reality

| Fathers,”

PARK
—

SAT.,

t

—|itrom intandi,” “God ot our LEAS” New Enlarged Store To Upen Friday

mk?
FRI.,

children

at 1:15 p.m.

Among
|

;

Program

their Thanksgiving

yesterday
A

Present

Thanksgiving

Don’t miss it!

ae eaaaame amare

oes

mp
Lae
TT WAN
MeBat Ae

“Tax

sale

Friday

| urday.

|

Sat-|

;

The new store will be staffed by |
William Johnson of Highland Park, |

Total

DOOR PRIZES

and

| Louise DelBene of Highwood and |
| Mr. Leeds.
|
]
|

‘Four Clefs’ Perform
—

featuring Chicken

Thanksgiving
TU

from

2

DI

p.m,

1

Pvt. A. Mills, Pfc. S. King, Pfc. |

in the Basket —

Dinner

RKEY

A. Green and Pfc. W. Platt, known |
collectively as ‘‘The Four Clefs,”’

Special

lentertained Highland Park’s Ro-|

NNERS

-

12

tarians with a program of spirituals
at Monday’s meeting.
|
The
Negro
quartet
appeared |
| through the courtesy of Chaplain

p.m.

75

| William

‘
@

@

@®

PACKAGE

FOOD

TO

TAKE

OUT

@

e@

@

|

Chaplin

| be

next

ORDERS

Phone

HI 2-1870

,

eae

is

Ill

scheduled

to |

speaker.

—|

|

Choice Hollywood Films

E,

Many North Shore children euntied out last week to meet
“Flasho” at the Bruce Martin Shoe store in Highland Park. The

nceeererees

| children’s shoe shop, owned by Samuel Cohen, is starting its second

THEATRE — WAUKEGAN || &lt;0 '”

The GARRICK Players
Forest

Sharpe

week’s

iene

|

Highwood,

=

Lake

of Fort Sheri-|

|

Open every day 12:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.

of

B. Sharpe,

| dan.

LIQUORS

423 Waukegan Ave.

|

For H.P. Rotary Club

T

= Oo U

re i D

T re FE

}

College

}

Continuous

Daily

from

1:30

Bar Park.

Msniand

Highland

RRA
A NL

ee

Tee

or

a

present

“DEATH

TAKES

A

a

i

HOLIDAY”

00
Berge bylegsWalter
Translated
December
Curtain

time

8:15

p.m.

Ferris

in

Durand

Auditorium

on

the

For

reservations
Players,

call

Lake

Forest

3100

Forest College,

Lake

|

Like

Italian

ext.
Lake

28

or write

in Technicolor
'|

Illinois

Forest,

Cars

Go

On

Display

Shore Show Room

LOVE

OUR

with
Tierney,
Genn

Spencer Tracy, Gene
Van Johnson, Leo

thru

WED.,

Nov. 30-Dec.

cas

Cooking

YOULL

~

Packard

Packard-North

“

ADVENTURE

SUN.

If You

At

“PLYMOUTH

of the College

Tickets $1.00

GARRICK

‘New

NOW THRU SATURDAY
Stirring sea story

3-4-5

Presented

North Campus

im

Stunning

true

1-3

story

na weil teil

|

“The Miracle of

SPAGHETTI
@

ie i Z Z A
%

A

STEAKS

Real

Bring

WASHINGTON
(Scornavocco’s)
‘

550 Green Bay Road, Highwood
ib
Se

_Thuraday,
I

ia

eal

a

Rg

November
az»

thy

@

Fatima”
RAVIOLI

27, 1952

Filmed in, color
ee,

Treat
@

i

-

the

Family

GARDENS
HI 2-9787

;

SS
;

Sila
The

Packard

A
Patrician

four-door

sedan

for

ton

above,

in

the new line of Packard cars for the luxury car market, is now on

Pennee een ry wees Se

display at Packard North Shore, 562 Lincoln Avenue, Winnetka,

Another Big Screen Hit!
Romantic Adventure

Two distinct lines of cars have been announced by Packard Motor
Car company: Packard cars for the top-price field and a line of
Packard Clippers at medium prices. There are seven cars in the

“The
Snows of || time
Power as steering,
designed by Packard, 1s introduced
for the first
Kilimanjaro”
optional equipment along with air conditioning. There are
J
in Technicolor

with

power brakes, ultramatic no-shift automatic transmission, and
other recent contributions to easier motoring.
Packard contour

Gregory Peck, Susan Hayward, || Styling is retained
Ava

Gardner

with

refinements

appearance.
Models in the Packard
engine with 8 to 1 compression ratio.

to further

line

have

a

accentuate
180

low

horsepower

Page

33

_

�How Does It Feel
To Give Blood?
Miss Anita E. Montgomery
Nurse’s Aide Asks a Question of Three Americans

“I’ve seen miracles at the hospital where I’m
on volunteer duty. I remember this one man
recently who had been badly injured work-

ing in a defense plant. He came out of the

Blood

Donor Center

our hospitals to have all the blood they
can obtain. What made me curious was...
how it feels to give blood

...

“I found out quickly enough at our local
blood donor center. People wanted
to talk
about this painless,
were making. Their

anonymous gift they
voices sounded proud

and yet humble... as they told me how it

feels to give blood .. .”

ward

after

ward,

silently

A
ARTE
I

Call
inner

esate

co
Toy and
@
Patio Shop

ALPHA CLEANERS ®
Page

34

GARNETT

Re
oe
po

with

Ke
mS

man

EE

a

... sure they’ve got to have all we

all-out enemy attack and this city
could be the front lines, with our

own families among the casualties.

In other words, let’s make sure we
have all the blood we need, wher-

ever

and

whenever

we

need

it.”

kee

NO

STRANGE’S

MARTINS,

can give them. But, as I see it, one

ED

SME
RU
Go
ces
eee
ae

SE

thanking an unknown American for
saving his life.”

HAROLD

an important Civil Defense job,
joined in: “‘Combat areas . . . service hospitals . . . civilian hospitals

CN

in

Sgt.

EN

ing

Marine

Be The Front Lines”

TOK

When you ask what it feels like to
give blood, I think of them . . . ly-

DONNELLY,

back from 14 months’ service in
Korea, told Miss Montgomery: ‘I’m
giving back some that I ‘borrowed’
after the landing at Inchon. How
does it feel? It feels great. It feels
like I’m almost talking to those
guys still out there. That’s what’s
important—for them to feel you
haven’t forgotten about them. . .
and that’s what you’re saying when
you give blood.”

ewes

But they’re still fighting for their
lives, still needing blood as desperately as the day they were hit.

CLYDE

SE

Army
we’re
those
now.

“It Feels Great!"

GE

SARAH
SIMMONDS,
an
Nurse, spoke up: ‘““The men
more likely to forget are
whose combat days are over

“This City Could

SEE

“Silently Thanking An
Unknown American...”

re

oe

operating room ‘doing well.’ Minutes later
he went gray as ashes before my eyes. No
surgery, no wonder drug could help him.
Only blood. And it took 5 pints.
* “So I know what it means to receive
Wood. And I know how imvortant it is for

at Her Local

MRS.
PAUL
DATE
ecco Tenn

.

NTRIBUTED AS A PUBLIC SERVICE BY _

&amp; CO.®

MOLEY

RADIO &amp;
APPLIANCE CO.

© Suriset Food Mart ® RUBY’S PEticatessen

First Nat’! Bank°F @ Skokie Valley beundry ond @ Town
Dry Cleaners -°

Floor Co. @ IREDALE STORAGE and
MOVING

Thursday, November

CO,

27, 1952

�PHONE

Dsutts

WANT

WANT AD RATES
20 words

This

55

cost

Words

or

will

cover

Less)

bdrms.,

the

® Deerfield Review

1896

up to

Tuesday 4:30 p.m.

Call any of these numbers
Ad

1899

615 Waukegan Road
HIGHLAND PARK
LAKE

REAL

Ave.

Deerpath

ESTATE FOR SALE
(LAKE FOREST)

(Improved)

PAY
LIKE RENT
Fine 7 rm. brick home in Lake Forest,
$23,000.
Wonderful
terms,
very
low
down payment.

ANCHOR
HI

REAL

2-0093

ESTATE
Res.,

2-1834

TRI-LEVEL

&amp; LLOYD,

Sheridan

Realtors

Road

HI

2-0880

DEERFIELD
8 bdrm. Brick French Provincia] in convenient location;
gas
ht., study,
bsmt,
Built
in 1950.
Offered
in middle
20’s.

FOREST

287

HI

SHERWOOD FOREST
2 bdrm. Brick Ranch with gas ht.; stone
fireplace, lge. kit., ceramic tile bath and
bsmt. Real buy in low 20’s.

DEERFIELD

St. Johns

Rd.

BRICK

EARHART

Park 2-4500

Lake Forest 2300

1775

pch.

WONDERFUL
HOME
for lge. family. 8
car gar. w/huge pine panelled rec. rm.
w/bar, above. 9 rms., 3% baths—on property
115x200
in excellent
East central
location.
$28,500. Call Jack Rasmussen.

Deerfield 485

Highland

screen

gas ht., oversize
area.
Call for

3 bdrms., 2 baths. Offered for first time.
Large “L” living-dining rm. Nestled in
beautiful wooded lot with 100 ft. frontage, paved
rd. in countrified surroundings. 3 blks. to Northwestern
&amp; North
Shore trains. $26,500. Call Bob Earhart.

TELEPHONE
WANT AD SERVICE
for a Want
Taker

and

G MAXON

Sheridan

QUAINT

for Publication in the Current
Week’s Issue

ask

bath

BEAUTIFUL corner location in desirable
Woodridge area. New and charmingly:
decorated,
completely
air-conditioned;
6 sunny
rooms,
8 bdrms., 2 ceramic
tile baths, att. gar. Priced to sell at
caer
Quinlan
&amp; Tyson,
Wilmette

® The Lake Forester

and

tile

ADLER

® Highland Park News
® Highwoed News
Ads will be accepted

(Improved)

Park)

on 2nd. Automatic
gar.
with
storage
appt.

insertion in all 4 papers.

Want

SALE

Start the New Year in this excellent 6 room brick home in Ravinia.
Lge. liv. rm., din. rm.-den comb.
attractively
decorated,
mod.
kit.
and brkfst. rm., pwd. rm. on Ist; 3

5¢ each additional word
(For

FOR

(Highland

50

for only ..... ‘]

ESTATE

HI

2-0087

——

—o—

HOMES
AND
HOMESITES
for sale in
vicinity of King Muir Road, north side
of Deerpath.
2 ranch
type homes
near
completion. Both are 6 room houses with
8 bedrooms,
2 baths,
modern
kitchens,
gas heat, 2 car garage.

REAL

ESTATE
FOR
(Highland

SALE
Park)

(Improved)

FOR
sale by owner,
4 bedroom
frame
house; 1% baths, gas ht., double garage,
lg.
lot.
Nice
neighborhood.
$17,000. Very good condition. Call HI
2-7431.

REAL

ESTATE

FOR SALE

(Improved)

(Deerfield)
ATTRACTIVE Cape Cod; 2 bedrooms, enclosed porch, gas heat, 6 yrs. old, garage. Exceptionally well built. $16,000.
Deerfield 1290.
FOR
GRACIOUS
LIVING
Brand new frame colonial on wooded 100x
300 lot; large sunken living room with
fireplace, dining room, cab. kitchen, 1%
baths,
master
bedroom
with
dressing
room, plus 2 twin size bedrooms, attached
2 car garage, full basement, oil hot water
heat. $35,000. Phone UPtown 8-3685.
Two bedroom Redwood Ranch home with
breezeway and gar. on wide corner lot;
gas forced air heat. Only $15,000.
Other well built homes comparably priced.
Available
for
immediate
occupancy.
Select
homesites,
conveniently
located
available now for spring building. Priced
from $1,000 and up.

VIKING

6385

Waukegan

REALTY

Rd.

CO.

Deerfield

161

Centrally located.
4 bedroom home. 100x
69 wooded lot. Double liv. rm., separate
dn.rm., modern kit., bsmt., 2 car garage.
Move right in. Reduced, $17,750. $12,600
mortgage available.
See your home being built. Will
for occupancy by March 1. Liv.
dining
area,
cabinet
kit., tile
bedrooms. A tremendous value at

ARR

701

Waukegan

REALTY

Rd.,

be ready
rm. with
bath,
3
$15,750.

CO.

Deerfield

984

or

985

IF YOU
PLAN
TO
BUILD
see Sherwood
Forest,
a new
and
fast
growing area. Large lots, many
beautifully wooded
with all improvements
in
and paid for. Reasonably
priced.
ROBERT
L.
JOHNSON
REALTY
CO.
1608
Berkeley
Rd.
HI
2-6200
Winnetka
6-3809
Deerfield
308

NEWLYWEDS
We have an excellent selection of small
attractive homes
reasonably
priced
and
ideal for the happy years to come. Call us
to see one of our
attractive
2 bdrm.
Ranch houses featuring good solid construction and an excellent neighborhood.
Price, $16,750.

HIGHLAND
PARK
EXCLUSIVES
162 LAUREL
AVE.
Near the lake and in fine neighborhood.
Convenient home for children and grownups; 4 bdrms, 2 baths, pleasant library
and scr. pch. Liberal allowance for decorating.

FOR AN ESTABLISHED FAMILY
We are pleased to offer this well built
brick home with 4 twin size bdrms. and
3%
baths;
over
an
acre
of
property. and secluded location amongst other
fine homes.
The
St. Charles
kit. with
dishwasher will make meals a pleasure.
Call us to see this property.

BENJ. PIERSEN
REALTY CO.

White brk. Ranch on 1 acre of ground.
4 bdrms., 2 baths, 2 car att. gar., oi] ht.
$22,000
mortgage
available.
Price,
$38,500.

ANN

667

MORELAND,

Vernon

813

Realtor

Glencoe

805

or

Waukegan

Deerfield

1573

Rd.
or

1572

350
BUILDER

LAKE BLUFF: 6 room Cape Cod. 8 bedrooms,
1%
baths,
living
room,
dining
room, kitchen and lavatory on first floor.
On
60x222
ft.
wooded
lot.
Telephone
Lake
Bluff 2622.

6 ROOM

BRICK

RANCH

LAKE
FOREST
COUNTRYSIDE
On over an acre of nicely landscaped
and wooded
property. There are 3 bedrooms,
2 baths.
Beautiful
large
living
room and adjoining all-purpose room with
fireplace
wall.
Gas
heat.
Thermopane
windows. Cork floors. 2 car attached garage. Low taxes. Priced to sell now.

LAKE

VIEW

PROPERTY

Choice Lake Forest location. Southwest
corner of Lake Road and Barberry Lane.
Over half acre with just enough trees.
All utilities in.

RIDGE
22/3
gain.

ROAD

acres

HART,

in

area.

&amp;

A

ESTATE FOR

(Highland

bar-

COMPANY.

SALE (Improved)
Park)

HOME
AND
INCOME
8 apt. buildings in good location;
income,
$415 per month. $30,000;
terms. For info. call

ANCHOR
HI

REAL

2-0093.,

res.

gross
good

ESTATE

HI

HIGHLAND PARK ESTATE
on 8 acres beautiful property in choice
east section; gracious home in immaculate condition. 30 ft. liv. rm., kit. with
dishwasher,
library with frpl., 4 family
bdrms., 3 baths, maids quarters. Priced
at only $48,500.

G REAL ESTATE

Be

Glencoe

Thursday,

Ave.

bedroom

Glencoe

November

27,

1971

1952

and

bath

on

Last
ae
field.

463

&amp;

R. ANSPACH,

Central

Ave.

FIRST MORTGAGE

4

2-1212

NEW
OFFERING
Five rm. shingle home in convenient location. Liv. rm. with frpl., sep. din. rm.,
2 bdrms.
and bath, bsmt.,
2 car gar.;
low
upkeep
and
taxes.
Price,
$16,500.
OPPORTUNITY
Seldom
have
we
been
able
to offer a
substantial
beautiful
4 bdrm.
home
in
Sunset
subdivision. If you
want a fine
neighborhood, convenient to schools and
transportation
along
with
comfortable
economical
living call to see this outstanding buy. Price, $24,750.

BENJ. PIERSEN
REALTY CO.

584

Central

RED

Ave.,

HI

BRICK

2-7278,

Dfld.

1578

unusualscreened

peh.; pwdr. rm., kitchen with bkfst.
space;
4 bdrms.,
STANDING BUY.
tails call:

RINGER
457

2 baths.
OUTFor further de-

REALTY

Central

PER CENT PROTECTED
mortgage to
qualified
home
owners.
Will
REFINANCE
present higher interest mortgage or will make
your PAYMENTS
in case of SICKNESS
or ACCIDENT.
Benj. H. Edelman, HI 2-3295, day or
evening.

OFFICES,

1ST FLOOR office for rent in Lake Forest. Call
Lake
Forest
2394
for appointment.

COMPANY
HI:

2-6600

2-2412.

MODERN apartment near Ravinia station.
4.rooms including bath. HI 2-4949.
NEW
and completely furnished 2 room
apartment, laundry privileges; hot water at all times, private entrance. Phone
HI

(Highland

ROOM

RENT (Unfurnished)
FOREST)

unfurnished

kitchenette

apart-

ment and bath. Will furnish if desired.
Telephone Lake Forest 3555.
38 ROOM unfurnished apartment. Children
welcome.
Telephone Lake Forest 410.
APARTMENTS TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(Miscellaneous)
THREE room apartments for rent; heat,
water,
electricity furnished.
For
further information contact, Sonny Service Station in Half Day, Libertyville
2-9879 or Libertyville 2-4141.

toga

TO
RENT
(Furnished)
APARTMENTS
(LAKE FOREST)
FURNISHED
modern
kitchenette
apartment.
Telephone
Lake
Forest
832.
FURNISHED apartment in private house
between Lake Forest and Libertyville.
$75 per month. Large living room, bedroom,
bath,
kitchenette,
and
garage.
Suitable for quiet couple with car. No
children, no pets. References. Telephone
Libertyville
2-3339.
HOUSES

TO RENT
(Furnished)
(Highland Park)

FOR rent: new house, furnished
furnished.
Call HI
2-5083.

or

un-

HOUSES TO RENT (Furnished)
(Deerfield)

HOUSES

TO RENT
(Furnished)
(Miscellaneous)

LOVELY
furnished
1 year old 5 room
house with wood burning fireplace. 1 car
garage, automatic
oil heat. From
December 1 or 15 to June 15. Telephone
GLenview
4-1208.
HOUSES
&amp; APARTMENTS
WANTED
(Furnished or Unfurnished)
WANTED
by civilian foreman and wife
at Fort Sheridan, furnished or partly
furnished small apartment. Permanent.
No drinking, smoking, or parties. Can
assist with chores on garage apartment.
Call HI 2-5000, extension 2210.
UNFURNISHED
2 bedroom apt. wanted
by financially. responsible young Highland Park couple with one 3%
yr.-old
daughter; garage apartment preferred.
IZ you have one available or coming up
within a few months,
please call us;
excellent references. HI 2-4105.
FOR

RENT

ROOM
for rent,
reasonable.
4 College
Campus, Lake Forest. Telephone Lake
_ Forest 2167.
;
COMFORTABLE
room
for
rent,
near
transportation;
gentleman
preferred.
Telephone Lake Forest 3294.
FURNISHED
room for rent, near transportation; call after 4 p.m. Telephone
Lake Forest 2267.
LARGE
room for rent, near transportation and town; private entrance. Call
after 3 p.m. HI 2-4300.
NICE big room, cloes to Vine Ave. station.
Phone
HI
2-1556.
LARGE pleasant room, private bath, own
entrance;
near
village.
Suitable
for
Navy couple or businessman. Call Lake
Forest 1674 evenings.

RELIABLE gentleman desires room; private bath or private entrance preferred.
Write Box F5 c/o Lake Forester.

GARAGE
WANT
to
Oakwood

phone

in
rent
garage
and Westminster

Lake

HELP

WANTED

Forest

2223

vicinity
of
Ave. Tele-

after

5 p.m.|

WANTED—FEMALE

COOK, 5 or 6 days a week, permanent;
experience is not necessary. Reasonable
pay.
Apply
at
406. Green
Bay
Rd.,

HI

assistant
time job.

cook
Sara-

2-0400.

GENERAL
help
needed
for
circulation
department
of national
magazine.
Varied duties. Experience unnecessary.
New
office. Phone
Florence
Rhodes,
Northbrook
1201.

bly

Punch

press

operators.

Free

operators,

bus

Assem-

transportation

on

insured buses on scheduled
route. Paid
vacations and holidays. Group insurance
and
hospitalization
available.
The
M. B. AUSTIN
COMPANY
1405 Shermer Ave.
Northbrook, Til.
Call Northbrook 715, Mr. Burbury

F.

Part
W.

SALESLADIES
time or full time.
WOOLWORTH
CO.

REGISTERED
nurses
needed
at H.P.
hospital.
Starting
salary,
$255,
with
afternoon bonus, $30, and night bonus,
$20. See Miss Beard, HI 2-8000.

EARN

CHRISTMAS
NOW

MONEY

Women
for light assembly work.
FREE
TRANSPORTATION
BLUE CROSS
CHRISTMAS BONUS
MUSIC WHILE
YOU
WORK
PLEASANT
WORKING
CONDITIONS
in
modern,
centrally
located
factory.
Days
8 a.m.
to
4:30
p.m.;
evenings,
4:45 to 11:15 p.m.

CHERRY-CHANNER
1488 Skokie Blvd.

CORP.
HI 2-6548

STENOGRAPHER—Winnetka
Park District has a very fine permanent position

FOUR room partly furnished Brick Ranch
home with garage, $100; radiant heat.
Immediate possession to May or longer.
Deerfield 234R.

It!

WANTED—FEMALE

helper
and
steady or part

Club,

2-1959.

ROOMS,
centrally located, reasonable
rent; includes utilities. Employed lady
preferred. Phone HI 2-2204.

Park)

FOUR
room
apartment,
near town
and
transportation; uitlities furnished. 421
Central
Ave., Highland
Park,
Il.

HELP
KITCHEN
wanted;

Female:

THREE
room
apartment, furnished, garage; utilities furnished. Two girls or
working
couple
preferred.
Tel.
HI

APARTMENTS TO RENT (Unfurnished)

1

(Furnished)

STORES &amp; STUDIOS |
TO RENT

APARTMENTS TO
(LAKE

COLONIAL

In a lovely neighborhood;
ly large liv. rm., din. rm.,

LOANS

upper

Inc.
HI

APARTMENTS
TO
RENT
(Highland Park)

ROOMS

Ample
funds available at low rates on
well located residential properties. Long
terms—prepayment
privileges.
FIRST
FEDERAL
SAVINGS
AND
LOAN
ASSOCIATION
216 Madison Street
Waukegan
MA
38-0084

and Charge

_GOLD COAST
APARTMENT
Exquisite 6 room apartment; studio living room, natural fireplace, 3 tile bathrooms,
walk-in
bar,
built
in breakfast
nook, modern kitchen. Rent, $300 monthly; 3 yr. lease. MIchigan 2-2382.

- MORTGAGES

$26,500.

2-0037

SUNSET
SUBDIVISION
For
sale—by
owner.
5 room,
2 story
brick; large screened porch, knotty pine
rec. room, carpeted; attached garage. 6
years old. $25,500. Phone HI 2-0717.

712

large

level. Gas heat. First class condition. Owner moving out of town.

H.

real

260 EAST DEERPATH
LAKE
FOREST
616

REAL

Charming English Brick Tri-Level
in lovely wooded area on 100 fet.
lot. Large combination living-dining room, and streamlined kitchen
on first level. Two bedrooms and
tile bath on 2nd level. One very

VACANT

estate

SHAW

FOR
SALE
BY OWNER.
Built like Gibraltar. Woods ravine setting.
6 room
brick,
1%
baths,
bsmt.,
rec.
room,
screened porch, heated attached garage,
rustic interior, wood paneling, beams.
Best North
Shore value, $26,500. Immediate possession. HI 2-4993.

LIQUIDATION,
ONLY
$4,000
DOWN
of new brick 8 bdrm. homes; full
See at 551 Longfellow Ave., Deer-

485

ADS

APARTMENTS TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(Miscellaneous)

38

ADS

Deerfield

use WANT
REAL

YOUR

open

for

experienced

stenographer

with some knowledge of bookkeeping.
Ideal working conditions, 40 hour week,
pension plan, sick leave and vacation
privileges. Salary dependent on experience and qualifications. Apply George
B. Caskey, Supt., Winnetka Park District Office, 2nd flr., Village Hall, Winnetka. Tel. WI 6-2160.

Girl with general office experience for typing, full time 5day week.
CHERRY-CHANNER CORP.
1488 Skokie Blvd.
H.P.
lady for typing ana general ofYOUNG
Shore Gas Co., 644
fice work. North
Park. Inquire
Ave., Highland
Central
Brandt. HI 2-6000.
Mr.
or
of Mr. Clark

STENOGRAPHER
PERMANENT POSITION
WORKPLEASANT
OFFICE,
SMALL
AND
SHORTHAND
CONDITIONS.
ING
5
NECESSARY,
EXPERIENCE
TYPING
AND
HOLIDAYS
PAID
WEEK,
DAY
INSURANCE.
FREE
I\VACATIONS;

LIGHTING
1548

W.

PARK

PRODUCTS,

Inc.

AVE.

2-5180

HI

EXPERIENCED
checkers
for full time
and part time work. Hours to suit your
convenience. Good pay, pleasant work.
Janowitz Foods, Lake Forest 2700.
NEED
PART
TIME
HELP?
Regardless of what type of job you may
want
done we have competent and reliable college men
and women
qualified
to meet your employment
needs.
Telephone
College
Placement
Bureau,
Lake
Forest 3100, extension 70.
MANICURIST, full and part time, in exclusive
shop;
best
pay
and
tips
on
North
Shore. HI 2-4768.
STENOGRAPHER
for part
time
work.
The N. A. Cates Co., 480 Waukegan
road, Deerfield;
phone
Deerfield 950.
KITCHEN
maid
to assist with general
kitchen work. Apply in person. High-

Hospital,

wood

50

Pleasant

Ave,

Highwood.
BEAUTY.
OPERATOR,
full
and
part
time; excellent opportunity. Best pay
on North Shore; wonderful customers,
also
pleasant
co-workers.
Shop
has
maid service. HI 2-4768.

Highwood.

WAITRESS
wanted, hours from 11 a.m.
to 7 p.m.,
6 day week, $47.50. Call
Glencoe 1813.
WANTED:
secretarial
and
general
office work; good
salary,
hospital and
life
insurance
plan.
Experience
unnecessary. Call Glencoe National Bank,
Glencoe 1750. See Mr. Schinler.
GIRL
or woman
for part time general
office work. HI 2-3231. Call between
9 and 4 p.m.

MULTILITH
Attractive

with

firm

located

OPERATOR

working

of

environment

business

in North

consultants

Shore

area.

Good

salary to start plus other benefits.
Call BRiargate 4-7500 from Chicago
or
Libertyville
suburbs.

2-4080

Page

from

35

�‘HELP WANTED—FEMALE —
time

work

Friday

and

CHRISTMAS

ADVERTISING SALESMAN

Saturday

FOR

_ CHEVY CHASE COUNTRY CLUB
BALLROOM
ATIONALLY
known
firm
of business
consultants
has a responsible position
on
its staff. Must be good typist. Uni _ usually
attractive
general
offices
lo_ eated in North Shore suburb. Good salary to start plus other benefits. Con_ venient transportation. Call BRiargate
4-7500
from
Chicago
or LIbertyville
- 2-4080 from suburbs.

HELP

WANTED—MALE

_

PERMANENT
JOBS
ARE
NOW
OPEN

TRAINMEN
SHOP WORKERS
TICKET AGENTS
CLERKS

LINE

‘STEADY drivers for the winter or year
around. Apply at Cab Stand. Highland
Park
Yellow
Cab and
Radio
Cab.
shipping
clerk
and_
stock
;
. New printing plant. Call Bill
Rhodes, Northbrook 1200.
ESTABLISHED
route open. Married man
- with car, now earning less than $100
weekly.
Write
Box
N26,
Mont
Clare
Leyden Herald, Elmwood, Park, Illinois.
YOUNG
man, full or part time, to operate
duplicating
machine.
Experience
unnecessary.
Call Bill Rhodes, Northbrook
1200.

ing

JOBS
2 men

machines,

We
will
Evatype

train.
Corp.

KITCHEN
0
wanted;
_ toga

_

do

assembly

Deerfield

365,

Club,

HI

2-0400.

ONtario

:

low

inventory

only.

Telephone

2-2370.

AUTO

SALESMAN

re
opportunity for the right man.
limit to possible earnings.
Packard
North
Shore,
Inc.,
562
Lincoln
Ave.,
Winnetka 6-3070.
_—

k
NEED
PART TIME
HELP?
Regardless of what type of job you may
_ want done we have competent and reliable
college
men
and
women
qualified
to
cet
your employment needs. Telephone
llege Placement Bureau,
Lake
Forest
8100, extension 70.

holidays;

stay

a
FANSTEEL
~ METALLURGICAL
CORPORATION
SHERIDAN
CHICAGO,

per

hour.

WOMAN
small

Call

RD.
ILL.

Applicants

with

c/o

each

Telephone

to

do

2-4105.

general
home,

housework
near

in

transporta-

family.

Refer-

Lake

Forester.

COUPLE:
Experienced,
white, to work
in suburb
outside of Milwaukee.
For
information
call
Mrs.
White,
Lake
Forest 2262.

SITUATIONS

WANTED—FEMALE

ALL types of beauty work done in your
own
home.
Tel. HI
2-4743
or Lake
Forest
2998Y1.
MANUSCRIPT
copywriting, books, plays,
theses,
general
typing,
proofreading;
reasonable rates. HI. 2-6269.
EMPLOYED
young woman desires room
in exchange for baby sitting and doing
dinner dishes. December
5th to 23rd.
Near transportation. HI 2-3438.*®
CLOTHES
or
linens
need
buttons
or
mending? Sox require darning? Hems
to be turned? A good typing job necessary ? Reasonable rates. Telephone Lake
Forest 1637.

WANTED—MALE
FAST
SERVICE
odd jobs. Snow remov-

FOREST

2846

ENJOY THE HOLIDAYS!
WHAT DO YOU WANT DONE?
EXPERIENCED,
AVAILABLE FOR

are preis not es-

sential.

242 °
be

—_—_—

MULTILITH

days

NURSE
for three
children;
white,
experienced,
references. Telephone
Lake
Forest 1587.

correspondence

For appointments,
which will
arranged at your convenience.

2

MIDDLE
AGED couple, white, for bachelor’s
small
apartment;
no
laundry.
References, experienced. Write Box E95

in working

CALL COLLECT
DEXTER 6-4900—EXT.

2-4148.

WINTER!
Time to repair your sagging,
sticking doors, build an extra closet,
add shelves; repair screens; line basement or attic rooms. I do home maintenance you'll like. HI 2-1636.
I NEED
A JOB
I can work 40 hour week, from 7 to 3:30
p.m. I’m 29 years old, neat, dependable
and honest. I have an automobile.
Give
me a chance. Call ONtario 2-7070. Give
type of work and salary.

Etiaus, deliver on product quotations, delivery and specifications,
in our sales department.
and/or college training
- ferred but such training

HI

white,

HI

modern

LAKE

os

interested

go.

tion;
1 small child’in
ences. Lake Forest 247.

TO
men

2242.

J. S. ENTERPRISES:

SALES CORRESPONDENT
TRAINEE
Young

Forest

LIGHT housekeeping and help with small
child; prefer someone experienced with
own .transportation.
Sixteen
hours
a
week;
can arrange times to suit. $1

EFFICIENT,
Leaves, yard and
al and plowing.

OFFERS
EMPLOYMENT
Pe

Lake

or

woman,

SITUATIONS

2200 N.
NORTH

TOYS
station,

transform-

OPERATOR

Attractive
working
environment
with firm of business consultants
located in North Shore area. Good
salary to start plus other benefits.
Call BRiargate 4-7500 from Chicago or Libertyville 2-4080
from

|

QUALIFIED MEN
FULL TIME WORK

NO JOB TOO SMALL!
FALL LANDSCAPING
YARD WORK
TREE SURGERY
POWER MOWER
TRUCKING
WINDOW WASHING
HEAVY CLEANING AND
OTHER INSIDE WORK
SNOW PLOWING
O K ENTERPRISES
LES KEEPPER, JR.
926 N. WESTERN
LAKE FOREST 447
BABY

FOR

SALE

MINNA

BEFORE
you
buy
a used
Mink
Coat
ANYWHERE
AT
ANY
PRICE,
see
Chicago’s largest selection of slightly
used mink
coats,
capes
and
jackets
and
save hundreds
of dollars. These
garments have been used in our rental
dept. and can be bought for $400, $500
and $600. They originally cost $1,500
to $8,000. MILLER’S,
166 N. MICHIGAN
AVE.,
CHICAGO.

WOMAN
6:30.

will
Phone

baby
sit
Deerfield

evenings
946R.

HOUSEHOLD

GOODS

FOR

SALE

VISIT
YOUR
OWN
HIGHLAND
PARK
Trading Post. We sell furniture, brica-brac
&amp;
clothing.
1813
St.
Johns.
Tel.

HI

2-3782.

NEW
solid mahogany canopy bed, Sealy
mattress and box spring; never used,
$180. Worth $245. Telephone Grayslake
38-2874.

BAKER
Sheraton, solid mahogany dropleaf table; 42 in. x 27 in. closed, opens
to 8 feet; 38% in. dropleaves. 2 additional 12 in. leaves with aprons. Complete with pads. Telephone Lake Bluff
1151.

KELVINATOR
deluxe electric range, excellent
condition:
Unable
to
use
in
naval quarters. Telephone DElta 6-3500
extension
194.
BEAUTIFUL
Chippendale davenport upholstered in blue stripe decorators fabric; custom made slip cover also. Terrific buy, $145. HI 2-3516.
SMALL
Frigidaire in good running order,
$20;
oak
buffet, old, has
good
lines, $10; dresser, $5; high chair, $1.
HI 2-34388.
TABLE model mahogany 16 inch Motorola
TV,
excellent
picture,
$75.
HI
2-3867.
SALE
of antique glass china, primitive,
by appt. only. Mrs. A. J. McMasters,
Deerfield 87.
SOLID mahogany dining room table, buffet, 4 chairs; moving. Make offer. HI
2-1035.

SPECIAL

PURCHASE

TV
Turntop Tables
17 inch
and
21 inch
...
3831/3
Record
Player
20TH CENTURY TELEVISION &amp; RADIO
1858
First
St.
HI
2-0341
Monday
and
Friday
till 9 p.m
MOVING, LEAVING STATE—762 DEAN
AVE.,
RAVINIA.
Baby:
bassinette,
scales,
2 play pens,
Simmons
innerspring mattress for 6 year crib; all in
new condition, bought at Bests. Some
bric-a-brac and
miscellaneous.
SOFA, chair, leather rocker, refrigerator.
HI

2-1588.

OLD
silver water tankard;
old German
mugs;
Dresden Haviland; music box;
chests;
chairs;
miscellaneous
re-sale.
Friday
only
or
evenings.
Deerfield
1370.

BARGAIN
G.E.
Electric
HI 2-7267.

range;

best

offer

takes.

MISCELLANEOUS

after

FOR

SALE

BABY BUGGY, stroller, in excellent condition. Phone HI 2-5945.
SNOW
plow, 8 foot blade; suitable for
truck or tractor. Telephone Lake Bluff

SALE

LIONEL

HART

train

set,

$150

value of equipment
HI 2-1822.
I

HAVE

in

my

complete;

in good

hobby

shop

shape.

1943

USED

Elm-

and

water

paintings;

Original
BABY

price,

many

other

Hawaiian
less than
$140.

CARRIAGE,

items.

guitar
a year

HI

2-1095.

studio

couch,

with
old.

ON

size 16;
maroon

dition

&amp;

bale
after

reasonable.

HAY

for

or ton.
6

GUARANTEED

fox ‘collar,

Deerfield

covering;

Telephone

no

174.

weeds.

MAjestic

By

brie-a-bracr,
1

21

clocks,

equipment.

mile

north

of

(Milwaukee

furniture,

Lincoln
Half

and

Antique

Day,

IIll.,

on

Ave.).

FIREPLACE screen and set; 2 mahogany
end
tables
and _ cocktail
table.
HI
2-0146.

INSTRUMENTS

SMALL
mahogany
Weber
See at Evanston Storage,
Street, Evanston.

FOR

terms.

WAUKEGAN

MART

223 WASHINGTON
STREET
WAUKEGAN,
ILL.
ONTARIO
2-8480
BEAUTIFUL, white mother of pearl 120
bass accordion; girl’s winter clothing,
coats, ete., sizes 10 to 14. Telephone
ONtario 2-7567.
WERNER upright piano, reasonable. Call
Deerfield 786.

TO

5

6

Furniture,
antiques,
glassware,
china,
bric-a-brac,
silver,
cutglass
glass
and
copperware,
guns,
fishing outfits, toys,
books,
garden tools, washing
machines,
sewing machines, golf sets, used doors,
storm
windows,
plumbing,
radiators,
sinks, bathtubs.
E
BUY,
SELL
AND
TRADE
STOCKADE
TRADING
POST
Milwaukee
Ave.
Wheeling,
Ill.
Wheeling 247

HI

COINS and unused stamps. Local private
collector pays better than dealers. Silver, gold, copper coins, before
1935;
good condition or tarnished. Telephone
Lake Forest 3271, evenings.
BICYCLES,.boy’s
20 inch and girl’s 24
inch, in good repair. Telephone Lake
Forest 1105.
WANTED:
Two
wheel
utility
trailer;
maximum price, $25. Tel. Deerfield 811.
WANTED,
2
800x15
whitewall
tires.
Must be like new or new. Fair price.
1057
Linden
Ave.,
Deerfield
1218R.
WANTED, good child’s roll-top desk and
chair; not too small. Write Box A-5
c/o H.P. News.
FOUND

LOST:
Labrador Retriever, 2 years old,
female; name “Flair.’? Reward. Phone
Deerfield 881R.

2-126;

‘

USED

MOTOR

TRUCKS

SAVE $500 on a 1952 Dodge % ton pickup.
Guaranteed
Sales, 10th and
cago.

mileage.
Sheridan,

AUTOS

Hale
Motor
North Chi-

WANTED

WANTED
to buy
for cash,
a pre-war
Ford or Chevrolet in good condition,
from owner. Phone SHeldrake 38-9478.

AUTO
Finance

save

your

money
FIRST

of

LOANS

car

the

bank

NATIONAL
Highland

way

and

BANK
Park

ALTERATIONS
ALTERATIONS done in my home;
dependable
service.
Telephone
Forest 1082.

BUSINESS

quick,
Lake

OPPORTUNITY

TAKE over our kitchen; all profit yours.
We
furnish
equipment,
you
furnis
stock. Apply in person, Tower Casino,
331 Waukegan Ave., Highwood.
1—Old
established tavern in Highwood.
Owner must sell.
established
restaurant.
Good
*2—Long
bargain.
8—Fine dry cleaning and pressing husiness.

ANCHOR
HI

AND

p.m.

OLDSMOBILE
1950
deluxe
98
Sedan;
original owner, excellent condition. HI
2-0146
or CEntral
6-3891
PACKARD
1949
Super
8,
120;
radio,
heater, overdrive. $1,400 or best offer.
Tel. Lake Forest 1801 after 7 p.m.

BUY

WANTED

LOST

p.m.

BRITISH
Singer Roadster,
1951 4-passenger, with
top and
cover; excellent
condition;
will
sacrifice.
Call LOngbeach 1-5134.
CHEVROLET,
1951,
metallic green,
4door
Styleline;
all
extras
including
bumper guards. Low mileage, suburban
driven. Telephone
Lake
Forest
1637.
CHEVROLET
Bel Aire, 1950, blue and
gray;
radio,
heater,
good
tires,
low
mileage; excellent condition. Call after

grand
piano.
1621 Benson

MUSIC

WANTED

WE
have three cars and must sell one.
We are the original owners of a 1950
Buick Super Riviera; Dyna-flow, radio.
This is one of the best Buicks ever
built by’ General Motors;
we
should
know. Have had several. If you want
to buy this fine car telephone
Lake
Forest 1890
before
10 a.m. or after

SALE

The Spinet model Hammond organ takes
no more space than a Spinet piano. Needs
no installation; never needs tuning; upkeep, little or nothing. $1,300. Convenient

CHEVROLET

191 E. DEERPATH
LAKE FOREST 3200

fire-

Shop,
Route

OK

Chevrolet, Deluxe, 4-door sedan.
Chevrolet Deluxe 6 passenger cpe.
Chevrolet Bel Air Coupe.
Chevrolet 4-door.
Buick
Super
4-door.

McCALLUM

3-1069

ANTIQUE JEWELRY FOR GIFTS
Garnet necklace and earrings, French porcelain miniatures in earrings for pierced
ears, gorgeous
deep
amethyst
and
diamond
ring, amethyst
and pearl brooch,
large topaz ring,
turquoise
and
yellow
gold bracelet, necklace, drop earrings and
brooch, Lapis bracelet set with topaz and
pearls, pairs of bracelets in black enamel,
also gold; large unusual brooch in black
and
gold,
jade
necklace
and
earrings.
Varieties of beautiful stone Cameos and
other jewelry.
Lindwall’s,
808
Oak
St.,
1% block west of Green Bay Rd., WInnetka 6-0145.

MUSICAL

1951
1951
1951
1951
1949

p.m.

STAY in condition all winter. For sale—
1 Excercycle. This is an automatic machine that makes you exercise. These
sell retail for $150; this one is in good
condition and will be sold at a fraction
of
the usual
price.
Telephone
Lake
Forest 3210 or Lake Forest 2984-Y-1.
SPECIAL
HOLIDAY
SALE
Linens
to
grace
your
holiday
table.
Searves, cloths, and doilies. Silver place
settings,
candlesticks,
candelabra,
wine
coolers,
platters,
tea
and
coffee
sets,
china,
glassware. Inexpensive
Christmas
gifts
in
brass,
wrought
iron,
pewter,
place

USED CAR
SPEGLALS

CO.

wringer type washing machine;
davenport.
All very
good
con-

and

MARSH

$74.50

ROGER
WILLIAMS
HI
2-5561

BLACK “wool. coat with ‘silver

CARS

HALE MOTOR SALES
13TH AND SHERIDAN
NORTH CHICAGO
DEXTER 6-2353

HOLIDAY SALE
30 gal. automatic gas water heater
Medicine cabinet
Floor
Tile
Wall
tile
4
type oil burner
inch
Sink
and
Cabinet

PFTERSON

$5 DOWN
PRE-WAR

PLENTY OF LATE MODELS
TO CHOOSE FROM

Ave.,

595

ALL

chaise

longue, sewing table. HI 2-0287, 1538
McCraren Rd., H.P.
NICE
fresh
chrysanthemums
grown
in
our own greenhouse, only $2 a bunch.
Call
for. HI
2-2936,
545
(Broadview

ARNOLD

AUTOMOBILES

WE PAY TOP PRICES
FOR YOUR OLD CAR
REGARDLESS OF AGE

wood
Dr., Highland
Park, many
new
things on displav for Christmas. Handmade
quilts,
children’s
knitwear,
oil
GIBSON
electric
amplifier,
$75;

Wir the person who saved chow ae
black cat please call Mrs. Gris-

$450

work
at

Lost
lost

wold after 6 p.m. Cat family pet five
years; children upset. HI 2-3560.
LOST: Mexican silver bracelet set onyx
stone,
Wed.,
Nov.
19th.
Kindly
call
Mrs. R. K. Carver, HI 2-2560.
MISSING since November 18: small short
haired light brown dog; white feet and
chest,
brown
eyes
and
nose.
Child’s
pet; reward. Call Deerfield 19.

580 LINCOLN
AVE.
WINNETKA
6-3738

2-2744.

TRADE
MART
Davenport, washing machine, chairs, tables, vanity dresser, youth bed and crib,
Servel refrigerator, clothing, bric-a-brac.
Trade
Mart,
866
North
Western,
Lake
Forest.
.
ORIENTAL
rugs, excellent quality, sizes
ranging 8 ft. x 5 ft. to 10 ft. x 22 ft.,
at bargain prices. John B. Nash
Co.,
1891
Sheridan
Rd.,
H.P.,
HI
2-3500.
BENDIX modern automatic washer. Used
very little; in good mechanical condition. Telephone Lake Forest 2146.
MOVING
out
of
state—must
sacrifice
1% yr. old Whirlpool automatic washer, 9 cu. ft. Frigidaire and Universal
Berkshire clock controlled range, Call
HI

SWEATER

IMPORTED,
HANDCRAFTED,
FULL
FASHIONED
SWEATERS
S.S. PULLOVER
NOW
$13.95
L.S. CARDIGANS
NOW
$16.95
ALSO
MANY
FANCY
SWEATERS

.

GAS RANGE, $20 or best offer. 488 Elm
Place, H.P. Tel. HI 2-5334.
RADIO
- PHONOGRAPH
combination,
portable
model;
perfect
condition.
Original cost, $148; will sell for $40.
Telephone Lake Forest 623.
ANTIQUES FOR THE COLLECTOR
Bells, dolls, pipes, odd cups, saucers and
plates,
Sandwich
glass;
Staffordshire,
Dresden;
blue
onion
Meissen;
6.
tall
wines,
milk glass compotes,
cranberry
and varied
colored glass; rare Capi de
Monte
vase
with Madonna,
comb
back
Windsor
chair, rare Sheraton Hitchcock
chairs, Victorian arm chairs, foot stools.
Lindwall’s, 808 Oak St., % block west of
Green Bay Rd., WInnetka 6-0145.

SITTING

CASHMERE

ers, village and many other accessories.
Name your own price. Telephone Lake
Forest 1364.

references

with housework
and
8 weeks over. Christ-

week; Wednesday and Friday.
Lake
Forest
1707.

Mes
—

_

Telephone

CLEANING

American
cook
Sara-

wages;

COOK:
Must
be
experienced,
capable,
like children. New
modern
house;
all
mechanical conveniences. Private room,
bath; near transportation.
Some
general housework;
other day help. References. Telephone
Lake Forest 2749.

WILL
lease 1 bay “Standard” Service
Station to responsible party. Lessee to
_ purchase

mi

mas

work.

helper
and
assistant
steady or part time job.

Top

WOMAN
to assist
cooking for 2 to

WITH
GOOD
FUTURE
to operate metal fabricat-

and

downstairs.

required.

EMPLOYMENT
OFFICE
HIGHWOOD

LOCAL
Wanted,

track,

CLOTHING

The man we’re looking for will sell advertising to North Shore retailers. He’ll
be a North Shore resident who wants a
position
that promises
an excellent future, plenty of work, and a good starting
salary plus commissions. He’ll be a selfstarter. When he comes to us, he’ll know
something
about
advertising,
but more
important, he’ll know how to sell. He’ll
own a car.

and

Pensions, insurance and free transportation. No
experience
is necessary.
Earn
hile you learn.
PPLY
TO

SHORE

SHORE

train,

If you’re the man we want, tell us about
yourself.
We'll
schedule
an _ interview.
(Our employees know of this ad). Write! BUY
now for Christmas, men’s novelty
Box A-15 c/o H.P. News.
socks and other knitted items made to
order. Phone HI 2-4790.
BOY’S
“Brooks
Brothers”
tuxedo,
size
HELP WANTED—DOMESTIC
16; like new. Telephone
Lake Forest
587.
SECOND
maid, white; experienced. Own
room;
top
pay.
Near
transportation.
TWO
formals, size 9, for high school or
college
wear, $7.50
each;
2 formals,
Telephone Lake Forest 2398.
size 12, in green, $5, and rose nylon,
MOTHER’S
helper, white; plain cooking,
$30. HI 2-2491.
Electric
dishwasher.
Lovely neighborSABLE fitch fur jacket, $35; good conhood. Stay. References. Phone Glencoe
dition. Phone HI 2-5945.
2342.
TUXEDO,
size 40, long. Like new, only
COOK,
experienced,
white;
for cooking
$25. Telephone Lake Forest 3294.

GET INTO RAILROAD
WORK!

NORTH

GROUP OF NORTH
WEEKLIES

LIONEL

REAL ESTATE

2-0093

Res.

HI

2-0037

MEN’S
WEAR
Store. Owner sacrificing
stock and fixtures for immediate sale.
Doing
good volume
in better quality
clothing. Same
location
121%4
years—
main
corner.
Buyer
will need
about
$10,000 cash. Owner has good reason
for selling. Located on the North Shore
between Chicago and Milwaukee. Write
Box E90 c/o Lake Forester.

BUSINESS

SERVICE

SEPTIC
SYSTEMS,
COMPLETE
‘SEPTIC
SYSTEM
INSTALLATION
TRENCHING
water,
All
sorts:
foundation,
drain,.
tiling, ete.
Free estimates, no obligation to have: —
our representative call.
i
EDWARD’S
P
&amp;
W
CONSTRUCTION:
CONTRACTING
ENGINEERS
|
WINNETKA 6-3971

�&lt;

A-1 CATERESS. Will take charge of your

Your

name,

number
the box

address

and

net

nc
’

ERE

ENTERTAINMENT

CHILDREN
(groups
of
50 cents each.

HI

ELECTRICAL

Industrial

thru

@

Have

the

electric

struction;

no

rod

REUBEN
Black

cut

out

no

lawn

ob-

- RAGS
FOREST

BRUNO

M.

CHIMNEY

-

LLOYD

St.

&amp;

Painting
Tel.
HI

and
Decorating
2-3452
or
HI

JEWELL SERVICE
2480
ORI

BASEMENT
Whitewashing, painting, repairing, cleaning. Free estimates. Call HI 2-5934
or
HI 2-4553.

MELVIN

BOARD
YOUR
DOG
AT LOWRY’S

SAM WOO LAUNDRY

"FOR THOSE

AND

day

SEWER.

HAZARDOUS
JOBS
A. VEHLOW

- GRAYSLAKE
3-2874
ESTABLISHED
1945

CHRISTO-CRAFT
1930
Cabinets
For free
or HI

CABINET

CO.

MAPLE
AVE., EVANSTON
custom made to fit your needs.
estimate call GReenleaf 5-7686
2-7238.

Interior Decorating Service. Custom made
draperies, bedspreads, etc. Furniture and
rug
cleaning;
painting
and decorating.
Excellent workmanship.
Viola Heap

HI

2-3853

HI

CHRISTMAS

2-6668

TUNING

&amp;

REPAIRING

PIANO tuning and reconditioning. Work
guaranteed.
Pianos
bought
and _ sold.
Formerly of Lyon and Healy, E. Zaat
member of N.A.P.T. Lake Zurich
5341.

PLANTS

&amp;

BULBS

AFRICAN
VIOLETS.
Reliable plants for
particular people. Gillette, 169 Washington Circle, Lake Forest 516.

November 27, 1952

moon

and

below

the

time

‘

I prefer.

date

and

al-

health’s

the

keep

belong—on

(Except

in the

to

news.

house,
Signature

paper

Cub
drive?

passed
up

AWFUL

sake,

they

Last

through

newspapers

moment
Cubs’

All

set

week

Deerfield
and

for one

I thought,

‘““There

go

all the

I

remembered—why,

profits!”

and

then

of

course!

Our

Cub

vigilantes

have

already

told

their

neighbors

about

per

drive

they

to

anyone

will

be

picked

Saturday,

still

have

around

you haven’t
the

word

Cubs
else.
up

December

plenty

to

any

of

of

our

wouldn’t

Deerfield

them

pers
on

and

the

by
The

next
6—so

time

your

to

padisgivpaweek
run

neighbors

already told and spread
around.

scrumptious!

Now

you

tell

Mother how wonderful it tastes and
eat all you can because that’s really
the best way you can show her how
much you enjoy her good cooking,
you know.
But while you’re stuffing yourself with that big Thanksgiving dinner, give your own private word of thanks for this big
wonderful country of ours where

boys

like

you

(and

all

of us,

too)

are privileged to live. Maybe I’m
an incurable flag-waver, but I never get over feeling how lucky we
are.
Pack 150, Den 8: Jimmy Street
reporting.
We opened the meeting
with the Pledge of Allegiance to
the Flag and then we had refreshments.
Then we made Christmas
cards and then we went home.
Den
9:
Tom
Camp
reporting.

We

opened

the

meeting

with

the

opening ceremony.
Then we had
our refreshments.
We
made
two
kinds of Christmas ornaments for
our next pack meeting.
We closed
the meeting with the Cub Scout
SEWING MACHINES
Motto.
Pack 50, Den 1: Bill Kleiner reRECONDITIONED
Singer
portable,
$39.50; $5
down. Reconditioned cabi- porting.
We started our meeting by
net machine, $39.50: 614 Central Ave.,
having the opening ceremony. Then
HI
2-3811.
we made ornaments for our work
on our Christmas project. We had
SEWING MACHINE SERVICE
refreshments while we worked. We
Necchi
Domestic
MAKE
Expert
repair
on
ANY
closed the meeting with the PromWork
Guaranteed
ise.
Arends
Sewing
Machine Co.
662 Central Ave.
HI 2-5200
Den 2: Scott Herrmann reporting.
We
had
our opening
cereTO BE GIVEN AWAY
mony and the Pledge of Allegiance
MOVING
out
of town;
would
like
to
After refreshments we
find home for gentle, young cat; beau- to the Flag.
itfully marked.
Telephone
Lake
Bluff worked
on our Christmas project.

We

2826.

TRAVEL
FLORIDA
trip. Want
Leaving
December
expenses. Telephone

TREE

man to drive car.
15.
Will
pay
all
Lake Forest 2217.

SURGERY

DONALD
G.
WORRALL,
ARBORIST
Expert tree work, shrub and evergreen
care.
Tree
removal,
power
saw _ work.

bow
g

eet
.

efficient

service,

Call

Wheel-

had

perfect

attendance.

Den 4:
Paul Wedell reporting.
We did the living circle. We decorated Christmas cookies and finished our Christmas gifts. We decorated turkey cookies too.
We did
the opening ceremony and closing
ceremony.
Ross
Roads
acted
as
Denner because Marty Miller was

absent.

High School P.T.A.

in

p.m.
the

first

usual

the

will

the

cafeteria,

on

cussion

teenage

dis-

problems,

un-

Edward

Mr.

of

superin-

former

Reichert,

(Ned)

by

a panel

will be

direction

the

der

followed
p.m.

at 3:30

program

at 2:45

served

be

Tea

meeting

The

held
3, instead of
of the
Thursday

December

Wednesday,
month.

on

be

will

P.T.A.

School

High

the

of

meeting

next

The

3

December

Meet

To

you

Pack
150
had
a simply
huge
crowd
and we all appreciate the
way everyone and his uncle turned
out that night, but then they all
had
a very
entertaining
and instructive
evening
too.
It’s quite
evident, that Pack 150 is well on
its way and all because everyone
is helping and doing his part.
I can smell those Thanksgiving
turkeys cooking and hmmm!
they

smell

- '

road

Brierhill

418

Clark,

O.

Robt.

to Mrs.

Mail

a

HAVE
you
a wood
shingle
roof?
Call
Wilmette
877,
your
“Roof
Treating
Headquarters”
for
its
proper
treatment
and
care.
Free
inspection
and
consultation.

TOYS

_ FOR a Merry Christmas let us design and
get
up your child’s electric train set;
any make, any size, anywhere. Contact
:
J.
G.
Cashin,
Libertyville
2-4140,
pi: WHitehall 4-7900.
ay

WILL give away 8 kittens, one part Persian, to good homes with people who
love cats.
4 mos.
old. 550
Elm
St.,
Deerfield 121R.
BLACK
Cocker puppies for sale; no papers. Reasonable.
Tel. Deerfield 31-R.
STANDARD
poodle
puppies
for
sale.
Ready for Christmas. AKC
registered.
Telephone
UNiversity
4-6997
for an
appointment.

ROOFING

WINDOW
CLEANING
WALL
WASHING
SCREENS
&amp;
STORMS
SERVICED
EFFICIENT - NEAT - FULLY INSURED

MARTIN

YOUR-DOG-&amp;-MINE
Kennels
(dog editor, ‘Better Homes
&amp; Gardens)
for best
care, feeding. Skokie Highway (U.S. 41),
5% miles north of state line. Phone Bristol (Wis.)
86-F-5.

PIANO

We
welcome
all strangers
on
8
service.
1875 ST. JOHNS AVE.
HIGHLAND
PARK,
ILL.
CEMENT
WORK
HI 2-7471.

for

appoint

SEE the pure-bred Arabian horses at International
Amphitheatre
show,
43rd
and
Halsted,
Chicago,
Sunday
afternoon,
November
30th
and
follow
up
with
subscription
to
Arabian
Horse
News.
Monthly,
ten issues per year,
three dollars
or send
dollar bill for
three
issues
to
The
Arabian
Horse
News, Box 2155, Cheyenne, Wyoming.
WANTED.
Ideas.
What
would
you
_include in a document
to be placed in
the cornerstone
of the new
Intermediate school,
to be sealed
in a lead
box
and
opened
by
posterity?
Call
Evelyn
Lauter at HI 2-4116
or send
any written ideas to her at 330 Beech
street,
Highland
Park.

HARRETT

work done with back hoe.
Fast—Simple—Economical.
Systems
Driveways
Mains
Trenching
Systems
Basements
SNOW
PLOWING
McDaniels
Ave.
HI
2-7186
Highland Park, Ill.

B &amp; B
PHONE

Service
2-8053

the

where

back

picking

PETS

OIL — GAS
TYPES CLEANED
AND REPAIRED
OIL LIFTERS &amp; CONTROLS
STOVES &amp; WATER HEATERS
TRAILER HEATERS

M.

BROS.

PAINTING
and paper hanging.
Call W.
C. Varney, HI 2-6980 or Lake Forest
156.

ALL

1397

heads!

of course!).

truck

CONGER

FURNACE SERVICE

All

your

2-0535

REDECORATING

as

for

Humus

ing

STOCKS
Investor’s Service of America invites you
to
try
our
service
in
listed
stocks.
Dealer,
Broker,
Adviser,
Ole
Nielsen,
Proprietor, 104 North Washington Circle,
Lake
Forest,
Illinois.
Telephone
Lake
Forest 2191.

Septic
Water
Sewer

HI

PERSONAL

SERVICE

BRUNO

big

caps

&amp; SONS

Compost
Soil
Rotted
Manure
Johns
Tel.

ORI

FOREST

as

those

EXTERIOR
and
interior
painting
and
decorating. Hubert Johnson, HI 2-1770.

METAL
44

BUILD - REPAIR - CLEAN
TUCKPOINTING
- BASEMENT
REPAIRING
- FURNACE
CLEANING
REASONABLE PRICES
FREE
wets
HI 2-4553
I 2-5934

LAKE

SUPPLIES

Soil

PAINTING

mess.

LAKE FOREST SCRAP
IRON
LAKE

Commercial

It felt

Now,
the

indicated

most as far away. Take my advice,
Cub friends, stay as far away from
your “flu bitten” friends as you

SEWERS

digging,

country, and

Did you miss me last week? To
tell you the truth, that “ole flu
bug” bit me and oohhh! my head!

can—and
NIGHT
to 9 p.m.

SEPTIC TANKS
and grease traps cleaned, repaired, built.
COMPLETE
SEWER
SERVICE
Jeep trench digger, water lines, electric
cable,
foundations.
WOODALL’S
2
Phone Wheeling 232

SCRAP

REPAIRS

Residential @
Tel. HI 2-3918

GARDEN

1487

CLOGGED

2-3853

ELECTRICAL MAINTENANCE

FAST — EXPERT
TV SERVICE
DAY
Mon.

20)

2-5592

SERVICE

and
INSTALLATION
and
Sat.
8 a.m.
Phone
HI
2-0530

Card

H-A-Y-R-|I-D-E-S

A ET

MASON repair, stone work, chimney and
fireplace building.
40 years
in same
trade. William
Otten, Tel. Northbrook

Pledge

I should like to do my share in the defense of my
willing to donate a pint of blood to the Armed

I have

in

Donor

Forces when
the Red Cross Mobile Unit is in Highland Park December 3 and 4.

I am

HI

BUSINESS

Blood

phone

will be placed at once
of the advertiser.

nee naene oem

|.

dinners,
luncheons, teas
and
cocktail
parties. Excellent references. Telephone
Mrs. Miks, MAjestic 38-1608.

tendent of school district 107 in
Highland Park and now professor
of education at Lake Forest college.
The

panel

ents

and

land

will
two

Park

High

Mr.

Charles

and

his

Problems
have

panel

Kluss,

mother,
and
been
and

body

of

two

from

school

a sophomore

Kluss,

dent

consist
students
and

High-

—

Carol

her father,

and Henry
Mrs.

par-

Allan

Loeb
Loeb.

questions for the
sent in by the stuthe discussion will

stem from among these, examples
of which are “Should high schoolers smoke
with or without their
permission

parents’

and

when?,”

Physical Requirements
For Blood Donors
1. You

must

60 years

be between
of age.

18 and

(Men

|

between

18 and 21 need the written |
consent of parent or spouse.)
.You must
or over.

You

weigh

pounds

|
tb

must

blood

110

not

within

have
the

given |

past

two

|

months.

. You

must

No

history

be

in good

of

health.

jaundice,

heart f

|

trouble, tuberculosis, diabetes; [|
no

major

surgery

for

_

six

months; no pregnancy for one |
year; no illness in the last f —

month; no active allergies.

.Please

hours

eat

before

something

Ye

two

donating.

You

may
eat fruit, toast, jelly,
crackers, milk, coffee without
cream,

tea,

lean

meats,

vege-

tables (not fried and without
butter).
Do
not
eat fried
foods,

butter,

salad

dressing,

| —

fatty meats or fried eggs four

hours

before

your

|

—

donation. |

To Marry at First Leave

“Where should couples go after a
date
other
than
to a_ tavern?,”
“How do the children feel about
the fact that some taverns do sell
liquor to minors
and parents
do
not
see
that
this
violation
is
stopped?”
“How
much
time
should be allowed on the phone?,”
ete.
Hostesses for the tea hour will
be mothers from the Junior Boy’s
is Mrs.
chairman
whose
session
These include the
Robert Koretz.
Anthony,
Marvin
Mrs.
following:
Mrs. H. T. Tasker, Mrs. R. L. Friedrich, Mrs. J. S. Wienman, Mrs. G.
E. Holmquist, Mrs. Eugene Rappaport, Mrs. F. C. Benson, Mrs. Martin Tarpey, Mrs. Roy DuChateau,
Esther
Mrs.
Winter,
John
Mrs.
Burkes and Mrs. Ralph Shorr.

Flying

East

Mr. and Mrs. Harold Tasker accompanied by their sons Bob and
Jonathan are flying east to Englewood,
N.J.,
where
they
will
be
joined by son “Treak,” who is in
college
in Massachusetts,
at the

home

of

Mrs.

Tasker’s

Mrs. Ernest Stauffen,
for Thanksgiving.

To

Attend

mother,

in Englewood

Wedding

Mrs. Martin Vose, 939 Beverly,
will leave Friday to attend a wedding in Minneapolis.
Roger Vose
and his family will spend Thanksgiving day with his sister and her

husband,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Wesley
Cain, at the home of their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Vose.

- Private Robert L. Pettis, son
of Mrs. R. E. Pettis of Deerfield, is taking his basic training with the Fifth Armored Di-

—

vision, Camp Chaffee, Ark. He
receved his degree at Carthage
College, Carthage, Illinois, in

June,

and

was

inducted

_

into

the army in September.
‘a
Announcement of his en- —
gagement to Miss Joan Han- —

sen, daughter of Professor and

Mrs. Ralph Hansen of Car- —
thage College, was made just
before he entered service. The
wedding will take place at —
Trinity Lutheran
church
in |
Carthage when he has his first

6a

Number Ads

4

CHICAGO RED CROSS DEFENSE BLOOD

- CATERING

Reply by phone as well as by letter
may be made to any Want Ad with
a box number as an address. Call
HI 2-4500 or Lake Forest 2300.

si

4

L

Rh

c

furlough.

;

_ Page
4

Kes

pete

Box

ie

a

bet

ar

}

j

ee

hel

5 fg

fi

ek

�Director of Film

Council to Meet

Professional Group
Ralph

Tollefson,

director

of the

Film Council of America, will give
an illustrated lecture and take part
in informal discussions next Mon-

day at 11 am.

tives of
ligious

with

15 representa-

local civic, social and reorganizations
who

are known
as
the
Professional
Group of the Coordinating Council.
The Preliminary Planning committee for the meeting, which will
be held in the Highland Park Pub-

lic library projection room, consists of Miss Cora Hendee, head
librarian; John McCarthy, director
of the Recreation center; Dr. Robert Wilson, superintendent of District 108; and Brent Allinson, a
«college professor.
The Film Council seeks the
motion of educational motion

propic-

tures with the support of such organizations of the Ford Foundation.
In conjunction with its program,
Mr. Tollefson will show three films
of an educational and documentary
nature.

John B. Leeming Is
Released From Army

Thanksgiving Plans

John
B. Leeming,
son of Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Leeming of Sheridan road, has returned to civilian

nedy

life
the

geant.

of

the

Highland

game

and

Men’s
Park

Garden

at

8:15

club
p.m.

of

next

nominated president; Clayton
del of 2710 Roslyn lane has

named

first vice president;

Engelbrecht

of 353

A.

Sanbeen

Edwin

Lakeside

second vice president;
Peterson, 1685 Ridge
J. Wilson

place,

and Warren
road, treas-

continues

in of-

fice as secretary.
Past presidents W. C. Wenninger
S.

Browning

tors for one year and
six men have been
rectors for two years:
Elzie Partlow, Edwin

will

be

direc-

the following
named as diEben Erikson,
Sincere, Ros-

well Swazey, Capt. George Kneupfer, and Everett Schaubert.

After the talk, refreshments

will

be served.

Make it a habit to read the Want
Ads every week before laying your
aside!

ESTHER

PERKINS

Specializing in

Cold

Permanent
Waves

Machineless

Permanent

Waves $10. up
23 Years of Experience

CLASSIQUE
BEAUTY SALON
1815 St. Johns Ave.
Specialize
and

Page

with

before being sent

his

some

former

of

his

to
at-

football

roommate

overseas

Sigma

in-law,

Lt.

Mayfield,

(j.g.)
and

and

his

Mrs.

six

S.

weeks

G.
old

niece, Lynn Kennerly, in New London, Conn. Mrs. Mayfield is the
former

Joyce

After

Park,
into

his

return

business

in Hair

Permanent

38

HI 2-1603
Dyes

Waves

home.

in

Wulfsohn,

to

Evanston.

14)

Other

guests

William

Carlson

Mrs.
dren,

of

Chicago.

A. L. Nicoud
Thomas,

and

Patrick

her

and

chil-

Daniel,

traveled from Fond du Lac, Wis.,
to join her sister and brother-inlaw,

the

James

Blackhawk
Mrs.

R.

Conways

for

the

road,

George

Wilson

from Milwaukee

of

holiday.

will

be

here

to join her daugh-

a

of

fellow’

Marion

student

boys

are

enrolled

in

the University of Michigan at Ann
Arbor.
Also with David will be his dog,
“Eddie
Robinson.”
The
dog
was

John

and

giving

Theodore Minorini
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Sam Minorini
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Rudy Notagiacomo
Mr. and Mrs. John Mantenuto

LEGAL

NOTICE

of

Highland
Park
Civil
Service
Examination
On Tuesday
evening,
December
16th,
at 8:00
P.M.
in the Council Chamber,
City Hall, the Civil Service Commission
of the City of Highland
Park will hold
an examination
to establish
an eligible
list for Street
and Water
Maintenance
Men.
Application blanks may be obtained
at the City Hall. The State Civil Service
Law requires a fee of three dollars to be
paid at the time of filing application.
All
applications must be filed with the Secretary by 6:00 P.M., Monday, December
15th.
For further information contact
G. S. STUNKEL,
Secretary
Civil Service Commission
of Highland
Park
1260 Ridgewood Drive

LEGAL
City

of

NOTICE

Highland
Park
Civil
Service
Examination
On Tuesday
evening,
December
16th,
at 8:00
P.M.
in the Council Chamber,
City Hall, the Civil Service Commission
of the City of Highland Park will hold
an examination to establish an eligibility
list for City Firemen. No person shall be
admitted to the examination who is not
a citizen of the United States and who
has not been an actual resident of the
City of Highland Park for at least six
months preceding the date of examination. All applicants must be between the
ages of 21 and 30 years (inclusive).
All
applicants must not be less than 5 feet
8 inches
in height
and
within.
certain
height and weight limits. Physical ability
and knowledge of local government will
be considered.
Vacancies in the fire department
will be filled from names
on
this eligible list—starting salary $3,264
per year.
Application blanks may be obtained from Mr. V. C. Musser, City: Clerk
at the City Hall. The State Civil Service
Law requires a fee of three dollars to be
paid at the time
of filing application.
All applications
must be filed with the
Secretary by 6:00 P.M., Monday, December
15th.
Cc. S. STUNKEL, Secretary
Civil
Service
Commission
of Highland Park
1260 Ridgewood Drive

plane.

Miss

Sue’s

brother,

Richard,

and

Mrs.

their

Ann,

W.

George

children,

over

day.

the

Paul,

Thanks-

holiday.

Thanksaunt and

uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Radtke,
of

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth C. Crowell of Ridge road and their children, Cathy, Richard and David are
visiting Mr. Crowell’s father, the
Rev. C. M. Crowell, in Iowa Falls,

Ia.,

for

today’s

holiday

festivities.

Mr. and Mrs. C.
O.
Dahle,
of
Ridgewood drive are traveling to
Iowa City, Ia., to spend the day

with

friends,

Mr.

and

Mrs.

E.

C.

Schrock.

day.

Margie

and

Mrs.

Wolf,
Arthur

daughter
Wolf

of

of Mar-

ion avenue, is home for Thanksgiving from the University of Colorado at Boulder. Miss Wolf is a
freshman
at
the
has pledged Alpha
rority.

Chicago.

day. Mr. and Mrs. Doland
merly of Highland Park.

Mr. and Mrs. Cory
St. Johns avenue

of

guests

of

Mr.

and

are

for-

P. Casterton
will be the

Mrs.

Vassau

of

Wauconda, Ill., for Thanksgiving
day. Accompanying them will be
their four children, Michael, June,
Susan, and James.
Mr. and Mrs. Oliver S. Castle of
Poplar road, and their sons, Bob
and Jim, will spend Thanksgiving
with his brother and his wife, the

Louis
Mr.
of

Castles of Oak Park.
and Mrs. John W. Chaffee

Green

have

Bay

their

road

two

are

-sons

happy

home

to

with

them for Thanksgiving. Dick Nugent will be home from naval train-

ing

school

and

Jerry

at

Grosseisles,

Nugent

Mich.,

is

on

vacation

from the University
where he is a student.

of

Illinois,

university
and
Epsilon Phi so-

Mr. and Mrs.
Nelson
Dahl
of
Ridgewood drive will have their
Thanksgiving
dinner
with
their
daughter and
her
husband,
Mr.
nd Mrs. Roswell Peterson, in Deerfield. Miss Mary Dahl, their other

daughter,

of

is spending

Springfield,

Mo.

the

holiday

‘

Mr. and Mrs. E. A. McHugh Sr.
Oakwood
avenue are visiting

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Henry

Hofmann

of

Milwaukee where they are enjoying this Thanksgiving holiday.
The
Harry
Rafferty
family
of
South
Green
Bay
road
is
in
Waukegan
today.
The
four Rafferty
children,
Patrick,
Sharon,
Kathleen
and Dennis, are eating
their Thanksgiving turkey in the
home of their maternal grandpar-

ents,

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Fred

Heiser.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Palmer
of Sunset road are the Thanksgiving Day guests of his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Palmer of Clar-

endon Hills, Ill. .
Mr. and Mrs. John P. Faulkner
of Oakwood
avenue,
and
their
daughters, Percy Ellen and Ginny,
will attend a family Thanksgiving
party at the home of Mrs. Faulkner’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. John

Ludovice,
included

in
are

Morton
Mr.

Grove.

Faulkner’s

Also
moth-

er, and Mrs. Faulkner’s sister and
her husband, Mr. and Mrs. Allan
Gerkin

Jr. of Green

Bay road, with

their children, Patty and Johnny.
The Robert M. Bridges of Oakland drive are fortunate in having
both their daughters with them on
this Thanksgiving Day. Miss Janet
Bridges came
home
from
Iowa
City, Ia., where she is in her last
year at the University of Iowa. Mrs.

Benjamin F. Carter Jr. of Forest
City, Ia., and her two children,
Benjamin Franklin II or “Chip,” 4,
and Cynthia, 18 months, will re-

Holy Cross Mother's
Club to Hold Bazaar
The

members

Mother’s
ly

Mr. and Mrs. John G. Cherry
of Central avenue will entertain
Mr. Cherry’s father who is coming
from

Cedar

with

them

over

end.
Mr. and
avenue are

ily

Rapids,

Iowa,

the

to

holiday week-

Mrs. Eli Zoul of Vine
entertaining their fam-

members,

all

of

Zion,

for

Thanksgiving
dinner.
They
Mr.
and
Mrs. James
Paxton
and Miss Bernice Paxton, and

and

be

Mrs.

Philip

family.
Benjamin

Zoul

and

Ziccarelli,

son

are
Jr.
Mr.

their
of

Mr.

and Mrs. Frank Ziccarelli of Edgecliff drive, will be home with his
family

for

Thanksgiving

Benjamin

is

a

vacation.

freshman

University of Illinois.
Mrs.
William -Zahnle

at
and

the
her

daughter, Mrs. Harry Sullivan, both
of Shady lane, will
dinner
guests
Mrs.

have as their
Zahnle’s
son

and

and

his family,

liam

Zahnle

children,
Urbana

Mr.

Jr.

and

of Genoa

Mrs.
their

Wilthree

City, Wis.

be

for

Among
who

will

the

Deerfield
away

and

the

5

and

and

getting

and
6

each

to

Saturday,

in

a

year

popular

demand.

it good

store

The

the items

which

were

such

hurry

last

a

clothes,
those

seem

business

for

in

almost

gone

be
by

group

has

to increase
bought

up

year —

doll

the

to

larger

instance.

exquisite

in

doll

Last

year

clothes

were

first

day

of

the

bazaar.
Mrs. Edgar Flynn, chairman, has very wisely
decided
to allow for many more doll clothes
this

year.

They

are

made

for

the

standard size dolls that all the little
girls are mothering now. Mrs. Robert Smith and Mrs. Robert Basche
are in charge of these doll clothes.
A new and novel idea is the
handpainted

plates

Abrahamson
these

far

group

which

heads.

outweighed

had

Mrs.

Homer

Marxer

of bed

jackets

and

good

Christmas

S. Mandel
table

tive

:anything

the

is in charge

gift items

is supplying

V. Nottoli

holiday

ready,

along

Mrs.

doll cradles,

etc.
has many

decora-

utility

aprons

and
with

year’s

both

and

the

ever-popular

sequin-trimmed
taffeta
aprons that made such
last

H.

for

pinafores,

centerpieces,

Mrs.

Mrs.

Orders

anticipated.

cocktail
hit at

a

bazaar.

Bun warmers, pot holders, washcloth mitts and table cloths are
under
Mrs.
J. Zally’s direction
while Mrs. Paul Riordan

has charge

of cocktail

napkins

Mrs.

L. W.

Reardon,

children’s

gowns

and

and

robes and hand-dressed “story book
dolls.”

Mrs.
bean

John
bags

Miller

and

Mrs.

will
L.

supply

T.

Rohan

will run the “Surprise Gift Booth.”
The “White Elephant Booth” will
be under the able supervision of
Mrs.

Ray

Marshall.

Sudbrink is
mous cookie
all

with

those

Christmas

H.

O.

mouth
- watering

cookies

day
season
without.

Mrs.

busily collecting farecipes to supply us
that

would

be

no

Holicomplete

This list should give the Deerfield residents an idea just what
will be sold at the bazaar, but the
best way to find out is to get there
early to see all these choice
first hand.

articles

Mrs. Morgan to Speak
To Pre-School

Mothers

The meeting will
at 8 p.m.
It will

new

primary

for

the

residents
holidays

their

son

Donald,

school

who

was

connected
university

ages

one

to

vanced

Mrs..

Sewell

Bartlett,

building.

with

North-

will discuss

six

with

toys

general

questioning to follow.
Mrs. Morgan has been teaching
child psychology
at Lake
Forest
college
for the past seven years

and

1410 Beverly, who are on their way
to Biloxi, Miss.

begin promptly
be held in the

Mrs. John B. Morgan, wife of the
late Dr. J. B. Morgan, author of
several child psychology books and

and she conducts
on Lake Forest

and

Decem-

scheduled

progressively

home from college, who are spending the holiday in Kenosha, Wis.,
Mr.

coming

is

These
bazaars
are
well
for their lovely handmade

items

for

are Mr. and Mrs. Charles Piper, 651
Chestnut,

Cross
deep-

Friday

December

western

Holiday
be

Holy
again

which

on

town.
known

of

in

bazaar
held

the

are once

Pre-school
mothers
club.
will
meet on Wednesday, December 3.

Guests

Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Bradt and
son Sam, 454 Margate terrace, were
the guests of Dr. and Mrs. George
D. Stoddard in Urbana last weekend
and
attended
the
IllinoisNorthwestern
game.
Away

club

involved

ber

will not be home either as he is
undergoing basic training at Fort found

Lynn and Jimmy, to Lorrette, Wis.,
to be with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. E. H. Doland for the holi-

in

City

the

roommate,

and
the
_latter’s
Fisher, owner of

Mrs. Frank Shelton of Half Day
road will travel with her children,

Mr.

We
wish
to express
our
deepest thanks and appreciation to our many relatives and
friends for kindness and sympathy shown during our recent bereavement.

her

Louise,
17,
will
spend
giving with Mrs. Casel’s

and

for the

Arthur

Rev.

Steele

Miss

THANKS

of

Ia., the

Thanksgiving

OF

company

Lynn
Fisher,
father, Robert

Mrs. Louise C. Casel of Glenview avenue
and her daughter,

Mrs.

Mr. and Mrs. Albino Dal Ponte
named after the White Sox baseball player and is the mascot of of Green Bay road are sharing
David’s_
fraternity,
Phi
Sigma their turkey dinner with Mrs. Dal
Ponte’s brothers
and
sisters
on
Delta.

CARD

Milton H. Jacobys’ daughter,

of Midland avenue are entertaining houseguests from Cedar Falls,

their families

and

to go

and

The

Sue, flew to Keokuk, Ia., from
Carleton college yesterday in the

Riley, Kans. Mr. Jacoby was graduated from Carleton last June.

and

Mr.

Chicago.

son of Mr.

Miss Sue Ottenheimer, daughter
of
Monroe
L.
Ottenheimer
of
Groveland avenue, is enjoying her
Thanksgiving dinner at home during a brief holiday from her senior
studies at the University of Iowa,
Iowa City.

Cooke

ters

Highland

expects

Wulfsohn

and
Both

page

Leeming.

Mr. Leeming

Samuel

of

from

include the Vincent Burkes, also
of Evanston, and
Mr.
and
Mrs.

those

Chi fraternity brothers at Brown.
He received his A. B. degree from
Brown in 1950.
Today Mr. Leeming is enjoying
his Thanksgiving
dinner
in
the
company of his sister and brother-

avenue,

Tuesday in the auditorium of the
Recreation center.
Election and installation of new
officers will also be conducted at
this meeting.
Robert L. Leopold
of 1244 Linden avenue has been

_ We

of

Henry Peng, of Hawaii, are spending Thanksgiving at the Wulfsohn

third appearance as guest speaker
at the annual Ladies’ Night meet-

paper

10

tended the Harvard-Brown

Mrs.

Professor
Margery Carlson,
Northwestern
university
botanist
and plant explorer, will make her

T.

served

to Camp Atterbury, Ind.
Mr.
Leeming
recently flew
Providence,
R. I., where
he

David

Installs Officers

and

He

Home From Ann Arbor
With Friend and Mascot

Plans Ladies’ Night;

urer.

spending 21 months in
with the rank of ser-

months in Korea

Men’s Garden Club

ing

after
army

(Continued

turn to their home when Mr. Carter arrives this weekend.

psychology,

a nursery school
campus for adstudents.

The

meeting is open to guests with 25c
admission

charge.

Thursday, November 27, 1952

�it can be done

Where
HEATING

AND

Fe

OIL

BURN

Phone

HI

2-3804

L

ASPHALT

SALES AND SERVICE

BRAUN

COVERING

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—

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CARPETS

ee

BROS. OIL CO.

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|/"cor ovens

|

DOWNING'S

HEATING EQUIPMENT.
GAS

FLOOR

LINOLEUM

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p

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For
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&amp; RUGS

SON

Tile

Asphalt

Tree

f

Esti
Binsy

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Daniel

install it yourself or make use of our expert mechanics.

th

Lencioni

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ie

f

1379 Deerfield Road, Highland Park

,

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459

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@

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h
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1864 SHERIDAN

ine

ieee

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Official
200000000

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CARS FOR HIRE

phone.

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Estimates.

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and

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Open Friday ’till 9 p.m.
Highland

|

BROS. fn.

Advertisements

ie.

field Review and Highwood

who

'
subscribe

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to the

Highland

Park

News,

Deer-

HI 2-4500 today and let us prepare a layout for you?

Why

not phone

2-0686

PAINTS — SUPPLIES

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The cost of an ad on this page is small

. $3.70 per week for a two-inch square on a yearly basis.

| 1)

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On

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PAP
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So do most of the people

HI

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All

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us work

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TO RADIOS | = Sane
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Blouses,

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clothes.

Tite,

Vinyl,

than

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to

mirocies.

Ceramic

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Linens,
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more

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INTERIORS

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1010 Hazel Ave., Deerfield

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lnsteliotion

RTT)

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Tudors,

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Convertibles,

PARK, ILL.

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TOW ING SERVICE

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SOUR ROR RARE SRE RRR RESS: | | pee eee

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COMBINATION

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Whether
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Choose from smart variety
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Phone

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�</text>
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                    <text>Thursday,

=

4, 1952

VOW’

&gt;

wD

S

€€

December

�MORE
PRE-XMAS
ATT

VALUES

EE

JEWELER
CORNER

DIAMONDS

/w|
[Cy

nea

Bank

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=n

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a

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$275.00....$]

Y4-CARAT WITH CENTER DIAMOND—

With

4

Fine

Side

Diamonds—Set

In

Piotinum—Reg. $185.00 6nd:

a

eat
til
D

:

ne

AND

SHERIDAN

eis

Soece ea

—

HI 2-2028

MEN’S WATCHES

v

M4
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,

ay

Mn 4 ——"

Central
ed

-44 CARAT SOLITAIRE —
In 14K Yellow Gold—Reg.

pH
Pee

CENTRAL

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&lt;
5

=

v.

Ave
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G5 00*

ON

$1 2500"

eae

OVER 11 CARATS BLUE-WHITE DIAMOND and
4 SIDE DIAMONDS—Set In Platinum
eee 6425000
$95 (900"

ae

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OE

Bee

Water - Resistant,
Watch With

ae

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ELGIN—

ne Bee

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ets

;
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Shock - Resistant,

uy

wis

125

Antimagnetic

Lifetime Mainspring—Radium

Expansion Band—Only

Dial—

...........000200000000..... $2 475*

MEN’S
ACCESSORIES

PEARLS
BEAUTIFUL SIMULATED PEARLS—
Single Strand—Solid Gold Clasp—Knotted
—Includes

Pearl

.... $5 95*

Shortener—Only

BEAUTIFUL

In a Variety

of

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NG

�37

in the

Circuit

Court

at Waukegan Friday on the right
of the Citizens’ Committee. for a
Better Deerfield to intervene in the
declaratory
judgment
action
brought by the Brick yard attorneys.
The
State’s
Attorney’s
office.
represented
by Asst.
State’s Attorney Bruno Stanczak argued in
behalf of the intervention, which
is being opposed by Dady &amp; Dady,

attorneys

for

the

National

to

Intervene

“Brick

koop,
917
Oxford
and
Joseph
Zerish, Cumner court.
Proposed zoning of the planning
commission
for this section
was
discussed by Mr. Wynkoop. Several
revisions were suggested and approved by the group. Members of
the newly-organized group are invited to attend the meeting next
Friday of the planning and zoning
commission in the Deerfield grammar school. At this meeting, property owners will have the oppor-

Filed

The
motion
to
intervene
was
filed by Harold Wynkoop, attorney
for the Citizen’s Committee.
The
court refused to rule on the petition, and. asked that certain matters be set up in the petition setting out the legal right to inter-

vene.

Leave

was

then

granted

or received
closed.

Andersen, 927 Westcliffe; G. E.
Evans, 935 Kenton; H. W. Wyn-

company.
Motion

period, but no books will be issued

to

withdraw
the
petition
with
permission to refile, when the matter
will again be set down for arguments.

tunity of expressing their approval
or disapproval
of the
which they have paid.

plans

for

Warrants In Monday Trial
the John

warrants for the illegal dumping

Doe

of

garbage at the National Brick company were called for trial
on Monday before Dan Hunt, police magistrate, attorneys
for the brick yard and land fill company presented a petition

seeking to disqualify Judge Hunt and 25 other justices of the
peace from hearing the cases.
The

Chest Campaign

Attains 75%
The

Chest

attained

approximately 75% of its
$12,500, with reports from
areas still incomplete.

goal of
several

and the cases were
ae

Scouts

ber

13, on the

Deerfield
Saturday

hours
p.m.

and
and

are

weekdays

of Troop

Christmas

9
the

southeast

Decem-

corner

of

Waukegan
roads.
Sunday
the
sale

a.m.
hours

to 9 p.m.

to

9

p.m.

and

will be from

to

After a morning

set for hearing

4

the

Schmidt,
company

police

officers

making

the

ar-

found
were
defendants
the
rest,
guilty and assessed a fine of $100
The case of Henry E.
and costs.
Laseke was continued to December
13 because the officer making the
arrest was unable to be present.

Since the arrests on November
all
dumping
has
allegedly
All profits from the sale of the 24,
pit.
at the brick yard
trees will be used to purchase troop stopped
equipment or for troop functions of State’s Attorney Robert Nelson has
Deerfield Troop 52, Boy Scouts of stated that every violation will be
prosecuted to the fullest extent.
America.
i

ti ny

library

is

Reschedule Date of
Cub Scout Paper Drive
The Cub Scout paper drive, previously scheduled for this Saturday
changed to next week,
has been
December 13. Everyone wishing to
and
of newspapers
rid his home
magazines will have the opportunity to do so by placing them on
the curbs by 9:30 a.m. that SaturResidents are asked
day morning.
to help the Cubs clean up the basements for the holidays.

created

cently

classification

tion, an eleventh

(see

for

public buildings such as schools,
churches and parks, although these

Existing
In

and

dividing

various

In last week's ‘Review Dan Hunt,
incorrectly

referred to as Daniel Hunt, justice
of the peace, in the article
brick yard
hearings.

on

the

public

Character
the

zones,

hearing.

town

into

and

inson, the planners, have studied
the existing character of the vari-

ous areas.
In some
house

size

areas

the

limitations

demanded
appear

un-

der the new set-up to be higher
than presently required, but it is
pointed
simpler

out that
method

a
of

different and
measurement

comparison

of this

one

printed

the

with

map

—
~

will |
previously in the REVIEW
show there has been no increase —
in manufacturing area except for |
_
a new parking lot at Kleinschmidt
—
already
has
which
laboratories,
been granted by the Appeals board.
Different regulations are set up

for each of the ten zones, governing variations in building and lot
size minimums and in permitted

ie
—

in each.

uses

One-family

Districts

The first four classifications are
all one-family districts, but vary in
house and lot sizes, as indicated

on last week’s map. R-1 calls for
big houses on big lots. R-2 means

a

|
|
a

R-3

lots.

small

on

houses

small

—
permits small houses on big lots,
big houses on
and R-4 demands
small lots.

call
and

“Small” lots (R-2 and R-4)
for 7,500 square feet minimum,
lots

require

R-3)

and

(R-1

of 20,000 square

most

The

the

A

use.

turing
week’s

“big”

Hutch-

ng
manufac-

for

is

zone

tenth

The

shopping

future

a

for

the other
center.

minimum

Studied

Kincaid

is used.

was

area

one

for

map).
The new ordinance will provide
There is, in addifor ten zones.

application

Correction
magistrate,

night.
The ordinance will then be presented either as it stands or with
to
modifications
public-demanded
the village Board of Trustees for
Dan Dunne is chairman
passage.
and Lewis B. Walton is vice chairman of the commission.
Five Zones at Present
Deerfield’s 1924 zoning law proTovided for four classifications.
day’s code has five, with an additional special compromise zone re-

are created individually for special

Mrs. Robert Jordt says that ‘“‘fathers are all expected at the oldfashioned box social’? being sponsored by the Holy Cross Mothers’
club on Tuesday, December 16. The
will have an opportunity to
men
bid for the attractively decorated
contain
will
which
lunches
box
food for two. There will also be a
grab bag and entertainment will
follow.

police

recompletely
the
on
Work
vamped zoning code, part of Deerfield’s village plan, has been completed by the professional planners
and the Planning and Zoning comThe first public hearing
mission.
will be held before the commission in the new section of the Deertomorrow
school
Grammar
field

a

'

feet.

classifica-

restrictive

tion, R-1, can be considered either
estate or farming property, depending
six such

|
~
=

Permitted

Uses

Agricultural

are

There

upon location.
areas.

This classification also specifies —
many uses not permitted elsewhere —
‘These include farming —
in town.
agriculture,

and

rais-—

turkey

or

—

gardening,

truck

chicken

orchards,

ing, “raising or training horses or aa
private

cattle,’

and —

courses

golf

a ,
greenhouses.
Residential Areas
hey
Domestic animals can also be
are
zones
new
ten
the
of
Seven
orThere are two slaughtered for home use, the
for residential use.
dinance reads, if the “lot” is at —
shopping areas, one for the pres‘least ten acres.
ent central business district and
Seven

Most of the southeast quarter of —
Deerfield, except for the subdivis- |
ions near the grammar school, are

Celebrate 25th

Year

The
rating.
an R-1
given
classification is given to two

~

same
strips

along Wilmot road, part of Wood-—
land Park, the North Woods sub- —

division, and the Landis

subdivis- |

ion.

1) 28.

of Palatine, Walter Christensen of
Northbrook,
and Edward
Wagner
of the
Laseke
Garbage
Disposal
company at Arlington Heights were
then called for hearing at 1 p.m.
before Judge Seyl, and after testimony presented in each case by

52 will betrees

appointed
attorney

The cases against John
of the Schmidt Disposal

Boy Scout Troop 52

selling

was

state’s

by Har-

of argument on the petition and
motions
presented
by the
Brick
Yards
attorneys,
Hunt
granted
a
change of venue to Eugene
Seyl,

To Sell Christmas Trees
Boy

who

assistant

police magistrate.

Residents
who
were
not
contacted during the drive, and those
who have promised to send checks,
are urged to mail their contributions to Post Office Box 86, Deerfield. “Do it today,” said William
C.
Garner,
campaign
chairman.
“‘Let’s keep Deerfield-Bannockburn
a Red Feather community.”

gin

opposed

prosecute
the
cases, who
argued
that the court could only pass upon
his own disqualification, and that
a.change of venue would have to
be sought before each individual

- Bannockburn
has now

was

Wynkoop,

special

of Goal

Deerfield

Community

old

motion

the

Holy Cross to Have
‘Box Social’

Judge Seyl Hears John Doe
When

while

form.
if the new zoning ordinance is passed in its present

oe

Decker

by

the closing is necessary in order
to make a complete inventory of
the books, also to rearrange them,
and to finish the decimalizing system
which
has been
incomplete.
This is the method of cataloging
books used by all libraries as a
systematic
method
of
locating
books with the greatest ease.
Special
arrangements
will
be
made to extend the time borrowers may retain books during this

village, Deerfield - r
Reflecting the growing complexity of the
g classifications
zonin
of
r
numbe
will have double the present

ae

Judge

heard

The library board announces that

a

First Meeting on
Proposed Zoning to
Be Held December 5

Family

Zone
house

mits

R-4

Gardening

has

requirement

7,500

square

the

In

R-4

same ‘large —

as R-1,

foot

but per-

lots,

—

and —

only family-table gardening.
ae
Two areas in Deerfield, known
as R-5, also permit only one family,
but are unrestricted. as to house —
size. These are both in the south- i
ern part of the village, one ad- |

ns

To Intervene in
Brick Yard Case
were

The
West
Deerfield
Township
library, located
in the Deerfield
Grammar
school,
will be
closed
during the school holiday season,
from December 22 to January 2,
inclusive.

First
regtiar
meeting
of
the
Home Owners Associated of Briarwoods Estates was held December
1 in the new building of the Deerfield primary school.
This group of citizens who have
banded together for the purpose of
protecting
property
values
and
rights of this section was conceived
and organized by William Madden,
Westcliffe lane.
At this meeting a group of nine
men
were
selected
to serve
the
organization.
Those
elected
were
R. E. Fidler, 909 Beverly place; H.
F.
Yegge,
915
Kenton;
Donald
Kempf,
820 Beverly place; G. B.
Richards, 850 Westcliffe; Bernard
H. Collins, 909 Knollwood; A. O.

Hearing on Motion

arguments

Over Holiday Season

oa

Library to Close

Home Owners Meet To
Discuss Plans, Zoning

Oral

4

4, 1952

December

Thursday,
Vol. 27, No.

jacent to the brickyards,
paralleling the southern
turing district.

the other
manufac- —

Two residential zones are set |
aside for structures housing more ~

than one family.

These areas are |

mostly on or near Deerfield road.

—

Zone R-6 permits two-flat homes, —
while R-7 is designated for apart- |

Edward H. Selig, Harold R. Vant and Edward Segert at
the recent open house held by the Deerfield Savings and ment houses, row
lodges, and hotels.
Loan to celebrate their 25th anniversary.

houses,

clubs, —
p

�Deerfield Mothers Speak

Mothers bo ths CLebor—
Opinions
columns

expressed

do

not

in

Trailer

Shows

these

necessarily

should

be

brief

and

should contain the name and address of the writer, whose name
will be withheld

LETTERS
My

first

field

if requested.

TO THE

EDITOR

Thanksgiving

brought

fond

in

Deer-

memories

Mrs.

of

feeling

“I

am

thankful

to

to New York city and
Thanksgiving
living

it

was

so

big

and

we
on

to live

here

Have

adjacent

Deerfield.

of its

natural
beauty—not
the
awe
inspiring type, but the simple beauty
of tree lined streets, picturesque
flower
gardens,
and
well-kept
homes.
Persons with these homespun likes, the love of the earth
and what it provides, are the real

and

toward

as

glad.
Harold Sparks
642 Hermitage

To

the

Editor:

Letter
Nelson

on

to

Mr.

in regard

Bradt

from

to current

the brick yard situation:
November Twenty-second

Mr.
action

1952

Hon. Andrew Bradt
Village President
Village of Deerfield
Deerfield, Illinois

My

dear President

to

There

the

Village

are now

alleviating

As

you

undoubtedly

_ office, in cooperation
lage
zens

know,

this

with the Vil-

Board of Deerfield, the CitiCommittee for a better Deer-

field,

and

Township

the
Board,

West
and

Deerfield

the people

of

West Deerfield Township, has been
making an effort to abate what we
consider to be public nuisance in
the operation of the National Brick
Company premises as a garbage
Page

4

discuss

the

prob-

Mr. Martin, the new Village Manager.
Mrs.
Minnie
Balke
of the
Lake County Zoning and Sanitation
Committee was also present. You
may
call
Mrs.
Howard
Nielsen,
Deerfield 1454, for specific information if you would care to join
the fight.
A community that is intelligent and aware will solve these
problems!
Mothers Pack
Dumping Hearing
Our
Village
officials
are
thoroughly aroused and are as determined
as the
mothers
to enforce the state law prohibiting the

dumping of garbage within a mile
of a village. Mr. Wynkoop is doing
everything possible to see
fenders are arrested and,

important,

that ofjust as

being brought promptly

of

pending

the

conditions

to

the

modus

operandi

Monday,
was
four

December

1, the

court

packed
for the trial of
drivers
who
had
been

rested the previous Monday.
were

fined

$100.00.

their

beds

unmade,

the
ar-

Three

Mothers

the

left

laundry

postponed, in order to be there.
Among
those we saw were Mrs.
Arthur Juhl, Mrs. R. Rovik, Mrs.

Fred Faulkner, Mrs. Henry Hawes,
Mrs. H. G. McMullen, Mrs. Martin
A. Olson, Mrs. George Schmid, Mrs.
Trenten
O.
Price,
Mrs.
Joseph
O’Connor,
Mrs.
Joseph
Kramer,

Mrs.

Arthur

Pagel,

Berkley, Mrs. Eugene

Mrs.

F.

Boratyn,

J.
Mrs.

William Schwerdt, Mrs. J. A. Scoggin,

Mrs.

W.

J.

Loarie,

Mrs.

John

Carlson, Mrs. Harry Abrahamson,
Mrs.
Fred
Harnisch,
Mrs.
Paul
Simon, Mrs. Donald Kempf, Mrs.
Robert Clark, Mrs. Norman Parker
Jr., and Mrs. Joseph Ryon. Women

such

as these

are

truly a force

the community and they
this dumping stopped.
Johnson
Mr. and Mrs.
son, 826 Pine,

will

in
get

Theodore J. Johnare parents
of a

daughter,

Christine

November

28,

at

Anne,

born

Highland

Park

hospital. She has four older brothers, Ted,
Glenn, 1,

Jeanne,

15,
and

who

Bob, 13, Donald, 7,
has an older sister,

is 11.

—

The maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. John E. Johnson of

HPHS Students To Present
Christmas Concert Sunday
The annual Christmas concert will be given by the music
department of Highland Park H igh school at 3:30 p.m. Sunday

in the High school auditorium. The band, orchestra and combined choruses have been worki ng together to make the event
enjoyable for all age groups.
—

Obituaries
REE

RH

ONS

RELA

Mrs. William
Funeral

garet

RTS

for

79, wife

William

B. Carr, were

ber

in

26

Decatur,

ARN

MS SAE

Mrs.

Mar-

of the late
held Novem-

Ill.,

with

of the Deerfield

Presbyter-

ian church conducting the graveside services.
Mrs. Carr died November
24 at the home
of her
daughter, Mrs. Harry Olendorf in
Decatur.
She was born on August 11, 1873,
in Canada,
and her marriage
to
William B. Carr was on January 4,
1895, in Milwaukee.
Mr. and Mrs.
Carr and their daughter, Beatrice,
moved from Libertyville to Deerfield in 1918 and she lived here
until Mr. Carr’s death in 1945.
Mr.

fied

and

Mrs.

with

many

ganizations
of
their
residence

served

for

Carr

were

activities

identi-

and

six years

on

the

of Beverly

Berning
Mr. and

1375

Mrs.

South

parents

Leigh,

of

born

Hills,

LeRoy

Telegraph
a

Chicago.

C. Berning,

road,

daughter,

November

18

are

Donna

at

the

Highland Park hospital.
She has
a brother, Robert, 11.
Mrs. Frost,

all

of the

Attorney’s Office
Special Assistant

Wynekoop

of the

Deer-

field Grammar school.board of education and was a charter member of the Deerfield Masonic lodge
and the first worthy patron of the
Deerfield
Order
of the
Eastern
Star.
Mrs. Carr was also active in
Eastern Star work and other community affairs.
is survived

by her

ROBERT C. NELSON
State’s Attorney

“Henry

Beethoven’s

Parisienne”

Members
form

of

the

the

and

ditorium

singing

World,”

First

will

candlelight

march

“Come

Offen-

choruses

into the

“Joy

All

Christian

“The

“Sym-

by

traditional

procession

“Good

con-

Deirdre”
Whitney,

Ye

the

Faithful,”

Men

Noel,”

au-

to

Rejoice,”

and

‘Silent

Night.”
Next
of

on the

the

program

Nativity

carols,

and

as

Biblical

“Song

of Christmas”

wold.

Robert

story,

Allen

part

voice

of

Others

verse

will

and

the

Ringthe

take

Judith

the

Kramp,

Participants

participating

voice

in

Mary.

Christmas”

etra,

songs,

Blitz will narrate

List

of

story

in

by Roy

Koretz

of Gabriel,

the

is the

told

of

in the “Song

include

Robert

prophet;

Jan

Sal-

Holm-

quist,
voice of shepherd;
James
Barton and Robert Bridell, voice of
kings;
Dale Burks, Guy Geleerd,
Bron Hafner, Charles Kimbrough,
Ann Schumacher, Marjorie Thorup
and Fred Turner, soloists.

daughter,

formerly of Deerfield, is the
ternal grandmother, and Mr.

maand

Mrs. Edward H. Berning of Northbrook are the paternal grandparents.

The choruses
will
singing the Hallelujah

combine
in
Chorus from

Handel’s

‘Messiah’

accompanied

by

Belmont.

David
The

concert

Allen

at

Highland

Park

hospital

on Monday. He has an older brother Ronny, 10. Mr. and Mrs. Chris

Mentzer
paternal

of Chestnut

street are the

grandparents.

will

be

concluded

with selections played by the band,
including

Mentzer
Mr.
and
Mrs. Arthur
Mentzer,
1046 Oakley, became
the parents
of a son with the arrival of Ray

“Salutation

March”

by

Seitz; “American Folk Rhapsody” ’
by Gundman; “Jesu, Joy of Man’s
Desiring” by Bach; two novelties,
“March of the Little Lead Soldiers”
by Pierne, and “Frosty the Snow-

man”

by Nelson, and the polonaise

from

“Christmas

Night”

by

Rim-

than

Public

sky-Korsakov.
[he

St. Gregory Church Dinner

Public

Press,

no

is a public

tess

trust.

DEERFIELD
REVIEW
Thursday

Dec.

Published

1775

4,

1952

Weekly

Vol.

every

27,

No.

37

Thursday

PUBLICATION
OFFICE
832 Todd Ct.
Deerfield,
Illinois
Telephone Deerfield 485
HIGHLAND
PARK OFFICE
St. Johns Ave., Highland Park,
Telephone HI 2-4500

II.

MEMBER
National
Editorial Association
Illinois Press Association

_

Heather

Hartwig

Phyllis Russell
V. E. Deckert

are available to
State’s Attorney

with him in an effort to cooperate
to accomplish our purpose.
Respectfully yours,

from

the

to
by

Lois Baum and Nancy Hall will
be accompanists and Marion, AngBeatrice (Mrs. Harry C, Olendorf), | ster will play the chimes.
Other
of Decatur;
two grandsons,
Dr. members of the girls ensemble and
James Carr Olendorf, and William mixed
ensemble
include
Susan
Carr Olendorf of 1059 Fair Oaks Childs, Sandra Edwards, Ann Haavenue, Deerfield, and three great ney, Katherine Parker, Odette Segrandchildren.
Harry
Olendorf’s lig, Mary Stewart, Geraldine Weinmother is Mrs.
Chester A. Wolf, feld, Marie Young, Byron Botker,
retired librarian of the West Deer- Betty
Kraupt,
David Rietz, Ann
field Township public library.
Stevens, George White and Marilyn Williams.
She

State’s

and we will work closely

open

the Morris
dance
VIII” by Germain,

5”;

and “La Vie
bach-Dorati.

or-

of this office.

facilities

will

from

No.

Office,

other

Any
comments
or _ suggestions
you or any members of the Board|.
may have on this program will be
welcome. You may be assured. that

finale

phony

Deerfield
during
here.
Mr.
Carr

Rogers Park, and Mrs. Theodore J.
Johnson

the

the

Rev.
Robert
Crothers
officiating.
Burial
was
at the
North
Shore
Garden of Memories with Dr. Paul

Keller

orchestra

“Overture
“Holiday Tune”

and

EER

B. Carr

services

E, Carr,

The

cert with

than to say that Special Assistant
State’s Attorney Wynekoop has received instructions from me to see
that all drivers of trucks dumping
garbage on the premises are arrested and that they be brought before the Justice of the Peace of.
your Township
by Constable McLaughlin.
Mr. Wynekoop will conduct the prosecutions
before the
Justice of the Peace as a repre-

sentative
Bradt:

to

cials were invited to attend, as was

Action

which exist. This course of action
has been unanimously approved by
the Board and I wish to advise you
formally
of
my
action
by
this
Americans of today—the kind of means.
I have this day appointed Harold
-people who are genuine neighbors.
W.
Wynekoop
Special
Assistant
Yes, we have a heap of healthful
living in Deerfield—not only fresh State’s Attorney in and for Lake
County, Illinois, and he has taken
air, but pure
and
better tasting
the oath of that office before the
water—and
where
dirt is recogThe
nized as such and eliminated wher- County Clerk of this County.
ever found.
The people of Deer- purpose of appointing Mr. Wynefield show great respect for clean- koop an Assistant State’s Attorney
liness and their properties reflect is to prepare and conduct criminal
prosecutions
against
those
who
this admirable
attitude.
garbage
on
the
National
True, you can say all the fore- dump
going about most midwestern towns Brick Company premises in violabut besides its natural advantages tion of the State laws and also to
all the conveniences of city living act as liaison between this office
are right here. The modern shops and the West Deerfield Township
and service purveyors, fine schools Board of Health in maintaining a
and churches are all conveniently daily inspection of the premises in
that
criminal
informations
located within a block or two of order
my house—and even a golf course may be filed in the County Court
for
a backyard—also
the
finest of Lake County charging the Napolice and fire protection. The rail- tional Brick Company and Sanitary
road station is but a quarter mile Fill, Ltd., with the maintenance of
away and I can get to the Chicago uncovered garbage on the premises
Loop a lot sooner than many Chi- for each day garbage is so maintained.
cagoans.
In furtherance of this program
Then too, if I wish to drive to the
upper
Illinois or Wisconsin
lake we have enlisted the cooperation of
McLaughlin,
Constable
of
resorts I can be there in an hour Percy
or sooner—with all the city traffic your Village, and Justice of the
eliminated.
Yes,
this
is really Peace, Eugene Seyl.
I do not desire to go in detail
Thanksgiving—I am living in Deer-

field

met

lem further and to coordinate their
efforts. Wives of the Village offi-

school

two
criminal
complaints
in
the
County Court of Lake County and
one suit in equity in the Circuit
Court
praying
for an injunction
against the operators of the Brick
Yard and the garbage dump.
In furtherance of our desire to
stop the dumping of garbage in the
Brick Company’s premises, I have
suggested a course of action to the
Village Board of your Town which,
in my opinion, will go a long way

“city-

because

the

mothers

are joingroup of

to trial.
dump

fied.”
In the final analysis, all things
considered, I decided Deerfield was
the finest spot to really live and
rear
a family.
The midwest
pioneering spirit still exists. Its early
settlers, and those who came late

elected

Easton,

The trailer camp is a disgrace
in this day and age. Living conditions there are totally inadequate
and downright dangerous. Let’s not
see a real
tragedy
occur
before
something
is
done
about
that
trailer camp.
Have
YOU
been
down
to the
Brickyards lately? Have you seen
trucks coming from Evanston, Arlington Heights, Glenview?
Many
mothers have in recent weeks, and

Long Island.
Then we moved
to
Chicago
and
more
recently
Evanston where we celebrated
several Thanksgiving days.
And
now
Deerfield.
It wasn’t
just by accident, either, as I spent
several months studying the advantages and disadvantages of Chicagoland
suburbs.
Any
community
adjoining Chicago
was ruled out

because

Miriam
Lets

be

living in Deerfield.”
As a youngster my Thanksgivings
were spent in Philadelphia and its
growing
suburbs
and
they
were
happy family occasions.
My work

took me
enjoyed

Dangers

nurse.

many
previous
Thanksgiving
day
celebrations.
But it also brought

the

every week more mothers
ing the fight. Tuesday a

Saturday afternoon, at\4:30, fire
broke out in one of the trailers
located at the brickyards. It was a
small
fire;
damage
was
only
$25.00.
But- children
are
living
there.
Five
of them
attend
the
Deerfield
Grammar
school,
Dr.
Brooks, the Township Health Officer, has protested the unsanitary,
unhealthful
conditions.
So
has

con-

stitute the opinions of the paper.
Letters

Fire

Seated

atthe

speakers

table

at

the

recent

celebration

of St. Gregory's birthday dinner are E. M. White, the Reverend
E. Dargan Butt, the Very Reverend Charles U. Harris, the
Reverend Jack D. Parker, Mrs. Charles U. Harris and Walter
H. Davies,

Jr.

Bon Gass Maas bo Editor
Managing Editor
Business Manager

Local Subscription Rates—$2.75
per year
Domestic Rate—$4.00 per year
Singte Copies—10c
Foreign Rates on Application
“Entered as second-class matter Novemver 27, 1944, at the post office at DeerMeid, Illinois, under the Act of March 8,
1679.”
Copyright,
1952,
By
The Highland Park Company
All Rights
Reserved

Thursday, December 4, 1952
sable;

�PARK

BANNOCKBURN

HIGHLAND -

VIEEAGE “OF =
DERRFrIELD
LEAN

OES

i195}

JEMFIELS

DISTRICT

(SINGLE

-2
(SINGLE

FAMILY-MIN.
(1 ACRE)

LEGEND

“D"

FAMILY)

LOT AREA

peat

RESIDENG

“

RESIDENCE

E

‘Bs RESLDENGCGE
eee
LIGHT

DEEeTIETS

EDS

eS

Ee

ee

MANUFACTURING

if

euaver

swasger

”
=
2
3

PARK

w
°
a&lt;
2
&gt;

R-2

DISTRICT

(SINGLE

AREA

“C*

FAMILY)

HIGHLAND

LOT

FAMILY = MIN. LOT

SZ

( SINGLE

Z,
‘ ,
far
?

FAMILY- MIN.
(1 ACRE)

COUNTY
county

PREPARED

BY:

KINCAID

&amp;

HUTCHINSON

CITY PLANNING &amp;
TOS W. MADISON ST.

ARCHITECTURE
CHICAGO 2, ILL.
SEPTEMBER

:
;

EXISTING
ZONING
SEPTEMBER

=

1981

�+

Holy Cross Bowling
Texaco

................ 22

SR

21

_Lauterburg

a

1

mers,

Lindemann

Bees) 44.P.
BS;

&amp;

CS

Oehler

Drugs

Service

meer

ee

............ 19

Station

Franklin

20

bus

... 17

..............:.....

=)

Country Fare .................... 16
Village

bs
he

UNIT
chao wal 12
Individual Leaders (Men)

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

for Sunday

school

The Christmas

by

chil-

dren on Sunday, December 7. The
bus will be one of the regular

17

B

Hardware

service

Br

|at
8:15,
traveling
on
road to the Glenbrook

(Women)

a

High

Ra).
ee

erate

Me

Gerre

Game

OPTOMETRIST

Complete
ps
ie

Optical

Service

\follow,

Established in Deerfield Since 1942
Call Deerfield 674 for Appointment
857

Rosemary

Terr.,

KNAAK’S

PHARMACY

Uae

BRUCE
Registered

H. FORD
Pharmacist

(

Established
Phone

in

1

then

avenue
Church

1884

ex

Expert
“

Ba

Entire

Repairing

Ml

Be

DEERFIELD

JEWELERS

FROST'S
Tel

Oecertield

F. D. CLAVEY
RAVINIA NURSERIES,
Established
a
Pe
West

Deerfield

12

Inc

1885

Road,

insurance

—

Real

Lutheran

Edward

H.

Team
Central POOGS ies
A. Willi, Plasterer ........
Deerfield Clothing ............
Highland
Park Fuel ....
Deerfield
Lumber.
........

Bishop:

Heating...

Sunset:

Ro0odG

Alpha.

Cleaners:

Mary

of

495

Church

of

16

23

15

24

&lt;3.

23.0245.
bowled

high

i

24

high

series

game

Mrs.

Carl

of

187.

Jaeger,

Northbrook-Deerfield

its Sunday

Bus . . . Licensed,

SSS

Experienced

A

r

, o&gt;

.o

PS

Y

.
\

»

(

G}

7

) BAY

all

a.m.—and

Driver

NORTHBROOK

radh

=
g) =~
ae}
in =O ORI)

————_

S)

Cal., to visit her son, Orville

Guests

Mr.

We

can

you

you
may

everything
er

for

your

bring
rest
from

your

car

assured

we

check

to

bump-

bumper

added

to

P|

and

aes

650 Waukegan

Road

Tel. 580

Mrs.

Joseph

Mrs.

John

Anfruns,

gees
EY
WORE RRS Geol
aaa ea DS!

pi

es
R sa ents

fe

*

:

bet

sees

eR

;

640

4

p.m.

and

7:30

Mass
p.m.

at

Con-

COMMUNITY
NORTHFIELD
Sanders
at Dundee

P.O.

Deerfield,

Ill.

Burford,

Pastor

His mother
Anfruns.

is the

1:30

6

Drum, New York.
Pfc. Kelly is on
a maneuver at Little Creek, Va.

Monthly

Women’s

rm.

4

meeting

of the

af-

guild.

Fvenirg

league.
;
in

instruction

vesper

chimes.

SUNDAY, December 7
9:30 a.m.
Sunday sehool

worship

and

classes.

10:30 a.m. Chime call to worship.
11 a.m.
Mornirg
church
worship.
7 p.m. Youth fellowship will leave from
ch»rch in a group to attend the Advent
Regional
the
for
service
Candlelight
Youth
fellowship
at Arlington
Heights.
MONDAY,
December 8
3:30 p.m.
Girl Scout meeting in the
church basement.
:
Council meeting in
7:30 p.m. Church
the church basement.
WEDNESDAY,
December 10
Choir practice in the church
7:30 p.m.

Sharon Jeager, Melinda McMillan,
Judy
Peterson,
Marsha
Diecus,
Karen Sanders, Margretta Winters,
and Karen Hartwig.
Maneuvers
An
amphibious
landing
under
simulated
combat
conditions
climaxed “Operation Sea Scape” for
Pfe. Earl F. Kelly, 1303 Somerset
avenue, who is stationed at Camp

December

p.m.

ternoon

for-

On

us in the
not attend
welcome to

ST. PAUL
EVANGELICAL
AND
REFORMED
CHURCH
638 Waukegan
Road
Rev. H. 0. Willman. Pastor
Deerfield 858

Cen-

Ward, Irene Woods, Barbara Yorke,

sanctuary.

FIRST

a

PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
824
Waukegan
Road
Phone
Deerfield
775
*
Dr. Paul J
Keller. Pastor
SUNDAY,
December
7

9:45

a.m.

through

Church

high

school for all grade

school.

9:45 a.m.
Adult Bible class.
11
a.m.
Morning
worship.
Sunday.
11 a.m.
Nursery
school
for
bb.
Bs
7 p.m.

Tuxis

MONDAY,
3 p.m.

December
Girl Scout

Loyalty
childre

society.

8
meeting.

7:30 p.m.
Boy
Scout meeting.
WEDNESDAY,
December
10

7

Oy

the

given

at the

Wilmot

school

Wednesday afternoon, November 26. Children from
all grades participated in the
program consisting of dancing, singing, Thanksgiving
poems and&gt; short plays in
honor of the Harvest Queen.
The Harvest Queen was

Nancy Bartholomew who was
crowned by the spirit of the
Harvest Carole Praet. Members

of

the

Queens

p.m.

Junior

8 p.m.

Chap

The annual Thanksgiving
program ‘The crowning of
the Harvest Queen,”
was

court

8:30
ah,’

Church
p.m.

choir

choir

Rehearsal

rehearsal.

rehearsal.

for

:

‘The

Messi
:

THE BETHLEHEM
CHURCH
(Evangelical United Brethren)
Francis
Geo.
Guither,
Ministe
815 Rosemarv Terrace
“Church Going Families Are Happy
Families”

THURSDAY,
December 4
3:45 p.m. Junior, choir rehearsal.
6:45

p.m.

Bethlehem

SATURDAY,
7:30-11:30
ship

Bowling

December
6
p.m.
Teen-Town

league

in Fellow

hall.

SUNDAY, December 7
9:45 a.m.
Church school for all ages
10:55 a.m. Divine worship.
Rev. Mar
vel will preach
on “Christian
Disciple
ship defined.”
TUESDAY,
December 9
8 p.m.
Fireside.
WEDNESDAY,
December 10
4 p.m. Confirmation
class.
7:80 p.m. Senior
choir
rehearsal.

were Nancy Root, Diane Boratyn,

Betty

Wilson,

EERE
ed

Becky

Barbara Zimmer,
Mosely,
Susan
Anthony,
Pamela
Kinsey and Ruth Graef.
The ‘‘Trumpeteers,’’ who
announced the program
were

Nancy _

Fredrickson,

and Valerie Sedgwick.
The children of the school
brought
gifts of canned
foods which were taken to
Lake Bluff orphanage by a
representative from each of
the rooms and by several of
the Wilmot mothers.

Bank

a
NE Tere

a.m.

month,

to join with
invite you
we
do
If you
service.
evening
church, we give you a warm
visit our services.

Celebrates Birthday
Carol Ann Kirar of Hermitage
avenue
celebrated
her
eleventh
birthday with a party in her home
last Saturday. The guests, all sixth
graders,
included
Charmaine
Daniels, Roberta Gougler, Phyllis
Huffmann,
Cynthia Jacob, Lesley
Marshall, Barbara Petersen, Rosalie

help you solve your financial

fueey
Swat

7:30

each

FRIDAY, December 5.
7 p.m.
St. Paul Bowling
SATURDAY,
December 6
9:30 a.m.
Confirmation
the church basement.

f
he

of

lopeter Jr.
mer Gloria

IN 1672.

Sieh
te ?
Se

Masses:

Friday

THURSDAY,

eilr

4 fife’
WY

First

at West Suburban hospital, Oak
Park, to Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Hol-

i

ihe

Weekday

tral, and the senior W. D. Hollopeters.
David was born October 22

1%2% interest paid on savings
Deposits insured up to $10,000.00

Midge’s Texaco

Thanksgiving

and

Pays First Visit
Young David William Hollopeter
of Forest Park spent his first outing visiting his grandparents, Mr.

these coins,
cut to make

State

of

CROSS CATHOLIC CHURCH
North
Waukegan
Road
Rev. John
O’Mara,
pastor
Rectory, 724 Elder Lane
Deerfield 430
10,
11:86.
Siinday
Masses:
«,
3:30,

James

Gee? | change, became known
FES
as bits” and “2 bits”
NDICATI

Deerfield

Ryan

HOLY

Has Reception
Telephone
Northbrook
935R2
SUNDAY
SERVICES
Mrs. Richard Wolfe of Portwine |
9:45 a.m. Sunday
school.
road entertained last Saturday at
11 a.m. Morning
worship.
7:30 p.m. Evening services (monthly).
a reception for the recently wed
First and third Sundays: Evangelistic
r
Barbara and Paul Keller Jr.
She services.
Youth
Sundays:
fourth
and
Second
had open house for approximately
fellowship
services.
e
150 guests.
If your church has no evening service,

Open A Savings Account at the
_—

at}

Warrington
road
entertained Mr.
and Mrs. Curt Deschert and their
four children
of
Barrington
for
Thanksgiving.
Mr.
Deschert
and | NORTH
Mrs. Ryan are brother and sister.

us,

safety.

for

(Pat),

corps

a.m.
Saturday:
fessions.

problems...
When

GREGORY’S
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
Wilmot
and
Deerfield
Roads
(Wilmot
School)
The Rev. J. D. Parker Vicar
SUNDAY,
December
7
KindergarFamily service.
9:30 a.m.
for the
classes
school
church
and
ten
communion
holy
and
Sermon
children.
for adults.

2

Our hardy forefathers recognized the value of
thrift.

ST.

Florida

‘who is in the army air
Parks Air Force base.

AMERICAN COLONIES,
‘Walves and quarters of

Var

Bo 4

COLONY

In

Mrs. Harry V. Clavey of Waukegan, formerly of Deerfield, is on
vacation in Miami and St. Petersburg, Fla.
She will return home
for
the
holidays
and
after
the
new year will leave for Oakland,

ING MEDIUM IN THE

4

il

yrs

Vacation

FOR YEARS THEY WERE
THE CHIEF CIRCULAT-

al

Loans

On

COINS, FAMED IN PIRATE
LORE, WERE LEGALIZED
“
, BY THE MASSACHUSETTS

am
Wee
R-

invites

at 9:15

U LC

THESE HISTORIC SPANISH

“

Deerfield,

School

ECO

Deer-

WRENCH

SS SBIECESNO
,

Selig
Harvid
Tel Deertieid 155

L.
14
15
17
18
21

[The BANKER’S STORY |
Wak

—

Welch

and

Ww.
25
24
22
21
18

ce

GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH
OF NORTHBROOK-DEERFIELD
AT FOURTH

Deertiela

Estate

donated

49-R.

1925

Road,

were

field

&amp; SELIG

Deerfield

toys

in-

Victory Rollers Bowling League

Walter

REALTORS

735

Cor-

crafts

or

[7

Establishea

of

and

999R,

"py;

VANT

chil-

direction

arts

The

eve-

and

time, especially on the first trip.
Information on specific roads the

Office and Nursery
Oeerfield 35 and 36

welt

the

three

bus will follow may be secured
from Robert Carlen, Northbrook
1326, Mrs. S. J. Fecht, Northbrook

WALTER

Retrigerators - Ranges —§ Radios
Washing Machines - Vacuums
We Repair All Makes of Appliances
Rd

on

Regular School

RADIO AND ELECTRIC APPLIANCES

Woukegan

east

under

Hellmer,

and

to use its bus transportation to and from home, made available free
of charge as a service to the community.
Route: Waukegan
Rd. north past Deerfield Rd. to Greenwood, to
Oakley, to Deerfield, to Chestnut, to Osterman, to Waukegan,
south to County Line.
Time—8:20-8:30 a.m.
Return—10:15-10:20 a.m.

1048

a6

130

for parents

and

children of this area to attend

2
a

daily

a week,

RIDE BUS TO SUNDAY SCHOOL

Family

Phone

sessions

nings

anwere

Sycamore road and
area, returning
on

Grace

635 Deertield Rd

Re:

work

have

Sherner road to Grace church.
Children are urged to be on the
lookout for the bus in plenty of

for the

Watch

There

next

so

and furniture, 52 large trucks and
toys, five bikes and 400 small items,
games
puzzles
and projects. The
toys were given to the temporary
care and child placement division
of the family court of Cook county.

there it
arriving

Pfingsten

travel

to the
street

Jewelry

oa
i,

areas,

Deerfield,

in

to

year.

Koepke
roads to the south, then
over to the Northbrook Park area,
arriving
there
at
approximately
8:50.
From
there
the
bus
will
travel to the Illinois and Oak street

Deerfield

Pt

taking

plans

P.T.A.

shop

ran

dolls, 39 stuffed toys, 4 doll houses

road, then through the Sky Harbor area, then east on Dundee to
Western and the Highlands area,
arriving
at the church
at about
8:45.
A second
route will then

DR. G. C. PARKNEN

rey

surpassed

from
the
homes
and _ repaired,
painted and mended. There were 56

Make it a habit to read the Want
On County Line road the
Ads every week before laying your, road.
bus will travel west to Pfingsten
paper aside!

Bs

P.T.A.

high

structor.

about
8:25,
traveling
west
on
Greenwood
road,
then
back
to
Waukegan
road
to County
Line

Jones

Deerfield

the

CHURCHES

Deerfield Activities

Enthusiasm

win

Waukegan
area near

County Line road.
From
will go on to Deerfield,

CHUIOTTE yk
High Series

DEERFIELD”

ECCI

toy shop sponsored

all expectations.

dren

| Sunday school and those not memHigh Game
bers of any Sunday school are inSD
ADEE Sie og. ca ds nteduiacecBbetog 231 vited to make use of the bus ser| vice.
High Series
The bus will leave its terminal
RUMOR
kos ac gels Sse eas ath ot 596 |

e

the

other

_ Northbrook school buses operated
by a trained and qualified driver.
24 | All children now attending Grace

16

CCA)

A Great Success

The
Sunday
school
of Grace
Lutheran church, Walter at Fourth,
Northbrook,
will start operating

.... 20°

ae

Christmas Toy Shop

Y Have Bus Service

W.

Midge’s
ae

| Sunday School to

News

‘Team

4

phn
i

Sa

th
ES,

as

bday lata

""

wear

RRL

A

;
S

d

laine sais ne

aX

Holv Cross Bazaar
Set For This Weekend
The

Holy

Cross
bazaar

Christmas

Mothers’
will

take

cluk
plac¢

Friday and Saturday at the store
on Waukegan road formerly know
as the “Georgian shop.”
Mrs. E. Flynn, chairman, is plan
ning a “coffee booth’ where cu

tomers
with

may

a cup

refresh

of coffee

themselve

during

the b

zaar. The committee also plans
t¢
keep the bazaar open until 9 p.m
on Friday and until 5 p.m. on Sé

�Cadet Is Honored |
At Military School
Russell

senior

academy,

at

has

Anderson,

Western

been

aca-

Military

designated

as

Wie

James

demic

/

co

SKATING

SKIRT

Musical notes on a full circle of red
wool lined in taffeta—Sizes 10 to

16.

10.95
JEWELED

SWEATER

Nylon with pearls and gold embroidery. Sizes 7 to 14.
James

4.95

R. Anderson

cadet second lieutenant in the Reserve Officers Training corps unit
at the
academy
for outstanding

work

in military

theory

and

prac-

tice.
Cadet
Mr. and
Glencoe
. He has

has

Anderson
is the son of
Mrs. W. J. Anderson of
avenue.
been active in soccer and

also

taken

part

in

the

Boys’

music

activities of the school. He is a
member of the senior dance committee, and is on the staff of the
school newspaper, “The Shrapnel,”

and

the yearbook,

“The

cotton

SHIRTS

Recall.”

}

Cadets To Attend

1.85

Aviation Classes
At Northwestern

Just what

The Civil Air Patrol has arranged
with the Air Force ROTC at Northwestern university for its members
to receive
instruction in aviation
in university-sponsored classes.
Basic rudiments
of 12 subjects
to be covered
during
the year’s

course

include

aviation

history,

structures and identification of airplanes, theory
of
flight, aircraft
engines, instruments and controls:
weather, navigation, radio and air
traffic control, safety, airports, vocational
opportunities in aviation
and aircraft terms.
Open
Classes,

part

To

All

which

of November,

are

the

latter

open

to all

members
of the Civil Air Patrol
A civilian organization, the CAP is
not obligated in any way to any
branch of the armed services; however, it has been designated by the
Air Force to furnish disaster air
lift teams in the form of mobile
support units to be used wherever
needed in case of an emergency in
Illinois. In case of an attack, CAP
would de important air reconnaissance work, and maintain the flow
of
traffic
throughout
stricken
areas. The communications network
of CAP with 150 stations in Illinois
would be utilized in the event of
disruption of normal telephone and
other communication services.
Civil Air Patrol in Illinois has
3,000
members
and
400
planes.
Membership is open to any citizen,
with
good
character,
who
is 15
years or older. Flying experience
or ownership of an airplane is not
necessary.
Information
on
membership
in
the group
may
be obtained from
Cadet Sgt. Michael Perlman at HI
2-5836.

:

Only the Want Ads offer amazing
values and opportunities not avail- able elsewhere. Read them now!

; _- Thursday,

December

4, 1952

he likes—an

ment of gay
to 16.

ae

ae

y

(/ 12)

at

Members
began

flannel

plaids.

assort-

Sizes 6

nylon

Hi

GOWN

L

Tiny

print

in.

pastels.

Sizes 4 to 6X.

3.99
Pucker Nylon

SLIP
For sizes

Brother

and

1-3, 4-14.

Sister

SUITS
Sizes 2 to 4

39D
Cunning polka dot shirts with bow
ties.
Rayon shantung suspender
pants and skirt. Navy and red.
Page

7

�Party on December 10.
~ ey
WHITT NORTHMORE
SCHULTZ

really

The

if

Press.
way,

Duchess

By
the
of

- Windsor ordered several of these the
. other day. Press holds 36 mats and
mapkins.
Made of washable paisley
chintz

paper;

ties

with

gay

ribbon;

wrapped in gift cellophane. 20’’x14’’.
$2.95 delivered.

Raymond

Fidler,

home

tools,

J. W.

Jesse

This

friends.

at the

meeting.

Mrs.

Ernest

T.

needasked
Worth

Bonded

Thanksgiving

2 fF FBO

Guests

Thanksgiving guests at the home
of Mr.
and
Mrs.
R. M. Harvey
were Dr. and Mrs. (Emily Harvey)
L. J. Schneider of Chicago, Mr. and

EDDY'S

Mrs.

Harold

Lloyd

Laegler,

of the

hc Mee EP

on

L.

a long

Harveys

Forest

Day,
who

and

Mrs.

time

friend

is now

living

avenue.

matter. what

you

want

to buy

or sell you'll find the Want-Ad

The

Christmas

meeting

of

while

tone.

Wt.° 8-oz:

watching

football

tion your best market place.

Frank

Zellett will be co-hostess.

| he Cle a

*

2

650 N. Western

Lake Forest 2168

ON

BEHALF

ahoda

if | |

HENRY

Northmore’s,

| Remember.
|

For

SHOP

YOUR

NICK

Like

LAWRENTZ,

The Deerfield Woman’s
cooperation with the 10th

the

—

GENE

@

The
18

to

Veith mores
HIGHLAND

PARK,

ILL.

1914,

the

and

girls

who

the
live

girls range in age
years. These girls

from 10
are pro-

gion, recreation
and employment
guidance.
To provide the girls with a few
personal
items
a Christmas
gift
shower will be given by the members
of
the
Deerfield
Woman’s
club at their meeting on Decem-

for
in

individual
sizes

14,

sewing,

16,

18,

Following

Individuals Who

Made

Enlarged Store Possible::

dish

towels,

sheets

A

new

Monday

KONSLER,
DAN

cloth-

and

pil-

to many

Co.

RADIO

Co.

of Mrs.

2-7377

her flower arrangements,
George
Each

SERVICE

HI 2-0609
Co.

Deerfield Woman’s Club
To Hold Christmas Program
The Deerfield Woman’s
hold

their

2 p.m.

up

a

Paul

aL

tempting

pecan

treat

or
Chocolate

24

Ld

OF
PARK

HOME MADE DELICACIES
“Butter Ball’’ Cookies

their

sleeves and pitched in to get our store open on time.

Christmas

December

club will

program

9

in

the

at

Deer-

field Primary
school.
In charge
of the
afternoon’s
entertainment

companied by Irma Tunks Wills.
The
Christmas
gift shower for
the Park Ridge School for girls,
under the direction of Mrs. Earl
T. Anderson, will be an important
feature of the program.

Hostesses will be Mrs. Harold
Wynkoop, Mrs. Paul Brown, and
Mrs. Charles Parsons.
Mrs. Hal
Roads,
president,
will
welcome
guests

and

members.

Howard Kirkpatrick

Is Named Recruiting
Officer in Lake County
Sfe.
Howard
D.
Kirkpatrick,
USA, of 711 Central avenue, has recently been made recruiting officer
for the U.S. Army
and U.S. Air
Force in the southern half of Lake
county. His headquarters are at the
recruiting station in Waukegan.

During World War II he served
in the European
theater and for
eight months in the Tunisian campaign in North
Africa was mess
sergeant
for Gen.
Dwight
HEisenhower.
High school graduates or young

men

who

will

Cocoanut

Macaroons

finest ingredients used
of either, attractively boxed
Phone

HI

2-0283

or write P.O. Box 385,
Highland Park
ea

vA

f

be

graduated

is under the direction
T. Anderson.

this

of Mrs.

Earl

ORDINANCE
AMENDING
AN
ORDINANCE
ENTITLED
“AN
ORDINANCE
REGULATING
THE INSTALLATION
AND
USE
OF
LIQUEFIED
PETROLEUM
GAS BURNING EQUIPMFNT

USE
GAS

AND

THF

STORAGE

AND

OF
LIQUEFIED
PETROLE
USED
THEREWITH
AND
F

INSPECTION

THEREOF,”

7

PASSED JANUARY 22, 1951 AND AP.
PROVED

JANUARY

BE IT ORDAINED

CIL

OF

THE

CITY

23,

1951.

‘

BY THE COUN.
OF

HIGHLAND

PARK,
LAKE
COUNTY,
ILLINOIS:
Section I. That paragraph (b) of Section I of an ordinance entitled “AN ORDINANCE REGULATING
THE.INSTAL- |
LATION AND USE OF LIQUEFIED PETROLEUM
GAS BURNING EQUIPMENT
AND.THE STORAGE
AND USE OF LIQUEFIED

LESEELEE SLLELINO TEBE,
NEW

NONA’S
HIGHLAND
rolled

and Mrs.

Moyer, Wilmette.
member will bring arrange-

PETROLEUM

THEREWITH

who

A.

ments and set a holiday table.

THE

Phone

Floor

Walter

Wecker, Wilmot road.
The club will have as its special
guest Mrs. Henry Kistner of New
York who is nationally known for

first

ALSO BENDIX
APPLIANCE SERVICE

SLE

friends

the

AND

Sign Co.
Town

on

TELEVISION

Cabinet

11 at the home

Dee
Christmas

luncheon at 12 noon on December

AN

Contractor

LENCIONI,

begins

Conkle. 5

Electric

club of
annual

year may reach Sfe. Kirkpatrick at
his home by calling HI 2-8468 after
6
p.m.
for
further
information
about army or air force service.

in each month.
Bulletin T free
57 East Jackson Blvd.
@
WaAbash
Chicago

H. N. GAMLIN, Contractor
too,

class

Works

Chris-Craft

Pasquesi

The Garden
will hold
its

Sfe. Kirkpatrick has been in the
shampoo,
tooth army 19 years and has spent the
bobby pins, sta- past seven in the recruiting service.
tionery,
wash
cloths,
large
bath He
has been stationed
at Fort
towels, roller skates, pens and pen- Sheridan for the last three years.

Decorators

Metal

Interior

?

facial
tissues,
brushes, combs,

Florist

CHRISTOPHER,

PEDDLE,

the

+

toiletries,

Four Months’ (Day)
INTENSIVE COURSE

to Thank

Sheet

LoBELLE,

WEILAND,

and

Thanks,
/

in

of

vided with an education, academic
studies, homemaking, health, reli-

Call —

By Mail
or Phone Only

erected

there.

DAVE CRELMAN, Store Fixtures
ED

- HI 2-0776

club in
District

of
the
Illinois
Federation
of
Women’s clubs has included in its
obligations the Park Ridge school,
the
maintenance
of the
Illinois

JOSEPH CABONARGI, Mason Co.
WAUKEGAN GLASS CO.

Park.

Convenience

AND

STANLEY

$3.95

. .

Ridge Program

being

a

;

will be Mrs. Garcia McCarthy of
the Fine Arts department.
The
|}entertainment will include vocal
|
selections by Mrs. George Flagler,
dramatic reading, “The Other Wise
Man,” by Lucille Welty Holmes, ac-

Women’s Club
To Include Park

BY PHONE

HI 2-0771

}

Highland

from

MOSE-R.

Firms and

CARL: PASQUESI,

Call me if you want more details.
And call in your order, or mail
it in, with check or money order to
_my Dun G Bradstreet rated mail order
—

came

After a brief- wedding trip Mr.
and Mrs. Harrold will be at home
in Northbrook.
;

re nels

|

_

firm

father,

for college women

better on seafood or waffles in this
new,
3-Piece
Butter-Warming
Set
| import from Sweden. Stainless steel
and beechwood are combined to make
serving quick, neat. Lipped pan, 3 /2“’
tray.

the bride’s

OF

cold

MARVIN

drip

married
Maywood
Dr.
Wal-

STENOGRAPHIC-SECRETARIAL

MACOMB

and

were

Montana, and Mr. and Mrs. Harrold came from Indiana to attend
the wedding.

cils,

ney _ Our New

lid

attorney,

low cases, are among the items requested this year. The gift shower

desirable and decorative gift. Unit
_ comes ready for you to assemble. Only
$1.98 postpaid.

_diam., with
postpaid.

ker,

ing

29.95 postpaid.

ny

an

Thanksgiving eve at the
Congregational
church.

and

Teen Age Sizes

other

Vic V¥.0 UT
friends
love
to
collect
orn
Le oki
Kon eek Ss:
then this new
Shadow Box is
for them.
Of
natural
hardwood. A most

rold,

ber 9. Food supplies such as canned

sports, for only you can hear, Doubly
uaranteed.
An
electronic
marvel!
:

the Wilmot
school, Tuesday evening at a surprise linen shower in
her home.
The Wilmot teachers
and Mrs. Meyers, the superintendent, were present.
Miss Walker and Bernard Har-

fruits, dried fruit, peanut
butter
or jellies, yard
goods which
are
used
in Home
Economic
classes

Perfect

or

ceclae

Mrs. William Baxter, 1321 Greenwood, entertained in honor of Kathleen Walker, fifth grade teacher at

well

Amateur gardeners will be held at
the home of Mrs. John Miller of
Deerfield road, on Monday.
Mrs.

sec-

in’ Junior-Misses and

wonderful

Oe VU

Cottage

Amateur Gardeners to Meet
No

&gt;,

at 438.

Moore: Straight

YI

sing

to telephone

Week

Dant

and

Sale of Dresses and Skirts

is. Has selective reception in 50mile-or-more radius. Lets you hear
your favorite radio program privately.
Fits in breast pocket or purse. Has

of

909 Beverly

son, George Kofsky. Anyone
ing baby sitting service is

LiQuorRs
Mat
the

Mrs.

the

The
hospitality committee
will
consist of the Mesdames S. F. Zelensky, Richard Wagner, F. H. Wil-

friendly service

Special

please your

here’s
Place

at

tain

has a way of winning

Now
new

Wednesday

ons, paints, books, woodshop

. . . and she was crazy about

our

1:30

and toys are among the items requested.
Mrs. George Flagler will enter-

EDDY’S.

_ friends when you
give this dispenser
that’s a handsome,
2”
high;
weighted; holds post office coil of
stamps, always available. A beautiful addition to all desks. $3.50 post-

meeting of the
will be held at

place.
Each one attending is asked
to bring a gift not to exceed 50
cents.
The gifts are to be given
to the Lake Bluff orphanage. The
children there range in age from 6
to 13 years.
Socks, mittens, cray-

Folks, it’s gift-giving time .
;
_ happiest time of the year . . . and
I'd
like to help you gift shop the
pleasant, armchair way: By mail or
‘phone
from your
fine
home
to
Northmore’s .. .
_ Five, new and unusual gifts for
your family and friends —
that’s
what
this
column
spotlights
for
Here,
for example,
is a
great gift.
A
_
Solid Brass Stamp
‘Box. We all use
stamps and you'll

The December
Newcomers club

urprise

TION

AND

FOR

THEREOF,”

passed

GAS

THE

USED

INSPEC-

January

22,

1951, and approved January 23, 1951, be
and the same is hereby amended to read
as follows:
Section
I—(b)
The total number of
gallons of water capacity in any installation shall not exceed
1,000 gallons. for
any
premises.
;
Section II. All Ordinances or parts of
Ordinances in conflict herewith are heres
by repealed.
Section III. This Ordinance shall be in
full force and effect from and after its
passage, approval, recording and publication in accordance with law.
;
A. GORDON
HUMPHREY,
Mayor
Attest: V. C. MUSSER, City Clerk
Filed:
November
10, 1952
Passed:
November
24,
1952
Approved:
November 24, 1952
Recorded, November 25, 1952
Published:
December 4, 1952
yi

i

“yi

Fo

�address book, $2.25. Scrapbook and photo album, $2.25 each.
Fleur de lis in Green or Tan colors; or Embassy Crest in Redwood

Your choice
colors.

of two

Tufide
plated

in

strong

Lexide.

From

Globe

globe
with globe.

ee

Brief Bag.
Lined
extension lock.

walnut and polished brass.

designs:

World
Bis

Shows temperature,
Wall Barometer.
humidity,
forecasts.
Mahogany.
Made of
Desk Barometer.
$25.00.

Desk Set and Accessories. Four-piece desk set includes pad, blotter, opener, calendar, $3.95.
Matching wastebasket, $2.25. Letterbasket, $1.25. Address-memo book, $2.25. Three-fold

Indoor-Outdoor Thermometer (above)
Plastic. Mounted inside
Household
Scale.
20-lb.
capacity.
Choice of three colors.

Brass-

$14.75

Snorkel Pen. NEW
sationo!]

Ti

Stamp-Tape

Model

‘’no-dunk”’

filling action.

nuchal

Dispenser.

(below)

Metal

From

in

Litho. dial,
$12.00

with Book.
WHighly-detailed 12-inch
full color. 96-page booklet is free
Sevag aap abuso sewn co&lt;ssdedabae aes abe manne $8.95

In sen$12.50

construction.

Silver-like finish. Sponge-pad top. Felted bottom.
Ziinches WII hil cota cic tAcalii Mvaredpennnndacnaan $3.50
Pitchin’ Pal.

Re-

turns your pitch
from any of 4 openings.
Tops
in
strategy
and _ skill
for 1-2-3-4 players. Score 1-point
for each ball you

Cato

Thursday,

December

4, 1952

aici... $3.95

Monte Carlo. Complete with roulette
wheel,
| miniature
chuck-a-luck,
and
“The Little Bandit
Cou a a aiminus=
tive slot machine.
With chips, etc.
3.95

Page

9

�Youth Uninjured When

Oo

Automobile

Salk

A

WINTER COUNTRY CLUB
VILLA MODERNE

food,

better

service,

or

more

Johns

cor-

dial
atmosphere.
Dinners
from
$2.50.
Lunch
from
$1.25.
Verne
Scott, well known
pianist
entertains
at dinner and all evening.

Skokie

at County

15-year-old

uninjured

_ This popular dining spot is open
the year ‘round and the Hutchins’
invite you to make it your club for
the winter. You’ll not find better

west, when
and

The

you'll

and
Glass,
sional

Machines On Open Market

was

reported

accident

near

City Sells Old Maintenance
on

Lincoln

St.

avenue

over.

accident

occurred

at

12:30

a.m. Saturday as he drove south on
St. Johns at a speed of 40 miles
per hour. Police
said the youth
lost control of the car, causing it
to hit the curb and upset. He was

The

city

sold

some

of

its

per-

sonal property last week. High bidder, James
Utpadel of Wheeling,
paid $26 for an ancient snowplow
and the Highland Paper Co. bought
the balance of the property which
included a sewer machine, a waterpump and a compressor.
given
a ticket for not having a
driver’s
license.
Leonard’s
truck
towed away the auto.

find

Gifts

for

in

— DRIVEWAYS

Brass,

A

GIFT FOR
ENDURING

OF
: When

you

give

“HER”
BEAUTY

her

“Vanity

Fair”

you
give
her
the
finest.
_Jacobi,
Intimate
Apparel

shows

a

delightful

after an 8 p.m.
the

asked
an

Taffeta.
Shades.
Velvet,

Sheer
wools
in
Pastel
Bed
Jackets
in
quilted
Crepe,
and
Nylon
from

$5.95.

Satin

glasses

etc.

Satin,

cases
578

Velvet,

for

Lincoln,

in

bring

a

Hart,

carols

OFFICE
HI 2-4462

Larson,

Beauty”

this

Carl

gift

be

sung

man

of

the

will

hostesses.

Mes-

Ray

May.
Edward
Edward

Maynard

McGovern

president

Ridge-

by, the

and

Mrs.

of

of

Arens,

Golden

vice

SUNSET’

for

of the

Leo

and

street

program

next

board

meeting

place
Elks

of

on
club

hall.

NEW CROP SHELLED
California Nonpareil

Kraft’s

Bag

98c

MIRACLE

WHIP

Pt. Btl.
SWANS

CAKE

hosiery,

44-oz.

Winnetka.

a Buick

for

HER

First St. And take a GOOD look at
the price tags. Of course you can
afford
to give
her a Buick.
HI

of

on

Henry

Ave.

display

L.

Barnitz,

Hubbard

American

at

the

Woods.

Academy

artist
Studio

914

Linden

Studied

at

of Arts in Chi-

cago,
and
Academe
Royale
Des
Beaux
Arts
in Brussels.
French
Provincial Furniture
make
price-

What

be

a more

Shurfine

Pure

Vegetable

Shortening

Mother’s

* &gt;. 73c

Style

U. s, No.

Spiced

Libby’s

Deep

Brown
14-072.

Beans

Sacramento
:

Loe

Cocktail

Pure

Noodles

Egg

Sunshine

1-Ib.

Cookies

Cello Pkg. 25¢

FRUIT
No.

Station).
HOLIDAY
If you’re

days,

take

going

your

DOGS
VACATION
away

Dogs

for

the

to

Holi-

Butter-

worth Kennels to Board.
In this
old established place they will be
given
the
finest
care.
All
Dogs
are happy there. Warm, individual

_ stalls, Sunny outdoor runways. 2810
Park Ave. HI 2-1352.

KB uth
Page

10

Wakefield

from

underwrite

Ameri-

consists

of

20

the
the

performance
chapter’s

com-

mitments
of
guardianships
for
needy students in ORT vocational
schools

located

in French

Tunisia,
France;

These

guardianships

tions

for

Greece;

Munich,

Vienna,

clothing

Morocco,

Iran,

many;

Austria,

and

Ger-

Israel.

provide

can-

clinics, vaca-

convalescents,

and _ basic

essential

recreational

needs.
Tickets
and
may

are
be

chairman,

Mrs.

dames

Max

priced at 65 cents
procured
from
the

Arthur

Wollner

Auerbach,

Pkg.

Heineman,

Samuel

at

Morton

39c

Charles

Pearl, Mortimer

Seymour
len.

» Tin 2lc

Chocolate

L. Sloan

and

Hor-

L. Scheff,

George

are also available

1902

Sheridan

Yel-

at the

road.

The

_°"

Flour

Dog Food 2 ...,,29¢

BRING

US YOUR

2

poz.

49

Fancy Green
Florida

CLICLIMRERS
Colfarnia

Red

.. 5-Ib. Bag 49c

will

TANGERINES

25c

Heart

Photo On Page 23 Is
Wrongly Identified
The picture of
uel,
author
and

Easy-to-Peel
Florida

Puff

Cello Bag

Florida

JUICE
ORANGES

303

Gold Medal

7d

tol

9c

Green

speak

at

Maurice Samlecturer who

the

dedication

service of the Oscar Hillel Plotkin library December 12 is incorrectly identified as Mr. Plotkin on page 23. Since the NEWS

is printed in sections we regret

FRESH

that the error could

RPOCCOLI

tified

BT acer

before

not be rec-

publication.

Woayas

GPPEN
PAPPARE

P &amp; G COUPONS

Seek Solitude
re

RUMP

acceptable

alluring array. Big beautiful Nancy
Ann
Dolls,
as well
as the
wee
Story Book Dolls for wee collectors, 739 St. Johns (opp. Ravinia

cast

DOWN

FLOUR

poratoes 10 14;.63¢
Sweet

SWIFT’S

them in Copper and in Stainless
Steel. Very stunning table settings
in China and Pottery. And as for
Dolls, you’ve never seen a more

Highland

1 Selected

RED

Crabapples 8° ?%35¢

Christmas Gift than a handsome
Chafing Dish! Edith Saletra shows

YOUR

Proceeds
will

Shoes,

THOSE WHO LOVE
TO ENTERTAIN

could

The

the

Women’s

performers.

Henry

less Gifts. See the luxurious 96
inch, Davenport, hand carved frame
from
Switzerland. Also Swedish
Glass.
FOR

ORT.

of

of

committee has announced that refreshments will be made available.

Centrella

Paintings of this well known

in

Edith K. Saletra Gift Shop, 729 St.
Johns
avenue;
and. Bruce-Martin

2-4800.
JOHN D. WALCOTT
BELGIAN ARTIST

p.m.

witz, Paul Lasman, Lionel London,
William H. Lytton, Harry Padorr,

Christmas

thrills to Buick’s big power. See all
the models at Kleeburg Buick, 1732

now

can

auspices

chapter

Tickets

Gift, and she will be sold on you
for ever.
Everyone
of fastidious
tastes loves the elegant beauty of
the
Buick.
Everyone
who
drives

are

the

Strasbourg,

the

3

3 1 Cc

STARS WILL SHINE
IN HER EYES
Buy

at

Bernstein, Bernard
Chizewer,
Leonard Cohen, Harry A. Epstein,
E. M. Gherman, I. M. Greenberg,

SALAD DRESSING

and

Sunday

HI 2-6990; the program chairman,
Mrs. Samuel S. Cohn at HI 2-7275;
the president, Mrs. Sol Gerstel at
HI 2-2471 and the remaining members of the committee:
the Mes-

ALMONDS

1-Ib. Cello

der

is

Monday

Garrick
“Sleeping

the Ravinia school auditorium un-

Algeria,

chair-

college’s
perform

teen service, medical

take

in the

Forest

T.

club.

will

at 8 p.m.

cent

president,

assisted

Roach.

group

will

Park

be

James

The

GARAGE
HI 2-6861

Players

will

club

Dostalek.

Louie Tazioli Excavating

Lake

are

Miller

chairman

Schramm

meeting

evening.

drive,

will

in

Members

bag.

Nicholas

Thomas

Fire Place Wood—Any Size

50

grab

the

Mrs.

Be-

Gowns,

to

rooms.

Christmas

witching
Slips
and
Nightdresses,
many
with
permanent
pleating.
Quilted Robes of Velvet or Silk,

Hostess

business

club

exchange

later

Emily
Shop

selection.

Elks

dames

China,
Lamps,
and
OccaFurniture. 563 Lincoln Ave.

Winnetka.

Emblem

She

—

, ORT Sponcors
Benefit Show
club will have its annual
party next Wednesday
This Sunday

Christmas

serve as

SNOW PLOWING

every

Silver,

‘Eniblem Club Sets
Christmas Party

wood

Line.

and masculine name on
Showing all that’s lovely

distinctive

boy

an

|

Over

his car hit the curbing

turned

At Grace Herbst’s Shop of Interior
Furnishings you'll enjoy selecting
Gifts
in an
unhurried,
leisurely
manner.
Everything
is so attractively and conveniently displayed
in these recently enlarged quarters.

There

in

avenue

CHRISTMAS SHOPPING
IS A PLEASURE

feminine
your list.

Turns

FRESH

ROAST

DRAWN,

Broilers

Manual labor is not nearly
as fatiguing
as people and
noise. Attending a large function, or meeting many persons
in the course of a day may
have an exhilarating effect at
first but it will leave you pretty exhausted.

CHOICE
GRADE
Boned — Rolled

BEEF

TASTY,

- Fryers

MEATY

Cut to Please You

FRESH

Tne
30°
2 Large
SUNSET
4 Personal size
and

757
FRIDAY

NIGHT

Pure

Ground

WILSON’S

Beef

CERTIFIED

I-Ib. Cello, Lb. 5 3¢

Bacon
Order

Early
Rib

for

Best

Roast,

Selection

Capons,

of

Turkey,

Holiday

Hams,

Geese

— Always Best in Quality —

FOOD

Central

Avenue

—

A

IS FAMILY

NIGHT

AT

SUNSET

MART

Central
—

Food

Store

STORE

OPEN

‘TILL 9 P. M.

Noise has none of the pleasant side connected with it...
it just wears on your nerves
and health and you are not
aware of its damaging effects.
Completely
quiet periods in
the day are an aid to health
. . . seek solitude now and
then.
Seek a capable
for drug needs.

pharmacist

Earl W. Gsell &amp; Co.
—Pharmacists—

Thursday, December 4, 1952 _
5

Wu

die

i,

he

aE

Ge

2h

eye

�Nylon

PAJAMAS

White on white

6.95

eyelet collar

SHIRTS
3-99

100% DuPont nylon,

wash

and

jiffy, need

dry

ing.

in a

no iron-

Linen

handkerchiefs

Fine quality by Colebrook.
Sanforized.

65c to 1.00
Fine

count,

rolled hems.

one ideal sift for a
wonderful Da

SSPpAAaIIngNG:
‘4

Ce

4, 4°/

4

~

a

me

A |

AES
Hand Painted

in California’

These gorgeous ties are han
d-painted
in California on fine acet
ate rayon
The beautiful patterns actu
ally twinkle
and sparkle with millions
of tiny,
!reflected lights. , The perf
ect i gift...
in a variety of new
colors,
$2

50

hand

�Wiss

Werth

the

otk:

Chovae dat
hi

For that

Die

20

bride-to-be,

Wedding

Wyn

favorite name on
your Christmas

Miss
Mirth
Durbahn,
whose
marriage to Philip J. Kennedy Jr.,
son of the senior Mrs. Kennedy of

Cleveland,

O., will take

De-

cember 20 in The Highland Park
Presbyterian
church,
has
asked
her sister, Mrs. Robert S. Hutchinson of Centerfield avenue, to be
matron of honor. Also in the wed-

ding party

are

Wilmette
McKenna

“male” list

place

Mrs.

Tom

Stein

and
Miss
Rose
of Rockford
and

of

Mary
Chi-

cago.
Karen

4
FLORSHEIM
S/ GIFT CERTIFICATES

The

D.

Want-Ad

interesting
tunities.

Hutchinson,

facts

section
and

Don’t miss it!

niece

of

is filled with

golden

will

serve

as

flower girl.
Ushers are James Snapp of Milwaukee, Haddon Anderson of Chicago
and
Robert
S. Hutchinson.
William Troth of Elmhurst is Mr.
Kennedy’s best man.

oppor-

the

Stracke

soloist

mony,

at

which

a reception in
Woman’s club.
Among

the

of
the

NBC
4:30

will
p.m.

be

cere-

is to be followed
the

Highland

parties

by

Park

honoring

the

bride-to-be were a miscellaneous
shower given by Miss Marcella
Hein
of
Chicago,
a
shower given by Mrs.

Moon

.of

Laurel

bathroom
Robert H.

avenue,

kitchen shower that Mrs. Tom

and

a

Stein

gave.

Me

Ps
ey
ee
a :

In Chicago Exhibit
An

exhibit of holiday decorations

for the home will open
day noon in the Garden

Bs
Ww

A

There are several Highland Park
members
of the society who
are
participating in the exhibit—Mrs.
LeRoy
F. Harza
of Pierce
road,
Mrs. William H. Riddle of Marion
of

and Mrs. Arthur J. Baldauf

Waverly

road.

The
display
will
include
examples of holiday decorations for
the living room, the front door, the
kitchen door, as well as wreaths,
swags and decorations for Christmas
trees.
Many
items
such as
(Continued on page 13)

Nese&gt;

Aus
i

A \\ eee
7

Ss

WW

\)\)

Walters

1
a

Ss

oe

East

of Bank

3 Doors

499 Central

Si

op

HI 2-0172

Highland Park

May

Be Your Own!

ABBOTT HOUSE
Pry

ae

.

_ |
ey

is the only licensed nursing home in Highland Park.
State Health Officials have complimented us on the
“highly qualified operating personnel” at Abbott House.
Centrally located—just east of Sheridan Road, it is less

than two blocks from the Northwestern

and see Abbott House for yourself.
Tell

us your

8

problem.

Full information

ABBOTT

on

request.

HOUSE

Highland Park, Illinois

HIghland

Page 12,

Park 2-6080
?

Here you will find one of the largest selections
of Sterling flatware shown any place in the
Country. And remember regardless of where
or how you buy the price is the same.

Railroad and North

Shore Line Stations, shops, motion picture theater.
We are proud of the fine food we serve, our cheerful
rooms, the homelike
atmosphere,
our scrupulously clean
kitchen and our round-the-clock
nursing
service
under
graduate nurse supervision.
If you have the responsibility for an aging person and
seek the best possible solution for that person—call on us

Be
EP |

Ca Dear Santa...give
International Sterling

Drive Carefully — The Life You Save

o

405 Central Ave.

TATMAN
... famous

this MonCenter of

the Chicago
Horticultural society
at 116 South Michigan avenue. The
exhibit will continue through Friday, opening daily at 10 a.m. and
closing
at
5 p.m.
Admission
is
free to the public.

avenue

Mrs.
Hutchinson
will give the
spinster dinner for her sister at
at home the week of the wedding,
with Miss McKenna as co-hostess.
Miss
Durbahn’s
parents,
the
Walter
E.
Durbahns
of Beverly
place, will give the bridal dinner
December 19 in The Chalet.

\ S \Y

If your favorite man is hard to please, give
him an easy to purchase Florsheim
Christmas gift certificate, redeemable for
a pair of famous Florsheim Shoes... the
gift with the stamp of approval of the
U. S. Male. Complete with gold
miniature shoe and box, here is a
present with a future.

HP Horticultural
Enthusiasts Aid

for silver

�Ws Peaterdehl J
Wiad Cal Cobo

William
u,

B

cL.

dousit

wood

R05

Wearing the traditional crown of
a
Swedish
bride,
Miss
Gudrun
Margareta
Reuterdahl
of
Lake
Forest will be united in marriage
to Earl H. Carlson of Llewellyn
avenue
Saturday
in a 7:30 p.m.
candlelight ceremony in the First
Presbyterian church of Lake Forest.
The
Rev.
Cornelius
Loew,
chaplain
of Lake
Forest college,
will officiate.
The bride-to-be is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Ebbe Reuterdahl

of

Stockholm,

Sweden.

She

at-

tended
schools
in
Sweden
and
lived in England for a few months
shortly
before
coming
to
the
United States last March.

Mr.

Carlson,

who

is the

son

of

the Ernest H. Carlsons, attended
the Universities of Syracuse
and
Illinois
before
receiving
his degree from Lake Forest:college. In
World War II he served 37 months
in the Pacific area. with the U. S.
Air Force.
Mrs. Otto Haas of Chicago will

be the bride’s only attendant. Airman Kenton H. Carlson of Tyndall
Air Force base, Fla., will be best
man for his brother, Ushers are
another brother, Donald of Llewellyn avenue,
and
Robert
Neff of
Chicago.
After their marriage the young
people
will make
their home
in
Lake
Forest where
Miss Reuterdahl will continue her studies at
Lake Forest college.
Mr. Carlson
is in business in Chicago.

F. G. Ross

lane

tending

will

the

be

107th

of
at

Conrad

Hilton

the

at-

night

the

hotel.

The

feast

by the Illinois St. An-

society
Scottish

for
Old

the

benefit

People’s

of

Home

at

Riverside.
About
to attend.

includes

or

ancestry.

men

are

in

Speakers

of

They
honor

saint

Donald

people

Membership

ety

patron

ter

of Mrs.

of

expected

in the

Scottish

hold
of

the

St.

socibirth

feast

for the

evening

will

chairman

president

of

Canadian

railways,

Montreal,

and

daugh-

Mowers

of

Callen,

son

of Bert

Callen

field road in an evening
in

Highland

Park

Vine

of Deer-

ceremony

Presbyterian

church last Friday. Dr. William Atkinson Young performed the marriage

Gerald

Richel,

|

12)

ter and

brother-in-law

groom,

acted

of the bride-

as attendants

for the

young couple. Mr. and Mrs. Callen,
who both attended Highland Park
High school, are at home on Deerfield road.

rites.

and Mrs.

page

sis-

SENSATIONAL

be

and

National

SPACE

PATROL

Bishop

interesting
tunities.

facts

golden

Patrol

WALK
IN THE STRATOSPHERE
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front
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constant ventilation and voice.
Decorated with the official insignia of the Space Patrol Commander,
Buzz
Corry.
Tubes,
neckpiece and double astral jet
pack
tanks
made
of
heavy
gauge, inflatable vinyl plastic in
colorful blue and red combinations. It’s a real adventure into
$4.95
outer
space

oppor-

DEPT.

PLANETS
SECRET

SECRET CONTENTS
Full color United Planets Stamps
Full color United Planets Plastic

3.

Coins
Authentic

&gt;

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- ~_
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. Official Space

Here’s the most amazing genuine
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System made—and at the most fantastic’
price!
No
batteries,
electric
plug-in or wires, you can communicate with others hundreds of feet
away!
With this incredible new invention you can talk room to room,
building to building, across fields,
etc., and
be heard
clearly—even
though you whisper; You get COMPLETE
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made
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plastic.
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ay

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SPACE

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OF TERRA

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CAST

The traveler wants a “he-man” set of luggage—made for the
ride! He gets toughness and smartness in PLarr Guardsman
in DuPont Fabrilite—at a welcome low price. He gets the
famous Pxiatr “shell-end” construction, design, and appointments. Tan or brown, like the finest leather. Brass hardware;

packing features; trigger locks. Choice of six sizes (companion
and two-suiter shown above). Matches Priatr Airess models
for women...Prices from ¢ 3000 to $12000

Limited
Come

GRANT « GRANT, inc.
Pape

e

ae Bs

&lt; SR

e
8:
SOnYs aero

"

4, 1952 —

From
Space
Control
Headquarters
comes the entire Space Patrol gang,
plus the fabulous city of Terra...
over 50 pieces in this magnificent
set ... full-color plastic equipment
. . . flying saucers . . . suspended
space port . .. rocket ships... .
full-color. plastic figures of Commander
Corry, Cadet
Happy
and
others
. . plus_ full-color United
Planets Capitol
Building, Treasury
Building, Space Patrol Headquarters,
Rocket Launching
Platform,
Interplanetary
Rampways,
and
many
other buildings to make your city
of Terra complete .. . plus a footlong model of the space ship Terra
V which you can rig to fly ona
glide
path.
When
the entire
50
piece model is assembled, you can
enact Space Patrol shows of your
own
and
have hours of exer
fun.
Just imagine, this entire 5
piece Space
Patrol show
in your
own living room.
Complete city of
Terra and plastic figures ........ $1.25

Quantity

In or Phone Your Order Today!

SPACE

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VISIT OUR LEATHER DEPARTMENT
Bill Folds, Manicure Sets, Travel Items of All Kinds
$2.00

TOYS
Space

section is filled with
and

Siri
HS

From the Only Official

Richard C. Raines of the Indiana
area of the Methodist church, Indianapolis.
Among
those
at the speakers’
table will be the Lord Provost of
Edinburgh.
The
Lord
Provost,
whose office is equivalent to that
of mayor, is bringing 1500 sprigs
of heather with him, which will
be passed out to the guests.
Scottish dances,
songs and orchestra music will make the complete entertainment.

The Want-Ad

RESTAURANT and COCKTAIL LOUNGE
Cocktail Time
5:00 to 7:00 p.m.
Dinner Time
6:00 to 9:00 p.m.
Supper Time
9:00 to 12:00 p.m.
Snack Time
:
Delicious Steaks
Chicken
Free Parking in Rear

Andrew,

Scotland.

Gordon,

Jean Mowers,

Frank

from

Christmas greens, and dried and
painted
material
for holiday
arrangements will be on sale. Further
information
regarding
the
sale
may be obtained from Mrs. Riddle,
ways and means chairman, at HI
2-4710.

avenue, became the bride of Byron

Mr.
1500

annually

Miss Norma

Wild-

those
Feast

this

is sponsored

And Byron Callen

Annual

Haggis

(Continued

Of Miss Jean Mowers

Saturday

the

drew

of 1413

among

Holiday Decorations

| Announce Marriage

St. Andrew Society
Holds Feast Of The
Haggis On Saturday

PATROL

HEADQUARTERS
641

CENTRAL

AVE.

HIGHLAND PARK

Ht

2-8474

Page 13

�Set December 13

|Miss Jacoby. Co-chairman
Of Carleton Rose Dinner

As Date for Second’
Highland Fling Party
The

second

Highland

Fling

Miss
Sue
Jacoby,
Mr. and Mrs. Milton
for-

mal supper-dance of the season will
be given on Saturday, December
13. George Burnett and his orchestra will furnish music for dancing

from

10

Highland

Several

Little Gifts

p.m.

until

1 a.m.

Park

Woman’s

in the

club.

Highland: Park hostesses

are entertaining before the dance
with cocktail and dinner parties.
Among them are Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Behanna
of
Bloom
street;
the
Henry Chases and the R. L. Rademachers of Sheridan road; Mr. and

Mrs.

Henry

C. Fordtran

side manor;

of Lake-

Mr. and\Mrs.

J. Wil-

liam Gooch of Clavey lane, and the
William O. Hansens of Priscilla
avenue.

and

Fabulous Gifts
2,

Mrs. J. Gordon Smith of Sheridan road is chairman of the Christmas dance. Reservations must be
made by next Wednesday.

Serving

with

Mrs.

Smith

on the

456

Groveland

chairman

of

daughter
H. Jacoby

avenue,

the

Mrs. Robert L. Johnson

annual

was
Rose

of
of

coDin-

ner held November 23, at Carleton
college, Northfield, Minn. Upperclass women
take
“little sisters’ to

their Carleton
this traditional

dinner given in the women’s

dorm-

itories. Each “little sister’? receives
a rose in honor of the occasion.
Miss Jacoby, a sophomore, is a
member of the water ballet group
and was a candidate for the 1952
homecoming queen.
dance committee are Mrs. Robert
Clarkson of Lincoln avenue. west,
Mrs.
George
K.
Ford
of Euclid
avenue, Mrs. Martin W. Granholm
of Linden
avenue,
Mrs.
Carl
S.

Wolf of University avenue,
Gooch, and Mrs. Hansen.
Mrs.
Mark
Knoll terrace

of

the

Mrs.

G.
Brown
of Oak
is general chairman

Highland

Fling.

make your lirst stop

hi Sigh Stop

all over the world

bor

POS

everyone

Here you'll find gifts they can wear.
Young

as

your

children

are,

Fortnightly Sets Date
Of Second Donce In
Subscription Series

they’re

people at heart.
Nothing will thrill
them more at Christmas-time than a
gift they can wear — a pretty little
dress, snug snowsuit, a colorful sweat-

Wiss

December 20 is the date of the
North Shore Fortnightly’s second

_

formal dance of the season, which

CF;

will

be

held

at

the

Michigan

Fortnightly members

CHINA

land

Park

include

from High-

the

J.

Gordon

Smiths of Sheridan road.
Members gather for the subscription

CRYSTAL

~ No matter where you look, you
won't be able
you can buy at
So make The
first stop on
shopping tour.

SILVER
CERAMICS

to better what
The Style Shop.
Style Shop the
your Christmas

dance

mond’s
2 a.m,

at-10

orchestra

p.m.

will

Lew

Dia-

play

until]

the joy of
Christmas + «+

Miss

Zenko,

daughter

of

Zenko
Robert

of
L.

Andrew
and Cpl.

parents.

who was given in
her father, wore a

of

white

tulle

veil

gown

lace

taffeta.

over

length

of fingertip

was held in place by a halo crown
of matching white lace. She car-

a

ried

colonial

bouquet

of

white

carnations,

Beatrice
maid of
net over

was

Zenko

her

honor in a gown
taffeta. Her’ head-

piece was fashioned of pink carnations and blue straw flowers and

the 7 shopping days before
Christmas,

she carried
flowers.

The
Sizes: Girls Infant thru pre-teen
Boys

Page 14

Louise

The bride,
marriage by
Her

We will be open until 9 p.m.

infant

thru

size

a
‘

The Style Shop
FOR CHILDREN
Open Friday Evenings ‘Til 9 P.M.
And All Day Wednesdays
502 Central Ave.

a bouquet

of the

same

bride’s only other attendant
(Continued on page 20)

WALLACE

10.

eZZve
EN Ce

“Third Dimension Beauty” Sterling
Choose it today from our
complete collection of all
@
@

Six patterns...

re) Wore

With

Johnson, son of Mrs. Norman K.
Johnson of St. Paul, Minn., were
united in marriage November 22 at
2:30 p.m, by the Rev, William H.
Remmert in the Redeemer Evangelical Lutheran church. A reception followed in the home of the

Miss

| B96 Linden rer

ies

Mr.
and
Mrs.
Lincoln place,

sister’s
of pink

ee

pee

Kobert uf pohnson

bride’s

ACCESSORIES

‘of

ies

Exchanges

Shores club in Wilmette.

ID Les u rs

Photo

The former Louise Zenko, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Zenko of Lincoln place, whose marriage to Cpl. Robert L.
Johnson took place November 22 in the Redeemer Evangelical
Lutheran church. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Norman
K. Johnson of St. Paul, Minn.
The couple is living near Fort
Campbell, Ky., while Cpl. Johnson is in service.

on your list

NB

Raa a

Betts

a

HI 2-6944

Whordini
—

670

Central

Jewelers —

HI 2-3905

@

Cleans
Revives

e Restores Lustre
Color @ Raises Pile

Re-Enlivens
Phone

Wool

Deerfield

DURACLEAN
International

Thursday,

Fibers
444

CO.

Headquarters

December

4, 1952

�Of hss Barube Th

Z Chasis: Party
Members
of the North Shore
alumnae association of Kappa Kappa Gamma entertained their young
sons

and

visit

daughters

from

Santa

Claus

early

at

the

The

engagement

Berube
of

of Miss Dorothy

to William

Mrs.

J. Baruffi,

Domenick

J.

of

mother,
Mrs.
Sunset road.

Northwestern

were

house.
guests

served

sound

and

their

mothers

refreshments

films

Public
Group
house
noon’s

university’s

from

the

and

saw

Evanston

library after Santa’s visit.
caroling around the chapter
tree
completed
the
afterfestivities.

Highland
association

Park
are:

members

of

avenue,

Hawthorn
Jr., Briar
Jr.

of

Freeman

Vance

Jr.

of

lane, Robert F. Walker
lane, Austin L. Wyman

Lincoln

Hadley
Richard
nue.

Norman

avenue,

Jr. of Kimball
of

St.

Johns

Campbell
r

of

Edwin

road,

place

C. Berube
wedding is

in October,

ing in Chicago,

of
to

1953.

Miss Berube attended Highland
Park High school and her fiance, a

Lake

Forest High

school graduate,

served with the navy during World
War
II.
The
bride-to-be
is
a
daughter
of
the
late
Cloy
C.
Berube.

the

Mesdames George D. Harrison of
Pleasant avenue, Albert J. Kurtzon
of Delta road, Paul Phelps of Orchard lane, John Sheldon of Groveland

take

Cloy
The

1:30 p.m.
in the
home
of Mrs.
Guy B. Finlay, 1427 St. Johns avenue.
Mrs.. Armand
McPhee,
formerly of Highland Park, now liv-

son

Baruffi

p.m.

in

Two former presidents of the
Ravinia auxiliary to the Chicago
Commons will be hostesses at a
meeting of the group, to be held at

Barufft

Lake Forest and the late Mr. Baruffi, has been announced by her

Young

-

an

is

For Settlement

association’s
annual
Children’s
Christmas
party
yesterday
at
3
chapter

|

with

Wlam

iChrictnas Cheer

M.

Clair

avenue

and

Arbor

ave-

and

Mrs.

Richard

Allenby

Jr. of Whittier, Cal., formerly of
Highland Park, announce the birth
of their second son, Kent Stewart,
on October 5.
The Allenbys’ first

wrapped for the club
people at the Commons
in Chicago. Later
candy
in holiday

Lilli,

of

St.

Zischke

physics

grandparents.

Toronto,.in

is 2 years

Mr.

old.

and

at

the

five

last

berger

City

#%

Elm
an

Place

years.

school

Mr.

executive

Products

for

Ellen-

officer

corporation.

of

They

are to be married in The Highland
Park Presbyterian church.

Mishkin

Glencoe

a

i

Ceremony

Mr. and Mrs. Samuel I. Mish
of Chicago announce the marria;
of their daughter,
Ernest Manasse.

The
p.m.

ceremony
last

Sally

Louise.

took place at 4:31

Saturday

in

North

Sh

1

Congregation Israel, Glencoe, in
the presence of immediate me
bers of both families.
Dr, Edga
Siskin officiated.
(Continued on page 20)

in the month,
wrappings
and

of

this

get-to-

This year’s president of the Ravinia auxiliary is Mrs. Walter M.

The

Braden,

of elderly
settlement

teaching

| Sally

homemade cookies will be taken
to the settlement for the annual

senior Richard Allenbys of Braeburn are the paternal grandparents,
and Mr. and Mrs. Herman Zischke
of
San
Francisco,
the
maternal

son,

co-hostess.

After the usual dessert-luncheon,
Christmas
gifts
of
handmade
aprons
for the
women
and
gay
neckties
for
the
men
will
be

Christmas
party
gether club.

Allenby

Mr.

will be

Mrs. W. a. ‘Abdeean ‘ot Glencoe
avenue gave a bridal shower last
Friday evening for Miss Edna Carlson of Evanston.
Sixteen friends
of Miss Carlson were present. She
is to be married’ on January 10
to Phillip Ellenberger of Linden
avenue.
Miss Carlson, who is formerly
fram Washburn,
Wis., has been

Johns

avenue.

are former

Highland

Park-

ers.
Mr. Allenby Jr. has recently received his doctorate degree in geo-

Mrs.

from

the

University

Toronto,

of

Ont., Canada.

GOING OUT OF
BUSINESS
Everything

Must

Sold

Be

REDUCTIONS to CLEAR
STARTS

DECEMBER

|

scented and milled hard
‘to hold its precious Fabergé perfume

4th

down to that last slim sliver
exquisitely gift boxed,

Skirts

Dresses

' Coats
Ski Suits

Blouses

Slacks

ri:

Jewelry
Slips

Cottons

|

Cashmere

by Fabergé

soap

satin-topped, 3 cakes 1.50 there's no fed. tox)
Sa

cea date dnen, epee

Please send me

eel

cake,

eaten iitinh * manly | cian, cance“ Maaer “enema”

boxes APHRODISIA

ARTY

a

|
fe

soap at 1.50

boxes ACT IV soap at 1.50

|
|

Sweaters

RW.

rie,

I
|

cm

| Name
| Address

|
| City

ALL SALES FINAL
ALL SALES CASH

Zone——

State
;

|

[] Check enclosed |

| [] Charge

900 Sheridan

Road

Park,

Illinois

Highland

Daily 9:30-5:30
ANT ae

HI 2-7348

Ue

Evanston store hours, 9 to 5:30 —

Mondays

Highland

5:30

Park

store

hours,

9

to

and Thursdays, 9 to 9

Monday

through

Saturday

i

�éeesomnu -

fr Women

Mostly

To Live In Evanston

Mss: Drochlich Aaah

Plans

ie

and

Darker

HP Parents Assist With

cL

atonrhes

LF

in May

by her parents,

Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Froehlich
of Ravine drive, has set December
27 as the date for her marriage.

The wedding will take place at
4:30 p.m. in the Highland Park
Presbyterian church with Dr. William’ Atkinson
Young
officiating.

There will be a reception
Deerpath Inn, Lake Forest.

in

bridesmaids are her sister, Roberta;
Miss Doris Dittrick of Chicago, a
former
roommate
at
Monmouth
college; Miss Jean Howard of Lakeside place; and Miss Patricia D’Sinter of Marion avenue.
Russ Wheeler of LaGrange, former roommate
of Mr. Barker at

is to be the best man.

The list of ushers has not been
completed as yet.
The couple will travel south on a
wedding trip, returning to live on
the
University
of Iowa
campus,

Iowa

John

Whos.

ohn

Name Miss Lunding
Honorary Whipper-In
Of Mill Creek Hunt

ie

‘Ga

Kaufmann

ue

Bd Eljar Bockm
The engagement
of Miss Maybelle Hawkins to Edgar A. Boehm
has been announced
by her parents,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Richard
W.
Hawkins,
at a family
tea given
last Saturday
afternoon
in their
Laurel avenue home.
Mr. Boehm is the son of Mr. and

Return

From

Hawaii

Mr. and Mrs. Albert Ramond returned last Friday from a combination business and pleasure trip to
Hawaii
where
they
spent
three
weeks in Honolulu and on several
other islands.
On the return trip

the

Ramonds

visited

their

son-in-

law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Anthony Vigelia, and their grandchild, Margaret, 3, in Long Beach,

Calif.

Page

;

is

for Thanksgiving

on November

26 to spend

of Chicago

a

four-day Thanksgiving holiday with
her parents.
Miss
Reading
is a
senior at Milwaukee-Downer seminary.

Coremony

and

the

Edward
are

for the

p.m.

located

Mrs.

members

Day

7:30

school
road,

association,

rangements

at

Bay

Winnetka,

ents’

Country

held

of

R.
of

directing

dance.

Parar-

Working

with them are Dr. and Mrs. Laurence E. Gegner of Judson avenue
and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth I. Russ
of Cedar street.

Former Highland Parker
Visits The Wm. H. Riddles
Mrs.

seon,

Charles

Ohio,

Patterson
presently

nity as the

Jacobs

the

Jr.

former

of Wau-

Patricia

of
Highland
Park,
is
visiting in this commu-

houseguest

of Mr.

and

Mrs. William H. Riddle of Marion
avenue.
With Mrs. Jacobs are her
two sons, Randall, 5, and Sheldon,
2:
Later in the month the Jacobs
family will be the guests of the
Sidney Gorhams
and of Mr. and

Mrs. Willett Gorham, all of Winnetka. Mr. Jacobs, who is publisher
of
the
Wauseon
Republican
newspaper, plans to pay frequent
visits until his family returns to
Ohio after the holidays.

Arden Shore Auxiliary
To Meet Next Monday
Highland
Park
Arden
auxiliary will meet next
at 2 p.m.
in the home
Henry H. Hixson of 810

road.

as

Robert

Cosine

In

a

setting

Clague

Bride

Of

Strang

of

white

spiral

candelabra, fern and white flowers,

Taylor
the

Courtney

eas

at

Winnetka.

Vews

_ Shore
Monday
of Mrs.
Kimball

Hostesses for the affair will

be Mrs. John D. Stodder and Mrs.
William H. Wilbur, both of Central
avenue,
and
Mrs.
Herbert
Delafield and Mrs. Baldwin Newman of Hazel avenue.

Miss

Courtney

the

Stanley

Clague,

Richard

daughter

of

Clagues

of

Woodland
road,
exchanged
vows
last Saturday
night with
Robert
Cozine
Strang
in The
Highland
Park Presbyterian
church. He is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Hubert C.
Strang of Colorado Springs.
Dr. William Atkinson Young officiated at the 8:30 p.m. ceremony
which was followed by a reception
at Exmoor.
The bride walked down an aisle
marked at each pew with lighted
candles placed in holders
bound
with variegated ivy. White spiral
candelabra with cathedral candles
and white flowers decked the choir
loft and
altar.

Given in marriage by her father,
she wore an ivory antique taffeta
dress styled with tucked bodice,
bateau neckline and full skirt ending in a cathedral train. The yoke
and pointed sleeves of her gown

were beaded in pearl and
A four-tiered, train-length
veil

cascaded

from

her

pearl-em-

broidered

Juliet

been

by her mother.

The

handkerchief

she

point
ried

worn

lace

cap

crystal.
illusion

which

was
another keepsake
(Continued on page 20)

had
rose

carfrom

Miss Mary Andrews Spends
Holiday With Her Parents
Miss Mary Andrews, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Edmund L. Andrews
Jr. of Linden avenue,
was home
for the Thanksgiving holiday from
the
University
of Wisconsin
in
Madison.
Miss Andrews is a junior at the
university and a member of Kappa
Delta sorority.

IHP Auxiliary Sews For Cradle Babies
e
monconnonennemn

ser:

officiated

gown

of

wore

a princess-

traditional

antique

ivory satin, trimmed at the neckline with pearls, and a veil of
Duchess

and

rosepoint

lace.

Her attendants, Miss Alice Altheimer of Winnetka, the maid of

and

Miss

Adrienne

of Oakmont

honor,

road

and

Miss

Porges
Barbara

Glick of Sheridan road, the bridesmaids, were clad alike in iridescent
green
taffeta
gowns
made
with bouffant skirts. They carried
bouquets of white anthurium.

Richard

Kaufmann,

brother

Daskal

Jr.

of

man.
and

Chicago,

of

Ushers
George

William

Kahn
of
Glencoe
and
Thomas
Philipsborn of Hubbard Woods.
Mr. Deimel and his bride will
live in Evanston on their return

from a wedding
Isle, Jamaica.
Mrs.

Bruno

J.

trip

te

Tower

Boehm

of

Cedar

Crest drive.
Miss
Hawkins
and
her
fiance
have not as yet set their wedding

date.

16

home

Doimeat

the bride, was best
were
Harold
Hines

Ramonds

Barker

in

girls

Clas

at the 6:30 p.m. ceremony November 22 in the Ambassador
East
hotel. A small reception for relatives and close friends took place
immediately afterward.

Miss Kaufmann

Ae a ihins

Ss

Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Kaufmann
of
Sheridan
road
announce
the
marriage of their daughter, Alice,
to John
E. Deimel, son of Mrs.
George
Kuh
of
Chicago.
Dr.

Mann

Mr.

Miss Geraldine Reading, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs.
Morley
W.
-Reading of Sheridan road, returned

Chicaigo

Louis

where

completing work for his master’s
degree.
He is a member of Theta
Chi fraternity and of the graduate
scientific organization, Gamma Alpha, for men
outstanding in the
field of science.

Home

Bride Of ohn

styled

Wiss

of Winnetka

Deimel

lice

Miss
Virginia
Lunding,
former
Highland
Park
resident
whose
family moved to Winnetka recently,
was named
one of the honorary
whippers-in
for Mill Creek Hunt
club with Mrs. Emerson Chandler
of Lake Forest at the Thanksgiving
meeting of the hunt. New officers
were elected at a luncheon following the traditional morning meet.
Membership
in the club, which
is marking its 25th anniversary, is
to be expanded from 40 to 75 or 100
persons in the near future.

Howell

City,

be

Green

Mr.

Shore

will

Saturday

boys and

the

Miss Froehlich has asked Miss
Betty Ann Wilson of Lincoln avenue
to be maid
of honor.
Her

Monmouth,

North

310
of

grade

—_

Wiss

Dance

dance for sixth, seventh

eighth

school

Miss
Dorothy
Joan
Froehlich,
whose engagement to Norman K.
Barker, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
C. Barker
of Lockport,
Ill., was

announced

For Square

A square

1

The

Marry

Weddings

Fingers fly at the sewing meetings of the Highland Park auxiliary of the Cradle, as
members turn out tiny shirts, sacques and other infants’ garments for Cradle babies.
The
group, which holds six or seven sewing meetings a year, gathered recently at Mrs. Buckingham
W. Gunn’s house on Gray avenue. Left to right are Mrs. Raymond T. Stymacks of Arbor
avenue, Mrs. J. J. Stefan Jr. of Green Bay road, and Mrs. Robert Palmer of Kimball road.
Mrs. Brewster Towne is president of the organization.
Thursday,

December

4, 1952

�te

Pesay

ee

ngagedTo U

reir

Soe

Sa
By
Foy

8

gt

Te

PTR

”

Cn? ta

4

oe

y

Tell Enga gement

of Ilinois Student.

°

ee

Chitsloins Sheditins.

Of Miss Wilner
To Oral C. Kost
Mr.
of

and

Mrs.

Kimball

gagement

Mae,
and

A.

Wilner
the

daughter,

C. Kost,

Troy

Ill.

K.

announce

their

to Oral
Mrs.

Warren

road
of

Topic

son

Kost

enEdna

of Mr.

of Astoria,

Of

The

couple

met

while

both

were

ceived a bachelor of arts degree in
1950 and Miss Wilner her bachelor
of science degree in 1951.

A

member

of Kappa

Delta

sor-

ority, the bride-to-be is currently
teaching first grade at the Wilmot
school in Deerfield.
Her fiance, a senior in the college of law at the University of

Illinois, is

a member

of Phi

Delta

Phi, legal fraternity there, and is
also
a
member
of
Alpha
Tau
Omega.

are also making plans for a luncheon to be given December 29 for
Sweetbriar alumnae
and students
who will be home for their Christmas holidays.

Jr.

photo

Edna Mae Wilner
Miss Nan

Three To Attend Party Given

Lewis Expected

Miss
Mr.

Nan

and

Mrs.

Kimball

18

Mary’s

hall,

Fletcher

from

Lewis

Mrs.

Kirby

play,

“The

played
in

school.

The

giving
Miss

called

play
and

dinner

classes
more
Albion, Mich.,

with

in

classmates

Thanksgiving

the party was

role

The party is being given by the
Chicago Sweetbriar Alumnae club
of which all three young women
The club members
are members.

of

Wilder’s

member

Soon

Mr.
quette

and Mrs. Arthur F. Marof Lakeview terrace and

known for her flower arrangements
and for her skill in making intricate Christmas tree ornaments. She

their

daughter,

spend

their

Christmas

fornia.

They

plan

this

month

they

completed

Barbara,
a

few

Penelope,

for

to

the

year

where

months

later

each

Chairman
of the Alcove
Gift
service of the Woman’s auxiliary of

home

in

they

Santa
go

Highland Park hospital, Mrs. McClure did the decorations for the
recent Christmas sale at the auxil-

for

year.

iary

Seaman Tony Marquette will be
unable to spend the Christmas holi-

days

with

his

family

since

he

well

has been giving talks on her hobby

Cali-

winter

last

Calif.,

in

is

for
the
past
four
years.
Mrs.
Robert Churchill of Forest avenue
is program
chairman.

will

leave

Illinois,

the

Leave

Coast

of

of

Arthur Marquettes Will
for West

Club

is

aboard ship in the Mediterranean.
His ship took part in the recent

shop

of

Evanston

hospital,

where she
designed
a Christmas
tree in white and gold as the chief
decor.
*

*

*

Members and guests are asked to
Operation Mainbrace off the coast
of Scotland and Norway, and since bring used toys still in good conthat time has docked briefly at dition to Wednesday’s meeting. The
Denmark.
February.

His

next

will be

leave

toys

in

will be sent
(Continued

in to the Chicago
on page 20)

Miss HILBORN’S Special

BUY

‘em —

price

is oh-so-low—

GIVE ‘em—they look THRICE the “dough”!

a

the

Illinois

Athletic

Clear plastic colonial lantern, with colorful
printed trim. Packed with lovely selection

club.

of six solid-color

18’’

pure

silk

hand-rolled

square scarfs. Red ribbon loop for hanging
Freely BYR Cocos tien alee
$2.95

at her
a

serv-

at

Thankswho

is

at sopho-

again

college,

Albion
driving

to

Erik-

McClure,

GALLERY oF GIFT ‘‘MAGIC”’

and their escorts will attend
hristmas cocktail party topre-C
a
morrow night in the Chicago room

hall.

weekend

Miss

to

cathedral

after

Jane

the

Lewis,

is back

Susan

of

festive

at the

Mary

Miss

Ostrander,

Miss

family.

followed
a

Barton,

her

Journey,”

in the

Elizabeth

Liz,

Saint

day production

ice of worship
Faribault

at

Patricia

Miss

their

at

The meeting will take

sen

De-

Minn.,

Thornton

Happy

Thanksgiving

of

home

classes
with

of

Lewis

Faribault,

Christmas

Miss

daughter

road, will arrive

cember
spend

Lewis,

Club

By Sweetbriar Alumnae

Home on Holiday Dec. 18

of Woodland

Garden

Don’t

Prior

Mrs.

Tae

club

Woman’s

monthly meeting in the village house.

place at 2 p.m. next Wednesday.

a

is the title of a

F. McClure

Ravinia

of the

members

before

road

we Be

Chi

Decorations,”

and

Traditions

“Christmas

talk to be given by Mrs. Lawrence

ch
H.

Womans

5

attending Monmouth college, Monmouth, Ill, where Mr. Kost re-

Percy

Ravinia

ions

down

spend _ the
at home.

Geraldine

In

Percy

H. Prior,
PHOTOGRAPHY

smartly

Christmas
season’s

Do you have a son or
a sweetheart in the service?
Send him a portrait of
yourself or of the family.

Wil-

kinson, daughter of the Vance Wilkinsons of Kimball road, a freshman at Albion.

A

Chess imas

“Sop

styled

Greeting
most

unusual

The

one!

in

all

Card

delightful

and

necktie

inexpensive

gift.

See how tie blends strikingly with Christmas
ComCard design. Choice of two patterns.
ready
plete with envelope,
and mailing. All for only

for

addressing

$1

Jr.
twothe
custom-made
Sophisti-Cuff
—
Heavy
14K_ gold-plating
initial bracelet.
“’Solid-Gold Look.” Glamgives
it that
it’s fully one
orously bold and
massive,

599 ROGER WILLIAMS
PHONE HI 2-3199

inch wide, yet weighs only 2/2 ounces. An
exciting personal gift. -.....-----.---------++- a

I. H. NEMEROFF
Jewelers

- Opticians.

International

r

Across
Rogers

Sterling,

Highland

Park

- 35 Years

the bank

from
Silver;

Elgin,

2-0630

Bulova,

Gruen
4”
with
Carryall,
Drum
new
The dramatic
Fitted
with
matching
diameter
lid mirror.
compact and comb. Satin-lined, with sewed-in
In luxurious black velvet, just $3.95
pocket.

ce

tarnish
chest
included

Solid Gold
Birthstone
Rings, $12.00 up

with
Deep, practical compact—lavishly studded
collecpearls’ that look real! Also exclusive
$2
tion of matching pieces. Compact
Diamond
Ring
$150.00

6

r

Diamond Set
$225.00 up

I

Fee

Hl b6
Why
North

Ge
Thursday,

$250
up
December

4,

1952

have

DISTINCTIVE

FASHIONS

FOR

MORE

chosen

THAN

do

you

Shore

think

women

Hilborn’s

20.

ob

FOR

for

YEARS

awn

eb
FINEST

NYLON

Page

17

�j

Sen. McClory to Be
Speaker for DAR
Robert
from

the

McClory,
eighth

hour by
Brierhill
of

home

Mrs.

Sher-

senatorial

district,

Lawrence, both of Lakeside place.
Mrs. Lawrence is chairman of the

The meeting will be held at 1:30
the

and

man

gram for the Next Illinois General
Assembly.” The assembly will convene in January of 1953.
in

street,

senator

Shore chapter of the DAR. His subject will be “An Americanism Pro-

p.m,

Kincaid

state

will be the guest speaker at next
Thursday’s meeting of the North

Wilbor
Wilbor

Mrs. Kenneth Krafft of
road, Mrs. Casper Haupt

of

Mrs.

John

B.

of 565 Lyman court. Mrs.
will be assisted at the tea

Clough

and

Mrs.

Edward

hostesses.

Mr.
Lake

eral

McClory
Bluff.

In

Assembly,

makes
the

15

that he sponsored
by the house, and

by

both

House

his home
Illinois

out

18

The

Woman’s

land

Park

auxiliary

hospital

regular

monthly

nesday

in the

Members

hospital
and

invited

to

were approved
14 were passed

making

of surgical

Senate.

The

senator is a member of the American, Illinois state and Lake county bar associations.

will

begin

followed
ing.
12:30

attend
at 9:30
by

a.m.

will

and

business
be

its

Wedroom.

friends

dressings.

a brief

Luncheon

next

and-help

Told

High-

hold

board

their

Her Engagement

of

will

meeting

bills

and

of

in

Gen-

Woman's Auxiliary
Meets Wednesday

are

in

the

Work
will

be

meet-

served

at

p.m.

The

engagement

of Miss Carolyn

Engquist,

daughter of

Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Engquist of Chicago avenue, to Cpl. Jack
Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Smith of Weidner avenue,

Pacoima, Calif., was recently announced.
Cpl. Smith, who has
been in service for four years, served 13 months in Korea and
returned to this country late in 1951.
He was recently sent

Overseas again and

is presently stationed

in Yokohama,

The bride-to-be attended Highland Park High school.
ding date has yet been decided upon.

Japan.

No wed-

George Carrs Leave For
Stay in Miami, Fla.
Mr.

and

Mrs.

George

E. Carr

of

Woodpath left this week for Miami,
Fla. They will remain in the south
until around the first of April.

warner’s

merry

Patronize
Local
Business

widow
Make

Half bra and waist pincher.
by the new
ning

party clothes—in

dressing

black

All the moral support called for

or white

a minimum,
nylon,

one long lean line.

keeps

flattery at

sizes 32 to 38 with

B

Makes

a maximum.
cup

only.

sure

WAYS

have

ALUN Hea

AL-

“new,

well-

groomed

look”

—

In

cleaning

that

brings

12.50

“back

into

bagging

|

that

clothes

eve-

pleats,

mn

your

Choosing your girdle or brassiere
at Stevens means fitting room attention and expert advice from one
of our staff of highly trained fitters. At no extra charge, of course.

Evanston store hours, 9 to 5:30 —- Mondays and Thursdays, 9 to 9
Highland Park store hours, 9 to 5:30 Monday through Saturday

into

line”

skirts,
tired

shape.

workmanship,
vice—call

with
..

dry
them

. snaps

drooping

necklines
For

SHOP
HOME
at

back

a&gt;

experienced

courteous

ser-

us.

ALPHA

CLEANERS44 |

WELCOME
WAGON

“TAILOR
Rea =3522A eh aka e

Thursday,

December

4, 1952

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adjusts the front seat back and forth...

graceful, ground-hugging lines. In the
glass-wall visibility. In the luxury of
exquisite fabrics and leathers.

and even

up or down.

And

you'll find

astonishing acceleration in the new 205horsepower, overhead valve V-8 engine.

This is purposeful, functional power to
make your driving far more relaxed than
ever before.

This is power in the same modern living
LINCO]
4
i,
Don't

1890

the big television hit,
Sunday evening, 7:00

HIGHLAND
First Street

At the touch of a button
it moves not just forward

This is excitement that happens once

back of the seat adjusts
to your posture. Whether
you are petite and feminine or a big six-footer,
you have individual seat
adjustment in all directions ... get full advantage of Lincoln’s glasswall visibility.

in a motoring age .. . and it’s happening

today in our showrooms.
inspection. We invite you
a demonstration drive
Lincoln Cosmopolitan or

We
to
in
the

invite your
arrange for
either the
Capri.

Lincoln Cosmopolitan and Capri
—crowning achievements in the
fine car field on the occasion of
Ford Motor
Company’s
50th
Anniversary.

MODERN
FOR
DESIGNED
FINE CAR
ONE
pies
DRIVING
MODERN
FOR
POWERED
4. N — COMPLETELY
miss

POWER
SEAT

and backward, but up
and down, too! Even the

far behind
by

FIRST 4-WAY
ELEVATOR

“TOAST OF THE
to 8:00, Station

TOWN”
WBKB,

PARK

with Ed Sullivan.
Channel
4.

LIVING

LINCOLN -MERCURY,

POWER

BRAKES

combine vacuum-hydraulic operation with
Lincoln’s exclusive new
suspended, aircraft-type
pedal action. Toe-light
touch brings you to
smoother, safer stops,
especially at the higher
ranges of the new
Lincoln’s performance,
The last touch in driving
ease and comfort.

Inc.
HI 2-6300

�ie

-

In Time

Bes

For

Woman's

Christmas!
CUSTOM

:
BH.

SE

Show Drawings of

MADE

A
1948
Highland
Park
High
school graduate, Elsie Jorgenson,
will have an exhibit of drawings
and
paintings
on display
at the
Highland Park Woman’s club during the month of December.

cover
SPECIAL!

Including Smart
Quality Fabrics
Now—

||Regular
$125
Value

k

Miss Jorgenson,
whose
art instructor
at the high
school
was

$7 9°

Two

ng

Weeks

Delivery

DRAPERIES

Miss

Lucille

Girls’

club

Value
Now—
$] 7°
;
_ -— Telephone Today —
_ Samples shown in your home by
- interior decorator without obli| gation.
Budget if you like—

Colony

Mois

Fashions

Wood,

received

from

page

17)

Commons
for
distribution
at
Christmas.
Mrs. E. E. Dierking of Clifton
avenue, house chairman, and Mrs.
Alfred W. Hoelsner of Yale lane,

co-chairman,

have

planned

a

Christmas tea to follow Mrs. McClure’s talk.
Assisting the chairmen will be
Mrs. Frank M. Irons Jr., Mrs. Carl
E. Parker
and
Mrs.
Thomas
H.

a

Compere, all of Clifton avenue, and

She was graduated from: Syracuse university this year and has
since studied at Mrs. Lord’s studio

Mrs. Harold G. Clarke of Yale lane.
Mrs.
William
A.
Johnston
of
Marion
avenue,
social
chairman,
and her committee are planning a
formal Christmas dance and buf-

in

$29.00

| OH

(Continued

Elsie Jorgenson

SOFA and CHAIR
Bs.

‘Christmas Traditions’

Club to

scholarship.

Evanston,

while

occupation
as
Great Lakes.

following

an

her

illustrator

at

Spend Holiday in Indiana
The

Warren

N.

Cordells

Briar
road
spent
weekend
in Terre
where they visited
mother,

Mrs.

The

of

Old

Thanksgiving
Haute,
Ind.,
Mr. Cordell’s

George

N.

fet supper to be held December

27

in
Ravinia
village
house.
Billy
Roberts and his orchestra will play
for dancing between the hours of
9 p.m. and 1 am.
Tables may be

Cordell.

reserved by one couple or more
with Mrs. William A. Johnston, HI
2-4270.
Barbara,

Robert

dell accompanied

Barrington

and

Jeanne

Cor-

their parents.

Rest Home

145 WEST MAIN STREET
BARRINGTON, ILLINOIS
An

exclusive

licensed

home

for convalescents,

cardiacs, diabetic, senile and the aged.

chronics,

Enjoy home

like

Excellent meals
surroundings and efficient nursing care.
served in rooms under the supervision ofa dietician.
Private and semi-private rooms and small wards.

by Linnie M. McComas
@
E

DRAPERIES
e SLIPCOVERS
@ BEDSPREADS
@ UPHOLSTERY
By the Yard or Custom Made

119-21

Excellent Transportation
One block west of the Northwestern Station
Two blocks west of the Northwest Highway Route
We welcome a visit and inspection
For

rates

and

other

call

or

write

(14)
to

BARRINGTON

1410

Wilmette 6006

ea
be

the

The

(Continued
was

Miss

Johns

GRAND

Rev.

Lester

SATURDAY

DEC. 6

are

cordially

invited

to

see our complete lines of Elgin

&amp; Bulova watches and Christmas gifts.

We have a fine Christmas

Selection of Jewelry at
a Savings to You

SE

\

PNESI'S
Expert

130 NORTH

AVE.

Repairing

of Watches

and

Jewelry

i

HIGHWOOD

JEWELRY
HI 2-2819

Clague-Strang
page

Peterson

who

was

(Continued from page 16)

14)
of

St.

attired

in

her mother’s wedding. Her
bouquet
was
formed
of
orchids and stephanotis.

The
Jane

two

maids

Wanzer

of

bridal
white

honor,

of Chicago,

Miss

cousin

of

the bride, and Miss Beata Swanson
of Highland
maids, Miss

Park; and the bridesConstance Engelhard

mauve-pink taffeta. Their dresses
were fashioned with side pouffs

groom’s

and

mother

wore

a

street-

of Evanston, Miss Julianne Carlstrom of Mankato, Minn., and Miss
Marylyn Bowles of Evanston, were
gowned

alike

stoles.

in_

The

floor-length,

matching

caps

of

maline, trimmed in mauve-rose velvet, picked up the color of the
with matching accessories.
Among
the
out-of-town
guests | orchids and roses carried by the
maids of honor and of the berries
were the bride’s grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Emit Sudeth of Jackson- surrounding the Pinocchio roses
| carried by the bridesmaids.
ville, Il.
Best man
for Mr.
Strang was
Other out-of-town relatives here
dress

of

navy

blue

velvet

Donald
Springs.

for the wedding and the reception
were George Sudeth of Prentice,
Tll., Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wegrzyn

Mrs.

Conrad

Jurkavich

Richard;

of

Joliet; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Maurer
and their daughter, Doris, of Chicago; and Miss Ann
Smith, also
of Chicago.
Mr. and Mrs. Johnson left November 25 for Fort Campbell, Ky.,
where they. will make their home
while
Mr.
Johnson
is_ stationed
there with the army.

and

nix.
from~page

her

Kessler

Her

own
of

sister,

Chicago,

brother,

Mrs.
as

15)

of

Colo-

the

bride’s

brother,

Stanley,

The

couple

met

while

both

served as best man for Mr. Manasse. His ushers were Louis Heyman
of St. Louis and Leonard Kessler.
The young people are motoring
through Louisiana and Texas on @
wedding trip. They will return to
live in Chicago. Mr. Manasse is the
son
of Mr. and
Mrs.
DeWitt
J.
Manasse of Park avenue.

Leonard

bridesmaid.

Marvin

Hanes

were students at Colorado college,
where Mr. Strang received his degree
last
June.

Mr. and Mrs. Mishkin gave the
reception at 8 p.m. in the American
Legion
Memorial
building, Sheridan road and Park avenue.
The bride was attended by Miss
Marian - Manasse,
sister
of
the
bridegroom, as maid of honor, and

by

Richard

both of Highland Park.
Mr. Strang and his bride, who
is a granddaughter
of the
late
Howard
Hill Wanzer
of Chicago,
are motoring to California on their
wedding
trip. They will stop off
at Colorado Springs and at Phoe-

Manasse-Mishkin
(Continued

Johnson
of
Colorado
Ushers were his brother,

rado Springs, Robert Humphrey of
Chieasha, Okla., Welton Mansfield

Mishkin,

Thursday, December 4, 1952

or

Page

minister

Gordon Neumiller of Fort Campbell, Ky., was Mr. Johnson’s best
man, while Normand Zenko, brother of the bride, ushered.
Mrs. Zenko
was attired in a
street length dress of blue with
black accessories while the bride-

and

i

from

Carol

avenue,

length

You

former

Laubenstein,

a gown of heavenly blue net over
taffeta with a matching net stole.
She wore
a halo crown
of pink
carnations and carried a bouquet of
the same flowers.

OPENING

photo

there, returned from his new pastorate in Joliet to officiate at
the ceremony. ‘The couple is shown cutting their wedding cake
at the reception given by the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Walter E. Meierhoff of Orchard lane, in the Highland Park
Woman’‘s club. The bridegroom, recently released from service
after seven months of Korean duty, is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Roscher of Deerfield road.

Johnson-Zenko

OUR

LeGoff

Mr. and Mrs. Carl Roscher (Virginia Ann Meierhoff) are
Their marriage
at home on 922 Atlantic avenue, Waukegan.
took place November 22 in Bethany Evangelical United Brethren church.

superintendent.

Green Bay Rd.

Wilmette

information

Lorraine

20°
5

Oe

STA,

hie}

e

Cate,

$

pit

cit bay &amp;

VE

EERE

Bo

OM

Bre .

en eee

PR

Cr

Nasi

ae

ae

yee

�The north shore’s new order-by-mail service which is solving Christmas problems for discriminating shoppers everywhere suggests fourteen choice gifts — at your disposal
without a single weary foot-step. Check in circles the gifts
you want. Place your name and address in the space pro-

ISCRIMINATOR
FOR

CARE

WHO

THOSE

vided, tear out this page and mail.

Delivery before Christmas to your house or anywhere in the United States
POSTAGE PAID, Greeting card’ enclosed if you wish.
Safe arrival guaranteed. We will replace any gift damaged in transit.

Your money cheerfully refunded if not completely satisfied.

Doll
Wardrobe

Solid Brass Fire Lighter
FIRST TIME

IN THE U.S.A.

Trunk

British Traveling Watch

The perfect gift any little girl will treasure for
life! A thrilling
toy for now and an ideal place
for girlhood
Be Sree
later. Sturdy
wooden
lock

Newest gift idea. Made in England by famous
Louis Newmark, Ltd. Sturdy precision movement and luminous dial. Mounted in neat
stand-up style zippered leather case in choice

and key, leather handle and card holder for
owner's name. Decorated with genuine railroad
and airline labels. Four drawers and hangers for
doll’s. dresses. 20” by 1014” by 1014”, weight
1214 lbs. Postage paid $11.50.

brown. 2144” by 214” by 4” closed. Weighs
just 2 oz. Immediate guaranteed, safe delivery
—1st Class Mail. Price complete (including
Fed. Ex. Tax) $8.95.

frame,

steel

sides,

brass

plated

hardware,

of

colors

—

green,

tan,

blue,

mulberry

For outdoor mounting
on a wall or post, the
clear, ringing tone
provides the ideal way
to call the children (and Daddy too). Perfect for
that ‘‘come and get it’’ summons.
|
,
Made of the Brest bell metal, highly polished
and then lacquered. Furnished with mounting
bracket and raw-hide pull. A wonderful housewarming gift. The bell is 5” in diameter. Over-all
height of 414”. Postage paid $7.95.
:
;
Patio Garden
Bell

or

The perfect igniter for indoor fireplace, outdoor barbecue, and any other lighting chores.
Slide back the barrel and four large wicks
ignite at once, producing a_long, powerful,
yet perfectly safe flame.
Fuel chamber is
evaporation-proof and holds 3 oz. of lighter
fluid, enough for months of use. Asbestos
wicks are everlasting, and a safety cap prevents accidental lighting.
Available in two sizes equally beautiful,
equally useful, they differ only in length.
No. 1
24” long
$ 8.95
Postage paid
10.00
Postage paid
No. 2.
30” long

BABEL

f

EY

fo

Si

conn,

ak

TEEN,

xX

:
.

z

ay

yy”

Sh ORK: PAGE
BERKS RIROURED

ee

es

i
=

ad

Three Brasses from Britain
We chose these because they are perfect for prizes,
party favors, thank-you
gifts, and many other social
occasions when you aed something small but really
worthwhile.
is A pair of wistful Scotties sporting a useful corkscrew for a tail. The dogs 214 inches long; the
corkscrew

(of

steel)

214

inches

long.

$1.25

Post-

we

age paid.
. An uproarious elephant, equally at home as a
paperweight, desk ornament or bottle opener.
Hooked lower jaw opens coke bottles. 314 inches
high; 134 inches wide. $2.45 Postage paid.
. Dignified hoop-skirted belle of yesterday is bell
for today's dining table. Clear musical tone. 2¥,
inches high; 244 inches wide. $1.90 Postage paid.
Or (special value) all 3 for $5.00.

cs

Every MAN ALIVE
Loves a Good Pocket Knife

Not a portable tool kit but a GENTLEMAN'S
POCKET COMPANION—slim, elegant, practical. Made in the greatest cutlery center on
earth, SOLINGEN, GERMANY, with engineturned stainless steel case, very best carbon steel
blade, nail file, screwdriver, and scissors, in an
attractive gift box.
The Discriminator is proud*to offer this outstanding value.
Postage paid, safe delivery guaranteed. . .$4.90

Junior

Engineers’

Family Bulletin Board
Ball-Bearing Lazy Susan

The nut brown finish of this hand-rubbed maple
Lazy Susan will stand endless washings with soap
and water. Its beautifully simple design and quiet
good taste will please the most discriminating. For
yourself or as a gift, but better be safe and order
two! Handmade by expert craftsmen with a lifetime
of pride in their work. This Lazy Susan, like everything offered by The Discriminator, is unconditionally guaranteed to please. Postage paid $10.50.

Grandma's Opera Glasses
World's

best

for

theatre,

concert,

or

FORT

indoor

sports

1s

this Lililux 214 power by Moller of Germany. Adjustable for distance between the eyes. A pocket or purse
glass less than one-half the usual size and weight.
Just 4” x 134” in its beautiful calfskin pouch.
Your

choice

of

colors:

Blue,

Brown,

Red, Black. Unconditional guarantee.
$27.00 including 20% Federal Tax.

Ivory,

Postage

That boy (from 6 to 60) who plays with trains
will love this ‘‘Railway Timekeeper.’’ A sturdy,
reliable 30-hour watch made in Vienna. The dial
has picture of a locomotive and the words ‘'Specially Examined.’’ On the back of the gleaming
nickel-plated case is a beautiful engraving of an
express locomotive at speed. Comes in a gift box.
We guarantee that it will run and keep time.
Postage: Patds's0)
voc Fe eh eitinn wes hae aoe $3.95
;

Your Favorite Easy Chair a Desk
Work,

Were Never Like This

ie

Railroad Watch

A central place for all family notices and instructions will prevent many a lost ‘phone call for dad
and mother. A valuable aid in child training
when used to post the weekly chores.
Strongly made with a frame of varnished western white pine with a notice surface of cork which
will last indefinitely.
Size No. 1—26” by 16” over-all.
POABE OO 5 ook fg Bhs Gs eee es $4.70
Size No. 2—26%,” by 20,” over-all.
PORNO GIG es oe owe Sip os vce s gee
8 $5.90

‘

Green,

paid—

write,

BOARD

or work

study

in

comfort.

table by placing

British Barometer—Alabaster Mounted

WORK-IN-COM-

converts any arm chair into a desk
the*board

in front of you

on the arms. Dad will use it when paying monthly

bills and Mother will enjoy it when mending or
filing recipes. Children love it for evening homework. Wonderful too as.a luncheon tray. WORKIN-COMFORT BOARD is 30” long x 18” wide,
has.rounded corners. Limed-honey or ebony (Specify which). Postage paid $5.75.

New—Exclusively

Ours

The world renowned Smiths Barometer and Weather
Predictor, an accurate, precision instrument, mounted
on a hand-carved wall plaque of
genuine alabaster;
translucent, beautifully veined, bawdtonees lovely, from
a mine first worked by the Romans. An ornamental
and practical gift for home or office. Diameter of
Barometer face 4”; of alabaster plaque 744”. Choice
of onyx, green, or amber.
Postage paid—$24.95.

Please Send Gifts Checked in Circles to:
NAME
od

i

oe

ADDRESS
STATE

CITY

My Check [_]
Motorola Magic

()

That’s our name for this Escort Model Motorola portable radio. It looks like a small camera
—comes with a beautiful plush-lined carrying
case of brown cowhide with shoulder strap. Its
super-sensitive performance with built-in magnetic Core antenna and 3-power operation—AC,
DC, or batteries—leaves nothing to be desired.
sl,” long, 644” high. 214” wide.
Complete with
batteries and carrying case,
postage paid, $35.67.
P

‘Thursday.
tym}

December

4, 1952

Putting the ‘‘BUY”’ into Binoculars
Optical experts declare these binoculars made by
German trained Japanese to be equal in every way
to $200 and $300 European instruments but at a
fraction of the price.
10 Power (Brings Distant Objects 10 Times Closer
—The Standard U. S. Navy Glass is 7 Power) °
50 mm (2”) Objective Lenses * Field of View at
1000 Yards—393’ * Hard Coated Lenses, Precision
Ground « Individual Focus on Each Eye Piece +
Plus Lined Leather Case with Shoulder Strap.
Price $49.00 Plus 20% Federal Tax Postage paid.

Money Order [_]
is enclosed.

in the amount of $

MAIL THIS PAGE TO

THE

Reference:
First National Bank, Evanston

ISCRIMINATOR
FOR

THOSE

WHO

CARE

BOX 388-H, EVANSTON, ILL.

In this issue see our advertisement featuring “Treats from our Pantry Shelf”
Page

21

|

�_AL

igh

SR Bot

House

Open

J
Parents of Highland Park
given an opportunity to meet
HPHS’‘s annual Open House held
school, our photographer snapped
ulty member, as she chatted with
of Detamble

‘]

Uy

High school students were
the faculty
members at
recently.
On a tour of the
Miss Elizabeth Bredin, facMr. and Mrs. Julius Solomon

avenue.

Seated at her desk, above, Miss
Elyse
Rinkenberger becomes better acquainted with the mother of a HPHS
student, Mrs. Joseph King of Deerfield.
Hundreds of parents
visited the school the two nights the open house was held,

ont

Handsomely Packaged
For Gift Giving

here now... the pajamas
that double your pleasure

Student
as

FIRST NIGHTER®
byWELDON

hosts

and

marshals

and

hostesses

student
and

council

served

as

members
guides

acted

for

those

parents who were visiting the school for the first time. Above,
Mrs. R. J. Tinkham of Sunnyside lane seeks information on
location of rooms

from

studénts

The Want-Ad section is filled with|
interesting

$5.95

tunities.

facts

and

golden

oppor-

Don’t miss it!

Fred Harris and Jane

Visits

in Hot

Springs,

Racine.

a month

est,

have

Mae,

Combed
over

balbriggan

with

broadcloth

solid

aveHot

Springs, Ark., where she will spend
as the guest

of her daugh-

ter, Mrs. Charles Pinkston,
Mr. Pinkston. The Pinkstons,
formerly resided in Sherwood
three

Robert

children,

and

and
who
For-

Virginia

Richard.

Ravinia

serves

cider

to

A.

F.

Charles Spencer of Ravine lane.

Visits Daughter's Family

Ark.

Mrs. Gus Maurizi of Taylor
nue
left last
Saturday
for

Mothers of senior students served cider and doughnuts
during the social hour held in the English Club room after
parent-teacher consultations.
Here, Mrs. Alfred Geigerich of

Mrs. Rudolph V. Schmid of Lakeside

place

returned

Nashville,

Tenn.,

six

with

her

weeks

family,

McInturss

her

Mr.
and

last week

where

their

Helen,

10.
Mrs.
Margaret

McInturss
Schmid.

from

spent

daughter

and

Margaret

she
Mrs.

new

born

and

Donn

daughter,

on

is the

October
former

color

Typewriter Repairs
Finest work by our expert
repairmen . . . and fully
guaranteed!

tailored trousfeephone

ers with pockets, cuffs.

Highland

Park

LLOYD

&amp; ELLIOTT,

af RAP ANY,

and

Mrs.

Mrs. Horace S. Vaile of Maple
avenue joined a number of leading Republican women from Lake
and Cook counties at the annual

meeting of the Women’s Republican club of the 13th Congressional
district at the Georgian hotel in
Evanston, held recently. Mrs. Vaile

a member

of the advisory board.

Plans were discussed for the victory celebration which will be held
in conjunction
with
the
spring
meeting. At that time Lake county
women will be hostesses to the entire membership which now numbers 869 in Lake county and 1,075
in Cook county, according to reports made
by
the
membership
committee co-chairmen at the Evanston meeting.

Typewriter Sales
Office machines, portables,
chines.

buys

adding
maSome excellent

in

machines!

reconditioned

At

Central

645
Ave.

a

meeting

of

the

Mid-West

chapter, Association of Steel Distributors, held at the Drake hotel
on November 20, Seymour Waldman of Rolled Steel Products, division

of

Emergency

corporation,
vice

at

1789

Thursday,

Steel

Service

Skokie, was re-elected

president.

sides
Page 22

Deerfield

Waldman Re-elected Vice
President of Steel Co.

Inc

MUTUAL GOAL
7 499 VINE AVE.*
7%. Wi

2-3100

of

Mrs. Vaile Attends 13th
Cong. District Meeting

is

pull-

Garnett &lt; Co.

Sturm

Mr.

Old

Waldman

Briar

December

re-

road.
4, 1952

�Mga

Oscar Hillel Plotkin Library
To Be Dedicated At NS Temple

ish ‘faith be
brary which

provided with a licould promote and

Kisch,

noted

historian

and

ogist; and Lawrence
Marwick
the Library
of Congress.
In

conceiving

program

for

a

the

Troop No.
Scouts from

of

well-integrated

library

it is the

desire of this committee that there
be a free exchange and dissemination of information with the workchurches,
of other
libraries
ing
temples and higher institutions of
learning.
Dr.

Siskin

to

Conduct

Service

The dedication service, to be
conducted by Rabbi Edgar A. Siskin, will feature an address by
lec-

and

author

Samuel,

Maurice

turer, whose
Jewish Book

subject will be “The
in the American Li-

brary.”
Following Mr. Samuel’s address,
Mrs. Plotkin’s son and daughter-

in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Plotkin, will act as host and hostess
at a reception in honor of the dedication. During the course of the
evening, assembled guests will have
the
examine
to
opportunity
an

numerous

Oscar Hillel Plotkin

library.

stimulate the advancement of Jewish culture.
In furtherance of this objective
and at Mrs. Plotkin’s request, a li-

brary committee was selected from
the

membership

of

the

congrega-

tion to represent all of the interests
in the community.
Professional

Librarians

Under

Plotkin’s

Mrs.

Assist

Of particular significance to all
and
associates
Plotkin’s
Mr.
of
encased
a glass
will be
friends

book entitled ‘Friends of the Oscar

Hillel

Plotkin

the
ad-

staff which included
Dr.
Bloch of the New York
library;
Professor
Guido

Among

Library.”

ment.

undertaking

great

will

the

memory

devotion

to com-

munity and family is in
with the highest concepts

keeping
of Jew-

serve

to

of a man

perpetuate

whose

ish tradition,”
the

a board

congregation

been

Roosevelt Military academy, Aledo,
Ill., for excellence in bugle band

50; sixth grade Girl
Ravinia school, have

working

diligently

on

and concert band. Cadet Vinnedge
is a senior and was recently promoted to the rank of cadet private,
first class.

their

art badge under the supervision
of Mrs. Edward A. Gorenstein of
Woodland road. The girls spent
four sessions in Mrs. Gorenstein’s
made _ their
they
where
studio,
works of art. On Monday the troop
had

exhibition

an

of their

Following

member

the

ceremonies

Cadet

Mr. and Mrs. William W. Wurm
of 423 Broadview avenue spent
three days last week at French
Lick

Springs,

Ind.,

attending

the

Indiana State Canners convention.
Mr. Wurm recently was elected
president
of the Chicago
Food
Brokers association.
Vinnedge returned to his home
the Thanksgiving
holidays.

for

original

work in Ravinia school gymnasium.
Teachers and mothers were their
guests for tea.
Girl Scouts of Troop 50 were
taken on a conducted tour of the
Woman’s

art

ex-

Highland

Park

hibit last
Lillie of
chairman

month. Mrs. Walter M.
St. Johns avenue, art
of the Woman’s
club,

showed
guided

standing

the girls the paintings and
them
to a better under-

appreciation

and

of

art.

Brownies of Troop 59 have put
the “out” in Scouting by having
three outdoor activities last month.
They had a hike through the woods

and a beach
found natural

REE WAY
TOE ROOM
4 Piper lasts allow

walk where
they
clay for modeling.

ple room for growth

.US ceiling room to
avoid

Sidney

Platt of Sheridan

Mrs. Thomas
terrace.

Carlin

of

road and

PATENTED
CONSTRUC”
No filler —Smoot"
Helps keep foo
balance

Lakeview

Dr. Lang Attends Meeting

335

association.

Park

Avenue

e—

fyoet shee
Carefully, correctly fitted
exclusively at—
,

FOOTWEAR,

tive
council
meeting
of
Illinois
association. Dr. Lang
Optometric

of the

Wiad

Wikeox

Dr. H. E. Lang, 716 Central avenue, recently attended the execu-

is president

Black Suede with
Leather Mudguard

friction.

At another outing they did bicycle
stunts on obstacle courts at Braeside school playground. Leaders of
the group are Mrs. Bernard Hammerman of Groveland avenue, Mrs.

its

contents is a preface to the library
and a listing of all those persons
who contributed to its develop“This

leadership

the
committee
worked
with
assistance
of a professional

visory
Joshua
Public

in the

works contained

son of
Vinnedge,
Brian
Cadet
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Vinnedge of
3292 University avenue, was decorated at special military ceremonies
November
25 on the campus
of

NEh

sociol-

Attend ‘Convention

Honors

in Bugle, Concert Band

Hillel
Shore

After months of intensive preparation, the Oscar
Plotkin library will be formally presented to the North
Congregation Israel December 12.
Mrs. Plotkin has said that the
new room reflects a long-standing
desire
of her late husband
that
North Shore residents of the Jew-

Cadet Receives

INC.
®

Glencoe,

Illinois

e

Glencoe

2308

of

declared.

SANTA’S HOURS:
From Fri., Dec. 5 to Wed.,

ADVICE
TO
BRIDES

Dec.
Afternoon

24
2-5

Evenings 7-9

Guidebooks to happy marriage say: “After you’ve got
a good man, get a good
cook book ...a good laundry and a good dry cleaner!” For there are three
good ways to keep a husband happy .. . feed him
well, make SURE his shirts
are done right and send his
@, clothes to a good dry clean— er.
A good many
dozen
1952 brides are proving the
point by “taking from” us.
We hope you will, too.

p.m.

p.m.

C mins
SANTA
HERE IN

SHOP

IS OPENING
OUR STORE!

. and you’ve never before seen so many wonderful
Christmas toys. Here’s the cream of the North Pole
workshops! Hundreds and hundreds of toys for all ages.

3/4 Family Finish Specialists
for Over a Quarter of a

STRANGE $

Century.
rus Seativ
LAUNORY

SERVICE

Your

Send Your Dry Cleaning With
Laundry.

Skokie Valley
LAUNDRY
“Where

Highland
Thursday,

&amp;

DRY

CLEANERS,

Park 2-3310 — Deerfield Call Enterprise 1616
512-518 Waukegan Ave., Highwood
4, 1952

SHOP

INC.

Your Clothes Stay Young”
Main Office and Plant

December

TOY and PATIO
1791

St. Johns Ave.

Ki

22-1833

Highland

Park
Page 23

�Se

Fashion Academ

Gold Medal for Styling ~esex
ll

Thousands of Dollars in Prize Certific ates
Prize Certificates Worth . . . $5000
RS Prize Certificates Worth ... $3500
Prize Certificates Worth . . . $2500
«+e foward

the Purchase of

a NEW

Domestic SEWMACHINE

Follow these Rules to WIN
@

Just count the dots in the dotted illus-

ws

Entry blank, or reasonable

facsimile,

tration in lower right hand corner and

must be filled out accurately and fully

mail your entry to our store. Winners
shall be decided by the accuracy of
count, earliness of postmark. In the

to qualify. Only one entry will be al-

lowed per person. Everyone is eligible
for prizes except our employees, em-

event of a tie, the judges will also
consider neatness. Only one grand
prize will be awarded. Decision of the
judges shall be final. All entries become the property of the sponsor.

ployees of this newspaper, and their

©

families.
This contest closes midnight of Dec. 8,
1952. No consideration will be given
entries postmarked after this date.

@) ALL ENTRIES MUST BE SENT THROUGH THE MAIL.

© 1952 Jerome J. Gorden

Domestic ''Count the Dots” Contest
Mail to

My Count
is

ARENDS, 662 Central Ave.

My Name
My Address
City

Zone___ State

rips

© 1952 Jerome J. Gordon

mn

“
i

e.

oF

*

y

SEWING MACHINE
662

Central

sigh

SEMA LAS AEA PAPI
¥
i
oh

és

RASS

LN

2MSDN
ES AY

A

TET ERRNO US

Ave.,

Highland

Park

Ba

CO.
2-5200

�his Wonderful NEW

Domestic
ne

BEAUTIFUL

-

SEWMACHINE

Full rotary mechanism

with beautiful

period

furniture-styled cabinet. Fit for a queen’s
drawing room. Your choice of two finishes,
Es

to go with your walnut or mahogany

eS

ture, with highly figured overlay panels. A
i

|

Here’s
Dots”
in the
dress,

[ (i

counts!

—

floats over

"
ZA

ae

manently timed and offers over
twenty of the most modern
features that make all of your
*ewing easier and faster.

Domestici

B

sews forwards and backwards,
pins and heavy seams, is per-

the

IN

m

machine,

:

;

sewing

|

2

styled

=
XS
NI
ic

|

finest

i

f

I
:
i
piece you'll be truly proud to own! Judged
by THE FASHION ACADEMY as America’s

( (i

.

ff)

pees

furni-

a prize contest that’s really fun
in the picture below, then enter
handy entry blank below.
Fill
and mail to the address given on
The winner

will be decided

for
the
out
the

All you
everyone.
number of dots you
the rest of the entry
But
entry blank.

by the accuracy

have to do
think this
blank with
you must

is “Count-Thepicture contains
your name, adTime
act fast!

of his or her count and

Count-the Dots today.
You must start now.
ness of entry.
away and you may be one of the lucky winners.

also by earli-

Send in your entry blank right

�4
,

Royal Neighbors Plan
Christmas Party for
Next Wednesday

RENT YOUR
FORMAL

Highland
Neighbors

at

Where society’s
best dressed men
rent theirs—
Cutaways - Strollers
Single
and
Double
Breasted
Tuxedos
All Accessories

(Next

to Varsity

Other

* OAK PARK

in

of the Royal
Wednesday

VFW

hall

with members
bringing
ued at 50 to 75 cents.

STORE

ar

LAL

Stores

the

6

for

a

of the camp, a birthday party and
Christmas party will be combined,

© THE

gifts

val-

Refreshments
will consist of a
potluck lunch. Each person attending will bring a dish of food such

INCORPORATED

EVANSTON

in

camp
meet

Sale December

brief business meeting and social
hour. As this is the birthday month

GINGISS BROTHERS
1718 SHERMAN

8 p.m.

Park
will

Prepare for Apron-Bake

aT)

.

as

a

salad,

sandwiches

or

cakes.

This is one of the more important
events of the year and all members, are especially urged
to at-

LOOP

® SOUTH SIDE

tend,

according

Coke,

oracle

of

to
the

Mrs.

W.

E.

camp.

At a gathering in the home of Mrs. W. J. Meierhoff, Mrs . O. J. Schmidle y ties an apron
on Mrs. John H. Jacobs.
The apron is typical of the pretty items to be sold at the Apron
and Bake sale Tabernacle guild of Immaculate Conception church will hold Saturday.
Mrs.

Meierhoff,

standing,

and

Mrs.

Frank

Jacobs, seated, show other samples.

Home-baked

goods, Italian spaghetti sauce will also be sold, and the Christmas theme will be stressed in the
displays of Christmas cards and toys and a number of gift suggestions.
Sale takes place from
10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the rectory club rooms.

lh

&amp; ao

WHEE! A DRY CLEANING

3

ing

:

Membership Invited

“LIKENEw!
Ss

,

A BLEND

|

i

|

Chorus

Glencoe

THAT MAKES CLOTHES LOOK By

Adult

Chorus
;

Congregation

this

week

Church Guild Holds
Yule Bazaar Today

of North
'

Israel

in

announced

Shore
Glencoe

that

it

is

seeking new
members.
Participation is not limited to members of
the congregation
and the chorus
would like to swell its ranks and
thus extend its repertoire.

J

==,
&lt;

2 “Sh,

The

chorus

meets

under

the di-

rection
of
Benjamin
Landsman
every
Thursday
at
8 p.m.
Mr.
Landsman
says,
“If you
like to
sing,
if you
like the
fellowship
of other men and women of similar
interests, you are wanted.”

"

North
Shore
Congregation
Israel is located at Lincoln and Vernon
avenues
in
Glencoe.
The
chorus is under the chairmanship

of

William

Klevs

and

Mrs.

D.

@ Schneider of Highland Park. For

$4.30

HOUSEWIVES AMAZED AT tonic ottice chonese
725, or the
MIRACLE SANITONE

4/5 Quart

chairmen.

Pleasantly light, yet with a most satistying
body and flavor, Bellows Partners Choice
is the thoughtful choice of discriminating
drinkers everywhere. This finely balanced

PROOF

» 60%

GRAIN

NEUTRAL

SPIRITS

+ 409%

STRAIGHT

goods,

aprons,

fancy

work, Christmas cards, Christmas
wrappings and miscellaneous articles.

Mrs. Louis Wagner, Mrs. B. E.
Kittman
and
Mrs.
Raymond
Rudolph are general chairmen of
the affair, and Mrs. George Shuman and Mrs. Harry Eichler are in
charge
of
the
luncheon.
Mrs.
Rudolph
Netzer
is president
of

the

guild.

Bay road had their two
home for Thanksgiving

Illinois Weslyan
in Bloomington,
and Miss Mary Katherine Amsteen,

@ Spofs Are

a freshman
nois.

at

University

of

Illi-

Re-finance

Press

Your

NS

6

_NORTH SIDE
EANERS &amp; DYERS Co.
Main

Office

and

5427-31
for

a

Plant—

Broadway

Courteous

Routeman!

LOngbeach

1-1000

GReenleaf

5-1000

Other North and Northwest

—Enterprise 6000—No

yn a
.

ibah theres
Ave,
Devon Ave.

2455

Page 26

will be open for the sale

bakery

@ Holds a Better

Phone

is

@ Odorless

“Chicago’s and North Shore’s
Leading Cleaners”

Cntythe Bustis Ladd BELLOWS

public

Gone

Since 14830
MARYLAND

Booths
of

The

to attend.

and the weekend.
They are Miss
Nancy Amsteen, a sophomore at

Call Today!

BALTIMORE

to 1 p.m.
invited

Mr. and Mrs. Walter R. Amsteen

Removed

WHISKEY

‘BELLOWS &amp; COMPANY

a.m.

of Green
daughters

@ More Dirt

blend is finding increasing favor as the perfect all-purpose whiskey and it represents
the best on the market today at no extra cost!

11:30

cordially

Amsteen Daughters Home
On Thanksgiving Weekend

DRY CLEANING

86.8

G.

Redeemer
guild
of
Redeemer
Lutheran church is holding its annual Christmas sale and luncheon
today in the church assembly hall.
The
sale begins
at- 10 a.m. and
continues
until
late
afternoon.
Luncheon
will
be
served
from

Suburbs

Toll

Davis
Vv
St .

SIS Mewerd $te.-1).

\

SHEAFFER'S
“SNORKEL

At

Never needs ’’dunking’’—
never needs wiping. Here just
in time for Christmas. Complete selection from $12.50.

the

4%

same

For full details without

J.
°

d;

j

Ooraint

—

670 Conttat

Jeweler —

make

sure

Modern

Henschen
Mortgages

Roger Williams

Highland

obligation

or Telephone

Richard
316

HI 2-3905

time,

rome free and clear if you should
rot outlive the mortgage period.

Write

V]]

At

that your family will receive the

ge) oe
ae

Home

Ave.

Park 2-7049

Thursday, December 4, 1952

�You Know Something About ‘[his an |
You’ve never seen him before.

And yet, as you watch him epee his
motor car—you feel instinctively y that you
know something about this man.

You feel you
background and

know something of his
his standing among his

fellow men. You sense his consideration for

the safety of his family and his friends. And

ou have a clear indication of the mark he
as made in his chosen field of endeavor.

For that’s one of the extraordinary things
about the Cadillac car: It speaks so eloquently of the man who owns and drives it.

CADILLAC
2050

Thursday,

December

First St.

4, 1952

It does so from its long association with
the world’s distinguished motorists ... and
out of its constant participation in the lives
of the nation’s leading people.

each and every journey a pleasure to anticipate and a joy to experience.

the land,

Beautiful, luxurious and inspiring—it
adds to the pleasure and satisfaction of the
whole day’s activities.

Cadillac is the
redictable choice of those
who choose without restriction.

And dependable, long-lived and economical
in operation—it compliments its owner’s

In every

community

across

And how well they choose—and how
wisely!
For the Cadillac car—as any owner can
tell you—is surpassingly satisfying from
every standpoint.

Smooth, powerful and responsive—it makes

MOTOR

CAR

practical wisdom through every marvelous
mile he drives.

*

*

*

Wouldn’t it be wonderful to enjoy all
these things in your motor car? Well then
. +. come in and see us. We’d be delighted
to see you at any time.

DIVISION
Highland Park, III.

Page

27

�ENG a Oeoh

BES

f
¥
FAS
SRP.
| Hh

ck Students In
| Thanksgiving Program
| Students at Shattuck
| Faribault,
|

play

Minn.,

“Skipper

school,

presented

Next

to

the

God,”

by

| Jan de Hartog, last Thursday eve-

| ming, as a
_ Thanksgiving

part of
program.

Shattuck’s
Woodward

_ Burgert, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wood-

| ward

drive,
| crew

Burgert,

was
for

of

365

a member
the

Guests For Thanksgiving

Wells

Mr. and Mrs. Louis G. Amendola
of Homewood avenue were hosts at
a Thanksgiving dinner last Thurs-

Mr. and Mrs. William
Grosse
Pointe Park,
nounce
the birth of
child, a son whom they

day.

Their

guests

were

the

F. B.

William

of the

stage
Shat-|

II.

The

baby

was

Dr.

and

West

Mrs.

Berton

Springfield,

Rudin

Mass.,

ILS, Florshelm

of

born

November

Pointe

Park.

tended
before

Mrs.
Sidney
Wiener
of
Miami
Beach,
Fla., formerly of Bob
O’
Herbert E. Holt of Judson avenue. Link road. The paternal grandparPaternal grandmother is Mrs. Wil-|ents are Dr. and Mrs. Philip Rudin

Mrs.

Holt,

a buffet supper
the
play,
and

on
a

campus
‘formal|

Wells

18,

in

Grosse

birthday.

Nan
is

daughter

the

of

former

Mr.

Is Honored At
NCCJ Dinner

announce

the arrival of a daughter, Emily
Beth. The baby was born on November 1, which is also Mrs. Rudin’s

Amendolas of Oakwood avenue and
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Masinelli of
Michigan avenue.

Oakland

performance.

Russell

P. Wells of
Mich., antheir first
have named

Mrs.

Wiener,

Rudin

is the

daughter

Citations honoring their efforts to reduce religious, racial

former

of Mr.

and

and nationality prejudices
among
local citizens were

Nancy

and

Mrs.

awarded by the National Con-

ae

ference of Christians and Jews
to Henry Townley Heald, New

2

former president of the Illinois

tuck

students

and

their guests

at-!

dance

afterward.

liam Wells of Bay City, Mich.

of Alexandria,

W.

Va.

York

university chancellor, and

Institute of Technology,
Leonard
S. Florsheim,
Green

i
A

appliances!

Ee

Be the one to

ELECTRIC

remember... make this an

%

CLOCKS

From $4.95 (plus federal tax)

electrical Christmas!

By

\

a

¥

u

3S

ELECTRIC IRONS

ie

G. E. Steam

g ‘

Sunbeam Ironmaster

4

Iron

G. E. Automatic

E

&amp;

Ve

%

.

Iron

Mien

‘

ae

~

a

&lt;7

Se

SN

'

} f

Ce

Zs

$14.95
$9.95

&amp; ly

~\

Alien,

:

Z$18.95

Jewish

)

»

WGA
fo

)

GIVE

ELECTRICAL

GIFTS

THIS YEAR!

A

“si a

eM,

D

ELECTRIC DEEP FRYER

ne

Fryryte
Complete with utility rack,

.

ini

ec}

popcorn basket and plastic

cover $29.95

\\

ELECTRIC GRILLWAFFLE IRONS
E. Automatic

Sandwich

Grill-Waffle Iron $21.95
Sunbeam Waffle Baker

$28.50

om dd

Fo

To Princeton Council

t

Russel C. Whitney Jr., son of
the senior Whitneys of Ridge road,

ELECTRIC
HEATING

PADS

is one of 11 members of Princeton
university’s
freshman
class,
‘e

numbering

G. E. and Universal
Heating Pads

From $5.95

ELECTRIC TOASTERS
Toastmaster $23.00

Co-Chairman

Russ Whitney Is Named

ASN
G.

of

Mr. Florsheim, who is a member
of the board of the National Conference, served as Jewish co-chairman between 1946 and 1952. He is
director and member of the executive committee of the Chicago Motor Coach company, a member of
the executive and finance committee and director of the Omnibus
Corporation, and a member of the
State Housing board.
“Tt is because of men like Heald
and
Florsheim
that America
has
made so much progress in recent
years
toward
better human
relations,” said Mr. Schroeder.
‘‘These
two men have exemplified the true
spirit of democracy in their everyday living and in their efforts to
combat
prejudice and intolerance
through their years of service with
the National Conference of Christians and Jews.”

Be

ei.

chairman

Presentation of the two awards
was made by Sterling H. Brown,
general
director
of the National
Conference of Christians and Jews,
at the American Brotherhood Silver
Jubilee
dinner,
which
was
sponsored by the business and. professional men of Chicago last Tuesday
in
the
Grand
ballroom
of
the Conrad Hilton hotel.
;
Mr.
Heald,
who
was
Chicago
Protestant co-chairman of the National
Conference
between
1948
and 1952, was associated with the
Illinois
Institute
of
Technology
from 1926 to 1952.
In addition to
his
work
in
education,
he
was
equally well known for his leadership in the areas of housing, slum
clearance, religion and community
planning.

Everyone on your list wants and

can use one of these electrical gifts.

road,

the board of the Independent
Pneumatic Tool company, it
was announced today by Werner W. Schroeder, Chicago cochairman of NCCJ.

YOU'LL MAKE A BIG HIT when you give small

be

Bay

and
888

to $8.95

won awards
track.

other electrical gifts, too... at
your Public Service store or dealer’s
Sunbeam Egg Cooker $12.00
Handy-Hannah Hair Dryer $8.95
Sun Lamps from $8.50

759 men, to be appoint-

ed to the 1956 Class council. The
council is the governing body of
the first year class. Appointments,.
announced
yesterday
by
Dean
Francis
R.
B.
Godolphin,
were
made
on the basis of all-around
achievement
at
their
respective
secondary schools.’
The former Highland Park High
school student was a member
of
one National Honor society, president of the Student council and

in both swimming

and

See these and
2° oe
or

:

De

ELECTRIC BLANKETS and

ELECTRIC SHEETS
From $29.95

Portable

ee

PUBLIC

ELECTRIC AUTOMATIC
COFFEEMAKERS

Sunbeam Coffeemaster $37.50
West Bend Percolator $11.95

HI 2-3500
JOHN B. NASH CO.

Lamps, too!

COMPANY OF NORTHERN

ILLINOIS

1891

Sheridan,

Thursday,
it

Fi.

wR a hse:

Highland

Park

December 4, 1952 {sf
oh

es

foe
Ca aaa

UN Un

eal

ieee

�Miss McClellan Active In
U. of I. Student Program

oLiturgy

e-

Song

es

6.

he

Dads’

day,

McClellan
on

IUSA

and

Mothers’

has

served

committees

in

day.

Miss

the

past

for the

social

and

TMlini

Miss Eileen McClellan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James E. McClellan of 556 Cherokee road, is a
research
and
development
subchairman of the personal management committee, and Red Cross
subchairman of the Illini Union
student activities program at the

forums,

University

majoring in psychology and specializing
in
industrial
personnel
work.
She is also rushing chairman of her social sorority, Delta
Zeta.

of

Illinois.

Union activities range from recorded music hours in the Illini
Union building lounge to campuswide events such as Homecoming,

Senior

Ball,

her

present

hops.

In

makes

surveys

post

she

and job analyses of

work
of
student
IUSA
workers
from major chairman to committee
members.
Miss McClellan is a senior in the

college of liberal arts and sciences,

Miss Febel On Theater
Committee At Carleton
Miss Joanne Febel, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob William Febel
of Blackstone place, is a member
of the business and house
ment committee for the

manageCarleton

Players’ production of William Butler Yeats’ “King’s Threshold.” Miss
Febel is a junior at Carleton college in Northfield, Minn.
“King’s Threshold” will be
sented next Tuesday through

urday
the

in Nourse

Carleton

Little

preSat-

Theater

of

campus.

SEE IT SATURDAY!
Directing the choral quintette of the Highland Park
Music club in the singing of ‘’The Lord’s Prayer,”’ as set to
early Christian plain song is Muriel P. Henschen, front left,
who wrote ‘’Church Music—Our Heritage,’’ a program given
recently by the club. In the front row are Mrs. Gordon Parks
Mrs. Robert Ruhl, Mrs. E. Edwin
and Mrs. Wilfred Johnson.
Hansbrough.and Mrs. Henry C. Sonderman are at rear.
i

|

NEW

GREAT

THE

}
|

DUAL-STREAK™

|

NEW

MARCHI

BUMPER!

TO

BUMPER

F8OM

STYLING

PONTIAC
HI 2-5030

1949 St. Johns Ave.

TSCRIMINATOR

THE

THOSE

FOR

P.O.

Mrs. Edith C. Howes of Linden avenue, above,
rator of the script, which covered the beginnings and
ment of church music over a period of 2,000 years.
are Mrs. Virginia McCarthy and Mrs. Robert C. Lind,
of the choral ensemble.

Box

388-H,

CARE

WHO

Evanston,

Illinois

gf

os

er

MY

RY SHELP
TREATS FROM OURFor PANT
Holiday Entertaining

was nardevelopWith her
members

For Outstanding Gifts
*
*
*
*
%*

Ps

Sent by mail to your house—or anywhere in the U.S.A.
Delivery by Christmas and full satisfaction guaranteed.
Safe arrival guaranteed. We will replace any gift damaged in transit.
We will gladly enclose your card or greeting.
Use this ad as your handy order blank.

FANNY’S

(internationally Famous)

SALAD

Nothing but the finest ingredients—
a gourmet's delight

CHARLES (f Evanston). CREME

A nut and mint confection

CANADIAN

CAKE

DE MINT

PECANS
8 Oz. Tin, $1.60 Postage Paid

BLACK

DIAMOND

Natural aged cheddar especially imported from
Belleville, Ontario—unequaled for flavor

ENGLISH

ENGLISH

FRUIT

2 Lb., $3.95 Postage Paid

CHARLOTTE
you will never forget

:
.
Pint Bottle, $1.75 Postage Paid

CHARLES (6 Evanstonr) OLD

CHARLOTTE
Superb! — From a 200
year old recipe

DRESSING

PEEK-FREAN

CHEDDAR

CHEESE

54, Lb. Circle, $5.95 Postage Paid

BISCUITS

The traditional vanilla sandwich (the English call it “Custard Cream’’)

Although

instrumental

music

held sway

during) a good

portion of the 17th and 18th centuries, both clergy and laity
eventually found it distracting during services and limited it.
Evelyn Dills, violinist, played typical instrumentalist numbers |
accompanied by Mrs. George W. Straub, pianist, who was
organist-accompanist in other numbers.
Thursday,

December

4,

1952

|
|

considered by many the World's Finest.

Sealed 1, Lb. Tin, $1.75 Postage Paid

See our full page ad of unusual gifts in this issue
Reference: First National Bank, Evanston
Page

29

�‘Two Highland Parkers
Serve With Infantry
At Camp Roberts

Chorus, Orchestra
In Holiday Party

Two
new
members
of the infantry
are Pvt. Eugene
Palmieri
and Pvt. Dale B. Rizzolo who are
now
taking
their
basic
infantry
training with the 7th Armored Division at Camp Roberts, Calif.
Pvt. Palmieri, 21, is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Palmieri of 283
Bloom
street.
A
Highland
Park
High school graduate, he attended
Lake Forest college and Bradley
university in Peoria before enter-

ing the service.
Pvt. Rizzolo, 20, also an HPHS
‘graduate, was attending DeForest’s

Dinner

North Shore singers and instrumentalists will welcome Christmas
in a Music
Party at a Highland
Park
home
next
Thursday
at 8
p.m,

Say Farewell at Private ‘Thanks-giving’

Hosts

Mr. and Mrs. Donald FE. Allen of
York avenue were dinner hosts on
Thanksgiving day. Their guests in-

cluded

Mrs.

Allen’s

parents,

the

Harry
Bettingers,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
George Dauners, and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert L. Fox, all of ee
The Flute and Fiddle club cham| —
ber orchestra will entertain a new
Johann
Sebastian
Bach’s cantata,
Highland Park community chorus
“Thou Shepherd of Israel.”
which organized last month. ReadIn addition, the chorus will sing
ing of joint music is to be a feature

of

the

ing
The

more

informal

program,

to Everett
Millard,
Millards’ Log House

place

will

be

the

accorddirector.
on Syca-

place

of

the

meeting.
“Singing and playing of music
is one of the Christmas season’s
Training school in Chicago at the most
treasured
traditions,’
com‘time of his induction. He is the mented Mr. Millard.
‘son of Mr. and Mrs. Anthony RizWorks which the two groups will
zolo of 234 Walker avenue.
perform
include
“May
No
Rash
Both young men are training at Intruder”
from
Handel’s
‘“SoloCamp Roberts, which is midway mon,” “Such Chiming Melodious’’
between
San
Francisco
and
Los
from Mozart’s “Magic Flute;’ the
Angeles, under the army’s most ad- | “Evening Prayer’? from Humpervanced basic educational setup, the | dinck’s “Hansel and Gretel,” and
division faculty system.
a choral on the 23rd Psalm from

three

a

capella

works,

and

the

orchestra
will
play
a Concerto
Grosso in C minor by Arcangelico
Corelli. Soloists in the concerto are

John

D.

Vollbrecht,

Ward

and

Dr.

Lake

Pease,

Bluff,

Winnetka,

Samuel

Binder,

and |

flutes,|

©

Highland | =

Park, clarinet. Heads of a host and
hostess committee are Mr. and Mrs.
John H. Harmon, Lake Forest.
Singing of carols will conclude
the evening.
The

Want-Ad

interesting
tunities.

section

facts

and

is filled with
golden

oppor-

Don’t miss it!

|

Green

Bay

| Lichtwalt

Road

Sr., who

school

retired

children

last week

gather

around

after serving

Frank

as custodian

| of the school for 25 years.
Picture was taken at the school’s
| private “‘thanks-giving’’ to Mr. Lichtwalt for all of his kind| nesses during the years. On his knee is Lynn Arnold, and stand| ing at rear are Susan Ekelman, Roger Feldman and at right,
| Janice Anderson.
Board members, PTA, school officials and
the children planned the farewell party in his honor.
‘Sherry

Party

‘Musee de
Shopping
The Musee

Opens

Noel, Yule
Service

| view more
(der
them

than 250 items and ordirectly
from
Chicago

ana North shore stores partici'pating in the benefit. The shop

‘officially
de Noel shop in Hub-|iS slated

opened November 24 and
to close December 6.

bard Woods was the setting for a|
Among
those who attended the
sherry party given November 23 by | pre-opening party on Sunday were
the young
women
on the junior|several
parents
and
friends
of
board of Scholarship and Guidance
Highland Park board members, inassociation
for interested patrons|cluding
the
Mesdames
Albert
L.
and patronesses of the shop.
|Arenberg, Harold
M.
Florsheim,
Located at 925 Linden avenue in Harold
E.
Foreman,
Herbert
A.
the suburb,
the shop
provides
a/Friedlich,
Ernest G. Loeb,
Claud
one-stop
shopping
service for| Nathan, Morton G. Schamberg and
Christmas gift-seekers,
who
can | Moses E. Shire.

Home shopping makes Christmas
merrier for you
and those
you love!
Right here, practically
in your front yard, is everything
you need to make their Christmas dreams come gloriously true.
You could travel far and wide
and
still not find a grander
selection . .. or better values
anywhere.
So save time
and
trouble,
whether
you’re
buying

an

automobile

or

a

&amp;

way

—l

€

Sie

&gt;

HERE S ONE GOOD aan Se

toy,

you'll enjoy the added fun of
shopping here at home .. . with
the friendly merchants you know
- » » merchants who know you
and go all-out to serve you!

HIGHLAND
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RAVINIA

Dodge-Plymouth

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INC.

Fridays

BUICK,

Till

9 P.M.

for

Your

SALES

LOCAL

Bi-Weekly
$3.00 es
BiO0:

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PARK-ENJOY

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ake

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$ 25.00

Be prepared to buy gifts
for everyone on your

100.00

Christmas list—by setting

150.00

something aside each

50.00

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.

250.00
500.00

of Federal

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week, here-at our bank.

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myn

of lala |

rg 84

_ ‘Thursday, December

4, 1952

�NS Mental Health Group To

Glencoe Church To Be
Host To Students Of

Meet December 10 In Winnetka

Foreign Lands Sunday
North

Shore

North Shore Mental Health association is planning to hold
its second annual meeting next Wednesday in Matz hall of the

Hazel and

Winnetka

coe,

Community

house

at 8 p.m.

“Patterns of Emotional Maturity” is the subject Miss Helen Ross,
guest speaker, has chosen for her
talk. She is the administrative director of the Institute for Psychoanalysis of Chicago and the Psychiatric consultant for the Francis
W. Parker school in Chicago.
Miss Ross is a member
of the
boards
of
the
Field
foundation,
Scholarship and Guidance association and the Chicago Tumor Institute.
She has worked 20 years in the
field of psychoanalysis
and child
development as a teacher, lecturer,
writer,
and
director
of
a girls’

Chicago
Shore

was
a

Mental

enabled

clinic

tal
land

Medical

Park

a

Liaison

turn
reality.

located
has

a

hope
The

clinic,

eration for
months.

North

association

its

hospital,

year

will

again

Sunday”

This

the

is

has

students

on

third
been

Men-

university,

host

in

High-

National

been

in op-

Evanston.

and_

three

Kendall
College

home
will

to

for
be

day.
of

and

church

school.

At both services the Rev. Russell

The

observ-

W.

Lambert,

the

regular

on

the

minister,

subject,

“The

will

and

MOVING

AND

PACKING

the

Education

HOUSEHOLD

GOODS

in-

AGENT

ALLIED

VAN

Ave.,

Highland

Park

LINES

which

STORAGE

a

474

of morning
guest

of one
them

the

11

a.m.

worship,

and

of the

church

to

service

to be the
families

experience

am

*

in

been

OF

allows

to attend

of

as the first in a series of
to be given during Advent.

for dinner and the afternoon,

vited

preach

Voice

REDALE

the

foreign

have

the

a part

service

perhaps,

of an Ameri-

worship service held at 11 a.m., and | Angel,”
as usual, there will be a 9:30 a.m. |sermons

Northwestern

of

worship

be a part

7.

that

college

Students

can

to

Glen-

December

at

also

a “Foreign

time

studying

service of

and
ance

church,

avenues,

observe

Student
church

for

All
interested
persons
are
invited to attend this meeting where
a report of the past year’s activities
will be made to members.

camp.
Form

the

Health

to

into

Health

society,

Methodist

Greenleaf

ferent

dif-

Central

Hi

2-0181

The low-priced FORD F-6 carries up to

Committee

The North Shore Mental Health
association now has a liaison committee
which
is contacting
civic
groups along the Shore who
are
interested in having speakers
interpret the role of the clinic in
their communities.
Members
of this committee are
Wilin
Weinberg
Eugene
Mrs.
mette, Mrs. A. Willard Adcock in
Kenilworth, Mrs. Morton D. Cahn
in Winnetka, Mrs. Ben W. Schenker in Glencoe, and Mrs. David Suttle in Highland Park. The committee is under the direction of the

than other leading 2-tonners!
it’s the only 2-tonner with Double
Channel frame and Gyro-Grip clutch!
And this Ford F-6 gives you rollaction steering, choice of three wheel-

bases, choice of two cabs!

public relations director, Mrs. Bennett E. Goodman

of Highland

Park.

This will be the second annual
meeting of the association and will
be
conducted
by
Mrs.
Orray
T.
Knight, acting president. The evening’s business will consist of election of new board members.
The nominating committee, comprised of Mrs. Frank F. Selfridge,
of Linden avenue, Mrs. Walter T.

Fisher

and

Winnetka,
comb and

Perry Dunlap
and Mrs. Alvah
Mrs. Henry W.

of Wilmette,

will present

nees for the vacancies
ciation’s board.

Smith

of

L. NewDrucker

its nomi-

on the

asso-

Vacancies are being created by
the expiration of the terms filled

by Mrs. Louis P. Haller, Mrs. Sidney L. Schwarz, and Mrs. Frank F.
Selfridge of
Highland
Park;
R.
Allen Benjamin
of Glencoe, Mrs.
Ned Morningstar and Mrs. Tilden

Cummings

of

Kenilworth,

Only V-8 or Six choice in 2-ton field!
New
239

power!

Second

choice
V-8,

or the BiG Six, now

of

112

famous

106

now

h.p.,

h.p.|!

3 out of 4 F-6's had running costs for

gas, oil and service (but not including
fixed expenses, such as taxes, depreciation, licenses, etc.) of less than4¢amile.

See Proor in the Economy

Run book!

Up to 800 Ibs. less dead weight than
other 2-tonners.

Load

up to that much

ge

more payload, within 16,000 Ib. G.V.W.

Mrs.

and

County

North

Year

Medical

Suburban

WE
IN

1 ¢

society

branch

MADE

@ EVENING WEAR
— ALTERATIONS —

New

Sheridan

Thursday,

Only 1 Y2-ton truck with choice of 106-h.p.

added cost, 5-STAR
EXTRA (shown).

V-8 or new LOW-FRIGTION
Clipper Six! Saves up to
The Economy Run proved
4 Ford F-5's run for less
mile (gas, oil and service
including fixed expenses,

USED TRUCKour VFordALUDealESer's

Now available at
Lice

Management)
HI

December

101-h.p. Cost
1 gallon in 7!
that 3 out of
than 3%4¢ a
costs, but not
such as taxes,

2-7118

4, 1952

G.V.W. 14,000 Ibs.—payload capacity
goes over 8,600 Ibs:.!

CASH IN ON THE

Siher Needle
1866

offers
or, at

depreciation, licenses, etc.)!

COATS

(Under

F-5
Cab

of the

e SUITS
@ DRESSES
@

Ford
The
the 5-STAR

SPECIALIZE

CUSTOM

peer

The low-priced FORD F-5

The association at this meeting
will be commemorating the second
birthday of its charter, received in
1950 from the
state
of
Illinois.
With the charter and the blessings

of Lake

Ba 38S

Availability of equipment, accessories and trim as illustrated
is dependent on material supply conditions,

Mrs.
and
Jr.
Moore
Philip W.
Charles H. Rose of Winnetka, and
Mrs. Henry W. Drucker and Mrs.
Eugene A. Weinberg of Wilmette.
Mark

Your

cu. in. Truck

FORD TRUCKING COSTS LESS
»

ee FORD

TRUCKS

LONGER!

Using

latest registration

data

8,069,000

on

PURNELL &amp; WILSON, INC.
ah th jt

1909 St. Johns Ave.

LAST

life insurance experts prove Ford Trucks last longer!

iad

Highland

trucks,
F.C.A.

Shi dor

Park

Phone

HI 2-0710
Page

31

�oe
ve
Y

RAE

Choral Group to
Perform

x

Ph

igesd

will

‘Messiah’

present

of

Chorus of Deerfield
the

Handel’s

19

at

“Messiah”

8:15

p.m.

Highland

portion

December

the

Deerfield
auditorium.

Parkers

are

participat-

the performance as well as
from
the
Deerfield
area.

Chester

| at

in

school

grammar
ing in
those

Christmas

B. Kyle,

Highland

choral

Park

instructor

High

school,

is

_ offering his services as director of
__ the chorus.
There

but

will

be

no

a free-will

be

requested

admission

fee

silver offering will

to defray

AUNT

ON

Sey

expenses.

PORN

eee

:

HP Church Matks
Parish Feast Day
On December 8

Selection Dec. 19
“Community

_

SN
Kay

een

Invest Cub

MTSE

TES

ree

Pie

Te

Oh Aa

LSS

OA

le’

okead eas a

PR

SN

ay Tee

a

BUN rubLIE
O

ROUEN
re
ne

TN

ee
Mee

outs
At Legion B uilding ©

~

.

e

hae

\

Immaculate
Conception
church
will celekrate its parish feast day
on Monday, the feast of the Im
maculate Conception, a holy day of
obligation in the Catholic church.
According
to
Catholic
belief,
Mary was conceived immaculately,
that is, without stain of original
sin, since she was to become the
Mother of God. The dogma of this
belief was proclaimed by Pope Pius
IX on December 8, 1854, and shortly thereafter the Bishops
of the
United
States
adopted
Mary
as
the
Patronness
of
the
United
States, under a title of the Immaculate Conception.
Four years later, when Mary appeared to Bernadette
of Lourdes
on
February
11,
1858,
she confirmed
this title in answer
to a
question.
“I am
the Immaculate
Conception,” she answered
when
Bernadette asked who she was.
Turn

to

the

“‘Hard-to-find”

Things

I Remember

By

Levinson

Soon

_

Harry

after

the

turn

of

saving

the

Want-ad

section

for

items there at money-

prices!

cen-

tury, a young man came to Levinson’s. Like so many other men, he
was

buying

time

a diamond

for the first

in his life—and

important
We

occasion

proudly

one

that

_ deep
future
Not

him

not

select

only

a promise

his

long

all.

helped

but

for

Store,

of

reflected

love,

for the most

his

for

@

the

°

bride.

ago

he

successful

returned

and

able

to the

to afford

_ FOR REFINANCING

.

IN CONNECTION WITH SALES
FHA MORTGAGES

*

Lean Correspondent
Aetna Life Insurance Ce.
New York Life Insurance Ce.

a gift of almost any price for his
Golden Wedding anniversary.
But

in seeking

character
_ to

and

worth,

Levinson’s.

brooch—an

something

of real

he came

Here

he

heirloom

back

selected
from

a

a

rN

fa-

he

knew

most

in

from

that

we

offer

distinctive

the

entire

one

jewelry

of

selections

we

quality

Loop

is easy

to see

exciting
from

INCOR

- WEST

WASHINGTON

PORATEC

1893

- STATE

Beth El Youth Group

Mr. and Mrs. Dorman Morrison
of 439 Orchard lane announce the
arrival of a second son, Guy Alan,
born on Thanksgiving day at Highland
Park
hospital.
Their
elder
son is Dennis, 2. Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Morrison of Ladoge, Ind., are
the
paternal
grandparents,
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
John
Sciortino
of
Pekin,
Ill., the
maternal
grandparents.
Mr.
Morrison
is _ basketball
coach
at
Highland
Park
High
school.

Is Host To Annual
Chicagoland Kinus

watosa,

2-0%"

Wis.

nation.

What’s more, as an importer and
collector

18)

Established

the

Morrison

Mr. and Mrs. Robert MacInnes
of 1233 Sherwood
road announce
the birth of their third child and
second
son
on
November
24
at
Highland Park hospital. Their other
children are Michael, 7, and Peggy,
5. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Walter MacInnes
of Chicago and
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Miller of Wau-

GFN:

every walk of life,

Bruce Aten.
Another of the new boys, Don Christman, was unable to be present when the
These Cubs are part of the entire pack of 43, whose Packmaster is Anpicture was taken.
Den 1 of Pack 31 officiated at
drew Kaiser and assistant Cubmaster, Bernard J. Bevan.
investiture ceremonies as did G. A. Rechlin, den father.

MacInnes

Blas

_ mous collection. Like so many other
Chicagoans

FOR CONSTRUCTION

Boys of Dens 5 and 6 of Pack 31, Cub Scouts, were invested with the rank of Bobcats
at the American Legion building recently.
Seated, left to right, front row, are Bruce Cliffe,
William Hansen, Robert Kline, Roger Feldman, Robert Leed and Richard Lyman.
Standing
are Michael Zaeske, William Bevan, Daniel Swan, Paul Williams, Andrew Neargarder and

even

supply

jewelry
why

savings

you

by

other

shops.
can

buying

So

it

NORTHSHORE GARDEN OF MEMORIES
A

Surprise

Awaits

You

If You

Have

Not

Visited

realize
directly

THIS

BEAUTIFUL

GARDEN

CEMETERY

Levinson’s.

Very

Reasonable

Prices

Green Bay Rd. &amp; 18th St.

Phone Maj.

488

CTS.

PEAR

A Blue White gem.
2 tapered Baguettes

Platinum
Original

SHAPE
.50

DIAMOND

Ct.

Phones

KEnwood

LEGAL
NOTICE
Highland
Park
Civil
Service
Examination
On
Tuesday
evening,
December
16th,
at 8:00
P.M.
in the Council Chamber,
City Hall, the Civil Service Commission
of the City of Highland
Park will hold
City

of

examination

6-0700

has

not

City

Price $12,006

739-43 North Clark Street, Chicago

ESTABLISHED

936 East 47th St.

1890

Chicago

IMPORTANT

ANNOUNCEMENT

We offer complete and highly adequate facilities
near you on the North Shore using the well known Furth
staff of directors.
AN OUTSTANDING PROFESSIONAL RECORD OF
62 SUCCESSFUL YEARS SERVING CHICAGOLAND

to

establish

an

eligibility:

Firemen.
No person shall be
the examination who is not
the United States and who

been

of

months

an

actual

Highland

Park

preceding

the

resident

of

the

for

at

least

date

of

examina-

A

service

gregation
will mark
Book
the

at

North

Israel
the

celebration

Month
opening

nationally
of

Services

ducted

p.m.

7:45

Connight

of
as

a Jewish

in the temple.
at

Shore

tomorrow

Jewish
well

Book

as
fair

will be con-

A display of rare books obtained
from the Chicago College of Jewish Studies, and a poster contest
on Jewish Book Month conducted
in the religious school will also at-

tract

a good deal

of interest.

As part of the family
worship
service Rabbi
Siskin will give a
special birthday blessing to all children celebrating their birthdays in
December
and the giant birthday
gift box will have a little souvenir
gift appropriate to the Jewish festival of Chanukah.
Chanukah, the festival of light,
which begins tomorrow, is also the
date of one of the most significant
events in the ‘‘Year of Dedication”
at the Congregation. There will be
a service
of
dedication
for the
Oscar
Hillel
Plotkin
library, an
additicn to the temple building and
an important
contribution to the
congregation’s educational resources. Maurice Samuel, noted author,
translator,
and publicist
of New
York is to be the guest speaker. His
subject will be, ‘““‘The Jewish Book
in American
Life.’
Members
of

the

community

vited

to

are

cordially

in-

attend.

urday and Sunday for the
of
discussing
pertinent
problems.

purpose
Jewish

six

and knowledge of local government
will
be considered.
Vacancies in the fire department
will be filled from
names
on

LEGAL
NOTICE
Highland
Park
Civil
Service
Examination
On
Tuesday
evening,
December
16th,
at 8:00
P.M.
in the
Council Chamber,
City Hall, the Civil Service Commission
of the City of Highland
Park will hold
an examination
to establish
an eligible

this

list

tion.

Your house of jewels
Jewelry from $50 to $150,000

32

Under
the direction
of George
Bernstein of Winnetka and Gerson
Meyers
of
Glencoe,
plans
have
been made to house the guests in
the
homes
of local youth
group
members.
President Maury Joseph of the
Beth
El Youth
group
announces
that the delegate’s fee covers the
following
events:
dinner
Friday
night in the Highland Park Elk’s
lodge,
Saturday
luncheon
in the
Synagogue after morning services,
and entertainment Saturday night
in the Highland Park Recreation
center. Additional information may
be obtained
from
Mr. Joseph
at
Glencoe 1035.
Seminars will be conducted Sat-

list for City
admitted to
a citizen of

Mounting
Value $16,000,

There
will be 11 Conservative
youth
groups
represented at the
Kinus, (Hebrew for gathering), all
affiliated
with
the United
Synagogue Youth. USY is a Conserva‘ive
youth
movement
within the
United Synagogue of America.

an

Directors

each

Bc
Page

All

Congregation Israel

This year’s theme of the second
annual Chicagoland Kinus is “To
Learn,
To
Teach,
To Do-What?”
The convention will be held tomorrow, Saturday and Sunday, when
the Beth El Youth group of North
Suburban
Synagogue
Beth
El is
host to more than 95 Jewish teenagers from the Chicago area.

1067

NORTH SHORE FURTH SERVICE
Funeral

Jewish Book Month
To Be Marked At

All

ages

of

applicants
21

applicants
8 inches
height

and

30

must
years

must not
in
height

and

eligible

weight

be

between

the

(inclusive).

All

be less than
and
within

limits.

list—starting

Physical

salary

5 feet
certain
ability

$3,264

per year.
Application blanks may be obtained from Mr. V. C. Musser, City Clerk
at the City Hall. The State Civil Service
Law requires a fee of three dollars to be
paid at the
time
of filing application.
All applications
must be filed with the
Secretary by 6:00 P.M., Monday, December
15th.
Cc. S. STUNKEL,
Secretary
Civil
Service
Commission
of Highland Park
1260 Ridgewood Drive

City

of

for

Street

and

Water.

Maintenance

Men.
Application blanks may be obtained
at the City Hall. The State Civil Service
Law requires a fee of three dollars to be
paid at the time of filing application. All
applications must be filed with the Secretary by 6:00 P.M., Monday, December
15th.
For further information contact
Cc.

S.

STUNKEL,

Secretary

Civil Service Commission
of Highland
Park
1260 Ridgewood Drive

Thursday,

December

i
cay

Mods saa

;
4g

eg Dk

40 CLEATS

a

j

Lk

Ee

br

4, 1952

on

ule

PN

Ca wh | 73

Ate

te

ea

-

�Has this ever

Siljestrom

happened to YOU?

COAL
COMPANY
(Serving the North Shore
Since 1898)

ANNOUNCES

—

The addition of our new

Fuel Oil Dept.

WE ARE NOW
DELIVERING Sinclair
FUEL OILS FOR
DOMESTIC HEATING

If you’ve ever been caught without oil on a wintry night,
you'll appreciate our Keep-Fill Delivery Service. We keep

a record of the daily temperature so that we know pretty
aceurately just how much oil you’ve used up since our last

deliyery. Then, before your tank runs low, we’re johnny-onthe-spot with a fresh supply. It saves you trouble and guards
against running out of oil. Phone us for...

KEEP-FILL DELIVERY SERVICE
— CALL —

Hi 2-0065

FUEL OIL WITH RD-119 |

SILJESTROM COAL CO.
@

fuel oils

®

coal

@

fireplacelogs

.

®

materials

HIGHLAND

1930 FIRST STREET

®

fertilizers

PARK, ILL.

HI 2-0065
Thursday,

December

4,

1952

Page

33

�‘Kanual 300k Fair
Set for Dec. 5-16
@

CHRISTMAS CARDS
@ PEN &amp; PENCIL SETS
@ BOXED STATIONERY
@ SMOKING NEEDS
@ SHEET MUSIC
@ OFFICE SUPPLIES
@ TOYS &amp; CANDY

North

@
is

GIFT WRAPPINGS

Shore

sponsoring

ginning

Congregation

Israel
to

Book

HI 2-0567

Fair

in Glencoe,

tomorrow

December

ng

a

held at the temple

®

i

and

lasting

be

beuntil

16, in observance of Na-

Frances R. Horwich, on leave from
her post as chairman of the department
of education
at Roosevelt
college, conducts the show which

tional Jewish
Book
Month.
Featuring books for readers young and

is, in fact,

a nursery

old,

pre-school

youngsters

selves in the fascination

the

shop

will

be

open

every

day during the fair for browsing,
purchasing, or placing orders. The
hours will be Friday nights after
services;
Mondays
and
Tuesdays

Drive Carefully — The Life You Save
May Be Your Own!

Dong AS

telecast for tots, became an NBC
network feature last week . over
station WNBQ, to be viewed at 9
a.m. Monday through Friday. Dr.

from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m.; Wednesdays,
Thursdays,

and Fridays from

to 3 p.m.; and

Saturdays

days from 9 a.m. to
Children
of
the

and

school

where

lose

them-

of partic-

ipating in a real school. Mrs. Rose
H.
Alschuler
of
Sheridan Toad,

consultant in nursery school education, is a consultant
of the program.

in supervision

ligious

participate

Nathaniel Leverone will speak
tonight at the December dinner
meeting of The Men’s Fellowship
club

of

the

byterian
parish
Ours,”

Highland

church

Park

at

6:30

¥

Pres-

in

the

house.
“This Freedom
is the topic of his talk.

of

Mr.
Leverone,
a Chicago
resident ever since his graduation from

Dartmouth,
chairman

is

the

founder

of the board

and

of the Auto-

1 p.m.

Sun-

12:15 p.m.
temple’s
Re-

school

will

the program by entering a
contest commemorating the

Put Yourself In Your Wifes

in

poster
event.

Place

on Washday
You've just finished washing all the family's clothes for the week ... the bedsheets, your
white

shirts

underthings

or

workclothes,

Junior's

bright

plaid

sport

shirts,

those

dainty

feminine

. . . and its time to dry them.

You lift the heavy clothes basket and lug it
up the basement stairs, fumbling for the doorknob, and carry it out to the backyard. You

start to hang the clothes up... darn it... forgot the clothespins.

ment, get the clothespins and return to the yard. OH NO! The neighbor's playful pup
next door has leaped up into the clothesbasket, muddy paws and all, and sits there tugging at one of your white shirts. Chase him away and — OOPS there goes the clothes
basket.

Whew!

ing quick.

Up and down those stairs a couple of times gets the old wind kinda com-

Well let's hang up the sheets first. Where did all that dust come from? Sheets

getting dirtier than when you started.
lightning—it’s

raining!

the house. AHCHOO!

Back to the basement for another load.

Thunder—

Dash

out to the yard, grab the clothes off the line and back in
Catch a cold? Took a little while getting them off the clothesline.

Ah the sun's back again.

Pick up the basket and out to the yard. Basket sure seems a
lot heavier. OH BOY! At last your finished, Park your self in the easy chair—ouch my
aching back! Couldn't get you to do the family wash for a long time. Well think how the
missus goes through all that every week, 52 weeks a year, year in and year out. And
she can't plop herself in an easy chair afterwards either. There's other household chores
to be done. Now you know why she’s kinda tired and grouchy at night. You could make
it a lot easier for her.

And yourself too. Take her down to your local gas appliance dealer

or North Shore Gas Company
automatic

gas

clothes

dryers.

and select one of the outstanding nationally advertised
She'll

get

the fastest, freshest and cleanest drying per-

formance for her family wash . . . and it'll be inexpensive to operate. No more worrying
about heavy clothes baskets, frisky pups, inclement weather or aching muscles. You've
put yourself in her place on washday—now

is your

chance

to put

an

automatic

clothes dryer in her laundry room.
wouldn't mind

Nathaniel

So back to the base-

It sure would make it a lot easier for her.
doing the family wash yourself anymore!

gas

And you

matic

Canteen

ica.

He

Company

is a director

NORTH SHOR

AY,

COMPANY ©
“The Friendly People”

|

See

your

Dealer

or North

Shore

Gas

Company

Store

of Amer-

of his trade

association, the National Automatic

Merchandising
association,
and
served as president of that organization for 10 years.
Chairman of the National Advisory Committee of International
Christian Leadership, of which he
was president for six years, member of the Laymen’s National com-

mittee, and

a director

of the

Chi-

cago Better Business bureau, Mr.
Leverone presently heads Chicago

Youth Week and is chairman of
Sunday School Week.
He is a director of Goodwill Industries and of Americans
Will
Vote, and is a member of the lay
committee of the National Council
of the Churches of Christ.
Interested and active in civic,
college and fraternity affairs, Mr.
Leverone
spends
a good deal of
his time speaking to civic, business,
service and social groups.

John

Haugan

of

3083

Priscilla

avenue is president of the Fellowship club, and Conrad R. Dreiske,
1968 Sunset road, is vice president.

‘The Fellowship
appetizers

at

club

6:30

will meet

p.m.

bers of the Woman’s
the

church

promptly
No

will

and

for

mem-

association of

serve

the

dinner

want

to buy

at 7 p.m.

matter

or sell you'll

what

you

find the Want-Ad

tion your best market
LEGAL

WN

Leverone

sec-

place.

NOTICE

NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
by the
Board of Appeals of the City of Highland
Park, that a publie hearing will be held
by said Board, in the Council Chambers
of the City Hall, in the City of Highland
Park, at 7:30 P.M., Tuesday, December

28rd,

1952,

to

hear

an

appeal

from

the

decision of the Building Inspector for the
City of Highland
Park, regarding variance from the Zoning Ordinance as follows:

Appeal No. 206 on behalf of Archie J.
Antes,
1775
Second
Street,
Highland
Park, for a variance of the Zoning Ordinance
to permit
the construction
of @

shop

building

on

the

rear

of

Block 6 (known as 1760 Second
Highland Park.
Appeal Board:
THOMAS CREIGH, Chairman
Lester G. Britton
R. W. Flinn
Warren Peterson
John H. Thomson

Lot

16,

Street),

y

‘

�Beware Of Dangerous Dan McGrew

Alexander

A

fourth

child,

Scott,

was

born

to Mr. and Mrs. William J. Alexander of 2175 Sheridan road last
Friday, November 28.
Their other
children are Gail, 9; Kim, 7; and

Beach

Palm

Kip, 3.
Mrs. Alice Alexander, the paternal grandmother, lives with her
The maternal
son and his family.
Mrs.
and
Mr.
are
grandparents
Charles F. Palmer of Chicago.

Home

Waterfront

Immediate

Occupancy

Often pointed out as one of Palm Beach’s loveliest
new homes, this distinctive rambling 1-story place of
beauty is priced by owner to sell instantly, Dramatic
picture-windows, with scenic vistas overlooking water.
Glass-enclosed dining loggia, 32x21 adjoins spacious
living room and 2 charming patios. Grounds luxuriously landscaped. 3 master bedrooms, with 2 tile baths;
powder room. Utmost in decor and appointments. Adjacent wing, with 2 bedrooms

and bath, for guests or

All-electric kitchen. Oil heat. Underground
maids.
2-car garage.
sprinkler system. Concrete sea wall.
The last word in gracious living.
Offered

OR

Metta Sokn, left, Lydia Tischer, center, and Nancie Bernardi rehearses a scene from
a pantomime production of “The Shooting of Dan McGrew” which will be presented as part
of a Christmas Variety show at the Armed Services club Sunday.

Services Club
Variety Show
To Be Sunday

by this group, and although
the
servicemen are constantly shipping
out and the personnel of the committee
changes with every show,
plans: for
each
production
have
gone on as usual.

Junior hostesses of the Highland
Park Armed Services club will present their version of ‘‘The Shooting
of Dan McGrew,” the famous Robert Service poem Sunday night in

the

club

headquarters.

The

pan-

tomime will be the highlight of a
Christmas variety show which will
be presented at 8 p.m. in the headquarters at the American Legion
building, corner of Sheridan road

and

Park

avenue.

Variety shows at the Center originated early last spring when the
young people of the center requested a more active part in planning
and producing the entertainment.
A committee
made up of servicemen from Fort Sheridan and Great
Lakes,
with
representatives from

the

junior hostesses

was

organized

with Miss Musa I. DeMuth, executive director of the YWCA, as advisor. Five shows have been given

The show on Sunday will draw
its talent, as have the others, from
the Fort, Great Lakes Naval base
and junior hostesses. Al Mills and
the “Four Clefs” representing the
Fort, plan to do a series of Christmas caro!s and spirituals. Miss Virginia
Merry
and
Miss
Virginia
Arens will present a few songs. A
square dance group of boys from
Great Lakes,
and the Fort, with
junior hostesses as partners, will
“swing
’em
on the
corner
like
swinging on a gate,” demonstrating
some of the patterns of this dance.
Two girls from Mrs. Peter Mazzetta’s dancing school, Yones Rabattini and Carol Ranchette, will offer
a hula tap. A boogie woogie piano
number
will
be
presented
by
Marine Tom Harris, and the Great
Lakes chorus will be present to entertain the group with varied selections. The junior hostesses’ “Dan
McGrew” skit will close the show.
Rod
Covin, instructor at Great

Lakes, will be master of ceremonies
for the second time.
Earlier in the evening, the Women’s association of the Presbyterian
church, under the direction of Mrs
Charles E. Bletsch, is planning to
prepare a buffet supper which wili
be ready from 6 to 7 p.m.

Make
Ads
paper

week

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Sheridan

Our Styling Offers You Satisfaction. Possible Only With
Artistic Hair Dressers Plus the Finest Preparations
Available.
Proprietor—

MARY

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2

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AVE.

Thursday,

December

PARK

W. POLLOCK

4, 1952

ALL

OPEN

far

more

than ._the

YEAR

TO SNOW
FOR

YOUR

FUN

PLEASURE

— it’s always fun
ts
— Bowling
Yes— Winter Spor
ng your friends
up—bri
on
at the Gateway—come
for an outing never to be forgotten.
Join our Fabulous Christmas and New Year's Eve
Parties—never a dull moment.

KING’S GATEWAY
LAND

your

Office,

333

HOTEL

O’LAKES, WISCONSIN
N. Michigan

THE WORK... . 2

—

FRanklin

2-7100

THE PRICE

SKIRTS
TROUSERS
BLOUSES
SWEATERS

68

CASH ano CARRY
VOGUE CLEANERS

=

(Plant)

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ROBT.

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remem

HIGHLAND

Worth

sell.

Let us clean them NOW for you . . . you can have
them pressed when you are ready to use them again...

; P aslry Shop

WEDDING

must

CLEAN
SUMMER CLOTHES

COATS
SUITS
DRESSES

Alia

owner

$87,500 price; % cash required.
PHONE MISS CLEMENS AT FRanklin 2-0663
INQUIRE AT ROOM 303, 75 EAST WACKER DRIVE,
CHICAGO, WEEKDAYS, 900 TO 5:00

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Road

Hair styling should mean creating ...

laying

aside!

MAGIC SCISSORS
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HI 2-3814

before

because

Drive Carefully — The Life You Save:
May Be Your Own!

it a habit to read the Want

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HIGHLAND

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PARK
Page

35

�9 Teams Will

"Little Giants Face New Trier
Tomorrow in First League Tilt

Vie As Cage
Season Begins

By Pierre Martineau
or

Highland Park’s Little Giants will travel to
tomorrow night to face New Trier in the Parkers’

|

urban

|
|

League

_

48, in a tight

|

game

played

high school gym.

Freberg was the only Highland
Parker to foul out, as John Hook
was the only Grayslake player to
do the same.
Grayslake In Lead
Grayslake jumped off to an early
lead
when
John
and
Jay
Hook
scored baskets, but the Parkers re_ bounded when Freberg got a couple

baskets.

ahead

Capitani

5-4 with

The

Giants

lead

oniy

put

a free

them

throw.

relinquished

once,

in

the

their

second

quarter, when Tom Cristen
a push shot from the top

keyhole.

George

Burmeister

sank a tip in to put the
front, 20-19. The second

at

24-24

hit on
of the

then

Parkers in
half ended

all.

The Giants built up a seven-point
lead in the third quarter on scores
2 by
Burmeister,
Freberg,
Benson
_
and Capitani,
and
in the fourth
pst _ Grayslake came within two points

a

of the Blue and White on tallies by

Jay
Hook. With the score 42-40,
_
Capitani sank a free toss and on the
- next play stole the ball and raced
down
the floor to put the Vine
_ Street boys in front by 5 points.
Mike
Geirnoth
and
Tom
Hall
i scored for Grayslake, but two free

|
'
|

throws by
ers ahead
47-43.

Russell sent the Parkwith a final score of

November 21 pandings

ae {

Team

Pi

#

Leonard Brown Plbg. .. ie

_

Weathermaster Jalousies 15

9

9

_

Highland Ten Pin ........ 3°

11

_

Acme Picture Frame ....12

12

ma wewis Co. ..........:...... IS)
IR
Rr
11%
Pimaett Luggage .............. 94%
= michter K C Sausage .... 8 Bt
High Series, Team
_

8
12%
14%
16

E. Lewis Co. .... 667-677-614—1958
Brown Plbg. .... 632-629-657—1918
b
High Series, Individual

Eileen
_ Marge
&amp;
a - Acme

Lewis ... 174-152-135—461
Golden .... 136-138-156—430
High Game, Team
Picture Frame

pPighland Ten Pin
re
High Game, Individual
Fe - Lillian Garfinkel
"enn Poncher

omen

Of Moose

‘ November
‘Team

Ee

Robert’s
_

Biagi’s

Dry

28 eranitiogs
Ww.

Goods

Clothing

. . 22
22

Toby’s Cocktail Lounge 2014
Be: Wilson’s Appliances .... 1914

a
14

1514
16%

MMI FO o.oo ceaccccecc ess csenes 18
| Puckett’s Boosters ........ 16

18
20

’

............ 18°

3

WS. ict sicarnseeescakedesnes 40°

26

Leed’s Jewelers.
RE

High

Series,

- Wilson’s
- Del Rio
:

Team

704-688-759—2151
649-714-761—2124

High

Series,

Individual

fe __H. Meckley
174-127-149—460
(My, Crovetti ......:. 170-154-132—456
Bo

BsPe

i

was

scorer

the

High Game,

Team

ROM iS
une sinha adda 761

EMMOTT Boss ssi fi.tonnetdrcdesnnigpepimsoistian 759

54

on

center,

the

Rams’

Curt

John-

son, who
scored
9 points.
This
was
the
third
straight
loss
for
Coach Jack Koehler of the Rams,
as the team lost to Lake Forest,

33 to 16, and to Warren,

49 to 24.

The
Highland
Park
sophomore
cagers play tomorrow night at New
Trier High school.
All sophomore
games start at 7 p.m.

Mary Jane Ladies
Bowling League
25

L.

Launderettes 2314

124%

Moley Television
&amp; Appliance ........:.....
LOwWeL Casino vis,
Natta Shoe Rebuilding
Highland’ Olsens
Freddie’s Tavern ..........

21
20
20
19%
19%

15
16
16
16%
161%

THOS BY’ S iota
ae te

17%

18%

A.

W. Zengeler Cleaners
isd ate integer sR
ge
14
22
TOE AIO ee
ees
14
22
Highwood Hospital ...... 11
25
High Series, Team
Moley Television
&amp; Appliance .. 716-769-722—2207
Rosby’s
751-748-676—2175
High Series, Individual
E. Carlson
183-174-183—540
Ti VON S26 lg 185-157-183—525
High Game, Team
Moley TV &amp; Appliance
Rosby’s
High Game, Individual
V. Morelli
Z. Shelton

Elks

28

Standings
L.

Moran Plumbing. .2....0...2 24
Singer Printing: sick.
20
WALA Coa ia
hel coe 20
ACING LAGUIONS fai
19

12
13
16
17

............ 18

18

TOW Pieer ose
Fh
oR 18
My, Favorite: Inn )..0.3.5008 13
McDonald Plumbing ........
9
High Series, Team

18
20
27

Singer

Builders

Printing

839-831-918—2588

Coal ...... 779-868-802—2449
High Series, Individual
John Fay
181-182-214—577
Jack Moran
164-201-171—536
High Game, Team
Singer Printing
Mutual Coal

Game,

on

the

Class

program,

A

bas-

at the conclu-

| nament.

Last year the highpowered Washington

with

Gardens

the

league

DeSoto-Plymouth

team

walked

off

while

the

trophy,
five

emerged

with the laurels in the elimination
tourney.
It
race

is expected that this winter’s
will be even more hotly con-

tested

than

last

year’s

chase

as

draft calls and
team
reorganizations have given the league a good
balance of power.
Organize Class B League
Officially organizing this weekend, after several practice sessions
and games, will be the City Class B
league.
This
league,
for
high
school boys not participating in the
City Class A league or not on a
high school basketball team, will
play games on Mondays at 7 p.m.

Team

captains

will

be

selected

and players chosen from among the
boys that have signed up for play.
Eligible boys who desire to participate and have as yet not signed up
are urged to do so before Saturday’s selecting session at the Recreation center’s gym office.
CLASS A SCHEDULE
Games Tonight
7:15 p.m. Kennedy’s Garden Spot
vs. The Haven
8:25 p.m.
Washington Gardens vs.
Highwood VFW
9:15:-p:m. Beth El vs. Bock

Individual

Highland

swim team lost its
November 25. Paced
by Gordon Fornell, a terrific crawlstroker, and a host of other
good swimmers, Maine outswam our boys, who were unused

first meet

Wis ove as

November 28 Standings

High Series, Individual

B‘nai

Bros.

Valley

Laundry

Radio

16

20

............ iG:

20

Highwood Ice Cream ....10
26
High Series, Team
Lenzi.
Bros.
. 889-863-843—2593
Highwood
Ice
Grenm:
857-774-928—2559

High Series, Individual
POR CP ASST
oe
ae
IPO RROT GC Cols an ieee es
High Game, Team
Highwood
Ice Cream
...........
RIE
VOUS oe
ea
+..
High Game, Individual
NOMOTA Seo
i
Up.
WURSIAN se
ene ny

642
624
928
920
244
243

Legion Post 145
Bowling League
Mary Jane Lane$ ©. .2.:.23..::../
Anchor Insurance ..............
C. Carani &amp; Sons .............
O./ Oneal Be Son 2260025...
Lincoln Beverage ..............
J. Thomson &amp; Sons ........
Dufty’s ‘Wavern: ©...)

Ww
28
20
20
20
18
18
16

L
1
19
19
19
21
aL
23

Ofticers'-

16

23

Clap
High

Lincoln
Mary

sie
2
Series,

Beverage.

Team

.....2.:......:..-. 2773

Jane Lanes ...................... 2652
High Series, Individual
A
GV ANE ioe ci ete
ao)
651
Da SAMO
sie eh BS 634
High Game, Team
Lineoln Beverage
ti os og
997
J. Thomson &amp; Sons ethan.
965

went

to Al

league

this

year.

Next encounter for the Mermen will be tonight when the

team

invades

Morton.

Highland

Individual
224
213

only

John
after

second

was

won

by

Gould in the 50-yard crawl
a tremendous
battle with

Fred
Harris, the other Highland
Park swimmer
in that event.
In
the 200-yard
crawl, Pete
Hughes

just

lost

he
was
swimmer

out

getting

second

when

overtaken
by
a
Maine
on the last length.

Frosh-Soph Whip Maine
The
frosh-soph
swimmers
showed they had the makings of a
pretty good team when they walloped the Maine frosh-soph, 45-21.
This
team
showed
depth
in the
crawl and some outstanding medley and breaststroke men. Winning
two firsts for the baby Mermen was
Pete Goelzer who took the 75-yard

individual medley and the 50-yard
breast. Firsts were won by Robert
Engdahl in the 100 yard crawl and
by Roger Sheahen in the diving,
who showed that he can develop
into a topflight diver.
Peter Onderdonk finished second in the 50

yard backstroke and in the medley.

Lenzi
Skokie

Suburban

The

Gus
Cervetti
.... 224-166-184—574
Dina Paganelli .... 179-208-181—568
High Game, Team
role
TOMe ts os
ot
898
Moraine Service Station ........ 857

Fie

19%

which

Park will travel to Niles next
Thursday and Harrison Tech of
Chicago will be the first home
swim meet on December 18.

Team
L.
Le, Motor Sales .2)055&lt; ae
1
NY
RIRCR
cc
23
13
Freo’s-Clothing
21
15
Moraine Serv. Sta. ........ 21
15
Fabbri :@ (Sons...
18
18
Shoreline Roofers .......... 17
19
Baracani Insurance ........ 14
22
Oak Terrace Beverage .... 14
22
G &amp; L Bump
Shop .... 14
22
Golden: Dome 0...560...0....- 13
23
High Series, Team
Golden Dome .... 814-879-898—2591
L. F. Motor
Sales
839-843-829—2511

19

........ 164%

medley

Rubenstein
by a sizable
margin,
and
diving honors,
which
Danny
Seitz
brought
home.
Danny
showed
great
improvement
over
last year and it looks as though he
will be’ one of the top divers in the

VFW Post 4741
Bowling League

Dollar

Highwood

dividual

Edwin R. ‘‘Mike” Snavely, acting
athletic director at the university
reports that 36 major letters have
been awarded athletes in football
and cross-country this season.

Silver

.

Varsity

The
Mermen,
however,
took
three firsts in the meet. They took
the 100-yard breaststroke and in-

Walter Chaffee, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Franklyn W. Chaffee of Egandale road, has received his major
football letter at DePauw
university in Greencastle, Ind.

Team

Groc.

school’s

Walt Chaffee Wins
Letter at DePauw

111%
AS
5

...17

High

54 to 24, at their pool

to the longer pool at Maine.

Fabbris Tavern ............ 244%
My. Mavorite inn cn. 3. 20°
Eddy's: Liquors’ 026.0558 24%,
Tavern

Park

to Maine,

Jus: Cervelo
FOREY AIDeRG i
ee ee

including November 25 Games
Team

By Art Weinstein

High Game,

Marconi Bowling
League Standings

Mutual

High
John Fay

op-

League
Ww.

Mitchell

began

Standings
W.

November

Dowling League
.

Highest

HP

Rh

Rams

Biggest period for either team
came in the second quarter, when
the Highland Park five scored 20
points and the Grayslake Rams, 12.

Highwood

_ No. 2 League

Grayslake

to 26.
The sophomore cagers, under the eye of Wallace Hammerberg, took an early lead in the
contest and were ahead at the end
of the first half, 31 to 14.
With
the shots of George
Moran
and
Paul Slovic, this lead of 17 points
leaped to 28 by the end of the
game.
Both of these players scored
12 points.

team

Also

ketball

By Harry Halton

the

department

sion of league play, will be the
popular single elimination tour-

The Blue and White colors were
spread over Highland Park High
school’s basketball gym on November 26, as the Little Giants won
their half of the double
header,

November

: Bnai B’rith

ter.

In Front, 54 to 26

by licking

reation

pionship at the Recreation cen-

HP Frosh-Soph Out

lin Benson scored 5 each and Howard Russell came in with a 4.

The City Class A Basketball
league sponsored by the Highland Park Playground and Recerations this week with nine
teams competing for the cham-

Doubleheader Finds

in the

a3
High scorers were
Eddie
Capitani with 12 points, Harold Freberg
- and George Burmeister with 11 and
|
10, respectively. Bob Troy and Rol-

of

Winnetka
first Sub-

title.

+The Giants scored their first victory of the season last Friday, 47-

Varsity Swim Team Loses To
Maine; Frosh-Soph Win Honors

B’rith

The

League

November 21 Standings
Candries)

io 60

Ww.

L.

Azge 20

4

Powerhouse
cis
Con
19
5
Mie
DOUS “coh
OA
17
%
Chivers: sca
oo
a
14
10
All Americans sii. ehiou ro
11
Oe
NACI ALS sci c, ole.kas 12
12
PAPPORIIS ot
hos ay 12
12
ROCKETS
Gi
ks dt
13
The: Dynamoes
es
11
13
LIK OCTR. so
aes
1
13.
PODDIOTS 2
i
10
14
The Bie Pours
10
14
RaUroeaders: ik
10
14
ule DATOS hia
9
15
Bloomer: Girls ‘2)..2402005
7
17
UEP ROVE: dione ae
6
18
High Series, Team
Hot Canaries (Wide
cs a
1933
High Series, Individual
Harriette Levin .. 119-145-176—440
High Game, Team
Powerhouse :3ssecchictewe
ent 696
High Game, Individual
Harriette: Levitt
3 Ae ee 176
Esther: Rubenssiso5
ee
176
Claire Palmer)
oh se
164

local

boys

won

November 28 Standings
Team
‘
Kleeburg Buick Inc. ...
TMAET IOS OM 5.6 oi
James Thomson &amp; Sons

Larson’s

Stationery

L.
17
17
18

18

20

19

DeSoto-Plymouth ............ 20
Anchor Insurance Agency 15
UME
Tire NS
15

19
24
24

Coal

Co.

High Series,
Thomson &amp;

James

Sons

Team

892-750-809—2451

Siljestrom
CO;

Coal
719-820-898—2437

High Series, Individual
W. Fossbender .. 189-168-190—547
C. Gerstner ........ 209-169-154—532
High

Game,

Team

Siljestrom. Coal Gogo

898

James

........

892

High Game, Individual
Ay Bertacchini (cs
AIO.
ety
oe te

224
213

Thomson

&amp;

Sons

Bowling League

MNOES, Baanad 647
Bill-Bob Inn ...... 620
7.

W.
22
22
21

........ 21

Siljestrom

High
Manhattan

Ww

relays.

Craftsman League

Seniors Prosperity
November 28 Standings

both

Series,

Team

619
583

668—1934
726—1929

High Series, Individual
Andrini ee 143 137 171—451

Rena

Manhattan Shoes ............ 22
Sherony Hardware ........ 21%
Louise Beauty Salon ....21
Esther’s Tavern .............. 184%

14 | Mary Somenzi ....148 157 130—435
14%
High Game, Team
15
BEBO
4On
la
ae
726 |
1714| Manhattan Shoes. ....................-- 668

Ariano

19

Construction

....17

Service Market .............. 164%
BiIneBop:. Unity ic seks 14

GRANGE

Brig.

ssnesrse 138%
i

:

*

High

Game,

Individual

191%4|
22

Mary Ladurini .22.02.......cc0..cc0.
Phil ‘Ronchettae.
a sk ae

22%

pene AnH se poip acoachtal Shin wee

ae

sia

i

“

T

Dad

eda’

oo

181
171

TL

�Receives Varsity Letter

Honor High School Athletes At Annual Dinner

Robert
Weddell
of
Webster
Groves, Mo., formerly of Highland
Park, has received his varsity footyall letter at the University of Ilinois. Mr. Weddell is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert W. Weddell, who
lived formerly on south Sheridan
road. He was also active in athletics
at
Highland
Park
High
school.

Dance At The Labor Temple
The Modenese society will hold
a dance Saturday at 8:30 p.m. in
the Labor temple. Proceeds of the
event will go into the fund which
pays medical expenses for chronically sick members of the group.

Joseph Minorini, chairman of the
dance, has announced that refreshments will
the evening
attend.

be served throughout
and urges the public to

The Want-Ad section is filled with
interesting facts and golden opportunities. Don’t miss it!

Harold
Dave

Freberg, president of the ‘’H”’ club, introduced
Coach Floyd
Floyd, who handed out the letters.

been

the

Annual ‘Spaghetti Sling’ at Highland Park High school
brings out a number of Highland Park fathers who watch their

Coach

sons

has

receive varsity football

letters.

Banquet

is sponsored

by

the ‘‘H’ club. Romano Ori, left, an honorable mention suburban league choice, is the dinner partner of Dorman Morrison, basketball
school.

coach and athletic council member

at

Harry B. Freberg,

high

school

18

Harold’s father.

years.

Onlooker

at

left

is

at the high

The Playhouse 21
21-Inch TV Console .
e

Pretty guests of the ‘’H” club were girl cheer leaders.
Judy Wender and JoAnn Cimbalo, pictured above with John

Art Bock and Bob Troy, left and right above, pose with
Donald Burson, assistant football coach.
Thirty-two members
of the varsity received their letters.
.

Gould

Award Letters _

Edward Walters Jr. Gets
Kenyon Athletic Letter

| board, faculty and students
for
their support
this season.

At Annual HPHS
1

Spaghetti

Sling

*

e

r

Thirty-two members of the
Highland Park Varsity football team, picked by the athletic

council,

letters

the

last

received

Tuesday

annual

their

night

“Spaghetti

at

Sling.”

The boys and their fathers met
in
Highland
Park
High
school
cafeteria at 6:30 p.m. for their annual
“feast”
of
spaghetti,
meat
loaf, cole slaw, French bread and

apple

pie a la mode.

club,

and

an

honorable

men-

tion backfield choice for the Suburban league all star team.
Speaking briefly at the gather-

ing,

A.

the high

E.

Wolters,

principal

school, thanked

Thursday,

Ed

December

of

the school

4,

1952

the

receiving

Anspach,

nie Bartoli,
Bernardini,

football

team

letters, were:
Antes,

Ron-

Rollin Benson,
Bill
Bernardi,

Roger

Jim
Art

Bock, John Franzese, Harold Freberg,
John
Gould,
Anton
Haras
and Bob Troy.
;
Fred
Harris,
Clem
Juhl,
Dick
Keim,
Dave
Klingler,
Bill
Mac-

Lean,
Gus
Nizzi,
Romano
Ronnie Reich, Dick Riddle,
Rosin,
Court
Joe Signorio,

Troy,
George

Bob

Coach
Dave
Floyd
handed
out
the letters to the varsity and William Kolbe presented them to the
freshmen.
Donald
Kane
awarded
the sophomore letters.
Coach Floyd was introduced by
Harold
Freberg, president of the

“H”

Those

of

Jack

Ross,
Ned
Siegel,
Tom
Stirsman, Jim

Tyson,

White

Ori,
Bob

and

Hinchsliff,

Peter
John

right

and

awarded

Scotty

Walker

were

among

seven

cheerleaders

quality 21” console TV.
Powerful Long-Distance
Chassis makes telecasting
stations seem miles closer.

e

letters.

Edward
W. Walters Jr., son of
Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Walters of 1048
Brittany road, received
his football numeral on November 18 at
Kenyon
college,
Gambier,
Ohio.
Mr. Walters was assistant manager
of the team. He is a freshman and
a pledge member of Alpha Delta
Phi social fraternity.
league
honorable
mentions.
Bob
Troy was the boy selected rather
than Jim Troy, his younger brother.

IMMACULATE
CONCEPTION CHURCH
Green Bay Roads
2-0202
P. Morrison
Joseph
Rev.
Rt.
Pastor
Rev. Donald
B. Runkle
Rev. Bernard
E. Burns
MASSES
9:00, 10:00,
7:30,
Sundays—6:15,
11:00 and 12 noon
Holy Days—6 enone
8:00, 9:00,
Deerfield

and
HI
Msgr.

1

*

Weekdays—6:15, 8:15
CONFESSIONS
:
Saturdays,
Eves. of First Fridays and
Holy Days 4:00 and 7:30 p.m.

e

e

e
e

Walker,
Wolter.

end,

e

hatharine

and

Dave Klingler, right tackle, among
those receiving letters, had been
picked for Suburban League honors
early
last month.
Girl
cheer
leaders
who
were
guests of the “H” club at the banquet,
also received
letters. They
were Frances Cimbalo, JoAnn Cimbalo, Marie Ellman, Toni Murphey,
Sally Quigg, and Joan and Judy
Wender.
In his talk Coach Floyd made a
correction
in
the
All-Suburban

SECRETARIAL

MARY JANE
LANES &amp; BAR
210 Green Bay Road
Highwood, Il.

Dial HI 2-5332

Here, for the first time at
this low price, is Magnavox-

Magnascope Big Picture
System with 21-inch Screen

slanted to cast roomlight reflections to the floor.
Exclusive Magnascope optically-filtered screen is slanted to prevent glare and produce life-like contrast.
Big 12-inch speaker is slanted upward to better distribute high-fidelity sound.
Magnavox
All-Channel
UHF Tuner may be readily
installed within the chassis.
Magnavox fine-furniture
cabinet in white oak finish,

ibbs

@ Never enough Gibbs-trained
secretaries to meet the demand.
Courses for high school and
private
school
graduates
and
college women.
Five-school personal placement service.

Catalog: Executive Dean
51 E. Superior St., Chicago 11
DE 7-3306
Other Gibbs Schools: New York
Boston
Montclair,N.J.
Providence

359.50', in mahogany
finish, 339.50

GRANT &amp; GRANT
252 E. Deerpath
Lake Forest 658

BETTER SIGHT

¢*

BETTER SOUND

BETTER BUY

*

MAGNAVOX
Page

37

�fue
Hazel

Basald have priority on your time. Speid some
5
hours in church.
REDEEMER EV. LUTHERAN
CHURCH
587 W. Central Avenue
Rev. William H. Remmert,

10 a.m.

Adult service.

10:30
a.m.
Eighth
lecture
on
“Great Jewish Books,”
The series
will be resumed in January and the
pastor
ninth lecture will be given on Suna
Tel. HI 2-6848
day, January 4.
Res. 1817 Green Bay road
Daily Minyan meets 7:15 a.m.
|'MONDAY,
December
8, through
TURDAY, December 6
9:30 a.m.
Confirmation
class THURSDAY, December 11
™

4 p.m. to 6 p.m.

2ets.

p.m. and 7-8 p.m. Announcents for holy communion will be
received in the assembly room.

SUNDAY,

December

The Ladies’ guild meets.

Laurel, Linden and Prospect
Avenues
Telephone

r. William

12 noon.

December

9 a.m.

to

12

Gan.

noon.

HI

Atkinson
Minister

2-1695

Young,

DAY, December 7
1 a.m. to 12 noon. Morning worship service, Dr. Young preaching.
h school classes for children
ee years old up through
de also meet at this hour.

The

METHODIST
CHURCH
Avenue and Everts Place
Rev. Donald Woods, pastor

THURSDAY, December 4
7:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
SUNDAY, December 7°

9:30
ages.

a.m.

Church

school

for

all

10:45
a.m.
Fifteen
minutes
of
chimes.
11 a.m.
Morning worship.
Sermon topic:
‘No Room.”
TUESDAY,
December 9

7:30

p.m.

WSCS

third

SUNDAY,

Cabinet

meet-

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
CHURCH
Deerfield and Green Bay Roads
Rt. Rev. Msgr. Joseph P. Morrison
Pastor
Rev. Donald B. Runkle
Rev. Bernard
E. Burns
HI 2-0202

Confessions
Saturdays, eves. of First Fridays
and Holy Days 4 and 7:30 p.m.
Masses
Weekdays—6:15 a.m., 8:15 a.m.
Holy Days—6 a.m., 7 a.m., 8 a.m.,
9 a.m., and 10 a.m.
SUNDAY, December 7

:30 a.m. to 10:05 am. Chancel
rehearsal.
9:30 am. to 10:35 am.
Junior
artment
(4th,
5th
and
6th
des) and Junior High depart| Masses at 6:15, 7:30, 9, 10, 11 a.m.
nt (7th and 8th grades).
380 am. to 10:30 am.
Adult and 12 noon.
MONDAY, December 8
Bl tea of the Immaculate Concep-

December

TRINITY

EPISCOPAL

Whckee at
The 10 a.m.

6, 7, 8, 9 and 10 a.m.
mass is a high mass.

HIGHLAND

meeting.

“TUESDAY, December 9

8 p.m.

Vestry.

TUESDAY, December
7 p.m. Cub Scouts.
7:15

p.m.

8 p.m.

a.m.

to

9:30

a.m.

Sanctuary

n for prayer and meditation.
:15 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Choir re-

Study

THURSDAY, December 11
10
a.m.
Women’s association
d meeting.
NORTH
SUBURBAN
- SYNAGOGUE BETH EL
1175 Sheridan Road
Highland
Philip

SUNDAY,
11

a.m.

HI

2-5787

L.

Lipis,

FIRST UNITED
Rabbi

December
5 — United
Youth Convention Sab-

Light candles.
Late service. Welcome

siven by Harold R. Blumberg, Beth

fl president, and by Maury Joseph,

co-chairman

and

EVANGELICAL

a.m.

Sunday

school

session.

10:40 a.m. Organ interlude. Mrs.
Lisle Hawley, organist.
10:45
service.

Beth

El Youth group president. Address
y Robert Robins, president Chiago Council, United
Synagogue
Beth:
Sermon:
“To
Learn— |
t? To Teach—How?
To Do—_
When?” by Rabbi Philip L. Lipis.
TURDAY, December 6
:30 a.m. Morning worship.
Sermon: Chaplain Arnold Goodn, USA of Fort Sheridan.
Y

HI 2-1731
December 7

SUNDAY,
9:30

convention

worship.

CHURCH
Green Bay Road at Laurel Ave.
A. G. Masser, Minister

Conservative

:09 p.m.
3:30 p.m.

Sunday

7

Park

Stanley Martin, Cantor
RIDAY,
ynagogue

December

a.m.
Morning communion
Message by the pastor.

7 p.m.

Junior

Christian

endeav-

or.
7 p.m.
ice.

Evening communion

ZION

EV.

High

Street

LUTHERAN

serv-

CHURCH

and Oakridge
Highwood

Rev. Herbert W. Linden,
SUNDAY, December 7
9:30 a.m. Church school.
ae 45 a.m.

Avenue

Pastor

BETHANY

HI 2-3522

December 7
Church school directed
D. Fritsch, with classes
groups.

10:45 a.m. F. B. Schlung will present 15 minutes of organ medita-

tions,

preparatory

guild

musi-

a.m.

10:45

Sunday

a.m.

with

minister,

the

FIRST

1:30

p.m.

Christmas

cellaneous

items,

ticket

9:30

a.m.

First
Masses

CHRIST

7,

and

utilizes

while

meeting.

only

the

man

power

all creation

and

reflects

of

Mind,

causation

are

in and of Deity. This will be explained in all Churches of Christ,

Scientist, on Sunday,
The

December

title of the Lesson-Sermon

God alone.”
Lesson-Sermon

passages

the Bible (King James

will

from

Version) in-

clude:

“In
Word,

the
and

beginning
the Word

was
the
was with

God, and the Word was
All things were ‘made

and

without

thing

By

the

made

the

him
that

word

heavens

God .
by him:

was not
was

any-

made...

of the

Lord

made;

and

Smorgasbord.
Mrs. Paul Wil-

chairman,

HI

2-0015.

CHURCH

and

9;

all

low

masses.

4 p.m. Hebrew classes.
7:45 p.m. Family worship
Opening

of

were

9:40

Jewish

December

a.m.

8:15 p.m. Young People’s division, Jewish Federation of Chicago.
TUESDAY, November 9
4 p.m. Hebrew classes.

Shore

WEDNESDAY, December
4 p.m. Hebrew classes.

December

Seminar
10

11

4 p.m.

Hebrew

8 p.m.
8 p.m.

Library committee.
Adult chorus.

classes.

and

To Be Celebrated

he

commanded,

include:

“Mind, supreme over all its
formations and governing them
all, is the

central

sun

fair

school.

Chanukah Festival

done:

serv-

Book

host of them by the breath of
his mouth . . . for he spake, and
it was

of its own

systems of ideas, the life and
light of all its own vast creation;
and man is tributary to divine
Mind . . . The substance, Life,
intelligence,
Truth
and
Love,
_ which constitute Deity, are red

at McGov-

aprons,

The sale
a variety

that

have been
the year,

guild

working
will be

placed on sale. A food table stocked
with

home

made

coffee

cakes,

cookies,
rolls and
other
baked
goods will be another feature of
the sale. Pillow cases and other
hand made items will be offered
at another table
a grab bag for

Mrs.

and there
children.

Helmuth

M.

will

Anderson,

be

HI

2-6985, and Mrs. L. R. Suess, HI

_

2-3935,

|

are

in

charge

of

the

Smorgasbord, which is to be served __

between the hours of 5:30 p.m. and —
7:30 p.m. Ticket chairman for the
event is Mrs. Paul Willison, HI
2-0115.
Mrs.
Charles
Meinhard,
HI
2-2069, general chairman of the
Christmas sale, has announced that
Mrs.

Ear]

of the

Fritsch

food

will

table.

mer and Mrs.
be volunteer

be in charge

Mrs.

Roy

Zim-

William Drake
saleswomen
at

will
the

apron table and Mrs. Carl Barnes
will sell the miscellaneous handmade items. The grab bag will be
under the care of Mrs. C. E. Farr.
The public is cordially invited
to attend the Christmas Sale and
Members of Bethany guild will
gather for their regular monthly
meeting at 8 p.m. Friday, December 12 to hear a Christmas program prepared by Mrs. Kenneth
Kightly, program chairman.
The Sleeman-Hesler circle will
serve refreshments. Friends and
members are invited to attend.

players

of

present
tonight

Lake

Here At Beth El

opening

Forest

“Death Takes
and tomorrow

at 8:15 p.m.in Durand

all the

and it stood fast” (John 1: de Os
Ps:°33:6; 29);
Correlative passages from “Science and Health with Key to the
Scriptures” by Mary Baker Eddy,

handmade

The

MONDAY, December 8
4 p.m.
Hebrew classes.
7:30 p.m. Board of trustees.

THURSDAY,

avenue

circle members
on all during

Garrick

7

Religious

8:15 p.m. North
of Jewish studies.

at
Bethany
Brethren

ern street, next Tuesday.
opens at 1:30 p.m. when

college will
A Holiday,”

SATURDAY, December 6
9:40 a.m. Religious school.
SUNDAY,

Laurel

auditorium.

performance

was

giv-

en last night. Michael Gilroy, son
of the Edwin L. Gilroys, 294 Central avenue, plays the part of Eric
Fenton, a young Englishman. Mr.
Gilroy

is

known

to

Garrick

audi-

ences for his portrayal
of the
young scientist, Don Carleton, in
“Cuckoos on the Hearth,” earlier
this autumn.
Reservations for the play may be
made by calling Lake Forest 3100,
extension 28.
nukah
into
community.

Jewish

Full Program

homes

of

the

Planned

A
full
evening’s
program
is
planned for the event. Rabbi Philip

Lipis

will

reviewing

open
the

the

story

program
of the

by

—

~

festival.

Featured on the Institute will be
a knowledge of holiday recipes and
songs of the festival and instruction in the proper performance of
the

rituals.
There will be arts and crafts exhibits showing how exhibits may be
put up at home, and stories will be

told adaptable for children of many

North Suburban Synagogue Beth
El will play
host
to the entire
Jewish
community
of the
North
Shore next Monday, in presenting
its fourth annual Chanukah Institute.
Celebration of the festival, which
dates back at least 1,800 years, is
being sponsored by various groups

age levels. The “Chanukah in Our
Home” pamphlet popular last year
will also be available.
A committee of judges will visit
Jewish
homes
in the community
the afternoon of December 14 to
judge
the
Chanukah
atmosphere
and to present awards.

Notification must be made tothe
synagogue office by those who want

of the synagogue,
including the the committee to visit their homes
Sisterhood, Men’s club, Young MarRefreshments in Chanukah styl
ried group and the five Bible study will be eee at the

in an at

a

Michael Gilroy to
Appear In LF Play

Lincoln and Vernon Avenues
Glencoe. Ilinois
Dr. Edgar Siskin, Rabbi
Benjamin Landsman, Cantor
FRIDAY,
December
5

ice.

church,

be
held
United

sale and
Bethany

Smorgasbord.

Fridays and Week Days —
at 7 and 8 a.m. Holy Days

7. ;and rare book exhibit.

be GOD THE ONLY CAUSE AND
CREATOR.
The Golden Text is from Psalms
(86:9, 10) “All nations whom thou
hast made shall come and worship
before thee, O Lord; and shall glorify thy name. For thou are great,
and doest wondrous things: thou
art

8

school.

Testimonial

mis-

baked

NORTH SHORE
CONGREGATION
ISRAEL

11 a.m. Church service.
WEDNESDAY, December 10
real

p.m.
with

and

—Masses at 6. 7. 8 and 9.
SUNDAY, December 7
Masses at &amp;°30. 7:30, 8:30, 9:30,
10:30 and 11:30 a.m.
MONDAY,
December 8—Feast of
the Immaculate Conception.
Masses will be celebrated at 6,

7

Sunday

Bazaar,

HI 2-0427
MASSES

SCTENTIST
493 Hazel Avenue
December

A. P.

146 North Ave., Highwood
Rev. James D. Gleeson, Pastor
Rev. Arthur E. Douaire, Ass’t.

worship.

OF

Rev.

food

ST. JAMES

school.

CHURCH

service

Johnson bringing the message.
7 p.m.
Youth
fellowship
devo-

lison

fellowship.

Morning

worship

worship

goods sale.
5 to
7:30
Bethany guild

THURSDAY, December 4
8 p.m. Choir rehearsal.

9:30

the

Morning

Green Bay Road and
Homewood Avenue

FRIDAY, December 5
4 p.m. Junior Youth
SUNDAY, December 7

to

hour.
11 a.m.

the

guild
will
Evangelical

of

FRIDAY, December 5
1 p.m. Guild board will meet in)
the Dubs room of the church with
Mrs. Homer Sleeman as hostess.

SUNDAY,
9:30 a.m.
by Dr. E.
for all age

smorgasbord To Be.
Given By Guild
The annual Christmas
smorgasbord
dinner
of

CHURCH

(Evangelical United Brethren)
1704 McGovern Street
Rev. A. P. Johnson, Minister
The Rev. Dale Zimdars,
Assistant Minister

JOHN’S
EVANGELICAL
REFORMED CHURCH
Rev. Harold Harris, Pastor

The

and

SECOND
BAPTIST CHURCH
OF HIGHLAND
PARK
The Rev. William Giles Glover
Highwood
Community
Center
428 North Green Bay Road
Highwood
Tel. HI 2-8145

Scouts.

FRIDAY, December 12
7:30 a.m. Holy communion.
4:30 p.m. Girls’ choir practice.
ST.

senses

tional service and social hour.
TUESDAY, December 9

cale.
THURSDAY,
December 11
8 p.m.
Parish choir practice.

The

class.

Boy

9

St. Martha’s

8 p.m.

HI 2-2101
7:30 p.m. Boy Scout Troop No. |
| Rev. Robert Clingman, Minister
ere.
p.m. Tuesday Evening group SUNDAY, December 7
airttase party and election of of9:30 a.m.
Sunday school.
ficers at home of Edith Ringdahl,
11 a.m. Sunday worship.
AL Hazel avenue—Ethel Larson,
7:45 p.m.
Sunday worship.
TUESDAY, December 9
iDNESDAY, December 10
8:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. Missionary

Harris

SUNDAY, December 7
7:30 a.m. Holy communion.
9:15 a.m. Family
service
and
church school.
11 am.
Holy communion and
sermon.
7:30 p.m. Canterbury club.
MONDAY, December 8
7:30 p.m.
Sea Scouts, ship 43.

PARK

BAPTIST
CHURCH
486 Central Court

CHURCH

of ae ome

to the facts of Science; we shall ,
see this true likeness and reflection everywhere” (pp. 209, 516).

7

425 Laurel Avenue
Very Rev. Charles U.
Rector
HI 2-6653

SUNDAY,

0:10 a.m. to 10:45 a.m. Quartet
earsal in the manse.
7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Tuxis society

Aveieas

9:30 a.m.
Sunday school.
9:30 a.m. and
11:30 a.m.
Worship services.
The Rev. Mr. Lambert will preach at both services
on “The Voice of an Angel.”

Gan.

WESLEY
Highwood

Greenleaf

- Glencoe
Rev. Russel] W. Lambert, Minister
Edwin Kemp, Director of Music
Glencoe 1227

The

12

ing.

HIGHLAND PARK
.
PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH

Church

to

school.

7

:30 a.m. Sunday school and biclass.
0:45 a.m. Worship services with
mmunion.
NDAY, December 8
30 p.m. Walther league meets.
ESDAY, December 9
:30 p.m. The choir meets.
TEDNESDAY, December 10
7:30 p.m.
The Sunday school
f meets.
p.m. Confirmation class meets.
RSDAY, December 11

2 p.m.

9 a.m.

FRIDAY,

Hebrew

and

bring |

_
|

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Enriched Flour | | QUAKER OATS

ell
bag

For all your frying and
94

No. 505—SWEDISH GIRL,

MANOR HOUSE. . 2:1
Drip or Regular

5¢

Savina

G

o each

ind Coffee

Pound.

Lb.

~be Price

MAXWELL HOUSE

Maxwell

House

INSTANT COFFEE
HEINZ
Chicken Soups

Chicken Noodle, Cream
Chicken or Chicken Rice

Ne, 506—BRIDESMAID,

No. 506—PARISIAN GIRL,

65

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Lb. 90c

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Jar

HEINZ
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No. 509—SCOTCH

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No. 511—-Colontel Girt,

VEAL SHOULDER
U. $. Government

Graded

and

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"Commercial"

Veal
Fancy—Caiifornia

Large

Eye—Domestic—Sliced

Mickelberry's

ncy—All

CAULIFLOWER. ~ 29
FRESH DATES.

ea

Prices effective
thru Saturday,

Old

Center

or

ee

‘‘A

ies

mee

ancy

Circle

a28D5e
Advertised Produce

SLICED BACON .
SWISS CHEESE.
FRANKFURTS . .
ar's

Cluste

California—Fancy—Selected

Lb.

Removed—
Cut

Grown—Large

RED GRAPES. .

ROAST . . he
Square Cuf—Neck
For a

eee

eT

ee

eMC

FU

No. 512—GIRL FROM IRELAND.

© ©

25-Lb.

oa

The giant of the Cereals

Farm—Skinless

Slices

C

Staple

Prices
thru
10,

U. S$. Government Gradéd and Staniped ° er

Beef

STANDING RIB Roast

75

Advortised

Grocery

effective

Wed.
while

Dec
sete

Prishable
Food Prices
subject to
change with

g

the markets.

| GROUND BEEF...» 4
National's

Advertised

Regular

Meat

Pure

Prices

Effective

Through

Saturday,

December

6,

578 Central Ave., Highland
636

Het

Deerfield

Road,

Park

Deerfield

�the

right

way

a

double
victory
over
Grayslake.
This put everyone in good moods
for
the
parties
(?)
afterward.
Everyone
seemed
to turn up
Dorothy Schaffner’s house, only

at
to

find that the hostess wasn’t home.
We heard that Elin Ladany’s party

Curl

The extent of the afternoon activities seemed to be bowling and
curling
(Woody
Hansmann
and
Cathy Stair are reported to have
a “star” team.) Almost
everyone
took advantage of the vacation and
slept the
afternoons
away.
Julie
Brown holds the record for sleeping the latest
... 4 p.m. Friday
night Mary
Lou Wetzel was the
party-giver.
If you had dropped in over at
Margie
Ellman’s
early
Saturday
morning you would have found a
lot of ambitious girls working on
“Turnabout” decorations, Get your

sophomores.)

down

pardon

to

New

the

was

a floorshow,

Continuous
Starts

TODAY—for

the

JOHN

REYNOLDS

' Page

40

one

of

of
the
“Good to

like

‘“da’

boys.”

turned

Thanksgiving
see you—how

school?”

their attention
to Woody
(Continued on page 41)

ALCYON

the _ basketballnight
in
their
Trier. It’s Lynn

Pe

THEATRE

PRIVATE DINING ROOMS
FOR

PF

7 Days

ie

MAU

1:30 - 9:40

HIGHLAND

other

bitter-sweet.

of

Parisian Nights . . . to the
fighting fronts of Spain...

ETT

ayy} al Affair
s

the hippopotami-teem-

ing waters of Africa...

ee TT

he

was

a man in search of his
soul’. , . and a woman!

SAT.,

MODERN

Evanston

GREGORY

SUSAN

AVA

PECK - HAYWARD - GARDNER

CALL

US

FOR

SOC

ERNEST HEMINGWAY'S

THE SNOWS of

a arc

Ticket Service

&gt;

SAT.,

PIZZA

MISTRESS”

Technicolor

@

Spaghetti
French Fried

SHOW

DEC.
6—KIDDIES’
Abbott and Costello

Fried

“IN THE NAVY”
Also
- Two

Comedy

WED.
Rita

&amp;

Hayworth,
in

Dec.
Glenn

Coming:
“PRISONER

“SNOWS

9-10-11

OF

Many

Others

SARATOGA

Ford

IN TRINIDAD”

OF

Chicken

Veal Scallapini

Color Cartoons

THU.,

Shrimp

Chicken Cacciatore

And
TUES.,

“AFFAIR

RESERVATIONS

events,

at

TRY OUR
CARRY OUT
SERVICE!

440 Green Bay
Highwood
Call HI 2-0440

™ COME IN AND SEE FOR YOURSELF
OR

sporting

sale

PARK

and

IRON
In

FACILITIES

@ EXPERT SERVICE

SUN.

“THE

Our Gang

@ FAMED ALLGAUER CUISINE
@ DISTINCTIVE DECOR

and

North Shore Hotel Lobby, DAvis 8-8282
9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mon. thru Sat.
Closed Sundays

MON.,
Dee. 5, 6, 7; 8
He fought like the devil for a
devil of a woman!
Alan Ladd and Virginia Mayo
in

eae

eis frit
&lt;= -

@

FRI.,

tts

CT

theater
on

Dial HI 2-2400

YOuR

Te3 a Cele
br ations
Eee
Birthday
ela tTT4

B BBBelie,

“A TREE GROWS IN BROOKLYN”
“GIGI”
““FOURPOSTER”
“STALAG 17”

ALSO

1:30

sper

TOMB

COE

Finest Party Restaurants
OFFER YOU TH
E Finest IN

TICKETS

Seige

Mitchell.

Elliott’s and Bob Hinchsliff’s turn
to be the couple of the week, so
we'll give them a break,
Bob Mordini, Bill Davidow, Jack
Tyson,
and
John
Gould
have

ALLGAUER’S

Films

from

Feature starts at
3:35 - 5:32 - 7:35

From

you

WAUKEGAN

Daily

now

Good
luck
to
teams
tomorrow
games with New

fresh-

ZENDA”

KILIMANJARO”

| 6666 NORTH RIDGE - BR-4-6666
LINCOLN at TOUHY - JU-8-8600

ILIMPN/ARO

Open Daily &amp; Sunday

TECHNICOLOR
NICO
menaceZO) -vrerves
cer

Lake Forest, Dlinois — Lake Forest 2106
North Shore’s Most Beautiful Theatre

YOU TELL ME (so we'll both know) Dept.: WHY don’t
we have the warm friendships anymore as in the past?
WHAT'S the hurry? HAS money become king! WHY
does a person have to die before people say nice things

KHPA
December

5 thru

about

December

11

&amp;
®

WEEK

®

“PAULA”

with

Loretta

Young,

“Paula,’”

an

satisfying

romantic

Kent

exciting,

Smith,

intensely

Alexander
human

Knox

and

®

thoroughly

drama.

@
@

Next Week—

“STEEL

STRAP”

with Joseph

Cotten and Teresa Wright

If You Like Italian Cooking

YOULL

. . .

LOVE

- PIZZA
SPAGHETTI
@

®
A

@

WASHINGTON

the

Just Living...

OUR

RAVIOLI
“You’re only young once;
\ but if you live it right, you'll
find that once is enough.”

Treat

Bring

@
@

Carefree kids walking to and from school.
Our local police force who work day and night and are
right there to protect you, and you and especially you.
AMERICA, where the winner and loser of the presidential campaign can sit down and fry to solve the nation’s problems.
It could only happen here.
The way JIMMY DURANTE closes those terrific TV
shows. Never a bad performance by this grand star
of stars.
Mother SUMMER folding her tent and closing shop
for the season.
The way PERRY COMO toys with “Don’t Let The Stars
Get In Your Eyes.”
Happy people coming out of church.
Living in a land where every one has a right to his
or her opinion on any subject and can express it openly
without the iron claw of silence folding over their
mouth.

*

STEAKS

Real

him?

WE LIKE... YOU LIKE?

THURSDAY,

ONE
By

do

GENESEE
—

is

Comment
weekend:

man
and
sophomore
talent in a
jazz band, plus two senior vocalists,

FRIDAY,

Today we're going to take you for
a tour behind the scenes of a television
stage and show you how some effects
are achieved.
Rain,
for example,
is made
three
ways.
The simplest is by emptying an
(
Ordinary
garden
type: watering can
just in front of a
camera
lens.
A
downpour
is
achieved by weaving
cellophanelike plastic into a
cloth, a strip of
which is attached
to
a
drum
and
revolved
in front
of a camera while
another camera shoots the scene... .
the pictures are then superimposed for
the effect.
When
real
wet
rain
is
wanted,
a sprinkler system
is turned
On above the action . . . it looks like
an
improvised
shower
backstage
but
like the real thing on the air.
Falling snow is made several ways—
a plastic sprayer, bleached cornflakes
a la movies
(although it’s a bit loud
for
TV),
confetti
or powdered
ice.
Snow on the ground after a storm can
be reproduced with powdered gypsum,
marble dust or dairy salt.
The salt,
lightly sprayed with water, has a crusty,
frozen look.
Smoke
comes
from
special
pellets
4 dropped on electric hot plates.
Fog is
machine-made, though it also can be
created by blowing steam on dry ice.
We'll go into this subject again in some
of our future columns, showing you the
secrets of TV staging.
There are other
secrets, of course, connected with television . . . and those are secrets of
engineering
. . . too complicated
for
the layman
to understand
. . . and
much
too expensive
to tamper
with.
When
your
TV
set fails to operate
properly,
leave
the
fixing
of
it to
trained specialists.
Let us do the job
Or you.
Just
call
20th
CENTURY
‘TELEVISION &amp; RADIO,
1858 First St.
+ « + Phone:
Highland
Park 2-0341.

and

expression)

Hollywood’s Choice

Judy

The Miscellaneous Column:
Ronnie Reich got a leather jacket

Trier

featuring

Walker

by

ER

you’ll

thru

They

for

to watch
the
Globe-Trotter
performance.
Almost
everyone
came
to the Moose dance at one time or
another during the evening. There

Thursday
was
officially family
day. All the eager college students
came back to visit good ol’ HP. We
were glad to see them. There were
Several college parties given last
weekend, including a surprise party
for Joy Stein, a dinner party at
Phil Hardacre’s, and other parties
iven by Paul Jones, John Eubanks,
and Tom Gutman. Joel Davis and
Roxie Harris entertained the Eastern college set.
and

out

night several Highland

went

THEATRE

Bowl

watch

“early-bird’”’

Was
a success.
The
crowd,
discouraged
by the
fact that they
weren’t going to get any free party
food,
went
on
to the
Parkside,
which was turned into a cheering
session.
Speaking
of good
food,
Marcia
Harrison
gave
a terrific
dinner
party
for the
sophomore
girls before the game. Guests of
honor were Peggy Lennox, Mary
Davidson, and Judy Mitchell.

They

to

The

given

REE

and

have

Geleerd.
were

OE

Sue

you

Saturday

with

Guy

Family

GARDENS

DOM

(WE’RE OPEN!!)
PIGATI

(Scornavocco’s)

550 Green Bay Road, Highwood

HI 2-9787

TE

in

and

sides,

(If

tion

Blitz

parties

Parkers

We started off the four-day vaca-

Bob

only a week

after-dance

those

Well, another “Turkey Day” is
over, and the girls are on their
usual after-vacation diets (for at
least a day or two!)

it’s

EES

IGH SCHOOL:
LLMARKS

dates gals, because

off and it’s going to be great. (Be-

DOM PIGATI JUKE BOXES
- Thursday, December

4, 1952

�%

he

_ November,
;
;

Wilectun

is

1952.

a

report

of ithe

Permits For
MAMORU
CSRs)
sii dc cso,
a
Garages
(Class I—Private)
.
ma iterations (8.F2) ....0c.ccccicecece
1 Alteration (other than S.F.) .
ROMMNLTIOE: DAG, iid de toss = cb Jbth La

Building

Bundstiviee)

,

18

OD

ee

he

netic,

ea $
bes
Oe

nes

for

the

Valuation
464,000.00
11,200.00
39,100.00
1,000.00
12,000.00

39
BORG). Bakiains Farmte vos. s upscale
seh odes $
Be PMUUTIORE
POFPANRE Sida cha.
oh i bag doaioke
m Bek Oe Bari
oe ea
el ae hi hie
i, Wee
PE
i
ek
eas | 2
SIRO
POUMNEE LRRD
ala ek haa eas tahad cc led Vien be

$

527,300.00

$

39
Total Building Department Fees
24: Sarttary: Sewer Permits
0055 tb
kk ge eS
5 Storm
Sewer Permits
2.........ccc.ccscceceeseeet
ee WN COI.
ta
sa
Ns Fak aes
rae
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BCDC:
TOMES
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130

‘Ot

AN

Year
19561
1952

26
39

1951
1952

Jan.

815
353

1,948.59
240.00
50.00
3,325.00
30.00
20.00

$

5,613.59

$

872.87
1,796.74

"Moots Curalaat

Fees
$17,899.65
18,947.09

Respectfully submitted,
P. E. COLE
Engineer &amp; Chief Building

will

open

at

7 p.m.

acy
ge

rane

$] 35.

TAKE
(10%

@

@

@

OUT

PACKAGE

guest speaker Jose Manuel Briceno
of Barquisimeto, Venezuela, at its
regular meeting Monday noon.

Gov.

Marshall

Open

every day

423 Waukegan

to

car.

high

extend

Watch

@

@

school

its

Continuous use

gaan

2:30

dont miss

“FIVE

&amp;

SUN.

&amp;

FOR YOUR

CHILDREN AT HOME

Dec.

(In Color)
Craig, Barbara
Guy Madison

Payton,

MON.

Dec.

WED.,

“FOR
Paul

Dec.

MEN

ONLY”

Margaret
Dobson

9-10-11

Field,

9:00

TO

THRU

GLENCOE

9:30 WNBQ

*

Highland
Open

FUN FOR THE KIDS and freedom for Mom:
“Ding Dong School” is conducted by ‘“‘Miss Frances”
—Dr. Frances P. Horwich, a specialist in pre-school
kindergarten training. It gives youngsters two to five
years of age the chance to attend a professionally-planned
nursery school at home 5 mornings a week . . . while
you relax or do housework.

DING DONG RINGS THE BELL with educators and
parents. Program content is highly educational as well
as entertaining. Your youngsters can participate in
fascinating games, stories, and puzzles presented in an
easy-to-learn way by Miss Frances. Be sure to bring
your kids to

Ufa
DING DONG SCHOOL

NBC TELEVISION

Park

2-0605

Mon.-Fri.

at

6—

at

Northwestern

the two districts also
as a separate project,

Fellowship

pro-

Sat.,
Sun.

Dec. 4th

Fri., Sat., Sun., Mon.

Dec. 5-8

“SPRINGFIELD RIFLE”
GARY COOPER and
PHYLLIS THAXTER
Tues., Wed., Thurs.

Dec. 9-11

“SALLY

ANNE”

AND

ST.

ANN BLYTH and
EDMUND GWENN

4

wae
Coming—

“OPERATION

SECRET”

O.

Hull

to the

newly

position of promotional
the firm.

createc

on

of

Mr. Hull was formerly anieek
with

the

Carr

Realty

Company.

Paul Leeds Announce
Grand Prize Winner
A

diamond

Leeds

ring,

Jewelers

first

grand

pri

opening

drive.

Robert Arends, of the Arends
Sewing Machine company, HighPark,

has

announced

that

the

contest he is sponsoring will be a
new
Model
723-151
Domestic
Rotary
Sewmachine
with
period
mahogany cabinet. In addition to

the

grand

prize,

many

valuable

merchandise
certificates
will
be
awarded.
The contest is open to
everyone
in the Highland
ParkHighwood-Deerfield area.
Neuman
Winners
week.

for

the

Fell and
will be

contest

will

be

Norman Hirsch.
announced
next

Of

Television

Herman
street, won
watch. Mr.
H

&amp;

Miss Lynn Cretors, daughter
Mr.
and
Mrs.
C.. J: Cretors’.

than

Bureau

people

atten

ceived a combination key chain
parking

meter

Marion

coin

holder.

Larson Named

New

Assistant Chief Operator
Miss Marion E. Larson of 21:
St. Johns avenue has been appointed Assistant Chief Operator fo
Illinois

Bell

Telephone

in Highland

Before
of
of |

Travel

3,000

the two-day grand opening ¢c
bration, according to Mr. Le
Everyone entering the store

pany

Contest

Anspach,
171
Bl
the third prize G
Anspach operates

R Anspach

More

the

Lynn Cretors Winner
Last Day Thurs.

ton

O. Hull

DePauw
university
student.
Singer resides at 1111 Ridgew

Rob’t. Arends Sponsors
Sewing Machine Contest

Judges

1:30 to 6—40c
&amp; Holidays, 60c

Clayton

was won
by Miss He
gram
of
Rotary
International week,
840 Park
Avenue
We
through which during this year a Boyce,
Boyce
teaches
the
seve
total of 111 graduate students in Miss
at Lincoln school.
i
all parts of the world are securing
| grade
©
Second
prize,
a
Lord &gt;
advanced
education
in countries
watch, was won by Alvin Sin
other than their own.

40c to 6:30

W. Somerset Maugham’s
“ENCORE”

NBC?

study

university.
Clubs of
participate,

grand prize in the ‘‘count-the-dots”

FRIDAY

CHANNEL5

Briceno

The two sponsoring Rotary Districts—formerly
a single
district
—have
in recent years
provided
scholarships for students from Argentina,
Chile,
Brazil,
Uruguay,
England,
Peru,
Colombia,
and
Ecuador, a student. from each of
these countries spending a year in

land

** EVERY MORNING —
MONDAY

and
the

Holden,

THURS.

Henreid,
James

7-8

BUSTER”

is

Highland
Park
club
is
affiliated. He is the ninth such student
to
receive
a
Rotary-sponsored
scholarship for graduate study at
Northwestern
university, and the
eighth to come from a South American country.
Jose

in the Foundation

Color by Technicolor
Lund, Scott Brady, Joyce
Chill Wills

TUES.,

5-6

DEEP

IIl.,

current

68
clubs,
with which

graduate

IN THE
SOUTH”

“BRONCO
John

SCHOOL

Darrieux,

SAT.

James

4

FINGERS”

Mason,
Danielle
Michael Rennie

“DRUMS

inG DONG SCHOOL
NURSERY

Dec.

in

year’s
international student
guest
of
Districts
213
and
214
(northern
Illinois) of Rotary
International, which together comprise

sym-

from

THURSDAY

FRI.

engaged

R. S. Hambly, of R. S.
Hambi
&amp;
Company,
Realtors,
has |
nounced the appointment of

at Northwest-

Evanston,

would

deepest

HIGHWOOD
THEATRE

e

Highwood, III.

TV

university,

out,

No matter what you want to buy
sell you'll find the Want-Ad sec-

James

** NEW

new

2-1870

Ave.

now

study

(Continued from page 40)

tion your best market place.

OUT

Briceno,

of Highland
and have as

the

orders)

TO TAKE

Mr.
ern

Hallmarks

ORDERS

HI

of

post-graduate

or

12:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.

Phone

Meckeley

their recent loss.

ORDERS

LIQUORS
FOOD

Speak at HP Rotary

son.

the Loyal Order of the Moose and
Mr. Johnson have invited the public to attend.

|

Venezuela Student to

pathy to the Blumenthal family for

in the basket

10 or more

and

The Rotary club
Park will entertain

like

Per Order

off for

Friday

The annual Mid-winter carnival
has as its chairman Vernon John-

Woody!
The entire

lle

Chicken

on

Saturday, and the children of the
community will be especially welcomed on Sunday afternoon.

Inspector

THE HIDEOUT

|

The annual three-day Moose Carnival will be held tomorrow, Saturday and Sunday in the Moose
home, 1799 Green Bay road. Doors

Share’

SIDELIGHTS

Closes Sunday

Hansmann’s

Featuring

North

Opens Tomorrow,

1951-1952

$5,265,290.00
5,955,850.00

City

1.796.74
89.85
10.00
48.00
4.00

Fees

254,040.00
527,300.00

to Nov., Inclusive
Valuation

of

Fees
1,564.69
45.36
141.35
4.34
41.00

te. 2

Pee eee ea

$

Accumulative Data
No. Permits

Year

$

Weer isi
a
hook oe ee
Comparative Data for November 1951-1952
No. Permits
Valuation

i

month

her

col

Park.

promotion,

Miss

|

son was a supervisor in the
exchange, a position she had hel

since 1945. She joined Mlinois mn

Crofton road, was one of the winners of a city and suburban-wide

in

1942

contest conducted by Uncle Johnny
Coons on his ‘‘Noontime Comics’
television program.
Twenty-five children were winners and gathered in the studios of
WNBQ
last Friday for lunch with
Mr. Coons.
The
contest
was
open
to
all
viewers. The youngsters, with or
without
parental
help,
were
to
complete in 25 words or less the
phrase: “My mother shops at Jewel
because .. .”

High

A

in

as

an

graduate
school,

the

operator.

of
Miss

Highland

Bowling

league.

Ce

Highland
Larson

Ten
She

Pin

Pai

is acti a

Lad

lives with

mother, Mrs. Lillian Larson, at tl
St.

Johns

avenue

address.

N. E. Meyerhoff Visits HP
Friend In New York City
Nathan

Elson Meyerhoff, son

0:

Mr. and Mrs. Irving E. Mev
of
Lincoln
avenue,
spent |
Thanksgiving holiday in New Yo: rk
City. He was the guest of Joel D:
vis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Berna
Only the Want Ads offer amazing Davis, formerly of Highland P.
values and opportunities not avail- Mr. Meyerhoff is a freshman
able elsewhere. Read them now!
‘Williams college.

�F
bie

ma

een Y
ge

BAe

. Fe
7

Ty

ee
REE

Re

ee SAT
eC RRR
:

CP Ce

et ee
ey

FRED and RED|
—.
| est college Madrigal Singers De|

cember

14 at the Highwood
Center.

munity
bs

Bruce

_ Boy’s

Raney

eeety
oye

Pee
dey

4"

—_

4 HOG Ve KT

—_

se

Db ATit: OE HRT

-

ee

ee

ns
eae | Rie
TPGeSRigby“
ETIML

Te
ee
ete
PityPT
ape
eet OEE
EY STAR
LTT Yo SE RET Tee
Ge eA)
md
? he tN Re
Pape

Com-

is president

of

\

the

Rifle Club at Highland

Park

‘

president.
Frank

ee
ne
ae

IT’S THE CHILDREN’S DEPT. AT
THE FELL
COMPANY
FOR

_ High .. . Bob Evans serves as viceme

NGS

Picchietti was awarded

.

his

football letter at Illinois Normal.
George Marchi spent his Thanks|

giving

|

his

|

leave

from

the

Navy

with

family.
We

received

a _ nice

greeting

card

Jim

from

Holiday

Bailey

that

Was postmarked—Keflavik Airport,

k Iceland .. . Jim hopes to be home

by July,
s

The
annual
Highland
Park
Chamber of Commerce Christmas
Party

takes

% Legion
Four

b

place

in the

American

Hall next Wednesday.
Highland

Park

men

played

first string on the Lake Forest col-

|

lege football team this fall... The

_

and the team’s most valuable play-

_

er;

Eugene

fullback

Ferrari,

Leo

are

locals

Tagliapietra,

end

who

_ also place kicked 19 points after
_ touchdowns out of 25; Dirk Young,
- halfback, and Welton Mansfield,
end ... Lake Forest, by the way,
shared first place honors in the

Illinois Conference race.
Mentioning
that

football

Highland

will

be
Bowl

Rose

the

in

resented

reminds

Park

me
repNew

|

Years Day ... Carl Martin, former

_

ing defensive tackle.

_ Highland Park High star, is startWe

have

Swank

a very

complete

line

of

Jewelery in our Men’s De-

SPECIAL

PURCHASE!

‘ri oushs sine sore ce.| GIRLS NYLON 2 Piece SNOWSUIT — valued
partment

of

the

University

of

_ Michigan Daily . . . Phil, a freshman,
he

won
was

“We

Illinois

attending

High.
|

an

award

when

Highland

Park

Just arrived, from a famous manufacturer—navy

green and

rent or sell formal clothes

store

has

the

complete

largest

formal

and

stock

Famous

|

most
the

on

_ North Shore . . . The Winnetka
_ store is open Thursday

nights for

:

G.

- fittings and reservations.
Dr.

and

Mrs.

Kincaid

avenue

the engagement
Ann
Carolyn,
Ostrom,

dith
Miss
_

L.

son

and

graduate

have

of Dr.
is

a

her

work

and

of

GIRLS
.

Our

Highland

2-PIECE
This

Mrs.

Rock

COAT

is a fine

100%

Winky

similar

SET
wool

Washable

style

fleece

Suit

$10.95

coat and

295

1895

750

~~

is

geology

Christmas

Mere-

9:00

Island

at

Park

in

Hat

slack

2

set—

announced

senior

Monday and Friday
day Wednesdays.

Weather

1 2

|

interlining.

quality tailored throughout.

from

Beloit

store

nights

Dec.

A.M.

Store
till

9:00

Hours:
P.M.

12 to Dec. 23, inclusive.

doing

at

the

University of Illinois.
|

wool

red,

5

Postels

fiance

in

lining, virgin

Poplin

of their daughter,
to
Meredith
E.

Ostrom

Postels

college

George

shell, nylon

$25

Girls and Boys 1-Piece Nylon Snowsuit ----------------------------~

for any occasion .. . Our Winnetka

Lot

red, nylon

and

at

9

Open Monday

is open

and

and Friday Evenings and All Day Wednesday

all

tw roiico| THE FELL COMPANY
Page 42

te

Bee

Thursday, December 4, 1952
he

ke

.
PATS

Me
&lt;i

SS. wee os

Da
s

eeies Pea is CT5

ep
HAR VIE

ipa

tea

aka

WAG) er ey
Van se
ll ei MRAe

�REAL

for only
each
(For

walls;

additional

55

Words

or

ent

word
Less)

® Highwood News
® The Lake Forester
|

closet

LAKE

ESTATE

space;

screen

584

Central

PARK

For

2-0093.,

“SUNSET

brick;

sale—by

(Improved)

Ave.,

large

HI
5

screened

2-7278

or HI

2-1215

porch,

condition.

H. and
463

Four

conveni-

R. ANSPACH,

Central

Avenue

INC.

HI

with

knotty

room.

porch,

pine

2.

story

knotty

pine
6

2-1212

HIGHLAND
PARK
EXCILUSIVES
162 LAUREL
AVE.
Near the lake and in fine neighborhood.
Convenient home for children and grownups; 4 bdrms., 2 baths, pleasant library
and ser. pch. Liberal allowance for decorating.

FOREST

walls,

2

gas

If you plan to
est, a new and

build, see Sherwood Forfast growing area, Large

many

baseboard

bedrooms,

full basement,
20’s.

lots,

beautifully

improvements in and paid
priced.
JOHNSON
ROBERT
L.
1608
Berkeley
Road
Winnetka
6-3809

wooded
for.

heat.

Low’

with

al]

Reasonably

a

co
2-6200

Deerfield

308

2-2468

or

HI

2-0596

ANN
667

7 rm. Ranch
Home—Zoned
business, 10
Skokie
Hy. Concrete
yrs. old, at 3046
block. Full basement,
FA oil heat. Can
be sold without future frontage road for
$22,500. Mrs. Crenshaw.

BAIRD

MORELAND,

Vernon

Realtor

Glencoe

305

BERTLING
Open

or

350

LANE

Sunday

WOULD YOU LIKE TO
MOVE TO WINNETKA?
Come
see this outstanding
Red
Brick Colonial; 4 bdrms., 3144 baths;
large screened porch; 2 car garage;
NEW TRIER and Indian Hill
Station. AN EXCELLENT BUY.

RINGER
457

REALTY

COMPANY
HI 2-6600

Central

HI

Road

Sheridan

BRAESIDE

Road

—

HI

RANCH

2-0880

HOUSE

Modern
2 bdrm.
Deluxe
home.
Owner built 6 months ago by prominent architect. Loads
of custom
made built-ins; good storage space;
large
rooms;
easy
housekeeping;
low maintenance; near trans. OWN-

ER

MUST

SELL.

$35,000.

REALTY

COMPANY

Central

HI

Tl!
Winnetka,
BRiargate
4-9001

RAVINIA
White

REDUCED!

on

You’ll love living in this neighborhood
of friendly congenial people. You’ll also
love finding a 4 bdrm. house with sep
liv. and din. rm., sun rm., lge. kit.; ful 1
love
bsmt.,
gas
heat.
You’ll
definitely
the new price, $28,500. Call Mrs. Gra
ham, HI 2-5842 or HI 2-7278.
AND
If you can use a 2 bdrm. house you must
see this cute brown shingle with _—
iv
trim, near transp. There
is a lge.
rm., din. rm., attract. kit. and bath; full
$16,500.
Call
Mrs.
bsmt.,
2 car
gar.
Graham, HI 2-5842 or HI 2-7278.

ON

ESTATE

FOR SALE

(Improved)

(Deerfield)

FOR
GRACIOUS
LIVING
Brand new frame colonial on wooded 100x
300 lot; large sunken
living room
with
fireplace, dining room, cab. kitchen, 1%
baths,
master
bedroom
with
dressing
room, plus 2 twin size bedrooms, attached
2 car garage, full basement, oil hot water
heat. $35,000. Phone UPtown 8-3685.

Colonial

private

golf

home,

course;

tA

is
of

ik:
ipa

fronting

beautifully

wooded
and secluded. Good sized
liv. rm. and den with frpl., din.
rm., lge. kit. and powder rm. on

1st flr. On the 2nd flr. are 4 good
sized bdrms. and tile bath; excellent

closet

space.

This house has been freshly decorated and
occupancy.

is ready

for

immediate

Reduced for quick sale .... $25,000

BENJ. PIERSEN
PAUL PHELPS,
REALTY CO.
_ 584 Central A ve., HI 2-7278 or HI 2-1215 | 497 Central Ave.
, December

DEERFIELD,
ILL. Immediate possession
in
beautiful
Woodland
Park.
Owner
built, 5 year old Georgian
brick and
stone; 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 1% baths.
Carpeting
and
draperies
throughout,
awnings, 2 car attached garage. Beautifully
landscaped,
quiet
corner
lot,
sare
Price
$42,500. Call ANdover

Excellent,
beautifully
modern
brick
home
located at 856 Rosemary
terrace,
two doors North
of Bethlehem
Church.
Home is spaciously sound in construction
with six rooms
&amp; bath,
full basement
and attached garage. Shown by appointment only. Priced at $22,000.
Spacious Seven Room
Tri-Level Brick
Provincial
Home;
three
baths,
large
ground level rumpus room, two car garage, large lot. $37,500.
Room
Country Ranch
garage, brick, acre lot.
R. K. EBERSOLE
Deerfield 1049

Inc.
HI 2-4580
i

home; at$18,500.

DEERFIELD
Spacious
4 bdrm.
older home
lot, reduced $17,750.

on

large

NORTHBROOK
AREA
Frame Cape Cod on % acre, 2 bdrms.,
one
down.
$13,500.

Waukegan

up,

REALTY

Rd.

CO.

Deerfield

984

or 985

HOME
BEAUTIFUL
For gracious living don’t miss this brick
and clapboard Colonial. 3 lge. bdrms., 1%
baths, liv. rm. with frpl., sep. din. rm.,
cab. kit.; enclosed pch.; lge. fenced yard;
gas ht.; 2 car att. gar. A buy at $28,000.
Call Mrs. Busse, Deerfield 1116R.
Solid construction. This brick and frame
Ranch
home
nestles
on
a picturesque
wooded setting in excellent neighborhood.
Lge.
liv.-din.
rm.
comb.,
2
twin
size
bdrms.
and bath,
modern
kitchen,
lge.
utility rm.
A bargain
at $16,750, Call
Mrs. King, Northbrook 527.

ys,

BENJ. PIERSEN
REALTY CO,
818

Co.,

lease. Real Estate
avenue, Highland

FIVE
room
unfurnished
trally located in Lake

2-1485

ESTATE
FOR
SALE
(LAKE
FOREST)

(Improved)

ANCHOR

REAL

2-00938

1

HI

Waukegan

Deerfield

1573

or

Rd.

1572

ply

Box

to

ROOM

F-10

c/o

required.

Lake

TO RENT

2-0087

(Unfurnished)

Lake

Forest

ROOM

unfurnished

decorated;
Lake

Forest

Forest,
newly

Telephone

410.

APARTMENTS TO RENT (Unfurnis
(Miscellaneous)

hed)

THREE room apartments for rent; heat,
water.
electricity furnished.
For
further information contact, Sonny Serv
ice Station in Half Day,
Libertyville
2-9879 or Libertyville 2-4141.

TO

THREE

room

oa
-

RENT

(Furnish

Park)

apartment,

furnished.

ga-

rage; utilities furnished. Two girls or
working
‘couple
preferred.
Tel.
HI

2-2412.

A FURNISHED
kitchen
nished.

IN
FOREST COUNTRYSIDE

ay

Lake

apartment,

(Highland

HOME FOR CHRISTMAS

apart-

3555.

children welcome.

APARTMENTS

LAKE FOREST: Two 5 room houses on
large lot. Gne house vacant, 1 rented.
Close to town. Will consider contract;
terms.
Telephone
Lake
Forest
1163.

ae

kitchenette

ment and bath. Will furnish if desired.—

3

LAKE BLUFF: 6 room Cape Cod. 8 bedrooms,
1%
baths,
living
room,
dining
room, kitchen and lavatory on first floor.
On
60+«222
ft.
wooded
lot.
Telephone
Lake
Bluff 2622.

—

Re-

Fores

FOREST)

unfurnished

Telephone

HOMES
AND
HOMESITES
for sale in
vicinity of King Muir Road,
north side
of Deerpath.
2 ranch
type homes
near
completion. Both are 6 room houses with
8 bedrooms,
2 baths,
modern
kitchens,
gas heat, 2 car garage.

LAKE

apartment cenForest. Modern

References

APARTMENT
for rent in
near town. HI 2-1643.

ESTATE
Res.,

$100.

(LAKE

payment.

HI

kitchen.

APARTMENTS

PAY
LIKE RENT
Fine 7 rm. brick home in Lake Forest,
$23,000.
Wonderful
terms,
very
low
down

Service, 649 Cent
Park 2-3480.
}

FOR rent, 3 room apartment. Apply thru
Highland Park Chamber of Commerce.

Realtor

ST. JOHNS
or eve.
HI

Park)

BEAUTIFUL
one-bedroom
apartment
new building. Large living room; hea’

warm

double front room

privileges;
$60 a month.

everything
HI 2-0199.

fur

TWO
room
kitchenette
apartment, pri- |
vote
bath;
hot
water,
heat,
elect
Over one acre of woods and lawn form
light.
Private
entrance.
2721 St. Joh
a perfect setting for this new
6 room
2nd floor, Highland Park.
brick rambling
ranch. Every thermopane |
window frames a peaceful picture. There FURNISHED
modern kitchenette apart.
are 3 good size bedrooms and 2 beautiful
ment in Highwood. Telephone Lake
baths with formica counter wash basins.
Forest 832.
Lay
Spacious living room opening out to unusual all-purpose family room with raised
HOUSES
TO RENT (Unfurnished)_
fireplace
in
all
stone
wall.
Perfectly
(Highland Park)
;
planned kitchen with large dining earea.
Warm
cork
floors.
Radiant
gas _ heat.
Extra large 2 car attached garage. Low FOR rent: 2 bedroom home, brand news)
reasonable. Apply thru Highland re
taxes, low maintenance costs. See it toChamber of Commerce.
ha
day—make a fair offer—it may be yours
,
statin
Ganvin
for Christmas.
FIVE room house; kitchen, dining roo
living room with fireplace, 2 bedroo
playroom
in basement
with
firepla
oil heat. HI 2-4035 after 7:30 p.m.
oe
260 EAST DEERPATH

HART,

SHAW

LAKE
Cape
lot.
ing
bath
and
gas

&amp; COMPANY

FOREST

616

BEDROOM

Cod residence on nicely landscaped
Lannon stone and brick exterior. Livroom, dining room, kitchen, den and
on first floor; 3 unfinished rooms
bath on second floor. Full basement,
heat.
Price,
$23,000.

JOHN

.GRIFFITH,

LAKE

FOREST

485

REAL

ESTATE

WANTED

LAKE

BLUFF
(To

in

Hichland

(Unfurnished)

(Deerfield)

for

rent;

3 bedroom

a month.

ranch

Call Deerfield

styl

207-W-

sss

816

Improve)

MORTGAGES

APARTMENTS TO
(LAKE

PAUL

Park Shop, central
rent—Highland
FOR
east side location; concrete floor, 16x
43. R. W. Hawkins, HI 2-0540.
floor office space for rent in
GROUND
Deerfield. Call Wed. or Fri. only. Deer-

497

Central

~~ HOUSES

PHELPS,

INC.

Ave.

HI

2-4580

TO RENT (Furnished)
(Highland

Park)

‘

FOR rent, 4 room house; all modern
fu!
nished. Call HI 2-5083 after 5 p.m. —
ee
=
ee
HOUSES
TO RENT
(Furnished)
(Deerfield)
Pi:

FOUR
room partly furnished home
&amp;
garage, $100; immediate possession
to
May or longer; or for sale on contract.
Deerfield 284R.
§

es

wa

HOUSES

171.

'N ES: space for rent with flat above.
small restaurant,
for tearoom,
Ideal
beauty or barber shop, dress shop. For
information call HI 2-0582.
USED car lot and business office ideally
HI
rent.
for
Highwood
in
located

RENT (Unfurnis hed)
FOREST)

NEW Ranch house on 2 acres, comple
ly post and rail fenced; stalls for |
horses.
Extra
lIge. liv. rm-din,
room
comb., lge. kit. completely equipped, | 7.
bdrms., den and 2%
baths. $800
pe
month.

LOANS

funds available at low rates on
Ample
well located residential properties. Long
privileges.
terms—prepayment
SAVINGS
FEDERAL
FIRST
ASSOCIATION
LOAN
AND
Waukegan
216 Madison Street
38-0084
MA

field

home

~ HOUSES TO RENT
$150

LOT wanted in choice residential section
Ranch
8 room
building
for
suitable
home. Write Box B-15 c/o H.P. News.

FIRST MORTGAGE

brick

Park, near schools and transportation
oil
heat.
References
required.
$125.
Write Box E-50 c/o Lake Forester.
_

HOUSE

INC.

STORES &amp; STUDIOS —
~OFFICES,
TO RENT

Frame
Ranch
on
%
acre;
2
bdrms.,
breezeway, attached garage. $13,250.
701

ACRE

723
2-1484

HI

2-6600

THREE
bedroom Cape Cod home; storm
windows, oil heat, 60 foot lot. 3. blocks
from West Ridge School. $15,000. Real
Estate
Service,
649
Central
Avenue,
Highland Park 2-3480.

REAL

(Highland

GAIN

and LLOYD,

REALTORS
1899

LOSS—YOUR

R. S. HAMBLY &amp;

2-0880

$1,750 down; 2 bedrooms, tile bath. Lot,
118x125;
spacious
living
room-dining
room
comb., modern
kitchen.
ONLY
$17,500
Call
Mrs.
Redlich

EARHART

APARTMENTS TO RENT (Unfurnished) —

(Improved)

Beautiful,
like new, excellently built, 3
bdrm. residence. Gorgeous liv. rm., frpl.,
2 baths; abundant
din. rm., recr. rm.,
stainless
stee]
trimmed
lighted closets,
cab. kit., fruit pantry, mod. utility rm.;
G.E. oil heating unit air conditioned, 1%.
gar., comb. S&amp;S professional] landscaping.
Exclusive neighborhood, 5 minutes to everything. Low 30’s.

NEW
RANCH HOUSE

ARR

&amp; WARNER

es

CORNER

REAL

Five
tached

2-4

| near

PARK

576 Lincoln
Ave.
Winnetka
6-2700

Sheridan

FOR SALE
(Deerfield)

WIDOW’S

EARHART and LLOYD,
REALTORS

1899

ESTATE

DEERFIELD

1089 RIDGEWOOD
DRIVE
| welt
built
stucco
on
approx.
1 acre,
wooded. Liv. rm., din. rm., pine panelled
Ige.
scr.
pch.
on
1st.
4
bdrms.,
farm kit.,
1 ceramic tile bath on 2nd. 2 bdrms., 1
, bath on 3rd. Gas ht., 2 car detached gar.,
ful! bsmt.
$28,500.

115

’

HIGHLAND

REAL

(Improved)

Lot
77x50
ft. presently
improved
with
sound,
7 rm.,
full basement
house—in
excellent condition and attractively decorated. 3 feasible uses: 1 - combining home
and business use, 2 - rental property or remodel
into 2 apartments,
3
site for
business bldg. We will be happy to discuss these uses with you. The price is
$17,500.
Contact Blair Lloyd.

$38,500.

$17,000 OR BEST OFFER
buys year old Cape Cod fr. dwelling at
997 Harvard Court. Full bsmt., 5 rooms
and
bath
(2-bdrms.)
on
Ist flr. plus
stairway to large unfinished 2nd flr. Lge.
lot, beautiful neighborhood.
JOHN
F. LEONARDI,
REALTOR
HI

BUSINESS

SALE
Park)

2-0037

Transferred owner
offers this gray brick ' | White brk. Ranch on 1 acre of ground.
4 bdrms., 2 baths, 2 car att. gar., oil ht.
ranch built in 1951. Living-dining combimortgage
available.
Price,
nation with stone fireplace, large kitch- $22,.°00

en

ESTATE
FOR
(Highland

RINGER

etc.

Most

REAL

457

iently located for schools, transportation and shopping .... $52,500

grora
good

rec. room, carpeted; attached
garage.
years old. $25,500. Phone H] 2-0717.

SHERWOOD

HI

screen

excellent

ESTATE

SUBDIVISION

owner.

by
HI

family bedrooms each with bath on
'second. Additional help’s quarters.
Three car attached garage. All in

Park)

res.

ht.;

usually beautiful detail throughout.
Large living room, library, break-

HOME
AND
INCOME
8 apt. buildings in good location;
income,
$415 per month. $30.000:
terms. For info. call
HI

gas

Ideal for family with children, Un-

Ave

REAL

bsmt.;

BEAUTIFUL
WHITE COLONIAL

Rood

FOR SALE

ANCHOR

pch.;

BENJ. PIERSEN
REALTY CO.

Deerpath

(Highland

&amp; Co., Realtor

723 ST. JOHNS AVE.
2-1484 or eve. HI 2-1485

\fast room,

REAL

2-1485

2-7278.

FOREST

287

G&amp;G Co., Realtor

ST.
JOHNS
or eve. HI

att. gar. Price, $30,000. See it now
calling Mrs. McClure, HI 2-5821 or

DEERFIELD
St. Johns

Conveni-

$17,000.

BUY
NOW
and make this lovely home your Christms
gift to the
family!
It is only
10
years old and in fine location on a beautifully
wooded
lot. Liv. rm. with
frpl.,
sep. din. rm., kit. with brkfst. area, study
(or bdrm.)
and bath on Ist flr. On 2nd
2 twin size bdrms.
and bath, loads of

Deerfield 485
Highland Park 2-4500
Lake Forest 2300

HIGHLAND

costs.

Special,

Curren:

Call any of these number
and ask for a Want A
Taker

1775

728
2-1484

HI

TELEPHONE
WANT AD SERVICE

Waukegan

heating

|R. S. HAMBLY

up te

Tuesday 4:30 p.m.

615

(Improved)

PRIVATE
EASEMENT
TO LAKE
White brick Colonial home on beautifully
landscaped lot near Braeside school and
transp. Lge. liv. rm., sep. din. rm., den
and pwd. rm.; screen pch.; 8 twin size
bdrms., 2 tile baths with showers on 2nd.
Bsmt. with forced hot air oil ht., 2 car
att. gar. Liberal mortgage
commitment.
Drastically
reduced
to
$39,500.

® Highland Park New-

for Publication in the
Week’s Issue

taxes,

everything.

HI

® Deerfield Review

Ads will be accepted

low

to

R. S. HAMBLY

This cost will cover the
insertion in all 4 papers

Want

SALE
Park)

; Frame Ranch, excellent construction; liv.
rm.-dinette comb., 2 lge. bdrms., tile bath.
mod.
kit.,
ventilating
fan,
utility
rm.
F.A.
oil ht., automatic
HW,
plastered

20 words
5¢

ESTATE
FOR
(Highland

Bl

FOR

rent:

ete

TO RENT
(Furnished)
(LAKE FOREST)

Winter

months

or longer,

es

|
“a
sd

fu

nished duplex; 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, li
ing room, dining room, kitchen, Cle
to
stores
and
transportation.
W
Box F-25 c/o Lake Forester.

2-3549.

HOUSES

APARTMENTS

TO RENT (Unfurnished)

(Highland
3

OR
4 ROOM
2-8460.

Park)

apartment

to

rent.

HI

UNFURNISHED 2 room apartment,
kitchen and bedroom; private showerbath and entrance. Employed persons.
25 Clay St., Highwood; HI 2-1999.
FOR rent, garage and 4 room
no children. Available now.
488 Elm Place, H.P.

apartment;
HI 2-2849;

TO
RENT
(Furnished)
(Miscellaneous)

LOVELY
furnished
1 year old 5 roo
house with wood burning fireplace. 1
garage, automatic
oi] heat. From
December 1 or 15 to June 15. Telephone
GLenview
4-1208.
ie

HOUSES &amp; APARTMENTS WANTED
(Furnished

or Unfurnished)

s

FAMILY of 4 need 2 bedroom house a
apartment.

Call

HI

2-4880.

¥

�|

HOUSES

&amp;

APARTMENTS

(Furnished

‘HELP WANTED-4FEMALE® ~~...

WANTED.

or Unfurnished)

UNFURNISHED
2 bedroom apt. wanted
by financially responsible young Highland Park couple with one 3%
yr. old
daughter; garage apartment preferred.
If you have one available or coming up
within a few months,. please call us;
excellent references. HI 2-4105.
TRANSFERRED
from
Peoria,
Illinois
Bell Telephone executive needs 8 bedroom home.
Excellent references. OFficial 3-9300 Ext. 8275 or HI 2-5808
nights.
YOUNG
working couple desire
3 or 4
room unfurnished house or apartment;
references.
Call
HI
2-6866
or
HI
2-0728.
LONG
resident
of Highland
Park
and
Highwood wants 5 or 6 room house or
apartment. Have a family... HI 2-6461.
WANTED
to rent, 3 bedroom
home or
apartment,
unfurnished.
Apply
thru
Highland Park Chamber of Commerce.

ROOMS

FOR

EARN CHRISTMAS MONEY
NOW

4:45

to

11:15

p.m.

CHERRY-CHANNER
1488

Skokie

CORP.

Blvd.

HI

WANTED—FEMALE

FEMALE

Women
for light assembly work.
FREE
TRANSPORTATION
BLUE CROSS
CHRISTMAS BONUS
MUSIC WHILE
YOU WORK
PLEASANT
WORKING
CONDITIONS
in
modern,
centrally
located
factory.
Days
8 a.m.
to
4:80 p.m.;
evenings,

2-65438

The

following

HELP

GET

HELP

positions

are

available

ing,

typing,

bookkeeping

fice

duties

ical

positions

please

payroll

or

contact

that

are

us

for the

open

purchasing,

in

* TOP

produgtion

WAGES

NORTH

PRODUCTS,

Inc.

KLEINSCHMIDT

BANK
WITH

used.

HI

near

transportation.

Gentleman

pre-

ferred. Call HI 2-1014.
TWO bedrooms for rent; ideal for couple.
Kitchen privileges if desired, plenty of
hot water, close to transportation;
sonable.
HI
2-5934.

AND

TO

*

Page

Tel.

44.

6-2160.

CO.

WE’LL TRAIN YOU, AND
YOU’LL BE
PAID
WHILE
YOU
LEARN
TO PLAY
AN EVER IMPORTANT
PART IN THE
LIFE OF YOUR COMMUNITY.

SEE

CHIEF

OPERATOR

HIGHLAND
PARK:
LAKE FOREST: 255

AT

1866
N,
2ND
E. DEERPATH

Woman
wanted
to
train
for
fountain
manager. No experience necessary.
F. W. WOOLWORTH
CO.
600 CENTRAL
AVE.
SALESLADY wanted; pleasant store conditions,
some
evenings
work
until
Christmas. Contact the Highland Park
Chamber of Commerce.
REGISTERED
nurses, experienced practical nurses and nurses aids. Highwood
Hospital,
Highwood,
Ill.

GIRL to care for my 2 yr. old grandson
visiting here from December
19th to
December
28th; home
nights
if preferred. Other help in home; high wages,
near transportation. HI 2-4776
WANTED,
experienced
saleslady
for
pastry shop. Tel. WInnetka 6-3182.
GEOMETRY tutor wanted; state teaching
qualifications and desired fee to Box
B-25 c/o H.P. News.

TRAINED
nurse or top practical nurse
to care for gentleman invalid for approximately one week during Christmas
holidays. Call HI 2-0240 evenings,
WOMAN
hours,
anne

to serve food in diet kitchen;
6:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. See Miss
Highland
Park
Hospital,
HI

ILLINOIS BELL
TELEPHONE CO.
Friendly

TICKET SALES AGENT

our

UNITED AIR LINES

office

MONDAY

THRU

STENOGRAPHER
work. Deerfield

general

office

OFFICE
assistant
and switchboard
operator
with
typing ability;
5 days,
387%
hour week.
Inquire of business

manager,

phone

Lake

Lake

Forest

Forest

College;

3100.

for

advancement

to

Service Representative work.

tele-

Come

in

now—or

call

pointment.

Mr.

Second

HIghland

St.,

Knox,

for

WITH
GOOD
FUTURE
to operate metal fabricatand
do
assembly
work.
Deerfield 365, American

WILL
iease
1 bay
“Standard”
Service
Station to responsible party. Lessee to
purchase low inventory only. Telephone
ONtario
2-2370.

Megr.,
Park

HELP WANTED—MALE
HOUSEMAN, experienced, white;
a week.

Telephone

Lake

ap-

1866

&gt; PADISTEEL
METALLURGICAL
CORPORATION
2200 N.
NORTH

SHERIDAN
CHICAGO,

2242.

COOK:
Must
be
experienced,
capable,
like children. New
modern
house; all
mechanical conveniences. Private room,
genSome
bath; near transportation.
eral housework;
other day help. References. Telephone Lake Forest 2749.
EXPERIENCED
cleaning woman one day
per
week,
top
pay;
permanent. help
cree
References. Phone HI 2-3162

References.

WOMAN
or
and wash
5

CORRESPONDENT
TRAINEE

TO
Young men interested in working
independently
on
product
quotations, delivery and specifications,
in our sales department.
Applicants with correspondence
and/or
college training
are
preferred but such training is not essential.

be

OPERATOR

Attractive
working
environment
with firm of business consultants
located in North Shore area. Good
salary to start plus other benefits.

Call BRiargate 4-7500 from Chicago or Libertyville 2-4080
from
suburbs.

ADVERTISING

SALESMAN

FOR GROUP OF NORTH SHORE
WEEKLIES
The man we’re looking for will sell advertising to North Shore retailers. He’ll
be a North Shore resident who wants a
position
that promises
an excellent future, plenty of work, and a good starting
salary plus commissions. He’ll be a selfstarter. When he comes to us, he’ll know
something
about
advertising,
but more
important, he’ll know how to sell. He’ll
own a car.
If you’re the man we want, tell us about
yourself.
We’ll
schedule
an_
interview.
(Our employees know of this ad). Write
Box A-15 c/o H.P. News.
scale;
experience
and building manot required. Call

RETAIL
MANAGEMENT
OPPORTUNITY
FOR YOUNG
MEN
Nationally
known
retail
organization
has openings for capable, ambitious. men
between 19-27 interested in merchandising and store management.
Men
who
qualify
will
start
in
the
stockroom and will be progressively adto

floor

man,

assistant

manager,

and.to store manager.
If you are interested in a secure future, write to Highland Park News, Box
X5, giving age, education and references.

YOUNG
each
area.

HI

2-4814,

table
from

GIRL
or woman
to help serve and
do
dishes
for 4 p.m.
Christmas
dinner;
electric
dishwasher.
Call
HI
2-8698,
GENERAL
housekeeper,
plain
cooking;
no laundry. Other help. Own room and
bath.
Near
transportation.
Telephone
Lake Forest 3027.
WAITRESS,
white, experienced, to help
serve dinner Christmas eve; also white
maid who can come daily and stay to
serve

HI 2-5555 or stop
580 Central Ave.,
.

man to shovel sidewalks after
snowfall for home
in Braeside
Phone HI 2-4708,

dinner

from

December

2I1st

through
December
29th.
Please
telephone
Mrs.
Cummings,
Lake
Forest
38040 between 6 and 7 p.m.
Copey
EXPERIENCED
cleaning man or woman,
one to three days a week; must have
own transportation. West Lake Forest
area.

242

For appointments,
which
will
arranged at your convenience.

MULTILITH

on.

2-0036.

WOMAN
for cooking
and light
housework from now until Jan. Ist; hours,
11 a.m. thru dinner 5 days a week. $45,
Call
after Friday,
HI 2-4750;
references required.

AS
SALES

p.m.

HI

man to help wait on
dishes Christmas day,

COOK-HOUSEKEEPER,
white,
for considerate family; 1 child. Lovely quarters on 2nd floor; glad to have working husband. Glencoe 12.

RD.
ILL.

OFFERS
EMPLOYMENT

DRIVERS needed. Call
at A-1 Taxi office,
Highland Park.

1 day

SECOND
maid, white; experienced. Own
room;
top
pay.
Near
transportation.
Telephone Lake Forest 2398.

GENERAL maid, temporary or permanent
thru Christmas Holidays; stay or go.

2-9995.

Forest

WANTED—DOMESTIC

collect.

vanced

an

‘

STEADY drivers for the winter or year
around. Apply at Cab Stand. Highland
Park
Yellow
Cab and
Radio
Cab.

TRUCK
driver, union
in handling lumber
terials preferred but
Deerfield 2.

and

Opportunity

STENOGRAPHER,
for part time work.
The W. A. Kates Co., 430 Waukegan
Road, Deerfield; phone Deerfield
950.

|’

in

GENERAL CLERK

ILL.

and_
165.

with

. business

TELLER

FRIDAY

CICERO

CHICAGO,

work

...

UNITED AIR LINES
5959 SOUTH

to

air-conditioned

OPENINGS NOW FOR

Has opening for young woman, 21 to 35,
who is interested in public contact work,
to act as airline representative at Great
Lakes.
APPLY

people

new

EXPERIENCED
salesman
to train
for
sales and service with the 100 year old
company
that
has
over
1200
stores
coast to coast. Advancement depending
on your adaptability to our business,
Salary and commission while in training.
Health
and
accident
insurance.
Singer Sewing Machine Co., 614 Central Ave.,
Highland
Park.

HELP

CALL COLLECT
DEXTER 6-4900—EXT.

Responsible
position
as
assistant
to a
senior executive
of a nationally known
firm of business
consultants
located in
North
Shore area.
Unusually
attractive
working
environment. Convenient transportation
from
North
Shore
suburbs.
Good salary to start plus other benefits.
Cal BRiargate
4-7500
from
Chicago
or
Libertyville 2-4080
from
suburbs.

WANTED,
general office work; experience not necessary.
Glencoe National
Bank,
Phone
Glencoe
1750.
See
Mr.
Schinler.

WANTED—FEMALE

WI

FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF LAKE FOREST
SECRETARY

OFFERS JUST THAT...
FULL TIME
JOBS FOR WOMEN
UP TO 43 YEARS
OLD AS TELEPHONE
OPERATORS.

RENT

trict Office, 2nd flr., Village Hall, Win-

APPLY IN PERSON OR
PHONE LAKE FOREST 900

ILLINOIS BELL
TELEPHONE

BOARD

COOK,'5
or 6 days a week, permanent;
experience is not necessary. Reasonable
pay.
Apply
at
406
Green
Bay
Rd.,
Highwood.
WAITRESS
wanted, hours from 11 a.m.
to 7 p.m.,
6 day
week,
$47.50.
Call
Glencoe ‘1813.
GENERAL
help
needed
for circulation
department
of national
magazine.
Varied duties. Experience unnecessary.
New
office. Phone,
Florence
Rhodes,
Northbrook
1201.
SALESLADIES
Part time or full time.
F. W. WOOLWORTH
CO.
REGISTERED
nurses
needed
at H.P.
hospital.
Starting
salary,
$255,
with
afternoon bonus, $30, and night bonus,
$20. See Miss Beard, HI 2-8000.
STENOGRAPHER—Winnetka
Park
District has a very fine permanent posi_tion open for experienced stenographer
with some knowledge of bookkeeping.
Ideal working conditions, 40 hour week,
pension plan, sick leave and vacation
Privileges. Salary dependent on experience and qualifications. Apply George
B. Caskey, Supt., Winnetka Park Disnetka.

Ideal
employment — close _ to
home. Save travel time and transportation.

CLUB

HOUSEWIVES

FOR rent, 4 months only, garage close
to Deerpath Inn. Write Box F-30 c/o
Lake Forester.

HELP

CHEVY

LOOKING
FOR
A JOB
WHERE
THE
PAY
IS GOOD
EVEN
THOUGH
YOU
DON’T
HAVE
EXPERIENCE?

PRIVATE
room
and
bath
in
pleasant
_ Ravinia home, near station, good meals,
for
reliable
employed
person
in exchange
for
staying
with
children
nights. HI 2-3912.

GARAGE

POSITIONS
A FUTURE

High
school graduate. Previous
experience desirable but qualified
applicants will be trained.

rea-

FURNISHED
room and garage for rent,
kitchen privileges;
1 block
to transportation. 208 North Ave., Highwood.
HI
2-3769.
DOUBLE
or single room, kitchen privileges; one block from North Shore Station. Call HI 2-3971 after 5 p.m.
FRONT bedroom, plenty of closet space;
hot water
at all times.
Near transportation. Telephone Lake Forest 891.
FURNISHED
room for rent, near transportation. Telephone Lake Forest 2267.
LARGE
room
to rent, near transportation; private home.
Glencoe
1481.
COZY
room for refined girl who wants
nice home privileges; Reasonable. Telephone Lake Bluff 10338.
SINGLE
bedroom
for
employed
girl,
kitchen
privileges.
602
Vine
Ave.,
H.P.; HI 2-4551 weekdays, HI 2-5514
evenings and weekends.
SINGLE
room,
good
bed,
nice
living
conditions;
1%
block
from
business
district. Hot water, laundry privileges.
HI 2-5457.
ROOMS
with
or without kitchen privileges; near Fort Sheridan, Gate 8, near
North Shore Office,HI 2-5269.
NICE pleasant rooms, plenty of hot water; near transportation.
$8 a week.
HI 2-1877.

ROOM

LABS.

Part
time
work
Friday
and
Saturday
evenings.
Women
wanted
for
waitress
work; no experience necessary. Call BRiargate
4-6060 or Wheeling
293.

CHASE COUNTRY
BALLROOM

-4020.

SHORE LINE

machine.

2-0348.

PLEASANT
southeast
bedroom,
twin
beds;
private
bath.
Telephone
Lake
Forest 653.
LARGE
room, with hot and cold water;

AGENTS

EMPLOYMENT
OFFICE
HIGHWOOD

LOCAL
JOBS
Wanted, 2 men
ing
machines,
We
will train.
Evatype Corp.

to shovel
Call
HI

SCHOOL crossing guard, beginning January 5th;
4% hours per day at $1.25
per hour, 8:15 a.m. to 4 p.m. Apply
ee
Principal, Braeside School, HI

Pensions, insurance and free transportation. No
experience
is necessary.
Earn
while you learn.
APPLY
TO

* HOSPITALIZATION

RENT

—

CLERKS

and

WANTED—MALE

high
school
boy
thruout
winter.

YOUNG man as a customer contact man
to handle collections, investigations and
other general work
dealing with our
customers. Apply North Shore Gas Co.,
644 Central Ave., HI 2-2600. See T. P.
Clark or Mr. Brandt.

WORKERS

TICKET

ac-

SMALL
OFFICE,
PLEASANT
WORK* VACATION
PLAN
LARGE
room for rent, near transportaING
CONDITIONS.
SHORTHAND
AND
tion and town; private entrance. Call
TYPING
EXPERIENCE
NECESSARY.
5
after 3 p.m. HI 2-4300.
*NEW
CAFETERIA
DAY
WEEK,
PAID
HOLIDAYS
AND
NICE large room for rent, 2 blocks from
Vine Ave. station; laundry privileges. VACATIONS;
FREE
INSURANCE.
Call HI 2-4329.
* MODERN
PLANT
DOUBLE
room near transportation; hot
water at all times. HI 2-6586.
SINGLE
room; hot water at all times. 1548 W. PARK
AVE.
HI 2-5180
nice living conditions. Call HI 2-6682.
NICELY
furnished bedroom
suitable for
WAUKEGAN
AND COUNTY LINE RDS.
1 or 2. Near Vine Ave. station. TeleKITCHEN
maid to assist with
general
phone HI 2-0405.
Deerfield,
Ilinois
Deerfield
1000
kitchen work. Apply in person. HighNICE
comfortable
room, some meals to
wood
Hospital,
50
Pleasant
Ave.,
lady,
if
desired;
or well
furnished
Highwood.
Y
housekeeping rooms. Near station. Reliable person,
couple.
HI
2-1749.
NICE large sleeping room, close to transMULTILITH OPERATOR
portation and shopping. HI 2-1229.
Attractive
working
environment
BEDROOM
in private home, near Braeside station;
comforts
of home,
for with
firm
of
business
consultants
employed lady or couple. HI 2-3360.
TELLER
LARGE pleasant room, private bath, own located in North Shore area. Good
For commercial paying and reentrance;
near
village.
Suitable
for salary to start plus other benefits.
ceiving cage.
Army or Navy couple or businessman,
Call BRiargate 4-7500 from ChicaCall Lake Forest 1674 after 6 p.m.
or
Libertyville
2-4080
from
BOOKKEEPER
UNUSUAL
large living room with com- go
fortable bed, fireplace; hot water heat. suburbs.
To operate Burroughs
or NCR
Suitable for 2; adjoining kitchen may
be

SHOP

cler-

departments.

STENOGRAPHER
PERMANENT POSITION

TRAINMEN

of-

the

HELP
WANTED,
driveway
2-6967.

PERMANENT JOBS
ARE NOW
OPEN
FOR

for

general

WANTED—MALE

INTO RAILROAD
WORK!

women who are seeking employment in
this area. If you have experience in fil-

counting,

LIGHTING

i

“HELP

Telephone

Lake

Forest

1547.

SECOND
maid, white; recent references
- required. Family of three adults, Permanent; current wages. Telephone Lake
Forest 279 collect.
:
WANTED:
Cleaning woman
1 or 2 days
a week; 1 block to bus. References required. Tel. Deerfield 8538.
MAID;
LIGHT
HOUSEWORK,
COOKING. OTHER
HELP
EMPLOYED;
ALL
MODERN
EQUIPMENT.
OWN
ROOM,
CONGENIAL
SURROUNDINGS.
PHONE
GLENCOE 2342.
‘CLEANING woman, 1 day a week; must
be thorough and have references. HI
2-6213.
MOTHER’S helper to assist with care of
children
and
household
duties;
no
heavy
cleaning or laundry.
Lovely
2
room
suite, private
bath.
Must
have
references. Call HI 2-5359.
EXPERIENCED
cleaning
woman,
top
wages; local woman preferred. Modern
ranch
house
close
to transportation,
Call Deerfield 1217.
CLEANING man 8 or 4 days each week.
Phone
HI 2-1450.
GENERAL housework, small home; Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday, 10 a.m.
to 6 p.m.; salary, $21 plus train fare.
HI 2-6922.
CLEANING
woman for Tuesday, $1 per
hour and carfare; references required.
Tel. Lake Forest 994,
WOMAN
for 4 days a week to do laundry and cleaning; references and own
transportation
required.
Please
telephone Lake Forest 979,
GENERAL
maid; 2 adults and 1 child,
small home,
near transportation. Top
wages. HI 2-6737.
WOMAN
for cleaning, all day or part
time,
white.
Telephone
Lake
Forest
2242.

WAITRESS for Christmas dinner, 2 p.m.
Telephone Lake Forest 1861.
EXPERIENCED
general maid needed for
housekeeping and simple cooking; will
if necessary
wait till after Christmas
for capable neat person. Small home,
small family. Own room, bath; cleaning help. References required; current
wages. HI 2-0674.
experienced and reliable girl
WANTED,
home.
small
housework;
general
for
2-5357.
HI
dinner.
Stay through

SITUATIONS

WANTED—FEMALE

ALL types of beauty work done in
our
own
home.
Tel. HI
2-4748
or
ke
Forest
2998Y1.
MANUSCRIPT
copywriting, books, plays,
theses,
general
typing,
proofreading;
reasonable rates. HI 2-6269.
OLDER
lady wants room and board in
exchange
for baby
sitting and
light
duties. HI 2-7143.
A NURSE will take elderly person in her
own home; will give room, board and
care. HI 2-5123.
.-

Thursday, December 4, 1952

�Box Number

CLOTHING FOR SALE

Ads

2

Reply by phone as well as by letter
may be made to any Want Ad with
a box number as an address. Call
HI
2-4500 or Lake
Forest
2300.
Your
name,
address
and
phone
number will be placed at once in

the box of the advertiser.
—————————————————————————

"SITUATIONS WANTED—FEMALE _
WILL do hand sewing in my home; sew
Sn BAe
small repairs, etc. Call HI

SITUATIONS

WANTED—MALE _

WINTER!
Time to repair your sagging,
sticking doors, build an extra closet,
add shelves; repair screens; line basement or attic rooms. I do home maintenance you'll like. HI 2-1636.
FORMER
commercial
photographer
of
Chicago and Hollywood will shoot weddings and social events at low rates
evenings and weekends. Hlghland Park
2-0744 evenings.
HIGH
SCHOOL
graduate wishes full or
part time work on Mondays, Thursdays,
Saturdays; good references. HI 2-4568.
SNOW
way,

SILVER
fox cape, practically new;
sonable.
Telephone
Lake
Forest
evenings and Sunday.

LADY’S mouton fur coat, size 14; very
reasonable.
See
Walter
The
Tailor,
1814

EXPERIENCED,
AVAILABLE
FOR

QUALIFIED
FULL TIME

TWO
winter overcoats,
excellent
condition;

SIZES

or

lady

desires

ironing;

Tel.

4

6

part

very

little;

Telephone

Call

5

Tele-

Floor

work

2-8382.

4-7900.

LIONEL train: pair switches, large transformer, 2 engines, coal loader, 3 viljJages; perfect condition. Over $200 in
equipment; sacrifice at $90. Telephone
Lake Forest 1191.
MARX
electric
freight
train;
2 trans5

cars,

2

remote

switches,

~CLOTHING FOR SALE
%

excellent

-BOY’s

12;

-

length
condition.

zip-lined

coat,

size

HI

overcoat,

to

14;

2-1024,

suits, etc., size

coat, leggings,

dress

12

size 6; tux-

edo overcoat, size 38, slender;
size 12; girl’s Kenwood coat,

formals,
dresses,

size 14. HI 2-1678.
broadtail Persian coat, perfect
BLACK
condition; sacrifice $250. Must sell.
Call HI 2-3468 Thursday between 6
p.m.-8:30 p.m.

,

Thursday,
§ Ago

see

Nek

ai

December

samples

4, 1952

Central

2-3051.

SOFA, good
ley
radio;
changer;
brown fur
television,
Telephone

PURCHASE

Friday

till

condition, gray green; CrosWebster
record
playerlady’s
black
winter
coat,
collar, size 34; Hallicrafter
seven-inch
with
magnifier.
Lake Forest 2320.

FOR
sale, cheap,
davenport;
also
high
chair. In good condition. HI 2-3527.
TELEVISION
Motorola, 17 inch beautiful mahogany console, doors, late model,
like new
black
and
white
tube,
sacrifice $210 or best offer. Deerfield
1218R or 1057 Linden, Woodland Park,
Deerfield.
FRIGIDAIRE,
excellent
condition,
$70;
boy’s workbench, tools; glider; storm
windows,
screens, etc. HI 2-1673.
INTERIOR
DECORATOR
has a bargain
for someone. 2 piece lipstick red frieze
loveseat, blonde legs, can be had at
my cost, $90; also 2 platform rockers
with ottomans
covered
in chartreuse
Kid Grain Duran, the finest to be had,
$48 each. These are all new pieces and
would make excellent Christmas gifts.
If no answer
call after
6 p.m.,
HI
2-6759.

ANTIQUE rosewood bed and chest, marble
top;
milk
glass,
old
lamps,
cut
glass,
Haviland
china,
music
box,
pier mirror.
Deerfield
1870, evenings
and
Saturday.
ELECTRIC range in good condition, Telephone Lake Forest 1654,
TWO
Habitant
bar
stools,
red
leather
tops, $19.75; Calvert coffee table, $49.50; mahogany nest of tables, were $75,
now $49.50; wing chair, $27.50; bronze
floor lamp, $32.50; bachelor chest, $158.50, now $85. Many good values in short
lengths of fabrics. Large selection of
Christmas gifts. Anne Hoyer, Inc., 457
Roger
Williams
Ave., Highland Park,
HI 2-4867.
BIRCH dinette set with 4 yellow leather
upholstered chairs, black lacquered buffet and mirror, in good condition; all
for $50. HI 2-6229.
FRIGIDAIRE

refrigerator,

size; good condition,
tvville 2-4141.

apartment

$20.

Call

LIber-

9x12 GREY rug with pad; 42 inch Berger
cabinet
sink, double
well with spray,
used only 3 weeks; maple dinette table,
4 chairs. HI 2-1652.
STUDIO
COUCH,
rose
and
stripe,
for
sale; in fine condition. Tel. HI 2-5954.
HUTCH
cupboard
and
corner
cupboard
of solid maple, like new, $125; will sell
separately.

HI

2-57838.

TWIN beds, box springs and mattresses,
dressing table and bench, round table,
2 straight backed
chairs; all painted
&amp;
9

apple

RADIO
2-0341

p.m.

9

green.

FT. x
wood,

HI

2-4442,

4 FT. 3/8
$5.50
per:

Clearance

and

trade-ins,

DOUBLE

Sale

$49

and

drain

dition;

up.

EXTERIOR
fir plyunit.
Call
Deerfield

board

mahogany

sink,

excellent

dropleaf

10; good Toastmaster;
upholstered
green _

ROEBUCK

AND

Ave.

Highland

CO.
Park

table,

conseats

4 chairs, newly
leatherette.
HI

CHIPPENDALE
desk,
kneehole,
leather
top, brass handles, and lyre back chair,
leather seat, both for $75; perfect condition.

Osterman,

garage

apt.

Lake

Forest.

ALMOST
new large stove and refrigerator, oval dining
table with
6 plain
and host and hostess chairs; kneehole
desk, 2 cabinet made bookcases; 9x10
. rug, old but cheap; andirons and fire
screen, 3 pairs lined floral drapes. Excellent condition.
Odds
and
ends
of
Deerdishes,
garden
tools, ete. Call
field 159 for information.

AUTOMATIC WASHER
CLEARANCE SALE
$50 AND
UP
FLOOR
SAMPLES
AND
DEMONSTRATORS

SEARS
601

ROEBUCK

Central

Ave.

AND

CO.
Park

CHILD’S
wardrobe, $25; baby
carriage,
pair antique coach prints. 211 Linden
Park place, HI 2-3394.

USED

TV

SETS

HI

20TH
1858

CENTURY TELEVISION
RADIO
St.
HI

First

Monday:

and

Friday

till

AND
2-0341

9 P.M.

DINING table, walnut, oval Queen Anne;
6 blue upholstered foam padded chairs;
serving
table.
Telephone
Lake
Bluff

range;

best

offer

takes.

2-7267.

barrel

chair

suitable for living
excellent conreasonably priced. Phone

bedroom

or

den,

dition; very
HI 2-4082.
PHILCO
refrigerator,
8 cu. ft., 40
Ib.
freezer in top; perfect condition. Call
to see, 215 Pierce Road, Highland Park.

ONE 9

cu. ft. Servel

refrigerator, perfect

condition; 3 trunks;
1 round mahogany table and 6 chairs; 2 new wool
bats; twin brass beds with box springs.
HI 2-3175, evenings only.
ROLL-A-WAY bed with innerspring mattress,
%
size; good condition, practically new. HI 2-5735.
ANTIQUE
loveseat and matching chair,
bedroom furniture, maple lounge chair,
Hollywood
bed,
4
small
chests
of
drawers.
Telephone
Lake
Forest
629
after 6 p.m. and Sundays.
NEW
dinette table, formica wood grain
top, $25; 2 redwood chairs, $10; large
portable Coca Cola cooler, $10; Firth’s
gray wool string rug, 9x10, $75. Telephone Lake Forest 2991-Y-4.
GENERAL
ELECTRIC
stove, completely
automatic,
excellent condition;
6 pair
drapes.
Telephone
UNiversity
4-0229
evenings.
SOFA, custom made, 76 inches long, 11
months old, modern tweed upholstered,
black
ebony
legs,
half original
cost.
2-6506.

REFURNISHING new ranch home; must
dispose
of high
grade
French
living
room furniture in excellent congition.
Phone Sat.,
Deerfield
346.
G.E. electric
stove,
full
size, excellent
condition. Call Deerfield 180.
LOVELY old dining room set; sideboard,
table, 6 chairs. $75. HI 22-4145,
BEAUTIFUL Chippendale davenport, like
new, with custom made slip cover; terrific

TABLE
MODELS
14 inch G.E.
(like new)
1G: Ameri PREPPING
i essen $79.95
12%
inch Westinghouse
w/table
$59.95
12% inch RCA w/table”
$79.95
CONSOLES
12% inch Admiral
(like new)
....$89.95
16 inch Motorola (1 yr. warranty)
$129.95

2-1760.

electric.

SMALL

HI

Highland

HI

BARGAIN

G.E.

room,

TABLE
model
‘RCA
combination
radio
and phonograph; mahogany case, good
condition.
HI 2-1024.
(
10
241,
model
set, RCA
TELEVISION
inch
screen,
perfect
working
order.
;
Call Deerfield 840.
refrigerator, like new; used
GCOLDSPOT
only a few months. Call HI 2-3665 evenings after 6 p.m.
TRADE
MART
comdouble bed
and chair;
Davenport
plete with mattress and spring, vanity,
room
dining
machine,
washing
stove,
gas
set, teletype
machine,
tables,
clothing,
bric-a-brac. Trade Mart, 866 North West-

2

hand switches, cross over; 18 curved,
23 straight tracks. $25 complete. Telephone
MUndelein
6-6054,
AMERICAN
FLYER
train with
tracks
|
and accessories, in good condition. Telephone Lake Forest 2835 after 5 p.m.

‘BEAVER

condi-

2146.

BLONDE
21 inch Admiral television in
perfect
condition,
1 yr. old; original
cost,
$325;
will
sell
for $200.
Call
Deerfield 1847 or come and see at 759

CHRISTMAS TOYS _

formers,

Forest

HI

and

SEARS
601

Merry Christmas let us design and
up your child’s electric train set;
make, any size, anywhere. Contact
G.
Cashin,
Libertyville
2-4140,

WHitehall

mechanical

Lake

Used

HOUSEHOLD

SALE

2-6831.

YOUNG
girl will sit with children during days or evenings. Tel. HI 2-5822.

FOR a
set
any
J.

2-3500.

washer.

automatic

good

HI

St.

Television

ern,

HI

H.P.,

FOR

488R2.

work,

time

p.m.,

in

Rd.,

p.m.

SITTING

after

First

Monday

»WOMAN desires baby sitting day or evening. Call Deerfield 241.
WOMAN
desires to do baby sitting any
evening; experienced, 3 years as governess.

modern

tion.

1858

only, from 4 in the afternoon through
dinner;
cook, serve or whatever
you
wish done. Will give all day Saturday,
$1.25 hour each. Write Box F-20 c/o
Lake Forester.
DAY cleaning wanted, $1 an hour. Telephone Lake Forest 2494, ask for Apt.
18.
BABY

GOODS FOR SALE

SPECIAL

WOMAN of refinement, education, desires
position as companion-driver; excellent
references. Write Box F-35 c/o Lake
Foreste.
COUPLE
wants 2 or 8 room apartment,
car space; or garage apartment.
Pay
rent or exchange work for same. Write
Box F-15 c/o Lake Forester.

experienced,

CLOTHES

GOODS

ANTIQUE
cherry
dropleaf
table; seats
8, perfect condition.
Also some
pine
pieces
and
odd chairs.
Telephone
HI

2-2744.

Sheridan

BENDIX

p.m. ~

COUPLE:

HI

1891

WHY not call me for the best in family
hand
ironing. Call HI 2-4860.
WAITRESS,
experienced,
available
for
private
parties, by day
or by
hour.
Please telephone Lake Forest 2308 after

12-16

TV
Turntop Tables
17 inch
and
21 inch
831/38
Record
Player
20TH CENTURY TELEVISION

day

after

43,
HI

ORIENTAL
rugs, excellent quality, sizes
ranging 3 ft. x 5 ft. to 10 ft. x 22 ft.,
at bargain prices. John
B. Nash
Co.,

references.

2-3500

40 and
suits.

VISIT
YOUR
OWN
HIGHLAND
PARK
Trading Post. We sell furniture, brica-brac
&amp;
clothing.
1813
St.
Johns.

WANTED—DOMESTIC

TRinity

sizes
also

Attractive
prices
for
practically
new
cocktail and wool dresses. Private party.
HI 2-6714.

work;
woman
desires
day
hour. Call HI 2-5829.

cleaning

2-1712.

2-3026.

HOUSEHOLD

LES KEEPPER, JR.
926 N. WESTERN
LAKE FOREST 447

phone

Park

MAN’S overcoats, navy blue, size 86, and
brown herringbone, size 40; both excellent quality and condition. HI 2-2525.

O K ENTERPRISES

EXPERIENCED

HIghland

ONE single breasted, dark blue suit, size
44,
from
Field’s,
$25;
one
double
breasted, brown
tweed, size 44, from
Capper’s,
$20;
one
double
breasted,
blue gabardine
Botany,
size 44, $25;
one grey tweed top coat, size 44, from
Capper’s, $25; one tan imported tweed,
raglan sleeve topper, $25; 2 sport jackets.
$15
each; one
pair new
Justin
authentic
Texas
cowboy
boots,
cost
$40, sell for $15, size 10%. Telephone
Lake Forest 2991-Y-4 Saturday.

MEN
WORK

JOB TOO SMALL!
TREE SURGERY
TRUCKING
WINDOW
WASHING
HEAVY
CLEANING
AND
OTHER INSIDE WORK
SNOW PLOWING
SNOW SHOVELING

CAPABLE
$1.25
an

St.,

LUXURIOUS
% length dark mink coat,
size 14-16; original price $3,000, will
sacrifice for $400. Call HI 2-0995.

NO

SITUATIONS

2nd

BLACK
Persian
lamb
coat,
%
length,
highly styled, size 14-16, $100; excellent condition. HI 2-7065.

removal service: will clean drivesidewalks, parking lots, etc. HI

ENJOY THE HOLIDAYS!
WHAT DO YOU WANT DONE?

rea629

LIKE
new fur coat, $75; worn
only 6
times;
grey
krimmer,
size
14.
Also
blue fox jacket, good condition, $25.
Telephone Lake Forest 141.

2-1550.

4 RELIABLE high school boys interested
in doing odd jobs including snow shoveling, etc. Call after 2 p.m. HI 2-5295,

HOUSEHOLD

DRESSES,
one 16 and one 18; both
originals, worn twice; very: reasonable,
HI 2-4790.

buy,

$125.

HI

2-3516.

SEARS
Kenmore
deluxe upright
vacnum
cleaner,
current
model,
complete
with -attachments; excellent condition,
$25. HI 2-4568.
MOVING. Must sell 9 cubic ft. refrigerator, like new. Call HI 2-2803 or HI
2-3782.

DINING ROOM table, 6 chairs; davenport
and
lounge chair; double bed, innerspring mattress, and dresser to match.
Call at 897 Central Ave., H.P., Thursday
afternoon or Friday.

NORGE

refrigerator,

8 cu.

ft.; has

well cared for and runs.
wicker sun porch set. HI

SOFA

with

bolsters,

a double or single
dition.
HI 2-4698.

green;
bed;

been

Also 38 piece
2-2210.

$85.

makes: into
Good

con-

GOODS

MISCELLANEOUS

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

WALNUT
dining
room
table and
six
padded chairs; white playroom rug, 9x
12; child’s beginner bicycle, ideal for
Christmas,
1 yr. old. HI 2-2412,

MEN’S suits size 40 medium, very good
condition; also odd trousers, size 3l82. Odds and ends of furniture. Phone
HI 2-3690.

CHOOSE
an
antique
for
Christmas;
authentic and reasonably priced. Staffordshire tea leaf and luster vasaline,
hobnail.
Wall
shelves,
lamps,
copper
and brass pieces. Victorian chair, washet
pie crust table and doe box. HI

ERNEST
SNAZELLE
of
Lake Bluff,
magazine
and
calendar
photographer,
wishes
to advise all his friends, an
customers, who desire Christmas photographs of children, made at home, to
call early.
LAKE
BLUFF
3237.
No
deposit
or camera
charge.
Very
unusual children and babies also wanted
as models.

-6413.

BENDIX
automatic
washer,
1 yr.
$100. Beautiful Queen Anne desk,
HI
2-3074.

old,
$25.

ART
METAL,
fairly: new,
steel office
desk;
drawers
one _ side,
typewriter
space
and
stand
on
other
side.
HI
2-2468,
ELECTRIC
stove,
4
8 storage drawers;
$35. HI 2-5783.

burners,
excellent

MISCELLANEOUS
BABY BUGGY,
dition. Phone

FOR

oven and
condition,

SALE

stroller, in excellent
HI 2-5945.

con-

CASHMERE SWEATER SALE
IMPORTED, HANDCRAFTED,
_ FULL FASHIONED SWEATERS
S.8. PULLOVER NOW $13.95
L.S. CARDIGANS NOW $16.95
ALSO MANY FANCY SWEATERS
MINNA HART
580 LINCOLN
AVE.
WINNETKA
6-37388

HOLIDAY
30

gal. automatic

gas

heater

Gun

oi] burner

.................---+- $112.50

Sink

Cabinet

54

ORR
CU

inch

and

PETERSON

........ $94.95

&amp;

CO.

ROGER
WILLIAMS
HI
2-5561

SPECIAL
HOLIDAY
SALE
Linens
to
grace
your
holiday
table.
Scarves, cloths, and doilies. Silver place
settings,
candlesticks,
candelabra,
wine
coolers,
platters,
tea
and
coffee
sets,
china,
glassware. Inexpensive
Christmas
gifts

in

OK ENTERPRISES
926 N. WESTERN
LAKE FOREST 447

550.2ccibs.scsvsscnscdeoss $10.65

Ss cb
Cdk ay, Uva copasdeovebannpiehes 6%e¢
ec
Noe 42c
sq._
ft.

ARNOLD
595

CHOICE
CHRISTMAS TREES
REASONABLE
WILL DELIVER FREE
SET UP IN HOME IF DESIRED

$74.50

cabinet.

type

BEARSKIN RUG
Cream
color, measures
7 by
8 feet.
Perfect condition, never been used. Tel.
Lake Forest 1497.
COME to 1266 Elmwood Ave., Deerfield.
At give away prices, all perfect. Boy’s
26 and 28 inch bicycles, both $10; football pants, shirt, helmet; blackboard;
2
sleeping
bags,
youngster’s
Palm
Beach
white
suit,
blue
tweed
short
pants, man’s overcoat, Alligator raincoat,
Lyon
&amp; Healy
Victrola,
Hollywood
bed-mattress,
skates,
etc. Cal}
Deerfield 990.

SALE
water

Mediotiie.

PORN
PTE

MAPLE
dinette set with china cabinet,
10 storm windows, 28x54%, reed stroller; size 2 girl’s coat set. HI 2-6135.

brass,

wrought

iron,

pewter,

bric-a-brac,
clocks,
furniture,
and
fireplace equipment.
Lincoln
Antique Shop,
1 mile north of Half Day, IIll., on Route
i
k
Fie
OE
TIRES
CADILLAC
Four
8.20-15
U.S.
Double
Eagle
tires,
used 20,000 miles; guaranteed
40,000
miles by manufacturer. Complete with
tubes, $6 each. HI 2-6714.
TWO
gallon oil space heater, good condition; best offer. Call HI 2-4896.
FOR
Christmas
Gift: Lionel train complete; extra tracks, extra transformers,
all fine equipment.
Perfect
condition,
HI 2-2021.
COMPLETE LIONEL TRAIN, brand new;
6 cars, automatic, train-stopping
station and tracks. Will sacrifice, terrific
Christmas bargain!!! Call HI 2-5170.
FORD
END
LOADER
TRACTOR
1948
With
SNOW
PLOW
ATTACHMENT.
Ideal machine for landscaping, black dirt
handling or snow removal. Priced to sell.
Phone
Northbrook
4.
NEW
Ikoflex camera
with case, Tessar
lens, $100. HI 2-11238.
GIRL’S
26
in. bicycle,
doll buggy,
ice
skates, child’s desk and chair, double
bed
with
springs,
fireplace
set.
HI
2-5842.

PRICED
for
quick
sale.
Large
metal
wardrobe, chest of drawers,
dog bed,
child’s
table
and
chair,
tricycle
and
other
toys,
silver,
bric-a-brac.
1652
__ Linden Ave., HI 2-5252.
ONE
double barrel, 20 gauge, shotgun,
like new, with shells, $30. Telephone
Lake
Forest
2991-Y-4
Saturday.
SUNLAMP, wardrobe trunk, picnic table,
chaise longue, 8 ft. G.E. electric refrigerator,
lawn
roller,
work
bench;
kitchen
cabinet
table,
porcelain
top;
kitchen table; traveling bag and other
household items in Highland Park. Call
owner,
Wilmette
5714
or
at garage,
1010
Princeton,
day.

meet
noon

owner
Satur-

BALED
oat and wheat
straw,
$19 per
ton at barn; $20 delivered (1 ton or
more),
smaller
quantities,
65c
per
bale. Telephone Libertyville 2-2398.
I HAVE in my hobby shop at 1948 Elmwood
Dr., Highland
Park, many
new
things on display for Christmas. Handmade
quilts,
children’s
knitwear,
oil
and water paintings; many other items.
Stop in anytime.
NEEDLEPOINT chair, desk, maple chair,
Francis First carving set, Delta 8 inch
saw,
Delta
jigsaw,
ski
shoes.
HI
2-3206.
NEW Nesco electric roaster with cabinet,
$50; man’s
suits and overcoats,
size
40. Call HI 2-3360.
IDEAL
FOR
CHRISTMAS
Remington
typewriters with case (portable), Pica type, hardly used, $50. Phone
HI 2-1178.
SLIDE projector. Takes 35 mm. and 2x2
slides. With case and built-in screens ;
never used, still in original carton. HI

2-5488.

OIL heater 4 room capacity, cheap and
automatic furnace control for coal furnace. Deerfield 234-R.
APARTMENT
size
Kenmore
range,
2
years old, fairly good condition; reasonable. Northbrook 864 after 5 p.m.
CEMENT tubs, double size, slightly used,
$20. Call Deerfield 1101-3.
.
ROLLEICORD
camera, Zeiss 4.5 Triotar,
Compur rapid shutter, like new, complete with Everready case and HeilandSol flashgun, synchronized ; adapter for
828 color film, very reasonable. Call
Saturday or Sunday, Deerfield 377.

HAND
LOOM
.,
Suitable for making rugs, tweeds, linens, etc. Also weaving accessories. ‘Telephone Lake Forest 1102.
SHOP
AT LINDWALL’S
FOR
THE
UNUSUAL
IN ANTIQUE
GIFTS
Choice selection of bric-a-brac, silver,
china, glass,
collector’s
dolls,
carved
Meerschaum
pipes,
furniture.
For
that
personal gift, lovely antique jewelry. 808
Oak Street, % block west of Green Bay
Road,

Winnetka

6-0145.

SKATES, Men’s new hockey, size 12, $10.
Skates, Girl’s used figure, size 6, $5.
38 evenings.
Call Deerfield
NEW
9
ft.
Philco
refrigerator
with
Mix
new
freezer top, still in ‘crate;
Master;
new
Westinghouse
dehumidifier; used 9 ft. Westinghouse refrigerator. Shown
by appointment. HI 20247.

DRUM
over

DON’T
until
with
used
and
For
Cook,

set:

professional

$300

for

pieces

$150.

HI

worth

well

2-3026.

let your child wait for a piano
another Christmas! New
spinets
direct-action, almost as low as &amp;
one. Also a Mason
and Hamlin
Knabe
reconditioned
‘“‘like new.”
appt.
day
or eve.
phone
R, J.
Evanston;
UN
4-1561
or GR

5-6020.

VIOLIN, very good, to sell; reasonable.
HI 2-5768.
at_
clarinet
Leduc
French
EXCELLENT
sacrifice. Beautiful
symphonic
tone,
$95. Henry Weber, Lake Bluff 730.
KIMBALL
spinet,
like
new,
wonderful
tone: also clarinet. Tel. HI 2-1678.
PIANO for musician. Mason and Hamlin
full size upright, plain
walnut,
good
condition,
$250. Tel.
HI 2-1138,
not
Saturday a.m.

“MUSICAL

INSTRUMENTS WANTED

SMALL
upright piano
49 inches high. Call

WANTED

wanted; not
HI 2-2599.

TO

over

BUY

WANTED
antiques,
glassware,
Furniture,
china,
bric-a-brac,
silver,
cutglass
glass
and
copperware,
guns,
fishing outfits, toys,
books,
garden
tools, washing
machines,
sewing machines, golf sets, used doors,
storm
windows,
plumbing,
radiators,
sinks, bathtubs.
WE
BUY,
SELL
AND
TRADE
STOCKADE
TRADING
POST
Il.
Milwaukee
Ave.
Wheeling,
Wheeling 247
COINS and unused stamps. Loca] private
collector pays better than dealers. Silver, gold, copper coins, before
1935;
good condition or tarnished. Telephone
Lake Forest 3271, evenings.
LATHE,
used;
metal
turning
with
attachments, 9-10 inch swing, 24-36 inch
bed; must be in good condition. Call
HI 2-8442.
WANTED:
PING PONG
DEERFIELD
1267.

TABLE.

WANTED:
fireplace
screen,
fire
grate, reasonable. Call HI 2-8215.
TABLE

for electric

TO

train.

Phone

CALL
set,

Deerfield

EXCHANGE

WANTED
on
loan:
baby grand
piano.
Will take good care of it and keep it
tuned. Telephone Lake Forest 3373.
LOST

AND

FOUND

LOST, black and white collie, male; answers to Robin. Reward. HI 2-5128.
LOST: pair sequine speckled glasses’ in
maroon slip case, Nov. 14th in Highland Park business district. HI 2-8280.

Page 45.

f

�LOST AND FOUND

~

LOST: gray male cat, gone for 4 weeks,
_ Wears
collar marked “Laflin.” Tele_

phone

Lake

_ MISSING
_

Forest

2738.

since November

USED

AUTOMOBILES

USED

Berries: ee
6

Deluxe

evrolet

1950 Chevrolet 4-door.

a

pe

tM
191

OK

4-door sedan.
passenge

ee

CHEVROLET
N
DEERPATH

E.

a

vate

owner.

4 door,

Tel.

CHF VROLET

HI

62 sedan, pri-

2-3026.

Powerglide,

1950.

PARTY.

FORD

HI

1941,

2-4200.

4 door

sedan,

good

running

condition, call HI 2-8468 or inquire at
711 Central Ave., H.P.
PONTIAC
station
wagon,
1947,
very
good condi‘ion.
Extra
heavy _ tires.
—
Write Hivhiond Park News, Box B-5.
JEEP
1951
with
snow
plow
attached,
fully equivped, excellent
buy. Can be
seen ot 727 Central, H.P. HI 2-1550.

Bs

_

MERCURY

best

offer,

5615

1946

station

private

wagon,

party.

Call

a‘ter 3 p.m. Thursday.

$750

or

HI

2-

in

.

y
BUYING
A USED CAR?
_. BUY
WITH NEW CAR CONFIDENCE
.\) FROM
A NEW
CAR
DEALER
1951 DeSoto, 4
dr.
perfect
condition,

se

Chevrolet
$1,895

4dr.

Tartine

full y

Savoy

51
DeSoto
custom,
drive,
$1,795

1950

Plymouth

4 dr.

equipped,
quipp

station
4

1948

4

Mercury

dr.

dr.,

sedan,

with

Hudson,

4 dr.

coupe,

sedan,

$1,-

$895

radio

and

condition,

$95

DeSoto-Plymouth
FIRST. ST.
HI

2-0580

SAT.,

SUN.,

WE DON’T
LIFETIME

A

MON.

ONLY

GIVE YOU
GUARANTEE

1952 DeSoto, Firedome
8,
4
door, - 1
REE Uh srsbtade&lt;* ecisugsnonencitiesdccasudscccadges -$2495
1950 Ford, 2 door
1949
Ford, 4 door, clean
995
_
1948 Plymouth convertible, new top, new
paint
795
1947
Plymouth,
4 door,
special
deluxe

1946
eo

Oldsmobile,

2

194

Buick. 2 door, runs good, paint fair
Chevrolet, 2 door, runs good, fend-

uick, 44 4 door,
1939 Buick

1941
1941
1937

new
paint, body
Mercury, 2 door, ga van saan
Plymouth, 2 door, extra clean
Buick,
4 door,
cleanest
in

1941

Ford,

_

County

_ 1952
Ford,
:
mileage
Mode!

$500
34

1952 Dodge,
_ mileage
5

lo
oe
Lake

2 door

SAVE

THESE

ton

pickup,

guaranteed

ton

pickup,

guaranteed

14

A

ON

pickup,

clean

WE SWAP ANYTHING
OF VALUE
HALE MOTOR SALES
18TH AND SHERIDAN
(1 BLOCK NORTH OF ABBOTT'S)
NORTH CHICAGO, ILL.
BUICK,
’50, Super hard
est car, low
mileage

$1850.
day.

Original

Telephone

"AUTO
4
_

PARTS

owner.

Lake

top, Lake Forand _ beautiful.

Selling

Forest

Satur-

Page46

For

FAST —

call

es

DAY
Mon.

thru

HI

2-5592

Party

Rates

HI

2-3853

ELECTRICAL. REPAIRS
FLECTRICAL
Industrial

@

MAINTENANCE

Residential
Tel.

HI

@

Commercia]

2-3918

MASSAGE
DUE to illness my shop will be closed
til further notice. Lottie Marsh.
PAINTING

&amp;

Painting
Tel.
HI

un-

REDECORATING

CONGER

EXPERT

no digging, no
SEPTIC TANKS
and grease traps cleaned,
COMPLETE
SEWER
Jeep trench
digger, water
cable,
foundations,
WOODALL’S
Phone Wheeling

NIGHT
9 p.m.

to

CLOGGED SEWERS
the electric rod cut out

Have
struction;

IRON
LAKE

- RAGS
FOREST

lawn

BROS.

and
Decorating
2-3452
or
HI

Service
2-3053

the obmess.

232

BOARD YOUR DOG
AT LOWRY’S
YOUR-DOG-&amp;-MINE
Kennels
(dog editor, Better Homes
&amp; Gardens)
for best
care,
feeding,
heating.
Skokie
Highway
(U.S. 41), 5%
miles north of state line.
Phone Bristol
(Wis.)
36-F-5.
FEMALE
Collidor,
spayed
1
yr.
old,
wants
good
home;
affectionate,
pure
black
except
for chest.
Has
had
all
shots. Cal] Harry
Oppenheimer’s
Dog
Training. HI 2-1240.
SHETLAND
sheepdog
puppies
(miniature
collies),
AKC
registered;
bred
from
famous
champions.
Marvelous
pets
of dog
show quality. Telephone
Lake Forest 1797.

HARRETT

PIANU

All

work done with back hoe.
Fast—Simple—Economical]
Septic Systems
Driveways
Water
Mains
Trenching
Sewer
Systems
Basements
SNOW
PLOWING
1897
McDaniels
Ave.
HI
2-7136
Highland Park, Il.

WOO

THOSE

A. VEHLOW

GRAYSLAKE 38-2874
ESTABLISHED 1945

&amp; ACCESSORIES _
19830
Cabinets
For free
or HI

to

15.

Will

PLANTS

@

&amp;

TREE

ing

Mrs.

Daniel

drive

car.

pay

all

SURGERY |

Christian Science
services for
Mrs. Eve Billsbury Cobb, who died

662

SERVICE

he

was

he

at 1351
he had

September

Ind.,
years

moved

to Cleveland,

Survivors

include

1,

where
he
ago when

Ohio.
two

sons,

Richard F. of Cleveland, Ohio, and
Harry K. of Washington, D. C.; a
sister,
Mrs.
Rena
McGown
of
Lagro, Ind.; three grandsons,
of whom is Dwight S. Jr. of

cago,

formerly

of

one
Chi-

Highland

Park.

L. Godie

The Very Rev. Charles U. Harris

officiated

at funeral

services

Fri-

den

ton.

of

morning

Memories.

The wife of Daniel L. Cobb, 286
Park avenue, Highland Park postmaster, Mrs. Cobb was born in
Streator, Ill., 64 years ago, and
came to Highland Park after her
marriage November 4, 1920.
She had been music supervisor
of Milwaukee State Teachers’ college before her marriage.

Two brothers survive, John and
William,
both of Los Angeles,
and four sisters preceded her in
death. A son, Daniel, of the Park
avenue
concert

address,
singer.

is

a

professional

Ira

Homer

Reynolds,

Thursday

in

82,

died

Highland

Park

hospital where he had been undergoing treatment for a heart condition during the week preceding
his

death.

held

in

Funeral

Marion,

services

Ind.,

ADJUDICATION AND
NOTICE

last

were

Satur-

CLAIM

DAY

NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
to all
persons that the first Monday of February, 1953, is the claim date in the estate
of
MADGE
HELEN
SMITH,
Deceased
pending
in the Probate
Court
of Lake
County, Illinois, and that claims may be
filed against the said estate on or before
said date without issuance of summons.
All claims filed against said estate on or
before said date and not contested, will
be adjudicated on the first Tuesday after
the first Monday of the next succeeding

month

at

10

A.M.

/

Mae E. Berry, Administrator
Singer &amp; Singer, Attorneys
First National Bank Bldg.,
Highland Park, III.

ESTHER

Mr. Godie was born September 9,
1896, in Chicago where he lived
until April 8, 1937, when the Godie
family moved to 335 Lambert Tree
road.
He
began
his _ business
career at the age of 14 as an ojfice boy for the Northern Trust
company in Chicago.
At the time
of his death he was district representative for a St. Louis investment

house with offices located on LaSalle street.
Mr. Godie was a
member
of the Highland
Park
Men’s Republican club.
He is suryived by his wife, Florence R.; a daughter, Joyce Day
Godie; and a sister, Mrs. Ethel
Clark

ira H. Reynolds
last

PERKINS

Specializing in

Cold Permanent
Waves

g50
1000
1500 up
Permanent

23 Years of Experience

CLASSIQUE
BEAUTY SALON
1815 St. Johns Ave.
We

HI 2-1603

Specialize in Hair Dyes
and Permanent Waves

of

Chicago.

Auto License Application
Forms Available At NEWS
Passenger car application blanks
for Illinois 1953 auto license platés
are available in the Highland Park
NEWS
office, 1775 St. Johns ave-

nue.
Over-the-counter

sales

of

license

plates began last Monday in Chicago at the office of the Secretary
of Statle’s automobile department
at Ashland
street.

avenue

and

Van

Buren

NOTICE
Your _ police
department
wishes to call to the attention
of
all
automobile
owners
throughout
the city, the ordi-

nance

which

parking

of

public

prohibits

automobiles

street,

parkways,

or

which
in

any

the
on

any

includes
city-oper-

ated off- street parking lots, between the hours of 2 a.m. and
6 a.m. any day during the winter months, as this practice interferes with snow removal and
the street cleaning program of
the

Machineless

_

past year. The
a lumber com-

born

1870, in Marion,
resided until two

Mrs,

at home will be held at 2 p.m. this
afternoon in Kelley and Spalding
Funeral home, 1913 Sheridan road.
Burial will be in North Shore Gar-

Monday

MACHINES

MACHINE

pany,

home

day morning in Trinity Episcopal
church for Anthony L. Godie, 56,
who died in Highland Park hospital November 26 after a brief
heart
ailment.
Burial
was
in
Memorial Park cemetery, Evans-

attack

1250

Necchi
Domestic
Expert
repair
on
ANY
MAKE
Work
Guaranteed
;
Arends
Sewing
Machine Co.
Central Ave.
HI 2-5200

his

Dwight S. Reynolds Sr.,
Eastwood avenue where

Anthony

L. Cobb

BULBS

RECONDITIONED
Singer
portable,
$39.50; $5
down. Reconditioned cabinet machine, $39.50. 614 Central Ave.,
HI
2-3811.
(

made

daughter-in-law,

He was the father also of the late
Dwight S. Sr. of the Eastwood avenue address.

Waves $10. up
SE\wiNG

Reynolds

his

been living for the
retired manager of

237.

REPAIRING

HAVE
you
a wood
shingle
roof?
Cal)
Wilmette
877,
your
“Roof
Treating
Headquarters”
for
its
proper
treatment
and
care.
Free
inspection
and
consultation.

CO.

MAPLE
AVE., EVANSTON
custom made to fit your needs.
estimate call GReenleaf 5-7686
2-7238.

showSpace

DONALD
G.
WORRALL,
ARBORIST
Expert
tree work, shrub and evergreen
care.
Tree
removal,
power
saw_
work.
Low cost, efficient ser~ire, Call Wheel-

PIANO tuning and reconditioning. Work
guaranteed.
Pianos
bought
and_
sold.
Formerly
of Lyon
and Healy,
E. ZaLeg member of N.A.P.T. Lake Zurich

SEWING
CABINET

man

ROOFING

HAZARDOUS
JOBS

CHRISTO-CRAFT

Want

December

day

WINDOW CLEANING
WALL WASHING
SCREENS &amp; STORMS
SERVICED
EFFICIENT - NEAT - FULLY INSURED

MARTIN

TUNING

trip.

AFRICAN
VIOLETS.
Reliable plants for
particular people. Gillette, 169
Washington Circle, Lake Forest 516.

LAUNDRY

We
welcome
all strangers
on
8
service.
1875 ST. JOHNS AVE.
HIGHLAND
PARK,
ILL.

FOR

and
interior
painting
and
Hubert Johnson, HI 2-1779

BLACK
Cocker puppies for sale; no papers. Reasonable.
Tel. Deerfield 31-R.
FOR SALE: Champion bred Beagle puppies. AKC
registered.
8
weeks
old
Christmas Day. Males and females, $50
each. Telephove Mrs. McPherson Holt,
Lake Forest 506.
WE give personal care and loving attention to your birds, in our home, while
you are
vacationing.
H]
2-3116.

METAL

OIL — GAS
ALL TYPES CLEANED
AND REPAIRED
OIL LIFTERS &amp; CONTROLS
STOVES &amp; WATER HEATERS
TRAILER HEATERS
JEWELL SERVICE
LAKE FOREST 2480

SAM

156.

EXTERIOR
decorating

44

FURNACE SERVICE

MELVIN

PAINTING
and paper hanging. Call W.
C. Varney, HI] 2-6980 or Lake Forest

PETS

repaired, built
SERVICE
lines, electric

-

1949 ELCAR house trailer, 27 feet;
er and toilet. Must sell. See at
928, Fort Sheridan, Ill.

of a heart

- SLEIGHRIDES

Birthday

Mr.

with

©

Obituaries

-. ENTERTAINMENT
Children’s

;

B-15.

HILL—ELGIN'

HAYRIDES

_

TRAILERS

expenses. Telephone Lake Forest 2217.
WANTED,
preferably
man and _ wife, to
drive
new
Oldsmobile
to
California
about February 10th; references. Write
immediately, Highland Park News, Box

State licensed rest home. Have you the
responsibility of someone for whom
you
want
comfortable
home?
24
hour
care
with graduate nurses in attendance. For
rates
phone
ELgin
7409
or write
309
Watch
St.

Employdetails

SERVICE
and
INSTALLATION
and
Sat.
8 a.m.
Phone
HI
2-0530

2278.

Leaving

~. CONVALESCENT HOME

MASON
repair. stone work, chimney and
fireplace
building.
40 years
in same
trade.
Williaw
Otten, Tel. Northbrook

2991-Y-4,

ROYAL,
U.S., whitewall 760-15 tires
with tubes, excellent shape, $45; also
two 710-15
tubes,
$5
(heavy
duty).
Telephone Lake Forest 2991-Y-4 Sat-

_urday.

sale.

TRENCHING
All
sorts:
foundation,
water,
drain,
tiling, etc.
Free estimates, no obligation to have
our representative call.
EDWARD’S
P
&amp;
W
CONSTRTICTION
CONTRACTING
ENGINEERS
WINNETKA
6-3971

495

1942
1941

for

BUSINESS SERVICE
SEPTIC SYSTEMS. COMPLETE
SEPTIC SYSTEM INSTALLATION

SCRAP

AT HOME

FRI,

Park Sitting and

Forest

FLORIDA

A-1 CATERESS. Will take charge of your
dinners,
luncheons,
teas
and
cocktail
' parties. Excellent references. Telephone
Mrs. Miks, MAjestic 3-1608.

MARY’S

AWAY

TRAVEL

STOCKS
Investor’s Service of America invites you
to
try
our.
service
in
listed
stocks.
Dealer,
Broker,
Adviser,
Ole
Nielsen,
Provrietor, 104 North Washincton Circle,
Take
Forest,
Illinois.
Telephone
Lake
Forest
2191. IN GOD
WE
TRUST.

2-0087

LAKE FOREST SCRAP

NO MONEY DOWN
LEAVE YOUR GOLD

:

HI

Var.
5c
to
$1;
growing
section, mod.
layout, open windows, lge. var. pop. lines,
good spot to expand; Xmas toys, etc., in;
good poten. for active party
or couple.
Price about $14,500; at once or Jan. lst.
Must
sell;
heart
trouble.
Washington
5e to $1, Waukegan, III.
ment Service
HI 2-4467.

2-6668

BE GIVEN

1% TONS stoker coal. Telephone Lake

‘CATERING

OPPORTUNITY

HIGHLAND

HI

SNOW REMOVAL
GENERAL HAULING
RELIABLE - EFFICIENT
POLAR ICE COMPANY
1192 GRIFFITH ROAD
LAKE FOREST 2726 OR 2727

small woman's
real buy. Call

Res.

made

TV

H. P. MOTOR SALES, INC.

/1914

2-3853

REAL ESTATE

2-098

$1,295

1947
Plymouth
club
coupe,
heater, $850
eer
Roce? coupe, very good

1941

HI

OPPORTUNITY

ANCHOR
aT

automatic

overdrive,

convertible

and

wagon,

1949 DeSoto 4 dr. carry all sedan, $1,295
_ 1948 Chrysler convertible, like new conoh
dition, $1,195
£3 reg
tee. 4 dr. sedan, fluid drive, $1,-

ona

way

1—Old
established
tavern in Highwood
Owner must sell.
Good
restaurant.
2—Long_
established
bargain.
8—Fine dry cleaning and pressing »usiness.

Radio,

heater,
directional
lights,
good
tires,
__low mileare. H] 2-5792 or HI 2-0352.
DODGE CONVERTIBLE, 1950. MAROON
BODY,
BLACK
TOP.
w.w.
TIRES,
HEATER
AND
RADIO.
VERY
LOW
Ber
rs oe ACRLLENT CONDITION.
.
i;
H OR TERMS.
PRIVATE

_

bank

Interior Decorating Service. Custom

NATIONAL
BANK
Highland
Park

"BUSINESS

CADILLAC
1951,
gray
Coupe-de-Ville.
Full eouipment, special w.w. tires. 17,000
miles.
One
owner.
Call
Chicago
STate 2-8200, loval 593.

1951,

the

BICYCLE,
boy’s 20 inch: excellent condition. $20. Telephone Lake Bluff 1065.
BOY’S
20 inch bicycle. excellent condition, $20. Call Deerfield 8377 Saturday
or Sunday.
FOR SALE:
Boys’ 24 inch Schwirn
bieycle, good condition, $25. Call Deerfield 860-J-1.

LAKE FOREST 3200

CADILLAC

car

@inance
your
save money.
FIRST
of

=

draperies, bedspreads, etc. Furniture and
rug
cleaning;
painting
and decorating.
Excellent workmanship.
Viola Heap

BICYCLES

4-door.

Super

Buick

949

LOANS

BEST offer takes Schwinn
bicycle, vood condition;
HI 2-8727.

GUARANTEED
15)

AUTO

CAR

SPECIALS

d

WANTED
to buy
for cash,
a pre-war
Ford
or Chevrolet in good
condition,
from owner. Phone SHeldrake 38-9478.

18: small short

haired light brown dog; white feet and
chest,
brown eyes
and
nose.
Male,
Child’s pet; reward. Call Deerfield 19.

TO

BUSINESS SERVICE

AUTOS WANTED |

street

department.

Arrest

notices will be issued by the police when this ordinance is violated.
Delinquent

The

annual

Dog

check

Licenses

for

delin-

quent dog licenses is now under
way, and notices are being is-

sued to those who have failed
to procure their dog tags, which
causes them to be delinquent
since July
1, 1952. The immediate purchase of this license
at the

City

Hall

will

lessen

work of this department,

the

and at

the same time prevent owners
from paying added costs, where

a summons
will have to be
drawn up in cases where the
notice is being ignored.
;
Edward B. Patten
Chief of Police

_ Thursday, December 4, 1952
ahi

.

—

�Where

it can be done —
FLOOR

HEATING

LINOLEUM

COVERING

FLOOR

DOWNING'S
FLOOR SHOP
RUBBER
PLASTIC
ASPHALT
GULISTAN CARPETS &amp; RUGS
LINOLEUM &amp; LINOLEUM TILE

HEATING EQUIPMENT
GAS AND OIL BURNERS
SALES AND SERVICE

Phone HI 2-3804
BRAUN

BROS. OIL CO.

444 Central

Highland

install it yourself or make

Park

y

Fender

@

Painting

JEWELERS

1864

SHERIDAN

Radiator

Repair

Leading
Official

Se 808 SR S00 Sse
CARS FOR HIRE

Rent

Watc

and

RECONST.
HI 2-0077

a New

WALL

@

Koroseal

@

Asphalt

@

Rubber

@

Plastic

Watch

AND

Inspector

FLOOR

the

REPAIR

PARK,

ILL.

Crajtzmen
North

Western

GENUINE

5-9583

R.R.

HERRERO RRR

Repairs &amp; Sales
Universal

- Philco - Zenith

20th Century
TELEVISION-RADIO
HI

|
|

VENETIAN
BLINDS

PACKARD

PARK

~ PACKARD |
Sales

and

Service

Packard-North
Inc.
A safe
All

place

makes

562 Lincoln

to buy
and

Shore

963 Waukegan
Phones

a used

car.

models.

WlInnetka

6-3070

810

Waukegan

WAYNE
CLEANERS

Chrysler-Plymouth

Highwood

We

Pick-up

and

Deliver

Satisfaction

Service

Other Sets to
$1500.00

Use

DEERFIELD
Owner—W.

&amp;

HI

BEN

line

for

ment
dows

616

How

Effective Are

the “WHERE
Well...

We

YOU’RE

reading

our

own

diamond

- Case-

SERVICE

Authorized
and

Service

Auto Body
Painting &amp; Repairing
the

KLEEBURG BUICK
INC.

877

@
®

Venetian
Columbia

@

Bamboo

Blinds—Draperies

®

Window

Shades

668

Highland

St.

BE DONE”
this page

Blinds
Lattishades

CENTRAL AVE.
HI 2-2350
Park

On

PAGE?
right now!

So do most of the people who subscribe to the Highland Park News, DeerThe cost of an ad on this page is small
field Review and Highwood News.
. . . $3.70 per week for a two-inch square on a yearly basis. Why not phone
HI 2-4500 teday and let us prepare a layout for you?

setting.

BUICK:

Chicago

PAINTS — SUPPLIES

Advertisements

IT CAN

do

BUICK SALES SERVICE

Darnell

Hauled

OPTICIANS

Have your diamonds set in moderm
settings. Payments arranged.

BUICK

LANDI BROS,

ESTIMATES
Center

~-

TA. Highland Park 2-0630
Across from bank for 35 Years

EXPRESS

Fill

in—

NEMEROFF

JEWELERS

Holes

and Delivery on
same day.
967 OSTERMAN

LAKE BLUFF 2575

Guaranteed

Your Rings and Jewelry
W. Check Them FREE

I. H.

Bound

4-3034

and

YOUR

HI 2-4806

1732 First

PTT TT TTT
SHADES

Windows - Picture Win- Porch
Enclosures
Doors
FREE

Dirt

Plan

Bring

Evanston

Deerfield

2-2500

SILJESTROM

complete

LOSE

Sales

RUSCO COMBINATION
METAL STORM WINDOWS
SCREENS and DOORS
A

Payment

Factory

Service

First

Our

etc.

INC.
Agency

Next Year

DON’T

Belts

To

Pay

DIAMONDS

Button

gifts

Set, $158.00

0000 Senos eee
TRUCKING

USED CARS
GO TO
MESIROW MOTORS

Double Hung Windows

Ave.

2-0455

350

S858 S 90080 e Sees ese
STORM WINDOWS &amp; DOORS

QUALITY CLEANING AT
REASONABLE PRICES

HI

Deerfield

SERRE

1740

of watches and
Payments.
p.m. Friday

Sweaters,

Hand

Main
UNiversity

Black

Ave.
HI 2-7211

Waukegan

733

$39.73

28-Diamond

Vogue Fabric Shop

CLEANERS

Rd.

—

—

Machine

Pickup

SORES Sees
CLEANERS

454

&amp;

—TAILORS—

Highwood Glass
&amp; Paint Co.

2-0341

SERVICE

DEERFIELD

Shirts,

-

Diamonds - Engagement Rings
SPECIAL FOR THE WEEK
4-ct. set in yel. or wht. gold ...... $185
Y4-ct. set in yel or wht. gold ......
$33
34-ct. set in yel. or wht. gold ...... $275
Highland Park
Tel. HI 2-0630
Across from the Bank—35 Years

SERVICE

Blouses,

Pleating
Buttons

FOR THE BEST

WINDOW SHADES
MIRRORS - GLASS TOPS
WALLPAPER
ENTERPRISE
GUARANTEED
PAINTS

All
PET TTT TTT

Linens,

$42.50
Free

I. H. NEMEROFF

eo

DRESSMAKERS

It takes more than
a few ‘‘’magic
words” to get some
ugly stains out of
clothes. Let us work
miracles
on yeur
clothes.

INTERIORS

02500850008
S esas
VENETIAN BLINDS

hs

AUTO RADIOS

FIRST ST.
HIGHLAND

TILE

Bathrooms, Kitchens &amp; Powder Rooms
Modernized
with
Real
Ceramic Tile,
Miraplastic Tile, Rubber,
Vinyl,
Cork
&amp; Asphalt Tile Floors.
Complete Tile
Service. Free Estimates. Phone Evenings.
TILE-CRAFT
830 Woodward Ave.
Deerfield 1049

AUTO RADIOS

1858

See our fine selection
for Christmas.
Time
Open until 9

1010 Hazel Ave., Deerfield
Phone Deerfield 602

CLEANING

by

PET TTT

Motorola

Engraving

Furnace and Boiler
Cleaning Service

Towels,

Evanston

and

Park

Installation

On

Fordors

Custom

Highland

MONOGRAMMING

All arrangements can be made
phone. Convertibles, Tudors,

GR.

Lencioni
Road,

A. E. Savage, Owner

Car

Grove

Deerfield

All Types of Heating

U-DRIVE-IT

617

the

Community Gas Heating
SERVICE

DRY

TILE

call

Call HI 2-5545

Designers

for

Tile

Estimate

Daniel
1379

2-2023

Repair

Jewelry

Wall

free

Tile

SERRE ERE
HEATING

HIGHLAND
AI

iG

Town Floor Company

pee

TELEPHONE

DAHL’S
AUTO
2058 Ist St.

WATCH

ROAD

Alignment
@

—

|

Repair

@ Wheel

Linoleum and
Linoleum Tile

459 Roger Williams Ave.

24 HOUR
TOWING SERVICE

- OPTICIANS

COVERING

@

For

use of our expert mechanics.

HI 2-0566

SERRE ERR RRR
TOWING

@

TILE

JEWELERS

_
|
Watch

Fine
;
Repairing
silauien

A.

MORDINI

HI 2-3905
Highland Park,

Ill.

{

�“Over Quarter Century of Qual
ity Leadership”
ART

OLSON

PAUL

OLSON

PACEMAKERS FOR SMART AMERICA

VISIT THIS CONVENIENTLY LOCATED MEN'S SHOP WHERE
YOU CAN SHOP WITH EASE AND COMFORT
— JACKETS

—

23
For Every Purpose—ldeal Gift
McGREGOR DRIZZLER .......0 $10.95
WIND CHEATER (wool lined) ............ $15.95
Sia
WO
oo).. 5
$16.95

REVERSIGLE JACKET...
% NYLON ANTI-FREEZE..........
"WHITE STAG ROUGH NECK.
i WYLON FREFZONE
SAO GAR
.
BA YING! DACRON
ERNE
WHITE STAG MT. HOOD...
sit
DUMRR eee
ZERO-KING (zip out liner)
_

$19.95
$22.95
$22.95
$25.95
$25.95
$29.95
$32.50
$34.50
$34.95
$35.00

— DOWN FILL JACKETS —
(good for 30 below zero)
MT. BAKER (fur collar)
RANCHER (fur collar) .........00

—
REN

HOSIERY
RID

Handsome,

—

— SPORT

Luxurious

A “Must”

Sweaters That Say “Merry Christmas”
... Sleeveless...
FORSTMANN’S LAMB’S WOOL...
(Hose to match $2.00)
CASHMERE MAIOR .......:....
05
FORSTMANN’S CASHMERE

$10.50

$57.50

... With Sleeves...
mer
a ee
RE
SU
ci
he
CASHMERE MAJOR
3.
FORSTMANN’S CASHMERE ....__..__..

$15.50

WHEN

FORSTMANN’S Cashmere ...............
FORSTMANN’S Lamb’s Wool .........
FORSTMANN’S Cashmere Argyles ..........
wr UPrenYLON 6x3 Rib....:.0.:..22.2022,

GIVE

HIM

ONE

IN DOUBT?

OF

OUR

“MILLION

DOLLAR

LOOK” GIFT CERTIFICATES. GOOD FOR ANY
ITEM IN THE STORE. MAYBE
HE MIGHT
WANT A NEW HAT FOR CHRISTMAS .
'DOBBS OR BORSALINO.

$3.50
$1.75
$7.50
$1.50

'CROSS GRAIN CORD |...

$22.95

‘COUNTRY

$35.00

CLUB

CHECK...

PE

oo oS 5500: teagan

$35.00

IMPORT

SCOTCH

$65.00

CHEVIOT...

$ 9.95
— SLACKS —
$12.50
|
Superbly
Tailored in Rich
$21.50
$25.00 [HOUNDS Sette os

meee ee

—

2... &lt;0... ...0.055508.. $2.00

COATS —

in Every Man‘’s Wardrobe . .

[CAMEL JACKET gece
$45.00
$14.95
[SERQOKS HRATHOE se
s $50.00
$18.00
|IMPORT
SCOTCH
HEATHER...
$55.00
ieieceie saa $21.50

.s» Cofdigan...

BUEN oie shaw oc cctereegcatdei
sacs $2.95 &amp; $3.95

FORSTMANIN 9 Ox

— SWEATERS
Rich,

Fabrics

CAMBRIDGE FLANNEL |
| SEPP IINI &lt;5 hs ciciBesttascseschv
doe ee
‘SUPERLATIVE FLANNEL
SUPERLATIVE GABARDINE

$14.95

$15.50
$19.50
$27.50
$27.50

|

|
PLEASE
NOTE:
-IF YOU ARE NOT CERTAIN OF THE SIZE...
. 'BRING IN HIS JACKET OR SLACKS AND WE
WILL DETERMINE THE SIZE.

ART 0 LSON
COMPLETE

(Open Friday
Nites )

STORE

IN
HIGHLAND

936 CENTRAL AVE.
er

3 (3

bey

se

bas

be

ios

es

es

4

ery

34

4

4

&lt;4

2

FOR

MEN

(Open Nites from
Dec. 12-23 Incl.)

PARK
Ss

se}

1s

Br,

Phone
4

HI 2-2871

�</text>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="25540">
                    <text>Thursday,

December

11,

1952

�LEEDS

J

F

W

F

L

helps You

£

re

make

_

er

ee

Central

Christmas

CONSULT THIS GUIDE-7hen

&amp; Sheridan

Buying

Easy!

decide!

Gifts

Under 7, 5

LEATHER

WALLETS

G enuine leath
leather.

pele —

TRS

8

MAN'S DRESS cir

IDENT

Srertineatecite
bs
S$

Gold
old

5Q

Waser. RESISTANT

I
Fillled

| A Wonderful Gift | 250

any colors.

| Z I PI P 0

17 jewels.

Radiumdial.

§ ? 450

Shock-proof.

L 1G H TE R

Smartly styled.

Guaranteed.

Large capacity.

$

3

50

he

LADIES’ BIRTHSTONE

Sheaffer

In Your

Pen

Choite of Colors

Set

Choice of stone

$

in fine setting

$@75

5

1 4

kus

3 19

SUNBEAM MIXMASTER

TOASTER

ti

$

Rookie Sh :

of 10K gold.

17 Jewels.

Dura-Power
79
mainspring.

AUTOMATIC

95

ELGIN SUNBURST”

00

2 3

.

a

50

$

si —

eae ef

949999992?
999999299?
999999999
9999.99.99)
9494999999

Kk

~—

NEW

2A

98,

COMPACTS

Styled
by :
:
Elgin American.

34%

Large selection.

RHINESTONE
Necklace, , ear Carrings and brace-

Saneon

SET
$

oui

Famous “Crown”
table model.
$

90

let. Gift boxed.

10

Fully automatic.

SCHICK

SHAVER

DIAMOND DUETTE

Famous “20”
complete with

$

ri
Matchinging
rings
in fine og
, $

90

carrying case.

Now

STOP IN AND SAVE TODAY!

...

00

karat gold.

For

Leeds

Customers

...

Gifts Purchased at Leeds

Engraved

Free!
Bank

eee

ng

HI 2-2028

ee
7B

“RasyAe

waists
Corner Central &amp; Sheridan,

fren

For

Highland

Park

Ventral
Te

eae:

=

ILEE DS")

Te

P

Ave

&gt;

fen,

Always

/

Evening

HI
fora
We

Shoppers,

Starting

Dec.

12—6

p.m.

to 9 p.m.

2-0700
RADIO

CAB

will reimburse you for your taxi fare
upon presentation of your fare receipt.

�Doerkh
Thursday,

Vol. 27, No. 38

Dfid. Post Office
Urges Care With
Christmas Mail
Christmas
and

no

fact

is only

one

14 days

is more

than

the

aware

postal

away
of

this

employees.

They strongly urge all residents to
cooperate
assure
mas

with

them

smooth

as

follows

handling

of

to

Christ-

mail:

Purchase
of

the

rush

dress

all

ink,

your

period;

your

giving

ing

stamps
mail,

street

apartment

in advance

carefully

ad-

preferably

in

address,

number,

includ-

if

any,

or

post office, or rural route and rural
box

number,

number;

send

first-class

ditional

delivered

if necessary,

Cards

you

have

In
a

tie them

dresses

all

mailing;

in

and

without

ad-

articles

the

time

Bundles

large

and

for

this

way

durable

likely

transportation

should

with

to

before
and

contain-

spoil

within

required

delivery

mailing;

be

for

are not

or

in-

imperative

if you mail such

things as watches

or

of

other
But

articles

most

jewelry.

important

of. all—mail

your Christmas gifts and cards just
as

early

as

Early Deadlines

Holiday

Announced

For

Christmas

Issue

Decorations

Warning of the rapidly
ing holiday season was
week by the appearance
mas
decorations
in
Deerfield.

Co-sponsors

of

possible.

Park

-and

Christmas

lighting project this year are the
Deerfield
Chamber
of Commerce
and
the
Citizens
Committee
for
a Better Deerfield.

Clifford

Johnson,

a member

of

both organizations, is the chairman.
The annual contest for outside
displays
by
Deerfield
residents
will also be held again this year,
with awards of ribbons and a loving cup.
Judges
for the
home
displays
will be members
of the Garden
club.
Mrs.
Robert
O. Clark will
act as chairman of the judges.
In addition to the organizationfinanced
public
decorations,
the
help of Deerfield’s merchants has
been promised in making the village’s
shopping
center
gay.
One
large decorated tree has already

The editorial department
of the Deerfield REVIEW
requests that all news contributors
observe
“an ‘early
deadline for the December 25
issue because of the Christmas holiday.
Church, club and organization news will be due next
Thursday; weddings or en-

gagements,
ber

19,

where

Friday,

Decem-

sports

stories,

and

possible,

by

10 a.m.,

December 20. All other copy
must be turned in by Mondav

noon,

December

22.

The
display
advertising
copy deadline for the December 25 issue will also be
advanced one day. Deadline
for classified
ads will be
4:30 pm.
MONDAY,
December

Johnson
promises.
This will mark the third annual
Christmas
lighting project to be
sponsored
by
the
Citizens
Com-

mittee, and the first in which it
has been joined by the Chamber

22.

of

Commerce.

Celebrate

Anniversary

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Long, Sanders road, celebrated their
22nd
wedding
anniversary
quietly
last
Friday with their family.
Present
were Betty and Billy Long, Mrs.
Viola Frank, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Ridgeway and Mr. Fred Ridgeway,
who
is visiting from Herrin, Ill.

In a determined

effort to prevent a repetition of the po-

litical ruckus of two years ago, leaders of the opposing
possibility of a coalition

slate for next

the group.

Mr.

Dumping Rumors

False
Deerfield
mothers
hearing
a
rumor that Chicago garbage was
to be dumped at the National Brick
company
sent a telegram to Dr.
Herman Bundesen, president of the

board

of health,

and

city officials,

requesting particulars and information.
The
following
is the telegram Dr. Bundesen sent in:
“In reply to the telegram you

sent
cago

to the city
be advised
has not
dispose

officials of Chithat the city of
and does
of refuse

not inin the

pany

Because of the fact that the
stores in Highland Park and Deer-

mittee.”

will

be

open

in

convenience

the
of

vise

evenings
Christmas

shoppers, the Highland Coach lines
will
revise
its evening
schedule
starting
next
Saturday.
The
bus
will leave Wilmot and Greenwood
roads at 7 and 8 in the evening
and return from Highland Park at
7:45 and 9:15 p.m. Friday nights
the schedule will remain the same
as previously,
with
the last bus
leaving
Highland
Park
at 10:45
p.m.

near

Deerfield.

other

Elected

members

to

Marvin

Please

of your

ad-

com-

Membership
A.

fellow avenue,

Schnaid,

452

has been

Long-

elected to

membership in the Chicago chapter
of the national association of Cost
Accountants.
The association, larg-

est

of

its

kind

in

the

world,

has

chapters
in
113
communities
in
the United
States, including one
in Hawaii and one in Cuba.
Mr. Schnaid has resided in the

community

for 24% years.

the

citi-

committee

for

unity.

In order to be certain of fullest
representation from all interested
groups and from all sections of
town, the group will be further enlarged
before
the
next
meeting,
which
is scheduled for January.
Town

Too

Small

“There is a growing feeling that
our town is too small for the bitterness that follows a hotly-contested election,” Mr. Piper states. “It
is the aim of this new committee
to attempt to eliminate a contest
by combining
the two
traditionally opposing forces in Deerfield.”

“Both groups,” Mr. Alabeck added, “are after the same
thing:
What is best for Deerfield. We feel
that by getting together, becoming
better

out

acquainted,

in advance

and

any

by

arguing

differences

opinion with regard
and policies, we can

of

to candidates
be of greater

benefit to our town than in a preelection fight.”
Closed

Doors

Both Mr. Piper and Mr. Alabeck
stressed

public

Deerfield

the

importance

understanding

committee

is trying

of

of what

to do.

clare. “We want the largest possible public participation in the se-

lection

of

candidates,

and

work of our committee,
open to: anyone congenial

No Wednesday afternoon closings
are planned
until the first week
in January.

in

the

which is
with our

aims of ‘unity instead of conflict!’ ”
Purposely
omitted
from
last
week’s

discussions

ently-elected

Rows of colored Christmas lights
have been put up to lend a festive
atmosphere
to the shopping
dis-

public

were

all

pres-

officials

and

the heads of civic organizations. It
was stated that this was done to
insure
an independent
approach
and
to avoid
any
suggestion
of

Clifdec-

sponsorship by
ganized group.

any

official

or or-

Tractomotive Party Saturday
Tractomotive
nual Christmas

will hold
its anparty Saturday at

Cub Scouts Paper

Chevy Chase. Invitations have been

Drive Dec. 11th

issued
and
they
expect
approximately 660 youngsters to attend.
Santa Claus will be there and there

esas

will be gifts for the children. Gene
Cameron,

'
|

Northbrook

will read

the

“Birth of Christ” and Glen Cole,
1062 Central, will lead the group
in choral singing. The party is
sponsored
by
the
Tractomotive

New

co

officers

recently

installed

in the

Eastern

Osterman, Florence Jacobs, Laverne Fredrickson,
Hunt.
In the second row, Maybelle Collins, Erna

Ruth

Hunt,

Mrs.

Charles

Sugden,

Gertrude

Star

first

row

above,

are

Mrs.

Edith

Hary Johnson, Mrs. Knacksteadt, and Dan
Shipley,
Hazel Rudolf,
Althea
Toefler,

Johnson, Harold Vant and Hazel Hertel.

In the

_ Foremens club. John Carlson, gen-

| eral manager will give the welcome

third row, Mrs. James Wilson, Dorothy Hunter, Mrs. Weskerly, Mrs. Stephens. Mrs. Vetter,
Mrs. Jacobson, Andrew Johnson, Alvina Culver, Hattie Wessling, and Kenneth Vetter are
in row four. Mrs. Frederickson was installed as worthy matron and Harry Johnson as worthy

| greeting.

patron.

—

4

.

a

the

“We want there to be no odor
of closed doors, secrecy or private
deals about this,” they both de-

Afternoons

trict, under the direction of
ford Johnson, who heads the
oration committee.

20 Deerfield

newly-formed

village

have

Christmas
buyers
by
remaining
open every night until 9 o’clock
from
tomorrow
until
Christmas
Eve. On Christmas Eve, stores will
close at 5:30 p.m.
Wednesday

Approximately

zens, most of whom were active in
the preceding two local elections,
and about evenly divided between
the opposing parties, now make up

No

Newly Installed Officers of Eastern Star

stores and shops will accommodate

Open

Alabeck was one of the can-

didates of the Progressive party for
village trustee in the 1951 election.
Mr. Piper was chairman of the Better Government party.
To Be Further Enlarged

clay pit of the National Brick com-

the

spring.

“In a discussion of the aims of this informal party, ‘unity’
is the word to which we keep coming back,” remarked Wesley
Alabeck, co-chairman, together with Charles E. Piper, of

Bus Service in the Evenings

field

parties

of Deerfield’s last local election met this week to discuss the

Chicago
tend to

for

11, 1952

Unity Instead of Conflict
Aim of Newly-formed Committee

appeared, and others will follow.
The
new _ shoppers’
court will).
have three decorated trees, Mr.

Stores, Shops To
Stay Open Until
Highland

the

approachgiven this
of Christdowntown

Christmas

registered

is especially

of
ad-

articles carefully

reasonably

acceptable

number

one

strong

ers;

sured,

as

is dis-

first

in bundles

faced

pack

tightly

gifts

mail

charge.
Tie

If

zone

greetings

for such

and

forwarded,

delivery

holiday

mail

patched

cards,

and

Deerfield To Hold
Annual Contest for

December

Cub
Scouts
paper
drive
is
definitely
set
for
Saturday.
Residents may set their papers
out on the curb at 9:30 a.m. and
they will be picked up by the
Cubs and their fathers. It will

help a great deal if the papers
are tied in “easy to handle”
bundles.

�the action, its origin, its objective,

i Deerfield

Forum

|

_ Opinions
expressed
in these
columns
do
not
necessarily
constitute
the oes
of the
paper.
Letters
should
brief and should
contain
the &lt;ol and address of the writer,
se name will be withheld if requested.

Union

Drainage

District

No.

1

_ of the Towns of West Deerfield, Lk
and Northfield, Cook County, Til.
Mr. Homer B. Marxer, Chairman
ear

Sir:

I feel duty

bound

as Supervisor

of West Deerfield Township to advise you that the Drainage district
is made a party defendant in a

|

| Declaratory Judgment action
the National Brick Company,

and

its

2.

relative

The

date

is entered

‘Drainage

district,

against

because

the

of the

ailure on your behalf, the court
has the discretion to assess costs
against the district, in my opinion
ett is incumbent upon the district as
pie Defendant to be represented in
truly,
Edward

Mr.

Richard

Assistant

1952.

‘Hurrah For Boys!’
To

the

Editor:

Hurrah

esults of the

assistance
stistant

with

of Mr.
state’s

the

with

Wynkoop

the

as as-

attorney.

I

trust

hat this will take care of the gar_bage dumping problem.
Our
next problems involve
health, sanitation, zoning, and digging clay in ground outside the
non-conforming area.
At our regular Village board|
meeting
next
Monday
night
I
Bh, picture
_actions
1.

of the status of the various
in Waukegan, including the

Appeal

of the

National

Brick

_in the zoning case by the County
Board of Appeals and the Lake
County Board of Supervisors.
2.

Action

Company
_

the

National

seeking

Judgment
zoning

by

a

Brick

Declaratory

in connection

with

the

classification.

8,4, and 5.

Three

criminal “In-

formations” filed by the State’s Attorney’s
_

6.

Office.

Refiling

of

an

action

by

boys!
for

high

especially

boys who

school

for

boys.

high

school

drive cars.
more

drink
high

for

and

Of course

the

‘State’s Attorney’s Office for an in; junction against the dumping of
_ garbage.
_
The information I would like to
| present is:
1.
A short statement concerning

Park,

Deerfield,

drive

the

school

and

Highwood
area
has
taken
its
place in the very forefront of
blood
donors
in the
Chicago
area,

boys

hurrah
who

sense

and

of

those

for

drink

fun

clever

each

on the highways.

toward

trick

you.

of

racing

No, it’s much

more fun on a two-lane highway
where you can combine speeding
with crossing in and out of lanes.
Man, that’s really great!
I wouldn’t give a hoot for the

same

boy who

drives carefully and

considerately.
He’s a dope.
He’s
a sissy. All that ever happens to
him
is
that
he
will
grow
up
to be
aman.
A strong man, strong

of

body,

strong

of

will

be

a

Of
course
the
superhighways
aren’t quite as much fun because
you can’t dart out into the oncoming lane into the path of cars

coming

appreciation

Park.

that

wonderful
other

with

our

mind,

able

to

make this world a good place to
live in.
Able to have boys of his
own.
He bores me.
How dull can
you get?
But
wait, maybe
we’ll have
a
little fun yet.
Maybe one of those clever boys
with a terriffic sense of fun will
come down the wrong traffic lane
at about 50 or 60 miles an hour,
and will crash into the same boy’s
car!
Oh
goody!
Then
all the
clever boys can go racing—six in
each car—racing to the funeral of
the same boy.
Man, that’s what I call living!
Mephisto.

ager
of

was

the

Mr.

Martin,
present

Village

Martin

856

has

lage
At
ards,

over
the

petition

new

last

Monday.

a home
and

duties

which

he

is

at

municipal

land,

Ohio,

is a public

compacted

refuse,

with

a

with a bull

issued

by

the

breeding

Susan

1333
of a
with

Elaine

in

Berins,

Cleve-

the grandparents.

place

for

flies

and

rats;

generating
fires, foul odors,
and
maintaining an objectionable eyesore in the area.”
Because
former
Chicago
alderman,
William
Cowhey,
calls
his
company,
the
Sanitary
Landfill
Ltd., do not confuse the method
his company employed at the Brick
company
with a sanitary landfill
method. Garbage at the Brick company was allowed to accumulate to
10 foot heights before compaction
with a tractor and
the covering
of earth has never been over six to
12 inches.
Thank You—
Northbrook Star and News

An

editorial,

entitled

“The

Gar-

bage
Star

Affair”
in the
Northbrook
and
News—of
December
3

says:

“We

must

Supper for Illinois Educational Assoc. at Wilmot
Office,

on flat

estates,

Frances

are

then

made

request-

a

11. Mr. Harold Root, 938 Osterman,
Mrs.

these

secretary,

Rich-

Highland
Park
hospital.
Susan‘s
two sisters are Nancy, 6, and Carol,
and

using

Owners

B.

presented

Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Root,
Greenwood,
became
parents
third daughter December
2

of

been

clam, and then covered with sufficient earth.
Open
Pit Dumping
Breeds
Flies
And Rats
According
to
a
manual
for
storage, collection and disposal of

1.

Root

arrival

have

in trenches,

ground

Vil-

ing a revision in the existing zoning ordinance. The matter was referred to the appeal board. There
will be a closed hearing Friday between
the board,
the petitioners
and the Bartlett corporation.

the

his

Briarwoods

George

on behalf of Home
of

on

Division of Sanitary “a
Pun
Illinois
Department
of
Publi
Health,
October
13,
1952,
“Th
operation of an ‘open dump’ by a
municipality results in producing a

Westcliff,

Associated

as

that

heavy tractor equipped

has

of December

meeting

850

meeting

terrace
as

low
man-

the

bought

his

manager

Village

at

board

Rosemary

taken

of

new

They

dumped

Request Revision of Zoning
Gayle

says

facilities since early summer.
The late Henry Clifford Hawes
was, largely responsible for making
these arrangements with the city
council
of
Highland
Park.
City
commissioner
Fred
Gieser
is in
charge of this operation, which is
located on Route 22 (Prairie avenue)
about
half a mile
east of
Waukegan road, on the south side
of the road.
In
this
operation,
garbage
is

added
the fervent tight-lipped
“thanks someone”
of the men
who are brought back from the
shadow of the valley of death
because of our small sacrifice
in their behalf.

cars.

biggest

school

effort of many individuals and
the active support of many organizations.
We
of the committee
extend
our
deep
felt
thanks to all those who
have
helped
to make
the campaign
a success.

boys

officer,

last inspection visit, November 24,
there was no improvement in the
unhealthful conditions existing at
the trailer dwellings and shacks,
and that garbage was not adequately covered. Township health regulations specify a covering of two
feet.
Deerfield Scavengers Dump at
Highland Park
Did you know that Mr. Fritsch
and Mr. Gastfield dump Deerfield
garbage
at the Sanitary Landfill
operation of the City of Highland

As a result of the generous
contributions of our people, the

To

high

recklessly,

clever

action taken

for

Especially
Most

very

State’s Attorney

County Court House
Waukegan, Illinois
Dear Mr. Bairstow:
We are very pleased

health

days in many weeks.

first, then drive cars very fast and

Bairstow

Cross Bloodmobile

collected
449
pints
of
blood
when it visited Highland Park
on December 3 and 4.
This is
an
outstanding
achievement!
The nurses with the unit said
that they had rfot had such busy

Highland

Park Board President

According to all reports, dumping has stopped at the Brick Company.
Rumors
continue
to circulate, that night dumping might be
attempted. If you see any trucks
with
garbage
or other
offensive
materials, notify the Deerfield police immediately.
Dr.
Frank
Brooks,
township

the citizens of Highland
Deerfield, and Highwood:
are very happy to report

that the Red

‘| Lawrence Raredon Elected

|

Speak

The present drive has been a
success because of the personal

who

4,

ac-

President,
Village of Deerfield.

A. Reagan

December

To
Park,
We

A. G. Bradt,

the
.

of these

Deerfield Mothers

Letter Says Thank-You
To Donors of This Area

tions covers the violation of the
Cease and Desist Order issued by
the Enforcement and Plats Committee prohibiting digging clay in
the new area?
I am asking Mr. Byron Matthews
to phone you for this information
so that his father, T. A. Matthews,
will have it available for the meeting.
Very truly yours,

Even
Yours

started.

should be taken.
Incidentally, which

Illinois Corporation.
That to date
you have failed to file or caused

Judgement

it was

3.
The action to date.
4. The next action, when it will
probably occur, and by whom
it

by
an

to be filed an appearance or anSwer on your behalf, if a Default

importance.

compliment

those

School

trust.

Published

Weekly

PUBLICATION
832

( 1775
;

oe

as second-class

of

Ceremony

“The

Britten’s

jamin

Carols,” at their annual Christmas
concert on December 18.

their
on
efforts to
area. We

citizens
minded
public
continued vigilance and
control the use of the

think that the people

and the or-

ganizations of Northbrook should
help on this job of watching, of
avoiding a nuisance. Deerfield has
done a swell job and they deserve
all the help we can give them in
keeping our back yards clean.”

Do you want to see ended, once
and for all, the garbage dump and
the

conditions

living

unsanitary

that exist on the edge of Deerfield?
your

to

talk

Then

and

neighbors

friends and see that they, too, are
fire
and
health
of the
aware
threats which this dump and trailer
camp daily offer to our community.
Let our officials know that you
are behind them. The village board,

the

township

health

board,

and

Health Officer Dr. Frank Brooks,
the county and sanitation zoning

committee,

the

State?s

Attorney,

the new Deputy State’s
Harold
Wynkoop,
The

Attorney
Citizens’

for a Better Deerfield,
individuals are doing

Committee
and many

these
has

eliminate
to
utmost
their
opposition
The
dangers.

time

the

labor

be

in

of

vain,

time

and

again

that _

for our village.

If

is not

to

our

officials

we

must

per

matter

Sorreebt,

1952,

show
we

them —
are

All

Reserved

The Bish land Park

Company
—

for

(aie

the

produc-

tion of Handel’s “Messiah”
sponsored by the Presbyterian church under the auspices

of

council
Jeannette

year

Novem-

By

the

Soloists

Ill.

, at the post office at Deerunder the Act of March 8,

Rights

Mrs. Archie Antes, 945 Central avenue, is one of the
100 students
participating in the college choir
of Northern Illinois State Teachsing Benwill
who
ers college,

'@:

Managing Editor
Business Manager

Subscription phon 75
tic Rate—$4.00 per year
tie
te Copies—10c
~ Foreign Rates on Application

we

Choir

Ct.

|

tino

In

OFFICE

Todd

;

ares

Sing

Janet Antes, daughter of Mr. and

that
opposition
the
and
all in this fight to stay.

:
MEMBER
National
Editorial Association
Illinois Press Association

;

To

Thursday

Deerfield,
Illinois
Telephone Deerfield 485
HIGHLAND
PARK OFFICE
St. Johns Ave., Highland Park,
Telephone ‘HI 2- 4500

Recther Hartwig
Phyllis Russell
mae
:
E.

Park.

it cares nothing

Vol. 27, No. 38

every

son, the board agreed to spend $300
on the Field house, which will be
a permanent
building
in Jewett
Park. A wooden
ramp
has
been
built from the door of the Field
house to the edge of the pond. In
the interior, the walls and ceiling
have been finished, a wooden floor
has been laid, lights have been installed and a few other minor repairs have been made.
At the November
meeting, Mr.
Raredon was elected president of
the board, to succeed Mr. Gilmour,
who has a six month leave of absence. This close contact with the
Recreation committee is only one
of the experiences Mr. Raredon has
had which has fitted him for the
presidency. He attended the Short
Course at Montecello, Illinois, given
by the Illinois association of Parks
and the District meeting held in
Des Plaines this year. He was one
of a9 group who
surveyed
Jewett

shown

DEERFIELD
REVIEW
| Thursday, Dec. 11, 1952

The Park board has been represented by Lawrence
W.
Raredon
at the meetings of the Recreation
Committee since the election of the
out plans to-’
In working
board.
gether for the coming skating sea-

Seated at the speakers table at the recent dinner meeting of the Illinois Education
Assoc. are: Mrs. George L. Haggard, Mrs. Paul Street, Dr. Paul Street, speaker of the evenng, Mr. re
Haggard, and Mr. W. C. Petty who also poke to the Sup

the

of

Inter-church

Deerfield
Teeter,

are

Virginia

McCarthy,
Paul
Martin,
Mary Vassel and Barbara
Sandvohl.
The choir is to
sing at the Deerfield Grammar school December 19.
The public is cordially invit-

ed to attend.

�askance

Wed

White Whds

Kaul Uhonal
Candlelight

in Bethlehem

_ | Chester Kyle directs Handel's
| | “Messiah” under sponsorship

Church

e

of Inter-church council

Ceremony

Constance
White,
daughter
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Arthur
White,
28
Elmwood drive, exchanged vows in
a candlelight ceremony
last Saturday with Paul Villarreal, USA, of
Corpus Christi, at the Bethlehem
church with the Reverend Francis
Guither officiating.
The
church
was
decorated
in
evergreen with white candles. The
bride wore a white satin and lace

gown

made

with

an

illusion

Heuber Appear

Drama

Festival at Loyola

Eleanor Pope, daughter
of Mr.
and Mrs. C. E. Pope, 405 Deerfield
road, and Judy Heuber, daughter
of Dr. and Mrs. Paul Heuber, 1340
Deerfield road, took part in the
play “Summons of Sariel,” a morality play presented by the drama
department of the Convent of the
Sacred Heart, Lake Forest, in the
Chicago drama festival, November
29. Twenty-one plays were in the

the
is

Kyle

Deerfield
director

is

of

vocal

church

since

his

of Music

at

and

choir

has

of

the
1950.

Bachelor

of

Conserva-

at Oberlin,

was appointed head of
department at Shenago
High
school,
Newcastle,
olace of his birth. While
he was soloist for the

Ohio

2 and

Linda,

Mr. Kyle received his Master's
degree from Northwestern University in 1948. While at the Universiiyv
he
was
selected
for
Pi
Kappa
Lambda,
national honorary music
society.
He has sung with Chicago Park
district Opera guild, with Wayne

school.

school

at Oberlin

two children, Johnny,
5 months old.

19

music

the

received

degree

directpresent

grammar

Park High

Kyle

to

December

of

director

Music
‘ory

which

‘‘Messiah’”

Presbyterian
Mr.

is currently

choir

Highland

and

the Music
Township
Pa., the
in college
Glee club,

sang with the a cappella choir and
the

Boys

quartet.

In 1945 he was appointed vocal
director
at Highland
Park
High
school. He and his wife, the former
Rachel Gabel, daughter of Professor and Mrs. Otto J. Gabel of De
Kalb Northern Illinois State Teachers college, bought the house erected by the building and trades department
of
the
Highland
Park
High. school at 914 Yale, in Highland Park. Mr. and Mrs. Kyle have

Outstanding

Player

Donald Piper, son of
Mrs. Charles Piper, 651

ig Photo

by

Betts’

Mrs. William Beinlich, the former Shirley Frost, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Frost, 918 Woodward ave., who
was

married

hem

church.

Hugo

Beinlich

to

William

Beinlich,

of Glencoe,

on

festival and only three were chosen
to be given again at the Loyola
Community theater on Decemper ‘.

In Chicago

at,
He

been

the

son

November

of

22

Mr.

and

at the

Mrs.

Bethle-

their home.

Eleanor Pope and Judy

the

Handel’s

neck-

line, long sleeves and a full train.
Her
sister
Mrs.
David
Meloney,
who
was
matron
of honor, wore
red velvet with a gold Juliet cap
and gold slippers as did Patricia
Jeronimo, her only other attendant.
Both
attendants
carried
white
flowers
while
the
bride
carried
white stephanotis and lilies.
Mrs. Arthur White, the mother
of the bride, wore red taffetta with
a white
pony
jacket.
She
wore
white
flowers
in her
hair.
The
family of the bridegroom was unable to be present.
The bride was given in marriage
by her father; David Meloney
was
best man, Alex Cameron of Park
Ridge and David Freeman of
Evanston
were
the
ushers.
Soloist
for the wedding
was
Miss Mary
Larson of Maywood and Miss
Florence Boydston was the organist
.
A small reception at the home
of
the
bride’s
parents
followed
the
wedding.
The
couple
had
originally
planned to leave
for Mexico
on
their wedding journey but because
the
bridegroom’s
leave
was
cancelled they have gone to Camp Atterbury, Ind.
They will make the
trip after Christmas, returning to
Camp Atterbury until June, when
Mr. Villarreal expects to be discharged.
They
will
go
to Mon-

terey, Mexico, to make

Chester
ing

The Sacred Heart show was one
chosen by the board of directors cf
the
Community
theater
for
pre-|
sentation to their subscri tion audi
ence.
Miss Pope played the part of a
young mother who died to save the

life

of her

child

and

Miss

Heuber

played the part of the guardian
angel
who
protects
all children.
The play was directed by Mrs. Ed
ward Brennan,
drama
director of
the schcol.

Guests at Open House

Given for Yancy

Cahill

Miss Nancy Cahill, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Cahill, 934
Chestnut, has been given two surprise showers in anticipation of her
marriage
January
17 to Patrick
Gallagher
in Holy
Cross church.
Mrs.
L. T. Rohan
and
Mrs.
Al
Noll of Deerfield had a surprise
miscellaneous shower at the home
of Mrs. Rohan, 932 Hazel avenue,

November 20. On December 2, Miss
Lorraine
Hatch,
748
road,
gave
a
shower

Deerfield
for
Miss

Cahill with Miss Nancy Huhn, formerly of Deerfield, now of Highland
Park,
as_
co-hdstess.
Miss
Cahill
was
guest
of honor
at a
kitchen
shower
given
November
29\ by Mrs.
E. Ryan,
Mrs.
Todd
Mahoney and Mrs. David Curley at
the home of Mrs. Ryan in Milwaukee.

Chester Kyle
King
at the Edgewater
Beach in
a quartet, has made
solo appearances with choral groups and hes
sung solo in the First Methodi-t
church in Cleveland and the Fourth
Presbyterian church in Chicago.

road, was a member of Beloit college’s
first
undefeated
football
team in its 6l-year history of intercollegiate competition.
Don, who is 6 foot, 2 inches, and
weighs
190
pounds,
played
end
and was a flanker on the defensive
platoon
that
held
its opposition
to only 18 points in eight games.
A converted tackle, Donald was

called

Pre-nuptial Si iis

Mr. and
Chestnut

one

of

the

most

Mr. Kyle has been very active in
the community, frequently direc’ing local groups, trios, ensembles.
quartets, ete.
The “Messiah” which he is nedirecting is being sponsored by the
Presbyterian church under the au pices of the Inter-church council
of Deerfield.

improved

players on the squad by Coach Carl
Nelson.
Since joining the varsity,
the junior end has helped Beloit
win 15 out of 16 games.

|

[The BANKER’S $10’
Por WORTH
ONES SA Lu" (6 x
{

SOLDIERS OF THE ROMAN

LEGIONS WERE OFTEN.
PAID PART OF THEIR
WAGES IN SALT.
see

FROM THE LATIN WORD
*SALARIUM’ (SALT)

dys

;

AIBX:

WE DERIVE OUR OWN @/ifm

ay [aoe

|

WORD “SALARY3AS

Qi tig

WELL

&gt;

AS THE

PHRASE

ea

‘

Eg

*NOT WORTH ONE'S SALT’
©WORLD

Book Club Luncheon to Be
At Thorngate Country Club
The
December
meeting
Book club will be held at

gate Country

Your

of the
Thorn-

club next Tuesday

perts.

at

Mrs.

Bryant
their

Holiday

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Keller, Jr. pictured at the party given
in their honor last Saturday by Mrs. Elizabeth Wolfe of PortMr. and Mrs. Keller, Jr. were wed recently at
wine road.
Mrs. Keller Jr. is the former Barthe Presbyterian church.

bara Alexander. Miss Liby Wolfe serving.
Thursday, December

11,

1952

or Mrs.

Mintz

_ ———&gt;

Mr. and Mrs. Norbert F. Dompke,
‘849 Knollwood road, had an early
winter holiday at Tower Lake, Jamaica. Mr. and Mrs. Dompke
a week at the island in the
part of November.

spent
latter

Our

affairs should
complete

be handled

attention

by ex-

is devoted

to

Open A Savings Account at the

to can-

Jamaica

money

ee

ing service.

reservations.
in

8:

giving this community a full and helpful bank-

11. Mrs. Laurene
Hoppe
of Chicago will review a current book.
Members
who find: they are unable to attend may contact either
cel

'SYNDICA

Deerfield

State

|

Bank |

1’%2% interest paid on savings
Deposits insured up to $10,000.00

�DEERFIELD

Holy Cross
Bowling
Teams

W.

L.

mages TeXaco “........2....... 25
MMIORROBILY ......cseccac-ccccdiace 22

14
Le

BUMMILOYDUTE ...2-ckesccccscceis 22
ee
IMALIED | ....5.....cesesece 22

17

Lindeman Drugs .............
mee Mranklin -..........:........
Village Hardware ............

19
18
18

20
21
21

.................... 17

22

Station

meuntry
H.

P.

Fare

Service

IM

CHURCHES

News

....

17

22

NUIES, 0.5. coccicoseccsse
aces

15

24

Individual] Leaders
High Game

INN
ooo Noni cel ip ncdnsplonvonseseis 231
RITE
2.050 i pds seachendocansnnane 200
High

I hope all the Cubs realized in
time that the date of the paper

drive was changed to Saturday,
December 13. Anyway, fellas, get
out

and

plug

Series

A

wonderful

you

DR. G. C. PARKNEN

ole’

Deer-

HOLY

of

to

news

and

Service

this

us.

pleased

More

and

Den

to

have

news

for

us

I’ll carry

on

from

there.

Deerfield

;

BRUCE H. FORD
Registered

Pharmacist

Established
Phone

any

in

1

1884

Deerfield,

Ml

other

night

before

the

Children working on toys turned
repaired in the Toy shop for children
cointyv

court.

It’s

services.

Second

the

for

Expert

Family

Entire

Watch

635 Deerfield Rd.

Repairing

Phone

DEERFIELD

not

I

Pack

1048

a

lot

of

hard-working

Dads
who
are going to snarl at
this (get out those skid-chains and

snow-shovels) but don’t you kind of
hope we have a “white
again this year?

JEWELERS

Pack 50 Den
porting.

We

A group of youngsters
the Toy Shop exhibit.

the

Cub

sign

RADIO

AND

ELECTRIC

APPLIANCES

Refrigerators - Ranges - Radios
Washing Machines - Vacuums
We Repair Ali Makes of Appliances
730

Woukegan

Rd.

- Tel.

Deerfield

F. D. CLAVEY
RAVINIA NURSERIES,
Established

122

Ine.

735

Deerfield

Edward

When
you

H.

you
may

your

bring
rest
from

your

car

assured

we

bumper

added

I.

R.

Vant

to

us,

check

to bump-

safety.

Midge’s Texaco
650

Waukegan

Road_—siTel.

580

porter.

Janet

We

ations

made

for

our

the

reporter

here,

none

were

absent.

For

refreshments
we
had
raspberry
juice and cookies. Then we went
out to collect more papers.
Den
6, Bob
Finney
reporting.
We had our refreshments. Then we
started talking about what we were
going to do. Then we worked on
our ornaments for our tree. Then
we had our closing ceremony.
Den 12, Richard Ulrich reporting.
We
made
snowballs
out of
cotton and practiced our Christmas
carols. We finished our peanut man
for the Christmas tree.

Victory Rollers’
Bowling League
December
Team
Central

A. Willi, Plasterer ........ 26
Deerfield Clothing ............ 2a
Highland Park Fuel ........ 22

16
19
20

Deerfield
Lumber
........ 20
Alpha Cleaners ...............- 17

22
25

Bishop

25
26

Heating ............... 17
a al
eal 16

Foods

little

the

porter.

Christmas

toys

both

last week.

Carol

for

76:

We

and

ine

Cox

we

made

ourselves.

Judy

took

tield.

was

Portman,

care

re-

of our

busi-

ness and had refreshments brought
by Sally Stillson. Then we started
to work on our Hostess badge. We

made
for

plans
our

missed.
roll

for.a

Last

and
We

Troop

made

77:

then

dis-

we

called

the

started

for

to

the
some

Barbara

story books

make

Christmas
decorations.

Bucher,

porter. Cammy
Kellogg
so Barbara brought the

made

party

and

week

then

preparations
party.

Christmas

mothers

re-

was sick
treat. We

for the children

in hospitals. We did the Brownie
“Squeeze”
and promise and then

we left. Beth Derby was our reporter last week.
She reported
that

we

played

made

tray

two games:

favors

and

“Farmer

in the

Dell”
and
“Simon
Says.”
Kassner brought brownies.

Linda

at

2:

Cathy

The

Pearson,

meeting

was

held

re-

at

Mrs. Anderson’s where we finished
making tags for blood donors. We
decided
on
our
own
Court
of

Awards

and

made

plans

for

a

added

Township
from

Standard

re-

This

is

the

to

be

first

Deer-

revision

made

in

of

many

camping

period,

and

serving

sending

refresh-

birthday

to the older women

cards

in the Golden

Circle. We also discussed the qualifications for our representative to
the Girl planning board.
Troop 12: Karen Feil, reporter.
Gail
Fisher
brought
cookies
for
our treat. Then we played “Hide
the Button,” ‘‘Movie Star” and a

spelling game.

We

ornaments

a needy

for

“Taps”

Troop

5:

and

started to make
family.

were

Janet

We

dismissed.

Vieregg,

re-

Christmas party. The meeting before was held at Joyce Altman’s
house
and we discussed
possible
projects for the year—setting up a

porter. The meeting was held at
Barbara
Jehle’s house. We
discussed

a

primitive

will

held

camp

before

regular

Antes

at

Warrington.

905

WEDNESDAY,
December 17
7:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal in the

church

sanctuary.

be

Christmas

at Nancy

FIRST

party

which

Card’s

and

PRESBYTERIAN
824

Waukegan

Phone

by the

of

years, and is the result of intense
work covering a period of years to
make tne Biole easier to read and
more understandable to the present
Zeneration.
Altar &amp; Rosary presents “Karen”
“Karen”, py Marie Killilea, was
presented by the Altar and Rosary
society of the Holy Cross Church.
1uis is the story of a littie girl, her
iather and mother,
brothers
and
sisters, her pets and friends. It is
an emotional story, not all sweetness and light, but more than
a
uint
tnat people
still have
love
and faith and courage to meet the
problems at hand. As one review
uas
stated,
“Anyone
who
meets
Karen will postpone resigning from
vue human race.”
Both books are now available for
circulation.

sang

ST. PAUL
EVANGELICAL
AND
REFORMED
CHURCH
638
Waukegan
Road
Rev. H. 0. Willman. Pastor
Deerfield 858
FRIDAY,
December
12
7 p.m.
St. Paul Bowling league.
SATURDAY,
December
13
9:30 a.m.
Confirmation instruction in
the church basement.
6 p.m.
Evening
vesper chimes.
SUNDAY,
December
14
a.m.
Sunday
school worship and
9°30
classes.
10:30 a.m.
Chime call to worship.
11 a.m.
Morning
church worship.
MONDAY,
December
15
3:30 p.m.
Girl Scout meeting in the
church basement.
6:30 p.m.
Youth fellowship newspaper
pick-up.
‘
16
December
TUBSDAY,
will
team
dartball
Men’s
p.m.
7:15
games
league
their
for
leave the church
to be played at Lake Zurich.
Monthly meeting of the Eve8 p.m.
ning guild at the home of Mrs. Archie

Version

was given

committee

Biodle

ments

Troop
4: Jean
Yous,
reporter.
Last week we made table decorations
for Thanksgiving.
Eleanor
Walton
brought
refreshments
which were brownies.

been

donations

‘Revised

Inter-church

umbrel-

Krase

have

Deerfield

of the Holy. Bible”

decor-

Sharon

treats

purses

Troop

Troop
L.
15

Youth

Sundays:

organizations.

The

re-

books

West

Library,

Peterson,

tree—little

canes.

porter.

8, 1952

W.
FO00GS iicncnwaiae 27

Sunset

Page6

7:

brought

were

Loans

Deerfield,

Selig
Hareld
Tel. Deerfield 155

everything

er for

Road,

Troop

Den
4, Paul Wedell
reporting.
We did our opening ceremony and
we did our Christmas ornaments.

our. Christmas tree. They are all
colors and they shine. All the boys

new

the

ligious

cookies for our refreshments.

and our

to

Picws

and

Pack 150 Den 1 Cub Scouts have
made a lot of pretty ornaments for

SELIG

Established 1925
REALTORS
Insurance — Real Estate —

Two

las

closing ceremony.
Den 6, Fred Paul reporting. We
had our opening ceremony and our
refreshments. Then we worked on
our Christmas decorations.

Office and Nursery
Deertieid 35 and 36
West Deertieid Road, Oeertield

VANT &amp;

Pack. Frankie Madison and Ronnie
Mentzer were absent. We worked
on our Christmas project. Then we
had refreshments and formed the
living circle and the Cub
salute
for our closing ceremony.
Den 3, Tommy Eiden reporting.
We
made
chains
and
decorated
newspaper balls for our Christmas
tree. We had Cokes, popcorn and

Then we had refreshments

1885

finished

“Karen” and New Bible
Available for Circulation

Girl Scout

and

salute and repeated the law of the

FROST'S

the

admiring

Christmas”

1, Billy Kliener re-

gave

fourth

services.

If your church has no evening service,
we
invite you
to join with
us in the
evening
service.
If you
do not attend
church, we give you a warm welcome to
visit our services.

wrong!

know

and

fellowship

meeting and we certainly do want
all your decorations on the tree by
Friday, December 19.
Pack 150 has the Christmas Pack
meeting next Wednesday. I haven’t
heard of any changes so I’m simI’m

NORTHFIELD
COMMUNITY
Sanders at Dundee
P.O. Deerfield,
Il.
James Burford, Pastor
Telephone
Northbrook
935R2
SUNDAY
SERVICES
9:45 a.m. Sunday
school.
11 a.m. Morning
worship.
7:30 p.m. Evening services (monthly).
First and third Sundays: Evangelistic

in to be mended and
who are wards of the

ply going by my records. Let’s hope
Jewelry

pastor

NORTH

mot school next Tuesday evening,
since we can’t get into the school

PHARMACY

O’Mara,

fessions.

the ornaments you’ve made for the
Christmas party must be at Wil-

KNAAK’S

John

Rectory, 724 Elder Lane
Deerfield 430
11:86.
Sunday
Masses:
7, 38:30,
10,
Weekday
Masses:
7:30 a.m.
First Friday of each month, Mass at
a.m.
Saturday: 4 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Con-

8

fun to read what all the boys are
doing, but it has to be called in to
me and really, it doesn’t take a
minute! Pack 50 Dens take notice—

Established in Deerfield Since 1942
Call Deerfield 674 for Appointment
Terr.,

We’re

with

Cubs

CROSS CATHOLIC CHURCH
North
Waukegan
Road
Rev.

us)

too—so Den Mother’s, have your
son call 248R
after the meeting

OPTOMETRIST

Rosemary

bit

150. Welcome

Mothers!

857

good

get rid of those (precious,
newspapers and magazines!

Pack

Optical

for

field Packs 50 and 150 and get
those neighbors (what, again?) to

week! We have an addition in the
Cub family. Dens 6 and 8 in Bannockburn have joined Pack 50 and
Den 1 in Delmar Woods has joined

Ed Kirar
Gerri Jones

Complete

CHURCH
EPISCOPAL
GREGORY’S
Roads
Deerfield
and
Wilmot
School)
(Wilmot
The Rev. J. D. Parker Vicar
14
December
SUNDAY,
KindergarFamily service.
9:30 a.m.
for the
|ten
and
church
school
classes
communion
holy
and
Sermon
children.
for adults.
ST.

Dr.

CHURCH
Road

Deerfield

Paul

J

775

Keller.

Pastor

THURSDAY,
December
11
2 p.m.
Women’s association Christmas
program and tea.
SUNDAY,
December
14
9:45 a.m. Church school for all grades
throvgh high school.
9:45 a.m.
Adult Bible class under the
leadership of C. E. Piper.
to

11

a.m.

Morning

11

a.m.

Nursery

7

6.

p.m.

Tuxis

MONDAY,

worship.

school

for

children

3

society.

December

15

8 p.m.
Girl Scout meeting.
7:30 p.m.
Boy Scout meeting.
WEDNESDAY,
December
17
7 p.m.
Junior choir rehearsal.
8

p.m.

8:30
siah.”’

Church

p.m.

choi:

re

errs

Rehearsal

for

THE BETHLEHEM
(Evangelical United
Francis
815

“Church

!

“The

Mes-

CHURCH
Brethren)

Geo.
Guither,
Ministe
Rosemary
Terrace

Going

Families

Are

Happy

Families’

THURSDAY,
3:45. p.m,
6:45

December 11
Junior choir rehearsal.

p.m.

Bethlehem

bowling

league.

FRIDAY,
December
12
7:30 p.m.
Play rehearsal.
SATURDAY,
December
13
7:30 p.m. to 11 p.m.
“Teen-Town” in
Fellowship
hall.
SUNDAY,
December
14
9:45 a.m.
Church school for all ages.
10:55
a.m.
Divine
worship
— “And
Heaven Broke Throuch.”
7 p.m.
Youth
fellowship.
TUESDAY, December 16
8 p.m.
Mother’s club.
WEDNESDAY,
December 17
4 p.m.
Confirmation class.
7:30
p.m.
Senior choir rehearsal.
Those welcomed to membership December 7:
Mr. and Mrs. Norbert Dompke,
Mrs. Jack Gagne, Mrs. Guy Mitchell, Mr.
and Mrs. Gaylord Thomas.
were
19
on October
admitted
Those
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Newton.

we

drew

Vieregg

names
was

for

chosen

as

gifts.

Janet

our

repre-

sentative
to the
Girl
planning
board. Nancy Card and Kathy Kies
will

hand

out

tags

to blood

donors

in Highland Park December 3 and
4th. Barbara served refreshments
and the meeting adjourned.
Thursday,

December

11,

1952

�a

- Yule Program
Oak
its

Terrace

annual

the

school

will present

Christmas

auditorium

at

program

7:30

Thursday.
All parents
are cordially invited.

The

Christmas

ture

p.m.
and

choruses

from

fourth, fifth,

sixth,

Give hw

in

things she

friends

for

herself 1 eee

will fea-

the

third,

seventh,

this beautiful lingerie

and

eighth grades.
A girls’ octet consisting of fifth graders will sing.
They
are Virginia Freese,
Joyce

Gilruth,

Barbara

Frehner,

Sharon

Danus, Beverly
Ronzani.
‘Toy

Carlson,

Zatee

Schaefer,

Lynne

Fabbri

and

Rita

Symphony’

A special feature will be the orchestra’s
performance
of Franz
Haydn’s “Toy Symphony,” which
was written for a children’s orchestra and toy instruments.
The
toy instrument soloists are:
Harley
Ridgway,
drum;
Terry
Somenzi,
cymbals;
John
Baum,
tambourine;
Buddy
Thomas,
cuckoo; Keith Burge, quail; Ed Stroh-

behn,

castanets;

rattle;

Linnea

Cesare

Caldarelli,

The

Severson,

triangle;

and

trumpet.

orchestra will also play “The

Parade
Ten

Sue

Baum,

of

the

fourth

Wooden

grade

Soldiers.”

boys

will

do

a

soldier routine.
They are Robert
Magnani, Joseph Herbert, Everett
Schaubert, David Gerard, Howard
Holniker,
Bill
Cargill,
Paul
DeVroeg, Arthur Mini, John Napier,
and Leo Krusemark.

The

boys’ double sextet will sing

“The

Twelve

These

Days

singers

of

Christmas.”

are John

Wills,

Eu-

gene Crovetti, Daniel Bababa, Ferrell Smith, Jerry Bioggi, Bill McClurg,
William
Palladini,
Jimmy
Ugolini,
David
Jennings,
Ebbie

Gibbs,
Saielli.

Larry

Hixson,

and

Bob

There will be a “toy shop” scene
with first and
dolls ahd toys.
Jaime

second graders
The dolls will

Minorini,

Harree

as
be

Martz,

Tobie Tondi, Susan Dillard, Carolyn Brookshire, Gretchen Benedek,
Grace

Loesch,

Annette

Lenzi,

Mary

Marino, Marsha Morris, Rose Marie
Belmonte,

Crocetti,
Ann

Patricia

Dottie

Gilruth,

Blank,

Carol

and

Mary

Compton.

Other toys will be Bill Guthmann,
Donna
Beaudin,
Charles
Thorsen,
David
Poelman,
Nancy
Bride, Jerry Nitz, Dania Hedberg,

Kenneth Miller, David Palladini,
and Judith Rizzo.
The art department under Mrs.
William

Kolbe

will

be

in charge

of

decorations and scenery.
The music directors at Oak Terrace

are

Miss

Ann

Mrs.

Beverly

Bunn

Place

tend

the

of

Cub

school,
pack

Scout
are

meeting

Pack

urged
with

be

The
a

boys will decorate

variety

of

homemade

a tree with
ornaments

they have been working on in their
den meetings. The tree, which will
be given to the Recreation center
for its holiday season, will bear
such ornaments as ropes of cranberries,
popcorn
balls and hand-

made

metal novelties.

After

awarding

badges Cubbers
be a movie

the

various

have
and

won, there
community

with

Sizes 32-38.
10.95

lace
slip.
10.95

Permanent pleats and
trim this lovely nylon

3.

Dreamy nylon gown with
lace and embroidery trim.
Pink or aqua. Sizes 32-38.
10.95

at-

The theme of the meeting will
“An Old Fashioned Christmas.”

slip

2.

their

sons Sunday.
It will be held at
2:30 p.m. in the Recreation center.

nylon

embroidery.

30,

to

Heavenly

deep flounce of sheer nylon

and

Attend Pack Meeting
With Cub Scout Sons
Elm

1.

Murfey.

Parents Urged To

Parents

: seuthed

next

buy

concert

—

A

Gir

anit é

nt

o Prese

he

4. Stunning

3-piece

pajama

and quilted robe set, comes
in two shades of rose, gold

or blue.

18.95
5. Dainty nylon panties with
sheer flounce. .......----- 3.50
6.

Sizes 32-38.

Lace trimmed

nylon briefs.

STORE HOURS: 9 am. to 9
p.m. starting tomorrow thru
Dec. 23. Santa is in the toy
shop daily from 4 to 5:30 p.m.

Lhe

�Magee

oun Tbh
.~SJown

- See
+

oA

Ree

MU

e

et APL

Library Gives

a

There’s a sparkling gayety at Villa

_

wh

a

THE VILLA IS IMPORTANT
IN HOLIDAY FESTIVITIES

|

Mana

ing published

high spirited
every dinner

- Lounge during the dinner hour and
through the evening.
Py.

LET

CHRISTMAS SHOPPING
BECOME A JOY
Christmas
Gifts, large and

‘For
-small, for every one
_ you'll find shopping
of

Grace

In

Herbst

a quiet,

‘with

a

real

unhurried

gracious

—

pleasure.

saleswomen

most

to

3 Piece Combo

in

China,

Pot-

Furniture
all so
conveniently dis-

CLUB 7

“Duveen,”
exploits

FRIENDS
|

‘played. 563 Lincoln Ave. Winnetka.

Blue,”

by

Arthur

Douglas
As

Art-

by S. N. Behrman (the
of a famous art dealer.)

array

These

true

scale

are

Complete,
Talking

of

accessories,

2 rail trains,
priced

ready

to

Station,

Cattle

Cars

trically,

from

run.

Mail

My

Life

by

and

elec-

Cars

operated

elec-

486

Central

Permanent.

ee

Mr.

in

_ of

excellent

pointment

Contoure

presenting

Armand, well known
Miss Barbara.is also
now

Mr.

Hair Stylist.
on the staff

operators.
and

Make
look

prettiest during the holidays.
Sheridan Rd. HI 2-3335.

apyour

1929

HANG
A KEY TO A BUICK
ON THE CHRISTMAS
TREE
For the woman in your life or for
the
entire
family,
nothing
will
bring
greater
joy
on
Christmas

morn

than a Buick. This is the gift

TOMATO
3

Cans

SOUP

GRADE

JELLO
3 Pkos. 23

31c

for Christmas.

1732

First

St.

:

IT MAY BE
LATER THAN YOU WISH
But no need for worry. At the shop
of
Edith Saletra there is still a
wide assortment of appealing gifts

for
on

the men,
your

smart

women,

list.

and

and

Occasional

unusual

children
furniture,

table

settings,

beautiful clocks etc. Dolls galore,
books
and
games
of
every
de_ seription. 739 St. Johns Ave. (opp.
Ravinia
station).
POOR

LONELY

LITTLE

DOG

ON CHRISTMAS
You go galavanting away for the
holidays, thinking only of yourself. How
_ pup feels

big
to

do you think that little
about being parked in a

empty house with just any one
look

after

Kennels

him?

At

Butterworth

he will be cozy warm

and

fed
with
the
right
foods.
The
os Butterworths will give him love,
- too. 2810 Park Ave. HI 2-1352.

Bt

BR uth

|

Page

8

William

C.

Grew
“Judge Medina,’
by
Hawthorne
Daniel. Authorized biography of
famed judge who presided over
the trial of 11
communists
in

1949
“Abraham Lincoln,” by Benjamin
P. Thomas. A single volume biography for the Lincoln beginner.
Biographies for Younger Set
“Peter Zenger,”’ Fighter For Freedom (7-8 graders) by Tom Salt
“Thomas Jefferson,’ Champion Of
The People, by Clara Judson (68 graders)

of

The

Delawares,’

by

Wakeheld

“A”

LARGE

months

S. No.

RAP-IN-WAX
STARKIST

Cpl. Beckman
Highland
Park

TUNA

1 McClure

RED
POTATOES

10

Lbs. 5 9c

Easy-to-Peel
Florida

TANGERINES &amp; Doz. 49°

te
Green
orida

CUCUMBERS
est When

2 tor

15¢

Green

PASCAL

1 5 c

CELERY
Stalk
Fanev California

NAVEL
AP ANCES

PETER

PAUL

ALMOND
MAZOLA

5 9c

3

Bars

25¢

CERTIFIED

CORNED
MORREL

BACON

BEEF

FLOUR

Lb. 69c

5-lb. Bag Alc

Christmas

Ctn.
of 6

Wrapping

Vel or Fab

3

69¢
Paper

Reg.
Bars

23¢

Cleanser

NIGHT

Pkgs. &gt;9¢

Camp

graduate of
school
and
before ennow living

his

wife,

the

Olson.

matter

what

you

find

want

to buy

the Want-Ad

sec-

place.

Pleurisy
If you have ever experienced
that sharp pain in the side
which is one of the symptoms
of pleurisy you will not soon
forget it. And if you wish to

Soap
2

meine

BOC

2

Cans

29 ©

LAUNDRY BLEACH
Linco ,Btl.
2.

FOOD

Central

Avenue

—

A

IS FAMILY

NIGHT

AT

SUNSET

I5¢

g.27¢

MART

Central
—

Food

Store

STORE

OPEN

‘TILL 9 P.M.

a

long

siege

of

ness you will see your
as soon as possible.

AJAX

ORDER NOW FOR HOLIDAYS
Special Attention Will Be Given—
Turkeys — Geese — Capons — Rib Roast

FRIDAY

2

Palmolive

Cc

YORKSHIRE

757

No

avoid

Style

SUNSET

after

at

MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE !-lb. Tin 94¢

LAMB

FULL SHANK HALF
HOME CURED—Kosher

with

Patricia

tion your best market

14-16 lbs.

HAMS

WHOLE

Northbrook

or sell you'll

PURE FRESH GROUND BEEF /+. 49¢
WILSON’S

in

CORNED BEEF HASH -- 3 16-0z. Tins $100

Free

S. CHOICE

is a
High

ALL

2 Pkgs.

LEG OF SPRING

of

Gal. Tin $223

Sweetheart Soap
U.

was
released
Ind.

tion on Skokie highway
tering the army. He is
former

ARMOUR’S

PURPOSE

son

worked at the Pure Oil Service sta-

JOYS
OIL

SHURFINE

Doz.

Beckman,

of his duty in Korea,

which
he
Atterbury,

LIGHT CHUNK

U.

Leonard

Martin
Beckman,
2052
Deerfield
road, was released from the army
recently after almost three years
service.
He
served
the
last
10

EGGS

are oh so reasonable. Ask for demonstration. Have one delivered in

time

by

editor

“The Turbulent Era,” by Joseph

“Dance To The Piper,’ by Agnes
G. DeMille.
Modern dance and
ballet exponent tells her story.
“The Magic Curtain,’ by Lawrence
Irangner. Recounts the history of
the Theatre Guild.
“The
World
of George Jean Nathan,” by G. J. Nathan
Statesmen and World Figures
“Champion Campaigner,” by Har-

FLAVORS

_ yourself and family. See the Buick
models at Kleeburg Buick. Prices

‘HI 2-4800.

amaz-

Morris

War Given Discharge

supreme
which
will bring
miles
- of happiness, years of pleasure to

fi,

Morris,”
The

Veteran of Korean

ASSORTED

cludes a smart new hair styling,
a cut, and long lasting, easy to arpleasure

President,’

man,

Cpl.
CAMPBELL’S

St.

CHRISTMAS
GIFT
.
FROM CONTOURE SALON
For
your
Merry
Christmas
gala
season. Mr. Contoure offers a regular $25.00 Permanent for the very
SPECIAL price of $17.50. This in-

takes

Mr.

Swiggett,

ing life of patriot Robert

Marty

AT SUNSET

{

range

Extraordinary
Howard

the

Cars

unload

parts.

by

Evelyn Nevin (4-6 graders)
“Lafayette, Friend Of America,” by
Alberta P. Graham (5-7 graders)
“Champlain Of The St. Lawrence,”
by Ronald Syme (5-7 graders)

Gauge Model Railroad Kits, Accesand

De-

Herbert

Hoover

“Captive

a _jtrically by wee men etc. Also H. O.
sories

by

Hill-

Sullivan,”

to

which

Hand

1929-1941,

“Mr.

And

$15.95.

See

pression

In

A How-De-Do,

car-

made

by

“Working
With
Roosevelt,”
Samuel Rosenman
“Memoirs,”
V. 3; The
Great

Ber-

are the American Flyer, and

ried.

his

“Rumor
and Reflection,’¢ by
nard Berenson

Christmas gift for any boy than
one of the famous electric trains.
Only at the Highland Park Cycle
vast

of

by

Nijinsky,”

“WHAT could be a more thrilling

‘a

Freeman

“The Last Years of
Romola Nijinsky

‘AMERICAN FLYER’
COMES TO TOWN

Shop

Southall

“Lincoln,”
a picture story
life, by Stefan Lorant

“The

—

III.

The

old F.
Cashel:
(Franklin
D.
Roosevelt’s techniques.)
“George Washington,” V. 5, Victory
with the help
of
France,
by

“My Island
Home,’
an _ autobiography, by James Norman Hall
In the World of the Theater

Gilbert
Green

2-4476
Ave., Highwood,

by

*Pioneer’s
Progress,’
an autobiography by Alvin Johnson

Good Atmosphere —

HI
325 Waukegan

Hannibal,”

“Hemingway, The Writer
ist,” by C. H. Baker

“Here’s

at

of

Wechter

“Arrow in
Koestler

Friday Nights

MEET YOUR

as-

elegant

Glass,

tery, Occasional
attractively and

—

Clemens

Dixon

atmosphere

‘Sist you, your selections are cer‘tain to be a success. The most
beautiful,
the
Lamps, Silver,

ENTERTAINMENT

on your list
at the Shop

“Sam

\

Culled from the adult and juvenile departments are the following
titles of recent biographies which
are suggested as possible selections
for friends and relatives.
Artists, Educators, Men of Letters
“Boswell
In Holland,
1763-1764,”
by Frederick A. Pottle
“Bernard Shaw and
Mrs.
Patrick
Campbell, their correspondence,”
edited by Alan Dent
“So Long To
Live,”
an
autobio-

This Christmas season, like
many of its predecessors, finds
and
every
evening
is an
event.
many shoppers who would like
The discriminating appreciate the. to
give books as gifts perplexed
- excellent quality food and splenin the selection of specific titles.
did service. Every one adores the
'952 has been no exception in
music of Verne Scott, popular pithe number of biographies be-anist, who
plays in the Leopard
Moderne during the
Holiday time. There

and read gener-

ally.

Gift Ideas For
Varied Tastes

graphy, by John Masefield

the

ill-

doctor

Pleurisy usually results from
subjecting
the body to extremes of heat and cold without being properly clothed for
these changes.
With prompt medical attention and
effective medicine
the sick period can often be
reduced to a few days. To be
effective
medicine
must
be
pure,
potent,
and
carefully
compounded.

Earl W. Gsell &amp; Co.
—Pharmacists—

Thursday,
PWG" lh a

December
as

—

11, 1952
tiaMi
AC aeat

inline alaa bramserineed
rs

fi, 0

__
Cont
aes
ari iy
bs Bt

cs

�side we

attending

on

the

Red

Donor

campaign.

mittee

are

the

and

favor-

publicity

Cross

We

grateful

prominence

hear

the
of

Blood

the

indeed

space

com-

for

you

The theory of the Bill of Rights
is expressed in the common phrase,
“Every man’s house is his castle.’’
Storm and wind and rain may en-

the

gave

to

program.

You
had

are entitled

a large

part

to feel
in

the

that

ter,

you

but

dare
most

successful

drive, which resuiteu in the collection of 449 pints of blood.
You will be interested in knowing that we have just received a
letter from Mrs. Miriam N. Boyer,
director
of recruitment
for
the

no

forces

of

government

cross
the threshold
ruined tenement.

of

the

Herein are stated the rights on
which we stand,
the
maxims
by
which we live and the precepts by
which we demand and expect fair
treatment from our fellow citizens.

Chicago chapter of the American
Red Cross, in which she states,

What are
guarantees?

“On behalf of the Chicago chapter
and its Defense Blood program, we
want to thank you for the superb
job you did in support of the bloodmobile visit at Highland Park December 3 and 4.
It is the finest
job
of recruiting
that
has
ever

1: Freedom of speech, of the press,
of assembly and the right to petition.
2. The right to keep and bear
the right to a state militia.

4.Protection
seizure.

Laura S. Wilbur
Theo. G. Newman.

be the

161st

6.The
right of
criminal suits.
anni-

co &lt;3

will

against

search

and

versary of the first 10 amendments

. The

rights

trial

by

jury

in

in civil suits.

. Protection from excessive fines
and cruel and unusual punishments.
9. That the federal Constitution is
a delegation of powers from the

it not be fitting in these
political upheaval to ob-

the

anniversary

date

cS

of this

are clearly and simply stated.
not

display

our

flag

our

lot to be living

and

DISPLAYED ON
OUR GIFT TABLE

Why

offer

a

prayer of thanksgiving that this is
States

in the

United

of America?

Although ours is a new country,
our government is the oldest in existence. The governments of older
countries
have
changed
much
in
the last 165 years since the Constitution was written. Though many
of its authors were
not satisfied
with their work, it has stood the
test of time.

from $100

SCARVES |

JEWELRY
EVENING

Muriel S. Olson
(Mrs.
Roy Olson),
Member of the National Defense Committee,
North
Shore
Chapter DAR

That

Special

BAGS

BELTS

COMPACTS
LEATHER

For

BAGS

Occasion

RENT A
MINK COAT
CAPE,
We

Baer, ps

— Christmas Gifts — |

the

STOLE

carry

OR

a separate

ee

JACKET
and

a)

com-

Chi

es ine

Sa

é

vlete stock for rental purposes.
For

Information Phone
ANdover 3-5512

Lake Forest 2168 : 2

650 N. Western

ne
~~

TURKEY GAME PARTY
Free Turkey Lunch
Saturday, Dec. 13, 8 p.m.

Christmas

|

at

Shopping

bes raw oe
wegenFis

fe

MOLEYS

INN

WHEELING, ILLINOIS

we dt

The best Products — The best Service |

Galore!

POTTED

Electric

Television

Refrigerators
Stoves

- Washers

Radios

HOT

POINT

RCA VICTOR

ELENA
Hsu &amp; Gh Shop
HOLIDAY

General

Electric

ADMIRAL

SUNBEAM

SUNBEAM

ZENITH

\
4,

ke

General

eR

WE are NOW
OPEN...

Pa aeee
Spleens
ee

-

eae

ee

e

Prizes

Your

Sx
pe

BUBBLING

Do

ior

ee

to the Constitution which are
known as the Bill of Rights. They
became
effective
December
Lo;
1791, when Virginia, the 10th state

to

hallowed
declaration
of our
liberties? Why not
on December 15
read the first 10 amendments; they

arms,

5. Protection
from
deprivation
of
the citizen’s
life,
liberty
and
property without due process of
law.

Reader Reminds Public Of
December 15 Anniversary
Of The Bill Of Rights
year

and

serve

3. Protection against military intrusion in a person’s home.

been done in the Chicago chapter.”

This

these
precepts
They are:

Would
days of

belong

oars

every

comments

the United States
states themselves.

es

Editor:

From
able

the experiences of the
states
fore the Revolution and the conventions
of several states consented to the ratification of the
Constitution only after they were
satisfied that the 10 amendments
would be a part of it.

Sace

the

Welcome

states with no denial of rights
still retained by the states.
not delegated to
be- 10. That powers
of

a

To

Very

out

ah

You’re

to do so, ratified them.
The Bill of Rights grew

From Recders

tars

om Letters

ARRANGEMENTS
PLANTS

FLOWERS

FOR ALL OCCASIONS

GREETING

CARDS

CANDLES

FLOWERS
Berthe

AND

K. Strubel

GIFTS
Agnes

454 Green Bay Road

Donini

Highwood,

Alverson

RADIO

Illinois
1805

Phone

HI 2-4534

Thursday, December ‘ll, 1952
Bh

Ree

ee

. bac Uh

ST.

JOHNS

AVE.

AND

TELEVISION

iene
Sek

MOLEY

is

$k

At

COMPANY

Highland Park 2-2042

A

�Going

Out
Final

Of

Business

Christmas snow and glittering icicles, although absent from
the Highland Park scene, will furnish the decor for Saturday

Reductions

DRESSES
BLOUSES
SKIRTS
SWEATERS

300

night’s Turnabout dance at Highland Park High school.
party, called the “Frosty Frolics,” because of its North

- 500

7°

. 10Q°°

- 2°0

4.00

- 6°

700

Turnabout Darice, Is Dec. ] ‘ie

- 4.00
- §°0

- 2°0

-4,00

theme,

- 1490
- $00
-

12°
-

$00

Describe Life
Behind Iron Curtain
' Ralph B. Mack
road, leader of

From

Cashmere

Slacks

Sweaters

-

-

Coats

-

Ski

Pants

Jewelry

Scarfs

-

-

All Sales

1900 Sheridan

Hats

Cottons

-

Bags

Umbrellas

ct
All

-

Drastic

Reductions

Final

All

the

December

Boy

Scouts

20

at

of the

5:15

com-

munity and their parents are invited
to
attend
and
hear
Miss
Kerssenbrock describe her experiences behind the Iron Curtain and
her escape to this country.

“Radio

Free

Europe,

Asia

which

and

Radio

are supported

by the Crusade for Freedom, beams
messages of hope and encouragement to the enslaved peoples in
Communist
controlled
countries,”
said William
S. Bishop,
Chicago
regional director for the Crusade.

Mr. and Mrs.
wood announce

SPECIAL!

school.

to

Nancy

Hall

Coash

charge

of

and Tom
tickets,

Carl Ostchairman.

which

are in

sell

Ray Vai of Highthe birth of their

second son, Bruce Edward, on Monday in Lake Forest hospital. Their
elder son, Russell is one year old.
The
paternal
grandmother
is

SPECIAL!

being handled
and Toni Mur-

phey, and Julie Whitney is responsible for publicity.
Refreshments
and check room facilities are un-

der the care of Peter Walker.
The Student Council is completing final
arrangements
for
the
party.
Ettlinger

of

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ettlinger
Winnetka announce the arrival

of their first child, Jan Viola, born
on Saturday in Highland Park hospital.
Mrs.
Ettlinger
is
the
former

Marjorie Nath, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Bernard Nath of Hazel avenue.
Paternal
grandparents
are
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ettlinger Sr.
of Broadview avenue.

Mrs.

Mario

Piacenza

The

maternal

of

Lincoln

grandparents

Highwood.
Only
values

the

Want

and

Ads

offer

opportunities

able elsewhere.

Read them

amazing

not

HIGH

SPECIAL!

EGGS doz. 59c

SCORE

Butter Ib. 69c

CAMPFIRE MARSHMALLOWS
1.G.A. ALL PURPOSE FLOUR
DOMINO CANE SUGAR
1.G.A. PITTED
CINDERELLA

25-lb. Bag .... $169
5-lb. Bag 49c

DATES
SEEDLESS

RAISINS

Regent Golden BLEACHED

RAISINS

1.G.A. CALIFORNIA WALNUTS

I-Ib. cello 2 3¢

I-Ib. Cello A'7¢

Se

aa

Super Mart.
»s
ceria

1848
&amp; ORI

MANOR

Ist Street

HOUSE

Coffee

‘ui $459

2 LB

I.G.A. Fancy New York APPLE SAUCE No. 303 2 for 99¢
Ripe ‘n Ragged PINEAPPLE CHUNKS We. 22 3 for $1 00
BIRDS EYE FROZEN PEAS
BIRDS EYE FROZEN SPINACH
Birds Eye Frozen FRENCH FRIED POTATOES
1.G.A. Early June GREENIES PEAS
1.G.A, GOLDEN CORN Cream Style
1.G.A. GOLDEN CORN Whole Kernel
1-lb. Bag aie
SUNNY MORN COFFEE
1-Ib. Pkg. 23¢
SUNSHINE KRISPY CRACKERS

SUNSHINE CHEEZ-IT
SUNSHINE

HYDROX

|

avail-

now!

Rib End Pork Roast.... lb. 19
Loin End Pork Roast ..lb. 2.9:
| FRESH COUNTRY—Large Size

for

are Mr. and Mrs. Egidio Saielli of

Vai

- 5:30

in the

high

midnight,
according
rand, entertainment

place.

2-7348

given

$1.50.
will address
a
Decorations are
Ravinia school by Margie Ellman

Reds,”

in

gymnasium

p.m.

Free

HI
9:30

of 860 Green Bay
Cub
Scout
Pack

Miss
Kerssenbrock
is
coming
directly from New York City where
she is currently engaged in aiding
the Crusade for Freedom—an
organization which assisted materially in bringing her to America. She
is a graduate of Barat college, Lake
Forest.

All Sales Cash

Road
DAILY

the

be

at the

Roy Milton and
his band
will
play for dancing from 9 p.m. to 12

65, has announced that Miss Mia
Kerssenbrock, author of “I Escaped
gathering

will

gymnasium

The
Pole
boys’

oe

�Durand

Simulated

Leath-

er Desk Set. Perfect...
to have or to give. Gold
stamped. Complete Set.
$3.50 &amp; $3.95
Matching wastebasket ................
Matching letterbasket, ................
PN EOE ota tao
re ci Snds en cass iced
Matching scrapbook ..............----....
PWNS DO, Guia sh ee ye
$2.50
A complete assortment of other style
desk sets ond accessories.
. now!

Pin-up Boaras.
Your choice of
red, tan, green
or
blue felt

face. ’’Pin-ups”
or “Snaps and
Scraps” at top.
Measure 24x24

in, .....- $2.25

At Chandler’s

Handsome,
ord Books.
able at left.
business or
Designed
quick

Royal Quiet Deluxe Typewriter.
One of the finest portables made. Has loads of ‘big machine”
features. With modern, compact carrying case.
Just ask for the machine with built-in ‘’whisperquiet’’ silence. Only $10 down. $97.50 plus tax.

Handy RecType availPerfect for
social use.
for easy,

reference.

AND BEAUX
[] Fine Plastic Playing Cards
[] Westclox Clock
[] Plastic Picture Frames
[] Fishing Tackle
[] Golf Balls
[_] Golf Ball Marker

For Mom
} Pine Cetd Tobies cision
$13.95
VV Tee i
Set $12.60
[] Three-piece Thermometer Set.
Includes
Deep Fat, Meat and Candy
PPIOFIIGRNONET o..cnk i asd dce oan edeas $7.50

[]
[]
[]
[]
(]
[]
[_]

Practice Putt
Desk Lamp
Picnic Thermos Kit
Diaries and Calendar Pads
Best-Seller Books
Pitchin- Pal Game
Potato-Head Game

For Dad

[]

1953 Date Books

[J Handy Mahogany Valet ........---.-------- $12.00

[] Success Calendar Refills
[1] Stamp Albums and Catalogues
[]

Small Home
Lock

Safe with Combination

[J

Book Lamps

(To Clamp on Book)

Py Poker Taba. iijectciiccccnaaesncsis $37.50
[J Ronson &amp; Zippo Lighters ...........- from $3.50
[2 OAVE DOS POR, Set 0-8. Seceked $6.50

Give...
the pon
that tukes the'dunk”

ce

ee

MT

ec

a Ne rapes

a

Si hes ok ta

Automatic Card Shuffler.
Yes it really works!
Simply place cards on loading shelves . . . turn
the handle . . . presto! . . . cards are shuffled.
$5.95

Shaeffer’s Brilliantly NEW Snorkel Pen.
With the amazing “‘no-dunk”’ siphon action.
Choice of models, colors. From .... $12.50

Complete Writing Kit. Ideal for servicemen and
students!
Includes calendar, stationery, stampholder, blotter, address book. ..............--..-- $6.95

Chandlers
Princess Gardner

billfold. 3-

way. bill divider;

pass case.

Saddle

........

cowhide.

; Thursday, ‘December i, 1952

$5.

Registrar.
Prince Gardner
Slim-lined. Detachable pass
case. Calfette goat. $5.00

645

Central

Avenue

Highland Park
Page

ll

�BEAM
oS
sisi

Et Tr

re Se) eRae

Ne PERC 8 ER ERS
ipo
Sree)CAEN

OT NT

Poorer PERE Dy LaF RPE a DAREN T 5 HART ORTE ET
A Sage Fk HEY
Nope NPP
wes

Ty

Rei

ON

Os

ta,

HP Thrift S hop

Garnett
ine

gi ts

Co.

for the
finest

MAN

you

bub

Esquire

a
tte
ny
ai

ett)

thi

‘\

Fine quality cotton

in bright colors

e

fap

all wool ARGYLES
EXCLUSIVE

Ve

WITH

ESQUIRE SOCKS

1.95 and 2.95

Yule Program _

Aids Work Of
Blocd Mobile

The Highland Park Thrift Shop
on Central avenue, whose profits
are contributed to various charities
and
organizations,
recently
gave
$25 to the Red Cress Blood program. The contribution was used to
defray the cost of food served to
professional and volunteer workers
attached to the Blood Mobile unit
while it was stationed at the American Legion building last week.

corduroy

CASHMERE
Ee

Rich

in

will be a part of the program. This
year the gifts brought by the children will be sent to the children’s
ward of the Cook County hospital,
Chicago; to the Lake Bluff OrphanThe
age, and to far-away Korea.

Mrs. Knox’ canteen is not to be
confused
with
the
regular
Red
Cross canteen that accompanies the
Blood Mobile and serves light refreshments
to
volunteer’
blood
donors.

solid

colors.

Also

sweaters

of

part

-club
of

List Program Events
The evening’s entertainment will
start with an instrumental ensemble and group of Christmas carols
played by the Elm Place band.
Part two of the program will describe Christmas customs in song
The junior choir will
and poetry.
sing ‘We Wish You a Merry Christmas,” “Jolly Old St. Nick,” and a
group of carols. Several poems on
Christmas candles and gifts will be
included, and the combined classes

12.95

“On
presents
choir
mixed
the
Chrismas Day.”
The boys and girls will give their
white gifts in the final portion of
The girls ensemble
the program.

sing

will

H.

Bridges,

son

of

Mills,

with

headquarters

LOUVRES
CASHMERE

Made

Soft as a cloud—a

6.95

MUFFLERS
wonderful

gift.

to Measure

and Installed

H. N. GAMLIN
1664 First Street

by
Road”
“Bethlehem
Ringing,”
Greenlund, and “Christmas Song”

combined

The

Charles.

HI2-5102

they

will

be

Night”

classes

by Adams

joined

by

the

the

in

Men’s Garden Club
Names

New

Officers

Officers
and
directors
of the
Men’s
Garden
club
of
Highland
Park have been elected for 1953
following their nomination at the
November meeting.
They are as follows:
Robert Leopold, president; Clayton Sandel, first vice president; Edward
Engelbrecht,
second
vice
president; Warren Peterson, treasurer;
Arlen
Wilson,
secretary;
Thomas
Browning
and
William
Wenninger, directors for one year;
Eben Erikson,
Elzie Partlow,
Edward
Sincere,
Roswell
Swazey,
George
Kneupfer,
and _ Everett
Schaubert, directors for two years.

Month

In

Colorado

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L. Bell of
Lincoln
place
are
leaving
for
Pueblo, Colo., on December 22, to
visit their
daughter
and _ son-in-

law, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Stancliff,
and their daughter, Jeanne Bell.
The
Bells
will
spend
Christmas
and the following month with the
Stancliffs and will return to High-

land

Park

the

end

of January.

ster college in Fulton, Mo., and was
graduated from Iowa university in
‘Towa City.

Thursday,
20

ee

Cradle

choir has selected
Is
There
‘‘Today

The mixed
Christiansen’s

Plan

100%

“No

Lehman’s

Was There and No Fire,” and the
“Gesu
will: offer
grades
upper
Bambino” by Yon.

World”
in “Joy to The
audience
before the finale, ‘Hallelujah Chorus” by Wilson.

INSIDE.

Imported

after

Tree”

will sing “O Christmas

and

Kansas City, Mo.
Mr. Bridges. has been connected
with
General
Mills for the past
two years. He was moved to Kansas
City last February after working
for a year in Chicago. He and Mrs.
Bridges
and
their
two
children,
Stevie and Laurie, now make their
home in Bethel, Kans.
Mr. Bridges attended Westmin-

cashmere

to

gifts

To Director's Post
With General Mills

eral

and wool.

the

Wm. Bridges Named

William

added

ex-

the

defray

will

transporting

gifts

will sing ““O Holy

Harold A. Bridges of Ridgewood
drive, was named director of advertising and sales promotion for
the Animal Feeds division of Gen-

24.95
a

Rotary
penses
Korea.

white

of

presentation

The

by

SWEATERS

and creamy, 2-ply for
strength. Solid colors.

invited to attend.

Committee women included Mrs.
Elwood Hansmann, co-chairman, of
Lincoln avenue south; Mrs. Donald
B.
Robinson,
Mrs.
Raymond
J.
Walker and Mrs. Albert J. Bushey,
all of Carol court; Mrs. I. S. Riggs
and Mrs.
Sherman
D. Clough
of
Lakeside place; Mrs. Nathan Corwith
of
Kimballwood
lane;
and
Mrs. Harry
VanOrnum
of Green
Bay road.

There is an excellent selection of
toys at the shop as well as other
articles suitable for Christmas gifts,
according to Mrs. Glidden.

The perfect shirt for his
leisure hours. Fine wale

will be presented

which

gram

in the Jesse Lowe Smith auditorium at the Elm Place school
next Wednesday at 8 p.m. Parents and friends are cordially
Some of the customs, which have
been chosen from our rich heritage of Christmas festivities, will
be presented by the children of the
Carols
grades.
fifth
and
fourth
will be sung by the upper and intermediate groups.

The treasurer, Mrs. Jay Glidden,
reported another month of record
sales for the shop. The rest of the
profits were divided
as ‘usual between the three supporting organizations, Northwestern Settlement,
the Woman’s auxiliary of Highland
Park hospital, and Infant Welfare.

2.90

is
“Christmas in America”
protmas
Chris
the
the theme of

Mrs. William H. Wilbur of Central avenue, blood program repre.
sentative, named Mrs. Edward M.
Knox of Lakeside place as canteen
chairman who, with the aid of her
committee,
served
luncheon
and
dinner to the volunteer and professional workers.

At the monthly meeting of the
Board of the Thrift Shop held in
the home of the president,
Mrs.
F. B. Carpenter, a gift was voted
to the Lake County Tuberculosis
association.

CORDUROY
SHIRTS

At Elm Place
Is Announced

December

l11, 1952

+:

�Fhe
OTH

°

°

SRE oteTe

NON RAP
ANT

0 ony
Wek

Nes oeeta ee

O

Columbia

Records

rata.

oe:

Music and entertainment for_every age and taste, for everyor regular 78 rpm records,
one on your list on 3314

CONCERTOS

&amp; JAZZ

NEW! BENNY GOODMAN
1937/38 JAZZ CONCERT
VOL. Il
Following the ,smashing ‘success of the first volume of
Benny

Goodman’s

Hall—recorded
Columbia

has

1938

on
now

Concert,

that

famous

issued

a

(Goodman

night

second

at

of Jan.

volume

of

16,

1938)
jazz.

These recordings were taken from broadcast concerts during
the season of 37/38 and give the listener the unique

(]

[]

Cond.

Orch

of

Met.

Opera)

ML

4515

SYMPHONY

........ ML

4308

ML

4233

(Bliss)
(The Skaters)

O

(Meyerbeer)

ae

ee

ar

LES SYLPHIDES (Chopin)
See GON, YP Ce, Pe ee

Ormandy

&amp; Phila.

Orch.

2. (Rachmaninoff)
Ones i

.... ML

4544

ca

ML

4433

(Dvorak)
SYMPHONY NO. 5 (New World)
Szell
Denne Aen, foi

ML

4541

(Beethoven)
7 IN A MAJOR
N. Y. Phil. Orch. ............ ML

4414

SYMPHONY NO. 5 IN C MINOR
Bruno Walter’ &amp; No“¥. Phil? Orch:

PAGLIACCI

(Tschaikowsky)
ee ML
a
(Beethoven)
ML
ion

OR

ML

ML

4367

4255

PARIS

EXCERPTS FROM FAMOUS WILL
SPEECHES, By Wil Rogers oo

1

cs

4400

LA TRAVIATA
COSI

PORGY

FAN

(Verdi)

BUTTERFLY
TUTTI

&amp; BESS

SL

113

..............2202..022.

SL

109

Complete --.................. SL

103

.... SL

104

(Puccini)

(Mozart)

(Complete

\GGrShWilinrIGYWOrd).

(Cornelia

“QUIET: MUSIC’’—A

Complete

Complete

............ SE“122

Operetta)

cis
he

SL.-162

Otis

Skinner)

and

651 CENTRAL AVENUE

RECORD

ML

4619

ML

4604

ROGERS

Series Designed for Your Listening

with

Goodman

&amp;

Mi pap walt

dead odsanes 3 ububacwbibabike ecw GL 510 thru GL 519

Such Orchestras as Cugat,
The Columbia Salon Orch.

Weber,

Al

SHOW BOAT, SOUTH PACIFIC &amp; SLAUGHTER ON
10TH AVE. (Kostelanetz &amp; Orch.) -........... ML 4514
STUDENT

PRINCE

(Romberg)

“Re Rounesvilie) ied.k

C] THE

MERRY

WIDOW

(DO,

Kirsten:

R,

Ar

ue ML

4592

ML

4666

(Lehar)

Rounesville)

ic

[]

ORGAN
PAT

MUSIC OF BACH BY THE WORLD FAMED
GIT
TE BIER Sil voce cco che cincecm tues SL
175.

1)

BENNY GOODMAN TRIO (Goodman, Krupa &amp; Wilson)
Plays for Fletcher Henderson Fund ................ GL
516

(1)

NEW

CHILDREN’S FAVORITES
PETER

Godfrey

AND

THE

WOLF

Narration

with

Kostelanetz

RUDOLPH
| SAW

THE

RED

MOMMY

1

‘TWAS

()

SUZY

[)

FROSTY.

[1] THE
Little

THE

KISSING

Bitty

SANTA

Re

NIGHT

BEFORE

SHOP

(Arthur

ML

.... MJIV

4625

56

CLAUS

eee

MJV

152

CHRISTMAS

MJV

88

Gon

MJV

123

MJV

75

Pedobiocsy wily MJV
bikip bide ncuta
........ Joitsnlti

53G

PRAYER
Baby

&amp; Orch.

le

iii

SMOWMAING

THE.

(Prokofieff)

REINDEER

oi

SNOWFLAKE

LORD’S

NOSED

ious

ico de eccsi cues ycicas

(Amos

HIGHLAN
RADIO

.........

Pleasure

[1] THE

4297

-.......

(Complete)

’90

ATRIODBTNG 2 oo
(Complete)

Cavallo)

(Leon
(Bizet)

CARMEN
MADAME

Ud:LF

rec

C1)

4596

OPERA

(As Played for the Sadler’s Wells Ballet) .... ML 4362
NUTCRACKER SUITE (Tschaikowsky)
Vouarmrieen tr: meh)
ok ae hx ML 4151
LA BOUTIQUE FANTASQUE
(The Fantastic Toy Shop)
I

4373

FOR EVERYONE

DON JUAN IN HELL (George Bernard Shaw)
(The First
Drama Quartette) Chas. Boyer, Chas. Laughton, Agnes
Moorehead &amp; Sir Cedric Hardwicke ................ SL 166

(D.Kirsten,

(Pathetique)

SYMPHONY NO. 5 IN E MINOR
Ormandy 7Phild, Orch: 22. ie

(Ormandy &amp; Phila. Orch.)
SLEEPING BEAUTY (Tschaikovsky)
(Lambert G Royal Opera Orch.)

CHECKMATE
Les Patineurs

ML

NO. 6 IN B MINOR

SYMPHONY NO.
Bruno Walter &amp;

fee

Cleva

(Rossini Respighi) Kurtz &amp; Royal Phil. Orch.
One of the most delightful &amp; melodic of the
[]

Ghee

Phil. Orch.)

bE

Osa

tee

(Fausto

eee

(Beethoven)
0 2../ ML

NEW* THE TRIUMPH OF NEPTUNE (Lord Berners)
PUNCH AND THE CHILD (Richard Arnell)

SWAN LAKE (Tschaikowsky)
Cond. Lambert &amp; Royal Opera Orch.)
GAITE PARISIENNE
(Offenbach)
Pram te Nee, in Oli) a
SCHEHERAZADE
(Rimsky-Korsakov)

nc

NOS..2 AND NO. 4
&amp; N: Y. Phil. Orch.

SYMPHONIES
Bruno Walter

(Tschaikowsky)

&amp; Royal

4025

RELEASES

[J

SYMPHONIES

SYMPHONY
NO.
Crit ae Prte.

*Two ballets that are light, gay &amp; strictly for fun!
[] FAUST BALLET (Gounod) &amp; AIDA BALLET (Verdi)

(]

ais

BALLET

(Beecham

.... ML

PIANO CONCERTO NO. 5 IN E FLAT MAJOR
(Beethoven) Serkin with Ormandy
Oo: Prot

[]

D MAJOR
(Tschaikowsky)
Orch. 3.5
ML 4232

PIANO CONCERTO IN F (Gershwin)
Lavant with Kostelanetz Cond. N.Y. Phil.

Hampton,

Ri:

[]
[J]

NO. 1 IN D MAJOR
(Paganini)
IN B MINOR
(Saint-Saens)
Phil, Orch, x2. .05.5.. ML 43.15

td

(]

4525

te

[}).
[]
[]

Krupa, Wilson, Stacy, etc.
VOL. Ti.SL: 180
VOL. V4Sk: 1.60
LIBERACE AT THE PIANO .2.0i40
oa
CL62)7
ONE FOR MY BABY (Frankie Laine) ............ CL 6200
HOLLYWOOD'S BEST (R. Clooney &amp;
PE; DONNIE acd enicdeadiicdcrustins Sislasdindcntictes: CL 6224
AN EVENING AT THE PUMP ROOM
OO, Bie WOE
rs ae
a
a ore
CL 6195
CUGAT’S FAVORITE RHUMBAS (Cugat) .... CL 6021
STARDUST (Kostelanetz &amp; Orch.) ................ ML 4597

4599

PIANO CONCERTO IN A MINOR (Grieg)
CONCERTO IN A MINOR (Schumann)
CPA TEES CF PT OOF, hn codes ss ecacpsdduasesasenc ML

VIOLIN CONCERTO IN
isaac’ Stern (with) Phila.

feeling of going “on the road” with the band. The album
contains over 35 of Goodman’s finest numbers and includes

such artists as James,

NEW PIANO CONCERTO NO. 4 (Rubenstein)
Lavant with Mitropoulos &amp; N.Y. Phil. Sym. ML

VIOLIN CONCERTO
CONCERTO NO. 3
Feancescatti t:N:Y.

Carnegie

great

4568

Oo

POPULAR
C]

RECENT

NEW PIANO CONCERTOS NO. 9 (Mozart)
Dame Myra Hess with Casals Cond. ............ ML

PHONE HI 2-0154

&amp; Andy)

�24

Sisterhood Sponsors
| Solo Presentation

Ws a 5 YY

Of ‘Black Chiffon’
The current best seller, “Black
Chiffon” by Lesley Storm, will be
dramatized Monday
at 1:30 p.m.

of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Bonamarte
of Beverly place, became the bride

“Black
Chiffon”
is a drama
which depicts a mother and son

of Mrs. Guido

tion.
in

in

The

a

play

London

and

complex

had
is

a

soon

situa-

long
to

run

be

re-

leased as a motion picture.
Mrs. Alk’s activity in dramatics
began as a high school student
‘when

test

she

in

which

won

a

state-wide

con-

reading

after

dramatic
she

went

on

to

study

at

the school of speech of Northwestern university.
At the completion
of
her
awarded

HAT

STORE OPEN EVENINGS
UNTIL CHRISTMAS

Pfc. James

daughter

Nardini,

son

Corsini of Highwood,

at Pearl Harbor T. H., on November
son

21.
of

The bridegroom
Lucien Nardini,

Highwood.

is the
also of

‘

The Rev. Otto E. Sporeur, USN
Catholic chaplain, officiated at the
9 a.m. ceremony in the Naval Base
chapel. Friends of Mr. and Mrs.
Bonamarte feted the couple afterward at a wedding breakfast
Alexander Young hotel.

in the

Miss Bonamarte wore a white
embroidered boucle blouse and ny- |
and

skirt

lon

an

open-crowned

graduate
study
and° training
in
dramatics
and theater technique.
Since that time Mrs. Alk has been

The
ment

couple is at home in Apart15,
1704
Punahau
street,

Honolulu. Pfc. Nardini is stationed

director

of

a

Dessert luncheon

on
Cc.

Traffic

Little

Theater

will precede the

which is open to the pub-

Commission

The resignation of J. C. Frehner
from the traffic commission was
“regretfully” accepted by the city
council Monday night. Mr. Frehner
resigned because
other duties and

of the press of
because he felt

that his presence was no particular

Eve
Eve

of Marine

Bonamarte,

straw

J.C. Frehner Resigns From

Park store hours, 9 to 9 through December 23, 9 to 5:30 Christmas
store hours, 9 to 9 through December.
23, 9 to 5:30 Christmas

Mary

white

before audiences throughout Chicago and the entire midwest.

EVANSTON: HIGHLAND PARK
Highland
Evenston

was
stu-

group, has done radio work and is
now
devoting
her
time
to solodramatizations
and dramatic
programs
which
she
has.
presented

RCT

BAR

studies
there,
she
a scholarship as the

Miss

dent with the most outstanding
dramatic ability, for a year of post

the

Covers your ears and neck—and does a mighty becoming job
Hat Bar’s new jersey visor cap that keeps up your
of it!
glamour rating while it keeps you snug and warm. WonBankers grey, beige, red, black,
derful for ski wear, too!
and brown. With matching or contrasting attached scarf, 7.95

WD Honolela Chapel

by Rozetta Alk of Rogers Park in
the
North
Shore
Congregation
Israel
under
the
sponsorship
of
the temple’s
Sisterhood.

relationship

“COVER GIRL” CAP

Viardini

contribution

to the

commission.

at

Pearl

remain
1953.

hat for her

Harbor

in

and

service

marriage.

expects

until

Minor Theft Reported
Edward
Knauf,
1847
Second
street, reported to Highland Park
police early Monday the theft of
two hub caps from his 1952 Mercury. The auto was parked in the
North Western lot on First street,
south of Laurel avenue.

Loss Of Bicycle Told
son’s bicycle, a
C. Higgins, was
by
to _ police

Larceny of his
red and white J.
Monday
reported

Baker

Brownell

of

677

Old

Trail.

The bike was taken from the Highlend Park High school bicycle lot.

SHERONY'S Gift Parade

BroilKing BROILER

General

Broil, fry, grill the fast infra-red way.
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SHERONY

Green

Bay

Road

LINE OF TOYS

For All Ages

rest.

Lionel — Erector — Chemistry Sets — Dolls
Johnson Ice Skates —
Stuffed Animals
Punching Bags — Fishing Equipment — Bicycles
Sporting Goods of All Types.

HARDWAR

NOW

3 3 999

Highwood

_

to

October,

~

�Hostess At College Christmas Tea

Miss oan
Whds

Miss Nancy Mc-

Tell Engagement

Nrhadee

Chicagoan

Of Miss Morrison.
To Lawrence Burns

ye

At a small
of Winnetka

Kinney, daughter
of the George W.
McKinneys
of
Braeside road, was
a student hostess
at the recent
Alumnae
Christ-

The marriage of Joan Schultz to
A. Myron Bernstein, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Archie Bernstein of Chicago took place November 30 in
the Glencoe avenue home of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin

mas tea given an-

J. Schultz.

T etiniber 30 Kites

nually
by
the
foods department
of Stephens college,

For her wedding Miss Schultz
chose a cocktail length dress of
green lace with a small hat of the
same hue. Her bouquet consisted
of Amazon lilies and stephanotis.
| Miss Evelyn Wehrmeyer of Naida

Columbia,

Mo. A junior at
Stephens,
Miss
McKinney will be
home
for the
Christmas holidays which begin
at
Stephens
on §

place,

who

left her

studies

at Car-

roll college in Waukesha, Wis., to
be maid of honor, was attired in a
‘rust colored dress. With

f

a jade

green

veil and

carried

brother, Richard, to serve
man.
,|
Attending
the
family
;

end January 4.

which

* the

followed

bride’s

the

their

santas

first

grandfather,

wedding in the chapel
Congregational

Arthur

Burns

of

attendant.

James

go will be best

ter of the Donald
Eastwood avenue,

The young people
Chicago’s near north

K. Morrisons of
will be married

Brookline,

Hibben

church, Miss Jane Morrison, daugh-

of Chica-

man.

ang
will.
side.

live

on

Whdlag Node...oA

@

on

trip,

CHRISTMAS CARDS
@ PEN &amp; PENCIL SETS
@ BOXED STATIONERY
@ SMOKING NEEDS
@ SHEET MUSIC
@ OFFICE SUPPLIES
@ TOYS &amp; CANDY

s

GIFT WRAPPINGS
&amp;

LARSON’S —— HI 2-0567
Drive Carefully — The Life You Save’
May Be Your Own!

at

Wh bers

SS, oe

SI, op

Roscoe

For the man who’s

Style Shop

dreaming of a
“right” Christmas

—

SHOES
You

can

make

Christmas

‘ ‘right”

for him

with a pair of famous Florsheim Shoes. Even
the man who has everything is sure to be
izes:
thru
Boys

Girls

infant

pre-teen.
infant
size

thru

10.

pleased with a gift of such fine quality. No need
to fret about sizes and styles. Save precious
shopping time by giving him a Florsheim Gift

Certificate that takes just seconds to purchase.

Walters

FOR CHILDREN
502 Central Ave.
Thursday,

December

11,

1952

Se

3 Doors

Open Friday Evenings ‘Til. 9 P.M.
And All Day Wednesdays
H|

2-6944

499 Central ©

j

Mass.
rngye
Her sister, Mary, is to be Miss
Morrison’s maid of honor and only

was

stop

Shopping for children’s gifts is
fun when you start off at The
Style Shop.
Here you'll find the widest selection of apparel for boys and
girls .. . at prices that you'll enjoy. Take your choice from our
gifts for girls
infant: thru
pre-teen. Or select a gift from
our boys’ collection .
infant
thru size 10.
Whatever your desire, you're
sure to find it at The Style Shop.
So start your Christmas shopping
tour here . . . all smart Santas

Mrs.

Emanuel

make

The

28, to Law-

dinner

Israel of Los Angeles, Calif.
Following a brief wedding

smart

yel-

as best

ceremony,

the couple is residing
avenue, Chicago.

December

it she wore

- low roses. Mr. Bernstein asked his

December 18 and

on Sunday,

rence Carroll Burns, son of Mr. and &gt;

East

Highland

of

Si

op

Bank

Park

HI 2-0172
d

Page 15

�Many

Mrs. Robert Cozine Strang

Pp arties Pp Liasied

Wontar’

Cab

WH

Ubher SS, Christesius

at

or

Wiss

Wika

odd i emer

_A

number

given

for

who

ski

| Shona:

of

parties

Miss

Doris

is to be married

are

Members

being

Sherbano

December

to

William

H.

Barnes

‘mother,

co-hostess

Mrs. Arthur

luncheon
Bickmore,
maids, and
Bickmore

luncheon

with

Tresch,

Ravinia Garden Club
Invitations

her

shower

at

at a

Carson

mette

at

entertained

shower

in

the

a

A

former

Highland

of Wil-

ranged

Shores

Mrs.

and

shower

Robert

Christopher,

will]

Mrs.
James

entertain
at Knollwood
Country
club.
Miss Mary Jardine, a bridesmaid,
and

her

parents,

Mr.

and

Forsythe, and her parents, Mr. and

Mrs. Robert Forsythe of Elder lane,
are planning to entertain for the
_
engaged pair during that week, as

is

John Straub, one of the ushers.

Mr. Straub and his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. George Straub of Lakeside
_ place, will give a dinner party for

|

the young people, December 22.
The
bridal dinner will be given
at

Indian

Hill

Country

club

De-

on page

Oh

_

Rev.

Charles

Trinity Episcopal

|
avenue.
Bok A small

U.

Of Mss Whlben
The

Harris

church

reception

at

on Laurel

followed

the

_ ceremony at the Hazel avenue home
of
Marian’s
great-grandmother,
Mrs. Francis E. Baldwin, and her
_ grandmother, Mrs. Baldwin Newman.
The maternal grandfather,

|

Gen.

Aubrey

S.

| 82nd
Airborne
_ the ceremony.
The

Newman
division,

Newmans’

of

the

attended

daughter,

Eliza-

beth, who is a senior at Skidmore
_ college in Saratoga Springs, N. Y.,
- spent the Thanksgiving weekend
with the Harry Gardener family
in Wayne, Pa. The Gardeners are
_ former residents of Highland Park.
_.

Miss

Newman

and

Miss

Helen

_ (Gardener, who is a senior at Wil: iam

IN.

Smith

Y.,

football

college

in

Geneva,

attended

the

game

Philadelphia

in

Army-Navy
on

_ November 29. Miss Newman is ex‘pected

home

holiday season.

next

Tene.
i:

week

for

of

Winnetka

Photo

Junior Curlers
Form 12 Rinks at

Engagement

of

W
to John

Brittany

recently
given

a

Mr.

and

Mrs.

M.
N.

school

uate

of

is

of

Winson

of

Sullivan

a

New

and

World

Trier

a gradAn
War

Air
II,

who has his degree
university and from
School of Business

Administration,
Chicago.

Miss

Mrs.

the

college.

during

Mr. Sullivan,
from Cornell
the Harvard

party

and

Y.

Smith

The couple
in February.

dinner
Mr.
is

graduate,

pilot

Eulalie

announced

Wallace

bride-to-be

High

Exmoor

Sullivan

Woleben

Sullivan

of Marcellus,

Force

family

Allan

netka.

His

was

by her parents,

Stanley
Dr.

of Miss

Wallace

court

at

| Exmoor Country Club

sNeeltvase

engagement

Woleben

Marian Elizabeth Bradley, two
year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Claiborne S. Bradley of Lake Forest, was baptized recently by the

| Very

//

cS is

Baptized Recently At
Trinity Episcopal Church

Howell

The former Miss Courtney Clague, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Stanley Richard Clague, whose marriage to Robert
Cozine Strang took place November 29 in The Highland Park
Presbyterian church. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Hubert C. Strang of Colorado Springs. The young couple
motored to California on their wedding trip.

18)

‘Marian Elizabeth Bradley

Ban-

commemorating

the

Ravinia

by

Mrs.

Garden

Claburn

E.

Jones

of Christmas
program story

Willard
Ewing
Barton will do

George
John

cember 26 by Mr. and Mrs. Barnes,
(Continued

road,

R.

decoris be-

and
Mrs.
the flower

arrangements
and
party decorations in the season’s spirit.
Hostesses
are
Mrs.
Clifford
Makelim, chairman of the tea, and
her committee members, Mesdames

Mrs.

Theodore P. Jardine of N. Ridge
road,
will entertain at an open
house and shower for both young
people during Christmas week. Another bridal attendant, Miss Diane

_

C.

ing written by Mrs. B. F. Reinking
of
Hopkins,
Minn.,
formerly
of
Bannockburn, and by Mrs. Richard
Thompson. Mrs. Reinking is planning to be present at the Silver
Tea.

are

who

Telegraph

the history
ations. The

planned on December 20 by Miss
Julie Christopher of Melody lane,
- also an attendant, and her mother,
Mrs.

Mrs.

of Charles Dickens, will lend color
to the scene as they tell in song

Johnson’s home on Lakeside place.
luncheon

of

for

tomor-

High school, wearing old-fashioned
costumes reminiscent of the time

in honor of the bride-to-be, and
Mrs.
Emmett Johnson and Mrs.
Jack Churchill feted her on Tuesday at a luncheon-shower in Mrs.

A

home

mailed

given

of Cedar avenue, program
chairman. Carolers from Highland Park

Henry
Schroeder of Kenilworth,
_ is planning a tea and shower today

|

be

A program of Christmas music
and customs given in a setting of
seasonal decorations has been ar-

luncheon-

Parker,

been

to

founding
of the
club in 1927.

club.
e

the

nockburn,

Exmoor

Michigan

at

have

tea

Torrence,-

Country club and Mrs. O. B. Kibler

‘and Mrs. Hubert

Silver

row

and shower. Miss Judy
another of the bridesher mother, Mrs. Frank
of Beech lane, gave a

and

Park

25th Anniversary of
the

is

in

business

is planning

Becker

Holiday From

Home

in

to marry

For

Radcliffe

Mr. and Mrs. James Becker of
Maple
avenue
will
have _ their
daughter Kate home with them for

the Christmas holiday. Miss Becker

the is

a junior at Radcliffe college in

Cambridge,

Mass.

Country club is the first

North Shore club to boast an organized
group
of junior
curlers.
Twelve
rinks
were
chosen
last
weekend from the high school age
members.
They will compete
in
round
robin matches
every
Sunday preparatory to a bonspiel and
elimination
tournament
during
Christmas vacation.
Skips of the various rinks include
Pat and Mead Montgomery, George
and
Jack
Tyson,
Michael
Hall,
Britt Davis, Jack Holloway, Warren
Brown,
Michael
Tighe
Jr.,
Woody
Hansmann,
Gay
Stirling,
and Julie Patton.
Peter Husting is chairman of the
(Continued on page 18)

The Charles Ballengers
Have Son Baptized Recently
Bruce Pope, infant son of Mr.
and Mrs. H. Charles Ballenger of
Glencoe avenue, was baptized recently at the Immaculate Conception church.
Members
of
the
family
and

friends gathered
home
mony.

at the Ballengers’

following the church
cereAmong the guests were the

baby’s godmother, Mrs. E. William
Immerman of Sheridan road and
the godfather, James Calvin of Arlington Heights.
Av tl

W.

Straub,

Haupt,

Mudge,
Jacobs.

R.

C.
S.

E.

E.

H.

Haynes,

Prosser

Leonard,

F.

and

of oLegends,
Woman’s

next Tuesday

Silver Tea Will Mark

of

Among
those entertaining for
the bride-to-be were Miss Susan
Tresch of Woodstock, one of the
bridesmaids,

of Highland

27

Winnetka. He is the son of the
Harold O. Barnes’ of that city.

_

P. rogram

busy day at the clubhouse
holiday season.

in The Highland Park Presbyterian
church

Wee

C.

S.

Wyatt

.

hk

Metzenberg

ee

Married ees

2t

will spend a

as they usher

Both
women,
members
of the
National League of American Pen
Women, have held national offices;
Mrs. Bacon as chairman of drama,
Miss Downey as chairman of music.
Mrs. Bacon majored in drama at
the University of Minnesota, study-

ing

later

at

schools

of

“The

Christmas

Story

Luncheon will be served at 12
noon to those having reservations.
Mrs.
David
M.
Cox is chairman.
For reservations call Mrs. William
Einbecker,
HI
2-3126,
or
Mrs.

Brace, HI 2-6563.

At
12:45
p.m.
Mrs.
Eugene
Barnes, a member of the literature
group, will introduce Mrs. R. W.
Fogler of Chicago, who will review

“The

Silver

Chalice’

by

Karl Velde Is Due
Home From Princeton

Miss Diane Weeks of
as maid of honor.

Dale

and

to Music”

For the second
year, Mrs. Roy
Olson, chairman of home and education,
will present
Mrs.
Evelyn
Rohde,
lecturer
and
creator
of
artistic flower arrangements.
Mrs.
Rohde
assembles
the
flower
arrangements in front of groups, calling attention to balance,
proportion and color harmony.
She will
give a demonstration of Christmas
decorations.

She
will
be
attended
by
her
sister, Mrs. Richard Morrill of New

of honor,

in

has been repeated, unchanged, at
the request of many clubs throughout the country.
The dramatization includes the Christmas story,
a group of French carols and finally the Nativity play, “There Was
One Who Gave a Lamb.”
The musical
accompaniment
consists
of
French carols.

Costain.
used by

as matron

drama

New York. Miss Downey is nationally known as an organist-composer, pianist-composer and choir director.

Miss Beth Metzenberg, whose engagement
to Samuel
Buchsbaum
was announced by her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert L. Metzenberg Sr.
of Woodpath in July, has decided
upon December 21 as the date for
the wedding.

York,

in the

For
the regular
meeting
at 2
p.m., Mrs. Harry Temple, program
chairman, has secured Mrs. Donald
Bacon, dramatic reader, and Miss
Mary Downey, accompanist, for a
program of Christmas legends and
carols,
“The
Christmas
Story
to
Music.”

George

Wiss

club

Cajels

by

at the

Last

Tea
of the

will be served
meeting.

avenue

Karl

Veldes

Thomas

This is a tale of the cup
Christ and His Disciples

Supper.

Velde

at

Jr., son

of

Linden

next

week

the

of the

avenue,

close

senior

is

due

Best
man
for Mr.
Buchsbaum
will be his cousin, Stanley Herzog
of Chicago. Charles Martin Jr., his

home

brother-in-law,

classes shortly after the first of the
year.

and

Robert

L.

Metzenberg Jr. of Pasadena, Calif.,
will usher.
The ceremony will take place at
4:30 p.m. in the Georgian
hotel,
Evanston
where
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Metzenberg will give the reception
immediately afterward.
Mr.
Buchsbaum
is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Buchsbaum
of Chicago.

at Princeton
is

a

from

his

university,

senior.

He

will

Miss

Boyd

officers

he
to,

_

Miss Jane Barr, daughter of the
Lyman Barrs of Wade street, is expected

home

Cleveland,

for

Ohio.

Christmas

She

from

is employed
as

a psy-

Named
Radcliffe

Miss Ann Boyd, daughter of Dr.
and Mrs. Douglas Boyd, 999 Wade
street, is among the recently elect-

ed

where
return

Miss Barr Coming Home
For Christmas Visit

there by Family Service
chiatric social worker.

Officer at

studies

of

houses at Radcliffe
bridge, Mass.

dormitories

and

college in Cam-

Miss Boyd, junior, was vice president of her class last year, and
is an officer of Saville house.
an

Plan

Week

In Florida

Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hixson of
Kimball road flew to Florida last
Monday for a week’s vacation. They

are

the houseguests

of the Harold

Websters
at La Crosse
Miami
Beach,
and
are

some

time

at

club:.at. Habe

the

Island at
spending

Jupiter

Sound..9..050'

Island

3)

—
~—

_

ALG

�i

onibeg

Of

Miss

ais

i

Weatheral Mainbers

Marriage

Are Looking Forward
To New Year’s Eve

Jorgenien

Handpainted
invitations
have
been mailed
to members
of the
Weatheral
club
for the
“formal
gala opening
of Club Caprice on
New Year’s Eve in the Ravinia Village house.”

Vathariole

Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Jorgensen
of Broadview avenue announce the
marriage of their daughter, Elsie,
to Pfe. Lee E. Nethersole of Long
Island, N. Y.
The couple was married on November 21 in a Protestant chapel
in Aberdeen, Md. The bride wore
a white wool dress with gray gloves
and hat.
Mrs. Nethersole is a graduate of
Highland
Park
High
school. and
Syracuse
university
in
Syracuse,
nN. Y.
The bridegroom
also graduated
from
Syracuse
university
and
is
now
in
Army
Officer
Candidate
school at Aberdeen. The couple will
be living in Aberdeen
during his
five-month officer candidate training period.

The invitations boast “finest entertainment, dancing, and a buffet
supper.”
The
entertainment
committee, headed by Andrew Timson,
includes Mrs. Robert Earhart, Mrs.
Kenneth
Farris,
Mrs.
Robert
Raughley,
Mrs.
Darwin
Rummel,
Mrs.
Hazen
Arnold,
Mrs.
Donn
Moseley,
Mrs.
Robert
Moseley,
Fred Messier and Robert Thomas.
Eddie Barrett and his orchestra
will play for dancing from 9 p.m.
to 3 a.m.
Members may make reservations
for themselves and their guests by
calling William Hammond at Lake
Forest 326.

Ws Rathbaum Ard

Clifford Makelims Home

de

man

The
eeihe.

Junior Auxiliary Plans
Bridge, Canasta Party
Junior auxiliary of the Highland
Park
Woman’s
club will have
a
bridge
and
canasta
party
next
Tuesday
night at the clubhouse.

The

price of admission

is any can-

celed stamp other than three cent
or six cent air mail stamps. Foreign or unusual
stamps
are preferred.
&amp;
The stamps will be sent to hospitalized veterans for their collections.

Coming

Here For Holidays

and

son-in-law,

Mr.

and

Ly,

Clifford L. Makelims

court are home

from

of Ly-

a holiday

Whd

JI wn

hee

their

oe

daughter,

Roberta,

1

at

the

Georgian

to Dr.

hotel

in

Miss
Rothbaum
is a graduate
of Sullivan
High
school and
attended Roosevelt college.
Dr. Firestone, who lives with his
J.

Baskins

of

Moraine

of Illinois

road,

Institute

Technology in Chicago,
ated
cum
laude
from

is

the

of

was graduUniversity

The “Holly Hop,” annual formal

Honor French Artist At Tea
George

Forest

Randall

gave

a

Roberts

tea

of

Tuesday

year.

Ravinia Woman's club, will be held
in the Ravinia Village house on De-|
cember 29 from 9 p.m. till midtony

night.

provide the music, as they did last —
year.
Working

G. Hall will arrive from
university December 19

to

the
at

on

decorations

Christmas

C. Partlow, co-chairman, and the
members of their committee: Mesdames George A. Brace, Howard
A. Boysen, Robert C. Brown Jr.,

he

will

after

the

on page.

18)

Christos

Do you have a son or
sweetheart in the ser-

a

holidays

Princeton,

and

plans for the party are Mrs. Mark
G. Brown, chairman; Mrs. Elzie

ae

Thomas
Princeton

spend

an

Stephen Price and his band will—

(Continued

return to classes shortly
first of the year.

vice?
Send

him

a portrait of

yourself or of the family.

Percy

No matter what you want to buy
or sell you'll find the Want-Ad section your best market place.

weeks.

:

first of the

sophomore

display at the Saltbox for the next

c }

December
on Christ-

with
his parents,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Vinton
Hall of Brittany road. A

afternoon at the Saltbox, her art
gallery on Bank lane, in honor of
Mimir, French artist, who has been
making his home in Highland Park
since June.
His work will be on
several

Institute, during
holiday and will

dance for teen-agers sponsored by

Tom Hall To Come Home
From Princeton Dec. 19

(Continued on page 18)

Mrs.

at

the editorial staff of The
Turnout, the college humor magazine,
and also on the staff of the weekly paper known as The Cadet. He
will return to classes shortly after

sister and brother-in-law, the Sama graduate

student

Mr. Makelim, who
studied at
William and Mary college, Williamsburg, Va., for two years, is in
his junior year at VMI. He is on

Evanston.

uel

a

see him again around
20 when he arrives home
mas vacation.

William Firestone of Moraine road.
They plan to be married on Febru-

ary

William,

Virginia Military
the Thanksgiving

Mr. and Mrs. Jack Rothbaum of
Chicago announce the engagement

of their

son,

H.

Prior,

Jr.

PHOTOGRAPHY

599 ROGER WILLIAMS
PHONE HI 2-3199

Only by

She
will take
advantage
of a
three-week holiday from classes to
complete preparations for her marriage in February to Morris Irvin
Cohn of Chicago.
Mr. Cohn is currently in business in Boston, where
the couple
will live.
Miss Levy

will

Mr. and Mrs. Paul B. Zeisler of
Oakvale will have as their guests
for the
Christmas holidays
their

daughter

Miss Faire Levy will return from
her studies at Wellesley college on
December
20 to spend Christmas
vacation with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Seymour B. Levy of Cherokee
road.

cL

Teen-age Holly Hop.
To Be Sponsored By —
Ravinia Clubwomen &gt; —

in Alexandria, Va. They were with

Lake

Miss Levy Will Complete
Plans for Wedding During
Three-Week Holiday Here

From Virginia Holiday

in

be

graduated

from

Wellesley

June.

Mrs. W. Catzen of Baltimore. Mrs.
Catzen is the former Penny Zeisler.

Make

yours a gift of

daintiness

. . . to flatter

her femininity,

and

you’re sure to win
her

appreciation.

Choose

from

Hilborn’s

delightful, complete collection
of

exquisite

slips,

glamorous

gowns

.

in

Fair’s

ever-lovely

Vanity

. all

eo
‘

oF

’

ee

provocative pettiskirts and

washes

tricot that
so willingly,

'

c

ey ee.
.

‘

‘

nylon

RES Cat

TS

PD

re

wears so long.

from

$5.95

from

$4.95

from

$8.95

Simetes Biches

Open evenings till 9 P.M.
Dec. 12th thru Dec. 23rd

yp hfe

SPECIAL!

only 7.95
100% wool, they should
white knit with crest on
» Store Hours:

starting tomorrow,

sell at much
pocket. Sizes

more. All
36 to 42.

9 a.m. to 9 p.m. thru Dec. 23

Why
North

have chosen

DISTINCTIVE

FASHIONS

FOR

MORE THAN

%

PM

Re

MEI

ate Figs st Eee

I

CPN ane Pe

;

an LAE as ai

do

you

Shore

HOSIERY

think

women

a4

O YEARS
icuie

an

FOR

Hilborn’s for
RANGA
‘ Ahekok

BY

eb
FINEST

NYLON

�&amp;

| ‘Holly
;

. Golden
recently moved

back ‘to this

2 lane in Highland Park. They
four children,
, and Pamela.

The

couples’

Rick,

parents

Mike,

are

Mr.

id Mrs. Frank M. Golden of Bur-

"~ (Continued from page 17).

(Continued from. page wo

quite accustomed to Highland Park Thomas H. Compere, David M. Cox,

life since she moved here from
Kansas. City, Mo. She has been
living at 704 Broadview avenue for
the past eight weeks.
Mrs. Gottlieb is now near her
daughter and son-in-law, the Herbert

E.

Kahns

of Hillside

Robert O. Farrell, Guy B. Finlay,
Henry E. Franzen, Robert S. Froehlich, Shelby Garwood, Alfred W.
Geigerich, Martin W. Granholm,
A. C. Heimerdinger, Carl E. Herbst,
Gordon F. Leonard, E. H. Loevenhart, Charles C. Looney, Edward

drive.

ton
avenue
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Charles Lomax of McGovern street.

CHAS.

A. Murray,
Theodore
F. Struve,
Michael A. Tighe, Frank Trangmar

of Colorado,’and received his doctorate
in electrical
engineering
from Northwestern university in
June. He is now doing electronics
research for Motorola corporation
in Chicago.
and Richard F. Uhlmann.
The price of admission will be
$2 per couple, and $3.50 for each
stag.

ample

A.

STEVENS « co.
4 words

free parking!

hn

Of Miss Morren To.
John

F. Miller

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Morren
of Vine avenue announce the marriage of their daughter, Patricia
Ann, to John F, Miller, son of Mr,
and Mrs. Albert Miller of Wheeling.

The ceremony took place at 9:30
a.m.
in Immaculate
Conception
church.
The
Rev. F. P. McArtle
of St. Mary’s church in Evanston,
a friend of the bridegroom’s fam-

ily, officiated at the ceremony and
was celebrant of the mass which
followed.
Miss Morren

wore

a champagne

lace dress in ballerina length with
a matching veil and carried white
orchids surrounded by stephanotis.
Her
only
attendant,
Miss
Lee

Bruno
of Pleasant
avenue, was
gowned in royal blue velvet with
a wreath of pink roses in her hair
and a bouquet of the same flowers.
George Borchardt of Wheeling
served

as best

man.

Members of both families and
a few close friends attended the
small reception at 2 p.m. in the
Morren
When

home,
they return

from

a motor

trip to the southern states, Mr.
Miller and his bride will live in
Morton

Grove.

She

There

will be stars in her eyes
when

she

opens

your package

a

graduate

of

Mallinc-

krodt High school in Wilmette and
he
attended
St.
George’s
High
‘| school in Evanston and Arlington
Heights High school.

|

A, ee

is

of

&amp;

®

Miss

GLORIOUS

Sherbano

(Continued from page 16)
parents

of the bridegroom-elect.

Mrs. Andrew Goodrich of Evanston, their daughter, is to be matron
of
honor
and
Mrs.
Charles
O.

Barnes
the

Nylon tricot gown with
trimming. Choose aqua
32-38.

rich lace
or pink,

be

a

brides-

sons

of

Evanston,

David

McNally

of Kenilworth, Arthur Gimble of
Lincoln, [ll., and Robert Valiquet
of Lakeside place.

Gift slippers to complete the ensemble—the open-toe style in pale
satin, $10.95,

sister-in-law of

will

maid.
*
Charles
Barnes
will
be _ his
brother’s best man. Ushers, besides Mr. Straub, are Robert O.
Law III of Winnetka, Thomas Par-

$10.95

blue or fuchsia

of Glencoe,

bridegroom,

Dr.

William

Atkinson

Young

will officiate at the 2 p.m. ceremony which is to be followed by a
reception at Michigan Shores.

the

little beaded ballerina in red, green
or black, $5.95

Junior Curlers
(Continued from page 16)
new group and Peggy Lennox will
serve as both secretary and publicity chairman.
The junior curl-

ers will be directed by Michael A.
Tighe Sr., who will be assisted by

Warm, soft, wonderfully cuddly
Viyella robe, white or blue sprigged

with

flowers.

And

Mrs. Jack Montgomery and George
Hadlock.
Trophy pins were awarded Sun-

it’s washable!

10-20. $29.95

day to 16 of last year’s curlers new
and
ions were given to the
instruct
curlers
by
Alex
“Scotty”
‘Cummings and Mrs. Warren Peterson.

No

matter

or sell you'll
tion

your

what

you

want

find the Want-Ad

best

market

place.

FOR COLOR, TASTE
AND

SPARKLE

Rippling hostess coat in rayon
brocade, grey, blue or terra cotta.
10-18. $22.95

Pure silk Fischer

slip, deep in lace.

White, pink, or black satin, 32-40.

$12.95

CHAS. A. STEVENS &amp; CO., HUBBARD WOODS
ERSfs

be

Bd
eile

i

Ny

‘it

a

CRANBERRY
ORANGE RELISH
Fresh-Frozen

and Ready fo Serve

to buy
sec-

|

�mn
ANU eee

Star attractions for gift seekers—but keep
yourself in mind, too. These blouses are so

wonderfully made, so excitingly detailed, they
made

us think

of your gift

list right away!

our beautifully detailed Sydney Heller blouses
1. Cardigan blouse with stitched trim, pearl buttoning.
White, pink, blue or ecru rayon crepe. Sizes 30
to 36.
7.95
2.

The

blouse

that

takes

a

suit

out

to

tissue faille embroidered with beading.
pink,

3.

blue,

ecru.

Sizes

Hand-embroidered
accessory-perfect

32

to 38.

celanese with
neckline.

dinner—rayon

White,

black,

10.95

a tucked

White.

Sizes

front,
30

to

an
38.

5.95
4.

Evanston store hours,
Highland Park stor

Crisply

tailored

linen

with

White,

eggshell,

or

black.

a

perky

Sizes

ribbon

32

to

bow-tie.

38.

8.95

�Mia

store for boys
Highland Park

Evanston

Famous for Beautiful Shirts

ROBES
a

Just Like Dad’s

aa

ee
o

Corduroy—All

/
Y,

For His “TV”

Le

Wool

Pleasure

No
more
shivering
on
cold
mornings. He’ll enjoy the roomy
pockets and full cut; in maroon

and

navy

with

Sizes

contrasting

trim.

4 to 12

$995

14 to 20 ...

$] J 75

WALLETS
Western

/,

a

Style....

Plus

F..E.

rd

$950

7:

HI GAUNTLET
GLOVES
Fleece Lined, and
with sheepskin cuffs.

$4.95

SHIRTS
We're
famous
Gabardines —

for
Cotton

Beautiful
Flanne's,

At recent initiation of new members, Mrs. Joseph Volpendesta, senior regent of Women
She is at left above with Mrs. Walter Harms, assistof the Moose, chapter 806, presides.
ant guide, second from left, watching three new members take oath of membership. New
members are Mrs. Clara Ebelsisor of Northbrook, and Mrs. Frances Burke and Miss Jean
Lindsay of Highland Park.
Mrs. William Winters, at right, serves as guide.
Only the Want Ads offer amazing
values and opportunities not available elsewhere. Read them now!

Randall
Make
The

Broadcloths and Viyella Flannel.

Family To
Home

Philip

Oakwood

672 Central Ave., Highland Park
624

where

HI 2-6240
UNiversity 4-6240

Davis St., Evanston
The

Only

Stores

on

the

North

Shore

Exclusively

to

for Boys

Drive Carefully — The Life You Save
May Be Your Own!

HI 2-3500
JOHN B. NASH CO.
1891

Sheridan,

Highland

Pre - Christmas

Park

G.

Randalls

avenue

month-old

son,

Newark,
they

Apes

In East
and

Michael,

N.J.,
will

last

make

of

1357

their

weekend

their

Mr. Randall, who was formerly
associated with the Braun Brothers
Oil company in Highland Park, has
accepted a position with the WhiteRodgers
Electric
company
as
a
sales manager in Newark.
Mrs. Randall is the former Patricia Nickels, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs.
Duilio Nickels ef Deerfield

Sale

5, ecomdae Coremony
A number
of parties
have
already been given in honor of Miss
Norma
Santi, whose
marriage
to
Lt. Roger Morgan of Glenview Naval Air station, will take place December 27 in Immaculate Conception church.

Miss

Santi,

a nurse

Christmas
Sale Price

FT. STANDARD
FT. DELUXE

17995
19995
22590
29999

Shelves in Door

They

coming

Sunday

the

All

HIGHLAND

Phones

PARK

305 Waukegan

David

entertain
home.

Miss Santi’s only attendant will
be her sister, Louise, and Lt. (j.g.)
Frank
Soberski
of Glenview
Air
station is to be the best man.
The couple will live on Deerfield
road
when
they
return
from
a

month’s
Beach,

wedding

trip

in

Palm

Fla.

avenue. Mr. Randall’s parents, the
P. M.
Randalls,
formerly of the
Oakwood avenue address, are making their home in Wauwatosa, Wis.

(saDuraclean
eize

Last!
2-0725
Ave.

AB

Fe

«Phone

Your

Lymushings.
tehlhaacshathey”

NEW

Duraclean. Service Dealer,

@ Cleans
e@ Restores Lustre
e@ Revives Color @ Raises Pile
@
Re-Enlivens
Wool
Fibers
Phone

Deerfield

DURACLEAN
International

20

at Highland

Park
hospital, was honored
at a
personal shower given by Mrs. Michael
Miotti
and
other
nurses
there, and was also feted at a kitchen shower several weeks ago by
Mrs. David Pasquesi. Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond
Schneider of McGovern
street
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
A. W.
Massin
of Walnut
street gave
a
cocktail party and bar shower for
both young people last Sunday. Another cocktail party is to be given
the Sunday
before
Christmas
by
Dr. and
Mrs.
Louis
Scheman
at
their home on Valley road.

This

While

Page

Morgan

Santis of Highwood will
for the engaged pair at

Regular Price

FT. DELUXE LARGE FREEZER
FT. DELUXE LARGE FREEZER

Of ft

ks

home.

at large Reductions
CU.
CU.
CU.
CU.

Brido

ap

motored

brand new 1952 Hot Point Refrigerators
8
8
8
11

11

Sant

444

CO.

Headquarters

Thursday, December 11, 1952 a

eSf
Pt

�FRa

ee yl ee)eS

ee‘

Ree

a

i

eee a

You have just 5 days to

“

FORD

a

2 cars to go! One car to be

4

awarded each day by the
°

Chicago

area

Ford

=

Dealers

Here’sJ
one

ne

Star ling

on

below on Friday, December

in

d

d
ay

W.

dn

all

€

d
es

!
ay

(closed
Th

St
e

new

d

d

anaara

f ih
o

x

)

R

American

d
nod

A
yamcnd

GREA

T

Entry

a
ae

name and address and drop Entry Blank

CAR

a

Box.

iim

5. Contest is open to everyone except employees

'

Sunday

A
e

j

the arched a.
complete ag (or a
additional words,
the following sentence:
‘he crusade

4, ie in ne

.

ues

“fl
oeah
iM

against heart disease is important to me, because... . !

Monday,

.

T

ee

Contribute5 cents tothe Chic

3.
Saturday,

‘a

12, or the following Satur-

day, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday between 8 a.m.
and 9 p.m.
2. Contribute 5 cents to the Chicago Heart Association

+

e

on

:
a

os

1. Visit any one of the Chicago Area Ford Dealers listed

Friday,

ecember 12, and continuing

D

i

.
all you have fo do to qualify
for
of these beautiful new ’53 Fords

(and

iS

their families) of Ford Dealers, Ford Motor Company,
the eee ee eee
pom ee arene’,
agencies.
The judging will
be under the supervision o
the Chicago
Heart Association and their Homaion will
be final. Entries will be judged on their originality,
igen sh Heo
a thought. sade err ae
. Owsley,
Gener
airman,
Chicago
He
ociation 1953 Campaign; Florian E.Schmidt,
M.D., Medical

oh
a
Baie
i”
ca
‘a
5
4

Director, Chicago Heart Association; Hugh McCulloch,
Chief of Staff, La Rabida, Jackson Park Sanitarium.

a:
;

6. All winners will be promptly notified. Duplicate prizes
THE CARS TO BE GIVEN AWAY ARE BRAND NEW 1953 FORD
CUSTOMLINE

TUDORS

EQUIPPED

WITH

RADIO

AND

a

will be awarded in case of a tie. Entries received between

V-8

8 a.m. and 9 p.m. on any of the above contest days will

HEATER

be judged

‘

in that day’s contest only.

‘

Listen to “John Harrington and the News” over WBBM at
5:15-5:30 P.M., Monday through Friday, and the ‘John
Harrington Show” over WBBM
at. 8:15-8:30 A.M.,
Saturday,
during this period for further
contest
particulars
and
the announcement
of winners.

:

x

THERE’S

Toe

,

NEW

HOPE

FOR

HEARTS

.

J

GWE. TO THE HEART FUND—A GREAT CAUSE!

53

See

CHICAGO

HEART ASSOCIATION

. -.

uy
ng
fee
ee
ie

FORD

it

ae

lest

Value
8

Drive

Check

|

it
ty

”

if!

a a

PURNELL &amp; WILSON, INC.
|

a :

1909 St. Johns Ave.
os

‘

December
11, 1952

|
‘

a

| tod

Highland

Ee haieles

Park

Phone
;

'

i

te Gaol

ti

Ue

ie)

HI 2-0710

a
:

:

age

RE

�From

Park Ave. Residents Now

Moving

Mr. and Mrs.
recently moved

Robert S. Arnold
from 2459 Mont-

gomery

to

Mr. and Mrs. Peter Dinelli of
126 Highwood avenue are moving
to their new home. at 661 Broad-

avenue

667

Park

ave-

nue. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Pershall
of Gleneoe have taken the Arnold’s
residence
on
Montgomery.
The
Pershalls

recently

returned

view

To Highland

avenue

in

Park

Ravinia

soon.

School

Books To Vaudeville

Mr,

Dinelli has been
a resident of
Highwood for the past 25 years and

from

Mrs.

Germany,
where
Mr.
Pershall
served with the army for two years.

Dinelli

her marriage

has

lived

10 years

here

since

ago.

NORTHSHORE GARDEN OF MEMORIES
A Surprise Awaits You
THIS

BEAUTIFUL

If You

Have

GARDEN

Not Visited

CEMETERY

Very Reasonable Prices

Phone Maj. 1067

Green Bay Rd. &amp; 18th St.

|

NORTH SHORE FURTH SERVICE
Funeral
All Phones

Directors

KEnwood

6-0700
Pn

ESTABLISHED
1890

Jeff Wineman, 280 Carey avenue, is the center of attention as he and other Highland Park students of The North Shore Country Day school, Winnetka, are pictured in the
Proceeds from the percostumes they wore in the annual Vaudeville show November 21.
formance, which was presented by the Upper School for the public, went to the senior
Central avenue; Susan
Standing, left to right, are Marcia McMillan, 233
council fund.

936 East 47th Se.
Chicago

IMPORTANT

| Pierce,

ANNOUNCEMENT

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

|.

2176

Sheridan

road;

No matter what you want to buy
or sell you'll find the Want-Ad section your best market place. |

AN OUTSTANDING PROFESSIONAL RECORD OF
€2 SUCCESSFUL YEARS SERVING CHICAGOLAND

Hadassah Oberves
Members

Salon

North
at the

Shabbat,

of

the

which

Sabbath,”

tradition

of

devotion

and cultural
poet, Hayim

pursuits.
Hahman

Bialik,

the

and

founder

a political

of

of

Winnetka

will

SUperior 7-6950

and

Lake

Mrs.

Charles,

H.

L.

Romine

of

La.

OAS

aap umes TICKET ©

the

prayer

THE

Bm"
c=

EVANSTON

AIRLINES

eee

Hi

SS
i

CONVENIENCE...
|

;

lei

BSH]
YSSSS

invoke

FOR MUR

ar

FFICE

SS

will

in his memory,
and
Mrs. Morris
of Dr. Weiz- Futurian of Glencoe will conduct
Perlman
of'the Havdalah service.

Se

TICKET

7

=. | OFFICE

a

%

A

Winnetka

present

Ce

11

Mr.

leader.

Gordon
of Broadand
Mrs.
Herman

ETTilt )\ (Pe

PLACE, CHICAGO

of
the

Washington; D. C.
Sgt. Romine,
who has been in
the army three and one-half years,
was recently sent home from Germany where he was stationed for
18 months. He and his bride will
live in Washington during his hospitalization period until he is assigned again.

AN.

70 EAST WALTON

Michela

announce

tradition.
Occasion will be taken on this
afternoon to honor the memory of
Dr. Chaim Waizmann, first president
of
the
newborn
State
of
Israel, who
died November
9, at
the age of 77 at his home in Kehovot, Israel.
Dr. Weizmann was
a scientist and statesman, a nation

Be

C65 chet lider, Salon

John

avenue

The ceremony took place in the
chapel of Walter Reed hospital,

EE.

cloche . . . yet, with soft feminine ways that are wonderfully
becoming—this is the Cloche Coiffure created in the Elizabeth Arden
Salon for Christmas 1952. Hair is set high over the brow; sides are
forward and down into a pretty hug-me-tight line. Add an artful shaping
plus the Salon’s gentlest permanent wave for a lasting joy.

Mrs.

this

was

oe
——

Close and smooth to wear under the

and

marriage on November 22 of their
daughter, Dolores
Marie, to Sgt.
H. Lee Romine. He is the son of

expresses

to communal
The Hebrew

a resume of the life
mann.
Mrs.
Joseph

“15

Mr.

means

Sabbath

Spertus

ONLY

Of Dolsres Michele

Onwentsia

Mrs. James
view
avenue

Wave

of

gather

Shabbat.

builder

Permanent

friends
will

Marriage

Je Sot ih ike KR. omine

“Joy

MONDAYS

left to right,

home of Mrs. Joseph Wertheimer,
Linden avenue, on Saturday at 2
p.m. to observe their annual Oneg

the

incomparable |

and

Hadassah

Oneg

all

Made

Annual Oneg Shabbat
Shore

o,.

Kneeling,

Clavey road.

1261

Selz,

Lorie

and

Jeff;

are Nancy Clinton, 1760 Dale avenue; Courtney Bowes, 80 Laurel avenue; Gay Stirling, 2710
Roger Williams avenue; and Ellen Reeves, 176 Roger Williams avenue.

INFORMATION
SCHEDULE
¢ TICKETING
TO
ANY
DESTINATION
°
WAITING ROOM
~*
LIMOUSINE
SERVICE TO THE AIRPORT
AMERICAN
CAPITAL

AIRLINES,

AIRLINES

*

INC.

°

BRANIFF

DELTA AIR LINES,
UNITED

AIR

INTERNATIONAL
INC.

©

EASTERN

AIRWAYS,

INC.

AIR LINES, INC.

LINES

Corner Church Street and Orrington Avenue. Hours: 8:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. daily.

Thursday,

December

11,

1952

|
ore

�Community Nursery Sends Out
Request For Old Toys, Books
Residents

of Highland

Park

are asked

to remember

visit with the Charles
of Ridge
Mrs.
been

the

Highland Park Community Nursery school when discarding
their children’s playthings this month to make room for Santa’s
new gifts.
for

The
school
three and

or girls,

can
use
any
four-year-old

board

members

toys
boys

said

this

week. Dolls, doll carriages, blocks,
sturdy trucks and other toys which
can be drawn around the room are
particularly welcome
as are picture books and children’s stories,
music
and
story
records
or any
serviceable toy which can be used
constructively by the youngsters.
Scholarship

Funds

Contributions

Knight

to

are

and

their

Mrs.

Olaf

returning

to

Orray

fund

The

scholarship
was

school

thus

was

the

last four months.

been

attending

since

September.

Elm

For

have

Petersens
Karin

Place

has

school

Christmas

Karin,
after

a

Gripsholm. They will join Karin’s
parents in Copenhagen in time for
Christmas.

Camera Club Meets

Home

For Lecture Monday
Highland Park Camera club will
hold its next meeting on Monday
at 8 p.m. in the American Legion

building.

Mrs.

Jane

Edwards

will

give
a
lecture
illustrated
with
color slides.
The topic will be on
“Composition
and Child Portraiture.”
Mrs. Edwards is past president
of the North Shore
Camera
club
and was a commercial photograph-

er of children.
She is also active
in the Photographic
Society of
America.

Visitors

are

cordially

invited

to

For Christmas|

Mr. and Mrs. Jacques Barr of
Green Bay road are expecting their
son James home for the Christmas
holiday from New York City. Mr.
Barr, whose stage name is Geoffrey

Barr,

has

been

working

ern

university.

the meeting, including beginners
as well as experienced photographers.

established

memorial
interest

to
in

Mr.
the

by the

recognized

nursery
school
board
members
who held him in high esteem.
All
contributions are tax-deductible.
Christmas vacation at the school
begins December 20 and will end
January 5.

No

matter

or sell

what

you'll

you

find

the

want

give her

to buy

Want-Ad

sec-

place.

tion your best market

the luxury of perfect fit
She’ll smooth them on and marvel at their fit! For—with Belle-

Sharmeers—there’s nary a wisp of stocking left over to sag

ah Almswy
VOGUE

or bag. Made in the exact shape of her leg, they cling
close as lipstick. Won’t you come in and let us select

her perfect-fitting Belle-Sharmeer Leg-size?
$] 35

to

$1 95

saavice

Yes, our famous Nationally
Advertised Sanitone Service
really gets out a// the dirt so
clothes look like new again!
Call today!

ORTH SIDE

brev

modite

(purple edge)

(green edge)

(red edge)

for slender
or small legs.
Sizes 8 to 1014

for average
size legs.
Sizes 8% to 11

for tall,
larger legs.

duchess
Sizes 912 to

11%

CLEANERS § DYERS Co.
“Chicago’s

and

Leading

Main

Office

5427-31
Phone

for

a

North

Shore’s

Cleaners”
and

Plant—

Broadway

Courteous

Routeman!

LOngbeach

1-1000

GReenleaf

5-1000

Other North and Northwest
—Enterprise 6000—No
537
1344
2455

- BRANCHES
Diversey Pkwy.
506
Morse Ave.
615.
Devon Ave.

Thursday,
iy

December

Suburbs
Toll
Davis St.
Howard St.

11,

1952

DELL,
se
C K LNG

S

I

K

Pi ExR

SO

N

AL

in

New York on television and radio
shows. He is a graduate of New
Trier High school and Northwest-

Garnett 2 Co.

to

defray tuition expenses for those
unable to afford them, are always
welcome.
They may be mailed to
the treasurer, Mrs. Stanley Lind,
2345 Egandale road in honor of a
friend or relative’s birthday, as a
holiday gift or as a remembrance
of a friend or relative.

last year
as a
Knight,
whose

with

Karin

ter, returned to Denmark on Saturday, aboard the Swedish liner,

Ungermann

Denmark

Taft

used

and

Capt. Ungermann, of the Danish
Navy, has been here for a five week
visit. He, his wife and granddaugh-

granddaughter,

Welcome

the

scholarship

Capt.

staying

Copenhagen

Guests Of Petersens
Leave For Denmark
and

Ungermann

for the

E. Petersens

road.

(VEG
. 5 i aaa
Page

23

�In Time For
Christmas!

CUSTOM MADE
SE

Published This Week
“The

cover

Shore

SPECIAL!
SOFA and CHAIR
Including Smart
Quality Fabrics
Now—
Regular

$125

$7 Q 50

Value
Two

Weeks

Delivery

Listens,’

Peters, who

Creative

edited

“The Last Laugh,” a silent film
produced in Germany in 1925 and
starring Emil Jannings, is the final
program of Series I of the Highland
Park
Film
Society
to
be
shown
tomorrow
at 8:30 p.m. in
the Recreation Center.

by

teaches North

Writers,

a

group

with many
Highland
Park members, is published
this week
by
Dierkes press.. North Shore Creative Writers had its beginning and
met for many years at the YWCA
in Highland Park, and is meeting
this year at the community house
in Winnetka.

This picture is a classic comedy
recognized for its camera work as
well as its star in the portrayal of
an aging hotel doorman. The audience is often in the position of the
principal character in that it views
events through his “camera’”’ eyes.
The continuity of this film is uninterrupted by sub-titles.

Local Poets Included

DRAPERIES
$29.00

Oscar Williams, poet and anthol-

Value
Now—
$] 7&gt;°
— Telephone Today —
Samples shown in your home by
interior decorator without obligation.
Budget if you like—

OL

Wind

Marjorie

Colony

Feblése

Fashinics

ogist
for
company,

jacket of
tains the

Scribner’s
has
written

On Junior League Clinic Committee

Film Society Shows
German Silent Film

Poetry Anthology,
‘The Wind Listens’

The
Highland
Park Film
Society is now formulating plans for
Series II which will consist of five
film
showings
from
January
to
June, 1953. Non-members interested in seeing ‘“‘The Last Laugh” may
do so by subscribing to next season’s series. For further information, call the Recreation Center office at HI 2-2442.

Publishing
the
book

the volume, which conpoetry of 35 poets, 33

of whom are from Chicago and surrounding suburbs.
Among the Highland Park members of Creative Writers is Mrs.
James
Cady
Ewell
of Cary
avenue.

ESTHER PERKINS

Classique

Beauty Salon
Highland Park

1815 St. Johns Ave.

Hi

2-1603

Permanent

for
by
‘@

DRAPERIES
e SLIPCOVERS
@ BEDSPREADS
@ UPHOLSTERY
By the Yard or Custom Made

119-21
Wilmette

CHRISTMAS
$950 to $29°

Linnie M. McComas

Green Bay Rd.
Wilmette 6006

Waves

All

Branches

Specializing
25

Years

GIFTS

and up to $5
of

Beauty

Mrs. Harry R. Johnson of Kimball road standing at left,
and Mrs. Robert C. Barr, above, right, are members of the
Evanston Junior league committee which sponsors the Children’s Hearing and Aphasia clinic at Northwestern university.
The league recently held an open house at the clinic for league
members.
Yesterday afternoon the Evanston Junior league
held its monthly meeting at the Indian Hill club.
The Rev.
Edward Thomas Taggard, rector of St. Luke’s church, Evanston,
addressed

the group.

9°
Turn

Culture

in Hair Coloring

to

the

“‘Hard-to-find”’

of Experience

saving

Want-ad

section

for

Form Caroling
Group To Sing
To Shoppers

items there at money-

prices!

A ecaroling committee has been
in conjunction
with
the
| formed
Christian Family
Christmas
committee
under
Mrs.
Robert
K.
Thomas of Sandwick court, chairman.
The committee
is made up
of representatives
of several
denominations in Highland Park.
Mrs. Thomas has made plans for
two groups
of singers
to gather
each night from December 18 on,

including

KARAT

puts
at

diamonds

your

feet...

Christmas

to shoppers
Any person
singers may
6540.
The
will gather
ond from 8

Creche
of

To

Be

Erected

to assist

the

committee

Those of the high school cooperating in the venture include Walter
Durbahn,
Paul
McLaughlin,
Wellington Gray
and William
Kolbe.

gleaming solitaire! Diamond-shaped
cutouts to bare your pretty foot ..,'
and cutouts at the back of
the shoe with a delicately

Posters on the theme of putting
Christ back
into
Christmas were
ready last week.
Committee members have
already
distributed
in
some
of the Highland
Park
churches more than 3,500 pamphlets entitled “Is Christmas Really
Christ-mas?”
Any
organizations
or
church
choral groups interested in singing with the group are invited to
telephone
Mrs. Thomas
and join
the group any of the nights they
will sing in the business district.

flesh-tinted lining to create the
illusion of the important

"exposed" look! In black or
blue buttersoft suede

$10.95
We Have Everything in
WINTER FOOTWEAR
For the Entire Family

Page 24

carol

in erecting a creche at the corner
of Central avenue and First street
where the carolers will assemble.

Fabulous fashion gems with the
verve and sparkle of a

41

to

Art and manual training classes
Highland Park High school are

combining

MIKE’S SHOE STORE
HIGHWOOD
HIGHWOOD AVE.
HI2-5293

Eve,

in the business district.
wishing
to
join
the
telephone her at HI 2first group
of singers
from 7 to 8 and the secto 9.

Wm.
DIAMOND

Kellys In Florida

Mr. and Mrs. William Kelly of
704
Elm
place
have
gone
south
for a six-month stay at Lake Worth,

Fla.

Mr.

and

Mrs.

D.

A.

Nichol-

son,
formerly
of
Glencoe,
have
leased
the- Kellys’
home
during
their abserice.

Thursday,

December

11,

1952

�othing Gifts
One hundred Girl Scout troops,
representing about 1,500 girls from
and

to 17 years of age
surrounding

were

awarded

result

of

in Chicago

towns,

last

American

nature

study

week

flags
at

as

a

Chicago

Natural
History
museum,
it was
announced by Howard T. Greene,
president of Brook Hill Farms and
donor of the flags.
Winner from Highland Park was
Troop
25,
of
which Mrs. A. E.
Johnson of DeTamble
avenue
is
leader.
Eighteen of the troops to receive
flags are Brownie Scouts, ranging
in age from seven to 9 years. Two
of the troops are composed of teenage senior Scouts.
The flags were presented to the
troops by Mr. Greene at an American
flag
presentation
ceremony
held last Saturday
at 2 p.m.
in
the James Simpson theatre of Chicago Natural History
museum
in
Grant park.

All flag-winning

troops

Christmas Prograr

For Distribution
To Orphanages

In Natural History
seven

Asked

were

in-

The

children

of

At High School

Set for Wednesday

North

Shore

Methodist church school, Glencoe,
have been asked to bring gifts of
clothing and small toys to church
with them this Sunday. The gifts
will be wrapped
in white
paper
and be presented by the children
on Sunday,
December
21 at the
annual White
Gifts service.
The clothing and toys are contributed to orphanages in Illinois,
and to a small orphanage in Korea.
Mrs.
Otis
L. Dodge
of Green
Bay road is in charge of the White
Gifts service. She serves as activities
chairman
for
the
church
school.
vited to attend, together with their
leaders.
One Scout from each of

the flag-winning troops in the Chicago region was selected to receive
the flag on behalf of her Scout
troop.
Virginia Cronkhite, daugh-

ter

of Mr.

Cronkhite,
cepted the
Troop 25.

and

Mrs.

~*~
x

Walter

G.

of Deerfield place, acflag for Highland Park

A traditional
religious pageant
will be presented at the Christmas
assembly next Wednesday at Highland Park High school.
The
program
will
include
the
senior chorus and members of the
drama class. Alan Koretz has been

chosen as narrator,
Goldboss
will play

and Sandra
the part of

Mary.
The setting will be a cathedral,
carrying out the religious theme

of the

production,

which

is under

f

tal,

Palm

2%,

is

their

where

the

is three years old. Mrs. Kelley, the
former Jennifer de Bujac Turner,
is the daughter of Mrs. James A.
Turner
of Palm
Beach, formerly

Mr.

and

Mrs.

of St. Johns

Calvin

G.

Bauer

avenue announce the

birth of their daughter, Carolyn
Louise, on November 19 at Highland Park hospital. The Bauers
also have a son, David, who is tw
years

old.

ie

Paternal
A.

and

S.

grandparents

Bauers

the

of

are the

Central

maternal

avenue

grandparent:

late

are Mr. and Mrs. Dudley Crafts
Watson, who are spending the win

Mr. Turner. Mr. Kelley’s parents
are Mrs. James A. Cook of Lake
Forest and the senior Mr. Kelley of
Palm Beach.

Watsons have rented their home
on Marshman street for the winter
months.
;

of Michigan

avenue,

and

the

ter in a Chicago

apartment. The

SNOW PLOWING

Mr, and Mrs. Abel Davis of Vine
avenue
announce
the
arrival
of
their second child, a girl, born December 3 in Highland Park hospi-

Leslie,

Fla.,

Kelleys have resided since their
marriage. Their son, Russell Jr.,

Davis

tal.

Beach,

Bauer

¢

-Mr.
and
Mrs. Russell Phelps
Kelley Jr. are the parents of their
second child, Jennifer, born December 3 in Good Samaritan hospi-

the direction of Miss Rosalie Marquart of the high school faculty.

“i

— DRIVEWAYS —
Louie Tazioli Excavating
OFFICE
HI 2-4662

da

ea

Fire Place Wood—Any Size

elder

daughter.
Maternal
grandparents
are Mr.
and Mrs. John Frank of Winnetka,
and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kahn of
Glencoe
are the paternal
grandparents.

A

: a

“3

GARAGE

HI 2-6861 |

“ney

.
gee
eras

|

“Wtcauaumuuuudiiidldde

LO

Television treatthe BUICK CIRCUS HOUR @
every fourth Tuesday

The cheer of traveling in style that’s
bright and gay as.a holiday wrapping.
The cheer of having rich and spacious

comfort — plus the cheery thought that
nowhere else can you get as much room
for the money.

The cheer of knowing abundant and
mighty able power

is on call, with all

the solid thrift of a Fireball 8 Engine
Enter GENERAL

MOTORS

$194,000

BETTER

HIGHWAYS

also high-

week, to make the most of this good deal

compression.

while it lasts.

The cheer of riding wonderfully buoyant, level and steady —with a ride that
feels like the million dollars it cost to
perfect.

Why not dropintodayortomorrowand

=

Buick showroom right now?

ee

The cheer of taking your travel free and

_easy—with Dynaflow Drive* doing the

chores in letter-perfect smoothness—

Thursday,

First

Street

ember 11, 1952

Equipment, accessories, trim and models are subject
to change without notice. *Standard on Roadmaster,
optional at extra cost on other Series. ** Optional at
extra cost on Roadmaster and Super only.

with Power Steering** assisting to
make parking and slow-motion maneu‘

vers

no task at all.

Even the price is a cheerful note here
—low enough, you'll find, to crowd the
‘so-named “low-price three.”

That means action is called for this very

CONTEST—See

Your

Buick

Klieeburg
1732

see how much cheer is tobe foundina

=

Ruane chk s

that’s valve-in-head
—and

x

ow would you like the fun of
Christmastime to last all the year
throughP
That’s the way it seems to be when you
call this Buick beauty your own—what
with the constant cheer it brings to you
week after week, month after month.

Dealer for contest blanks and full information

Buick,

Ine.

HI 2-4800
*

Page

25

i

�Welcome

Two Residents
Named

CPA
and

wood

to State

Society

Solway
road

F.

Firestone

Stephen

place
of

of

Braeside

S. Steel of Lake-

were

to membership
ety

New Cub Scouts Into Pack 38

recently

in the

Certified

elected

Illinois

Public

Soci-

Account-

ants.

at

WE EMPLOY-- 4
e
OUR COAL OF COMFORT
YOU'LL

ENJOY

Mr. Firestone studied accounting
Northwestern
university
and

Loyola

university.

ed

CPA

his

in 1940,

!

in the

and

He

was

award-

in

[linois

certificate

is at present,

practice

of public

ing in Chicago.
Mr. Steel studied

at

engaged

account-

Northwest-

ern university and at De Paul, and
was awarded his Illinois CPA certificate in 1944. Mr. Steel and Marvin
L. Channon,
another
member
of
the Illinois society, have just announced the formation of a part-

nership,
and

known

as

Steel

Channon

Co., in Chicago.

ORDER
NOW!

Assistant Cubmaster Stuart Balkin of Pack 38, Braeside fastens a Bobcat pin on the
Lined up to receive their pins are Stuart
shirt of a brand new Cub Scout, Kent Lawrence.

Rosenberg and Joe Glass.

comed

new Scouts.

Picture was taken at recent candle ceremony where Pack 38 wel-

Cubmaster of the pack is Robert S. Ascher of Lincolnwood road.

HPHS Instructor
At Convention

From

Harham Turkey Farm

John

structor

LAKE BLUFF

LAKE
FOREST

HOOPS
Jackson

+ Wabash

\\
SAWER/OAN

Screens
made
to your specifications — installed— brass
or black curtains. Visit our
new
Fireplace
Salon ... entire
second
floor.

ber 28-29.
Two high school students, Mimi
Angster, editor of Shoreline, the
high school paper, and Jerry Heisler, a reporter and photographer
for the paper, attended the session
on November 28.
The meeting

consisted of exhibits,

journalism.
&lt;

%

DEERFIELD

S

@

|
°

BY

ane

Superior birds, scientifically fed, battery raised

@

Guaranteed

@

Holiday orders

now

all sizes from

our

READY

FOR

fresh and

THE

being
1952

OVEN

taken

for toms

and

PREVAILING

YOU
MORE?

Mrs. Joseph
Coke of Highland
Park,
vice
grand;
Mrs.
August
Bleich, also of Highland Park, recording
secretary;
Mrs.
Frank

Schor of Deerfield, financial secretary; Mrs. Phillip
Park, treasurer.

HOUSE

From

when

you wish

phone Lake Forest 2266

Harham Turkey Farm
Sanders Road &amp; Junction Highway 22
Deerfield, Illinois
Page

26

Including

first

half

hour’s

the

= | Rebekahs

staff

are

Mrs.

will be held on Monday
at the Mason’s

will

hall. Quar-

be

observed,

members will join in a Christparty after the meeting.

FORMALWEAR RENTA]
RENT YOUR
FORMAL

labor

Where
society’s
best dressed men
rent theirs—
Cutaways - Strollers
Single
and
Double
Breasted
Tuxedos
All Accessories

Appliance &amp; Music Co.
WILMETTE

named

Rebekahs

birthdays

SUBURBAN
PHONE

also

Thomas Connolly and Mrs. Coke.
The next regular meeting of the

PRICES.
Order now . . . for pick up at the farm store

was

The selected hospital bed committee
consists
of Floyd
Patrick
and Albert
Lyle,- both from
the
Highland Park Odd Fellows lodge.

and
mas

NOW
$4,90

MARKET

of Highland

Glen
Watkins,
Waukegan,
Mrs.
James Nolan and Mrs. Albert Lyle
of
Highwood,
and
Mrs.
Ernest
Kuehne of Highland Park.

®\terly

CALLS

Cole

The elected trustees are Mrs. Edwin Beckman of Deerfield, Mrs.

at 8 p.m.

hens,

flock of 5,000 birds.

AT

ARE
PAYING

®
TELEVISION

tender

Mrs. Lena Brown of Lake Forest
was
elected
noble
grand
at the
business meeting of Sheridan Rebekah Lodge No. 801 on December
1 in the Mason’s hall. Other officers
for the
ensuing
year
were
elected as follows:

Mrs. Nolan
‘| captain.

HIGHLAND
PARK

DEERFIELD RO.

in-

director

conferences, discussions, and lectures on many phases of scholastic

Chicago 4

S
gS

journalism

publications

at Highland Park High school, attended the 26th annual conference
and short course of the National
Scholastic
Press
association
and
the national Association of Journalism
Directors
at the
Conrad
Hilton hotel in Chicago on Novem-

ie
LIBERTYVILLE

Munski,

and

Sheridan Rebekah
Lodge Elects New
Officers For Year

6760

GINGISS
BROTHERS
INCORPORATED

_ EVANSTON ‘STORE
‘1718. SHERMAN
(Next'to.

Varsity

oy ae

Other Stores in
© OAK

PARK

Thursday,

de

Theat.)

:

© THE

LOOP

® SOUTH

December

11,

SIDE

1952

�Midshipman Adler At
N. Y. Mechanical
Engineer Meet
Midshipman
Ronald
E. Adler,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Adler
of

Hazel

three

avenue,

first

men

was

class

representing

academy

at

among

(senior)
the

U.

Annapolis,

the

in

the

first

the

for the

S.

Naval

been

announced

to

high

school

at-

two

ses-

sions of the five-day session.
The three midshipmen, officers
of the
Midshipmen’s
Mechanical
Engineering
club, joined ranking
figures of the profession and representatives from colleges and universities
throughout
the
United
States in discussing current questions in the mechanical engineering field. -

ao

tickets

in

Highland

tend the recent annual meeting of
the American Society of Mechanical Engineers.
The
meeting
was
held
in New
York
City’s
Hotel
Statler.
The
Naval
academy
delegation

participated

Changes

midship-

Md.,

Mr. Baskin Featured

Change Plan For
Selling Of Tickets
At HP High School

Tickets
in the
on

High
by

selling

games

school
A.

E.

at

have

Wolters,

principal.

will

be

on

season

foyer

ditorium

for

basketball

Park

rest of the

plan

of the

from

Wednesdays

11

sale

at the
high
a.m.
and

for

box

the

office

school
until

Samuel J. Baskin of 368 Moraine
road was featured in an article in
Life
magazine
on
November
10.
The article pertained to the Chicago courts jam-up.
Mr.
Baskin
has
been a
trial
lawyer in Chicago for 20 years and

Thursdays

3:30 to 4 p.m.
Tickets not sold during the regular selling time will be available
at the gate the night of a game.

Park

2-3100

has taken an active part in the pro-

Home

of

The tickets were sold from

f/f etepnhone

Highland

motion of the Judicial Reform bill,
a bill
designed
to take
politics
out of the courts.

au-

1 p.m.

the weeks in which games will be
played.
Previous arrangements called for
the sale of the tickets on Tuesday,
Wednesday and Thursday of each
week in which games were to be

played.

Typewriter Repairs
Finest work by our expert
repairmen . . . and fully
guaranteed!

In Magazine Article

On

Leave

A/3ce Norman

Gherardini,

son of

Mrs. Clara Gherardini of 607 Skokie avenue, will leave December 19

for

Spokane,

week

air

leave

force

Wash.,
here.

He

November

after

a three

entered

14,

1951

the

Typewriter Sales
Office machines, portables, adding
machines. Some excellent
buys in reconditioned
machines!

Central

645
Ave.

and

took his basic training at Lackland
Air Force
base
in Texas
before
being sent to Lowry field in Denver,
Colo.,
for
further
training.
This is his first leave since entering the service.

Drive Carefully — The Life You Save
May Be Your Own!

|

WHOS EXCITED?.... EWE RYBO DY !

ee

oS aaee

COME

SEE the car

that’s causing more

excited talk than
any new car has
done in years... and

for the best of all

1

Here’s full-time power steering ... Does 4/5 of the work
for you—gives five times safer
car control. Eliminates wheel
fight when the going’s rough...
eliminates strain and fatigue!
Makes parking easier, safer.

2

Here’s safer, quicker stopping power . . . with Chrysler power brakes! Power from
the engine helps you brake with
as little as 1/3 the ordinary
pedal pressure. A safety factor
many other cars don’t offer!

3

‘Here’s new beauty .. . new
glamor. ..new highway fashion...from all angles! Sparkling
new grille and front end. Lower,
clean-cut fore-and-aft lines.
Graceful new rear deck with
44% greater luggage capacity!

possible reasons!
America's

First Family
of fine cars

WINDSOR

°

MESIROW
1740 FIRST ST.

NEW

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CH RYS LER
e

for 53

IMPERIAL

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Inc.
HI 2-2500

See them...drive them... judge them... at your Chrysler-Plymouth dealer's!
Thursday,

December

11, 1952

{

Page

27

�Bring STA-DRI
to the rescue!
It seals water
of

enough!

eta

Inside,

outside,

above

or below grade, STA-DRI

party

min-

PAINTS —

2-2350

Highland

the

Moose

be

given.

to

bring

for the grab
To

will

Soloist

hold

Wednesday
home.

At

Christmas

Annual

Donations

Members

a

are

Christmas

bag.
Chapter

Mrs.
Catherine
Anderson,
Moosehaven
chairman,
will have
for her chapter night project on
Wednesday a parcel post donation.
Everyone is asked to bring a package costing not less than 50 cents.
Refreshments will be served with
Mrs. Anderson
in charge.

SUPPLIES

HI

on

Orchestra

At the December 3 meeting, the
senior regent, Mrs. Joseph Volpendesta presided.
A tablecloth and
napkin set, donated to the chapter
by
Miss
Lucille
Williams,
Mooseheart chairman, was awarded to Mrs. Joseph Kostka of Riverside.

LANDI BROS.
Ave.

Moose

the

will

present

the

meeting
in

p.m.

requested

Capable of holding a wall of water.
nine feet high without leakage.

Central

of

next

time

that

eral.
coatings
stop
water
and
beautify in one operation.
Supplied in a variety of colors and
white, in 5, 25, and 50 pound
packages.
Just mix with water
and apply like paint.
For the best above-grade transparent water-repellent, buy STADRI
CLEAR-COAT—contains
Silicone.

668

8

at

ee

mie

ial.

De

ZO

ei

2

bee

..

ee

Women
their

out of masonry.

AKG

#

Youth

Women of the Moose
Plan Christmas Party

Park

for

Piano soloist with the Youth Orchestra of Greater Chicago,

Walking-in-the-snow-itis:

January 23, in a performance at Orchestra hall will be Judith
Elaine MacCorquodale, 16, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. W. D.
MacCorquodale

of Winnetka,

former

residents here.

A form-

er Lincoln school and Oak Terrace school pupil, Judith has
been playing the piano since she was four years old and has
won a
Mich.

Federation

of

Music

clubs

scholarship

to

Interlochen,

She will play Gershwin’s ‘’Rhapsody In Blue’’ with the
Youth orchestra, under the direction of Herman Felber.

Symptoms:

Your

car

usually

happens

car

most.

the

months...

just

won’t

when

you

Very

need

prevalent

hard on nerves

The Carl Arnswalds Move

start...

To Lake Worth, Fla.

your

Mr. and Mrs. Carl Arnswald of
Green
Bay
road
left Friday
for
‘| Lake Worth, Fla., where they will
make
their home. The Arnswalds
have lived in Highland
Park for
the past 40 years.

in winter

and

pocket-

book.

Mr. Arnswald is a charter member
of Highland
Park
American

Treatment:

Trade

reliable
Park

new

new

in
model

old

at

car

your

for

the

carefree

saves

you

time

and

business

Highland

Park

sociation,

for

winter

with

a

every

dealer

Post

145 and

has been

cus-| She

is majoring

in

history.

SAVING

that

You'll like

member

Automobile

Then

driving

money.

Legion

a

Highland

car dealer’s showroom.

enjoy
doing

your

todian of the building
since the
post moved into its new home on
Sheridan road two years ago.
Miss Betty Arnswald will move
to Lake Worth with her parents. A
graduate of Highland
Park High
school, Betty has attended Rockford college in Rockford, Ill., for
three years and will enter the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor
in February
as a senior student.

of

the

Dealers

As-

listed

below

has a proud reputation to maintain.
That’s why when you buy locally, you’re
sure of the best possible
and friendly courtesy.

YOU

CAN

deal,

service

1s simply

ALWAYS DEPEND ON SATISFACTION
WHEN YOU SHOP AT HOME

POSTPONED

BUYING

You don’t give up a thing when you put
money in the bank. All you do is postpone

HIGHLAND

PARK

RAVINIA

AUTOMOBILE

MOTORS,

DEALERS’

INC.

VAN

Studebaker

MARCHI

GUILDER MOTORS

BROS.

NELSON

PARK

BUICK,

INC.

MESIROW

SALES,

PURNELL

INC.

Page

28

MOTORS,

account. Start it soon and keep it going!

INC.

&amp; WILSON,

INC.

Fridays

Till 9 P.M.

HIGHLAND

for

Your

Convenience

PARK-ENJOY

LOCAL

Member

IS

Ford

DeSoto-Plymouth

BUY YOUR CARIN

SALES

See us about a savings

Chrysler-Plymouth

MOTOR

Open

future needs will be more urgent than

Oldsmobile

Buick

HIGHLAND

MOTOR

some of your buying. And quite likely
present wants.

Dodge-Plymouth

Pontiac

KLEEBURG

ASSOCIATION

SERVICE

of Federal

Deposit

of HIGHLAND

Insurance

Corporation

ey
ULe
PARK

Thursday,

December

11,

1952

�Campbell Chapter
Give

to

2 Christmas

A potluck snack will be provided
and the committee in charge has
planned an entertainment program
in keeping with the season.
Mrs.
Edward
Warren,
worthy
matron,
has
announced
that
the
annual
children’s
Christmas
party
given
by the Royal Arch Masons and the
OES will take place Sunday, December 21, between the hours of
2 and 4 p.m. in the temple.
Santa
Claus
will
arrive
gifts, candy and fruit for the
dren and a Christmas movie
be shown.
The

Want-Ad

tunities.

section

facts
Don’t

and

miss

with
chilwill

is filled

golden

To U. S. From
board

Kimberly

Members
will invite their husbands
and
wives
to the
regular
meeting of Campbell Chapter 712.
OES,
to be held
at 8 p.m.
next
Wednesday in the Masonic temple,
Lauretta
place
and
Temple
avenue.
The
meeting
will
be
followed by the chapter’s Christmas
party.

with

oppor-

Pes

tN

Seaman Jack Beck To Return
On

Parties This Month

interesting

ie

Beck,

the

the
son

C. Beck

The

ship

United

Theater

destroyer

is sonarman

USN,

Andrew
nue.

Korean

of

USS

seaman

Mr.

Jack

and

Mrs.

of 836 Laurel
is due

States

to

today

ave-

return
from

to

/

Return from South America

—

Home from a six weeks business
and pleasure trip to South America
are Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Goodman
of 1555 Hawthorne
lane. Making
the journey by plane, they traveled
20,000 miles in their visits to 12
South American countries and were

in

Ko-

Chile

for

presidential

in April,

1951,

and

from

U.

Fleet

the Far East via the Panama Canal,
Hawaiian Islands and Japan.

the

S.

2.

at Key West, Fla., last April.
He
then left Norfolk, Va., in May on
board the Kimberly which sailed to

graduated

Sonar

November

in-

auguratisn

was

on

the

rea where she was operating with
the
United
Nations
Escort
and
Blockade
force, shelling strategic
enemy targets.
;
Seaman
Beck entered the navy
school

Nelson

Requests Permit To Operate
Day Nursery On Spruce Ave.
The
ferred

Mrs.

city

council

recently

re-

to the

zoning

committee

for

public hearing a petition from Mrs.
Ruben

Olson,

requesting

nursery

a

1831

school

Olson

stated

Spruce

permit
her

Arnold

cs

Peterson of Broad-—

view avenue is in San Francisco
where she is visiting her daughter
and son-in-law, the Norris T. Nel- |

sons and their first child, Crystal —

home.

Mrs.

La Reine, who was born November —
29. Mrs. Nelson, the former Joy

petition

that

Peterson,

to

in her
in

avenue,

.

operate

a

will

welcome

her

father

she has applied for a state license
and has a 13 by 22 foot room in

and sister, Patricia, a student at St.

which to care for eight children.
The council recently granted a
petition for a similar project in a
single family dwelling zone.

when

Olaf’s

college,

Northfield,

a
.
iy
aig

Minn., —

they arrive in the California

vide
aN

city for the Christmas holidays. Mr.
Nelson is the son of Mr. and Mrs.

A. A. Nelson of Des Moines, Iowa.

fe
Ain

ane

x

3

GREATEST
ACTION
CAR
America Has Ever Produced!

it!

SPECIAL

ASSESSMENT
NOTICE
NO. 348
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
to all
persons interested that the City Council
of the City of Highland Park, County of
Lake and State of Illinois having ordered
the
construction
of
reinforced
concrete
pavement
improvement
together’
with
necessary
drainage
and
all other
neces-

sary

work

to

complete

the

proposed

im-

provement
of Green
Bay
Road
from Central Avenue to Edgewood
Road, all in the
City of Highland
Park, Lake County,
IIlinois, the ordinance for the same being on

file

in the

office

city

and

having

of the

City

applied

Clerk

of said

the

County

to

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

had

on

the

27th

day

of

December,

A.D.
1952,
or as
soon
thereafter
as
the
business
of the
court
will
permit.
Said assessment
is payable in five
(5)
installments,
with
interest
at
the
rate
of six
(6)
per centum
per annum
on all
installments
from and after date of issue
of
first
voucher.
All
persons | desiring
may
file objections
in said
court’ before
said day
and may
appear
on the hearing
and
make
their defense.

HARRY
Dated at Highland
A.D. 1952.

EARHART

Officer
appointed
to
make
said
Assessment

Park,

Ill.,

Dec.

Cte

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Most people would pray more
if they felt they knew how, —
and knew how prayer could
really be effective. Many today
feel that their own

their

limitless,

beneficent

source — the realm of God.
Today a remarkable book, the
Christian Science textbook
SCIENCE
WITH

KEY

and

HEALTH

TO THE

SCRIPTURES

one-

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Flashing style and thrilling road
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by Mary Baker Eddy
is reverently revealing a wholly
new understanding of prayer,
and meeting humanity’s need.
This great book may be read,
borrowed or bought at

———

“

vee

Mae

many

Thursday,

11, 1952

Time-Proved ‘‘Get-Away”’ Six

ing the time-proved Six engine.

Time-proved for dependability and
all-round economy. Famous
Dodge “Get-Away”’ Six is
the trusted choice of
millions of Dodge
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New-All Non Dodge
Specifications and equipment subject to change without notice.

VAN

Road

December

in the low price

—
°

Highland Park
Open Daily
Information concerning church services,
Sunday School and free public lectures
_also available.

models

field. Five‘ smart models, featur-

Christian Science
Reading Room
1935 Sheridan

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cubic inch. Most efficient engine design
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Stack the new Dodge up against the most costly cars for comfort, safety and performance!
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lives, and

the world at large, sorely need
help that human effort has not
brought.
They see that somehow the answer to life’s perplexing problems must be sought where
power and intelligence have

curved

1943

St. Johns Ave.

GUILDER

MOTORS
HI 2-2770

x ‘4

�Eugene Rappaport Made
Director of Nat'l Society

MOSER
STENOGRAPHIC-SECRETARIAL

Eugene Rappaport, chartered life
underwriter

Four Months’ (Day)
INTENSIVE COURSE
for college women
A new class begins on
Monday in each month.
Bulletin T free

57 East Jackson Blvd.

@

to

the

Life

the

section

for

Couples

company,

has

gregation

elected
Society

Rappaport

and

is past

cago

He

saving prices!

director

of

of Chartered

resides

president

chapter

is, in

of the

of

the

addition,

Million

; P. aslry

WEDDING

of
Mu-

at

169

Pierce road. He has been a chartered life underwriter
since 1936

“Hard-to-find’”’ items there at money-

boa

agent

Pacific

Underwriters.

Mr.

Want-ad

been

American

Life

general

agency,

Insurance

recently

first

and

Rappaport

tual

WaAbash 2-7377

Chicago

Turn

the

the

of the
CLU

Chi-

society.

a life member

Dollar

Round

Shop

Table,

ROGER

|

and PARTY CAKES

WILLIAMS

“Just East of

AVE.

HIGHLAND

Jewel Tea”
ROBT.

Edward

club of North
Israel
J.

Sparling,’

Roosevelt college
ing on December

Shore

will

Con-

present

Dr.

president

at its
21.

next

of

meet-

Dr. Sparling is also president of
the United Nations association of
Chicago
and will speak
on ‘The
United Nations in the Cold War.”
He attended, along with Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt,
the Zagreb
peace
conference in Yugoslavia in 1951.
The meeting will begin at 7 p.m.
with a picnic supper, for which the
club will furnish coffee or tea. The
program will open at 8:15 p.m. in
the Rebecca Crown
room
of the
temple
at Lincoln
and
Vernon
avenues,
in
Glencoe.
All
young
married couples are invited.

OUR SPECIALTY
628

On Civilian Tour of Military Bases

Couples Club To Hear
Speaker On ‘United
Nations In Cold War’

PARK

Walter
Pancoe,
co-chairman
of
the executive
committee,
announced that all previous attendance records were broken at the
last meeting at which was shown
the banned film, ‘‘The Miracle.”

HI 2-4334
W.

Official

an organization restricted to those
who sell a million dollars or more
of life insurance a year.

POLLOCK

Air

Force

Photo

John G. Cherry,
116 Central avenue, receives last minute
instructions from Capt. David Little, USAF jet pilot, prior
to being taken aloft in a T-33 jet trainer. Mr. Cherry, who is
president of the Cherry-Burrell Corp., Chicago, visited Eglin
Air Force base in Florida with over 60 other members of the
15th Joint Civilian Orientation conference, on a tour of military, naval and air bases sponsored by the Defense department.

Buy From Savings...

ITS SAFER!
Announcing

our new

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and the opening of our

shoe department
— SATURDAY, DECEMBER

13th —

306 GREEN BAY ROAD
HIGHWOOD

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CHILDREN’S SHOES

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CASUALS

HEADQUARTERS
OFFICIAL

BOY

SCOUT

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306 Green Bay Road
Highwood
Serving
for

This
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Community
15

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SHOES

you

money

savings.

if you

By paying

You stay out of debt, too.
should

open

a savings

appliances,

It’s just one reason why
with

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better-than-average

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can

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@ Savings Insured Safe Up

hiemi

Ne
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“URNS

HIGHLAND PARK
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN ASS’N.
Established
SECURITY
1811

Page

buy

Leather Belts 75c¢

Natta
SHOE

SHOES

FOR
WEATHERBIRD

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Opening Special:

MEN’S

save

1888
SATISFACTION

SERVICE

Hi 2-0361

St. Johns Ave.

30

Thursday,
f

December

11,

1952

�Archeology

contains
fields

up-to-date

of

Against

Biblical

the

information

on

investigation.

setting

of their

ex-

Books New

otic

At Library

John A. Wilson has interpreted the
Egyptians’ long religious, intellect-

Wide public interest in archeology dates from the discovery of
Tutankhamen’s tomb in the 1920’s
and the unprecedented publicizing
of its excavation.
Several books
published within the last two years
witness the current continued interest in the subject.
Perhaps the
book
which
has
done
the
most

to

catch

Kurt

the

layman’s

Marek’s

Scholars.”

interest

“Gods,

Told

Graves,

with

and

their

strange

land,

ual, and political development
in
“The
Burden
of Egypt,”
a book
which might well explain the significance of archeological discoveries in that country.
These
books
are
available
at
the Highland Park Public library.

factual

lowing it, Mrs. Aaron

Plan Luncheon, Book

Review For Thursday
The

December

Woman’s

meeting

association

of

of

The

the
High-

land Park Presbyterian church will

Bauer, chair-

terested

Highland

nominating

committee,

invited

to

present

her

It has

which

made

known

man

of the

will
been

report.

also

that a duffel bag

That

will be available as a receptacle for
clothes to be turned over to the
Church
World
Service
and later
sent overseas.

service

open with a dessert luncheon in
the parish house of the church next
Tuesday at 12:30 p.m. Prior to the
luncheon Mrs. Carl Howard’s group
will supervise a bake sale and fol-

Guests

Invited

Mrs. Kathryn Turney Garten will
give what she terms her “own review of the Bible” at 2 p.m. All in-

will

Park

attend
be

followed

same

evening

department,

women

the

are

program
by

tea.

the

under

social
the

di-

rection
of
the
chairman,
Mrs.
Charles Bletsch, will entertain the
residents of the Lake County home
in Libertyville with a movie, refreshments and the presentation of
a gift. Mrs. Bletsch can be reached
at HI 2-2478 should anyone wish to
aid in this project.

Presenting

is
and

ac-

curacy this popular story of the
great archeological discoveries of
the last two centuries dwells on
the scenes of Pompeii, Troy, Crete,
Egypt,
Assyria,
Babylonia,
Sumeria, and Yucatan.
A similarly absorbing book was
written for children by Anne Terry

White.
“Lost Worlds” reveals the
driving power behind famous archeologists and the mystery and excitement
of discovery,
and
describes the reconstruction of four
buried

art

Presbyterian Women

THE

GREAT

NEW

1953

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civilizations.
Religious

Archeology

Asia has been the cradle of many
world religions, among them: Zoroastrianism,
Hinduism,
Buddhism,

*

Taoism, Shinto, and Islam.
Jack
Finegan’s latest book, “The Archeology of World Religions,” traces
their history through the actual
and tangible memorials of the past,
permitting each religion to speak
through its own documents
and
works of art.

*

guide.

Turn

The

first

dictionary

to the

completely
in

30

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In
studying the archeology
of
Bible lands one might turn to the
new
“Harper’s
Bible
Dictionary”
as a handy one-volume
reference
Bible

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Shc Gone OF
TD

A

SEE
The woman headed for a
gala evening is the woman
who
always
keeps
her
clothes flower-fresh — with
regular dry cleaning . . . the
woman who is always fastidious about things like
powder-begrimed necklines,
underarm
stains, tell-tale
spots. Prompt service, quality work. Call us.

ALPHA
AT TA
PTI

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DEERFIELD Rd Ph Deervie/

Thursday,

December

11,

THIS

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e

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e New Deeper Rear Seat Cushions

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e New Panorama-View

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e New

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e
1952

MARCHI
1949

St. Johns

Ave.

BROS.

OUR

GENERAL

MOTORS

SHOWROOMS

MASTERPIECE!

NOW!

Here, in the greatest Pontiac ever
built, is the finest, most beautiful,
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at a price so close to the lowest. The
new 1953 Dual-Streak Pontiac is completely restyled, inside and out. And
it has Pontiac’s traditional dependability and economy. Come in—for
dramatic proof that dollar for dollar
you can’t beat a Pontiac!

PONTIAC

Tel. Highland Park 2-5030

Highland Park, Ill.

Page

31.

�mk!

Miss Kilpatrick In

GATEWAY TO SNOW FUN
OPEN ALL YEAR FOR YOUR

PLEASURE

Miss

New

Year’s

daughter

bra

Office,

333

N. Michigan

—

FRanklin

of

Mr.

Kilpatrick

Ann
and

of

university.

Kilpatrick,
Mrs.

Old

J.

the.

May-

Trail,

was

among 32 students in the University of Missouri to be listed among
the outstanding American college
students in the 1952553 edition of
“Who’s
Who
Among
Students
in

Eve

KING’S GATEWAY HOTEL
LAND O’LAKES, WISCONSIN
Chicago

Patricia

American
2-7100

Universities

and

who

are

listed

are

selected

committee

studies

leadership

character

records

suggested

for the nominations.

of

of

each

Outstanding

and

student

Students

‘Last spring, Miss Kilpatrick was
chosen as one of 50 outstanding
women
on the Missouri
campus.
She is a senior in the school of
journalism and a member of Kappa
Alpha Theta social sorority.

Colin

The

scholarship,

One

leges.”
Students

publication

from nominations made by a special committee of each college and

Student Who’s Who

Yes— Winter Sports
— Bowling — it’s always fun
at the Gateway—come on up—bring your friends
for an outing never to be forgotten.
Join our Fabulous Christmas and
Parties—never a dull moment.

national

the

Scout Training for
Explorer Leaders
Begins Tonight
Announcement
has been
made
by the training committee of North
Shore
Area
council,
Boy
Scouts
of America, of a training course for
all who are interested in programming for young adults, and especially for leaders of Explorers in
posts or troops. The
course will
open
at the
Highland
school
in
Libertyville tonight at 8 o’clock.

Instructors for the course will be
Dr. Robert Black of Sheridan road,

ELECTRIC

chairman of the council leadership
training committee; Avery Jones of
Eastwood avenue, Charles Gribble
and Ken W. Taylor of the council
executive staff. Dr. Black and Mr.
Jones attended the Explorer training program at Philmont, National
Council Scout ranch in New Mexico, last summer, where they were
given
the newest
information
in
this field.

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eZ

\

—

Waffle

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——

Sunbeam

The basis of Exploring program
planning,
which
is done
by the
young men themselves on a fourcommittee system, has been used
successfully by leaders of church
youth groups and others, including
both young men and young women.

The plan includes activities in outdoor

high

adventure,

indoor

voca-

tional exploration, social and service work, or work in the citizenship field. The material and ideas
to be presented can well be-used
by other than Explorer leaders.
Explorer
leaders
from
Northwest and Lake shore districts will
be invited
to participate
in the

course.

eo
|

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Check over your list,
you'll find there’s a

be done
No
tion

on the weekend

matter

what

your

you

trip.

want

to

buy

find the Want-Ad

best market

sec-

place.

Fryryte
Complete

popcorn

basket and

\

plastic cover $29.95
irr}
Poth
Tt +t
eas

Sunbeam
Shavemaster $26.50

with utility rack,

Schick Super $22.50

Service store or dealer’s

LECTRIC BLANKETS and
LECTRIC SHEETS
From

Sunbeam

to take place at a camp in Wisconsin at the convenience of the
group. Programs for the sessions
include
Exploring
fundamentals,
service,
leadership,
program,
organization, and Exploring skills to

ELECTRIC DEEP FRYER

ELECTRIC SHAVERS

... at your Public

$37.50

states. Later sessions are scheduled
for December 18, and January 8,
15 and 22. A weekend camping
expedition will be set by the-group,

or sell you'll

small appliance perfect
for each one on it!

See these and other
electrical gifts

Coffeemaster

West B end Percolator $11.95

The location for the remaining
sessions
will be decided
by the
group this evening,
probably
on
the basis of where the major part
of the leaders are from in order to
suit the convenience of the greatest
number,
the
training
committee

HE TRIEO
TO MAKE BOTH
ENDS MEET
a

— D&gt;

Ae

$29.95

Egg

Cooker, $12.00

ms

Handy-Hannah
Hair Dryer, $8.95
© LOCAL TRADEMARKS, Ine.

Sun Lamps
from $8.50
Portable

Lamps,

ELECTRIC
too! A

TOASTERS

. .. and

Toastmaster $23.00
Sunbeam Toaster $26.50

G. E. Toaster $22.95

about
ELECTRIC HEATING
G. E. and Universal
Heating

PADS

the

he found

fine

If you

out

values

like

at

value

and service, stop in.

Pads

From $5.95

Eddy’s.

then

to $8.95

EDDY'S
LIQUORS
EG Th

eed
Wont

key

�PB. uppetry

VFW Tells Plans For
Games Party This
Saturday Night

oungs ters

oO, ities

Highland
Park
Memorial
Post
No.
4737,
Veterans
of
Foreign
Wars, will give its annual pre-holiday games party at 8 p.m. Saturday in the VFW home, 667 Central
avenue.
The public is invited to attend
the party. Arrangements are being
made by Francis L. Sheahen, commander of the post; Louis D. Picchietti, senior vice commander; Edwin
L. Jablon,
junior vice
commander;
Lloyd
Moon,
quartermaster and Harry E. Skidmore, adjutant.

Turn

to

the

Want-ad

section

for

“‘Hard-to-find” items there at moneysaving prices!

I. H. NEMEROFF
Jewelers
Across

At the left is a portion of the youthful audience which
watched spellbound as the Gilmore puppets gave a show for
their benefit at Trinity Episcopal church recently.
A large
group

of children

from

all

parts

of the

community

attended

Michael

Holmes,

Susan

Rodgers,and

Susan

Kennicott,

- Opticians

from the Bank—35
Highland Park

Years

International Sterling, Rogers
Silver; Elgin, Bulova, Gruen

left to right, decided to get a close-up view of some of the char-

acters during one of the skits. Many traditional children’s
stories were dramatized as well as original playlets.

the performance.

N. Shore Methodist
To Hold Board
Meeting Monday

|

The official board of the North
Shore Methodist church in Glencoe
will hold its semi-annual meeting
at
8 p.m.
next
Monday
in the
church. G. William Wilson of Glencoe, chairman
of the board
will
preside and the Rev. Mr. Russell
W. Lambert will give the devotions
for the evening.
First

Covery

Six

church activities, public relations,
ushers,
fellowship,
building
and
grounds, music, records and history,
world peace and civic relations and
hospital and homes. Members are
asked to be present.

The youth and high school choirs
will meet Wednesday for rehearsal
in the parish house at 7 and 8 p.m.
respectively.
On Thursday at 7 p.m. boys of
the high school fellowship
group

of

the

School
Also
senior
the

church
gym

in

Central

for basketball

meet

practice.

meeting
choir,

parish

that

who

house

evening

will
at

is the

rehearse

in

8 p.m.

Now! Get the buy of the year!

Months

10;

The meeting will cover the first
six months of the church’s fiscal
year. Several committee chairmen
have been asked to make verbal re-

ports

of progress.

Among

them

Open

’til 9 p.m.

is

Adolph
Frankel
of 260 Lakeside
place, chairman of the men’s work
committee, who
will give suggestions on how this group’s membership can do a more active job. Several
other
members
will
cover
various
other
phases
of church
work including membership, inter-

Solid Gold
Birthstone
Rings, $12.00 up

Coinkdhite 5
TELEVISION

nal at extra cost;

Illustrated: State Commander

Diamond

Give yout folly a huyoule fet Chul!

AND

RADIO

$250
up

Ring

0.00

6 Diamond
$225.00

Set il
up

-°

Get a Studebaker

SERVICE

ALSO BENDIX
APPLIANCE SERVICE
Phone

Commande VE ot Chamin

HI 2-0609

America’s most distinctive jet-streamed styling!
Every model a stand-out in structural soundness!

hatharine
SECRETARIAL

Come
Gibb

Get a buy that you'll talk about for years!

S

All models offer Studebaker Automatic Drive or Overdrive—and

@ Never enough Gibbs-trained
secretaries to meet the demand.
Courses for high school and
private
school
graduates
and
college women.
Five-school personal placement service.

RAVINIA

Catalog: Executive Dean
51 E. Superior St., Chicago 11
DE 7-3306
Other Gibbs Schools: New York
Boston
Montclair;N;J;
Providence

Thursday, December 11, 1952

in right away!

1778
Open

Friday

until

MOTORS,

SALES &amp; SERVICE
Phone HI 2-1854

First St.

Evenings

glare-reducing tinted glass—at extra cost,

9

for

your

convenience.

Highland

INC.

Park,

Opposite

Ill.

North

Western

Depot

3-Piece Tea Service .................-.-

53.00

Vegetable: Dish ....005.
i
ee
Bread ‘Trey os850
ee ee

24.00
10.00

I. H. NEMEROFF
Highland

Park

Across from the Bank—35 Years
Use Our Christmas Layaway Plan

Page

33

|

�Community Chest Drive at
High School Is Over Top

Girl Scouts Display Art Efforts

Highwood Scouts
Seeking Leader
For Next Spring

The Highland Park High school
Community Chest drive ended very
successfully with the sum of $1,087.20 collected.
This topped the
school’s quota by $12.44.

Boys

of

Scouting

age

in

Highwood are seeking a leader
for next spring. In April, 20 of
the 67 Cub Scouts at St. James
school will outgrow the ranks

of Cub Scouting and will be unable to continue

ing

program

in the

unless

Scout-

a

leader

can be found. There are also
about a dozen boys at Oak Terrace school who will be 11

years old this year and another
group

of almost

20

who

have

passed the age of 11 and would

RESTAURANT and COCKTAIL LOUNGE
Cocktail Time ........ 5:00 to 7:00 p.m.
Dinner Time ........ 6:00 to 9:00 p.m
Supper Time ........ 9:00 to 12:00 p.m.
Snack Time .......... 12:00 to 2:00 p.m.
Delicious Steaks
Chicken
Ribs
Free Parking in Rear

like to be Boy Scouts if a troop
can be formed.
St. James Cubmaster Richard
Jacobs urges anyone from Highwood or the Highland Park section
of

the

school

district,

who

either

has had Scouting experience himself or who has previously worked
with Scouts, to volunteer for this
project.
‘Anxious
aD

MAGIC

SCISSORS

Beauty

LEGAL

She

HI 2-3814

1893

Hair styling should mean

Sheridan

Road

creating ...

Our Styling Offers You Satisfaction Possible Only With
Artistic Hair Dressers Plus the Finest Preparations
Available.
Proprietor—

MARY

DESMOND

TARNOW

wonderful

NOTICE

For the ones
from one to twenty!

Hall,

in

the

City

of

Highland

concern about the Scouting program. “It may be that we can
organize a troop for each school
as the Cubs have
petition seems to

23,

Highwood could be found to sponsor a combination troop.”
Several
men
including
Bruno
Giangiorgi, John Schaefer and William Russell, have offered to help

organize

giorgi

as

We Sew On Every Week!
Here’s a part of our service you DON’T pay for...
yet it’s one of the most important parts of our business!
Sewing on missing buttons when you send us your work
saves you a good many hours of “‘chores’’ each year...
and keeps your husband’s disposition sweet and pleasant.

Mrs.

LOOK in the

Send Your Dry Cleaning With Your

YELLOW PAGES

34 Family Finish Specialists

—the CLASSIFIED section
of your telephone directory—
fOr » DIAPER SUPPLY SERVICE
e MOTION PICTURE
EQUIPMENT &amp; SUPPLIES
e TOYS

Laundry.

for Over a Quarter of a
Century.
tCaumpay

SERVICE

Skokie Valley
LAUNDRY
“Where

e BICYCLES

&amp;

DRY

Page

34

INC.

Your Clothes Stay Young”
Main Office and Plant

Highland Park 2-3310 —
512-518

CLEANERS,

Deerfield Call Enterprise 1616

Waukegan

Ave.,

Highwood

Scout

troop

if

2-5917.

Indiana U.

Bass,

Samuel

N.

son

of

Mr.

Bass

of

Sheridan

road, will be home

the lot line on
instead of 40 feet
.

for the Christ-

ADJUDICATION
AND
NOTICE

and
HI
Msgr.

Green Bay Roads
2-0202
Rt. Rev.
Joseph P. Morrison
Pastor
Rev. Donald
B. Runkle
Rev. Bernard
E. Burns
MASSES
Sundays—6:15,
7:30, 9:00, 10:00,
11:00 and 12 noon
Holy Pee
ea
8:00, 9:00,

and

mas holidays next week from Indiana university at Bloomington.
Mr. Bass is a freshman at Indiana and a member of Zeta Beta
Tau social fraternity.

IMMACULATE
CONCEPTION CHURCH
Deerfield

HI

Michael

percon-

required.

at

Arriving From

1952.

structed
20 feet
from
Roger Williams Avenue

Boy

call either Cubmaster or Mr. Gian-

Appeal No. 207 on behalf of Theodore D.
Kahn at 690 Wake Robin Lane, Highland
Park (Lot 1, Lebolts Subdivision), for a

BUTTONS

a

someone
can
be
found
to
take
charge. Anyone interested in serving in any capacity
is asked to

Park,

variance of the Zoning
Ordinance to
mit
a single
family
dwelling
to be

done. The combe good for the

boys. If not, perhaps some group in

at 7:30 P.M., Tuesday, January 6, 1958,
to hear appeals from the decision of the
Building Inspector for the City of Highland Park, regarding variance from the
Zoning Ordinance as follows:
Appeal No. 206 on behalf of Archie J.
Antes whose appeal was postponed from
December

Jacobs.

gram and it would be too bad to
waste the valuable training they
have received as Cubs.”
Oak
Terrace
Cubmaster
Frederick Wendling added his word of

NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
by the
Board of Appeals of the City of Highland
Park, that a public hearing will be held
by said Board, in the Council Chambers
of the City Hall, in the City of Highland
Park, at 7:30 P.M., Tuesday, December
28rd, 1952, to hear an appeal from the
decision of the Building Inspector for the
City of Highland
Park, regarding variance from the Zoning Ordinance as follows:
Appeal No. 206 on behalf of Archie J.
Antes,
1775
Second
Street,
Highland
Park, for a variance of the Zoning Ordinance
to permit
the construction
of a
shop
building
on the
rear of Lot
16,
Block 6 (known as 1760 Second Street),
Highland Park.
Appeal Board:
THOMAS CREIGH, Chairman
Lester G. Britton
R. W. Flinn
Warren Peterson
John H. Thomson

City

to see,” said Mr.

“Let’s not fail the boys who are so
anxious to continue as Boy Scouts.
It is certainly good for the community to have the young people
interested in such a wholesome pro-

NOTICE is hereby given by the Board of
Appeals
of the City of Highland
Park,
that a public hearing will be held by said
Board, in the Council Chambers
of the

The Know-It-Owl says:

Continue’

“The enthusiasm of the boys who
have earned their Webelos badge is

At a recent tea for mothers and instructors, Ravinia Girl Scouts of Troop 50 exhibit
their paintings which merited them art badges.
Among the 22 scouts of the troop are, front
row, left to right, Nancy Michaels, Jill Henner, Judy Kraft and Penny Michaels. Standing,
left to right, are Mrs. Bernard Chizewer, Mrs. Ralph Michaels and Mrs. Edward A. Gorenstein,
professional artist, who directed the art instruction. Co-leaders in the work, but not pictured,
are Mrs. LeRoy Weis and Mrs. Jack Guthman.

Things for children?
Here are plenty

To

isa

CLAIM

DAY

NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
to all
persons that the first Monday of February, 1958, is the claim date in the estate
of

MADGE

HELEN

SMITH,

Deceased

pending
in the Probate
Court
of Lake
County, Illinois, and that claims may be
filed against the said estate on or before
said date without issuance of summons.
All claims filed against said estate on or
before said date and not contested, will

be adjudicated

on the first Tuesday

after

the first Monday of the next succeeding
month at 10 A.M.
Mae E. Berry, Administrator
Singer &amp; Singer, Attorneys
First National Bank Bldg.,
Highland Park, Ill.

Weekdays—6:1 5, 8:15
CONFESSIONS
Saturdays,
Eves. of First Fridays and
Holy Days 4:00 and 7:30 p.m.

IREDALE
MOVING

AND

PACKING

OF

HOUSEHOLD

GOODS

@
AGENT

ALLIED

VAN

Ave.,

Highland

Park

LINES

STORAGE
474

Central

Thursday,

HI 2-0181
December

11,

1952

�‘Mi

| Hostess

To Pupils

" Slated For Tuesday

Junior

Guest of honor at the Briergate
Community club Christmas meeting will be the best known resident of the North Pole, Santa
Claus, who will bring his grab
bag to the meeting in the Recreation center Tuesday at 8 p.m. He
will share the spotlight with the
carolers of the Highland Park High

school

mixed

ensemble

under

piano

students

Children To Sing Carols
All Briergate
children
are

and

Mr.

Ben-

and

Mrs.

Frank and
42A

for

your

new

Delco-Heat

-

mechanism of all!
You can be sure your DelcoHeat Burner will be saecaine rig Bi
too — we've been factory train
by Delco-Heat experts! Phone
or come in right away !

Here is real General Motors value !
The dependable, economical
Delco-Heat Conversion Oil Burner
— with the exclusive Rotopower unit
that combines all moving parts in
one assembly —the simplest burner

Dinners

AND

BISHOP HEATING &amp; SUPPLY

Hostess:

Mary

176—LAKE
Closed

Jane

1543 Deerfield Road

BLUFF

Highland Park, Ill.

Call HI 2-0407

2484

Wed.

MEN

We Have A Large Supply of These for
Immediate Delivery and Installation.
MRR

1

UU UNV

RE YE BEDE EE ME NEUE NUN

“Any

amount

that

your

We

one

“Your

further

support

PERSONAL

of

the

UE

EM

I

A

Mr. and Mrs. Clarence R. Scott
of Homewood avenue left last Friday to attend the wedding Sunday
morning of their cousin, Miss Doro_ thy Pilkington, in Sigourney, Iowa.
zs They stopped Saturday at Grinnell
college in Iowa to pick up their

Barbara,

and

then

went

Sigourney.

and

Mrs.

Scott

RADIOS

BATTERY SETS—AII Types

UU

UU

Come

In

RRS BU ME BEDE DDE DE

Phonographs

Attend Wedding in lowa

eughier,

PLUG-IN

Many to Choose From —
CS PEE

returned

3-SPEED

ATTACHMENT,

PORTABLE
PORTABLE
TABLE

as low as

3-SPEED MANUAL
3-SPEED

MODEL,

AUTOMATIC

as low as

Oe

ee

f

have a complete line

of all types from $14.50* up.
See our new lightweight luggage—21

inch

only

5 Ibs.

Also car sacks. We have the
finest.
MR RO

NEN

UE ME

UE

UE UE

OE UR

Leather

of Zenith and RCA.
- FM - Regular &amp; Clock

AM

in our

Highland Park Community
Chest
shall be greatly appreciated.”

NERD ENE

have a supply of all the newest

organ-

agency

OUR

as low as $] $9

PERSONALIZED

ization or your membership can
afford, either as a contribution, or
a plus over last year, will be of
important
assistance
to an
extremely vital service
community.

NU

Clock Radios

mem-

bership, in an attempt to aid
of our Council members.

MODELS

We

RRR

TABLE

Luggage

ewww

ewe eww wn weeee

Bill

RR

your

EE

Radios

life. Consequently, you, as members of the Highland Park Coordi| mating Council, are requested to
to

NER REDE UE

NNN

OE

UU

UU

MRE US

RR

I

much as the work of these agencies
is most essential to our community

subject

"sa9°"

21 inch

Inc.
NNN

RR RR

Consoles —

ENN

RR RR

20-Inch as low as

be necessary to reduce its aid to
any of its member agencies, inas-

this

a New

Why Not See Us—
Table Model

NM

I

Trade In That Small Set for
20 or 21 Inch Set

$8,000. Although subscribers have
increased contributors over previous donations,
it has become

ee

MMR

Television

Community
Chest
$76,225.00 goal by

necessary for the Chest to re-solicit donors for a further increase
in their contributions, if they have
not already done so. This year’s
budget
is larger
than
previous
years by about 9 per cent.
“The
Chest
hopes
it will not

MN HYP

&amp; GRANT,

OO

Highland
Park
is short of its

GRANT

RR

Co-

MEE

FROM

last week
of the

EZ

De

LADIES’ BAGS
PASSPORT CASES
Have Many Other Items
to Choose From.

We

CEE

YB

ER

Goods

Folds — Men &amp; Women $95 up*
KEY CASES — MANICURE SETS
LIQUOR SETS IN LEATHER CASES
TOOL KITS IN LEATHER CASES
BRIEF CASES—Rexbilt $10.00 up

EE

agencies

BE ED

addressed

RE

a letter

set by the Highland Park Community Chest. Said Mr. Rodde:
“After weeks of hard work, the

‘Mr.

pay

Conversion Oil Burner!

Converts your
present heating
system to automatic
Delco Heat!

Williams.

all member

‘on to

OIL BURNER

The Want-Ad section is filled with
interesting facts and golden opportunities. Don’t miss it!

Your Host and

president
of
the
organization,
urged an all-out effort to solicit
the needed $8,000 to reach the goal

Be
es

New low prices on the

Delco-Heat Conversion

Regner

Lu

ordinating Council, Herbert Rodde,

'

Vollertsen.

LL NEE BE BR REE DEE BEE DE ME DE DE REDS 8 UD

In

Wendy

You will enjoy the delightful organ music of

Coordinating Council
Asks For Continued
Red Feather Support
to

Jef-

Jefferson,
Leta Jane
Appelman.
Suzanne and Carolyn Stunkel, and

and

Luncheons

in-

Mrs.

Sanders,

frey LeClereq, Norman Pattarozzi,
Gerald Johnson, Alan Weil, Joanne

SLES

Charles

Mr.

Beverly Fabbri,

Thomas

THE ACCENT IS ON FOOD

and are being assisted by Mr. and
Mrs.
Julian Winthrop,
Mr. and
Mrs. John Irland, Mr. and Mrs.
and

and

Our New Dining Room and
Cocktail Lounge Is Now Ready

Christmas
tree where
Santa will
give each child a gift.
Mr. and Mrs. Carlyle Wells head
the committee handling this event

Kanter,

Robert

The Steele’s

Sunnyside, and Southgather around the big

Covert,

April Clements,

Miss

to

urged to take their young
to the
intersections
of

Eastwood,
\land and

Johnston.

EASY TERMS! New low prices—no
down payment—and up to 3 years

vited to attend the club’s annual
children’s outdoor caroling at 7
p.m. December 22. Parents in that

ton

of

the

and Mrs. David Barrow, Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Fitzgerald, Mr. and
Mrs. Chester Jones, Mr. and Mrs.
Wilbert
Parisoe, and Mrs. Anne
Scibetta.

James

farkacs

Helen Taylor met in her Park avenue home
Saturday afternoon for
an informal musical party. A colored
moving
picture
was
made
during
the
program
by
Irving
Levin. The participants were:
Margaret Herbst, Joel and Neil
Levin, Susan Mason, Richard and
Karen
Goldwach,
Linda
Heintz.
Elinor and Ruth Fine, Diane Win-

direction of Chester Kyle.
Refreshments will be served and
all residents of the Briergate area,
which
includes
Sherwood
Forest
and
its environs,
are
invited to
attend and become members of the
club. Members of the program committee in charge of entertainment
are Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Lewis, Mr.

area are
children

oj elton Goodman,

At Musicale

OE ER

RE

A

PA

BS

Records
Christmas

and

BE

ee a ee

re

Music

Carols — Robert Shaw

Symphonies on L P
Concertos

PE

Ballet on

LP

on LP

Show Tunes on LP

Children’s Favorites

Rudolph The Red Nose Reindeer
*Plus

Federal

Tax

�EA
i

. Elks Bowling League
Ss

December

_

Team

'

Moran
singer

waemautual

5 Standings
Ww.

tL.

Plumbing ............ 27
Printing ................ 22.

2
14

Coal

.................... 22

meme TAGUOrS 2o.:..26.........-..
Mitchell Builders ............
BR
ELOOY ..os.
0
cai.
my Favorite Inn. ............

McDonald

Plumbing

High Series, Team
Prtg. .... 901-737-859—2497
Plbg. .... 809-845-811—2465

Singer
Moran

17

21
19
19
13

18
20
20
23

........ 10

29

RECREATION DEPT. CITY
Leading Scorers

High Series, Individual
MORAN oes
221-192-148—561
PO
ae dec ace 221-158-167—546
High Game, Team
Singer: Printing 3534 ea
901

Jy
De

Singer.

Printing: io2.60.30/.5..
High Game, Individual

ty

OLA

Dg

TE

code

ere eeeok

ipa tebe i coe teat Nha

VEW

859
221

221

Name
Bob Joor

Team
FAVED

Renzo

Vocational:

Marchietti

oe
.....26:32...,

Peta:

Jerry Fell
Ron Walz
Rich Martini

BCU
od us cea nkey
Hinchelie se): i.3..csc56.
Moroney”
6.350 te.

Vince

Cimbalo

Ol ee

Moroney

Gene Tagliapetria
Don Geske

Post 4741

B
13

Marty Sokoloff

Highwood VFW

LEAGUE
FT.
5

11

aah

ction

Washington Gardens
VE
ke gee coc

Defeats Last

Total
31

1

31

10

2

22

5
8
8

7
1
0

17
17
16

8

0

16

6
7

2
0

14
14

Year's Champs
Washington

\

L\

Team

Insurance

VOCATIONGl
TAAVER.

oes

........

1

ois:

1

ENN | oss

1

Bock’s Bombers .............--Highwood. VEW “33..-:.-:.
Hinchcliff’s Orphans ........
Beth BE VM
ee
Le.
Kennedy Gardens ............
Highland Park Moose ......
Washington Gardens ........

1
1
0
0
0
0
0

SENSATIONAL
SPACE PATROL TOYS

y

Official

Space

Patrol

m

Chuck
W.

Moroney

CO

L.
13
14
16
4 By’ g
High Game, Team
20
Oak Terrace Beverage
21 L. F. Motor Sales
22
High Game, Individual
Zo
24 R. Tondi
25 H. Montecchi

CO

W.
26
25
ae
Ae,
19
18
17
16
15
14

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tussle

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Moose by a
Marchietti
and
also
points for
gert
scored
losers.

on

Wed-

overpowered

score of 53 to 30. Renzo
controlled both boards
hit
the basket for 23
Vocational.
Don
Tageight points
for the

In Thursday’s first game, Moroney Insurance, led by sharp shooting Rich
Martini,
outscored
the
Hinchcliff Orphans 61-49. The first
half was very close with the score
being 34-30, but the speedy Moroney club proved to be the stronger
unit
the
second
half. Ron Walz
scored 17 points for the losers.
Close

Game

The closest game of the evening
was between Beth El and Bock’s
Bombers with the Bock crew coming out on top, 48-46. After a very
poor start, Beth El came to life in
the last half, outscoring the victors
by eight points, but was two shy of
winning when
the gun went off.
Jack Tyson scored 12 points for the
winners, but the outstanding player
of the game was Marty
Sokoloff
who scored 22 points for Beth El.
The
final game
on Thursday’s
card was another thriller between
Haven
Inn and
Kennedy
Florist,
with Haven Inn coming out victors,

48-43.
to

The tall Kennedy

hit

the

on

end

many

club failed

lay-ups

proved

very

which

costly.

in

Bob

Joor hit the field
13 times
and
added five free throws for a total
of 31 points for the winners.
Bob

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�Varsity Swim Team Faces Niles Today
Gus Gaggioli To Be Host To
Northwest Bowling Proprietors

Wins In Sorority
Swimming Meet

Eight Firsts Outof Nine Events oe

Miss
Mr.

Fjerre,

Mrs.

Arthur

Fjerre

won

three

and

Johns

Gus

Caryl
avenue,

places and

daughter

of

of

St.
first

one third place for her

sorority,

Kappa

Epsilon

annual

inter-sorority

Nu,

at

an

swimming

meet at Augustana college in Rock
Island.
Miss
Fjerre
is a freshman
at
Augustana. She was a member of
Penguin
club
at Highland
Park
High school.

Gaggioli,

owner

of the Deer-

field Bowling academy, will be host
to the Northwest Bowling Proprietors

association

meeting
eon

Tony

next

will

be

at

the

Thursday.
served

at

monthly

A
noon

lunchand

Cavalier, president of the as-

sociation, will conduct the business
meeting at 1:30 p.m.
Charles
Crovetti will represent
the Highland Ten Pin at the meet-

ing
Jane

and

Jack

lanes

Passini

will

also

of the

Mary

attend.

Mermen Triumph
Over Morton In

60 To15 Win
By Art Weinstein
Fresh from a tremendous 60
to 15 win over Morton in the

latter’s pool December 4 in
their first Suburban league
meet, the Highland Park High
school Varsity swimming team
will meet Niles today at 4 p.m.
in the Niles pool.
The Varsity won eight firsts out
of the nine events. Winning firsts
for

..- Go To HPHS Varsity Mermen

the

Mermen

were

Fred

Pete

Hughes

Bill

Davidow

in

Harris
in

the

freestyle

the

40

in
the

yard,

200-yard,

in the

and

100-yard.

Al

Rubenstein won two firsts in the
100-yard breaststroke and the individual medley, setting a pool rec-

ord

in the

latter.

The

local

boys

came through in the backstroke by
taking first and second. Bob Stanwood just nosed out his mate Jim

Barton

by 2/10ths

of a second

in

that event.
The Mermen won the
first two places in four of the seven individual events..
Other boys
who
won
second
places
were

Woody Hansmann
stroke, John Gould

Maine

Frosh Cagers Drop
Two To New Trier
In Series Opening

they throttled a tall New
team 43-37, at New Trier.

school’s

freshman basketball squad suffered
defeat twice last Friday at the
hands
marked
teams’
series.
games,

of New Trier.
The games
the official opening of both
Suburban league conference
New Trier wrapped up both
47-13 and 42-20.

New Trier jumped off to an early lead when John Magnuson made
good for two points. At the end of

the first quarter the Winnetka boys

Trier

The Indians started a team which
averages around
six
foot
three.
Ranging
from
six foot five Don
McNeill
were
Don
Davidson, six
foot four, and Jack Stillwell, Bob
Knight and Ray Etiennet, each an
inch shorter.

The

Parkers’

team

averaged

around six feet. George
ter, six foot seven, was

Burmeisthe only

Giant

included

in

a lineup

which

Harold Freberg, Bob Troy, Eddie
Capitani and Howard Russell.
The Little Giant ballhandling of
Eddie Capitani, Bob Troy and Har-

old Freberg

completely baffled the

remained out in front with a score
of 16-1, Roger Burnell making the
point
for
Highland
Park.
John
Swan and Burnell made a basket

lengthy
Indians.
The
only
the above three didn’t do was
under somebody’s legs.

apiece

and accurate in their passing, and
above all, they were hitting.
Not
too many shots were taken in close.
Most of them came from the outside where the tall boys couldn’t
reach them.

during

the

second

quarter

but New Trier still remained
in front with an 18 point lead.

out

The
second
half brought forth
no luck for:the Parkers with New
Trier still out in front. New Trier
cinched it in the fourth period by
scoring 15 more points while Highland Park tallied only one.
The
final score was 47 for New Trier
and 13 for Highland Park.
High scorer for New Trier was
John
Magnuson
with
21
points.
Don Carlson led the Perkers with
five to his credit.
At

the

beginning

of

the

(Continued on page 40)
Page

38

second

The

Blue

New

White

were

thing
craw!

sharp

Trier led at the end of the

first quarter

when

and

and

also the first half,

the score was

New

Trier

Highland Park, 18.
Excitement started in the
quarter as the Parkers made

22,

third
it 23

all, on shots by Capitani and Russell. Capitani made a push shot but
so did Bob Leitzow.
Then Bob Troy sank one from
the

top

of the

keyhole;

the

gave

25.

Trounce

Morton
secfirst
they

Russell

(Continued on page 40)

hit

the 60-yard
inFirsts were won

by Mike
Tighe
in the
40-yard
crawl, with Kirk Emmert finish-

will face a tough and tall Oak

The Giants pulled their first, and

High _

on November

breaststroke
and
dividual medley.

without a doubt their greatest, upset of the season Friday night as

Park

in

relays

trounced the Morton
frosh-soph,
41 to 25. Peter Goelzer remained
undefeated by winning the 40-yard

Park team tomorrow night on the Highland Park floor. The
Huskies, under a new coach, Harry Kinert, have five boys from
last year on their squad. Game time will be the usual 7 p.m.

By Jerry Heisler

Keim

Both

The
frosh-soph
won
their
ond meet in a row and their
Suburban
league win
when

By Pierre Martineau

Highland

Dick

Frosh-Soph

Get Set For Oak Park Tilt
cagers

crawl.

looked
tremendously improved
over a rather poor showing
at

Giants Conquer New Trier;
Little Giants

and

200-yard

the victory to the Mermen.
The
only upset of the meet was Shultz
of Morton’s stunning win over Danny Seitz in the diving. The Varsity

John Gould, right, took second place in the 100-yard
free style at the HPHS Varsity-Morton swim meet December
Second place in the backstroke went to James
4 at Morton.
Eight firsts out of the nine events went to
Barton, left above.
the Varsity.

The

freestyle,

in the breastin the 100-yard

ing second.

Roger

ed

performance

his fine

when

he

Robert

First place in the 200-yard went to Peter Hughes, about
to dive in above. Flashing through the water is Allen Rubenstein, who set a pool record for first in the individual medley
and also took first in the 100-yard breaststroke.

won

the

Engdahl

Sheahen
diving

won

repeat-

at Maine
with

the

ease.

100-yard

freestyle after a close battle. The
race was very close until the last
length
when
Engdahl
started
to

pull

away.

lay

for

The
the

strong
baby

(Continued

medley

Mermen

on page

retri-

40)

Frosh-soph Also Star at Meet

Name Ferrari

Most Valuable

Frosh-soph
whipped Morton
frosh-soph 41 to

LFC Player
Leo
Ferrari
of Highwood
was chosen yesterday as the
“most valuable” player at Lake
Forest college at the annual

25, with stars like

Peter Goelzer,
who stayed undefeated, winning
football banquet in Calvin Du40
yard _ breastrand Commons on the college
60campus. The award was pre- stroke and
sented to him by Kenneth Russ yard _ individual
of Cedar avenue.
medley.
In the
Lake
Forest
awarded
football
picture
at
right,
monograms to 29 members of the
Kirk Emmert, rear
championship 1952 grid squad. Besides Leo Ferrari, the lettermen in- took second in the
clude
Welton
Mansfield,
Dirk
40-yard crawl.
Young and Gene Tagliapietra, all
Peter Onderdonk,
of Highland Park.
The Alumni association of Lake
another
team
Forest presented a team trophy to
member,
is
poised
the squad, symbolic of their grid
achievements as champions of the at pool’s edge.
college

conference

Foresters

won

tied

in

one

football

coach

of

six,

the

Illinois.

lost

campaign.

Walter

(Continued

one,

Lemm

on page

The

and
Head

also

39)

Thursday,

December

11,

1952

�i:

the game
into an overtime period.

or Edges
ae Rather: i
Tight Game
By

Harry

Every

In the

the score to add

fan

lucky

enough to be at New Trier
High school last Friday night
knew that he had his money’s
worth, even with the Lil’ Little

Giants of Highland Park High
school losing their first Suburban

League

game,

to

New

Trier, 52 to 49.
The game went into three extra
periods, before the Green and Gray
team of New Trier finally broke a
49 to 49 tie to win.
ri
Cae

Peete

av

she
aahMe
,

extra

throw

to tie the

score,

minute

six points to High-

land Park’s total. However, New
Trier’s five also scored six points,
four on two-pointers
by
forward
Bob Gritschke and guard Marty
Johnson, and the rest on two free
throws by Bill Struve, tall center
for the Green and Gray.
Free

Throws

No points
tire second

Break

were
over

i Tiny Facres Gyacesods Surgery Elected Intra-Mural Chait

Named Team Co-Captain
At Illinois Wesleyan

On Finger Hurt in Proviso Game

U.

David McCulloch, son of Mr. and
Mrs.
William ‘C. McCulloch
of
Sheridan road, was elected co-captain of the swimming team of Illinois

Wesleyan’

university

in

Bloomington.
Mr.

McCulloch

is

a

graduate

of

Highland Park High school and .is
now a junior at Wesleyan, majoring in history.

James

(Tiny)

Foster

byterian hospital in Chicago where
he has
undergone
surgery
on
a
finger which was injured in the
recent Proviso-Highland Park football game.
Tiny,
a member of the
Highland Park Frosh-soph team, is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Foster of 642 Judson avenue.

Call Ferrari

Deadlock

first

quarter,

10

to

6.

The

presented

New

from

gold

page

footballs

to

“Voice

teen

guest speaker. Mr. Ryan, who covers the
Chicago
Cardinals for a

putting

free

throw

for

a New Trier win.
action was supperiods, however.
Blue
and
White
New Trier in the

points

for

Highland

Park

to

of

of

Alpha

De.

junior

class.

each

end of the first half, 19 to 16. Four-

a

of the

letter winner.
Jack Ryan, sports
writer and author of the column

broke the 49 to 49 deadlock with a
and

chairman

Phi
fraternity
at Northwes ter
university where he is a memt

38)

field

goal

came back in the secand were ahead at the

mural

Most Valuable

(Continued

scored in the entime, but Struve

Peter Armstrong, son of Mr. |

Mrs. W. H. Armstrong of aed
avenue, was recently elected int

is in Pres-

Trier cagers
ond quarter,

three points and
Not all of the
Just before the end of the fourth plied in the extra
quarter,
with
New
Trier
out
in
The sophomore
front 43 to 42, Bob Mordini made a
team was leading

free

five

period, George Moran put two field
goals through the hoop, and Bob
Mordini placed two free throws on

Halton

basketball

first

the

Grandstand,”

MARY JANE
LANES &amp; BAR

was

New Trier’s 11 points in the third
quarter tied up the score, 30 to 30, Chicago newspaper, is a familiar
before the fourth quarter brought figure to Lake Forest where the
Cards maintain their training camp.
both teams 13 points.

210 Green Bay Road
Highwood, Tl.

Dial HI 2-5332

E

RETAILING
THE
Vol. 24, No.
What You Should Know
About Diamonds
By

Harry

Before

you

smart

sure

are

you

to

getting

to

full

value.

Every

diamond

is different and

often

only

expert

an

can

tell

the
difference
between
seemingly alike gems.
As

one

most

of

importers

Levinson’s
the

are

1)
2)
3)
4)

and

C’s”

is low

nation’s

of

fore-

collectors,

suggests

“Four

you

the

two

you
the

considering;

know

diamond
they

are:

CARAT weight
CLARITY
COLOR and the
CUT OF THE STONE

For 64 years, Levinson’s has
assisted wise Chicagoans in buying diamonds
stones.
chasing

and other precious

Our

famous

methods

Savings

as well.

supply

many

jewelry

so

and
to

In fact, we

why

shops

of

not

of true

distinction,

you

and

the

situation

on

UHF

converters

is

lousy.

Distributors Caught Short
Distributors all got caught short on supply of
immediately available sets here, with the UHF
station of Empire Coil Co., going on the air
earlier than previously expected.

character
invited

Levinson’s.

1952 * * * |

Let

To You!
Get Your ARVIN

UHF Models Now

DI-

’

22,

This Happen

Customers were screaming for sets that could
Retailers were tearing
be installed: immediately.
their hair to get sets and distributors were frantically meeting nearly every plane and railroad to
grab what UHF they could.

now

buy

are

Ore.,

with

save?

jewelry

visit

you

but amazing

Loop

RECTLY—and
For

direct-pur-

assure

not only top quality

Sept. 21—Television hit Portland
yesterday but most of the early set owners couldn’t
see it. The supply of sets with built-in UHF tuners
Portland,

September

Don't

By Elanor Scheece

be

NEWSPAPER

New York 3, N.Y., Monday,

185

a diamond,

check

FURNISHINGS

UHF TUNER SNAG MARS
PORTLAND ORE., TV DEBUT

Levinson

select

it’s only

HOME

DAILY

Vol. 24—No.
Portland,

vision

Ore.,

sets was

of the week

184, Friday, September 19, 1952
Sept.

18—A

expected

total

of 5,000

tele-

to be sold by the end

and that is a conservative

estimate

for

this first week of active promotion, trade sources
believed.
Trade

sources

said Meier

&amp;

Frank

Co.

sold

350 sets Monday and the pace has been kept up
substantially. Average prices of sets purchased in
the city ranged between $350 and $458.
7.61

CTS. MARQUISE DIAMOND
Platinum Mounting
Original Value $15,000, Price $10,500

oe

Your

house

of jewels

Jewelry-from $50 t0 $150,000.

4

Retailers are getting frantic about the lack
of sets with UHF.
Warehouses reportedly were
full of sets, but distributors are having a hard time
getting strips on converters for VHF sets. Manufacturers with sets with built-in UHF tuning are
in the best position, but there are not enough of
those sets to fill demand.

“We Sell the Best; and Service the Rest” —
ALL PHONES:
HIGHLAND PARK 2-0725
305
ee

eR

eRe

Waukegan

Ave.

ts
an

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ae ii

ates

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ere

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©

—&amp;

A

Bi

VILLAGE

| &amp;

SERS5

HARDWARE

:

AiHR

i

WILL BE OPEN EVENINGS

|

@
—&amp;

MONDAY

"

Wy;

e

a

THRU

i

SATURDAY

i

Ne

i

‘TIL 9:00 P.M.
UNTILCHRISTMAS

FROMDEC.13

|=

‘

‘

ORR

Team
War
caus
Rappri,
avern
2s.
27142 11%
My : Favorite Inn 233323, 24
15
Eady s liquofs® 3.2.25. 24
15
Silver Dollar Tavern ....19
20
Highwood Radio ...........: Los
3.22
Lenzi Bros. Groce. ........ 17% 21%
Skokie Valley Laundry
16
23
Highwood Ice Cream ....10
29
High Series, Team
Lenzi Bros. ...... 889-863-843—2593
Highwood
.
Ice Cream .... 857-874-928—2559
High Series, Individual
Passini
High Game, Team
Highwood
Ice Cream
Skokie Valley Laundry
High Game, Individual
Somenzi
Passini

December
Sherony

Hardware

Manhattan

-

Ladies League

5 Standings

Shoes

December

W
........ 244%

L
14%

.......... 234%

15%

Louise Beauty Salon ....21
Esther's: Tavern: sii: 20%

18
18%

Ariano

2014

Construction.

...... 18%

ROAD

DEERFIELD

DEERFIELD 864

A

a Vi

ANS

Service Market ............:.. 17%
21%
Grand: Bros, &lt;scs
o so 164%
221%
BUl- Bop: WAM eS as 14
12
High Series, Team
Sherony Hdwe. 631 626 748—2005
Esther’s Tavern 681 689 633—1993

High Series, Individual
Marge Bellei ...... 153 158 150—461
Mary Somenzi ....136 160 163—459
High Game, Team
Sherony
Hardware
.......2.)...:.. 748
Esther's: Paverhy sa ey 689
High Game, Individual
Taie | Veninini: sy em
181
PGUISG CUAPATIE. sh
ec ee oe
179

oe Oo

a

at at at aT a

aoe

Wa

oeSESE ap SE ce EMSC ar WESC ay NA cr MN aN
ae ae ae ae Be

aco

Ee

ieey

i

1-1

at

end of the first period of play.
Highland Park quickly fell behind
in the second quarter with the tally

Be De ee BeBe BeBe BeBe Be Be Beebe Bae Be Be Bee Be Bebe BeBe BD Be BeBe Bees ee ee De

(GIFTS...that please
CELEBRATING

OUR

25th

YEAR

—

The

High Series, Individual
Rose Bairstow ....145 193 186—524
Marion Larson ....162 214 131—507
Edna Skidmore ..143 189 171—503
Edith Mansfield 168 143 191—502

The
Our
tured,

new

showroom,
open

and

WEATHER VANES

Metalwork Accessories

Speci al eae Ltuversa
on

ry

Description

iv

wv
wv

Sob

all

Making Available One of the Largest Selections for You

|

From

@ UNIQUE GLASSWARE
@ IMPORTED PEWTER

@ POST LANTERNS
@ LIGHTING FIXTURES
from Holland, Norway &amp; France
@ HOUSE SIGNS
Oe

i

:
Hours

Hagerstrom Metalcraft Studio
:

Milwaukee

Wheeling,
OE

(%

III.
EE

Pa Rie ge bee

Ave.

EE

block

North

of

Dundee

Phone
EE

AE
A

A

RE
A

A

A EE

*#
¥

Road)

Wheeling
Er

361
ea

PE EP

to Choose

eb

250).

Open every evening

until 9 p.m., start-

ing Monday, Dec. 15
until Christmas.
Sundays, open 11
a.m. until 6 p.m.

1214

Women

-

of Moose

Bowling League
1 Standings

Team

Week

24
gn)
21%
201%
20

15
46
171%
18%
19

1970
447

High Game, Team
WNACur alse Oi

740

High Game, Individual
VWireinis
AGOMS oo

164

lame: PRIOr
MOL SAMUELS

163
162

Seo
a is
eo oe

Defeat

(Continued

from

on a jump shot,
again put one in.

in from

the

end, the

top

Giant

NT
page

38)

and
Bob
Troy
Freberg put one

of. the keyhole

scoring

to

for the third

quarter, 33-29, with the Parkers on

two points
Giants.

38)

The

of the year at Niles

triumphed.

away

from

the

Little
:

Parkers

then

got

down

to

business as Russell sank one from
the corner and also a free toss. Mc-

Neill dropped

a

free

throw

and

Lindstrom hit from the corner.
The Giants then wrapped up the
ball game on free throws by Capitani, Freberg, and a basket by Bill
MacLean, to make the final score,

43-37.
Players

and

fans

alike

rushed

to

the floor to carry their hero, Eddie

The first home meet of the season will be next Thursday against
Harrison Tech of Chicago.

the

21

Series, Team
isis

quarter with free throws by Stillwell and Lindstrom to put them

today.
The
frosh swimming
for
the first time won both relays that
they competed in. Two teams were
put in the medley with both teams
finishing
one-two.
The
freestyle

to

6

High
Ganariasr

long end.
Free Throws Up NT Score
New Trier
opened
the
fourth

umphed easily.
Herm Van Velzer
came
in second
in
the
40-yard
breaststroke after a close race.
The
freshmen
will
have
their

Turn

ERPROYVS \ cin) -sasiceest erties

the

Varsity Team Faces Niles

also

1
4
1
8
10
id
13
13
14
15
15
16
17
Lt
17
18

Giants

Individual

N. Hudson
M. Horsley

first full meet

W.
23
20
19
ay
16
14
14
13
12
12
tt
10
10
10
9

The

Biagi’s

page

Team
Hot: Canaries: cee
ee IS
he Se
Powerhouse) 22.2602
sss hisses
Chasers. ie
or
All Americans
c3c2 408
The Dynamoes 325...
"re NAtuUraAls. cit eae
IPOD RUS fo 2 Os
UOC
case
GIO U ER sui ti Siel yo
a
Siriicete. sic Sonia
TRE SPANOS ieee
sss tacivs
The Big Pour eso
Raliroaders jn
ee
Bloomer: ;Girls. oes

High Series, Individual
Claive: Famer siecle

Leeds Jewelers ................ LS:
2a
Puckett’s Boosters ........ Lo
ae
ROSDWSi hea aG eas
toe
High Series, Team
Leed’s
734-691-767—2192
Robert’s
682-736-748—2166
High Series, Individual
N. Hudson
139-182-157—478
M. Crovetti
165-153-145—463
High Game, Team
Leed’s

from

214
193:

HOt

Robert’s Dry Goods ....
Biagi’s Clothing 2 2203.0.5
Toby’s Cocktail Lounge
Wilson’s Appliances ....
D6] Mie te na oe

(Continued

High Game, Individual
MBO: DIOTSON 2iider
ok
ROSE BaIStOW accion.

King Pin Wilmette

518
508

ie?

935
912

No. I League

779
798

Individual

High Game,. Team
Larson -Bros;: Garbage: ...:.2.1.....
SCATICUL Soa
ae

B’nai Brith

184-132-192—508

Cy SOUUATOl ee
VieIORRILL inch
ule

High Game,

NPP

COPPERWARE

g

261%

High Game, Team
TROSOW Si ie occa eh et eo
lu, ace
Highwood Laundrettes ............

MM

@

of Every

a

we

for Every Style Home

(© Fire Place Equipment

Morelli:

December

YE

e CERAMICS

Launderettes

Moley Tele. &amp; Appl. ....24
15
Freddies Tavern ............ 20% 181%
FOO Biocon
aaa:
20% 181%
TOWEL CASINO... ss.
55 20)
2549
Natta Shoe Rebldg. ........ 20
19
Highland.
“Oi
6 ne 19% 19%
Zengler Cleaners .......... 16.
2s
Highwood
Hospital ...... Lae
S20
De Rink
kale seas L425
High Series, Team
Highwood
Launderettes
798-744-719—2261
ROSDY'S
6 oes
727-779-728 —2234
High Series, Individual
C.
Bernardi
155-176-187—518

just in

aaa
ace

@ LAMPS

Wi:

Highwood

as pic-

time for not only Christmas,
but also for the celebration of
our 25th Anniversary. Like our
other showrooms it is amply
stocked with beautiful and unusual gifts for those fortunate
ones on your Christmas list.
You, the giver, will be indeed
pleased with our wide selection of which only a few are
mentioned here.

Grand Selection of

Team

High Game,

Receiver

is now

December 2 Standings

Vi.

Giver

as well as

@

the

ee

Bee Be BeBe Be BeBe

score

OE

Die BeBe

the

They hit a scoring streak in the
second
half
and
marked
up
12
points, but it wasn’t enough.
The
final score favored New Trier, 4220.

May Be Your Own!

i Ieee

making

at 19-8 in favor of their opponents.

Drive Carefully — The Life You Save

:

toss,

TE

Sata

HO a

EEE

ein

os HO

DE

as

MO UDEV

WO ay

NNER

ii

BI ag Yas

game Highland Park took a narrow
lead with Art Alverson sinking a
free throw.
New Trier’s Hart responded however with another free

L
10
i
16%
17
17%
18
19
19
20
21
ae
22
24
24
24
27

High Series, Team
Larson Bros. ....831 935 850—2616
Scarlett's &lt;3... 825 809 912—2542

Bowling League

38)

ENE RNY

Ee

page

ER MR MER MDM

DEERFIELD

from

ERR

817

(Continued

4 Standings

w
Liebschutz Liquors ...... 29
Larson Bros. Garage ....28
Sdarletts. cc. ei 22%
Cortesi Plastering .......... ne
NE MOTS oi? ce et aa 21%
Anchor Insurance .......... 21
Sunset Food Matt .......... 20
Photography By Jay ...... 20
Hi-Neighbor Records ....19
My Favorite Inn ............ 18
Villa Moderne ................ Pe
Pigati’s Juke Boxes ....17
Phe PSH COs eee, 15
Style: SHOP ia
15
Bishop: Heating : 60.0.2... 15
Somenzi &amp; Sons ............ 12

Mary Jane Ladies

Cagers Beat Indians

EY

§

|

Bowling League

2 Standings

AX

a
—

|

Fightind Ten Pin

© | Seniors Prosperity .

JuX

—

is

-

BR

ui

Bowling

December

i
3

OY

:

_ Marconi

Bae hae

an

M

3

Page

SHOPPING CONVENIENCE

|by §ag
i

Et

FOR YOUR CHRISTMAS

|§ =

|

be

i

Want-ad

section

for

“Hard-to-find” items there at moneyUR

i

Sia mm

Capitani, off the floor. Coach Dorman Morrison was swarmed under
by a barrage of handshakes
and
kisses!!
High scorers
for
the
Parkers
were Howard Russell and Bob Troy
with
12; Eddie
Capitani
had
11,

Harold Freberg
Lean 2.

saving prices!

6

and

Bill

Mac-

rsday, December 11, 1952
ud

intass

ee See z

;
Shae
ay mkss

BUI

Ls WPA
ae

U

BRN,

VK.

Sore

ta

�YOU'RE

ALWAYS

WELCOME

DRUGS

witha

Right Reserved to
Limit Quantities

Bunte

Or

‘Diana

Stuft'

4-01. Bottle

100% filled and 100% delicious
hard candy. Giant 20-oz.

Kreml

49°

Leaves no 4
white flakes

Lentheric TWEED
Purse Icicle ’n Bouquet—twice
nice gift of classic
‘ ys
scent. Silver-ribboned... 9 —«

tree!

Bottle

87

the

others

stay

lit!

SELTZER

POWDER
c

TABLETS
Cc

Medium

size for ....

of

100.

U. Ss. P.

5-grain

DOAN’S PILLS

TREE LIGHT SET

Regularly 19c. Box of 100

Multiple type, when one burns
12

String of 7. add-on plug..

BROMO

Dental Plate

ASPIRIN TABLETS
COTTON SWABS

A PERFUME BELL!
Bourjois Evening In Paris on
a gay tree ornament—for 12

her. her Christmas

FASTEETH

Kreme

Hair Tonic

of holiday taste delight. .

out

REPUTATION

FRIDAY, SATURDAY SALE
979 CENTRAL AVE.

THURSDAY,
ete

AT

#°~

90c Value.

Bottle
of 10

(Limit

(Limit 2).

Save at Walgreen’s

1).

T1¢

eee

22 19

(Limit 1)....

46

C

SWEETHEART SOAP 3 ror 1 Gc
mes Reg.

Size

(Limit

3)

Quick Relief!

GROVES | Cilerodent | PHILLIPS

Cold Tablets | Tooth Paste

Rees
SPAR

28-INCH

Wind-up freight engine sparks.
pulling 3 cars over 10
98
section track. Thrills!..
a

AUTO

cry, sleep, win a tot’s
heart!

TRANSPORT

Big 14” truck carries
plastic cars. Rear ramp

DOLL!

Dimpled soft-skin darling who'll

For

795

$16.95 value for..

{—

Dance &amp; sparkle

Pull trigger—safe sparks shoot
out—gun goes rat-tat-tat! 12

for loading, unloading.

Tough plastic and steel..

Ze

“KING'S

:

MEN"

c

c

&amp;

59°

A

DUET

Famous knight-crowned decanters of After-Shave Lo- 920
tion &amp; lather shaving bowl.
"~~

5c CRAYONS

TWINE

Boxes of B.../::......;... 2 9 6°

SIGHT SAVERS
Clean your lenses........ I of

12¢ Pack of 30

Foe

Sandwich Rack

o15¢

ea Ps

loti COLORFUL

RIBBONS

UB
Ra
: ‘= Wide

cs
:
selection
of tinsel,
corded
‘“and “satin” ties in gay
69°
hues. $17.00 value for...

—

198

handsomely gift packaged

I—

GOLF

{

Christmas Ribbon

rece
&amp; colors. 10° &amp; 29°
Gift Paper
Pretty designs 10° «25°
Seals &amp; Tags.. ...5¢ &amp; 10c

|

BALLS

AIR-TITE

keep tobacco fresh!

,

- 2

Wrap ‘em Pretty

Crown’s—power packed 738
arid silicone vitalized.....
—

ROGERS

a

. J

« To Please a SMOKER /*

Sure to make a “hit”! Golden

TOPS in Tobacco
seals as it closes to

is

. :
ae

to “click” —gold-plated

‘'*&gt; razor, 36 injector blades,

Dozen

gu

ae

—

‘~ Schick RAZOR SET
':. Bound

ae

Regular 19¢ ball.......... th

Cc

' 29

Tinsel Garlands ........49%¢

9

Your List
a

Glitter!

with bright glow
10
aMetallic
hah tha Roping
pring 25

SPACE CADET GUN

2 tiny
79¢

Tree

| MAGNESIA

ef. OO" Lea

100-Ft.
200©

,

LA PALINA

Pouches—

“1.55

TOBACCO

RALEIGH

IDEALS

Mild and light . . . always
right with smokers. Treat
him to the Box of 50, only

()
)

Smoking joy in every pipeful!

4i2

just

93°

Big 14-ovxce humidor-

tin in holiday finery. ...

25 Personality Cigars, 1.25 Value. 98¢
King Edward Cigars, box of 50. 2.70
Corina Larks Cigars, box of 25... 3.35
White Owl Cigars,
Dill’s Best Tobacco,

-- YOUR
A pipe-smoker appreciates their
flawless grain and 4
$5
fine imported briar.
&amp;
ae

Ritepoint LIGHTER

The visible fuel supply makes

this a preferred smoker's
gift. In jewel fie
ae
Thursday,
kav
Ne
A
eS

MR

fot

i,

December
\

11,

1952

_|;.

* "37

Model

Lristwa
GIFT...
- STORES

-_

|

1

25

|

Tobacco, 14 oz. tin... - 89¢

Revalation
\

box of 50... 4.60
Pound...............

Tobacco,
SS

Pound... 1.64

—

a,

ae

6-Cup Percolator
“: Nu-Brite non-tarnish aluminum.

'S Snug-fit lid, easy-grip
“handle. A $1.19 gift.,..

Nut Bowl &amp; Cracker
Gleaming, nickel plated 7-inch

4) _|_ bow! boasts picks and

wenut cracker. Felt base..

18

LIGHTNING IRON ‘= Chrome Toaster
A streamlined beauty, has wide

sole, long-life element,
heel

rest.

4

$4

value!....

gis

§7

Bright 2-slice electric beauty.

Tip

doort—toast turns.

ACDC

patsvchen.

719
B28

Page

41

�a4

ELCOME 10 CHURCH

BETHANY

doctrine

SHORE METHODIST
CHURCH

Hazel

and

Greenleaf

Avenues

Rev. Russell W. Lambert, Minister
Kemp,

.,

Director

Glencoe

of Music

1227

SUNDAY, December 14
9:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. Worship
services.
The Rev. Mr. Lambert
will preach at both services on
“The Voice of a Chime.”
NORTH SUBURBAN
SYNAGOGUE BETH EL

(pp. 410, 454, 444).
FIRST

UNITED EVANGELICAL
CHURCH
Green Bay Road at Laurel Ave.
A. G. Masser, Minister
HI 2-1731

10:45

a.m.

service,

Conservative

December

Morning

message

7 p.m.

by

Junior

worship

the

pastor.

Christian

endeav-

People’s

fellow-

or.

12
Council

Sab-

4:09 p.m. Light candles.
- 8:30 p.m. Late services conducted by boys and girls of classes
~Gimel and Daled of the Hebrew de-

7

p.m.

Young

Address:

December
4 p.m.

December

493

Hazel

Masses
Weekdays—6:15
a.m., 8:15 a.m.
Holy Days—6 a.m., 7 a.m., 8 a.m.,
9 a.m., and 10 a.m.
SUNDAY, December 14

Avenue

Masses at 6:15, 7:30, 9, 10, 11 a.m.
and 12 noon.

"SUNDAY. December 14
9:30 a.m. Sunday school.
11

a.m.

Church

service.

WEDNESDAY, December 17
8 p.m. Testimonial meeting.
_ That man can utilize divine power for his protection and healing is
erified by the Holy

Scriptures

and

will be explained in all Churches
f Christ, Scientist, on Sunday, De-cember 14. The subject of the Les-son-Sermon

_ PRESERVER

will

be

GOD

OF MAN.

THE

_

The Golden Text is from Psalms
25: 2, 21, 22) “O my God, I trust
in thee. ... Let integrity and up‘rightness preserve me; for I wait
on thee. Redeem Israel, O God, out
of all his troubles.”
_ Bible
selections
(King
James

Version)

“He
not

in the Lesson-Sermon
that

God;

loveth
for

God

not
is

in-

knoweth
love.

Orchard

choir

rehearsal.

12

8 p.m. Bethany guild convenes
in the Dubs room of the church. A
Christmas program will be featured. The Sleeman-Hesler circle
will serve refreshments.
Friends
and

members

SUNDAY,
9:30

are

invited

December

a.m.

to attend.

14

Church

school,

with

classes arranged for all age groups.
11 a.m.

Morning

worship

hour.
December

16

Philathea class will meet.

WEDNESDAY,

December

17

Bethany Chorus rehearsal immediately after school.
FRIDAY,

December

Avenues
Church
Telephone
HI
Dr. William
Atkinson
Minister

December

20

3 p.m. Christmas party for the
beginner and primary departments
of the school.
8 p.m. Charisma club Christmas
party at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth
Kightly,
1910
Spruce

years

old

up

2-1695
Young,

through

third

grade also meet at this hour.
9:30 a.m. to 10:05 a.m. Chancel
choir rehearsal.
9:30 am.
to 10:35 a.m.
Junior

department

(4th,

5th

and

grades) and
Junior
High
ment (7th and 8th grades).

9:30

am.

to

10:30

6th

depart-

am.

Adult

‘| class.
10:10 a.m. to 10:45 a.m.
FroshSoph and Varsity groups for high
- cause fear hath torment. He that school students.
feareth is not made perfect in
10:10 a.m. to 10:45 a.m.
Quartet
love. ... The fear of man bring- rehearsal in the manse.

TUESDAY, December 16
7:30 p.m. Boy Scout Troop
324—-Troop

8 p.m.

Board

North

of

Shore

party.

SATURDAY,
9:30
a.m.

NORTH SHORE
CONGREGATION
ISRAEL
Lincoln and Vernon Avenues
Glencoe, Mlinois
Dr. Edgar Siskin, Rabbi
Benjamin Landsman, Cantor
FRIDAY,

December

Review.

area council

class

meets.

SUNDAY, December 14
9:30 a.m.
Sunday
school and
junior bible class.
10:45 a.m. Worship services.
MONDAY, December 15
Walther league meets for social
and Christmas party.
WEDNESDAY, December 17
4 p.m. Confirmation class meets.
ST. JAMES
146

North

CHURCH

Ave.,

Highwood

Rev. James D. Gleeson, Pastor
Rev. Arthur E. Douaire, Ass’t.
HI 2-0427
MASSES
First Fridays and Week Days —
Masses at 7 and 8 a.m. Holy Days
—Masses at 6, 7, 8 and 9.
SUNDAY, December 14
Masses at 6:30, 7:30, 8:30, 9:30,
10:30

and

11:30

a.m.

SECOND
BAPTIST CHURCH
OF HIGHLAND
PARK
The Rev. William Giles Glover
Highwood Community
Center
428 North Green Bay Road
Highwood
Tel. HI 2-8145

SUNDAY,
11 a.m.

December 14
Sunday worship.

HIGHLAND PARK
BAPTIST CHURCH
486

Court

HI 2-2101
Rev.

Robert

Clingman,

December

Minister

14

9:30 a.m. Sunday school.
11 a.m. Sunday worship.
7:45 p.m. Sunday worship.
TUESDAY, December 16
8:30

p.m.

to

10

p.m.

Missionary

Study class.
ST.
The

celebration.
December

14

9:40 a.m. Religious school Chanukah celebration.
3:20 p.m. High school department.

7:30 p.m. Alumni.
MONDAY, December 15
: 1:15 p.m. Sisterhood Chanukah
ea.
4 p.m. Hebrew classes.
8 p.m. Board of religious edu-

cation.

JOHN’S
EVANGELICAL
REFORMED CHURCH
Rev. Harold Harris, Pastor
Green Bay Road and
Homewood Avenue

THURSDAY, December 11
8 p.m.
Choir rehearsal.
FRIDAY, December 12

4 p.m.

Junior

Youth

EPISCOPAL

425

The

Very

Laurel

Rev.

initivande:

CHURCH

Avenue

Charles

U.

WESLEY
METHODIST
CHURCH
Highwood Avenue and Everts Place
The Rev. Donald Woods, pastor
THURSDAY,

p.m.

SATURDAY,

8 p.m.
in

December

Choir

rehearsal.

December

Couple’s

11

club

Fredrickson

13

Christmas

hall.

HI

THURSDAY,

8 p.m.

Parish

choir

hambra,

D.

S.

Bartoli,

Bartoli of Al-

Calif.,

formerly

of

Highland Park, recently return- 4
ed with a crew of 2,000 offi- —
cers and men on the USS lowa, —
after eight months’ service in
Korean waters. A member of
the storekeeper division, Seaman Bartoli saw the lowe
steam 40,000 miles, pulling into Long Beach navy shipyard in
November for a five-day stay
before leaving for her new
home base at Norfolk, Va.

‘Minimize Neurotic
Needs To Cut World

Crises’: Josselyn
The

need

constructive

to

establish

a happy

environment

for

the

child so he can find his proper
place in a reality world as an
adult was brought home by Dr.
Irene Josselyn at the recent annual
meeting
of the
Highland
Park
Family Service.
Speaking
on
“The
Individual,
Society and the Family Agency,”
Dr.

Josselyn

told

the

audience

as-

sembled in the public library, “We
cannot hope to solve the world’s
problems with the family agency,
but no form of diplomacy will
either, unless the majority of the
population has a minimum of neurotic needs. To achieve a population with
greater
maturity the
Family Service agency offers help
to disturbed individuals in finding a constructive place in the
world.
The
more
rational
our
social
living
becomes,
the
less
danger there will be of real cataschange

in

government

and

international relations.”
Delegates
to the 21st annual
meeting heard a report by Mrs.
Martha Winch, executive director,
who
announced
that the
agency
now has more applications for help
than the present staff can handle,

and

that

a waiting

list

has

been

established.

Harris

2-6653

December

James

in

SUNDAY, December 14
9:30 a.m.
Sunday school.
10:45 a.m.
Morning worship.

TRINITY

Seaman

son of Sam

trophic

Rector

TUESDAY, December 16
3:30 p.m.
Cradle roll Chanukah
party.
4 p.m. Hebrew classes.
8 p.m. Experimental theater.
8:15 p.m.
North Shore Seminar
of Jewish Studies.

party

Central

12

8:30 p.m. Service of dedication
of the Oscar Hillel Plotkin library.
SATURDAY, December 13
9:40 a.m. Religious school Cha-

7:30
No.

December 13
Confirmation

street.

WEDNESDAY, December 24
11 p.m.
Christmas eve service
from 11 p.m. to 12 midnight.
A
service of special music and message.

SUNDAY,

SUNDAY,
December
14
11 a.m. to 12 noon. Morning worship service, Dr. Young preaching.
Church school classes for children

three

Christmas

19

7 p.m.
Christmas party, with
film for the junior department of
the Sunday school.
SATURDAY,

12 noon. Redeemer guild meets
in assembly room for luncheon and

service

with the minister, the Rev, A. P.
Johnson bringing the message, in
the assembly room on the first
floor while the sanctuary is being
redecorated.
7 p.m. Youth fellowship and so-

nukah

HIGHLAND PARK
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Laurel, Linden and Prospect

There is no fear in love; but perfect love casteth out fear; be-

eth a snare; but whoso putteth
his trust in the Lord shall be
safe” (I John 4: 8, 18; Prov. 29:
~ 25).
Selections
from
“Science
and

of Mrs.

420

December

fhe

SUNDAY,

Confessions
Saturdays, eves. of First Fridays
and Holy Days 4 and 7:30 p.m.

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST
SCIENTIST

Chancel

8 p.m.

16

home

HI 2-0202

school.

MONDAY through FRIDAY,
December 15 to 19
~
9am. to 12 noon. GAN.

8 p.m.

cial

pastor.

Society of World

at the

Meierhoff,

TUESDAY,

TUESDAY,

CHURCH
587 W. Central Avenue
Rev. William H. Remmert,
pastor
Tel. HI 2-6848

Res. 1817 Green Bay road
THURSDAY, December 11

11

lane.

Evening gospel service,

“Teaching

Hebrew

Walter

the

15 to 18

to 6 p.m.

meets

sermon

by

December

1 p.m. Women’s
Service

ship.
7:45 p.m.

8 p.m. Ladies Christian fellowship meets in the home of Mrs.
flewish Values and Attitudes” by Fred Gieser, 1345 McDaniels avearry Hershman, educational direc- nue.
tor. This will be an interpretation WEDNESDAY,
December 17
and
evaluation
of
the
Sunday
8 p.m. Midweek prayer service.
School Teachers’ conference held THURSDAY, December 18
in November under the auspices of
8 p.m. Midweek prayer service.
he Chicago Board of Jewish Edu8 p.m. Ladies Missionary society
cation with special reference to its meets in the home of Mrs. Leslie
impact on the Beth El program.
Trout, 104 Elm avenue, Highwood.
SATURDAY, December 13
8 p.m. Senior choir rehearsal.
9:30 am. Morning worship.
SUNDAY, December 14
7:15 am. Daily Minyan meeting.
IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
8:15 a.m. Tephilin club meeting.
CHURCH
10 a.m. Adult services.
Deerfield and Green Bay Roads
10:30 a.m. Chanukah celebration Rt. Rev. Msgr. Joseph P. Morrison
and
school
program
in Ravinia
Pastor
school building.
Rev. Donald B. Runkle
MONDAY
through
THURSDAY,
Rev. Bernard
E. Burns

partment.

HI 2-3522
THURSDAY,

FRIDAY,

10:40 a.m.
Organ interlude—organist, Mrs. Lisle Hawley.

HI 2-5787
Philip L. Lipis, Rabbi
Stanley Martin, Cantor

_Parent-Teachers

Christian

SUNDAY, December 14
9:30 a.m. Sunday school session.

1175 Sheridan Road
Highland Park

FRIDAY,

absolute

Science,
and
this is the great
truth which
strips all disguise
from error. ... Step by step will
those who trust Him
find that
‘God is our refuge and strength,
a very present help in trouble’ ”

Glencoe

Edwin

of

|

Rev. A. P. Johnson, Minister
The Rev. Dale Zimdars,
Assistant Minister

*

God should have priority on your time. Spend some hours in church.
NORTH

CHURCH

(Evangelical United Brethren)”
1704 McGovern Street

11

practice

FRIDAY, December 12
7:30 a.m. Holy communion
4:30 p.m. Girls’ choir practice
SUNDAY, December 14
7:30 p.m. Holy communion
9:15 a.m.
Family
service
and
church school.
11 a.m. Morning prayer and ser-

mon
7:30 p.m. Canterbury club
MONDAY, December 15
7:30 p.m. Sea Scouts, Ship 43
8 p.m. Vestry
TUESDAY,
December
16

Mrs. Orray T. Knight was re-_
elected president of the agency,
and Mrs. Arthur Raff again will.
serve as secretary. New additions ©

to the

board

of directors,

which

now numbers 20, are the Rev. Wil-—
liam Atkinson Young, Ralph Pottker, Wm. E. Sheehan of Deerfield,
Mrs. Hal Roads Jr., of Deerfield;
and Mrs. Edward
ing on the board

Boyd,

vice

Zipoy,

Olson. Still servare Mrs. Douglas

president;

treasurer;

Frank

Mrs.

J.

Baker

Brownell, James Garnett, Mrs. J.
Nelson Hinde, Mrs. A. R. Lauter,
John Leonardi, Richard Loewenthal, Mrs. Theodore L. Osborne Jr.,
Mrs.

Sidney

L. Schwarz,

Mrs.

Ray-

Health with Key to the Scriptures”

mond
Simons,
Mrs.
Henry
M.
Thullen
and
the
Rev.
Donald

by

Woods.

7 p.m. Cub Scouts
explorer planning group.
SUNDAY, December 14
7:15 p.m. Boy Scouts
WEDNESDAY, December 17
9:30 a.m.
Church school for all
9 am. to 9:30 a.m.
Sanctuary ages.
x‘
“Every trial of our faith in
10:45 a.m.
Fifteen minutes of ZION EV. LUTHERAN CHURCH
God
makes.
us stronger.
The open for prayer and meditation.
7:15. p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Choir re- chimes,
High Street and Oakridge Avenue
more difficult seems the material
Highwood
11 a.m. Morning worship.
Sercondition
to be overcome by hearsal.
Rev.
Herbert
W.
Linden,
Pastor
mon topic: “Be Not Afraid.”
Spirit, the stronger should be our THURSDAY, December 18
faith and the ‘purer our love. . .'.
10 a.m. to 3: p.m. Woman’s asso- TUESDAY, December 16
SUNDAY, December 14..
That evil or matter has neither ciation church meeting. Review of
8 p.m. WSCS annual ‘Christmas
9:30 a.m: Church school.
intelligence nor power, is the Bible by Mrs. Katherine Garten.
bbe! an pees
3
10:45 a.m. Morning wo:
Mary

Baker

Eddy,

include:

The staff includes, in addition to
Mrs. Winch and Dr. Josselyn, who
is a psychiatric consultant, Mrs.
Margaret
Mink
and
Mrs.
Mina
Kuyper,

family

counselors;

Dr. Ji

McCormick, psychiatric consul
and Mrs. Patricia Zahnle,
if

~

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11

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All new models will be on display Friday at Purnell
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MAIL ORDERS ACSt. (formerly Stad-

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Directed by MARTIN MAGNER
with Barbara Foley, Aune
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Through December 14
Coming:
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Page 44

creates.

The

public

of his handicraft

is invited

during
3

to see

ST

the

the 25th anni-

oe

and
was

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a

TRAP
Cotten

Today | will steal a million dollars!
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1 * COME IN AND SEE FOR YOURSELF
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Closed Sundays

(ECU

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SAT.,

SUN.

&amp;

MON.
Dec.

“THE

DEVIL

12-13-14-15

MAKES

THREE”
With

Gene

Kelly

and

Pier

Saturday Matinee Kiddies’
Dec. 13—2:00 P.M.

“Corky
“Our

of

Gasoline
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Comedy
&amp;
Cartoons

Gang”

TUES.,

WED.

G THURS.,

Angeli
Show

Alley”
Two

Dec.

Color

16-17-18

“ENCORE”

Dec.

“Prisoner
Coming
“THE

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Traer,

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19

KILIMANJARO”

JOHN

is

Don Trieschmann

—

Don

and

Engagement

~—

Another
significant
event
in
the
history of television occurred recently
when
CBS officially opened
its $45,000,000 Television City in Hollywood.
The amount of money
poured
into
the making of this most expensive and
largest television center in the world
means two things
to us: that television
is on
the
verge of becoming
the No.
1 influence over the entertainment world
and that the needle
of
television
superiority is moving across the dial
from
New
York
rf
to Hollywood.
In moving
to Hollywood,
television
would
have
the
benefit
of all
the
know-how of the chaps who make our
movies
(and what
is TV but movies
in the living room?)
and of all the
artists who are old hands in front of
cameras who live in the sunny clime
of
Southern
California
and
wouldn’t
move
away from the area for scads
of TV
money
if it meant
going
to
New York.
And one of the far-reaching facets
of the new
TV
city is that all the
studios
have
been
erected
with
an
eye to film so that in the future even
the most out-of-the-way cities (speakof

course,

access

of

path)
to

those

off

will have

all

major

the

TV

Central

Lake

son

A.

Forest

of

Mr.

and

a junior

academy,

was

1:30

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thru Wed.
Dec. 14-17
BURT
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in thrilling

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on

the

story

Richard

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12-15

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Dec.

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Team
Wee
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10
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Highland Ten Pin ........ 1422
Wistang: 360.05)
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Richter King Cole Saus. 11
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605-661-695—1961
L. Brown. Plbg. 696-606-649—1951
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J. Harris
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IN

ARIZONA”

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Edmund

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Liam

Starts Thurs., Dec. 18
VAUGHN MONROE

MAN

Dec. 11

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thru

TUE.

Actually filmed in the
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Blyth,

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the good medium of “a
shows.
Ah,
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Heemer Wars eo

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ILIMAN

Ra

December

Treischmann

avenue

Highland

beaten

programs

Thru

Ralph

selected as a guard for the second
team
of the
Mid-west
Prep
all
conference
team
selected by the
opposing
players.
He
was
voted
an outstanding line backer on the
academy team which lost one game,
finishing second in the conference.

Films

from

Trieschmann,

Mrs.

of 126

WAUKEGAN
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Gets

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REYNOLDS

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High Game, Individual
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Reena

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wil

grandmother

Mrs.
Bradford
Smith
of
Laurel
avenue. Paternal grandparents are
Mrs. William E. Clow Jr. of Lake
Forest and Glen Wood
Traer of
Gurnee.

THEATRE

with

of Zenda”
OF

M.

GENESEE

micro-wave

With Glynis Johns, Nigel Patrick,
Kay Walsh, Roland Culver,
Ronald Squire
Also News and Short Subjects
FRIDAY

Milton

Hollywood’s Choice

ing,

Starting

Mrs.

1675 Sunnyside avenue, announce
the birth of their third child, a
son, Charles Wood,
at Lake Forest hospital last Sunday. The baby’s
sisters are Deborah, 2, and Polly, 1.

By

THEATRE

FRI.,

and

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ERE

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~e

TICKETS
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”

BEEF

FOR

YOUR

INTERNATIONAL

PRIME,

LIVE-

PRIZE-WINNING

ENJOYMENT

No Increase in Our Regular Price!

440 Green Bay Road

For Reservations

Highwood
Thursday,

December

11, 1952

S
‘

A

R

A

T

©

G

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Call

HI 2-0440
Page s

«

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Hills Bros.
New Nateco

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WA

Can

LiBBY'S PENCHES":2* 29° Syancoy sMargarine's:. 19°
ie PINEAPPLE ‘ss 25° TOMATO JUICE
. “2: 25°
DOLE PINEAPPLE ~
29° PARTY PEAS. pine

DOLLS ane

BORDEN’S |

$1.00

with

every

chase at Your

$5.00

ve

vhite

et ‘

”

gs:

fruit cakes and

Sey

‘omsr of

doll attractively packin window box ideal for

:

Pk

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gr

3-02.
Pkegs

find

You'l

Be

coo

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9-02.

SE

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National Food

Store.

Each
aged

A

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pur-

Mincemeat : @

Suc
None -Such

asian
:

Gelatin Desserts

:

A doll of your choice for only

ies.

20"
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KI
MP
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NC
FA
3°
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NS
BEA
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Christmas Gifts. Guaranteed
value $2.00 or more!

B VELVEETACheese 2:-&lt;89° Pie CRUST . - 2 he =

bisibun’sDEANS2 25" GiSGUICK

No. 502—

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Value

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Ist thru

Sth

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Way.

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pees

Chales

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Reet

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Naturall

Tender, Naturally. a

rib—7”

Cut

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ROAST

Beef,

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Lb

Gov't Graded

(LEG OF LAMB- hae
Graded "'Choice"’

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{LAMB ROAST...» 59° ) FRANKFURTERS. .» 45°
CHICKEN WINGS.. rig SQ° BREADE
5

Gov't Graded

"'Choice'’ Lamb. Square iy ce.

Swanson's Evertresh

he

{-Lb,

Fishermen Cooked Cod, Haddock
Perch

or Ocean

Advertised

Large

Solid

Heads— Fresh

(erTUGE oun

Iceberg

SLICED

Meat

D FisH...'%°* Qo

Prices

effective

thry Sat., Ta

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CUCUMBERS §
Texas—Crisp,

No. b/0—POLISH GIRL

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No,500-“SCOTCH GIRL

4

Advertised
Sat., Dec.

Fresh,

Tender—

Produce
13

Tender

9he
effective

46

r

rs

in

Advertised
Staple
Grocery
Prices
effective
thru
Wed.,
Dec.
17,
be
‘sale supplies

Advertised

markets.

thru

FRIDAY NIGHT IS THE NIGHT! —ENJOY SHOPPING
TIL 9:00
Page

ae
/-

SUMMER SAU
SAUSAGE
SAGE”, 79°

SUMMER

Perishable Food
Prices subject to
change with .the

Fresh

Prices

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BACON

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5/3 Central Ave., Highland Park
636 Deerfield Road, Deerfield
Thursday,

December

11,

1952

�PHONE

YOUR

WANT

ADS

Deerfield

use WANT

REAL

WANT AD RATES
5¢

each

(For

This

55

j
saene.

additional

word

Words

or

will

cover

cost

Want

Ads wil! be accepted

Tuesday 4:30 p.m.

BAIRD

mortgage.
1896

ask

for a Want
Taker

Ad

PRICE,

Radiant

gas

heat.

HART,

SHAW

City

Owner

&amp;

Sheridan

Road

HI

2-0880

RARE
INDEED
Where else can you find so much space
in such convenience at such a low price?
This cheerful older home is in good condition; Ige. liv. rm. and den both with
frpl., din. rm., Ige. kit. 4 bdrms.
fone
with small sitting or dressing rm.) and
2 baths on 2nd. Then, if you still need
rm. there are two usable rms. on 3rd.
Screen pch., new gas and oj] furnace, 2
car gar. No more chauffering family in
this house! It’s marvelously close to everything,

even

the

lake!

All

this

the low price, $23 750. For appt. call
McClure, HI 2-5821 or HI 2-7278.

RANCH

water,

interested

COMPANY

260 EAST DEERPATH
LAKE
FOREST 616

for

Mrs.

584

Central

Ave.,

HI

2-7278

or HI

2-1215

See this lovely red brick Colonial: nicest
neighborhood
3 blks.
from
school
and
close to transportation. 4 bdrms., 3 baths,
car

gar.,

priced

spacious

at

bdrms.,

screen

pch.

Carefully

$33,500.

1

bath

8rd.

Close

to

school

Lake Forest: Attractive 2-story house in and transp.:; 2 car gar., gas ht. In lovely
excellent condition on 75 foot lot, near |/neighborhood. Asking $28,500.
station and school. 5 rooms and bath on
ANIN! MAORELA™'D. REALTOR
ist floor, 2 extra bedrooms on 2nd floor,
667 Vernon
Glencoe 305
or 350
Hot air heat with oil furnace. Combination screen and storm windows, Two-car
garage. From a purchaser willing to wait Unusually good 1 story home in esfor possession until lease expires Septempecially convenient location and in
ber 1, 1958, owner will accept the bargain
price of $16,500.00.
excellent condition. Living room,

Lake
Bluff—being
completed,
good
loeation; spacious 3 bdrm. brk. Ranch.
2
tile baths, 2 car gar., full bsmt. $37,000.
R. K. EBERSOLE
830
Woodward
Ave.
Deerfield
1049

REAL
8

apt.

ESTATE

FOR

HOME

AND

(Highland

buildings

in

SALE

Park)

INCOME
good

location;

income,
$415
per month,
terms. For info. call

ANCHOR
HI

2-0093.,

(Improved)

REAL
res.

gross

$30,000;

good

ESTATE
H1]

2-0037

SUNSET
SUBDIVISION
For sale—by
owner.
5 room,
2
story
brick; large screened porch, knotty pine
rec. room, carpeted; attached
garage. 6
years old. $25,500. Phone H] 2-0717.
Cute brick Ranch with basement, 2 bedrooms,
liv.-din.
comb.,
gas
heat,
1%
ear garage. A buy at $18,500.
IF YOU PLAN TO BUILD
see
Sherwood
Forest, a new and
fast
growing
area. Large lots, many
beautifully wooded, with all improvements
in
and paid for.
Reasonably priced.
ROBERT
L.
JOHNSON
REALTY
CO.
1608
Berkeley
Road
HI
2-6200
Winnetka
6-3809.
_
Deerfield
308

Thursday, December

11, 1952.

separate
dining
room,
modern
kitchen with breakfast space and
dishwasher.
Three
bedrooms,
tile
bath, full basement with attractive
recreation
room.
Gas
forced
air
heat. 2 car garage. 80x130 foot lot.
Priced for quick sale
$21,500

FRENCH

PROVENCIAL

Brick with slate roof. Magnificent
living room w/beamed ceiling, dining room,
screen
porch, paneled

library,

powder

room,

kitchen

and

breakfast
nook. Second
floor has
five bedrooms and 4 baths. Choicest east Ravinia location convenient for schools and transportation.
Owner
transferred
to California.
Wants offer.

H. and
463

Central

R. ANSPACH,
Avenue

HI

INC.
2-1212

Charming

FOR SALE BY OWNER
brick home built by architect

for

use;

own

first

ht.

Tri-leve] brick, 6 rms.;
1%

baths,

Frame
forced

(gas).

e

FOR SALE
(Deerfield)

att.

$22,800

gar.

place, 2
on well

'tion

near
paid

nas

Ask

us

about

our

Deerfield

R. S. HAMBLY

BAIRD G WARNER

$3,750

576
Lincoln
Ave.
Winnetka 6-2700

bargains.

G&amp;G Co., Realtor

CALIFORNIA
style ranch; 24 ft. living
room, lge. panelled kit. and breakfast
nook; 2 bdrms.
Flagstone patio; conveniently
located
in
Highland
Park.
Call
owner,
HI
2-3095.

floor

REAL

712

features

picture

windows,
beamed
ceilings
throughout,
generous
pine panelling in halls, living
and
dining
room;
basement-rec.
room,
attached
garage,
3 twin bedrooms,
1%
baths.
Best construction. Near
lake on
wooded
lot. $26,500 or make offer. Call
HI 2-49938.
Mk
e
Wy

Glencoe

Rd.

FOR

FIRST
Ample

available

FIRST
AND
216

Deerfield.
brick

Excellent,

Street
MA

OFFICES,

beauty

home

located

at

856

STORES
&amp;
TO
RENT

or

barber

information

call

Country Ranch
brick. acre lot.

home;

Ranch
R.
K.

830 Woodward

attached

home,
very
EBERSOLE

Ave.

$16,000;
Two

low

neighborhood,
eating

space,

oversized

gar.

payment,

HIGHLAND
PARK: Older
exclusive
nei hberhood:
walking

distance

to

Waukegan

all

frame home in
wooded
lot,

conveniences.

Liv.

kit.
with
brfst.
nook,
All furnishings included
$9,000.

CARR
701

$3,000.

brick Ranch
home in nice
American
cab.
kit.
with
bsmt.;
oil heat, detached
Low price at $16,500.

rms,
2
drms.,
bath, full bsmt.
in low price of

REALTY
Rd.,

984

or

985

VALUE
large rooms. L shaped
with frpl., 2 twin size
utility rm.:; gas heat,
%
acre
fenced
yard.

BENJ. PIERSEN
REALTY CO.
584

Central

Ave.,

HI

2-7278

or

© ARR

Waukegan

REALTY

Rd.

Ave.,

HI

2-1215

CO.

Deerfield

984

shop,

evenings.

4

urnis
R
mca coat: GE ric
2-7239.

6

ROOM
kegan
885

RENT

6

(Unfurnished)

HI|

month.

per

a
meatal

(Deerfield)

—$—&lt;—$—=

HOUSES

p.m.

3
to

rooms and
transporta-

Call HI 2-1170.

APARTMENTS

2-6366

or

We

TO

8

RENT

(Furnished)

Park)

furnished apartment; bath,
ROOM
utilities
all
and.
heat
varage,
nished.
children,

Employed
pets.
no

new
fur-

no
desired;
couple
January
Available

Ist. Phone HI 2-1128 evenings.
rooms and kitchen, close to HighTWO
eh ty
oe
wood, Call Rae cme
TWO room furnished apartment, complete
kitchen and use of laundry. 722 Homewood Ave., Highland Park, after 7 p.m.

APARTMENTS TO RFNT_ (Furnished)
(LAKE FOREST)
2

furnished apartment
ROOM
ing couple or sinule person,
Lake
Forest 1872.

TO

HI

NEED
have

2-0728.

WINTER

reliable

RENTALS!

clients

who

rent for 1, 2 or 3 months.
tel. HI 2-1834.

will

Please

ADLER &amp; MAXON
2

BEDROOM
apartment
or house
with
9
and
for couple
furnished,
garage,
up to $150.
pay
Will
old son.
year

Lake

Telephone

References.

Forest

extension

for workTelephone

RENT (Furnished)

(Miscellaneous)

private
bath,
TWO
38-room
apartments,
partly
furnished.
Call
LIberty ville
2-9879 or 2-4141.
1949 ELCAR house trailer, 27 feet; shower and toilet. Must sell. See at Space
923,
Fort
Sheridan, Ill.
2%
ROOM
furnished
kitchenette apartment with heat and utilities; 2nd floor,
private entrance. Long Lake area. $65
a month. Telephone Fox Lake 7-3314.
KITCHENETTE
apartment,
Lake Shore
Dr., available for sublet, January, February (March optionel). Call HI 2-2244
after 6 p.m.

556.

NAVY wife, 2 daughters, ages 16 and 11,
desire
38 or 4 room
apartment,
fur.
nished or unfurnished, in Lake Forest
or
Lake
Bluff.
Wanted
January
1,
1953. References if desired. Telephone
ONtario 2-8266.
DESIRABLE business couple, no children,
require 1 or 2 bedroom apartment, furnished or unfurnished. Call HI 2-6929,
ROOMS

aaa

2-8460.

(Highland

or

UNFURNISHED
2 bedroom apt. wanted
by financially responsible young Highland Park couple with one 3%
yr. old
daughter; garage apartment preferred.
Iz you have one available or coming up
within a few months, please call us;
excellent references. HI] 2-4105.
2 RESPONSIBLE
families
need
38 _ bedroom
homes.
Please
call
Highland
Park Chamber of Commerce.
YOUNG working couple need 3 or 4 room
unfurnished
house
or apartment
by
December
20th.
References.
Call
HI

utilities
month.

uwunfur3 or 4 room
decorated
in nice quiet locaapartment,
HI

house

1429.
desires
single,
doctor,
RESPONSIBLE
kitchenette apartment
small furnished
DElta
Dr. Gilman,
with private bath.

Pcie

FOUR room unfurnished flat: all
paid, good location.
$125
per

Call

TO RENT
(Furnished)
(LAKE
FOREST)

FOR rent: Winter months or longer, furnished duplex; 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, living room, dining room, kitchen. Close
to
stores
and
transportation,
Write
Box F-25 c/ Lake Forester.

6-8500,

VERY
modern
apartment,
bath. unfurnished; close
tion. HI 2-4949.

tion.

brick Ranch;
2 car gagas heat. $125. Deerfield

children.

FOUR room apartment, unfurnished, newly decorated;
adults
only.
Phone
HI
2-6587.

NEWLY
nished

RENT
(Unfurnished)
(Deerfield)

FOUR
room partly furnished home with
garage, $100; immediate possession to
May or longer; or for sale on contract.
Deerfield 234R.

Park)

no

and

Call

~ HOUSES
TO RENT (Furnished)

WE

furnished apartment, 328 WauAve., Highwood. Phone Deerfield

after

month.

871d.

2-0582.

$85

a

For

612
loft;
heated.
Cal] HI 2-0049.

Hizhwood;:

sale.

for

goods

2-6456

4PARTMENTS

Are you tired of the usual small 2 bedroom
house?
These
2
bedrooms
will
make
you
whistle! This brick
home
is
ideally located; walking distance to everything.
Ist flr. has liv. rm. with nice
entrance hall, separate din. rm., kit. with
lge. pantry; spe. bdrms and bath on 2nd
floor; bsmt. is high and dry. Oil ht., fruit
cellar &amp; nice pwdr. rm., 2 car detached garage. All this for $16,500. Call Mrs. Miniter, Northbrook 1422.

701

TO

flat above.
restaurant,

dress

room garage apartment, utilities
THREE
furnished; garage available. Household

CO.

Deerfield

AN OLDER
HOME
Frame 6 room house; 3 bdrms. and bath,
full
bsmt.;
hot
air,
oil
heat;
garage.
Priced to sell at $12,750.
GOOD
Frame Ranch with
liv. rm., din. rm.
bdrms., mod. kit.,
2 car
att. gar.,
Price, $20,000.

|

Deerfield 1049

down

bedroom

STUDIOS

__$55-4 month,
Call HI 2-1157 mornings.
Pleisant

garage,

FOUR year old brick Ranch house. Liv.din. comb. with frpl., 2 twin size bdrms,
cab. kit. with plenty of room for eating
space, bsmt.; oil heat. Price reduced to

HI]

TO

TWO
bedroom
rage, porch,

KITCHENETTE apartment located at 131

ter-

attractive.

shop.

(Highland

modern

Rosemary

Waukegar
383-0084

FOR
rent.
storage
Laurel Ave. (rear).

(Improved)

race,
two
doors
north
of
Bethlehem
Church. Home is spaciously sound in construction
with
six
rooms
&amp;
bath,
full
basement and attached garage. Shuwn by
appointment only.
:

LOANS

at

RUSINESS space for rent with
Ideal
for
tearoom,
smal]

Let us

beautifully

HOUSES

$150

school

near

for rent,

house

transportation.
2-0582.

HOUSES
&amp; APARTMENTS
WANTED
(Furnished or Unfurnished)

FEDERAL
SAVINGS
LOAN
ASSOCIATION

Madison

open

garage,

FAMILY
of 4 need 2 bedroom
apartment. Call HI 2-4880.

MORTGAGE

funds

and

home

room

¢ ROOM

1971.

low
rates
or
Lon,
well
located
residential
properties.
terms—prepayment
privileges.

COMPANY
HI 2-6600
SALE

possession.

Glencoe

APARTMENTS

ESTATE

quarters,
sun
acre of ground,

Immediate

MORTGAGES

show you this beautiful property—
it may solve your problem.

RINGER REALTY
457 Central

condition.

LOCATION

It!

Road,
Deerfield
1870
inspection,
for
Must have good moral and credit refHI
lease.
Will
$135.
Rent,
erences.
2-0153.

LANG REAL ESTATE

formal
garden, large terrace
screened porch are only a few

features.

(Improved)

HOME—EAST

4
family
bdrms.,
maid’s
rm., oi] ht., 2 car gar.,
%

perfect

We
have
this
distinctive
home,
quality construction, in one of the
best
North
Shore
neighborhoods,
which
affords easy living and
is
ideal for the family who wishes to
entertain graciously.

of the outstanding

ESTATE
FOR
SALE
(Miscellaneous)

ATTRACTIVE

Have you wanted
a place in the
country, yet close to schools and
transportation? HERE IS THE ANSWER—

The
and

Winnetka,
Il.
BRiargate 4-9001

IN YOUR
OWN
HOME
FOR
CHRISTMAS
2 bedroom
ranch
home
with
real
fireplace. Price, $14,500; cash, $1,500, Easy
monthly
payments.
Deerfield
234-R.

723 ST. JOHNS
AVE.
2-1484 or eve. HI °2-1485

HI

of

DEERFIELD
FOR
LARGE
FAMILY
A bargain in a 4 bedroom, 3% bath, brick
home. Excellent neighborhood
for school
children. On
wooded
acre. Good financing. MR. DEAKINS.
;

ranch, 6 rms.; 8 Bdrms., 2 baths,
air heat (oil). 3 yrs. old. $33,000

75 ft. x 158
ft. on Ridge
Road,
in and
improvements
all
Clavey;

sep-|
fire-

Charge

TO RENT
(Unfurnished)
(Highland Park)

4%

NEW

car garave. Many fine features;
landscaped
% acre in best secvillage. MR.
EAKINS.

$26,500

VACANT
FOr

HOUSES

(Improved)

EXECUTIVE
THE
FOR
in a de
bargain
good
An exceptionally
Owner
home.
ranch
brick
quality
luxe
|has moved out of town and is anxious

3 Bdrms. and den,

full basement,

Country

on

water

aaeN
°
eave

hes

aai
ep

(Deerfield)

HAVE A FAMILY
CHRISTMAS PRESENT
2

hot

REAL

BENJ. PIFRSEN
REALTY CO.

A livable home for Ige. family on 1 acre.
Liv. rm., din. rm., Ize. pine panelled kit.,
pwd.
rm.
4 bdrms.,
1 bath
on
2nd.
2

GILBERT RAYNER
LAKE FOREST 382

:

ESTATE

DEERFIELD

SPECIALS]

PARK

FOR THE EXECUTIVE _

REALTORS
1899

Situated in West Lake Forest on over
an acre of landscaped grounds. There are
3 bedrooms, 2 baths; large living room,
all-purpose family room, both with fireplaces;
large
well
planned
kitchen
and
breakfast space. 2 car attached
garage.
Many thermopane windows, Warm, quiet.
floors.

2-1834

EARHART and LLOYD,

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE (Improved)
(LAKE FOREST)

city schools. Low taxes.
in reasonable offer.

HI

$17,500
might
consider
renting.
Call
Mrs.
Redlich

Owner

LAKE
FOREST
287
Deerpoth

cork

Rd.

as

DEERFIELD

6 ROOM

$17,500.

&amp; MAXON

$1,750 down; 2 bedrooms, tile bath. Lot,
118x125;
spacious
living
room-dining
room
comb.,
modern
kitchen,

615 Waukegan Road
HIGHLAND PARK
1775 St. Johns Ave.

REAL

Will take a good

NEW
RANCH HOUSE

Deerfield 485 |
Highland Park 2-4500
Lake Forest 2300

NEW

radiant

Winnetka,
III.
BRiargate 4-9001

Sheridan

Call any of these numbers
and

&amp; WARNER

ADLER

TELEPHONE
WANT AD SERVICE

(Improved)

Brick kit.
Ranch,
new; 5 space,
rms. 3 att.
Bdrm8.,
to sell. dining
8 largeroom,
bedrooms,
with’
basement2 baths,
aY.+| | arate
with likebreakfast
large

REID.

a yr.; taxes, $158.

for Publication in the Current
Week's Issue

SALE
Park)

MISS

SOLID BRICK; full liv. and din.
rm., 2 bdrms., tile bath, att. gar.
with storage above, fenced in yard.
Low cost maintenance; gas ht., $90

up to

ESTATE
FOR
(Highland

HIGHLAND

EXCELLENT
BRICK
RESIDENCE in Ravinia, beautiful property; 4 bdrms., den, 2% baths, attract. modern kit., reer. rm., automatic gas ht. $42,500.

Deerfield Review
Highland Park News
Highwood News
The Lake Forester

REAL

eat
Hata
ey
et ON
algae
”
.

576
Lincoln
Ave.
Winnetka 6-2700

the

-(Improved)

and

COLONIAL
BRICK
LOVELY
Listed for the first time. 6 rm., 3 bedrm.
home on quiet picturesque street. 2 car
baths. Under 30.
garage, scr. porch, 1%

Less)

insertion in all 4 papers.
®
®
®
®

SALE
Park)

PARK

HIGHLAND

50

$]

20 words
for only

ESTATE
FOR
(Highland

485

ADS

LARGE
tion

room
and

for

town;

FOR

RENT

rent,

near

private

transporta-

entrance,

Call

after 3 p.m. HI 2-4300.
SINGLE
room; hot water at all times.
nice living conditions. Call HIl 2-6682,
LARGE pleasant room, private bath, own
entrance;
near
village.
Suitable
for
Army or Navy couple or businessman,
Call Lake Forest 1674 after 6 p.m.
PLEASANT
southeast
bedroom,
twin
beds;
private
bath.
Telephone
Lake
Forest 653.
FURNISHED
room for rent, near transportation. Telephone Lake Forest 2267,
SINGLE
rvom,
good
bed,
nice
living
conditions;
1%
block
from _ business
district. Hot water, laundry privileges.
HI 2-5457.
NICE pleasant rooms, plenty of hot water;
near
transportation.
$8 a week.
HI

2-1877.

SLEEPING room, near transportation and
business
district;
no
other
roomers,
Reasonable. 1970 First St., HI 2-4439
after

4

p.m,

ROOMS
for rent,
close
transportation.
Inquire
Johns,

Highland

to
at

town
1875

and
St.

Park.

COMFORTABLE sleeping room, very reasonable.
2438
S. Central
Ave., Highwood, HI 2-1117
Z
FURNISHED
room
for rent, near Vine
Ave.
station.
Prefer
young
employed
woman. HI 2-0376.
NICE large sleeping room on east side,
close to transportation and shopping.
HI 2-1229.
NICELY furnished home-like double bedroom; ample drawer and closet space,
hot water. Close to Vine Ave. station.
Phone HI 2-0405.

Page

47

�ROOMS
2 ROOMS;
heat

and

Near

hot

FURNISHED
rooms
_ kitchen ‘privileges,
and
transportation.

NICE

beautiful

__tral

Ave.,

SINGLE

room

with

block

district;
employed
HI
2-0149.
DOUBLE

room

__leges.

HI

from

business

woman

with

light

2-4139.

pri-

privileges;
North Cen-

Highwood.
%

Lake

with
or
without
near
Ft. Sheridan
HI 2-5269.

sleeping

room,

of

reasonable.

Telephone

vate
kitchen
and
laundry
hot water at all times. 427

c

Plenty

very

station.

1467.

HELP WANTED—FEMALE

RENT

1 single.

water;

Farwell

Forest

FOR

1 double,

preferred.

kitchen

privi-

EARN CHRISTMAS MONEY
NOW
Women
for light assembly work.
FREE
TRANSPORTATION
BLUE CROSS
CHRISTMAS BONUS
MUSIC
WHILE
YOU
WORK
PLEASANT
WORKING
CONDITIONS
in
modern,
centrally
located
factory
Days
8 a.m.
to
4:30
p.m.;
evenings,
4:45 to 11:15 p.m.

CHERRY-CHANNER
1488

Skokie

ROOM
SLEEPER,
_
evening

AND

ee

Near

station

GARAGE
FOR

rent,

4

PERMANENT

and

TO

months

to Deerpath Inn.
Lake Forester.

town.

HI

RENT

only,

garage

Write

Box

close

F-30

c/o

GARAGE

HELP
_

COOK,

5

for

rent

LIGHTING

in

or

6

days

is

not

necessary.

at

406

Moderne

a

week,

permanent;
Reasonable

Green

Bay

Rd.,

Restaurant,

Phone

HI

assistant

in

small

ILLINOIS BELL
TELEPHONE CO.

STENOGRAPHER

duties,

General

office

general

interesting

details.

necessary.

Call

Florence

Rhodes,

office

work.

a

details.

Experience
Northbrook

_

MACHINE

un1200.

OPERATOR

‘Interesting work running a Multilith printing machine in North suburban office of business consultant
firm. Assist in duplication of important client documents, Experi-

ence not necessary. Pleasant coun-

_ try like surroundings in converted
mansion.

Attractive

TELEPHONE

CO.

OFFERS JUST THAT...
FULL TIME
JOBS FOR
WOMEN
UP TO 43 YEARS
OLD AS TELEPHONE
OPERATORS.
WE’LL TRAIN YOU, AND
YOU’LL
BE
PAID
WHILE
YOU
LEARN
TO PLAY
AN EVER
IMPORTANT
PART IN THE
LIFE OF YOUR COMMUNITY.

t
SEE

CHIEF

OPERATOR

HIGHLAND
PARK:
LAKE FOREST: 255

AT

ical

positions

counting,

or

contact

that

are

for

employment

experience

in

in

in
of-

for the

cler-

the

ac-

production

and

departments.

*NEW

PLAN

PLANT

KLEINSCHMIDT
AND

Illinois

LINE

RDS.

Deerfield

1000

starting salary

plus other benefits. Call BRiargate

_ 4-7500 from Chicago or Libertya
ville 2-4080 from suburbs.
ne

SECRETARY
Responsible
position
as assistant
to a
senior executive of a nationally known
firm
of business consultants
located
in
North
Shore area.
Unusually
attractive
working environment.
Convenient transportation
from
North
Shore’
suburbs.
Good salary to start plus other benefits.
Call BRiargate
4-7500
from Chicago or
Libertyville 2-4080
from
suburbs.
HELP

MACHINE

client

not

country

our

people

new

office

to

like

surroundings

CO.
work

with

in

business

graduate

OPENINGS NOW FOR

GENERAL CLERK
advancement

Service Representative
now—or

pointment.

Second

Mr.

to

work.

call

for

Knox,

St., HIghland

experience;

Mgr.,

Park

1866

2-9995.

and

re-

Burroughs

or

NCR

Ideal
employment — close
to
home. Save travel time and transportation.

APPLY IN PERSON OR
PHONE LAKE FOREST 900

FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF LAKE FOREST

GENERAL office work in Alumni department;
typing
required.
5 day,
37%
hour
week.
Inquire
Mrs.
Crampton,

yh te need

us

Telephone
67,

Lake

SHORE

The man we’re looking for will sell advertising to North Shore retailers. He’ll
be a North Shore resident who wants a
position
that promises
an excellent future, plenty of work, and a good starting
salary plus commissions. He’ll be a selfstarter. When he comes to us, he’ll know
something
about
advertising,
but more
important, he’ll know how to sell. He’ll
own

a

car.

If you’re the man we want, tell us about
yourself.
We’ll
schedule
an _ interview.
(Our employees know of this ad). Write
Box A-15 c/o H.P. News.

DRIVERS needed. Call
at A-1 Taxi office,
Highland Park.

GET

HI 2-5555 or stop
580 Central Ave.,

INTO RAILROAD
WORK!
PERMANENT JOBS
ARE NOW OPEN
FOR
TRAINMEN
SHOP
TICKET

WOMEN
to sew
for holiday
business,
Easy to sew product, good pay. Sewing
machine
not essential.
Write, Kenroe
Mfg. Co.,
Yorktown,
Indiana.

SALESMAN

GROUP OF NORTH
WEEKLIES

ap-

High
school graduate. Previous
experience desirable but qualified
applicants will be trained.

Tie

engineering

preferred.

ADVERTISING
FOR

an

POSITIONS
A FUTURE

Lake Forest College.
Forest 3100, extensi

MAN

DIVISION
2301 DAVIS STREET
NORTH CHICAGO DExter 6-3400

and

in

con-

DEEPFREEZE APPLIANCE

TELLER

for

in

Attractive starting

STUDY

WORKERS
AGENTS

CLERKS
Pensions, insurance and free transportation. No experience
is necessary.
Earn
while you learn.
APPLY
TO

NORTH SHORE LINE
EMPLOYMENT
OFFICE
HIGHWOOD

O K ENTERPRISES

RD.
ILL.

LES KEEPPER, JR.
926 N. WESTERN
LAKE FOREST 447

VERSATILE
ties and
between
EX

interested

in working

independently on product quotations, delivery and specifications,
in our sales department.
ferred

but such

training

baritone available for parweddings.
5:30 and

Call DExter
6:00.

6-2735

GI college student with family desires
work during vacation, Dec. 22nd thru
Jan.
8. Call HI
2-1064.

YOUNG man to do all jobs; prefers painting. Call HI 2-3185 between 8-12 a.m.
please.

TO
men

MEN
WORK

JOB TOO SMALL!
TREE SURGERY
TRUCKING
WINDOW
WASHING
HEAVY
CLEANING
AND
OTHER INSIDE WORK
SNOW PLOWING
SNOW SHOVELING

“SITUATIONS

WANTED—DOMESTIC —

SPECIAL
service for particular people.
Your clothes beautifully ironed by responsible *person
in
my
own
home;
men’s
shirts,
ruffled
curtains
and
children’s clothes
mv
specialty, Flats
finished also. HI 2-3725.

is not es-

sential.

EXPERIENCED
lady desires day work,
cleaning and ironing; references. Telephone Trinity 2-4106 after 4 p.m.

CALL COLLECT
DEXTER 6-4900—EXT. 242
For appointments, which will be
arranged at your convenience.

WOMAN
DElta

desires
6-1785.

day

work.

Telephone

CHRISTMAS TOYS

Ex-

Between 25 and 40 years; minimum
of 3 years

...

Come

TIME

:

QUALIFIED
FULL TIME

NO

SALES CORRESPONDENT
TRAINEE

HELP

Pleasant

=

air-conditioned

Opportunity

documents.

necessary.

salary
plus
other
benefits.
Call
BRiargate 4-7500 from Chicago or
Libertyville 2-4080 from suburbs.

ILLINOIS BELL
Friendly

MultiNorth

suburban office of business consultant firm. Assist in duplication

verted mansion.

TELEPHONE

OPERATOR

Interesting work running a
lith
printing
machine
in

perience

EXPERIENCED,
AVAILABLE
FOR

OFFERS
EMPLOYMENT
AS

Young

WANTED—MALE

ENJOY THE HOLIDAYS!
WHAT DO YOU WANT DONE?

Applicants with correspondence
and/or
college training
are
pre-

WANTED—MA.LE

HOUSEMAN,
experienced, white; 1 day
a week. Telephone Lake Forest 2242.

OFFICE

SITUATIONS

WITH
GOOD
FUTURE
to operate metal fabricatand
do
assembly
work.
Deerfield 365, American

SHERIDAN
CHICAGO,

|

NURSE, graduate, middle aged, available
9 to 8 five days a week; private duty
in home. Excellent
references.
Write
Box C-15 c/o Highland Park News.

STEADY
drivers for the winter or year
around. Apply at Cab Stand. Highland
Park
Yellow
Cab and
Radio
Cab.
LOCAL
JOBS
Wanted, 2 men
ing
machines,
We
will train.
Evatype Corp.

WANTED—FEMALE

TEACHER,
10 years experience, will go
to Arizona to tutor your children while
you spend the winter there. Give details first letter. Write Box C-25 c/o
H.P. News.

GEOMETRY tutor wanted; state teaching
qualifications and desired fee to Box
B-25 c/o H.P. News.

2200 N.
NORTH

LABS.

COUNTY

cleaning,

FANSTEEL
METALLURGICAL
CORPORATION

CAFETERIA

* MODERN

day

WILL
iease
1 bay
“Standard”
Service
Station to responsible party. Lessee to
purchase low inventory only. Telephone
ONtario
2-2370.

WAGES

* VACATION

one

fil-

general

us
open

purchasing,

of important

1866
N.
2ND
E. DEERPATH

BOOKKEEPER

eee

OFFICE

2-5180

ILLINOIS BELL

To operate
machine,

Mrs. A. McCarthy
1866 Second St.
Highland Park

dictation,

AVE.

TELLER
For commercial paying
ceiving cage.

PART-TIME

aried

Inc.

LOOKING
FOR A JOB WHERE
THE
PAY IS GOOD
...
EVEN THOUGH
YOU DON’T HAVE EXPERIENCE?

BANK
WITH

DINING SERVICE
MATRON

pqisht

please

available

* HOSPITALIZATION

PRODUCTS,
HI

have

bookkeeping

duties

WAUKEGAN

home

(See

;

PARK

seeking

you

typing,

fice

Deerfield,

with
3 children to help mother with
_ all usual routine for approximately
4
_ hrs. a day except weekends; preferably
afternoons and 1 evening a week. Own
transportation desirable.
Write
Highland Park News, Box C-5.
AN excelient sales position will be open
on January 2nd, selling medium priced
to better women’s apparel. This is per‘manent position
where you
have the
Opportunity
of earning
more than at
any
store
in
the
Chicago
area;
no
nights. Minna Hart, 580 Lincoln Ave.,
Winnetka, III.
SALESLADIES
AND
WAITRESSES
\
__Part
time
or full
time.
;
F. W.
WOOLWORTH
CO.
SECRETARIES and stenographers wanted
in Highland
Park;
excellent working
conditions.
Apply
thru
the Highland
-_ Park Chamber of Commerce.

See

are

If

are

for

PART
TIME.
Experienced
toy. electric
train
repairman.
Also
complete
new
set-up and layout work. Ph. HI 2-1369.
HIGHLAND
PARK
CYCLE SHOP

HOUSEWIVES

2-4283
or
Glencoe
4338.
AT appearing and pleasant woman to
work
5 hours in morning
as_ bakery
ie
e
Apply
Alva’s
Pastry
Shop,
628 Roger Williams, HI 2-43834.

_ HOUSEHOLD

ing,

POSITION

vicinity

EGISTERED
nurses
needed
at
H.P
hospital.
Starting
salary,
$255,
with
_afternoon bonus, $30, and night bonus,
$20. See Miss Beard, HI 2-8000.
STENOGRAPHER—Winnetka
Park
Disi _ trict has a very fine permanent posi$ _ tion open for experienced stenographer
with
some
knowledge of bookkeeping.
“§
Ideal working conditions, 40 hour week,
pension plan, sick leave and vacation
privileges. Salary dependent on experience and qualifications. Apply George
B. Caskey, Supt., Winnetka Park District Office, 2nd flr., Village Hall, Winnetka. Tel. WI 6-2160.
net
Woman
wanted
to
train
for
fountain
‘manager.
No
experience
necessary.
{
F. W. WOOLWORTH
CO.
‘
600 CENTRAL AVE.
OFFICE SECRETARY. Good position for
qualified person to serve as secretary,
receptionist
and
handle
simple
bookkeeping accounts.
Hours, 9-5 Monday
___thru Friday. HI 2-4981.
UNTER and check in girl, steady job.
Apply in person. John Zengler’s Cleaners,
1905
Sheridan
Road,
Highland
Park.
ANTED,
experienced
waitresses;
day
or evening
work,
excellent
earnings.

_

W.

WANTED—FEMALE

_ experience

_ Villa

who

area.

positions

* TOP

Park Ave. HI 2-7264,

pay.
Apply
Highwood.

women
this

HELP

WANTED

garage

of Linden and

2-6543

following

SMALL
OFFICE,
PLEASANT
WORKING
CONDITIONS.
SHORTHAND.
AND
TYPING
EXPERIENCE
NECESSARY.
5
DAY
WEEK,
PAID
HOLIDAYS
AND
VACATIONS;
FREE
INSURANCE.

1548

WANTED,

HI

The

STENOGRAPHER

BOARD

private room in exchange for
sitter; employed person pre-

CORP.

Blvd.

FEMALE

payroll

SINGLE
light
housekeeping
room
for
employed person; plenty of hot water.
ee cpork
from
business
district.
HI
3.

:

SITUATIONS
WANTED,
man
HI 2-5928.

WANTED—DOMESTIC

FOR a Merry Christmas let us design and
set up your child’s electric train set;
any make, any size, anywhere. Contact
J.
G.
Cashin,
Libertyville
2-4140,
WHitehall 4-7900.

SECOND
maid, white; experienced. Own
room;
top
pay.
Near
transportation.
Telephone Lake Forest 2398.
MAID;
LIGHT
HOUSEWORK,
COOKING. OTHER
HELP
EMPLOYED:
ALL
MODERN
EQUIPMENT.
OWN
ROOM,
CONGENIAL
SURROUNDINGS.
PHONE
GLENCOE
2342.

DOLL HOUSE.
5 room, 2 story, prefabricated house; unique clapboard siding
and shingle roof. HI 2-4159.

GENERAL
maid, temporary thru Christmas holidays or permanent. Own room
a
stay or go. References. HI

MARX
ELECTRIC
TRAIN
DELUXE
MODEL,
complete; automatic uncouplers,
whistle,
automatic
switches,
20°
ft. Zlexi track, instructions for operating,
wire
hookups.
$30. Phone
HI
2-2542.

PLAIN cooking, general housework, personal laundry, assist 2 school age children;
no heavy
cleaning
or laundry,
nice room and bath in friendly home.
ea
eat appliances, good salary. HI

BICYCLE,
girl’s
medium
size;
basket,
good condition, $15. Doll house, completely furnished, $10. HI 2-0353 after
6 p.m.
ELECTRIC
freight
train,
.027
gauge,
complete with
track
and
accessories,
$12. Phone HI 2-1040.
12-INCH tricycle, newly painted; sturdy,
tubular
frame,
excellent
condition,
$7.50. Child’s indoor or outdoor swing.

GENERAL
housework
for
experienced
woman who is reliable, loves children,
and can do plain cooking; all modern
appliances. Top salary for person who
wants
to stay
with
friendly
family.
HI 2-2958.
GIRL to care for my 2 yr. old grandson
visiting here from December
19th t
December
28th;
home
nights
if preferred.
Other
help
in
home;
high
wages, near transportation. HI 2-4776.
WOMAN,
white,
upstairs
experience not necessary.
HI 2-1862.

and
serving;
Adult family.

GIRL or woman
for cleaning and ironing;
near
transportation.
8
days
a
week. HI 2-2525.
CHRISTMAS
DAY:
waitress .t6
serve
noon
dinner.
Telephone
Lake
Forest
955.

WHITE waitress to
dinner. Telephone

help serve Christmas
Lake Forest 118.

NEED
several extra days cleaning during Christmas
vacation period, beginning
about
December
17.
Experience
with
upstairs
work
desirable.
Other
help employed. Telephone Lake Forest
5
TEMPORARY
cook-general
housework.
Stay
or
go;
must
like children.
HI
2-6886.
COOK
OR
SECOND
MAID.
My
maid
needs
an
experienced
helper.
Private
room and bath. Permanent position, 2
adults;
near
transportation.
Highest
wages. HI 2-13829.
COOK,
white, at extra top wages for 4
or 5 weeks from Dec. 16; plain cooking
with no other work except waiting on
table.
No
farmal
parties.
Own
bedroom,
sitting
room and bath.
Phone
HI 2-0212.
NURSE
needed for visiting granddaughters, 2% and 1 year; about 2 weeks,
beginning
December
19.
Stay
or
go;
other
help
employed.
Telephone
Lake Forest 253.

SITUATIONS

ences.

would

like

Call DExter

da
6-2575
js

Work:

yetaey

2-2542.

transformer,

large

train

table,

other

accessories all like new. $75. HI 2-1576.
AMERICAN
FLYER. New train sets as
low as $15.95, complete,
ready to run.
Also
A.F. parts and equipment;
accessories and structures for all gauges. HO,
S$; "RP 027 ‘and -0,
HIGHLAND
PARK CYCLE
SHOP
486 Central at Sheridan
HI
2-13869

H. O. GAUGE
RAILROAD FOR SALE

MODEL
88

ALL
NEW—NEVER
USED
FREIGHT
CARS—BUILT
UP
5 ENGINES—3
BUILT
UP
1 WRECKER
CRANE
86 FT. OF TRACK
6 TURNOUTS—PRICE
$300
TEL.
DEERFIELD
948M

AMERICAN
FLYER
train
complete,
mounted
on large
board;
2 engines,
freight train, passenger train, log loader,
station,
yard
lights,
automatic
switches, bridges, water tower, double
transformer. Original price over $275;
sold
only
as complete
unit,
$85. HI
2-3996.

WANTED—FEMALE

ALL types of beauty work done in
our
own
home.
Tel. HI
2-4743
or
ke
Forest 2998Y1.
A NURSE will take elderly person in her
own home; will give room, board and
care. HI 2-5123.

WOMAN

HI

LIONEL
freight train; electric switches,
2 operating cars, engine with whistle,
complete with transformer. All in excellent condition. HI 2-4639.
LIONEL
train,
locomotive
and
tender,
transformer,
in good
condition.
Call
HI
2-0505.
ELECTRIC
train accessories, reasonable;
engine and tender, caboose, operating
box car, flat car, corner tunnel, easel
type
coal
loader. Call, after
6, Tom
Aronson, HI 2-1431.
LIONEL
“O-27”
train set;
log loader,
remote
control
switches,
190
watt

CLOTHING

FOR

SALE

TWO
men’s overcoats, size 44; topcoat,
‘ size 44; lady’s coat,
size 40; dress,
size 20; 2 pair white flannnel trousers,

44

A

waist.

Call

WONDERFUL

HI

2-4790.

warm

Christmas

prese

ent—black Persian lamb fur coat, new~
ly styled, size 12-14,
excellent condi-

tion, Reasonable,

HI 2-5272.

Os;

�_

- HOUSEHOLD GOODS FOR SALE

Box Number Ads

Reply by phone as well as by letter
"may be made to any Want Ad with
a box number as an address. Call
HI 2-4500 or Lake Forest 2300
and phone
address
Your name,
number will be placed at onee in
the box of the advertiser.
——————

CLOTHING FOR SALE
SILVER
fox cape, practically new;
sonable.
Telephone
Lake
Forest
evenings and Sunday.

rea629

MAN’S navy overcoat, size 40; mouton
coat,
size
12; beaver
coat, size
14:
mink dyed squirrel cape; clothing size
11. HI 2-5607.
STARLIGHT
mink coat,
black
Persian
lamb
oe
jacket.
2‘

worn six times:
%
coat;
black
Reasonable.
HI

TOO
GOOD
A COOK
My wife feeds me too well. I have outgrown my dinner jacket, tails, and smoking jacket; each worn once, size 39 long.
HI 2-6414,

LADY’S
_

black

cloth

coat,

fur

trimmed:

2 Persian lamb coats, size 12-14, suits,
dresses,
cashmere sweaters. Priced to
sell; sale beginning Friday. HI 2-4159.
ONE dark gray top coat, size 40, originally $125, sell at $30; 2 pair riding
breeches,
size
42,
$10
each;
lady’s
beaver trimmed coat, size 16, $25, nice;
one like new tuxedo, size 40, $20. Telephone Lake Forest 2991-Y-4 Saturday.
GIRL’S champagne nylon
9, like new; worn only
Lake Forest 2619.

net formal, size
once. Telephone

LIKE new Hudson seal coat, $100; evening jacket, $25; cape, $25; sport coat;
man’s overcoat, suits, size 38; lady’s
coat, worn twice, $50; ski suit; dresses,
size
12,
short;
formals:
boy’s
suit,
shirts, size 18. HI 2-1673.
TUXEDO
for
sale,
size
38.
Call
HI

2-1673.

HOUSEHOLD

GOODS

FOR

SALE

VISIT
YOUR
OWN
HIGHLAND
PARK
Trading Post. We sell furniture, brica-brac
&amp;
clothing.
1813
St.
Johns.
Tel. HI 2-2744.
ORIENTAL rugs, excellent quality, sizes
ranging 3 ft. x 5 ft. to 10 ft. x 22 ft.,
at bargain prices. John
B. Nash
Co.,
1891
Sheridan
Rd.,
H.P.,
HI
2-3500.
ANTIQUE
sofa; rolled ends, mahogany
trim, dark rose upholstery. Perfect condition. Tel. HI 2-23805.
MODERN
dining
room
table,
bleached
mahogany, 40x72 extends to 120 inches
long,
4 upholstered
chairs.
Will
sell
separately, best offer. Can be seen all
day Friday and Saturday morning
at
740 Clavey Rd., H.P.
TWIN
beds,
walnut,
complete,
$20;
7
quart pressure cooker, like new, $10.
HI 2-5223.
$50
EACH,
Universal
vacuum
cleaner,
portable
Singer sewing
machine,
new
silver fox scarf, lamps and other items.
Call HI 2-3294.
BED,
davenport
and
chair
4
kitchen
chairs and stool; also doll dresser. HI
2-2881.

i

METAL
Jenny
Lind bed, springs, mattress
and
dresser,
$25;
small chest,
$3; miscellaneous. Call HI 2-0581 after
6 p.m.
BAKER Far Eastern cabinet, brand new,
with fluorescent bulb, 5 ft. high and
80 in. wide, light wood, copy of original; worth $700, will sell for $850 or
best offer. HI 2-82738.
GRAY
Lawson
sofa, made
to order,
1
year old, in excellent condition; modern mahogany
bedroom set with twin
chest, like new; 18th Century nest of
tables; step tables, all very fine quality; crystal chandelier; baby crib, high
chair. Glencoe 583.
DUNCAN PHYFE mahogany dropleaf table, 4 chairs, $70. Call Deerfield 1478.
PAIR of cut glass decanters, copper tea
pot, French and English china, framed
French
prints,
mirror,
brass
candlesticks,
2
small
Victorian
chairs,
1
_ Early
American
chair,
many
other
items;
all
perfect
for
an _ unusual
: Christmas
present.
HI .2-6413.
OOD
- ROSE
carpeting
and
pad for
_ living room hall and stairs, living room
_ arm chair. Reasonable. Call HI 2-0736.

FRENCH

PROVINCIAL

rose

sofa,

green

wing chair; brown marble 3 corner coffee table; corner ceiling cabinet, miscellaneous. Reasonable.
HI 2-1958.
RUG,
12x17,
Swedish
primitive
beige;
mahogany
bed,
spring
and
mattress;
twin
maple
beds
with
desk-dresser;
Lawson
sofa;
pair
of
small
barrel
chairs; straight back odd chair; yellow
faille drapes. HI 2-7090.
SALE, HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS
By order of Legatees of Estate of
MRS.
BESSIE
GERNON
MANNING
Contents,
Art Objects, Antiques
at
1112 SHERIDAN
RD., WILMETTE
Eleven
rooms
of
furnishings
for
the
living
dining,
breakfast
and
bedrooms;
bric-a-brac,
large collection
chinawares,
silverwares,
glasswares;
linens,
drapes,

clothing,

Queen

rummage.

ANTIQUE

Anne,

FURNISHINGS

Chippendale,

Sheraton,

_Mintons, Crown Derby, ete.; silverware
: ih Georgian pd. sterling, Sheffield. All
Rie

ic

low for quick
sale to the first
ers for cash, on
:
RIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY, 10 to 5
-_ EVERYTHING MUST BE SOLD

James and Charlotte White

&lt;

f

}

MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE

WANTED

FRIGIDAIRE refrigerator, apartment|CAMERA,
4x5
Busch
pressman,
F4.7
size; good condition, $20. Call LIberGraflex
lens, Busch
vue focus, Soletyville 2-4141.
noid
attachment,
B.C.
synchronizer,|
Furniture,
.
carrying case, 9 holders, 3 developer | bric-a-brac,
TWIN beds, box springs and mattresses,
tanks;
all equipment
like
new.
$3800]|copperware,

dressing

2

table and

straight.

apple

bench,

backed

green.

HI

chairs;

round

wood,
$5.50
488R2.

per

unit.

table,

all

painted

2-4442,

9 FT. x 4 FT. 8/8 EXTERIOR

fir ply-

Call

Deerfield

ENGLISH walnut
and
mattress;
HI
2-5630.

2

valve
OIL

freight

and

587

perfect
2-4216,

condition;

mattress,

Pleasant

gas

range,

Ave.,

High-

COMPLETE
fireplace set, brass, almost
new. Deerfield
1407.
PRIVATE
sale. Must
sell household
of
English
period
furnishings;
decorator
items;
includes
living
room _ tables,
lamps, chairs, breakfront, dining table
and chairs, bric-a-brac. HI 2-6976.
SERVEL
gas refrigerator in good
condition for sale, cheap. HI 2-7185.
9x12
COTTON
domestic
orienta]
rug,
good
condition,
clean.
$20.
Call
HI
2-0676.

.

SOLID walnut kneehole desk, $35; Duncan Phyfe dining table, 8 chairs, $125;
almost new stove and
refrigerator at
half price; 8 pair floral drapes, cream
background,
$15
a pair;
man’s
full
dress suit and overcoat, size 38 to 40,
excellent condition. Call Deerfield
159.
26
INCH
Speed
Queen
console mangle,
slightly used, $45; used ABC
wrinver
type washing machine, $15; fair condition. Call Deerfield 533J.
ANTIQUE
loveseat and
matching chair,
bedroom furniture, maple lounge chair,
Hollywood bed, 4 small chests of drawers, %
size bed, complete.
Telephone
Lake Forest 629 after 6 p.m. and Sundays.
GAS RANGE, table top, white, full size,
in good
operating
condition,
$20
or
best offer. Will deliver. Telephone Lake
_ Forest 2268.
PAIR
French commodes, antiqued ivory
finish. Call Deerfield 1446J.
GAS
Frigidaire,
little
apartment
gas
stove, both for $50. HI 2-4603 or HI
2-6279.

DINING
ROOM
set,
9x12
rug,
double
beds, springs,
chifforobe,
chairs, antique hall tree, Best offer. HI 2-8945
or HI 2-2064.
FRIGIDAIRE,
excellent
condition,
$70;
glider,
makes
bed,
$25;
storm
windows,
screens; dressing
table,
stool,
$25; small bar. HI 2-1673.

MISCELLANEOUS

FOR

SALE

CASHMERE SWEATER SALE
IMPORTED, HANDCRAFTED,
FULL FASHIONED SWEATERS
S.8. PULLOVER NOW $13.95
L.S. CARDIGANS NOW $16.95
ALSO MANY FANCY SWEATERS
MINNA HART
580 LINCOLN
AVE.
WINNETKA
6-3738

HOLIDAY

SALE

PETERSON

&amp;

CO.

ROGER
WILLIAMS
HI
2-5561

SPECIAL
HOLIDAY
SALE
Linens
to
grace
your
holiday
table.
Scarves, cloths, and doilies. Silver place
settings,
candlesticks,
candelabra,
wine
coolers,
platters,
tea
and
coffee
sets,
china,
glassware.
Inexpensive
Christmas
gifts

in

brass,

wrought

iron,

pewter,

bric-a-brac,
clocks,
furniture,
and
fireplace equipment.
Lincoln
Antique Shop,
1 mile north of Half Day, Ill., on Route
21
(Milwaukee
Ave.).

CHOICE
CHRISTMAS TREES
REASONABLE
WILL DELIVER FREE
SET UP IN HOME IF DESIRED
O K ENTERPRISES
926 N. WESTERN
LAKE FOREST 447
CHILDREN’S CHRISTMAS
RECORDS
20TH CENTURY
TELEVISION AND RADIO
1858

First

St.

londay and

h

874.
d.

each,
railroad

passenger

HI

used.

system,

engines,

cars,

DIRIGOLD
94 PC. TABLE SERVICE

ALLIGATOR
luggage,
unusually
beautiful, 3 pieces, custom made. Could not
Phone
$2,000.
under
be
duplicated
3-1010, Apt. 1602 between
WHitehall
17: gem and 3:
UNIVERSAL gas range, 3 yrs. old; good

HI

2-0341

Friday till 9 p.m.

HT

2-1872.

figure skates, size 6 and 7 and
WHITE
black
figure
skates,
size
7 and
11;
player,
record
5;
size
child’s
racer,
swim firs. Call Deerfield 145.
bike,
26 inch
boy’s
Deluve
SCHWINN
Cadillac
4 black
condition;
excellent
tires,
8.20x15,
fits all Cadillac
cars,
used only 500 miles; boy’s alpaca lined
storm jacket. excellent condition, tweed
topcoat, wool 7ip-in lining, worn only
twice, size 14-16. HI 2-5577.
14 DARK
doors for inside use, different
sizes, good
condition.
HI
2-0153.
YEARLING
hens, 80c per Ib., for stewing or roasting; also select eggs, 65c
and
55c. Bradley
Road
at the water
tower.
Telephone
Libertyville
2-2398.
SMALL portable sun lamp by Sperti, with
gog7les,
like new,
$20;
wool
string
rvg, 9x10. $75; dinette table, formica
top, new $25. Telephone Lake Forest
2991-Y-4 Saturday.
REFRIGERATOR,
General
Electric,
5
cubic foot. Telephone Lake Forest 912.
ANTIQUES

FOR

CHRISTMAS

7 branch brass candelabra, bells, decanters
and
perfume
bottles,
6 tall
green
wines, cranberry punch bowl, needlepoint
prayer stool,
milk
glass
compotes,
variety of colored glass, odd demi-tasse and
tea cups.
fruit center
plates,
6 Crown
and Derby cups, large Sheffield service
tray,
Bennington
bowls,
ivory
cribbage
board, carved pipes, inkwells. ete. Furnityre and antique jewelry. Lindwall’s 808
Oak Street, % block west of Green Bay
Road, WInrnetka 6-0145.
UNIVERSAL
Geneva
man’s
automatic
date wrist watch, purchased from VLA
‘a few weeks
ago for gift; cost $110
will sell for $65, unconditionally guaranteed by VLA.
Also new Speidel
18
Kt. gold expansion
watch strap; cost
$35, sell for $20. Both items in. original gift boxes.
Also
woman’s
Wittnauer
wrist
watch,
$25.
Telephone
Lake Forest 2991-Y-4 Saturday.
STUDIO COUCH, excellent condition, and
man’s
overcoat,
size
388,
practically
new.
Deerfield
1287
after 6 p.m.
or
weekends.
EXCELLENT gifts for any occasion; and
wearing
apparel,
pair of
fine
Ruby
Lustres lamps. Come browse and you'll
be delighted. Dianes Beauty and Gift
Shop, 524 Waukevan
Ave., Highwood.
VERY reasonable: like new sleeping bag,

sled,

B-B

gun,

pellet

gun,

and

diamond

ring;

fobs,

chains
and
many
other
unusual
fine
pieces
of jewelry.
Lindwall’s
808
Oak
Strect, % block west of Green Bay Road,
Winnetka
6-0145.
DAVENPORT, drapes, some antique glass
and
china,
pewter,
Majolica
pieces,
lamps, shades, brass; 3 men’s
robes;
vases, large pressure cooker, hanging
walnut shelf, 2 boy’s jackets, fur collars, odds
and
ends.
Telephone
Lake
Forest 2552.

‘MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
EXCELLENT
French
sacrifice. Beautiful
$95. Henry Weber,

small

Upright

Leduc
clarinet
at
symphonic
tone,
Lake Bluff 730.

(School

Piano),

4

inches
higher
than
a Spinet,
-longer
strings
and
sounding
board.
For
a
gift to a .prof. musician, a “Brooks”
bench,
half price. A wide
variety
of
new
spinets.
For appt.
day
or eve.,
phone R. J. Cook, Evanston, UN 4-1561
or GR 5-6020.
CELLINI accordion, $125; Arnold flute,
$50.
Both
like
new;
make
excellent
Christmas gift. Call HI 2-5710.
KIMBALL
spinet, fine instrument, wonderful tone, $465; clarinet, wood, $65.
HI 2-1673.
WALNUT
Steinway,
large baby
grand,
Louis 15th, make offer. Deerfield 387.

WANTED TO

garden

machines,

tools,

washing

golf

windows,

machines,

sets,

used

plumbing,

sinks, bathtubs.

doors,

GUARANTEED

radiators,

WE
BUY,
SELL
AND
TRADE
STOCKADE
TRADING
POST
Milwaukee
Ave.
Wheeling,
Wheeling 247

Th.

1951
1951
1950
1949
1946

COINS and unused stamps. Loca] private
collector pays better than dealers. Silver, gold, copper coins, before
1935;
good condition or tarnished. Telephone
Lake Forest 3271, evenings.

McCALLUM CHEVROLET
INC.
191 E, DEERPATH
LAKE FOREST 3200

LOST AND FOUND

USED

LOT

Dodge
Chrys.

BUY

WANTED, reasonable, used upright piano
in good mechanical condition; cabinet
. finish
immaterial.
HT
2-3089.
USED Drill Press in good condition for
home work shop. Telephone evenings,
Deerfield 698J.
‘
;

CROWDED

4

hard top; R &amp; H, auto.
Imp.
4-dr.; R &amp; H,

trans.
power
(

51

Chrys. Windsor
trans.
50 Dodge 4-dr.; R
49 DeSoto cl. cpe.;
48 Buick conv.; R
Plymouth 4-dr.;
Chrys. Windsor;
Ford 2-dr.; full

cl. cpe.;

R

&amp;

H,

Stude. Champ.
4-dr.; heater, OD.,
seat covers. Officials car, new car

1952

Stuae. Champ. 2-dr.; heater, radio,
O.D., fully equipped.
Hudson
Super 2-dr.; radio, heater.
Stude. Champ.; R. D.H. 4-dr.; radio, heater, O.D.
Ford Convertible; radio, heater.
Stude. Champ. R.D.H.; heater, O.D.
Ford 3-pass. Coupe; heater.
Stude. % ton pickup; ex. condition.
OTHERS

TO

Trades
Open

CHOOSE

&amp; H, auto. trans.
R &amp; H, ww., fl. dri
&amp; H, Dyna.
;
H. » ww.
R &amp; H, fluid dr.
price, $350,

"

ies

Chrysler-Plymouth
1740

Agency

First

HI
Highland

2-2500

Park

USED
CARS

FROM

Evenings

@

RAVINIA MOTORS
Inc.
First

St.

Highland

Phone

HI

Park,

Ill.

2-1854

PLYMOUTH,
1941
4-door
Special
luxe; has 1947 Dodge motor, low mileage. Exceptionally good rubber. Phone
or Sat. &amp;
evenings
1153R
Deerfield
Sun.
EVROLET,
1929 model 2-door sedan,
aitan running condition. $100. Call
VS
Lake Forest 1143 after 7:30 p.m.

AUTO

BUYING

A USED CAR?

BUY

WITH
NEW
FROM
A NEW
1951 DeSoto
4-dr.,

CRN

1952

1950
1951
1950

1949
1949
1949
1043
1947
1939

1940
1941

1914

ins
:

Inc.

Accepted

Friday

CAR
CONFIDENCE
CAR
DEALER
perfect
con-

cts
or
a
eG

Chevrolet

4-dn,

top

Belvidere

hard

Aeeesecegenconenvensadunpndwnatntdunamadiiiel $1,695

Plymouth

4-dr.,

light

green

Plymouth

Dodge
Bition

club

coupe;

Fe
ee

radio,

ae

SALES,

First

St.

$

INC.

HI

bike,
English
style;
new. Call HI 2-3263.

Large selection; all rebuilt, most repainted. Many like new, $10
and up.
:
HIGHLAND
PARK
CYCLE
SHOP
‘
486 Central at Sheridan
HI 2-136
GIRL’S blue 26 inch Schwinn bike, like
new. Call HI 2-1212.
\

Packard 4-dr. sedan ......cecss-- $
Hudson 4-dr. sedan .........------ $

MOTOR

BICYCLES
GIRL’S
Schwinn
26 inch, almost

BOYS’

coupe, very good consik
a
eee

DESOTO-PLYMOUTH

and

way

bank

the

NATIONAL
BANK
Highland
Park

$1,295

DeSoto 4-dr., carry-all sedan $1,295
Olds. club sedan .2......ecencese-- $1,295
Dodge 4-dr., fluid drive ....$1,195
Mercury Gorn... ..cccackvesslosvecceos $ 895
MOGLGR

LOANS

car

your
oney.
oe IRST
of

Finance
co

1,995

~ fully

OOUINDOE
ok
a Se $1,895
DeSoto 4-dr., auto. drive ....$1,795
Plymouth

\

*

guarantee,

TERMS

1778

auto

MESIROW MOTORS

SELL

1952

MANY

en

‘

IS

steer.

USED CARS

1949
1948
1947
1947

®

OUR

52
51

GUARANTEED

1950
1950

‘

oa
ae

OVERSTOCKED

@

ONE OWNER

TO

eat
ade

CLEARANCE
WE’RE

AUTOMOBILES

PRICED

OK

Chevrolet, Deluxe, 4-door sedan.
Chevrolet Deluxe 6 passenger cpe. —
Chevrolet 4-door.
}
Buick
Super
4-door.
+e
Chevrolet Aero sedan,
2

LOST:
December
4, large male
collie,
tan with white markings. Reward. Televhone Lake Forest 307.
LOST—red
coin’
purse;
lost
around
Northwestern
depot
Saturday.
Contained
valuable identification. Reward.
ONtario
2-8571
collect.
LOST:
Labrador Retriever, black, white
mark on chest, Dec. 4th, Highland Park
License 444. Reward. HI 2-7020.
oe
LOST: lady’s gold Hamilton wrist watch,
gold wrist band, H.P. business district,
near bank, Dec. 2nd. Deerfield 509.
LOST: Lady’s gold wrist watch and band;
missing since weekend
after Thanksgiving. Reward. Call HI 2-7133.
MISSING since November 18: smal] short
haired light brown dog; white feet and
chest, brown eyes
and
nose.
Male.
Child’s pet; reward. Call Deerfield 19.

H.P.

FOR SALE

WESTINGHOUSE
portable radio-victrola
combination,
2 mahogany
record cabinets. HI
2-5607.

NEW

USED CAR
SPECIALS

blackboard;

size 9 and
11 boy’s skates, girl’s 5,
$1.00 a pair; scout uniform, clothing,
1266 Elmwood Ave., Deerfield.
ANTIQUE
JEWELRY
Variety
of
lovely
bracelets,
earrings,
necklaces,
cameos.
Garnet necklace and
earrings, French porcelain miniatures in
earrings for pierced ears, rare amethyst
and cameo
brooch
and
earrings,
choice

amethyst

BUY

antiques,
glassware,
china,
silver,
cutglass
glass
and
guns,
fishing outfits, toys,

sewing

storm

TO

: WANTED

books,

-

Complete settine for 8 people. Including
tray with sugar &amp; creamer, 4 sets salt &amp;
pepper shakers, 8 demi-tasse spoons; like
new
in
anti-tarnish
chest.
Priced
for
quick sale, $149. HI 2-5219,

deep

30 gal. automatic gas water heater $74.50
PRECICIRG GCRUUIIOE iicceit hi ccicdgtasersenttcnses $10.65
I
RR
2a
a
sua ied 6%e
WTA
DEO | xcnphi, Antccidtaehoeseiens 42c
sq.
ft.
Gun type: Ol] -DAYNEE | cicvcecscccisscccs-s-- $112.50
54
inch
Sink
and
Cabinet
........ $94.95
595

model
and

covdition.

LOVELY
old wing chair, down cushion,
buff color velvet, $85; sewing cabinet,
$10;
hand
crocheted
bedspread,
$50.
HI 2-4145.

ARNOLD

Deerfield

gal.

26-INCH
deluxe
girl’s
Schwinn
bicycle,
$25; Hollywood
twin beds, $10 each;
English
coach
style buggy,
$5.
Everything in good condition. HI 2-3483.

UPRIGHT
piano, B flat clarinet, violin,
dinette
table;
Duncan
Phyfe
dining
room table and buffet, chairs; Amprosound projector, large screen; hospital
humidifier,
Hotpoint
electrie
stove,
Phileo
refrigerator,
Hotpoint
Deepfreeze,
Bendix
washer,
books,
bookspring

5

double bed, box springs
good
condition.
Phone

refrigerator,
sacrifice. HI

HI 2-3295,
land Park,

Call

275

good
$115.

2-4024.

cases,

$125.

COMPLETE

TWO
radio-phonographs.
Motorola
with
record changer; Farnsworth, no changer.
Bargains.
900
Dean
Ave., or HI
USED
must

for

a

$3397...

roadbed
and
track,
switches,
master
remote
control
handle;
value $1,500,
for quick sale $475. HI 2-6707.

NINETEEN
INCH
Traveler
TV;
working
condition.
A
buy
at
HI
2-83380.

Hep-

plewhite,
Empire
and
Victorian
desks,
_ chests, sofas, tables and chairs, decorative
accessories; fine china in Coalport,

eae

ae

Fi]

ce
a es

875
195

BUICK
1950 Super convertible, excellent
shape
mechanically;
top and
exterior
perfect. Dark green, tan leather; reasonably
priced.
Phone
owner,
HI

GIRLS’

BUSINESS

150
95

2-0580

AND

1—Old

established

ANCHOR

inch

or 26

inch.

OPPORTUNITY

Owner must sell.
2—Long_
established
bargain.
8—Fine dry cleaning
ness.
HI

24

tavern

in

Highwood.

and

a

¥
Good

restaurant.
pressing

ae

husi‘

REAL ESTATE

2-0093

Res.

HI

2-0087

2-0762.

BUICK
4-dr.
sedan.
Has
1949
motor.
$800. Can
be
seen
at ‘“Hi-Neighbor
Record
Shop,”
260
Waukegan
Ave.,
Highwood. HI 2-6224.
CHEVROLET,
1950, deluxe coupe; blue.
Telephone Lake Forest 3228.
CHEVROLET
for sale. I am leaving for
Germany. 1949 2-door; looks and runs
like new.
Seat covers,
radio,
heater;
A-1
condition. Call after 5 p.m., HI
2-2098. 426 Pleasant Ave.
CHEVROLET,
1951
convertible;
8,000
miles.
Canary
color;
private
owner.
HI
Perfect
condition,
many
extras.
2-1548.
FORD
customized convertible; new special paint and custom upholstery, 1936
Ford
chassis
with
1941
motor
and
transmission,
hydraulic brakes, sealed
beamed headlights, dual carburetor exhaust, Southwind heater, long shackled
sway bar, other special features. A real
bargain at $225. Call Winnetka 6-3467
after 6 p.m.

BLACK: GOLD
Horticultural

ing

Fertilizer

pre-glacial

deposit

Business.

of

Amaze

millions

of ©

cubic yards,
rich
in Nitrates, Calcium,
Ammonia, Sulfates, Magnesium, etc. 10,000 cubic yards, excavated in stock piles
will make 840,000—$1.00 bags. Lack of
capital compels sale. Moderate initial investment, pay as you sell.

CONSERVATION
CECIL PINKOUS,
MUNDELEIN

CORP.
PRES.

6-6864
é

THE

Highland

Park

not for sale. The
by Lucille Jones.

Sitting
service
Call HI

Service ‘is
is 0;
2-6258,

“

�BUSINESS

OPPORTUNITY

WOR
rent: garage, 532 Waukegan
Ave.,
or Sheridan Rd., Highwood, Ill. Established location, formerly Grandi Bros.
Garage.
Long lease. For appointment,
HI 2-1877.
ree to

BUSINESS SERVICE
FAST — EXPERT
TV SERVICE
and

DAY
Mon.

INSTALLATION
and
Sat.
8 a.m.
Phone
HI
2-0530

thru

CLOGGED
Have
the
struction;
and

traps

cleaned,

the obmess.

repaired,

built

COMPLETE
SEWER
SERVICE
Jeep trench
digger, water lines, electric
cable,
foundations.
WOODALL’S
Phone Wheeling 232

LAKE FOREST SCRAP
SCRAP

IRON
LAKE

- RAGS
FOREST

44

We
welcome
all strangers
on
8
service.
1875 ST. JOHNS AVE.
HIGHLAND
PARK,
ILL.

day

CABINET

CO.

1980 MAPLE
AVE.,
EVANSTON
Cabinets custom made to fit your needs.
For free estimate call GReenleaf 5-7686
or

HI

Leslie M.

pital,

as

illness.

much

as

they

would

Leslie

normally

spend at a large dance to the Deborah Boys’ club fund.
This fund
aids 1,500 underprivileged boys.

place

2-7238

|Steamers

SNOW REMOVAL
GENERAL HAULING
RELIABLE

POLAR

-

EFFICIENT

a panel
Health

Paintine
Tel
HI

All

work
done
with
back
hoe.
Fast—Simple—Economical
Systems
Driveways
Mains
Trenching
Systems
Basements
SNOW
PLOWING
1397
McDaniels
Ave.
HI
2-7136
Highland
Park, Il.
WINTER! !
Time
to
repair
sticking,
dragging,
doors;
add
closet,
extra

SNOW
BY

attic

space.

job
of
2-1636.

car-

‘CUSTOM
SNOW PLOWING
JOB OR SEASON'S CONTRACT
IMMEDIATE SERVICE
LAKE
FOREST
2846
SNOW

PLOWING

for regular service
Harvey
Anderson,

2375

SYSTEMS

through
Glencve

representative

CONSTRIICTION
ENGINEERS
6-3971

MASON
repzair. stone work, chimney and
fireplace
building.
40
vears
in same
trade. William
Otten, Tel. Northbrook

CATERING

CHRISTMAS

SMALL DANCE COMBO
HI

Call

Lake

was

of

the

League

of Women Voters and a member of
the Highland Park Hospital auxil-

iary.

During

Rubens

of

the

em-

was

World
an

Highland

American

of-

Red

War

active

Park

II

Mrs.

worker

chapter

with

of the

Cross.

She is survived by two sons, Walter L. of Chicago and Charles, who
is serving with the army at Ft. Riley, Kans.; her mother, Mrs. Edward
Landau
of
Los.
Angeles,
Calif.;
and
a brother, Homer
of
New York City. Her husband preceded her in death September 23
of. this year.

his son, Delroy,

avenue, a member of the
Park
police
force;
his

Private
funeral
services
held Tuesday in Kelley and
ding funeral chapel.

HERE
Arends

chapter

had
High-

were
Spal-

Miss
kee in

Cobb
1884

of

Cobb,

Highland

was
and

several
Park.

born in Milwaumoved with her

family to Highland

Park

when

she

was two years old. She lived at 261
Laurel avenue until 20 years ago
when she moved to Florida.

She attended Chicago Kindergarten college, now National College
of Education in Evanston, and was

the first kindergarten teacher at
Elm Place school. She later conducted
a private
her home.

kindergarten

at

Miss Cobb was a member of
Highland Park Woman’s club and
of

Trinity

She

Episcopal

is survived

church.

by

her

brother

Daniel
L.
Cobb,
postmaster
of
Highland Park, and two nephews,

Daniel L. Cobb Jr., and
Lampson of Lake Wales.
Episcopal services were
Monday in Lake Wales.

William
held on

THEY ARE!
Sewmachine

Winners

Contest

Announced

W

get

painting

Vahnewn

FFI

9

and
177A

PETS

YOUR-DOG-&amp;-MINE
or. Retter Homes
&amp;
care,

feeding,

POODLES,

Kennels
(dog
Gardens)
for

heating.

Skokie

mites north of
(Wis.)
36-F-5.

brown

or

black

editbest

Highway

state

line.

miniature

pup-

pies;
desirable
bloodlines.
Telephone
Fillton
65-2596.
YEAR old boxer dog to good home: AKC.
registered.
Has been
wormed
and inoculated; excellent with children, $25.)
Telephone
TRinity
2-8646,
IRISH
setters: ideal Christmas present;
pedigreed,
proven
hunting
and
show|
strains,
15 -months.
old, housebroken.
For

details

telephone

ONtario

2-3192

|

TUNING @ RF PAIRING

Robert

PIANO
tuning and reconditioning. Member of American Society of Piano Tech- |
nicians. E. Zaboth,
formerly
of Lyon
and
Healv. member
of N.A.P.T.
Lake
Zurich, 5841.

PLANTS&amp;

2-0854

BUI.BS

AFRICAN
VIOLETS.
Reliable plants for
particular
people.
Gillette,
169
Washington Circle, Lake Forest 516.

Arends

awards

Dots Contest’’ winner, Mrs.
with

contest

was

2,763,

several

judges
the

a new

Paul S. Miller,

Norman

exact

number

others guessed

the

Domestic

Hirsch

and

of dots
right

Sewmachine
1425

Jake

Fell.

in the

answer,

Oakwood
Mrs.

contest

Mrs.

to ‘’Count-Theavenue,
Miller’s

picture,

Miller’s

shown

entry

entry

Although
bore

the

earliest postmark.

ROOFING |
you

a

wood

Wilmette
877,
Headquarters”

ment

and

care.

shingle

roof?

Call

your
“Roof
Treating
for
its
proper
treat-

Free

inspection

and

consultation.

RECONDITIONED
Singer _ portable,
$39.50; $5
down. Reconditioned cabinet machine, $39.50. 614 Central Ave.,
HI
2-3811.

- SEWING

662

All

Merchandise
Will

Be

Certificate

Notified

By

Winners
Mail

MACHINES

MACHINE

SERVICE

Necchi
Domestic
Expert
repair
on
ANY
MAKE
ork
Guaranteed
Arends
Sewing
Machine
Co.
Central Ave.
HI 2-5200

TREE SURGERY

LOVELY
red
and
white
male
cocker
spaniel,
7
mos.;
gorgeous
coat and
sunny disposition, housebroken, inocuted, AKC registered. Clarkdale Cockers, Deerfield 626W.
:
:

DONALD
G.
WORRALL,
ARBORIST
Expert tree work, shrub and evergreen
care.
Tree
removal,
power
saw
work.
Low cost, efficient ser~ice, Call Wheeling 2387,

50.

He

Park

she

of the

Daniel

Forest

PETS

Page

much

land

where

late
mayor

BOARD YOUR DOG
AT LOWRY'’S

TREES

ENTERTAINMENT |

2-1630

interior

$i

SF iwiNG

CHRISTMAS
tree lot for rent, excellent
location
in business
district;
4
way
traffic, plenty of space. HI 2-6053.

For Hire
Reasonable
Prices
Call after 6 P.M.
or

in

1925

president

the

times

GUITAR
lessons in your home. Spanish
guitar,
Hawaiian
guitar,
uke,
banjo,
mandolin.
Instrument
furnished
while
learning.
JACK
MOORE,
HI
2-6284.

HAVE

A-1 CATERESS. Will take charge of your
dinners,
luncheons,
teas
and
cocktail
parties. Excellent references. Telephone
Mrs. Miks, MAjestic 38-1608.

HI

or

call.

EDWARD’S
P
&amp;
W
CONTRACTING
WINNETKA

Deerfield.

COMPLETE

SYSTEM
INSTALLATION
TRENCHING

All
sorts:
foundation,
water,
drain
tiling, ete.
Free estimates,
no obligation to have
our

in

was

since
a past

of

in Lake
daughter

Service
2-8058

hanging.

2-6980

avd
«

PIANO
SEPTIC

SEPTIC

Karsten

burial

Park
been

69, died last

j

EXTERIOR
Aecarath

paper

HI

(U.S. 41), 5%
Phone
Bristol

NORTH SHORE
REMOVAL SERVICE

Arrange now
the
winter.

and

C.
Varney,
156

took

T. Cobb,

Thursday
in her
home
Wales, Fla. She was the

BROS.

and
Decorating
22-2482
or
HI

PAINTING

services

spending

REDECORATING

CONGER

month

Miss Anne

Rubens,

INSTRUCTION

Septic
Water
Sewer

or

&amp;

hos-

a four

of Deerfield; two daughters, Mrs.
William
Owens
of Chicago,
and
‘Miss Betty Haggie of Evanston; and
four grandchildren.

disVs.

Landau

Sunday in Highland Park
Co-proprietor
of
the

tral avenue, Mrs. Rubens was born
November 25, 1905 in St. Louis,
Mo.
She
had
lived in Highland

parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Haggie
of Deerfield; a sister, Mrs. J. O’Shay, and a brother, Howard, also

Speakers included Eugene Rappaport,
director
of the
National
Conference of Christians and Jews,
William Heintzheimer, secretary of
the
Anti-Defamation
league
and
Paul L. Hill of the North Shore
Mental Health Clinic.
PAINTING

HARRETT

basement

after
in

on

had been residing in

|

STOCKS
Investor’s Service of America invites you
to
try
our
service
in
listed
stocks.
Dealer,
Broker,
Adviser,
Ole
Nielsen,
Proprietor, 104 North Washineton Circle.
Lake
Forest,
Illinois.
Telephone
Lake
Forest
2191.
IN GOD
WE
TRUST.

improve

cemetery.

life

the

Survivors include

Several members
of the parish
of Immaculate Conception church
attended a North Shore open meeting
Sunday
night
sponsored
by

enn
—= em eee

Do.
your
unusual
small
pentry and painting. HI

Deerfield

died

Francis’

and

and

of second
Highland

For Mental Health
Panel Discussion

1192 GRIFFITH ROAD
LAKE FOREST 2726 OR 2727

shelf;

at Fitzgerald

49,

ployed by the Evanston Post
fice at the time of his death.

need your help.”

Sponsor Meeting

ICE COMPANY

MELVIN

St.
after

Evanston

his

Prejudice.”
Interior Decorating Service. Custom made
draperies, bedspreads, ete. Furniture and
rug
cleaning;
painting
and
decorating.
Excellent workmanship.
Viola Heap
HI 2-3853
HI 2-6668

in

Funeral

Chicago

Donations may be mailed to Mrs.
Louis Behr at 345 Sheridan road,
or she may be reached at HI 2-3477
for further information.

B’nai B’rith, to hear
cussion
on
‘Mental

1

Evanston,

Hortense

Chestnut Court Book Shop on Cen-

Haggie,

Mr. Haggie

will be “No supper, no music, no
dancing,
no
time,
no
place,
no
party, but there are greater benefits from your subscription for the

boys who

Mrs.
47, died
hospital.

Haggie
M.

December

METAL

SAM WOO LAUNDRY

CHRISTO-CRAFT

Obituaries

The Deborah Woman’s club has
announced its fourth annual “‘Let’s
Not
And
Pretend
We
Did”
party.
People are asked to give

Miss Anne T. Cobb

Mrs. Walter L. Rubens Sr.

PER
a
a

The Deborah women report there

SEWERS

electric ‘rod cut out
no digging, no lawn
SEPTIC TANKS

grease

NIGHT
9 p.m.

to

Deborah Women
Hold Annual ‘Let’s
Pretend’ Benefit

We'd like to thank everyone who entered our
contest. Merchandise certificate winners will be notified
by mail within a few days.

END

SEWING
662

MACHINE

Central

CO.

HI 2-5200

Thursday, December 11, 1952

�Where

it can be done
FLOOR

COVERING

LINOLEUM

DOWNING'S
FUEL

FLOOR

OIL

ASPHALT

HEATING EQUIPMENT
GAS AND OIL BURNERS
SALES AND SERVICE

LINOLEUM

Phone HI 2-3804
BRAUN

BROS.

444 Central

OIL CO.

Highland

BREE CER SSR
TOWING

Fender

®

Painting

@

Repair

Leading

|

Rent

FOR

Watch

and

eee

a New

Official

WALL

HIRE

=

phone,

can

617

Watch

AND

:

Evanston
GR.

5-9583

PTTL
AUTO RADIOS

GENUINE

Motorola

and

Universal

- Philco - Zenith

20th Century

RRR

SERVICE

~ PACKARD
Sales

and

Packard-North
Inc.
A safe
All

place

makes

562 Lincoln

to buy
and

Shore
a used

car.

for

the

PARK,

Winnetka

6-3070

Lencioni
Road,

HI

Highland

Furnace and

Cleaning

Engraving

Western

Phone

R.R.

HES SRR RRR

CLEANING

EREEREERRe

Ave.
Highwood

Deerfield

ER RRR

ment
dows

and DOORS

complete

line

for

- Case-

Windows - Picture Win- Porch
Enclosures
Doors
FREE ESTIMATES
616

Center

YOU’RE

IT CAN
reading

from

this page

the

877

for 35

Venetian
Columbia

@

Bamboo

Blinds—Draperies

e

Window

Shades

668

Blinds
Lattishades

CENTRAL AVE.
HI 2-2350
Highland

Park

On

PAGE?
right now!

So do most of the people who subscribe to the Highland Park News, Deerfield Review and Highwood News.
The cost of an ad on this page is small
. . $3.70 per week for a two-inch square on a yearly basis. Why not phone
HI! 2-4500 today and let us prepare a layout for you?

Years

We do our own diamond setting.
Have your diamonds set in moderns.
settings. Payments arranged.

Authorized

Sales and Service
Auto Body
Painting &amp; Repairing

KLEEBURG BUICK
INC.
1732

ct

t
i.

}

|

HI 2-4806 |.

First

BREESE EEREE

BROS.

@
@

St.

BE DONE”

bank

PAINTS — SUPPLIES

Effective Are Advertisements

the ““WHERE

Across

Moving
Hauled

e eee
SHADES

LANDI

SILJESTROM

RUSCO COMBINATION
METAL STORM WINDOWS
A

NEMEROFF

BUICK

Chicago

and

in—

BUICK SALES SERVICE

Darnell

Fill

and Jewelry
Them FREE

EUERCRSER
eRe eee
BUICK SERVICE

EXPRESS

and, Delivery on
same day.
.967 OSTERMAN

2-2500

YOUR

JEWELERS - OPTICIANS
Tal. Highland Park 2-0630

Holes

Dirt:

Pickup

Service

Double Hung Windows

Your Rings
We Check

I. H.

Bound

4-3034

and

Plan

Bring

Hauling

Black

Year

LOSE

Factory
General

HI

SCREENS

DON’T

MOTORS
&amp;

Payment

DIAMONDS

Evanston

Owner—W.

Next

Our

etc.

Main

DEERFIELD

Pay

Sweaters,

20 0R See
TRUCKING

LAKE BLUFF 2575

Well...

Button

To

First

BEN

Guaranteed

How

&amp;

Machine

Use

Belts

Hand

UNiversity

INC.
Agency

—

TO

MESIROW

CLEANERS

Satisfaction

Service

DSRS eee
STORM WINDOWS &amp; DOORS

WAYNE
HI

Ree

GO

Shirts,

Buttons

350

$1500.00

602

Vogue Fabric Shop
733

Deerfield

Chrysler-Plymouth

1740

Set, $158.00

SERVICE

Blouses,

Pleating

Authorized

EERE ER eRe eee
CLEANERS

454 Waukegan
2-0455

Rd.

Linens,

USED CARS

Ave.
HI 2-7211

Engagement Rings
FOR THE WEEK
or wht. gold ...... $185
or wht. gold ......
$85
or wht. gold ...... $275
Tel. HI 2-0630
the Bank—35 Years

Other Sets to

eee Ree

Towels,

—TAILORS—
Waukegan

Highwood Glass
&amp; Paint Co.
963 Waukegan
Phones

On

gifts

28-Diamond

MONOGRAMMING

DEERFIELD CLEANERS
810

Diamonds SPECIAL
¥2-ct. set in yel.
ct.
set in yel
3%4-ct. set in yel.
Highland Park
Across from

Service

DRESSMAKERS

$39.7%

I. H. NEMEROFF

Boiler

Deerfield

-

See our fine selection of watches and
for Christmas.
Time Payments.
Open until 9 p.m. Friday

1010 Hazel Ave., Deerfield

North

$42.50
Free

Park

2-5545

All Types of Heating

ILL.

It takes more than
a few ‘‘magic
words”’ to get some
ugly stains out of
clothes. Let us work
miracles
on your
clothes.

We Pick-up
and Deliver

models.

the

BSR
HEATING

FOR THE BEST

QUALITY CLEANING AT
REASONABLE PRICES

Service

Deerfield

Craftsmen

INTERIORS

WINDOW SHADES
MIRRORS - GLASS TOPS
WALLPAPER
ENTERPRISE
GUARANTEED
PAINTS

All

PACKARD

TILE

VENETIAN
BLINDS

TELEVISION-RADIO
1858 FIRST ST.
Hi 2-0341
HIGHLAND PARK
SERSERRERESERE

call

Installation

DRY

ST
TT is
VENETIAN BLINDS

Repairs &amp; Sales

Tile

Tile

Estimate

Call

Designers

TILE

Bathrooms, Kitchens &amp; Powder Rooms
Modernized
with
Real
Ceramic Tile,
Miraplastic Tile, Rubber,
Vinyl,
Cork
&amp; Asphalt Tile Floors.
Complete Tile
Service. Free Estimates. Phone Evenings.
TILE-CRAFT
830 Woodward Ave.
Deerfield 1049

AUTO RADIOS
Custom

free

2-2028

Repair

Jewelry

Inspector

FLOOR

HI

by

Convertibles, Tudors,

Grove

Wall

Daniel

IT’S
SHEER
MAGIC

Fordors

Rubber

1379

olans

Car

be made

@

Plastic

Community Gas Heating
SERVICE

- U=-DRIVE-IT
All arrangements

Asphalt

@

Town Floor Company

TILE

HIGHLAND

TELEPHONE

RECONST.
HI 2-0077

CARS

SS

ROAD

DAHL’S
SSERGReae

@

A. E. Savage, Owner
SHERIDAN

Alignment

AUTO
2058 Ist St.

Koroseal

use of our expert mechanics.

el
1864

Radiator

@

459 Roger Williams Ave.

Repair

- OPTICIANS

COVERING

Linoleum and
Linoleum Tile

For

BERR S RR Re eee
JEWELERS — WATCH REPAIR

Wheel

@

TILE

&amp; RUGS

&amp; LINOLEUM

HI 2-0566

24 HOUR
TOWING SERVICE
@

PLASTIC

CARPETS

Install it yourself or make

Park

SHOP

RUBBER

GULISTAN

FLOOR
@

JEWELERS

Watch

A.

Fine
Repairing

MORDINI

HI 2-3905
Highland Park,

Ill.

i

�se.

Rm
oa

rts

Start

jw
Tet

B

jw;
&lt;

B

Nt
&lt;

gh) Bet
p
a

D

Pie
oe

jpoZ?)
BrP
San Sore

B

7
*&lt;

“Over Quarter Poatary of Quality Leadership”
ART

OLSON

PAUL

PACEMAKERS

FOR SMART

OLSON

AMERICA

What best dressed
Christmas trees will wear...

VISIT THIS CONVENIENTLY LOCATED MEN'S SHOP WHERE
YOU CAN SHOP WITH EASE AND COMFORT...
— JACKETS

— SWEATERS

—

For Every Purpose—lIdeal Gift

‘McGREGOR DRIZZLER sid Gascon eae $10.95

WIND CHEATER (wool lined) ..............
UR RRER DRE CUOR oie tice
REVERSIBLE JACKET .....................-22.-.
M¢ NYLON ANTI-FREEZE ..............-..-........
yy WHITE STAG ROUGH NECK ................
| NYLON FREEZONE |...020...
RN OO oe,
DA VINCI DACRON ..2....00200o:.coc..
RPORTCASIOR cocci BO,
WHITE STAG MT. HOOD...
BOMATO-IAG degen
ZERO-KING (zip out liner) .......0...........
— DOWN FILL JACKETS

$15.95
$16.95
$19.95
$22.95
$22.95
$25.95
$25.95
$29.95
$32.50
$34.50
$34.95
$35.00
—

(good for 30 below zero)
MT. BAKER (fur collar) ..................--.... $45.00
RANCHER (fur collar) ....................-..--. $57.50

— HOSIERY

—

SU
ooo os ee dei ec ccs $2.95 &amp; $3.95
FORSTMANN’S 6x3 Rib .......................... $2.00
FORSTMANN’S Cashmere ...................... $3.50
FORSTMANN’S

Lamb’s

FORSTMANN’S

Cashmere Argyles

Wool

$1.75

Handsome,

—

— SPORT

Luxurious

A “Must”

Sweaters That Say “Merry Christmas”
. Sleeveless...
FORSTMANN’S LAMB’S WOOL
(Hose to match $2.00)
CASHMERE MAJOR 3 ois.cicl. dk
$14.95
FORSTMANN’S CASHMERE ................ $18.00
LYLE &amp; SCOTT CASHMERE ............
.... $21.50
.. With Sleeves...
EPRT
Witte sea
Sets
$ 9.95
RAED I Ey
os eile ican sdkeese des ic occeeas $12.50
CASHMERE MAJOR .................0..000000000. $21.50

FORSTMANN’S

CASHMERE
... Cardigan...

LAMB’S

COATS —

in Every Man’s Wardrobe . .

CROSS GRAIN CORD
COUNTRY CLUB CHECK
TWEED
CAMEL JACKET
STROOK’S HEATHER
IMPORT SCOTCH HEATHER
IMPORT SCOTCH CHEVIOT

— SLACKS —
Superbly Tailored in Rich Fabrics
NOUNDS

Tete

$14.95

oe

666

CAMBRIDGE FLANNEL ........
GABARDINE i isicesesses
sie N eo.
eG
SUPERLATIVE FLANNEL ....
SUPERLATIVE GABARDINE

WOOL

WHEN IN DOUBT?
GIVE HIM ONE OF OUR “MILLION DOLLAR
LOOK” GIFT CERTIFICATES. GOOD FOR ANY
ITEM IN THE STORE. MAYBE HE MIGHT
WANT A NEW HAT FOR CHRISTMAS . .
DOBBS OR BORSALINO.

$15.50
$19.50
$27.50

— NECKWEAR —
Can’t

Be Christmas

Without A Tie...

LARGE SELECTION OF HAND MADE SILKS
IN VARIOUS PATTERNS AND COLORS
$2.00
$2.50
$3.50
$5.00
WSU
ST.60

CO

ART OLSON

”

yen

SPUN NYLON 6 x 3 Rib

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

Rich,

(Open Friday
Nites )

536 CENTRAL AVE.

COMPLETE

STORE

IN
HIGHLAND

FOR

MEN

(Open Nites from
Dec. 12-23 Incl.)

PARK

Phone

HI 2-2871
SS
whe

fa

Sa
pes, a

\

.

_
ae
73%

S

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                    <text>Thursday,

December

18, 1952

�——
Put

CHRIST
into

:

back

CHRISTmas

From the star over Bethlehem to the Christ-

But it is at the the crib of Bethlehem . . . and
in the many

mas wreaths over Fountain Square stretch
miles and miles . . . and almost 2000 years.
Do the wreaths of fir and holly, the bells

replicas of it that appear

at this

season . .. that we see reflected the true spirit
of Christmas.
This community effort to reflect the real
meaning of Christmas—to put Christ back into
Christmas—is one in which we can all take
pride. And if we are to gain the most from it
we will keep its inspiration with us not only
on Christmas but every day of the year.

and jolly Santa faces really bring us the true
meaning of Christmas? They have their place
—and they help us honor His birthday just
as the tokens brought by the three wise men
did in the long ago.

This advertisement

in the public interest is contributed

Christmas

Committee

to the Christian

of Highland Park by the Public

Service Company of Northern Illinois.

Family

�ks

+ DR

a

ACEC
Vol. 27, No. 39

Thursday,

Form Committee To Speed Up
Delinquent Tax Collection
Lake

County

Farm

bureau

and

the

Civic

league

joined

forces to take some action in collecting of delinquent taxes in
Lake county. They have formed a committee which has met
with State’s Attorney Robert C. Nelson and County Treasurer
Hugo L. Schneider Jr. The committee had five main recommendations for improving and speeding up delinquent tax collections:
Past

Coin Containers for
Seals At Post Office
Arne

the

W.

Lake

County

sociation’s

losis

Makela,
46th

Tuberculosis
Annual

Christmas

announced

Chairman

Seal

that

of

As-

Tubercu-

Sale,

today

the

week

during

coin containers were placed in the
Deerfield post office for the convenience of residents who did not
receive
Christmas
Seals in the
mail. A supply of the seals was
left with each container and purchasers may help themselves to
what ever amount they desire.
Collected
These

After

Christmas

containers

lected shortly

will

be

col-

after Christmas

and

the money in them will supplement
the money raised by the mail sale.
Proceeds from both the mail sale
and the containers
will be used
to finance the program of the Lake
County Tuberculosis Association in
its never ending program for the
control of tuberculosis.
- At

the

end

of

the

4th

week

of

the Christmas Seal Sale, the total
received in the offices of the association now stands at $29,546.81,
Makela said. This is slightly over

the

amount

last

year.

received

by

this time

STATE LIBRARIAN
TO VISIT DEERFIELD
Mrs. Laura Langston, Chief of
the Extension Division of the Illinois State Library, will be a visitor
in Deerfield for three days during
the two week holiday period when
the West Deerfield Township Li-

brary will be closed.
The
Illinois
State

Delinquencies

1. Replace the individually typed
registered letter sent out by the
State’s Attorney with a printed letter and thus increase the number
of delinquents who were officially being informed of their delinquency. Research. indicated that an
increase in registered letter notification would bring an immediate
increase
in payment.
State’s Attorney Nelson not only accepted the
suggestion, but improved on it.

2. The State’s Attorney should
implement the judgements by getting an execution and having the
Sheriff levy on the property. The
State’s Attorney has pledged
his
cooperation, and it is assumed he
will also do this.
Future Delinquencies
3. That no interest or penalties

be

forgiven.

4. That the County Clerk add the
back delinquent personal property

taxes

to

the

present

tax

bill

just

as he does for real estate taxes.
5. That the County collector be
held responsible for collections and
that he levy on delinquent property
by authority of the continuing warrant in his tax book.
The Delinquent Tax committee
of the county board passed over
the suggestion of County collection
in favor of collection in the Justice
of the Peace courts of the various
townships. The adopted plan calls
for the State’s Attorney to start
suit in a J.P.
court
and
when

judgement

is had

against

the

de-

linquent, the Town constable can
seize his property for non-payment
of taxes.

Announced

For

Christmas

Issue

of

the

department

Deerfield

REVIEW

requests that all news

Although

and

con-

ber

19,

Decem-

sports

stories,

and

where possible, by 10 a.m.,
December 20. All other copy
must be turned in by Monday noon, December 22.
The
display
advertising
copy deadline for the December 25 issue will also be
advanced one day. Deadline
for classified ads will be
4:30 pm.
MONDAY,
December 22.

on

Christmas

held

at

midnight

Mass

at 1 o’clock.

Eve

followed
At

the

which

has

county

roadhouses.

School

At a meeting at the Deerfield
grammar school, Friday, December
5, the board of education, District

109, opened
eral

bids

from

contractors

for

seven
building

genthe

west side primary school.
The contract was awarded to the
lowest bidder, Otto Schultz, who
submitted a base proposal of $236,633. The board also elected to include _alternate one of $10,000 for
drives, walks and parking
area
construction. Alternates three and
four (deductions
amounting
to a

total of $1,986) were also taken.
Alternates 2a and 2b which provide
for paved play areas will be considered at a later date if finances
permit.

was

The

final

contract

signed

for a total of $244,647.

Work
on the

will be started immediately
Deerfield
building which

the architectural firm of
and Will has designed.

Perkins

Eighth Grade Dance Cancelled

low

midnight

Mass, high Mass, the choir will sing
“Third Mass in E Flat” composed
by A. H. Rosewig.
Mrs. J. J. Rink
is director and organist.
Personnel of the choir includes sopranos:
Mrs. Walter Krol, Mrs. N. King,
Mrs. Alex Willman, Mrs. W. Miniter, Mrs.
Stuart
Hamilton
and
Mrs. Kenneth
Jones.
Altos: Mrs.
J. J. Rink and Mrs. Fred Tarnow.
Bass: Jack Doyle, Joe Wachholder,
Joe
Schuessler.
Tenors:
Edward
Younglove and Henry Bernard.
Christmas hymns will be sung at

The

eighth

grade

dance

original-

ly scheduled for December 18 has
been cancelled due to the Christmas
program
school.

at

the

grammar

course

all

Mrs.

a.m.

teen-agers

Hugh

Riddle,

president

red

of

to has

two

been

formed

months

of

of the

as a result

parents’

plaints that

their

been

liquor in various

served

erns, that tragic

An

have,
tay-

consequences

Open

Letter

High

School

Dear

com-

children

have

Parents:

Had you realized that we have
over 1,000 homes?
Wouldn’t
it be grand if every evening dur-

ing the holidays a large number
of homes would be open to a
small comfortable group of our

HPHS
at

students?

home

come.

and

The

Plan

make

to

them

be
wel-

simplest of refresh-

suffice.

Let us all make it a good
holiday, a Merry Christmas and
be ready for the very best in
1953.
Will

you

a group

open

your

door

to

of your son’s or daugh-

ter’s friends?

We

hope

you

will.

Council of High-

land

Park

Highland
school

High

school.

Park High
PTA

board.

resulted and all manner of hearsay
voiced by the students themselves.
Backed by the high school board,
this committee proposes to investigate the complaints various schooi
officials have received.
Mrs. Charles Walker,
Bowen
Schumacher,

Leonard

Davidow,

Halbert Crews, and
Mrs.
compose the
committee.
members

Library,

don’t

Highland Park High school PTA,
told the NEWS Tuesday.
The committee which she refer-

11:30 prior to the midnight Mass.
“Silent Night,” “Oh Holy Night,”
and
‘Adeste Fideles’”
are among
those hymns which will be sung.
The Sunday schedule will be observed later in the day. Masses will
be held at 7 a.m., 8:30, 10 and 11:30

Cook

are John

Gould,

Riddle
Student
president

of the student council; William Davidow, president of the senior class,
and Mimi Angster, editor of the

is to

Shoreline.
Mayor John Frantonius of Highwood said Tuesday,
“The
tavern
owners
know
that if they are
caught selling to minors in Highof
revocation
a_
wood, it means
of them
most
license and
their
wouldn’t be foolish to risk their
large investment on the few dollars
they might make breaking the law.
“We’re
very serious about this
(selling liquor to minors) and the

proper

police department works hard here

cataloguing of the books, eliminating obsolete volumes and other
improvements that will be benefi-

at enforcing the law ... . we don’t
have many violations but if there

cial

over

will

be

the offending tavern is closed until the trial and then, if the tavern
owner is found guilty his license is

To

Mrs.

Help

Mrs.

Langston,

Haney

in

her

official

capacity, has visited the Deerfield
Library
several
times,
and
has
made
numerous
recommendations
for improvement. Her visit during

the latter part of this month
give

first

Helen

hand

an

of

service

extended

great

Haney,

to

period.

benefit

Librarian,

is a case where

This

to

Mrs.

and

Mrs.

Alice Clark, assistant librarian.
As previously announced, the Library will be closed from Decem‘ber 20th to January 4th, inclusive.
Borrowed books which become due

during this period, will have their
due dates automatically extended
a
‘ for:two
weeks.
ee

and

of the north

Student

through
their extension
division,
offers
special
services
to
the
smaller
Libraries
of
the
State,
whose resources are insufficient to
employ
a full
time
trained
librarian.

My

sensationalized

drink—but a committee of students
and parents has been formed to determine the best way to handle the
problem of drinking
among
the
small minority of those who do,”

ments

will be
by

have

repeatedly been seen in some

Build New

Holy Cross Will
Hold Midnight Mass
On Christmas Eve
Masses

reports

Otto Schultz to

organi-

Friday,

recent

“Of

zation news will be due next
Thursday; weddings or engagements,

many

exaggerated the extent of tavern-frequenting among the adolescent population, there is a small core of high school students.

tributors
observe
an early
deadline for the December 25
issue because of the Christmas holiday.

club

1952

War On Student Drinking

editorial

Church,

18,

Teen-agers, Parents Lead

Early Deadlines

The

December

either

ec

The breaking of ground for the new sch ool was witnessed by all the students of the
Deerfield grammar school and by W. E. Sheehan, Supt. of school; Otto Schultz, General
contractor; «Ruth ‘Mitchell, board member; Gordon Norman, board member; Margaret Tibbetts,

board

member;

H.

T.

Riedman,

president

of the Board

of Education;

Perkins and Will, architect; Arthur Pagel, school board member; Helen
dent; A. M. Kelly, Supt. of job from Perkins and Will and many others.

Lee

Cochran,

Ryan; P:T.A. presi-

a minor

suspended

is caught,

or revoked,”

the

mayor added.
He also said that in Highwood
the ordinance against
minors.
is
strictly enforced.
This ordinance

provides that minors are liable for
a fine up to $200 for even being in
(Continued
4

on

page

4)

�Deerfield
Opinions
umns

expressed

do

not

[All Deerfield Residents

Forum
in

these

necessarily

In Christmas Light Contest

col-

All

idea

of

“living”

as

expressed in this column last week,
very different from that of the
average high school student
at
_ Highland Park. The majority of us
gh school teen-agers are being
blamed for the actions of a small
Unfortunately

your

letter

just

_ added to the recent barrage of columns and articles condemning the
teen-agers. It is always easy to sit
back and criticize others, but often
hard to give a word of praise to the
_ deserving ones.
Let
me tell you a few of the
things we students do, which might
help to raise your opinion of us.

our

we

students

annual

asked

to give

school

the

high

money

for

drive.

We

chest

_ donated almost $1100, which was
_ distributed to worthy charitable or-

ganizations.

Believe In Good Sportsmanship
The
students themselves
have
_ tried to promote good sportsmanship,

and

letic
we

complete

events.
have

If

support

of ath-

don’t

believe

you

succeeded

in

these

two

i things, come to a high school basketball game, and see for yourself. More than 500 of the high
school students presented a musical Christmas concert for the public a few weeks ago. These are only
a few of the things students do
which are constructive.
We
teen-agers
have
problems
; which need to be ironed out, just
like you and the rest of the community have. But we don’t stand
by and let the problems go unoticed—we attempt to find a solution. If you need further proof of
this, come to a Student Council
meeting,

or

a Boys’

club

or

Girls’

club executive board meeting.
Give us a break. We teen-agers
admit we make mistakes, but inos stead of knocking us down as often

as

possible,

a hand,

and

lead us in the right direction.

The

majority

give

of

us

us
are

conscientious

young people who want to do the
right thing. Before you emphasize
the faults of others, count up to
ten—of

your own.
Mimi

Angster

Highland Park High school student

The Public Press, no tess than Public
Office, is a public trust.

DEERFIELD
REVIEW

New Officers Elected

In Amvets Auxiliary
The last business meeting of the
year of the Amvets Auxiliary was

held

Wednesday,

7WV ac

every

= eee

PUBLICATION
OFFICE
832 Todd Ct.
Deerfield,
Ilinois
Telephone Deerfield 485
HIGHLAND PARK OFFICE
St. Johns Ave., ens
Park,
Telephone ‘HI 2- 4500

“1775

Eben!

Subscription

_ Domestic

_ Single

Managing Editor
Business Manager
Rates—$2.75

Rate—$4.00

Copies—10c

per year

Cree

Foreign Rates on Application
“Entered as second-class matter Novemae 27,
1944, at the post office at Deer-

feld4, i Illinois, under the Act of March 8,
‘The

Copyright,
1952,
By
Highland Park Company
All Righta
Reserved.

‘Page

4

10

in

the coming
follows:

year

were

elected

as

President, Mrs. Mary Alice Murtagh; senior vice president, Mrs.
Paul Sedlak; junior vice president,

being

aglow

with

Not 25 homes brilliantly

Mrs.
ard

Elmer

Krase

Suess;

Hoffman;

and

treasurer,

secretary,

Mrs.

Eric

Banfield,

subscriptions

past president

were

purchased

veterans

$20.00

donated

hospital

to

the

for

Auxiliary District No. 2 hospital
fund for the purchase of cigarettes,
candy, etc. As a Christmas gift to
the
patients,
$25.00
in
canteen

books

were

donated

to the

hospi-

tal and $25.00: for the purchase of
magazine racks, etc. Mrs. Emmett
wishes
to
thank
all
those
who
donated used magazines and books
which
are always
greatly appreciated by the librarian at Downey
hospital. Special thanks are extended to all non-members who have
faithfully accumulated
books and

magazines for this purpose.
‘Mrs. Gerhard von der Linden,
Child Welfare chairman
reported
that $25.00 has been donated to the

local
chase
dren.

Public

Library

for

the

pur-

of books of interest to
Mrs.
von der Linden

chilalso

announced

completed

plans

Christmas

party

children

for

for

a
of

Amvets to be held on Sunday afternoon at 5:00 p.m., December 21.
Santa Claus will be there to greet
the children with plenty of gifts
and refreshments.
An addition to the kitchen will

be a 50 cup coffee urn to be purchased by the Auxiliary. During the
past week,
the
hall had
a new
paint
job,
with
new
drapes
in
preparation for the coming holiday
season.
The Amvets Auxiliary meet the
second and fourth Wednesday
of
each month
at the Amvets
hall.
Dues for 1953 are now being accepted, and any new or prospective
member is welcome to attend any
meeting.
in North

Dakota

Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth
Vetter
will
spend
Christmas
in Jamestown, North Dakota with Mrs. Vetter’s sister, Mrs. E. J. Young.

Ch.

The

the

you

desire.

Your

display

should

be

kept lighted each evening between
Christmas and New Year until 9:30
p.m.

For judging purposes the Village

race and Northwoods.

Gerhard

installed
the
newly
elected
officers.
Mrs.
George
Emmett,
hospital
chairman reported that during the
past year, $50.00 worth of magazine
Downey

Deerfield

Amvets

Rich-

Richard

von der Linden; sergeant-at-arms,
Mrs. Joe Schessler.
Immediately
after the election,

Mrs.

of

library,

Mrs.

Mrs.

a resident

are automatically in the contest.
There is no entry fee. The contest
is for amateurs only, so every resident should participate.
The decorations need not be expensive or
big. All you have to do is decorate
your door,
yard
or windows,
or
whatever part of your property you

will be divided into six districts as
follows:
No.
1—All
homes
north
of
Greenwood
avenue
and
west
of
Waukegan road.
No. 2—All homes west of Milwaukee
Road
tracks
south
of
Greenwood
avenue
and
north of
Deerfield road.
No. 3—All
homes
east of Milwaukee’ Road
tracks west of but
including
Rosemary
terrace
and
north of Deerfield road.
No. 4—All homes east of Rosemary Terrace and north of Deerfield road including Westgate ter-

III.

MEMBER
National Editorial Association
Illinois Press Association

Heather Hartwig
te
Russell
V.E. Deckert

December

the Amvets
hall. Outgoing president
Mrs.
Treve
Pottenger
presided at the meeting. Officers for

Christmas

eet

Deerfield

As

crude

recently

towards

committee for a better Deerfield.

Dear Mephisto,

school

point

lights during the Christmas holidays.

May we send this letter through
your columns to “Mephisto” who
wrote to you last week?

Just

indications

lighted but 250 homes with some sort of lighting is the object
of the citizens lighting contest being sponsored by the Citizens

Editor:

_ Your

We
on

Student ‘Tells Off’ Mephisto
the

Speak

constitute

the
opinions
of the
paper.
Letters
should
be brief and
should
contain
_the name and address of the writer,
whose
name
will be withheld if requested.

To

‘Deerfield Mothers

Ca

Bethlehem
church
will present a Christmas
play, “Christmas is a Miracle’’ on December 21 at
7 p.m.
Included in the
cast are John Carlson, Anita Pagel, Wendy Merner
and
Robert Camp.
The
play has become an annual
affair at the church and the
public is invited to attend.

No. 5—All homes south of Deerfield road and east of Waukegan
road.
No. 6—AIl homes west of Waukegan road and south of Deerfield
road.
The six judges for the contest

will

be

selected

from

among

the

members of the local garden clubs.
Ribbons will be awarded the three
best displays in each district. The
best display of the Vilage will then
be selected
from
the winner
of
each district and the beautiful trophy appropriately inscribed will be
presented to the winner.
Last year’s winner was the Donald. Kempf
home,
820
Beverly

place.

Deerfield and Bannockburn
Xmas Vacation Recreation
Grade School Boys’ Basketball
Mon., Dec. 12. DGS—10 to 12 noon.
Wed., Dec. 24. D@S—10 to 12 noon.
Sat., Dec. 27. DGS and Wilmot—
9 to 10:15 a.m.
Mon., Dec. 29. DGS—10 to 12 noon.
Wed., Dec. 31. DGS—10 to 12 noon.
Sat., Jan. 3. DGS
and Wilmot—
9 to 10:15 a.m.
Teen Agers
Mon.,
Dec.
22.
(Boys and
Girls)
DGS—7 to 9 p.m.
Tues., Dec. 23. (Boys) DGS—7
to
9 p.m.
Sun., Dec. 28. (Boys)
DGS—2
to
4 p.m.
Mon., Dec. 29. (Boys and Girls)—
7 to 9 p.m.
Tues., Dec. 30. (Boys) DGS—7
to
9 p.m.
Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth Grade
Girls’ Badminton-Volleyball
Mon., Dec. 22. DGS—1
to 3 p.m.
Tues., Dec. 23. DGS—1
to 3 p.m.
Mon., Dec. 29. DGS—1
to 3 p.m.

Tues.,

Dec.

30.

DGS—1

to 3 p.m.

High school girls—same schedule
as above except time of 3 to 5 p.m.
each day.

Open

to all children in the com-

munity.
Dorothy

Nichols

on

Honor

Roll

Dorothy Nichols, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. T. E. Nichols, 834 Forest
avenue
was
among
the 379 students
at Northern
Illinois
State
Teachers college who were named
to the honor role. In order to be
named to the honor roll a student

must have an all over “B” average for a twelve week period.

all

breathed

Monday

learned

that

are

living

now

a sigh

afternoon
only

pany

premises.

state

deputy

on

of

relief

when

twenty
the

Brick

Gustave
fire

we

people
Com-

A. Witzke,

marshall,

and

Russell
Batt, fire chief, made
a
complete inspection of the dwellings
and
gave
us
this
report.
Only one
section of one
of the
shacks is now occupied according
to Deputy
Witzke’s
investigation.
All but two of the ten trailers are
padlocked, and Mr. Hertel said that
many of the families had returned
to Texas.
Twelve people are living on the
second floor of the two story brick

apartment

building

he

said.

Dep-

uty Witzke recommended that another exit should be provided for
the second floor of this building
and that electrical wires
in this
building should be covered properly.
He
more

ordered
the installation
fire extinguishers.

Brick

Company Wants
Motel

of

to Build

Deputy Witzke told Mr. Hertel
that each trailer should occupy a
space of 40 feet by 25 feet.
Mr.
Hertel agreed
that the dwellings
were dilapitated and ‘fire traps”
and should be eliminated.
Deputy

Witzke

reported

that

Mr.

Hertel

said the Company
would
like to
erect a brick motel, but have been
told that this is in conflict with
county zoning ordinance, and also
that they must wait to make this
request until pending court cases
are settled.

The

Lake

County

Zoning

for action!

School Fire Brigades Recommended
We

think

that

plan for making

you

have

a

swell

our children more

alert
during!
fire
drills,
Deputy
Witzke! We hope that our fire and
school
authorities will give your
suggestion serious consideration in
their fire prevention program. Deputy Witzke has organized programs
at Diamond
Lake
and
Prospect
Heights.
Older children are designated as
fire chiefs, fire captains, and lieutenants, and given specific responsibilities during fire drills. Youngsters are taught to assist those who
have disabilities, to search cloak
rooms, wash rooms, gyms, and other spots while the building is being
emptied.
When
the
children
assemble
outdoors,
each _ teacher
takes a roll call to be sure that
every child is acounted for. Deputy
Witzke
also
emphasized
the
importance of regular unannounced
fire drills every two weeks.
Thank
You
Deputy
Witzke
and
Chief Batt
Chief Batt
day resting,
duty Monday
grateful to
time to this
tion.
Ever

since

should have spent the
as he was to be on
night.
We are most
him for devoting his
important fire inspec3,

Deer-

field mothers have been contacting
local

and

Officer Frank Ortiz of Glenview was recently appointed to
fill the vacancy left on the
Deerfield police force when
Francis Jones resigned:
He
served with the military police
in Australia

county

where

he

met

his

wife who was then serving with
the Red Cross. They were
married in Australia and have
a daughter ‘Mickey’ who is 8.
Mrs. Ortiz is on the faculty
of the National college of Education in Evanston as class
room supervisor. More recently Officer Ortiz has served as
special policeman in Northfield and Northbrook.

Teen-agers,

authorities

to

correct hazardous and unsanitary
conditions in regard to the gar-

Parents

(Continued
a tavern.
“We had

from

page

a case,”

the

“where

caught

but their parents

let

them

owner

testify
so

could

the

children

rewere

refused

against

there

3)

mayor

called,

the

was

to

tavern

nothing

we

do.”

Mrs. Riddle declared that education of parents will be as important a function of the committee as

exposure

of illicit liquor

sales and

encouragement of wholesome
parties for the young people.
Not

alone

problem
dents,

in facing

the

among

high

Highland

Park

is cooperating
Evanston in
a solution.
Board

with
an

drinking

High

New

effort

member

home

school

stu-

school

Trier and

to

work

Leonard

dow, his son, William,

out

Davi-

and Thomas

Swidler,
president
of the junior
class, represented
Highland
Park
High school at a meeting at New

Trier High school Monday night,
called for the purpose of making
plans

The

to lick the

drinking

representatives

meeting

primarily

problem.

attended
at

the

the

instiga-

—

tion of a group of students anxious
to help their erring contemporaries.
bage dump
after

and trailer camp. Delay

delay

has

postponed

action.

From the bottom of our hearts
we thank the state fire marshall,
Otto Dahl and Deputy Gustav Witzke

for

asking

tion. Our
Fire

for

letter

Marshall

state

was

fire

Dahl

on

4.

Deputy

Fire

Chief

Monday,

reported,

left a complete
the

Brick

but

Witzke

Russell

December

15.

Batt

He

not

investigated

and

set of orders

Company

to

Thursday,

telephoned

on

inspec-

dispatethed

December

only
September

Ortiz

Ordi-

nance prohibits dwellings on industrial property except for watchmen
whose continual presence is necessary.
Deerfield
mothers
contend
that because of hazardous and unhealthful conditions, this zoning ordinance should be strictly enforced.
At Levittown, New York, last week
two children lost their lives in a
small excavation 2 feet deep and 72
feet square.
At the Brick Company, deep gaping pits with water
at the bottom comprise a great deal
of the 33 acre original plot. These
pits are directly back of the dwellings
occupied
by
families
with
small children.
is
Mr. State’s Attorney—NOW

the time

Frank

the

same

with
day,

-

and sent on a report to Springfield -

that very night. That’s action! —

�Series of Tableaux Will Be

Otto Zschau

To Marry

Presented by Bethlehem Church

Mr. and Mrs. Howard R. Tarnow _
of

The Bethlehem Church again proudly presents its contribution to the Christmas season in the second annual presentation of the play, “Christmas Is a Miracle” to be held in the
Bethlehem church sanctuary between the hours of 7 to 8 p.m.

Sunday

Upper Grades Present

Wilmot
school
will present its
annual Christmas program tonight,
8 o’clock in the auditorium.
All
parents and friends are cordially
invited
to attend.
Pupils
of the
sixth, seventh
and eighth grades

will

present

the

play

“Why

the

Chimes
Rang.”
Members
of the
cast include: Susan Whitehead, Bill
Rogers,
Fred
Henniger,
Bonnie

Becker,

Martha

Oestriche, Don

In-

man,
David
Kinsey,
Ted
Nelson,
Emily
Wolters,
Gene
Johnson,
Marilyn
Visoky,
and
David
Rudolph.
Supporting
players
are:
' George
Haggard,
Sandra
Baarsh,
Susan Baarsh, Judy Lyons, Carol
Williams,
Gail
Haugland,
Donna
Sedgewick, Carol Rothchild.
The choir is composed of: Donna
Hugh, Julie Clampitt, Beverly Han-

son,

Susan

Silence,

Gail

Johnson,

Linda Thompson, Nancy Bartholomew, Josephine Bye, Janice Sund-

berg, Kay
son, Diane
Betty
Linda

Kraft, Barbara PatterOestriche, Judy Hensel,

Swigart,
Nelson and

Nancy _ Trotter,
Jeannine Becker.

In the
congregation
are:
Bar:
bara Busse, Mildred Visoky, Emily
Winters,
Gwen
Winters,
Kathy
Winters,
Carol Frost, Mary Hagbloom, Holly Haggard, Judy Reeb,
Glenda Lockwood, Carol Root, Bonnie Inman, Dennis Homeyer, Teddy

Link,

Gary

Sternberg

and

David

Palmer.
.
Also Jeff Ferguson, John Visoky,
Peter Williams, Dick Huber, Kenneth
Kenniston,
Bill
Casselman,

Max

Casselman,

Fred

Weinert,

Laurie Woodell, David Bye, Fred
Driscoll, Jeff Hanson, Jim Fields,
Peter
Silence,
Jim
Hallenbeck,
Dan . Halvorsen,
Gordon
Vines,
Scott Herman and Billy Haghloom.
In charge of the stage crew and

lights are: John Tasker, Dick Zartler, John Hyink, Charles Schultz,
Bill Haney, Dennis Herrman
and
David Homeyer.
The play is being presented under the direction of Mrs. Frank

Rice, music instructor in the upper
grades.

Eastern

Star Christmas

Party

The Order of the Eastern Star
will have their meeting tonight at
the Masonic Temple. The meeting

Deerfield

and Carthage college. After
wedding
they
will
make

home

| road, are the Mesdames Henry Fischer and E. F. Nelson.
Li

4

sday, December 18, 1952
Eds

*
—

Springfield,

».

their |
their

where

Mr, —

bureau.

oe

Jr. Guild to Have
Christmas Sing

7

hem church will hold a Christmas _
sing for husbands and wives on —
Friday at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. William Hensel, 1334 Wood~ —

land drive. Mrs.
and the Reverend
will sing a
Mrs. Robert

Hold

George Flagler —
Francis Guither —

duet accompanied
Weed.

Christmas

The

by
wid

Program

kindergarten

and

primary

\ asae

;

grades of the Wilmot school gave
a Christmas program of carols and

_
__|

told

s story Wed- |
Constance White, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur nesday thefor Christma
parents and friends.
an
White, Elmwood road, and Raul Villarreal who were wed in the
All the classrooms of the school _
Bethlehem church December 6. Mr. and Mrs. Villarreal are are gaily decorated in
Bi
making their home temporarily at Camp Atterbury, Ind., of the season. Each roomthe hasspirit
its _
where the groom is stationed. They will live in Monterey, own
tree
which
the
students

Program at
School

|

decorated.

The

cember
Dorinda Bolton and Pleasant
Birthday of a King

Thiele

2

school
19

vacation
and

begins

ends

De-

January

—

5,

1953.

Grades

4. 5, 6, 7, and 8 with Solo
by Merrell Keyes
Recessional—Joy to the World
Allen March at the Piano
From
the Hall—We
Wish
You a
Merry Christmas
Mrs. Richard Thompson, musical
director;
Mrs.
Lawrence
McDermott Jr., stage director; Mrs. Richard Hamill, principal.

Caroline Soefker to Wed

a

Mrs. Henry Soefker, 164 County
Line road announces the engage-

ment
to

of

John

her

W.

daughter,
Lehnert

of

Caroline
Chicago.

Caroline attended
mar school and

Deerfield
Highland

High

couple

school.

The

is

gramPark
plan-

ning to be wed in the late spring,

[The BANKER’S STOXY

a

_

by
if

|

ORIGIN OF THE WORD

=

“CAPITAL”

THE ANCIENT GREEKS

USED CATTLE AND OXEN
FOR MONEY, COUNTING
IT BY

THE HEAD...

-|O Little Town of Bethlehem
Piano

Duet—Barbara
Thiele
Michael Certik
Fantasy
Christmas
Piano
Duet—Janet
Stallman
Janet Nelson
The Holly and the Ivy
Soprano Solo—Beth Oakes
The First Noel

Piano

&amp;
Admiring the door decoration at the recent meeting of
_ the Garden club at the home of Mrs. Walter Wecher, Wilmot

in

Inspection

Bannockburn

Tee

engage- —

Doris Ann,
son of Mr.

be
married
February
14 at the
Luther Memorial church on Wil-

Christmas

Club

the

woods, Deerfield. The couple is to —

The
main
character
parts
are
taken by Robert Camp who plays
Mexico.
Uncle Jed; Pat Hansen,
who becomes Nickie; Anita Pagel is Mary;
Mrs.
Louis Zenko
is the Golden
Angel; Wm. Hensel, Rhinold Timm,
and John Carlson become the three
Wise
Men;
and
Fred _ Baarsch,
James
Mann,
Toby
Clark,
Larry Peel of Bells
Libby Wolfe
Long
and
John Kenney
are the Candlelight
Processional and
shepherds.
Other supporting parts
Bringing of Gifts
are taken by Hanne Petersen, Do- O Come All Ye Faithful
ris Pagel,
Mrs.
George
Stanger,
Dorinda
Bolton
at the Piano
Mrs. Fredda Kollar, Wendy
Mer- Remarks by the Narrator
ner,
Susan
Hildebrandt,
Marilyn
Warren Dick
Mandler,
Nancy
Stryker,
Marilyn Sheep May Safely Graze
Bach
Mertes,
Susan
Baarsch,
Sandra Piano Duet by Jean Bischoff and
Baarsch, Marilyn Clifford JacquelPleasant Thiele
ine Hansen,
Lila Heiser, Rhinold Jingle Bells
Timm, and Charles Hansen are in
Piano Solo—Barry Carroll
charge
of all staging and lights; Troika
Russian
and Mrs. Charles Ulrich and Mrs. Three Kings
Hopkins
John Carlson are in charge of cos4th and 5th Grades
tumes; makeup under the direction First Christmas Day .. Rex Maupin
of Mrs. Charles Murtagh and Mrs.
Gayle Blount—Soprano Solo
Milton Merner.
The public is cor- Christmas Comes Again
dially invited.
GY
Ae
15th Century Carol
Grades 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8
Reading
from
the
Bible
— First
will be a Christmas party and all
Tableaux of Angels
members
are requested
to bring
Warren Dick
a fifty
cent
gift.
Mrs.
Laverne
Harmony
of the Angels
Frederickson, Worthy Matron will
Flute Solo—Shirley Page
preside.
It Came Upon the Midnight Clear
Grades 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8

Garden

announce

and Mrs. Otto Zschau Sr., River- —

The
Christmas
play
presents
quite simply and briefly the story
of what happened
in a deserted
church. Although people have long
since ceased to worship here, Uncle
Jed, the old caretaker, is still faithful. He lovingly cares for the building and keeps it in repair, always
hoping and believing that sometime
the
people
will
return.
Every
Christmas
Eve
he rings
the old
bell and there has been built up a
legend of those things which happen when the bell rings. Some say
a miracle takes place, that the organ plays and angels sing.
Some
even say that Mary and the Holy
Child appear.
On this Christmas Eve Nickie, a
crippled boy, has come with Uncle
Jed to the old church.
Nickie is
so awed
by the place that when
Uncle Jed rings the bell he imagines he sees the
story of the
first Christmas
relived.
The old
church becomes an ancient sanctuary in which the shepherds have
taken refuge from the winds on the
plains of Bethlehem.
Nickie himself and Uncle Jed are shepherds
of long ago and the sacred mystery
of the first Christmas is unfolded
in lovely fantasy.

Chicago,

ment of their daughter,
to Otto E. Zschau Jr.,

evening.

Play at Wilmot School

or:

Duet—Peter

Elias

and

WORD

and

Tableaux—Holy

Silent

Night

Family

*CAPITAL”

‘TO ‘CAPITA’, WHICH
IS THE LATIN FOR

and

- Barbara
Isely
2nd Tableaux of Shepherds
The
First Noel Repeated
by All
Groups
.
Ivy and Holly
Irish Song
Mummers Song
Grades 6, 7, and 8 with Comment
by Warren Dick
Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy ....
Tschaikowsky
At Two
Pianos—Dorinda
Bolton
and Allan March
3rd Tableaux of Kings
We Three Kings
Vocal Solo by Jim Dier
How Far Is It to Bethlehem
Elicit uit
so Richard Donovan
Vocal Ensemble

4th

WE TRACE OUR OWN F

Part of our

function

is to channel

the

ment of capital into worthwhile fields.

investLet

us

help solve your business problems by providing
fresh

capital

For

me

..

.

Loans

of All Types

Deerfield

See

State

1%2% interest paid on savings
Deposits insured up to $10,000.00

The

ig

Bank { —

�New

Prize Winning

Rate for Radarman

James

F, O’Connor

Play

DEERFIELD

CHURCHES

Serving aboard the heavy cruiser
USS Helena in Korean waters, is a
new rate to radarman third class,
USN, for James F. O’Conner, son
of Mr. and Mrs. F. M. O’Conner of

1061
Nl.

Deerfield

The

Helena

road,

is on

ST.

GREGORY’S
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
Wilmot
and.
Deerfield
Roads
(Wilmot
School)
The Rev. J. D. Parker Vicar
SUNDAY,
December 21

Deerfield,

her

third

Jingle Bells! Jingle Bells! Jingle
all the Way! Christmas is coming
and we’ve got our little bit of snow
—all my shopping is over, is yours?
Well anyway, most of you fellows

tour

of duty in the Far East, and serves
as

a

heavy

support

ship

with

fast

carrier Task Force 77.
. Since the outbreak of the Korean
conflict
the
Helena
has
pounded Communist shore installations, troop concentrations, and
coastal

than

supply

25,000

bre

centers

rounds

ammunition.

The

UN

also

troops

on

Dr.

Frank

L.

Trable: Jr.,

hospital, Akron,

home

for

the

of

the

Ohio

will

to

visit

holidays

with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Frank L. Trable Sr., 407 Brierhill
Jack
road. His younger
brother,

will be home from Dartmouth the
19th

for

the

Optical

Service

Established in Deerfield Since 1942
Call Deerfield 674 for Appointment
Terr.,

Deerfield
Photo

KNAAK’S

H. FORD
Pharmacist

Established
Phone

in

|!

1884
NL

Holy
Family

Entire

Repairing

635 Deerfield Rd
Phone

DEERFIELD

1048

JEWELERS

FROST‘S
RADIO

AND

ELECTRIC

APPLIANCES

Refrigerators - Ranges - Radios
Washing Machines - Vacuums
We Repair All Makes of Appliances

|130 Waukegan Rd. - Tel. Deerfield 122
. D. CLAVEY
RAVINIA NURSERIES,
Established

Inc.

1885

Insurance

: 735

Deerfield

| Edward

H,

Road,

Loans

Deerfield,

Selig
Harold
Tel. Deerfield 155

Il.

R.

News

Ww.
L.
Midges Texaco
.-............. 26
16
Carr: Healy iii
24
18
Lauterburg and Oehler .. 24
18
phases SVR POT shi
ce eateoces 23
12
Lindemann
Drugs .......... 21
21
H.P.
Service
Station .... 19
23
Village
Hardware.
.......... 19
23
Ben: Meany soe coc.
19
23
COUNTY
MARe) ref he e 18
24
hetoschultz 3. pe
17
25
Individual Leaders
Men’s High Game—Ernie Ori ..231
Men’s High Series—Ed Kirar ..596
Ladies’
High
Game — Sylvia
GHIOTT Es Sia cee
a Cs
ak 200
Ladies’
High
Series — Gerre
TOU
esc ert
ae ase, ce eae 499

Bowling

&amp; SELIG

Established 1925
REALTORS
— Real Estate —

Feil

Victory Rollers

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

VANT

Cross

Bowling

Jewelry
tor the

Expert

Vant

League

Mr.
and Mrs.
Willard
B. Feil,
1139 Elmwood, became parents of
a son December
12 at Highland
Park hospital. He has been named
William
Barton.
The
infant has
three sisters, Karen 10, Cheryl 8,
and Lois 2. Maternal grandmother
is Mrs. Cecilia Fitzgerald of Wis-

consin

and

you

may

er

for

your

rest
from

assured

car

to

we

us,

check

bumper to bump-

added

safety.

Midge’s Texaco
Waukegan

Page 6

Road

‘Tel.

580

grand-

Kolsky

of

Mr. and Mrs. Carlo B. Alonzi,
682 Deerpath, became the parents
of a daughter
at Highland
Park
hospital December 13. Mrs. Marie
Pallisard,
Chicago
and
Mr.
and
Mrs. Carlo P. Alonzi, 360 Deerfield
road, are the grandparents.
Mrs.
Colandrea
Louis
of
Chicago
is
great grandmother.
Spend

Christmas

in

Paris

and

January

Grace Lutheran
brook, is planning

and the other at 7:00 p.m. The serv-

ices will be identical with part of
the Sunday school children participatingin each service.
At
the
Christmas
Eve
service
the children will tell the Christmas story of Jesus’ birth at Bethlehem. Their recitations and songs
will have as a background colored
slides also telling of Christ’s birth
and
the
announcement
to
the

shepherds

by the

Christmas

carols,

Alpha Cleaners. .............. 17
Sunset’ FO0Gs coche: 16

28
29

Jim

will

LEGAL
NOTICE
WHOM
IT. MAY CONCERN;
to

a

petition

presented

arwoods
Home
Owners
a public
hearing
will
Board of Appeals of the
field, in the Village Hall
of January, 19538, at 8
that

ing
Zone

time

the
to

will

be

heard

establishing
be

a

of

designated

by

the

PurBri-

Association
Inc.
be
held
by the
Village of Deeron the 6th day
o’clock p.m.
At
petition

a
as

new

request-

Residence

“AAA”

Resi-

dence
District
which
is described
with
1,400 sq. ft. inside floor area for a one
story
residence, and
with 1,750
sq. ft.
inside floor area for a two story residence.
The section of Deerfield that is
petitioned for such rezoning is that area
north

of

Deerfield

road

and

serv-

iced by and surrounded by Warrington,
Cumner, Carlisle, parts of Warwick and
Oxford, Margate and Beverly, that is the
area
heretofore
known
as, the
Tackett
subdivision property.
by Lewis B. Walton, Chairman
BOARD OF APPEALS
VILLAGE. OF..DEERFIELD ...

spend

To

December

Miss.,

a week

hunting.
ber

leave

They

where

visiting

will

19

for

they

will

friends

and

return

Decem-

24.
Spend

Mrs.

Christmas

William

K.

in Japan

Holsman,

844

Knollroad
road,
is awaiting
her
visa to fly to Japan to join her
husband, son of Mr. and Mrs. William T. Holsman, same address, for

the

holidays.

Mr.

Holsman

is

at-

tached to the public information office with the Navy
command
in
the Far East. He is stationed in
Tokyo
where
Mrs.
Holsman
will
meet him. She expects to be away
about a month.

Gil-

and.Mr.

Walter

also tell an important part of the
Christmas story in song and verse,
under the direction of Mrs. K. T.

and Mrs. Gilbert
choir
A
girls’
service
with
a
also sing during
choir is under the
K.. H. Breimeier

mont school in Luzon, Switzerland.
Mr. James
Street and his son

Mr.

Voss, who is projecting the slides.
The
Beginners’
and
Primary
group of the Sunday school will

24
26

for a week of winter sports.
She will then return to Brilliant-

angels.

bert Thiel, Deerfield, is directing
the program, assisted by Carl Jaeger, Deerfield,
in charge
of the

Deerfield
Lumber .......... 21
Bishop
Heating
............. 19

High Series
Johnson 194-155-206—555

church, Northtwo Christmas :

Eve children’s services, one at 5:30

House of the University of Paris.
She will be there from December
22 until January 7, when she will
leave for Adelboden, Switzerland

International

50. But

Grace Lutheran Holds
Christmas Eve Service

Paris

Foyer

it

Until later—‘“MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR.”

20

the

make

6th for Pack

........ 25

at

I'll

con-

we'll have a notice in the REVIEW
later to remind you again.

Deerfield

Clothing

doubt

We won’t be seeing each other
much for the next couple of weeks
—the
next parents
meetings
are
not
until
after the first of the
year, on January 5th for Pack 150

Krumbach,

lying

650

Everybody

it no

Miss Lynn Street, 933 Rosemary
terrace, will spend Christmas in

TO

everything

and

15
18
20

suant

your

paternal

Alonzi

Hernando,

bring

the

mother is Mrs. Herbert
Broadview, Illinois.

To

Mary Spannraft ....168-185-180—533
Ann Wilt 180-139-192—511

you

up

December 15, 1952
Central:
Foods = a. .i6.050.. 30
A. Willi, Plasterer .......... 27
Highland Park Fuel .....- 25

Rosem’ry

When

Drake

November 29.

Deerfield,

Watch

at the

Eleanor Pope, Mary Katherine Meyer and Judy Heuber in
a scene from the play “Summons of Sariel,”’ which was presented by the drama department of the Convent of the Sacred
Heart ‘in the Chicago Drama Festival presented by Lake Forest

PHARMACY

BRUCE
Registered

by Antoine

Weekday

First

Mrs.

Ira Goetsch,

are

John

John

Fox,

Mrs. Kenneth

Mrs.

Brinke,

open

June

Michehl,

Judy Michehl, Sally Rudolph, Mary
Lou Keller, Barbara Keller, Judy
Burmeister, Nancy Schubert, Betsy

and

Barbara

Hemlin.

After the service there will be
a distribution of gifts for all the
children.

The church decorations are being planned by Mr. Arthur Gilster
and Mr. and Mrs. Edward Rudolph
and

the

To

Visit

Sunday
In

Saturday:

school

staff.

East

Mrs. William Tennermann, 1020
Oakley,
will leave
Saturday evening for Bloomfield, N. J., to visit
her son and daughter-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. William Tennermann and

their ‘son, William

Albert

III, who

was born December 6. Mrs. Tennermann is flying to New Jersey

Kindergar-

classes
for the
holy
communion

of

7:30

each

4 p.m,

a.m.

month,

Mass

and 7:30

p.m.

at

Con-

NORTH

NORTHFIELD
COMMUNITY
Sanders at Dundee
P.O. Deerfield,
Il.
James Burford, Pastor
Telephone
Northbrook
935R2
SUNDAY
SERVICES

9:45

a.m.

Sunday

school.

11 a.m. Morning
worship.
7:30 p.m. Evening services (monthly).
First and third Sundays: Evangelistic
services.

Youth
Second
and
fourth
Sundays:
fellowship
services.
If your church has no evening service,
we
invite you to join with
us in the
evening

service.

If

you

church, we give you
visit our services.

a

do

not

warm

attend

welcome

to

ST. PAUL
EVANGELICAL
AND
REFORMED
CHURCH
638
Waukegan
Road
Rev. H. 0. Willman
Pastor
Deerfield 858
FRIDAY,
December
19
: p.m.
St. Paul Bowling league.
p.m.
Church Christmas
decorating.
SATURDAY,
December
20
9:30
a.m.
Confirmation instruction in
the church basement.
for
2 p.m.
Sunday
school
rehearsal
Christmas
program.
6

p.m.

Evening

vesper

chimes.

SUNDAY,
December 21
9:30 a.m.
Sunday school worship and
Christmas program rehearsal.
10:30 a.m. Chime call to worship.
11 a.m.
Morning
church
worship.
2 p.m.
Choir rehearsal in the church
sanctuary.

6:30 p.m.
Youth fellowship will meet
at the church for their annual Christmas
earolling for the shut-ins.
Refreshments
and a gift excange
will take place
church following the carolling.
MONDAY,
December
22
8:30
p.m.
Girl
Scout
meeting

at

the

in

the

church basement.
WEDNESDAY, December 24
Annual
Christmas
Eve services.
7:30 p.m. Annual Christmas Eve Sunday school program in the church sancChristmas
ecandlelighting
service.

Eve

worship

and

FIRST

PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
824 Waukegan
Road
Phone
Deerfield
775
Dr. Paul J. Keller, Pastor
SATURDAY,
December
20
8 to 4 p.m.
Christmas party for the
nursery,
kindergarten
and
primary
departments.

SUNDAY,
December 21
9:45 a.m. Church school for
through high school.
9:45 a.m.
Adult Bible class
leadership of Mr. C. E. Piper.
11

a.m.

Morning

all grades
under

the

worship.

11 a.m.
Nursery
school for children
‘to 6,
4 p.m.
Church school pageant, “Peace
to Earth.’
MONDAY,
December 22
3 p.m.
Girl Scout meeting.
7:30 p.m.
Boy
Scout meeting.
8

WEDNESDAY,

7:30 p.m.
male choir.

December

Christmas

24

carol

service,

all-

THE BETHLEHEM
CHURCH
(Evangelical United Brethren)
Francis)
Geo.
Guither,
Ministes
815 Rosemary Terrace
“Church Going Families Are Happy
Families”

the,

processional
and
the service. The
direction of Mrs.
and its members

Michehl,

Zimerman,

a.m.

Thiele.

will

Masses:

Friday

fessions.

at 8 o’clock.

service.

CROSS CATHOLIC CHURCH
North
Waukegan
Road
Rev. John
O’Mara,
pastor
Rectory, 724 Elder Lane
Deerfield 430
Sunday
Masses:
7,
8:30,
10,
11:80.

row

night,

Family

HOLY

and

§

fused everybody but
up to you somehow.

OPTOMETRIST

Rosemary

gifts

a.m.

Don’t forget the Pack 50 Christmas Party at Wilmot school tomor-

messed

DR. G. C. PARKNEN

857

Mom’s

Sincerely
hope
that
Pack
150
had
another
successful
meeting
yesterday.
Our
publicity
got
all

holidays.

Complete

your

is invited but don’t forget, every
youngster coming should bring a
grab-bag
present
because
Santa
will be there and you won’t want
to miss the chance to grab for a
surprise. There will be ice cream
and cookies so be there to get in
on the fun and to see what some
of the other Dens have done for
Christmas, too!

for Christmas

Peoples
be

cali-

cruiser

made

some have even had a chance to
make one for Dad during the Den
meetings.

more

of heavy

supports front line
the eastern front.
Home

with

have

9:30

ten
and
church
school
children.
Sermon
and
for adults.

THURSDAY,
3:45
p.m.

6:45

p.m.

FRIDAY,
8 p.m,

December
18
Junior
choir

Bethlehem

December
19
Junior guild

rehearsal.

bowling

league.

Christmas

sing

at

the

home of the William Hensels.
8 p.m.
Handel’s
‘‘Messiah’’—Deerfield
Grammar school.
SATURDAY,
December 20
in
7:30
to 11:30
p.m.
‘“Teen-Town”
Fellowship hall.
SUNDAY, December 21
9:45
a.m.
Children’s
classes
report,
then all ages meet in Fellowship hall for
special program.
Parents invited.
10:55 a.m. Family day—Children’s story,

Christmas

story.

Service

of

Baptism.

5:30 p.m.
Sanctuary service, and the
Christmas play “Christmas Is a Miracle.”
WEDNESDAY,
December 24
4 p.m.
Confirmation class.
7:30 p.m.
Senior choir rehearsal.

where she will spend a few days
and then go on to Buffalo, N. Y.,
to visit her daughter, and son-inlaw,

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Richard

L.

Frost,
and
their
20-month-old
daughter, Kathryn Lynn. She will
‘return

the

Thursday,

end

of the

December

week.

18, 1952

�Braeside School
Gives Christmas
Program Tonight

the

entitled

“Holiday

The

program

Greet-

will

Here

is

to

say

Chas tmas

fom Garnétt ¢ Co.

friends through a stage presentation of animated greeting
ings.”

way

“Merry

Braeside school will this year
bring Christmas cheer to its

cards

warmest

be

presented by the sixth grade
under the direction of its instructor,
William
Shorb,
in
joint cooperation with members
staff,

Greetings”

audi-

are present-

Gumbiner;

Erikson,

Finkleman,

Mary

Geri

and

/

Ed

Loeb; skiers, Trudy Martineau, and
Jim Sumbler.
Tree dancers are
Carol

Beck,

Kathy

Holland, David
tineau, Jackie
Murphy.
Zell, and

Harris,

Billy

Klein, Trudy MarMurphy, and Jill

The wood cutter is Sam
Elliot Siegel and Barbara

of

Hammerman portray the roles
the children in the production.
Chorus

The

choruses

To

and

Sing

orchestra,

un-

der the direction of Anne C. Phelps
-and Bruce Warnock, will present
musical
numbers
preceding
the
stage
presentation
and
will
also
provide music during the production.
Others
tion are:

y

companists
are
Barbara
Partlow
and Barbara Slepyan.
Ushers are
Roy Price and Steve Morton.
The primary Christmas program
to be
presented
by the kindergarten,
first,
second,
and
third
grades,
at
10:30
a.m.
tomorrow,
consists
of
Christmas
songs,
rhymes, and choral poetry.
Parents and pre-school children are
invited to attend.
Santa Claus will
visit and have a surprise for every

according

to

Parent-Teacher

Ke JX)
AES

Civic

the

charges

Miss

Grace

8

2

fy

,

&gt;

\
i

YR

Ye

Y

7
vy,

‘

)

A

h

J

3

i

a,

Braeside

Martin,

“i!

Y

J)

also

at

:

&lt;

}

/

5

J

«

o

S

of

Dv

on

E

t¢

f

:

J

while

highway

KY

Vv

/

of driving

&gt;

wv

association.

Skokie

A.

Yj

V\ LEE

Namon
Smith
of Chicago
was
being held by Highland Park police
after his arrest Monday
at 11:30
intoxicated on
Berkeley road.

J

‘Mt

Two Arrested Monday
To Appear In Court

on

\

assisting with the produc-

stage assistants, Joel Goldstein and
Ronnie
Rudolph,
student
ac-

p.m.,

\

|

Art, Frances Apitz; dances, Andrew
Voisard;
settings, William
Shorb and Harry Kubalek; lighting,
Jim
Lipman;
curtain,
Sam
Zell;

child,

RD
©

Don

Schinder,

PRX)

Shel-

Isador,

*

e

skaters,

aS

Yq

little

:

Hecht;

¢

KARE SK
SS SS

girl, Ann

don

Fred

Claus,

Santa

Si “Be
Gls

then brought to life through the
The
magic powers of Santa Claus.
following are members of the cast:

aitKOC
KG\ eke,

S
=&gt;

The characters are

—

ed as tableaux.

tonight

Braeside

a

“Holiday

in

a

Braeside

tS

the

a : LG

of

at 8 o’clock
torium.

7H

Y

he

b\-

4

©

v

den

J+

Chicago,
a passenger in the car,
was booked on disorderly conduct
charges for resisting arrest and released on $25 bond Tuesday after-

noon.
Both

are

to

appear

Saturday

at

4 p.m. before Samuel Smith, justice
of the

peace.

1. Luscious quilted shirred
waist
robe.
Washable
bemberg.
Aqua, pin’k,
yellow. Sizes 10-18. 14.95

2. Quilted
shortie jacket,
lined in contrasting color. Flame, navy, green.
ee
Gh i ee
8.95

Conblite 5

TELEVISION
AND
RADIO SERVICE

. Cotton
duster,

calico
flower

quilted
print

on

black with yellow piping.
munes: 10 to 20.......:.....; 5.95

ALSO BENDIX
APPLIANCE SERVICE

. Cotton

house
navy
striped
LB VAX

crepe
zippered
coat.
Purple or
bodice,
multitrim.
Sizes 10 to
dee leek shakes 5.95

Phone

HI 2-0609
Thursday,

December

Dpen until
18,

1952

9 p.m. Dec. 17 thru 23
Page

7

�, ere cre
-_
ee
Cries
Pes Te)
tbat
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F TIT fhe
‘es
My

ere
Prana
TDD
etree
1 {
te

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Oeen

tT
Sah

oe

ngR

Eene
URT
TAN

1

.

Oy

We CML
j

aT Be TEOt

ME

OO

TAREE

;

¢ piabanecme

x

LTrg

SI

— OMT GRATE
,
—AL UE e Teo —EE REN ee
CT ECEWES PAY. Me og RMT He Re Me sy
iy
‘)
Peo
NC a a ean tae
MART
AS
¥
f
™
aA

eee

;

as
P

i)

2

+

tT

¥

‘

A

|

%

*NEW YEAR’S EVE
AT VILLA MODERNE

. For 19 years the Villa has been our
favorite
_ old

spot

year

for

and

ringing

ringing

in

out
the

the
new.

This year the complete evening of
festivity will be $5.75 a person
plus tax. This includes a wonder-

_ ful Dinner

and
_
e

plus elegant

fun makers

favors. An Orchestra for Danc-

ing and Verne Scott our most popudar pianist playing in the Lounge.
Make Reservations now. HI 2-4283.

_ Skokie at County Line.
FASCINATING
FOR FAVORITE

_ At

the

beautiful

GIFTS
PEOPLE

Shop

of

Grace

_ Herbst you'll find Gifts delightful
_ to give.
Shopping
there
is very
_ pleasant, for the beautiful Silver,

_Lamps,

Glass,

Leather

FROM

Goods,

SUNSET

China, etcetera, are so charmingly
and
conveniently displayed. You’ll

This

have no difficulty in finding someie thing worth while for every name

DIAMOND

on
your
long list, feminine
and
masculine.
Interested and experienced salespeople to assist you. 563
Lincoln
Ave., Winnetka.

LARGE

Sale

BUDDED

Effective
CENTRELLA

WALNUTS

2

16-oz.

1903

1914

Cadillac,

Stutz

Bearcat

_ etc. 486 Central Ave.
GIVE HER THE KEY
TO AMERICA
_

beautiful
|

is

_

new Buick and the world

hers

no

to

explore.

grander

family,
mile,

from
to a

for

every

You

present

they’ll
day,

can

to

the

give
entire

enjoy

it every

for years

to come.

See the beautiful Buicks at Klee| . burg Buick, 1732 First St. See the
price tags and be surprised.
_ for demonstration. HI 2-4800.
FRENCH

_ FOR

THE

|

are

many

PROVINCIAL

HOUSE

At the Studio

Ask

SWIFT’S

most

L. Barnitz

attractive

pieces

of

French Provincial Furniture which

combine

so delightfully

PREMIUM

WHOLE HAM ~~...
Full Shank’ Half 3-2

with

any

Lb. 59c
Le, Boe

READY-BAKED

FRUITED HAMS !2-14 Lbs. ............... Lb. 7 3¢
CERTIFIED

CANNED HAMS 10 Lbs. Avg. ......... : Lb. 79¢
CURTIS

gian artist
John D. Wolcott, charmingly framed would make a won-

derful
netka.

gift.

914

Linden

Ave.

Win-

_ Far from

_
|

e

a

the crowds

and

MORRELL

PRIDE

PORK SAUSAGE MEAT 1-lb. Cello Roll 3 3¢

EXTRA FANCY

JUMBO

SHRIMP 15-20 Count ............ Lb. 89c

CHOICE

RIB ROAST OF BEEF —---------- Lb. 75¢
SELECT

FRESH

----------- Pint 8c

OYSTERS

smart
chafing
Dishes,
Casseroles
-with
covers
etc.
‘AND
for
the
youngsters; Books, Games, and oh
such beautiful Dolls including the

Nancy
‘St.

Lee

Johns

Story
(opp.

Book
Ravinia

Dolls.

739

Station).

YOUR DOG ACCEPTS
WITH PLEASURE
Your devoted
Dog is always delighted
with
your
suggestion
to
Board
at
Butterworth
Kennels

while

you

go

on

a

vacation.

Of

course he’d love to go with you,
: _ but next best is to be left with the
Butterworths. Warm cozy buildings
with
all
modern
equipment
for
dogs comfort and good health. 2810

|

Park

Ave.

HI

2-1352.

Sun. 2-5 by appt.

Daily

8-7,

Rath Wakefield
Adv.

Page

8

CENTRELLA

;

JUMBO

RIPE OLIVES ...-----------------—- Pt. Tin 3 3¢

FLAKO PIE CRUST ----- 2 90x. Phas. 35.
Assorted Flavors -...................

JELLO

3

BIRDS
BIRDS

EYE

BIRDS

EYE

CUT

CORN

VALLEY

HEAD

LETTUCE... 2 tor29©|GRAPEFRUIT 2 tor 2°
Fancy

Tender

Oregon

U.

S. No.

2

gf

1

Behs. 25¢

Selected

PEARS

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

2

Lbs.

29E

EMPLROR

10 ;1:.69¢

GRAPES _...

Pe

29¢

BALLS -.--------------------- 16-02. Pkg. 3.7 ¢

HILL PEARS ---------------- No. 212 Tin 29¢

GOLD

COCKTAIL

MISTLETOE
1 Haste a uts
$49¢
Meg LA
CENTREL
Dressin

Sugar

NIGHT

9

CANE

Krisow Crackers

I-Ib. Pkg. 25¢

GULF

KIST

' Jumbo
412-oz.

Shrimp
Can

Avenue
NIGHT

39c

B

**-°%. 5 3c
Mincemeat
CENTRELLA
Pitted Dates oo " oe
SHURFINE
Flour

5-Ib. Bag Alc

Centrella Whole

84°"

Kernel

— A Central Food Store
AT SUNSET — STORE OPEN

ORE

tb. 8

Tomatoes 2 ¢3,,5 35¢

CFNTRELLA

:

;

| Grapefruit Sections
303

59c

FOOD
757 Central
IS FAMILY

18-0z.
ao

3 7c
azo 7S\Corn = 2.83%

SUNSHINE

FRIDAY

:
meat
Mince

%°..2%35¢ centreLia tien

Pumpkin?

Salad

*-~ 186

39 c CENTRELLA saa

No. “ 8 J ss

* &amp; H PURE

SUNSET

| SWIFTNING

. . can 33° Shortening

ot dar De

FRUIT BUNS --..---------- ven deeteeteeseeeees Doz. 6 Qc
8-Inch Brandied Mince Pie ------------ 59c
Danish Pecan Coffee Cake -----.---------- 55¢

1 Qe

.... 10-oz. Pkg.

FROST

MELON

LIBBY

wa

1 Qc

12-02. Cans for $100

«44 ---c

M
Olives ON'A TREE
California

-------- 3

STRAWBERRIES

fed

Fresh

Pkgs. 23¢

Frozen Food Specials
EYE PEAS ------------------- 12-oz. Pkg.

Peanuts

CARROTS

is the well stocked Shop of Edith
Saletra, well known Interior Decorator. Gifts large and small for
. the home including unusual Clocks,

-.-------------- 46-oz. Tin 29¢

FRUIT COCKTAIL -----.------ No. 303 Tin 9 3¢

PLANTER’S

D‘ANJOU

confusion

JUICE

PINEAPPLE

SPRING TURKEYS 9-15 Lbs. .......... Lb. 6 7c

Sweet

LAST MINUTE
GIFT SUGGESTIONS

SWEET POTATOES !" Syrup .... No. 2 Tin 7Q¢

LIBBY’S

FARMS

Pie period. Cocktail Tables, End Tables,
Tea Carts, several Davenports
(a
_ 96” inch style with hand carved
frame
from
Switzerland
is stuning and
oh so luxuriously
com-

_ fortable). A Painting by the Bel-

STYLE

SACRAMENTO

AGED,

BEAUTIFUL

of Henry

"2 496

MARSHMALLOWS ....------------- I-lb. Pkg. 2Q¢

WILSON’S

Sounds fantastic! Far be it
such. Make
her gift a key

“STRAWBERRIES

FROZEN

CENTRELLA

5 at 89c each. See 1910
Ford,

35¢

10%-OZ.

CAMPFIRE

_ Parts
are precision
modeled
in
_ durable plastic. Series of 5 at 69c
Model
‘“T”
1908
Buick,

|

LIBBY’S

| |

SAUCE

Cans

24th

|

STRAINED

MART

SPICED CRABAPPLES --- No. 2¥2 Jor 3 3¢

are
easily built and bring hours
-of fun for young
and old. Each
Highway
Pioneer
is a faithful
_ replica of well known vintage cars.

-

Dec.

MOTHER’S

of automobiles of bygone days may
|
be had at Highland Park Cycle
_ Shop. These Revell “Old Timers”

and

Thru

CRANBERRY

1-Ib. Cello Bag 49c

“HIGHWAY
PIONEERS”
CONSTRUCTION KITS
These fascinating scale miniatures

each

FOOD

Can

19¢

MART
‘TILL 9 P.M

�a

RTE
CS

a

AO

cr

PANERA ERS
BEARSOt Cae
ee ae ree
IM Cr phe
PE
WIE
Sertngh

DEE
| Aaa

ry

NAR
i

pene ey
BO

QC SAS

e

Wee

re ae
MCR
i

PE R tual
f

TE

GS

te

Fr) aT

A Scene From Elm Place Christmas Pageant
Hee

hing.

Chole:

Sis

NEW

Ine.

SHIPMENT
OF

LANZ

ORIGINALS
AND

OTHER

COTTONS

FOR CRUISE WEAR
A program

of Christmas

customs

in America,

given

at

Elm

Place

school

last

night,

finds Santa Claus, otherwise Bill Piersen, checking and double-checking the toys he leaves for
all his little American children.
Paul Perry, the toy soldier, assists Santa in keeping the

clown, Tommy Inman, from teasing the Scottish doll, Ann
rabbit, who is played by Raymond Wicklander.

Winkley,

and

from chasing the

Cloihes

Ue

Drive Carefully — The Life You Save

650

bows

N. Western

Lake

Ge
Forest 2168

' May Be Your Own!

||

Aoliday

Vi),

eeoeeee

@ CHRISTMAS CARDS
@

Hl 2-0567

Scarlett's
Between

SKOKIE

=&lt; &gt;

Line Rds.

.

NEW YEAR
RESERVATIONS

NOW:

-

Filet Steak Dinner -------------------------- $250
Pink or White Champagne ---------- $350
&amp; Served—

(Can

be used for dinner
or drinks)

1835 or 1228

@
@

NOISE MAKERS
FAVORS

@

CONFETTI

December

18,

1952

@ MEN’S

SHOES

0
Up

To

if

Reductions

0
All Sales Cash

All Sales Final

ss

SHOES FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY

.

@

MiIKE'S SHOE STORE
Open

8 a.m.-9

p.m.

Daily

(Wed.

Next

to
HI

CLIFF STAFFORD,
Mer.

Thursday,

SHOES

°

No CoverCharge

Call

GLENCOE

®@ WOMEN’S

6

HODGSON’S
ORCHESTRA

Minimum 2.50 per person
5.00 per couple

SHOES

Per Btl.

Entertainment &amp; Dancing to
RED

@ CHILDREN’S

(Old 41)

Dundee &amp; County

—Chilled

SAL

GIFT WRAPPINGS

LARSON’S —

ON

PRE-HOLIDAY

e

PEN &amp; PENCIL SETS
@ BOXED STATIONERY
@ SMOKING NEEDS
@ SHEET MUSIC
@ OFFICE SUPPLIES
@ TOYS &amp; CANDY

2

41 Highwood Ave.

Incl.)

Sunday,

10 a.m.-12

noon.

Postoffice.
2-5293.

Highwood
Page

9

�_SnsentEnLERESSNSESENEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEeEeeeeeeeeeeee
’

NS

- MERRY CHRISTMAS
OUR

HOLIDAY

Prime Beef From

and a HAPPY NEW YEAR

SPECIALS

TO

YOU

The International

WILL

FEATURE

Livestock

Exposition

ALL CUTS AT NO INCREASE IN PRICES
FANCY

CHOICE

Legs

of Lamb

..

5 9c lb.

ALSO
NEW

YORK

DRESSED — FANCY YOUNG
24 Lb. and up —Govt. Grade A

NORTHERN

Tom Turkeys.....45¢ w.
PLACE

YOUR

ORDER

DEC. 18th - 19th - 20th
FROZEN

FOOD

SLICED STRAWBERRIES
|

IN EARLY!

!

DEPARTMENT

Dec. 22nd - 23rd - 24th
SWEETHEART

12-0z. Pkg. -2....2.-.----:--- ~--- 2Q¢|

TREESWEET ORANGE JUICE 6-oz. Can

303 Tin

SWEETHEART CRANBERRY SAUCE No. 303 2 for 35¢
SWEETHEART

BIRDS EYE PEAS

PUMPKIN

FRUIT

COCKTAIL

No. 22 Tin 39e

' DOLE PINEAPPLE JUICE

KRAFT MAYONNAISE
_ BIRDS EYE WHOLE ASPARAGUS SPEARS

KRAFT PHILADELPHIA CREAM CHEESE

BIRDS EYE FRENCH CUT WAX BEANS
BIRDS EYE SQUASH
TOWN SQUARE DEEP DISH APPLE PIE

BALLARD BISQUITS

PARKAY MARGARINE

_ SWEETHEART CRANBERRY SAUCE 303 Tin 2 for
SWEETHEART BRANDIED MINCE MEAT 9 oz...
RIPE ‘N RAGGED PINEAPPLE CHUNKS No. 212 Tin
RIPE ‘N RAGGED ELBERTA PEACHES No. 212 Tin ...
SWEETHEART R.S.P. CHERRIES
No. 2 Tin
SWEETHEART GOLDEN YAMS
No. 2 Tin

KRAFT MIRACLE

FRENCH

DRESSING

35c SWEETHEART EX. LGE. RIPE OLIVES
]9c
LINDSAY EX. LGE. PITTED RIPE OLIVES
37
39¢ | LINDSAY EX. LGE. GREEN OLIVES
35¢
39¢

LIBBY'S TOMATO JUICE 46 o2. ....-..2.2.2...2.c0te: 2 for 55¢
DEARBORN

CLUB TOMATOES

SHASTA SWEET

No. 2 Tin

PEAS No. 303 Tin

CAMPBELL’S TOMATO

SOUP

VELVEETA CHEESE
KRAFT SLICED AMERICAN

iy canin svaur

ES

ge

BS

CHEESE

a

|

1848 1st Street
PICCHIETTI

&amp; ORI
Thursday,
ay staat

December
ane

|i

�At

Home

In Lake

Forest

Christmas
Mr.

In

and

Waverly

Roland

Mrs.

road

Mrs. Gadson Test Lamon

Florida
are

Wirt

‘leaving

row to spend their Christmas
tion in St. Petersburg, Fla.

will

be

dinner

guests

of

tomor-

of

vacaThey

Dr.

and

on Christ-

mas day and plan to revisit
points of interest in Florida.
will return home January 4.

Mrs.
ternity
tended

Lamon

was

Mr.

other
They

Wirt’s fra-

housemother when
he atthe University of Colorado

at Boulder.
Mr. Wirt’s father and mother, the
Howard Wirts, and his sister, Miss
Lucile Wirt of Freeport, Ill., visited
them last weekend. They celebrated Christmas together
trip to Florida.

before

their

~ SENSATIONAL
SPACE PATROL TOYS
Official

Space

Patrol

Headquarters

The Only
‘Place You
Can Buy These
in the Entire
Chicago
Scotty

Photo

With her satin wedding gown, the former Miss Gudrun
Margareta Reuterdahl of Sweden wears the traditional crown
of a Swedish bride for her marriage to Earl H. Carlson of
Llewellyn avenue.
The ceremony took place December 6 in
Lake Forest’s First Presbyterian church.
Mr. Carlson is the
son of the Ernest H. Carlsons.
His bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Ebbe Reuterdah! of Stockholm, Sweden.
Mr. and
To

Mrs.

Carl J. Bates

Visit Here
Mr. and Mrs.

Ridgewood

their

for Holidays
W. H. Blessing

place

daughter

and

are

son-in-law,

LIMITED

burg, Ark., here for the holidays.
of | The Bates plan to be here for two
Mr.|

weeks.

Mrs.

Bates

Barbara

Blessing.

is

the

former

QUANTITY—COME

SPACE

and Mrs. Carl J. Bates of Mountain-

expecting

Area!

IN

OR

YOUR

PHONE

ORDER

TODAY

PATROL

HEADQUARTERS
641

CENTRAL

HIGHLAND

AVE.

HI

PARK

2-8474

Give A Living Gift for Christmas
-&amp;

Young,

95

Train

Colorful,
Them,

Beautifully

Plumaged

PARAKEETS
Them, Teach

Tame

Them

@

stock

of

to Talk

20 gallon Aquarium

with

stain-

less steel top.

$1295

$14.50

Color

Bred

SINGING
$1 150

Guaranteed
CANARIES

with stand $23.95
e 15 gallon Stainless Steel
Aquarium

. . - and

$10.95

to $1500

11.75
e@ 10 gallon Stainless steel Aquarium.

$8.95

with stand $18.95
@ 5 gallon Chrome
Aquarium

$5.50
Remember

f}

your dog

at Christmas.

Toys,

candy,

new

collar or leash, feeding pans, brush &amp; comb, Christ-

i

mas stockings filled with toys.

CHRISTMAS

Pr. GUPPIES

EVANS
794 CENTRAL AVE.
Thursday,

December

18,

1952

it

SPECIAL

This Is NO Fish Story
1 5-gallon CHROME Aquarium
6 VALISNERIA PLANTS
10 Lbs. GRAVEL
1 Pr. BLACK TETRAS
1 Pr. PEAL DANIOS
1 Pr. BARBUS SUMATRANUS
1

GARDEN

love

Everybody’s
raising
tropical
fish these days. It’s a perfect
pastime for children or anyone confined.
If you can’t
have other pets—get a bowl
full of fun.
Fish are quiet,
clean and real entertainment.
We have
many
varieties to
choose from ... plus bowls,
ornaments, fish food. See our
display today.

with stand $20.95
@ Stands alone

CAGES
$350 to $1895

you'll

AND PET STORE
HIGHLAND PARK
|

$795

HI 2-0124
Page 11

�Mr.

ews

he

isks
by

Joanne

e

Warton

leaving the car and taking
to Cuba

to complete

a plane

their vacation.

The frozen north calls Miss Clara
Malvey of the Elm Place kindergarten to Moorhead, Minn., by train
and her assistant, Mrs. Jack An-

derson, who will drive with Mr. Anderson to Hibbing, Minn.
Others heading north are Miss
Dorothy
Dennis,
second
grade
teacher at Green Bay Road school

who

will drive to Minneapolis,

and

fifth grade Elm Placer Miss Edna
Carlson who will visit her family in
Washburn,
Wis.,
to
make
final
plans for her wedding next month
to Eugene
Ellenberger of Linden

avenue.
Travel

In

All

Directions

Eastern-bound Elm Place faculty
members are Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Powers, who will fly to Boston and

the

spend

Stanley

Hozempas,

Christmas

in

who

will

Wilkes-Barre,

Pa. Miss Jean Vogel of the fourth
grade will be in Bath, N.Y., and
Miss Olena Heggen, also a fourth
grade staff member,
goes as far
east
as Renwick, Pa.
Migrating
southward
is
Miss
Winifred Wolfe, speech correctionist for District 107, who is flying
to Howey-in-the-Hills,
Fla.
Miss
Sally Wheelock, first grade teacher
at Green Bay road, and Miss Lawry Turpin, junior workshop instructor for District 107, will take the
midnight plane tomorrow for Daytona Beach, Fla., to bask in the sun
over the holidays.

Dr.
are
Dr.

and

Mrs.

spending
and Mrs.

perville.

Casper

O.

Dahle

Christmas Day with
Irwin Keeler in Na-

If weather conditions per-

mit, they may drive to Iowa City,
Ia., before school starts. Dr. Dahle

Is principal of Elm

Mrs.

morrow

Robert

Blackburn,

for a two weeks

is motoring
schools,
Page

Place.

to Milwaukee

Dwight

of Green

Zimmerman,

Bay,

prin-

is celebrating

Christmas in her home at 211 Carv
avenue this year. Her sons, Miles
and Hugh, will both be with her
for the holidays.
Miles is in the
U.S. Air Force and is stationed in
Boston, Mass.
Hugh is a freshman
student at Trinity college in Hartford, Conn.
Some

C.

Ia.

Mrs.

Kikue

W.

Schroeder

Takaki,

in

Braeside’s

Stay

Here

Some

Mr.

Are

and

Expecting

Mrs.

James

Guests

Whitehouse

of DeTamble avenue are
Mrs. Whitehouse’s sister,
chel Blackburn and Miss
din of Tulsa, Okla., for a
visit between Christmas
Year’s.
Both visitors are

in Tulsa.

Mrs.

expecting
Miss RaMay Harfew days’
and New
teachers

Whitehouse,

assist-

ant principal at Lincoln school, also teaches arithmetic in the sev-

enth

and

eighth

grades.

The junior Joseph Burkards of
St. Johns avenue will have as their
houseguests,
Mrs.
Burkard’s
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Clemens of Milwaukee, and the senior
Joseph Burkards also of Milwaukee.
Mr. Burkard
is at Ravinia
school.

Among the families who will remain in Highland Park this year
are the A. E. Wolters’ of Judson
avenue.
They
will spend
Christmas day in Evanston
with
their
daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Howard
Cushman
and their
children, Christine and John.
Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Wolters of Wade
street and their infant son, Russell,
will
complete
the
family
group. The senior Mr. Wolters is
principal of Highland
Park High
school.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kendig of
90 Acorn lane will also be at home

The Dudley Deweys will have 15
guests
Christmas
Eve.
Included
will be Mrs. Dewey’s mother, Mrs.
G. W. Thompson and her brother,
Derby
Thompson
and his family,
all of Iowa.
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn
Harris of Bannockburn with- their
son, Fred, a junior
at Highland

over

Park

the

holidays.

Mr.

Kendig,

head of the high school athletic department,
says that he hopes
to
find time to ‘do some work around
the house.”
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Crowell of
Ridge
road
and
their
children,
Richard, David and Cathy, have invited Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Beam
of Barberry
road
and
their son,
Richard, to have Christmas dinner
with them. Mr. Crowell is principal
of
West
Ridge
school
and
Mr.
Beam, principal of Braeside.
The
Beams are planning a short trip to
Delafield, Wis., to visit Mrs. Beam’s
parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Burnham, during the vacation.

Miss
teacher
Ellen

Jessie Hiatt, first grade
at West Ridge, and Miss

Miller,

at Lincoln

second

school,

grade

have

teacher

purchased

a new home in Deerfield but neither will be here to enjoy it over
the holidays.
Miss Hiatt is going
to Rockwell City, Ia., to visit her

mother,

Mrs. May

Hiatt.

ler

will

spend

her

left,

and

Mrs.

Florence

holiday.

Mrs.

in Park

Ridge.

Miss Mil-

vacation

Blackburn,

and Miss Otteson,

will visit her parents
12

Mrs.

cipal

Mrs.

exchange
teacher from Honolulu,
Hawaii, and her husband, Michael,
are spending their vacation with
friends in Kansas City, Mo.

Teachers in the Highland Park schools are looking forward to their Christmas vacations as much as their young pupils. This week, instead of the usual question and answer column, we present a resume of some of their plans for the holidays.
When the dismissal bell rings at
noon
tomorrow
John
,Scruggs
will have the family car packed and
waiting at the front door of Green
Bay Road school for Mrs. Scruggs
who
is a second
grade
teacher
there. They will drive non-stop to
Dallas, Tex., for a visit with relatives. From Dallas they will travel
to Houston and New Orleans before

and

Postville,

music

with

Otteson
second

The
Kennard
Manchesters
of
Deerfield will entertain Mrs. Manchester’s
father,
John McFarlane
of Rockford, Ill.
Mr. Manchester
is fifth grade teacher at Ravinia.

school,
a

and

daughter

freshman

at

Illinois

State Teachers college at Normal,
will also be present. The Deweys’
daughter, Mary, will be home from
her sophomore classes at Coe col-

lege

in Cedar

sister

land

Rapids,

Barbara,

Park

a

High

out

the

family

be

Pfc.

Glenn

Ia., and

senior

at

her

High-

school, will round
group.

G.

Missing

Harris

will

who

is

with a tank division in Korea. Mr.
Dewey
is the physical
education
teacher at Ravinia school.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Naegele

travel

Scruggs,

folders

and

maps

vacations.

Mrs.

Cuba,

Wheelock

Miss

left, and Miss Sally Wheelock
in

Scruggs

anticipation

is heading

is going

of their

for the

study

Christmas

southwest
They

to Florida.

are

and
both

teachers at Green Bay road school.
ger,

first

school,
motor
rida,

grade

and

her

down

the

stopping

spend

teacher
west
in

Christmas

They

will

at Lincoln

husband
coast

Fort
Day

continue

plan

Flo-

Key

West

eastern
former

before

coast
home

of

will

return

friends.

time

for school

uary

5.

Miami

and

starting
the

state

up
to

at Fernandina.

to

Myers

with
to

of

to

to

Highland
when

the
their
They

Park

it opens

in
Jan-

of Broadview avenue are spending
the holidays with his parents, Mr.
and

Mrs.

waukee.

Julius

The

Naegele

Stanley

in

McKees

Mil-

of

McDaniels
avenue will remain at
home
with
their
four-year-old
daughter, Penny.
Mr. Naegele
is
principal of Ravinia'school and Mr.
McKee
is
principal
of
Lincoln

school.
Another
couple
being lured to
warmer climes is the William Dragers of Judson avenue.
Mrs. Dra-

are

grade

instructor

High

Cynthia,

Mrs. John

for

busy

packing

teacher

Ravinia

at

to leave

Ravinia

and

West

to-

Miss Helen Mildner, second grade teacher at West Ridge

school,

school,

puts away

Ridge

before

leaving

her

‘’Weekly

for Minneapolis,

Readers’
Minn.,

and

school:

papers

to spend the holidays

with her mother.
Thursday,

December

18, 1952

�Durand

Simulated

Leath-

er Desk Set. Perfect...
to have or to give. Gold
stamped. Complete Set.
$3.50 &amp; $3.95
Matching wastebasket ................
Matching letterbasket, ................
PUNE MU
ladies coyinsicvesavpiiwca cece
Matching scrapbook ..........--..----.--WOU ROE Se ne
$2.50
A complete assortment of other style
desk sets and accessories.
. now!

Pin-up Boaras.
Your choice of
red,

Scraps’

tan,

green

or
blue felt]
face. ‘’Pin-ups” | |
or “‘Snaps and |
at top.
}

Measure 24x24 in. ...... $2.25

At Chandler’s

Royal Quiet Deluxe Typewriter.
One of the finest portables made.
Has loads of ‘’big machine”

Handsome, Handy Record Books. Type available at left.

Perfect for

features.

business or social use.
Designed for easy,
quick reference.

FOR BELLES | =s-n

With

modern,

compact

carrying

case.

Just ask for the machine with built-in ‘“whisperquiet” silence.

Only $10 down. $97.50 plus tax.

AND BEAUX

For Mom
Be Pati Ceeh TONGS oc. ousncc passenger
decease $13.95
Sci ciscecdaplemedoesomecy Set $12.60
i
ee I

[1] Three-piece Thermometer Set.

Includes
lus ied $7.50

OD

Deep Fat, Meat and Candy
I
a

OODDCBEaIAOOnNOOoD

[]

Fine Plastic Playing Cards
Westclox Clock
Leather Picture Frames

Fishing Tackle
Golf Balls
Golf Ball Marker
Practice Putt
Desk Lamp
Picnic Thermos Kit
Diaries and Calendar Pads
Best-Seller Books
Pitchin- Pal Game
Indoor-Outdoor Thermometer
1953 Date Books
Success Calendar Refills

Stamp Albums and Catalogues
Small Home Safe with Combination
Lock

Book Lamps

For Dad
[] Handy Mahogany Valet ..........-------- .. $12.00
[} Pohewe’ Tetlobe: aicssa: seccciec tasla cna erounslgeine $37.50
[] Ronson &amp; Zippo Lighters ...........- from $3.50
O) Chic: Desh Peri St: ia cenicceacisee sepia $6.50

(To Clamp on Book)

ges

bee

Automatic

Card

Shuffler.

Yes

it really works!

Simply place cards on loading shelves . . . turn
the handle . .. presto!'. . . cards are shuffled.
$5.45

Shaeffer’s Brilliantly NEW Snorkel Pen.
With the amazing ‘’no-dunk”’ siphon action.
Choice of models, colors. From .... $12.50

Complete Writing Kit. Ideal for servicemen and
students!
Includes calendar, stationery, stampholder, blotter, address book, .................... $6.95

TS
Princess Gardner

billfold. 3-

way bill divider;

pass case.

Saddle

cowhide.

December 18, 1952

........

$5.

Prince
Gardner
Registrar.
Slim-lined. Detachable pass
case. Calfette goat. $5.00

645

Central

Avenue

Highland Park
Open

Evenings till

9 P.M. thru Dec. 23

|

�%

ayy
Fede

:

ML Kercthards Return
From
Mr.

and

Brush

Mrs.

M.

avenue

L.

have

Kerrihard

returned this

week from a two week vacation in
Mexico City and Acapulco, Mex.
Theiy
daughter,
Miss
Marion
Kerrihard, who 1s an airline stewardess, spent last week on vacation
here
from
Los
Angeles,
Calif.,

ALPH L. STEMPLE
Fuller

Exarl Carbon Weds

Mexico Vacation

of Grove

Dealer

where

she

hard’s

flight

tween

Season’s

Los

is based.

Miss

assignments

Angeles

Kerriare

and Chicago.

Greetings

MAGIC SCISSORS
Beauty

1893 Sheridan Road

Our Styling Offers You Satisfaction Possible Only With
Artistic Hair Dressers Plus the Finest Preparations
Available.

MARY

DESMOND

be-

hake
The
of

First

Lake

the

TARNOW

from

marriage

the

church

setting

December

6

for

of

Miss

Gudrun
Margareta
Reuterdahl of
Lake
Forest to Earl H. Carlson,
son of the Ernest H. Carlsons of
Llewellyn
avenue.
Miss
Reuterdahl is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs.
Ebbe
Reuterdahl
of
Stockholm,
Sweden.
The
chaplain
of
Lake Forest College, the Rev. Cornelius Loew, read the marriage service.

chose

bride
with

gown

bodice trimmed
seed

pearls

illusion

an

ivory

cathedral

a

satin

train,

the

with two panels of

and

finished

neckline.

Her

her

terdahl

Presbyterian

with

an

fingertip-

length veil was held in place by a
crown
bridal
Swedish
traditional
of seed pearls and she carried a

Style Shop's

The

platinum

Rites

Forest was

gardenias over
special significance

Of

Soreéler Sa

Presbyterian

The

(SoGh

HI 2-3814

oh
Sh

was the

cross, a confirmation
parents,

wore

which

Miss

entwined

string of pearls.
As matron of
Haas of Chicago
aqua
net
dress

0

gift
Reu-

with

a

honor, Mrs. Otto
was attired in an
and
a modified

Swedish crown of yellow roses. She

aden

Mr.

and

an

Mrs.

Albert

which

followed

in the

Carl-

son home.
After a brief wedding trip, the
couple is residing in Lake Forest
where the bride is completing her
studies at Lake Forest College.

No

matter

or sell you'll

what

you

want

to buy

find the Want-Ad

tion your best market

sec-

place.

Lechy

Mrs.

Day

road

Canon

is

M.

Bridell

the
carried
a bouquet
of the
same
marriage
of their daughter,
Lorflowers.
Airman Kenton H. Carlson came raine, to Hartman Bennett Canon
home from Tyndall Air Force base, Jr., son of Mrs. Canon Sr. of DeerPanama City, Fla., to be best man field.
for his brother.
Ushers were anThe couple was married Novemother brother, Donald of Llewellyn
-ber
21 in Benton Harbor, Mich.
avenue, and Robert Neff of ChiMaid of honor was
Miss Helen
cago.
Mrs. Carlson selected a French Lakich, an Alpha Xi Delta sorority
blue taffeta dress with bead trim- sister of Miss Bridell’s at Northming, champagne accessories and a
western university.
George Andercorsage
cf
Sweetheart
roses for
son, an Acacia fraternity brother of
her son’s wedding
and the open
Mr. Canon’s, served as best man.

house

Half

Conan

Mech

Si

Whd
of

B

announce

a

sophomore

nological Institute at Northwestern.
They are both graduates of Highland Park High school.
The young people are now living
in an Evanston
apartment
while
they continue their studies.
They
are planning a wedding trip during
the Christmas vacation.

Sues... IDEAL GIFT

“be happy...give Luckies”

If you have a gift problem
We'd like you to stop
And check these suggestions
From The Style Shop.
You'll find lots of values
For girls and for boys
In fine children’s clothing,
And new Christmas toys.
Girls

Sizes:

Boys

[ |
[_]
[_]
[_]

infant

infant

thru

thru
size

pre-teen
10.

189 to 3%

Boys’ Shirts
Floppy Dogs
Dresses
Sweaters

Hes ilies

1% to 9%
3%

to 17”

295 to 5%

As advertised in ESQUIRE

He'll be a happy..and a lucky man to get Good

Luck

r

FOR

CHILDREN

Open Friday Evenings ‘Til 9 P.M.
And

All

Day

Wednesdays

ties designed

by

Regal.

A

choice

of six

lucky patterns... horse shoes, four leaf clovers,
shooting stars...0on fine acetate jacquard.
Other Regal Ties
Large

selection

in

the college of liberal arts, and her
bridegroom is a junior in the Tech-

1.50 to 5.00

to choose

from.

�Duo-pianists Will Perform For Woman's Club

-*\ pital

[

|

(This Ad To Be Read By
Men Only)
Here are some very spe-

ay
Says

|

cial gift suggestions for that
very special woman in your
life. Far above the usual
gifts, ‘these are heirlooms-

ree

fas

on

to-be,

Solid gold antique-type bracelet containing 11 diamonds,
44 genuine blue sapphires, 60 beautifully matched cul-

SURI, WINN

cies

oc tilice hisy te scone dlaveeleck en a

$50000*

Sunburst pin and pendant containing 84 pearls with .25
COVOT COMTAN CHOMONNE 1oic6 ci onan $1 5Q00*
Round sunburst containing
PxOY OCCT VIG OR hii

90 pearls and 6 diamonds.
iio
eco
ls $3QQ00*

Distinctive LeCoultre ’’Par Excellence’ with dainty solid

GONE TT CRIP neces

cc

alc ces

as

$3 3Q00*

An excellent selection of fine cultured and oriental pearl
necklaces, pins, earrings and bracelets.

$5000" to $7 50Q00*

JEWELERS

Ped

A two-piano program

Park Woman’s

will be presented the

of

January

6

in the

Highland

Arthun Seelig of Linden Park place and Mrs.

Irving C. Schur

of St. Johns avenue, duo-pianists, billed as Dorys Seelig and Virginia Schur.

They will play

the

March

and

club by Mrs.

afternoon

Waltz

from

Rachmaninoff’s

Second Suite. Mrs.

|

3

§

:

an

Corner Central &amp; Sheridan, Highland Park

George Webster of Cherokee|]

+ pis

road, center, will do the Ogden Nash narration for their second number, Saint Saens’
“Carnival of the Animals.’’
The program will close with their presentation of ‘’Scaramouche” by Milhaud.
Both performers are Highland Park Music club members and will repeat
the program, with Mrs. Webster, before that club on January 13.

Tax

HI

Drive

2-2028

Carefully — The Life You
May Be Your Own!

Save

WITH
Rit

ay

O- Ft

FoR

ANC

E

One sweep of beautiful figure—strapless bra on down.

And Lily’s long,

lean line is so much the better for
your holidays, because its dainty

iOK

AT
nylon.

CHRISTMAS

Satin lastex back has conven-

iently long zipper.
Sizes 34-38.

White only.

18.50

Choosing your girdle or brassiere
at Stevens means fitting room —
attention
and
expertadvice
from

one of our

staff

of

highly

trained
At

no

@

fitters.
extra

charge,
course.

me

of

ANU Bu Ae
!

eh

,

STORE OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL CHRISTMAS
Evanston store hours, 9. to 9 through December 23—9 to 5:30 Christmas Eve
Highland Park store hours, 9 to 9 through December 23—9 to 5:30 Christmas Eve

Thursday,

December

18, 1952

:

Page 15

�1?

rie

oy

Se

AC
Fie tee
b
"

eee

Lie

Na

/ HA,

fe or

W

Lk (ly) Robert Bary
‘Weds

D omadion

Vovember
*'

Dr.

and

Sheldon

ee

ites

CARE

evs:

ed

et

ny

i

1

ny

eR

ey
Ss

a

O men

To Wed

Mrs.

A.’

are

Highland’Parker

The

Of

In

LL.

Berg.

announcing

of

|}:

the

©

Canada.
uated

of the Royal Canadian
Mrs. Christian.
attended

schools

Highland

|

E

in

Park

High

School
and received
his degree
from Purdue university, West Lafayette, Ind.
He is presently stationed at Coronado Beach, Calif.,
‘where he is with the Amphibious
| ‘Staff of the navy.
He has served
in the navy for two years, one
‘year of that period on the troop
transport, USS Telfair, in Japanese
waters.
Dr.
and Mrs. Berg and their
daughter, Marilyn, left for California this week to spend the coming
month
with their son
and

| §
t

,

|

|:
|

‘Will Visit Highland Park
| During Christmas Season
| will

visit

Roy

Highland

D.

Welch

Jr.

Park

over

the

|

-fcame

‘ Christmas-New
Year’s_
holidays.
The former Constance Alexander,

_ daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
A.
Alexander of Berkeley road,
and Mr. Welch Jr. were married

last

December

21,

and

lived

Evanston
- vice.

until he entered

While

Mr.

Welch

has

in

the ser-

been

last few months, his bride has been
Visiting
Harry

her

aunt

David

and

Beans

uncle,

at

the

Winchester,

| Mass.
|
After graduation exercises, when
| Mr. Welch receives his commission
as an ensign, the couple will re-

turn

C.

»

Mr.
Jr. of

and Mrs. Jerome P. Bowes
Laurel avenue have as their

guests for the holidays Mrs. Bowes’
mother
Nesbit

and

Mr. and Mrs. Warren A. Peterson of Ridge road will have their
_ daughters, Suzanne and Julie, and
their son, Warren Jr., with them

- for the Christmas holidays.
- §uzanne, a sophomore student,
lives on campus at Lake Forest
College, where classes are out today.
Julie, a junior student at

- Kemper Hall, Kenosha, is expected

home today on vacation.
Warren Jr., who is in his sophoDartmouth,

_ day from classes.
ly

will

on a two-week

ar-

holi-

He was recent-

initiated into Kappa

_ ternity, of which
a member.

his

Sigma

father

fra-

is also

Two Highland Park Young
Women Will Fly Here
- For Christmas Week
Miss Gale George, who has been
_making her home in San Francisco,

_ Calif., for the past year will arrive

home
to

by plane on Christmas

spend

ents,

four

Mr.

George
return
_

and
San

Making

the

will

flight

be

Miss
on

her

Edward

street.

She

Francisco

(Continued
Page

with

Mrs.

of Rice
to

| George

days

east

with

page

18)

MOTOR
he

LLU
ee,

)

RRS
Or Me ee
Paeee
Shy
eee
oN oe
Pe SYS BLT Ws

a

J,

Bennette

Moore

photo

up

sons

Bowes

will

also

with

them

for

from

Told:
Us

dated

Moultrie

Air

be

being

home

recalled

this

Harrison

to

duty,

will

weekend.

Bowes

is also

expected

home this weekend from the University of Texas at Austin where
he is a sophomore
student.
His
brother, Jerome P. Bowes III also
is home for the holidays.

ar os

Chis

Tlews

NS Fortnightly
Christmas Party
Set For Saturday
The second of a series of five
formal
dances
sponsored
by the
North Shore Fortnightly is to be
held Saturday night in the Michigan Shores club in Wilmette. The
executive
committee,
headed
by
Mr. and Mrs. Francis B. Stine, is
keeping secret the plans for decorating the club for this Christmas dance.
Highland Parkers who are mem-

bers of the Fortnightly, a group

of

more than 100 North Shore couples
who
subscribe
to the series, are
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Nosek of Sunset road, the John A. Delaneys of

Barberry

lane, Mr.

and

Mrs.

John

L. Griffith of Balsam
road, and
the J. Gordon Smiths of Sheridan
road.
The Smiths will make
up
a party with Dr. and Mrs. Charles
McArthur of Winnetka:

William F. Walshes to
Spend Christmas Here

base

Ga., where Lt. McClelland.is taking
jet pilot training.
The lieutenant, son of Cmdr. and
Mrs. James P. McClelland of the
American Embassy in Lisbon, Port(Continued on page 18)

Connart

since

Nae
4 UReAeR ER re

Weddings

Cesiee
zo

ae CA

Re

to California

Lee R. Blevins of Woodland road,
who has been in.Hollywood, Calif.,
Opening a new branch office for
the production of television shows,
will be home with his family for
Christmas.
Mrs. Blevins and their children,
Judy, Linda, Michael and Gretchen,
are planning to move to Hollywood
after the first of the year to be
with Mr. Blevins.

Mr.
and Mrs. W. J. Walsh
of
Sheridan road are looking forward
to seeing their son and daughter-

in-law, Mr. and Mrs. William F.
Walsh of Evanston, who will return
from a trip to Florida and Nassau
in time to spend Christmas here.
They will bring with them their

daughter,
Colleen
months
old.
The
also

be

visiting

Ann,
three
Walshes
will

Mrs.

Walsh’s

ents, the Leo J. Sheridans

par-

of Dean

avenue at Christmastime.
On December 27, the couple is planning
to leave for St. Paul to attend the
wedding of Miss Mary Catherine
Matson
to
Richard
Nagle.
Mr.
Nagle
attended
Georgetown
university with Mr. Walsh.

Anne And Jack Harris to
Arrive From East Saturday
Miss

Anne

Harris

and

her broth-

er, Jack, son and daughter of the
Very Rev. and Mrs. Charles Harris
of
Prospect
avenue,
will
arrive
home Saturday to spend two weeks
with their parents over the Christmas holidays.
Miss
Harris
is a freshman
at
(Continued on page 18)

Plan Christmas Dinner Dance

Ravinia Woman’‘s
Dinner Dance Is
Set for Dec. 27
Ravinia

Woman’s'

club

is

plan-

ning to hold its annual holiday dinner dance on Saturday, December
27, from 9 p.m. to 1am.
The buffet dinner will take place between
9:30 p.m. and 11 p.m.
Chairman
of the event is
W. Alcock Johnston of Marion
nue, social chairman
of the
whose
co-chairman
is Mrs.
rison Beers of Burton avenue.

Mrs.
aveclub,
Mor-

On
their committee
are
Mesdames J. Rogers Lawrence, James
C. Snow, Frank Andrews, John H.
Armstrong, George F. Eisenbrand,
Walter Buchroeder Jr., Robert P.
Palmer, Richard Baughman,
I. H.
Hartman Jr., J. Richard Henschen
and Theodore L. Rehn.

Eve
par-

be

Reservations for
made with Mrs.

the party. may
Johnston at HI

C.

2-4270, or with Mrs. Beers at HI 2-

will

6591, until noon. December 24.
Billy Roberts orchestra will furnish the music.
Tables will be re-

December

Nancy

their

Va.

Mrs.

Christmas.
Lt. J. Channon Bowes
of the U. S. Navy, who has served
aboard the carrier Wasp for a year

'W. A. Petersons’ Daughters,

at

and sister, Mrs. Harrison
and Miss Elizabeth Nesbit

of Warrenton,
Mr.

Son to Be Home for Holiday

year

Ninon

Jerome P. Bowes Family Gathers For Christmas

have

more

Wiss

Moving

to the Midwest.

_ rive tomorrow

Miss

at-

tending Naval Officers’ Candidate
school in Newport, R. I. for the

EE ORE
Ee
¥

Mrs. William J. McClelland, the
former
Patricia
Walters, was. reunited with her family for the first
time since her marriage in June,
when she and Lt. McClelland arrived Sunday to spend the Christmas holidays with her parents, Mr
and Mrs. E. Worthington Walters
of
Glencoe
avenue.
The
couple

The Junior Roy Welches

Mrs.

ie

Are Here on Christmas
Visit To E. W. Walters’

|

:

and

*

Lt., Mrs. McClelland

‘daughter-in-law.

Mr.

eM

The Louis C. Connarts of New
Orleans
have
announced
the engagement of their daughter, Ninon
to Herbert D. Fried, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Lawrence A. New of Laurel
avenue. Mr. Fried, who traveled to
New Orleans for the announcement
party two weeks ago, attended the
University of New Mexico, and is
now in business in Chicago. He is
a member of Kappa Sigma fraternity.
His bride-to-be studied at Isidore
Newman
school and at Stephens
college in Columbia, Mo., and later
attended Endicott Junior college in
Beverly, Mass.
The couple is planning to marry
March 7.

Lt. (jg) Berg was grad-

from

Be
Feta
ate

ROA

barber!

of their son, Lt. (jg) Ro-

bride

kre
ec

Engagement

| tian is the daughter of Capt. L. W.
*

‘

ian

‘bert L. Berg to Miss Shirley Chris-tian November 19 in the Flamingo
‘hotel, Las Vegas, Nev. Miss ChrisChristian
Navy and

Cea
Swe

\

19 Kites

lane

marriage

eG

Miss

served

for

New-

well

for

as

individual

couples

groups.

(Continued

on page 18)

as

Mrs. Morrison Beers of Burton avenue, right above holds up a snow figure, one of the
decorations for the Christmas holiday party planned by the Ravinia Woman’s club December
27.
Mrs. Beers, co-chairman of the event, discusses party decorations with Mrs. James C.
Snow of Lakeside place, a committee member.
The buffet dinner dance is being planned
under the direction of Mrs. W. Alcock Johnston of Marion avenue, social chairman.

16

Thursday,
bis

ae

WER

iw

:

ALS

‘

December
A

Sow

Rap

wee,

ae

Be

18, 1952

Tet

ators

AW

Mia Ries BUR UE BASRA

Ph

cet

z

ee
ci tae

oan

Nig

CPShe

Ade:

�ihe

eas

Day Has Toy Shop,
Christmas Program

“Attendants

For Jan. 17 Wedding
Miss

Nancy

sister,

Mary

honor
to

at

her

Patrick

and

Mrs.

Cahill
Jane,

Gallagher,
G.

asked

be

marriage

John

Deerfield,

has
to

her
of

January

17

of

Mr.

Gallagher

formerly

The

of

of

Highland

Park.
The
Mr.

bride-to-be,

and

Mrs.

a

Fred

daughter

Cahill

of

of Deer-

field, will have as bridesmaids Miss
Eileen Moroney of Deerfield road
and Miss Loraine Hatch of Deer-

field.
Best

man

for

Mr.

Gallagher

High

Country

maid

son

nna Wma.

North Shore Country

will

be his brother, James.
His ushers
are Gilbert
Baruffi of Highwood
and
Jack
Cahill,
brother
of the
bride-to-be.
A
reception
in
the
Highland
Park
American
Legion
Memoria]
building
from 6 to 10 p.m.
will
follow the 3 p.m. ceremony in Holy
Cross
church.
The
couple
will
travel to Florida for their wedding
trip.

school

Day

at North

school

has

Shore

3 shop under student managership
to make toys for several charities.
James
Witherell
and
Richard
Ridenour of Evanston are serving
as co-chairmen of the student committee.
Their
assistants
include
Miss Ellen Reeves of Roger Williams avenue, Miss Courtney Bowes
of Laurel avenue and Miss Marcia
MeMillan of Central avenue.

wooden
be

toys
given

and
as

stuffed

gifts.

Not

just

a

robe—but

and

a

it comes

a big collection

robe

that

looks

WOME

snap

Mrs.

Holidays
Edward

L. Tixie

will be graduated
in February.
when he will receive his lieuten.
ant’s commission in the Air Force

at

cere-

p.m.

4:30

the

of chrysanthemums

a spray

western university in Kansas City,
where he will be a guest of his

ily, she
is
Christmas

with

the

at home
holidays,

Close

during
the
completing

oon

Mrs. Prior’s father, Mr.
will arrive
on Christmas

over

a
are

attendin

in chemical

the

ge

Do you have a son or
a sweetheart in the service?
Send him a portrait of

yourself or of the family.

avenue.

the family

Troxe

the University of New Mexico and

fam-

Mrs. George L. Martin of New
York City, formerly of Beech lane.
arrived Friday to spend Christmas
with her daughter and son-in-law,
the junior Percy H. Priors, who are
occupying
their
new
home _ on

join

Bluff. The

a month ago.
Both the Tixiers

George L. Martins To
Spend Christmas Here

Princeton

of Lake

Mexieo are —

formerly of Central avenue, moved

plans for a spring wedding.
Mr. Close is a senior
engineering.

of New

Martin,
Eve to

Percy

H. Prior,
PHOTOGRAPHY

599

ROGER

PHONE

holidays.

Jr.

WILLIAMS
HI

2-3199

in her

hair.
(Continued

like

a

.... from

on page

18)

9%
dress;

Also,
$10.95

CHRISTMAS

PLEASUR

GUARANTEED !

aad dh casein gay ep avaviccs docepucosengdiness $2.95

SgPolat

eeeay

PIE

and

Thanksgiving

Not just another Jewel Box—here’s one that sprouts handy
shelves when the cover’s raised.
Every storage nook beLeatherette, with ‘‘importcomes immediately accessible.

NE

Mr.

Troxels

Mrs. P. D. Brand of Hinsdale, the

just

favorites.

The Christmas

and

Clavey

fiancee’s parents, Dr. and Mrs. H.
Carleton Reynolds.
His fiancee, Miss Jean Reynolds,
is
a
senior
at
Northwestern’s
speech
center.
Having
spent

in a lavish variety of styles.

of tried-and-true

Mr.

of

James Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Albert
the
of Clarendon Hills announce
marriage of their daughter, Betty
Ann, to Robert Wier Weddell Jr.,
forWeddells,
son of the senior
merly of Sheridan road, and now
of Webster Grove, Mo.
The Rev. Glen J. Schillerstrom

GIFTS soutithc EXTRA
‘It’s NEW,

of

coming east for a Christmas visi
with her parents, the Thomas G.

in
matron of honor, was gowned
floorlength emerald green taffeta.
Her flowers were white chrysanthemums and evergreens and she wore

Tomorrow
a
Christmas
play.
“The Wise Men,” will be given by
ninth grade students.

son
Close

mas vacation from classes at North-

in place her fingertip length veil
and she carried a white prayerbook
to which a white orchid and clusters of stephanotis were fastened.

have portrayed Christmas tableaux,
led
carols
and
presented
choral
music. Today, Santa Claus, a senior
boy, will distribute handmade toys
to members
of the Lower school.
Folk and square dancing will follow.

Close,

Robert Wi Wedell Hr

ending in a
skirt
the
pailettes,
train. A lace and pearl cloche held

The traditional week of Christmas observances began last Monday at the school. The students

C.

Charles

(Jean Troxel)

mony on November 29 in the Union church of Hinsdale.
Miss Smith wore a dress of white
Florentine lace over satin, the illusion neck edged in seed pearls and

animals

Christmas

Jack
Mrs.

court, will spend part of his Christ-

officiated

The committee, which represents
the home rooms of the High school.
will organize
the manufacture of
to

Holidays In Kansas City

Of Botty OMA SP

organized

| Edward L, Tixiers To 2
Visit T. G. Troxels Over _

“Yack Clése to Spend

aay

ts Nancy Cahill

%

Not just ordinary sweaters—these feature luxurious beaded -.
patterns, for those ‘‘dress up’’ occasions. Large selection,
finest

pure

wools

and

kitten-soft

cashmeres.
=

including

just drab umbrellas—but umbrellas with a style and
that make them a harmonious part of milady’s

styles,

including

velvets,

challis,

wools

(00.6

quilts.
$6.95

Bi

ee laaes

cassie

and
from

aeetn

Sse

hte
aes
5

oa

tem oa

tes

NES

TS

ian?

truly somenew fabrics

hme

Sigh)ee

beedbd:

please —the sheer luxury of
Holeproof's Jewel-Toned nylons. They'll
go with her to all the holiday festivities
and many others because Holeproof's
Beauty Lock finish means more snag resistance —longer wear.. Give Holeproof
for Christmas in Fashion-keyed colors.
Sizes 8!/, to 11. Proportioned lengths.

= hex

and

sorne:. ore

old bedjackets—these are
run the gamut
in fresh

to

eng

Sure

Not just the same
thing special.
We

es
di

Their Own Jewel Box

Yes, today even umbrellas are fashion-conscious!
bet she doesn’t have one like these! from $5.95

droo =le

ensemble,
And we'll

ae

ies

JEWEL-TONED NYLONS in
Not
flair

Ree
pet

is

from $10.95

Open

Evenings

\ Yale

have

FASHIONS

FOR

MORE

Why do you think
North Shore women
chosen Hilborn’s for

TH AN

20

pr.

3me

denier $1.65

oes

60 gauge—15

a com-

YEARS

EN

er

$1.

Hiljo

,

Until 9:00

DISTINCTIVE
| Thursday, December 18, 1952

from

and

ee aa
eR NERS

plete assortment of jewelry g ift pieces,

$2.95;

For 3 pair in reusable plastic Gift Box.
HOSIERY

a

4.95

BY

wns
ae] 3

o&gt;
FINEST

NYLON

Sie eS
nyt

from

Santa

Garnttt -Co._|
Claus

will be here

4 to 5:30 daily.

Saturday

2 to 5

a

collection of gift purses,

Bee

outstanding

e

PLUS—an

|)

�Lt., Mrs. McClelland

SNOW PLOWING

(Continued

page

|Ravinia Woman’‘s Club Smith-Weddell

16)

(Continued

from

page

16)

ee

ee ee eee eee

ee

ee

store for boys
Fis
Famous for Beautiful Shirts

EE VU PLUMS YY VOY

Park

MVD 1 VDDD UE MDE YE ENE 2 MED 1 MEH

VEE

OD

Sot Teverbaugh

This year give Yourself a present .. . 52 extra
days

of carefree

34 Family

Men

Century.

tus Bead im

LAUNDRY SERVICE

Skokie Valley
LAUNDRY

&amp;

DRY

a Bea eee

Roseanne

of

Champaign

Campbell
were

and

Miss Diane

of Chicago,

similarly

all of whom

gowned

in

emerald

IS

green and carried chrysanthemums.
Mrs. Smith chose a mink brown
lace dress with bronze colored or-

chids and a pink cloche for her
daughter’s wedding and for the reception

Lake

which

followed

Country

club.

in the Ruth

Mrs.

Weddell

wore navy blue crepe trimmed in
bugle beads with a matching hat
and a corsage of white orchids.
Best man for Mr. Weddell was
the bride’s brother, Sgt. Gordon W.
Smith, who had just returned from
Korea. Ushers were Tom Weil and
Dirk Young of Highland Park, John
Broerman of Rocky River, O., and
John Langlays of Hinsdale.
Mr. Weddell and his bride’ will
live in Urbana until the end of the
term at the University of Illinois
where both young people are studying. He is a member of Alpha Delta Pi fraternity and she is affiliated
with Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority.

Anne

and

Jack

(Continued

Harris

from

page

16)

Smith college, Northampton, Mass.,
and Jack is in his first year at the
Virginia
seminary
in Alexandria
where
he
is preparing
for
the
Episcopal ministry.
He was grad-

uated from Williams college,
liamstown, Mass., last June.

Two Highland
(Continued

Wil-

Parkers
from

page

16)

man. daughter of the Bernard Newmans of Sheridan road.
After a
week’s stay with her. parents, she
will
return
to
the
West
Coast,
where
she
is
also
following
a
career.

COMPLIMENTARY
11

A.M.

to

EGGNOG
2

P.M.

to

FAMOUS NAME BELT
own name in nail heads

with fancy jewel trim.

$350
LEATHER WALLETS with change
purse—snap_

closing—

$20
Inc. F.E.T.

§ :

clea hi4ls

Also zip around wallet with
bronze plaque trim—
$300

Inc. F.E.T.

LEATHER
GLOVES—for
balling. Dry, soft—
LOUNGING
—snowflake

PAJAMAS

snow$950
of cotton

pattern— contrast-

ing coat and pants. Maroon
White.
Green &amp; White.
, Sizes 4-12 $295

14-20

WESTERN
PAJAMAS
able cotton—trousers

like op?

with

&amp;

Christmas

Dinner

12 Noon to 8:30 P.M.
For Reservations Phone HI 2-4444

$395
Expecting

of washfashioned

holster

ROBES—handsome rayon
Large block pattern

in

672 Central Ave., Highland
624 Davis St., Evanston
The
18

Only

Stores

on

the

North

Navy,

Red

and

Shore

Exclusively

for Boys

during

the

join

us

too.

Bring

the children

on Christmas day to meet our
Santa Claus who has wrapped

Blue.
$995

Park
HI 2-6240
UNiversity 4-6240

visitors

holidays?
Let them
be our
guests .. . and we hope you will

pockets.
Lt.

BAaaY

$3.50

4 to 10 $295

Page

ee Behe

Miss

Christmas Day

Distinction

His

INC.

Highland Park 2-3310 — Deerfield Call Enterprise 1616
512-518 Waukegan Ave., Highwood

of

is still time for you
order the

CLEANERS,

Your Clothes Stay Young”
Main Office and Plant

Junior Ready-tied Ties
Cadet Ties
Student Ties
Stripes, Figures and Knits
$] 00
There

Finish Specialists

for Over a Quarter of a

oy

for Young

Your

Laundry.

Ba Daby i BeBe Wee Bese Bie Be BeBe a BeBe

TIES

It’s as easy

as calling SKOKIE VALLEY LAUNDRY.
MEMBER
Send Your Dry Cleaning With

“Where

EERE PE RPM

leisure a year.

were

Gelvin of Springfield, Miss Joyce
Weise and Miss Barbara Shepherd

RAHAAAAAARRAHRAANAAARNARRRRARARAANEREDDAN EASA NH HHHHHRRE TRAE E DRA AE PDP R MRR RRD

eee

OD

GARAGE
HI 2-6861

Hee

Bridesmaids

iy

Louie Tazioli Excavating

5-4

Fire Place Wood—Any Size

Evanston

(Continued from page 17)

ugal, has a 14-day leave.
Another
party
with
which the
Another
member
of the family | Ravinia Woman’s club is concerned
who will be home for Christmas is|is the ‘Holly Hop” to be given DeEdward W. Walters Jr. He returned |cember 29 in the village house from
Sunday from his studies at Ken-|9 p.m. to midnight for teen-agers
yon college, Gambier, O., where he|of the area.
The club gives this
is a freshman.
party annually.

— DRIVEWAYS —

OFFICE
HI 2-4662

from

gifts for them
mas
HIGHLAND

PARK

under the Christ-

J

tree.

Eggnog

time—

11 A.M, to 2 P.M.
Santa Claus time—
12 Noon to 1 P.M.

Thursday,

December

18, 1952

�Candidly

Speaking—

Mrs. Oliver W. Tuthill of Roger Williams
avenue, a new member, is welcomed at Ravinia
Woman's club membership tea by Mrs. Arthur

Two of the 16 new members welcomed were Mrs.
Everett A. Dannemark of Central avenue and Mrs.
Stephen D. Chase of Central avenue, above.
Mrs.

Mrs. Gordon Parks, president of the club, stops
to chat with Mrs. Robert E. Sloan of Summit avenue
and Mrs. Theodore F. Struve of Ridgewood drive, both

chairman, who pins a corsage on her shoulder.

her

in the home of Mrs. Wyatt Jacobs on Lakeside place.

H. Moulton,

vice president and

membership

Moulton made arrangements for the tea assisted by
co-chairman,

Mrs.

Lloyd

A.

Tupper

and

com-

new members.

Reception and tea was held recently

mittee members.

Redeemer Lutheran
Families To Attend

Christmas

Party

The congregation
of
the
Redeemer Lutheran church will gather together Sunday at 7 p.m. for
a family
Christmas
party in the
Highland Park Recreation center.

:

Redeemer
guild
members
who
comprise the
committee
for
arrangements are Mrs. Rudolph Netzer,
chairman;
Mrs.
Raymond
Grossman, Mrs. Raymond Rudolph,
and
Mrs.
Thomas
Miller.
Other
committee members planning decorations
and
entertainment
have
been chosen from the
Walther
league, Fellowship club, the Senior
choir and the Dorcas society.

BELLE
IN

At the regular monthly meeting
of the Redeemer guild December
11, plans were formulated for the
Christmas party.
The meeting be-

gan with a Christmas

G

i V

EC

H

E

R

T

New officers were elected at the
business session which followed the
luncheon as follows:
Mrs. Louis
Wagner,
president;
Mrs. Louis Geminer, secretary; and
the
Mesdames
George
Shuman,
Raymond Rudolph, and Frank Stubenvoll, council members.
The present vice president, Mrs.
Edward Juul, and
the _ treasurer,
Mrs. Marvin
Lawrentz,
will continue to serve for another year.
Mrs.
Thomas
Miller and Mrs.
George
Shuman
volunteered
to
serve on the Altar committee for

the months

of January

and

Febru-

Cooper

will

return to Tucson sometime after | EDGAR A. STEVENS, Inc.

the New

Year.

Thursday,

December

18,

1952

SIZE

|

E

PERFECT

OF

LUXURY.

Because

its

clear

flattering

sheerness

is sized

to fit her

should
— it

clings

ond

Choose

nature.

Fis

And

stocking
like

sec-

Brey

if

she’s small — Modite if she’s

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Borinstein
(Gail Cooper) of Indianapolis, Ind.,
and their 18 months’ old daughter,
Cathy, will arrive in Highland Park
shortly
to spend the
next three
weeks
with
Mrs. _ Borinstein’s
mother, Mrs. Morton R. Cooper of
Marshman street, and her younger
sister, Lynn, a junior at Highland
Park High school.
Mrs. Cooper’s
other daughter, Jill, is flying home
tomorrow from the University of
Arizona where she is in her second

Miss

LEG

like a well groomed

Joseph Borinstein Family
To Spend Holidays in HP

of studies.

PERSONAL

leg as well as her foot.

ary, 1953.

year

HER

STOCKINGS

This is the Christmas stocking every woman hopes for.

luncheon for

members and
guests
with
Mrs.
John Dee, Mrs. Marcus Hagen and
Mrs. Peter Duskey as hostesses.

SHARMEER

average

—

regally

tall.

afternoon

Duchess

OPEN

EVANSTON

Daytime

sheers,

Sheerest sheers,

EVENINGS

if she’s
and

1.65
1.95

UNTIL

CHRISTMAS

HIGHLAND PARK _ Evanston store hours, 9 to 9 through December 23—9 to 5:30 Christmas Eye
Highland Park store hours, 9 to 9 through December 23——-9 to 5:30 Christmas Eve
Page 19

�| Name

MOSER

A

STENOGRAPHIC-SECRETARIAL
Peat Months' (Day)
INTENSIVE COURSE

for college women

A

new

Monday

class

begins

on

in each month.
Bulletin T free

57 East Jackson Bivd.

@

the

first

WaAbash 2-7377

Chicago

H. M. Florsheim

Director

Of

FestivalOf Lights Ends Tomorrow

IMA

Harold M. Florsheim of 650 Sheridan road was elected a director
of the Illinois Manufacturers’ association at its 59th annual dinder meeting last week in the Conrad Hilton hotel.

Col. J. V. Houghtaling,
1787
Clifton ‘avenue, is secretary of the
association.

Willcox
FOOTWEAR,

INC.

THREE

WAY
TOE ROOM
Pied Piper lasts allow

ample room for growth

HOME

OF

PLUS

ceiling room

avoid

friction.

te

PATENTED
CONSTRUCTIC™
No filler —Smocther Helps keep foot in
balance.

+.
¢

“1

sf,
-

—

n

WISHES YOU
A VERY MERRY

Ce

In keeping with the Christmas spirit we
extend our wishes to one and all for
the best of everything.
335

Park

Avenue

&amp;

Glencoe,

Illinois

&amp;

Glencoe

2308

RICHER,H

ne

.

co

The candle lighting of the Menorah, main ritual of Chanukah, the Festival of Lights,
was demonstrated at the recent institute sponsored by the men’s and women’s organizations
of North Suburban Beth El Synagogue.
Above, Harold R. Blumberg, president of the congregation, lights the candles with the Shamas (pilot light), as Rabbi Philip Lipis, Mrs. Seymour
Tabin, co-chairman of the institute, and Mrs. Herman DeKoven, chairman, look on.
One
candle of the Menorah is lighted each day of the holiday in ascending fashion until all eight
are lighted.
Chanukah, which opened last Friday and continues through tomorrow, recalls
the rededication of the temple of Jerusalem after it had been seized by and rewon from the
Syrian Greek, Antiochus.

EAVIER

|

{

Home

For Holidays

Mr. and Mrs. Victor Glader of
| 1891 Second street are the parents

Mr.
end
Mrs.
Max
Bloomstein
Jr. of Lincoln
avenue
south are
of a boy, Daniel Victor, born De- expecting their daughter, Valerie,
home
for the Christmas holidays
pital.
Daniel’s sisters are Connie, | on Saturday.
MMiss
Bloomstein
is
16, and Judy, 12. Mrs. Peter Glad- | a sophomore
student
at
Mount
er of
McDaniels
avenue
is the
Holyoke college in South Hadley,
paternal grandmother.
Mass.

cember 12 in Highland Park hos-

~~,

alll

BETTER:- TASTINGS DP

| Glader

ONLY YOU
CAN PUT THE

IN THRIFT

This year, enjoy the best holiday egg nogs you
ever tasted. Get Wanzer’s famous Egg Nog Mix
(non-alcoholic). Made after the original, exclusive Wanzer recipe, it has a flavor all its own.

You’ve simply never tasted anything like it before.
; as is,
Wanzer’s Egg Nog Mix is a grand, complete drink
ready to use. The whole family will love it... especially
the children! And as a mixer, it can’t be beat.
Enjoy this richer, creamier, fuller-bodied egg nog this
holiday season. Be sure you get genuine, old-fashioned
Wanzer’s Egg Nog Mix (non-alcoholic). Phone now or
see the Wanzer driver-salesman. Delivered right to
your doorstep in Chicago and all suburbs. The num-

Decide now that:

“I will set aside cash for emergencies.”
“J will build my bank account to take
advantage of opportunities, as well.”
OPEN YOUR ACCOUNT HERE

ber below is toll-free.

Call Ente RPRISE

SIDNEY

6700

WANZER

Chicago’s First and Finest Milk Company

« sons
¢

Our 93rd Year

Serving Chicago and 177 Neighboring Towws and Suburbs
Page

Member

of Federal

Deposit

Insurance

of

HIGHLAND

TSM

Corporation

yO

:

PARK

20

Thursday,

December

18, 1952

�Coin Containers for
TB Stamp Sale to Be
Placed

Brownies to Sing
Christmas Carols
Tomorrow Night

In Post Office

Arne W. Makela, chairman of the
Lake County Tuberculosis association’s
46th
annual _ tuberculosis
Christmas
seal
sale,
today
an-

nounced that during the week coin
containers were placed in the post
offices throughout Lake county for
the convenience of residents who
did not receive Christmas seals in

the

mail.

was

left

A

supply

with

each

of

the

seals

container

and

purchasers may help themselves to
what ever amount they desire.
Mrs. Horace S. Vaile of Maple
avenue, who is on the Christmas
seal committee, has announced that
the Highland Park containers will
be collected shortly after Christmas, with those of the other Lake
county towns and villages, and the

money

in

them

to

supplement

funds raised through the mail sale
of stamps.
Proceeds from both the

mail

sale

and

the

containers

be used to finance
the association.

the

will

program

same

time

Jill Perkins

last

year.

Entertains

Friends At Chanukah

Party

Miss Jill Perkins,
10 year old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
M. Perkins of Windy
Hill Farm,
was hostess at a Chanukah party
Saturday afternoon for several of
her friends. At sundown the children lighted the Chanukah candles

and

sang

the

traditional

Scout

Road

troop

school

carol

to-

morrow from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. at
Central avenue and First street.
The
children
are
first
year
Brownies and are in third grade.

They will be led by four eighth
grade girls from Ravinia school.
The

son,

carolers

Mary

Hathorn,

are

Kris

Janice

Ander-

Bowman,

Marjorie

Sunday At Elks Hall

Ray

Santa

73 of Green

will

to

Members
committee

prayer.

Later
they were
served
refreshments, including the ritual latkes,
or
potato
pancakes,
and
played

will

make

one

of

This

Dr.

George

Sheahen,

Rose,
HI

HI

2-4227

2-5167

or

So Fhoy Say

by today.

Members
will bring
a dish of
food to the potluck supper which
will be served after Santa has paid
his visit.
Another
Elks
club
Year’s Eve

event in
members
party.

| SHE WOULONT GIVE UP

|

prospect for
is the
New

are asked to notify the
making

arrangements

as to how many children they are
bringing to Sunday’s gathering.

Sandra

Lonngren,

Claus

his annual visits to the Elks hall
Sunday
at
2:30
p.m.
when
he
pauses in his rounds to distribute
gifts at the annual Christmas party
for children.

information

is to

be

given

The Want-Ad section is filled with
interesting facts and golden opportunities. Don’t miss it!

Viola

Nelson, Barbara Noble, Rose Noble,
Virginia
Barbara

Marie

ESTHER

Pett,
Margaret
Pierce,
Rogers,
Patti
Swanson,

Viventi,

Judy

Kenny

1815 St. Johns Ave.

Permanen t

for

$950 to $2900
All

Mr. and Mrs. George
Bock Jr.
of Laurel
avenue
entertained
10
friends and relatives of their son,
George III, last week at a dinner
party in celebration
of his 18th
birthday.

1953

... She kept right on until he
finally

Branches

of

Specializing
25

ON

Beauty

the

EDDY’S.

Now

service.

SPECIAL THIS
J. W. Dant and

GIFTS

and up to $5

tried

he’s just as enthusiastic about

Waves

CHRISTMAS

Party

NOW

Highland Park

HI 2-1603

and Mrs. Harry Pierce of Princeton avenue is co-leader.

Birthday

PERKINS

Classique Beauty Salon

and

Ang@
Yost.
The eighth grade girls who will
lead
the
troop
singers
are
Sue
Dodge, Patty Hutchins, Sally Livingston, and Peggy Price.
Mrs. Harrington Yost of Sunnyside avenue is their troop leader

of

Sales to date stand at $29,546.81,
slightly above the sum raised at
the

Brownie

Bay

Santa To Visit Here

Jessie

900

Moore

WEEK
$
Zz

for

8

EDDY'S

Culture

in Hair Coloring

Years

310 GreenBay Rd.* HL.2:1323

of Experience

DISPLAY = THE BEAUTIFUL

treak IBonigs,

Dual-

games.

A GENERAL
*
*

Yes, our famous Nationally
Advertised Sanitone Service
really gets out a// the dirt so
clothes look like new again!
Call today!

NEW
*

*

NEW

COMPLETELY

LONGER

NEW
POWER

MOTORS
WHEELBASE

ONE-PIECE
STEERING*

CLEANERS § DYERS CoO.

Office

and

Phone

for

Plant—

a Courteous

Routeman!

1-1000

GReenleaf

5-1000

Other North and Northwest Suburbs
—Enterprise 6000—No Toll
537
1344
2455

BRANCHES
Diversey Pkwy.
506
Morse Ave.
615
Devon Ave.

Thursday,

December

Davis St.
Howard St.

18,

1952

LOVELIER,

x

SPECTACULAR

We

feel very

we

have

in

proud
our

NEW

today.

showrooms

DOLLAR

FOR

DOLLAR

YOU

CAN’T BEAT A PONTIAC!

hat room, more hip room.

STYLING
ROOMIER
REAR

OVER-ALL

For
a

This newest and finest of Pontiacs
is completely new in styling inside and out. It has a longer
wheelbase, more leg room, more

Broadway

LOngbeach

LONGER,

motor car masterpiece—the great
new 1953 Dual-Streak Pontiac, a
great new beauty, a great new
performer and a great new value.

“Chicago’s and North Shore’s
Leading Cleaners”
5427-31

x

“DUAL-STREAK”

WINDSHIELD—WRAP-AROUND

ORTH SIDE
Main

NEW

MASTERPIECE!
BODIES

WINDOW
PERFORMANCE

This new Pontiac gives you spectacular Dual-Range* performance. And now, for the first time,
you can have Pontiac Power
Steering as optional equipment.*

We do more than invite you, we
urge you to come in and see this
great General Motors value, the
1953 Dual-Streak Pontiac. You
have never seen a car sc wonderful at anywhere near its price!
*Optional at ext

MARCHI
1949

St. Johns

Ave.

BROS.

Tel. Highland

PONTIAC

Park 2-5030

Highland Park, Ill.
Page

21

�x EA

eR
7

E TTC

LE’

RL

PHT Pe

Pe
Oe

EeTL

Craig E. Knight

doctrination on the ways of service

Completes Coast
Guard Course
Craig
son
of

of

E. Knight,
Mr.

and

Skokie

pleted

avenue,

the

E
OUR

Guard

W.

the U.
center

its discipline and are inin
practical
first
aid

methods

and

personal

hygiene,

well as in physical

Knight

responsibilities as citizens are
stressed in weekly lecttires.

com-

of

re-

S. Coast
in Cape
receive

in-

WALTER
Certified

education.

as

Their

also

Accountant

Central

Avenue

Highland Park, Illinois

MOVING

Plan

AND

PACKING

OF

AGENT

From

BLUFF

will leave the temple at 7 p.m. December
29.
Those
interested
in
going are asked to telephone Edward
Kann,
Glencoe
1962,
for
further information.

Lt.

GOODS

Highland

Park

and

aM

7

ble

button

Park

Superior birds, scientifically fed, battery raised

@

Guaranteed

@

Holiday

wing

man

now.

being

taken

for toms

and

OVEN

AT

PREVAILING

fly front.

been
law,

of

Chatham,

living
the

the

her

Rucher,

2-0181

N.

with

Rudolph

Broadview

husband

is

J.

Hyne-

She

has

her

parents-in-

J.

Silvermans

address,

stationed

while

at

Camp

Ala.

1S!

Finest front quarter
CORDOVAN HORSEHIDE
Genuine A-2

FLIGHT

JACKET

Cordovan
Brown
or Blue

Dou-

Sizes

36

e

Fly

Extra
large
mouton
chin
“4 strap
with
drawstring
at
a: neck line.
Sizes: 36 to 46.

@
@
@

Shoulder Straps
2 Patch Pockets
Clips on Fly
Quilted Lining

No.

.

to 46

gussets.
shoulder.

epaulets

A-2HQ

Front

225

WATER
REPELLENT
10 Oz. Quilted Lined
Sizes 3 4 to 50

PARATROOP
BOOTS

CAPS
WATCH

hens,

MARKET

. . for pick up at the

i

you wish

Harham Turkey Farm

1295

Orders
Send Check or Money Order
Mail

State Size

MERRILL

95¢
O.D. or Navy
Blue All Wool
Heavy Knit

MILITARY

Men’s Brown Smooth Split Paratroop
10” Boots—two full Leather Midsoles—Half
tap composition
soles
and rubber heel. Nailed and sewed
construction.
Sizes 6-12.

STORE

346 Waukegan Ave.

Sanders Road &amp; Junction Highway 22
Deerfield, Illinois

73

Made of 9 oz. Mountain Cloth
All wool
quilting.
Mouton
collar.

farm store

phone Lake Forest 2266

22

hospital.

1952 flock of 5,000 birds.

when

Page

of

on

Button

tender

PRICES.
Order

Highland

RO.

@

THE

an-

in

underarm

He

O.D.

FOR

Silverman
avenue

birth of their first
Ellen, last Saturday

O. D. TANKER JACKET

READY

Joseph

nounce
the
child, Maura

IT

2290

all sizes from our

Mrs.

Broadview

Mr. and Mrs. John Raymond

HI

af\

now

and
824

The Jackets You Have Been Looking for, for Less M oney than
You Would Have to Pay for One in Chicago...

FORT
SHWER/OAN

orders

featured
for
the

will make to Downey hospital. Cars

of

GENUINE TYPE B-9: PARKA
9-oz.
Combed
Mountain
cloth. Sateen. 33 to 34 in.
long.
16
oz.
wool
rayon
quilted
lining
body
and
sleeve. Hidden zipper closing

fresh and

will be
favors

Silverman

B-9 PARKA

\ gs

a

Another
event
of
interest
to
members is the next visit the club

LINES

HERE
r

as

Members

Mrs.
Silverman
is the
former
Elizabeth
Hyneman,
daughter
of

ALLIED VAN

Ave.,

known

Party.’””

A circus theme
with
prizes
and
youngsters.

STORAGE
Central

is to be

Kid

will bring a box supper and be
furnished dessert and coffee without charge.

Christmas

HOUSEHOLD

gathering

“Chanukah

@

474

LAKE

The

IREDALE

ORDER
NOW!

LIBERTYVILLE

p.m. in the temple, located at Vernon and Lincoln avenues, Glencoe.

Highland Park Moose lodge will
hold its annual children’s Christmas party next Sunday at 3:30 p.m.
in Elm -Place school
auditorium
Santa Claus
will appear
at 4:15
p.m. to distribute gifts from his
pack to boys and girls up to 10
years
of age
whose
parents
are
lodge members.

15, 1952.
497

The annual party honoring children
of Men’s
club
members
at
North
Shore
Congregation
Israel
is set for next
Monday
at 6:30

Party For Children

Announces the opening of an office for the practice
of public accounting, auditing and tax service.

Telephone
HI 2-4581

Is Next On List of
NSCI Club Events

Williams avenue is supervising director of the non-profit. school. She
has been active in nursery school
work for the past 22 years.

Moose

Te

‘Chanukah Kids Party’

The children of Ravinia Nursery
school
are
giving
a
Christmas
party
tomorrow
for their
mothers, it was announced this week by
Mrs.
George
J. Blosten
of Ravine drive, chairman of the Nursery school.
Mrs. G. F. Weinfeld
of Roger

M. LILLIE

December

ee

Children Plan Yule
Party for Mothers

Before entering the service, Mr.
Knight attended Sewanee Military
academy
in Sewanee, Tenn.,
and
was a member of the National Forensic League and Rifle team of the
academy.

Public

OC Eee
SPN
:

e

life and
structed
recruit,

course

recruits

empLloy-4—*-4_
COAL OF COMTORT
YOU'LL ENJOY !

T.

last month

12-week

ecruit training at
Guard
Receiving
May, N. J.
Coast

seaman

Mrs.

eR
te
Te Bsa RET
OT en Ree
enn
OP
TAPP
ee on
ae
as Py ARS By PRY By crip
BEES
e
EC
Mae
EY
Bene Oe SE Oe
:
‘
xj

Walker
Look

for the Large

Highwood,

Double

Ill.

Store

with

&amp;
Blue

Waukegan Avenue
Neon Sign Across the Front. Open eves. until 7 p.m.

Phone

HI 2-7210

Thursday, December
TEC:

oe

Oh

18, 1952
hah

By

ah ena
er

re

eae

�Store
.

Open

Every

Night

Until

Christmas

*

¥

’

a

RECONDITIONED
ET ee 5

COUOUETOUOE

rn
Men Oe Bae
a
BY ie

UH

Oe
EE
R RP
UE
a
RL

BVA

ee

Sensational

ha
hak suesescinss-axciier coi
CUO sods
id ie Ca ieccs cations
i
ak

$100.00
$50.00
150.00

itesulas Peide
APEX DISHWASHER SINK .................------- $449.95
CROSLEY DISHWASHER. ...;..-....2--0060.00 $339.95

Sapo beh Leisure tec hesSeanauv ll stebonyaneploaseacend

$100.00

ee

ae
$100.00

ee

PHILCO 16” Consol
er

ae

VISION MASTER 16”
“
re
vai Rn
ADMIRAL 12” Console
ie 50" Valle MOONE
Ps

$60.00
$100.00

$75.00

tener
niet ie

i trees

THOR AUTOMATIC WASHER ............-.-------Sei aiee 1) CU FT,
$379.95
WAG SEMI-AUTOMATIGC 2...-.isccecse-ccoac-csseoes $223.50
ENE TAL CACMAATIC 55.555 0.05.cc cic iet $199.95

on
149.95

PIONEER SHOW MOVER ....0020.-- eee $134.95

$ 99.95

TNO

331968

3505: 2

ian

ice

$299.95

$189.95
aoe
,

DEEPFREEZE 7-FT. FREEZER ....................... $299.95

$50.00
SR

epttestlaentt ner

$175.00
$349.75

CROSLEY 6-FT. FREEZER .................:............ ee
;
ee arene
te kgs)ys | Oe

ig

................----.--20-----ceeseseeeeesteeeteees
nc
a

Now!
$249.95
$239.95

BENDIX: BCONOMAT. «........--.2-.--..2--------n-a0eo $239.95

$125.00

ee

Values

$199.95
So C0 WE: PRE isonet
FRIGIDAIRE FREEZER 13 Ft. .........--------------- $439.75

THOR GAS

$125.00

Table Model ............-2...2.2.2020000-+:

nO

$239.95

FRIGIDAIRE 9 CU. FT. REFRIGERATOR ........ $349.95
REFRIGERATOR ae =
CROSLEY 12 ov
G. E. 2-DR. REFR
Ra

71a

$269.95
acer
;

AMANA 12 CU. FT. UPRIGHT FREEZER .... $499.95

ON DISPLAY—RAVINIA STORE ONLY

$399.95

...NO EXTRAS...

All Sets Carry 90-day Warranty and Delivery

Prices Include Delivery — Warranty and Federal Excise Taxes

$50 to $100 TRADE-IN
for your small-screen
Regular

Hallicrafters 21” Console TV

icrafters

iat

EE

OE

21" Console TV ........

Bt

Ut

Hoffman

Emerson

:

eee

tS

$675.00

21” Console TV ............-. $409.95
No Extras

HIGHWOOD

21%

21”

Table TV

...------------- $289.95

ees

9 YM Conecla TVS ok lcs $339.95

$239°

$

Emerson

21”

Fruitwood Console .... $379.95

$279%

$3 095

RCA 21” Phono-Radio Comb. ............ $525.00
RCA 21” Console TV .....-.------esceseees $349.95

$4.2500
$2499

3389-95

$289”

RGA

Included

EVERY

EVENING

UNTIL

BE

ROOMY

tet

Highland

Park,

One and one-half blocks north of Moraine Rd., east of tracks.

2-6260

Hours: 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., Daily

(Except Sun.)

ALSO

AT

Ill.
John

Bosselli,

Prop.

Your Convenience.

OUR

RMR
ARAMAAAAP
RRARRRRAARAARAAAAA

Thursday, December 18, 1953

CO.

Open Mon. and Fri. Evenings 7 to 9—For

Laverne Cioni, Mgr.

$93995

CHRISTMAS.

RADIO &amp; APPLIANCE

WaukeganAve.,

2631

RRRRRRBWWR RRR

$209°5

$199%

OPEN

HI

2] Table TV ........------------ $259.95

Sentinel

Saiki

You Pay

As Little As
$209°

$

$299.95

Vs

Price

Table TV ........ $259.95

oi cicverceserqssesleccnesodies $389.95

Parts - Warranty - Federal Tax and Set Up

Tel.

;
Westinghouse

Goncle TV .:...-25,..&lt;

Brands

Regular

$

TV hee

Famous

You Pay

“393 9°

5339 95

21” TV Console ... aang;
Westinghouse
Be Witsaninsteah
mG
ce

TV on Nationally

$379.95

Cone

CONG

Crosley ma

ee

APPLIANCES

$199.95

MECK 16” Console .............----------sescseseeeeccecestteteeeteeeseeeees
cs
Danny 097 Tenet MOOU ok

ee

NEW

oo ioscan
cs ciecy inc cc ecsccnaeeies

MINN

"

BRAND

del
Model ...........--.-.------2--+eeeeseseeteeeeceeeteneeees

RCA 16" T a
able
RETR

TV

MT

MMRRRARWMARARKM MAMAN

PMH

MIP

Page 23

�TS

ii

Ngee
Bre R Tae See ht Fer Bae D Pee NEE DT
Wis Sy

When it’s clear pictures
you want.. then It’s

Sentinel
PICTURE SEALED TV
Come to think of it, what's more important in a TV set than clear pictures?
of course, you want a good-looking cabinet too! It's still Sentinel Picture Sealed
Inside every Sentinel is a Power-Factor Chassis to give you absolute iops in
formance . . . bright, steady pictures sealed to stay that way a long, long
. even if you live in a fringe areal
$ 3 9 9 9 5

Oh,
TV!
pertime

EVERY ROOM
A LIVING ROOM
|

with studio tone in your home

_

i
I
Null + (eral
=
—o
cf

+

There’s no place at home that wouldn’t be better
with one of these mighty mites keeping your
favorite programs handy!

|

While the maid is in the parlor, and Mom is in the
ELECTRIC

Lulls You to Sleep .

Cc LO

C

K-

RA

D

. . kitchen... there’s a full house of fun with Sentinel

3 O

Model 344! It's super-sensitive to bring in more
stations and make them sound better!

. Wakes You Gently . . . A Sentinel master performer

Your choice of walnut or ivory plastic cabinet as

in more ways than one! This compact, good-looking clock radio soothes you
to sleep at night . . . then shuts itself off. In the morning on it comes, to wake

little as

$3 4S 5

you gently but thoroughly. Then all during the day you'll listen with pleasure
to its rich, clear tone — marvel over its far-reaching reception and sharp
selectivity — enjoy the modern styling that blends with any setting. Available

cme

u

.... OPEN EVERY EVENING

HIGHWOOD
2631
Tel.

Hi

2-6260

Hours: 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., Daily

2

RADIO
Waukegan

Ave.,

&amp;

APPLIANCE

Highland

Park,

Ill.

One and one-half blocks north of Moraine Rd., east of tracks.

(Except Sun.)

Laverne Cioni, Mgr.

Open

Mon.

and

CO.

Fri. Evenings

John
7 to 9—For

Bosselli,
Your

Thursday,

Prop.

Convenience.

December

18, 1952

§

�»

RAEN

Be hee

Join the folks all over

the country

who

are

enjoying Sentinel Picture Sealed TV! Sitting in
your own home... cool, comfortable, relaxed
. «+ you'll be front row center. With Sentinel’s
Power-Factor

Chassis

performance

you

won't

miss the flicker of an eyelash! It's even better
than being there because you see more, hear

a

a |

|

$25

7

Come in and see the many Sentinel models we have for
you. Most of them come in either dark or light woods.
One like this is yours for OMLY...........ssessssssssssssseesneesssseseeess $29

q

Sensational
Sentinel
&amp;

PICTURE SEALED TV

|
the people's
°

l

-

choice!

|

i}

&gt;. r

Giant
| Screen
with

iI

!

i

7

A

Reception
Y

os

Set

t

ese

t

eels

reddit felechron

a

Perfection

it

it

t

o ta

off

...

the

be

iful,

front panel ot this

Sentinel automatically turns on your favorite program
right on time . .. turns the set off at the time you
want. A handy, decorative timekeeper for all pro-

x

pe

;

CLOCK

TELECHRON

= ih

for

grams.

Sit safely on the sidelines and watch the campaigning fun
with this little beauty! It is non-inflammable by fiery oratory, guaranteed to resist mud stains and is just the right
rwi
s
for throwing
size

.

a

.

+H
argument!
in a political

;

Your

—

Sentinel Model

Il-ri
i and full-rich
343 also Iso has miles-wide ran ge, fine amrecivity
walnut
or
ivory
beautiful
a
in
it
have
can
you
...
tone

plastic cabinet for as a

entir

as

$229

satisfaction

literally

ay engineering ok ne
J

H

*

) manufacturing

control

aunty

at

skill,

(3)

every

most
industry’s a
step,
ey (4)theenone
tests. Picture Sealed means

;

Pertect

oe i

a J
e~
an TING

Satisfaction!

Ese

5
Get out into the wide open spaces of TV with this terrific big-screen Sentinel!
No need to sacrifice any of your precious inside space for Sentinel has designed the most compact 27” television set you can find! As if that weren't
enough, you'll have a famous Telechron clock to keep your viewing timely,
to turn the set on or off automatically!

St .

SETS as low as $2500
tantee—

Come see the full string of Sentinels we have corraled

UNTIL CHRISTMAS...

for you.

.

HIGHWOOD
2631
Tel. Hi 2-6260
Hours: 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., Daily

Thursday,

December

18,

RADIO
Waukegan

fr 4.

5

00

One like this costs only... aiisvvounnalpinl

Ave.,

&amp;

APPLIANCE

Highland

Park,

CO.

Ill.

One and one-half blocks north of Moraine Rd., east of tracks.
Open Mon. and Fri. Evenings
Laverne Cioni, Mgr.
(Except Sun.)

John
7 to 9—For

Bossell i, Prop.
Your Convenience.

�EO
a

TV Quality...
— guaranteed

a

hallicrafters
“The Best Engineered Set in America’
Celebrate Christmas
around the world this year
with a brilliant new

Hallicrafters World-Wide
8-Band Portable.
Here are 8-bands to take
you... Rome

to Rio...

Melbourne to Moscow,
with magic-carpet ease

direct from your living room.
Travel the whole world
from marine and weather
reports, aircraft, police,
amateurs, ships at sea,
foreign stations and

favorite programs on

hallicra

standard broadcast.

ters

Model

1060 21-inch tube, Mahogany finish.
available

4

I A

B

|

World-Wide Short-Wave Time Map
Tel
ing Whip Ant

HALLICRAFTERS

WORLD-WIDE

world

anes

oo ai
arge Speaker

that it can
ffered t

See

2631

FOR

UHF

TV sets can: be

wh

ee invest in HALLICRAFTERS.
seve eee iy Gere
% as
As Low

$2500

Fully Guaranteed

_

OPEN EVERY EVENING UNTIL CHRISTMAS.

RADIO &amp; APPLIANCE

Waukegan

Ave.,

Highland

Park,

One and one-half blocks north of Moraine Rd., east of tracks.

(Except Sun.)

Laverne Cioni, Mgr.

ALSO

Pacc 26

‘

$] 49°

HIGHWOOD
Hours: 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., Daily

an

Less Batteries

Portable 117v. AC-DC or battery.

2-6260

ae

t

All HALLICRAFTER
S
:

any portable radio, anywhere, anytime, at any price or your money
'
refunded , | Plays on traitrains, planes,
lan
ships 4

HI

Spagna

ERS TV
neeid

quickly and inexpensively converted to receive the
coming UHF stations. You’re safe from obsoles-

:
Guar
anteed to Outperform
_ Hallicrafters World-Wide 8-Band Portable is guaranteed to outperform

Tel.

be aa

READY

ion
Band Identity Signal

.

the magnificent =.
a
tion! Qua oy
See oe itv ini ay
it

ee

Six Short-Wave Bands
Standard Broadcast Band
Special Beacon Band

Hallicrafters 8-band World-Wide

1061)

over.

Dei Tre Tuer oe
Button Tone
Control
Belour ia-thie
Altech

Skyrider Attachable Antenna

FEATURES

(model

Here is no mere claim of quality Here is
the product of a reputation the whole world
knows and respects. FOR
HALLICRAFTERS.
precision communications equipment is used the

é

;

OUTSTANDING

in blond

Also

CO.

Ill.
John

Open Mon. and Fri. Evenings 7 to 9—For

AT

RAVINIA

OUR

Bosselli,

Prop.

Your Convenience.

STORE
Thursday,

December

18, 1952

�FRIGIDAIRES
New

PORCELAIN

and Wonderf ul

AUTOMATIC
ES

(ITS A

WASHER

DISH

&amp;

PAIR
FILTRAMATIC

DRYER

2

OREAM

COME

TRUE /
EXCLUSIVE

Lifetime
Porcelain
Finish

Cleans as easy
as a china dish
Stays snowy white
for lifel

ee

Resists scuffing

Heat won't scorch it

Automatic

Washer

Live-Water
clothes

clean

New Filtra-matic Electric
Clothes Dryer ends lint
and moisture problems!

with

Action gets
|

as new!’

Gets out the ‘‘deep-down" dirt ordinary washing
actions can’t touch! Frigidaire’s Live-Water Action is
gentle on nylons, woolens and rayons, too! In this
washer clothes are in water all the time not half-in,
half-out .. . and your hands need never touch water!
See a demonstration today! See how Live-Water Action works, how the new Float-over rinse carries away
all the dirt, how Rapidry Spin dries many clothes
ready for ironing. There's nothing else like a Frigidaire Automatic Washer.

A completely

new and

different clothes dryer that

leaves no sticky lint on the walls, no steamy moisture
in the room and on windows. And it needs no costly
plumbing fixtures or venting pipes. You can dry
clothes as fast as you wash them . . fluffy-soft and
sweet-smelling to any dryness you prefer... all

automatically. Remember—it's the only Clothes Dryer
with

Lifetime Porcelain Finish on cabinet and drum
for lasting beauty and protection against rust. Get this

COME

HIGHWOOD
2631
Tel. HI 2-6260
Hours: 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., Daily

EVERY

IN AND

EVENING

Dy

iain

bes

age

Boh

eS te

:

oc

18,

1952

UNTIL

CHRISTMAS.

SEE A DEMONSTRATION
Ave.,

Highland

One and one-half blocks north of Moraine
Laverne Cioni, Mgr.

(Except Sun.)

AT

RAVINIA
December

Porcelain Finish
on Cabinets —
also on Washer Tub
and Dryer Drum!

RADIO &amp; APPLIANCE

Waukegan

powders won't
scratch it

229"

ALSO

Thursday,

Scouring

new Frigidaire Filtra-matic Electric Clothes Dryer now]

299”
OPEN

lodine won't stain it

Park,

Rd., east of tracks.

Open

OUR

CO.

Ill.
John

Mon. and Fri. Evenings 7 to 9—For

Bosselli,

Prop

Your Convenience

|

STOR
Page

27

�||

Zion Lutheran
ran Sc
To
Have Yule Service Sunday
The church school of Zion Lutheran
its

church,

Highwood,

Christmas

service

4p.m.

Delco-Heat Conversion

OIL BURNER
EASY TERMS! New low prices—ne
dewn payment—and up to 3 years
fe pay for your new Delco-Heat
Conversion Oil Burner!

Here is real General Motors value !

dependable,

Christmas

Story”

at
will

economical

Delco-Heat Conversion Oil Burner
—with the exclusive Rotopower unit
that combines all moving parts in
One assembly —the simplest burner

friends are invited to attend the
service and the social hour which
will follow.

Converts your
present heating
system to automatic
Delco Heat!

For

mechanism of all !
You can be sure your Delco-

That

Special

Occasion

too — we've been factory traine
by Delco-Heat experts! Phone
of come in right away !

CAPE,

STOLE

OR

| BISHOP HEATING &amp; SUPPLY
1543 Deerfield Road

in

the

series

a
course
taught by

in
Mrs.

Smith leads her classes through
the techniques of classical ballroom
dancing, from
ba.

the waltz to the rum-

The fall series of classes closed
early in December, and the new
one will begin on January
12.
Classes will convene weekly till
course

is concluded.

Any

While

ly

JACKET

the

dance

composed

ments

can

of

be

group

is chief-

couples,

arrange-

made

for individuals

who wish to take advantage of this
opportunity

for

instruction.

Announcement
of
the _ other
courses to be offered in the adult
education series will be made by
the YWCA
at an early date.

Information Phone
ANdover 3-5512

Call HI 2-0407

An exclusive licensed home for convalescents, chronics,
cardiacs, diabetic, senile and the aged.
Enjoy home like
surroundings and efficient n ursing care.
Excellent meals
served in rooms under the supervision of a dietician.
Private and semi-private rooms and small wards.

Drive Carefully — The Life You Save

One block west of the Northwestern Station
Two blocks west of the Northwest Highway Route (14)
We welcome a visit and inspection
For rates and other information call or write to the
superintendent.

Excellent Transportation

May Be Your Own!

BARRINGTON

1410

SHERONY'S
; : Complete
bi

WE

ELECTRIC POWER TOOLS
CHRISTMAS TREE BULBS
String

(independent

||

9-Light (Bubble Light Set)

||

7-Light String

The music department of the college will present its seventh
annual concert at 8:15 p.m. in Durand
Institute
auditorium.
Four
vocal
groups,
including
the
Madrigal
Singers, Choir, Men’s chorus and
Women’s chorus will participate in
presenting
a
full
program
of
Christmas music.

As in past years, the brass ensemble will play familiar Christmas
carols outdoors before the concert
begins.
Arnold R. Thomas, chairman of
the music department, will direct
the
Women’s
chorus
in opening
numbers, and the Men’s chorus is
scheduled as second on the list of
vocal groups.

Eight
selections
including
“O,
Bethlehem,” and “Lay Down Your
Staffs,” are
among
the
numbers
chosen
by the
Madrigal
Singers,
rated nationally as one of the better
vocal
groups.
Mrs.
Ruth
C.
Thomas directs them.
Audience
participation in carol
singing under the direction of Mr.
Thomas is a new feature
of the
concert. The college choir will close
the program with the joyous “Shepherds’ Story,” by Dickinson.

The

concert is open

to the public.

Birthday Luncheon
Mrs. Adolph B. Reich of Pleasant
avenue invited 18 of her friends
for luncheon

last Thursday

her celebrate

her birthday.

to help

aaa

HAVE

CHRISTMAS

TREES

Kiddies Auto (pedal)
Johnson Ice Skates (White—girl’s) Model 770
_Johnson Ice Skates (boy’s hard toe)
Complete Line of Lionel Trains and Equipment.

lights)

Complete Line of Sporting Equipment.

Decorations of All Types

Complete Line of Fireplace Brass

|

‘ Robert Castellari, son of Mr. and
Mrs.
John
Castellari.
of
Walker
avenue and a sophomore at Lake
Forest college, will be one of the
vocal soloists performing tonfght in
the college’s annual Christmas Concert,

Flexible Flier Sleds . . . all Sizes

(Outside)

Christmas Tree

Sunbeam

Christmas Concert

Line of Toys and Gifts

For All Occasions.

| | 7-Light

per-

formation.

145 WEST MAIN STREET
BARRINGTON, ILLINOIS

Highland Park, III.

in

ballroom
dancing
Lucy Smith.
Mrs.

The Barrington Rest Home

A

|

class

sons interested may call the YWCA
office, HI 2-0675, for further in-

We carry a separate and complete stock for rental purposes.
For

first

adult education
offered at Highland Park YWCA for 1953 will be

the

RENT A
MINK COAT

Heat Burner will be installed righ

Heard At LF College

The

have

be presented by the children under
the direction of Marlin B. Rechkemmer, Mrs. Edgar C. Benson and
Vega
Anderson.
Parents
and

New low prices on the

The

“The

will

Sunday

Soloist ToBe

In

Clocks

. . . Radios.

. . Irons

Small Appliances
. . . General

All leading

Electric

brand

$32.50

. . . Universal

Revere Kitchen Ware
Universal ‘Stroke saver’ Iron, reg. $14.95

names.

Now $8.95

G. E. Washer .... $119.95
Maytag Washer .... $129.95
Vacuum Cleaners $21.95 up
G. E. Regfrigerator (model N H8H) double door, self defrosting, was $467.50,
now $339.95
CHRISTMAS SPECIAL ON GENERAL ELECTRIC BLANKETS
EVERHOT Blankets (electric) $39.95

SHERONY HARDWARE
OPEN

314 Green Bay Road,

Highwood,

EVERY

III.

EVENING

. . . FOR

YOUR

SHOPPING

CONVENIENCE

Tel.

HI

2-2041

—

�ww

Pleasure...

of Lasting

Gift

The

"

"

-

pi:

re

er

O

©

pape
Music and entertainment for_every age and taste, for everyone on your list on 3314
or regular 78 rpm records,

RECENT

CONCERTOS
[C1]

VOL. Il
Following the smashing
Benny Goodman’s 1938

1937/38

JAZZ

success of the first volume of
Concert, (Goodman at Carnegie

Cc)
{-]
[}
[1]
(]
[}

Hampton,

180
160
6217
6200

6195
6021
4597

[)

NEW* THE TRIUMPH OF NEPTUNE (Lord Berners)
PUNCH AND THE CHILD (Richard Arnell)
Seas
aa
nachcidadlgdecpans ML 4593
(Beecham &amp; Royal Phil. Orch.)
*Two ballets that are light, gay &amp; strictly for fun!
G3 FAUST BALLET (Gounod) &amp; AIDA BALLET (Verdi)
(Fausto Cleva Cond. Orch of Met. Opera) ML 4515
(1) SWAN LAKE (Tschaikowsky)
Cond. Lambert &amp; Royal Opera Orch.) ........ ML 4308
() GAITE PARISIENNE
(Offenbach)
maetee Or Cl, Gan, Crete) lo
ML 4233
[J SCHEHERAZADE
(Rimsky-Korsakov)
(Ormandy &amp; Phila. Orch.) ........................ ML 4089
(1) SLEEPING BEAUTY (Tschaikovsky)
(Lambert &amp; Royal Opera Orch.) ~............... ML 4136
(J CHECKMATE (Bliss)
Les Patineurs (The Skaters) (Meyerbeer)

0
(]

(J

for the Sadler’s Wells

Ballet)

.... ML

4362

NUTCRACKER SUITE (Tschaikowsky)
Rm
Ch OO
aes
ML 4151
LA BOUTIQUE FANTASQUE (The Fantastic Toy Shop)
(Rossini Respighi) Kurtz &amp; Royal Phil. Orch.
One of the most delightful &amp; melodic of the
Oa
ee
ML 4367
LES SYLPHIDES (Chopin)
(Kurtz &amp; N.Y. Phil. Orch.) act dnccteunsda! ML 4255

YOU

[}

VIOLIN CONCERTO
CONCERTO NO. 3
Feancestett. o NY

L]

VIOLIN
Isaac

1]
(7

Nef
PPTL
=
oF

(P.S. We Don’t Believe It Either!)

Thursday, December 18, 1952

with

IN D MAJOR

Phila.

PIANO

CONCERTO

Lavant

with

&amp;

Phila;

2s

4525

(Tschaikowsky)

Orch.

IN F

Kostelanetz

Ores

ML

ML

4232

.... ML

4025

(Gershwin)
Cond.

N.Y.

Phil.

a

a

ML

4373

[1] SYMPHONY NO. 6 IN B MINOR
(Tschaikowsky) Ormandy &amp; Phila.

4544

(Pathetique)
Orch. .... ML
eng ML

4433

ML

4541

[1] SYMPHONY NO. 7 IN A MAJOR (Beethoven)
Bruno Walter &amp;G N. Y. Phil. Orch. ...........- ML

4414

SYMPHONY NO. 5 (New World)
Seren CO seeees ONG eo

[1

SYMPHONY

NO.

5_IN E MINOR

Ormandernivia,

Orcny

iu.

Ge

ML

(1) CARMEN

(Bizet)

Cavallo)
(Complete)

(1)

LA TRAVIATA (Verdi)
MADAME BUTTERFLY

(1

COSI

FAN

(Complete)

TUTTI

Series Designed for Your Listening

with

Orchestras

Goodman
See

&amp; The Columbia Salon Orch.
a
Ly
eee
GL 510 thru GL 519

BOAT,

103
104

[1] PORGY &amp; BESS (Complete Operetta)
CRNA
UNNI
cess

SL

SOUTH

AVE.
STUDENT

MERRY

ORGAN

as

PACIFIC

(Kostelanetz
PRINCE

&amp;

WIDOW

Orch.)

Cugat,

&amp;

122
162

SLAUGHTER
...........-

i

ee

and

651

AVENUE

CENTRAL

Al

ON

— s

ML

4514

— ‘

ML

4592

ML

4666.

—

FAMED:
Vas
SL

a

(Lehar)

ae

a

ae

MUSIC OF BACH BY THE WORLD
css oa
SCHWEITZER 22.50)

‘4

BENNY GOODMAN TRIO (Goodman, Krupa &amp; Wilson)
Plays for Fletcher Henderson

Fund ................ GL

516

ee

CHILDREN’S FAVORITES
Godfrey

Narration
THE

with

RED

Kostelanetz

NOSED

&amp; Orch.

REINDEER

MIJIV

152

‘TWAS THE NIGHT BEFORE CHRISTMAS
SUZY 'SIOWFLAKE 5535s er
FROSTY THE SNOWMAN .......0..2-0-e---0--THE LORD’S PRAYER (Amos &amp; Andy)
Latte ACR si cisicctcsontensccbouetoiraaes

PHONE

SHOP
HI

4625 — ;
56

1 SAW MOMMY
KISSING SANTA CLAUS
PUTRIDGIIIS 5528s
on
oes i

RECORD

(Arthur
ML

.... MJV

HIGHLAND
RADIO

Weber,

(Romberg)

R= Rounesvilles

(D, Kirsten, R. Rounesville}

........ Shits

............ SL

Such

4297

Complete .........--.....-.-- SL
(Puccini) Complete .... SL

4604

Pleasure

RUDOLPH

109

Complete

ROGERS

NEW PETER AND THE WOLF (Prokofieff)

....................... SL

(Mozart)

WILL

4400

OPERA
(Leon

FAMOUS

“QUIET MUSIC’’—A

THE

(Tschaikowsky)

[1] SYMPHONY NO. 5 IN C MINOR (Beethoven)
Bruno Walter &amp; N. Y. Phil. Orch. .............--- ML

(1) PAGLIACCI

By Will Rogers ....-..-.------.&lt;c---+-&lt;:-+- ML

THE

(Dvorak)

ee eee

Skinner)

FROM

ALBERT.

2 (Rachmaninoff)
SUN pila ce ci ane hous

Otis

SPEECHES,

iD. Kirsten;

4596

(1

(Cornelia

EXCERPTS

10TH

[1] SYMPHONIES NOS. 2 AND NO. 4 (Beethoven)
Bruno water i mM. Y.. Pol, Orns) aco... ML

(1) SYMPHONY NO.
RO
Me PPI,

‘90

SHOW

MAJOR

SYMPHONIES

Never before on records has there
been such wierd and wonderful
sound.
Ask to hear—

Ferrante &amp; Teicher

Stern

PARIS

NO. 1 IN D MAJOR
(Paganini)
IN B MINOR
(Saint-Saens)
Phite Oren ae
ML 4315

PIANO CONCERTO NO. 5 IN E FLAT
(Beethoven) Serkin with Ormandy

WON’T BELIEVE
THIS!

CARAVAN

CONCERTO

.6224

BALLET

Played

PIANO CONCERTO IN A MINOR
(Grieg)
CONCERTO
IN A MINOR
(Schumann)
Ding sets
Ph SOFC, oes

Krupa, Wilson, Stacy, etc.

VOL. th2SL
VOL; {1:235L.
LBRRACS AT CPOE Pee
cot
CU
ONE FOR MY BABY (Frankie Laine) ............ CL
HOLLYWOOD’S BEST (R. Clooney &amp;
Pr GPS
o.
cckpeceameao neice
ee
CL
AN EVENING AT THE PUMP ROOM
Reese VITIOOTE so ee
eee cee
CL
CUGAT’S FAVORITE RHUMBAS
(Cugat) .... CL
STARDUST ‘(Kostelanetz &amp; Orch.) ~....2.2........ ML

(As

4599

[]

CONCERT

Hall—trecorded on that famous night of Jan. 16, 1938)
Columbia has now issued a second volume of great jazz.
These recordings were taken from broadcast concerts during
the season of 37/38
and give the listener the unique
feeling of going ‘‘on the road” with the band. The album
contains over 35 of Goodman’s finest numbers and includes

such artists as James,

NEW PIANO CONCERTO NO. 4 (Rubenstein)
Lavant with Mitropoulos G N.Y. Phil. Sym. ML

are

&amp; JAZZ

GOODMAN

C1)

FOR EVERYONE

DON JUAN IN HELL (George Bernard Shaw) (The First —
Drama Quartette) Chas. Boyer, Chas. Laughton, Agnes.
Moorehead &amp; Sir Cedric Hardwicke ........-......- SL 166.03

fae

BENNY

4568

fd

POPULAR
[) NEW!

NEW PIANO CONCERTOS NO. 9 (Mozart)
Dame Myra Hess with Casals Cond. ............ ML

RELEASES

2-0154.

MJV. ‘88
MJV 123
MJV 75
MV

9

:
536 4

�| Foreign
A
fs

_ @

Never

enough

Courses

for high

school

and

private
school
graduates
e women.
Five-school
- gonal placement service.

and
per-

Catalog: Executive Dean
_ $1 E. Superior St., Chicago

Montclair, N. J.

‘ty

0

Born Group
of

foreign

born

resi-

joined

in

singing

around

the

gaily

familiar
decorated

carols
Christ-

mas tree and participated in games

11

planned

DE 7-3306
Other Gibbs Schools: New York

J Boston

i 4

dents of Highland Park gathered
for a Christmas party last Monday
in the YWCA
at 474 Laurel avenue.
Over
30 men
and
women

Gibbs-trained

secretaries to meet the demand.

coll

group

r|*

syy

as

Providenes

for

the

event.

At the conclusion of the festivities coffee and Christmas cookies
were served.
Arrangements

for this party were

YOU'LL

MAKE

A

ie

teaches English
foreign born
High school.
sisted

by

Miss

nee

classes for

the

at Highland
Park
Mrs. Riley was asRegena

and L, E. Libakken,

Beckmire,

both of whom

conduct classes in adult education
at the high school.
Also serving
on the committee were Mrs. Dud-

ley Dewey
of

the

and Mrs. Robert Palmer

YWCA

board.

It is hoped by the committee that
further meetings of such a group
will become
another
regular activity sponsored by the YWCA
as
a community service.

BIG

appliances!

: ue

ital

HIT

Eat Their Way —

Woodward Burgert Jr. is one
10 cadets chosen to complete the
16-member
roster
of
Shattuck
school’s precision drill unit, the Crack
Squad.
The
son of the
senior Woodward Burgerts of Oak-

Into Television
Six
have

young

Highland

discovered

one

enjoyable methods
television.

of

of

Park

girls

the

most

appearing

on

land drive, Woodward, as a sophoThey were televised eating candy
more member of the squad, will be
bars for the commercial
part of | captain for 1954-55.
The school is
the
‘“Super-Circus”
program
last located in Faribault, Minn.
Sunday, between 4 and 5 p.m.

|

In
the
group
of
youngsters,
Jane Smith,
Stephanie
whose average age is 11, were Joan ‘Leonard,
Souby, and Margaret Vance.
Bishop,
Betsy
Granholm,
Nancy

when you give small

Everyone on your list wants and

can use one of these electrical gifts.
remember... make

Be the one to

ELECTRIC

From

this an

CLOCKS

$4.95

(plus federal tax)

td

What

electrical Christmas!

Is A Diamond
W orth?

:
By

Harry

Levinson

Experts set the real price of
diamond
or other precious

gems by careful examination
and weighing. But, by the time
you buy from ordinary jewelers, the price has been skyrocketed by brokers, middle‘men

and

ELECTRIC IRONS

others.

*

_

G. E. Steam

Besides, there are many ele-

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faint

and

few

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buyer.

by

Minute

variations

of these
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or

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there

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place

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cence

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$9.95

ELECTRICAL GIFTS
THIS YEAR?

Si

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a

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even though the differences

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for
im-

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brings you a chance at exciting
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quality.

take

any
an

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item

are

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invited

wish

independent

rket.

teed

are
the
This

Sunbeam

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Shavemaster $26.50
Schick Super $22.50

_

FRYER

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%

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to

first

exactly

buying and its
open diamond
is

truly

guaran-

value.

ELECTRIC GRILLWAFFLE IRONS

For more than three generations, leading families of

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this

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guished
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lievable savings.
Perhaps

you

know

at

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HEATING

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Sunbeam Waffle Baker $28.50

n buy sparkling diamonds...
exquisite necklaces ... distin-

ELECTRIC
that

we

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gorgeous fiery brilliant gem
Platinum
Mounting ~
Original Value $9,500. Price $5,750

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TOASTERS

Toastmaster
Sunbeam Toaster

$23.00
$26.50

G. E. Toaster

$22.95

PADS

G, E. and Universal
Heating Pads

unbe-

supply
many
leading
Loop
jewelers. So why not buy directly and save?

See these and other electrical gifts, too... at
your Public Service store or dealer’s

A

tee
a

DEEP

Fryryte

appraiser.

‘That means you know
what you
value on

ELECTRIC

collector.

ELECTRIC BLANKETS and
ELECTRIC SHEETS
From

$29.95

Sunbeam

Egg Cooker

Handy-Hannah

$12.00

Hair Dryer

$8.95

Sun Lamps from $8.50

ELECTRIC AUTOMATIC
COFFEEMAKERS
Sunbeam

Coffeemaster

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Portable Lamps, too!
Your house of jewels
Jewelry from $50 to $150,000

PUBLIC

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�Miss Susan Selz In
Smith Choir Program

Mr. and Mrs. Albert
514 N. Central avenue,

Clavey
road, and a freshman
at
Smith
college,
in
Northampton,
Mass., took part in the traditional
Smith
college Christmas
Vespers
service last Friday on campus. Miss
Selz is a member of the All-Smith
choir.

and

have
announced
the engagement
of their daughter, Carole Dee, to
Wilson E. Richardson Jr., son of

Mrs. Grace Richardson of Michigan
avenue, and Mr. Richardson Sr. of
Mesa,

Ariz.

The young people, both of whom
attended

Highland

Park

High

school, are planning to be married
February 21.
A reception in the
Veteran
of Foreign
Wars
home
in Highland
Park will be given
after their marriage at 4:30 p.m.
in Wesley Methodist church.
They
will live in Highland Park.

and
ent

has

3,

and

Todd,

5.

parents

are

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Straus

of

George

Lauters

a

committee

Kelly,

headed

Jacks and Mrs.
her assistants.

un-,

by

Mrs.

and

Mrs.

Doris

Law-

and

the

of Chicago.

| Koos, futmushings.y

“Phone

Your

See

|

chairman,

Melvin

road,

»aDuracleanNEW

Claus was presgifts around
a

worked

Sheridan

Grand-

our

January

Duraclean

full

column

HOUSE

... on News
Phone

Service

ABBOTT

in

Highland

BEAUTIFUL

Stands

Dec.

Deerfield

DURACLEAN
International

ad

Deale

19...

Highland

cancel

will

be

405 Central Ave.

Headquarters

The

Ep
NK yt
\

arrangements.

The academy office said that all
donations in support of the concert

Illinois

2-6080

Drive Carefully — The Life You Save

444

CO.

academy was told by the director
of the choir that, due to personal
circumstances which he could not
anticipate, he is compelled to regretfully

Park

HOUSE
Park,

an-

Tuesday.

next

Andrew,

|

is the only licensed nursing home in Highland Park.
State Health Officials have complimented us on the
“highly qualified operating personnel” at Abbott House.
Centrally located—just east of Sheridan Road, it is less
than two blocks from the Northwestern Railroad and North
Shore Line Stations, shops, motion picture theater.
We are proud of the fine food we serve, our cheerful
rooms, the homelike
atmosphere,
our scrupulously clean
kitchen and our round-the-clock
nursing
service
under
graduate nurse supervision.
If you have the responsibility for an aging person and
seek the best possible solution for that person—call on us
and see Abbott House for yourself.
Tell us your problem. Full information on request.

of the
concert

nounced the cancellation
Paulist Choir choristers
for

H. Selz of 1261

Christmas tree.
Auxiliary members

Frank
rence,

Canceled At LF Academy

scheduled

nieces.
Santa
to distribute

John

academy

Lawrence

\ J t=

der

Forest

Mrs.

The
world premiere
of a new
“Magnificat” by the English composer of choral music, Gerald Finzi,
was given at the vesper service.

Paulist Choir Concert
Lake

Their third child and first daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. L.
Thomas Straus of 1725 Old Briar
road Friday in Highland Park hospital.
The
child’s
brothers
are

Miss Susan Selz, daughter of Mr.

E. Lyle of
Highwood,

ABBOTT HOUSE

Straus

——

Albert E. Lyles Tell
Troth Of Daughter to
W. E. Richardson Jr.

A

eA

on, )

|P
ci

AN

§

ay

SN ar

returned.

Junior Auxiliary Fetes
Younger Set At Party
Somers
of

the

of the Junior

Highland

auxiliary

Park

Woman’s

club feted their young relatives
at a Christmas party in the clubhouse

last

Sunday.

Youngsters

invited to attend were the members’ daughters and sons, nephews
ADJUDICATION
AND
NOTICE

CLAIM

Fordomatic Drive, Overdrive, !-REST tinted safety glass, white sidewall tires optional
at extra cost. Equipment, accessories and trim subject to change without notice.

DAY

NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
to all
persons that the first Monday of February, 1953, is the claim date in the estate
of
MADGE
HELEN
SMITH,
Deceased
pending
in the Probate
Court of Lake
County, Illinois, and that claims may be
filed against the said estate on or before
said date without issuance of summons.
All claims filed against said estate on or
before said date and not contested, will
be adjudicated on the first Tuesday after
the first Monday of the next succeeding
month at 10 A.M.
Mae E. Berry, Administrator
Singer &amp; Singer, Attorneys
First National Bank Bldg.,
Hiehland

Park,

SPECIAL

Til.

ASSESSMENT

The new Standard of the
"45
American Road
With 41 “Worth More’ features, its worth more

NOTICE

NO. 348
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
to all
persons interested that the City Council
of the City of Highland Park, County of
Lake and State of Illinois having ordered
concrete
of reinforced
construction
the

pavement

improvement

together

.

of Green

Bay

Road

from

Cen-

tral Avenue to Edgewood Road, all in the
City of Highland Park, Lake County, IIlinois, 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 had on the 27th
day
of December,
A.D. 1952, or as soon thereafter as the
business of the court will permit.
Said assessment is payable in five (5)
installments, with
interest
at the
rate
of six (6) per centum per annum on all
installments from and after date of issue
of first voucher.
All persons
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, Ill., Dec. 11th,
A.D. 1952.
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE
IS
HEREBY
GIVEN
by
the
Board of Appeals of the City of Highland
Park, that a public hearing will be held

by

said

Board,

in the

Council

Chambers

of the City Hall, in the City of Highland
Park, at 7:30 P.M., Tuesday, January 6,
1953, to hear appeals from the decision
of the Building Inspector for the City of
Highland Park, regarding variance from
the Zoning Ordinance as follows:
Appeal No. 206 on behalf of Archie J.
Antes whose appeal was postponed from
December
23, 1952.
Appeal No. 207 on behalf of Theodore
D. Kahn at 690 Wake Robin Lane, High-

land

Park

(Lot

1, Lebolts

Thursday,

December

Search no more: the car that exceeds
your every driving need is making
its bow at your Ford Dealer’s!

18,

1952

friction, high-compression Mileage Maker Six.

Those who have owned Fords in
recent years have a hint of the many
ways in which this ’53 Ford sets an
entirely new standard for the American Road.

In this new Ford you'll find a new
Miracle Ride that sets a new standard

of

smooth,

quiet

comfort

on

level highways or roughest byways.
You'll find easy handling and great
visibility you need for today’s fastmoving traffic . . . plus the “Go”

to

master today’s long-distance driving. Value check it . . . Test Drive it!

5e

NEW MIRACLE RIDE brings you riding
comfort at its level best! Not just softer

springs and new shock absorber action, but
an entirely new concept of driving comfort.

OF

AUTOMATIC

POWER

gas.

Featured

regular

saves you

on V-8

Six.

and

On Display NOW sex...vscccm. nsromer!

PURNELL &amp; WILSON, INC.
1909

PILOT

money every mile you drive because it
gives you high-compression “Go” with
F.C. A.

Subdivision),

for a variance of the Zoning Ordinance
to permit a single family dwelling to be
constructed 20 feet from the lot line on
Roger
Williams
Avenue
instead of
40
feet as required.

S
— Ford's
CHOICE OF V-8 OR SIX ENGINE

110-h.p. high-compression Strato-Star V-8 has
a partner for thrifty “Go” in the 101-h.p. low-

with

mecessary drainage and all other necessary work to complete the proposed im-

provement

when you buy it...worth more when you sell it!

ST.

JOHNS

AVE.

HIGHLAND

PARK

PHONE

HI

2-0710
Page

31

�*

Samuel Martins to Welcome
Typewriter Repairs
Finest work by our expert
repairmen . . . and fully
guaranteed!

Telephone
Highland
Park 2-3100

Sons Home

Two
of the Samuel
I. Martins’
four sons will be with them
at
Christmastime
when
the
family
gathers
at the
Martin
home
on
Green Bay road.

Seaman
has
been
August of

for

Typewriter Sales
Office machines, portables, adding
machines. Some excellent
buys in reconditioned
machines!

Central

645
Ave.

for Holidays

Harry Mills Martin, who
with
1951,

the
will

Christmas

Day

Navy
come

since
down

from

Great

Lakes where he is stationed, and
Richard, a senior at St. George’s
in Evanston, will also be present
at the family gathering.

Ens.
at

the

West,

Donald
Naval

Fla.,

E.
Air

is scheduled

three days after
leave which will
ary 10.

The

Martin,
station

Martins’

based
in

Key

to

arrive

Christmas
last until

for a
Janu-

other

son,

Brother

:

i

CTT
is
et
AT
:
1
ee

MES
BR
ET SLY
Je eePoe
ra
See
oe it i

SoC
ie

Se ue‘
ae
Sk

Oe

9

Legion Plans Yule
Party For Children

Resumes Duties With

Jolly
old Santa
Claus
will be
present
at the
American
Legion
Christmas party for small children
(up to and including fourth grade)
at the Legion Memorial building on
Sunday at 2:30.p.m. There will be
singing
of Christmas
carols
and
presents for all.
Legion Cmdr. Thomas E. Strenger has appointed Henry C. Eitner
as chairman. He will be assisted by
Herman Leuer, Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Salo, Orval
D.
Meredith,
Henry
Mrazek,
Bernard
P. Sheehy
and
Chaplain Willard Hackbarth.
Jerome Walbert, teaches English at
the Christian Brothers High school
in St. Joseph, Mo.

TB

Dr. Theodore S. Proxmire, president of the Lake County Tuberculosis
association,
announced
that
Charles C. Macnamara has resumed
his duties as executive
secretary
of the association
beginning the
tirst of December.
Mr. Macnamara
was executive secretary of. the association from December, 1948, until June of 1951 when he was recalled to active duty in the U. S.
Navy.
As a reserve officer he served
over a year aboard the USS General H. W. Butner, a troop transport carrying troops and dependents to Germany, Japan and Mediterranean ports.
During Mr.
Yeriod,
Miss

“he

Here’s some

Mandy Sfame Pointers

|

on AUTOMATIC Gas CLOTHES DRYERS

|

Assocation

Macnamara’s
recall
Catherine
Cable
of

association’s

erved

nursing

as executive

staff,

secretary.

Included in the members of the
2&gt;xecutive committee of the associition are Mrs. Cyrus M. Avery of
Barberry road and Mrs. Horace S.
Vaile of Maple avenue.
Dr.
Proxmire
also
announced
that at the end of the third week
of the
1952
annual Tuberculosis
Christmas Seal sale, $23,159.21 had
Yeen received in the association’s
offices.

Named President Of
Hospital Association
Seymour Waldman of Old Briar
road, president of a steel products
company
in
Niles,
was
recently
elected
president
of
the
Niles
Township Community Hospital association.
The

newly

organized

association

has plans to construct a $2,000,000,
100-bed

general

WE
IN

hospital.

SPECIALIZE

CUSTOM

e

MADE

SUITS

®@® DRESSES
®

COATS

@

EVENING

—

WEAR

ALTERATIONS

—

Siler Needle
(Under
1866

New

Management)

Sheridan

HI

2-7118

IMMACULATE
CONCEPTION CHURCH
Deerfield

Green Bay Roads
2-0202
*
Joseph P. Morrison
Pastor
Rev.
Donald
B. Runkle
Rev. Bernard
E. Burns
MASSES
Sundays—6:15, 7:30, 9:00, 10:00,
11:00 and 12 noon
Holy Dover
are
8:00, 9:00,
Rt.

Rev.

and
HI
Msgr.

Weekdays—6:15, 8:15
CONFESSIONS
Saturdays,
Eves. of First Fridays and
Holy Days 4:00 and 7:30 p.m.

See Your Dealer or

NORTH

SHOR

COMPANY
“The Friendly People"

Call

|

HI

JOHN

2-3500

B. NASH CO.

1891 Sheridan, Highland
Page

32

Thursday,

December

beats Mea hoes ean a

PAA

Park

18, 1952
eae a oa
eae i

ree
ie

�Mase

4

Highland

4
4
4

No. 4737
Wars

Park

of the Veterans

will

sponsor

its

Post

dren’s Christmas party Sunday at
4:30 p.m. in the VFW club room on
Central avenue. Stanley Pankman
Only
one more
day—and
then
of 636 Homewood avenue, chairman
vacation!
Many
of us wonder
if
of the event, and his committee
we'll survive through the parties,
have planned movies, refreshments
dances, and teas that are bursting
and have
requested
Santa
Claus
the social calendar. Let’s start off
to distribute gifts to the children.
the vacation in the right way by
going to the basketball game
at
Morton
tomorrow
night
and
the
parties: One
given by Jo Todes,
home
game
with
Niles
Saturday
another by Nancy
Goldstein
and
night.
4
4

.

Last week’s game with Oak Park
was followed by the first -Recreation center dance. Tom Harter on
the trombone, John Gould on the
trumpet,
Charlie
(Drummer
Boy)

Weeks

on

really
music.

be

the

outdone,

turn

drums,

and

offered
us
some
Of course, Paul Day

and

at the

All

had

to

have

who

escaped;

NROTC

tests

Saturday

morning,

found

decorating

the

show

went

has

over

been

: were!

floor-|

The

a bang.

with

sent

of the Turnabout, we mustn’t forget to recognize the few half-asleep
zombies who stumbled up to the
gym
bright
and
shining
Sunday
morning
to
“undecorate.”
They
were rewarded by a breakfast of
ice
cream
bars
and coffee,
topped off, by a few of the braver
souls, with hamburgers out at Gus’.

even

corsages.
wore

Most

only

to

Including

the

George

will join

Of

ik 1s

Sib

In Florida

Schwalbach
Mr.

SU

Pie

of 774

Schwalback

who

1.

Mrs.

DAY

790

LAUREL

LN

dance.

dinner parties. We
of three
slumber

ks

hci

Sok

Th

aT

paced i

Ot

A

i

HN

RIN

er

ae

a OF

jai

Ha Heya
x) AWE

H. NEMEROFF |
Jewelers

Across

- Opticians

from the Bank—35
Highland Park

Years

International Sterling, Rogers
Silver; Elgin, Bulova, Gruen

State

Health

Have

you

always

regarded

ities

James |

00
up

1

Open

be Jost

business must

in

$

Often opportun-

Paternal grand- |} [€SS creates.

and

Ue

ok PE

your state of health as your
own affair? Think how many
persons are affected if you
become seriously ill.

$950
up

;

’til 9 p.m.

or postponed during this time
Any serious illness leaves a
mark uvon your health. Don’t

REPAIR

put off
physical

that much
examination.

needed

Buy. the prescription your
doctor advises from a thoroughly trained and recognized
pharmacist.

Appliances

Dishwashers,

Solid Gold
Birthstone
Rings, $12.00 up

Disposalls

SERVICE

EDDIE

Diane Wing, Lynn Elliott, and Ann
Robertson gave
also
got wind

Washers,
SAME

after

me

Holidays

Your

Service On All Electrical Appliances...

After the dance, parties were
given by Diane Codd, Karin John-

limited

Mr.

are

Formerly With Harry S. Schram

Givers

their dates out to Hank’s for large
plate
dinners.
Eating
wasn’t

parents

APPLIANCE

boys

son, and Jessamine Bridell. Rather
than saying who was at Bridell’s,
it would
be
easier
to say who
wasn’t. The boys were determined
to spend some of the girls’ money.
The junior and senior boys dragged

PEAY Cee

ae

drove
down
several
weeks
ago.
They will spend the holidays with
their daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
and
Mrs.
Michael
Kloepfer
Jr.,
(Sally Schwalbach).

| Elliot of Leavenworth.

A| everybody.

them.
Party

she

Elliot
Mr. and
Mrs. Robert
L. Elliot
of Leavenworth,
Kans., announce
the birth of their first child, Diane
Marie, November 11.
Mrs. Elliot

vacation

wonderful

a

jyaye

in for the

of the

ray

In addition to the person
who must care for you personally, every member of the
hovsehold must make an adParting thought of the week: A |is the former Nancy Benson, daugh- || justment to cope with the finman isn’t complete until he’s mar-|ter of the Edward C. Bensons of
ancial problems a serious ill-

“frosty freshment girls”: Where in
the world do you get the idea that
the senior girls are sophisticated?
What
a
salesman
Carl
Ostrand
turned out to be! (“What the heck
—Buy
an ice cream
bar.’’) Congratulations to the gals for their

clever

by Sally Geigerich.
we got off the subject

gym|+ijeq .. . Then he’s really finished! | St. Johns avenue.

boys’

girls’ big night.

question

his

horn.

those

for the

others
mellow
couldn’t

the third
Before

ee

ory

Central avenue left last Thursday
by plane for Miami,
Fla., where

Two members of the North Shore
Methodist
church
have
been
appointed to the board of the Methodist Students foundation at Northwestern university,
Evanston.
Arkell B. Cook of Glencoe was reappointed to a second
term, and
Adolph
Frankel,
260
Lakeside
place, was appointed for his first
term at the recent annual meeting.
The Rev. Russell W. Lambert, minister of the church,
serves as a
member of the advisory board. The
board has both students and adults
as members, and operates the center at 1800 Sheridan road, Evanston. The Rev. Gene Durham is the
chaplain-director.

chil-

3

eS

3 \ Fe

Mrs.

Student Board At NU

of Foreign
annual

a.

Spend

Named To Methodist

Memorial

eA eea

oh

Earl W.

JUUL

Co.
6

Diamond
Ring
$150.00

Diamond Set
$225.00 up

2-1391

DEIIRIN

II

III

&amp;

—Pharmacists—

HI

AVE.

Gsell

Only the Best is Labeled Bellows
BELLOWS “CLUB” BOURBON

BAS RS SS

IGH SCHOOL
ALL MARKS

CMA

kM

Adolph Frankel Is

Santa Claus To Be Guest
At VFW Party Sunday

4

ed

:

Exactiy Riga
3-Piece Tea Service
Vegetable Dish
Bread Tray

I. H. NEMEROFF

Keep

YOUR

clothes

TRADER

fitting

right, feeling right, LOOKING

Park

—

able

and

Ads

offer amazing

opportunities

elsewhere.

Read

not

them

\%

avail-

now!

=)

right
with
regular
dry
cleaning by ALPHA.
They’ll
wear longer, “put you across”
better.
“cleaners!”
A MAN’S
Prompt — experienced — ecoefficient.
highly
—
nomical
ici
i
i
The kind of service you want!
Call us.

Only the Want
values

You might as well serve the best
+esit costs you no more

$435

UCKY
STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKET
KENT

+»

4/5

7

RENT YOUR
FORMAL

iW MS

Aromat

Bettows Cius Bourson represents the
superior quality always associated with
this famous 122-year-old name. For
those who seek Kentucky Bourbon at
its finest, Bellows is unsurpassed in
its lightness and generosity of flavor.
That’s why it has long been a popular
member of America’s finest clubs.

RG RG RNS

Highland

Across from the Bank—35 Years
Use Our Christmas Layaway Plan

Where

Quart

a Single
op

®BLLO

Ws
&amp; CO

BAL imor’- -

:

ouble
an" yo

.

As¥
‘

GINGISS BROTHERS

Wy

ce 1830

:

Breasted Tuxedos
All Accessories

A

BELLOWS &amp; COMPANY
Since 4820

§

society’s

best dressed men
rent theirs—

Ah

Ata)

a

Dic

SS E

ond

le

Dea

SS

Qu

a

lion

eae

2

1718
Csi

TAILOR

ea

Eats

STORE

EVANSTON

yea

SHERMAN

Other Stores in
© OAK

PARK

© THE
®

LOOP

SOUTH

SIDE

Page
{

:

\
4

’

.

;

eC sit mee ly el

33

ri i
fhe

Peay
\ Lee
dig Be 4) the:
Lec poms
ae

:

�The Oyster and the Pearl

»- but this Curia
oN,

Flowers, alone, truly capture
the spiritual quality of

Christmas giving. They “top oil”
any gift and make it more personal
and cherished. For inspired giving
... for a true sense of well being

in the home, fill the holidays with
FLOWERS...simply call your florist with

your list...for delivery at time you
specify. For choicest of his choice
Holiday selections...

CALL EARLY... TODAY!

DD

BD

RR

RB

BEN BN

BeBe

Re

Be Be

eB

'GIFTS...that please
CELEBRATING

OUR

25th

YEAR

Their
elder
daughter
is Sally
Marie,
22
months.
The
grandparents are the senior Roschers of
the
Deerfield
road
address
and
Walter Stanley of Lake Forest.

Giver

as well

as

Receiver

Our new showroom, as pictured, is now open and just in
time for not only Christmas,
but also for the celebration of
our 25th Anniversary. Like our
other showrooms it is amply
stocked with beautiful and unusual gifts for those fortunate
ones on your Christmas list.
You, the giver, will be indeed
pleased with our wide selection of which only a few are
mentioned here.

Roscher
Mr. and Mrs. Fred E. Roscher
of 1351 Deerfield road announce
the birth of their second daughter,
Audrey Lee, last Sunday in High-

land Park hospital.

:

The

The

rn

DDD

NE OE EY

BD

VN

RB

Now

Passini

Mr. and Mrs. John Passini of 210
Green

Bay

nounce
Frank,

the birth
December

road,

Amedeo

Picchietti

avenue

Elm

and

the

avenue,

Highwood.

At

20TH CENTURY TV

ypect al ae
on

versary

Description

Sue

all

COPPERWARE
Making Available One of the Largest Selections for You
to Choose From

i

5 Ss

=

@
@

UNIQUE GLASSWARE
IMPORTED PEWTER

from Holland, Norway &amp; France

@
@

@

POST LANTERNS
LIGHTING FIXTURES

HOUSE

SIGNS

ETO

Hagerstrom
Milwaukee
Wheeling, Ill.

Ave.

Metalcraft
(1%

block

North

of

Dundee
Phone

LO OE

Studio *#®:
Road) _
Wheeling

361

v
%

Ue

bien

Open every evening
until 9 p.m., starting Monday, Dec. 15
until Christmas.
Sundays, open 11
a.m. until 6 p.m.

but

must

economize

demand

finest

eee

of Every

space,

quality.
Brilliant
21-inch
Crystal-Clear Picture. Unequal-

Ett

Metalwork Accessories

in

Exclusive

led

Symphonic-Tone

Power*

System,

Reserve Supply Video

for clearer picture.

Au-

thentic styling in mahogany.
Ready for UHF now!
Yours for

ee ee eI

®

For those who

The
“Charlestown”

only

eee

for Every Style Home

McDaniels
Passinis

ee

WEATHER VANES
@ Fire Place Equipment

@ CERAMICS

of

Joseph

have
The
Mrs.

ee

® LAMPS

20TH CENTUR
Haare

Grand Ralochian of

FREE
EIS
IR
Ie
eee

.

an-

a son, John
in Highland

Park hospital.
The Passinis
a daughter, Mary Jane, 10.
grandparents
are
Mr.
and

CAPEHART

R

Highwood,

of
10

YUU

RRR

pearls.

NN NE ME UE MY NNN

your florist can wire flowers anywhere

UN

Say MERRY CHRISTMAS
the most personal way ... with FLOWERS

Emily Rosenberg, left, Carol Ralph and Fred Fiocchi, right, are part of the third grade
class at Elm Place school which watched eagerly as Bert Leech, science teacher, opened two
oysters sent to Carol by her father, Commander Earl J. Ralph, who is stationed near Japan
with the U. S. Navy.
The first oyster yielded two pearls, and the second contained one.
They came from the famous oyster beds off southern Honshu where Japan is attempting to
build up her cultured pearl industry.
Mrs. Ralph and Carol, who are planning to go to Japan
in February, will have an opportunity to see the oyster beds and add to their collection of

1858

First

Street

Liberal

Terms

Television

&amp;

Radio

Company
Highland
Trade-ins

Thursday,

Park

Accepted

December

18, 1952

of

�YOU'RE

ALWAYS

WELC@ME

AT

ae

ae

Mee

.

»

THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY SALE

OLIVE TABLETS #27"" 17
*10 WASHCLOTHS 3: 18°
SUPPOSITORIES #2
579 CENTRAL AVE.

‘acetic

FANCY

TRIMS

ADORN

THE

TIE

RIBBON

TO

GIFTS

10°. 25
Cc

Foil, tape,
tinsel, yarn

ee

SOFT
TERRY
(Limit 6)

Cc

60¢ Value Ribbon Box
Cc
Gala ass't of many kinds 39
Seals &amp; Tags pack

5¢&amp;

INFANT, ADULT
(Limit 2)

oeerereoee

i0¢

Wrap. Paper pack 10¢ &amp; 25¢
me

|_ ALKA-SELTZER

TABLETS
65ce SIZE ........--

ent

Plus 20%

*7

ty

eMom

=

Federal

on Toiletries, Luggage

Excise Tax

Wants

and

ate

Billfolds

U
DOSOCSR

soe

=

|

Percolator

Cup

| Nu-Brite non-tarnish aluminum.

' Snug-fit lid, easy-grip

“handle. A $1.19 gift...

i

MORE TIME for Christmas Shopping!
NIGHT

NOON,

MORNING,

gy

IS OPEN

|&lt;... Every Day &amp; SUNDAY, too!

FOIL ROPING

|

ae

95¢

Fireproof metallic

TINSEL

“-, Bunte ‘Diana Stuft’

Red &amp;

“'s Yule Confections

* 100% filled and 100% delicious
hard candy. Giant 20 oz.
of holiday taste delights. 49°

!

GARLAND

silver, silver. 18’.

and
59¢

49°

os

BOWL

98°
” bowl, nickel-plated
‘ eracker and four picks. .

"DARK

Give

amine82 a,2°

7 o%
¢

Adorable

TOYS

Set
To Deck the Tree

Amico’s string of bright taper
79°
bulbs with socket plug.
Series type. Priced low.

Whitman's Sampler
a.

dolls or cute animals

—SAVE $7!

1 {=
|

Famous old-fashioned luscious
chocolates. Fruit, caramel, $
and cream centers. Pound

in easy-washed plastic
mom likes. $1.98 gift!.. Ts

BLUE RIBBONS—To
A Smoker's Liking!

Mild. . «fragrant... fresh!
$3.00 VALUE! Box of 50.f—

6c AMICO BULBS... .2 for 7c
Magic

FLASHER

PLUG. .29c

Up

PHOTOS!

NOW...for

Shooting” Around
Christmas Tree!

FLASH
BULBS

Famous Brands
... priced right!

BROWNIE

Kit

Flash

Hawkeye camera and flash unit,

!

‘

TRUCK

15-in. CARRY

TOASTER

CHRISTMAS is The Time

5-lb,. CHOCOLATES

more. Hood lifts high...

2-SLICE AUTOMATIC

wv.

...Stock

Tool chests in side hold extra
tires, jack, wrenches,
14

Westin

$24.95 value

“5,

-\=

ae

“Good
Your

WRECKER

EYES"

Ivory plastic forty-hour alarm

for FAMILY

Thrill the family with Bunte’s
wonderful assortment in 9%
gay Christmas box for.. &amp;

SET

nut-cracking season—

:
l-

-

;

oe
. be te
se .

WALGREEN’S

KY TREE TRIMS
FOIL ICICLES
Fireproof! Package 10° s:¢
G

NUT

Bye

.

~

we

plus batteries, bulbs,
film and 2 booklets....

| TOAM AN’S
ly

138

LIKING

Re

i

a..¥

i

PRINCE ALBERT—A
Joy to Pipe Smokers!

89°
A milder tobacco with
nary a “bite. Pound....

ARETTES ~—'—By
HIS FAVORIp TEMorriCIG
s. . Raleighs. . Kools

Old

Golds. .Phili

..Luckies. .Camels. . Chesterfields.

GIFT-WRAP CARTON OF 200....

97

— ——

eek

YEL

OS ORK
x
SOCKS
OOO

oS

sweet! Choice at. 459-250

OSG

TW
Silvery-ribbon

links

Lentheric

Bouquet to 6-0z. box of 218
scented Body Powder... .4—=

CHANTILLY Corsage
Lace-lovely Houbigant Perfume
showcase—boxed with a 12
pin-on holiday corsage. .
Thursday,

December

18,

1952

PIPES

Honey-cured bowls start sweet,
smoke sweet, stay

eae
Byte)

14

fy

EVANS

LIGHTER

Flood-free action smokers pre995
fer. In silvery or golden
styles, specials at only...a—

CIGARETTE CASE
Holds a full king-size or regu-

lar pack.. Rogers SlydeLok, all metal case oeneeoere

_

SEAFORTH TRIO

Highlander After - Shave Lot$3
ion, Talc and Cologne
in jugs..--+--

GILLETTE

GIFT

SET

Super Speed razor and blades
$75
in case plus shave cream
7~
&amp; extra 10 blade pack!..

Dozen GOLF

BALLS

But be sure they’re PO- DO,
the ball that’s silicone

vitalized for more zip...-.

Page

35

�ENG

‘i

i

GPE

From

Gardens,

defending

_ champions, won their first game of they whipped the Niles Trojans, 40_ the 1952-53 season against Beth El
YMG by a score of 40-32 in the

bee

|

points

|

was

high

team

ape”

;

In the second game last Wednesday night,
DeSoto-Plymouth
defeated Moroney’s Insurance, 41 to

_

35.

while

for

Jerry

the

pa

Fell

scored

The

score

15

changed

hands

five

Riddle

scored

two

won

to

-

go

but

Dick

quick baskets followed by a free
_ throw by Renzo Marchetti to tie the

game.

With only 30 seconds to play

_
Lawrence “Dopey” Servi scored a
basket to win for DeSoto-Plymouth.
|
Renzo Marchetti was leading scorer
with 15 tallies.
In

Thursday

night’s

first

game

_
Kennedy’s Garden Spot defeated
___Bock’s Bombers 36 to 34. Bob Zim-

|

merman

scored

13 points

victors.

Buddy

Bock

ihe
Pas

points

for

the

losers.

now have al
Jeague play.

and

Second
Big

Don

Win

Both

1

12

teams
i;

record

For

Geske

for the

scored

in

VFW

scored

15

points

to lead Highwood VFW to a 49-33
victory over Highland Park Moose
lodge. The game was close for the

_
|

|

first half but the VFW

|

away

in

|
|

the second

trouble.

team pulled

half and was

win

for Highwood and the second loss
for the Moose lodge in league com-

|

petition.
The final

game

of the

evening

|
Was a fight all the way down the
line with the Haven
Inn finally
winning
over Ravinia Standard

__
As the Christmas and New Year
holidays fall on league nights, there
and

a two

play

weeks’

resumes

8.
League

a4

Seeemeaven

Inn

Highwood

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

Ww.
2

....&lt;...................

2

VFV

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

2

Moroney Insurance ........

1

Bock’s Bombers ................
Kennedy’s Garden Spot ..

_

_

1
1

Washington Gardens

Ravin
ia Standard
ig
Beth El YMG
aa ;

1

Service

Base

0

Res,
es
Fe
ee

mike

Tonight’s
7:15 Bock’s
_

cliff’s

Games

Bombers

vs.

Hinch-

Orphans

E), 8:15

dy’s
‘Beth Kenne
El YMG
4

7

Garden

Spot

vs.

This was

the lo-

first half the score was Oak
20, Highland Park, 11.
Roger Burnell, John Swan,

Park

comeback

riod

of play

in

and

the

at the

third
end

pe-

of that

period trailed by only two baskets.

it looks

fans

as if there’ll

over

the

Bob Joor (Haven)
Renzo Marchetti (DeSoto)
Marty Sokoloff (Beth El)
Jerry Fell (Beth El)
Don Geske (Highwood VFW)

Vince

Cimbalo

Bob

Esp

Ron

Walz

‘Page

(Moroney

(Kennedy’s
(Ravinia

for

Little
:

|when
Park,

Harry

Halton

Wallace
Hammerberg’s
sophomore
basketball team lost to the
Oak Park cagers last Friday, by a
score of 50 to 21. The game, played

they

were

61-48,

in

beaten

the

by

Oak

Highland

Park

The
Huskies
started Jere Kinnan, Don
Lehwald,
Ron
Frazier,
Don Caputo and Bud Dike.
Coach
Dorman
Morrison
used
Harold
Freberg,
Howard
Russell,
George
Burmeister,
Eddie
Capitani and Bob Troy.
;
The Huskies won on a 23 point
fourth
quarter.
The
first period
ended
with their team
in front,

Niles

HPHS Enters
Holiday Cage

44-22

Tournament
Highland Park
cagers will take

CITY

December 26, 27, 29, and 30.
Highland Park will play its first
game against Shabbona at 9 p.m.

round will be on sale at the High
Monday
school today, tomorrow,
and Tuesday.
If Highland

they

Spot)
ste

12
8
AO

M1
9
3

oo
29
25
25
26

16.0
14.5
12.5
12.5
11.5

Park

play

11

8:30 and
game.

beats Shabbona

second

the

the

a.m.

the

reaches

HP

day

December

Semi-finals

If

round

of

the

30

semi-finals,

the game will be played at 1 p.m.
Because of the time
December 30.
round
that
for
tickets
element,

be

will

SESS

Ave,
25.5
19.0
VE5

will

Tickets
at 3:30 p.m. December 29.
for that game will be available at
between
office
school
High
the

LEAGUE
&gt; Total
51
38
3D

that

for

Tickets

26.

December

Official

BF. TY
Pi 21
9
Kk
4
sie 15
5
mass BO.
AE
ies 13
3

High school
part in the

25th annual holiday basketball!
tournament
at DeKalb
High
schocl in DeKalb
this year.
The’ oldest tournament of its
kind in the state, it will run

A

during

trophy

Great

for outstanding

Lakes’

1952

sportsmanship

football

season

U.

and

S.

Navy

Photo

leadership

went to Seaman

Jack Cahill, HPHS grad, son of the Fred Cahills of Deerfield.

Cahill, who also won

the sportsmanship-leadership

trophy

last

year, was honored with Junior Arterburn, quarterback, at the
Bluejackets’ annual football banquet in Milwaukee December
a Named to the third team of Navy Times’ All-Navy football squad for his outstanding play at guard on the Bluejacket
11

this fall, Seaman

Cahill

has been

stationed at Great Lakes

Naval Training center for more than a

36

games

gym.

By

Scorers

Insurance)

Garden
Standard)

good

The Parkers suffered their first
Suburban League loss last Friday,

The Pentagons beat the Ball Hogs
by a score of 27 to 11 in the Highland Park Recreation Department
Class
“B” City league
basketball
game last Monday night. Bill Bernardi scored 13 points for the winners and John Bailleaux was high
for the Ball Hogs with nine points.
In the second game of the evening, the Cannibals
defeated the
Bananas, 25 to 21. Jerry Berges was
leading scorer with 12 points.
The final game put the Romans
in the win column by a score of
27 to 24 against the Hep Cats. Sam
Fiegura
scored 12 points for the
victors
while
Marshall
Strauss
earned nine points for the losers.

DEPARTMENT
Leading

be two

weekend.

Sophomores Lose
To Oak Park, 50-21

John

Guentz,
and
Jack
Stodder
made
the points for the Parkers.
The local boys made a remark-

able

Giant

ERO
aeeneeaeee
ee

RECREATION

:
/ |

unti!

season,

Ball Hogs, 27-11, In
City League Tilt

Standings

_DeSoto-Plymouth

__

January

decided

night the Little Giants will travel to Morton

to face a team earlier thought to be a pushover, but now considered more of a serious threat. The Giants will be hosts to Niles
of Skokie Saturday. Since Niles has a fairly sound team this

Pentagons Win Over

intermission

on

NNNREeEEHOCOOM™

be

by 10 yards.

Beat

Service station by a score of 39 to
. 35. The sharp shooting of Bob Joor
was
the feature of the game. Bob
'
scored 20 points for the victors.

until

not

Foes

Pierre Martineau

The
frosh-soph
baby
Mermen
won their third consecutive meet
and their second Suburban league
encounter by soundly beating the
(Continued on page 37)

|

| « will

was

37-31.

year.

on

sale

for

one

half hour

only, between 8:30 and 9 a.m. December 30 in the High school office.
In the event that Highland Park
reaches the finals, which will be
played at 8:15 the same night, spec-

tators will have to take a chance
on getting tickets at the door
in
available
be
will
none
since
Highland Park.
team
varsity
of the
Members
who will compete in the tournament include George Burmeister,

Rollin Benson, Edward Capitani,
Gino Dal Ponte, Harold Freberg,
PhilThomas
McLeran,
William
lips, Harold Russell, Robert Troy,
John

and

Ugolini.

Thursday, December 18, 1952
‘

¢

Walt
abs an tie

deh

Second Time Trophy-Winner

never

This is the second

meet

and

The Oak Park yearlings won an
early
lead
when
forward
Ron
Lepianka
hit the basket for two
points. Both teams played headsup
ball and
at the
end
of the

Tomorrow

RY

To

e

a

a

on the Highland Park court, was
cal boys second straight Suburban
The Huskies increased their lead highlighted
by the action of the
league victory.
in the fourth quarter and then be- two Huskie guards, Russ
and Bob
The
Mermen
came
through
in
gan to stall, making it practically Barney.
Russ
Barney
was_
high
the backstroke to take the first two
impossible for the Blue and White scorer on the Oak Park team, with
14-12. Both teams acquired eight
places.
Bob
Stanwood took first
to get the ball.
8 points
to
his
credit.
Highest points in the second quarter and
with teammate Jim
Barton
close
Swan A Top Player
scorer of the game, however, was in the third frame, both tallied 16.
behind.
Al Rubenstein was upset
One
of
the
most
outstanding the Blue and White’s George Moran
The Huskies Still Ahead
in the
100-yard
breaststroke
by
Going into the fourth period,
10.
Throughout
the
entire
George
Lockwood.
The race was players of the game was. forward with
John Swan who had 16 points to game,
the lead was held by the the Huskies were ahead 38-36. Lehvery close with neither swimmer
his credit or half the total points visitors.
wald, main cog in their offense,
having
an advantage,
but at the
finish Lockwood
got his arms on made by the Parkers in that game.
Tomorrow
night,
the Highland scored a total of 17 points for them.
Leading the Oak Park cagers was
His
push
shot
in the
fourth
the wall before Al did and he was
Park cagers will travel to Morton,
forward Ron Lepianka who tallied
quarter put Oak Park ahead, but
declared the winner:
where they will do their best to deRussell
brought
up the Giants’
Rubenstein came back in the 150- 10 points.
feat the Mustangs and on Saturday
The second game was no better
score two points on a jump shot.
yard individual medley to triumph
night the Niles Indians will play
for the Highland
Park five. The
Dike,
Lehwald
and
Donahue
all
by a whole length over teammate
the sophomores in a game at the
took
that
game
by
six
scored two pointers to place Oak
Fred Ellenberger who finished sec- Huskies
Park ahead by 10 points, since only
points, bringing the final score to HPHS gym.
ond. In the freestyle, the Mermen
37-31, with Oak Park on top.
Huskies. He had 10 points to his/CaPitani_ and Troy sank free
took second and third in all three
throws.
Leading the scoring for the Park- name.
The former and Burmeisevents.
Bill
Davidow
and
Fred
Both of Highland Park’s fresh- ter narrowed the margin to eight
Harris finished second and third ers were guards Art Alverson and
Pete Hugle with nine points each man
teams
showed
terrific
im- points with free tosses, but Dike hit
respectively in the 50 yard.
Pete
to his credit. Oak Park’s Soliday provement
over
their
previous on a push shot to make it 52-42 in
Hughes took second and Dick Keim
favor of the Huskies.
third in the 200 yard. The 100 was was the high point man for the game with New Trier.
Final scoring came with baskets
a good race until the last length
by Oak Parkers Gustafson, Donawhen Larsen of Niles pulled away
hue, Reno and Lehwald, to make
from
John
Gould,
who came in
the score 61-48.
second, with Bill
Davidow
third
The local boys were winning the
medley relay until the crawl stroke
when Larsen again overtook Brit
Davis of the Mermen
to win for
Niles.

times during the game. Moroney
f
led by five points with two minutes

_

The

the .last event—the
200-yard free
style relay.
The score was 33-31
with Niles out in front. The relay
made up of Fred Harris, Peter Husting, Pete Hughes and John Gould
won
easily. The
Mermen
took a
commanding lead at the start and

Gardens’

|es for the Beth El team.

__

35, in the latter’s pool.

Highland Park Recreation department’s Class
A
City
Basketball
league. Roger Robertson’s
12

By

The Huskies of Oak Park High
school took a double header from
the local freshmen five last Friday,

36-32

*

Giants’ Weekend

Frosh 5
By Jerry Heisler

Highland Park High school’s varsity swimming team will face the
tankmen from Harrison Tech high
school of Chicago today in their
first home meet of the season. The!
Mermen
will be trying for their
third ‘straight win.
Last Thursday

Yee

et ON Thy,

ine

Niles And Morton

Double Header

By Art Weinstein

Washington

+

a

q In First Home Meet Tonight

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(Continued from page 36)
Niles

frosh-sophs

The
mers

baby
who

44-22.

Mermen
won

two

events—George

won

freestyle

events,

with

finishing

right

behind

100-yard,

and

Pete

the

and
Ed

individual

kind

came

both

in

of

100-yard

him

and

the
re-

the

right

75-

Ken

behind

events.

Ris-

by downing

Sheahen.

took

second

place

frosh

Monday

frosh won

Niles,

on

senior

42-24.

behind

Earl

training
head

Sproul

in Hartford.

coach
Next

on

a nine

The

1929,
the

a

the

Tufts

Trinity’s

since

II,

is on

opened

against

under

Christ.

E.

college,

which

schedule

Saturday

last

team
first

is
Hiram

new

Arthur

H.

schedule

is

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18, 1952

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FOR

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NOTHING

Boston
university,
which
Trinity
faces January 9. Mr. Sproul is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl E. Sproul
of Hawthorne lane.
On the freshman team at Trinity
is another Highland Parker, Hugh
A. Zimmerman, a candidate for the
freestyle. Hugh is a son of Mrs. D.
J. Zimmerman of Cary avenue.

Mead

Wielkers

Bleniled Whiskey
4

Montgomery came'in second in the
50 and 100-yard freestyle events.
The frosh took the first two places
in the 75-yard individual medley,
with
Bob
Clark first and Tom
Goodman
second.
The
freshmer
triumphed in the 200-yard freestyle4
relay by half a length.
They also
won the 150-yard medley relay but
were disqualified.
The Want-Ad
interesting facts

team

meet

y Deer beer Buse beer busy beer bier Beer bier beer Buy be?

Trinity

at Trinity

varsity

swimming

Niles.

For

Backstroker

of

their first

tankmen,

disqualification

baby

gave his best performance this year
he

on

full meet

Mermen won first and second place
in the 50-yard backstroke with Robert Engdahl
winning
and
Marty
Granhom
finishing
second.
The
race was even until Engdahl pulled
away at the end.
The local boys
also won first and second in the
diving.
Roger Sheahen won to remain undefeated, and Giles Gunn
when

team

The

Goelzer
The

Swim

without the services of four of their
first string swimmers, won easily.
Pete Riddle and Bob Rehn placed
first and second
in
the
50-yard
breaststroke. Bill Powell and John
Driscoll won the first two places in
the 50-yard
backstroke
due to a

by winning the

medley.

these

in

frosh

this week.
The

Stanwood

Goelzer

breaststroke

yard
in

50

undefeated

50-yard

swim-

7 er ighland Parkers

disquali-

freshmen faced a tough Wau-

kegan

had two

Peustow

mained

The

but were

cathe ne

,

margin,

—

a good
fied.

High School Mermen

�He
should have priority on your time. Spend some hours in church.
FIRST

CHURCH OF
SCIENTIST
493

Hazel

CHRIST

MONDAY,

Avenue

mas

sunpay, December 21
9:30 a.m. Sunday school.
11

a.m.

Church

service.

be explained

in all Churches

INCLUDING

OLVED

_

BY

ATOMIC

MAN,

FORCE?

The Golden Text is from Prov‘erbs (3: 19) “The Lord by wisdom
th founded
inding

the earth;

hath

he

by under-

established

Lesson-Sermon

Passages

e Bible (King James

Christ-

the

from

Version) in-

December

p.m.

Christmas

eve

choral

service and holy communion
11 p.m. to 12 midnight.
SUNDAY,

December

from

28

9:30 a.m. Sunday school.
10:40
am.
Organ
meditation;
James Varney,
10:45
am.

Pastor

Harris

organist.
Morning

preaching.

1703

WESLEY

Second

CHURCH

THURSDAY, December 18
7:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
rom

me,

and

have

walked

after

_ Vanity, and are become vain?...
Hath
a nation
changed
their

my

people

glory

for

profit

have

that

changed

which

. . . Saying

doth

to

a

their

not

stock,

9:30
ages.

a.m.

in

the

time

of

their trouble they will say, Arise,
and save us.” (Jer. 2: 5, 11, 27).
_Correlative passages from “Sei.

ice and

Health

ptures”

by

lude:

with Key to the
Mary

Baker

_

ean be understood; but when ex_ plained on the basis of physical
sense and represented as subject
to growth, maturity, and decay,
the universe, like man, is, and
must continue to be, an enigma
... All things are created spiritually. Mind, not matter, is the
reator.” (pp. 295, 124, 256).

ON

EV.

LUTHERAN

CHURCH

‘High Street and Oakridge Avenue
.

Highwood

Rev.
a

_

Herbert

W.

Linden,

Pastor

DAY, December 21
:30 a.m. Church school.
0:45 a.m. Morning worship.

4p.m.

srvice.

Church school Christmas

for

all

am.

Fifteen

C

the pupils.
VEDNESDAY, December 24
1:30 p.m.
Festive
Christmas
rvice. Christmas sermon by the
pastor and Christmas song by the
hi oir.

ST. JOHN’S EVANGELICAL
AND REFORMED CHURCH
The Rev. Harold Harris, Pastor
h
Green Bay Road and
Homewood Avenue
HI 2-1599
IURSDAY, December 18
C80 p.m. Chancel choir rehearsSenior

choir

rehears-

9 p.m. Combined choir Christmas party at the parsonage.
fRIDAY, December 19
:30 p.m. Junior youth fellowNDAY, December 21
9:30 a.m. Sunday school.
10:40
am.
Organ. meditation;

James Varney, organist.
0:45 am.
Morning
r Harris

preaching.

worship;

at the

Kenneth

home

departments

of Mr.

Kightly,

SUNDAY,

and

1910

December

Mrs

Spruce

classes

for

school, under
E. D. Fritsch,

all

11 am. Morning
with the minister,

age

groups.

worship service
the Rev. A. P.

Johnson, bringing the message, in
the
assembly
room
on the
first
floor while the sanctuary is being

6 a.m.

Early

Christmas

breakfast

following.

Eve

service.

mas

Youth

caroling

and

party

in

fellowship

followed
the

at the

FIRST UNITED EVANGELICAL
CHURCH

Green Bay Road at Laurel Ave.
21

9:30 a.m. Sunday school session.
10:40 am.
Organ
interlude,

played by Mrs. Lisle Hawley.
10:45
am.
Morning’
worship
service, sermon by the pastor: “The

Miracle of Christmas.”
7:30 p.m. Sunday school

include

drills,

special

songs,

recitations,

music,

congregational

a play

entitled,

Christ-

will

which

program

mas

“No

singing

Room

and

in the

Inn.”

| WEDNESDAY,
8

p.m.

December

Prayer

9:30

a.m.

Holy

22

communion,
Scouts,

December

Ship

St.
43.

23

WEDNESDAY,

December

Christmas

21

a.m.

Chancel

rehearsal.

9:30 a.m. to 10:35 a.m. Junior department (4th, 5th and 6th grades)
and Junior High department (7th
and

8th

grades).

9:30 a.m. to 10:30 am.
Adult
class.
9:30 a.m. Varsity homecoming.
10:10 a.m. to 10:45 a.m. Quartet
rehearsal

in

10:30

p.m.

street

24

Christmas

Eve

Pag-

dlelight
processional
of Chancel
choir and Bethany choristers; spe-

and

Pageant

the

manse.

Christmas Family Vesper

service.

TUESDAY, December 23
7:30 p.m. Boy Scout Troop 324
annual Christmas party and Court
of Honor.
WEDNESDAY, December 24
9 am.
to 9:30 a.m.
Sanctuary

open for prayer and meditation.
NORTH SUBURBAN
SYNAGOGUE BETH EL
1175 Sheridan Road
Highland Park
HI 2-5787
Philip L. Lipis, Rabbi

December 26
Nichols-Wessling

Christmas

circle

party and gift exchange

at the home of Mrs. Fred
1339 Ridgewood drive.

Bishop,

SECOND BAPTIST
OF HIGHLAND

CHURCH
PARK

The Rev. William Giles Glover
Highwood Community
Center
428 North Green Bay Road

Highwood
Tel. HI 2-8145
SUNDAY,

11

December

a.m.

Sunday

3 p.m.
with
Mrs.
chairman.

Women’s
William
Proceeds

organization.

741

Central

William

Day program
G. Glover
as
will be used

Junior

Chorus

musical

Tel. HI 2-6848
1817 Green Bay

Deerfield

SUNDAY, December 21
9:30 a.m.
Sunday school and
junior Bible class.
10:45 a.m. Worship services.
1:30 p.m. Children’s practice for
the Children’s service Christmas

and

Green

Bay

Roads

Pastor
Donald B. Runkle
Bernard E. Burns

HI 2-0202

Weekdays—6:15
a.m., 8:15 a.m.
Holy Days—6 a.m., 7 a.m., 8 a.m.,
9 a.m., and 10 a.m.

SUNDAY, December 21
Masses at 6:15, 7:30, 9, 10, 11 a.m.
and 12 noon.
ST. JAMES CHURCH
146 North Ave., Highwood
James

24

pageant.

11:30 p.m. Midnight service.
THURSDAY, December 25
7:30 a.m. Holy communion.
11 am.
Holy communion and
family service.
FRIDAY, December 26
9:30 am. Holy communion, St.
Stephen day.
4:30 p.m. Girls’ choir practice.

Dn.
Congregational
party at the Community

D. Gleeson,

Pastor

Rev. Arthur E. Douaire, Ass’t.
HI 2-0427
MASSES
First Fridays and Week Days —
Masses at 7 and 8 a.m. Holy Days
—Masses at 6, 7, 8 and 9.
SUNDAY, December 21
Masses at 6:30, 7:30, 8:30, 9:30,
10:30 and 11:30 a.m.

WEDNESDAY,

December

HIGHLAND

Christmas
center.

PARK

BAPTIST
CHURCH
486 Central Court

24

6:30 p.m.
First Christmas Eve
service especially arranged for the
smaller children.
7:45 p.m. Second Christmas Eve
service especially arranged for the
older children.
THURSDAY, December 25
8 a.m. Christmas morning service.

HI 2-2101
Rev.

Robert

‘

Rev. Russell W. Lambert, Minister
Edwin

Kemp,

Director

Glencoe

of Music

_

1227

SUNDAY, December 21
9:30 a.m. and 11 a.m.

Worship

services.

Clingman,

December 26 Dinner
Begins Homecoming
At Glencoe Temple
This year’s holiday vacation will
be of special interest to the homeward

bound

Minister

SUNDAY, December 21
9:30 a.m. Sunday school.
11 a.m. Sunday worship.
7:45 p.m. Sunday worship.
TUESDAY, December 23
8:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. BeenODaey

college

students

in the

congregation of the North Shore
Congregation Israel for it will be i,
their first opportunity to view t
newly completed temple buildir

A Sabbath Eve dinner will be given
December 26 at 6:15 at which the
the college group and members of
the present active alumni will be
the guests of the congregation. The
dinner will be held in the Rebecca
K.

Crown

ceding

room,

the

immediately

Annual

pre-

Homecoming

service.

Guest
speakers
will be Judy
Siegel of Glencoe, a confirmant of
1949 and now a student at Pembroke

college

of

Brown

university,

and Stephen Arnold of Pleasant
avenue, also a confirmant of 1949,
and now a sophomore at Beloit college. Members of the college group
will participate in the service which
is open
to parents
and
young
people.

Books”

Confessions
Saturdays, eves. of First Fridays
and Holy Days 4 and 7:30 p.m.
Masses

Rev.

SATURDAY, December 20
9:30 a.m. Confirmation class.

Jewish

Rt. Rev. Msgr. Joseph P. Morrison

Remmert,
road

Great

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
CHURCH

Avenue

H.

“The

will be resumed Sunday, January
4.
7:15 am. Daily Minyan meeting.
MONDAY through THURSDAY,
December 22 to 25
4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Hebrew school
MONDAY through FRIDAY,
December 22 to 26
9 a.m. to 12 noon. GAN.

worship.

pastor

Res.

on

Rev.
Rev.

REDEEMER EV. LUTHERAN
CHURCH
Rev.

4:11 p.m. Light candles.
8:30 p.m. Late service. Sermon:
“A Rabbi Looks at Christmas.”
SATURDAY, December 20
9:30 a.m.
Morning worship.
SUNDAY, December 21
10 a.m. Adult services. The se-

21

of Gary, Ind., will present
selections.

The

Stanley Martin, Cantor
Conservative
FRIDAY, December 19

ries

'F

and Greenleaf Avenues f
Glencoe
_

at this hour.

10:05

Eve.

7 p.m. Cub Scouts.
7:15 p.m.
Boy Scouts.
5 p.m.

First

eant program, with F. B. Schlung
playing the Christmas music; can-

fellow

TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH
425 Laurel Avenue
The Very Rev. Charles U. Harris,
Rector
HI 2-6653
SUNDAY, December 21
7:30 a.m. Holy communion.
9:15 a.m. Family service and
church school.
11 a.m. Morning prayer and sermon.
7:30 p.m. Canterbury club Pag-

Thomas day.
7:30 p.m. Sea

a.m. to

choir

room

for a Christmas basket to be presented to a hospital or the Good-

24

service.

eant rehearsal.
MONDAY, December

also meet

9:30

supper

Masser, Minister
HI 2-1731
December

SUNDAY,

Creche,

and Central avenue.
WEDNESDAY, December

FRIDAY,
8 p.m.

G.

grade

Christ-

by

recreation

cial musical numbers
of “Christmas.”

FRIDAY, December 26
7:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.

A.

December

11 a.m. to 12 noon. Morning worship service, Dr. Young preaching.
Church school classes for children
three years old up through third

'4p.m.

21

9:30 a.m. Church
the direction of Dr.

caroling

program.

TUESDAY,
p.m.

primary

SUNDAY,

minutes

A special invitation is ex-

tended to all parents and friends

:15

school

candlelight service. The choir will
sing several Christmas numbers.
THURSDAY, December 25
MYF

Vine Principle, God, and then it

and

with the mothers as guests.
8 p.m. Charisma club Christmas

6 p.m.

WEDNESDAY, December 24
11 p.m. Midnight Christmas

Eddy,

“God creates and governs the
universe, including man...
The
universe, like man, is to be interpreted by Science from its di-

19

of the manse.
of
TUESDAY, December 23
2 p.m. Bethany choristers’ re11 am. Morning worship. Serhearsal.
mon topic: “A Son is Born.”
8 p.m.
Bethany Chancel choir
school
Church
Annual
7 p.m.

10:45
chimes.

Christmas
- but

Church

rehearsal.

"Hazel

Avenues

redecorated.

21

December

December

beginner

with

Highwood Avenue and Everts Place
The Rev. Donald Woods, pastor

SUNDAY,

18

choir

street.

street.

METHODIST

December

Chancel

fearel, lL imden and Peeper”
- Church Telephone HI 2-1695
Dr. William Atkinson Young,
Minister

7 to 9:30 p.m. Christmas party
for the junior department of the
Sunday school, with the films “A
Savior Is Born,” and “The Littlest
Angel,” followed by games and refreshments.
SATURDAY, December 20
3 p.m. Christmas party for the

party
worship;

6 p.m.
Senior Youth fellowship
progressive dinner, and pre-watch
night party at the home of Norman

Johnson,

THURSDAY,
FRIDAY,

24

Rev. Dale Zimdars,
Assistant Minister

HI 2-3522
8 p.m.

7:15 p.m.
Church school Christmas program and white gift service
for Bensenville home.

11

The

22

auxiliary

party.

WEDNESDAY,

of Christ, Scientist, on Sunday, De_-cember 21. The title of the Lessonrmon
will be IS THE
UNI-

VERSE,

Ladies’

TUESDAY, December 23
8 p.m. Finance committee.

DNESDAY, December 24
8 p.m. Testimonial meeting.
In order to understand creation,
i
must understand God, the only
Creator, and the divine laws which
_
govern man and the universe. This

will

December

8 p.m.

CHUR

1704 ‘McGovern Street
Rev. A. P. Johnson, Minister

Homecoming

Dance

Homecoming events reach their
climax in the annual dance which

~

will be held at the temple Sunday
night, December
28. Alumni
activities are sponsored by the joint
program committee.
The
congregation
will
observe

the eighth and concluding night of
the Festival of Light, or Chanukah,
tomorrow with the presentation of

an original
pageant written
by
Rabbi Edgar E. Siskin. '
Members of the Youth group,
Cantor
Landsman,
the _ temple
choir,

and

Rabbi

Siskin

will

inter-

pret the story of the Maccabean
heroes who were ready to die for
conscience,

faith

and

freedom.

Presbyterian Church
Christmas Vespers to
Be Held On Sunday
The public is invited to attend
the annual Christmas family vesper |
service of The Highland Park Pres;
byterian church.
The service, to.
be held in the church auditoriw
at 4 o’clock Sunday, will feat
the singing of Christmas carols by
the choir and congregation; the

reading

of the appropriate

Scrip-

ture passages by Dr. William Atkinson Young, pastor; and a tableaux depicting the manger scene.
Mrs. J. Richard Henschen, s0prano soloist in the church quartette, will depict Mary, and Mr.
Henschen will depict Joseph.
The
three Kings of the Orient will be
portrayed
by Leonard
Balsamo,
tenor soloist, Howard
Berhalter,
baritone
soloist,
and
Herschell
Snuggs, baritone soloist.
The annual Christmas offering
which will be received, underwrites
the benevolent work of the church
at Laird Neighborhood house in
Chicago, the major local recipient
of the fund. Laird house will also
receive “White Gifts” that childre
of the church and Sone Geks

to

to

—
x

�Unfortunately

Red

is

still

il

... we are sorry to disappoint
you readers.

eae

Se ae
se rieicaiunghaes

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What a perfect gift—handsome Botany flannel robes,
carefully tailored to look
smart and wear well.

1995

Give a hat to the “Man
Give

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Him

A STETSON HAT
Gift Certificate in a miniature hat box.
He selects the hat at his convenience.
Stetson Hats from

To reserve your forma
wear call or visit our

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The address is:
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Open Every Evening ’till Christmas

THE

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6-0307

�— Lincoln School
a

se

"

,

Miracle Play Given
At HPHS Assembly

P

To Give Yule
_ Program Today
e

day

Lincoln school will round out
_ its activities for the year for morning for the Christmas
bly at Highland Park High
| the children and their parents The play is taken from an

it presents two assembly

programs

previous

to the holi-

_ day period.
abe
&gt;

The
today

|

Miss
“Why

_

carol sing is scheduled
at 1:20
p.m.,
directed

_ given
5

|

for
by

Anne Phelps, and a
play,
The Chimes Rang,” will be
tomorrow

rected

by

at

Miss

11:15

Helen

a.m.,

di-

B. Boyce.

Collaborating with Miss Phelps

in

the presentation of the carol sing
is
Bruce
Warnock,
instrumental

|

music director of District 108. The

|
_
|

program will include numbers by
‘the band and orchestra; a primary
chorus; girls’ sixth, seventh and
eighth grade chorus; boys’ seventh
and
eighth
grade
chorus;
mixed

Py
Gey
aa
La
Ray

chorus,

FZ)

_

the

and

community

audience.

Special

Holiday

The miracle play, ““Le Jongleur
de Notre Dame,” or “Our Lady’s
Juggler,” was produced yesterday

_

: when

| Visitors Groth Coidde

singing

by

numbers

will

assemschool.
old legFrance’s

the

direction

of

Miss

Dan Sietz was the Tumbler, Donald Jones played the Son and William Rosenbaum, the Man.
Jane Bergquist, Betsy Kraft and
Lisa Ori were the Three Women.
Mary was played by Sandra Goldboss, while the Three Angels were
Mary Heath, Sally Quigg and Sally
Casey.
The
chorus
supplied
the
musical effect.
The

charge

art

department

of staging

Singer designed

Ellen

‘Miller, second grade teacher, with
Miss Gertrude Brown, first grade
aa _ teacher,

as

accompanist.
List

was

the play.

the set.

in

Diane

The

cathe-

_ Jo Ann Jefferson, Wendy Vollerteh sen and Steve Wessling. Auto_

harp accompaniment will be played
‘by Jo Ann Jefferson and Dave Selt-

zer.
Program
Be

Wendy

cover

was

Vollertsen,

designed

under

by

the

di-

rection of Mrs. Frances Apitz, art
consultant. Ushers are Dick Hopp,
_ Bob Brown, Bob Bass, and Bob
Lustbader.
The narrator is Lynn
‘Stunkel.

|

“Why

The

Miss

Rosalia

Marquart

directed

the play, Paul McLaughlin

handled

the technical matters, and Chester
Kyle conducted the chorus.

Soloists

Soloists include Cynthia Parks,
Barbara Kahn, Bob
Hunt,
Terry
e
- Oggel, Ken Waltzek and Guy SimRita)»
kis,
Bei }
pler.
nt
Accompanists are Lynn Stunkel,

Chimes

4

Rang”

is

a

Calgary,

non-sectarian
play.
The scene
is
laid in a peasant’s hut on the edge
of a forest near a cathedral town.
Here, midst humble surroundings,
two brothers, played by Tim Wanger and Ben Cohn, wait with mixed
emotion
and concern for the arrival of their uncle Bertel, played
by Hugh Seyfarth, to take them to
the Cathedral to see the processional.
Mary Ann Johnson as the
Old Woman
and Virginia Griffith
as the Angel complete the cast of
main characters. These young people, with Lynn Stunkel as student
director, help objectify the axiom:
“It is more blessed to give than to
receive.”

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Bossort is the former Margaret Hi-

THE HIDEOUT

Bo.

arriving

Elmores of Elmwood
drive.
The
Bossort family will be the guests
|of Mr. and Mrs. Elmore until DeAlan Koretz,
Jan Holmquist, Rob- cember 30.
ert Bridell,
Robert
Saletra
and
Fred Turner played the parts of the
Monks.
end as told in
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“Etui de Nacre.”

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by
’ - include a selection by a group of dral windows
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grade Robert Caipe, student teacher, and
| _ boys’ voices, a mixed ensemble and they were constructed by Georgia
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athird grade song flute group with Black, Barbara Dewey,
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auto-harp accompaniment.
Westgard, William Duffy and My'
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�“HIGHWOOD.
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paternal grandparents.

WILSON”

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Maternal
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land

Dec.

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Jan,

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Thursday,

WEEK

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NOT TALK!
but DOES

but not a word
The whole nationis talking about in Thethe Thief,
motion picture.
7

is spoken

NEXT
THE

by him or anyone

WEEK—Randolph Scott in
“HANGMAN’S KNOT”
WEEK

Thursday,
et its i}

FOLLOWING—
“The Miracle
of Our Lady of Fatima”

December

18, 1952

to buy

market

JOHN

given

as

a

no

the

business

corporate

Company

in person-

Under
in

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The merger

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by the “Public

Serv-

of Northern Illinois Division.”
Because the proposal involves a
statutory merger, approval to put
the plan into effect also will have
to
be
obtained
from
the
companies’ stockholders.

sec-

place.

Pizza”

Lake Forest, Dlinois — Lake Forest 2106
North Shore’s Most Beautiful Theatre

December

best

being

Serv-

ice

Ravioli

WASHINGTON GARDENS

Friday,

your

want

involves
or

be conducted

find the Want-Ad

or sell you'll
tion

you

was

proposal

Service

“Merry Christmas”

what

nel
posal

Theatre
Closed for
Christmas
Eve

FAMILY

Original

“The

sideration

stock of Public

simplification measure.

Dec. 24

matter

capital

merger

Domerque

TREAT

THE

—
Mrs. Richard Bartoni rehearses with some members of the
Shown are
Junior Prosperity club and the St. James Pal club.
Mrs. Bartoni, Janet Ugolini, Mildred Bell, Maureen Carney and
Gloria Servi.

TUES. &amp; THURS., Dec. 23 &amp; 25

PIZZA
A REAL

Carolers to Sing at Somenzi &amp; Sons

6

FRI. thru MON.,
Dec. 19-22
“YOU FOR ME”

No

®

and There

LAST DAY THURS.
Dec. 18
“HIGH TREASON”

We Wish Our Many Friends A Merry
Christmas and A Happy New Year

Steaks

Here

2-0605

Open

WED.

@

From

GLENCOE

from Monday, Dec. 22 thru
Opening Friday, Jan. 2.

@ Spaghetti

SIDELIGHTS

|

ern Illinois into the Commonwealth
Edison Company.
Edison, which owns 99.87 per cent

Peter Lawford,

RESTAURANT
will close for the holidays

Service

North Shore

/

district superintend-

Public

has announced that a petition was
filed December
12 with the Illinois
Commerce
Commission
asking approval of a plan to merge

Liam

— ANNOUNCEMENT

ts
ete

oa

le

and

MEET
TUES.;

Dec.

WORLD”

Kelloga, Otto
__ Jim Bandon

of a second

are

Harris

LEER

Bruce
SUN.

2:30

OF DANGER”

“UNKNOWN

avenue

T.

man, born last Thursday in Lake
Forest
hospital.
They
also
are
the parents of Julie, 11, and Tom,

Feature)

Scott, Robert
Kay Kendall
PLUS

Laurel

Alden

SRR

Zachary

Mrs.

(Bier

“WINGS

475

ents

from

SAT.
(Double

of

and

SiG

and

Sunday

Mr.

Sgieieee

FRI.

Show

Hi 2-6228

ee

eee

Continuous

f
one,

Bl

Aes

REYNOLDS

When the first rocket takes off on
the first attempt by man to reach the
moon,
we'll be going along by television.
There
probably won't be any
living
creature
going
on
the
first
rocket.
It will be filled with gadgets
broadcasting
back
to technicians
on
earth
the unknown
conditions
to be
met on such a trip.
And
television
transmitters
will be
sending back to earth a picture of all
that’s
going
on,
including the first
closeup of actual
moon
ground.
And
television
networks by that
time
probably
will be encircling
the world so that
everyone
will
be
able
to see
for
himself the won:
ders
of
deep
space and get a vicarious feeling of
treading
a spot where
no
man _ has
ever walked before...
Television
is emphasizing
the
impact of fictional characters upon
our
life.
At
least half of you who
are
reading this will be familiar with two
such
characters
you
remember
from
your youthful adventures into prose—
Frank Merriwell and Peck’s Bad Boy.
We note that both of these famous
fictional
personages
are
being
used
as the basis for a couple of new video
series which are due to hit our screens
in the not too. distant
future
.
:
Speaking of screens . .. is your TV
screen too small for your living room.
Here’s. a suggestion,
buy one of the
new
large screen sets and
keep
the
small one for the children’s playroom.
This
is one
way
to enjoy
the
programs
you
like. without
cutting
out
the children’s favorites.
Come in and
look over our fine selection
of sets,
including
the new
CAPEHART
TELEVISION at 20th CENTURY TELEVISION
&amp; RADIO,
1858 First St. . . . Phone:
Highland Park 2-0341.

The
show
window
and
Sons’
furniture

Green
again

Bay

road,

December
15 marked the opening of the new Highland Park office of
Walter
M. Lillie;
-C.P.A.
Mr. Lillie came to Highland Park
in 1941 when he was employed as
an
auditor
on
construction
contracts at Great Lakes.
Since 1943
he has been engaged in public accounting
with
several
Chicago
firms.
Last July Mr. Lillie started
1 practice in Highland Park and
neighboring suburbs.’ He is a graduate
of
Colgate
unfversity
and
holds the degree of Master of Business Administration from the University of Chicago.
The new office will be located at 497 Central
avenue.

Highwood,

this* year. The
club, St. James

will

—

Junior Prosperity —
Pal club and the

Fort Sheridan
quartet will
bine to present the musical
gram. The carols will begin

p.m. both Friday, December
Saturday,

—

caroling

Christmas

feature

December

20.

comproat 7

—

19, and

—

Arrange- —

ments have been made to broad- |
cast the singing to the town over |
a public address system.
Members of the choir
Mildred

Bell,

Dugan,

Clara

Marie

1a
—

include:

Carlson,

Ferrari,

Alice

Maureen

—

Carney, Carmella Leopardi, Stella
Mr¢gella, Judy McLaughlin, Loretta
Palmari,
Mary
Pasquesi,
Janice

©

Poverello,

C.P.A. Walter Lillie
Opens H.P. Office

of Somenzi
store,
334

Anna

Sernisi,

Servi,

Angela

bara

Walsh,

Scornavacco,

Dolores

Molenari

Joanne
and

‘i

Gloria
Bar-

Zagnoli, |
Peggy

Day.

|
ae

Harry Freberg Wins
Marchi Pontiac Prize
James

Montonara,

general

man-

ager of Marchi Bros. Pontiac Sales, _
announced today that Harry Freberg, 451 Orchard lane, will be
©
awarded

ficate.

a

Mr.

$50

merchandise

Freeberg

was

certi-

one

of

over a thousand people who visited —
the Marchi showrooms last week
to

see

the

1953

The

children’s

by Ann
avenue.

Arnold,

Pontiacs.

prize,

ey

a

scale

model of the new Pontiac, was won
1706

Sunnyside

|
ae

‘Space Ship’ Comes To Highland Park

This model space ship, complete with miniature men from
Mars, will be cruising Highland Park until December 23. The —
model,

Paul

mounted

on

a

four-wheeled

Phelps to publicize

‘Central

the

Space

trailer,

was

Patrol Toys

secured

by

~

store, 64) —

avenue.
Page

41

—

�= NATIONAL.
FOOD STORES.

¢

fis
U1 3 yA IN MS
oe
TLE
a2 aa

rong Sp ray
CRANBERRY

your

of

enoles

ve

Plump, Sat
ie
a

onty ’

1.00 with every $5.0 5.00 wSi 'store.
purchases,
at any Native. plastic

A

dot

SAE 9:95

PE

peas,

| SLICED PEACHES ."::' 29
peices
FRUIT COCKTAIL .":2°33° #2
_
PINEAPPLE...
. 29° 4 Cri iad
: “eontinus | o

Del

Monte

Halves

or

Niblets

hris
our
oe

: cntte

eh

me 45°

ana

{-Lb,

Cc

12-02.
Pkg,

C

Cans

Kernel

or

Stokely’s

Cream

Style

PUMPKIN... . 2°29"

Rendy
== Lares Budded

Emerald WALNUT

Whole

C

a

per-

GOLDEN CORN . 2'"29°

i uk mp paella pet
oe
tasted he D

is

GOLDEN CORN Lo 38°

Libby's

APPLE SAUCE rr 99°

arg

A

picked

‘the peak of
fect flavor.

or poultry.

ASPARAGUS | ae

ie G5

Le money hg
Dole

ened EVISCERATED READY TO

or

Del

Monte

ae

PINEAPPLE JUICE‘: 29°

MIXED NUTS . . . Ht 49 TURKEYS 9c ) TOMATO JUICE. .%2 27°
rein

ROAST

Morticerkon
and
Weighing 16 Lbs, up

i

Fresh Pack

Swanson's’

Colorful

Treat

Chocolote

Taste

E Fe

T

R

K

E

YS

Stople

Grocery

Prices

Se

thru

Sat.,

Dec.

Advertised Meat Prices Effective

to

12

Your

Wy.

2

Lt

Swee t, Juicy,
Sizes—! 76-20 0—Sw

Good

8

=

GQ»

SEEODLESS

—Goad Cookers

Selected—

cm
Ho
RIES
ener
CRANBER

Bisnit PEAR S

Yellow

4cCelle 59°

Winesap ‘Applles

+
a

Pure

Ceresota,

3

C

Crisp, Tender, Fresh

2° re~ 29" CARROTS

-

Gold

C

Saturday,

or

Pillsbury

eLh.

/

j

Great

v

Nateo

Western

Granulated

beet

Cc

“Lb

Bae

C

§-02z,

Cc

Condensed

Dee. 27

2
Advertised

resalill

Pkg.

Food Prices sublect

te change

with

the

markets

delici

oy S$ flavors
i.
brigh ten up the holi

Dry

Gingerale,

ae 99°
8
55

30°

Bag

Sporting, Wont ckey,

Da

i

|

~

5

Medal

J SUGAR.
Through

.

Shortening

Vegetable

—

DATES.
FRESH
Large Size Bunches~~

9Q¢
99
ag

ON lONS

VEGETABLE

4. Mae Sr tenin 9s 79°
§
8
j

67c

Assorted

-Lb. 99°

sats

Juice Filled.

46
§

BEVERAGES |

“eat Size—Clean Washed

Florida—targe Size

Juice

NATCO Ze

27,

Eating—Ca lifornie

Cocktail

/
up

Weighing 20 Lbs. uo to 24 Lbs.

.
.
.
S
E
G
N
A
R
O
L
E
V
HA
GRAPEFRUIT FQ: POTATOES.
MARSH

Lbs.

Sliced

while scale supplies last.

laaauler

10

Siieelahats
clecned—ready
to roast!
Fancy Northwestern and Far Western.’

WHITE BREAD . ."&amp;"13

Advertised

Eviscerated—Over

OUNG TOMS

Covered

Cordial CHERRIES. wet 9

Top

ar
Western.
to 24 Lbs.

eke bee
TURKEYS Ready

H

9Q°
a
CANDY BARS. . .-%:4 |
Top

Libby's Twice-Rich

Go} aoe ‘ities,

Root

Beets

No Deposits!
ep
Si $i
No

R

‘

erurns!

|

g

fase ote

2. Btls,

;

�PHONE

bsHutts

WANT

for only
(For

This

additional

55

cost

word

Words

or

will

cover

Less)

the

insertion in all 4 papers.

OPEN

® Deerfield Review

© The Lake Forester

874

‘Monday 4:30 p.m.

Green

Call any of these numbers

1899

Deerpath

FOR SALE

(Improved)

Park)

HOME
AND
INCOME
8 apt. buildings in good location;
income, $415 per month. $30,000;
terms. For info. call
’

ANCHOR
HI

REAL

2-0093.,

SUNSET

res.

gross
good

COLONIAL

&amp; LLOYD,

Sheridan

Road

THE
FOR

Realtors
HI

PERFECT
XMAS

2-0880

INCOME

SUBDIVISION

For sale—by
owner.
5 room,
2 story
prick; large screened porch, knotty pine
rec. room, carpeted; attached garage. 6
years old. $25,500. Phone HI 2-0717.

2 bdrm.,

24% bath

liv. rm., and din. rm.,‘screened pch.;
cabinet kit.; pecky cypress
tion
rm. with f/p; room

recreafor ex-

pansion on 2nd floor. QUALITY
Unusually good 1 story home in es- CONSTRUCTION.
pecially convenient location and in
excellent condition. Living room, A SACRIFICE AT $29,500
separate dining room,
modern Owner is unable to move into this
kitchen with breakfast space and outstanding BRICK home, so is ofdishwasher. Three bedrooms, tile ferring it at this low price, includbath. Full basement w/attractive ing carpeting and drapes; 4 bdrms.,
recreation room. Gas forced air 2% baths.
heat. 2 car garage. 80x130 foot lot.
Priced for action ................. $21,500 For appointment to see these and

H. and R. ANSPACH,
463

Central

Avenue

other

Inc.

HI

2-1212

Choice location in a new and convenient
neighborhood,
6 room brick ranch with
attached garage; 3 bedrooms,
2 colored
ceramic tile baths, full basement. Walking distance to schools and transportation. Price, $34,500.

QUINLAN

Wilmette

&amp; TYSON,

6700

Inc.

UNiversity

BAIRD &amp; WARNER
576
Lincoln
Ave.
Winnetka
6-2700

166

Indian

Tree

porch,
rage.
sion.

bsmt.

rec.

rm.;

Owner moving;
Under $40,000.

gas

ht.,

immediate

PORTER and WEINRICH,
62

Green

Bay

Rd.

.

Winnetka

Thursday, December

att.

ga-

posses-

Inc.
6-2600

18, 1952

for sale,

call:

COUNTRY

ESTATE

R. S. HAMBLY &amp; CO., Realtor
HI

REAL

7123
2-1484

ESTATE

Fine

Road.

brick

First

8 YR. old brk. Ranch. Lge.
with dining
area,
2 twin
bath, bsmt.; oil forced air
gar. Ideal location. $16,500.

CARR

FOR SALE
(Deerfield)

Country Ranch
brick, acre lot.

CO.

Deerfield

home;

830

984

or

985

attached

garage,

Ranch home. very attractive.
R. K. EBERSOLE
Woodward Ave.
Deerfield 1049

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE (Improved)
(LAKE FOREST)
NEW

6 ROOM

RANCH

HART,

SHAW

&amp;

COMPANY

large

Brierhill

living

room

room,
dining
attractive
fireplace,
with
step saving
kitchen,
bright study,
and
floor has 4 bedSecond
room.
powder
rooms
and 2 ceramic tile baths; 2 car
garage
attached
and
wooded
property,
ai ruae.” Tip top condition and offered at
$47,500.
ROBERT
L.
JOHNSON
REALTY
CO.
1608
Berkeley
HI.
2-6200
Winnetka
6-3809
Deerfield
308

FIRST

Lake
Bluff—being
completed,
good
location; spacious 8 bdrm. brk. Ranch.
2
tile baths, 2 car gar., full bsmt. $37,000.
.
K. EBERSOLE
830
Woodward
Ave.
Deerfield
1049
8 LARGE
bedrooms
and
2 small
bedrooms;
cement
stucco house
in Lake
Bluff. Living room with fireplace, dining room, den and large kitchen with
plenty of cupboard space, full basement
and attic, vas-oil combination heat, garage. Excellent residential district, near
transportation
and
schools.
Available
Februarv
1st. Price, $20,000; private
owner. Telephone Lake Bluff 3455.
ATTRACTIVE
2 bedroom,
ranch
style
house. Large living-dining room, picture windows.
$22,500. Open
for inspection Saturday
and Sunday,
10 to
4:30.
141
Sunset
Place,
Lake
Bluff.
PAY
LIKE
RENT
Fine 7 rm. brick home in Lake Forest,
$23,000.
Wonderful
terms,
very
low
down payment.

REAL

2-0093

ESTATE

Res.,

HI

"REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE (Vacant)
(Highland

Park)

LOT for sale, south to Broadview in Ravinia.
Reduced
price
for quick
sale.
Call HI 2-2652.

ESTATE FOR SALE
(LAKE FOREST)

HOME

(Vacant)

SITES

50x180—All utilities in, Park
Ave.
78x230—Wooded,
fully
imp.
RAVINIA: PAP
ee
ek
100x295 — All
utilities
in,
Geen Brae
(ives
sn dincatecxete

Two
with

stores for rent in Hichwood,
6 room flat. For details see or

226

Green

50x150—Fully
center.

JOHN
LAKE

of

imp.,

4 blocks

town

GRIFFITH,

FOREST

2850

485

INC.

LAKE

BLUFF
\

816

one
call

GUY VITI
Bay,

Highwood,

HI

2-39383

TO RENT (Unfurnished)
Park)

furnished apartment, 328 WauROOM
kegan Ave., Highwood. Phone Deerfield
885 after 6 p.m.
unporch,
enclosed
and
room
THREE
furnished; near transportation. Call HI
2-0559.
6

LOWER apartment of house with garage,
2 bedrooms,
2 baths, living room
dining room combination, kitchen, enclosed
porches;
gas
hot
water
heat,
nice
large
basement.
Can
be rented
furnished. HI
2-1530.
ROOM apartment,.second floor. Immediate occupancy.
East side, close in;
all utilities included in rent: automatic
oil heat, gas, light, hot water, electric
refrigerator,
gas
stove.
Large
yard.
Phone HI 2-3707 after 6 evenings for
appointment

to

see.

EAST side, central location; 6 rooms and
bath.
Adults, no pets; references.
R.
W. Hawkins.
HI 2-0540.

RENT (Unfurnished)
FOREST)

four room apartment, second floor,
NEW
brick building; living room with fireplace, 2 bedrooms
and bath. Close to
business. HI 2-0118.
GARAGE
APARTMENT,
unfurnished;
bedroom, living room combination, bath,
kitchen. West of Lake Forest; available
immediately, $60 per month.

JOHN
LAKE

GRIFFITH,

FOREST

485

APARTMENTS

TO

(Highland

LAKE

RENT

Park)

INC.
BLUFF

816

(Furnished)

TWO room furnished apartment, complete
kitchen and use of laundry. 722 Homewood Ave., Highland Park, after 7 p.m.
TWO room, furnished, heated apartment;
private bath. $60 monthly. HI 2-0199.
TWO
room
furnished
apartment,
near
transportation; hot water at all times.
HI 2-4067.
TWO room apartment, furnished; close to
transportation
and
town.
HI
2-5965
4

p.m.

THREE
room
furnished
apartment
and
garage: employed couple desired. Phone
HI 2-1128 evenings.

APARTMENTS TO RENT. (Furnished)
(LAKE FOREST)
furnished apartment, including
ROOM
utilities and
garage.
Telephone
Lake
Forest 2338.
living
apartment;
furnished
ROOM
3
room has hide-a-bed. Gas heat, utilities
$150 a month.
and garage furnished.
Telephone Lake Forest 911.

8

APARTMENTS
TO RENT (Furnished)
(Miscellaneous)

apartments, private bath,
38-room
TWO
Libertyville
Call
furnished.
partly
2-9879

or

2-4141.

furnished kitchenette apartROOM
2%
ment with heat and utilities; 2nd floor,
private entrance. Long Lake area. $65
a month, Telephone Fox Lake 17-3314,

HOUSES

3000

LOANS

BUSINESS space for rent with flat above.
Ideal
for
tearoom,
small
restaurant,
beauty or barber shop. dress shop, For
information call HI 2-0582.

after

2-0037

HINSDALE—Oak
Brook. Spacious country living. 8 room
Colonial including
den and recreation with frpl. 3 acres of
ground,
4 stall barn; bus service to
Hinsdale
school.
Home
adjacent
to
bridle
path.
$57,500
or
will.
divide
house and
1 acre,
$52,500.
Hinsdale
1832.

to

TO RENT
(Unfurnished
(Highland Park)
:

room

garage.

375

house;

2

Vine

Available

bathrooms,

Ave.,

January

Highland

1

stall

Park.

Ist.

(Highland

OFFICES, STORES &amp; STUDIOS ©
TO RENT

APARTMENTS TO
(LAKE

GILBERT RAYNER
LAKE FOREST 382

ANCHOR

MORTGAGE

NINE

It!

HOUSES TO RENT (Furnished)_

Ample
funds available at low
rates on
well located residential properties.
Lony
terms—prepayment
privileges.
FIRST
FEDERAL
SAVINGS
AND
LOAN
ASSOCIATION
Waukegan
216 Madison Street
MA
38-0084

5
Lake Forest: Attractive 2-story house in
excellent condition on 75 foot lot, near
station and school. 5 rooms and bath on
lst floor, 2 extra bedrooms on 2nd floor,
Hot air heat with oil furnace. Combination screen and storm windows, Two-car
garage. From a purchaser willing to wait
for possession until lease expires September 1, 1953, owner will accept the bargain
price of $16,500.00.

“REAL

HOUSES

WANTED

MORTGAGES

(Highland

260 EAST DEERPATH
LAKE FOREST 616

HI

ESTATE

APARTMENTS

Situated in West Lake Forest on over
an acre of landscaped grounds. There are
3 bedrooms, 2 baths; large living room,
all-purpose family room, both with fireplaces;
large well planned
kitchen
and
breakfast space. 2 car attached garage.
Many thermopane windows. Warm, quiet
cork floors. Radiant gas heat. City water,
city schools. Low taxes. Owner interested
in reasonable offer.

CHOICE

(Improved)

DEERFIELD
beautiful
on
home

has

Rd.,

Deerfield. Excellent, beautifully modern
brick
home
located
at
821
Rosemary
Terrace, two doors north of Bethlehem
Church. Home is spaciously sound in construction
with
six rooms
&amp; bath,
full
basement and attached garage. Shown by
appointment only.

ST. JOHNS
or eve. HI 2-1485

floor

REALTY

Waukegan

and Charge

PRIVATE
party
desires
to buy
direct
from owner—4 bedroom home; 2 baths,
2 car garage, large lot. For cash. A. V.
Noren, Waukegan, III.

liv. rm., kit.
size bdrms.,
ht. 1%
car

COMPANY
FOR SALE (Improved)
HI 2-6600 REAL ESTATE(Miscellaneous)

Close
to school
and
transportation;
3
bedrooms, lIge. liv. rm. with lannon stone
fireplace,
dining
‘area,
modern
kit.,
2
lg. porches, full bsmt.; oil ht., beautiful
grounds, near bridle path. Excellent barn
offers
ample
accommodation
for riding
horses.
REAL
VALUE,
$32,500

Drive

Brick Colonial is just 12 yrs. old and is
considered one of the best houses available in the area at the price.
4 good
bdrms.
(3 take twin beds),
2%
bths.,
peautiful bright liv. rm., lovely kit. with
pbrkfst. spe. An unusually nice screened

have

Frame Ranch built by contractor owner;
living-dinette comb., fireplace, 2 bdrms.,
tile bath, cabinet
kit., utility rm.; upstairs, 2 rm. possibility. Oil forced air
bt., low taxes and heating cost. Close to
everything.
$17,000.

Winnetka,
I.
BRiargate
4-9001

HIGHLAND PARK, BRAESIDE

we

RINGER REALTY
457 Central

4-2600

OFF THE BEATEN TRACK
but close to everything.
Beautiful
custom-built
Ranch
house
of
brick
&amp;
redwood
with
2 ceramic
tile
paths. A “One of a Kind’? home requiring
the’
minimum
of
labor.
$10,000
cash,
palance like rent to. qualified buyer. MRS.
MATTHEWS.

homes

Country location. 3 yr. old Cape Cod on
\% acre. 1st flr., liv. rm., kit. with din.
area, 1 bdrm., utility rm., bath. 2nd flr.,
2 bdrms. Oil hot air ht. Close to school.
$13,500.

GIFT

home located in EAST RAVINIA is
in excellent condition
and
ready
for immediate occupancy. Separate

2-0037

REAL

(Improved)

SALE

FOR

485

ADS

(Deerfield)

Country

YOU'LL be proud to own this home built
by outstanding
builder
for own use;
brick.
8
twin
bedrooms,
1%
baths,
screen porch, attached heated garage,
basement recreation room. Picture window overlooks park ravine near lake;
rough
hewn
beamed
ceilings,
lavish
wood paneling. Owner moving; will acaa
or reasonable offer.

This expandable

ESTATE
HI

COD

6-5152.

In convenient H. Pk. location. Comfortable 7 room
home
in perfeet condition,
immediate occupancy. Forced air gas heat,
extra toilet. Kitchen, liv. rm., din. rm.,
sunroom
and 2 closed porches on first
fl. 8 nice bdrms.
and bath on 2nd fl.
Plus
cottage
containing
3
rooms
and
porch. Also 3 car gar. in rear of large
wooded lot. Terms to responsible buyer.
JOHN
LEONARDI,
REALTOR
HI
2-2468
:

DEERFIELD
615 Waukegan Road
HIGHLAND PARK
1775 St. Johns Ave.
LAKE FOREST

(Highland

&amp; CO.

ESTATE

REAL

701

Winnetka

HOME AND

Highland Park 2-4500
Lake Forest 2300

ESTATE

Rd.

EARHART

Ad

Deerfield 485

REAL

1-4

Offered
for
first
time—Braeside
area,
Ige. wooded lot. Charm
in every rm. 2
bedrms.,
tiled bath downstairs, well located for maid’s rm. and study. 2 bedrms., bath upstairs. Knotty pine brkfst,
rm., panelled rec. rm. w/huge stone fireplace in basement. Realistically priced—
$37,500. Contact Bob
Earhart.

TELEPHONE
WANT AD SERVICE

287

Bay

CAPE

for Publication in the Current
Week’s Issue

for a Want
Taker

SUNDAY

S. L. GOODFRIEND

Want Ads will be accepted up to

ask

(Improved)

863 BALDWIN
RD., HIGHLAND
PARK
A little jewel, ranch house less than
1
yr. old, placed in beautiful E. Ravinia. 4
bdrms., 2 baths, comb. liv.-din. overlooking tremendous ravine. All carpeting, draperies
&amp;
dishwasher
included
in
fast
selling price of $28,500.

® Highland Park News
® Highwoed News

and

SALE
Park)

Highland Park—East side. Pressed brick.
Reception hall; lge. liv. rm., 15x24 with
frpl.; lge. din. rm., Ige. kit., glazed and
heated sun porch with tile flr., powder
rm. 2nd flr. has 4 bdrms.; 2 are master
size and have adjoining sitting rms., 2
tile baths, full bsmt. and att. gar.; gas
ht. Beautiful lge. corner lot; immediate
occupancy.
Only
$37,000.
DONALD N. ANDERSON, REALTOR
697
Vernon
Ave.
Glencoe
2113

20 words
5¢ each

ESTATE
FOR
(Highland

ADS

Deerfield

use WANT

REAL

YOUR

(Unfurnished)
TO RENT
(Highland Park)

NEW
4%
room home and garage, open
for
inspection,
1870
Deerfield
Road.
Must have good moral and credit references.
Rent,
$125;
will
lease.
HI
2-0153.
LARGE
family
home,
near lake, grade
and
high
school
and
transportation;
separate library and breakfast rooms,
4
master
bedrooms,
plus_
servants
rooms; spacious grounds in choice location: For rent or sale direct by owner.
‘HI 2-0251.

Park)

ONE bedroom furnished house for rent;
hot
water
heat,
glassed
in sleeping
porch. $100 a month.
HI 2-2029.

HOUSES

&amp; APARTMENTS

(Furnished

or

WANTED

Unfurnished)

UNFURNISHED
2 bedroom apt. wanted
by financially responsible young Highland Park couple with one 3%
yr. old
daughter; garage apartment preferred.
Iz you have one available or coming up
within a few months,
please call us;
excellent references. HI 2-4105.
YOUNG couple, both employed by Encyclopaedia Britannica films, desire bedroom apartment; no children or pets.
Excellent
references.
Call
Wilmette
6404, extension 87 days and GReenleaf
5-8557 evenings.
QUIET,
refined,
single,
elderly
woman
would like 3 or 4 rooms, unfurnished,
quiet apartment. HI 2-4828.

APARTMENTS

&amp; HOUSES
TO SHARE

WILL
share home with couple. Private
bath and kitchen privileges. Telephone
Lake Forest 3061.
meet matt Me

ROOMS
LARGE
tion

room
and

for

town;

FOR

RENT

rent,

near

private

transporta-

entrance.

Call

after 3 p.m. HI 2-4300.
NICE pleasant rooms, plenty of hot water; near
transportation.
$8 a week.
HI 2-1877.
NICE
large sleeping room on east side,
close to transportation and shopping.
HI 2-1229.
NICELY furnished home-like double bedroom; ample drawer and closet space,
hot water. Close to Vine Ave. station.
Phone HI 2-0405.
TWO
rooms
for
rent,, %
block
from
transportation and shopping; one eingle, one double. HI 2-7215.
ONE
large comfortable room, hot water
at all times; gentleman preferred. Near
transportation. HI 2-1014.
ROOM
to rent, close to transportation;
kitchen
privileges. HI
2-6769.
TWO sleeping rooms; 1 double, 1 single.
2 blocks from town and transportation.
Nurses,
teachers
or employed
women
__preferred. Call HI 2-8819 after 4 p.m.
LARGE
room,
spacious
closet,
kitchen
privileges; home atmosphere. Telephone
Lake Forest 3210 days or Lake Forest
1684 evenings.
FOR
rent: room and kitchen privileges,
or
share
home
to
congenial,
neat
__couple. For information call HI 2-5468.
FURNISHED
room for rent, near transportation. Telephone Lake Forest 2267
after 4:30 p.m.

ROOM

AND

BOARD

WILL give room and board and care to
elderly person. Tel. HI
2-6123.
STUDENT or employed girl to assist with
children part time in return for room
and board. HI 2-7409.

HELP

WANTED—FEMALE

COOK, 5 or 6 days a week, permanent;
experience is not necessary. Reasonable
pay.
Apply
at
406
Green
Bay
Rd.,
Highwood.
REGISTERED
nurses
needed
at H.P.
hospital.
Starting
salary,
$255,
with
afternoon bonus, $30, and night bonus,
$20. See Miss Beard, HI 2-8000.
STENOGRAPHER—Winnetka
Park District has a.very fine permanent position open for experienced stenographer
with some knowledge of bookkeeping.
Ideal working conditions, 40 hour week,
pension plan, sick leave and vacation
privileges. Salary dependent on experience and qualifications. Apply George
B. Caskey, Supt., Winnetka Park District Office, 2nd flr., Village Hall, Winnetka. Tel. WI 6-2160.
Woman
wanted
to
train
for fountain
manager.
No
experience
necessary.
F. W. WOOLWORTH
CO.
600 CENTRAL AVE.
COUNTER and check in girl, steady job.
Apply in person. John Zengler’s Cleane
1905
Sheridan
Road,
Highland
ark.
NEAT appearing and pleasant woman to
work
5 hours in morning
as bakery
salesgirl.
Apply
Alva’s
Pastry
Shop,
628 Roger Williams, HI 2-4334.
AN

excellent sales position will be open
on January 2nd, selling medium priced
to better women’s apparel. This is permanent
position
where you have the
opportunity
of earning
more than at.
any
store
in
the
Chicago
area;
no
nights. Minna Hart, 580 Lincoln Ave.,
Winnetka, Il.

Page

43

�Part
_

F.

‘ADIES AND WAITRESSES
time

W.

or

full

time.

WOOLWORTH

COOK,

HOTEL MAID

CO.

APPLY

TO

HOUSEKEEPER

DEERPATH INN
LAKE FOREST 2280

PART-TIME

CASHIER-CHECKER
for full time, permanent
employment.
Janowitz
293
East
Illinois
Road, Lake
2700.

See

Foods,
Forest

TELLER
'
Light

STENOGRAPHE
dictation,
general
office

Varied

duties,

interesting

ral
office
ecessary.

Call

details.

Florence

Rhodes,

details,

work.

Experience

Northbrook

un-

1200.

-

_ STENOGRAPHER
_ PERMANENT

For commercial
ceiving
cage.

AVE.

HI 2-5180

Ideal
employment — close
to
home. Save travel time and transportation.

FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF LAKE FOREST

LOOKING FOR A JOB WHERE THE
PAY IS GOOD... EVEN THOUGH
YOU DON’T HAVE EXPERIENCE?

ILLINOIS BELL

VE’LL

TRAIN

YOU,

WHILE

YOU

CO.

AND

YOU'LL

LEARN

TO

BE

PLAY

EVER IMPORTANT PART IN THE
f OF YOUR COMMUNITY.

SEE

CHIEF

IGHLAND
LAKE

_ GENERAL
ment;
hour

Lake

OPERATOR

PARK:

FOREST:

1866

255

office work

E.

Forest

N.

2ND

in Alumni

College.

3100,

AT

DEERPATH

typing
required.
5
week.
Inquire
Mrs.

Forest

Between 25 and 40 years; minimum
of 3 years experience; engineering
graduate
preferred.

DIVISION
2301 DAVIS STREET
NORTH CHICAGO DExter 6-3400

ADVERTISING SALESMAN
GROUP OF NORTH
WEEKLIES

The man we’re looking for will sell advertising to North Shore retailers. He’ll
be a North Shore resident who wants a
position
that promises
an excellent future, plenty of work, and a good starting
salary plus commissions. He’ll be a selfstarter. When he comes to us, he'll know
something
about
advertising,
but more
important, he’ll know how to sell. He’ll
own a car.
If you’re the man we want, tell us about
yourself.
We'll
schedule
an _ interview.
(Our employees know of this ad). Write
Box A-15 c/o H.P. News.

day,
387%
Crampton,

Lake

GET

67.

y week

with

with
Full

friendly
time, 5

15 minute

breaks

ning and afternoon. Paid vacaand holidays. Blue Cross and
e Shield
available,
employer
ng half. Also other benefits.
ocated in business section within
of H.P. bus stop. Apply now.

- DURACLEAN CO.
Mr. Tennis

DEERFIELD

444

ted: stenographer
capable of doing
te typing and good at figures; must
pleasant and cordial with the public.

k for Mr.

&amp;

LOAN
ASS’N
Deerfield 165

OF

NORTHERN
ILLINOIS
HAS

AN

OPENING

FOR

Young registered nurse for division headjuarters, on Skokie highway, Northbrook.
lient
facilities
and
surroundings.
oy

CAPABLE
young white woman for general
housework,
plain
cooking;
no
heavy
cleaning.
Own
room
and bath,
Telephone Lake Forest 2769.
COOK
and downstairs
maid,
white,
experienced.

and interesting duties. Attractive
benefits. Excellent salary plan.
. Rardin at HI 2-2900.

transportation;

top

room

car.

apartment

Telephone

with

garage

Libertyville

space

for

2-3040.

SITUATIONS WANTED—FEMALE _
ALL types of beauty work done in gone
own
home.
Tel.
HI
2-4743
or
Lake
Forest
2998Y1.
TEACHER,
10 years experience, will. go
to Arizona to tutor your children while
you spend the winter there. Give details first letter. Write Box C-25 c/o
H.P. News.
NURSE, practical, available for post hospital cases and new born infants. Also
parent substituting. Telephone GReenleaf 5-0409.

SITUATIONS

WANTED—MALE

_

ENJOY THE HOLIDAYS!
WHAT DO YOU WANT DONE?
EXPERIENCED,
AVAILABLE FOR

QUALIFIED
FULL TIME

MEN
WORK

NO JOB TOO SMALL!
TREE SURGERY
TRUCKING
WINDOW WASHING
HEAVY CLEANING AND
OTHER INSIDE WORK
SNOW PLOWING
SNOW SHOVELING
O K ENTERPRISES
LES KEEPPER, JR.
926 N. WESTERN
LAKE FOREST 447
GOOD

cook, also baker desires work from

December 18th
Call HI 2-4329

thru
December
28th.
between 4 and 7 p.m.

SHORE LINE

PART
TIME.
Experienced
toy
electric
train
repairman.
Also
complete
new
set-up and layout work. Ph. HI 2-1369.
HIGHLAND
PARK CYCLE SHOP
WILL
iease
1 bay
“Standard”
Service
Station to responsible party. Lessee to
purchase low inventory only. Telephone
ONtario
2-2370.
If you are a plumbing, heating, building
materials salesman we have an excellent
job for you. Come in and talk it over.
SEARS ROEBUCK &amp; CO.
601 Central Ave.
Highland
Park

HELP

Near

pay, own rooms. Telephone Lake Forest 2398.
COMPETENT
houseman,
Negro;
references. HI 2-7409.
COUPLE:
woman,
cooking, light housework; man, some driving and outside
work. Current
references
required.
2

CLERKS

EMPLOYMENT
OFFICE
HIGHWOOD

WANTED—DOMESTIC

MAID;
LIGHT
HOUSEWORK,
COOKING. OTHER
HELP
EMPLOYED;
ALL
MODERN
EQUIPMENT.
OWN
ROOM,
CONGENIAL
SURROUNDINGS,
PHONE
GLENCOE 2342.
WOMAN
to cook and general cleaning;
no laundry or heavy work. Must like
children. Own room and bath; good salary. HI 2-6945.
LADY’S
maid,
1 day a week; pressing
and mending. $10 and gas costs. Must
have
own
transportation.
Telephone
Lake Forest 29.

GENERAL HOUSEWORKCOOKING
Must
be
experienced;
permanent
position. Stay, own room; other help. Top
‘salary; references.
Winnetka
6-1663,

SLED
Airline
Racer,
Flexible
Flyer,
foot, like new; cost $15, sell for
Telephone Lake Bluff 3167.

LIGHT housework
6 to 8 hours a day.
Please call after 7 p.m. HI 2-1138.
LAUNDRY
done at my
home. Gall for
and
delivered.
Telephone
Lake
Bluff
2722.

,

COOKING, experienced; temporary or permanent;
adults only. Telephone
Lake
Forest 1113.
*
WILL do washing and ironing in my own
home; or just ironing. Experienced. HI
2-8489.

NEAT

colored

girl

with

two

years col-

lege would
like maid
job;
go
home
nights. 6 days per week, hours from
8 to 4, $1 and carfare. Call ONtario
2-0411.
WOMAN
desires work as kitchen maid
or helping during
Christmas
holiday
or after; no ‘heavy cleaning or lifting.
Lake
Forest
references.
Write
Box
F-40
c/o Lake Forester.

BABY SITTING
HUSBAND

and wife would
like sitting
jobs
for Christmas
and
New
Year’s
Eve.. HI 2-81838.
WILL
baby
sit or do housework
evenings, weekends or holidays. Book me
now for New Year’s Eve. Lake Forest
2

CHRISTMAS

TOYS

8
qr
LIONEL
train set;
log loader,
remote
control
switches,
190
watt
transformer,
large train
table, other

accessories all like new. $75. HI 2-1576.

5
$9

“LIONEL”
”O
Gauge” Train, like new,
used only 5 hours; large KW trainmaster transformer,
number
681
locomotive with
smoke
and
whistle,
special
ears
include crane
cars,
search
light
car, lumber car, conveyer-type lumber
loader, and lighted caboose; cost $125,
will sell for $70. Also
folding pingpone table, $15. Phone Deerfield 1044.
ENGLISH

coach

2-3483.

GIRL’S

doll

buggy,

$5.

HI

(

20

inch

Schwinn

Schwinn
24 inch
condition,
very
2-5622.

bike;

boy’s

bicycle. All in good
reasonable.
Call
HI

MARX
electric train, deluxe model, complete;
automatic
uncouplers,
whistle,
automatic switches, 20 ft. Flexi track,
instructions for operating. Reasonable.
HI 2-2542.

GIRL’S figure skates, size 5, almost new,
skates.
hockey
Girl’s
$17.
were
$10,
size 7, $4; sled, $4. Telephone
Lake
Forest 2241.

~ CLOTHING

FOR SALE

es

LADY’S
fur
coat
for
sale, reasonably
priced; can be seen at Walter the Tailor, 1814 Second St., H.P.

TUXEDO,
size 40-42 and 2 dress shirts,
size 16%,
large
size, $85; like new,
435
Kingston
Terrace,
Deerfield,
Ill.
3 PIECE
tux
and
tails,
size
38; full
length black velvet evening wrap with
hood,
size
14;
maple
vanity
with
drawers.
Telephone
Lake Bluff
2555.
GIRL’S
green
velvet and
taffeta party
dress, size 12; blue wool skating outfit, size 12; red knit dress, 2 piece,
misses 12; man’s blue double breasted
40.

size

suit,

HI

2-3018.

LADY’S
black
%
Hudson
seal
coat;
man’s
overcoat,
small
size.
Both
in
excellent
condition,
reasonable.
HI

:

;

LIKE new

low as $15.95, complete,
ready to run.
Also
A.F. parts and equipment;
accessories and structures for all gauges. HO,
S, TT, 027 and: 0.
HIGHLAND
PARK CYCLE SHOP
486 Central
at Sheridan
HI
2-1869

2-0674.

EXPERIENCED cleaning man or woman,
2 or 38 days a week; must have own
transportation. West Lake Forest. Telephone Lake Forest 1547.

AGENTS

Selig.

ERFIELD
SAVING
Waukegan
Rd.

2-3536.

EXPERIENCED
general maid needed for
housekeeping and simple cooking; will
wait till after holidays if necessary for
capable, neat person. Small home, small
family. Own room, bath. Cleaning help.
References required. Current wages. HI

WORKERS

Pensions, insurance and free transportation. No experience
is necessary.
Earn
while you learn.
‘
APPLY
TO

NORTH

widow:

nice
room.
references
2-5557.

WOMAN
to work every evening during
the holidays from 5 to 9, for cooking
and serving dinner. Small family. Near
transportation. Telephone Lake Forest
1005.

TRAINMEN

TICKET

for

TOP wages to experienced general maid,
for cooking and downstairs; excellent
working conditions. Current references
required. Permanent or temporary. Telephone Libertyville 2-3040.

INTO RAILROAD
WORK!

SHOP

housework

COOKING,
light
housework
for
small
adult
family;
no
heavy
cleaning
or
laundry.
Own
room
and bath. References. HI 2-0417.
CAPABLE
woman
to do light housework
and
cooking
and
assist
young
married woman recovering from illness.
Pleasant, private room and bath. Other
colored help kept. Top
salary. Phone
collect Highland
Park
2-4556.

PERMANENT JOBS
ARE NOW
OPEN
FOR

GENERAL
OFFICE WORK
OME TYPING REQUIRED
ermanent positions
working conditions.

SHORE

HI

depart-

Telephone

extension

WANTED—MAiL rE

TIME STUDY MAN

FOR

‘ERS JUST THAT ... FULL TIME
OBS FOR WOMEN UP TO 43 YEARS
OLD AS TELEPHONE UPERATORS.

PAID

HELP

DEEPFREEZE APPLIANCE

HOUSEWIVES

TELEPHONE

re-

APPLY IN PERSON OR
PHONE LAKE FOREST 900

POSITION

LIGHTING PRODUCTS, Inc.
W. PARK

and

High
school graduate.
Previous
experience desirable but qualified
applicants will be trained.

SMALL OFFICE, PLEASANT
WORKG CONDITIONS. SHORTHAND AND
YPING EXPERIENCE NECESSARY, 5
MAY WEEK,
PAID HOLIDAYS AND
VACATIONS;
FREE INSURANCE.

1548

paying

general

MAID,
light housekeeping and cooking;
all
modern
appliances,
outside
help
employed.
Private
room
and_
bath;
friendly
family;
near
transportation.

BANK POSITION
WITH A FUTURE

Mrs. A. McCarthy
1866 Second St.
Highland Park

AES

permanent.
Stay
nights;
Small
home.
Experienced;
required. HI 2-8284 or HI

DINING SERVICE
MATRON
ILLINOIS BELL
TELEPHONE CO.

&gt;.

oP

t"

USED

16-18.

HI

10-12, worn
boy’s leather

2-5577..

once,
ideal
jacket, size

BLACK
Persian
lamb
coat, size 12-14;
wonderful condition, reasonable. Man’s
winter overcoat,
size 38, $25:
man’s
sport jacket, $10. HI 2-5272.
WINTER coat, zipper lining, perfect condition, size 40, $25; spring coat, $15;
2 men’s
overcoats,
size 44, $7 each,
Call

HI

2-4790.

Persian lamb cape, $150;
BLACK
Safari seal cape-stole, $125; A-1
tion

and

style.

HOUSEHOLD

HI

brown
condi-

2-5759.

GOODS

FOR

SALE

WASHING

4 years old. $25.
field 87RM2.

-SALE_

sofa, hunters

Call

MACHINE

Mrs.

Classen,

Deer-

SIX year crib, $15; youth bed, $20. Both
ae
springs
and
mattress.
Call
HI
-3022,

MODERN
walnut dining set, good condition; table, 2 arm and 4 side chairs,
credenza and china cabinet. Will accept
best offer. Glencoe 396.
CROWN
gas range, $10; Bendix washer,
$100;
Dinette
table,
$20;
Hot
Point
electric stove, deluxe model, $225; old
end tables, card tables, chairs, books, |
bookeases,
ete.;
no
reasonable
offer
refused. HI 2-3295.

CIRCUMSTANCES | necessitate
sale
of
fine furnishings. Will sacrifice beautiful oval solid walnut dining room table
and chairs; couch, 6 down filled cush- iwi
ions in excellent condition, slip cover
included; 2 occasional tables; painted
|
twin bedroom set with 5 drawer chest,
_
dresser and night
table: twin Hollywood
beds
with
headboards,
chair,
wardrobe trunk; draperies; bric-a-brac:
practically new Hamilton Beach vacuum,
all attachments; large aluminum bar-bque,
used
5
times;
handsome
new.
wrought
iron porch furniture;
apartment upright piano, full keyboard, good
tone. Can be seen after 6 p.m. Thursday evening. HI 2-0740.

MISCELLANEOUS

CASHMERE

FOR

SALE

SWEATER

SALE

IMPORTED,
HANDCRAFTED,
FULL
FASHIONED
SWEATERS
S.S. PULLOVER
NOW
$13.95
L.S. CARDIGANS
NOW
$16.95
ALSO
MANY
FANCY
SWBATERS

MINNA

HART

580 LINCOLN
AVE.
WINNETKA
6-3738

2-1914.

FORMAL,
size
for holidays:

,

Sallinial LaWeos

green matelasse; 2 barrel lounge chairs,
gold metallic nubby fabric; 2 smal] mahogany occasional chairs, beige matellasse; also twin
Hollywood
beds and
7 piece bookcases. 2 yr. ABC washing
machine,
newly
overhauled;
40
in.
double sink and 35 gal. hot water oil
=
HI 2-8089 Saturday and Sunay.

HOLIDAY

SALE

30 gal. automatic gas water heater
Medicine cabinet
Floor Tile
Wall
tile
Gun type oi] burner
54
inch
Sink
and
Cabinet

ARNOLD
595

PETERSON

&amp;

$74.50

$94.95

CO.

ROGER
WILLIAMS
HI
2-5561

SPECIAL
HOLIDAY
SALE
Linens
to
grace
your
holiday
table.
Scarves, cloths, and doilies. Silver place
settings,
candlesticks,
candelabra,
wine
coolers,
platters,
tea
and
coffee
sets,
china,
glassware. Inexpensive
Christmas
gifts
in
brass,
wrought
iron,
pewter,
bric-a-brac,
clocks,
furniture,
and
fireplace equipment.
Lincoln
Antique Shop,
1 mile north of Half Day, IIl., on Route
21
(Milwaukee
Ave.).

VISIT
YOUR
OWN
HIGHLAND
PARK
rading Post. We sell furniture, brica-brac
&amp;
clothing.
1813
St.
Johns.
Tel. HI 2-2744.
BEAUTIFUL dining furniture, mahogany:
table, 6 chairs, pads, 2 extra leaves,
$275; or with breakfront and credenza,
$675. Perfect condition; must be seen
to be appreciated. 485 Kingston
Terrace, Deerfield.
ONE
9x12 Oriental rug for sale; new,
very
cheap.
816
Highwood
Avenue,
Highwood.
GREEN bedroom chair, $25; Maxon washing machine, $8. 435 Kingston Terrace,
Deerfield.
DINING room set, picture frames, double
bed, music
box,
old lamps,
miscellaneous old glass and china, Haviland.
Deerfield 1370, Saturday.
YOUR choice, 2 automatic washers, $75
each, sold as is Sears Roebuck and Co.,
601 Central Ave., Highland Park.
LIONEL
train, tracks, transformer, ete.
MONTH
old
innerspring
mattress
and
Remington
portable typewriter, White
box
spring
with
attached
legs,
30
Rotary sewing machine. Al] in A-1 coninches wide. Call HI 2-7435. Best offer.
dition. Call HI 2-4754.
GENERAL
ELECTRIC
combination Vic- MAPLE
crib,
6
months
size,
electric
trola
and
radio;
mahogany
cabinet.
sterilizer, $10. Phone HI 2-3012.
‘Best offer. Deerfield 387.
OHLSSON
AND
RICE,
60
special
airDOUBLE maple bed, spring mattress, $25
plane
engine;
boy’s
Nestor
Johnson
complete; swivel arm floor lamp, $15;
Hi-Speed racers, size 8; both like new.
4x6
Oriental
rug,
dark
red,
$15.
HI 2-6970.
L. Richards, Sr., Del Mar Woods, DeerENCYCLOPEDIA
AMERICANA,
30 volfield 360M2.
umes,
perfect
condition;
silver
fox
BRAND new light wood Mengel desk; will
jacket, like new; hand carved marble:
sacrifice, $60. HI 2-0547.
lamp; reasonable. HI 2-6013.
FRIGIDAIRE
electric
range,
4 months NEW
$120 Ampro Tape Recorder,
$75;
old; 30 inch model. Cost, $229.94, must
still in carton. Fine for parties, Chistsacrifice, Contact F. North, 1323 First
mas gift. Maul, Phone Lake Forest 743.
St., Northbrook, Ill., after 5 p.m,
FOUR
7.10x15 Royal air ride tires with
MUST
sell
Simmons
couch-bed
with
tubes, good tread; priced for quick sale,
Beautyrest
mattresses;
green
tweed
$15. Deerfield
1431.
cover. Modern large mirror, gold frame;
12 gauge automatic shotloveseat
two
and
matching
chairs; REMINGTON
gun with 8 boxes of shells; excellent
leather large top tables; Crosley: comb.
condition, $75. Also Zeiss Ikoflex camradio-victrola,
lamps,
pictures.
295
era,
$55. Telephone Lake Forest 1538.
Woodland
Rd.,
H.P.
Thursday
night,
Saturday 10 to 1.
BICYCLE, basketball, baseball mitt, football equipment, skates, typewriter, perSUNBEAM
Mixmaster
complete,
almost
colator set, Westinghouse
9 refrigernew, at half price. HI 2-0291 Thursator, Maytag washer, child’s wardrobe.
day after 6 p.m. or Saturday and SunHI 2-6089.
day morning.
DIESEL switch engine, ‘“O” gauge, and
RADIO and record player; plays records
caboose, $7.50; double spool bed, exon both sides; light wood, good condicellent
coil spring,
almost
new mattion. Call Deerfield 387:
tress, $15. HI 2-2528.
COLLECTORS
items: brass
lamp
table
washing machine, good conwith 12 inch square marble top, copper KENMORE
dition,
$385;
child’s
tricycle,
semicalling card holder, Chinese inlaid sewpneumatic
tires,
$10.
HI
2-7356.
ing box, small Smith and Wesson barrel gun, perfume bottle. HI 2-3295.
TWO pairs boy’s skates; hard toes, hockey’s, size 5 and 7, excellent condition.
WESTINGHOUSE automatic dryer, $110;
HI
2-10384.
Bendix washing machine, $75. Both in
perfect condition.
Call Deerfield
987. FULL size box spring mattress; 48 inch
roll-a-way
bed;
3 pair custom
made
PAIR of cut glass decanters, copper tea
drapes,
silk damask;
Burpee
cooker;
pot, French and English china, framed
lamps; Thor washer; rummage. ExcelFrench prints, washstand, brass candlelent condition, reasonable. HI 2-1914.
sticks,
2
small
Victorian
chairs,
1
Early
American
chair,
many
other
WORLD
BOOK
ENCYCLOPEDIA
items;
all perfect
for
an
unusual Deluxe 1947 edition, excellent condition,
Christmas present. HI 2-6413.

CHOICE
CHRISTMAS TREES
REASONABLE
WILL DELIVER FREE |
SET UP IN HOME IF DESIRED
OK ENTERPRISES
~~
926 N. WESTERN
LAKE FOREST 447

$55. HI 2-3958 after 5:30 p.m.

‘

_

�Black,

LOST:

Reply by phone as well as by letter
"may be made to any Want Ad with
Call

address.

an

as

number

- g box

HI 2-4500 or Lake Forest 2300.
and phone
address
name,
Your
number will be placed at once in
the box of the advertiser.
ee
MISCELLANEOUS
2

OIL drums,
2-2327.

275

FOR

gal.

each,

used.

6 Crown
plates,
fruit center
tea cups,
and Derby cups, large Sheffield service
ivory cribbage
bowls,
Bennington
tray,
board, carved pipes, inkwells, etc. Furniture and antique jewelry. Lindwall’s 808
Oak Street, % block west of Green Bay
Road, Winnetka 6-0145.
NEW invalid rubber tire wheel chair, used
for

suitable

$45;

person

2-0615

HI

175 pounds.
Sunday.

years to
day and

195.

LARGE fresh eggs, 60c per doz; medium
size, 50c per doz. Bradley Road at the
Water
Tower.
Telephone
Libertyville
2-2398.
10-4:30.
Sunday
and
Saturday
SALE:
4
$350;
Ford,
Anglia-English
1941
$75; GE
gas stove,
Kenmore
burner
Point
Shuttle
12x18
$100;
r,
refrigerato
grand
Apollo
small
pad;
rug,
green
piano, $150; occasional tables; 75 glass
bricks, 50c each; red kitchen table, 2
chairs; 3 pr. grey drapes, like new; 3
rummage.
rugs;
throw
bedroom
blue
141 Sunset place. Telephone Lake Bluff
2627.
UNIVERSAL
stove
for
sale;
excellent
condition.
Price, $85. Telephone Lake
Forest 1389 after 6 o’clock.
ANTIQUE JEWELRY
Siberian
amethyst
tlexible bracelet
and
ring; sunburst pearl pin, diamond center;
beautiful
bracelet;
English
gold
solid
turquoise
necklace, earrings
and _ bracelet set in yellow gold; watch fob charms;
drop
and
type
button
slides: earrings;
garnet earrings and necklace; hand painted porcelain miniatures
in earrings
for
Many
other
unusual
fine
‘ pierced
ears.
808 Oak
Lindwall’s
of jewelry.
pieces
Street, % block west of Green Bay Road,

WiIrrnatka

so

BUYING

CAR CONFIDENCE
WITH NEW
FROM
CAR
A NEW
DEALER

1951

conperfect
4-dr.,
DeSoto
GitiOn .......-.00..sccccceeenereresccccseenees $1,995
EQUIPPed _ .....-..----------e--e-neereseoe- $1,895
DeSoto 4-dr., auto. drive ....$1,795
Plymouth
Belvidere
hard
MRR SS Fe Si
Lod ela celbotondgiaiidnoe’ $1,695
Plymouth
4-dr., light green $1,295
DeSoto 4-dr., carry-all sedan $1,295
Olds.
club
sedan
.................-- $1,29
Dodge
4-dr., fluid drive ....$1,195
Mercury. CONV. | ..0.c0i..2.20.ccks222see $ 895
Plymouth
club coupe;
radio,
«
MOREE | in ccsaunaeateonccerctdtadbbsnnneiees
75
Dodge coupe, very good conTG TIE ais sindsaslnchsnant degnonescebewebs
195
Packard 4-dr. sedan ............... $ 150
9
Hudson 4-dr. sedan ...............- $

1950
1951
1950
1949
1949
1949
1948
1947

1940
1941

HP DESOTO-PLYMOUTH
MOTOR SALES, INC. -

1914

First

St.

HI

2-0580

FOR DEPENDABLE
EXTRA CLEAN USED CARS
VISIT

KNAUZ MOTOR
SALES, INC.
R&amp;H.

dr.,
4
deluxe,
Styline
Chevrolet,
R&amp; 7.
Plymouth,
Belvidere,
R&amp;H.
Ford, V8, 2 dr., R&amp;H.
Chrysler, Windsor, 4 dr., R&amp;H.
Plymouth, 2 dr., R&amp;H.
Plymouth, 4 dr., R&amp;H.
New Yorker, Club Coupe,
Chrysler,
R
.

1951
1951
1950
1950
1950
1949
1949

KNAUZ MOTOR
SALES, INC.

I

2-3867.
BALED

and

oat

ton at barn; $22 delivered
quantities,
smaller
more),
bale. Telephone Libertyville

MUSICAL

$19

straw,

wheat

INSTRUMENTS

WANTED

TO

ton or
per
65c
2-2398.

BUY

wanted. HI 2-0616.
WANTED:
black half grown kitten, female; housebroken. Phone HI 2-3360.
JUNK
cars
wanted,
regardless
of age;
running or not. HI 2-2017.

WANTED
china,
Furniture,
antiques,
glassware,
bric-a-brac, «silver,
cutglass
glass
and
copperware,
guns,
fishing outfits, toys,
books,
garden
tools, washing
machines,
sewing machines, golf sets, used doors,
storm
windows,
plumbing,
radiators.
sinks, bathtubs.
WE
BUY,
SELL
AND
TRADE
STOCKADE TRADING
POST
Tl.
Milwaukee
Ave.
Wheeling,
Wheeling 247
COINS and unused stamps. Local private
collector pays better than dealers. Silver, gold, copper coins, before
1935;
good condition or tarnished. Telephone
Lake Forest 3271, evenings.

LOST:
wide,

_ Park.

AND

gold mesh
December

Reward.
et

aS FO |

FOUND
link
ring,
11th,
in

HI 2-0241.

%
inch
Highland

CARS

SWAP FOR ANYTHING
OF VALUE

HALE MOTOR

SALES

13TH
AND
SHERIDAN
NORTH
CHICAGO
DEXTER
6-2353

SALE

- PING PONG table, with or without legs,

LOST

WE

per

OLD upright piano, very reasonable. Call
HI 2-1244
evenings.
CLARINET,
Italian made, perfect condition; cost $100, sell for $60. Telephone
Lake Bluff 3167.
ADAMS
SCHAAF
upright
piano,
$75;
Cundy-Bettoney
Grenadilla
wood,
B
flat
clarinet,
$100;
violin,
$75.
HI
2-3295.

26

1950, 2-door; radio and

heater.

6 cylinder, perfect condition. Best offer. Telephone Lake Forest 3282-Y-3.
FORD, 1936, in excellent condition; customized with 1941 motor and transmission, hr. brakes, speed equipment. Best
offer. WInnetka 6-3467.
Telephone
LINCOLN,
1947
convertible.
UPtown
8-4778.
PONTIAC 1947 station wagon, very good
condition; extra heavy tires. HI 2-1473,
10:30 a.m. or between 6 &amp; 7 p.m,
STUDEBAKER,
new,
under
900
miles;
O.D., deluxe 2-door, new car guarantee.

Must

sell,

$1,975;

terms.

Deerfield

991.

USED CAR
SPECIALS
GUARANTEED
1951
1951
1951
1950
1949

OK

Chevrolet, Deluxe, 4-door sedan.
Chevrolet Deluxe 6 passenger cpe
Chevrolet,
2-door
Chevrolet 4-door.
Buick
Super
4-door.

CNet

CHEVROLET
INC.
191 E. DEERPATH

LAKE

FOREST

bike,

3200

good

condition,

$22.-

$7.

Telephone

Lake

GIRL’S bicycle,
Forest 2335.

Whizzer bike; extras,
SCHWINN
lent condition.
$128. Telephone
Bluff 1151.
BOY’S 24 inch Schwinn
condition,
$25. Tel.

BUSINESS

Good
»usi-

\

for

WOO

NIGHT
9 p.m.

to

METAL
44

:

LAUNDRY

We
welcome
all strangers
on
3
service.
1875 ST. JOHNS AVE.
HIGHLAND
PARK,
ILL.

1930
Cabinets
For free
or
HI

CABINET

day

ideal

sonable.
7

MELVIN HARRETT

ring,
gold

perset-

gift.

Very

rea-

Crystal

Lake

1256

p.m.

&amp;

REDECORATING

PAINTING
and paper hanging.
Call W.
C. Varney, -HI 2-6980 or Lake Forest
EXTERIOR
and
interior
painting
and
decorating. Hubert Johnson, HI 2-17790

evergreen

work. —

saw

Wheel- —

Call

ser~iee.

Obituaries
Leo Carlson

illness

after

Monday

died

Carlson

at his

home,

221 —

Mr.
Burchell avenue, Highwood.
OcSweden
in
Carlson was born
Highto
came
and
1875,
tober 15,

land Park at the turn of the cen-

i

Funeral services were held yesterday at Kelley and Spalding
mortuary with the Rev. Herbert W.
Linden of Zion Lutheran church

Burial was in North

officiating.
Shore

Garden

of Memories.

Carlson

is survived

Mr.

4

by his

wife, Theresa; five daughters, Miss
Leola Carlson, Mrs. Marian Rogan,
Mrs. Evelyn DeVroeg, all of High
wood, and Mrs. Ruth Lindstrom,

:

a
and Mrs. Ellen Larson of Zion;
—
and
d;
Highwoo
of
Emil,
brother,
grandchildren.

seven

PETS

Local Realtor Voted

BOARD YOUR DOG
AT LOWRY’S

IRISH
setters: ideal Christmas present;
pedigreed,
proven
hunting
and
show
strains,
15 months
old, housebroken.
For details telephone ONtario 2-3192
WE give personal care and loving attention to your birds, in our home, while
you are vacationing. HI 2-3116.
DACHSHUND
puppies, brown, AKC registered, 8 weeks old, males and females.
$50 and up. Telephone MAjestic 3-3060.

COLLIES

OF

BRAEMORE

Finest blood lines in Scotland
and the
U.S.
Bred
right, fed right,
and
raised
right. These are not puppies raised in a
basement or clothes basket and sold at
weaning time but were raised to improve
the breed, ready to take their place in
your home as companions
or for show
purposes
and
are typical
specimens
of
this wonderful
breed.
Forty-five
years
experience with Collies. Telephone
Lake
Forest
2886
after
5 or
weekends
for
appointment.
No
information
over
the
phone.
doggy. Dachshund pupold, paper
trained.
HI

work
done
with
back
hoe.
Fast—Simple—Economical
Septic Systems
Driveways
Water
Mains
Trenching
Basements
Sewer ei
NOW
PLOWING
HI 2-7136
1397
MeDaniels Ave.
Highland Park, IIl.

CANARIES
for sale,
home-raised;
fine
singers in good health. Make acceptable
ocr
eae gifts. For appointment, HI
PEKINESE, 1 year old; inoculated. Wonderful child’s pet, AKC registered. Telephone
TRinity
2-2071.

PIANO

sticking,
repair
to
WINTER! ! Time
extra
closet,
add
doors;
dragging,
space.
attic
or
basement
improve
shelf;
Do
your unusual
small
job
of car-

NORTH SHORE
SERVICE
SNOWsnowREMOVAL
plowing, by job or season’s
Telephone

COMPLETE
SYSTEMS.
._ SEPTIC
SEPTIC
SYSTEM
INSTALLATION
TRENCHING
All
sorts:
foundation,
water,
drain,
tiling, etc.
Free estimates, no obligation to have
our representative call.
EDWARD’S
P
&amp;
W
CONSTRUCTION

TUNING

&amp;

REPAIRING

PIANO tuning and reconditioning. Member of American Society of Piano Technicians. E. Zaboth, formerly of Lyon
and Healy, member of N.A.P.T. Lake
Zurich, 5341.

All

CONTRACTING
ENGINEERS
WINNETKA 6-3971

efficient

ARBORIST

and

power

Head Of Lake County

Real Estate Board

1640 Hicko

John F. Leonardi,

avenue, was elected president —
the Waukegan Lake County Real
Estate board at a meeting in Wau“
conda last Monday night.
The board passed a resolution
requesting the governing body of ©
each community to hold a 10 day
to

effort

an

in

hearing

public

re-

move rent control in the county,
which has been certified by the
government as a “critical defense
area.”

The board claims that the “fo
of any
section
classified
rent”
a
that
proves
aper
newsp
county
—
availis
g
housin
of
good supply
able in Lake county.

recently represented
faction

control

—

the anti-rent

to

appeal

an

advisory

rent

county

Lake

the

in

CO.

STOCKS
Investor’s Service of America invites you
to
try
our
service
in
listed
stocks.
Dealer,
Broker,
Adviser,
Ole
Nielsen,
Proprietor, 104 North Washington Circle,
Lake
Forest,
Illinois.
Telephone
Lake
Forest
2191. IN GOD
WE
TRUST.

service.

collect,

PAINTING

removal,

shrub

tury.

Christmas

Call

GET along little
ee
weeks

MAPLE
AVE., EVANSTON
custom made to fit your needs.
estimate call GReenleaf 5-7686
2-7238.

Custom
Immediate
contract.
Lake Forest 2846.

Sheetaleens -ameseraes

YOUR-DOG-&amp;-MINE
Kennels
(dog editor, Better Homes
&amp; Gardens)
for best
eare,
feeding,
heating.
Skokie
Highway
(U.S. 41), 5%
miles north of state line.
Phone
Bristol
(Wis.) 36-F-5.

LAKE FOREST SCRAP

SAM

eae

sleigh rides for rent.
Forest
2451
for ap-

156.

SEWERS

-

ting;
after

FAST — EXPERT
TV SERVICE

IRON
LAKE

reeanteater

BEAUTIFULLY styled cocktail
fect diamonds, 1.2 ct. white

BUSINESS SERVICE

- RAGS
FOREST

Sleighrides
H I 2-3853

JEWELRY

Highwood.

service
2-4467.

and
INSTALLATION
and
8 a.m.
Sat.
Phone
HI
2-0530

or

FUN!

INSTRUCTION

FOR rent: garage, 532 Waukegan
Ave.,
or Sheridan Rd., Highwood, Ill. Established location, formerly Grandi Bros.
Garage.
Long lease. For appointment,
HI 2-1877.

SCRAP

Sa

SOME

GUITAR
lessons in your home. Spanish
guitar,
Hawaiian
guitar,
uke,
banjo,
mandolin.
Instrument
furnished
while
learning.
JACK
MOORE,
HI
2-6284.

REAL ESTATE
Res. HI 2-0087

SITTING
and
employment
sale. For details call HI

thru

Hayrides
2-5592

OPPORTUNITY

established tavern
1—Old
Owner must sell.
restaurant.
2—Long | established
bargain.
g—Fine dry cleaning and pressing
ness.

Tree

ere
ty

SURGERY

WORRALL,

work,

tree

a brief

—_

bike, good
HI 2-1212.

in

care.

G.

—

680.

Forest

Lake

Telephone

ENTERTAINMENT

HAY
RACKS
and
Telephone
Lake
pointment.

excelLake

bicycle, excellent
Deerfield
360J1.

GIRL’S blue 26 inch Schwinn
condition, reasonably priced.

have 2 that we will give to a good ©

TREE
Expert

AWAY
present—kittens

Christmas

perfect

offer the finest in care and accommodations to suit all purses. Five attractive
suburban units where a truly home-like
atmosphere prevails, properly staffed to
meet the highest standards in the care
of the infirm, the chronically ill, and the
aged. Pleasant quarters also available for
guests
rot
under
medical
supervision.
For detailed information and rates, call
Mrs. Potter, Hinsdale 184.

HI

large,

We

home.

Low cost,
ing 2387.

LET’S HAVE

2-6478.

CHRISTO-CRAFT

seDESOTO, 1952, Firedome V8, 4 door
Will
miles, fully equipped.
600
dan;
1942.
Forest
Lake
sacrifice. Telephone
1951 2-door sedan; radio, heater,
FORD,
miles,
15,000
spotlights.
overdrive,
c/o
D-5
Box
Write
condition.
good
H.P. News.

FORD,

inch

HI

THE

Leo

electric rod cut out the obno digging, no lawn mess.
SEPTIC TANKS
and grease traps cleaned, repaired, built.
COMPLETE
SEWER
SERVICE
Jeep trench digger, water lines, electric
cable,
foundations.
WOODALL’S
Phone Wheeling 232

PLENTYOF LATE MODELS
TO CHOOSE FROM

(1

FOR

50.

CLOGGED

WE PAY TOP PRICES
FOR YOUR OLD CAR
REGARDLESS OF AGE
$5 DOWN
ALL PRE-WAR

|

deluxe girl’s 26 inch bicycle,
SCHWINN
deSchwinn
also
$28.50;
new,
like
luxe boy’s 20 inch bicycle, very good
condition. Deerfield 1044.
BOY’S

nce ee

DONALD

"MIDWEST
HOMES

NATIONAL
BANK
Highland
Park

the
Have
struction;

2-5867.

ON

CONVALESCENT HOME

and

way

bank

1 or 2

like to have

driving. Leave for Miam
help with
Florida, December 26th. HI 2-2652.

TO BE GIVEN

A-1 CATERESS. Will take charge of your
dinners,
luncheons,
teas
and
cocktail
parties. Excellent references. Telephone
Mrs. Miks, MAjestic 83-1608.

LOANS
the

car

Be

i

e.

oe

a

and| WOULD
work, chimney

CATERING

BOYS’ AND GIRLS’ 24 inch or 26 inch,
Large selection; all rebuilt, most repainted. Many like new, $10 and up.
HIGHLAND
PARK
CYCLE
SHOP
HI 2-1369
486 Central at Sheridan

DAY
Mon.

1060 N. WESTERN
LAKE FOREST 2800

Cassar
F:2.8
Perle
camera,
GERMAN
jens; Deckel-Munchen shutter, 1/250th
second,
including
range
finder
and
leather case. $69. Also imported damask table cloth, 12 matching napkins.
Telephone Lake Bluff 681.

WANTED

AUTO
your
Finance.
3ave money.
FIRST
of

5

r

repair, stone

40 years in same
fireplace building.
trade. William Otten, Tel. Northbrook

HIGHEST prices paid for junk cars, running
or not,
regardless
HI
of age.
2-2017
or Libertyville 2-4377.

1949 Chrysler, Windsor, 4 dr., R&amp;H.
4 dr., R&amp;H.
1948 Chrysler, Windsor,
R&amp;H.
Wagon,
Station
1948 Ford
1947 Chrysler, New Yorker, 4 dr., R&amp;H.

GIRL’S 24 inch bicycle, $12; G.E. Sunlamp
with automatic
timer on stand,
$20; girl’s red Kenmore coat, size 10,
$5; girl’s white figure skates, size 13,
$1; Apex washing machine, $10, needs
$10 i peach Call Friday &amp; Saturday, HI

radio and record player.
COMBINATION
Telephone Lake Forest 2814,
580°
model.
table
television,
INCH
17
Lake
Tel.
Forest.
ke
Lane,
Bank
Forest 78.
SET of Child Craft books, like new; cost
HI
half.
less
than_
will sell
$79.95,

AUTOS

USI)
oe

I

Ot

MASON

HI 2-3405.

miles.

100

used

only

ANCHOR
HI 2-0093

Nash Rambler Station Wagon, R&amp;H.
Yorker, V8, 4 dr.,
Chrysler, New

1952
1951

6-0145,

gael

fully

4- dr.,

Chevrolet

1952

ONE

BICYCLES

A USED CAR?

pa

‘

set of Firestone snow tires, 6.70x15,|

AUTOMOBILES

BUY

19389

chintz draperies, valance &amp; double
bed dust ruffle to match; 2 twin size
red gingham spreads and dressing table
seat—new.
trainer
bathinette,
skirt;
Neerfield

USED

Satur-

2 PR.

Call

pat

stripe

in
skirt,
line
straight
metallic
and
HI
depot.
Northwestern
of
vicinity
2-8518 after 6 p.m.
LOST necklace on gold chain, with rust
colored beads and pearls, in Highland
Park between Cedar
Ave.
and
Roger
Williams Ave. HI 2-3218.
in
Beegee,
name
blue parakeet,
LOST,
Sherwood Forest, Sunday. Reward. HI
2-0357.
LOST:
white gold Benrus
wrist watch,
Dec. 10th in Highland Park business
district. HI 2-2206.

HI

riety of colored glass, odd demi-tasse and

price

white,

SALE

ANTIQUES FOR CHRISTMAS
7 branch brass candelabra, bells, decant6 tall
green
ers
and
perfume
bottles,
wines, cranberry punch bowl, needlepoint
vacompotes,
glass
prayer stool, milk

once,

gray,

d

c

IE

SAE

WN

gt

fotos

.

-

ra

x

PLANTS

&amp;

BULBS

AFRICAN VIOLETS. Reliable plants for
particular people. Gillette, 169 Washington Circle, Lake Forest 516.

ROOFING

Homecoming Sunday
from 9:45 a.m. until 10:45

Sunday

a.m. in the parish house. All alumn

SEWING

MACHINE

SERVICE

Necchi
Domestic
repair
on
ANY
MAKE
Work
Guaranteed
Arends
Sewing
Machine Co.

Expert

662 Central

Ave.

HI 2-5200

will

be

in

charge of the program. Six tollege
freshmen will give short talks on
different phases of collegiate life
The

students

will be

Hugh

Zimmerman,

Olson,

Miss

Guests
1911

RECONDITIONED
Singer
portable,
$39.50; $5
down. Reconditioned cabinet machine, $39.50. 614 Central Ave.,
HI
2-3811.

j

are invited to attend.
Miss Sydney Graham

Mr.

SEWING MACHINES

¢

land Park Presbyterian church wi
have its annual homecoming this

Hardacre
HAVE
you
a wood
shingle
roof? Call
Wilmette
377,
your
“Roof
Treating
Headquarters”
for
its
proper
treatment
and
care.
Free
inspection
and
consultation.

1

Varsity Group Holds

Bruce

For
and

Ridge

Gwen

Miss

Ferguson,

Ann

and

~

Brown,

Larry

Philli

Mudge.

Christmas
Mrs.

Karl

road

are

H.

Bahr

of

entertaining

their niece, Kathleen Keller, of Albuquerque,

N.

Mex.

Kathleen

J

rived Sunday and is to be with the
Bahrs during the holidays until December 29.
vty
Mrs. Bahr’s sister, Mrs. Gilber

Pfeiffer and her daughter Sue of
Oshkosh, Wis. will also spend
Christmas

with

them.

—

�4

‘Letters To Editor

wary

Cites Other Opinions On
Whether Fluorides Are
Universally Accepted
To
to

following

the

is

Highland

an

open

letter

Park

City

coun-

is

called

cil:

“Your

few

attention

pertinent

regarding

facts

the

and

a

of

Dental association.

Writing in the September, 1951,
issue of ‘Oral Hygiene,’ he states,
‘I maintain that the long term
effect
of
fluorine
in
varying
amounts upon the bones and vital
organs of the human body has not
been ascertained. How do I know
this poison

will not have

a cumula-

tive effect? Suppose this diluted
rat poison gradually ruins my kidmeys and thus sends me to my
grave. Will it be any comfort to
me

if my

association

says,

‘He

died

with perfect teeth’? Operation Dental-Caries

may

Operation
failure.”

prove

Vital
Dr.

a success

Organs

may

Swendimann

but

be

then

a
re-

minds us that a courageous dental
association would attack the consumption of candy, soft drinks and
refined foods which, ‘as every dentist knows,’ are the main causes of
decay.

tooth

“The Council on Foods and Nutrition of the American Medical
association stated in ‘Northwest
Medicine,’ January 1952, ‘It is the
opinion of the council, however,
that unqualified recommendation
for general use of this procedure
(fluoridation) must wait the completion of long term studies now
in progress. Its effects are not fully
established.’
_ “The
above
quotes
were
reprinted in the magazine ‘Prevention,’ published
by the
Rodale
Press, Emmaus, Pa. This magazine
also reports that on August 30,
1951, the health commissioner of
Evanston, Ill., where the water has
been fluoridated for four years,
wrote, ‘We do not recommend that
sodium fluoride be added to any
public drinking water supply except on a purely research basis
and uniformly advise that all interested persons wait until adequate scientific proof is obtained
to show this procedure will actually help to reduce tooth decay.’
*
*
*
“The
local
governments
of

Springfield,

Holyoke

and

North

Adams, Mass., have all stated they
will not adopt fluoridation since

too

little

is known

about

its effect

on the human system. Wisconsin
cities of Shawano, Stevens Point

and

Plymouth

fluoridation

as

have

voted

have

Seattle

hasty,

unwar-|{j

regrettable

Mrs. H. B. Van
30 Lakeside Place

down

and

Velzer

Nutritional

Re-

Wis.,

bul-

search, Milwaukee,
letin 53.”

in

invariably

found

waters?

What

in

natural

is

the

fluo-

relation

between the intake of fluoride food
and/or water and its activity with
respect

to

its

concentration

asso-

tissues?
calcifying
with
ciated
hen these questions have been
answered,
together
with ‘ those
other questions which continued

on

research

fluoride

and

its

ef-

fect on living systems will propose,
then only can we say that fluoride
therapy is out of the experimental
stage. Until that time we must be
Page

46

browse.

the Editor:
In reply to Mrs. Alfred Gardner’s
question
(Highland
Park
NEWS,
December 11) concerning fluorida-

of city drinking

begins

to

drink

affect the flavor of water.
6. The cost is a small fraction of
the average person’s dental bill—
See story on page 3 of the December 11 NEWS.
,
Fluorides are natural and neces-

sary

components

organs

and

of

tissues,

many
and

of

our

fluorida-

tion would only correct a deficiency
in the chemical composition of our
water,

just

like

the

irradiation

of

our milk, the iodinization of our
salt or the enrichment of our bread
with vitamins and minerals.
Piero P. Foa, M.
356 Elm place

D.

“Why
Ring?”

Do
The

departments
Bells

For

title

entitled
Christmas

given

to

the

primary and kindergarten departments’ performance is “The Night
Before
hearsal
at 1:30

Christmas.”
is scheduled
p.m.

The last refor, Saturday

Mrs. Marshall Ledlie is in charge
of the musical portion of the program.
Following the dramatization, Santa Claus will make his appearance and distribute gifts to
the children.

story

Year’s

preceding

and

days.

any church, Laurel avenue «and
McGovern
street,
will
be
the
Christmas Eve Pageant program
which will be open to the public.
Organ
music,
played
by F. B.
will begin
float out

church

at 10:30 p.m.
over the air

tower.

p.m. the candlelight proof the Chancel choir and

Bethany

choristers

lowed

carol

by

will

singing,

be

are
entitled
“Angels
Announcement
to
the
Shepherds,”
“The

vice

Family,” “The Visit of the
Men,” and a portrayal of
Christmas Story.”
The serwill

conclude

at

12

midnight

with prayers for peace.

and

S. Miller
their two

Bruce,

plan

to

spend the Christmas holidays with
their parents in Cincinnati, Ohio.
After
Christmas
they
plan
to
travel

they

to

Palm

will

Beach,

spend

Fla.,

several

where

weeks.

Esther’s Tavern ............ 224%
Louise Beauty Salon ....22
Service Market .............. 20%

1914
20
21%

Ariano Construction .. 184%
BERD Tan hak ey LT
CTOGr Pe
16%
High Series, Team

23%
20
25%

678-722-622—2022

168-119-173—460
High

Bellei

Series, Individual

172-173-130—475
168-119-173—46
High Game, Team
:

Service Market 2.03054.
8
50).
Barer s Tavern
a ee

722
685

BUBON TG oii sins asa
High Game, Individual
IVE SOMME Saal
Ss ak he

685
173

M.

173

Somendl

cca

es:

pital.
Their elder son is Jeffrey,
19 months.
Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Morrill of
Indian Tree drive are the maternal

grandparents
and
the _ paternal
grandparents are the B. M. Kohlers

18,26

of

High Series, Team
Highwood Hosp. 715-752-745—2212

Moley

TV

Series,

Individual

170-158-184—512
2.23

146-154-159—459

High Game,
Ee

"sR

RE

ond

Team

CHT REN

RPO PR

se

783

ties Se
ea Aer
lio
ae est

son

born

December

10

in

Highland
Park hospital.
John’s
older brother is Charles, 314. Mrs.

Highwood Hospital ................... 752
High Game, Individual
Ws OATISOR
RAL PRT RI

Glencoe.

Dayton
John William is the name chosen
by Mr. and Mrs, Jack Dayton of
1089 Sandwick court for their sec-

732-660-748—2140

Carlson

Grayce

Dayton

of

South

Central

avenue, Highwood, is the paternal
grandmother and the Edward Hohlfelders of Glencoe are the maternal

184
174

grandparents.

Craftsman League
Bowling Scores
December

American

12 Standings

December
RS
18%
20
21
22

DeSoto-Plymouth .......... 224%
Larsons Stationery .... 22

22%
23

Hummer. Pure 23034.. 19;
Anchor Ins. Agency .... 18
High Series, Team
Kleeburg Buick

“26
27

NG ee
837-850-781—2468
James Thomson &amp;
HONS 2h es 846-872-743—2461
High Series, Individual
C. Johnson
192-233-145—568
W. Fossbender .... 192-234-146—552
High Game, Team
J. Thomson: &amp; Sons ................ 872
MU NULE PSOE 6 ackicacesene
cathe ieabl ok. 865
High Game, Individual
WW a POBBDENOET 6.)
eljciees 234
Sj MESON
hc. ba oicaicdics
dinadhs otis 233

IWPC Jrs. Bowling
Mary Jane Lanes
December
Irving

Scott

11
Co.

Uptown Groce.
Usolini 8: Ce.

Ww

L

............ 24

15

Construction

M

Masons

...... 21

............... 20

Scassellati &amp; Son
G &amp; L Body Shop

.......... 18
.......... LZ

Rollery’s Delctsn .......... 16%
Comtet, BOG) chia 16
OS Viste oLiun elas 15
High

Contr!

Game,

Hie.

Uptown

cartes

1S
1534
18

19
21
22

22%
23
24

Team

cuiiegL
ee ae:

836

ich cae es

785

High Game, Individual
Evelyn ' Tognarelli’ ......2..02.0020.... 193

December
Fabbri

Tavern

L
12
-22
22

Anchor Insurance ..............
©. -Carant @ Son 223.
Lincoln Beverage ..............
CEOOTS
Ce

22
22
20
19

23
23
25
26

Dutty’s.

Tavern so
18
High Series, Team

27

Lincoln

Maty

L
11%

Silver $ Tavern ............1.21
Lenzi Bros. Groce. .......... 20%
Highwood Radio ............ 18
Skokie Valley Laundry 16
Highwood Ice Cream .:...11
High Series, Team

21
21%
24
26
31

Highwood

liccak ceric co 2593

Ice Cream

................ 2559

High Series, Individual
PP ARSUAR ae ited ge Veo Sac decdasshcse
cess
MURR RC ase icc ath tr
High Game, Team

642
624

Highwood Ice Cream .............. 928
Skokie Valley Laundry ............ 920
ON
Passini

High Game, Individual
8 ha
Lied NN ie

...................... 2773

..........2.......... 2652

High

Individual

Series,

J. Thomson &amp; Sons .................. 965
High Game, Individual

By
Be.

PROBCKOR: i.
hs
ROUTINE
oi
ea

257
248

Women of Moose
Bowling League
10

Standings

WwW
Robert’s Dry Goods ...... 26
Biagi’s Clothing ............ 25
Toby’s Cocktail Lounge 22%
DIBL RAO? eee eo 21

L
16
17
191%
21

Puckett’s Boosters ........
Wilson Appliances ........
Leed’s Jewelers ..............
Rosby’s Wear. Apparel

21
21%
23.
29

21
20%
19
13

High Series, Team
Puckett’s 2.0.00... 731 720 726—2177
FLODEIT
Sick 674 722 751—2147
High

Series,

Individual

M. Crovetti .......... 150 174 117—441
H. Benséh S255: 121-174-141—436
High Game, Team
Biagi’s
oe
Robert’s
751
High

Game,

Individual

Marty

Crovetti

ITT
and

H.

Benson

.... 174

HP Elks Club
16
17

TSVOUNOTS

Beverage

Jatie Lanes

Ai HI
Ge
ee es 651
DE; TOURER aati
a Lee 5 oe 634
High Game, Team
Lincoln Beverage .................... 997

M.

Eddy’s Liquors ................ 26
My Favorite Inn ........:. 25

POONA

Standings

w
Mary Jane Lanes ................ 33
J. Onesti &amp; Sons ........... 23
J. Thomson &amp; Sons ............ 23

178

9 Standings
Ww
..............:. 30%

12

December

Standings

................ 24
eee 234%

Legion

Post No. 145

Team
Wee,
SU UUELBNNy ei
nc itd oe 26%
James Thomson &amp; Sons 25
Kleeburg Buick Inc. .... 24
Siljestrom
Coal
Co ...23

ly

141%
18%

M.

DIG) ARO sie asic, hike

16

Marconi League
Bowling Scores

12 Standings

Sherony Hardware ........ 27%
Manhattan Shoes ........ 23%

Market

Cleaners

birth of their second child, a son,
last Friday in Highland Park hos-

Marie

League
Weis

Service

26

Zengler

Viola-Castellart::...2..5200.50.0

Senior Prosperity

Team

A.

C &amp;

Mr. and Mrs. Edward
of Ferndale avenue and
Darry

211%
21%
2p

Linari

Holiday Travels

sons,

Tighlant. Ole
20%
Freddies Tavern ........ 20%
Highwood Hospital ........ bi

fol-

Christmas

music and pageantry. The religious
scenes planned for the occasion
Holy
Wise
“The

19
eo
£=20%

at

Reg-

The first service in the newly
decorated auditorium of the Beth-

December

The annual church schoo] Christmas program of the Wesley Methodist church will be held Sunday

morning

New

the

‘Bowling

Wesley Methodist School
Gives Christmas Program

intermediate

and

on

Schlung,
drinking naturally fluoridated wa- and
will
ter for generations with no effect from the
other
than
a low
incidence
of|- At 11
caries. No injury to people, pets, cessional

5. Fluorides, at the concentration
of one part per million, do not

stories dur-

Bethany Church
Lists Plans For
Christmas Eve

water, the greater the benefit.
4. No bad effects have been
traced to the use of fluorides in the
recommended amount. Millions of
people the world over, and as near
to us as Lake Bluff, have been

is many
recom-

heard

141%
h6

Natta Shoe Rebuilding 23
LOWeT
ASINO
855.6
oa.
ROBY
SUG
21%

W.

Kohler
Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Kohler
of Eastwood avenue announce the

tL.

Laundrettes 27%
&amp; Appl. ........ 262

C,. ‘Bérnardl:

li-

the rest of the holiday
season—
Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 9
p.m.; Saturday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.

fluoridated

concentration in the water
times greater
than
the
mended one.

have

and

Saturday

of the

Highwood
Moley TV

E.

Country,”

room

W.

High

special

ular hours will be observed through

caries

vegetation or inanimate objects has
been reported, except from those
communities in which the fluoride

and

children

legends

the

5 p.m.

varying from 35 to 50 per cent.
The younger the age at which the
child

young

Christmas

lic hearings on the matter.
3. On the basis of past experience, one may expect a decrease in
dental

are

hours in December. There will be
no story hour on Saturday, December
27, but it will be resumed
January 3, at 10:30 a.m.
The
library will close
all day

N. Y., in July

of

display

“Sport

News,”

ing

2. More than 480 cities and towns
are now adding fluorides to their
drinking. water. Among these are
Washington,
Baltimore,
St. Paul,
San
Diego,
and
San
Francisco.
Philadelphia will start soon. New
York and Chicago are holding pub-

incidence

on

re-

don

Christmas

1. The experiment in January,
1945, in Grand Rapids, Mich., fol-

the

Christmas

numbers
of
English
“The
Illustrated Lon-

brary

water:

lowed by Newburgh,
of the same year.

of

9 Standings

Team

Christmas
magazines,

and “The Sphere.”
In the children’s

To

tion

Books

Hello World

League

December

carols and verse, and Christmas
cords are also available.

Doctor Answers Some
Inquiries About The
Fluoridation Question

at 7 p.m. with Mrs. Lyle Courtney
in April, 1950, issue of ‘The Bur’: and Mrs. Harold Carpenter as co“What is the response of the body chairmen.
to fluoride that is not accompanied | Included in the program will be
by the other mineral substances a presentation by the junior and

ride

may

Featured

Longview, Wash., Sacramento, Cal.,
and Alburquerque, N. Mex. Ottawa,

Kans., reports ‘there was almost
a triple number of cavities’ after
three years of fluoridation.
“Gustav William Rapp, Ph. D.
of the department of chemistry and
psychology of the school of dentistry of Loyola university, Chicago
College of Dental Surgery, wrote

for

Bowling

Now
that Christmas
has come
again the Highland Park Public library, responding to the gaiety of
the season, has donned Christmas
wreaths
and
set forth
a special
Christmas collection of books, pictures,
songs
and
stories,
where
readers,
looking
for that special
story for Christmas Eve, or a Madonna to adorn a Christmas exhibit,

“P.S. The complete report by
Dr. Rapp is available from the Lee
Foundation

Mary Jane Ladies

Library Responds
To Gaiety Of The
Christmas Season

another.”

adding

city

water
supplies
that
may
have
escaped your notice.
“First may I quote George D.,
Swendimann DDS, past president

of the American

draw

perhaps

many chemicals in its food without

to

opinions

fluoridation

to

“There are many other reports,
from
both
doctors
and
dentists
warning
against
this
procedure,
which are available to any one interested. Not discounting all other
the public is already
objections,
subjected, involuntarily, to far too

the Editor:
The

not

ranted,
and
conclusions.’

Bowling League
December

Moran Plumbing ............
Singer Printing ...:...é...
Acme Liquors ................
Paittital: Coad 3026. uae
Mitchell Builders ............
SOW LPIOOr ee

Ww.

L.

30
25
7
23
21
19

12
14
19
19
21
23

My Favorite Inn. ............ 14
25
McDonald
Plumbing
.... 10
32
High Series, Team
Singer Prtg. .... 868-867-838—2573
High Series, Individual

N. Hoffman. ........ 201-180-189-—570
De OG ns os ea! 164-232-173—569
High Game, Team
Singer Printin® 6c
868
High

244
243

12 Standings

Team

Game,

Individual

J. Fay
Nu

Mottitan

232
igs

al ieee

201

Thursday, December 18, 1952

©

�Where
CARS

Rent

FOR

HIRE

a New

FLOOR

phone.

FLOOR

can be made

by

ASPHALT

Convertibles, Tudors,

—

Evanston

GR.

SEER SRR ERE
AUTO RADIOS

AUTO RADIOS

os

Repairs &amp; Sales
Custom

otorola

and

Universal

1864

- Philco - Zenith

yee

SHERIDAN

HI

Furnace and Boiler
Cleaning Service

TILE

REPAIR

HI

2-0341

Deerfield

602

ILL.

Watch

Inspector

TRUCKING
DEERFIELD

QUALITY CLEANING AT
REASONABLE PRICES

for

I.

North

WALL

Western

AND

R.R.

FLOOR

TILE

V,-ct.

H. NEMEROFF
set

in

yel

or

3%4-ct. set in yel. or
Highland Park
Across from the

wht.

gold

wht.

To

454 Waukegan
HI 2-0455

We

Pick-up

and

Deliver

Ave.
Highwood

Deerfield

DRY

Set, $158.00

On

Highwood Glass
&amp; Paint Co.
963 Waukegan Ave.
BY 2-7211
oe
lll
llele ltl
HEATING

Linens, Blouses,
Towels, Shirts,

Phone HI 2-3804
BRAUN BROS. OIL CO.
Park

complete

line

for

Holes

Bring

LOSE

from

bank

BUICK

cit to get some

ce

B

LINOLEUM

Chrysler-Plymouth Service

U

@

Linoleum and
Linoleum Tile

@

Koroseal

@

Asphalt

@

Rubber

@

Plastic
For

Wall

free

USED CARS
GO

Tile

call

the

1379

Deerfield

Call

Sales

Road,

Highland

2-5545

How

Agency

Park

1740

Effective

the “WHERE

Well...

YOU'RE

&amp;

Venetian Blinds
Columbia Lattishades
Bamboo Blinds—Draperies
Window Shades

668

CENTRAL AVE.
HI 2-2350

Service

First

Highland

HI 2-2500

Are

Advertisements

IT CAN

BE DONE”

reading

this page

BROS.

Park

On

PAGE?

right now!

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use of our expert mechanics.

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�for a selection of
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it’s

ol Cab
Beches
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Bank

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�</text>
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                    <text>ys

10 Cents

Thursday,

December

25,

1952

Ce

a

verhold keview

�..

. Gna,

Most

OF All,

We'd like to stop

|

a moment and say thank you . . .

to each of our editorial contributors,

to each

of

without whose

without

whose

tions

could

to each

not

support our publicabe.

tions

of our advertisers,

could

without

tions

tions

No

man,

not

be.

or business,

for our very existence.

is autonomous.
That

suppliers,
support

not

our publica-

be.

to each of our readers,

without whose support our publicacould

our

Each

is why we

whose

could
of us

take time

support

not
relies

our publica-

be.
upon

many

others

out at this season

to say

what is in our hearts throughout the year . . . thank you for being our friends.

The

Highland

Park Company:

HIGHLAND PARK NEWS
HIGHWOOD NEWS
DEERFIELD REVIEW
LAKE FORESTER

�KZ

f),

&gt;s

fj,

JJCOMHE AKE
Thursday,

Vol. 27, No. 40

St. Paul’s To Hold Two

Judges For Christmas
Contest Announced

Christmas Eve Services

Mrs.

St. Paul church will celebrate the birth of Christ by two
traditional

Christmas

services

on

Christmas

Eve

in the

church

Robert

Mrs.

Henry

Mrs.

John

O.

Clark

has

asked

Mrs.

Carl

Reeb,

Fisher,
Ploehn,

Mrs.

Wendell

Frank

Zartler,

sanctuary. The first service at 7:30 p.m. will be presented by
the children and young people of St. Paul Sunday school. At

Goodpasture,

Mrs.

11 p.m. the congregation will join in a worship
Christmas music and candlelighting.

Mrs.

Williams,

Walter

At

7:30

ginner

p.m.

and

children

of

the

kindergarten

classes

Christ Child’s

birthday in simple verse and with
child-like faith. Also, at this service the primary, junior, and intermediate departments will join in
the
presentation
of the
pageant
“The Shepherd and the Angel,” by

Mildred

Kerr.

Speaking

parts will

be done by Frederick Krase, Paul
Daniels, Grant Berning, Linda Seiler, Charmaine Daniels, and Judy

Varner.

The

children

of the

ing

their

pageant

includes

Sunday

places

as

school

angels,

all
tak-

shep-

herds, and Bethlehem people. The
Christmas carol music background
for the pageant will be sung by a
choir of primary and junior girls;
and the beginners and kindergar-

ten

children

will sing

Manger”

and

as

of

part

“Hush,

the

“Away

of

be-

will participate in an “old fashioned program of recitations, tell-

ing the story of the

program

in a

He’s

Asleep”

Nativity

picture

which is the climax of the pageant.
The program is in charge of the

staff and teachers of St. Paul Sun-

Three New

Members

Elected to Chamber
At

the

recent

meeting

of

the

Chamber of Commerce a nominating committee was formed for the
January election of Chamber officers.
Milton
Frantz is chairman
and the committee is composed of
Earl
Hurt,
Clarence
Wilson and
Ed Selig.

There were three members

elect-

ed to the Chamber of Commerce.
They
were
Edward
Joers,
vice
president
of the
Robert
Bartlett
Real Estate company, Harry Pitner,
Deerfield Snack Shop and John J.
Dunne of the Oaks.
Gayle
Martin, Village
manager
was present at the
meeting and
was introduced by Ray Meyer to
the group.

Janice

Darling

Henry

Whitehead

to

and
assist

Mrs.
her

in

judging the Christmas Displays in
Deerfield.
The judging will be done
one
evening
between
Christmas
and
New
Year.
Mrs.
Clark
said
the
judging will be based on suitability
of display, originality, distinctiveness, and proportion,
In each of the five districts of

the Village

the

judges

will

award

ribbons for the first, second, and
third best displays. From the winners Of the five districts the judges
will select the “BEST
DISPLAY”
of Deerfield. The winner of THE
BEST
DISPLAY
will
receive
a
beautiful trophy suitably inscribed.
As soon as the judges have determined the winners in the five
districts and the “GRAND CHAMPION” they will immediately present the winners with their awards.
All the winners will be announced
and a picture of the BEST DISPLAY will appear in the Deerfield
Review.

Home

day school.
Janice Darling, 9 year old daughCandlelighting by Congregation
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Warren DarThe Wondrous Story by Kountz ling,
925 Hemlock,
has returned
will be sung by the choir in the home
for the holidays
from Ev11
a.m.
service
December
24 at anston hospital where she has been
St. Paul church. The cantata tells confined for the past three months
the Christmas story in six parts: as a polio victim.
She is accom“The
Shepherds,’
“The
Angel panied by her nurse, Mrs. Elsworth
Choirs,” “The
Three Wise
Men,” of Evanston.
“Into
the Town
of
Bethlehem,”
“The
Manger,”
and
“Christmas
Dawn.”
The singing of the cantata will
be followed by a service of candlelighting for the entire congregation
of worshippers.
With the symbol

Leave

for

Harrisburg

Mr. and Mrs. Howard Oaks, 710
Orchard,
are leaving for Harrisburg, Pa., to spend Christmas with
their
daughter
and
her
family,
Master Sergeant W. W. Youart and
Billy and Kathy.
Sgt. Youart has
just returned to the states after
being stationed in Fritzland, Ger-

| Hutchinson as a part of their proposal for the future development

of the

village,

this

to possible through

Jewett

map

Village
board

park

sary
now

board

belongs

and

to

of Deerfield.

The

the

held
Park

years.

At

for the

new

Park

located

in the

plans for a

a meeting

to

Friday evening the Jewett
association will be dissolved.

all

the

other

details

worked

out. The deeds were mailed to the
Park
board
and
to the
Village
board December 19.
‘Lawrence

Raredon,

the Park board

president

and Andrew

president of the Village board said
“the Park and Village boards wish
to express their appreciation to the
Jewett Park association for all the
conscientious work they have put
into the organization as well as the
business like way in which the deal
was closed.”

for 33 months.

Mrs. Youart

is the

former

Oaks.

Martene

Harold ‘Root Sr.,
William

Haggie.

village,

a different location

grammar

er

school to be

northwest

showing

considerations

section

that

of

practical

often outweigh oth-

factors.

5

At the present time Deerfield
has only two streets that cross the
village in either direction, Deerfield road and Waukegan road. As
the population increases, these two
streets will become more and more

congested and it will become increasingly important to provide additional
thoroughfares
for
town traffic. By completing

avenue
west

and

Greenwood

traffic

and

north - south

crossNorth

for

east-

providing

four

streets,

street travel would

Deerfield’s

be improved.

The principal objective is to look
ahead and attempt to provide adequate space for future schools when

they may become

necessary.

While

such problems belong to the school
board or boards fundamentally, a
pattern
which
other
municipal
bodies
can
see
and
understand
makes it possible for them to lend
a helping hand whenever their acwould

or
be

interests

permit.

particularly

true

This
for

the

Plan
Commission
whenever
it
might be considering new subdivisions or for the Board of Appeals
when considering
posals.

new

zoning

pro-

The development plan can help
similarly with the proposed park
areas.

At

same

the

moment

our

new

time it is cooperating with the

school board in providing a combined educational and recreational
center

around

the

new

school

area

west of the tracks. The development plan establishes a suggested
basis for the park
and_ school
boards to work together along the
same

lines

in the

future.

One addition would be the connection at some future time with
Highland
Park’s
proposed
Edgewood road. This would provide a
continuation of Deerfield road direct
to Ravinia,
starting
at the

bridge

near

Deerfield
east.

the

and

eastern

edge

continuing

of

straight

James Thomas Has
Honorable Discharge

Corporal James Thomas, son of
Mr. and Mrs. James R. Thomas, of
Beverly place, Deerfield, recently
received his Honorable Discharge

J., Stewart, Senior

Edward Selig and

as

Park board is busy improving Jewett park and increasing its usefulness as a recreation area. At the

Installation of officers for the
Deerfield Lodge No. 1110 will be
held Tuesday, December 30, at the
Masonic temple at 8 p.m. New officers for 1953 are Preston C. Root,
Worshipful Master, Earl F. Paul,
Senior Warden, Kenneth D. Knackstadt, Junior Warden;
Vernon H.
Burnside, treasurer; George L. Lutz,
secretary; Hans R. Buhrow, Chaplain; Elmer A. Krase, Senior Deacon,
Robert
N. McGuire,
Junior

Kottrasch,

the

tivities
many,

At Masonic Temple

are Frank

of

Bradt,

Tuesday, December 30

officers

be

The First National Bank of Lake
Forest, as escrowee, has held the
papers until the title was cleared

and

to provide

the

to

park for Deerfield which the Jewett Park association hoped to complete in 10 years have been realized
in five

recommendations

a sort of objective to work toward.
Already it has been found neces-

Completed
Jewett

their

It should
be remembered
that
these are only suggestions, actually

Park

Installation of Officers

ing

shows

streets, school areas and park areas.

and as the light is extinguished,
each person will take within his
heart that light which “shines in
the darkness and the darkness cannot overcome it.’
All Christian worshippers in the
community are sincerely welcome
to attend and share in both these
Christmas services.

Edward

1952

The accompanying map is the third map to be. presented
by the Deerfield Review in connection with the current hearings on the Deerfield Village Plan. Prepared by Kincaid and

of Christ the Light of the World
each person will light his candle;

Steward; Howard A. Rosély, Junior
Steward; Nicholas J. LaChat, Marshall; Carter Christiansen, organist;
John M. Beckman,
assistant Marshall; Walter S. Page, Tyler, Paul
D. ‘Shipley, instructor. The install-

25,

Propose Recommendations
For Possible Through Streets

A BARREL OF FUN AT THE PLAYHOUSE

Deacon;

December

from

the

member

Having a lot of fun with the barrels at the Playhouse on Rosemary Terrace are Carolyn
Carter; Billy Miller; Kathy Otter, Cookie’ Hanson; Jackie Pebler, Jann Foster; Mike Mueller
and Laurie Casselman. The Playhouse is under the supervision of Mrs. Georgette Driscoll
and Mrs.

Elinor Holmes.

Armed

Forces.

of Company

He

was

a

G, 511th Air-

borne Infantry Regiment, 11th Airborne Division.
Prior to his induction Cpl. Thom-

as attended North Park Junior col-

lege;

he

intends

to

studies at Northwestern

resume © his
university.

�RETE.LD

PETLANOTS

DEVELOPMENT

&lt;x
Limits

PLAN

VILLAGE

stot:
miGM SCHOOL
PROPERTY

L662
GMM

MAJOR

GEC

seconoary

STREETS

MME

SUGGESTED STREET EXTENSIONS &amp; ADDITIONS

HMMM

RecommenceD street WIDENING

STREETS

WIOTH

60°

EXISTING SCHOOLS &amp; PARKS
PROPOSED SCHOOL &amp; PARK SITES

PROPOSED

LOTS &amp; STREETS TO GE VACATED &amp; OR RESUBDIVIDED

-

WIDTH

OLEAFICLO
oom

ONAN

SoMOMm

geamman
“Cs

iii ii

THLE

SRICRGATE

countay

PARK

SA tas,

| *

cauv

HIGHLAND

PROPOSED

eer
VILLAGE

Limits

NEIGHBORHOOD

SCHOOL
SITE

Stwact

TREATMENT
,

PLANT

SHEmDAN
rie 8
PISTOL civel
ne

PROPOSED

WIDTH

|

ai
oe

‘*
&gt;

Lo
PREPARED

BY:

KINCAID

&amp;

HUTCHINSON

CITY PLANNING &amp;
105 W. MADISON ST.

APRIL § 1952

ARCHITECTURE
CHICAGO 2, ILL.

25, 1952
December

DEG

OF

Thursday,

PARK

BANNOCKBURN

-VILCAGE

HIGHLAND

BANNocKBU

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*

Deerfield Mothers Speak

Santa’s Work Shop

Popular New Books

Added to Library

Inspect
ef

en

A crew of experts inspected the
Brick Company
premises on Mon
day,
to determine
what
kind
of
“clean up” is necessary for the gar
bage dump
and
trailer camp.
As
their inspection was not completed
at press time, we will report on
this next week.
Those who were here included:
H. A. Spafford, Sanitary Engineer,
State Department of Public Health
Springfield;
William
B. Jackson.
Assistant Scientist, Illinois Department, Public
Health,
Springfield:
William J. Hooper, Jr. Consulting
Engineer,
Waukegan,
retained
by
Lake County; A. J. Fox, Sanitary
Engineer
of
firm
of William
J.
Hooper Jr.; and Harry J. Carlson,
Building Officer, Building and Zon
ing Committee,
Lake County. Dr.
Frank
Brooks,
West
Deerfield
Township
Health Board, Benj. J.
Piersen, board of health, also went.
Gayle

Martin,

Village

Non-Fiction:
standard
Book,

Dear

Santa

Deerfield

Christmas

mothers

wish

have

“cracker

boxes”

at the

the

proper

authorities

and
safe

Country,

Dreams,

Children

_.|

age|

Mr.

of

the

Wilmot

afternoon kindergarten

school

Mrs.

| Pre-Christmas

|

Hal

Roads,

826|

Diedrich,

Santa

| Sr. : will

water
homes.

be

are located back
Deerfield mothers

in

from

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Parties
Arthur

Feicht,
a
at

Farmer
Mr. and

925

Byron,

pretheir

Mrs.
Ill.,

for

Harry Tracy
parents
of

the |

———_——

—

TRACTOMOTIVE

CHRISTMAS

terrace,

Christmas

in

E.

the

E.

Farmer,

parents

of

a

625 |

Schmitt;

House

Shute;

Ferber;
A

Runbeck;

Weekly

and

The

Hungry

East

of

|

born
in
December

Farmer,

both

David,

of, Highland

shall

Man

Eden,’

the

(in

|

Mrs.

for

G.

sell

P.

Sedgewick,

is

Glory to God in the high-

enter-

co-leader

which

find the babe wrapped

est,

Palmer

Savior:

ing

Scouts

Edward

A

in swaddling clothes, lying
in a manger. And suddenly
there was with the angels a
multitude of the heavenly
host praising God, and say-

g

‘tained Troop 11 of the Girl Scouts |
at a Christmas luncheon. Mrs. Rus- |

ood

Crib

and
d

on

earth

peace,

will toward men.”

from

the

Holy

Cross

ehurch.

was

f

also present.

[The BANKER’S STO®Y ]

Santa

Linda

wonder

Claus
of

Greene

at the

wasn’t

party,

too

but

it all,

sure

she

what

she

was

wide

wanted

eyed

to

tell

with

the.

| EXAMPLE OF THE
|
BANKING
PRINCIPLE
APPLIED TO
|
COMMUNITY
|

every

Heather Hartwig
Phyllis Russell
V. E. Deckert

ACTION.

1 DO YOUR BIT BY CONTRIBUTING

Vol. 27, No. 40

| TO YOUR LOCAL RED

CROSS

Thursday

Your
for

feels a real sense of responsibility

any

of

the

it serves.

varied

Please

services

in

call on us

which

we

specialize.

For loans of all types see the

Editor
Managing Editor
Business Manager

Local Subscription Rates—$2.75
Domestic Rate—$4.00 per year

bank

to the community

Ill.

MEMBER
National
Editorial Association
Illinois Press Association

per

Deerfield

year

Copies—10c

State Bank
Se

Foreign Rates on Application
ber

27,

second-class

1944,

at

the

fold, Ilineis, under
879.”
Copyright,
The

post

the

marter

office

Act

1952,

of

at

Deer-

March

:

ey;

8,

By

Highland Park Company
All Rights Reserved

2

12%

Novem-

Thursday, December 25, 1952
FE
a A

_

Far

Palm |

PUBLICATION
OFFICE
832 Todd Ct.
Deerfield,
Illinois
Telephone Deerfield 485
HIGHLAND PARK OFFICE
St. Johns Ave., Highland Park,
Telephone HI 2-4500

as

of

of the

Christ the Lord.
And this
shall be a sign unto you: Ye

time.

‘Thursday, Dec. 25, 1952

“Entered

of

Confessors

In the House

Giant,

Cy.

son, |

|

DEERFIELD
REVIEW

Singte

Boynton;

returned

Rotan

The Public Press, no less than Public
Office, is a public trust,

1775

WonderGarden

Becker, 357|

have

from Boca

Published

River

maternal grandparent is. Mrs. Mel- |
ville C. Dean
and the paternal |
grandparents
are Mr.
and
Mrs.!

Beach, Fla., to be with their family |
at

Different

The

Florida

Mr. and Mrs. Wesley

home

It’s

Mas-

Steam-

“For unto you a child is
born this day in the city of

run
rampant.
Mothers
of
these
youngsters do not have proper sanitary facilities to keep their children
clean.
We do not think that any children in these United States should
have to live under such conditions!
Deerfield Mothers

Kingston

Mrs.

Thomas,
hospital

| Luncheon

county into these pits until mothers
protested recently. The garbage is |
still not properly covered, and rats |

from

O’Neal;

Steinbeck; Juniper Tree, Baldwin;
Traitor’s Moon, Neill; Attack in the
Desert,
Home;
Catherine
Carter,
Johnson;
Don
Camillo
and
His
Flock,
Guaraschi;
High
Bright
Buggy Wheels, Creighton.

Guest for Christmas
The brother of Mrs. Leslie Gage, |
Sterling
road, . Bannockburn,
Charles
P. Jaeger of New
York,
will arrive at the Gage
home
to
spend Christmas week with them. |

PARTY

not want to witness a tragedy such |
as
occurred
at
Levittown,
New
York last week
when two youngsters were killed in an excavation.
For
the
past
year,
75 to 100
trucks dumped garbage from Cook

Home

Valley,’

|

are

John T.
Park.

|Ralph Taylor, 702 Elm, will be in
from to spend the holidays with the TayMrs.| lors.
|

of |
do |

This

Highland |
.17.
The |

John
Park

Barbara,)home

Joliet

7

|

|

Arriving from California
and

F.

in front of Santa’s. workshop

classroom.

their parents
| 0lidays.
and suitable}
Mr. and
|Robinson,

Hazardous
machinery
and
the |
brick plant are close by. Wide, doce
gaping
clay pits filled with
stag: |

nant
their

Lea;

Name,
Zara;

Bent,

Story, —

Fletcher;

Ward;

Repose,

King,

|
Parents

that

Country,
the

Us

Keyes;

a Woman,

Football,

Is

Bankhead.

World,

Gothic,

of

Twig

Gift,

Earth, Wilson;

edge|W-

see

the

Blue
Lincoln,

Hellinger

Give

Queen’s

Pure
of

Game

the

Tallulah

of

ful

Sunday as did Mr. and Mrs.
of their Village on National Brick
| Calif., for the holidays. Mrs. Roads’|G. Edward Palmer at their home,
Company premises. They hope that | Parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hal Roads|Edlyn Lodge, Portwine road
these children
are moved
to
housing.

Mark

boat

children and their small brothers
| Deerfield road, expect Mrs. Roads’| Beverly, entertained
at
and sisters who are living in fire|mother
and father, Mr. and Mrs.| Christmas cocktail party

trap

Hohman;

for

a special |

school

As

ter

|

for six

This

Waldorf;

Ham;

Illinois

Abraham

Thomas;

Fiction:

Manager

a

1952;

Bishop;

and
Mrs.
Harold
Giss,
Village
Health Officer sat in on the conferences before and ‘after the in: |
spection, but the Brick Company |
would not admit them to the prem
| their
ises.
|

ae
Claus:

Holy Bible, Revised ee

version;

se

Mr.

v

eee

Sanitation Experts
Brick Company

ESI
iis
f

Pe

q

ER

—
——- eas
eee
ab mere
eg Ae
?
,
ae
Searcy
|

ian

ey
7
PRONE
CRN OHM eTes
Se atR TS ST aebain
her ne
ee he
fe aoe‘iti y
Oa | 2Ne i

and

Santa Claus arrives
talk to them.

at the

party to greet the youngsters

interest paid on savings

Deposits insured up to $10,000.00
Page

5

�&amp;

‘0

Omega
e
Ta

\\ "440

19 V6

a)

‘

See

m

and Mrs. Vaughn Mansfield Sr., is
, and Mrs. Raymond T. Meyer,
Vaukegan road, is home from
nell university, Ithaca, N.Y., for

Chi

| Edwin

Tenn., for the holidays.

and

Mr.

of

son

Taylor,

David

is

702 Elm,

Ralph Taylor,

Mrs.

er John Allen recently re- home from St. John’s military academy in Delafield, Wisc.
d fromthe armed. forces. Her
Ronnie’ Ritter, son of Mr. and
er brother Fred will be in from
Mrs. Frederick Ritter, 946 Clay,

rt Wayne

for the holidays.
Miller,

Ronald

pl:

for seven days

is home

1 road,

sit his

Wauke-

727

family,

Mr.

‘Miller. He
» Atterbury,

and

Mrs.
study-

Sheridan

‘sentlyat Fort

for 8 weeks.

Mr.

of

son

Armstrong,

aregory

Telegraph

J. Glasgow,

home

from

ughn Mansfield Jr., son of Mr.

Bill George, son of Mr. and Mrs.
William D. George Sr., 853 West-

Comptete
Established

in

Optical

Service

Deerfield

Since

Bob

Rosemary

Terr.,

son

of

Mr.

Deerfield

dred Tuttle’ of Highland
Henry

Tuttle,

home on léave from Camp
.

H. FORD

BRUCE

Registered

Pharmacist

Established

in

ton,

California.

rine

Corps.

Ml.

Jewelry
‘for the
Entire Family

Watch
Repairing

. 635

majoring

of

Mr.

and

liams

college,

FROST'S
APPLIANCES

Refrigerators - Ranges - Radios
Washing
“We Repair

Machines
All Makes

730 Waukegan

- Vacuums
of Appliances

Rd. - Tel. Deerfield 122

“RAVINIA NURSERIES, Ine.
1885

Office and Nursery
Deerfield

West

35

and

36

Deerfield Road, Deertield

Jordan,

son

of

-MANT &amp; SELIG
735

Deerfield

Road,

Deerfield,

a star

is

home

année, HeeS'from

I.

Edward H. Selig '
Hareld R. Vant
Tel. Deerfield 155

W.

R.

Robert S. Ramsey Jr., son of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert S. Ramsay of Ramsay road, is home from St. George’s
and|school, R.I., until January 6.

Mr.

shop

around

in

the

lead

me,

only

stores,

we

have

It may be that what

who
and

if we

from

is majora member
her, as a

Mari-

happens

all

the shep-

I want

can sing.

And

a faith which

I want

will

refresh

permit

it to be.

the

time

Christmas

is

Christmas is the

when

humble

hearts

leave room for angelic voices, and divine revealings, and
star-studded ideals, and the ever-living Christ, who is daily
reborn in Christian hearts.
I guess what I want most for Christmas this year is a
new sense of wonder! I’d like the broken dreams of myself
repaired or replaced by a new hope and a new courage.
I think that I could alsc use a bit more love for people,
even the unkind ones. And maybe, the edge of God’s

Marjorie Mar-

shall is returning’ from Montclair,
!|N.J.,. for, “the “holidays.: She re‘|ceived her masteris degree from

Columbia’ university ,in the. spring

gift to me

of a holy imagination

and

to be sharpened

ligiouseducation in fhe Watchung
Congregational ;church: ‘in. Mont-

of all, I’d like the little Babe of Bethlehem to lay His head
upon my manger heart, and make the Miracle of Christmas
come again to me. I think I could ask for nothing finer in
all the world—for Christmas!

of: re-

ought

to help

has been
me

dulled a

see the

and the possibilities within myself and others.

;
cae
Easton, daughter of Mr.

bit,

goodness

But most

Francis George Guither
Minister Bethlehem Church

mary tertace, ig home from Cornell
college; Iowa, where she ‘is majoring in French.
~
oe
Virginia ,Hurlbert, ,daughter of

Mr. and, Mrs. L. G. Hurlbert, Riverwoads ‘road; is home

from

“Glory be to God on High” is a prayer that the priest
sings at Mass.

Mason

you

may

fLeverything

bring
rest
from

your

car

assured

we

check

to

bump-

bumper

er for your added

to

us,

safety.

_ Midge’s Texaco
f}

650 Waukegan

Road

Tel. 580

Mrs. Florence Mason, 73, mother ||’
of Mrs. Bert R. Gescheidle of Deerfield, passed away in Tucson, Ariz.
after a short illness. She has been
a resident of Tucson for the past

6 years. During the summer months
she
lived
with
her
daughter
in
Deerfield. Mrs.
Gescheidle
spent
the past three weeks in Tucson during her mother’s illness. Surviving

|are a son,

It means that the greatest praise and most

heartfelt thanks are due to God for having sent His Son
into the world. Those who have the good will to glorify
God by their actions will receive peace, happiness and His

Obituary

you

two daughters

grandchildren. Funeral

and eight

services

were held in Tucson and in Benton

Harbor, Mich., her former home.
*

CROSS CATHOLIC CHURCH
Road
Waukegan
North
Rev. John O’Mara, pastor
Rectory, 724 Elder Lane
Deerfield 430
11:88.
10,
7, 8:30,
Masses:
Sunday
7:30 a.m.
Masses:
Weekday
First Friday of each month, Mass at

HOLY

8

a.m.

Saturday:

_,

blessings. When the birth of Christ was announced, it was
told to the shepherds first. God let it be known that He
loves to dwell with the poor, simple, faithful people. He
reveals Himself to those who are little in their own eyes.

Each of us knows that Christmas Day is Christ’s Day.
Despite the schemings of man and the prevalent existence
of the ancient

hate

and

war,

Christmas

still does

and

will

always belong to God. Rejoice with the angels over the
birth of the Saviour and pray with the entire world in
storming Heaven for peace. Ask for courage for our suf-

fering all over the world. May the Infant Jesus
peace and hope for the coming year.
j

e

NGD

Va

:

7:30

and

4 p.m.

Con-

p.m.

fessions.

NORTH

NORTHFIELD
COMMUNITY
Sanders at Dundee
:
P.O. Deerfield,
Ill.
James Burford, Pastor
Telephone
Northbrook
935R2
SUNDAY
SERVICES
i
i: Aiea!
9:45 a.m. Sunday
school.
er tee
11 a.m. Morning
worship.
hed
7:30 p.m. Evening services (monthly).
First and third Sundays: Evangelistic
S
services.
Youth
Sundays:
fourth
and
Second
fellowship services.
If your church has no evening service,
we
invite you to join with
us in the
do not attend
If you
service.
evening
to
welcome
church, we give you a warm
visit our services.
ST. PAUL EVANGELICAL
AND
REFORMED
‘CHURCH
638 Waukegan
Road
Rev. H. 0. Willman. Pastor
Deerfield 858
WEDNESDAY, December 24
Annual
Christmas Eve services.
7:30 p.m. Annual Christmas Eve Sunday school program in the church sanctuary.
Eve worship and
Christmas
11 p.m.
candlelighting
service.
FRIDAY,
December
26
j
7 p.m.
St. Paul bowling league.
SATURDAY,
December
27
No Confirmation instruction.
6 p.m.
Evening vesper chimes.
SUNDAY,
December
28
Sunday school worship and
9:30 a.m.
;
classes.
Chime call to worship.
10:30 a.m.
worship.
11 a.m. Morning church
December 29
MONDAY,
3:30 p.m.
Girl Scout meeting in the
church basement.
FIRST

PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
824 Waukegan
Road
Phone
Deerfield
775
Dr. Paul J. Keller, Pastor
WEDNESDAY, December 24
7:30 p.m. Christmas carol service, allmale choir.
December 28
SUNDAY,
9:45 a.m. Church school for all grades
school.
high
through
Adult bible class under the
9:45 a.m.
leadership of C. E. Piper.
Morning worship.
11 a.m.
11 a.m. Nursery school for children 3
to

6.

December 29
MONDAY,
3 p.m. Girl Scout meeting.
Boy Scout meeting.
7:30 p.m.
THE BETHLEHEM
CHURCH
(Evangelical United Brethren)
Ministe
Guither,
Geo.
Francis
815 Rosemary Terrace
“Church Going Families Are Happy
Families”’

WEDNESDAY,
December 24
4 p.m.
Confirmation class.
7:30 p.m.
Senior choir rehearsal.
;
28
December
SUNDAY,
Church School for all ages9:45 a.m.
10:55 a.m.
Divine worship.
TUESDAY,
December 30
Auxiliary postponed
one week.
WEDNESDAY,

4

eth

Father

Holy

brin
.

O’Mara

Cross Church

December

Confirmation

p.m.

31

class.

Monsignor Morrison

Will Lecture In
South America
The

Towa

State in Ames, Towa. Miss Hurlbert

| When

GREGORY’S
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
Wilmot
and
Deerfield
Roads
(Wilmot
School)
The Rev. J. D. Parker Vicar
SUNDAY,
December 28
KindergarFamily service.
9:30 a.m.
ten and church
school
classes
for the
communion
holy
and
Sermon
children.
for adults.

It could be that that is what

not something that happened long ago.
that

CHURCH
ST.

SoA

T sunpose we are in danger—but if it happens, it is our
own faults—for Christmas is in our hearts, and it will be

and

Hawaii ‘who; will

visit for afew days.

Mrs.

me. This is what I want at Christmas. I need nothing
new except a new desire and a new resolve to keep that
which is old forever with me.
_ Christmas is in danger of being commercialized.
So
I am told, and so I sometimes fear. There is so much that
takes us away from the true meaning of Christmas, that

miracle

road,

we

can

Katharine Marshall, daughter of
Mr.
and Mrs.
Irl Marshall,
1100
Northwestern where she
ing in liberal arts and is
of the Alpha Phi. With

the

just simple angels

wich

commercialized

Waukegan

of

while

nents—”

and Mrs, Nonald Easton, 1001 Rose-

Loans

And

Mrs. Robert Jordan, 50 Waukegan
road is home
from Northwestern
Technical institute, Evanston.

clair, NJ.
Marlene

:

son

and

herds, the wise men, and Mary and Joseph, and the baby.
And, as Peter Marshall said, “angels there must be, but
not necessarily in evening dress and peroxide perma-

Mass.

Mr.

from

want at Christmas is the simple story.

Tasker,

and. is\working ‘as director

Established 1925
REALTORS
- Insurance —- Real Estate —-

Ma-

from Wil-

house. guest.is her roommate

B,D, CLAVEY
. Established

is

His

Middletown,

elementary

for the holidays

Mr.

we most want and need at Christmas. You can’t buy these
things in stores; but happy will be the people who receive
them this year or any time.
Sometimes, we think we must discover something
new at Christmas! So, on the cards, and in the songs,
come the things that are new—galloping horses, and ships
in full sail, and the modernistic angels. But all that I

friends.

Jerry
ELECTRIC

Harold

is home

early

ness, or a smile, or a prayer?

Piper Jr. is exJefferson
City,
family.
Tasker Jr., son

Mrs.

brother-in-law,

Nanke
of Davenport, Iowa, and
her mother Mrs. William Rothe of
Milwaukee for Christmas.
John Robertson, son of Mr. and
Mrs. John Robertson, 704 Orchard,
is home from Andover academy to
join his family for Christmas.

Janet

Maybe it’s in their hearts—like a room-full of happiness, or
a helpful act motivated by love, or a phone call of friendli-

He will be homé'a week and then
go east to attend a debut and visit
with

AND

chemistry.

1403 Woodland,

Deerfield Rd.
Phone
1048

- DEERFIELD JEWELERS:

‘RADIO

in

Cornell.

people need most at Christmas is not in the stores at all!

_

brother Charles £.
pected in: from
Tenn., to: join the
Harold ‘“‘Treak”

in

formerly

of Highland

difficulty thinking what people need.

nut, is home from Beloit where he
is

home

It’s very hard at Christmas to know what to get peo-

Pendle-

is in the

from

Sheehan,

ple.

Donald Piper, son of .Mr. and
Mrs. Charles E. Piper, 651 Chest-

1884

Deerfield,

Expert

He

tertani,: is

All | Want For Christmas

and

road,

Antes,

now

friends.

Neil

and

Park

Deerfield

and

majoring

visit

Mrs. R. J. Cassady, 624 Hermitage,
is home from Oberlin college, Ohio,
where he is majoring in history.
Henry L: Tuttle, son of Mrs. Mil-

1942

Call Deerfield 674 for Appointment
857

Cassady,

ne

U.S.A., son

University of Chicago Law school.
He will be home until December
30 when he will leave for N.Y. to

cliff, who attends De Paul university, Greencastle, Indiana. Bill is
studying economics and expects to
be home: for ten:days. —

OPTOMETRIST

Stanley

is home

is home

Douglas is majoring in psychology and is in the
air corps reserve.

nn., will be home until January

“DR. G. C. PARKNEN

ab

studies.
Henry
Keller, son of Dr.
and
Mrs. Paul Keller, 461 Hermitage,

atford, who is studying at WesMiddletown,
an university,

.

|

is

Susan Gage, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs.
Leslie Gage,
Sterling road,
Bannockburn.
She attends Southern Seminary and Junior college,
Buena Vista, Virginia.
f

| Mrs. John R. Armstrong, 1249

_

Park,

university in Ohio.
Douglas Glasgow, son of Mr. and
Robert

e

of Deerfield

State
Mrs.

:

Schwartz,
C. Schwa

ter of Mrs.

who is a student at Bowling Green

is stationed at road, Bannockburn,
Indiana, but is Dartmouth college.

j

Bye

Middlebury, Conn., for the holiof Mr. and Mrs. Frank Schwartz, days.
1146 Deerfield road, who is staRex Morgan, son of Mr. and Mrs.
tioned at Fort Lee, Virginia, is
C. E. Morgan, 937 Forest, is home
home for the holidays.
from the U.S. Coast Guard acadJanet
Antes,
daughter
of
Mr. emy at New London, Conn., for the
and Mrs. Archie Antes, 945 Cen- holidays. This is his third year at
tral, is home from DeKalb univer- the academy.
Mr. and Mrs. Morsity and her cousin Nancy, daugh- gan are expecting her sister and

home from Baylor school in Chattanooga,

ss le

/

so

Rt. Rev.

Joseph

P. Morrison,

pastor of Immaculate Conception
church, will leave New Year’s afternoon for South America to participate in and speak at the Latin American Congress on ‘The Problems
of Rural Life.”
The monsignor has been asked to
address the Congress as a repre-

sentative
ence

of the Liturgical

of the

United

States

Conferof which

he is a director, as president of the
Vernacular society, and as a member of the board of directors of the

National
ference.
“The
United

topic

Catholic

Rural

i.ife

Liturgical Apostolate
States of America,”

of

the

monsignor’s

Conin the
is, the

lecture. ‘

He will take a boat to Panama and —
fly to Manizales,

is

Colombia,

gheld.

wh

—

�Music

of

' Mr. and Mrs. James L. Zahnle

a Deerfield-produced

Sr. of Central

“Messiah” will feature the Christmas day program of a North Shore
radio station.

A

transcription
by station WEAW

to be
(FM),

two members of
family yesterday

from 12:30 to 2 on Christmas afternoon was made last Friday evening
during a performance
of George
Friedrich
Handel’s
“Messiah”
at
Deerfield grammar school by soloists, chorus
and orchestra
under
Chester
Kyle,
director of choral
music
at
Highland
Park
High
school. A capacity audience of 250
residents heard the “live” performance. Dr. Paul Keller, minister ot
Deerfield Presbyterian church, of.
fered an invocation
and
»enedic

holiday.

welcomed

their immediate
(Wednesday)

when their son, James
Zahnle’s mother, Mrs.
Zahnle
Sr.,
arrived
Park for the comnig

broadcast
Evanston,

Jr., and Mr.
Charles
in Highland
two weeks’

James, who was graduated

in June from Highland Park
school, is a freshman at The

del, military college
S.C.
home

High
Cita-

in Charleston,

His grandmother
in Tucson, Ariz.

makes

her

Robert

7

their

home

in

Vero

Beach.

grandparents

of

are

Mr.

and

Machinist’s

Joseph

A.

home

last

Christmas
ents,

attended

before

Amherst

Mass.,

for

to

YPhone. Your

peace. He was held after his arrest
Monday
at Skokie highway and
Berkeley road.
Miss Grace A. Martin; also of
Chicago, a passenger in his car,

college,

three

transferring

before Samuel Smith} juSticé ‘of the

years
North-

was

fined

$10

for

resisting

See

the

mate

Seyl

Jr.,

week

holidays
senior

USN,
to

cember

29

for

his

Charleston,

or-

For

Park, is director.
The chorus includes 65 singers
drawn from members of the Deerfield... Presbyterian
church,
St.

field

‘Singers,

te

nineteen

years

the Villa

h

been the favorite spot of particul:

people for ringing out the old ar
ringing in the new. This yee
1952-1953 there will be the
gala party. Complete evening,
cluding

seven

course

dinner,

makers, favors, and an orche
for dancing, all for $5.75 a pe
(plus tax). It’s smarter to ma
reservations.
Skokie
at
County
Line, Glencoe 433,
SEASON’S GREETINGS
FROM GRACE HERBST

fitting

par-

For your

of

S.

Libertyville

school. chorus and Highland
High school chorus.

mas

High
Park

|
|

enthusiastic responset

the opening of the addition to he
Shop at 563 Lincoln .Ave.,
netka,
Grace
Herbst
wishes
thank you all. A very Merry CI

gitts:

C.,

on the

Paul’s Evangelical church, Bethlehem
church
and
St.
Gregory’s
Episcopal church choirs, the Deer-

Highland

CO.

Headquarters

WELCOME THE NEW YEAR —
AT VILLA MODERNE

the

Seyls

where he will sail for Cuba
USS Bears.

444

DURACLEAN

oun

arrived

with

Deerfield

ad

class

spend

Joseph

column

International

here's a

second

full

Phone

on Monday.

western.

Duraclean Servic

our

arrest

Bob O’Link road. He will leave De-

Mrs. H. G. Obershelp, Jack Kenney,
Michael Clark and Bruce Warnock
the

Bushey
Amherst,

SALA

ing ‘while ‘intoxicated ‘ate a hearing

court, is home for the Christmas
holidays from Northwestern University dental school where he is
in his first year of studies. Mr.

Pa.

all of \Deerfield,and
Reynold
S.
Geary,
bass, of Libertyville.
Accompaniment
is by: the
30piece chamber symphony orchestra
of the Flvte and Fiddle club, drawn
from North Shore instrumentalists.

of

» Duraclean

and
Carol

Mrs.

To Be Stationed In Cuba

Millard,

of

Their

Soloists to be heard are Jeanette
Teeter, Mary Vassél and Virginia
McCarthy, sopranos; Barbara Sandvold, alto; and Paul Martin, tenor

‘members

son of Dr.
Bushey

other children are Linda, 8, Susan,
6, and William III, 3. Paternal
William Lewis Sr. of Wilkes-Barre,

Everett

J.

Benjamin

the Handel Christmas classic, according to estimates by the station
staff.

Deerfield

Albert

Lewis, December 16 in Vero Beach,
Fla. Robert is the fourth child
of the Rev.
and
Mrs.
William
Lewis Jr. (Lois Thorson) who make

WEAW will air the music at 105
on FM dials. Sponsors of the pro.
gram
are Deerfield Lumber Com:
_ pany
and
Tractomotive
Corporation, also of Deerfield.
A listener audience of 10,000 to
20,000 North
Shore families
wil]

are

Mrs.

Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Thorson
of Temple avenue have received
word of the birth of their 11th
grandchild,

chestra.

- Robert Bushey,

Lewis

tion.

tune in Deerfield’s performance

avenue

and

a

happy

and

success

New Year is her wish for
1
After Christmas do stop in and see
her attractive shop as it is today ~
and maybe buy yourself a worth?
—
while gift to glamorize your hom %

DELLE-S
StoO
35

THE CHRISTMAS
i
YOU'LL ALWAYS REMEMBER! —

Oe

The Christmas you
Buick you'll never

got your first
forget! Mayb

it was fifty years ago.. (Dearie ‘ye
don’t have to. be
I). Maybe there

a lot older
will be a

new

Buick on-your,Christmas
Tree

this

year, assuring you a mighty happy
New’ Year ahead. At any tate Klee+
burg. Buick. 'wish ,you
Season’s Greetings.

all

of

J
xB

a4

PARTY
WITH

NEW YEARS
ING IS FUN...

PARTY

FAVORS!

A

Paper plates, cups
AND MANY, MANY

MORE!

And a New Year overflowing

fit with made-to-meas-

Edith Saletta sends to all of

ure

perfection—in

own

leg-size.

her

interesting

for slender

or small legs,
Sizes 8 to 1014

modite

duchess

(green edge)

(rediedge): 23)

for average

for tall,

Sizes 844 to'11

Sizes9'2to.11¥%

size legs,

.

Open

Highland

Avenue

Park

%

larger:legs.:'{
wt

Gawes

&amp;

°-: legs. Sizes
,

atoll
SVL:

1

Friday nights:unitil. 92:6 tis bias

{

|

Re

ey

i

F

ff

\

L|

mar.

the North

al

known

well

been

Shore these many yea

Her Pizza and
Italian dishes

way

Spaghetti, and o
are famous. Eve

Line.

County

at

i

BOW WOW WOW
YIP YIP YIP
Along with much wagging of tail,
this means ‘Merry Christmas” in

*

i

Be

t

STORAGE
474 Central Ave., Highland Park

has

Rosie

thing cooked to order at her fam,
ily’s Skokie Gardens. Eat there o
take home with you. Skokie High-

MOVING AND PACKINGOF HOUSEHOLD GOODS
@

thi

those

ROSIE FANTOZZI
SAYS “BUON NATALE”

for largest

here l]

of

array

0

showing

which make the home beau
ai
to live in. 739 St., Johns.

p=:--&lt;f (plain edge)

Garnétt
&lt; Co.
/

Central

classic

Always

1953.

you

see

to

hopes

and

during

brev

you,

She wished: to thank-you for your
generous patronage of the p

year

* (purplé edge):

V

life’s blessingsis the sincere

AGENT ALLIED VAN LINES

645

with

She'll love the way they

Fun! Why New Years is the most gala time of the
year... and especially with party favors. Visit
Chandler’s today for our largest array in years!

Exciting party snappers
Super-loud noisemakers
Wide selection of horns
Tons and tons of confetti
Long, bright streamers
Ugliest masks in the world
Always-popular balloons
Gay, colored nut cups
Absorbent paper napkins

HAPPY JOYOUS
CHRISTMAS DAY —

HI 2-0181

Dog

language.

The

Dogs

boardin; #

at Butterworth Kennels during the
holidays will have a happy
tim a
indeed. Best of everything fora

Dog’s

good health,

happiness.

2810

Park

comfort,
Ave.

and
Daily

8-7,.Sun. 2-5 by appt. Closed holidays.

HI

2-1352.

�Guests of the Tinettis:

—

Mr. and Mrs. Donald Blackard of
1825 Green Bay -road, will spend
their Christmas
Day as the dinner
guests

RENT YOUR
FORMAL
Where society’s
best dressed men
rent theirs—
Cutaways - Strollers
Single and
Double
Breasted
Tuxedos

Deerfield

-

(Next

® OAK

tee
ee
DA.

Holy

8-6100

PARK

Martin

at

1864

and
HI

Green Bay
2-0202

© THE

Days—6:00, 7:00, 8:00, 9:00,
10:00

CONFESSIONS
Saturdays,
Eves. of First Fridays and
Holy Days 4:00 and 7:30 p.m.

LOOP

°® SOUTH

Roads

P. Morrison

Weekdays—6:15, 8:15

Theat.)

Other Stores in

Mrs.

home

Pastor
Rev. Donald
B. Runkle
Rev. Bernard
E. Burns
1
MASSESE
Sundays—6:15, 7:30, 9;00, 10:00,
11:00 and 12 noon

STORE

SHERMAN

to Varsity

and

their
road.

Rt. Rev. Msgr. Joseph

Rte
be
here
EVANSTON

Mr.

IMMACULATE
CONCEPTION CHURCH

All Accessories

1718

of

Tinetti
in
Green Bay

Rehearse Jor Weatheral Party

SIDE

645. Central Avenue

On

Members of the Weatheral
club are busy preparing for
a gala New Year’s Eve party
in the Ravinia Village house.
ABOVE, Mrs. Robert Bartholomay, left, instructs Mrs. Donn
Moseley, Mrs. Darwin Rummel
and
Mrs.
Robert
Raughley
(left to right) in a Can Can
number which will be part of

Woe
==

the North Shore
it’s Chandler’s

for all your
Office Supplies!

the

Son and Daughter Home

steel

desks
of

Superbly
cient

areas,

working

desks

Globe-Wernicke

designed

lasting

construction

offer
and

effi-

a wide

range of styles to perfectly suit every business require-

Dr. and
Roger

Mrs. Gustave Weinfeld
Williams
avenue
wel-

comed their son and daughter home
last weekend from their schools in
Ohio.

Alice attends Rosilynd hall in E]more, O., and Tim is a student
Miami university in Oxford.

ment.

at

Announce Marriage
Of Miss Delhaye
To Ernest L. Oest
Mr.
of

St.

steel files
husky

Wernicke,

Make

Ads

files
come

of top-quality
in 2, 3, 4-drawer

steel

are- by

Globe-

paper

sizes for legal and

week

before

the

Want

laying

your

SECRETARIAL

new business year

Columnar

pads

fibre

(2 to 18 column).

Columnar books, wide range.
Fine-quality file folders, letter &amp; legal size.
Sturdy post binders.
1952 Desk Calendars.
Letter size box file of heavy binders’ board,
indexed A-Z for quick reference.

Page

8

show.

AT

LEFT,

of

class
each

begins
month.

Bulletin
57

East

their

to Ernest

L. Oest,

Ernest

The
p.m.

of Ridge

of
the

Joan,'

son of Mr.

Oest

of

ceremony

took

place

at 3:30

the

chapel

Saturday

in

Bath,

and

H.

last

Jackson

on

the

T

free

first

Blvd., WAbash
Chicago

Mon-

2-7377

Deborah

Buchanan,

ter of the junior Gordon

announce

daughter,

For Holidays

Miss

Delhaye

Ill.

days

college
is

road,

from

a

is home

Williams

in

Fulton,

are

now

cock recently
the army.

was

brown

yellow

carried

a

Her maid of honor and only attendant, Miss Lois Longmire,
a
classmate at Illinois Wesleyan university in Bloomington, wore brown
net over pale blue taffeta with a
matching blue net headdress. Her

It’s time to wish
our friends good
health, happiness,
and good luck for
another

New

Year!

SUNSET
FOOD MART
157
A

CENTRAL

Central

Food

Store

she

in

Evan-

were

discharged

blue

carnations.

Junior

where

living

dress, pale

She

Mo.,

ston. A former Winnetkan, Mr. Pea-

flowers

of white

for the holi-

Woods

The Stewart Peacocks (Mary Buchanan)

Miss Delhaye
wore
a gown
of
white lace over satin and net, with
matching
closefitting
cap
and

veil.

daugh-

Buchanans

senior.

officiating.

5
GREETINGS

other needs for your
Letter-size transfer files of corrugated
board store all inactive records.
Account books in many styles. _

A new
day in

Leslie

avenue

bridal bouquet

for college women

Chandler’s own inventory form has: been~ tested for
years, found to be the finest! In pads:of 100 sheets
of 914” x 12” size punched with five-holes: There is
space for 28 listings on the front and 33 on the back.

Johns

waistlength

Four Months (Day)
INTENSIVE COURSE

forms

Mrs.

Home

of Trinity Episcopal church, with
the Very Rev. Charles U. Harris

aside!

MOSER

letter filing. The wrap-around construction gives: years
of trouble-free and dependable service.

inventory

it a habit to read

every

and

marriage
Mrs.

Big,

floor

four other club members are °
shown in rehearsal for their
part of the entertainment.
Mrs. Winfield Fisher warms up
with Robert Thomas, at drums,
Glenn Keats, at bass fiddle,
and Alan Bede on horn.

yellow

and

from

brown

chrysanthemums.
Mrs.

Delhaye
and

chose

flowered

a_

brown

hat, and

chrysanthemum

corsage for the wedding and the
reception which followed at home.
Mrs. Oest was clad in navy blue.
Her flowered hat, carnations and
gloves

were

all

in

pink.

Best man
for Mr.
Oest was
Wayne Dierker of Joliet. Robert
Spencer of Chicago ushered.
When they return from a wedding trip to Florida, the couple
will be at home
on the Illinois
Wesleyan campus, where Mr. Oest

is a junior
more

and

student.

hatharine
SECRETARIAL

his bride

a sopho-

Gibbs

@ Never enough Gibbs-trained
secretaries to meet the demand.
Courses for high school and
private
school
graduates
and
college women.
Five-school personal placement service.

Catalog: Executive Dean
51 E. Superior St., Chicago

11

DE 7-3306
Other Gibbs Schools: New York
Boston
Montclair, N, Ji
Providence

Thursday,

December

25, 1952

�Girls Fete Boys At Turnabout Dance

i
The

Me

boys’ gymnasium

transformed

into an

ice

at Highland
palace

Park

for the

High

“Frosty

school

was

Frolics,“”

an-

nual Turnabout dance earlier this month.
Here, against ay
background of snowflakes and icicles, Robert Blitz and Carl
Ostrand perform at the mike.
A rattle and miniature horn
dangle from elaborate corsage Carl’s date thoughtfully provided

him

with.

Wellesley Girls
To Be Feted At
Breakfast Tuesday

Larry Brown Home
Cornell University

From

Turn

to the

Want-ad

section

for

““Hard-to-find”’ items there at moneysaving

prices!

dau
Bay

Highwood,

IIl.

Kenneth

Mr.

and

Farrises Have

tertained

Mrs.

Kenneth

friends

ner

Farris

Sunday

Friday

Mrs.

for

the

en-

Farris’

they

birthday

at

an

with

a

din-

investments

KEY

THE

SCRIPTURES

study

of this

great

book shows anyone how to
turn to God in a way that is

both practical and certain.

Christmas

party

the Robert

Earharts

Chicago

at

the

their
by atWing’s

home

on Krenn

of
ave-

nue.
the

Want

Ads

offer

amazing

values and opportunities not available elsewhere. Read them now!

for

a

christmas

Joins Parents for Holidays
Guy Wilbor came home Saturday
from Amherst
college to spend
Christmas with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. John B. Wilbor of Lyman
court.
Mr. Wilbor will return to
his third year studies at the Massachusetts
college
shortly
after
New

Year’s.

check!

beginning Friday, December 26, and for
as long as the merchandise lasts

annual

moderate price dresses
junior dresses

4

price (and less! )
clearance

sale

It

all sales final
Sorry, no returns * no exchanges

skirts
blouses

shows how to avail oneself of
the Bible promise, “Thou wilt

Warners’

keep him in perfect peace,
whose mind is stayed on thee:
because he trusteth in thee”
(Isaiah

in

marked

millinery

by Mary Baker Eddy
Sincere

party

they

sportswear

and HEALTH
TO

theater

Saturday

Only

celebrated

better dresses

WITH

is

The Student Council sponsored the party

fifth wedding
anniversary
tending the Infant Welfare

Farrises.

evening

and

and

open house in their Ferndale avenue home. It was the end of a busy
weekend

to be feted on this one night of the year

for which Roy Milton and his band played.

security: Can what we think
protect us?

ence textbook

Dial HI 2-5332

the dance

suits

finding it in the Christian Sci-

Road

on

floor with Sybil Kramer.

Humanity’s call today is for

SCIENCE

id

Linda Bernstein.

is a twosome

Happy

coats

There is an answer of priceless assurance now at hand,
Many in heartfelt gratitude are

MARY JANE
LANES &amp; BAR
210 Green

Something
to Depend Upon

a4

who

Open House Party Sunday

south,
is home
for the holidays
Wellesley college girls and those
from
Cornell
university,
Ithaca,
of Highland Park High school who
may
attend Wellesley in the fall N. Y., where he is a first year student in the mechanical engineerwill be entertained next Tuesday
at a breakfast at Exmoor by Mrs.. ing school.
Howell W. Murray of Linden ave.
nue.
Christmas In Lake Forest
Highland
Park
young
women
presently
students
at
Wellesley
Mr. and Mrs. W. Ames Ross of
who have been invited to the break. 930 Brittany road will spend Christfast include Misses Diane Weeks. mas
day
and
have
dinner
with
Geraldine
Bailey,
Ellen Whitney.
their cousins, the Stuart R. FrenchAliée
Gilbert,
Ann
Lawton
and
es, in their home in Lake Forest.
Faire Levy.

F

Pia

Marty Granholm photographed with Libby Fisher, left, and

The

Larry Brown, son of the Robert
C. Browns Jr. of Lincoln avenue

e

Cigarettes add spiky points
to the chrysanthemum corsage
worn by Roney Stackler above,

26:3).

Science and Health may be
tead, borrowed or bought at

January

Girdle

Bonuses!

were
Boned sta-up top girdles, 14-16 inch
«£000
White nylon sta-up top girdles, 14-16 inch .... 12.50
White slip-on lastex girdles
,
1250

now
11.95
8.95

all in
sizes’

8.95

26 - 32

White lastex pantie girdle

12.45 sm., med., Ige.

. 15.00

~
|

Christian Science

Ha
Jackson

+ Wahash

Screens
made
to your specifications — installed— brass
or black curtains. Visit our
new
Fireplace
Salon ... entire
second
floor.

Chicago 4
Thursday,

December

25, 1952

Reading

Room

1935 Sheridan Road
Highland Park
Open Daily
Information concerning church services,
Sunday School
also available.

and

free

public

|

A

EZ

lectures

Evanston

store

hours,

Highland

Park

store

9

to

hours,

5:30—Monday

9

to

5:30

and

Monday

Thursdays,

through

9

to

9

Saturday

Page

9

�~~~

=~Season’s

Bradford

Greetings

TWICE - YEARLY

SALE
Girls‘ Teen-age — Misses
and Youth
Reg.

NOW

7.95

Shoes

All Storm

—Open

bruce

and

Boots

Greatly

(Just

5.45

Reduced!

Wednesday Afternoon—

South

Store

shoes

for Children

of

Post

Highland
Junior

Park

students

college

in

at

Brad-

ford, Mass.,
are home
for the
Christmas holidays. They include:
Miss Ann Curtis, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. James A. Curtis of
Sheridan road, who is in her freshman year at Bradford; Miss Margaret Nieter, daughter of the Leon-

Miss

Footwear

1902 Sheridan Rd.
Only Exclusive Shoe

Four
Bradford

ard

martin

Fine

Home for Holidays

- 8.95 Values

4.95

Plans June Wedding

Students

W.

Nieters of Elm place and
Schiller, daughter of

Nan

Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Schiller
of St. Johns avenue, who are both
seniors.
:
The fourth young woman is Miss
Alice Rosenberg, daughter of the
Irving
Rosenbergs
of
Riparian
road, who is also a senior and is
publicity director of the Bradford
Athletic association.

Office)

for Children

HI 2-4852
in Highland Park

Turn to the Want-ad section for
“'Hard-to-find” items there at moneysaving prices!

Mrs.: Ella Goldberg of Chicago announces the engagement of her daughter, Joan to Sydney Pearl, son of Mr. and
Miss Goldberg attended
Mrs. Samuel Pearl of Oakland drive.
the University of Illinois, and Mr. Pearl is a law student at DePaul university.
The couple plans to be married in June.

Drive Carefully — The Life You Save
|
May Be Your Own!
URDU

RDEV VE NEV VEU UE VE VUE VN NEE NE NEV

UE ME EE VE ENE

PDP

NEN

UE NEEM

MURR ME MR MEERUT

RN,

RRR

Let

the

bells

to all that
rejoice..

And

and the Repair Staff

RR
UE

of

PAT

PAUL LEEDS
GORDON

OR

BILL JOHNSON
LOUISE DEL BENE

MEMBER

NUE

Central

RU

Sheridan
.

_..a@

time to

with

each

message

peal

of the

Merry Christmas!

Family Finish Specialists
a Quarter

of a

Century.

Skokie Valley
&amp;

DRY

CLEANERS,

INC.

Your Clothes Stay Young”
Main Office and Plant

Highland Park 2-3310 — Deerfield Call Enterprise 1616
512-518 Waukegan Ave., Highwood

SER RR RSME

Page 10

proclaim

SERVICE

“Where

and

HI 2-2028

3

LAUNDRY
PEPE MEU

Corner

forth

for Over

CAUHORY

TTS

and

let our Christmas

. . . Merry,

OE NU

FROM

forth

it’s Christmas

to you ‘ring
bells

ring

USP

ON BR NNN NN

NE NER

EE

EU

Thursday,

EU

UE

December

EE

25, 1952

�Brownies

Give

Doll

House

To

Needy

Children

y

ios

aeyg
eee

Mf

nnn

Wa

OE

We

NM&lt;
NY

Mp

Ns
The

| Home From lowa College
_ Barbara Scott arrived home Sat-

For

iurday

evening

from

| lege,

Grinnell,

Ia.,

the

‘Holly

Hop’

The Ravinia village house
become a white fairyland set
:

anes
/ents,
Mr.
with |

Grinnell

to

|

Swing
The

col-

spend

the

OTAys
eee. Hae eee
and
Mrs.
Clarence
R.
V
. Mi

frosty Christmas trees and. hung
| Se%tt Of Homewood avenue.
| Mis

with glistening snow balls for the | 5
traditional “Holly Hop,” younger |
set

party scheduled
number of the

A

tending
ner

are planning

parties

for Saturday.
teen-agers a

ser

Spend

to give din-|

before

the

dance,|

Lt.
of

’
Year's

and

Mrs.

Here

Richard

Williamsburg,

Va.,

M.

Wise

will

in charge

of decorations

Brown,

G.

with

chairman

sponsoring committee.
There
will be dancing

p.m.

unfil

midnight

of Stephen
Price
Admission
is $2

$3.50 for each stag.
Ravinia Woman’s

to

from

tre

and
per

Mrs. , drive.

of the

Carol

Wise

is

Brown.

the

Tighe,
F.

Frank

Trangmar

and

Mesdames

club

December

30

at

p.m.

boys

and

of

9

for

in

454

Green

Bay

+

ne

AND

4

GIFTS’

¥oY&amp;

Agnes Donini Alverson
Road

Highwood,

Wy

a

IIlinois

3

girls

My
Fhone

x

fe

eRe

A

crapper

Highland

Sec

my

Re

ee

Oe

g

7

May
to Naghs

2-453

me

sec

Soph

HI

zZ

Be Your Qwn!

Bicte TKirg Ioere S

CHRISTMAS

er

rom

the

‘

Style

i

members

Thomas

Woman’s

given

=)
=
MY
=
==
oy

a

CAR

i

Rich-

Uhlmann.
ieee

working
on
the
party
are
Mrs.
Howard
A. Boysen,
Mrs.
Robert
C.
Brown
Jr.,
Mrs.
George
A.

Brace

Park

former

and

of the Swing

will

be

é

Berthe K. Strubel

club

9

music

his band.
ard
couple,
or|__

club

Mrs.

dance

My
Wy

FLOWERS

Is Set

Night

Wi

tL

|

arrive

sponsored each year by the Ravinia | Saturday to spend the New Year’s
Woman's
club.
weekend with Mrs. Wise’s mother,
Mrs. Elzie C. Partlow has been| Mrs. Eleanor Brown of Woodpath

Mark

second

Dance

trimmed,

a

high school age.
George Fanelli
and his orchestra will be featured | ————
with
specialty
numbers
provided
by the drum
and brass sections. |
Chairman of the dance is Mrs. G. |
M. Harris and co-chairman is Mrs.
G. F. Page, both of Deerfield.

5
oT

New

Club

For Tuesday

are

the first
snowflakes
have
fallen.
Carollers
are singing.
Bells are
ringing.
It’s time to
wish you all . . . Merry
:
Christmas! Happy New
Year!

Three Brownies, members of Green Bay school’s Troop 72, put the finishing touches | #
on the doll house they refurbished for needy children of the North Chicago Settlement house. A,
Left, Judy Gans arranges a miniature piano, Lynne Arnold, standing, adds a new article AYR
to a bedroom, and Anne Channon adjusts a kitchen piece. The house was presented to the
children at a party given by the Brownies Saturday at the settlement house.
Glistening Snowballs
Will Provide Decor

trees

Shop

is

Dry

i
nS
a
ny
He
cm

H.

Compere,
David
M.
Cox,
Robert
O. Farrell, Guy B. Finlay, Henry E.
Garwood,

Alfred

W.

7

Geigerich,

Martin W. Granholm, A. C. Heimerdinger,

Leonard,
les

C.

Carl

E.

Herbst,

E.

H.

Loevenhart,

Looney,

Edward

Gordon
A.

F.

CharMurray,

:

;

aN

hs
Be

Cainkhit. 5

ae
i

i

ele

TELEVISION
AND
RADIO SERVICE
ALSO BENDIX
APPLIANCE SERVICE
Ss
ri
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———— ||

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May
you
day
not
you

the day be merry with
in our most gala holifrock or formal.
Why
let us get it ready for
now — beautifully

Call

HI 2-3500
|
JOHN B. NASH CO.
1891

Sheridan,

Thursday,

Highland

December

Park

25, 1952

Z

worries.

FAUPHA\
ZZ
eye
“DE DEERE EL O Rd Oh Deervieid
61g

friends, lo our cherishes

i

new friends, ane to those

i

whose piendship we sin-

i

corely hope lo earn, we

i

extend oie wishes for a

ja

Very Merry Cheistmas

ie
BR

=

fully pressed!
Then you
can just slip into it with no

Tee

i

YF

fresh, spotlessly clean, care-

last-minute

our faithful old

yy)
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and the Happiest

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Friday Evenings ‘Til 9 P.M.

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Sey
nal
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Franzen, Robert S. Froehlich, Shelby

Page

11

�S

O

7 M

Candidl,

W

te Or

i

|

t

Whiss

Speaking

Prilip

Bride

A

In a setting of evergreen trees,
white flowers and red poinsettias,
Miss Mirth Durbahn, daughter of
the Walter E. Durbahns of Beverly
place, became the bride of Philip
J. Kennedy Jr. of Cleveland last
Saturday afternoon. He is the son
of the senior Mrs. Kennedy of that
city.
White Gothic arches bound with
evergreen
were
placed
in
The
Highland Park Presbyterian church
for
the
candlelight
ceremony,
which took place at 4:30 p.m. The
altar
was
decked
with
all-white
bouquets, set off by scarlet poinsettias just outside the altar rail.
Miss Durbahn’s full-skirted dress
of white
silk net flowed
into a
train. She wore a cap and veil of
net and
carried
stephanotis
centered with white orchids.
The matron of honor, Mrs. Robert S. Hutchinson
of Centerfield
avenue, sister of the bride; and the
bridesmaids,
Mrs.
Tom
Stein
of
(Continued on page 14)

MMos

Miss
Sanders and Mr. Ulbrich,
both of whom. are students at the
University of Michigan, are planning to be married this summer
after her graduation. Mr. Ulbrich
will be graduated in February from
the
school
of
metallurgical
engineering.
Stephen is in business in Chicago
and
has an apartment
on North
Winchester although he will spend
the holidays in Highland Park.
The
Robert L. Sanders’
of St.
Johns avenue and their three children, Abby,
Victoria
and
Robert
Jr., are
spending
Christmas
day
with the Sanders’. The junior David Sanders’ of ‘Alpine, N. J., are
unable to join the family reunion.

Mrs. Hill’s Rink
Wins Watson Event

At Curling Club

To Be Scene of
Roycemore Dance

Mrs. Charles Hill’s rink defeated
a rink skipped by Mrs. Thomas E.
Keough of Fairview avenue, seven

to five, in last Thursday’s

more
school
in Evanston
is
annual dance which this year
take place Saturday night at
moor.
Fletcher Butler and his

chestra

will

play

the
will
Exor-

for dancing.

On the Hill rink were Mrs. Darwin Curtis, Mrs. William J. Lawlor, and Mrs. William Ohle, all of
Winnetka.
Mrs. Keough skipped a rink composed of Mrs. Arthur Roberts. of
Wheeling,
Mrs.
Charles
Price
of
Glencoe and Mrs. Warren Peterson
of Ridge road.
In Wednesday’s semi-finals, Mrs.
Hill defeated Mrs. Oliver S. Orms-

liams avenue, a senior, will hold
open house for the guests after
the party. Her parents are among
the patrons.
Vice president of her class and
secretary of student government,

has been
preparing

Cur-

Sixteen
rinks of the
Heathers
took part in the event which ran
three weeks at the Curling club.

Miss Terry Hamm, daughter of
the Fred B. Hamms of Roger Wil-

Miss Hamm
committees
dance.

finals of

the Heathers of the Chicago
ling club’s Watson event.

active on
for’
the

by

of Glencoe, and Mrs. Keough’s
(Continued on page 14)

Teiis

Botrothal

Camoll C Radd fh

Of

Miss
Betsy
Sanders
and
her
brother, Stephen, have invited their
friends to an open house Sunday to
meet her fiance, Carl Ulbrich of
Villa Park. The party will be held
in the home of their mother, Mrs.
David T. Sanders of Linden Park
place.

Exmoor Country Club

One of the highlights of the holiday season for students of Royce-

Cha

bein

Weddings

At Holiday Party

Of

Kennedy

&lt;—

Miss Sanders To
Introduce Fiance

Mhvth, Dicckiha

WSocsinas

The Christmas party was the second of four supper
dances to be given during the season, under Highland Fling
general chairman Mrs. Mark G. Brown.
Chatting at the supper table were Mrs. Nathan Corwith and Dr. Albert Bushey.

Engagements

nN

e

mm

O

Gwendolyn

The
dolyn

Jr.,
of

engagement of Miss GwenFuchs to Carroll C. Rudd

son
Park

known
E.

ake

of

Mr.

Ridge,

by her

and

Mrs.

has

been

made

Mrs.

Oscar

mother,

Rudd

Fuchs of Burton avenue.
Miss Fuchs attended the Univer-

sity

of

Illinois

for

three

years

and received her bachelor of education degree in 1951 from the National
College
of
Education
in
Evanston.
She has been teaching
kindergarten in Prospect Heights.
Her
fiance, a graduate
of the
University of Illinois, is teaching
a design course there and is working for his master’s degree in architecture.
The
couple
plans to marry
in
June.

The Howell W. Murrays
To Be Daughters’ Guests
Mr. and Mrs. Howell W. Murray
of Linden avenue will spend Christmas Day in Glen Ellyn, IIl., as the
guests of their daughter and sonin-law, the Heath Wakelees (Betty
Murray), and their three children,
Wendy, 9, Betsy, 8, and the twins,
Bruce and Richard, 6.
During
the
week
following
Christmas, the Murrays will be in
Crawfordsville, Ind., visiting their
other
daughter,
Mrs.
Grant Herman
(Marjorie
Murray)
and Mr.
Herman.
They will also see their
two youngest grandchildren, Mary
Lynn, 3, and Laurie, 1%.

Miss Boyd and Miss Dickey
To Fete Former
Miss

Ann

Boyd,

Classmates
daughter

and Mrs. Douglas Boyd of
street, will give a tea next
day
at
home
with
Miss

of Dr.
Wade
TuesJanet

Dickey,
daughter
of the Leslie
Dickeys of Deerfield road.
The
two young women will entertain
some of their former classmates at
(Continued on page 14)

The Frank F. Selfridges
Fete Family Gathering
Mr.,

and

Mrs.

Walter

Angrist

(Jane Selfridge)
and their children, Jill 4142, and Jay, 14 months,
traveled from Minneapolis, Minn.,
to be with her parents, the Frank
F. Selfridges of Linden avenue for

the Christmas holidays.
Mr. and Mrs. Selfridge’s son and
daughter-in-law, the John Selfridges
of Cincinnati, Ohio, will also join
them
as will their youngest son,
William, a freshman at Illinois college, Jacksonville, and their daughter Mary, who is studying at the
National
College
of
Education.
Evanston.

Jr. Robert Olmsteds
To Have Houseguests
Over the Holidays
Christmas visitors of the junior
Robert H. Olmsteds of Pierce road
will be their daughter and son-in-

law,

Mr.

Castle

in

and

(Suzanne

Park

Forest,

Mrs.

Richard

Olmsted),

who

M.
live

Ill.

Another
daughter,
the
former
Mary
Olmsted
and
her
husband
George
Truitt
Rayne
will
come
down
from their home
in Madison for a visit after Christmas, to
round out the family circle.
Page

12

Mr. and Mrs. Herbert H. Alexander, at left, who are expecting a Christmas week visit from their daughter, Constance,
Mrs. Roy Welch Jr., and her husband, of Newport, R. |., were
among the members attending the second Highland Fling of
the season in the Woman’‘s club. Pictured with them is Mrs.
Kendall Clough.
Miss

Jane

Home

Out-Of-Town Guests Spend

Roberts

for Holidays

Christmas

Miss Jane Roberts arrived home
last Saturday to spend Christmas
with her parents, the Charles S.
Roberts of 1730 Ridge road.
Miss
Roberts is a senior at Smith college in Northampton, Mass.
Charles Grimm
of New Jersey
a friend of Jane’s, is the houseguest of the Roberts family during
the holidays.

Entertain

Holiday Guests

Mr. and Mrs. Elwood B. Low of
Laurel avenue will have as their
houseguests
this week
their son,

Bill,

and

Mrs.

Low’s

brother

and

sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. J. E.
Orr of Houghton, Mich.
Bill returns to Roswell, N. M., next Monday where he has been associated
with an oil company for the past
two years.

With

Davidsons

Mr. and Mrs. E. Craig Davidson of Woodland road are entertaining several guests who arrived
earlier this week. Mrs. Davidson’s
sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and

Mrs.
D.

W.

L. Fuller

C.,,and

in-law,
USN,

her

Adm.
and

of Washington,

brother

and

sister-

Walter S. Macaulay,
Mrs.
Macaulay
of

Schnectady, N. Y. are spending
(Continued on page 14)

the

To Visit Family in NYC
Mrs. Julian O. Phelps of Ridge
road and her two sons, William,
10, and Barton, 6, will leave for
New
York City this week where
they will visit Mrs. Phelps’ parents.

They

will

also

be

the

guests

of

friends
and
relatives
on
Long
Island and in New Jersey during

Chairman of the Christmas dance was Mrs. J. Gordon
Smith, left, photographed at the punch bowl with two of her
committee members, Mrs. George K. Ford and Mrs. J. William

their anticipated two weeks’ stay.Gooch.
Thursday,

December

25, 1952

~

�Jr..Woman’s Club Fetes Children

Arthur Humphreys
To Spend New Year's
In Highland Park
Arthur G. Humphrey Jr. who was
released December 13 from active
Army duty after two years of service, arrived in Highland Park last

Friday

with

his

wife,

the

former

Kathleen Belle Kelsey, for an overnight stay with his parents, Mayor
and Mrs. A. Gordon Humphrey of
Judson avenue.
The couple was accompanied by
his brother, James, a junior at DePauw university, Greencastle, Ind.

The

fy

are now

in

Chats

Pill In

At Robert

Kites

A gala Christmas party Saturday
night drew to a close the activities

o

Presbyterian

For her marriage
Prill last Saturday,

to Charles F.
Miss Caroline

Stroud chose a gown of lace over
satin,
fashioned
with
a Queen
Anne

collar

and

train.

&lt;A

finger-

of

the

Earharts’

Infant

Highland

Welfare

Park

and

Mrs.

William

who

planned

and

Provisionals

ried a cascade
white roses.

bands as a gay
hard work.

carnations

and

of
Mrs.

Robert S. Earhart of Krenn avenue
was hostess to the gathering, assisted by Mrs. Winfield Fisher and

tip-length veil, edged in lace, fell
from her crown of seed pearls
trimmed in sequins and she carof

Wings

Ravinia.

Martin,
the

co-chairmen,

dinner

and

climax

for Wings

their

hus-

to a year

Metzenber g and

|

Richard
Calif.,

ee

fd

Warvied if

kas

are

was

Pe

At the final Wing meeting of the
year, held last week in the home
of Mrs. Robert K. Thomas, mem-

Sunnyside avenue, the bridesmaid,
wore
similarly-styled
dresses
of

A former private first class, stationed at the Army Chemical center,
Maryland,
Mr.
Humphrey
trained at Fort Leonard Wood. He
holds
a geology
bachelor of arts
degree from DePauw and was assigned as a geologist in the Chemical and
Radiclogical laboratories
at the Army center.

lace

Mrs.

bers learned that the annual meeting and
luncheon
of the Infant
Welfare
Society
of Chicago
will

Mrs.

take place January 28 in the Sher-

No matter what you want to buy
sell you'll find the Want-Ad sec-

tion your

best market

place.

and

Stroud’s

net

over

in shrimp

taffeta,

pink

and

Springer’s in peacock blue.
Their
flowers
were
garnet
roses
and
they wore holly wreaths in their

hair. Helen

Prill, thé bridegroom’s

sister, served as junior bridesmaid,
wearing a peacock blue dress.

Mr. Springer was best man. Ushers were John Stroud of Evanston,
Jack
Ryan
of Great
Lakes
and
William
Kiddle
of Pleasant
ave-

nue.
The

wedding

took

place

at

2

aton

hotel.

New member
welcomed
at the
meeting was Mrs. Clair E. Freeman Jr. of St. Johns avenue.

Mrs.

W.

W.

bert Raughley
Farris assisted
hostesses.

Hamilton,
and
Mrs.

Mrs.

last Saturday

is

road

p.m. in The Highland Park Presbyterian church with Dr. William
(Continued on page 32)

for

to Samuel

the

week.

of

Mr.

Timken

Ursula,

Park,

of Mr.

Britton

Mrs.

daughter,

guest

G.

last

joining

Highland

and

SheriTimken

and

their

at Aspen,

Colo.,

holidays.

University of Indiana campus
in
Bloomington,
where
Mr.
Buchsbaum is a junior student and his
bride a freshman.
Robert Metzenberg Jr. of Pasa-

Buchsbaum, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Chester
Buchsbaum
of. Chicago.
She wore a Brussels lace veil belonging to the bridegroom’s moth-

er

dena,

The Christmas color theme was
carried out in the gowns worn by
her
sister,
Mrs.
Richard
Morrill
of New York, who served as matron

usher

at the

wedding,
as was
Charles
Jr., brother-in-law
of the

Calif.,

Martin
bride-

groom.
was

honor, and Miss Diane Weeks
Dale avenue, the bridesmaid.

was

an

Stanley Herzog of Chicago

best

man.

YULETIDE

Mrs. Morrill’s bolero dress was in
green taffeta and tulle and Miss
Week’s
dress,
of the
same
material,
was
fashioned
in a
soft
red tone.
Both young women carried bouquets of red carnations and

stiee,
+

ivy.
Rabbi

Morton

Berman

of Chicago

officiated at the 4:30 p.m. ceremony in the Georgian hotel, Evanston, where the bride’s parents, Mr.

GREETINGS
Percy H. Prior, Jr.
PHOTOGRAPHY

and
Mrs.
Robert
L.
Metzenberg
of Woodpath, gave the reception.
After a wedding trip in Mexico,
the couple will be at home on the

599

tom-mad

last! The cust
— RE
a
older Jooking skin ON* is

ROGER
WILLIAMS
PHONE HI 2-3199

N
a bien

REINCARNS muscie tone
ESTHER

Classique

ry

pora
Not atemp".

:

on.

ar

r “mechanical”
y O firmness t

e you h

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i regular
lift,

rae pormones
the estrogenic
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Beauty Salon

1815 St. Johns Ave.

Hi

and strengthe

PERKINS

N

jend of fabulous

THE

Waves

HOLIDAYS

[

-$Q50 to $2.()00 and up to $5 (00
All

Branches

Specializing
’
SEDGE
Thursday,

PRE

25

Years

TE

LANE

December

of

Beauty

Culture

in

Hair

Coloring

25, 1952

See

of Experience
LE

BI

NN

I

II AR ORT

27 GRIT oh,

Evanston

store

hours,

- Highland

Park

store

9

to

hours,

5:30——-Monday

9

to

5:30

and

Monday

Thursdays,

through

9

to

Ro-

Mrs. Kenneth
Thomas as co-

of Palo Alto,

of

overnight

Lester

dan

A
traditional
ivory satin wedding
dress,
styled
with
a sheer
yoke
trimmed
in seed
pearls,
a
peplum and a long train, was Miss
Beth Metzenberg’s choice for her

marriage

an

Mrs.

Timken

formerly

of

The attendants, Mrs. John Stroud
of Evanston, the matron of honor,
and
Mrs.
William
Springer
of

| Former Resident Visits

eth

of
of

Humphreys

Wings Close Year |
With Gala Party

Huntington, Ind., for a Christmas
visit
with
her
father,
Knowlton
Kelsey, and will return next Tuesday or Wednesday to spend New
Year’s here.

or

Mrs. Richard Crook of McDaniels avenue holds her young
son, Pat, as she registers with Mrs. Jack M. Kelley of Laurel
avenue for the children’s Christmas party given by the Junior
auxiliary of the Highland Park Woman’‘s Club.
Members’
children received gifts at the party which took place in the
Woman’s club.

junior

Miss Stroud Wed Th

9

Saturday
Page

13

�Fete Classmates
Highland
of whom
lege.
Miss

two

Colibrates

25th

Year

Park High school, most
are now attending col-

Boyd

studies
Dickey,

Chub

eda

(Continued from page 12)

is

at
who

years,

Western

home

from

junior

Radcliffe
and
Miss
studied at Purdue for
is

now

Reserve

a

student

college

in

at

Cleve-

land.

How To Buy A Diamond
By

Harry

Levinson

;

When
you purchase a diamond, you make an important
investment. In fact, diamonds
and other gems are considered
an excellent security and are
almost “inflation proof.”

More

affect the price of diamonds at
all. What's more, many experts

So it pays to buy gems wisely and to get the fullest possible value as well as the ex-

beauty
comes

this, many

and

with

distinction

them.

leading

To

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door

Chicagoans

rely on the 64 years of experience
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we
at Levinson’s
offer.

The Toofs Entertain
Exchange Students
Vicky

Toof

Sweetbriar

arrived
college,

briar,

Va.,

last

Christmas
and

home
Sweet-

Mrs.

her

to

spend

parents,

Frederick

of Linden
She

Saturday

with

Mr.

Olmsted

Toof

avenue.

has

as

her

houseguests

students from

Paulette

Ducatez

France;

two

Sweetbriar,
of

Lyon,

Miss Johanne

Sachs

of Holte, Denmark,

and Miss Sach’s

fiance,

Rosenmeier

Fenerich

of

Denmark, who is an exchange student at Carleton
college,
North-

field, Minn.
Miss Toof will leave
Richmond, Va., where

tend

the

Pinnell
briar.

All
Original

Platinum

Value

-

Cts.
Cts.

Mounting

$15,000.

Price

$10,500.

Your house of jewels
Jewelry from $50 to $150,000

739-43 North Clark Street, Chicage
Page

14

RIGHT, Mrs. Alfred G.

Left to right:

liams,
Betsy
Kraft,
David
Rietz, and Byron Bottker.

Rhone,

11.86
4.97

home.

Fred Turner, Peter Walker,
Marion Angster, Marilyn Wil-

Miss

Diamonds
Diamonds

Torrence

for the program.

exchange

Marquise
Baguette

the

is pictured with Mrs. Dudley
Crafts Watson,
center, and
Mrs. Courtland Munroe, first
vice-president of the Garden
Clubs of Illinois. BELOW,
Highland Park High school carolers provide a musical setting

from

57

and

Ravinia

List, left, president of the club,

Miss

27

of

UPPER

As a prominent collector and
gem
importer,
we
offer you
our unique
direct-purchasing
methods. Here is a guarantee
of not only finest quality but
unmatched savings. Since we
ourselves serve leading Loop
jewelers, it’s only good buying
sense to buy directly from the
gem source—and save.
You are invited to join three
generations of Chicagoans who
think first of Levinson’s
for
jewelry
and
gems
of
true
quality.

the

IN THE UPPER LEFT PHOTO,
Mrs. Claburn E. Jones, the
club’s program chairman, and
Mrs. B. F. Reinking, right, who
gave a verbal history of Christmas decorations, examine the
traditional Swedish
_heartshaped wreath studded with
symbolic ornaments
on the

say that diamonds
are probably
the
best
protection
against money inflation.

that

attended

Garden club’s Silver Tea December 12 in the Bannockburn
home of Mrs. C. R. Torrence.

The ordinary ups and downs
of the stock market
do not

citing

than 60 members

guests

IF YOU ASK SANTA
CLAUS TO BRING
COMEFORT, HE'LL
ORDER IT OF US.

debut

before

of

Monday for
she will at-

Miss

returning

Barbara
to Sweet-

holidays

page

with

Washers,

790

LAUREL

AVE.

Miss Durbahn
(Continued

12)

the David-

Macaulay, who is
brief
period
at
air station,
will
and relatives for

Wilmette
Kenna

(Continued

from

as

page

12)

rink defeated that of Mrs. Horace
Vaile of Maple avenue.
The Heather championship starts
the second week in January at the
Curling club on Dundee road, west
of Skokie.

REPAIR
Appliances

Dishwashers,

Disposalls

Miss

white

and

Fugi

flower

ivy.

followed

Their

American

bouquets

Mrs.

Hutchin-

Karen

JUUL

club,

silk

was

and

were

recep-

Durbahn
dress

gowned

corsages

the

at 5 p.m. in the

Mrs.

chiffon

and

chose
Mrs.

in green
of

silk.

miniature

pink roses. Out-of-town guests at
the
wedding
included
Miss
Nan
Kennedy, sister of the bridegroom.
William Troth was best man for
Mr. Kennedy and Haddon Anderson of Chicago,
James
Snapp
of
Milwaukee and Robert S. Hutchinson ushered.

Only the Want

2-1391

served

girl.
ceremony

Kennedy

in

daughter

the

Woman’s

Mc-

Chicago,

carried

tion which
a navy

Mary

and

The couple will live in
when they return from a
trip.

DAY SERVICE

HI

Rose

12)

mums _ surrounded

variegated

For

page

dresses

color

son’s young

Mrs. Hill’s Rink

from

Rockford

velvet

beauty
of

and

of

wore

with

Service On All Electrical Appliances...

EDDIE
a

Christmas

from

sons. Ens. Angus
stationed
for
a
Glenview
Naval
join his parents
Christmas dinner.

Formerly With Harry S. Schram

SAME

a

(Continued

APPLIANCE
Including

Bee

Out-of-Town Guests

values

and

St. Paul
wedding

Ads offer amazing

opportunities

able elsewhere.

Read

Thursday,

December

not

them

avyail-

now!

25, 1952

�YWCA ‘Family’
Parties Continue
Through Holidays

Let us not forget the real
meaning of Christmas

Phe

Young

Women’s

association’s

It isa season of prayer for
the whole world

. . . for

Deerfield

been

as

friends whom

during
house-

hold in Highland Park.
Its residents had their Christmas dinner

CLEANERS

&amp; TAILOR

Road

Deerfield

DEERFIELD,

we

December 16, a bit ahead of schedule, in order to get the group all
together.
After a turkey. dinner
with all the trimmings, 14 of those
who call the YWCA home for most

will toward all men.

728

Christian

has

busy with “family” parties
the holidays as any other

peace on earth and good

ALPHA

home

To all our

of

619

ILLINOIS

the year gathered around
shining Christmas tree for an

the
ex-

change

the

of

last

package

all

joined

presents.
had

in

When

been

have

served.

_ MESIROW
MOTORS
(

INC.
1740 FIRST

ST.

unwrapped,

singing

Christmas

carols with Mrs. Harlan Burns providing a piano accompaniment.

Twenty-five
members
of the
Friendship group met around the
same tree last Thursday for their

Christmas
party.
Santa Claus helped

An
authentic
to add gaiety

to the distribution of gifts among
the girl members, all of whom are

VERY
MERRY
CHRISTMAS

BOWMAN
545

Vine

DAIRY

cember 29, when the Junior hostesses of the Service Men’s center
will give a dinner for some of the
men who have been regular attendants.
Misses Joyce Godie, Nancy
Bernardi and Barbara Doty, with
Mrs. Harlan Burns assisting, will

provide

CO.

Happiness

employees
in
various
industrial
and household fields.
Holiday activities at the “Y” will
continue on Tuesday evening, De-

a gala celebration

health be yours at Christmastime.

for ser-

vicemen unable to return to their
homes for the holidays.
Guest of

Ave.

And all our heartiest
good wishes for a
joyous Holiday season and a New Year
filled

with

every

in

and

Christmas

CENTRAL

See
Tree

Our

Tuesday

evening.

Buchanan

ments.

Mrs.

is in charge

Members

of

and

bands and friends
“Y” at 8 p.m. for

William
arrange-

their

hus-

will meet at the
a gala event.

erected

HARDWARE

STORE

1822 Second St.

HI 2-2756

by

Mr.

and

Pons

THE R. S. HAMBLY CO.
Mrs.

Ann Reynolds
Jeanette Fridell
Mrs. Evelyn Jones
Clayton

Donald

Boynton of Hawthorne lane at their
home in Bailey’s Harbor, Wis., is
told in the December 27 issue of
The
of

Evening

Saturday

Under

the

the

Private

title,

Wish

chapel

Mrs.

Hh b ym
bBer
van tog

O.

Mi
.
xy
Hull

x

Post.

“The

Mystery

Chapel,”

Hartzell

MERRY

CHRISTMAS
and

HAPPY

You A

A

Ky

NEW

Spence describes their reasons for
building it, the difficulty and at
the same time, the joy, involved in
carving

by

WE

WISH

YOU

EVERY
CHRISTMAS
AND
GLAD

MAY

NEW

JOY...
1953

YEAR

BE A
FOR YOU!

hand

font,

baptismal

the

the

and

rail,

other

in painting
decorate

wood surfaces and
41
murals
which

chapel.
A work
Wisconsin

altar

pulpit

the
the

of art, in its setting of
pines and birch trees,

chapel

gradually

“ceased

to be

a project and became a devotion,”
It is open to
Mr. Spence writes.:
the public Sunday afternoons from
June through September.

To Visit In Mt. Carroll
Mr. and Mrs. John N. Teeter of
Cavell avenue and their two children, Diane, 12, and Freddy, 7,
will spend Christmas Day in Mt.
Carroll, Ill., as the guests of Mrs.
Teeter’s
shons.

parents,

the

G.

E.

:

Mrs. John Zenko
R. S. Hambly

A story of the Norwegian

Imported

Ornaments

Yt PF
tyeL

her

Boynton Chapel Is
Subject of Story

blessing.

Come

in
Pensacola,
Fla.,
who
was
a
charter member of the center.
The Paul Lawrence Dunbar club
will close its activities for the year
with a post-Christmas dance next

a
;

honor will be George T. Harrison
Jr., a seaman returning from duty

Mer-

May

your Christmas
be full of joy

and your New Year
Happy

and

Prosperous

�Santa, Please Note:
Wi shing

‘Fiddlers’ Ask For
Instruments, Music

you

One
good
piece
deserves
another, in the opinion of a group
of North Shore musicians.

and yours
ae

| #8

The

our very best
Drop in and see us today
at

| Mack

ate
ag
py

ES

our

Christmas

party
CHILDREN’S

n’ Nill

WEAR

y &amp;

c

1927

Sheridan

Road

Hi

Sh 23 HOE os HY
Pri
a

rite Prie|
eo

~&lt;a

Pritg

Ta.

Pre

2-0010

Ta

Brite Pir

Flute

and

Fiddle

club,

call-

ing itself ‘fa unique chamber orchestra, now old enough to vote,”
appealed this week to supporters
of community music to loan or give
music and instruments which can
enlarge
its work.
The _ club,
through its policy-making ‘“‘sounding board,” cited a list of previous
benefactors
and
said
they
need
now ‘a cello and a bass.”
“We
can use and care for instruments which would otherwise
deteriorate through neglect or idleness,” said Jack Kenney, 623 Jonquil
terrace,
Deerfield,
and
Everett
Millard,
Sycamore
place,
Highland Park, of the club’s board,
Acknowledge Gifts

both for the holiday season
and for the year to come

Siher
1866

Vecdle
HI

Sheridan

As an example of cooperation in
securing
instruments,
the
club
cited two members
who recently
purchased a Heckel model bassoon
which will be played by a third
member
of the club’s
orchestra.

The

club

violas,
ox

heer

an

and

hap-

piness in abundance .. . that’s the
Christmas wish we make to every
one

ELMER

of

you.

CLAVEY

1 Skokie and Clavey

HI 2-4664

a flute

and

Mozart

joyable

SsSVs se seess se

a French

violin

concerto

No.

6

a valuable

experience

ists to play

for

it with

and

the

your

blessed

Z

house

with

be

health,

F

*EZ

44

horn

Two violinist members
in E flat.
are now
studying
and preparing
the solo part, they said, and added

that it will be

PSS

a violin, two

as a “pool”. for players who temporarily lack adequate instruments.
board
members
also
acThe
knowledged a recent gift by Theodore H. Bolle, 143 Glenwood, Glencoe, of a rare score and parts for

the

NURSERY

also has

May

2-7118

&gt;

pros-

perity.

ZOTH CENTURY
1858

and

happiness,

‘«K

S\N

sic co.

TELEVISION
HI

First St.

&amp;

2-0341

en-

violin-

orchestral

ac-

companiment.

he
aR

Among

WITH ALL
SINCERENESS

Be

=

i

™ 2058 First St.

REETINGS

ete as

Let Santa’s jolly spirit be -

Boynton,
John H.

your

Highland Park.
Legionnaires to

= DAHL’S AUTO RECONSTRUCTION CO.
a a a

the

Harmon, Mrs. Everett L. Millard
Sr., and Dr. Samuel Binder, all of

A

HAPPY NEW YEAR

Oe

to

George H. Jones, Theodore C. Butz,

MERRY CHRISTMAS
AND A

Ni
My

donors

the late Mrs. Charles T.
Mrs. Donald S. Boynton,

WE WISH
YOU

previous

orchestra’s collection of music and
and
Mrs.
instruments
were
Mr.

oH
re

e

Season and
happiness

wish to express the Season‘s Greetings

A gala New Year’s party will be
held at the American Legion building
for
all members
and
their
friends.
Robert A. Klingeman has
been
appointed
chairman
of the
party
and
reservations
may
be
made by calling him at HI 2-3482.
Music for dancing will be furnished by the Suburbanites and a
midnight
supper
will be served.
Others on the committee include
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hargreaves, -Mr.

man

Best Wishes

Mr.

Holiday Season

Jr.

and

of

55

tertaining

HUSENETTER
e hae
L

+ 447

Roger Williams

RAEN ER RS

HI

you deserve.

1811

2-0361

St. Johns Ave.

Along

with
:

these

;

holiday

li

greetings is our
little message of thanks to our kind

Mrs.

at

Douglas

Sycamore

some

of

and
J.

Reid

place

are

their

friends

y

en-

A Merry Christmas

a Happy

New

Year to

you one and all!

and

relatives for Christmas
dinTheir
guests include
the
ner,
senior Reids of Sheridan road and

HARDWARE

Ave.

enjoy all the

Leuers.

Reids to Entertain
Christmas Dinner

of the

Holiday

Highland Park Savings &amp; Loan Ass‘n

friends.

to all our friends.

this

Have Gala Party
On New Year’s Eve

and Mrs. Raymond Ward, Mr. and
Mrs. Peter J. Duskey and the Her-

We

guide

2-4387

a cousin, Miss Daye Newby
cago;

and
Park

also

Mrs.

Fairchild

her daughter,

Barbara,

of ChiH.

1930

First St

HI 2-0065

Doty

of 430

avenue.

fee;

�Nativity Pageant Is
Given by Canterbury
Club Christmas Eve

mY BEY ey

See Ber

To

The Pageant of the Holy Nativity
was
presented
Christmas
Eve

BEN

our

clients

(Wednesday) at 5 o’clock in Trinity church by members of the Canterbury club, for the church school

LY Bee} Berd Bred fe

fine

friends

we

Ui

as

pee Brey Bae Pre

Oe

and

extend

our

sincere

pupils and their friends.
Members
of the parish and girls’ choirs sang
during the pageant.
The

Rev.

Jack

D.

Parker

of

St.

Gregory’s chapel, Deerfield, was
the director.
Members of the cast
were:

May Gladness reign in your house .
May good cheer and happiness be permanent guests . . . May worries fly past
your door without stopping, through
Christmas and the whole New Year

Cast
Judy

George

MIKE’S SHOE STORE
41 Sees

Ave.

HIGHWOOD

HI 2-5293

PAUL PHELPS, Inc., Realtors

Includes

McComb,

Bron

Hafner,

and

Tyson,

Robert

Jack

|*

497

HI 2-4580 fi

Central Ave.

Jahn, Jack Holloway, Mead Montgomery, Craig Hafner, D. A. Jones,
Kirk
Robinson,
James
Oppen- | a*&amp;
heimer, Charles Bliss, Marlyn Wilson, Judy Harvey, Peggy Lennox,
Lois Dick, Harriet Sharp, Barbara
Jahn,

Lucy

Grey,

Louise

Tinsel, snow, sleighbells,
holly .. . all let you know $%
that Christmastime
is $%
here.
Time for remem$m
bering ‘“‘Peace On Earth” © i.
and “Goodwill Toward §
Men.”
7.

Millett,

Diane
Churchill,
Jane
Racine,
Nancy Jahn, Michael McComb and
Woody Hansmann.

Roger B. Morrison
during

this

wonderful

Christmas Season . . . and
a Happy

New

Year.

Roger

THAYER’S
DELICATESSEN
835

Central
HI

Home From Texas
For Two Weeks

Ave.

B.

Morrison,

USAF,

base

in

San

Angelo,

Before entering the
Mr. Morrison attended

can

Paint Spot

609 Laurel Ave., HI 2-0528

of

Art

Tea
te Sets

part

Air Force,
the Ameri-

in

Here’s a friendly wish to }
our wonderful customers
and friends.
Enjoy the
happiest of Yuletide
Holidays and a Happy
Happy New Year.

Chicago.

of Highland

Park

MERCHANTS

of

Western

DELIVERY CO.
HI 2-0406

Europe’s

NATO
army, Pvt. Coleman’s unit
is conducting training maneuvers
in the U. S. Occupation zone of
Germany.
Called
the
‘Hell
On

Wheels”

CHRISTMAS
cheerful
‘round the
the season
we like to
Christmas

division,

it was

the

first

American
outfit
to enter
Berlin
as World War II neared its end.
Pvt. Coleman, who entered the

to one and all

army

basic

Our

greeting

training at Fort Riley, Kans.
Before going into the service he attended Highland Park High school.

one,

but

Christmas

time

for

old

last

May,

received

his

noe

Christmas

RELIABLE
LAUNDRY
DRY

a

Pvt. Donald R. Coleman, son of
Mr. and Mrs. H. N. Coleman
of
678 Glenview
avenue,
is serving
in Germany with the Second Armored division.

As

&amp;

Rd.

Serves In Germany

from

Once
again
greetings ring
world. We like
and best of all
say, ‘“A Merry
to you all.

Deerfield

Pvt. Donald Coleman

CHRISTMAS
Inman’‘s

Academy

He is a graduate
High school.

MERRY

1420

MOTORS

Tex.

At Reese he will be trained as
pilot for multi-engined planes.

For A

NELSON

Mr. Morrison has completed the
first phase of pilot training in preflight
school
at Goodfellow
Air

Force

2-0597

Best Wishes

son

of the Donald K. Morrisons of 13'79
Eastwood
avenue,
arrived
home
last Thursday for a two-week stopover en route to his new assignment at Reese Air Force base in
Lubbock, Tex.

CLEANING

2226 Green Bay
HI 2-4551

Road

CO.

Dinner

Riley’s

sister

and
Mrs.
Kenneth,

and

son-in-law,

and

brother-in-law,

Frank
King, their
and their daughter

the

loski’s, all of Morton

Bernard
Grove.

an

old
is

songs,

a
old

wishes and old friends. So

Guests

The
Frank
H.
Rileys
of 1274
Sherwood
road
are
entertaining
relatives today for Christmas dinner.
Their
guests
include
Mr.
Mr.
son,

is

Jab-

may we say, Happy

Holi-

day.

JOHN

ZENGELER,

CLEANERS

1905 Sheridan

Rd.

AND

INC.

DYERS

HI 2-2801

}

�PES

SS

WSS Ss

sSSSSq

In Christmas
Usher
¥ At
Trinity Churc

Our Very Best Wishes for A

&lt;

| Midnight Service to
h

Ne
‘

in

decorated

fs

church,

sanctuary

425

of

Laurel

Trinity|

avenue,

i

mas.

Bie

E. McClay, of Northwestern university’s school of music, the par-

ae ooé

Under

;

ish
=

iS

TY

Nt
hs

choir

jg | carols

a

RINGER
457

Cantrol

oa

REAL

|preach

Mf

ave,

HI

2-6600

oe

ey

eonr

will

sing

Charles

on

y

the

Rev.

The

Need

of

“God’s
Noah

11:30

Extend
Best

on

will

Wishes

Foolishness

and

#A

Assisting will be

p.m.

Our Very
:

#

rector, |

Harris,

Fehl,

We

familiar | *%

The

U.

#

George

the

season.

| Man’s Wisdom.”

_

OF

direction

of the

{the Rev.

¥

co.

the

Friends,

will

usher in the observance of Christ-|

i

To Our Many

The traditional midnight service | *s
the candle-lighted evergreen-|
#/

c
Ny

Bf)

SEWING

MACHINE

CO.

Ph.D.

service

will

be

preceded by a recital on the AllenRehfeldt Memorial carillon and by
the singing of a group of carols

by the choir.
At

Manse

11

members

and a happy,
'
Naw
¥
appy New
Teor
to ‘all

ce

a

‘#4

eee

service

brief

¢|

we wish you con_

joyous Christmastime.

CALL GLENCOE 538

Poe Nore Nae MN ies hoe # Yin D De

No

;

Poe vont

Pee oe

ee

ee

ton toe ee

a as a

bt

a

a a

message

:

i
S

¥

mt

:

TOWN

is

SHOP

Holy communion will also be|#
celebrated at 7:30 a.m. Christmas

:

:

HI

2-0944

bas? tte

me

SG

oat toed

taste

~My t Bai io?

eS

bas?

Fi

145’s

Decem-

ber meeting in the Legion

ican

Memor-

ial

Legion

at

Post

by

Scouts

and

Troop

31

Boy

Cub

Scouts,

Scouts

5
es
es
Po
re
tas

this

happiness

the

wonderful

ave served
have

ee

past

year.

RY

\

}

M4,

ee

:

}

VELL

TE

Stes

|

AGE

,

HARDWARE
817 Deerfield Rd.

xy. Pe

Deerfield 864

}

|

preceded

At the

Senior

the

We

Wish

All

initiation

auxil-

of Our

iary members who are volunteers
at Downey hospital described the
work
they
do
for the
veterans.
The members are Mrs. Phillip E.
Cole, Mrs.
Chris
W.
Matthiesen,
Mrs. Oscar Iverson, Mrs. Bernard
P. Sheehy and Mrs. Mabel ‘Duffy.
Names of new members and their
branch of service are as follows:

meeting

Patrons

Army

Air Force;

Navy;

Ira

William

B. Cope,

Dorsey,

Army;

Michael

A

A

Noa,

;

Merry Christmas

&gt;

.

’

and

GREETINGS

Happy

New

Hackbarth,

Army;

Alvin

:

MEYER’S

Year

BAKERY

S. Gilroy, Army Air Force; Wil-| #% 583 Central Ave.
A.

Army;

Robert

A.

HI 2-0193

J.

Klinge-

a

2

ite

67

6

and Shoe Rebuilders

Page 18

ie

‘aa

of Legion

its
oe
es bo

CLEANERS

a

#4

to

building.

Walker, Army Air Force;
B. Olson,
Marines,
and

ae ine aet bac bce hae ae at ae as as ae
ia

all

eopl
pre

Navy; William P. Peddle, Army;
Sherwin R. Rodgers, Navy; John
J. Rose, Army Air Force; Francis

OE:
1875 St. Johns Ave.

enough

seem

| ated into membership of the Amer-

L. Sheahen, Navy; James H. Siljestrom, Marine Air Corps; George
Srnanek Jr., Navy;
Waldemar
E.
Treichel,
Army
Air
Force;
Raymond
C.
Ward,
Navy;
Charles
Marty,
Marines;
John
Morgan,
Army; John Hayden, Army; John

CENTRAL

to

can’t

man, Army Air Force; Raymond J.
Mann,
Marines;
Leroy W. Mintz,

;

ios

a

Into Legion | #3
y| Initiated
Twenty-six young men were initi-

Iverson,
et ios

wish

*%

i

Twenty-six Men Are

wz | lard

ah

%

just

L. Boilini, Marines; Guy T. Caselli,

me 794 /Central Ave.

8

rector.

a|

We

Donald A. Athanas, Navy; Henry

is

fo

the

by

be

ling the service.

ceremony.

&lt;

will

%

The nursery will be open to care |

Talks

%

there

§%#|

te

a

family,

for infants and small children dur-

=

Be ae i coh ce heat hae baa et baa ae

and

eee
|

SALON

BILLI‘'S SWIRL

parish

|

3

tinued success during this

of the

Day,

in-

the

ne

Christmas

church|
of the
pupils
cluding
school, will attend the family celeSi | bration of holy communion.
The|
= | girls’ choir of 40 voices will sing|

f

May

The public is invited.

o’clock

HI 2-0305
tga

Sika

Thomas,

Army.

‘Moves

to Highland

When Christmas thoughts
are everywhere about us.. .
we pause to think of the
many loyal friends whom it
is our pleasure to serve and
to wish them a

Merry Christmas

Brandt
Ramon

and

Park

S. G. Taylor Jr., formerly of
the Union League club of Chicago,
has moved -to Highland Park and
is making his home with his daughter and son-in-law, Dr. and Mrs.
Douglas Boyd of Wade street.

a

Happy New Year
A.

MORDINI

670 Central Ave., Highland

ra Nf

I

Bea Te

Tey Is Ta I

Ta

..

.

Jeweler

Park, Il.

Is eet i

Phone

Tees es a

RR CR

HI 2-3905

es Me ne

Thursday, December

ga eA

25, 1952

�Arthur Meyerhoff to
Head Allied Art Group
Of Chgo. Heart Drive
The

a
Merry Christmas
to You All!

CHESTNUT
503

Central

COURT

BOOK

SHOP

Ave.

HI

2-6400

Chicago

ing,

Happy

and

as chairman

entertainment

New

Year

is our wish
to you

of the Allied

and

music.

The

Ball

addition

to

riest Christmas
Happy

O’NEILL’S
1746

ACE

Second

HI

We

the

A

veteran

Mr.

the

AEF

of

the

First

Meyerhoff
for

2-1150

Wish

Patrons

two

and

Friends

Merry Christmas
and

a

Happy New Year

World

served

All

of Our

All-American

Girls’
Baseball
Management
association
and
a director
of The
Chicago
National league baseball
club.
His agency was a pioneer
in comic page advertising.

War,

New Year!

Club

heading

the

and very

HARDWARE

Meyerhoff agency of Chicago and
Milwaukee, Mr. Meyerhoff is own-

of

Our sincere good

wishes for your very mer-

Arts

division’s quota is $34,000.
Goal
of the Chicago Heart association
in the 1953 drive is a total of
$600,000.

er-president.

Prosperous

of us!

division, section A, of the association’s 1953 “There’s New Hope For
Hearts” campaign. The Allied Arts
division includes advertising, publishers, the graphic arts, paper,
photography,
newspapers,
radio
and television stations, theaters,

In

and a

To all of you., . from all

association

today announced the appointment
of Arthur E. Meyerhoff, 2427 Montgomery road, president of Arthur
Meyerhoff and company, advertis-

Owns

A Merry Christmas

Heart

with

years.

He

pioneered in the use of anti-biotics

Koshy

for the growth of animals, and as
a result of his research founded
Myzon, Ince.

Women’s

251

;

&amp; Children’s Wear

Waukegan

Avenue

HIGHWOOD

Legion Building

HI 2-0976

Directors Pick
New Officers

Spirit Time
By Liquor Service
TO ALL
OUR FRIENDS
OLD &amp; NEW
A
VERY MERRY
CHRISTMAS

LIQUOR SERVICE CO.
FINE WINES &amp; LIQUORS
FOR FAST FREE DELIVERY CALL HI
337 Waukegan

2-1500

Chris W. Matthiesen was named
president of the Legion Memorial
Building
association
this
month,
heading a group which will serve
during 1953. Directors chose Henry

C. Eitner as vice president; Frank
J. Zipoy, treasurer, and DeWitt J.
Manasse, secretary.
Committee
members
and
chairmen announced by Mr.
thiesen are as follows:

House committee—Henry

their
Mat-

Eitner,

chairman;
Miller
W.
Schreiner,
Herman
Leuer,
Harry
Rudolph,
Osear
Iverson,
Winfield
Zimmer
Louis
Habercamp,
members;
ground
committee— Donald
Bernardi,
chairman;
budget
and
finance committee — Jerry C. Leam-

ing, chairman;
Frank J. Zipoy,
William C. Heinrichs, William J.
Rectenwald

rison,

Jr.,

and

Alan

J.

The

management of Vogue Cleaners and Employees
wish you all a glorious, joyous holiday.

VOGUE
2055 Green

Bay

CLEANERS

431 Roger Williams

1862 First Street

Har-

members.

Camera

Club to

Meet January 5
The next meeting. of the Highland Park Camera club will be held

at 8 p.m.

January

Merry Christmas

5 in the Amer-

and Happy New Year

ican Legion building on Sheridan
road.
Visitors are cordially invit-

Every Happiness

This Blessed
CHRISTMAS DAY

GSELL’S DRUG STORE
Park

Thursday,

December

25, 1952

ed.
Members’ 11x14 black and white
prints will be judged by Nathan
Rosenberg and his committee, who
will select a “Print of the Month”
and three honorable mentions.
Miss June Nelson and her committee
will judge
colored
slides
and
will choose
a “Slide-of-theMonth” and three honorable men-

to All
CORRESPONDENCE
1860 First St.

NOOK
HI 2-6680

�NS African Violet
Society Schedules
January Meeting

Wishing you
a very

Mrs. James C. Snow of Lakeside
place will open her home for the
January 7 meeting of the North
Shore African Violet society.
Featured guest will be Mrs. Donald
Hansen of Evanston, an authority
and
lecturer
on African
violets,
who
has titled her talk, “Crosspollination.”
An open discussion
will follow the lecture.

ERRY CHRISTMAS
and

a

HAPPY NEW
YEAR

The December
society was held

RK NEWS AGENCY
FRED

meeting
recently

of
in

you

a_

L. RICE

season

cheer.

Merry

In

short—

Christmas!

HOLIDAY
GREETINGS

% 510

FURRIER—TAILOR—DRY

Central

a new

hobby

charge
Frank

of
O.

place,
Mrs.
Carr

CLEANING

Ave.

Two

&gt;}among

We

family a very joyous Christmas and a New Year

and

Members

NEW

in

president

of

Pomper
and
of Deerfield.

the

Mrs.

We extend to all
our friends . . . Joyous
Yuletide Greetings

society;
Larry

YEAR

TOO

this project
are Mrs.
Straight
of Briarwood
K.

North

the

Shore

members

residents

are

of a sponsor-

ing committee which is launching a
membership
drive
this month
to
create an auxiliary organization for
Bellefaire, regional child care center in Cleveland. The new organization will be called “Friends of
Bellefaire.”
The
sponsoring
committee
includes Everett Michaels, 1100 Linden avenue and Charles Satinover
of Glencoe.
Friends of Bellefaire will establish a development
fund to help
meet special needs of the institution, such as increased psychiatric
facilities
and
other
services
not
covered in the budget.
Additional
chapters
will
be
formed in other Mid-west cities following the Chicago drive. Through
such
auxiliaries,
the
Bellefaire
board of trustees hopes to meet a
budgetary
deficiency
which,
this
year, may exceed $70,000.
Last year Bellefaire served children from 32 states.

take this opportunity to wish you and your

EARHART

outlet.

WONDERFUL

N. Shore Residents
Aid Committee For
Bellefaire Auxiliary

M. BELMONT
mo

#

“The Amateur’s Way.”
Plans were formulated to start
“hobby”
projects at several hospitals whereby
violet plants will
be given by the society to bed-ridden
patients.
It is hoped
that
the care and propagation of such
violet plants will give the patients

rich in joy, brimming with
good

A Merry

home of Mrs. Herman D. Pomper of
Woodland road.
At this meeting
Mrs. William H. Brinkman of Clavey court was guest of honor while

+

wish

Wish
You

Christmas
and
A Joyous
New Year

the
the

Mrs. Charles A. Simpler of Lincoln avenue presented a program, |

We

We

LLOYD

—REALTORS—

Greetings
We

hope

your

..

.

Christmas

will

be joyous and your New Year
filled

with

happiness

and

achievement.

Lynn Allison Koelper Is
Baptized December 14

BEST WISHES
FOR

A

HAPPY

HOLIDAY

Deerfield

Lumber
DEERFIELD,

&amp;

Fuel Co.

ILL.

Deerfield

2

accept

our

Christmas

tral avenue, was baptized December 14 in the Bethany church with

health and happiness

the Rev. A. P. Johnson officiating.
Lynn’s sponsors
were
her aunts,
Mrs. Daniel Vetter of Central avenue and Mrs. Edward Koelper of
Arlington Heights; and her uncle,
Erwin
Koelper
of Mt.
Prospect,
Ill.
The
maternal
grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Vetter of De-

SEASON

Rlease

Lynn
Allison
Koelper,
seven
weeks
old daughter
of Mr.
and
Mrs. Herman G. Koelper of Sylvan
Lake,
Ill., formerly
of 832 Cen-

Tamble
avenue,
gave
a dinner
party in their home following the
ceremony.

compliments,

our wishes for your
in the coming

SHELTON’S
481

RAVINIA

Roger Williams Ave.

year.

GRILL
HI 2-3306

�Entertain

Kindergarten

Mothers

Miss

Davidow

The Lakeview terrace
the Leonard
Davidows
setting

for

a

party

by their daughter,
Miss
cago

home of
was the

given

Ann,

Monday

in honor

Tracy Oppenheimer
and Robert Katz of

Mass., who
this Sunday.

Doricks

Entertains

of

of ChiBoston,

are to be married
About 60 guests at-

tended the fete. Miss Davidow is
enjoying
a
holiday
from _ her
studies at the University of Chi-

cago.

Mrs. George Niblock Jr., takes a cookie from
garten teacher.
Second and third from left are
Mrs. Raymond Lange is at
Mrs. Peter Erickson.
Mrs. H. E. Holmes and Mrs. H. C. Edwards, also

NSCI Alumni Plan
Winter Conclave
At Lake Geneva

Miss
Holly
Stair,
daughter
of
Mr. and Mrs. Bowen Stair of Cary
avenue and president of the student body at Smith college, North-

The second winter conclave, at
the George Williams College camp
in Lake Geneva, sponsored by the
alumni of the North Shore Congregation
Israel,
will
be
held
the
weekend of January 2.
Those attending will be 44 high
school students
of the congregation, who will leave by bus Friday
morning, returning Sunday afternoon, January 4.
Among the activities will be winter sports such as skiing, tobogganing,
and _ ice-skating.
Other
events will also be included.
Planning the conclave are Ethel

dress

Mass.,

at

service

the

at

will deliver
annual

Trinity

an

College

church

adDay

Sunday

at

11 a.m.
Jack Harris, a postulate for Holy
Orders at the Virginia Theological
seminary,
will
read
the
service.

He

is the son

of the Rev.

Charles

U. Harris, rector of the church,
and Mrs. Harris.
Also invited to
take part are Earl Sproul II, son

of the senior Earl Sprouls of Green
Bay road and John Hansmann, son
of Mr. and
of Lincoln

Mrs. Elwood
avenue.

Hansmann

Peter Ross, a senior at Princeton university, will be unable to
take part in the service since he
will spend the holidays traveling
with the Princeton Triangle show.
Participating as acolytes will be
Bruce Patterson, Todd Griffith, Wil-

liam Rutherford, James Kilpatrick
and William Temple. Walter Chaffee, Charles Allen, Parker Hall,
David
Tony
Ralph

Hugle,
William
Makelin,
Newey,
William
Ostrander,
Trieschmann
and
Russell

Caro,

chairman,

Winnetka;

Airman Lawrence Shanley
Spends Christmas In HP

Marnie

Meltzer, Chicago; Dick Cohn, Glencoe; Ruth Fell, Winnetka; Howard
Yaffe,
Winnetka;
and
Marianne

Klein

and

Beverly

of Highland

Schreiber,

Malcolm

arrived

home

Williams college, WilliamsMass., to spend the Christ-

Following the service all college
students of the parish will be the
guests of the Rector and Mrs. Harris at the rectory for a _ buffet
luncheon.

mas holidays with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Harold L. Nelson of Elmwood drive.
A sophomore at Williams, Malcolm was chosen to sing a tenor
solo
with
the
Williams
College
Glee club in a recorded program
which will be heard over a nationwide hookup January 11.
Mr. Nelson, a graduate of Highland Park High school, is the recipient of a seven year scholarship
providing four years at Williams
and
three
at any
post
graduate
school of his choosing.
Malcolm is
taking
a liberal arts course
and
is active on the school paper.

Attend

Visits From

Whitney
as

have

been

invited

to

act

ushers.

Joining the parish choir for this
service

will

be

Barbara

Barbara
Clemence,
Cora Lee Griffith,
Joanne

Holden,

Elizabeth

Curtis,
Harris,

Patricia Kilpatrick,

Lewis,

Ricker,

Cynthia

Smalley,

Ellen

Ann

Britton,

Ann
Diana
Thayer

Forbes

Sinclair,

Nancy

Whitney

and

Betty

Wilson.

Convention

Mr.
and
Mrs.
Arthur
R. Cook
of Cedar avenue attended a business
convention
recently
in Atlantic City, N. J.
After the convention, the Cooks

stopped off at Cumberland,
to visit Mr. Cook’s parents.
Thursday,

December

25,

Md.,
1952

Appleton

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Robert

M.

7.

avenue

family

are

anticipating

gathering

mas dinner. Mr. and Mrs. William
P.
McKanna
(Mary
Dorick)
of
Lockport,
Ill,
and
their
three
daughters, Kathy, 5, Peggy, 3, and
Sharon, 1 year, will be present, as

well as the James
Dorick)

of

children,

all of us at the bank. We

Christmas —and

Member

of Federal

La

N. Doyles

Grange,

Terry,

and

5, and

(Alice
their

Steven,

wish you a happy

a new

year

Deposit

Insurance

ey

of HIGHLAND

to match

it!

Corporation

0 Te

PARK

the home
of Mrs.
Strieby’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Cabonargi
of Cedar
avenue.
Another
daughter, Mrs. James M. Hape and
her husband
of Columbus,
Ohio,
will also attend the family gathering.
The Cabonargis’ son and daugh-

ter-in-law,
Theodore

Wash.,
ily

for

Lt.
D.

Cmdr.
Lent

are unable
the

of

and

Mrs.

Bremerton,

to join the fam-

holidays.

Hosts to Denver

Guest

Mrs. C. K. Thomas
of Denver,
Colo.,
arrived
Friday
to
spend
more than two weeks in Highland
Park as the houseguest of her son
and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
A. L. Thomas of Ridge road.
The
two young members of the Thomas’
household are Allison, 6, and Mich-

and a

Happy New Year
stevict

ael, 3.

Elks Lodge Completes
Plans for Gala Party

be available

NORTH

a

for Christ-

Strieby

Dancing will begin at 10:30 p.m.
at the New Year’s Eve party the
Elks Lodge No. 1362 is planning
mother, Mrs. Peter Reineck of Ap- in the clubhouse on Laurel aveReservations are to be made
pleton, Wis. The Reinecks have nue.
three children, Sarabess, 10, Nancy, |in advance and refreshments will

Thomas,

large

Family Gathering

Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Reineck of
299 Barberry road have as their
houseguest
over
Christmas
his

9, and

Temple

and their son, Robin of Cincinnati,
Ohio, are celebrating Christmas at

Park.

A. Nelson

Mr. and Mrs. William Dorick
and their daughter, Elizabeth, of

to all of you, our friends and neighbors, from

Airman Lawrence B. Shanley is
home
from
Randolph
Air
Force
base, San Antonio, Tex., to enjoy
the Christmas ftestivities with his
mother, Mrs. Katherine M. Shanley of Hazel avenue, and his grandfather, James Martin of the same
address.
He will return to his duties January 2 and leave shortly thereafter
for Palm Beach, Fla., where he will
continue
his
course
in airplane
fueling.
Mrs. Shanley’s Christmas dinner
guests today include her sister and
brother-in-law, Mr. and Mis. John
B. Wing
of Sherwood road,
and
their children, Diane, Barbara and
Kate.

both

Malcolm A. Nelson Home
From Williams College
For Christmas Holidays
from
town,

Reunion

the plate held by Miss Gladys Zak, kinderroom mothers, Mrs. Ray Anderson and
the right.
The group, with the help of
room mothers, planned the party.

College Students
From Trinity Church
Have Service Sunday

ampton,

Plan

SIDE

CLEANERS &amp; DYERS CO.

buffet style.
Page

21

3.

�er

|

LEGAL NOTICES

LEGAL NOTICES

Assessment
TOWN OF DEERFIELD
The following is a correct list of
all Personal Property and changes

in

Real

Estate

Deerfield
thereon as
Treasurer
published
wit:

in

the

»-Town

of

with the assessed value
extended by the County
for the year 1952 and
as required by law, to

Town of Deerfield
CITY OF LAKE
FOREST
Richard
Roderwald
City
of Lake Forest com at
intersn cen In Walden
Lane extd Sly &amp; S In
SE% NW%
Sec 3 the N
alg extn cen In sl St &amp;
alg cen In sd St 64.62 ft
mol to pt of tangency
in sd Rd th NWly alg
een
In
sd
St_
(radius
100

ft)

154.38

ft

to

pt

of
curve th contg Wly
14.61 ft th NEly alg a
In forming an angle of
93 deg 55 min
50 see
{measd
from
W
to N
with cen sd St) 213.15 ft
mol
to cen
In Ravine
betw Lot 312 &amp; 313 th
alg
cen
In
sd_ ravine
364.88 ft to cen In of
branch
ravine at NEly
cor lands convd by Doc
560810 th Sly alg cen In
sd branch ravine 340 ft
mol
to sd S In SE%
NW% th E on sd S ln
334.55 ft to pob (ex S
36 ft)
&amp;
(ex Walden
Lane) pt Lot 312 &amp; Jessamine
Ave
ee
vac) 1.2 a part Lot
...312
L G ARRIES 1ST ADDN
TO NORTHMOOR TERRACE
G J Bina ve W*)
Lot
OM

I

i lbs

veces

18

2

Cylver

Kniskern

........

3

~

Joseph

E

Rose

(ex

13560

SUB

Lot
22 &amp; all
cies
Earnest Gherardini (ex W
wae

et)

IN

100.

ft

ft

S

290

ft

W

S

~,,:

150

51850
16260
8730

N

11680
11

1980
4050

59

4300

172

ft

..

81

Marco
&amp;
Barbara
Ugolini beg on N In Prairie
Ave 220.27 ft W of W
In of Morgan Pl th N
125

ft

to

pt

218.23

ft

W of W In Morgan PI
th W
parl with N In
Prairie Ave 22.68 ft mol
to E In Lot 1 in Santi
Bros Sub th S alg sd E
In 125 ft to N In Prairie
ct 24.72 ft mol the E
550
Nig disose es 6

E

6

tae .t
(ex W 100 ft)
Rita
De
Bartolo
pt Lot
54 daf beg at N E cor
th SEly alg Ely In 28.93
ft th W parl to N In
to W In sd Lot th N
to N W cor th E on N
MEE
DOD. 6. stn se sos cs 54
Mary I &amp; Irene A Santi
moO ft § 400 ft....... 58
BELLEIS SUB
Frank
Fiocchi
Olea
&amp;
may

daote

_ Hubert
155

2-8

&amp;

J

Lots

90

ft)

&amp;

(ex

15830
4600
14880

1

2

&amp;

SUB
..8

Lennert H Johnson E 55
ft W 155 ft Lots 12&amp;
3
LUCY D COMSTOCKS
Frank Fortunato (ex S 90
Rak
kip s Uo ks ss
4
Charles
J Nustra
(ex §
E

146

mY

4

3

5410

15

2540

15

i

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&amp;

50

&amp;

we Paul

OC. Ori

Page

22

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to

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(ex

9000
33500
8800

500
8220

27

3600

28

6520

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a

pt

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Prem
hwys)

Bec

S

Bernardi,

320

alg

/

W

to pob (ex
pt of Blks

LEI Oe Vals

bed

ae

28

Joseph Calzia et al Th pt
Lot 14 in Bentley’s sub
daf com on S In sd Lot
at a pt 485 ft W ow SE
cor sd Lot th W on §
In sd Lot 100 ft th N
on a In dr perpen to S
In
6h) Low?
14. a: dist
of 163.95 ft mol to cen
In of Wrendale Ave th
NEly
alg
cen
In
of
Wrendale Ave
101.8 ft
mol th § on a In drawn
perpen to S In sd Lot
and parl with W In and
100 ft thr frm a dist of
182.7 ft mol to pob (ex
sts &amp; hwys) pt of .
Frank P Hawkins All “th
pt Lot 14 in Bentley’s
sub orig plat of Highwood
lyg
W
of a In
drwn perpen fr a pt 535
ft W
of SE
cor
Lot
14 &amp; S of cen In of
Wrendale
Ave as relocated being pt of Blk
SANTI

BROS

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Wly
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com
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in

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sd

28

2040

SUB
7300

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4540
4050
4340
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6260

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POFTOEL,
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AUR OBG es ese
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Pisitieuits
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Gee

Fowler, Eugene T
Fraulini, Arthur
Freddie’s Tavern
Fred's Department Store
Fuller, Victor
G &amp; L Auto Body Shop
Gaggioli, Gustave
Galanos, Michael
eee ee ee
Galassini,
Guido
Frank

Aldo

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resese

eene

Ernest
Foust

Gibson,

John

F

Gilruth, Robert A
Giu diani, Dominic
Giuliani, Joseph
Glass, Charles
Goldstead, Mervin ......6.seceese08
Gorsi, Anyelo tee ee ewe ewer e wer eeee
Grandi, Arthur F
Grandi Bros Garage ee
Grandi, Elio

wenn

ener

er aene

Grant,

ewes

wees

Grinde, Eldon Pe ee ee
Grotti, Ray
Grotti, Raymond A
ee eo
Gualandri, Angelo Pe
Gualandri, Armando
Guilandri, Joseph ee
Guilandri, Tony eed eceeseeseocrses
ee
ee
Guerrini, Pietso ee

reso

eas

ero

Cervi, John J
CREGONID: APO. viii s dais Viclela a
Cimmarusti,
Frank
Cioni, LaVerne
Club ‘7’

coves

peas

eooereceneere

Cclumbia Household Appliances ..
Contig, iJ Onn Orns pate ees abe teles
Connolly, Thomas
E Jr
........
Contri Bros Grocery &amp; Mkt
Cooperative Trading Inc
CODD
TAGWe
Ca eis BRUNE Vicon
Guido

Corso, James eee ee were eee eee esone
BOs
FLUE Fae kk eve Oh bale owls
Cowgill, Edwin E Jr a
Credi, John P eee eet tere wee eens
Croci, Evelyn Sete ewer erm eesessese
Croci, Geno
Crovetti, Chas

Cumming

Guglielmi,

Antonio

Guido, Mrs Mary
Gultch, Leonard J
Haincheck, Eugene
Haines, Edward W
llangren,

Edward

Hangren, Robert C
Hansen, Herold ee
Hansen’s Pastry Shop
eee ewe e ener
Hansen, Ramona
a
Hartman,
Adam
Hayward, Wm E
Hedrick,

Frank

scone

eeee

E

ee
Hellsvick, Mrs E ee
Henderson, Iva M see ee eee
Herbert, Josef eee meee ewer
Hideout Tavern
ee
Highwood Barber Shop

ey
ewes
eee

eee
e wane

reerees

roses

egeeoeenee

ereosevseeete

Antonio

Fred

D

eee

ewe

ce

meee
eee

oor

ee

reser

ewer

ccer

sip ee

nee

eeee
seses

eres

see

een eeres

eee

Albert

ee
Managlia, Francesco
Mancini, Seconda poe eseeereeeseee
Marchette. Joe eee eee e eee reese ene
Marek, Edward Pe ee ee ee
Maresco, James A eee eee ewer ew ene
eee

Margelli,

e eee

rer

eees

eee weet ener tenes
Margelli,
ee
ee ee
ee ee
Marnini,
eee
eee
eset eee eer eeees
Martz, H C
Mary Jane Bowling Lanes
Masini, Ernest coer ere ese eeseeeees

Frank

ee

Masini, Robert seer eee eee weet eee
Matchen, Henry J eee ee ewes en eee
Mazzetta, Oswald aoseressteoeerecss
oe
ee
Mazzetta, Pete ee
McGraw, Durmont W eee eee eee eee
eee
en
eee
wees
McKenna, Mary E
McKillip James eee e emer e eee ew roses
eee
ee
McLeran,
John
eee ener eer eereseres
MeNeill, Hugh
eee ee ee meee ewes eee
Medici,
Atilio
Medici, Louis eee e eee rere ee oeseses
eee eee eee et eeece
Menduno, Frank
Merrill Sales, Inc eee weer e eee eeeee
Milani, Mrs Clara ........+.05.- ie
Miller,
H A
Mini, Louis F
Minorini, James L cee ee eer es eeee
Minorini;,
Minorini,
Minorini,

Joseph

.....s..ch
eee

ee

were

eet

ee

wee

vanes

e ewe
eee

tee

ee

eae
e eee

Miotti, Michael
Mobile, Carmen A cee ere ere seers
sere were rete ewer
Mocogni, Joseph
Moe, George A.....&lt;+sebee ween
Molendi, Peter eee eee eee neers eeee
Molendy, Leno eee eee eee eee eee eee
Moley, Joe eee ene mew eww reese sees
Molinari, Dominic sewer ewe er eeene
seme

Monfardini,
ee

severe

Lyle, Albert E ee re
Maddalozzo, Mike ace eee erent ew ene
Madden, Thos ......-++++0+- WP~he
Maestri’s Auto Service Sta eens
eo eeererseeeneee
Magnani,
James
Mahoney, Bart woe eee ewes eresr tees
eee
rere ee ee eeees
Mainliner Tavern

Masini,
eee

rr

John

Malmauist,

ee

Ce

wer

Lolli, John
| a
Lolli, Joseph Wevneeankeae
Lomoro, Mary Jo eer e eee weer eeeee
Lomoro, Mike Pee ee
Lonngren, Howard . weer eee eres
Lopiano, John J cheers eee oan. wee
Lorusso, Joe acer reseret eres he eee
Louise’s Beeuty Salon eect eaters
ee
ee
Lucchi, Mildred ee eee

Lutgen,

Joseph

Giarelli,
Giarelli,

J

Lucenti, Joseph
Lucente, Nickolas
Lunardi, Mike eee
Lustigan, Dr H B

ee

ipo

Victor

Lucente,

Club’

Gaivani,

Lenzi,

Lenzini, Adngelo er
Gene ...-..-+eeeeeeeeees
Lenzini,
wee cere sees e ees eae
Lenzini,
wate ewer eres eeeeees
Lenzini,
ee
ee
ee
Lenzini,
Lenzini, Virgil eee er ee seccoesseees
pa
coes
cv
e 6
o he oD
Leonardi, John F
eee eee eer ese eee ee
Leopardi, Tony
eee
eeeee
Liebschutz Liquor Co Inc
Linari, Corinto eee e eee sores ee eee
Linari, Domenick ee
Linari, Edward acoso ce ese Coe 0 eS
Lindblom, Edwin J ee
Lindstrom,
August
Liquor Service Inc
Listander, Gerhard ee
eco

Chas

Fleming, Clarence V
PO,
Pred. Ay hi ys shee Ses
Fortunato, C J
Fortunato, Leo
“400

Highwood Grocery &amp; Market
Highwood Produce Co ....-.--&gt; sone
Highwood Texaco Service .....-+Highwood
‘Theatre
‘as
Hogue, Oliver R eee ete er ee rere eee
ee
Hogue, Robert L Pe
ee
Hohlfelder, Jean ee
Hoie, Lars eet orererccescearense re &amp;
Holmberg, Gus A eer eoereeseeeeees
Holniker, Seymour
Howk, Marlowe R eer eoeersrererene
Huegel, Anna Mae
Iattoni, Bruno
Ideal Cleaners weer eres seees ee eee
eee weer
r seer
Ippolito, James W
oeeeeeseessese
Irene’s Restaurant
ee
Jacobs, Joseph M
Jacobs, Richard J ee
Jacobson, Carl M weer ererense reese
ee
ee ee
ee
James, Melvin
Jonnson, Elmer ......--2+seeeeeee
weer
eersreereeere®
Johnson,
Esther
sohnson, George B ee
wee ewe
eeeeeeeee
Johnson, Harold
Johnson, Hubert weer eee eee eeeeeee
Johnston, Dr Sherman DDS a
Jorgensen, Chris J ee
Juleff,
H C Jr ee
Juleff, H C eee e scree eese reer none
Kalk, Edward ...-.--+-++e+eees ire
Kay, George wore rersrererereee eee
were eee ep ersesesreeeee
Keeler, Wm
Kehrwald, Robert A eee e ne eeneee
eee er ee eae e rere eee
Kenry, George
Kenry, Katherine E ......--- isu
ee
Kerhlicker,
Henry
Kiefer, Peter ..---++sssecseeres en
Kiehl, Ear} wee reer er eeresereseeree
Konsler, Carl W ee ee ee
Kraft, Fredrich eee eee e reer en ee eee
Ladurini, Americo ee ee
Laegeler Pharmacy Inc eeeeeeeeee
Lamberti, Primo were rer ee ew ee eee
Lanera, Mike ......-+-seseeeee vial
Larsen, George W cere vceso seers
Larson, Andrew E aoe ereeeooseene
Lattanzio, Michael ee
Lawler, John M eee ese senor eesee
eon eesneoesrer ee eee
Lazo,
Eusebio
Lazzaretto, Joseph er
Leid, George Henry eee eeerereeees
Lelli, Adolph eceeesercere er eens Fe
Lempinen, Emil ee
ee
ee
Lempinen, Otto ee
Lenzi, Ettore eoeeereseeseoeseeese

Llewellyn,

teem

eer
eo

otek

ic kistetee o hig si aio hagas
DBO. bis oo bix rove 6 ood Ake c ioe

Fantasia, Nicholas
Fasci, Stanley J
Favelli, Leonard
Favelli, Pcno
Felicioni,

Giannasi,

bala
al ee

eee

Hoch

PRORIGL

Giambi, Gilbert cere weer acer
Gia inelli, Ferdinand
Giangiorgi, Bruno
Giangiorgi, Clara eee ewer eee
Giangiorgi Grocery &amp; Mkt
Giangiorgi, Reno

Cervetti,

Corsini,

OMOEA

Gentilini, Gino
Geren: OGOU Fo eaves
CON
ed
Gheridini, Alberta ys sie 6 oes 3 Vines
Gherardini, Ernest serene eee ene ne
Gherardini, John ee
Gherardini, Melford ee
ee
Ghini,
Fidel

re eeeee

Amidei, Arthur
weet ewer nee eres see
Amidei, Bruno
Amidei, Dante
Amidei, Hubert eee mere eee reer eeee
Amidei Garage
BUGOVHOR; OE Te Wl si Mieke hie po cee
Anderson, Chester F (DDS)
Anderson, Oscar T
PROUT,
I sa ig wah a hing bale w'e/os
Angiuli, Pete ..... BA Wd wa alk nin scans
Antonettd, Famed ied lbs sid de éses
Ariano, Joseph
.......... bia ate
Army Store, ERG Wiildioisie
vie bake aes
Atlantic &amp; Pacific Tea Co, The. é

SOMITE

PP RVMIL,

ih Pek ee le

Gandilfi, Neil ee
Garavaglia, John

eceeveses

e eee

PeRULE,
MP RTPIG;

oa

Garino,
James
F
Gateway
Service

eesens
een

ee

ls

Cassedy,
Edward
Castellani,
Nello
OStOS
FON
bs

D

| POM

Ms
PRMD
5 |b
a4 Bis oe a Hw alee
PIMOMIEOT GOs
Wied kha
dk cewaiee te

E

MbCTANO

PG,

Fiore, Frank
Fiore, Marion
EG
INANE
2b

Caringello, John eee eee ewer were nne
Carlini, Aldo J sete rete ees wreseee
Carlson, Ellen eee teeter eee etna sees
Carlson, Leila eee we eer eee e reer eee
Carlson, Gustav eee ee weer ert eseene
Carlson, Russell
Cary,
Bert
Louis

Evangelista, Frank C
Fabbri, Angelo
&amp; Sons

Fiorri,

enere
eeeee

DeVroeg,
Wm
eee ee em eee eee ewes
Diana Beauty &amp; Gift Shop
Diasparra, Frank
Seem e ere eee eoee
DMSPELTS OUI
5 6s
ta ie es A vs
Dickelman, A F &amp; Sons
SEGAOR PURE
Uo EK (nn Beas
Dill, Woodrow W eee ee w were ee neee
Dinelli, Armond
Dinelli,’ Peter eer
e cae Ah eae
Dombeck, Stanley
Donelli, Charles
Donini,
Agnes ....... Fale
we ob Sloe
Doretti, August
Douaire, Est of Emily A
Dransfeldt, Roy
DIVO UO BE
gs Sa Rie ihe Fi a ati ed
Dilly Ss FAVOR co os Se%i)n
oe ee
Dupre, David D
see ee mm
wwe ee eee
EDOUG, BiB adisisiw
dep is teenth ee
Ehrens, F A eee eee meee eee weer eee
Elstrom, Donald een ee meee eee we eee
Engstrom, Harold Jr
Ermine Cleaners Inc eee ew wee eens
Evangelista, Carlo

Fiocehi, Frank
Fiocchi, James
Fiore, Anthony
Fiore’s Barber Shop

woke

eee

Dal, DAVIG Wiis tibia
tee Saher
Dandrug Corporation ............
Danielson,
Stanley
Danielson, Werner ee
PRC TORY: (i eRe Mp hoy s's 6 Vee ¥le have
Davidson;
-WEEGM
ok ase ed
Davis, Donald
.......... De che eeae
Davis, Robert L Se
eee em ew err ereeee
DeBartolo,
Alex
DeBartolo,
ee
DeBartolo,
See eee meee eeee
DeFilippo,
eee remo e ewe
DeFilippo,
See eee eee ee ewe
Delbene, Steve
Del Rio Tavern
TDeMeo, Morino
DeMilio, Frank eee eee meester eee ene
DePalma, Leo
Derby Inn, The eee eee eww meee wees
Ber into, Mite
sas sss sah seve ce
DeSanto, Albert A
DeSanto, Ralph
DeSmidt, John
Dever, Evan J

Bick;

ee

were
ewer

Crowley,
BG ‘eves eevee wat ee
Cummings, Melvin J .

Giambl,
eee

Frank

Cervetti,

....).....-.

eee

eee

5 iss cision k sek Wate

Angelo

Caringello,

8700

Pete

Altman, Wm J
Amendola, Louis

Ci:

Capitani,

CURARS

eer eteeeeeses

Fy

Caraffi, Mary
Carani, P A

15

PERSONAL PROPERTY
CITY OF HIGHWOOD

Alleri,

hha

Cameron, Re Fe ie oe
ea ke
Campagni, Evaristo
Campagni, Julio
Campagni, Nello
Canovi, Clyde J eevee eee reseeeses
Cantagallo, Domenie C
Cantagallo, John weet weet eee evens

Carzoli,

ft Sly fr NWly cor sd
Lot 16 th Nly alg Wly
In Lots 18 &amp; 16 39 ft to
POD. oss s Rees eae eens

Abbou, Augut eee reer
Acme Liquor Service
Adolph’s Liquor Store
Ahlberg, Carl
Ahlberg, Oscar
Allen, Willard S

Ss

Brugioni, John
Buceanti, John A eee eee ree eee eens
DM
ARTUR oo 8 ag 5 Sink wih 's bo jh thy 00
UP MELOL PIOETE os ca
ere ee ee
Buss, Norbert
Cabri, Adelmo
CM
OMI
oy keke
a aaa |b beet
Cadamagnani, Emilio
Calbri, Thomas L
Caldarelli, Cesare
Caldarelli, Daniel
A eiaarel, Path: Bock
se hors ARESRS
Caldarelli, Paul Sr eee eee e ee ewes
POMIZI OCHS
Ls i coe Ue ka Oe as

Capitani,

at a
8 10

Lot

MOR

Bodner, Themas A
TUGMVISE NOE; SIPRNGL ii os dcpcea
Bondioli, Battista &amp; Angelina ....
Borgini, Frank
TOKEN
ALE
ik oe ko hk wesc
ee
Bortolotti, Edgar
Bortolotti, James
Bowes; Herahel i's &lt;o disse dlaeebnues
Bramlage, Cecile
Brieden,: John Foi
3 ieee
ee
Brookover,
Russell
ee
Brown,
Frank G
Bruer, Marie M eee eee
tere
Brugioni, Alberto

ft Sly of NW
cor sd
Lot th SEly to a pt in
W
In sd Lot 60 ft S
of NE
cor sd Lot
th
S alg E Ins of Lots 8
&amp; 16 94.70 ft to SEly
cor Lot 16 th NWly to
a pt

i

Bernardi,
eee wee ewer ens
Bernardi,
Bernardi,
Core eee meee eee ees
i
ee)
Bernardi, Louis ee
Bernardi Highwood Pharmacy ...
BOrer dit
PO
es e's a teks os
Bernardoni, August
Bertagni, Emilio
Bertagni, Frank
WOK, ME MIAMOO. ow 5 Calo bee RL NO
Bertucci, Adelmo
Bertucci, Corrado eee ew wwe ww eseee
Bertusi, Albert ee
Biagi, Dorothy
ee
DI.
WI ie Saris
ss OURS Ate Oued
Binz, Whitney W
Biondi, Albert
Biondi, Eldo
Biodel: Fiditie.’ ¢ dia ies iio wes ey
Bjork, Mr &amp; Mrs John B
Black &amp; White Service Sta
Black, Clarence O
OE

Marco Ugolini
(ex N 50
ft
ee
ee
|
John &amp; Ella Pasquesi ..
A
SUB
OF
PT
BLK
24
E A MEARS
PLAT
Gaetano
Scopelitti
....
8
Minor
Williams
(i...
10
John
W
Schaefer
...... 15
WESTVIEW
or
Reno Giangiorgi
........
Alfext | Stefanie. cass‘es
5
Paul
Henry
DeVroeg
.. 11
John Brugioni com at a
pt on N In sd Lot 15
10 ft Ely of NW
cor
thof th SEly to a pt on
S In sd Lot 15 34.52 ft
E of SW cor sd Lot th
E on § Ins Lots 15 &amp;
16 94.51 ft to SE cor Lot
16 th NWly to a pt on
Nly In sd Lot th is 15
ft SWly
of NEly
cor
Lot 16 th SWly alg Nly
In Lots 15 &amp; 16 to pob
Angelo
pt in

Atteridge, William R ...........AVOKK;, TOCReSt | ss 86k
ONO A ee ts
ABE TRS Sains cba CED NOE EN SOURS
Rabbini, .Arvthar ict
iscas ke ces
Bagatte,
John
.....
Bair, Margaret eee ee eee eee ewer eae
Baldi, John
Baldino, Peter eee ee meee eee re ssne
PSRIGTINA, COIR! Was wa wien BOC KN oe
BRIA STIN So OMOE IS eis 4 ys oe ce hie
Ballantini, Nello ...... MGA
ale pon Bi
Baracini Office Service eee emer eee
Baracani, Marie eee teem eee eee eeee
Barton, George GC sis.
556 ewesons
Bartolitte, :Anrgo
isch.
tapes
Bartoni, Mrs Gertrude
Baruffi, Gilbert J
Baruffi, Louis N i
ee
Baruffi, Louis Jr
Battaglini, Louis eee ee ee ewes wna ee
BROS,
SRRUT Yi ees Uke
eh ve eke
Baumeister, Martin W
PAO is AIOE Fs ech Wp kas 6 VES ele bie
SEGA OW FCCBORUTONG) Bre bb ioWld
wy cbs
Bella Vista Tavern Cette wee neenne
Bellefeuille, Melba eee wee eee eseee
Bellei, Everett T Cee ee eee nates eee
ESO
AMONG st Wak os no Bho ae Ck
Bellettini, Costante ..............
Belmonti, Joseph .......... PRR Ae
Belmonti, Mrs Julia eee wee eww ween
Baimonti, Santiiel 3 aesive
Benassi, Armand J eee ewe eee none
Bengazzi, Joseph S eee em ene wee ene
Benson, Edgar C
Benvenuti, Bruno eee meee erases ees
Benvenuti, Theo
Bergdahl, George eee eee meee e teense
Bergdahl, L H
Bernabei,
Bernardi,
eee eee weer ewe eee
Beraarel; ACLHUE is oie bees eee as
Bernardi, Bernardo

Cervetti,

S%

Wace alley adj ..........
LLOYD’S
a
Primo Vannozzi
..:.....
Annie Roslund Lots 28 é 23
A
R Ugolini Lots 30
JOSEPH ORI SUBDN

Lot

In sd
sts &amp;

2120

5450

NNwe

48

sd

No

9550

5710

FIORE’S Sun’
Trout
........
HAYT’S RESUB
_ Alberto Brugioni Lot 7 &amp;
E 13 ft Lot
Russell Carlson vig E 13
ft) Lot 8 &amp; all
Mario
Pasquesi
&amp; 34
S%
vac alley
a
Frank
&amp; Raffaela Acello
Lots

3730

8
SUB

‘Terry Terracina W 96
E 146 ft (ex S 90 ft) .. 4
15
CO CLERKS FLAT OF BLOCK
2 IN PLAT C OF eno
Raymond
Suzzi
........
R G EVANS
SUB
Meierhoff (ex S 125 ft) .. 1
Press Galloway (ex W 2. 55
meennur

2220
6820

......

BURCHELL’S
Johnson (ex W

ft)

49

ft

ft W of SE cor thof th
W
on S In sd Lot a
dist of 115 ft th N ona
In drawn
perpen
to S
In sd Lot 14 a dist of
182.7 ft mol to cen In
Wrendale Ave th in a
NEly. direction alg cen
In sd rd to NW cor of
prem convyd rec as Doc

BU

hele

‘Vincent
Camporeale
ow
76 ft
George E Bergdahl
ft S 259 ft

100

In

8535
8290
6590
8199

SUNSET HILLS ESTATES

R

ho

Alfred acre
Lot 6
(ex WSIS ft) ies
PLAT D OF ‘iiidHWwooD
Anton Bertacchini (ex Nly
4 17
25 ft) &amp; (ex Sly 25 ft)
Skokie Valley Laundry Inc
6 17
All Lot 5 &amp; N 75 ft Lot
Joseph Affrunti S 25 ft
welt
N 50 ft
PLAT
E OF HIGHWOOD
Theodore Benvenuti S 55
ft N 483 ft W%
(meas
on. OW In Bie es wean
$7
VR Rooter S 50 ft N 200
ay
ft E%
Wm
O Heath ‘Th’ pt “Lot
14 in Bentley’s Subdivision daf Com on § In
sd Lot at a pt 135 ft
W of SE cor thof th N
331 ft th W on a In parl
to S In sd Lot to cen of
Wrendale Ave th SWly
alg cen In sd rd to NE
cor Prem convyd &amp; recorded as Doc No 196947
th S alg SE cor of sd
Prem
to SE
cor thof
th E alg S In sd Lot
14

Johnson
17
3350
WALDEN
LANE suBDN
Gordon McCormick
eeeeee
12300
Roscoe E Harris
13700
WASHINGTON
nee
SUB
maenry Hansen
..........
2750
Geo &amp; Frank Niemeyer .. 20
9620
WOODLAND ADDN TO
LAKE FOREST
S$

STOKEY

streets or hwys) pt of ..
Wm H Rosenbaum Th
pt
Blk
28
lyg
N
of
Wrendale
Ave
as
reTOCHtOG
Ne ates
Miedo oe
Marino
&amp; Helen Maestri
Th pt Lot 14 in Bentley’s sub daf com on §

10885

5

Frederic F Stripe ........ Re
ALFRED W roe
Emerson E Mead
Do

PEARSON

Dr

11640

Everett K &amp; A F Knox
Lot 14&amp;
E% Lot ....15
8
Olaf
Swanson
W%
Lot
oer
Mal Lot.
6s... eds 16
68
Ethel H Hedstrom
...... PB

Roll

LEGAL NOTICES

LEGAL NOTICES

LEGAL NOTICES

eee

Dominic

sees

aoe

sees

ee

Montecchie, Charles eee eee ee we eeee
Montecchi, Harold .........e0+- s
Moraine Service Station eee ee eeeee
eee te rere esereseses
Morani, Gene
Moravec, Rodney D coe ewer eee eeee
Mordini, Anthony ee
ee
ee
Mordini, Benny ee
Mordini, C B Pe ee
eee ee eee eer rest eee
Mordini,
ee
ee
ee
Mordini,
Mordini, Nello
ee
Mordini,
ey
Morelli, Bruno
eee tem eww een eee eee
Morelli, James
Morelli, Peliegreno

Thursday,

December

bees

un

ete

25, 1952

600

�LEGAL NOTICES

LEGAL NOTICES

POPE MUON
odds pas S sl Ed Go des
wee
MONON LP Se bce. ke
DORIA CRCOUNG iii, caciccpen doves
ME
CMON DR . Caccpcecccbeaaes
PNM
PONE Siok
coc iicciiictes
REEL.
OA
As wor ded webeaes
PRUMBAREI, Silvio 6.60.
cek cit conc
PE CORICG TNT 8c ccei ccc iices tet
Nannini, Angelo
be
ike
PUMeh,
MATIO (oe eins cesas bias
Nannini,
Norando
Nannini, Pete .
i
oem
ax
TNO
en og vv clsid'n Cecainiie:s
Natta Shoe Rebuilding ee ewe wrens
Nelson, Wallace A Cee eee eee ween
Nerini, Ovidio L Ce
ed
RN,
SAW iin'e ss &lt;e's ve ae boss
peau, Pearamn Vc
kicks cease
Niemietz,
Raymond
See weet eee eee
MURAL
410 65 4G od hwo wee uacn
PO
ION
a ae ka vais a ewan
Nizzi, Julius TOO ee mew eee e ee wwene
Cee

reese

Salyards, Clyde

IO

esreeee

Sneridan,

Pasquesi Bros Inc Peewee ee ewer eeeee
Pasquesi,
ee
Pasquesi, Henry Cee eee ereeererene
I
NR
on eo. 65d ovis uc eee
Pasquesi, Joseph D See ee wwe eee ene
Pasquesi,
ey
aR
TE ois.
sk aise be

RIE

Raszkiewez,

Soproni,
Soprani,

—

December
0

ewoee

25, 1952

eee

ewww

HEReee
ree

Hm eee

reese

600

of America
.......... 4

LAKE

FOREST

R

ee

Bert

ei erases
eeessece

650

Palmstrom,
eet ee ewe wereee
Mees
SEINE hy oo
is sw 0's Smee
Peddle, James B
Peterson, Martin
PORVOO
A Fe. Scio lh ibe abe e eae
Poole, George A Jr
Prentice, Mrs
Violet P
........
Public Service Co of Northern III
Pulliam,
Richard
E eee ee et reese
Reid,
G
Roberts,
Howard
R
Robertson,
Geo
G

1900

450

430
530
895
3070
715
350
650

330
405
1310
880
1045
440

LEGAL

Vandervoort,
Robert
C
........
VanEeckhout, Maurice M ........
Volpe, Robert Mule 5. ois.
hed ccs
Walker, Samuel
....
Wells, Marvin L ....
Welsh,
Francis J ...
Werhane, Arnold F ....
West,
Ralph
E
.....
Westbrook,
Chaucer
Wheeler, Henry: Poni.
citi cece.
Wheeler,
Est of Leslie
........
Writes KOM is cpt vole aie kad be
Wilson; Donald: A. ivi
eeieee cee
Zanier,
Leo
..... cevearen’ hain Male

2360
1415

NOTICES

VILLAGE

OF

DEERFIELD

DOWN) DD Tb cei nth 0 hen lees ieee
Nickelsen, Henry .......... Wade ce
Perkingy: ©. Lb) ésesecccheosbceas ;
The Western Union Telegraph Co
DIM

BAT:

BO

csc clewdcald’s

ae

OTs

ee

woind oe Reeds

Fe aiec ek aR
ee

A Rie és

eerereersee

Illinois Bell Telephone Co Dist 67
Do Dist 111
Do
(Conduits)
Dist 67
Do
(Conduits)
Dist 111
......
De
(Condnitel)
vise sece. snes

CITY OF HIGHLAND
TOWNSHIP

43

RANGE

12

Harold
&amp;
Katherine
Westergard
(ex
E
1019.9
ft)
S%
NEY
SW% Sec
15, 4.44 acs
......
Albert &amp; Anna Godwin
(ex hwy)
E%

of

S%
Fred

W

145.7

ft

NE% SW*%
Tibaldi
(ex

W145.7

ft

E

E

1019.9

Sec 15, 1.11
hwy)
W%

1019.9

ft

S%

ft

acs
of

NEW

SW%
‘Seo 16, 1.11 ace .....5.%
Penato
&amp;
Dirce
Carani
W
193
ft N 62% ft N 2 acs 8 acs NE%
SW%
NWY%
Sec 26, .275 acs ..
Herman Denzel All th pt of SEY
NW%
sec 27 lyg Wly of C &amp;
N W Ry row &amp; Wily of cen In
of Deerfield Rd &amp; lyg Nly of
a In 233 ft N of &amp; patl with cen
In

of

Richfield

Ave

Sec

Sec

27,

9.444

acs

....

Robert L Johnson All th pt S%
‘S% NW%
NEY
Sec 34 lyg Ely
of cen In of Ridge Rd Sec 34
BAe

MO

nc hb

tale

ae Oihae

och

First Nat’] Bank of Highland Park
All th pt lyg Wly of cen In
Ridge Rd N%
S%H NWY%
SEY
BOG

04

B.

MOR.

i Wiwi caden
the oy

Wm
J Rectenwald Jr Th pt lyg
Ely of cen In Ridge Rd &amp; (Ex
S 2% acs thof) N% S% NW%
NE%
Sec 84, 2.50 acs ........
Frank R Campbell Jr (ex E 150
ft)

&amp;

(ex

See

ee

eee

W

700

ft)

ree

essere

S

reessreeseee

ee

eee
eee

ee
w ere

eee
nes

eeee

ay

as

S 5 acs E 10 acs of th pt NW%
SE%
Sec 34 daf com at a pt 22
rds W of NE cor sd 4% \% see
rung th W 80 rds th §S 78 rds
th E 30 rds th N 78 rds to pob
Bae 294s 18 MORN esis
Wie Ce
F C Lustig
(ex W 470.25 ft) N
16.84 ft of tract daf (ex W 21
acs) SW%
SE%
Sec 34, 1.499
ft of th pt
of W 21 acs

Be

ON
A
yl geht

Lot

ee

6

Blk

1

at a pt on W In
97 ft N of SW
cor thof th E parl with
N In sd Lot 115 ft to
pob the E parl with N
In

beg

sd

Lot

6

64.82

ft

to

a pt on a In ext
fr a pt
on
N
In
sd
Lot
150
ft W fr E In sd Lot to
a pt on
S In sd Lot
203
ft E
fr SW
cor
sd Lot th Sly alg sd
In to SEly In sd Lot 6
th SWly alg sd SEly Lot
In 75.37 ft th Nly &amp; parl
with Wly In sd Lot 6
A657

£0:

80

SOR SACRO
Frank &amp; Ann
20 ft Lot 1
ft thof)
&amp;
Lot
2
(ex
thof)

DOO.

ieee

of Wm
Nat'l

See)

7

9

4000

8

9

4000

ee

Sr

....

eeeeeee

Bank

of

eee

Lake
y

Rafferty

y

2 2, eta
Se ae
ne a
SAT
ET
re cr ins Yee
B

&amp;

&amp;

1000

E

F

Ely

ft

Lot

2

Konsler

38%

ft

8

une

A

5750

1 14

8200

16

7330

16

6900

Cee
22

5600
7030

238

40000

Cee
26

87550
31200

38

10500

39

16700

40

4250

15
vac alley
776
We MA
a iin cans HE Swe
45825 | Geo Burmeister (ex N%)
63575

Lot

22

27460

ley

12100

Herman

E

&amp;
&amp;

W%
adj

vac

al-

eo

Wizner

S

100

ft

6320 | &amp; Et% alley ...... we COW
F J Ronan E 50 ft ......
8
Highland Park Sav &amp; Ln
Assoc S 25 ft W 100 ft
1
Iredale Storage &amp; Moving
Go. all Lobe ccs ew he bcc
Laurence W Scott ......
4
Sidney I Baren
S 75 ft
Ny 1 7B16 f8 ia aia
5
18410| James
A
&amp;
Annabelle
roe
ete
Le 11
Jos &amp;
Helen
Volpendes
5780
25
LU
eee eeeee le
1
Francisco ae
ps
fs
NS)
vac
y lyg
980
&amp; oi
23 Haas ORE nee 12
L G Culver
8200
:

era nav ie
| Lucile M° Weil com at

pt
on
S In sd Lot
1 200
ft W of &amp; at RA to E
In sd Lot 1 rung th N
parl to E In sd Lot 1
485 ft mol to N In sd
Lot 1 th NWly alg Nly

46250

B

ay wclh « Oe i Eee
Gruber Sly
(ex Ely 82
Nly 25 ft
Ely
82
ft

x

In

10940

2500

13800
6800

1

&amp;

Lots

2

&amp;

1

to

400

9500

5800

2 44

Ba T0

o
45

28970

65

14500

Miy In Bot :8 idee bea es
8
Mrs E ane Lot 10 &amp; 30 ft
Lot 11 as meas
on N oe In iy ute
Do
(ex
30
ft
as eae
on N Lot In 11
Geoffrey : Field: . 5.050685 10
Max
F
Goldberg
all
th
pt Lots 1 &amp; 2 lyg Ely of
a in drn fr a pt in Nly
In Lot 1 110 ft Wly of
NEly
cor Lot
1 to a
pt
in
a
In pe
te

65

9660

66

7080

66
69

9960
$6400

&amp;

at

rt

....

angles

to

0

y

oa Lot
ae Sei) on tO
Mortimer Singer All th pt
Lots 1 &amp; 2 lyg Ely of
Wly 100 ft Lots 1 &amp; 2
&amp; Wly of a In drn fra
pt in Nly In in Lot 1
110 ft Wly of NEly cor
Lot 1 to a pt nee
ys
Lot

2

117.5

ft

y

o

SEly cor ioe
‘ant
a
Louis Marko
(ex
Ely
17.
ft &amp; ex N 50 ) arid
i
ex
rd oe gt os Ct dauunres
Irene Abrafig te oe uns
ewe &lt;i
i
Nly
60
oe se
ee re
na
Walter
Gatzert
(ex SEly

40

ac Ce os aoa

2%

10130

Bie

3200

14

70

8150

8

Tt

11180

2

M2

22400

ee

12899

8

82

8360

iege
r
ts Lot 3 &amp; ab cia.
ee
Dr Joel
F, Sammet
Lot
91. &amp; Sly 8 ft ..+5+.%; 82.
82
ARTHUR H APFEL’S SUB
Joseph Ariano (ex E 4 ft)
40

Lot.8

@

aloyitaccveies h

BAIRD &amp; WARNER’S ADD
DEERE
Yr
SUB
h Lots

deg, monic Tot 3
Pa.

©

at
1
to
sd

2

F
17800

42

,

toa

pob

AV.

3

2

Edw A Green (ex W 80 ft)
Florence
S
Cobb
Nly
107.45 ft measd on Wly
In of Linden Ave Ely of
a In 40.8 ft Wly a ne
cor

8400}

Lots

pt 365 ft W
of &amp;
R A to E In sd Lot
th S on a In th is parl
&amp; 365 ft W of E In
Lot 1 to § by sag a
th SEly alg
y
Ins

3930

2520

of

7810
:

Sly

Tone

4060

8 12

Wly

ex

thers

#12

........-+- °

t

370

4790

Sasch

ewer

Mle, aS Fe acs Gc

F

Oe

Oo

ex

ex

5350

6

y

mt

‘
8

.......-. ceaee

| pttReh
We Bi
thot) wen ccneceen:
eee

SW%
SEY
thof Sec 34,

Jack Flax E 156.75 ft of W 470.25
ft of N 416.84 ft of th pt SW%
SE%
lyg E of W 21 acs thof
OG
HORS UDO
mie
re
eR AS
Elmer Clavey Inc
(ex easements
for pub row) &amp; (ex 235 ft Strip
E of &amp; adj RR) &amp; (ex beg on
Wly
In Skokie
Blvd
&amp;
§ In
Clavey
Rd th SEly
200 ft th
SWly at rt angles to W In Skokie Blvd 180.88 ft to Pub Serv
Co Ppty In th NWly on sd Ppty
In 264.5 ft to S In Clavey Rd th
E 145.4 ft to pob) all E of RR
NW%
SW%
Sec 35, 5.959 acs
HIGHLAND
PARK
John B Nash Th pt Lot
6 Blk 1 daf com at a
pt on W In sd Lot dist
97 ft N fr SW cor sd
Lot th rung N on sd W
In 50 ft th E on a In
parl to N In sd Lot to a
pt on a In extd from a
pt on S In sd Lot 150 ft
W fr E In sd Lot 150 ft
W fr E In sd Lot th Sly
alg sd In 53 ft th W
parl to N In sd Lot to
daf

Est

800 | First

15600}
416.84
lyg E

Geiser

950

7800

ces

Robertson,
Keith
Robson, Merritt A
Roderwald, Richard G ee eer reece
Roney, Raymond W
POOR MOORE
Woe vase
cna ohare
Roseman,
Edwin’ L
DARATTON
HPT OM. okie ince
eas
Senracim, = Victor. Mooi.
ck des s
Schroeder, Wm
T &amp; Edith G ..
Schwarm, Arthur Oo si 6..04.¢4.%
Scott, George B
Shannon,
H
Smith,
Smith,
See meee eee wees
Smith,
Sees eee ewes eons
Smith,
SER
Oe
a ie an ois PEKee eR fe
Strecker,
George
O
....
Strueber,
Frank
A
......
Strueber,
John
E
Swope, George S ....
Teegarden, Georgia ..
Trude, Alfred S Sere eer tears
rees
Trussell, John C &amp; Mary

900|F

234.6

Ralph Burkhardt (ex E 150 ft) &amp;
(ex W 700 ft) N 201 ft S 435.6
ft W% W 3/4S% NE% Sec 34,.
Walter R Ceperly S 220 ft E 156.54
ft W 621.04 ft N 1287 ft NW%
SE%
Sec 34 &amp; (ex W 39 ft §
187 ft W 389 ft S 220 ft S 5 acs
E 10 acs of th pt NW%
SEY%
Sec 34 daf com at a pt 22 rds W
of NE cor sd 4% % sec run th
W 30 rds th § 78 rds th E 380 rds
th N 78 rds to pob Sec 34, 94.
ee

700| Angelo Madelon
(ex Nly
1000
25 ft) &amp; (ex Sly 87.5 ft)
2
600 | Florindo Piacenza Sly 37.5
3000
MES
es Ra's calc ibis poe Co

27,

DS
ROB
watery
ct a pu tigh race
Catherine Yager S 2.44 acs of th
pt E of Deerfield Rd &amp; W of
C &amp; N W Ry SE%
NW%
Sec
ZC)
kaa 2 RRB SOR Seok
cas a oe ee
Earl Lahey Adm Est M &amp; E Mc
Craren
Th
pt
desed
in
Doc
217498

NOTICES

PARK

eceeerererececes

WEATIOENO)
CTE
oie sk ek vhscae
Mansfield,
Est of Alfred
W
..
DEMS
PRL No ao op ia'w an oe ak Ses
McConnell, Franklin
.........¢..
mew onete, Devito
as ok a eed
McLaughlin, Mrs Florence
serene
McLaughlin,
Robert
H
sere wees
McManus, Frank Donald
McMasters, Ward H
McRoe,
Christine
Mead, Emerson E eee ewer eee enee
Moureau, R C
Moyer,
Paul
§S
ee
Nagel, John S
Nash, Mrs Joseph
re
Nelson; ANGPOW Fo edisiva
eaic olen a a
Newbell,
:Rhodes
V
.....cisceeee
Newman, Alpert
occa
ced, .
DOODER SOCNIEM Bae vs civic ba sy Acdwvere
North Shore Gas Co eee eee wears
O’Leary, W S Sete meet ewe ewer eee

eee

Weete,
VISOR
a ihe SiN aes
Walz, Harry R eee eee eee eee ewe eee
Washington Gardens eee eeerescee
Washington Grocery &amp; Mkt
Wayne Cleaners eee ww ww etn wees eee
Wendling, Frederick E eee ee ee ees
Whitelock, Stanley B weet ewww eeee
Wileox, Walter L ee
Wilczek, Joseph
Wiliams, ‘Minor Bo vcs.
c cee specks
WERE:
“TOM ig oath eee bees
WEG PORN ib wiwiy eeu Rees emus ws ke
Word, Jewei P
Wright, John
UORRPE, OGD
55 isk as kad sie's 4
TOROIE
TOD
ons doin hot Cay heen
wennarini, Oliver: o4s vodka
es ckvass
Zanotti, Ben
Zenzola, Paul
CARCRTO, (ATURE
is Le sine hv Meade
Tetna Insurance Company

OF

Philip

Manchik,

Volpendesta,

Rubbard, Chester D ..............
DRSTOIO PN, dk oi ski ios ce heen
Wales GMT
eek
ck incase eis
TNR
EID
os vs 8s 5 &lt; oasew bn wes
Russell,
ES
ae ais Vie Lik amine
tina Oey

Thursday,

ee

Valentini, Dominick
Vanni, Hannibal Cee eee eeerewsens
Venn, Carle 2000s beside te gc
Varghan, Thomas Cee ee ete ee ene ae
Wontearl, Joseph. coo ei aes es eh
Venturini, Marino
Weare Mares. i053 ceeds
conc ase
Vignocchi, Corrado ......+.......
Viznocchi, Giovacchino
Village Inn eee ewe eee eer ee eeeeens
Viti, Guy Cer ere ere ereseeeserersece
Volpendesta, Domenic oer rereseeces
Volpendesta,
eee wwe
nae
Volpendesta,
eeereecesecce

oe

Rychlenski, Gerald K ............
MIO
Rr TOODORE | 6 chicees
MRM, PN
oo 6a ae win Sb5k We winks
Saielli, William ...... ee

eees

so ui eons
eek

Jeanette

Seer

Ronzani, Domenic Cees e reser eees
Roof, William G
Rosalini, Adolph
Rosalini, Joseph
WOCOWR
ie TEM si.
eae ec coc
Beast
Er Ward Gio
6 os 6k ce vce ons
TOON Re
tos ho ces ads ckai.
eee

ree

ee ea

B

COOH

corsenseee

eee

meee

Travetto,
Reno
Cee ewww ween ee eene
Trout, Arthur H
Turchi,
Armand
Cee weer wees eneee
Turchi, Romano
TUE,
MOberE |. x5 4i\s:c ea eee cae
Turner, Grace Mary
Turner, William
Ugolini, Sa
i ea ty
Ugolini,
eee meme eee eee eeeae
Ugolini,
Bruno (DDS)
er
Ugolini, Emilio
Ugolini,
Ugolini,
ee
Ugolini,
ee
Upgolini,
See eee em weer ene erenee
MANOS,
CDOT
i Fie Oni es
Uptown Grocery &amp; Mkt eee ee eenee

6 bi is ith Koes one kn

eee

Arnold

Traphagen,

Roberts, Rose Dry Goods Store ..
Rogiero, Doris
PPP Heme eee eee wrens
Rollery, Dario

ee

ee

Toni, Claudic Cee e eee eee eens eeees
SOWER
CMGIN Goons pd iu Unis wd ele

Rizzo, Nickolas §
Rizzolo, Alfonso
Roach, Thomas Settee ee ee ereerens
Roach, William ee
Roach, John
HPP e meee ere eee rsees

POOR

ee

Splett, Alfred
Standard Oil Co (Ind)
St. Peter, Edward
Stanley, Roland Sr
Stanley, Roland Jr
Stephani
Aibert
eee eee m ewe e ee ees
RON
APE hes ay oo Fe sg Gee
Stratford, Hilda
BUDO, | TRGDMPE oid
s Cale ds:
Sunnyside Tavern
Suzzi, Raymond
STOUOOR REIN ooh
bois ok ee

Toni,

Cerro eseredsvn

Perec

J

Texas Company, The
Thomas, Wayne A
Thompson, Louis E
Thorsen, Chas A
Thorup, Victor R
La
PEO Oo kb ended
sees Ob
Toby’s Cocktail Lounge ..........
ODGW\ROWORE | 3.50 padnd &gt; Wawices
shia’

ee
SPP

Robert
Vernett

Temple,
Eugene
Wereneetias: erry

Rattig, Peter Sr
Reynolds, Earl
Rich, George L Seem ewe eee eee erene
DENG POE
oe
ehh use cae dee
Ridgway, Harley H
Rieck, David W Teeter eee sewer eene
oe

Spencer,
Spencer,

Sore oe wile akin ce

Carlson,
Robert
Carpenter,
TRON
Cong vee had ‘
Carton, Mr
&amp; Mrs
Lawrence
A
Cedarquist,
Wayland
B
........
NORYRRMENO S SIINE MR eps 0 be deedsoi
COMBIESOG
TIBEE OWS
Low cckiacss
Cramer, Mrs Ambrose
OTOnwen
Re Was
Soya eat a
Curtis, Edwin M Jr
Cushman, Walter M Sete ween eee
Dick, Franklin A
Donnelly,
MEWS
Ae aused scene
Douglas, Est of Grace
(deceased)
Douglas, James H Jr
Douglas, William B
Dunean,
Sheldon
F
Ekdahl, George C eee meee wmeeee
Bess
BORN
Be lhc
vend oes 6
Fitzgerald,
J E &amp; Elsa were we eeee
POCTAH
"WON
TE ee CES ov ae ce
Franquist
,Elmer E
ee
Ganz, Paul
ee
Gladding,
es
Grant,
Reipn Goi
ac isceeees
ees,
Gray, McKinley H &amp; Laura eee eee
Grittith, Btewart
(Diviiies cates
Hamill, Mr &amp; Mrs Alfred E ....
Hansen,
Henry
&amp; Louise
Harris,
Lenore
B
PEWS,
WOM: Rv
wns ed vs Koders
Hayner, Jeannette H
Hixon, Mrs. Alice G eee weer neee
MEO
ERO
I
hs Vidas 6 au scons
Hodgkins,
W
Press
eee weet tween
Hoffmann, Anton R eer ewww eeens
Holland, James Jr Sere w eee er wenee
ONO
SF Pe ha dt Occ
ks sie
Jonsson,
Gregor
fete ewww ewer eeee
SUNG, OOM
bu vs keh bwiekas
eh ibad
Kleine, John H
Kniskern,
Culver
Ceram errr sene
Knotter,
Knox,
Everett
K
eet
ewe ewer eee
Bi
BPO
Oe i eho wb wk phe Bk
LeGoff, Montgomery
eee weer eens
Lynch, James A Jr
Lynch,
John
A
MacLean, Chester E

5s 2a wes end

Takala, Reino Cee e eee
Tamarri, Nello
"RPMI
hc resi Sh

Rau, R F (D.C.)
i
Ee
ee
eg
Rector, David M ee
Reid, Sydney J Ww See ee eee eeeeesne
Reilly, Harold ee
re
Reilly, Ruth ee
ee ee

Ce

Cane,

Edsel R
Jos D

TW

LEGAL

Ackley,
Willem:
“3.45 40260
Anderson, James III ............
Baldwin, Fred
Bearers Dw
ae
ein catylecd
Cowes
Bates,
Chandler
etter
erent sees
Beatty | ee
We CN
ies heen as
Beidier, Frandeell cies
ieide
Beidler, Est of Elizabeth L ....
ODES,
(ROLE MR oka a Oe here
Bina, Gordon J &amp; Priscilla
Birney,
Kenneth
O
tere e er eeeee
SOE
RS Pn hp 4.0.00 ee nee oleae
Bowen, John J Jr
Brahm, Bernard H
Bromstedt, W F
Burke, Harold J ee
SOY
SROPOORIO S14
i-s's g &gt; hs. 00
Cahn, Est of Trina B

SO
AIM
hE
oe ee Se oe
eS
Swanson, Byril E eee ew eee ere eeene
Swanson, Fredrik
Cee ee wees eeweeee

Chester

MOS

CITY

Ellsworth

Rwerienin

VARe OOD

Queen Insurance Co
(E C Benson Agt)

Sovenseon, WEGs eles
elkde tsk eee e's
Spayer, Virginia L

soc
coc ck scent css

Passini, C
See ewe reer ewsese
Passini,
Cee ee eee ewe wane
Passini, Joe Peete eee eee ee eee ee eee
Passini,
BRON
MPMI
dbs boss 6 die Wane va ©
Pedrucci,
Virgil
Pepe, S. Ernest
OCG, | UNE ie oie. S'S se coe oe 4
Peradotti, Peter J Coe ee ew eee eee
Perry, George
DMEM
hs ie pe
eae
Peterson, Eugene R ..........0.0.
I
MOR
ok
ck ce aewe seed ds
Phillips, Frank
PR
IME i 50's v's ogc chin a bie wie’
Phillips Petroleum Co ............
Piacentini, Nello ee
OR
OM
6 bid ba bie Cs basa e'n c's
Piacenza, Angelo ee
Piacenza, Louis Cee ee ee ewww ee eeeee
Piazzi, Corrado ee
Picchietti,
OOO PI
heii Lists sha duc ccleved’s
OPMENT MOM
i is kee sk cee
WAGWUR INTE Gi...
ko edie ccc ces’s
Pigati, Domenick Cee ee wre eee ewe eee
Pilicrini, Peter . ee
ROM
A
ii aa oc vlc eles voces
Pottker, Ralph E
Poucher, Jay H CORO e ee eer eee ee ene
PONG
Wiis sy oc cek else oce's
Pranzini, Wm ........
BOW ee
ee, Cb a. kv be eens
Public Service Co of No. Ill
Pure Oil Co, The
pa
|
Ee ee
Rabattini, Mrs Anna eee ew eeeere
Rafferty, Joseph HOw meee eee enee
Rainbow Tavern ee
Me
I
os
a ales 0%

ED

Sheridan Lunch Coe ee eesereernses
Sherony, F See ee ee reser eerste seee
ON
BFS
Fh SE
Cee ie ak
ROTORS, | TRONT
245 swkek
toy vee oks
Shoreline Amusements
Shriver, E J Ce
ee ee a
lense.
Vistew, ike
vos tons sae
Silver Dollar Tavern
BUNCE Te
a
cea
i toa
Silverstrini, Frenk
Ceeerererecevce
SEMAN
PRIM
6 hee eee: a
Sinclair Refining Co
BORONTA PO
Tei cnetcy ce
Skokie Walley Laundry, Inc
Skrabanek, John
PIMCK, George i450 i a ee nai sions
Smith, Gerald W
Smith, Leslie W
Smith, Lowell K
IEE |: PAOOEO 5 5b bdsn ek bm occas
Smoleroff, Eugene V
SUAVE OM, DERCION He bas eels
cbs 5
Sober, Lawtente
oo iii
ks.
Socony-Vasuum Oil Co, Ince
Solgatto, 'OAtalea
55 2s ko a
PENRYN
OM Wei
os
ks bbe ks
Somenzi, Lodovico Cee ee ee ee ee wee

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ice sess

NOTICES

(Baracani
Ins Agency)
......
The
Continental
Insurance
Co
(J E Engquist Agent) ...... ea
Hartford Fire Insurance Company
(J E Engquist Agent)
........
Hartford Fire Insurance Company
(Guy
Viti
Agent)
Home Insurance Company
(Engquist
Ins Agency)
......
Kansas City Fire &amp; Marine Ins Co
(Baracani Office Serv Agt)
..
National Fire Ins Co of Hartford
(Gus
Vite
Atebt)
os cass ve
Ohio Farmers Insurance Co ....
(Leonardi
Ins Agency)
......
Pacific
Fire
Insurance
Co
(John F Leonardi Agt)
......
Planet Insurance Co
E C Benson Agency)
....... é
Springfield Fire &amp; Marine Ins Co
(J J Flannigan Agt)
........
St Paul Fire &amp; Marine Ins Co
(Engquist Ins Agency)
.......
St Paul Fire &amp; Marine Ins Co
(E C Benson Agency)
........
Norwich Union Fire Ins Soc Ltd

DTG
ROMS
ha bw Ws Maind Diakisca cae
MULE, WONDERS 6 i Ucin ON edd
Ou dh. 0
Santi, Lino A
SARE MONS.
oo. Ces va he Fh sR Ondine ce
Scabby’s Golden Dome
weet ewe wns
SCRIBOTIBL,. BAVIC 4 tN
casos seth
Schaeffer; John W .iussvdcawcess
Schanock, Romaine
W
eee ee ewes
Schlobowske, Roland ..............
Schuler, Georges:
iis sche
ce hein 5h
Schwall, Robert James Cee ee eenee
Scornovacco,
Alex
eee eee were eens
Scornovacco, Anthony a
Scornavacco, Eugene Ceesecereces
Scrnoavacco, Ralph eee ee ewer eesae
Selig, Virgil J Cee eee een eseseesee
Serafini, Guido OREM ew DEVS Die ht ewes
Sernesi, Tulio
OETA, DCCUET
ou wis Wuwhr 16 aa oy ides.
WOVETAOR, TOAMON 5.6 Kies os WS 6's o2e'e's
Severson, Est of Jos
BURL, VOOR Wi aot ian es bices ons
Sheahen, Chas H
Shelton, OA
Be
is ic
oeee

Palmieri, Chas C Cee twee were rene
Panther Lounge
ETO
wine 6.6 Ka vv b6.0% &lt;iwie d's
Paradise, Thomas
Parenti, Frank

POM

............ mb aead

Salyards, Stunley K ........ CRESS
Sandberg, Clarence ...... biK Gh eae
Santello, Louis ......... hia
o% Sie a
ante, Willies | oo evs eh bes sess
Meme,
Anguae!
ys. Tekihed
ee tes
BOO
CUR
68 06
eR
es

Novachek, Thomas J .......... pen
PERI:
60's bwbids
che a 0 ode
PUN
PROD Do vcs ciccce ivan ed
I
PUNO OE Sb o's ook basta
go's
Oak Terrace Beverage Corp oe ewer
O’Brien, Michael eee eee new eee eens
ROE
EUCL. CO ook scccicsc vibes
Speeee emymond Ao... cect ices
Olson &amp; Nord ..... ins Subba ean
Olson, Lloyd E ee
ie
dese eV babe bec wbe ces
Olson, Wayne
Cee eee ewe eee ee eeres
O’Neil, Tom
ey
EN
Cod eels cscs Wada decid
ROEM
5...
c coc cece
TN
hiss Ura le bbe sca 6 6 cao:
Ori,
Ori,
POOR eee meee nee eerens
Ori,
EO
en
i
be ba vey
Ostrond,
Walter
Coe
wm ewe mee ewes
Paganelli, Dino
Peete were
eensene
Paganelli, Dino
Paganelli, Ray TPP Meee meet wee enae
Pagliai, Guido
ey

PBT

LEGAL

BANTA’S

SU

27200
$0420
9540

TO

1
...ccccccceers
Sol Rosen
Dr Eli Olech .......-++-:.
2
BLACKTHORNS
Myrtle Sullivan Toohey ..
3
Dr Milton Vainder ......
4
BOB-O-LINK
WOODS
5960 | Robert
B Kaufman ..... ee
BRAN
Angel De La Torre
....
Erich "Paschkes ........0. 67
WH
Schwarts 4.0. 0854 ih ea
Bert Lusken
........-.. ee
T HMartinan Jr... ee da 84
Herbert L Kellner ...... 97
BRANIGAR
BROS SUNSET
TERRACE
Arnie Anderson
........ 20
Sam Fell Lot 30 &amp; W 10
RAE
aS co's bw ace a wekpierel Stig
Harry
E Eichler Lot 31
25400
(ex W
10 ft thof)
&amp;
CN ARO 26) RG hes ek as SB
k
J S Johnson E 10 ft Lot
Oo &amp; call: Loti. vk
88st
Conrad
Dreiske
........ 89.
1
R Gillett White
........
Ba
Chester. D. Byle
0005463
6
3
Ernest
Mitchell
........ 19.8
BW
GON
ad ee wae Cee me $2:
5
Vernon Heins Lot 387 &amp; . 38
5
John DD O'Brien: aia ives
6.56
Ira &amp; Frank Jr &amp; John
Lebolt
S%
Lot
20 &amp;
NOME
ali
is view eames
Brit
Sumner Sprague S%
Lot
OY Ge: Ol i008 Penis
23)
Ray
W
Anderson
...... 23
6
Fredk
Brown
..... ob Nee OO
5670 | Ernest
A
Harris
...... 11
17
9810| Dominico
Sottlaryie
.... 52
7
Paul
Lubes
Lot
56
&amp;
Bie
aa hra tiesoe SS FF STF
Alvin Richman
(ex E 25
18) Ot
2
ON
a
ae
5850! Dr Marc
Nissenson
....
2
9

18840
16640
18360
19410
14740
ieee
11550
14300
14300
17150
9900
7400
9600
2800
12420
9750
9750
1760
9650
9830
11600
7700
9300
9885
8550
6250
6900
8950
10125
9825
10550

Page 23

©

�sd

Lot
SAM

to pob
BROWN

oN!
‘IR’S SUB

8160

E

70

ft

Lot

3

&amp;

(ex N

ft-W of E 70-ft)
en
Foster

_

..

9600

Brown Lots 9-17 ine tog
with th pt vac alley lyg
SEly of oe 9-16 ine &amp;

NWly

of Lo

to

Martin

NEly

J Staller

In

Lot

..

COLEMAN’S SUB
Wm Diener
8
:
COMPTON’S
ADD TO H P
nrico Mordini Lots
3 &amp;
4
2
omenic
Velo
Lots 5 &amp;
6
2
CONRAD’S
ave
rtunato Amendola
..
\
DEERE PARK
SUB
1 A Lewis
Lawrence
German
8900
9750
11600
9800

1

ft

9900

J Hardacre Jr Wly
Lot 1 &amp; all
2
EXMOOR ADDN TO H

PK

7440

1
daf com at a pt in
Ely rowlnCNS
&amp;M
i
175 ft S of
In sd
Ik 1 th E parl to N In
‘Blk 1 to a pt 253.95 ft
of E In Blk 1 th S
572 ft th Wly 50.32
to a pt 285.938 ft S
N In Blk 1 th Wly

2.58

ft

Bork

18ST
Daniel
1ST

a

pt

ward

in

;

W%

ADDN
TO
Lencioni
ADDN
TO

ae
.

to

3670
6500

io

11400

DkERFIELD S VILLA
20
540
E W
LEWIS
yeh

B

MacIntire

H

Bede

..

ae
0590
14640

i

14080

Id A Schiller
13940
ADDN
TO
RAVINIA’ "HIGHLANDS
Belmonti
17

aoe

H

Phillips

Wm

Davidson

A Wenger Hoff

1

GARLAND’S

Tos

SUB

R Anthony

3

Vena
13
R S HAMBLY &amp; CO
BERNING ACRES ADDN
,
b Lipson (ex W 22 s
2 . fem. te 22.96)52.) 8
Beam
Sr .
9
x Pe HAWKINS
ADDN
Tonle Pickus (ex S 40 ft) 19 15
_HIELD’S
ADDN
TO
ee
ax F
Rich

et

t
E Leopold
ft) Lot 19

3%

M

Paradise

hn

M

ol &amp;

eonard
WwW

_ Sidney
25

ft)

Unger

Mary

(ex E
&amp; all

W

50

19

10070
8570
ar
71000
12875

ft

Gerstel

Chestek

Rosenberg
Lot

85

&amp;

(ex

W

Kelleher
KIMBALLWOOD ‘SUB
Samuel A Nathan
Wm
W
Woodbridge
11900
Nathan
Corwith
28
12800
KRENN
&amp; DATO’S HIGHLAND
PA
ADDN
F J Rydberg
8800
Ernest
Goran
12800
Carl
S Wolf
12050
Louis
Beale
16150
PARK ADD SuB “NO 2
Corinto Linari
62
9189
LAKE VIEW TERRACE SUB
Nathan H Pasct (ex E 70
ft) Lot 4 &amp; E 60 ft Lot
5
19320
Albert H Dolin (ex W 20
it)
Lot:
11
@
W.
.18: ft 12
22210
LAKE MICHIGAN HEIGHTS
Joseph Greco (ex W%)
Lot 12
91
Joseph
Greco
(ex
W%)
George C Bartoli W%
.. 12
GRETA
LEDERER’S
‘JACKIE LYNN’ ae
J K Salomon
Maurice H Gaines
E W LEWIS SUB
Lesley
&amp; Denise
Kodner
4
LORUSSO’S
“—
Mike Camporeale
McDANIEL’S
SUB
R S Johnson W 50 ft E
100 ft N 150 ft of th pt
Lot 31 lyg S of S ns
Deerfield Avenue
4200
McGINNIS
suB
Paul R Paradise
21040
McGINNIS ‘SUB Pt SEY
Sec 34
Jack
VanderVries
2
19
MILITARY Sune
SUB
god
Appel

MOLLEMA’S
DIVISION OF
N 150 FT LOT 121 SOUTH
HIGHLAND ADDN 7” H PK
Justin
Bosley
21040
GEO F NIXON
&amp; ‘co's
HIGHLAND PK GARDENS
Charles F Connolly
17
6350
Arnold
C Bremer
6000
Chas
Gramlich
6850
Clayton W Bartlett
7350
B Gataas
148
9350
GEO F NIXON
&amp; CO’S
NORTH
SHORE
FOREST
RIDGE
Otto A Kralik Lot 14 &amp;
NWly 10 ft Lot
15
9940
Bernard
C
Benson
(ex
NWly 30 ft) Lot 17 &amp;
NWly 40 ft Lot
18
10690
Bayport
Corp
(ex NWly
40 ft) Lot 18 &amp; all Lot 19
1440
Do All Lot 20 &amp; NWly
17%
ft
11120
Do SEly 382.5 ft Lot 21
&amp; NWly 86 ft Lot ....
1620
Louis
Blow
SEly
15
ft
Lot 22 &amp; all Lot
11060
Avery
10500
Edward H &amp; Florence B
Norton
8400
Bert W Sager
13900
Louis
S Kahnweiler
Lot
70 &amp; (ex NWly %) Lot
14550
Richard H Gottlieb Lot 74
&amp; a
N 24 ft) Lot ..
2280
Ben
H &amp; Selma M Peck
Lot 86 &amp; SEly % .
12450
Franklin A Cole Lot 108
&amp;Nly
% Lot
14250
Albert
R &amp; Doris E R
Jacobsen
Sly
%
Lot
109 &amp; all Lot
15450
Dr E L Montgomery
(ex
Nly 20 ft)
11
14120
F J Mann
10700
James
A
&amp;
Elayne
Schoke Lots 180 &amp; ....
18040
Frank
J Heineman
i
11500
Seymour &amp; Barbara Waldman
1
11200
Marshall Bennett
Frank M Levy
147
GEO ¥ NIXON
&amp; Cco’s
WOODRIDGE
SUB
Mr Martin Rotter Lots 113
&amp;
114
I J Sussman Lots 141 &amp;
NORTHWOOD
MANOR
Nat Reznick
Mr Fred Florence
Robert A Borinstein
Norman
Dolgin
Edward J Moss
OAK
GROVE
suB
Joseph
Lampl
H E Juhrend
OAK MEADOWS
Anthony C &amp; C M Biagi
1
John A Swanson

W

32

Do (ex
W 32 ft) Lot 86
&amp; W 38 ft Lot

Alfred
J
Marks
Carolyn E Marks
Bruce K Goodman
Theodore L Vitkin
OWNER’S

10190
9020
5130
4600

f ngelo Farina
LL
oO

&amp; STONE’S
ur Rady
Tackett Inc

Thomas G
HILL

Ruth

D

shed

12
RAVING
20

VIEW

SUB
18900
17900
19400

4

STONES

Brown

SHORE

‘as P &amp; Sherry B Buhai ss
ILL &amp; STONE’S SRerean

26840

CREST

pees

ROAD ‘sub

f

15510

J

Zz
S HOVLANDS
TO HIGHLAND

15510
IST ADD
&gt; na
4680
4260

Hutchinson
Rasmussen

....
....

30
88

5750
6100

DIV

OF

Lors

1

@i2

STEINBERG’S RESUB
Mrs
Verle.
Benassi
Lots
‘Lots 1 &amp;
Bartolomeo Ladurini ...
OWNER’S
SUB OF LOT
5
RAVINIA WOODS TRACT
Lawrence F McClure ....
D
PORT

CLINTON

A Fabbri &amp; Sons
Benton
J Willner
Jr
Evelyn
Willner
James A Rose
Olivia Lenzini
C_ Difilippo
Sinesio A Zagnoli Lot
&amp;
E%
vac
alley
W of &amp; adj
Wm R Bernardi Lot 13

S

14 ft Lot

14

&amp;

W%

21110

w

26

JF

Robert W Jensen S 9 ft
e921

E 35.8 ee
:
‘
Scalabrini Lots 9 &amp; 10
KIMBALL’S , oe
Ralph
Bowers
John
T Kennedy
(ex E
12 oa Lot 18 &amp; (ex W

“ivthnk’ Dube Sd Woe

FOREST

James J Lawrence ...... 14
A
RAVINIA
HIGHLANDS
HN
&amp; V N Adams All
Lot 22 &amp; S%
Leon
Swartz
Mrs Maude Gardiner
John
Orsan
George D Harrison
Richard Francis
Dr Henry E Chirprin Lot
56 &amp; (ex Nly 20 ft) all 57
R E Hutchins S% Lot 24
&amp; Niy 30 ft
Clara Loder Teter (ex Nly
30ft) Lot 25 &amp; all .....2
David Wieegel Jr
Herman Leuer
RAVINIA HILLSIDE
John Lenzini S 45 ft L
29 &amp; N 3
RAVINIA
WOODS
Hilda
G
Gorenstein
Ely 10 ft)
Annette M Person
Marshall L Berlin
Cc REIMBOLD'S- RESUB
Stanley M Freeling

&amp;

&amp;

vac alley E of &amp; adj
sd
tract
13
Lorenz P &amp; Theresa errs
ne
PROSPECT Linben SUB
Myron
B Shure
4
RAVINIA
COURT
Joseph L Kadison
Lot 4
&amp; Wily % Sly 85 ft ..
5
Ben W Sager Ely % 85 ft

DNA

_ NWly to NWly cor sd
_ Lot th NEly on NWly.

ae ye

RAVINIA

Guyot
Silvio

th SWlyto a‘pt on
In sd Lot 70 ft SEly
NWly cor sd Lot th

In
ie

Rot b Mr

|

Ernestine

RESUB

Innes

OF

, Ashville, “Thelma
im

Kurtzon (ex pt used for
Eden’s Hwy) W
ears
|
A
C
Almgreen
(ex
pt
used
for Eden’s
Hwy) 70
Arthur
Dunas
&amp;
Morris
Kurtzon (ex pt used for
Eden’s
Hwy)
Donald

Askow, Irwin

Ugolini

5880

WESTVIEW
Bernard
Gordon
3
WILLETS
RESUB
Harris
Trust
&amp;
Savings

fm

sd Lot 11 th SEly
on Ely In ee Lot 50
fr

easy

J

Co

Harold

11320
9110
27600

Sew

aves

Milton Lev

ace’ ee = NEL

Barrett

K

WINCANTON
&amp;
Mary
W
1

16700

a
eee
Meyers
R
Robinson
Lot
&amp; S%
Malcolm S Greenebaum ..

Irving
ea

9030
20900
16500
2150

D

HIGHLAND
PARK
Lillian C Tucker
oe.
Bert
&amp;
Ida
Piacenza
N
50 ft S 100 ft Lots 6 &amp;
7
Leonard
Zieve
S%
.... 19
H Manasse &amp; Co N%
.

CLAVEY CORNERS
UNIT NO 2
B Frank
Beach
Jr
.
11480
RESUB
RAVINE MANOR
M D Sachnoff
10
16020
Aaron, William
RESUB
OF LOTS 49-50-51 IN
Abarvanel, Nathan .......
J S HOVLANDS rere ADDN
Abbott
ouse, Inc
Irving
Rudolph
630
W
Charles J Wolf
:
600 Abels, Monroe
Abelson,
Morton
§
RESUB OF LOT 3 IN
| Abercromby,
Archibald
SWAZEY’S rer
Alvin H
ae
B Swazey
11050 l Abraham,
Jerome L
....
21500 Abrahams,
Abrahams Richard S
RICHARD’S SUB
Abram,
John
Highland
Sunset
Lots
1
to
8
117060
Abrams, Arnold J Jr
RIDGE
VIEW
Acello, Mike J
Donald F Pavlick
6050
Ackerman,
A Tusten
Harold H Herbert S1%4 Lots
Ackerman, Walter G, MD .
29-39
By
Adair,
Jane
Glen
Briscoe
Adair,
John
Edward J Flynn
Adams,
Richard
Philipson
Adamson,
Henry T &amp; Katharine
RIDGEWOOD
PARK
SUB
G
Paul
Ettington
Addison,
Eugene
Bennett
160
ft)
5
11180
Edelman,
Robert
J
IRVING ROSENBERG'S
Adler,,
Alma
EDGECLIFFE
—
Irving Rosenberg
25510 Adler,
Adler,
Charles
F
UFNERS SUB OF ors 8-9
Adler, Eugene M
&amp; 10 BLK 86 &amp; LOT 59
Adler,
Henry
SOUTH
HIGHLAND
ADDN
Adler, Jules L
Edward
Frank
(ex
Wly
Adler,
120° ff). Tot
te
Cee
Adler,
eed 1290 ft Nly 10 ft)
Agatstein,
Louis R
3680
Aho,
Wm
Samuel N Levin Wly 120
Ahrens,
ft Lot
1 &amp; Wly 120 ft
Nly
10
ft
Lot
8140 Aiston, H B
Albert, J Earl ...
SECOND
ADDN "TO
Albert, Joe
RAVINIA
cee
14370
Albrecht, John
III
&gt;
Cyril
Stanek
8
Aleyon Theatre
640
Aldridge,
Alfred
G
SHELTON’S MANOR
SUB
Bruno
Bertucci
8
6540 Aldridge, Harry S
Aldridge, William S
SHERWOOD ren
Alexander,
Jose Villa Arce Jr
....
8610
David Van Pelt
6750 Allderdice,
Allen,
Howard
S$
Emil &amp; Ann L Wiberg ..
5850
Wm
B White
8200 Allen Jamse E Jr ....
Chas W lauzon
Rex
8500 Allen, John
Robt J Noren
8200 Allen,
William
P
Wm
Harmon
8280 Allenby, Richard J
Clarence B Sandberg ....
8080 Allison, Archibald M
Edward
Ettlinger
115
8780 Allison,
M
G
Martin
Wiberg
N%
Lot
Alschuler, Alfred S Jr ..
181. &amp; .all. Lot
(132 ..&amp;
Alschuler, Rose H
S%
11350 Alter, Harry
F M Thalman
9450 Altholz,
Herbert
SOEFKER’S Woops
Altman,
Alvin
S, DDS
Iola W Norton
12600 Altschul,
Gilbert
Ww bas SORENS
SUB
Alviani,
Angelo
Chas
H Wilso
4
10950 Amendola,
SOUTH. "HIGHLAND ere
Amendola,
Geo Proetz N%
11300 Amick,
E H
Arthur G Wagner
‘6
18000 Amsteen, Walter R
Warner Spengler S 122 ft 78
6890 Amsterdam,
Harvey C .
Joe Ariano N%
14100 Andersen,
i
Morton Bucharest S%
14100 Andersen,
Leif Jensen
N%
170
8100 Andersen,
STRATH- ae
Michael Fleischmann ....
6080 Andersen,
Anderson,
SUB
OF BLK
3 it
MooR
ADD
Henry
Schilp
5550 Anderson,
Anderson,
SUB OF LOT 6 BLK 4
Anderson,
RIDGEWOOD
PARK SUB
Anderson,
Ann W Martin
3
10290
Anderson,
SUB OF LOTS 5-6-7-8-9
Anderson,
BLK 79 HIGHLAND ener
Anderson,
Mrs Nathan Elson
9830
Anderson,
SUB OF LOTS 11-12- is &amp; 14
Anderson,
BLK
81 eee
PARK
John
Fischer
151000 Anderson,
Anderson,
SUNSET iANOoR
Lester N Heap EX%
....
3520 Anderson, Steven O
Anderson,
SUNSET MANOR “ADDN
Andrews,
(EX PUBLIC Hwy)
Constantine
Scassellatti
Andrews,
N%
Lot 31 &amp; all .... 38
Andruss, Lee J
18960
SWAZEY’S
SUBDN
Angster,
Herbert C
Boswell B Swazey &amp; ChrisAnixter,
tine I Swazey
W
R
3840 Anixter,
6760 Anschultz,
UDELL’S
SUB
Ansel, Bernice
OR PT: LOT it Bik: 4:IN 6s,
Anspach, H &amp; R Ine
WRENN’S
ADD
TO H PARK
Anspach, Herman F
M Betty Udell
:
Anspach,
William
N
Mrs Signe Johnson
Antes
Sign
Co
VALLEY siBpN
Anthony, Joseph R
Robert L J Gillispie ...
Anthony, Marvin L ...
VILLAGE
OF iit ‘woops
Anthony,
R B
Angelo Santucci
Apitz,
Mrs
Alfred
C
Richard
Shoemaker
se s
Appel,
Miss
Mildred
Arthur
Dunas
&amp;
Morris
Appel, Vallee O
Kurtzon (ex pt used for
Appelgren, Jane
Eden’s Hwy)
59
Appelman, Harry: L
Do
(ex
pt
used
for
Arcadius, Herbert G ....
Eden’s Hwy)
60
Arenberg,
Albert L ....
E
Taft
Madsen
(ex
pt
Arenberg,
Milton
K
used
for Eden’s
Hwy) 61
Arends Sewing Machine Co
Wm S Hedges (ex pt used
Armbruster,
Benjamin F ..
for Eden’s Hwy)
62
Armbruster, Dorothy
Arthur
Dunas)
&amp;
Morris
Armstrong, Henry J
Kurtzon (ex pt used for
Armstrong, John
Eden’s Hwy)
Armstrong,
ers
H
Do
(ex
pt
used
for
Armstrong,
R
cidieigt acts
Eden’s
Hwy)
Armstrong, W x
Lillian
Goering
(ex
pt
Arnold,
H
§
used for Eden’s Hwy) .
Arnold, Leonard H
Arthur
Dunas
&amp;
Morris
Arnswald, Theodore ...
Kurtzon (ex pt used for
Eden’s Hwy)
Aronson,
Alfred C
Do
(ex
pt
used
for
Aronson, Jerome B
Eden’s
Hwy)
Arthur,
Ralph
W
Mrs Isabelle Bordeau
(ex
Artistry,
Ine
pt used for Eden’s Hwy)
Ascher, Robert S
E
tee
oe
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Asher,
Frederick

PERSONAL

23200
39370
26300
3s

PROPERTY

8440
10000
8100
8100

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Aten \ BW
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Athanas, Don
Atkins; Clata: Pal: .3..48..408)
Atlas, Donald H
(The
Great)
Fer Be SENT OR MOG” sc cpeniabecies
Aubrey,
James
T
Auerbach,
Max
R
Austin, C Henry
Aven,
Donald
Avery, Cyrus
M ..
Axelrod,
David
Axelrad,
Milton
Ayars, Mrs M P
Aynsley,
Robert
Arens,
J Carl
B &amp; B Decorators
Bacik,
George
Bacon, D P
Bagley, George Re i.:iici. oss i
Bahnsen,
Carl
Bahr’s Flower Shop
Bahr, Hans
(Flower a)
Bahr, Ruth F
Baizer,
Simon J
Baker, Althea
Baker, Charles
R, DDS
Baker, Mrs L T and Mrs Carol
Baker
Summers
Roger M
Baldau f,

John

H

Baldwin, Est of Catherine
Baldwin, deceased
Baldwin, Mary C
Balke,
Mrs
Clarence
W
Balkin, Dr Ruth B

Hugh

Ballenger,
Ballenger,

Ballenger, William
Ballew,
Forrest
Balz,
Richard
F
Balsam,
Banfield, S R, MD

G

Barbaras,
Jacob
J
Barbee, John N Jr
Baren,
Sidney
I
Barker, Melvin G
Barkley, Faye (Dress Shop)
Barnard,: Riebard ‘C.3.30 02
Barnard, Robert A
Barnes, Arthur C: 2200....620Ss
Barnes,
E P
Barnes, Carl M
Barone,
Andrew
Barr,
Jacques
Barr,
Lyman
Barrows, Harlan H .
Bart,
Chester
Bartel, Wm H
Bartelman, m0
Bartholomay,
Robert
Bartlett, Clayton W
Bartolai,
Battista
Bartolai,
Domenic
Barton, James W
Barton, T E Jr
Baskin, Samuel
J ...
Bass,
Samuel
N
Bates, Charles
I
Bates, Dallas Lane ..
Batt, Thayer
Bauer,
Aaron
§S
Baughman,
R U
Baum,
Alvin
Baum,
Gus
Baum’s
Pastry
Shop
....
Beach,
Ss
Florence
Beach
Candies
Beale,
Louis
Beam, Darrell R Sr
Beaman, aera E
Bean, Dora
Beaudin, Mitchell
Beauregard,
Rose
Beck, Andrew
C
Beck, Della S
Beck,
Beck,
Beck,
Becker,
Becker,

Beckler,
Beckman, Martin L
Beckmire,
Miss
Bede, Howard
H
Beers, Bertram
R
Beers,
Morrison D, MD
Behanna, Paul C .
Behn, J Fred ...
Behn,
Jack
Behr, Mrs Louis ....
Behrens, Henry J ....
Behrens,

Bellei, Everett
Belmont,
Belmont,

G

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Belmont,

Belmont,
Belmont,
Belmont,

Belmonte,
Louis
Belmonti,
Dora
Beman,
Lewis T
Benassi, Armand J
Benjamin,
Irwin J
Benjamin( Robert M
Bennett,
Bruce
D
Bennett, Ellen
Bennett, John
Bennett,
Marshall
..
Bensinger,
B
E ...
Benson, Bernerd C
Benson,

Benson,
Benson,
Benson,

Carl

A
Grant D &amp; Carrie
Benson,
John
H
Benson,
Robert
Benton, Daniel L
Benvenuti,
V
J
Berem, Dale E O
Berg,
L
Berg,
Bergman, Jerome
Bergsman,
L A
Bergstrom, Arthur T
Bergstrom,
Robert
‘| Beris,
Normand
Berkson, Maurice J
Benson,

�Bernardi,

Joseph

Bernardi,

Sam

silleetinnhtaseaibelm ih

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Estate

of

Boynton,
Boynton,

Donald
F B

§

Brand,
Brand,

fs ae eeeecceeecceescecoesoccce

JO0n
Leslie

HW
S

C T

.........

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BYRNE), BeOS
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Brandonisio, Arthur R ................
Brandonisio, Mike ........-....----...

Bernardini,

James ......................-.
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Berry,
Berry,

Charles
Kenneth

L
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Brancs, eehe: DB: cncunGuii..
Braun Bros Oil Co Ince
Braun, Ernest A
Braune, Grace ....

.....

Brazzale,
Breakwell,

Sete ecw ee ccceneweceeconsooe

Betterman,

Blast

Thelma

Aas

(men’s

clothing)

neces

Bielert, Karl F
erwirth CH

Bilow,

Binder,

Louis

nam,

Broming,

Y

Y, Trustee
Y, Trustee

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Harry a

George

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Biondi,

John

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Albert

tor

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Briscoe, Glenn G
Briskman, Edwin H

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Samuel,

Bingham,

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stein, Har
Birkenff,
Ernest
Bischo

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Bishop ns

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Browning,

Blakeslee, Homer
Blanding, James
Bleich, August

Elizabeth
Clarence §

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Thomas

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Chiprin,:
Henty
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Chizewer, Bernard § ......
Christenson,
Ed
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Blessing, WH
Bletsch, Arthur R
Bletsch, Caroline M
Bletsch, Charles
i
R
Bligh, Harrison J
Bliss,

Charles

M
Buchanan,
Buchbinder,

Dr

Sete
w meee eececeeecccecores

Buchroeder,

Walter

M

Theodore

H

Buenger,

Blomquist,
Alfred
Blong, Arthur O

Bullivant

Bloomfield,
Bloomstein,

Andrew
Max Jr

Blue

Food

Bock,
Bock,

Co

Harold
Sunoll,
Vv

Burkhardt,

Fred

Ralph

Bogeaus,

W

....

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Arthur

Boilini,

-Bonacorsi, Joe
namarte, a
oo

Bean
Evelyn
D
Burton, Frank
W
Burton, Robert R
Burwell, Dorothy M

&lt;A ....

Robert

Busch,
gaat

"Herbert

Cc

Bushey, Albert J

Dene

Butz,

Borchardt
hardt

Butz,

M Emma

Borgeson,

Cabonargi,

Cadillac

Frank

Bosseli, John

Northern

Trust

Trust

Umberto

Mortor

Car Division

.

d/b/a/

Highwood
Campbell,

Botker, Raymond

pecyy

V

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Canmann,
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&amp;

Butz, T C &amp; Northern

Walter

Bortolotti,

T C &amp; Northern Frust Go

T C

Capen

Harry L

.....

Canmann, Mark F
Canter, Floyd M Ns aanet, a

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Arthur

Joseph

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Christiansen, Carl F ......
Christman;
Donald
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Christopher, Nicholas
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Christopher, Robert D
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Onureh,
Margaret.
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Churchill, Jack
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Churchill, Robert A
Chutkow, Rupert
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Cicconi,
Angelo
Cimbalo,
Frank
CIPRO.
SRGle:
iC A
Cimbalo,
Nick
.....
Cimbalo,
Pete
.....
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Clague,
Stanley
R
Clark, Charles J
Clark, Edna
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George B

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Bock,
George Jr
Bock, Clark R
Boettger, W E
Bogoff,
Henry:

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Piackailes

Burch,
Nathan
Burdick,
Ella

C

Arthur
F
Floyd E ...

Boches,

Booth,

William

Mart

Blume, Marshall
Blumenthal,
- pea
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L

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Blockhan, Armin R

Goose

Wilber

Cassel, Louis ........
Camsiay,: C8
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Cassedy,
R R
.....
Castellari, John
Castellari,
Ray
Castelli, Joseph .......
Casterton,
Cory
P
Castle,
Oliver
.....
Cawley,
WP
Cederborg, Emil W
Central Beauty Shop ...........
Central Cleaners
&amp; Dyers
Central
Hardware
Central
Tire
Co
Oeperiy
OW
Re
Chaffee,
Frank
W
Chagios,
Christ
...........
Chaimson,
Samuel
M
Chalmers,
Thomas
...............
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Joseph
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Chamberlin, John B
Chambers,
Lorne
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‘Chapman,
Arthur ....
Chapman,
Chapman,
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Chester, Leonard

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Robert

Carleton,
Maude
Carlin, Thomas
Carlow,
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Carlsen,
Carlson,
Carlson,
Carlson,
Carlson,
Carlson,
Harold
A
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Carlson,
H D &amp; Elsie kK acdideiites
Carlson, Herbert &amp; Adelaide ....
Carlson, Lawrence .....................:
Carlson, Robert C. E.
Carlson,
Mrs
Violet A
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Carpenter,
Ellen
..............
Carpenter,
Frederick
B
Carr,
Caryl Cody
Carr, James W
.....
Carr, Richard
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Carr,
Robert
W
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Carr Wallace T oo
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H. Bes ry
Carver,
Priscilla
Case, Jean V
Casel, Carl F
Casey, W iJdr.
Casey,
W
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Coleman, Jain

Bs

a

Delafield, Mrs Herbert ..........
Delaney, James
A Jr ........s00%

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Compere, Thomas ..
Compton, Gail W
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Dembo, Harold .
Demichelis, Joseph .....
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Connolly,

John

de. la Torre, Angel scsi
Delhaye, Emma
..........
Delhaye, George ...........05
Delhaye, Leslie ............. vee

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a
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Denzel, Wa Hi
DePaola, Frank

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Nook,

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Peter

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Dickey,

Leslie J
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Dicus, Frederick O

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Deapres, Alexandre .... 0.6.80«0% 5
Detmer, Howard F ...... eewenae ‘
Deuchler, Philip G
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DeVries, John A

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Bickmore, J Franklin
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Brewier, Arheld-C io
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‘Brennan,
Thos
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Brenner, Murry J
Brentano, John C M &amp; Sophie ....
Bresnehan, W
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Brickman,
Paul
Briddle, Evelyn L
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Silvia
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Diener,

Wm

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Dillard,

Wm

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Wm—Plastering
Nathan
Nathan Jr
Wm
J &amp; Evelyn

Corwith,
Corwith,
Cosmos,
Cousens;

«Harvey.

Covington,

Co

Ditling, KW

Kh. .:&lt;.sssensceccosss

John

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Distelhorst, Carl F
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Dixon, Marvin’ H.66¢. Vie
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Dobeus, Est of Vander M ......

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Crawford,

W

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Dodge, Otis L
Dolgin, Norman R ...... Pamamg bert
Dolin, Albert H
Domash, Marshall E
Domarscki, Walter
Dompke, John
Donaldson, Doreen
Donelli, Angelo settee ew ewer ewes
Doner, Allen G .
Donnersberger, Genevieve ..
Donohue, Mildred G .
Don’ 's Standard Service Sta.
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Creigh, Thomas were eee e errr
Criesbach,
Richard
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Cretors, Charles &amp; Georgia
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Crocoll, Norman R .
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Roy A

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Crouch, Charles A
Crowell, George W
Crowell, Kenneth C
Cruttenden, James R
Cruttenden, W
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Cucchiaro, Herman J
Cucchiaro, Joseph J
Cumming,

George

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Douglas,

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......... ;

Downing, Paul E BA
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Berkeley

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Dreiske, Conrad R ........
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Dressler, Myles Harley
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Cuscaden, Fred A
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Harold
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Clarke, Helen P
.......
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Harry
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Clarkson, Robert E
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Clason,
Pearl
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Dudley LeRoy
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Samuel
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DalPonte,

Albino

DalPonte,

Lewis

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Danakas,

Danyo,
Darby,

ME Tg oa ok Kaate Gack
Alexander

6 pistes

Louis
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Durbahn, Walter E
Durkee, Charles E
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Ehrenberg, Lyle M
Ebrlich, George W
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Eichler, Leonard M E

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Defenbau, Calvin E
Deffenbaugh, Walter
DeFilippo, Carmine
Degen, Albert P wee

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~
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Dules, Stephen
Duman, Louis R
Dumont, Lilo .
Duncan; Charles
i op ioei teaee Wee

David, Robert L
Davidson,
Davidson,
TIRWIAMOTE

Harry
Duffy,

Cptil. in tigies eu hccintone

Neal R
Charles V

Darlan,
Daro,

Duffield,
Duffy &amp;
P

mees

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lam
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Bernardi, Charles P

Boynton,

Carlo. &amp; vies

1 Caranl,
Domenic
20.
oe
Carani,
Mark
........ apse callin ioe
OBPORy
OGE
ios
ascend sites
CORR,
SOOTY
oc bsciccoctulayes:
Carey,
Walter J
Cargill, Frank W

et

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s «9 Sy

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Bilert;‘ Mo Arion 46 666i og
Einbecker, William F ..... kiceeee
Eisenbrand, Dr. George F
Eisendrath, Joseph L Jr
HISENGPATN,
JJ W
W
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Eisendrath,
Eisendrath, William B
Eisenschiml, Gerald
Eisenchiml, Ralph E
Kitner, Menry C13. 05

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[| Boynton,” Allee D “Sos

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LEGAL NOTICES

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Ellsworth, Charles" D
REM
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0! 6 bic a bled 6-v ss cieliine
DIT
TIME Vicle dip.dic's v-Vecwpecdelew
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enon, William: HE ek
SRT
RAMI
230, gc in vc ev epee e
i
se esa ess conc wiwat
, Clarence R sete ween nee
Memmeinrecnt,
Pose
ec ce tee cess
ee
Engelhard, Oscar W
Engelman. Robert S
DOT
RROUIANG 6 oc
ccc ccs cbeene
Epstein, David .
eee
ewer ees aeee
Epstein,
Harry
Epstein, Harry A eee eee eer reer ere
Epstein, Julius Ce
a
Ericksen, Kenneth W eee ee mena wee
Erickson, Norman K &amp; Marjorie M
Erickson, Peter A
Ericson, Robert W
CE
MEIEUD, is” oa ba cw ob ein vwinn
Erikson, Eben W
Erikson, Roy A
Ernst, Mabel Ann (Milliner)
RR
MIO
CS os oe oc ay hee eens
MN
EN! Go s5d bie bw c.th die 60 bibs
Escalante, Jose &amp; Co ............
HOMES
SE ele cpcvcsesesscess.
MeN, AZOTTITICS 2... cece
sc ecees
MU
TER TRO beak
tcc cbs evveeus
Esmiz, Alfred R
EE
oie
s,s
a's woh e wb oe
MON
Soleo
da sd cibiely pe e's
MOM
PMU Cc io sc cc cece ieens
Ettlinger, Edward R ere eee eeeees
NOES
PS
a
Ettlinger,
Ettlinger, Ralph Sr ..............
Etu, Dr. George DDS
Eubanks, William Coen eer we reeeeeee
Evangelista, Frank eee enw eee we eae
Evans, C T
eee eee men
eee ee sence
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ee

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wwe

tee

ME
MODORE G oi.
ec. ccs eee
Evensen, Erling Cee ee er reece see
Everett, Mrs Jean
Evers, John W
Evert, Viola
ee
ee ary
Re
gL ye se p's vhs wide a vom
MES
Ob dae bobs oss neltie vce
Ewing, Willard ee
Exiner, Alexander R eee ee ewer eee
Exmoor Country Club
EMC
oe
ecg veka kas ee
Eyles,
Fabbri, Bruno
MMC
MURTY bhi ec kc oc ccus cule cescs
Fabricant, Noah D .
Fagen, Herold
MS
VEMIOPTE (S06 occ cs ae lece ees
Fairbanks, B W
Fairbanks, Aline
Falk, Morris Jr
Falk, Sidney
Faoro, Gale F
MM
AMIMOIO oe
eh ek ice e es
Farmer Beverage Co
MeMRe MUMEONCO Hy 6555...
0 seek eee
Farrell, Mrs Robert O
Farrell, William H Cee ewer eweeene
Fasig, Bernice
ES
OMIT HY 5 cs ose occ cee bs
metas
Waamen: Nios... seca css
memner, Wilma As...
kee
MTU
SN eig'So'c do 8 agscsesisceee
Fay’s Beauty Shop
Fearing, Munroe
ee
NO
eke ikke deacu de oes
Fechheimer, Richard
Feigen, Morton B
Feika, Sadie ..
ESO
65.5 o5 osc cbeecss
ces
MEET
cbc
ee hak eee ck ls
Feldman, Burton G
Feldman, William J
Fell Co, Th

Me

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cid eels vocdaeed

I
ie g' Nia's
ok Oe com's cd
MEO
So 6 Doo dc kc Cece e cWae
Fell, Milton (Shoes)
ENN
ois oceilescvec
cous
Felsenthal, James G
Feiske,
C Longford
Fenelon, Thomas V ..............

Fenton,

Irvin

R

........ ie

cits

UMN
EROS Sig
ea dein cs Celeaces
Ferraro, Nercissus
Ferraro, NE
hE hide d ice ts cake
Feuchtwanger, Richard J
Feuchtwanger, Sidney
Peurstein, Morris N ............
Fidder, Mr &amp; Mrs R H
Fiedler, Lovis P
Field, Geoffrey M
Field, Herbert P
EE
ee eee
oe le Soe
Finder, Irving
Finder, Paul L
Fine, Leon
Fini, Ee
hse be occ ayy yr eee aE Jo
Finkelman, Louis D
Finlay, Guy B
Finsky, Leo H
Fiocchi, Caesar
Fiocchi, Charles
SP
EOC
os aks
asda cae
Firestone, Bernard
RE
TON
Ts.
os od pice
Fischel, Robert F Inc
mueonely Robert Fo... 3.5.
cca des
Fischer, Albert C Jr
Fischer, Joseph
Peete eee reser eeee
Fischer, M J SOPs ee ee errno eesoee
CMC

ee

cere

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eesevece

Fischer, Thomas C
NE
IRONS
Sie oslo c's sree ke oe kee
Fisher, Fred F Jr Cee tere ever eees
Fisher, Milton L
mieegerald, Alice ....:..........,
Fitzgibbons, John T
FitzSimon, Robert T
Fjerre, Arthur J
Flanagan, James E
Flanzer, Harold M
APM)
i0w W'g a0 6's 6 oye Wag 6 'e
Flaxman, Geraldine ......... Dates
Fleager, Samuel B emer er ee eerce
Fleischman, Bernard

Page 26

GR

1000

MMU

Site

CoM

ius wc Gale

Gainds, ‘Maurice Ho ie kk
Gaines,
Theodore G
............
Cetinasini, Sowenh oor
ud
Ss
Gate PiyMan ts yee ce aR 5 Gok dec
CALE,
Male
er
ee
is
Grlingher a es us
ca
Gallagher,
'W Fred’
........... )
Gallagher, W H ...... Pia
ee ues
Galloway, James D ....... be
ee&gt;
Gamlin;
Howard
N’
2.2.05 .0.¢, fi
Gameaon,
Henrys
cir
eas eh
Gans, Gia.
aco aes aoe a
Gardner, Alfred Bou vaigd
cs ies
Garfinkel,
John
...... Nyda wee aes
Garino,
Ledley
cob ecicieie
wee sae
Garland, A Stewart .......... aes
RAMP
TEVINE h hoe ie ee vals oats oe
SRE
aR, wale ce ks acpnia aca tea
Garnett. 2) B OO: TH: .is0os i658 Garrett, Loraine P ........... eis
RR NRECG
FBS) ooo Sug ps kwed i'icarnd
SIN
MOOI
oi ke uO
Rei le dai
Gartside, Est of Mrs Florence ...
Mme WOOd,’ SHOMR
eo
6 a6 iiss os is
Gas Heating Service Inc ss diese a is
MSG8R, PAU
Tico
ros,
Gatzert, Welter) Ar io
Wisie
GeUCronty
Aa od Ol owieg
aah yc
Wain, Peter Ay Siete
ea ae ei
Garner, De De
eek caulk: a
Gets . POOR
oS e cae s Be SrePeded Wine
Geigerich, A ws Bw alve hot
Ee eR bee
Geils, George We e e ec ass oe aie
Geisenberger, Mrs Harold R .....
WAGIOE,
i
We cada eas
wk ON Wiss ited a wade
Crerener, Gene
sis cs tide pec yeas
Geleerd, Wm
L ...... Vaan alae alts
Gelperin, Jules MD | LNG tae ae vp
Geminer,
Louis
............. ate
George, ‘Edward C_ Meiosis 4 /ealbhtnn

58fe
?

Elkins,
Cee
e weer
enter ene eeee
Pacoes
Eugene P ..... Suna
IR
MUIDOTE We gic
deed ix ewes
SURE
A
dg Sia
owl aia wie wis v Wiese
MEME GTEYGOR Hoe.
cl see i sce aes
Ellis, TOR
oo Veikey a cides b dies pk

2300
Georgeson Bros Repair Ser .....
500
Gerael, Joseph ei ieee Vie eack eee eb
750
Gernarda Pal ese
oes eae
250
Geringer, Miles A ,....
650
Gershun, M L
300 | Gerstel,
Sol
600
ERURIGO, ADEE.
Led besics wees ee
250
Getz,
Oscar
3
500
Gherman, Dr Emanuel
..........
1050
Giaimo,
Jack
10350
Gibbs,
Naomi
....
700
Gibbs, Richard F
10050
Gibbs,
Walter
2000
CRN
0 Sd pai
tieK GS
750
SSIDGOK, DACA de hos heens oid baie pneole
400
ie with) Gere’
6445 pak Geaewe
wae
400
ARIOW COM Lek
wake ee ge de 6s Cu
ko
300
Giese, Geo L
Giese: Connie: Ts. se iti weccieis
600
Gieseke, Walter G .......... eam
1700
MOREY: PHO Beate
det ivc deesak
1200
Gieser,
Helen
350
Gifford,
H C
.
700
Gres, |. Pe Fe: O Wisin ss atc Ha'sceeke on
1300
Gift Corner, Inc The ....
2850
Gilhert, Aired! Oe
ads
as ereeee
1050
Gilbert, Russell S Ce eeee
er esenee
500
Gilleland,:
Wdith
B.'s
cies
os oee's
2650
OBIS, | Feo
cass wale Was orale
800
Gillispie,
Robert
L
J
400
Gilroy, Edwin L
5000
CipenGre,, 160 Ue
55 by So eis
1550
Kpiometth,
| LOO
5565
0s ca tiewane ‘
850
Gips, Walter
F Jr ....... eckaek
2000
Glader, George F ..........
250
Glader, Ned
Lew
650
SEIMOOE, OV IBUON. 05.5.6 05 So lace wineve
400
WREBON.
68s Co eb ieih
aus i
500
GIRNMOW, SRG Te Siege snlekeawe om
900
Glass, Melvin H
1700
Glazer, Max
.
500
Glazier, E M
..
1300
Glazier, Robert Beer.
aaa
900
Gleick, Jos T &amp; Adele Bec
\
1200
Glick, Dr Joel B
é
1100
Chicka, We
8 ois ois sca tees bs
10250
Glicksman, Est of Effie ee
1650
Glidden, Lola Taber pce eececsese
250
Glotfelty, Walden M
1150
Gluck, Gerson I
1000
Godie, A L
250
Godwin,
Naat
350
Goeckner, Ad
0.30625 ,0. vane hae
2500
Goelitz, Mrs Bertha
Goelzer,
C H
450
1300
OTE G, PUB REY a 6 o's bas hs eee
Gohde, Charles H ...............
600
ee
Goldberg, Harvey § er
600
Goldberg, Irving H
650
Goldberg, Julius B
400
Goldberg, Max F ....... Gets
250
Goldbogen,
Frank
250
Goldboss,
Earl
700
Goldboss,
Willard
.......e--sa+300
Golden,
950
Golden, Helen C ee eee ee
1100
Golden,
James.
Bea vvaycsnveces
650
Golden, MareBall is 5.6 usis sete seas
700
Goldfarb, Alger D ee
400
Goldman, A Van
450
Goldman, David W ee
800
Goldman,
Harold
450
Goldman, Louis M Jr
1100
Goldman, M Clarence eee meee eae
500
SSOLGBTNN, DP AA
od oie hae hve
3000
Goldsmith, James K
500
Goldsmith,
Mare §S
250
Goldstein,
eee etm ews roeee
600
Goldstein,
350
Coe eer arrest sene
Goldstein,
500
wee ewe newer ease
Goldstein,
550
Goldstein,
3400
Goldstone,
7000
Goldt, Dr
1150
see e tte en en eee
Goldwach,
700
ee
Gooch, J ae
850
1700
650
3500
Cee eee eases aere rane
1100
eee ner eas easens
650
1650
eee eee wer enere
1250
ee
ee
1050
400
Goodman,
saree ete were
750
Goodwin, Ross
teeter mene reer enne
1700
Goran, Ernest E Ce
2200
Gordon, Allen
Sem errr rere ere eens
250
Gordon, A
1050
Gordon,
500
Gordon,
RERUREE Noe unas 0
1000
Gordon, Dorothy D ‘Est of
2100
Gordon,
Fred
S$
1000
Gordon,
450
Gordon,
1660
800
Mrs Mary
2000
Gorenstein,
E A ..
500
Goroway, Sam
450
Goss, Lyman E Jr.
450
Gosswiller, Edw
400
Gotass, Birger COO e ewe em eee eranee
750
Gotass, Sverre
550
acu heyyy, | ORIN
o's Wa Wa ihc di acetatate
tala
2050
Gottleib, Robert N ee
ey
500 Gottschall, W L
1450
Goudie, Mary E Cee eee an ee ererrees
1650
CIO: Te
BOs
ois cei we cane
550
Gourley, John &amp; Co .............
1350
GOUPIES)
IPM
o's 5 6. ERE
Ratvaa
750 Grapell: Jomanuel:
60550255
Sea es
250 Grabin, Nathan N ....... e eh ees
650 Grace, Stanley D
eee rer eeeeees
250 Grach,
Edward
300 Grade, Michael Wi. 6556 eh ‘
850 Grady, DP Grover Qo
A
2600
Grady, Dr Grover Q@ :....0css00.
700 GPSTT, \F DOMAS Wests
be ee
900 Graham,
Harold
...
1800
Graham, Sydney P
1000 Gram, Mrs Ruth
550 Gramlich, Charles
300 Grandi, Amil See er weer rere eee nne
1400
EPEROS, (ANSON ey
oe ide oaks
86000
GANG,
MM Angele
iic\ i036
fe. c6 ss
500 Granholm, Martin W ............
650 Grant, ChavlesoRiiiies a6. 900 coh s
850 Grant,
Raymend
&lt;eeiciiaweriial
560
Grauer, Millard J
750
Gray, Milton: Bh waste ete thy,
1800
Greed; BIER veidehrcoeeuas $4050
550 Greco, Joseph
.......
2800
Green, Don J &amp; Laura B........
1500
Greet; Waward Aids.
bs cvv se weas
700 Green, Jack (Barber Shop) res as
500
Green, Raymond M &amp; Sibyl M .
700 Greenberg, Arthur
650 Greenberg, David
600 Greenberg,
650 Greenberg, I
1150
Greenberg,
250 Greenberg,
1150 Greene, B D
‘
§
1000
Greene, Lois D “(MD) .
Dee rete
350 Greenebaum, SOU
vk cen ceevicn
900, Greenebaum, Malcolm §S .........

8a.

Fleischmann, Michael ............
Fleming, Norman
...... lek aaa
Fleming, William ..... aes
aee ih
Pena,
MILPOR Ee Sie ka yas was ‘
Fresher, Ali Co The eos cc
cky
Flinn, Howard H ..... Bae ve bie-ooae
Piltiny Haymond Wooo
evs cease
PGR; Weer
Oop reas. (Nasa b aces
PROG, MYCE EE bak
Ok oe bi ka ode’
BMPONCE ATES: 2 ihe tie oa 0's bye bv cle Oe
Florsheim, Harold M ............
Flogabeim, “Ivan: Pind hawaii de
Florsheim, Leonard S ............
Hioreheiin, | Peter ois te ce
ca cas
PIGUH; PAOLTIO’ OC GAViaaio
ces c kh eawe
FOS, OD
eh Pe heey wks ween bon
PIN
BAW
Foe
aes aa’
Paya | WOR SB ee CORI eas
«levee
BOGS Te PUES © EL
Si VN cam va
POO
We
ee eRe
es eas
Fontana, Anthony ...............
PODCARM
SPPEG bass oy ON tak phe
ROC, GROVE Me
ie CUR aa Wien 600%
POrdtray, /Peney Oey.
bs Sse ie
Foreman, Harold E Jr ..........
ROVOIIAT | TONEY | cosas
ob sade
Foreman, Madeline ..............
Moroman, Mo Benyry ees
ot does
Forester, (JOH Poe
ss iediek
a ae nes
TE EMAE, eh OMOWRE
yi hs oklasek
ic belnc a
Forrest, Est
of Wm S
........
Forsythe, Robert W ..............
Poncer;, ermen
hooey
ed peek cy
Foster, Reuben: A206.
kisi ce cc
PMU. EBU siciwcine
ye ahaha ce ty a
Fowilec, Gordon) CP
A ksias
ROMs. AUN
0 creamer hedaw dees
ROX, ANAL GE A chat ehr i
e awk
FOX GOPMOI OE cae Cee eae
ROR SVOMNOM. bo UCL cakes
aves s
PIXATONG,
FOUCTIATG 6 a's eke
ale cious
rrancoeur, Loais Vs.
eo ies cited
ean &lt; CeeOree TS he i a
he SG ak
A,
Ae I
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ha
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MUR,
OL VTR
sv kd Whe WA bee DS
PRMD
OVEV ER, Bei
a he Con hs Wieck
Peak,
Wether Or
Poe ek
Frank’s Shoe Repair ............
REOUKO: SAGO © sic ccd balsacv
Dremeel James eos oor
Ye.
Brahe, Clifton’ Or
a tes.
Franklin, Claude H ..............
Ervankliny SRMER
OW
hi
ee iat
PERM,
TO a
id ee
et ee
Wratizen, Hetty (Hi. as
PUARSREG,
JOO).
bees heeds
eer ess
Franzese, Pasquale ..............
Frauenhoffer, Anton
............
Frauenhoffer, Anton Peter ......
Preberg, . Berane 5 asks
oe ioe
PVODOLE PIMs.
Ok vay cases
wake Thu
RUODENS, TIRES Bosc
eck saat
ROUGE, OW MILER BS 6:0%s bculefenih
oss
Frederickson, Arthur ............
Freehling, Stanley ...6..../......
RPPOOIAT, VALNONE oi.
ces
ol
ereeman,
Arthur
Foo...
i. os)cws
Eroeman,
Clair. Bi
ss vedas
Breeman, Golden
.....6ccucews
fae
Frenner, Jaeob'C io
isie.a cess
Freininth, John (Pose
oe. Ba
Prelinger, ‘Gregg Fo so
cece oivichs
RCE,
PORT a Os ge eee
Bevund, Gustave &lt;5) viwniiec
ec. kc:
Veey,: LROWRE. Foo.
Soe elie:
Pere,
(OBR
SB Vals bk ee ca
Sraavich, | Richdad ‘Tyce
en sac oak &gt;
Ren,
Herbert: Fei
wi se
io c's
POPIOGs
SOREPOG Tlic
Vcc sernaty aautorcs
Mr
ere, TMS Te Voki
oe ec
Friedlich, Herbert A ............
Friedlich, Margaret B ............
Breen. N@itG TF ho obs cs vcas,
BPIMUNCH, ¢ SOMR.
os kos ke ee
Friedinan, Bernard DDS
........
Friedman, Herbert J.............
Friedman, Herbert M ............
RVIpGRMN : SOBODN ds uses
a seed
Friedman, Morton B ............
Frieaman, Bot, Te eoae
Friedman, Seymour J............
Prieoman;
Tort: Wy
cei cesses
Fuiedmén,
“Bullpen
sete a
Friemuth, “Agnes (3s
ioc a
Friesem, Gustave Ber a's Wpa:
5 WK die oles
Frisbee, OO
See disteme
hue aeite
FRISCH, SAAT oy i
a ok
PEMACH.
CHMEON 8 eels Be aes ov ks
Pesek,. Dro MRT Ds
aoe ee
PHUSCH) : Oat
Pics soe
otk ss bh Aa
WPOMOEE.: TOMSE Vedas
i
bees
Froelich, Edmund W ....,...:...
PPOCUEN,: ODERE SS 6s vison cukis y
Hromet, Herman:
Ta. sisi 4 salessc
BUCO, OTRONB: Beh
ia live thw de t
Kove, Newt’ P Gries cseesvus
RABRs - 10s PRES
SWS
a eas
Rei
PARK
Me
ic ees fos
Funkhouser, SOOPER oii
o cto ok
RUIOM. DUIS Cae sieves
or eee
Furrow. WATIOR
ee Ws eo baka a
FORO.
WEPON
i 62. be A OL eek
MRMRAp AR Rak ary SS
eo ee ies
PEN BOPRORE Oy ii
ache Mes Vin oa

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Eldred, Emil F ....
Eliel, “—*
PoUeNde cree eherie ‘

LEGAL NOTICES

LEGAL NOTICES

LEGAL NOTICES
250 Greenfield, Burton J ............
600° Greenwald, Edward C Sr ........
500

Greenwald, Edward Jr ..........
Greenwald,
wee
we ewer eereee
GEGES
EAPO eici'e vc SW iaew Out hls
Gregg, Uharles E Jr .......... i
Gregori, Thoretta &amp; Grace ......
Gregory, Alma
....... tee eeeerae
COVE, TROWOTE 2M eS Sip be we dees
Gressens, Robert J ......
Grey, Arthur L ..... kee
4
CHRIS AO
Bi
pies nos were
MEVECRICH, 'PONMN Bae
bN coves ks ve eee ee
Griswold, James F Jr ..........
Grithes, Chap: Ber Stak
\ ask ere oe
Gritvon,;: Herbert) 8 oi. etc aee
Gronlund,
Alfred
Sree, Maral : Mee
iy eekes
Grossman, Riché#d! o.oo
eee cs
Grontad,
Carl
osc
58 os
Grostad, John
Grotti, Leo C
Gruber, Frank Hue Uebsae eK thud
Gael), BardWe esters
tex Sede “
Gsell, Earl W &amp; Co ....... bynes
Gesell, Barl W &amp; Co. ...seiccuces
Geaiandrs,
Jonw sdiws skeed
eee as
Gientz, ‘Louis: Bick
sc isiiecedea
eis
Gumbiner, Larry .......... teins
Gumbiner, Seymour W ........ wh
Nt
Wo. oats ee ewes teree
Gunsteens,
Gurioli,
Laurence
Gus’
Restaurant
..........
Gustafson, Carl .....
Gustafeon, Emil
(05... 0 ioe. oes i
Gustofson, James E
Guthmann, Walter S ........... i
Guthrie, Fames
hi
es si eae o
Gutmann, Alice C (Trustee)
siete
Gutmann, Daniel N ....... yeebape
Gutman, Myroa (Bes
iss ine.
Guy’s Beauty BROMINE craps a
Cee,
Bren
iwi
ec ae ba ho
Haak’s =
Supply Oe ok Pa hiten
Haas, Claire B
Haas, L R.
Haas, L R Jr
Haavekost,
Frederick
Hackett, Thaddeus B ............
PEAS, Fare OE CANES eh oes ‘
Hadlock,
George
‘
Haeberlin,. John’. Bi Ir *:.....4605
Haessler, Mrs Mildred B
Hafner, Richard Heyesd
vies ces
Hagberg, John S
Magen,
Maroaeiisis sacs eevee ae
Fissawuine,:
Antrid
ccs
lees
Hagglund, Mrs aeren
ehee sae
Haik,
Julius
Hale,
Hall,
Hall,

Haller,
Halperin, Wowie. sia
s4 (Ss ks phon
Halsted, Jess
Halton, Frederick J Jr ...... Mel
Halverson, Ellis C
Ham,
E
Hambly, RS &amp; Co.
Hamilton,

©BA

Ce

eee

reersescrseses
Seamer sera

ee
CC

e eee

eee

Hammersberg, Wallace
Hammond, G John See

eas
ee

eee

a
wes

teens

eee eer eens
er ewes senee
eee

eee

ewes

ey

Haner, Wendall W &amp; Phyllis B .
Hanett, Melvin E
eee eee rreesees
Hanger, David W
eee tee er eaees
Hanger,
Kenneth
ee
ey
Hanig, Irving A i
Hanley,
Hanna,

Robert
cee

E

Hansen,
Hansen,
Hansen,
Hansen,
Hansen,
Hansen,
Hansen,
Hansen,

Gerald
BORN: Gi CU Vectii gad: 32
Marjorie SO meer wer areeres
MEME
Hos hb yi Bh
eae
Norman B
Phoebe
Wallace
Coe ee ee wee wes aee
Wm
O

eee

eee

seer

Hartmann, Est of Hugo
........
Hartmann, Hugo Jr ........-+-&gt;
ee
ee
Harty, Edward
Harvey, Ellery H
........-+.--Harvey; Robert (Wee
diss caveccde
Harza, L F
Haskins, Robert W
........-ee eneees
Hastings,
Robert
D Jr
Hatcher, Charles C Jr
Hathornay: &amp; Mi sv. dcewe’
Hatowski, Myer J ......
Hangan, John R
Haupt,
&gt;
Hauser, Dolph bis bie
Hawkins, Kenneth en.
Hawkins, Richard W
Hawley, L R
Hayes, Raymond ™M ras
Haynes, Charles J ........-- open
Heap, Lester N
....... oon Obs ale
Heartel, Victor Wes sicdeen
kee can
Heath; Oliver W- avs.
osc cbacted
Heath, Wm O ....... se ewerrsere
Hecht, Fred C
Heck, Bi W: ..20¥ wiWia)-e
pipla weet a
Heck,
Brumselh.
cccvisaw'vcewis
ccs ewe
Hecker,
Elizabeth © i. cs viseevns
Hedde, Charles Je ods 0 e'cwaiasmlene
Hedlund, Alfred B .........- ain
Bleab,
August
cceebcsecdic ns ivnen
Hefferon,- Fred L ....... eee
Hegman,
William F ....... Vea
Heicher,
George R
........+. whe
Heinmann,

Jimmy

......

eeasewals

Heimerdinger,
A
C
....ccseceee
Heineman, Frank J .......-0s2.
Heineman, Henry ....
Heinrichs, Wm C
Heins, Vernon H
Heinsimer, Edward R ....:2...4.
Heinsimer, William R oe eee reese
Heiser,
LaVerne
W

Heiser,

W J ...... elie

eee

Fleliler,
Hiatold )
s\\..')..stcnaauen
Helding, Herbert W
Helke;: Benjamitt: i ia cis 'vie't's bane .
Helke, Norman H
Heller, Peter E
Hellstrom,
Edwin
Heim, 0.0) ss577.
Helmold, Mrs Mary
Hemmingway, Hugh Li oe sicewe
Henderson, - Harold | ...s.e0srseeee
Hendrickson, Walter .....sse+e60
Henkle, Mrs. Genevieve ...... ay
Henner, Dr Robert
Hennig, Wm
Henning, Fred Cc
Henrickson, H F
oan
é
Henschel, Week
sci vs cates eusteine i
Henschen,
J R ........ + heec eae
Herbert, Harold H
Herbst, Carl E
Herbst, Est of Robt H
Herbst, Marion S
Herman, Laurence. ......sessesves
Herman,
Milton
......
Herman, Raymond E ..........-. ‘
Hernandez,
Raymond
Herring, Lloyd E
Herring, Paul R
Hershman,
Harry
Hertel, Mrs Anna H
Hertzell, Albert F
Herzog,
Hesler,
Walter
F
Hess, John
R
eee
Heuer,
Adelaide
Heuer, John
Hexter,
Myron

mew

meer

wer

eees

Heymann,

Heymann,

oe
eee eee

w

LEGAL NOTICES

eeseee

Heymann,

Heymann,
Heymann,

Heymann,
Hiatt,
Houston
I
Hickey,
Charlotte
Hickey,
John
Higgins, Archie’ J

ee

ey

iiss pichatalpin
vs . sspdaeerws

Higgins,

Lyman

Highland
Highland
Highland
Highland
Highland
Highland
Highland

Bump Shop ...........
Fling, The .......... Be
Hotel
Apts
........
Market Herbie Klein) |.
Paper
Radio &amp; Record Shop . ‘
Refuse Service ........

Highland

Hanson, H Everett
Hansuetti, TORS ee
kas eu n a
Hanten, Kenneth S Pewee sees reeee
HATCKO, “VPC
Gres bea
cise 3
Hardacre, Gilbert K
PARUOE
ROU
ls New Sadie
wee ke
Harmon, John H Jr oe meee eer res
Harmon, William See e meer reenereas
Harms, Walter J
Harper,
Harrett, Lola Mae Comet eer ereees
Harrett, Melvin E
Harrington,
Harris, Alden
Harris,
Harris,
Harris,
Harris,
Harris,
Harris,
Harris,

eee

T
Cee

eee

ere

eee

sees

ee

seee

Highland

Park Auto “Parts eeeee
Highland Park Beverage ee eeres #
Highland Park Bowling Alleys oa
Highland Park Chestnut Court
Book
Shop
Inc
Highland Park Company
........
Highland Park Cycle Shop
.....
Highland Park Fuel Co
........
Highland
Park Ice Co
Highland
i
Inc
Highland Park Motor Sales Inc ‘
Highland
Park
Pharmacy
....
Highland Park Sav &amp; Loan ‘Assn
Highland Park Service Sta
5
Highland Park Trading Post ....
Highriter, Harry W
Highwood Glass &amp; Paint Co" rae te
Hilborn, Lucile H. Ine. ... 3 6ccc..
Hildebrand,
Carl
J
Hill &amp; Stone, Insurance
Hill,
Helen
Bill).
Wiliams.
oes teas
Hill,
Wendell
A
Hiller,
Walter
N
.........
Hiller, Walter N Jr ....... ‘
Himmler,
Dorthea
Hinde, 3° Nelson:
4. e504 caaeaee
Hine, Est of Winnifred Otis | eee
Hine,
Frederick
O
severe weeees
Hines Lumber
Co
teem
mesa eese
Hines, James H
Highland

Hintz,

CeCe

eR

OR

eee

eeenees

Harrleon’ George
yank oo
Harrison,
Georse Diced
ees
Harrison, William Lee eee eee ene
Harry, William W
wee

re

ee

me ewe

wea

eee

ey

ery

rt, Richard F
tidin'
EMAAR
UE SN eel
A de vae al
PERERA
GIN 0d ob cielo ie @hweledad'a
Hartman, Fo.
dea
Hartman,
George H
ravines Pie
re

Hirsch, . Harry’. J ois ca tee + te
Hirsch, Helen * (Mra. LM)
cea,
Hirsch, James
oe Sok biakue meee
Hirsch, Jos we
Hirsch,
Hirsch,
Hirsch,
Hirsch,
Hirschberg, Alena Y ......... ae
Hirsh, Herbert W
Hitchcock, C Webster
Hixson,
H H
Hodgson,
Hoelsner,
Hoermann,
Hoffman,
Hoffman,
Hoffman,
Hoffman;
Hogstedt,
Hohfelder,

William H ....... nik aia
Alfred W
William
Donald C
Donald
G &amp; IS
Cee

eer

Wayne iM
oii
Hug
‘eae
Esther’ ma Rin ea

Thursday,

December

eer

eene

sae
ania ne

25, 1952

265
1550
400
520
900
2050
500
250
900
2200
1370

�“LEGAL NOTICES

LEGAL NOTICES

Hobu, Wrahete Fis
5 is els oc ba
Hohnehorst, George F ..........
Holbrook, Francis W
Holden, Walter Mi itt oetadeen es
Holland,
Arnold
B
wane
Cee
We
eek uk
Holland, Gordon B .
Hollands, A G
Holloway, John T ........... oes
Holmes,
Carl E
Holsinger, Arthur
Holt, Herbert E ...... a ek¥
CN eia
Holt, Helen Dr (MD)
..........
Holzheimer, PA
IWel eae CON’ bb ie
Hopp, Harvey M Colonel» Raeudes
Hornung, K E
Horsley, Martha A ....
Horton, Clarence
Horton, Morrison §
MOORE, CUGTICS
bog ooo kc oe one vs
Horwitz, Joe
Hotchkiss,
Eugene
...;.....0:5.
TURPRRIND,
DOMOS
oo cccccncaccus
Pees Prank Go...
ck cee wakes
Houghtaling, Col J V ...... eK
House of Vision, -—
The
Houser, D L
SP

eee

ewer

Johnson, AOTOMDE 25 3. i dba Gen odsene
Johnson, J Sigurd
eee eeererrece
‘| Johnson,
se eeeeeersaeesens
Johnson, BWOi8 Oe ieee
als ous pei
Johnson, Mavehall Ey: coc
cise ceeds
Johnson,
Johnson,
Johnson,
Johnson,
Johnson,
Johnson,
Johnson,
Johnson, Finaeell |G Nsw have ieee
Johnson, Russell H wc cideuvee
Johnson, OM
RO
wel K ih aiaiee «
Johnson, William E eee ee ew eeene
Johnson,
Wilfred
Johnson,
William
Meer’
iA
vn bee ha et
Johnston,
Johnston, Mrs S Parker
Johnston,
S Parker Jr
Johnston, W Alcock
Jolls, Thomas H
Jones &amp;
ee eet ewes eeetreeeres
Jones, C
Ww
ee
Jones C
Jones,
Jones,
Jones,
eee eee eet esas sos
Jones,
Jones,
Jones,
Jones, William T ..
Jonsson Sea Foods ..
Jordan, Chas L ...... bine ea We hn
TONY.
Halddln
ce Oule we kes
Jordan,
Jordan, Marjorie
L
6. xe
Jorgensen, PO
Josefson,
Holger
Joseph, David
Joseph,
Joseph
Joseph,
Louis
Joseph,
Sallo
Wm
Josko,
J osler, Edmund
B
J osselyn, Livingston E &amp; iM i.
Henry
=
ns whl hae Vas
w Hes
Juenger,
eeeeee eeeene
Juergensen,
Augus
Julian, Mr &amp; Min Donald we tre
peek WBia,
KaDell, Harold

M
&amp;

wetene

....c.ck.s.ss
Don Rossi ....

Huhnke,
ER
GBs « tina etch 2s «Ss
Hull, Charles
F
Hull, Wm
Fred
Humer,
Humer, Ferdinand
(Furriers)
Humer,
Katherine
Humer,
John
Humphrey, AG
Peewee weer enn eee
Humrich,
E R

Kahn,

Kaplan,
Kaplan,
Karasik,
Karasik, Sidney

ONE

Karger,

Thursday,

J

ie

te

be

ai

December

Git

G

xe ileiisdn4p

520
900
1200
1400
1000
1050

S

clei) tastes.

Kelling,

Henry

Kelling,
Kellner,
Kellner,
Kellner,

Wm F
Mrs. Clara
Gecrge Jr
Herbert L

Kellow,

GA

Kiddle,

ereee

400

William

teseaee

1000
2400
2550
1900
1800
750
450
1050
1000
1350

1300

Kromer,
Kropke, Walter
Krueger, Chester

J

Kurtzon,

1250
1000
550
1400
1150
600
1000
650
650
600
700
1300
900
900
1000
1950
1900
1650
300
550
1900
2150

Leverentz,

Levin,

500

1100

1100

2250
6190
1050
1050

Levy,

Rodney

Irving

wwe

ewww

eee

J

H

D

Arthur

Levy,
Levy,
Levy,
Levy,
Levy,

K

Frank M
Herbert
Marshall
Milton
Norman

A

Norman

H

Lewin,
Lewis,
Lewis,
Lewis,
Lewis,
Lewis,
Lewis,
Lewis,
Lewis,

Chester

A

ete

Levin, Leonard L
Levin, Richard H
Levin, 5amuel N
Levinson, David
Levinaon, Jobe: Os svieys
ie obs ets
Levite, Leonard D
LeVitus, James L

Jr

LaBuda, Bernard L
LaBuda, Leo
Lachraan, Harold &amp; Dorothy
Lackner, Florence S
Lacy, Kenneth B
Ladany, Jules
Ladany, William
LaDue, R A
Ladurini, Leo J
Ladurini, Onorato
Laegeler, Julius C
Laegeler, Lester
Laegeler, Sarah V
Lahey, Earl
Laing &amp; Goechner
Laing, Edw A
Lake, Mary
Lally, Paul
Lambert, Charles J
Lambert,
J H
Lampi, Joseph
Landau, Howard M
Landauer, Robert S
Landwehr, Volney E
Lang, H E
Langdon, W L
Lange, Alan G
Langill,
E A
Langtry,

re
eww

Lemme,
Walter
Lemmon, John H
eee ewww ewer teens
Lempinen,
Earl
Lencioni, Daniel
Lencioni Grocery eee e ee weer ewes
eee ee ee
eee ee ane
Lencioni, Julius
ee
ee
Lencioni, Philander
Lennox, Frank H
ee ee
Lenzini, Joseph ee
Lenzini, Mary
Lenzini, Ernest J oor eeeresersess
Lenzini, John
H
Lenzini, Olivia O eee ee eee wee cresee
Leonard,
Gordon
F
Leonard,
Leonard, Gordon F (Serv. Sta.) ..
Leonard, LeRoy
Leonard,
Scott W
Leonardi, John F
Leonardi, Louis
Leopold, James E
Leopold, R L
Lever, Herman W
Leuer, Joseph J Jr

Morris

Kushen, Arthur
Kux, James

H

Leverick, Emil
Levernier, Arthur
Levi, Hans
Levin,
Levin, Devid S$
Levin, Edwin

Dora

Edwin

850
1700
550
1100
1000
650
810
1500
400
1120
600
1400
300
1950
1000
950
1700
1500
500
800
500
950
350
2200
1200
1100
1650
550
850
1350
2050
1500
800
1000
1500
500
1450
1400
350
450
1650
500
550
700
450
400
900
250
400
650
1000
700
280
550
600
500
600
550
500
800
800
600
950
2050
250
450
250
550
500
700
500
5500
1050
1300
1400
1000
1700

See

Kromer,

Kuh,

J

Keifer, Stephen
oem ev
er ane eli
Kiehl, Stanley
J
Kielhack,
Kilcoyne, James L
Kiley, Timothy S
Killian, Lloyd A
Kilpatrick,
J Maybra
Kimball, Elizgbeth M
Kimber, R G
Kimbrough, Charles W
Kimmett, PROM Hee ahh vate ee wees
King, A R
King, Donald S
King, George
eos Vo aphibia
wd diecs he
King, K OP i
Kipp, John J
Kirby, Roy B
Kirchheimer, Harry W
Kirchheimer, Robert P
Kirk, Ada
(Millinery)
Kirkgasser, George J
Kirkgasser, Roger P
Kirkpatrick, Mr. and Mrs. RD
..
Klavetor, E Edward
eee ee ee enone
Kleber, George D ed
Klee, Herbert A ee
Klee, Howard W weer sees eee reese
Kleeburg-Buick Inc ey
Klees,
Alfred See ee wee w eee eee eeee
Rieth, Winer i.) 6 cues phe peaked
Klein, Max R.

en

900

Lausche.
H W ......
Lauter, Aaron BR ..cesccecseveces
Lauzon, Charles W ......-+-++--LIM, POE Bes ocivkesvewe cctas eet
Lawrence, A Chas
Lawrence, David
Lawrence,
ee
ee
Lawrence,
ee
Lawrence,
ee
Lawrence,
Lawrentz, Marvin eee ee wee ere eeee
ee
Lawrentz, Marvin ee
Lawson, Andrew L ee
Lawton, Richard S eee eer ere enews
Lawton, Samuel T Jr

Lehman, John
Lehmkuhl, Edmond
Lehr, Herman
Lelewer, Joseph D

Kuhlman, Chas
Kuhn, Charles
Kuhn, John E
Kuhn, Marion
Kuhns, Richard F
Kuiper, John
Kulp, Harry
Kunstadter, John W
Kundstadter, Sigmund
Kurtzon, Albert J

4100

Kelly,
James A C
Kelly, John
Kelly, John M
Kelly, Lester J
Kelly, Wm M
cba cin ee
Kemp, E Ys vase
Kemp, Mrs William H
oe
i
Usk paouerued
Kendig, Robert S
Kendrick,
Kennedy, John T &amp; Eleanor
Kennedy, Warren
Kennicott,
H L Jr
Keogh, Edward L
Keogh, Thos E
Kerber, Herbert E
Kerman, Dr. Willard Z
Kerrihard, K C
Kerrihard, M L
Kessler, Louis I
Keystone Printing Go «..&lt;008c ss...
Kidd, Alar R

eter

Laurie, John D .........seeeeseee

Lazzaretto, John ee ee ee
Leach, John C ee ee
Leahy, William eee ee
Leaming, J C eee wow eee ere ereae
ee
Leaming, Joseph F ee
LeClereq, Mrs Robert eee eee ewes
Ledbetter, William
Lederer, Carl S
Lederman, Harvey S
Lederman, Morris Y ...........Lee, Robert C &amp; Virginia M ....
Leeb, Bernard M
Leeds, Fred S
Leeds; Milton 0b o/s:his-6 Weert eg aee
Lieey FRO 6s ckbiods
666 CFR Ok Ueite x
Leeds
(Jeweler)
Leeming, Tom
Leffert, Fred A

S

Kravitt, Jerome J
Kreinberg, Nathan
Kresnik,
Eldon
T
Kriser, Lecnard S
Kritz,
A A Caer meer

Kyle,

H

ee

Konsler, Eugene
Koon, John L Cee mee w eee sewer ewer
Kopel, Harold
eee eee eee ne serene
Koppelman, Francis
Koransky, Dr, A R
Koretz, Robert J meee emer ereeeees
Kornblith, John H
Korshak, Donald
Korshak, Stanley Roy
Kortendick, John A
Kositchek, Don M
Kosky,
Sam
Kraatz,
A W
Kraatz, William J
Krafft, John
H
Krafsur, Howard G
Kraft, Kenneth H
Kralik, Otto A
Kramer,
Chris
Kramer,
Kremer,
Kramer, Julian H

Krueger,

Kelleher, John F
Keller, Frank E
Keller, Jokn
Kelley &amp; Epalding

P

Krueger, Edward Wm
Krueger, Harold
Krueger, Joseph D
Kruger, James M
Kruger, Gladys
Krumbach, Henry G
Kubalek, Harry J
Kuehne, Ernest H

Maver
6. oi cs Gass

Keirnan,

ees

25, 1952

S

1650
1900
2300
1050
1650
700
450
2000

COMME. Lah tates bans
Beg re

Frances R ......:.....
Pred .....5..... ‘

H

2100

Katz, Jack J
Katz, William B
Katzman,
Kaufman, H J
Kaufman, R B
Kaufmann,
Kay, Michel
Keare; Spencer. B+. voce
soy 6b oie,
Kearney,
John J
Keating,
A &amp; L J Marder, Tr ....
Keating,
A &amp; L J Marder Tr....
Keats,
Glenn
A
Keats, Herbert A
Keats, Herbert J
Kebbon, Margaret C
Keefe, Howard M &amp; Rosemary B ..
Keel, H C
Keim, Edwin P
Keim, Melville

Johnson,

James

Wm

Kasman,

ns
Tea Co, Inc
Jimerson, Bessie
Joffee, Norman R eee wwe eeene
Johns, Russell C Peewee ere seeece
Johnson, Antone E
AODRNGM
Es
bea Vn wens
Johnson,
es
Johnson,
Johnson,
Peewee eee eeeses oe
Johnson,
Bradley S
Johnson, Charles H

tees

Komie,

Karel, Norman H
Karger,
Betty
Karger, Sidney W

a

ee eet

L

Mawel Livy anew his

Jastrzemski,
eee e ee eet noe
Jefferson,
Dorothy
fee eer eeeenee
Jefferson, John A
Jenisio,
Steve
eb hog 6 hd0n 6 bone kia
wetmims,
~mrcnio Ts 2.2%...
6 eecs es
Jennings, David L Jr ee eee eseee
Jennings,
George J ee ee
ey
Jennings,
James
W
eee eee eeees
Jensen, Kenneth R Cece er eeeeene
Jensen,
D
Jensen,
Jensen,
Paul
V
een
Seem ew eet tae enans

Johnson,
Johnson,
Johnson,
Johnson,
Johnson,
Johnson,
Johnson,
Johnson,
Johnson,
Johnson,
Johnson,
Johnson,
Johnson,
Johnson,
Johnson,

Robert

Kahn, Saul
Kahnweiler, Louis
Kalseim, G G
Kanrich, Nathaniel
Kapalka,
Kaplan,

Milton

Dr.
Alb
Benjamin
Earl A
Fletcher
Gertrude

F

Libakken, Leslie E
Libbey, Miss Eleanor
Lidicker, John J
Lilienfield,

Edward

Lilienfield, Walter
Lillie, Albert R T
Lillie,

2500
1550

1200

E

M

Carl

ewe

rene

ee

ee

ee

H

Lindenmann,
Max
Lindsey, Lillian E
Lindstrom, E
Lindstrom,
Ling, Harriett A
Linhoff,
C H Ce
Linville,
Lipman, Albert S
Lipman,
Lipman,
Lipman,
TAA

1950

Walter

R
W

Limback, Harry M
Limberg,
Raymond
A
Linari, Corinto eee eee eee ee
Lind, Clifford M
ee
Lind, Robert C ee
Lind, Stanley L
Lindahl, Jeanette Pe
Lindblom, Harry L ee
Lindbloom, Oscar
Linden,

Cc

Lanigan, W H
Lankford, Harry G
Lanpher, H $
Lansing, Werner
Lanz!, Hans
Lapine, Herbert
Lapins, Gerald M
Lappen,
Charles
Larsen, Hans
Larsen, Herman
Larson, Albert
Larson, Axel R
Larson Bros. Garage
Larson, Chester A
Larsou, Clarence A
Larson, E Leo
Larson,
Larson, om ot: Sd dated Melximy
Larson,
Sh CIN ies tad ation
Larson, EE
Larson, Lloyd L eee ee ee eee een eee
Larson, Milo D
Lencioni, Daniel Cee em w tree rete nee
Larson’s Stationery Store
Larson, T Albert sete enter eeeeene
Lasman,
Paul
Lasswell, Lulu Sete eee eee eee eenee
Last, Jules H Pee e eee eer eerewenee
RRM
RNs | bs 'oiec bie sO Cie Varela
Latimer, Teare D See weer em eee ene
Cotte ee ew ee wee
Lattanzi, Dominic
Lattanzio, John
Lauesen, Edward J ..

LEGAL NOTICES

LEGAL NOTICES

NOTICES

IG
MONEE FE Sees ehbwnncey ses
Kleinschmidt, Jeanette ..... el Ue
MRD,
“TGR Ei Gia
ey ces ee Pas 8
eee, Oe NN
sbi K Bu dies 0 Abie bie
Klingler, Raymond E ............
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Klingeman, Raymond
Kloos, J Elmer ......... t Ue Sees
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Knight, Edna R
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Knox,
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Knox, Virginia ee
Knudson, Ernest B
Knuepfer, Capt. George ..........
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Koch, A Melvin
Kodner, Lesley
Koebelin, Reinhart L
Kocines; Hewmen Gis oii
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Kohn, Walter C
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Hunt, Kenneth G
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Ingwersen, Robert
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Iredale Storage &amp; Van Moving @o
Irons, Frank M
Irwin, John
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Isador, Harold S
Iverson,
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J &amp; R Jewelers
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Huber, E G
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Livingston, Dr. George S
Livinyston, Hilda F
Livingston, Morton
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Lowell, George H ......seee0e- one
Lowenstein, Haskell ...... a hubine
Lubin, Chas W .......sesnceseros
Lubke, Walter F &amp; Gertrude a
Lucchi, Peter ‘so... cecesesdes on
Luedemann, George Henry .......
Luedemann, Warren G ...-..+++.
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visa bionbackuel
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Lundquist, C F .....-eeeseees sen
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Lunn, Richard S ......+-+. enki
Luskin, Bert L ..... daa pias o's a alate
Lustig, Frank C ....c--eseeees os
Lustigman, Dr
HB ......« sviwane
Lyman,
George S ....+-+.+- ch tdee
Lyman, Geo Jr ......- wah dee eee
Lynch, Frank ......--csececsocee
Lyngass, Chester R Jr ....-- aan
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Lytton, William H
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Mabrey, Lindell ......... lixevawae
Maccanee, Ben ...... Saas cae
MacInnes, Robert J ...... ts onanGe
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Mack, RalphB ........... pak eee
Mackey, Clara .....-.-+esee. rey
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MacLean, G iscs
dis sees
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Maddalozzo, Michele ..... nebetiae
Madden, Edward J ......... ah eu
Madsen, E T ...-.«++-- Avenir cea
Madson, Mrs Walter E .......+s.
Maffini, Torquato ........ Wes eae
Mager, Hans .......-.- i dine ae
Maggi, John ...-.-++.-00. 9s bebe
Magani, Rebert ......... veepide en
Magnus, Louis ......+-..++. wba
Magnus, Philip ........--+++-+ cai
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Maher, Rovert Francis ......-.. ‘
Mahler, John S ......---- ie chke
Mahnke, Lewis H_ ...+-+++.0e+- be
Maier, Dr Alexia W ......--- Yoke
Maier, Herbert N .......--- vie vee
Mailfald, Robert ........+..-- wher
Maiman-Haines Sport Shop ......
Maiman, Matt J ....... a Ws clans eile
Maiorano, Louis J ......-- ‘copes
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Makelim, Clifford
.......++-.eee. é
Maley, Lrle W ......+see0e&gt; wena
Malm, Eile bo ond ane cee ase eadcte
Malvey, Clara M ...... idvaneae wie
Manasse, DeWitt J .......... ene
Manasse, Rose L ..... «+++. S405
Mance, Eugene E ....... + 6 siin Me
Mancou, B R isies
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Mandel, Edwin F .......ecsceees Mandel, Ernest M .......-.-ees ee
Mandel, Sidney W ......++-+- iene
Maness, Mrs S R ...---seeeeee ie
Manfredini, Robert ......+.-.++- ai
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Mansuetti, Anthony R ......+-.- é
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Maple, Alex R ...---seseeee- Jo Bh
Marchi Bros. Garage .......-. é ou
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Marcucei, Ledo .......s.+e+00% Fite
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Marks, A J Jr ..-- cece ecceesces
Marks, Catherine .....++++++++++ ‘
Marks, Edward S ...--+++++e+0292
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1080
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450
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Page 27

�| Mills, Elmer E ........... eae
yer,

Harry

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Vincent D
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McCord, Downer Tr.
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Milton, Mrs Mary M ...:.....46.
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Minorini, Amedeo Sr .
Minorini,
Amedeo
Minorini, John
Minorint,” I¢sephok 356s
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Misch, Robert D
Missncr, Phil D
Mitcheil,
C?
Mitchell,
Mitchell,
Mitcheli,
Oscar
POMC
i
he pce talen celay eatenhy
Moatti, Raymond L
Mockler, James I
Moist, Mrs Christine
Moley Radio &amp; Television Co ses
Molke, Eric C
Momment,
Zilis
Montecchi, Harold V
Montgomery Ward &amp; Co
Montgomery, John M
Montgomery, Morris Mead
Montie, R J
Moody,
James T
Moon, Fred R

Mooney,
Mooney,
Moore,

Joseph
Wm

Moraine

Hotel

Moran,

ek

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George

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Gowen,

Thomas

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Moran,- John
Moran, Richard L
Morano, Lawrence
Moras,

E

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Moras, Karl §
Mordini Jewelry Shop
Mordini, Peter N
Morelli, Fred
Moreton, George
Morgan, Edith C
Morgan, Laurence W
Morgenstern, George E
Morine, Kenneth H
Morner, G H

cHugh,E

McHagh,
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Clifford

Moran,
Moran,
Moran,

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Peter J

Moroney,

Moroney,
Moroney,

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an, D

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Moroney,

Moroney,
Morren, Thos
Morrill,
Morris,
Morris,
Morris,
Morris, T H
Morrison, Dorman
Morrissey,
E H
Morrissy, John F
Morrow, C R
Mortimer,
Vernon
Morton, Sol
Moseley, E T
Moseley, Mrs Marion
Moses, James H
Moses, Robert W
Moss, Edward J
| Moss, H Baron

Pliociet D MD
l, Margaret R
Ra, James W

‘MeOmber,

Frank

sents
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oe

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Moss,

J

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Motor Parts &amp; Machine
Moulton,
A H
Moulton, David H
Moyes, Frank M
Mrazek, Henry T
Mudge, Frederick S
Mueller, Albert R
Mueller, Emil DDS
Mueller, Frank J
Mueller, George F

Co

E TR

Murphey,
Murphy
Murphy,
Murphy,
Murphy,
Murphy,
Murphy,

J M
&amp; Schwall
Edward L
Elmore M
Howard G
Jarnes
Martin D

Murphy,
Murray,

Maurice
Andrew

D
A

Murray, E A
Merray, Howell W
Murray, Dr Wm A DDS
Musser, V C
Mustric, Mrs Hermance
Mutual Coal Company
Myerson, Raymond King
Mylotte, Patrick
Naab, Carl M
Nachman, James §
Naegele,

pect
Irving
Meyers,
Irving D

E

Meyers, Raymond
ichaels,

Belle

Nagel,
Nanni,

Walter
Emil

Naset,

R

Nash, John B
Nash, John B (Rugs)
Nash, L E
Nath, Bernard
Nath, Est. of Claude
Nathan, Edith E
Nathan, Joseph E

J

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Raymond

ichaels, Everett B
haels, ng“ of J FE

ichaels,

Nathan,

ncaa Asphalt Roofing
illard, Mrs Everett L

illard,

William

ler, Abe

D

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Louis

A

Nathan, Robert B
Nathan, Samuel A
Nathan, Thomas C
Nathenson, Edward
National Tea Company
Naughton,

Peter

T

Neafus, Holady C Jr
Nechine, Leonard M
Neff,

Wesley

M

Neil, W F
Neild, Joseph A
Neisser, Walter R
Nelson,

, Henry

S MD

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L

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Nereim, Roy O ........
Nerini, Bovis ....
Nerini, Blgv a
eis hs We clasetin Rhee
Nesbitt Bottling Co
Nestrick, Cecil
?
Nestrick,
J W
Netzer, Rudolph A &amp; Katherine ..
Neuman, Nelson S
Nevins, Edward A
New, Lawrence A
Newberger,
Kenneth
Newhouse, Henry L
Newman, Bernard E
Newman,
Charles H
Newman, Harry E
Newman, H
Newman,
Newman, W M
Newman, Harold
Newmeyer,
Harry
New Secretary, The
Newton, Milton A
Nichols, C V
Nichols, Donald B
Nichols, Robert W
Nicholson, R §
Nichels, D
Nicoud, Est of Cornelius
Nielsen, Ernest
Niemi, Owen
Nieter, Leonard W
Nihlson, Bernhard
Niketh, Rudolph Fredrick
Nissenson, Marc
Nixon, Charles H
Nizzi, Bartholomeo
Nizzi, Joseph
Noble, Frank
Noble, Richard
Noerenberg, Fred C
Noren, Robert J Jr
Norrlen, A E
Norrlen, Gus A
Northmoor Country Club
North Shore Decorators Ser
North Shore Gas Company
North Shore Gas Company
North Shore Gas Company
North Shore Gas Company
North Shore Grocery
North Shore Plastering Co
North Shore Ready Mix Co
North Shore Utilities
Norton, Chas E
Norton, Iola
Norvik, August
Nosek, Francis J
Notari, Cecil A
Nowinson, Mrs Richard
Nowlin, Archie V
Nussbaum, Mrs William
Nustra, Chas
O’Brien, John D
O’Connell, George B
O’Connell, George J
O'Connell, Joseph J
O’Connor, John W
O’Dea, Robert E
Oetzel, Raymond
Oggel, Harcld P
Ohlwein, Edw P
OHlwein, Jack
Ohrmund, E C
Okey, Fred
Olech, Eli
Olech, Joseph
Oliver, Alfred
Oliver, John
Olmsted, Robert
Qlsen,

Olsen,
Olsen,
Ulsen,

Alice

Ori,

V

DO,

Quigg,

Anthony

Peterson,
Petik, Catherine
Pett, Gordon
S
Peyraud,
Elizabeth
Pfeffer,
Fred
Pfingsten, Helen
Pfister,
Eugene
Phelan, James M
Phelan, Thomas
Phelps, Elsie R &amp; Erastus Bw
Phelps,
Phelps,
Phelps,
;
Philips,
William
C
Philipson, wot
Phillips,
Phillips,
Phillips,
Phillips, Pesala oe atid otelarbio’
Phillips, Stanton V
Piacentini, Nello
Piacenza,
Bert
Piacenza, Henry
Piacenza,
Virgilio
Piazzi,
Corrado
Picchietti &amp; Ori
Picchietti,
Picchietti,
Picchietti,
Picchietti,
Pick, Albert Jr
Picker, Thomas
Pickett, John D
Pier, Harry M
Pierantoni, Albert
Pierce,
Pierce,
Pierce,
Piersol,
Pincus, Jacob T
Harry

Rice,

Rice,
Rich,
Rich,
Richards, Marion HRichardson,
Elizabeth J
Richardson, Wilson E Jr’
Richardson, William H
Richman,
Fred W
Richman,

E

Piper, George A
Pirie, Alex II
Platt,
Sidney
Plotkin, Pearl D
Plummer, Daniel C
Podolsky,
Chas F
Poetzinger, Floyd A
Poggioli, Stanley M

Riggs,

Rigler,
Donald
Riley, Mrs June
Ring, Jerry A
Ringdahl, Mrs Martin
Ringer, Philip
Ringer Realty
Ringwalt, Charles H Jr.
Rink, John J
Rinkenberger, Miss Elyse
Riser, Walter J
Risjord, Dr N C
Riskind, Mrs David A
Riskind, Phillip A
Risler,
George A
Risula,
Lauri
Ritow,
Herman
Ritter, Leon
Ritter, Ralph B
Rivett, Fred
Rizzolo, Alfonso
Rizzolo, Anthony
Rizzolo, Dominie Jr
Rizzolo,
James
Roach, Edward A
Robb, Thomas °
Robbins,
Robbins,

Pollack,
Bernard
Pollak, Chas A
Pollak, Maurice A
Pollary, Joh
Pollock,

Va

Pomper,

Pomper,
Pomper,

Pompilio, Valerio V
Poncher, Jerry E
Ponsi, Gene
Pool, James
L
Porges,
Porto, Dr Joseph F
Poser,
Edward
Postels, George G

Osborn, T L Jr
Ostebo, Gerhard
Ostrander, Lee H
Ottenheimer, M L
Oweiss,
Walter
Charles
Owen,
Raymond
§
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Parry

Pace, Pasquale
Pacin,
Sidney
Pacini, Zeffero
Padderud, Elvidge
Padorr, Harry
Page, Wilbur W
Pagenta,
Dan
Pahlke, Lawrence
Pahnke,
Erwin

Postels,
Poston,

E &amp;

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F

Paletti,
Palmer,
Palmer,
Palmer,
Palmieri,
Palmieri, James E
Palmquist,
George
Pankman,
Stanley
Panther, Mark A
Pantle,
Alvin
Papp, ‘Wm
Paradise, Edson M
Paradise, Maurice
Paradise, POU Fe

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Lee

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George G
William S

Potter, Edith &amp; Eliz Lowes
Powell, Paul B Jr
Powell,
Paul F
Prato, Peter H
Preskill,
Press Print Shop, The
Price,
Milton
Price, Stirling B
Prindle, George B
Prior, Irene S
Prior, Percy H Jr Photographer .
Prior, Percy:
pti. as veeeaston
Pritchard, Irving H
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Proetz,
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Richman,
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Ricker, George
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Ricks, James
B
Rico, Antonio
Riddle,
Hugh
Riddle, Joseph J
Riddle, ° WH
ines
Riepe,
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Rieser,
Rietz, Walter H
Riggio, John A

Pokorney,

O’Riley, Eugene J
Orlowsky,
Morris
Orner,
Seymour
B
Orsi, Florio
Orsini,

F

Rebechini,
Rechkemmer, Marlin B
Rechlin,
Gustav
Rectenwald,
Raymond we
Rectenwald, Wm
J
Redd, Russell L
Redfern, H H
Redfield, D Z
Redlich, Ruth W
Redman,
Harold F
Red Seal Homes
...
Rees, Dr Lloyd G
Reeves,
George
C
Reeves, Joseph E
Rehn,
Reich, Adolphe B
Reich, Dr Walter J
Reid, Douglas J
Reimbold, William C
Reineck,
Edward
A
Reinert,
L G
Reinier, T Jae
Reinish, Carl L
Reitmeyer,
Sylvester
Reliable Laun &amp; Dry Clean Co
Renner,
Frieda B ....
i
Reschke, Robert C
Rettig,
Jack
Rettman, Bernard J
Reuben,
Jacob
Reynolds, John L
Reynolds, W G
Reznick, Nat N
Rhinehart,
DeVere
Rhodes, James A
Riccio, Leonard J
Rice, Alexander C

Peterson,

Pine,

James

Rede
ence. Richard L
Radner, David B &amp; Marsha
Rady, Seymour
Raff, Arthur
Rafferty, Alex Jr
Rafferty Transfer &amp; Storage ....
Rainwater, Chas E
Ralph, Earl J
Ralph,
George...
Ramond,
Albert
Randolph, Fr ¢
Rankin, Leslie A Jr
Ransom, Emma L ..
Rantanen, Veikko H
Rapp,
Prancis
Jo6. bis cow st pene
Rappaport,
Eugene
‘
Rappold,
John
Rasmussen, C B
.
Rasmussen, H Funch
Rasmussen, I C
Ratcliffe, Myron
Rathbun, Rex
Ratner, Jack
Rau, Ben W
Rauch, L A
Rautenberg,
Ravinia Beauty Shop
Ravinia Delicatessen
Ravinia Motors, Inc
Ravinia Geo B Winters, ‘Ine eae
Ravinia Standard Service .
Ay
Ray, Donald F .
Raymond,
Mrs _ Louise
Reach, Frank B Jr
Reading,
Geraldine

Peterson,
Peterson,

.

Esl Loic cev soa da Katee

Quigley &amp; Schneider
Quinn, James B
| Raber, George
Raber, Dr. weeee

Peterson,

Shop

BES

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avis
Un ee aenee
Pugh,
ilbur
h, Willis K |
Pulver, Robert H
Pure: Oil Ge acko
bl ei
Do,
3
Purnell. &amp; Wilson, Inc
Putnam, Imogene H ..........- ri
Pusins SCOVE sees sob eines 6's enioees

Penney,
Horace
F
Perbohner, A T
Perkins, Richard M
Perlman, E R
Perlman,
Raymond
Perrigo, Chas R
Perry, John
Person, Annette M ..
Pertz, Harry G
Pesola,
Rocco
Peterman, James E
Peters, John A
Petersen,

Co.

vseseeserssstererrerseceere

| Pete

P

Pelligrino,

G
J Franklin
Louis L

Paisley,

Nelson, Hal
Nelson,
Nelson,
Nelson,
Nelson Motor Sales
Nelson, Nels S
Nelson, Olaf R
Nelson, Rena Louise
Nelson, Virginia
Nemeroff,
Irving
Nemeroff, Irving Pe uae eras orale et

eae

Paris, Milton
Sieleth ein Vike bu sirens
Parker, FAO
aan Sow hw eee S ebbis
Parkes); Mawar Colossi caseee ye
PArKOr, WR Iehy Ben
oe Paes pees Sacer
Parks, Gordon R ......
Parkside Restaurant
Parliament, C A
Parrish: &gt; Dot)’
.4:5.%
Parsons,
Charles» A
Partlow, Elzie C .....
Paschkes, Dr Erich
Paset, Nathan H
Paskind,
Marshall
Pasquesi, Caesar
Pasquesi,
David
Pasquesi,
Pasquesi,
aPasquesi,
Passini, Meno S
Passuello,
Angelo
Pathman, William J
Pattarozzi, Fred
Patten, Edward B
Patten, Nancy Newman
Patterson, Angela
Patton, Eleanor K
Patton, Robert F
Paul’s Barber Shop
Pavlick, Charles
Pavlick,
D F
Peachim,
Samuel
Peacock
Cleaners
Peacock,
Mark
Peard, Mrs A W
Pearl,
Pearl,
Wm
Pearson, Carl a ‘
Pearson,
MD.
Pearson, K P
Pearson,
William
Pease, Claire H
Pease,
Robert
Peck,
Ben
Pedderson, Edgar C
Peers, Frank
Pekow,

H

Roy
Omanoff, "Sack
Cc
O’Melia, Francis L
Onderdonk, Catherine H
Onderdonk, Dudley
O’Neil, Charles A
:
O’Neill’s Ace Hardware
O’Neill, John K
Onesti Bros Upholstering
Onesti.
John
Oppenheim, Theodore H
Oppenheimer, Arthur
Oppenheimer, Edward H
Ori,
Alfred
Ori,
Ori,
Ori,
Ori,
Ori,

: Pardee, HS MOE

Pekar,

R

Olson Printing
Olson,
Olson,
Olson,
Olson,

Mullins, Melvin C
Mulvibill, J J
Mundell, Dr R B
Murdick, C H
Murfey,

Newlin, ‘Rant

Robbins,

aD T
TREES

Robbins,
Robert,
Gaston
Roberts, Everett
Roberts, Harry B MD
Robertson,
J N
Robertson, Robert Jr
Robertson, S H
Robinson,
Chas F
Robinson, D B
Robinson, Helen C
Robinson, K J
Robinson, L R Claud
Robinson, Sidney R

ese

Bros

&amp;

Co

.

......

.
.

�NOTICES

Robinson,
William
B
..........
Robinson, Yorke ...... geen
eae
Rodde, Herbert R ...... eae ath as
NG;
BORGER TL. ies ecseaee
Rodgers, Sherwin R ...... d
I
OM. ec dioid ois ok pices ooh 8-0
Roessler’s Exclusive Cleaners .
moeee, TArry ©. isc veces ati
SO
DD oko diccdwuse
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NE
SPER 0 6.5 Area 'eahu bes ab eee
Rogers,
Franklin
L ....... we
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sick
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THOORVOW * 5 vs ics 00 vay wine
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Wearing
Apparel
......
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Fred
.........5- &lt;5, eke
pomener, FG.
wo... Beas eae ‘
Roscoe, George
........... ime
NE
lei 6 Ue oak 2% cigle p ad -tc i
Rose, Charles W ........... jiwex
OMG
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Deer rormest. D Ir is. cc ccccctens
Rose, Dr George A
Vag win WES
EMINEM
WY.
bis vie' es ecbae alere'
NN
RS.
sa ews ctebeeae
Rose,
bial
cs oss ce ea ees
Rosenbaum,
Stanley
............
Rosenberg, Homer E ............
Meera,
ITVINE «0 ic cle cep ece
Rosenberg, Lester E ..........:%.
Rasgenberg, Nathan T ...........
Rosenfels, Mrs Clarence
........
Rosenheim,
Harold
............
I
EO
ke ew a ik uaesecse
Rosenthal, Samuel R ............
Rosenthal, Samuel R ...........
POM
NOTEO Fon. ccc ccscecene
TEI
oo oo vin.c cad cae tivcees
Rosman, Mrs Florence ..........
Ross, Ames

750
550
600
750
2000
700
400
500
400
300
850
500
600
500
400
900
1600
600
300
850
400
450
400
500
300
2350
400
400
300
700
900
850
250
850
700
500
400
1200
1800
2200
900
1950
1150
1000
3700
9100
3500
2700
500
450
1250

Ross, J T &amp; Co
Ross,
John
T
ERNE
GB ocd. cc ecctcevce
SN
OE,
TD. kone
ewe es vows
BB
vbw asecete’s
I
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civic ba sde seg ne
Rossetti, Michael S .............
Rossi,
NS
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MOU
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Rossiter, Donald
E MD
........
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RS
Se a era
Rotnsena, Carl M
.... ccc eee
Rothschild, Edward I ............
mothsehiia, Mulda B ............
Rothschild, Seymour
............
NOOO
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oc. etek neleveee
Rowe, George H ....... ceawwiwes
OR
MTR
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sees
DUN s SRE
kL
oko Sieg e's
Rubens, Mrs Pauline M .........
OR
- NUMIE
6. occ ek vc. kk wei
UOEMEOCIM,
LOUIS
obo.
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Rubenstein,
Sidney H
..........
UIIUCIINEE OE Ek
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Ruby’s
Delicatessen
Inc
........
Rudolph, Chas E Jr ............
Rudolph, Raymond J ............
PEE
MOTD
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UR
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oS icles bes tie wke
mete, Wee Oe CO. ia. os Ss sae
Ruekberg, Herbert S ........&gt;+.
Ruekberg, Miriam G ............
muekuere,: wetter S's.
is. (o dow

$500
900
1150
2950
650
2100
500
600
800
1720
500
1100
900
7500
1800
650
300
1500
1200
1900
1800
500
1500
1100
950
1300
800
1850
1000
400
350
300
1700
9000
900
2500
1200

EE

Ruffner,

Mrs

Mary

Ct

U

850

.........

800

450
1000
600
1800
600
500
1500
2350
1350
1150
550
800

Spe
ME
etc
ne cee
RM
et cee
Ryan, Raymond J ....... rNa 8
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cc kvle hee e's
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MI,
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Morey
D
............
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VR
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y's 6 i's wing ook
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Sackheim, Norman R ............
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SN:
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800
1000
900
850
750
500
1100
1300
3000
800
1350
800
1350
600
500
300

MR
KM
a
veces wk
mason;
mrared © ... csc cee
Salomon, Joseph K .............
NOR
MEME
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Salyards, Stanley K ............
Salyards, William E ............
meee Wee senor...
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Sree,
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ce eek
Gamitech,
Merman
.............
Samuelson,
Richard
............
Mem perts wee
© kk oc ck occ cack

250
1100
1650
1100
370
600
500
1500
500
250
300

Wares
ee
ks
oc os vac
ManGOt meen.
lk eck a
Sanders, Dester Ao.
ci ie. . cece...
Sanders, Mrs Margaret B ......
SU
Me
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SmnGere, Mee
Bs Skok
bk aee
Sanders, Mee Ws
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Sangerman, Myron R ....:.......
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SAUDE ee
nk sk iwc.
SAB
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Stl
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Santi, Louis &amp; Sons ............

1000
1000
300
930
800
450
450
1500
250
12400
300
800
1050

I

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ME

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Micky
Daro
............
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Ruttenberg,
Joseph
J
..........
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Bo.
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Saphir,

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Clarence

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

MD

.............,

Sargent,
Bernice
R............
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NE,
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STOO
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SAS

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Sayre, Dr
SemlIaweIn,

Loren
BUVIO

Seassellati,

C &amp;

Scarbrough,

Schaeppi,

~

LEGAL

Schaffner,
Schaffner,

Harry

William

Frances
Frances

Thursday,

1500

1700

600
500
1800
300
1600

600
250

H
§
S

..........

1000

........

2000

..........
et al

6700
30955

Inc

...........

December

SAGES

Herbert
K §S et
CEO

WE OH

T
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..........
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Schear, Edward R
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Scheff,
Mortimer
Louis
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Schelhas,
See eee eee eens
Schick, Harold
G
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Schiller, Robert M .. ee ee eerscses
Schlessinger, Walter
............
Schlossberg,
Norman
J
........
Schlossman, Norman J .....
Schlung, Elmer G .......:......
me
PP
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Schmauch, Walter W ee
Schmid, David §
Semen
Be Vie eee
Schmidley, Oscar J es
Schmidt,
A
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Schmidt,
Schmidt,
Schmidt,
Schmidt,
Schnadig, Lawrence K ....
Schnadt, Raymond
C
DOMME MEME oe
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Schneider, Hugo L Sr ee eerrecees
Schneider, Hugo L Jr Seer sesos
Schneider, Raymond G ee
Schofler, Eugene
W
Pe eet sere cee
Schoke, James
A
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Schonthal,
Joseph
Ce eee esesesese
Schoonover,
Schotanus,
Henry
See eer sree vres
Schowalter,
J J
Pewee meer eee ene
GR
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Schram, H S Appliance Inc
Schram,
Harry
ee
i
Schram,
Jack
5 BOO Cho
64 68s obo 6
Schramm,
Ceeeersceecces
Schramm,
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Schramm, M T CPPCC Pere EC errdence
Schreiber,
Sewer eeseses
Schroeder,
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Schroeder,
See ee seers seseene
Schueler,
Schulte,
Schultz,
Schultz,
Schultz,
Schultz,
Schultz,

B

Walter R
F CORCOC

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ROO
Cee

Mrs Gladys
MO
iS ey
Ward M

Cee

Sb

400
500
1700
8400
3400
950
300
1300
1000
2350

666

PSD

Ch 00 OCW

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Edwin
M ..... Poe
Refining
Co
Pan's a

Peete

Schwandt, Gunter W
Schwarez
Morton
Schwartz,
Schwartz,
Schwartz, J
Schwartz, Jack
Schwartz,
M H
Schwartz,
Wen
ET
Se
ak fo
ie
Schwarz, Sidney L
Schweiger, Fred H
Schweitzer, E C
Schweitzer, Minnie
Cen
Me:
Sepmie
ho
aia
ih
Schwieger, Natalie
Schwimmer,
Walter
Senwenge, Joun Fo
3. i
Scornavacco, Armand
Scernavacco, John
Scott, Clarence R
Scully, Vincent C
menwary, John W 25.6650 oss
Searles, Est. of Willard G
Sears Roebuck &amp; Co ............
Sears, Est of Wesley M
Sears, Weyland D
Seastrand, Arthur
Secrast, F E
Secrest, H C

O'S ee

ceeeses
x 6 bie

Sinclair Refining Co Cee eenseces
Sinclair, L B
Sinclair,
Peter. cer ec
wes
Singer Printing &amp; Pub Co
Singer Sewing Machine Co
Mortimer

oo.

035,

Skytte,

Paul

....5....

Slack, Clara Louise
Slater, Howard R 7006s OS We Be wie Oe
Slater, Lloyd E COO O06 0 0 0's wee eee 6
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PRU
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Slayback, Rcbert ORF OS ee ew ees 6 oS
Sleeman,
Homer
Sloan;

Albert

Foo

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David
Sloan,
pvan, Robert: Br
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Sloan, Seymour
L ..............
Slocum. Percy W ....
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BEC
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Slusarezyk, Stanley A
Slutzkin, Leo
B M
Smalley,
J w
Smart,
Wrenn, SOON
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Smigoski, Mary
R
Smith,
Smith,
Smith, Chas M
Smith, Edward I Mfg Co
Smith, Col Edwin A
Frank E
Hareld A

Seitz,
Seitz,

1850
1500

2550
500
1350
350
1000
1100
250
850
1600
2200
5100
2200

1450
1400

wie’ s 0s

F

OMNOE
aa
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Selz, Lawrence H
Server, Roy W
MU
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Seyfarth, Robert M
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Shane, Seymour A
Shankman,
Leslie
Shanley,
Shapiro, David J
Shapiro,
Shapiro,
Shapiro, Sol
Shaver, Mrs
Shaw, Harold W
Shaw, Wm
D

850
950
500
1550
1550
600

250

25, 1952

Sheahen, Gregory M
Sheahen, Harry W
Sheahen,
Sheahen,
Sheahen,
Sheahen,
Sheahen,
Sheahen,
DOOGReMy
dP oie
Sc uel es
Shétehy, “Bernard
ii...,
sik ic...
Sheftel, Bernard M
Sheldon, John W
Shelk, John A
Shelton’s Ravinia Grill
Shevard, Irving W
Bnepard, “Pmily
fc iL ce ee ce
Sherbano, Harold A
Sherer, Renslow P
Sheridan Inn Hotel
CRAM
Ee Ro
Sheridan, Richard T ............
Sheridan, Thomas H_ ........cees

“ar gpd
Smith,
Smith,
Smith,
Smith

0

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1300

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Snow, James C
SPCC
MOLPON
ec 3S ck
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Snyder, Harold V
Seer MOU
cle ok ras.
Soborcff, Irving E £99086 6 es teks
Soboroft, Juel E
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Solomon,
Solomon,
Solomon,
Solomon,
Solomon,

Frederick
Julius E

es

Sonza-Novera,
Sordyl,

Sordyl,

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eceesseon

Peter

Edward

Frank

Sorg,

Frank

Sorg,
Sorg,
Sorg,

James H
Julius O
Robert E

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Stone,
Stonebreaker,
VOT
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PeOmeUat ys ROVE
AG og ivhe Poe ces
Stouffer, William H
Straight,
Frank
Straith, Wm M
prvemin. W Alber. P&lt;.
s arse aback ves
Stranish,
Edward
S eee eee eee see
Stransky, Edward J
RON
WY
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Riwatrord: «Jone Te
4 6 Gi 5 ka vs
Stratman,
Caroline D
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Straub, George W
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Straus, John J
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Strauss, Edward E
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4ice sib noe eww ee
Strauss, Herbert D Jr
Strauss,
Marshall E weer erences
Strauss, Paul A
Street, Wallace V
Streicker, Arnold M eee ewww etn wee
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erreeretreres

Swan,

Syvanson,

V

Spangler,
Marguerite
V
Spannuth, Ray I
Spark, David I
SRIOCRONS “MEOP BR is oon eas
Speed, Kellogg MD
Spellman, Wm FE Sete ee

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Swanson,
Swanson,

RePeORy SORE
66s
SO
eae
Souther,
M
E
Souther,
Robert

Spachner,

meee

Stupple,
Robert
Stupple, Wm H a)
ee
Sturgis, R F Pe
Sturgis, Wm A Jr
Stymacks, R T ee
Subotnik, Dr N eee eee ee eet eet eoe
Suburban Grocery &amp; Market
eee ewer e ete enree
Suess, Virginia
Sullivan, Dan
Sullivan, James H
Sullivan, John W
eee eeeere rece rns
Sullivan, Richard J
Sultan, Robert M ® é0he bee 8 6 aie oe &amp;
Sumbler, James R
Sunset Grocery &amp; Market
Sussman, Irwin J
Sutherland, Edith
Sutinen, Raymond E
Suttle, D M

Sonderman,
Henry
Sonnenschein,
Hugo

400
1450
500
500
1100
350
850
1150
250
900
1000
1200
2300
2100
2150
1550
500
2550
400
1900

eeeee

Stevenson, C F Cee ee weer eres eens
Stewart, Edward
Stewart, George Craig Jr eters ee
Stilwell, Thomas V ee
Stimmier, Eugene
BUG;
Bernies - 5.
ce eek
hakas
Stipe, Mary ..... Secures ape gh op
BIBS, LNeOuore J. isa ke clebets
PURMNG Ta eM
okin oe che ees dos ay
wtinhag, “THOmEs.: To
cs fockaeee
Stodder, John D &amp; Helen W ....
Stolkin, Ralph E &amp; Ruth eee wees
Stollman, O S ee
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Stone, Bertram A Cee were renee rere
Stone, Reba C Cee ewer e eee w renee
Stone, Mark M

Stupey, Joseph J cow
Stupple, Edward
G

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rd

wee

WeGuee. Fase
bs ble ae ea “hewes
Stemples, John G ee
Stenberg, Sten A eee ew mew ewe eee
Stenson, Henry
eee ewe ete eee eeeee
Stepansky, Joseph
eee ewww twee eee
Stern, Alfred W eee ee meee ewe e ee
Stern, Edward S
Stern, Herbert L Jr
Stern, Myron
B
PAPA: PURUREE: TS icc
i ds’ ewe ve
SNE
RAN
ak ooo a veh ope hie ds
OREO,
ODOEG WE: 6c sik o's nis eV ey uke
Sternfield, Geo L &amp; Lucile S ....
DUAVOnS; “BIMDEND 6665.6
ae C Ti koko
Stevens, Edgar A Inc ee ewww ewan
Stevens, John B Seem eee ewe esee

Strenger,

O4 Ye

we

twee
eenee

eee eee neeee
Strenger,
Strenger,
seen
meee meee et eene
Stricker,
eee eer eeeeeee
ee
ee
ee
Strickler,
Strubank, W N ee
Strubel, Arthur R ee
Struve, Theo F ee
Stukey, David C ey
Stunkel,
C S ee eee ee ee

POek 4 v's 6H ab 6k bai 4
ORS
CO 6.6 bb ol aa

Smolenski,
PEC
Smoler, Hymen ...
Smoler, Jerome B FE
Smythe, E J

ew aeseeee

ee

eee

Stevens,

2500

R J
R W

Selfridge, Frank
Selig, Sidney

eee

ee

wa 6 6%

BRAM, DE Oka
Skidmore, Charles
RRIONONE MOR woes
alae
Skinder, Robert L 60:0 0.06 0 tien te bu
Skog, Ludwig

eheae as

Staton: Josenh Fire
es Cs cats 6
Stem, Andrew M6 0ridc een bis tha
Stein, Mrs D W F eee eee eters eee
Stein, Donald L ee em wee ener ewes
Stein, Irving F Jr ee)
Stein, Joseph Cee ee eee meee eee teense
Stein, Josephine H ee
Stein, Lawrence M ey
Stein, Robert N eee ewww eee eee eee
eee eee meee eer eweee
Stein, Walter
Steinberg, Boris R eee ee were we eee
Steiner, Carl L eee we mm emer eee nee

big 04:6 0-0

On

eve

ewe

eee

eesecees

tele

bes cs bad

Stebler, William J ee
Stcel, Stephen S eee eww ewww
Steele, Chas E Cee eee mee ewww
Steele,
ee

Simon,

CP

6

Cee

Simon,
Simon,
Simon,
Wm J
ep
A ee
is te
Simons, Lawrence ...........___.
Simons, Raymond § Cee eecesecvese
Simpler, Chas A OW 0 eh H6 de bineeaee
PEt

Fade

Shetler MAT
Fs
ves ected vs
Stallman, Albert J eee ee eee ewes
Standard Ojl Co (Indiana)
eeeeene
Standard Oil Co (Indiana)
ee eee
Standard Oil Co (Indiana)
eee eee
SOMME, WORE e Saer 05 Fs Oe wee coe ie
PPM ON, COCO soils
vei oe ode ck ae
Stanger, Warren D Corres eerenee
Stanish, Edward
Sete eee ee eee wees
Starcevich, Charles A eee eee w eens
State Oil Co Cee ee ween metas esenee
State Oil Co
Coote were eresereeece

hs
ced 6 lee

ee

i
ee

ew

1500
2300
ewes

LEGAL NOTICES

NOTICES

MUGGED ss, 5 ee Cee eV er PAR CES
Spengler, Warren B eee eee wen eee
Spero, Henry See meee ewe wm ewer teens
Spertus, Maurice eee eee ewww tenes
Spiegel, Andrew C ee
Spigarelli, Angelo D eee ene w wees
Spitz, Lawrence S eee teem mene enne
Spizzirri, Joseph eee eee eee wwe wee
Sprague, Sumner
ewe ew eee ween eee
Spring, Frank S eee eee ewe ewe
Springs, Mzeyetta
SPPOO “Fo Bis tka ls doe cesOS
Srnanek,
George Jr ewe
ereeee
Stackler, Edward K weet eet e ee ene
Stackler, Sidney L Cee meee eee eens
Stacy, William D weer e wwe eereeeee
Stafford,
Clifford
SURG,

Simon,

Singer,

B86

1800
1000

Simon,

emir,
Mein
OC).
hee Soe
Schur, Irving
C DDS
Schwalbach, Donald
Schwaill, Joseph

FC

MMRON

1500

Sienerth, Irene § See reese seesces
RBM
PONG. fn fh
ue os foe
Sigler, Mrs. Herbert
mer,
Mliren: Bong ie
Sikorski, Stanley J
Silberman, David B
eee ee ee re ees
Silbernagel, Conrad
Siljestrom, James H ............
Siljestrom Coal &amp; Ice Co
Silverman, Ethel
Silverman,
Silverman,
Silverstine, Allen
Sa ey bw
A aid o's eck
Silverstine,
tere eees
Silvert, Mrs Sophie ..............
Simmers, Raymond J
Simmonds, Fanny
Simon, Al Jr

eeeesercecee
Se eee ewer eens
ORC

LEGAL

NOTICES

Mhevmen: JON
8535
cis 084 es
Sher-Park Building
Sherry, Edward J wee ew eee eet ene
BOT WIR. TE TE Al ss pies iba ck rae:
Sherwin, Raymond F
Shetzley, Clarence J
Shiffer, Daniel B
SMEG
IOI ics oe
sos bay Week Oe
Shipnes, Bessie L
Shire, Louise B
Rei
Me lis tat atk wo es eed
Shlopack, Wallace B cee ewer reese
Shoemaker, Richard J
Sholty, Lester J Coe meee eee renee
Sholty, Lester Jr
SOIT, BODE Tee
68
55 oe Cs eae
Shuman,
George
Shure, Myron B

450

oo vo a's Rock

E

Schamberg,

LEGAL

450

Don
..........
6. ke ces ;

Son

Schaffner,

NOTICES

&gt;

LEGAL

Swanson,
Swanson,
DWRNEON
Swanson,
SN
NIB
Swazey,
Swazey,
Sweeney,
ORTON:
Swenson,
Swidler,

John

A

CINE.
OU dare
ee CES:
Sture
SEMI
See
do k's 65k hk oe
WO
hes
te eS
Phoebe A Coe eoreersovece
Roswell B ..............
John Mi. cicccslkc
cc ces
ERP
ae ot
Loyd Te...
is hssdcls
Harry A .

Swifts: DOA.
6s VPAS ip eweees re
Swinea, Harold E ......... eyes
Tabin, Seymour so oasis.
caye ees
Taft; Andrew Jes
civ css + pee
RE
Tatt, Edmund J." os. 0s é¢0cbs PNY
Tagliapietra, Frank ....... Nba ces
Tagliapietra, John
....... os avg
FONUNER, FOO 6. cis ce Seepetes id
Talk O’ the Town Beauty Shop ..
Taradash, Warren L ......... sek
Tarnow, Mary D (Beauty Shop) ..
Tarpey, Martin W
......... at sien
Tatman, James H ...... sim ebewey
Tauber,
Jerny
soir vss Seesaw ‘
Tauman, Hodged
sc...
ccs cvsess 5:
Tavyalin,, Samuel
sion
t ees bak
LOGIOP, - TOVGIGR | 60 i 6.8 ous 8S ean
Taylor, -Géorte GQ dad
inc cheey eb
Pavlor,; Helen. iv 3kecels
ce pare te
Pavlor, Tee io
cs
ah ees ek ws wad
TORO,
GUIGO . . tic de scien ¥%
Tazioli, Mildred ...........+. Sete!
Tasiol, Sam
(‘sivscicdec
i vececeeee
Teare; Dorothy (i6i.8y «eles Os Katee
Tacce, Wier
ji sks. oehC em
Deeter, SOW I: iis
45,5. 40e on area
POMS, Mewy Ode
cts as eks weey
Templeton, Frank H ...... wee cee
Wonnans
Deis oss teese
eee es tebe
Tetiney, Wm
weirseen ote
Teter, Mrs Lucius ....... oceve ue
DOIPACes, THEM Scrs
os pees ss dbn See
Texas Company, Fhe ......... sve
Texas Company, The ...... Ate
SOW; POMODR Gd.
ce ceaiess cea
Thalman, Andrew
........ 5 Sip eaten
Sndiman, Felts M5
juni
Thatcher, John’ i535 ov ieee sy ie
Thayer’s Dairy &amp; Delicatessen ....
"TROPPien,; IGEN iiss 30s 4a eee
THOM BrOb Glick
ca cee ete toe ete
TROMAK, TPM oo boa hsh ets cok i ety
Thomas, Margaret:
05055 scene .
Thomas, Reuben R ........... eae
Thomas, Mrs Robert K ..........
Thomas, FN ibis.
oes cee %
Thomas, BtAIe. cass
ies bck bees AA
Thomas, Ww
id ect Licicccas eae
Thompson, Gilbert ........... eae
Thompson, Mar¥ H .......... ove
Thompson, Robert D ......... lene
Thompson, Thos C ‘Co....... one bath
Thomson, James!
(Avs occss&lt; bees
Thomson, ‘JON Es
oc i is ees eae
Thorsen,
Kenmore
....... ivehue

600
300
85
250)
1300)
850)
400+
50M.
BOQ
900
500
7090
700.
22300.
1208.
1650.
A40Q.
658
250
650»
500.
500,
400.
4002550.
1000
900.
1350
3000.
1700.
800
8250
405
380
1100
400,
950
500
1759
450
8150
250
300
600
660
1500.
900.
250)
900.
250.
7100»
3460.
800»
1050.
600 -

Tighe, Michael A .......... aeons
Tilley, Robert’ dss Aswssstesasean
Tillman,
Arthur
os... cecceueeee
Tillman, Lawrence
...... cia tien
"DURAN, ROWE WP oi e's 0 ofeib-e o bone tae
Tim, Wont Pic iiecexes wath been
arett, RO
ve
bbs oa oo A
a)
amis ROWE
sks oc
eae &lt;n kdmhee
"AMOI: TOOL EO isc ss ws be vee bee
Tinetti, Clarence ......s.csee ois's
Timer, Martine
065 ise esse ooseele
Tippey, Marvin E ....... be ctawratn
nee.
EL Ge
OWN hoo oh. 0 eee
SORT.
Li SE. by beg oes oo) een ehae
Todd, Edward F ...... coeres Mea
Todd, Medford § ...... ocaan heen
Todes, Melvin B ..... ia enc lecne
OMA IEN, 2
Ae
a eae ewe
AOU,
LTAe
aes. pak see seen
Rete,
A Tae
eos eet
Tomei, Joseph N .........0. tiece
Toendi;. Albert.i%.
boca swun os Arann
Loot, FredO
0scSec cts cyeu
eee
"LOOHGY, J).
ism cide das Ocets Sate aee
Torrence, Charles A ..... sia
Ce
Tosi, Domenico ........ oe. ORE
Town Shop, The ...... ¢caskeaeen
Towne, W Brewster ...... Aeory
ea
Trangmar, Frank
M i. .iccdicwvens
Trapani, Paul
...... Sieh eemene ;
Treger, .§ Gi vViios ei er kebanee
Trieschmann,: Ralph A: 6.3 ers &lt;as
Trippé, ‘Brnost: ects is eka diate ak
Trost, Wi G Drie
ni teees aeacae
Trowe, Jerome G ..... Vee sinks ena
Troxel; Janiee W255
a (ee eae
‘Troxel oT Ge AViwcs
ti vers pees ewe
Pruks,’ Hewes.
Sit ie che abet
Trude, Alfred E III ....... pape
Tre; Wien
Toss ovis ooes ante
TOGKON:
LiMIO: Gi ine chk
3 os aateaia
Tupper, Lloyd A ..... sien
eeepeus
TUred, Mussel Piss
ess 6b
eas wns
Tore, Richard. 656i 6s. veg che
UL K MURR RO awh
ee ss 6 wa b Seekien
RUPINO, Lidd- ih sie
ks 6c bike kes oaee
TINCT A ME is ocd eas hives vieben
aurner, Edgar 'G \.ii6&lt;.i34 ee
Turner; OUveR Boks
is oss esos oan
Turpin, Lawry &amp; Sarah Wheeloc
SM
CO AW hin cteek
Os Cava aeatouee
S0ty: Centroy’) TV
3.65 vey vende
Reh
AVA
des Ces cack a 44 ak
pine
EE, PORG Be ox ei eces ee
Unelt: Mrs: Jobw foe
i see pokey
EGON Dy EGO Gate tacds cy niga
Ugolini, Donald: J oe
a hele
RIZOUGE Dom es.
tie ee dee
PON,
TOO &lt;a i cco.
face veswe ou
eon:
JORn) fo.)
eo
ces vibe
Ugolint: + Boiss
So wis even ‘eee
Ugolini, Alessandrina ..... wed eect
Uhlmann, Frederick G ...........
Uhlmann, Mrs Richard ......... ‘
Ullmann, Agnes M ......... erties
Ollmann, ‘Lucille § 53&gt; zie ewe
Ullman, ‘Sam .B cs oie os ces ‘
UOlthy Fried
cis
ets cee
eee .
Unget, WB...
0. ok ie ae ee
Uist, Oar) Fe oie taice
eee a keane
Valley Suiisvus eevee crv: aot
iets
Vainder, Milton
MD ......... owe
ValGallis, Johiti ccs osc heey ose vow
Valiquet! Mrs A. Si ie vavcniees pee
Vallalay, Linn ‘dicéseiisiesss toeece
Vance, Norman Jr .
bates
Vanderbie; FiS scrssSaicts
eae
VanderBloomen, John W ........
Vandermeulen, Wm
............ x
Vander
V ries; Fath.
20.664. «2d
VanGuilder Motors ......... etene
VanHecke, Clyde B .......e.cecec
Vanbeer, Osea
iiss werk
as ;
Varn, DiGi.
edie er ones,
ae ee
Vanonl BR)? ise
ee sieo
Soares
VanOrnum, Harry J ...... aheee
VanRiper, James M ........ ease
VanStraaten, Herbert ......... wes
VanGCeleer He Bes
fais ¥eca an »
Vaniey,’ Albert. 2050255) wise sbie
Varney, Clarence F ...... ath Sect vga
Vasterling, Jay D..... dbs era etae
Vang:
Chee Do
705 anu
i i
Vechioni, Herman
....... qalnesws
Veech; Willem Foo
60 00oas pias
Velteh: “Willard” 2.6 6ciesc
oa. eho
VOM
MarlFs oiss's vs-cviecaeeunt
Velo, Domenick Const Co .......,

800
150.
600 «
500.
10470
6930
10064.
1050
650.
508.
508.
400
17568:
400:
800
600:
1700)
700:
650)
370
600
450
600
1100
250
450)
2000"
1008)
145
TAN
1200
2500
450
400
90m)
2200,
120%
4005
450
SEC)
5a *
1600
278%
55@)
50Q:
60Q
2500)
250)
105%»
860s
Tha
1000
1056
850
400
600
450
50m
50M
25a
660
800
We
6108
25 Gr
185
90M
130@
50Gr
100.
2150
215
60
1900
50
600
2150
808
50
105
150
90@
90G
408
40»
55@
856
2050.
1708
45@
508.
70
308:
50°
55@
450
2006+
600.

Thorson,

Chas

Bo.

vive eee Seeeee

Page

258»

29.

�é

LEGAL NOTICES
Vena, William
Venturi, Domenic
Mera:
FLGUPY 6d '¢ 6b: cee s'wees At
Vercoe, Edna G
Vercoe, E Winifred &amp; F Vivian os
Vercoe, Est of John B wee eee ene
Vercoe, Mrs John B
Vetter Electric Service
Vetter, Daniel A
Vetter, W F ewe e were reese erenes
Victor Bros Inc Ce
Viergutz, Martha S
Viezvicke, Vincent J ee
ay
Vignocchi, Anthony
Vignocchi, Roger T a
VillaArce,
Jose Cee ee reese serseee
Vinnedge, Russell C
Vinson, James C
Vinyard, E L Jr eee reer ors ereees
Vinyard, E L See e ewe e eee eae erene
EMO
6 ac, ile veyed
weed sat
Vogue Cleaners &amp; Dyers Inc ....
Vollath, Karl Cee meme em e sere sere nne
Vollertsen,
John E
Wollmer, Lee W eee ee emer eeseeee
Welpendesta, Adolph
‘Velpendesta, Dominic
Volpendesta,
Joseph
‘Volpendesta, William
‘Walgreen Co
‘Von der Linden, Siegfried
‘Vous, Adolph

Wadsworth,

George

W

Wagzett,
Frank G eee tere eras eee
Wavyner, Arthur G Jr
‘Wagner, Leuis A Cee eee eres eases
Wagner,
ee
|
Wagner,
ee eee eres
eeesese
Waldman, Benjamin ee eee rere eens
Waldman, Seymour eee eee seer aee
Wales, Frank B .......... es Kets
Walgreen Co eee ee were eee eeaeene
Walk, Maurice
Walker, Faith Louise
Walker, James A
Walker, John J cee weet tenet en eee
Walker,
Walker, Robert F Jr ee
Walker, Robert F ee
ee)
Walker, Robert P ee
Walker,

W

M

Jr

er

Wallace, Richard C ee
‘Wallach, Dr Howard ee
ee
ee
‘Wallach, Marvin
W
‘Wallenstein, Bert M
see ees enses
NE
ERWWIN
PS: 6 5 5 ac bc cecveees en
‘Walrath,
R
H
SITUS
AD chs vse b'c 0% 400d deo pass
Walsh, Wm J
‘Walters,
ee
MATONS, 0 0 yes sececrecee wavnes
Walters, W J
‘Walters’ Shoe Shop eee
ee
mrmnemer, Mildred. ......c.ccrcecers
Waltzek,
Edward
B
‘Walz,
Frank
* Wampler, Harold A
Wanger, Jessie W
eet reer reer seoen
Wanger, David Jr ee ee ee |
SE
ACAIT Ly wo. ce eke wcccees
Wanless, Louise E
Ward,

Ray

‘Ware, Irwin R ee
ee
Warner, Raymond C sere awe
Warner, Mason K
‘Warner, Robert W
Warren, Frank &amp; Marie eee
Warsaw,

Max

Warsaw,
Warton,

Stanley M
John
H

1050

‘Mrh@et. JO
rr OE Be

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

oe

ie Caren yi Oke ss
Oe erece:

West Side Mill &amp; Woodworking
Westerfeld, Anthony
ser ee eee
Westergard,

2300

sas

A

Harold

ee

Wetzel,
Ralph
L
Whitcomb,
Guy
WV le,
\GEOPTS 6051
White,

Harold

Co
eeee

ins ck bab hie

R

White,
White,
White,

White,

WAMU.

White,

Patricia

(85s

ek tvis ss 3 Vek’
Nancy

White, R Gillett ee
White, VE REE eh ba9 B98 0 66 ale oes
White, William W eee
ee
ee
Whitehouse,

James

L

Whitfield, Malcolm H Sete w
Whitlock, Luther E eee w eet
Whitman, John R eee w er
Whitworth,
C
Wiberg,
Emil

R

Cee

ee

Oe

wee

enw

swerens

wees

ee

eene

a ee eens
eeee

ey

Wiberg,
Martin
Cee meee were r ae aane
MAGN
ORR ef
6 2s 60 '6 05 Bho koi
WR MRS
PR aie g doing 45 nd aks
Wicklander, Harry
Wicks, Mrs Frank
Wieboldt, WW: She SSE Chae CLO Eee
Wieder,
Comm errr aes ennee
Wiegel,
Wilber,
F M
Wilbor,
Wilbur, William H ee
Wilde, Maurice C
Wilder, TIONS FR deo
ck Bes ck ewes
VET
Oe
es Leino sedge vucks
WV SIGs
MOTOR
eos ei ed du ei wees
Wilkinson, Vance Coe wwe mane ereere
WELTY EPUIRINR TE i aie Cow 6 bible aki ce
Will, Howard R Jr
Willard, C B Ce
Willard, A E Cette wee eee we eens
Williams,
ee
ee
eA
RE
op os oe Sadek Cuca
Williams, George Cott eer eases eese
Williams,

ome

m reer

seeseses

Williams,
Williams,
Williams,
Ce
ee
Williams,
Williams,
Sewer
were eeeseene
Williams,
WHLBON,
OUD he tek d 42040
K0cs 045
Williets, Cecilia B
Willits,
Ward
W
Willner, John A
Wilner,
Benton J Jr eer eeeereos
Wilner, Warren K eet e eer es erees
Wilson,
A
J
Wilson,
Wilson,
OI

C ¥.:
AMO

Wilson,
Wilson,
Wilson,
Wilson,

Denald Th va nlkS Cenwws
hes
Mrs Florence B ........
Est of Geo H (dec’d)
Harold
Cette etter eweee

oc

eer

ere

ak

Wilson,

reeessecesce

ks

50 vale wn vue

ee
Ce

Wilson,

ee

we ewer

ere

eee

LEGAL

eee

w eer

es

seers

eeee

PAROS,
AWE

......ee+eeees

"Werhane, Vernette ...-cesceseees
Werhniak,
Anton
...ceeseeerees
Wertheimer,
D P
..... gaa “es
"Wertheimer, Irwin S ....+.+-+-+ :

WOM

AG

a

ee

a

oa

reer

ees

ois oh asc

sks 6 68s bis oh oka

Winogrond, Henry
Winstin, Mural J
Winston, Jay L
Winter,
See

eeer

R

ere

e eee

eersooeses

eee

ee wees

eee

Witten,

Witten,
Witty,

Peter

eee

ewes

sere

Wolf,

eoresesens

H

Arthur

Cr

ee

|

Wolff,

Allan

Woll,

Wm

oe ivd ole pcekas

I Jr

Wormnell, ent Woon
Woodbridge, Wm W
Fh)

Wii

OS

woe

“Co

ke wre eeelssemes

Wright, Dr Ernest
WETUENS,
NICORES AEG Sb eb dees tenes
ORS ANG, WEI: ROPES o és va +.0 045 v.08
Wulfsohn,
Samuel
Wurm, Wm W
Wurth, Dr A Jd 2;
Wursburg,
A
Hart
Wyle,
John
M
Wyle,
Roy E
VIG,
OM ei
ich bibs v's Sip Seo 5%
Wylie,
Jesse
‘wager, Dr Francis Ms
66 6cc,es ue
Yeager, Harry M
Yeo; ‘GimS&amp;S “cs yasaewees&lt; Ve veety
Yellen,
George
MOTELOWS
BOODE
hs sec
haaeas
Yost, Donovan A Cerra ee sees eesoe
Young, Hazel L
Moves,
Mary AS cee Ci 6 5s 550s
Youngs, Harold C ........ ie tates
Zabel,

T

J

ee

&amp;

(Hill

ee

Zacharias, Richard
Zaeske,
Earling
were rere eee eeeeses
Zagalia,
Geno
Zagnoli, Sinesio
Zahnle, James M eee reer soenreeeee
Zahnle, Larry J eer eeor secre eese
Zahnle,
Leo
J
Zechman, Muriel .......eeee- bie.
ett:
BOF:
Di
keen
Zeisler, Paul B .
MON,
Ps IN EB iigesscae's
Zengeler-Horan Co Ine
eeereseceese
Zengeler,
John
Inc
ZORBOIO?: TORN §s on Wid Care oma’ 04.00%
Zenko. AUGTOW sks ies
kdacanseuee
Zicecarelli, Frank . stew eresereseae

ko CN vw a tis

900

acces
v0 a ot

500

Company

Stone

Agents)

Aviation

&amp;

......

General

Briddle Agt) .6ié...5-:
Employers’
Ins Co
Stone Agta). i.% 2450s
Insurance
Co
........

&amp;

Stone

Agts).......:..

Assurance
ee

250
300

Co

ROG

Ltd

1240
205
70
85

......
0 oo 6's exe

360

Automobile Insurance Co of Hartford, Conn
(E T Skidmore
&amp;
Son Agts)
Badger
Mutual
Insurance
Co
(V W Briddle Agt)

710

TAUB)

Continental
Insurance
(Hill &amp; Stone Agts)
Employers’
Fire
Insurance

&amp;

Stone

Association

Agts)
of

&amp;

Co
eee

1165

eens

Philadelphia

Pasquesi

60
3110

held

a

Pack

31

pack

meeting

Legion

of

den

Highland

building

in

achievements

since

their

last

entertained

friends

with

accomplished

pack

meeting,

their

families

Christmas

the

31,

Legion
Post
145, has Russell
F
Turco as committee chairman; Andrew Kaiser
as
Cubmaster,
and
Bernard J. Bevan as Assistant Cubmaster.
Plan

Sleigh

by

the

and
Pack

last

Thursday. At this meeting the boys
contributed new and repaired toys
which will be distributed at the anual Christmas party on Saturday at
Good Fellowship Settlement Home
in Waukegan.
Some of the es
ome
privileged children of this
are provided for by the pack.
The
boy
also
donated
canned
and
packaged
food
which
was
given to needy families for their
Christmas dinner.
In addition to receiving awards

sponsored

skits.

each

American

Ride

The
eighth graders
at Ravinia
school
are
hoping
for
a lot of
snow during the month of January.
They are planning to have
a sleigh ride, weather permitting,
as one of their class parties.

Instructor, Student At Military Academy

..

380

(E T Skidmore &amp; Son Agt)
Fireman’s Fund Insurance Co
(Anchor
Ins Agency)
Fireman’s Fund Insurance Co.
(L Dreiske Agt)
Firemen’s Ins Co of Newark N

1690
J
465

Agts)

Fulton Fire Insurance Co
(A Fitzgerald
Agt)
Gulf
Insurance
Company
Agency)

Hartford Fire Insurance Co
(Hill &amp; Stone Agts)
Hartford Fire Insurance Co
(Chas
C Hatcher Agt)
Home

Insurance

(Ernest

S

1760
1105

Company

Gail

Agt)

eees

1930

(Fred
Okey
Agt)
Insurance
Co of North
America
(Harry E Kichler Agt)
Insurance
Co of North
America
(Hill &amp;
Stone Agts)
eee
eeee
Insurance
Co of North
America

635

Home

civ sia ea whceu

Woolworth,
F
W
.
Worcester, Ralph G .
Woskow, Morris
Wrenn, W B
MEPIERDN

chee oc re ov eae

AG. 266.64 606

Wiiaa

Insurance

(Anchor

CM.

Wollner,
Arthur
4
Wolterdine.
7200.
sdceceacscn bas
WOES)
VA de
eg ng
Wolters,
Robert M

WOROKG,

WIPO

Albert:

(Shetzley

Ce

Carl §S
ATION Eiken

EMOIOG: 6 550d 685s 2 0 eee ae
aes fe POPPER
TORE oes

(V Wm
American
(Hill &amp;
American

Fire

eeesors

Wizner, Herman
sere ses erereeees
Woerner, Gertrude B eee eeeseeeee
Wolens, Melvin B eee eee ees eeees
Wolf,
Wolf,
Wolf,
NOME

550
1700

(Hill

Wm
Jr
George
F

Wittig,

PORE
SVK
pe WSd wd ee 8s
RM oy Piece bod blak CNH Scie clei

American

(255)

Wirtanen, Richard
Withrow, Gladys
Wittelle, Samuel
R
Witten, Frances
Witten,

Park

PEAS.

Atlas

Scout

1000

American

ey

Cee

Cub

3750

Isadore
(RGA

‘for

Gives Toys To Needy

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

TU
OE

Byes;

800
250
500

cele
ee e's

Zimmerman,
PATAOPIART

(Hill

Winefield, Alex H
Wineman, John S
Winfrey, L V
eI,
ORR oe he
Winkler, Gordon

Cub Scout Pack 31

NOTICES

Zieve,
Leonard.
§
(2448.7
Zimmer}
Roy. Bois
eee ei
eee
Zimmerman,
Barbara M
........

ee,
OTS

oe
eee

Shown with some of the new and repaired toys contributed by Cub Scouts of Pack 31 for
their Christmas party for underprivileged children on Saturday are, left to right, Russell Turco,
Andy Kaiser, Billy | Piersen and Robert Rechlin.

Aetna

ee

°

WOME,
WGBis

Cubs Spread Christmas Cheer

NOTICES

Wertheimer,
Joseph
Wertheimer, Nathan
Wesner, Howard A
Wessling, O K

eeees

Frederick A
Watkins,
Jesse M Jr
‘
Watkins, MUTIEO bien
ccd eeees Whee
mene,
RROUEIt Mo...
cc cec ces
Watson, Dudley S &amp; Louise Hall
Watson, J “reg 3 x
Watt, Frank L
Wayne, Wm § ee
Weaver, Edna &amp; Fortune ........
Weaver, G C Jr
EES
PEMUTY. DS. oo ook skews wees
Weaver, Mrs Mildred
Weber, Bertram A ee
ee
PO
fe his de eiess cece
Weber,
eet ewer weer eesseeese
Weber,
A9GO
My
5s ove e cteccece
Weckworth, Cletus J
ee
Weed,
Cornelius
MEE ASIIVOT. TO) vos c ect sccved bras
Weeks, Edward L eee ee eeee en eee
Weeks,
Francis D
oe
Weeks, Marcy
Weeks, R
Weigle, Maurice S
Weil, Edward S
pepenmr George Ly ..i.ccccsceces
‘Weil,
‘Weil,
Weil,
Weil,
Weil,
Weiland, Henry C
Weiler, Edward eee eee eer seers eeee
Prmemera®, LOUIS Jr... ccscccscves
Weinberg, Robert L ........ re
Weinberger, Walter ......... Fein
Weinberger,
Walter
Jr
Weiner, Albert .....cesccsveces Pie
Weiner, George HL .....ceceoeeee
Weinfeld, Dr Gustave .........0..
Weinmann, Jos
Weinress,
Wallace
...... aa baa
Weinstein, Edward R ......-eeees
Weinstein, Herbert ..... eeedvee ee
Weis,
Weis,
gi
Weisbard, George L ......--. Be
Weisbrod, Benjamin H .........Weislow, Leonard B .....-.eeeee
Weiss, Daniel A
Weiss,
Harry
Weiss, Mrs Lotta ....... cag das se
Weiss, Trevor D ..
.
‘Weissenberg,
EC.....
‘Welch, Christine
TIMMINS
66k caceccce eeate
Welch, Raymond W
;
‘Wellman,
Lester Jr ..........
Wells,
A J weer were e err eeteosee
Wells, Leonard A
....
Wells,
Paul
‘Wendel, Dr George E ...
Wender,
MT
14 cos event 6 évids
Weng, Jos (Beauty Shop)
Wengerhoff, Albert ..... Seem ES
cere
eer seers
Wennberg,
Chas
Wenninger, William C ..
Werchek, John A
..cccccccccees
‘Werhane,
TOPORE..
24s c'sls «ian tees 4:

Page 30

250
750
550

ee)

M

Werhane, Raymond

LEGAL

Insurance

(Howard

W

sere

Company

Huber

Agt)

Massachusetts Fire &amp; Marine Ins
Co (Hill &amp; Stone Agts)
ee eeewe
Newark
Insurance
Co
eee eoees
(Hill &amp; Stone Agts)
eee eeeeees
New
York
Underwriters
Ins Co’
(Ernest
S Gail Agt)
Northwestern National Ins Co ..
(Howard W Huber Agt)
Norwich Union Fire Ins Soc Ltd
(Hill &amp; Stone Agts)
eee eect eee
Pearl

Assurance

Company

Ltd

.

(Shetzley &amp; Pasquesi)
Phoenix Insurance Company
(Hill &amp; Stone Agts)
Providence Washington Ins Co ..
(Moroney Ins Agency Agts)
Queen
Insurance
Co of America
(Howard
W
Huber
Agt)
abs
St Paul Fire &amp; Marine Ins Co ..
(Hill &amp; Stone Agts)
Springfield Fire &amp; Marine Ins Co
(Hill &amp; Stone Agts)
Star Insurance Co of America ..
(Moroney

Ins

Agency

Fire

(Harold
Travelers

J Beik Agt)
Fire
Ins
Company

(E

T

Travelers

Ins

Agts)

Travelers

Skidmore
Fire

Company
&amp;

Son

Insurance

..

Cadet Joseph Bell arrived home Friday from Staunton Military academy, Staunton, Va., to spend a_ twoweek Christmas vacation with his mother, Mrs. Anna Bell, and
his grandmother, Mrs. Joseph Studeny, both of 326 North avenue.
His grandfather, Maj. Joseph Studeny (USA, Ret.)
band
7655
1535

..

Agts)
Co

1170

..

Hambly
&amp; Co Agts)
Travelers
Fire
Insurance
Co
.
{Hill “&amp;. Stone Agts)
........
Trinity Universal Ins Co
(Shetzley &amp; Pasquesi Agts)
..
U S Fidelity &amp; Guaranty Co ..
(Shetzley &amp; Pasquesi Agts) .

530

2145
360

instructor

at

the

academy,

is

unable

to

come

home

for the holidays because of the band’s program commitments.
Cadet Bell, the son of M/Sgt. Norman Bell, who died of injuries
received in Iceland in World War II, was graduated from
Highland Park High school in 1951 and attended Lake Forest
college before entering Staunton in September 1952 as a
post graduate cadet.
He will be graduated next June.
Maj.
Studeny has been an instructor at the academy since September, 1938.
Before his retirement from the army in 1938 he
had been a band instructor at Fert Sheridan for 12 years.
Thursday,

December

25, 1952

�U. of Arizona Students

Rogers-Schelhas

Wedding
Salem
The

‘Fly’ Home For Holidays
The poor flying weather which
blanketed the Middle West the past
few days caused considerable delay

Rites ee.

in the

niced Saturday

wedding

rites

of

Mary

of

performed

Central

Coyl

last

avenue

Saturday

at St. Francis
mette by the

were

afternoon

Xavier church, WilRev. Charles Long.

A reception
at
Exmoor
Country
club followed the ceremony.

The

bride,

who

is the

daughter

of Mr. and Mrs. Horace Edward
Coyl
of
Wilmette,
wore
an
ice
blue satin gown with long sleeves
and an illusion neckline trimmed
with sequins and seed pearls. Her
bouquet
was
made
up
of white
camellias.
Mrs.

D.

in

champagne

she is

with

was

Her

flower

daughter,

girl.

wore

5,

an

embroidered white organdy dress
over an ice blue satin underskirt.
She had a wreath of flowers in her
hair and carried a bouquet similar

to. the bride’s.
Dr. Schelhas’
of

Evanston

brother,

served

as

Lorenz,

best

man.

They are the sons of Mr. and
Julius Schelhas
who were both

Mrs.

of Allegan, Mich.,
here ‘for the wed-

ding.
~

Ushers included Dr. John Boyle
and Dr. William Bradford of Winnetka, Dr. Robert Jans of Skokie

and

the

bride’s

brother,

Charles

E.

Coyl of Wilmette.
Mrs. Coyl chose brown
taffeta
for her daughter’s wedding.
She
wore a shell pink hat and gloves
and
a
corsage
of
cymbidium

orchids.

Mrs.

Schelhas

was

of Ari-

to land in

a member

of Chi Omega

so-

attired

A number of cocktail parties will
precede the Christmas formal dinner dance members and guests of
the Ravinia Woman’s club will attend Saturday night in the Ravinia
Village house.

Those
in
to

for
the

the

planning
cocktails
dance at

club

of

Mrs.

W.

the

Entertain Family Gathering
Mr.

and

Mrs.

Fred

W.

Burling-

and

Alcock

Johnston,

of the club and

event,

and

avenue,

co-chairman,

and

Beers.
dinner.

The

the junior

guests

Fred

W.

will

in-

Burling-

hams of Northfield and their two
children; Mr. and Mrs. Roger Die-

boldt,

also

of Northfield,

and

Mr.

For

That

Special

in navy

acces-

Mrs.

family party will be the Medways’
children, John, 12 and Susan, 10.

PARTY
Ribs of Beef

COMPLETE

Plus

Orchestra

For

Fed.

and

A

(41)

Amuse

Tax

Dancing

neaton
ea bbage
Skokie

DINNER

$575 PER PERSON

MUSIC
FAVORS
FUN MAKERS
at County Line

HI 2-4283

h

RENT A
MINK COAT
We carry a separate and complete stock for rental purposes.

matching

and

Grant Davis and her daughter, Ann,
of Denver, Colo. Completing
the

Occasion

CAPE,

blue with

their. son, Dick

Wis.,

and Mrs. Duncan C. Allardice and
their two children of Evanston.

ham Sr. of Barberry road are entertaining their family at Christ-

sories and an orchid corsage.
Dr. and Mrs. Schelhas are now
living in Glencoe where they have
purchased a new home.

Wauwatosa,

Prime

chairman
cocktails,
Beers,
of

of

New Year's Eve

social

will
also
entertain
at
as will Mrs.
Morrison

of Milwaukee, the Regin-_

GALA

Mrs.

Johnston

mas

and Don, three months.
They are
houseguests of the Godfrey Eylers
of Marshman
avenue, Mrs. Buchter’s parents, and will remain here
until after New Year’s Day.

Mr.

Schmidt

ald Medways
and

Vintn Moperne

3

Gordon

Mr.

clude

with
3%,

Mrs.

avenue,

chairman

of

Among
Highland
Buchters

who arrived Tuesday
young sons, Jonathan,

president,

Clifton

Mr.

burg,
their

« W—~

to invite friends
before going on
9 o’clock include

W. K. Wilner of Kimball road and
the junior Walter M. Buchroeders
of Marion avenue.

Godfrey Eylers Are Hosts
To Daughter, Son-in-law
the Christmas visitors to
Park are the Robert A.
(Monie
Eyler) of Pitts-

of Lyman
court are: entertaining
members of Mr. Medway’s family
for Christmas dinner. Their guests
will include Mr. and Mrs. Chester

R. Parks, and Mr. Parks; Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth J. Weir of Deerfield,
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Frisch of Ivy
lane, the Arthur
N. Moultons
of
Oakland drive, the E. E. Dierkings

Burton

For

STOLE

OR

6666 N. RI
e New

Br

iliant Decor
rvice

@ Unexcelled Se
e Private Dining Rooms
for Priv ate Parties

JACKET

and

ALLGAUER'S
(a

Information Phone
ANdover 3-5512

Fire

00 Lincoln

sg

et

Every

Day—

Typewriter Repairs
Finest work by our expert
repairmen . . . and fully
guaranteed!

Telephone
Highland
Park 2-3 100

af

VY |

eS

jas

aie

Typewriter Sales
Office machines, portables, adding
machines. Some excellent
buys in reconditioned
machines!

F

i

=

)

| ,

ST

645
Central

Ave.

We

tie ttt t att tt ta tet tet

e tt tte trae

tie

friends.

AAA

UU

to express

the

Best wishes of the

AAA

Holiday

Season

AAA

650

pie,

N. Western
December

nc.
Lake

ADDED PLD DDL DDD Bi Di DDD Di De Dee

Thursday,
pate See

hotles
25, 1952

Dee eB

RAMA

Bec

DL

SHERONY
314 GREEN

BAY

HARDWARE
HIGHWOOD

ROAD

HI 2-2041

Forest
a

AM A

Hoe e a eee ee eee

eee

DADA

eee ee eee

AAA A AAA

TE

ee

wish

Season’s Greetings to all our

AAA

ss

ott

University

Unable

brown

Candice,

Candice

the

Chicago the young men flew back
and forth between
Kansas,
Iowa
and Illinois before their plane was
finally grounded in
Moline,
IIl.,
where they obtained bus transportation to Highland Park.
Bob Christopher is the son of the
junior R. J. Christophers of Melody
lane and Bob Larson is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard A. Larson of
Northland avenue. Freshman roommates
at Arizona, they are both
members of Theta Chi fraternity.
Miss
Julie
Christopher,
Bob’s
sister, is on vacation from her studies at Lake Forest college where
rority.

taffeta

from

zona at Tucson.

of Wilmette

accessories and a wristlet of brown
orchids.

Larson

She was clad

R. Hawkins

Was matron of honor.

night of Rob-

ert J. Christopher II and Robert K.

Rogers of Wilmette and Dr. Charles
Schelhas

arrival Sunday

Willard Medways Have Guests
‘Mr. and Mrs. Willard Medway

Parties to Precede
Christmas Dance

Page

31

�Pack 30 Decorates Tree For Center

ENTERTAINMENT
—

—

Friday Nights
3 Piece Combo

—

Good Atmosphere —

MEET YOUR

FRIENDS

at

325 Waukegan

Ave., Highwood,

III.

HI 2-4476

See

Members of Cub Scout Pack 30, Elm Place school, decorated a Christmas tree at their
recent meeting and then donated it to the Highland Park Recreation center for the holidays.
Shown arranging the handmade ornaments are, left to right, Robert Armstrong, Tom
Marks, John Warton Jr., and Dean Swift Jr.
Miss

Buchanan

Leaves

Stroud-Pril|

Soon For Skiing Trip
GOODRICH

SILVERTOWN

CENTRAL
1883

St. Johns

Miss

TIRES

Louise

TIRE CO.

mas

for a week

Park, Colo.

Ave.

Buchanan,

daughter

of the W. L. Buchanans of County
Line road, will leave after Christ-

HI 2-1200

Ardelle

will

Wood

join

Talwenden

of skiing

at Winter

She and a friend, Miss
of Arlington

fellow
Ski

members
club

at the

Heights,

of

the

(Continued

of New
from

page

13)

Atkinson Young officiating.
A reception
followed
in
the
Stroud
home on Burton avenue.
The bride
is the daughter
of Frederick
F.
Stroud and the late Mrs. Stroud.

Mr.

resort.

Prill, son

of the

Carl Prills

TRADE!

We Will Give the following
Trade-In on 2linch Consoles

No
or

matter

sell

you'll

5,

4

:

Greetings

:

for

Best

:

Wishes

:

A HAPPY
HOLIDAY

Bea‘s

w

Restaurant

330 Waukegan Ave. HI 2-3622
HIGHWOOD
RPE

BE

EE

EE

EE

BE

his

you
the

want

to buy

Want-Ad

sec-

tion your best market place.

NOTICE

:

Wis., will take

what
find

LEGAL

PE

SALE!

Lisbon,

bride on a wedding trip to Wisconsin.
The couple will be at home
on Burton avenue.

IS

NOTICE

HEREBY

GIVEN

by

the

Board of Appeals of the City of Highland
Park, that a public hearing will be held
by said Board, in the Council Chambers
of the City Hall, in the City of Highland
Park, at 7:30 P.M., Tuesday, January 6,
1953, to hear appeals from the decision
of the Building Inspector for the City of
Highland Park, regarding variance from
the Zoning Ordinance as follows:
Appeal No. 206 on behalf of Archie J.
Antes whose appeal was postponed from
December 23, 1952.
Appeal No. 207 on behalf of Theodore
D. Kahn at 690 Wake Robin Lane, Highland Park
(Lot 1, Lebolts Subdivision),

for

a

variance

of

the

Zoning

Ordinance

to permit a single family dwelling to be
constructed 20 feet from the lot line on
Roger
Williams
Avenue
instead of 40
feet’ as required.

Plan To Meet
That

ct GT CET
I

ty

10 inch up to ------- $5000
12 inch up to -------- $8500

16 or 17 in. up to $1 2500

If some
member
of your
family
were
confined
to a
hospital
in
an
emergency
could you afford the cost?

-------- $23900

20 inch TV Table Model

-------- $27950

20 inch TV Console Model ---- $34950

$16900
$22900
$30950

$7900
$5Q00

$4000

See the Rose Bowl Parade &amp; Game
on These New

GRANT
252
Page

E. Deerpath
32

IT

We Have Some Real Cash Bargains on the Following:
20 inch TV Table Model

@® LOCAL TRADEMARKS, Ine.

. . . at the top of her list
was

Eddy’s.

you'll

Sets

« GRANT,

INc.

Lake Forest 658

Emergency

Early or late,

find a full

Satisfaction

here.

SPECIAL

THIS

J. W. Dant
Jessie

Moore

quota
WEEK

and
........

$
2

for

EDDY'S
TS

of

Bd Le

8

Doctors who encounter such
cases
constantly
know
the
hardship a long hospital confinement can cause to a family. On the other hand the
family who are covered by a
hospital insurance need have
no great fear of having their
savings erased by a serious
illness. More than that. they
are able to get the medical
care they need at once,.such
X-rays,
laboratory
tests,
etc.
Prepaid medical care is the
best
plan
to assure
your
health
and
finances.
Ask
your doctor about it.

Earl W.

Gsell

&amp;

Co.

—Pharmacists—

Thursday,

December

25, 1952

�RN
PRR MEET.) tS CoS Woe
ee

ohet
aaa
eM
oe

ent

CLOTHING SALE
BEGINS AT 10:00 A. M.
FRIDAY MORNING DECEMBER
EVERY

SUIT - TOPCOAT

- OVERCOAT

Hundreds

-

SPORTCOAT

of Fine

IN STOCK

DRASTICALLY

|

Another

in This Group

Are

Group

of Quality
YOU

NEED

of Suits and Coats

AND

SAVE

$59
MANY

DOLLARS.

For This Sale Only!
Entire

Stock

of

have selected a number of suits and coats which sold
for as high as $65 to clear out at

$

3

SLACKS

2

STORE

OPEN
MONDAY&amp; FRIDAY
EVENING

HOURS

i

25, 1952.

10%

FOR

FRIDAY:

off

h

fa

&gt;

S

10:00 A.M. TO 9:00 P. M.
FREE
f

with
i

each
é

purchase
Oo
®

595
December

=

Regular Prices

Select any Tie in the Store

Thursday,

Fine

Clothing

For Early Shoppers
We

§$

Topcoats and Overcoats

THIS IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY TO SELECT THE CLOTHES
EVERY GARMENT IS FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK.

Limited Number

REDUCED

Quality

VALUES TO $75
Included

26

Central

Highland

OPEN
ALL DAY
WEDNESDAY

Park
Page

33

�NORTH SUBURBAN
SYNAGOGUE BETH EL
1175 Sheridan Road
. Megr. Joseph P. Morrison
Pastor

Rev,

Donald

Highland

_ | SUNDAY, December 28
9:30' a.m. Sunday school.
|
10:40
a.m.
Organ
meditation;
James Varney, organist.

Park

HI 2-5787
Philip L. Lipis, Rabbi
Stanley Martin, Cantor

B. Runkle

Rev.

10:45
am.
Morning’
worship;
Pastor Harris preaching.
6 p.m.
Senior Youth fellowship

Bernard E. Burns
HI 2-0202
Conservative
progressive dinner, and pre-watch
Confessions
FRIDAY, December 26
night party at the home of Norman
days, eves. of First Fridays
College Night Sabbath.
Johnson, 1703 Second street.
4:14 p.m. Light candles.
Holy Days 4 and 7:30 p.m.
8:30 p.m.
Late service.
Panel]
D NESDAY, December 24
HIGHLAND
PARK
discussion, “Religion on the Camtmas. Eve
BAPTIST
CHURCH
12 midnight. Solemn mass, pre- pus.”
486 Central Court
veded
at 11:25 by the singing of SATURDAY, December 27
HI 2-2101
istmas carols by the children
9:30 a.m. Morning worship.
Rev. Robert Clingman, Minister
Immaculate Conception choir. SUNDAY, December 28
Rev. Edward J. Skoner of the
10 a.m. Adult services.
| THURSDAY, December 25
cesan Mission band, formerly
7:15 a.m. Daily Minyan meeting.
5 a.m. to 6 a.m. Christmas mornstant priest at Immaculate ConThere will be no classes in the ing
service
with
choral
music
eption, will preach the sermon at Hebrew and Nursery (GAN) de- and a message by the Rev. Clingnight mass.
partments during the week of De- man.
IRSDAY, December 25
‘|cember 29. Classes will be resumed SUNDAY, December 28
stmas Day
.
on Monday, January 5.
9:30 a.m.. Sunday school.
Low masses will be said at 1:30
11 a.m. Sunday worship.
a.m.
2 a.m., 6:15 a.m., 7:30 a.m., 9 TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH
7:45 p.m.
Sunday worship.
a ‘m., 11 a.m. and 12 noon.
425 Laurel Avenue
TUESDAY, December 30
Alumnae of Immaculate Concep- The Very Rev. Charles U. Harris,
8:30 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Missionary
on school will sing the high mass
Rector
Study class.
ich is celebrated at 10 a.m.
HI 2-6653
DAY, December 28
SUNDAY, December 28
ZION EV. LUTHERAN CHURCH
Masses at 6:15, 7:30, 9, 10, 11 a.m. Holy Innocents Day
High Street and Oakridge Avenue
12 noon.
7:30 a.m. Holy communion.
Highwood
9:15 am.
Family eucharist and Rev. Herbert W. Linden, Pastor
no church school classes.
ORTH SHORE METHODIST
WEDNESDAY, December 24
11 am. Annual college service.
,
CHURCH
11:30 «pim. - Festive
Christmas

| Hazel and Greenleaf
pe
Glencoe

Avenues

. Russell W. Lambert,

twit

Kemp, Director of Music
Glencoe

ive

the
OME

Minister

1227

Service

of

|

Communion

sanctuary.
Members may
anytime during the threeservice and receive Commu-

INDAY, December 28
:30

j

a.m.

and

11

a.m.

HIGHLAND

Worship

PARK

PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Laurel, Linden and Prospect
urch Telephone HI 2-1695
William Atkinson Young,
fe
Minister
December

28

1 a.m. to 12 noon. Morning worship service, Dr. Young preaching.
Chi ash school classes for children
se years old up through third
i Ae also meet at this hour.
| 9:30 a.m. to 10:05 am. Chancel
hoir rehearsal.

:30 a.m.
partment

9:30

a.m.

Holy

THURSDAY,

Communion.

January

1

FRIDAY, January 2
7:30 a.m. Holy communion.

FIRST UNITED EVANGELICAL
CHURCH
Green Bay Road at Laurel Ave.
A. G. Masser, Minister
HI 2-1731
SUNDAY, December 28
9:30 a.m. Sunday school session.
10:45
service;

a.m.
sermon

7 p.m.

Morning
worship
by the pastor.

Junior

Christian

endeav-

People’s

fellow-

or.
p.m.

Young

| ship.
7:45 p.m.
Evening service.
The
Senior choir of the church under
the direction of Mrs. Lisle Hawley

will present
“Holy
Night;”
the
Christmas story in colored pictures
with

musical

accompaniment.

WEDNESDAY,

December

31

8 p.m.
Midweek prayer service.
10 p.m.
Watch Night service at
which
the sound
motion
picture

to 10:35 a.m. Junior “Queen Esther” will be shown.
(4th, 5th and _ 6th Fellowship and a devotional period

ades) and Junior high depart\ it: (7th and 8th grades).
30 am. to 10:30 am.
Adult

will close

the

service.

WESLEY

METHODIST

Highwood

Avenue

CHURCH

and Everts Place

10:10 a.m. to 10:45 a.m. FroshThe Rev. Donald Woods, pastor
soph and varsity groups for high WEDNESDAY, December 24
00] students.
11 p.m. Midnight Christmas Eve
+ 10:10 a.m. to 10:45 a.m. Quartet candlelight service. The choir will
shearsal at the Manse.

DNESDAY,
am.

to

December 31
9:30

a.m.

Sanctuary

n for prayer and meditation.
- NORTH SHORE
- CONGREGATION ISRAEL

i Lincoln and Vernon Avenues
Glencoe

Dr. Edgar Siskin, Rabbi
ae
Glencoe 725
[DAY, December
,6:15 p.m.
Alumni

26
Homecoming

Sabbath Eve dinner.
8:30 p.m. College Homecoming
ce.
DAY, December 28
Alumni

Homecoming

ligious school classes resumed.
DAY, January 5

sing several Christmas numbers.
THURSDAY, December 25
6 a.m.
Early Christmas service.
MYF breakfast following.
FRIDAY, December 26

7:30 p.m.

Choir rehearsal.

SUNDAY, December 28
9:30 a.m. Church school

493

sermon

by

Hazel

Solemn

SUNDAY,

cember

25
9:30,

10:30

8:30,

9:30,

28.

The

thew (10:8) ‘Heal the sick, cleanse
the lepers; raise the dead, cast out
devils:
freely
ye
have
received,
freely give.”

Bible

selections

Version) in the
clude: “And
God

(King

James]

Lesson-Sermon
wrought

‘REDEEMER EV. LUTHERAN
CHURCH
a
Yhe

special

Jews and Greeks also dwelling at
Ephesuh; and fear fell on them
all, and the name of the Lord
Jesus was magnified ... Many
of them also which used curious
arts brought their books together, and burned them before all
men...
So mightily grew the
word
of
God
and
prevailed.”

by

from
Key

Mary

“Sickness,

10:45
a.m.
Fifteen
minutes.
of
chimes.
11 a.m., Morning
worship
sermon
topic:
“New Year’s
Resolu100,”

can.

Central
William

that

Eddy,

in

as well as sin, is an
Christ,

destroy

Truth,

...:

H.

Remmert,

10:30 a.m. to 12 midnight.

mas Eve

Pageant

the

service

first

orated

in

sanctuary.

illuminates

the

the

will

8 a.m.

dec-

ceiling,

Christmas

no

Father Skoner

and Bethany
the pageant.

Midnight Mass

F..B.

sole

Schlung

will

.play.

at

will

the

To Preach

begin

organ

special

December

Christmas

26

Nichols-Wessling

circle

9:30

December

a.m.

classes

for

‘10:45

a.m.

all

11

age

Organ

F. B. Schlung.
ice

28

Church

school

with
by

A. P. Johnson.
Youth fellowship

with

Mission

band will

Midnight Mass in Immaculate Conception church.
formerly

Father Skoner was

assistant

priest

there.

The Rt. Rev. Joseph P. Morrison,
pastor, has announced
hour on Sunday, from

that a holy
4 to 5 p.m.,

will be offered in Immaculate Conception
for
all the
persecuted
peoples behind the Iron Curtain.

the

Innocents,

is

time

the

when

Feast
a

of

the

reminder

early

Holy
of

tyrant,

the

King

Herod, ordered the death of all infant males in his kingdom, seek:
ing to destroy the young Savior.

a.m. Morning worship servand sermon by the. minister,

the Rev.
7 p.m.

Diocesan

preach the sermon at the Christmas

Sunday,

groups.
meditations.

the

The hour is being held in all Catholic churches of the United States,
at the request of the Catholic Bishops
of America
at their
recent
meeting. in..Washington.

Christmas party and gift exchange
at the home of Mrs. Fred Bishop,
1339 Ridgewood drive.

SUNDAY,

At

The Rev. Edward J. Skonerof

con-

midnight.
p.m.

de-

votions and: social: hour.
WEDNESDAY, December 31
3:45 p.m. Bethany chorister ‘rehearsal in the Dubs room‘ of the
church.

The Want-Ad section is filled with
interesting: facts
tunities.

and

aclten, oppor-~

Don’t miss it!

*

NORTHSHORE GARDEN OF MEMORIES —
A Surprise Awaits You
THIS

If You Have

BEAUTIFUL

GARDEN

Not Visited

CEMETERY

Very Reasonable Prices
Green Bay Rd. &amp; 18th St.

Phone Maj. 1067 —

The

NORTH SHORE FURTH SERVICE
Funeral

alone

physical

healing of Christian Science results now, as in Jesus’ time, from

All Phones

Directors

KEnwood

6-0700

the operation of divine Principle,

before which sin and disease lose
their reality in human consciousness and disappear as naturally
and
as necessarily
as darkness
gives them place to light and sin

to

reformation.”

(pp.

251,

Pref.

&lt;1),

ST. JAMES
146

North

Ave.,

7

CHURCH
Highwood

E. Douaire,

HI 2-0427

936 East 47th Se.
Chicago

~
ea

AW

IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT
ae
oie
We offer complete and highly adequate tacilities .
near you on the North Shore using the well known noire.

Rev. James D. Gleeson, Pastor
Rev. Arthur

ESTABLISHED
1890

Ass’t.

e

serv- .

old

rose walls and: the symbols’ displayed on the arch. A candlelight
processional of the Chancel choir
choristers

road

ice.

Indirect lighting
blue

Bay

service especially arranged for the
smaller children.
ik
7:45 p.m. Second Christmas |
service especially arranged for «
older children.
THURSDAY,
December
25
1

be

newly

Green

WEDNESDAY, December 24
6:30 p.m. First Christmas Eve

Christ-

program

1817

“

‘Science
and
to
the
Scrip-

Baker

Avenue

Tel. HI 2-6848

Res.

19: EL, 17; ¥9;.20).

Selections
Health
with

error

741
Rev.

in-

miracles by the hands of Paul
. And this was known ‘to all the

(Acts

Tel. HI 2-8145
December 28
Sunday worship.

SUNDAY,
11 a.m.

BETHANY CHURCH
(Evangelical United Brethren)
1704 McGovern Street
Rev. A. P. Johnson, Minister
The Rev. Dale Zimdars,
Assistant Minister
HI 2-3522
WEDNESDAY, December 24

8

title of the Lesson-

|

pastor

FRIDAY,

Sermon will be CHRISTIAN SCIENCE.
The Golden Text is fromm’ Mat-

Center —

Highwood

pre-

December 28

Masses at 6:30, 7:30,
10:30 and 11:30 a.m.

Community

428 North Green Bay Road

mass

THURSDAY, December
Masses at 7:30, 8:30,
and 11:30 a.m.

Avenue

practical; yet scientific and logical,
will be explained in all Churches of
Christ, Scientist, on Sunday, De-

all

Rev. Harold Harris, Pastor
Green Bay Road and
Homewood Avenue
WEDNESDAY, December 24
7:15 p.m.
Church school Christmas program and white gift service
for Bensenville home.
11 p.m. to 12 midnight. Christmas eve choral
service
and holy
communion:

midnight.

OF HIGHLAND PARK
At
The Rev. William Giles Glover |

Highwood

ceded by carol singing.

12

clude:

ST. JOHN’S
EVANGELICAL
AND REFORMED CHURCH

12

Days

the

SUNDAY, December 28
9:30 a.m. Sunday school.
11 a.m. Church service.
WEDNESDAY, December 31
8 p.m. Testimonial meeting.
That religion can be Christianly

ages.

The

Christmas

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST
SCIENTIST

tures”
for

Masses at 7 and 8 a.m. Holy
—Masses at 6, 7, 8 and 9.
WEDNESDAY, December 24

music which will be heard from
pastor and Christmas songs by the the church tower. The four-scene
choir, under the direction of Mar- pageant of the Christmas story will
| be, presented by members
of the
lin B. Rechkemmer.
Sunday school under the direction
SUNDAY, December 28.
of Mrs. A. P. Johnson, with Elmer
9:30 a.m. Church school.
Schlung as narrator.
Prayers for
10:45 a.m.
Morning worship.
peace will conclude the service at
service.

9:30 a.m. Holy communion, feast
of the circumcision.

7

Avenues

NDAY,

WEDNESDAY, December 31
7:30 a.m. Holy Communion.

| olen

ee Fridays and Week Days —|_

staff of directors.

AN OUTSTANDING PROFESSIONAL RECORD c
62 SU CCESSFUL YEARS SERVING CHICA GOLAND

oe

es

¢
|

�:

Cheah
SR
OG
:

16H
THEATRE
e

MA Nac

inate oka Cos

i

aeons
v4

01) iskeialbientcilt ed
HEUER

COUNTRY GIRL”

"GIGI" — “TOP BANANA”
="STALAG 17”
theater

and

on

Evanston

sporting

sale

events,

North Shore Hotel Lobby, DAvis 8-8282
a.m.

to

6 p.m. Mon. thru
Closed Sundays

Sat.

(OUR

9

Central

SAM ICMLN TLL

“Great

Street,

big time”—Kogan,

With

Pope

by HUGH

Irwin

and

Pat

Through

Coming:
Dec.

30

Joe

28

SAVAGE

thru

11

Jan.

Curtain: 8:30 (Sun. 7:30), Sat. Mat.
Eves. (Exc. Sat.)
$2,
TOU, | ol
$2.50, $2, $1.50.
;
at. ‘ Mat. $1.

No

MAIL ORDERS AC-

on We
about

hope

that

you've

been

little periodic chat
today we're going

our

first love

on
to

and

Turn
enjoying

television,
forget all

just sit down

and talk about a subject we all enjo
—Christmas
.
We
tucked our feet up on the has-

sockck and

browsed

around

among

staan

and

of

goodwill

toward

neighbor!

men.

Merry

a

Happy

And

GENESEE

‘THEATRE

—

Continuous
NOW

WAUKEGAN

Daily

thru

from

1:30

SATURDAY

Jean

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thrilling story filmed in
Georgia Swampland

“Lure of the
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In

Want-ad

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for

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PARK

Sat.,
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WED., THURS., SAT.

Friday, December
extended
run

greatest

Dec. 31-Jan. 3

GREATEST SHOW
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love

ever

story

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you

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SNOWS

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have

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“MIRACLE ON 34TH

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30 thru Jan.

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Along with these holiday
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WASHINGTON
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sage of thanks to our kind
friends. A Merry Christmas.
and a Happy New Year to

GARDENS

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HI 2-9787

Highwood

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SSSV

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RANDOLPH

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1

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adventure

and

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romance!

KNOT”

Claude

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New

Jr.

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Entertainment by the

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Following—

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Dec: 28
Showing until 4 p.m. Wed.
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FOR

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every day 12:00 a.m, to 12:00 p.m.

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FOOD

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TO TAKE

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OF ALL KINDS

Phone HI 2-1870

423 Waukegan Ave.

@ CONFETTI

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The Finest in Italian Foods
STEAKS - CHOPS - SEA FOODS
Fine Selection of Wines &amp; Liquor

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LIQUORS TO TAKE
FOOD ORDERS

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ORDERS

10 or more

RESERVATIONS

basket

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O UT

off for

in

and midnight show
Dean Martin &amp; Jerry Lewis

if

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Arthur Franz
Cont

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a

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P.M. and runs continuously

Maureen

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Our Gang Comedy — Two Color
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Color by Technicolor
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Dec. 28-29-30

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Mon.-Fri.

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Shows

Biggest

‘Hollywood's

the

MERRY
Starting

some

old books in front
of the fire the other
night—just
getting
comfortable and
taking a good rest
after a hard day—
and we'll be durned
if we didn’t learn a
few
things
about
Christmas we hadn‘t
known before.
Guess
everyone
knows the old poem,
the
one
‘Visit from St. Nicholas,”
which
starts out:
‘ ‘Twas
the night
before Christmas and all through the
house not a creature was stirring, not
even a mouse.”
Did you know that the
poet, Clement Moore, wrote it just
for his own
randchildren, never dreaming it would
come
a classic?
He’s buried in the
Chapel of the Intercession in uptown
New
York
and
each
Christmas
Eve,
just
before
the
midnight
service,
young men students hold a candlelight
ceremony at his grave, singing Christmas carols and paying tribute to his
memory.
And out from the pages of one of
our books popped an oldie by Eugene
Fields.
Remember
these words:
“Father calls me William, sister calls me
Will, Mother calls me Willie but the
call me Bill .
- most all the
time the whole year ‘round there ain‘t
no flies on me, but jest ‘fore Christmas _!’m as good as | kin be!”
Yes,
it’s Fields, ‘Jest ‘Fore Christmas”
poem.
Yes, it’s a great season, this
Christmas.
It's a season of giving, of poetry,
Christmas,
New Year.

to

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Technicolor
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SUN., MON. &amp; TUES.,

“Hard-to-find” items there at money-

Highland Park 2-0605

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Dec. 25-26-27

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HIGHLAND

24

WERE”

FRI., SAT.

“SON

2:30,

CEPTED.
1716 Central St. (formerly Stadlum Theatre), Evanston, DAvis 8-7440. Box
Office open daily, 10 a.m.—9 p.m.

By JOHN

Maraquerite
Diana Dors
Plus

Sawyer,

THURS.,

THEATRE

2:30

'

BAIT”

“AS YOU

Stedman

CURIOUS

erformance Mondays.

Brent,

Clarissa

December

THE

George

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from

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Dec.
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other

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- 246 Green Bay Road

HI 2-9744

12:00

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PACKAGE

Sundays
LIQUORS

|

�Giants

In

DeKalb

HP Mermen Beat Harrison
In Mid-Season Meet, 68-6
varsity

mermen

ended

the

first

half

of their

Unbeaten In

season

last Thursday by dumping the tankers from Harrison Technical
High school
Little Giant

of Chicago, 68-6,
tankers will take

in their first home meet.
The
one week off and will resume

City Cage Tilts

Frank

lane, is captain

Inn

and

Highwood

VFW remain undefeated in the
Highland Park Recreation de-

practice after New Year’s day. The first meet of the new year
will be against Waukegan on January 8 in the Bulldogs’ pool.
The mermen won the first two

partment’s city class A basket-

places in all seven of the individual

downed

events.

Highlighting

performance

was

the

Giants’

Al Rubenstein.

won the 120 individual medley
set a new

also

team

and pool record.

triumphed

_ breaststroke
ord

that

in

the

100

established

last

Hansmann

finished

in

individual

and

sohn

He

yard

and tied his old rec-

he

Woody
the

Al

and

second

in the

year.

second

Pete

Wulf-

freestyle

breaststroke.

events’

competi-

tion churned the pool as Fred Harris

nosed

40 yard,
yard

out

Pete

easily

second

Bill

Hughes

with

place

Davidow

won

Dick

and

in

John

the

the 200

Heim

taking

Gould

tri-

umphed over teammate Pete Husting in the 100 yard. Harrison conceded
the
diving to the Parker
mermen.
Divers Danny Seitz and
Tom Peterson placed first and second, respectively. The Little Giant
tankers won the 160 yard freestyle

relay by one length. Harrison defaulted in the 120 yard medley relay
the

but the mermen
race anyway.

ran

Frosh-Soph

Win

through

The frosh-soph tankers won their
fourth meet in a row without a de-

feat

by

soundly

beating

Harrison,

66-4. The frosh-soph, like the varsity, placed first and second in every individual event.
Peter Goelzer set two team and pool records.
He won the 40 yard breaststroke

with

a sensational

breaking

the

old

Every

time

of .24 flat

pool

record

day

the

Highland

ter

during

period.

play

will

be

Park

Recreation

the

Saturday

Christmas

Scheduled

and

12 noon

The 100 yard backstroke was a
thrilling race with Bob Stanwood
coming in first with teammate Jim
Barton close behind
in second.
The

Recreation Center
Organizes Events
For Holidays

games
are

boys

vacation

for

informal

from

10

seven

to 10 years

a.m.

New

Trier.

He

established

to

old and grade school girls. At noon
a basketball
program
for
grade
school boys will take over the court
until 2:15 p.m. For the remainder
of the afternoon the court will be
reserved for boys of high school
and college age. Also on the gym-

nasium

program

will

be

a

free

throw contest for boys in the different age groups.
With interest
in
table
tennis
growing, a tournament will be held
for boys and girls. Age classifications will be set up similar to those
used in the All American
Table

Tennis championships. This grouping calls for midgets, 11 years and
under;

old;

juniors,

12,

13 and

intermediates,

15,

14 years

16

and

17

years of age; and an open division.
Expected
to defend their titles
won in the Thanksgiving vacation

tournaments are Don Riskind, defending junior boys champion, and
Bonnie

Simons,

girls

junior

cham-

pion.
Completing

schedule

for

the

the

one for various
checkers.

tournament

holidays
age

will

groups

be

ball

league.

The

Haven

Tourney
Shabbona First

Inn

DeSoto-Plymouth

in

a

charter

Wake

Robin

ice

member

hockey

to the

of

the

Area

newly

Amateur

ice hockey

Chicago

area

Thursday

night

has returned

in team
in the

play

Crystal

the

old

record

of 37.2

held

Giants

Highwood

VFW

also kept a clean

slate, winning
over Moroney
Insurance, 45-35 for a third victory.
The
insurance
crew
had
trouble
penetrating the tough VFW
zone

defense and were unable to get
close-in shots. Norm Erickson led
the victors’ scoring with 10 points.
Vince Cimbalo scored 18 points for
the losers.
The final game of the night saw
Moose Lodge winning a close one
from Washington
Gardens, 40-38.
After a very slow start, Washington
Gardens
tied the game
early in
the third quarter and the remainder of the game
was basket for
basket until Bill Bush made two
quick
jump
shots
that
put
the
Moose four points ahead with 60

seconds to go.
Robertson Leads
A
basket
by Roger
Robertson
with 20 seconds to go rounded out
the scoring for the game.
Robertson’s 18 points led the scoring.
Ravinia Standard Service won its

first league game against two dein feats downing Olson’s Clothiers, 45(Continued

on

page

38)

headers
are scheduled
for every
(Continued on page 38)

HPHS

Rifle Club

Receives

Awards

Highland

Boys’

Park

Rifle

High _

school’s

club

recently

received

the

National

Rifle

awards from
sociation.

as-

of

the

James Hafner, Richard Ugolini and
James

Reed.

Marksman awards were given to
Bob
Andersen,
Ray
Srensa
and
‘Bill Binard.

In the

advanced

dolph and Tom
Sharp Shooter

group

Ken

Ru-

Killian received the
Bar 1.
Bar 2 was

awarded to Roger Frost, Bob Evans
and

Tom

Goodman.

by Francisco

Rico

rine, and Edward
the

Bar

8

Bar

4 was

and Tom
Wanger

won

Mau-

received

award.

hind

until

the

last

event,

margin.

Page

36

the

200

Truh-

Lindroth who tallied
Novak, who scored 14
Bettin, who was good
and Ed Zelenka, who
Starters

Harold

for Highland

Freberg,

Park

were

10 points; Howard
George

2 points;

Russell,

2 points; Jim
baskets; Bill
for 8 points,
scored 3.

Burmeis-

ter, 15 points; Ed Capitani, who
scored 11 points and Bob Troy, who
was

good for five points.
At the end of the first quarter
13-7.
behind,
were
Parkers
the
They picked up only 6 points, however, to the Mustangs’ 20 points in
the second quarter, which was the

13 in the fourth

scored

12.

for

the

Niles game

was

Parkers

just as dis-

Scoring for the Blue and White
ran: Capitani, 10; Freberg, 8; Russell, 6, and Troy and Burmeister, 4.
Niles scored

11 points in the first

period, and while the Giants had
10, Niles was ahead at the end of
the first half, 18 to 14.
The third period, which
seesaw all the way through,

was a
found

the

33-24.

They

finfin-

local
good

Don

for the Ponies,
The
6 foot 2
10 shots from

Riha.

swim-

The
by a

of

Little Giant starting team fouled
out—George Burmeister, Ed Capitani, and Bob Troy. The other two
starters were Harold Freberg and
Howard Russell.
The Trojans’ starting five were
Hicks, Pohlson, Baylor, Bartels, and

ming team defeated the Little Giant frosh tankers recently at the
Waukegan pool, 55-11. The only
first that was won by the frosh was
taken by Pete Riddle in the 50 yard
breaststroke.
Bob Rehn, the other

yard freestyle relay.
tankers won this race

oldest

mal to Highland Park fans as the
Morton fiasco.
The Trojans won 50-37, on Dave
Baylor’s 12 points.
Three of the

divers.
Roger Sheahen won and
Giles Gunn placed second.
Harrison forfeited both relays to the
frosh-soph tankmen.

ished third in the 50 and 100 yard
freestyle races. The Bulldogs beat
both of the Little Giant relay
teams. The frosh B team defeated
the Waukegan B team by one point
29-28. The baby mermen were be-

Shabround

the floor and four free throws.
Along with Truhlar, Coach Jim
Vopicka
of Morton,
started
Ed

The

the 100 yard freestyle with Scott
Ewing, second. A diving exhibition
was also given by the frosh-soph

local swimmer, in that event,
ished third. Mead Montgomery

the

game,

lar was the big gun
scoring 24 points.
Truhlar scored on

quarter to Morton’s

Marty

freshmen

face
first

In the Giant game of December
19, the Parkers were defeated by
Morton, 57-45. The Blue and White
were also defeated by Niles, 50-37.

The Parkers

by

backstroke. George Puestow nosed
out Mike Tighe in the 40 yard
crawl. Robert Engdahl easily won

Waukegan

DeKalb

In the event that Highland Park
reaches the finals, which will be
played
at 8:15 that same
night,
Tuesday,
spectators
will have
to
buy tickets at the door, since there
will be none available in Highland
Park.

Dismal

medley.

to

big difference, as the two teams
both scored 12 in the third period.

the

Granholm
beat
Onderdonk
by
2/10ths of a second in the 40 yard

The

tournament,

In the Morton

Pro marksman awards were won
by Gene Brownell, Bruce Owens,
Craig
Holner,
Paul
Bruckman,
Larry
Johnson,
Edward
Kiehl,

Herm Van Velzer finished second in the breaststroke and Peter
Onderdonk was behind Goelzer in

individual

travel

Highland
Park will
bona at 9 p.m. in the

Nave of Oak Park.

the

will

for the opening of the 25th annual holiday basketball tournament at DeKalb High school.

the December 17 first game, 47- Ice Palace, Willow Springs road, its kind. If successful, the Little
Giants
will play a second
round
35. The game was close for
one mile south of Route 66.
at 3:30
p.m.
Monday
for which
three
quarters
but the fast
Interested players may
contact tickets will be available at the High
breaking Haven team moved
Mr. Karger at HI 2-1715 evenings. school office between 8:30 a.m. and
out in front early in the fourth
The Crystal rink, one of the new- 11 a.m. the day of the game.
quarter and maintained a 10
Semi-finals will be played at 1
est
sport palaces to be erected in
point lead the remainder of the
p.m., December 30, if the Giants
game. High scoring Bob Joor the Chicago area, boasts a regula- are still in the running. Tickets for
pumped in 20 points for the tion size hockey rink along with this round will be sold between
winners while Renzo Marchetti other sport facilities. It is equip- 8:30 a.m. and 9 a.m. that morning
led the losers with 15 points.
ped with bleacher seats.
Double in the office.

new 60 yard individual medley record with a time of .37 flat breaking

By Pierre Martineau
Tomorrow night the Little

team,

association.

Amateur

Tournament

of the re-activated

Chicago

Hockey

each

675

Hornets

formed

Foe In Holiday

‘Oh, No You Don’t...’

of

.24.5 which was held by Westenfall
of

at
cen-

Karger,

Chicago

Haven

For

Frank Karger
Captains Ice
Hockey Team

2 Teams Still

By Art Weinstein
The

Tomorrow

Trojans
picked

still

in

front,

up another four points

in the fourth period as they tallied
17 points to the Parkers 13 points.
Sophomore

Games.

The sophomore team also lost to
Morton by a score of 49-32. Ken-

Robbie Moroney of
De Soto Plymouth’s Dick
Koch, also of the DeSoto
ation Department Class

Moroney’s Insurance basketball team goes up for a jump shot as
Riddle is determined to block the play. Standing by, at right, is Milo
Five, which downed the Moroney team, 41 to 35, in a recent RecreA league game.
:

ny George
points,

paced

the losers with

10

In the sophomore tilt with Niles,
the Little Giants lost again, 52-37.
Substitute

guard,

“‘Woodgie”

Reich

led the Parkers with 9 points.
Thursday,

December

25, 1952.

�PHONE YOUR —
WANT

ADS

|

Deerfield

Cia
REAL

WANT AD RATES

coe

H ouse

Words

cost

Yes,

or

will cover

the

for Publication in the Current
Week’s Issue

full

TELEPHONE
WANT AD SERVICE
:
i

Taker

Lake Forest 2300
DEERFIELD
Se

615 Waukegan Road
HIGHLAND PARK
|
1775 St. Johns Ave.
LAKE FOREST

Se nay CeO

basement

with attractive recreair heat. 2
lot. Priced
$21,500

ent for schools
Owner
Wants

H.

Deerpath

AND

463

and

transferred
offer.

R.

Central

to

California.

ANSPACH,
Avenue

HI

INC.
2-1212

AT A TIME LIKE THIS, WE ARE
GRATEFUL
FOR
WHAT
WE
HAVE:
“ESTATE

FOR

(LAKE

SALE

FOREST)

(Improved)

._ Lake
Bluff—being
completed,
eation; spacious 3 bdrm. brk.
tile baths, 2 car gar., full a"

R. K. EBERSOL

$30

Woodward

Ave.

;

Pencttald

1049

8

4

PAY
LIKE
RENT
a Fine 7 rm. brick home in Lake Forest,
Wonderful
terms,
very
low
- $23,000.
down payment.

ANCHOR

REAL

HI 2-0098

ESTATE
Res.,

HI

2-0037

$7,500
Small

frame

living room
ter of
tion.

cottage;

JOHN
| LAKE

and

GRIFFITH,

FOREST

W.

bedrooms,

district

485

6 ROOM
1271

2

and kitchen. 3 blocks

shopping

LAKE

bath,

to cen-

transporta-

INC.
BLUFF

816

BRICK RANCH

EVERETT

OUR FAMILIES
OUR FRIENDS
OUR COMMUNITY
OUR FREEDOM

good
loRanch. 2
$37,000.

ROAB,

Built about 1 year ago by owner and
occupant. Large living room and adjoining all-purpose
room
with
huge
raised
replace. 3 bedrooms,
2 baths, wonder] kitchen, 2 car attached garage. Gas
t. Cork floors, Thermopane windows.
Low taxes. Price just reduced to sell now.

HOMES
AND
HOMESITES
IN
SHERWOOD
FOREST
ROBERT
L.
JOHNSON
REALTY
CO.
1608 Berkeley Rd.
HI 2-6200
Winnetka.
6-3809
Deerfield
308
HIGHLAND
PARK
BRAESIDE
This brick colonial is nearly new; 4 bedrms.
(3 take twin beds), 2%
baths. An
unusually nice porch, bsmt. rec. rm., attached gar. and gas ht. Immediate possession.
Under
$40,000.
PORTER &amp; WEINRICH, INC.
62 Green
Bay
Winnetka
6-2600

ANN
667

260 EAST DEERPATH
LAKE FOREST
616

Este

FOR
ighland

SALE

HI

2-0093.,

ESTATE
HI

2-0037

SUNSET

SUBDIVISION
‘For sale—by owner. 5 room, 2 story
large screened porch, knotty pine
brick;
‘rec, room, carpeted; attached garage. 6

years

old. $25,500. Phone

HI 2- 0717,

po
anne

OWNER offers 6 room white brick, 1%
paths,
heated
garage,
screen
porch,
basement
rec.
room,
generous
wood

panelling, beamed ceilings; picture win-

dow overlooks woods and ravine. Near
lake. Architect’s
e of superior con-

_ struction. $26,500 or offer. HI 2-4993.

Thursday, December 25, 1952
Bl

WISH

ALL
AND

805

or

350

LOYAL

VERY

MERRY

H.

AND

R.

463

Real Estate and
Central Avenue

REAL

ESTATE

CHRISTMAS

ANSPACH,

INC.

Travel
HI 2-1212

FOR SALE
(Deerfield)

(Improved)

Deerfield. Excellent, beautifully modern
brick
home
located
at
821
Rosemary
Terrace, two doors north of Bethlehem
Church. Home is spaciously sound in construction with
six rooms
&amp; bath, full
basement and attached garage. Shown by
appointment only.
Country Ranch
brick, acre lot.
Country
880

home;

attached

garage,

Ranch home, very attractive.
K. EBERSO
Ave.
Deerfield 1049

Woodward

LEONARDI,
Ave.

OFFICES,

6

per

REALTOR
HI 2-2468

STORES &amp; STUDIOS
TO RENT

Two
with

stores for rent in Highwood,
6 room flat. For details see or

226

Green

GUY
Bay,

one
call

VITI
HI

2-3933

APARTMENTS TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(Highland

6

days

experience

is

not

necessary.

at

406

pay.
Apply
Highwood.

APARTMENTS
TO
RENT
(Highland Park)

(Furnished)

ATTRACTIVE 2 rooms and bath given in
exchange
for 2 hours’ daily
cleaning
help; no work on Sunday. HI 2-1776.

TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(LAKE FOREST)

ROOM

TO
RENT
(Furnished)
(LAKE FOREST)

modern,
January

furnished
1.

and
schools.
$125
MAjestic 3-0941.

AN

Reasonable

Green

Bay

Rd.,

SALESLADIES
AND
WAITRESSES
Part
time
or full
time.
F. W.
WOOLWORTH
CO.
STENOGRAPHER
dictation,
general
office
duties,
interesting
work.

Light
Varied

office

details.

details.

Experience

un-

necessary.

Call

Florence

Rhodes,

Northbrook

1200.

Near

house

avail-

transportation

month.

STENOGRAPHER
PERMANENT POSITION

1548

W.

PARK

AVE.

HI

RUBBER CO. EXECUTIVE
desires to rent 4 bedroom, 2 baths, private residence; north suburban
location
preferred.
Controlled
or decontrolled.
3
children. MOnroe 6-7371, Miss Anderson.

RENT

NICE large sleeping room on
close to transportation and
HI 2-1229.

east side,
shopping.

TWO
rooms and bath, private entrance;
ideal place for single or working couple.
HI 2-1999
RIVER FOREST—to employed man, two
rooms, bedroom and sitting room. $11
per week. Address Box E-15 c/o Highland Park News.
NICE big room, close to
tion. Call HI 2-1556. .

Vine

Ave.

sta-

LIGHT pleasant single room; hot water
at all times. HI 2-3694.
;
without
FURNISHED
rooms
with
or
kitchen
privileges;
near gate 3, and
North Shore office. HI 2-5269.
ONE
room,
kitchen
privileges;
1 block
to. transportation. HI 2-3767.

FOR

The man we’re looking for will sell advertising to North Shore retailers. He’lB
be a North Shore resident who wants a
position that promises
an excellent future, plenty of work, and a good starting
salary plus commissions. He’ll be a selfstarter. When he comes to us, he’ll know
something
about
advertising,
but more
important, he’ll know how to sell. He’lk
a

car.

If you’re the man we want, tell us about.
yourself.
We’ll
schedule
an _ interview.
(Our employees know of this ad). Write
Box A-15 c/o H.P. News.

GET

KITCHEN
helper
wanted,
time; evening work. HI

full =
2-044

part

INTO RAILROAD
WORK!

TRAINMEN
SHOP

WORKERS

Pensions, insurance and free transportation. No experience
is necessary.
Earm
while you learn.
APPLY
TO

NORTH

friendly

working
conditions.
Full time,
5
day week with 15 minute
breaks
morning and afternoon. Paid vacations and holidays. Blue Cross and
Blue
Shield
available,
employer
paying
half. Also
other benefits.
Located in business section within
block of H.P. bus stop. Apply now.

DURACLEAN
Mr.

bilities has been offered to date.
anywhere for 3 design and layout
draftsmen (mechanical, 1 patent
drawing draftsman. Call us now,
Lake Forest 3650 or write Art Makinen c/o Box 471, Lake Forest, Tl.

Tennis

DEERFIELD

CO.

COLLEGE STUDENTS
Students
with
mathematics,
accounting or legal education or aptitudes are invited to phone for interview regarding possible employment with progressive actuarial firm

located

near

Lake

like

to

talk

plans

with

after

TO HOUSEKEEPER
DEERPATH INN
LAKE FOREST 2280

you

graduation.

Firm

about

ee

Bluff

3400

Glencoe

during

1485

in

your
excepLake

the day

the

~

Summer

work is available for a few
tional
people.
Telephone

and

evening.

3 TIME STUDY MEN
Between 25 and 40 years; minimum
of 3 years experience; engineering
preferred.

CLERK

office.

DEEPFREEZE

Experience

APPLIANCE

DIVISION
_.
2301 DAVIS STREET

NORTH

CHICAGO,

&gt;
;

PLANNING
in production
necessary.

HOTEL MAID

Forest.

employs about 50 persons. If you
are home for the holidays we would

graduate

444

#; ss

ate
ene meme

AT

Experience
with

SHORE LINE

No better job with unlimited possi-

1866
N,
2ND
E. DEERPATH

positions

AGENTS

DRAFTSMEN

OPERATOR

With or Without

j

PERMANENT
JOBS
ARE
NOW
OPEN
FOR

CO.

GENERAL
OFFICE WORK
SOME TYPING REQUIRED
Permanent

~

EMPLOYMENT
OFFICE
HIGHWOOD

WE’LL TRAIN YOU, AND YOU’LL BE
PAID
WHILE
YOU
LEARN
TO PLAY
AN EVER IMPORTANT
PART IN THE
LIFE OF YOUR COMMUNITY.

HIGHLAND
PARK:
LAKE FOREST: 255

SHORE

CLERKS

OFFERS JUST THAT...
FULL TIME
JOBS FOR WOMEN
UP TO 48 YEARS
OLD AS TELEPHONE
OPERATORS.

CHIEF

SALESMAN

GROUP OF NORTH
WEEKLIES

2-5180

LOOKING
FOR A JOB WHERE
THE
PAY IS GOOD
;
EVEN THOUGH
YOU DON’T HAVE EXPERIENCE?

APPLY

WANTED—FEMALE

WANTED—MALE

ADVERTISING

Inc.

HOUSEWIVES

SEE

86

———-——_.._--4

HELP

ILLINOIS BELL

WANTED: 8 room ranch home by private
party;
will buy
or rent.
Write
Box
E-5 c/o Highland
Park News.

—

EXPERIENCED
waitress wanted, full or
part time; evening work. HI 2-0440.

TICKET

TELEPHONE

Foods,
Forest

WOMEN to sew for spring business. Easy
to sew product, good pay. Sewing machine not essential. Write, Kenroe Mfg.
Co., Yorktown,
Indiana.

SMALL
OFFICE,
PLEASANT
WORKING
CONDITIONS.
SHORTHAND
AND
TYPING
EXPERIENCE
NECESSARY.
5
DAY
WEEK,
PAID
HOLIDAYS
AND
VACATIONS;
FREE
INSURANCE.

PRODUCTS,

for full time, per-

manent
employment.
Janowitz
293
East
Illinois
Road, Lake
2700.

Telephone

UNFURNISHED
2 bedroom apt. wanted
by financially responsible young Highland Park couple with one 3%
yr. old
daughter; garage apartment preferred.
If you have one available or coming up
within a few months, please call us;
excellent references. HI 2-4105

FOR

—i

CASHIER-CHECKER

own

LIGHTING

WANTED—FEMALE

permanent;

excellent sales position will be open
on January 2nd, selling medium priced
to better women’s apparel. This is permanent
position
where
you
have the
opportunity
of earning
more than at
any
store
in
the
Chicago
area;
no
nights. Minna Hart, 580 Lincoln Ave.,
Winnetka, III.

HOUSES
&amp; APARTMENTS
WANTED
(Furnished or Unfurnished)

HELP

week,

Woman
wanted
to
train
for
fountain
manager.
No
experience
necessary.
F. W. WOOLWORTH
CO.
600 CENTRAL AVE.

RM. unfurnished flat, newly decorated ;
natural
gas
heat,
hot
water
heater,
laundry
tub.
1
block
from
Market
Square. Telephone Lake Forest 410.

able

a

Park)

LARGE
4 room apartment, second floor,
with heated ‘sun porch. Central location,
east side. Rent includes automatic oil
heat,
light,
gas,
electric refrigerator
and gas stove; nice yard and drive-in.
Available Jan. 1st. Will show on appointment. Phone D. Cobb, HI 2-1367,
or after six HI 2-3707.

HOUSES

HELP

WANTED—FEMALE

or

General

Highwood,

LARGE
room,
spacious
closet,
kitchen
privileges; home atmosphere. Telephone
Lake Forest 3210 days or Lake Forest
1634 evenings.

CUSTOMERS
A

HN F.
Highwood

51

to

and

NICELY furnished home-like double bedroom; ample drawer and closet space,
hot water. Close to Vine Ave. station.
Phone HI 2-0405.

OF OUR

Park)

REAL
res.

REALTOR

Glencoe

FRIENDS

(Improved)

HOME
AND
INCOME
3 apt. buildings in good location; gross
income,
$415 per month. $30, 000; good
terms. For info. call

ANCHOR

MORELAND,
WE

mortgages

contracts.
Paying
4%
per cent
es
return
on
your
money

ROOMS

Kebbon

Ann
Andruss
Sarah Gordon

Vernon

HART, SHAW &amp; COMPANY
REAL

Margaret

Mrs.
Mrs.

ATTENTION
first

WANTED
to rent, furnished apartment
or small house by couple, preferably
in
Deerfield,
for
month
January
or
longer. Deerfield 873.

WE WISH YOU A
MERRY CHRISTMAS
and
PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
Mrs.

several

HOUSES

WE WISH THAT 1953 WILL
BRING EACH ONE OF YOU A
CONTINUANCE OF ALL YOU
CHERISH.
RINGER REALTY COMPANY
457 CENTRAL
HI 2-6600

L.F.

LOANS

transportation.

”

REAL

INVESTORS
Offering

5

and Charge It?

REGISTERED
nurses
needed
at
H.P
hospital.
Starting
salary,
$255,
with
afternoon bonus, $30, and night bonus,
$20. See Miss Beard, HI 2-8000.

Ample
funds available at low
rates on
well located residential properties.
Long
terms—prepayment
privileges.
FIRST
FEDERAL
SAVINGS
AND
LOAN
ASSOCIATION
Waukegan
216 Madison Street
MA
38-0084

Winnetka,
Tl.
BRiargate.
4-9001

FRENCH PROVINCIAL
Brick with slate roof. Magnificent
living room w/beamed ceiling, dining room, screen porch, paneled library, powder room, kitchen and
breakfast nook. Second floor has
five bedrooms and 4 baths. Choicest East Ravinia location conveni-

Park 2-4500

287

REID

ation room. Gas forced
car garage. 80x130 foot
for quick sale

Deerfield 485

Highland

rm.

Unusually good 1 story home in especially convenient location and in
excellent condition.
Living room,
separate dining room, modern kitchen with breakfast space and dishwasher. Three bedrooms, tile bath,

Monday 4:30 p.m.

COOK,

Waukegan.

FIRST MORTGAGE

576 Lincoln
Ave.
Winnetka
6-2700

Want Ads will be accepted up to

HELP

MORTGAGES

MISS

ADS

WANTED

bedrms.

BAIRD &amp; WARNER

© The Lake Forester

Call any of these numbers
and ask for a Want Ad

three

Your immediate possession
E ntrance to screened porch from din,
A perfect living room with fireplace
Realistically priced

® Deerfield Review
® Highland Park News
© Highwood News

'f

has

ESTATE

PRIVATE party wishes to purchase direct
from owner for cash 3 or 4 bedroom
house, brick. Write, phone A. V. Noren,

beautiful

it

REAL

(Improved)

Nicely
landscaped
Excellent
condition
Wonderful location

Less)

insertion in all 4 papers.

Ms

SALE
Park)

on

This

55

ESTATE
FOR
(Highland

A pple pie
order
P icturesque
street
P owder room
on first

5¢ each additional word
(For

use WANT

485

DExter 6-3400
Page 37

�MISCELLANEOUS

Box Number

Ads

Reply by phone as well as by letter
may be. made to any Want Ad with
a box number
as an address. Call

HI

2-4500

or

Your name,
number will

Lake

Forest

2300.

address
and phone
be placed at once in

1953 WORLD BOOK
ENCYCLOPEDIA

WILL
iease
1 bay
“Standard”
Service
Station to responsible party. Lessee to
purchase low inventory only. Telephone
ONtario
2-2370.

WANTED

STOCKROOM
man
capable of assuming
responsibility,
willing
to be bonded;
references. Good
starting salary
with
chance for advancement. Call for appt.,
HI 2-2356.
JANITOR
and
maintenance man,
hours
3 p.m. to 11 p.m. See Mr. Frantonius,
Highland Park Hospital, HI 2-8000.
WANTED:
man for installation of window shades and drapery hardware; experience
not
necessary.
Apply
Brand
Bros. 638 Central.
KITCHEN
helper
wanted,
full or part
time; evening work. HI 2-0440.

LOST

USED

MAID,
light Sectpokatil
and cooking;
all
modern
appliances,
outside
help
employed.
Private
room
and_
bath;
friendly
family;
near
transportation.
HI 2-3536.
COOK
and downstairs maid, white, experienced.
Near
transportation;
top
pay, own rooms. Telephone Lake For-est 2398.
WOMAN
for month of January to stay
with 2 adult girls; some housekeeping
‘and cooking. References. HI 2-6714.
WOMAN for light housework; stay or go
nights. No
children,
small home.
HI
aa
Wed. between 4 and 6, anytime
daily.

1951
1950
1949.

“SITUATIONS

WANTED—MALE

ENJOY THE HOLIDAYS!
WHAT DO YOU WANT DONE?
EXPERIENCED,
AVAILABLE FOR

QUALIFIED
FULL TIME

MEN
WORK

NO JOB TOO SMALL!
TREE SURGERY
|
TRUCKING
WINDOW WASHING
HEAVY CLEANING AND
OTHER INSIDE WORK
SNOW PLOWING
SNOW SHOVELING

H. P.
1914

FOR

VISIT

YOUR

GOODS

OWN

FOR

AUTO

%
HI

HIGHLAND

PARK

MISCELLANEOUS

FOR

ANCHOR
HI

CASHMERE SWEATER SALE
"IMPORTED, HANDCRAFTED,
FULL FASHIONED SWEATERS
S.8. PULLOVER NOW $13.95
_ LS. CARDIGANS NOW $16.95
ALSO MANY FANCY SWEATERS
MINNA HART

BUSINESS

FAST —

580 LINCOLN AVE.
WINNETKA
6-3738

HOLIDAY

Gun
54

type

inch

DAY
Mon.

SALE

30 gal. automatic gas water
Medicine cabinet
Floor “Tile «
RMR
ENO
eo ce ak

heater

and

Cabinet

ARNOLD
PETERSON &amp; CO.
595 ROGER WILLIAMS
ia

Pisce 38

. HI

2-5561

Have
the
struction;

,
-

thru

or season’s
Telephone

HI

LET’S HAVE
Hayrides
HI

6-3971

SOME
or

HAY
} RACKS
Telephone
pointment.

¢ and
Lake

FUN!

Sleighrides
HI

2-5592

2-3858

sleigh rides | for rent.
Forest
2151
for ap-

INSTRUCTION
GUITAR lessons in your home. Spanish
guitar,
Hawaiian
guitar,
uke,
banjo,
mandolin.
Instrument
furnished
while
learning.
JACK
MOORE,
HI
2-6284.

PAINTING
PAINTING
Thay

&amp;

and

renee

REDECORATING

paper

HI

hanging.

2-6980

or

Cal]

Lake

W.

est,

PETS

TUNING

&amp;

REPAIRING

PIANO tuning and reconditioning. Member of American Society of Piano Technicians. E. Zaboth, formerly of Lyon
and Healy, member of N.A.P.T. Lake
Zurich, 5341

PLANTS

&amp;

BULBS

AFRICAN VIOLETS. Reliable plants for
particular people. Gillette, 169 Washington Circle, Lake Forest 516.

EXPERT

HAVE
you
a wood
shingle
roof? Call
Wilmette
377,
your
“Roof
Treating
Headquarters”
for
its
proper
treatment
and
care.
Free
inspection
and
consultation.
NIGHT
9 p.m.

SEWERS

electric rod cut out the obno digging,’ no lawn mess.
SEPTIC TANKS
{and grease traps cleaned, repaired, built.
COMPLETE
SEWER
SERVICE
Jeep trench digger, water Hae electric
cable,
foundations.
.
:
WOODALL’S
Phone Wheeling 232

SEWING

SEWING

MACHINE

SERVICE

Necchi
Domestic
_Expert repair
on
ANY
ork
Guaranteed
662

Arends

Central

Sewing

Ave.

MAKE

Machine'Co.
Fl

2-5200

El

and

Sandy

Funeral services were held Tuesday afternoon for Edward A. Warren, 58, who died Sunday in Highland Park hospital where he had
been confined since December 10.
The Rev. Donald Woods of Wesley
Methodist church officiated at the
services in Kelley and Spalding
chapel. Burial was in Rosehill cemetery,

Chicago.

Born in Highland Park August 1,
1894, Mr. Warren had been an auto
mechanic on the North Shore for
the past 35 years.
He
was
employed at Kleinschmidt Laboratories, Inc., Deerfield, where he performed
specialized machine work

Alex Maytorena of Seattle, Wash.;
a brother, Harry,
of San Pedro,
Calif.; a sister, Mrs. Bert Brand,
of New
York
City,
formerly
of
Highland Park; and two grandchildren.

Mrs. James
Funeral

Macord

mass

was

sung yesterday

(Wednesday) morning at 9:30 in St.
James church for Mrs. Ersilia Macord, 27, who died Sunday night in
Highwood
hospital after a _ prolonged illness. A rosary was said

night

Marovitz

first

at

and

College

will

feature

Night

Sabbath

service.
The
students
will
evaluate the current
attitude of the
campus towards religion, and de-

scribe the religious and cultural
programs sponsored by the three
faiths giving an estimate of their
effectiveness.

Other college students and their
friends will take part in the discussions after the
is over and during

formal service
the social hour

which will follow. The services
will begin as usual at 8:30 p.m. .
Sunday evening, a supper social
was attended by students and their
friends who are home from school
for their mid-winter vacation. This
affair and the service were planned
by a committee headed by Mrs.
Harold
R. Blumberg
of Glencoe
and consisting of Mesdames Miller

Erens, Sidney Falk, Nathan Gore,
Samuel Kling, Charles Liebman,
Earl Lewis, Harold Marovitz and
Irving

Meyers.

Guest

Of The

‘A

recent

George

George

Taylors

houseguest

G.

Taylors

of

of
St.

the
Johns

avenue
was Mr. Taylor’s sister,
Miss Clara Taylor, who stopped
in Highland Park on her way to
San Diego, Calif.
She returned
to the United States a short time
ago after spending eight months
touring

Europe.

last night at 7 o’clock in Sequin
Funeral home.
Mrs. Macord was born in Naples,

Family Christmas Planned
By Mr., Mrs. Nels Dahl

Italy, April 4;'1925. It was there
she met and married Mr. Macord
during World War II while he was

Dahlof Ridgewood drive is coming

serving with the army. They came
to Highwood June 1, 1947.
Her husband is her only known
survivor.

38

in

The

Thursday

night’s

first

game.

score was tied throughout

game,
but
play Richie
quick points
overcome.
.

the

with
two
minutes
to
Baldwin scored eight
that Olson’s could not
Altogether
Richie

In the
den Spot

night-cap Kennedy
thoroughly blasted

El YMG,

62-15.

The

GarBeth

Beth El team

was handicapped by lack of first
string players because many of the

team members were absent.
Big
Art Wiener scored 11 field goals
and eight free throws to pace the
winners

with

30 points.

Home

From

Denver

Miss

Carol

Secrest

came

Harold C. Secrests of Burton
nue,
during
the
Christmas

Miss

Secrest

from

family
near

of Mr.

and

and far away

Mrs.

Nels

to be

with

them on Christmas Day. Their sons
and

daughters-in-law,

Dr.

and

Mrs.

A. E. Dahl of Dearborn, Mich., and
the Elmer Dahls of Waukegan and

of

Deerfield

Dennis

and

and

children,

John;

and

Judy,

the

John

Hargus of Lake Forest will comprise the remainder of the guests.

Celebrates Fourth Birthday
Gordon

Tatner

will celebrate

his

fourth birthday one day late as it
officially falls on Christmas Day.
The son of the H. G. Tatners of
Ivy lane, Gordon will be feted by
14 of his friends tomorrow (Friday)
in the home

of his parents.

Hockey Team
School

‘(Continued from page 36)

home

Friday to be with her parents, the
days.

The

children, Philip, Stephen and Timothy, will motor to Highland Park.
The Dahls’ daughters and sons-inlaw, Mr. and Mrs. R. K. Peterson

City Cage Tilts

aveholi-

is a freshman

Thursday
games are
The grand

at 7:30 p.m., although no
set for Christmas day.
finale for the Tlinois

title is carded for April.

at’ Colorado
Woman’s
college
in
Denver.
Her
brother,
James,
is
serving with the navy in Mediterranean
waters
and
is spending
Christmas in the French port of
Marseilles.

Guests

MACHINES

RECONDITIONED
Singer
portable,
$89.50; $5
down. Reconditioned cabinet machine, $39.50. 614 Central Ave.,
HI
2-3811.

Beth

by Jay Erens, Ernest Liebman
the

Edward A. Warren

scored 18 points for the winners.

YOUR-DOG-&amp;-MINE
Kennels
(dog editor, Better Homes
&amp; Gardens)
for best
care, feeding,
heating.
Skokie
Highway
(U.S. 41), 5%
miles north of state line.
Phone Bristol
(Wis.) 36-F-5.
IRISH
setters: ideal’ Christmas present;
pedigreed,
proven
hunting
and
show
strains,
15 months
old, housebroken.
For details telephone ONtario 2-3192

Sabbath Rite
tomorrow

Obituaries

(Continued from page 36)

NOT responsible for debts contracted by
anyone other than myself. J. M. Hansen, a
Wisconsin Avenue, Lake For-

Beth El Plans
A panel-discussion entitled “Religion on the Campus” will be led

Forest

ROOFING

to

2387.

PERSONAL

PIANO

2-0037

SURGERY

SEPTIC
SYSTEMS.
COMPLETE
from August, 1951 to December 5
SEPTIC
SYSTEM
INSTALLATION
TRENCHING
of this year.
water,
drain,
All
sorts:
foundation,
He is survived by his wife, Hatiling, etc.
Free estimates, no obligation to have zel M., worthy matron of the Highour representative ‘call.
land Park chapter of the Order of
EDWARD’S
P
&amp;
W
CONSTRUCTION
CONTRACTING
ENGINEERS
|the Eastern Star; a daughter, Mrs.

SERVICE

TV SERVICE
and
INSTALLATION
and
Sat.
8 a.m.
Phone
HI
2-0530

CLOGGED

$74.50

oi] burner

Sink

and

REAL ESTATE
Res.

Custom snow plowing, by job
contract..
Immediate
service.
Lake Forest 2846.

BOARD
YOUR
DOG
AT LOWRY’S

OPPORTUNITY

2-0093

NORTH SHORE
_—s_«T|.
SNOW REMOVAL SERVICE

or

1—Old
established tavern in Highwood.
Owner must sell.
2—Long_
established
restaurant.
Good
bargain,
38—Fine dry cleaning and pressing husiness.

SALE

work
done
with
back
hoe.
Fast—Simple—Economical
Systems
Driveways
Mains
Trenching
Systems
Basements
SNOW
PLOWING
1897
McDaniels
Ave.
HI 2-7136
Highland
Park, Ill.
WINTER!!
Time
to _ repair
sticking,
dragging,
doors;
add
closet,
extra
shelf; improve basement or attic space.
Do
your unusual
small
job
of carpentry and painting. HI 2-16386.

2-0580

LOANS

BUSINESS

Trading Post. We sell furniture, bric‘a-brac
&amp;
clothing.
1813
St.
Johns.
Tel. HI 2-2744.
FULL
size
Westinghouse
stave
with
double oven, in excellent condition; a
‘bargain at $100. Phone HI 2-0291.

All

Septic
Water
Sewer

EXTERIOR
and
interior
painting
and
decorating. Hubert Johnson, HI 2-1770

INC.

Finance
your
car
the bank
way
save money
FIRST NATIONAL
BANK
of Highland Park

SALE

HARRETT

ENTERTAINMENT

13TH AND SHERIDAN
(1 BLOCK N. OF ABBOTT'S)
NORTH
CHICAGO,
ILL.

SALE

MELVIN

condition;

DONALD
G.
WORRALL,
ARBORIST
Expert tree work, shrub and evergreen
care.
Tree
removal,
power
saw_ work.
Low cost, efficient ser~iee, Call Wheeling

A-1 CATERESS. Will take charge of your
dinners,
luncheons,
teas
and. cocktail
parties. Excellent references. Telephone
Mrs. Miks, MAjestic 83-1608.

NO MONEY DOWN
HALE MOTOR SALES

BLACK
Persian coat, highly styled,
ely
size 14-16; sacrifice, $115.
2-706

HOUSEHOLD

SALES,

DeSoto-Plymouth
FIRST ST.
HI

Plenty
of
Chevvies,
Fords
Plymouths and other makes.

LES KEEPPER, JR.
926 N. WESTERN
LAKE FOREST 447
CLOTHING

MOTOR

day

CATERING

Buy your son or daughter a prewar automobile for Christmas.

O K ENTERPRISES
'

Chevrolet,
2-door
Chevrolet 4-door.
Buick
Super
4-door.

BUYING
A USED
CAR?
WITH
NEW
CAR
CONFIDENCE
FROM
A
NEW
CAR
DEALER
1952 Chev.
light blue sedan
........ $1895
1951 DeSoto dark green sedan
....$1995
1951 Plymouth
Belvidere,
yellow
UME OIRO eee
es ieaudehigas
95
1951 Dodge
Coronet,
auto.
trans.,
R., H., directional lights ........ 1695
1951 Chev.
2 tone
gray,
PowerMOG?! s ckaicncss eotntcipitauetastetie
scale $1595
1951 Chev.
Club
cpe., green ........ $1495
1950 Plymouth, light green. sedan $1295
1949 DeSoto Carryall ..-.....2............ $1295
1949 Dodge Sedan, dark blue ........ $1295
1948 Chrysler convt., R., H., auto.
trans., exceptionally clean .......... $1195
2045 Mercury
Gonvte
ase
$ 850
1948 Studebaker 2 dr., O.D. 00.01.22... $ 850
1947 Plymouth
Club Cpe. .............. $ 795
1939 Dodge
Business
Cpe.
........... $ 195

New

TREE

LAUNDRY

WINNETKA

BUY

SITTING

WOO

- METAL
44

MASON
repair, stone work, chimney and
fireplace building.
40 years
in same
ae
William Otten, Tel. Northbrook
TJ.

McCALLUM CHEVROLET
INC.
191 E. DEERPATH
LAKE FOREST 3200

Femara

sit

AUTOMOBILES

USED CAR
oF eIALS
GUARANTEED OK

WANTED—FEMALE

will

FOUND

FORD,
1941 convertible with
1946 motor, automatic top; new battery, wiring,
brake
lining.
Tires
less
than
5,000
miles. Has
been used as station ‘car.
$300. Call HI 2-3766.

our
ALL types of beauty work done in
ke
own
home. Tel. HI
2-4743
or
' Forest
2998Y1.
NURSE, practical, available for post hospital cases and new born infants. Also
parent substituting. Telephone GReenleaf 56-0409.
NURSE
will care for elderly person
in
my home. Call HI 2-5123.

TWO
responsible
oe
Year’s Eve. HI 2-352

AND

SAM

- RAGS
FOREST

We
welcome
all strangers
on
8
service.
f
1875 ST. JOHNS AVE.
HIGHLAND
PARK,
ILL.

BUY

LOST: 5 keys on chain, in or near Highland
Park
Presbyterian
Church,
December 14th. Call HI 2-6175.
LOST: boy’s watch, just south of Jewel
Tea in Highland Park, Dec. 17th. Reward.
Call
Rick
Lloyd,
Gleneoe
746
collect
LOST—black
female Labrador Retriever,
Sunday,
Dec.
21st, vicinity
Highland
Park. Answers to “Midnight.’? Reward.
HI 2-5651.

WANTED—DOMESTIC

BABY

TO

COINS and unused stamps. Local private
collector pays better than dealers. Silver, gold, copper coins, before
1935;
good condition or tarnished. Telephone
Lake Forest 8271, evenings.

MAID;
LIGHT
HOUSEWORK,
COOKING. OTHER HELP EMPLOYED; ALL
‘MODERN
EQUIPMENT.
OWN
ROOM,
CONGENIAL ore
ee PHONE
GLENCOE 2342

SITUATIONS

IRON
LAKE

TRAILER
for sale, excellent
reasonable. HI 2-5157.

STOCKS
Investor’s Service of America invites you
to
try
our
service
in
listed
stocks.
Dealer,
Broker,
Adviser,
Ole
Nielsen,
Proprietor, 104 North Washington Circle,
Lake
Forest,
Illinois.
Telephone
Lake
Forest
2191. IN GOD
WE
TRUST.

THE GIFT OF A LIFETIME
FOR THE ENTIRE
FAMILY
MRS.
LURA
SENTMAN
(LOCAL
REPRESENTATIVE)
LAKE
FOREST
3604

WANTED—MALE

TRAILERS

SERVICE

LAKE FOREST SCRAP
SCRAP

SKIS

————————————

HELP

BUSINESS

SALE

Two
pair
laminated
hickory
skis
with
steel edges and Kandakaer Cable bindings.
HI 2-5881.

the box .of the advertiser.
HELP

FOR

| CRAFTSMAN belt sander, good condition.
Call Deerfield
19 after 6:30 p.m.

"Make

every day

a holiday”

In River Forest

Mr. .and Mrs. William R. Bush
and ‘their son; Robert, will be in
River Forest today (Thursday) as

the guests of the J. Victor Mattsons. Robert, who is a junior at
Lake’ Forest college, is spending
his. Christmas
parents.

vacation

with. -his

eRANBERRY

ORANGE

,

RELISH

Fresh-Frozon As

5 ood Ready ra: as
Ct

hintaan Deswaber

25, 1952

|

�LINOLEUM

‘

FLOOR COVERING

COVERING

Linoleum and
Linoleum Tile

@

Koroseal

@

Asphalt

@

Rubber

@

Plastic
For

Wall

free

DOWNING’S
FLOOR

Tile

ASPHALT

Tile

Estimate

call

the

1379

Deerfield

Road,

Call

LINOLEUM

Lencioni

HI

Highland

Install it yourself or make

Park

2-5545

JEWELERS

Universal

1864

- Philco - Zenith

SHERIDAN

Hi

WATCH

ROAD

2-0341

Official

BESO R Ree eee
CLEANERS

Watch

Inspector

TRUCKING
DEERFIELD

UALITY CLEANING AT
REASONABLE PRICES

‘for the

North

WALL

Pickup

We Pick-up
and Deliver
atisfaction

Dirt

and

and

Fill

Hauled

and Delivery on
same day.
967 OSTERMAN

Deerfield

Guaranteed

the

877

Se SERRE

ENETIAN

BLINDS

AND

n

WALLPAPER
PAINTS

ighwood Glass
&amp; Paint Co.
Ave.
HI 2-7211

HEATING

Ae

733

EQUIPMENT

one HI 2-3804
Pentral

BROS.

sweaters

a
Shirts,

etc.

OIL CO.

Highland

Park

A

Hand Bound

&amp; Machine

Button

arrangements

2o

can

be

Rd.

by

TO

MESIROW

1740

How

MOTORS

the “WHERE

Well...

YOU'RE

&amp;

First

Effective

H. NEMEROFF

Set, $158.00

Center

- Case-

Next

Our

Payment

DON’T

Year

Plan

LOSE

YOUR

DIAMONDS
Bring

Your

Rings
Check

and

Jewolr;

Them

FREE

JEWELERS

Ta.

-

Highland
from

bank

OPTICI..83

Park

2-0630

for 35

Years

We do our own diamond setting.
Have your diamonds set in moderm
settings. Payments arranged.

St.

@

Fender

®

Painting

@

Wheel

®

AUTO
2058 Ist St.

BUICK

Repair

Radiator

Repair

RECONST.
HI 2-0077

SALES SERVICE

Factory Authorized
Sales and Service

Auto Body
Painting &amp; Repairing

KLEEBURG BUICK
INC.
HI 2-4800

1732 First

BRESR ERR

S4YADES

LANDI

BROS.

PAINTS — SUPPLIES
@

Venetian

@
@
@

Columbia Lattishades
Bamboo Blinds—Draperies
Window Shades

Blinds

CENTRAL AVE.
HI 2-2350
Highland

2-2500

Advertisements

IT CAN

BE DONE”

Park

On

PAGE?

right now!

So do most of the people who subscribe to the Highland Park News, Deerfield Review and Highwood News.
The cost of an ad on this page is small
. . $3.70 per week for a two-inch square on a yearly basis. Why not phone
HI 2-4500 today and let us prepare a layout for you?

re

I. H. NEMEROFF
Across

Alignment

Service

this page

Pay

BUICK

Are

reading

Use

24 HOUR
TOWING SERVICE

668

HI

$1500.00

EERSEER eee
BUICK SERVICE

Authorized
Agency

5-9583

gifts

Diamonds - Engagement Rings
SPECIAL FOR THE WEEK
¥3-ct. set in yel. or wht. gold ...... $185
Y-ct. set in yel or wht. gold ......
Y4-ct. set in yel. or wht. gold ...... $375
Tel. HI 2-0630
Highland Park
Across from the Bank—35 Years

S00 ESR
TOWING

USED CARS

Evanston
GR.

616

Service

INC.

Grove

Windows

FREE ESTIMATES
LAKE BLUFF 2575

FOR THE BEST

GO

made

350

BEER eae eee eee

Fordors
617

Deerfield

Chrysler-Plymouth

Car

I.

“y

DAHL’S

CLEANERS

—TAILORS—
810 Waukegan

Convertibles, Tudors,

phone.

DEERFIELD

for

Windows - Picture Win- Porch
Enclosures
Doors

clothes. Let us work
miracles on your
clothes.

4-3034

line

words"
to getoutsomeof
ugly
stains

S\

Evanston

a New

ment
dows

MAGIC
ig
as

Holes

Main

complete

Double Hung

CLEANING

'

SILJESTROM

RUSCO COMBINATION
METAL STORM WINDOWS
SCREENS and DOORS

u-tan tl meote

Buttons —

See our fine selection of watches and
for Christmas.
Time Payments.
Open until 9 p.m. Friday

6-3070

ES Soe eee eee eee
STORM WINDOWS &amp; DOORS

IT's
SHEER

U-DRIVE-IT

OIL

AND OIL BURNERS
ALES AND SERVICE

AUN

ouses,

a
Towels,

Rent

All
ATING

Linens

UNiversity

&lt;0)

FUEL

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Vogue Fabric Shop

Ue)

{-)) C-)

SERVICE

SERRE
RR RRR RRRREe
CARS FOR HIRE

eee

TILE

GENUINE
TILE
INTERIORS
Bathrooms, Kitchens &amp; Powder Rooms
Modernized
with
Real
Ceramic Tile,
Miraplastic Tile, Rubber,.
Vinyl,
Cork
G Asphalt Tile Floors.
Complete Tile
Service. Free Estimates. Phone Evenings.
TILE-CRAFT
830 Woodward Ave.
Deerfield 1049

Pleating — Belts

GUARANTEED

963 Waukegan
Phones

FLOOR

MONOGRAMMING
ee

WINDOW- GLASS
SHADESTOPS
RRORS

RPRISE

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DRESSMAKERS

VENETIAN
BLINDS

Western

Winnetka

BEN

Moving

$39.79

Inc.

562 Lincoln

Darnell

Hauling

Shore

-

Other Sets to

——
Black

Packard-North

$42.50
Free

Engraving

A safe place to buy a used car.
All makes and models.

+4
4
=

General

602

28-Diamond

CLEANERS
Ave.
Highwood

ILL.

2-2028

AYNE
454 Waukegan
-0455

PARK,

EXPRESS

Owner—W.

Deerfield

Sales and Service

Leading Watch Repair. Craftsmen
and Jewelry Designers

PARK

Phone

- PACKARD|

REPAIR

HIGHLAND
HI

Boiler

Service

1010 Hazel Ave., Deerfield

ewe Ls

TELEPHONE

TELEVISION-RADIO
FIRST ST.
HIGHLAND

—

est

20th Century
858

TILE

ij
fe

Repairs &amp; Sales
otorola

Cleaning

459 Roger Williams Ave.

AUTO RADIOS
and

Furnace and

use of our expert mechanics.

HI 2-0566

SERRE
AUTO RADIOS

Custom

All Types of Heating
Installation

TILE

&amp; RUGS

&amp; LINOLEUM

- OPTICIANS

A. E. Savage, Owner

PLASTIC

CARPETS

JEWELERS

Community Gas Heating
SERVICE

SHOP

RUBBER

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Town Floor Company
Daniel

HEATING

eaeaur

FLOOR
@

it can be done

Watch

A.

Fine
Repairing

MORDINI

HI 2-3905
Highland Park,

III.

|
SS

Where

�rordomatic Drive, Overdrive, white sidewall tires
optional at extra cost. Equipment, accessories and
trim subject to change without notice.

With

41

‘“‘Worth More”

it’s worth more

when

features...

the only V8

in its field /

you buy it... worth more when you sell it!

This ’53 Ford sets an entirely new standard

for the American Road. For in this big
new Ford you’ll find 41 “Worth More”
features that give you more of the things
you want...more of the things you need...
than ever before in low-priced car history.
You'll find the “Go” you need to handle
today’s long-distance driving. You’ll enjoy

Ford’s new Miracle Ride that brings you

the smooth, quiet riding comfort you need

A few of the 41 “Worth

for today’s level parkways or rough, rutted
byways ... plus nearly effortless steering,
braking, and parking. And you’llsee beauty
that belongs wherever you may drive.
When you see this new Ford at your
Ford Dealer’s, you’ll understand why it is
worth more when you buy it ... worth
more when you sell it. You’ll agree that
here, indeed, is the New Standard of the

CHOICE OF V-8 OR SIX
Ford’s famous 110-h.p. high-compression StratoStar V-8 has a partner for thrifty “Go” in the
101-h.p. low-friction, high-compression Mileage
Maker Six. Ford Automatic Power Pilot gives
high-compression Go” with regular gas.

American Road!
More”

features in the 1953

Ford

SHIFT TO FORDOMATIC—and
you'll never shift again. It’s the
finest, most versatile automatic
drive ever. And remember,
Ford also offers the smooth
and thrifty Overdrive.

POWER-PIVOT PEDALS — are
suspended from above to elim-

vents

ERE

NEW

more
shock

MIRACLE

RIDE—Net

responsive
absorber

spring

just

and

actien, not just

feam rubber cushions, but a
balanced ride that gives you a
new concept of comfort.

inate dusty, drafty floor holes.

They give more unobstructed
floor space and provide easier
pedal operation.

Here now...the 53 FORD

CENTER-FILL
hose

“filling up”
side of gas
filler pipe
space for an

FUELING — premarks,

and

makes

easier
pump.
gives
extra

from either
Shorter gas
you trunk
suitcase.

“spe: Bo

FULL-CIRCLE VISIBILITY
— with
huge, curved, one-piece windshield, a car-wide, one-piece
rear window and big picture
windows all around—gives yo-visibility unlimited.

SEE IT...
VALUE- CHECK IT.»

esr orive rr!
F.C.A.

PURNELL &amp; WILSON, INC.
Authorized ston

1909 St. Johns Ave.

Highland

Diaby

Park

Phone

HI 2-0710

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                    <text>2

10 Cents

Thursday,

January

1,

berticld Kevieu
We

te:

1953

�eT WE LAST
ry
Ne 4# ADVERTISEMENT
WAS
ye PRINTED YESTERDAY

=
&gt;

ae
‘a =
ee

ba

5

me

nee A

‘

A

ah

What

Would

The

fli
a

last

advertisement

was

printed

Were PRUE?

yesterday.

You

have cut it out and put it away to show your grandWith

children.

it,

a way

of living

as vou

World Be Like

knew

can't

afford

gifts anyway.

We're

it last week.

You pull up to

At another—but no, you don’t like
It’s too much gas and

Let’s go home.

So-and-So’s acting

Poor

on a show.

Next

month

. they’ve had to up prices to meet plant expenses.
of the others have closed down

Tomorrow

you

for $50.

will want

some

groceries.

go to the nearest grocery store and buy some.

perhaps, and lima beans.

You

why

the food

is color television anyway?

was printed

Pretty soon

bills are so high.

The last advertisement was printed yesterday.

a.

Next

is Aunt

Jane’s

birthday.

The

sk

last advertisement

*

Advertising has. brought us many
better homes,

made

silly fads and

wonderful

life easier—and longer.

blessing.

things.

cars,

inventions that have

Advertising is no unmixed

unmatched in any shies lice and time.

Well,

Finer

But it has helped give America a standard of living

living should

month

You will never see it.

yesterday

Rib roast,

night at the bridge table that the store just next door was

will wonder

No one will hear of it.

will

You won't hear until tomorrow

having a “special” on rib roast and lima beans.

how the

Fellow in Milwaukee is inventing color television to sell

half the theaters will

attendance.

. . . don’t know

Most

government will feed all the new unemployed.

What

your husband

Can’t afford a new one...

“Low priced” cars are now $4,000 . . . demand’s fallen off

Tonight you will want to see a movie.

close.

like

it, has

passed forever.

time to waste

money

water and living like poor folks. . .

Old car’s wearing out.

one—saw

spending

persist as long as people

That standard of
have wants to fill

if you
and money to spend and eyes to read with.

think I’m going to spend half a day tramping from store to
store looking for a gift that I used to find by turning a page

It will persist only so long as the presses keep rolling.

�-—

RL

~%

Yo

L)C¢

Thursday,

Vol. 27, No. 41

New School To Be

Called Maplewood
Construction
is progressing
as
fast as weather permits on the new
west
side
elementary
school
in
District 109, and the board of education
has
announced
that
the
building will be known as Maplewood school. The name was chosen
from
the
street, Maplewood
ter.
race, which will be vacated and be
incorporated in the school grounds.
The building
was
designed
by
Perkins and Will and is being constructed by Otto Schultz, general
contractor, at the cost of $244,000.
A completion
date of September
Ist is the goal of the contractor.
Subsequent issues of the “Deerfield Review”
will carry
a_perspective view of the new school as
well as more detailed explanation
of the new features incorporated in
the building.

Altar and Rosary

Society Meets Tuesday
The Altar and Rosary society of
the Holy Cross church
will hold
its regular
meeting
January
6,
following the
Novena
service
at
8:30 p.m.
Robert
Greenslade
will review
“A
Giant in the Wilderness”
by
Helen Margaret. It is a biography
of Father Charles
Nerinckx who
founded the order of the Sisters of
Loretto. Mr. Greenslade, 803 Hazel,
is home on, vacation. He is a student. at. St. Thomas seminary
in
Denver, Colorado.

Tea

will

pitality

be’ served

committee.

Rugen

is

of

George

Year's

the

Mrs.

chairman

ments.
Mrs.
president.

New

by

hos-

Ernest

arrange-

Emmett

is

Eve at Thorngate

Climaxing a busy social and golf
season Thorngate Country Club of
Deerfield will hold its first New
Year’s Eve party to usher in the
New
Year.
Since it has
been in
operation
less
than
two
years,
Committee co-chairmen, Dr. B. Q.
Smith and Berne Waling, are well
pleased
and
elated
over reservations to date and they and their
committee anticipate a full house,
consisting of members
and their
guests.

Monsen’s

Music

Men

ish the music, as they
of the club’s social
the past.

will

‘Teen Town’
New Year TV

Children Find Weather
Balloon From Joliet

Party at Church

Donna and Joey Hugh, daughter
and son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
A. Hugh, 355 Wilmot road, had an
unexpected and exciting thing happen to them the day after Christmas when
they found
a weather
balloon in the field opposite their

be

a New

party

There
at

“Teen

Town”

night

at

the

“Teen
usual

will

Town”
from

the

young

ity.

The

-will

people

of

will

church.

be

11:30

open
p.m.

the
be

TV

Saturday

Bethlehem

7:30 to

party

Years

in

as

to all

communcelebra-

tion of a 21 inch Zenith TV presented to the church by Mr. and
Mrs.
Wesley
Alabeck
for
“Teen
Town” activities. All young people
are invited to come and bring a
friend.
Special
events for the evening
will be under the direction of the
recreation
commission:
Jackie
Frost,
Joyce
Anderson,
Richard
Pagel and John Kenney.
“Teen Town” is held in Fellowship Hall at the Bethlehem church
each Saturday evening, under the
auspices
of the
Youth
Planning
board with the Junior guild of the
church providing chaperons.

High School Reunion
At Home of
Willard Loarie
Mr. and Mrs. Willard Loarie had
a Senn high school reunion party
at their home,
853
Oxford,
last
Saturday in honor of Herb Block,
noted
political
cartoonist
who
draws
for the Washington
Post.
and Miss
Helen
Harris,
former
teacher at Senn. Present were Mr.
and Mrs. George Haney, Deerfield,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Lewis
Campbell,
Glencoe, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rodgers,
Wilmette
and
Mrs.
Jessie
Block, mother of Herb Block.
Mr. Block is a former Pulitzer
prize winner and has just written
a book ealled “Herblock Book”.
Miss Harris was the faculty advisor of the Senn.
news
and all
there with the exception of Mrs.
Block, Mr. Haney and Mr. Campbell are former Senn students who
worked under Miss Harris on. the
school paper.

house.

They

saw

a red

object

in

the field and after speculating a
little the children investigated and
found an orange
red parchment-

like

paper

parachute

about

4 feet

in diameter with strings attached
to a little reed hoop. At one end
there was a strong cord attached to
the parachute,
through the hoop
the remnants of a balloon. At the
other end was a lightweight box

about

one

foot

tall

and

4

The box was to be taken

to the post office and sent to the
reconditioning center at Joliet. The

remainder of the balloon is considered worthless—to be thrown away
or otherwise destroyed.
The bal-

loon had been released from Joliet
and is apparently the first one of
its kind

to land

in Deerfield.

The next play to be presented
by the Deerfield Stagers will be
“Suspect”.
It was written by Edward Percy and Reginald Denham
who
also
were
the
authors
of
“Ladies in Retirement.” The ‘Suspect” is a psychological drama involving a woman whose past comes
up to threaten the future happiness
of her son.
Tryouts for the production will
be held Tuesday and Wednesday,
January 6 and 7, in the Community room ot the Deerfield grammar
school.
All
those
interested
are
urged to attend and take part in
the tryout session. The “Suspect”
will be under the direction of Mrs.
Elizabeth Gage.
On January 8, the Stagers will
hold a regular business meeting to
formulate plans for a charity show

the

polio

fund

in

the

near

future.

Holy Cross Box Supper

furn-

have at many
functions
in

to

Church

Two most generous members of the First Presbyterian —
church have presented anonymously an outstanding and mag&gt; |

nificent Christmas
the

complete

present to their church.

refurnishing

set forth by proposals
niture company.

of

of Mrs.

Thomas

lane,

Evans,

Tuesday,

1510

January

6,

Bannockburn Garden
Club to Meet
Bannockburn
Garden
club
will
meet January 7 at 12:30 for luncheon at the home of Mrs. Wallace

Carrol,

Duffy

Rogers

will

be

lane.

Mrs.

assistant

James|
hostess.

Mrs. Ralph Roscher will speak
“Color Styling in Your Home.”

on

E

At the Holy Cross box supper. recently held by the Mothers club were seen Mrs. J. Pietro, Mr. J. Pietro and Mrs. E.
Biggman.

sanctuary,

donors

are

Church
known

as

Fur-

only

to

read their letter of presentation at

Infantile Paralysis

At a meeting of the Church session, called for that specific purpose the day before, the gift had

“Science
ly

toward

of

infantile

at last
an

paralysis,’

Weinshenk,
field
said

1254

chairman

Mrs.

polio

dent
for

of

a

the

Infantile

last Sunday.

been officially accepted, and Dr.
Keller also read the Session’s letter

Deer-

of

drive

corporating the specifications of
the gift and a cashier’s check f ir
$20,000 were shown to the congregation.
The plans and_ sketch

Polio

was

where

of

Weinshenk

Dimes
said

very

Paralysis,

acceptance.

were

The

exhibited

by

contract

the

the

the close of the service.

en-

and

extent

of

the

in-—

Deacons

The beau

Christmas

pres

presi-

ent derives from the purpose and

Foundation

intent of the donors, who said’ i
their letter that their basic reasoning is best indicated by the Gospel

O’Connor,

National

told

the

meeting
that latest scientific
advances foreshadow the certain conquest of polio as an epidemic, she
reported.
At the meeting Mr. O’Connor explained the results of the 1951 and
1952 field trials with gamma globulin in ‘which 55,000 children took
part in Provo, Utah; Houston, Tex.,
and Sioux City, Ia. As a result, it
was proved for the first time that
paralytic polio in human beings can
be prevented—even if only temporarily so far.
“We
must be certain we
have
sufficient funds with which to continue
this
progress,’
he _ stated.
“The prospects of conquering polio
have never been so bright. But the
dark side of the picture is gloomier
than ever. The 1952 epidemic is the
worst in history, recording more
than 55,000 cases up to the first

week in December.
“The staggering financial burden
of patient care for this year alone
will be about $28,000,000. By the
end
of this year, the
March
of
Dimes will have
provided
direct
assistance in 1952 to at least 90,000 patients stricken in this and
previous years.’

The
first
installment
of
the
study of “OUR AFRICAN
HERITAGE”—a
book to be studied by
the
Women’s
Society
of
World
Service of the Bethlehem Church
will be presented
by Mrs. Louis
Zenko, Tuesday January 6, at the
regular meeting to be held‘at the
home of Mrs, R. M. Harvey. This
promises to be a very interesting
topic, in this time of questions in
that
continent,
and
anyone
who
would care to study with W.S.W.S.

is invited to do so.

service

Woodland,

Chicago,

Basil

morning

Justin

March

news

the

Mrs.

the

from

attended

meeting,
latest

of

rapid-

preventive

today.

Returning
she

is moving

effective

Society to Study ‘Our
African Heritage’

Crabtree
at 9:30.

gift includes

the

In Temporary Halt Of

The executive board of the Deerfield Woman’s club will hold the
regular
monthly
meeting
at the

home

The

of

by the Ossit

The

Meets Tuesday

Board

interior

the pastor, Dr. Paul J. Keller, who

The 1953 March of Dimes will
be held January 2 through 31, Mrs.
Weinshenk added, with plans for
the participation of a record number of volunteers.

Executive

the

and sketches

New Drug Effective

couraging.

Stagers To Hold
Tryouts for
New Play

for

Gift

1, 1953

Presbyterian church donated :
$20,000 to refurnish sanctuary

inches

wide. There was also an antennae
attached.
There were instructions
on the box as to what the finder

should do.

Christmas

January

passage, Matthew

26: 6-10.

©

|

Womans Club To Meet
Deerfield

Womans

club

will

meet Tuesday, January
13 at the
Deerfield grammar school at 2 p.m.

John
omy

Sternig, assistant in astron-

at

Dearborn

observatory,

lecture

on rocket

and

Mrs.

J. D.

Skinner,

space

civic

will

ships.

and

sci

service chairman, will be in chargg
of arrangements. Mrs. Paul Brown,
Mrs.
Charles
Parsons
and
Mrs. —
Harold Wynkoop will be hostesses
—

for the social hour.
Attend

Rose

Mr.

and

Bowl

Mrs.

eS
Game

Arno

.

D.

Wehle, —

1111 Osterman avenue, and son,
Alan, are spending three weeks in

California.
Chicago

After

friend

in

visiting
La

an

Jolla,

exCali-

fornia, they will spend some time
in Los Angeles and attend
Rose Bowl parade and game
Pasadena on New Year's day. They
also visited the Carlsbad Caverns

on their way west.

On

the

Coe

Looking over plans for.
the nearly completed rectory
of St. Gregory's church are
Billy Couch, Donald Dick,
treasurer of the building
fund,
Mrs.
William
A,
Couch, church member, the
Reverend

Jack

D.

Parker,

rector of St. Gregory’s and
Jimmy Couch. The rectory
will be ready to move into
by the end of March. Drive’
for the money for the down
payment
was headed
by
Robert. E. Wood, sponsored
by the Church of the Holy
Spirit in Lake Forest of '
which

Reverend

Parker

an assistant rector.

~

was

|

—

�4

,

Mothers Speak
d
Allen | Deerfield
To Wed Willar

Mrs. R. H. Potter Entertain

Trailers mounted
the Brick Company

ir. and Mrs. R. H. Potter, Deerroad entertained at a formal
party
Saturday
evening,
eember 27. Among those present

re

Mr. and Mrs. Irl Marshall,
and Mrs. Robert Ramsey, Mr.
Mrs. Edward Palmer, Mr. and
s. Richard Wolfe, Mr. and Mrs.
rritt Barnum,

Mr. and

Mrs.

Rus-

d

Mrs. Oliver Ortman, Mr. and|
Gunnar Sundvahl. There were
and prizes
was served.

and

a

tation

committee.

midnight

is

_ Expert
. Watch

; Repairing

Joanne

Phone 1048

DEERFIELD

Mr.

Covey

JEWELERS

Call

Deerfield

674

for

and

Ralston

Mrs.

of Downers

Edmund

Grove,

M.

Ill.,

announce the engagement of
their daughter, Joanne Ralston,
to Willard Allen, son of Mr.

and Mrs. Willard B. Allen of
1125 Hazel avenue. Both Miss

DR. G. C. PARKNEN
OPTOMETRIST
Complete Optical Service
Established in Deerfield Since

Ralston and her fiance are sen-

1942

Appointment

_ 857 Rosemary Terr., Deerfield

iors at Lake Forest college,
They plan to
Lake Forest.
marry in the summer after
graduation.

paper

aside!

KNAAK’S

PHARMACY

BRUCE
you
may

bring
rest

hing from
+ for your

your

car

assured

we

to

Registered

us,

check

bumper to bump-

added

H.

FORD

Pharmacist

Established in 1884
Phone 1
Deerfield,

Midge’s Texaco
Road

‘Tel.

580

&amp; SELIG

Established 1925
REALTORS
Insurance — Real Estate —- Loans
735 Deerfield Road, Deerfield, III.
Edward H. Selig
Harold R. Vant
Tel. Deerfield 155

if IN ESTABLISHING NEW
TYPES OF BANKING,
SUCH AS THE BANK
t FOR INTERNATIONAL
t SETTLEMENTS, AMEAI- #5
CAN FINANCE /s_
¥#

| HELPING TO CREATE Via
| THE ECONOMIC BASIS

REQUIRED FOR A

} DURABLE PEACE!
a

hee

In a new

TM.

safety.

VANT

O Waukegan

age

of

the

Zoning,

and

Sani-

He

made

Waukegan

after

an

this

News

inspection

out.

Mr.

Carlson

bank ing

service,

William

Rae
and

Collard,

Mrs.

road,

daughter

Fred

P.

Dier,

Bannockburn,

December

32

the old Yale

}

at

CHURCHES

was

campus

Mr.

ST.

GREGORY’S
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
Wilmot
and
Deerfield
Roads
(Wilmot
School)
The Rev. J. D. Parker Vicar
SUNDAY,
January 4
KindergarFamily service.
9:30 a.m.
for the
classes
school
ten and church
communion
holy
and
Sermon
children.
for adults.

Telegraph
married

Dwight

Yaffee

of

chapel

on

to Dr. Howard

of

South

Cam-|

bridge, Mass.
The

bride

was

gowned

tilly lace

over ivory

cathedral

length

camellias

book

with

streamers.

Mrs.

Fred

P. Dier

a dark

in
She

over

blue

suit with

and

wore

a/|

car-|

a prayer |

Her

was

thia bank

For loans of all types see the

J.

Hooper,

engineer

According
Brooks, West

mother,|,

dressed

in |

accessories

to |

a yellow

corsage. |

The bride is a graduate of High-.
|
by | land Park High school and Oberlin |

on

Monday,

De-

cember 29, no official reports on
the inspection have been’ submitted by Mr. Carlson, Mr. Hooper, or
H. A. Spafford, State Sanitary Engineer,
Illinois
Department
of
Public
Health,
Springfield,
who
visited the Brick Company in company with Health Board member,
Ben Pierson and Dr. Brooks last

Monday, December 22.
Mr. Spafford told all present that
the State of Illinois would be glad
to
make
recommendations,
but
that it would be up to the State’s
Attorney to see that they were carried out. Because Mr. Nelson was

out of town, and his assistants had
conflicting court assignments, his
office could not be represented at
the inspection last Monday.
HOW ABOUT THOSE HEALTH
CASES, MR. NELSON?
The following telegram was dispatched to Mr. Robert C. Nelson
on Wednesday, December 17 by six
Deerfield mothers.
‘Lack
of
sanitary
facilities,
trailer camp National Brick Company affects six children attending |
Deerfield Grammar school. School |
nurse reports children’s condition
growing worse because of lack of
sanitary facilities. How
soon can
health cases regarding trailer camp
and garbage dump
be
heard
in
County
Court?
Please
reply
immediately as we consider this urgent.
Hazardous open pits are dangerous for these children. Two children killed, Levittown, New York
last week in small excavation. We
do not consider this a proper living
place
for children.
Property
not
zoned for residence. Please investigate county zoning violations also.”
The following reply, dated December
22 was
received
by the
mothers:
“Information against the National Brick company regarding viola-

FROST’S
AND

ELECTRIC

APPLIANCES

Refrigerators - Ranges - Radios
Washing
Machines
- Vacuums
We Repair All Makes of Appliances
730

Waukegan

Rd.

- Tel.

Deerfield

122

/ Deerfield State Bank
interest paid on savings

Deposits insured up to $10,000.00

F. D. CLAVEY
RAVINIA NURSERIES,
Established

, 9,

1885

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

Inc.

college and is at
at the Yale school
Haven, Conn.

COMMUNITY
NORTHFIELD
Sanders at Dundee
P.O. Deerfield, Ill.
James Burford, Pastor
935R2
Northbrook
Telephone
SERVICES
SUNDAY
school.
9:45 d.m. Sunday
worship.
11 a.m. Morning
7:30 pm. Evening services (monthly),
First and third Sundays: Evangelistic |

services.

* ST. PAUL EVANGELICAL
CHURCH
REFORMED
AND
Road
638 Waukegan
Rev. H. O. Willman. Pastor
Deerfield 858
FIRST

PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
824
Waukegan
Road
Phone
Deerfield
775
Dr. Paul J. Keller, Pastor

have
after
their

SUNDAY,
January
4
9:45 a.m. Church school for all grades
through high school.
9:45 a.m.
Adult Bible class, under the
leadership of C. E. Piper.

families, Mrs. Will Potter of Cedar
terrace and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Kaatz,
Warrington
road.
James
Kaatz has as his guest for the’ holidays Ernesto Jaimenez of Bogota,
Colombia. Both are students at the
University of Illinois.

11

a.m.

Morning

of the

West

Deerfield

to

Town-

ship Board of Health regulations,
as they pertain to the trailer camp
area located on the National Brick
company
property in West Deer-

field Township,

have

6.

7 p.m.

Tuxis

Court and will be set

for

the

“An

the

in

appeal

Lake

near

from

County

the

decision of |

of Super-

visors in regard to the zoning of
the aforementioned National Brick
Company property has been made
by the National Brick company and
is
now
pending
in
the
Circuit
Court.

society.

January

WEDNESDAY,

7
8

5

p.m.
p.m.

Junior
Church

January

7

choir rehearsal.
choir rehearsal.

THE BETHLEHEM CHURCH
(Evangelical United Brethren)
Francis
Geo.
Guither,
Ministe

future.

board

Communion

new members,
for children 3

3 p.m. Girl Scout meeting.
7:30 p.m.
Boy Scout meeting.

been filed in

the County

worship.

service. Public welcome of
Nursery school
11 am.

-|MONDAY,

trial

~

Virginia

Pfe. and Mrs. John Kaatz
returned to Fort Eustis, Va.
spending the holidays with

tion

Con-

NORTH

ical school.
He
is at present
a
resident
in
dermatology
at
the
Massachusetts general hospital.
to

p.m.

7:30

Second
and
fourth | Sundays: Youth
fellowship
services.
i
If your church has no evening service,
the
in
us
with
join
invite you to
we
evening
service.
If you
do not attend
to
welcome
church, we give you a warm
visit. our services.

present training
of Nursing, New

Dr. Yaffee is a graduate of Syracuse university and Harvard Med-

Return

and

p.m.

4

Saturday:
fessions.

Waukegan

retained

to
Dr.
Frank
W.
Deerfield Township

Officer,

CROSS CATHOLIC CHURCH
North
Waukegan
Road
:
Rev. John O’Mara, pastor
Rectory, 724 Elder Lane
Deerfield 430
11:80.
10,
8:30,
7,
Masses:
Sunday
Weekday
Masses:
7:30 a.m.
First Friday: of each month, Mass at
HOLY

Chan-

satin with

train.

ried white

alse match

Lake County to make
an inspection of the Brick
company
premises,
said
that
he
was
taking
samples of drinking water and making bacteria tests of the water in
the pits and in the ditch both entering and leaving the brick yards.

RADIO

1%2%

-

Dr. Howard Yaffee
At Dwight Chapel

Stanley

premises.

consulting

available.

~

Lake

Weds

The maid of honor was Millicent |
contaminated water from the clay| Dreher of New York and Richard |
pits
nearby,
the
only
bathing Porter of Boston was the best man. |
facilities are the inadequate shower | A reception followed the ceremony |
facilities.
| in Dwight Hall parlor.

attempts to give you the best and most modern
service

week

broken

Health

Make it a habit to read the Want
Ads every week before laying your

fhen

last

the

the

Collard

said that unless the residents use |

Jewelry
for the
Entire Family
635 Deerfield Rd.

’

to

J. Carl-

of

“We
found but two toilets for
use of 75 persons during the summer time and one of them is out
of order,’ said Mr. Carlson, The
only place for the people to bathe,
according
to
Mr.
Carlson,
is a
shower room in a part of the building where
bricks are made,
and |
much of the cement flooring there |

Mr.

Alexander,

Building,

Rue

blocks at
not fit to

to Harry

officer

County

of

on and Mr. and Mrs. E. NelMr. and Mrs. L. Hayner, Mr.
Robert

Building

Sun

ompson, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Mrs.

in, according

‘| statement

Sedgewick, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
own, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond P. |

and

live
son,

on
are

|

EERFIELD |

815

Rosemary

Terrace

Families Are
Families”
THURSDAY,
January
1
Open house at the parsonage,
Going

“Church

FRIDAY,

3-6

p.m.

Senior. choir rehearsal.
aa.
3
January
Year’s in
New
p.m.

Teen

January

7:30 p.m.
SATURDAY,
7:30-11:30

Happy

2

town.
SUNDAY,
January
4
school
Church
a.m.
9:45

for

all

ages.

11:55 a.m. Divine worship, communion,
“A declaratory judgment action
7 p.m.
Youth
Fellowship
party.
questioning
the
validity
of
the}
TUESDAY,
January
6
County
Zoning
Ordinance
as _ it
1:30 p.m.
Women’s
Society of World
pertains to the said National Brick Service at the home of Mrs. R. M. Harvey.
company property has been filed
WEDNESDAY,
January
7
in the Circuit Court. Both of the
4 p.m. Confirmation class.

last mentioned matters are now)|
in process of litigation.”” Robert C.

7:30

p.m.

Senior

choir

rehearsal.

Nelson,

State’s
Attorney.
|
[he Public Press, no less than Public
NOTE TO MR. NELSON—Action
Office, is a public trust.
on the health
cases was
started
with cease and desist orders of the
West
Deerfield
Township
Health |
Board on September 3... When
these cases reached Justice of the
Peace Ray Reardon, of Waukegan
Vol. 27, No. 41
Thursday, Jan. 1, 1953
at the
end
of October,
he told
Deerfield mothers that the docket
Published Weekly every Thursday
of the
Lake
County
court
was

DEERFIELD
REVIEW

only

two

weeks

behind,

and

these

cases
could
be
heard
within
a
couple of weeks. Tomorrow will be |
January
1, 1953.
As soon as the reports of the
sanitation
experts
are
available,
these
cases
should
be
heard
promptly, so ‘clean up’? work can
begin.
Public health
should
not
have to wait for legal continuances
and delays!
Is the zoning of the trailer camp
included in the zoning cases pending in Lake County Circuit court?

If this

is true,

these

cases

should

be heard promptly, too. Children’s
health and lives are involved. They
should not be the victims of legal

delays

and

continuances

either!

1775

PUBLICATION
OFFICE
832 Todd Ct.
Deerfield,
Illinois
Telephone Deerfield 485
HIGHLAND PARK OFFICE
St. Johns Ave., Highland Park,
Telephone HI 2-4500

Ill.

MEMBER
a
National Editorial Association
Illinois Press Association

Heather

Hartwig

Phyllis Russell
V. E. Deckert

Managing Editor
Business Manager

Lecal Subscription Rates—-$2.75
per year
Domestic Rate—$4.00 per year
Singte Copies—10c
Fereign Rates on Application
“Entered as second-class matter Novemper 27, 1944, at the post office at Deer-

ae

ee

under

Copyright,
The

Highland

All

Rights

the Act
1952,

Park

of

March

8,

By
Company

Reserved.

Thursday, January
*

asia

1, 1953

+

�of the
to “put
citizens
entered
played

several faiths in our community joined in a campaign
Christ back into Christmas.” The efforts of these young
of Highland Park were well rewarded. The merchants
into the spirit of the endeavor and many of them disa replica of the great event that was the beginning of

Christmas,

or Christ’s

Birthday.

Prominent

in the center

of

our city is a creche, created by the skill and efforts of
students

from Highland Park High school.

An additional reward for the efforts of these various groups
was the realization that, regardless of creed, they could
work
together harmoniously to bring to a successful climax a venture
that should have lasting effects for the good of our communi
ty.

Christmas is one day, and it has passed, not to return for

359
day
over
the
the

past.

days. Today begins the New Year 1953. As New Year’s
approaches each year, it is a human custom to look back
the year that is coming to a close, to find satisfaction in
good we have accomplished, to vow to make amends in
new year by avoiding the mistakes we have made in the

At this time last year we had hoped that in 1952 peace
would come in Korea and possibly throughout the world. That
hope

did

fathers

not

look

come

to

sadly

son belongs.

pass,

and

many

at the vacant

American

place

in their home

mothers

and

where

a

Traffic deaths on our highways and in our cities

were shockingly high in 1951. A campaign to stop this slaughter met with little success in 1952. So many faults in
our
national character we vowed to correct last year! Only partial
success greeted our efforts.
As the year went by there was a notable increase in
the

number of our citizens turning towards God.

Peace

and

order,

So essential to the happiness and well-being of a people, are
an
impossibility unless God has His rightful place in society.
Human beings are PERSONS, sharing somewhat in the Personality of God. When men forget this, they cease to
ACT
as persons and the result is the accumulation of evils we
ob-

serve in the world and in our own character, evils that prevent
peace and cause us to be unsuccessful in working together

harmoniously,
A year is much longer than a day. The various groups
in
our community worked together successfully to put
Christ

back

into

Christmas.

There

is no

ing together, cannot successfully
THE ENTIRE YEAR!
The Rev. Bernard

Holiday

E. Burns,

were

all of us,

work-

GOD

BACK

INTO

Cadet

many

parties

J.

Reagen,

son

of

Visiting

C.

S.

Charlestown,

Visits

Elmer

Island,
Arthur

Vernon

B.

Heiben-

Exmoor

Among the many people of the
younger
group
who
were:at the
dance
sponsored
by the Exmoor

Country

club

were

Bob

Ramsey,

Carol
Segert,
Billy Vogg,
Nancy
Johnston,
Marty
and
Mike
Hall,
Cathy Pearson, Betsy Sturm, Greg
Armstrong.

T. Anderson,

her daughter
holidays.

Robert

George

Robert

| Mrs.

and

for

Seldon W.
Mrs. Robert

hill road,
ton and
' field to

Clark, son
O. Clark,

is home

of Mr. and
418 Brier-

from

Washing-

Lee. He will leave Deerreturn to school on Sun-

day.
Thursday,

January

1, 1953

reportparty

and decorated our tree. We had a
grab bag of gifts. Linda Hirschner,
Patty
Mandel, Karen
Meyer
and
Karen
Arne
brought
the
treats.
Last week we made felt lapel pins
with sequins for our project. We
sang Christmas carols and ate the
candy turtles and cookies that Eva
Mae Schwab brought.
Troop 11: Donna
Sedgwick,
reporter.
Mrs.
Palmer
called
the
meeting to order. Donna brought
the treats. We made
more ornaments for our tree and discussed
the Christmas party we will have
Monday
at Mrs.
Palmer’s
house.
Last week Pleasant Thiele brought
Cokes and cookies and
we
made
ornaments for our tree then, too.
Troop 12: Karen Feil,
Karen brought Christmas
We sang carols and started
the mantel pieces for our
Then we played “Squeeze”
missed.

reporter.
cookies.
making
parents.
and dis-

Troop 4: Jean Yous, reporter. At
our meeting we continued making
gifts fer
our
mothers
and _ ourselves. Joan Richards was chosen
our
Juliette
Lowe
girl.
We
got
things
together
to
send
a Care
package to Germany and the girls
brought comic books to give to the
mentally retarded
children. Susie
Sinclair brought doughnuts for the
treats,

I should say it is overdue. The average one of us has.
been buffeted around too many long years. Gigantic and often
undefinable,

misunderstood

Mylott

have

pushed

us

this

way

on the first day of summer vacation. Our responsibilities
citizens and as men and women of faith remain with us.

as

Men are still being wounded and are still dying in Korea
and Indo-China to help preserve the way of life we proudly
embrace.
Tonight and tomorrow night, and for God knows
how long, two out of every three people on earth will go to
sleep in some stage of starvation, ill-clothed and ill-housed by
even the lowest standards. Racial and religious tensions will
still be felt by the sensitive.
We shall have to hold before us as men and women of
good-will the thought that there be no peace until we have
achieved peace within ourselves, in our families and town. We
shall have to remember that tensions and injustices will not
be resolved until we right the wrongs closest to us. We shall

have to recall most of all that we are dependent
on each other for all things.
You have heard the phrase

timism

is shallow

unless

solid core of reality.

we

“shallow

optimism.”

give our hopes

A poet whose

on God

name

and

Our

op-

and visions

I do not know

the

wrote

a poem in the ancient Sanskrit language which says it all very

well:

“Listen to the Exhortation
Look to this Day!
For

it is Life,

the

very

of the
Life

Dawn!
of

In its brief course lie all the
Varieties and realities of your

Life.

existence;

The bliss of growth,
The glory of action,
The splendor of beauty;
For

Margaret

forces

and that way.
‘
Yet, there is no magic—not even the magic of optimism—
by which we may enter 1953 with the same feeling a child has

yesterday

is but a dream,

And tomorrow is only a vision;

Home

Miss Margaret Mylott, a student at
Loretto
Heights
college,
Denver,
in Prairie View for the Christmas
holidays. She is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
P. Mylott.
Miss Mylott will return to school
January 5.

But today well lived, makes
Every yesterday a dream of happiness,
And every tomorrow a vision of hope,
Look well therefore to this Day!
Such is the Salutation of the Dawn.”
In that spirit and with those good sentiments. . may
richly bless your New Year.
The

White

Rev.

Charles

Gifts

U.

Harris,

Trinity

Episcopal

God

Church

To Korea

road,

the

Home

George,

Michael

field

for

son

of Mr.

George,

came

1142

home

for

and
Deer-

the

in

Charles

Mrs.

Iowa

Uchtman,

Conrad

son of Mr.

Uchtman,

914

and

Fair

Oaks, is home
on vacation
from
Randall, Iowa, where he is teaching
vocal and
instrumental
music
in
Randall.
Family

Gathering

Stanger,

904

Forest,
entertained
their
family
Christmas day.
Present were Mr.

Holidays

Christmas

of Rock

family

Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Home

Peterson,

Illinois, mother of Mrs.
Feicht, 925 Beverly, visited

Teaching

at

son,

Mrs.

our

Daughter

Mrs.

Seen

Johnson’s

weekend,

Janet

Donald
P.
Dennis,
nephew
of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sullivan, Milwaukee road is spending the holidays with the Sullivan’s. He is attending Officers Candidate school
in Newport, R. I.

|

the

7:
had

Send

thai, his wife and daughter, Jacqueline of New Brighton, Minn.

over

We

Many factors—governmental, political, economic—produce the
glow that brightens our neighbor’s face as he rushes by on his
way to make the morning train.

Relatives

holidays
from
Iowa
university.
Miss Irene Livingston of Iowa City
is a house
guest of the George
family.

guests

Troop

‘America enters 1953 bathed in the warm seas of optimism!

5S 3

mond Goodpasture, Mr. and Mrs.
Lyle Fordham.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cederberg,
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Johanson, Mr.
and Mrs. Homer Marxer, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Card, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ramsey, Mr. and Mrs. Gunnar
Oliver
Mrs.
and
Mr.
Sundvahl,
Ortman, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Brown,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert O. Clark, Mr.
Street, Mr. and
and Mrs. James
Mrs. Joseph Ryan and Mr. and Mrs. |
Joseph Wachholder.
|

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Johnson,
1040 Waukegan road, had as house

Home

James

Vews
er.

Fu
a

_

Colorado, has returned to her home

Church

Mr. and Mrs. Ed Reagen, 827 Pine
street, is home from the Citadel in

Frank Schwartz, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Schmit, Mr. and Mrs. Ray-

Guests

Conception

Reagen

Cadet

going

on throughout the holiday season.
Among
those who entertained at
parties were
cocktails or dinner
Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Cramer,
and Mrs. Ed Stuart, Mr. and Mrs.

Weekend

why

PUT

Immaculate

Parties

There

reason

Our Responsibilities In 53

Girl Scout

In the weeks preceding Christmas, groups of young people

oo

For A Happy New Year...

and

Mrs.

Clifford

Stanger

and

daughter Debra, Chicago; Mr. and
Mrs.
George
Stanger
and_
sons

Dean

and

Mr. and
oria.

Steven,

Mrs.

D.

O.

Deerfield,

and

Endebrock,

Pe-

School children of District 107 arrange white gifts for distribution to neighboring
charitable institutions and needy children in Korea under the guidance of Miss Irene Jones,
sponsor of the Elm Place Student council, and Ernest Belmont, director of the International
Service committee of the Highland Park Rotary club which assumed the transportation
costs of the packages to Kore
The boys are, left to right, Donald Christman of Green Bay
school; and John Loose, Tom Marks and John Hubertz of Elm Place.
Not pictured is Dr.
Casper O. Dahle, superintendent of District 107 and vice president of t he Rotary club, who
handled arrangements for the project.
Page5.

�LOOK

AT

DURING

VALUES

SPECTACULAR

THESE

OUR

WINTER

ANNUAL

SALE

MEN'S VALUES!
S U

i T %

values

to

are Ss
Values to $65

SLACKS 10% off reg. prices

$59

Tris ts Your Orrorn’cenns, S49 &amp;
|

Our entire stock of ~aabail quality

$75

JACKETS warm and durable
;
Alpaca Lined. Values to $225°

arm, Alpaca Lined
&amp;
$49
3 Q 3 and

BOY’S

SPORT

WHITE

NECKWEAR Values to $2.50

|

and

reduced
SLIPS

White,

Values to $2.95
Reg. 79c

OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF WINTER

Our entire stock of Children’s Winter

COATSandSNOWSUITS

DRESSES

off regular prices

1%

/3

DRESSES

Values to $4.95

HOSIERY

Large Group,

BLOUSES

Values to $1.50

Values to $2.95

UNDERWEAR

Volue $1.95

BLOUSES, SKIRTS, SWEATERS Special Group 1/&gt; Off — by sarc Values to $2.95
BELTS

SLEEPERS

Values to $2.95

JEWELRY

Special Group

- Open Monday and Friday Evening

VALUES

TOPCOATS AND OVERCOATS 1/, Off

|

Our entire stock of Women’s Winter

COATS

SHIRTS

,

SHIRTS Values to $3.95

9 5

Melton, Values to $18.95

Wool

SHIRTS

T

é&amp;

SLACKS Values to $5.95

CORDUROY
JACKETS

$1

:

SWEATERS

Values to $1.95

Reduced 1/,

2 for $100
2 for $300

Values to $3.95

Open All Day Wednesday

�Engaged To Wed

Wiss
hy

Devishs
HU

Td

Irath

Shedént

a

hs, Poseath

The

engagement

of

Miss

Betty

Dorick to Gary Quinn of Crystal
Lake, Ill., was announced Sunday
at

a

party

given

by

her

parents,

Mr. and Mrs. William Dorick
Temple avenue and attended
friends

of

the

young

of
by

people.

Miss Dorick was graduavcd from
Highland Park Hig’ sciool and attended Beloit college, Beloit, Wis..
where she was
a member
of Pi
Beta Phi sorority. Mr. Quinn, who
is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John
M. Quinn of Crystal Lake, also attended Beloit college and is presently
studying at the
school
of
commerce of Northwestern university. He is
amember of Beta Theta

©

Pi fraternity.
The couple has not as
date for their wedding.

Junior

Auxiliary

yet

set

FINE

WATCH

REPAIRING

® EXPERT JEWELRY REPAIRING
@ PEARLS RESTRUNG
@© SILVER REPLATED

a

-®@ DIAMONDS

RE-MOUNTED

Of

HP Woman’s Club To
Hear Talk On Silver

Corner

The
Junior
auxiliary : of
the
Highland Park Woman’s club will
hear a talk on “The History and
Lore of Silver’ at Tuesday night’s

meeting

Wiiss

Betty

Donak

in

the

Highland

Woman’s
club. Mrs. Howard
Jr. of 1415 St. Johns avenue

Central

Je

and

ot

Sheridan

t

©

HI 2-2028

Park

Will
will

introduce the speaker, a member
of the staff of the Cellini shop ‘in

|:

Official! Watch

Inspector North Western

R. R.

Evanston.

January
White Sales
Begin Friday,

Jan. 2

AKE advantage of these sales to effect
real savings on your home needs.
Anticipate your needs for the entire year.

Every item is of well-known quality from

Garnétt
Warner's

Co.

foundations

to start the
New

Year

right

our regular stocks of quality merchandise.

—

sheets, cases

—

blankets

—

bedspreads

—

table

—
—
—

linens

kitchen needs
contour sheets
comforters

a must for your.

1953 silhouette
1. Satin panel girdle designed
to cinch your waist. 12.50
Nylon
2. Satin

Sn
panel

aes

3.95

pantie’

girdle

with firm control.

.... 5.95

Wired strapless bra .... 3.50

Garnett = Co.
| Thursday,

January

1, 1953.

3.

Embroidered nylon net
ee
waist cincher, boned. 12.50 -

Open Friday nights until 9.

Page 7

—

�ond
Veginia Shar, Borys Scely Wilt Be Sec
Jewish

aN

Z7oWwn

LE

Meal ie

NEW YEAR’S
RESOLUTIONS
300d

resolutions

for

Mrs. Irving C. Schur of St. Johns avenue

1953

are

Seelig of Linden Park place, known

all

over the place; let us hope we keep
some

of them.

Let’s make

to

a

have

wonderful

dinner

Line.
ANNUAL JANUARY
j
DISCOUNT SALE
‘impressive
reductions
at

‘Shades,

Included

unity

ely

are

Silver,
to

buy

Grace

Lamps

China,

and

Glass

some

and

of

those

things you've always wanted

r your own home. Wonderful way
invest that Christmas check, 563
ncoln Ave. Winnetka.

INTIMATE APPAREL
DRASTIC REDUCTIONS
ng

her Annual
Jacobi offers

“mM

January Sale,
many stupen-

-dous values. Women who love to
ok luxurious during their leisure
urs will adore the Quilted Robes
d Hostess Gowns marked far be-

ow their original cost. In Velvet
r Satin, in many luscious colors.
lainty Bed
Jackets
and
lovely
ylon Nighties and Slips.. Many
i-in-one

Foundations,

Girdles,

d Panty Girdles and Bras by
en Jolie, Lily of France, Poirette,
‘reo,

Franco.

578

Lincoln

Ave.

Winnetka.

‘

IT’S LATER

THAN YOU THINK

a

re we are knee deep in January
and Spring can’t be far behind. In
months Spring flowers will start
gudding and you’ll want your home
match them in new freshness. At
» Studio of Henry L. Barnitz are
aany
newly
arrived
Fabrics
for
raperies, Slip Covers, Upholster-

s etc.
lly
m,

Everything

may

be

chairman
.

Harry
Levinson
One of the extra nice things
about the Holiday
Season is
that special, warm feeling that
seems
to stay with us even
after the calendar says we’re
into a new year.
Downtown there’s still an air
of festivity that happily manages
to
break
through
the
stern, businesslike atmosphere
of Loop offices.
You hear people on the bus

telling what

ident

DISCOUNT

Mrs.

play

Ave.

shop

and

their kids did on

furnishings
&gt;

over

for

for

your

. The
pp.
as

Ravinia

START

_

own

prices
THE

*

embroideries,

old textiles

early

prints

and

deries,

bringing

early

American

French
with

her

embroiexamples

of each.
Mrs. James W. Pugh, luncheon
chairman, has announced that reservations may be made with Mrs.
Fred H. Okey, HI 2-1116, or Mrs.
No
A. Judson Wells at HI 2-3459.
after
taken
will be
reservations

tomorrow

the

for

night

12

home

F.
At 12:45 p.m. Mrs. William
chairman,
literature
Einbecker,
Jerry Schmal,
Miss
present
will
book reviewer, who will give her
version of Edna Ferber’s new bestThe book tells the
seller “Giant.”
love story of Bick Benedict, owner
(Continued

on page

19)

FOOD

MART

wish you a

or

for

NEW

A

past, that we can truly count
our blessings.
“Good
Will
Toward
Men”
was, I’m sure, not meant to be
a seasonal thing. The most generous gift we have to give is a
smile and a cheery word. And
these we can give every day
throughout the year.
On behalf of the entire staff
of Levinson’s and myself, may
we wish you the very best of
everything
for
the
coming

Good Health and Happiness to You
We look forward to another year of service and
thank you for your consideration and patronage.

RING OUT
THE OLD YEAR

ONLY

Synagogue
Suburban
At North
ed in
Beth El, courses will be offer

....

Edgar E. Siskin.
A workshop in

Our

Lipis
Practices” by Rabbi Philip L.
Temoe
Glenc
the
at
given
will be
le.

” The courses offered at the Evaneleston synagogue include, Torah,
ew
mentary and intermediate Hebr
Beliefs”

by

given

will be

Polish.

David

Rabbi

“Understand-

series,

a lecture

Cars Collide On
Green Bay Road

cen-

in the

stopped

had

Roger

265

Lasman,

Paul

that

and

Williams,

to
prior.
intersection
ter of the
road.
Bay
Green
onto
left
ng
turni
When he pulled onto Green Bay

the horn,

blew

Anderson

Mr.

road

Boy Uninjured
Fall From

In

Auto
Jones,

2,

uninjured

was

Barberry

333

af-

Saturday

the

richly

on

you

de-

the

apparently

seat

door
Turn

serve.
We
would consider
it an honor to

handle

and

the

Want-ad

to

pulled

tumbled

on
out.

section

Be

'|."Hard-to-find” items there at moneysaving

be of service in
any way poss-

prices!

MOSER

ible.
Once
again,
Happy
New Year.

finest

SECRETARIAL

Four Months (Day)
INTENSIVE COURSE
for college women

Send

Your

Dry Cleaning
Laundry.

With

Your

A new
day in
East

34 Family Finish Specialists
Above

illustration
DIAMOND

approx.

Y

for Over

size.

NECKLACE

195 Baguette Diamonds
1.60 Cts.
51 Round Diamonds
2.89 Cts.
4 Marquise Diamonds
1.09 Cts.
All-Platinum
Mounting
Original Value $8,000 Price $4,800

the finest. When we return we find
Fido in good health and spirits,
df so glad to see us. (Absence
e

4

_, . Your .house: of jewels
Jewelry from $50 to $150,000

begins
month.

Jackson

on

the

T

free

first

Blvd., WAbash
Chicago

Mon-

2-7377

ot a

Century.
‘taAunwory

°

Servics

Skokie Valley
LAUNDRY

akes.the heart grow fonder, even

a Quarter

class
each

Bulletin
57

ONCE

Wakefield

a

and

Judaism

lecture series, “Understanding

happiness

so

YEAR

HI

Rabbi

by

year brings you

all the joy and

BUICK

Ave.

Jewish Movements;
series, “Understand-

Environment”

Our

ing

He-

intermediate

and

elementary

brew, Modern
and a lecture

ternoon when he fell from an auto
driven by his mother, Mrs. E. J.
Jones. The car was traveling about
five miles an hour on Barberry, police said, when the boy, standing

mn a vacation ‘we tucked Fido in the

Park

The

Evanston.
Synagogue,
Free
s are
tion
rega
cong
three
These
In
cooperating in an innovation
feah
whic
es
studi
sh
adult Jewi
tures discussions on the theme,
‘Understanding Judaism.”

since there was not enough room
Police said Mr. Lasman
to pass.
evidently did not see the other auto
and the collision resulted.
Neither driver was hurt.

Here’s
hoping
the coming

a

and took him with us. Never
gain! He wasn’t happy’ about: it
nd neither were we. Ever since
time we leave our. precious
Dog
at
Butterworth
Kennels,
here the Boarding facilities are

Israel,

Emet,

Beth

and

William

you.

ar

Rath

Congregation

Glencoe,

road,

One day; when we were ‘going away

2810

Shore

North Suburban Synagogue
Beth El, Sheridan road; North

post that William J. Anderson, 1504
Glencoe avenue, was driving north
at 4:15 p.m. on Green Bay road,

. WE TOOK OUR DOG ALONG

dogs).

will begin

to
Minor damage was reported
Green
on
ed
collid
which
cars
two
ams
Bay road, at the Roger Willi
recrossing Christmas day. Police

is

.

the

at

Tuesday

studies

ing Our

SUNSET

_‘First St. HI 2-4800. -

th

of the
term
second
The
Jewish
of
nar
Semi
e
Shor
h
Nort

and

which

delight

will give you

AND

p.m.

luncheon.

nm attention and service. Quick deV
on your favorite model. 1732

ONCE

and

All of us at

eventful if you have a beautiful
new Buick at your command. The
places you can go—near and far—
the things you can see, the fun you
_@an have. Buick gives the utmost in
ower, room, and comfort. KleeBuick

*

will
introduce
as guest
speaker,
Mrs. B. B. Dahlquist, owner of the
Ho-Ho shop in Chicago. Mrs. Dahl-

_ ‘The year of 1953 will be happy and

irg

will

from

on

beau-

Station).

RIGHT—WITH

Waltz

will talk

beautiful

home

will

Mrs. Seelig

and

| Mrs. David Sanders, chairman, who

ing” to folks you’ve passed by

and rush of shopping

and

March

in the building dozens of times
before.
This is certainly a wonderful thing, especially in the city
where we too often forget the
little acts of neighborliness.
So if I can put my bid in for
my favorite time of the year,
lll take the “day after” the
Holidays. It is then, when the

hurry

will

meeting.

Schur

the

club,

The
10:30
am.
session of the
Collector’s
Study
group
of
the
Woman’s club is to be directed by

ve been decidedly reduced. In
s large selection you’re certain
to find many items you'll want to
guy

Woman’s

quist

Seminar

Starts Tuesday

St. Johns

the

the

the

*

Christmas
morning.
Pretty,
young
salesgirls
dreamingly
reminisce
about
their
New
Year’s Eve parties.
Why, you even find yourself
speaking to strangers on the
train and saying “good morn-

SALE

at 729

look

professionally as Virginia

club.

Rachmaninoff’s Second Suite. Jean
(Mrs.
George
Webster)
| Webster
will be the narrator for their second
number,
Saint Saens’
‘“Carnival of the Animals.”
The narrative was written by Ogden Nash.
Milhaud’s
“Scaramouche”
will
close the program.

WORTH KNOWING ABOUT
ou must go into Edith Saletra’s

attractive

of

conduct, the

made
in their own
work
or
buy
materials
by
the
A

of the

Mrs.
Harry
Temple,
program
chairman,
will introduce the artists, and Mrs. Clinton Fritsch, pres-

yard. 912 Linden Ave. Winnetka.
i

and Mrs. Arthur

Schur and Dorys Seelig, will give a duo piano recital next
Tuesday at 2 p.m. in the Woman’s club. Mrs. Schur is music

a resolu-

ind
a pleasant
evening
at Villa
foderne very often. Such evenings
go toward making life happier. The
a is a splendid place for hava delicious lunch, too. Open
the year ’round. Skokie at Coun-

ings.

Teheae 4 Chat gearee! Tuesday

Term Of

“Where

&amp;

DRY

CLEANERS,

@ Never enough Gibbs-trained
secretaries to meet the demand.
Courses for high school and
private
school
graduates
and
college women.
Five-school personal placement service.

INC.

Your Clothes Stay Young”
Main Office and Plant

Highland Park 2-3310 — Deerfield Call Enterprise 1616
512-518 Waukegan Ave., Highwood

Catalog: Executive Dean
51 E. Superior St., Chicago 11
DE 7-3306
Other Gibbs Schools: New York

Boston

739-43 North Clark Street, Chicage

t

Montclair, N,J;

Providence

�Capt. Carr’s Ship in Dock

Mr.

of

ton,

D.

hotel, Chicago.

is a senior

C.

at the

Milletts Have

Mr.

Daniel

Houseguests

his mother,

Mrs.

Jane

for

their

home

in

their

Allen,

5%,

and

The
Robert
Clarks
will
leave
soon for their home in Whitefish
Bay,
Wis.,
after their
Christmas
and
New
Year’s
visit here
with

Mrs. Clark’s parents, the Lawrence
F. McClures.
of Woodland
road.
With them is their young daughter, Cathleen.

That

Special

Occasion

RENT A
MINK COAT
CAPE,

STOLE

OR

JACKET

We carry a separate and complete stock for rental purposes.
For

IN CUSTOM MADE
e

IMMACULATE
vor

wen,

Rt. Rev. Msgr.

Joseph
Pastor

RY

.

SUITS

@ DRESSES

CONCEPTION CHURCH
Deerfield

For

WE SPECIALIZE

» COATS

Roads

P. Morrison

@

EVENING

—

Rev.
Rev.

Donald
B. Runkle
Bernard
E. Burns
MASSES
Sundays—6:15,
7:30, 9:00, 10:00,
1:00 and 12 noon
Holy Days—6 a
8:00, 9:00,

Weekdays—6:15, 8:15
CONFESSIONS
Saturdays,
Eves. of First Fridays and
Holy Days 4:00 and 7:30 p.m.

EA

WE,

R

ALTERATIONS

—

Sther

Needle

1866 Sheridan

I

Information Phone
ANdover 3-5512

Kevin

645

Central

Mr. and Mrs. William Anderton
Harris of 1267 St. Johns avenue
are the parents of a daughter, born
Sunday at Highland Park hospital.

Kansas

Avenue

——

oN

~

aL
Me

I

the North Shore
it’s Chandler’s
U

|
||

for all your
Office Supplies!

oe

store for boys
Highland Park

Evanston

Famous for Beautiful Shirts

JANUARY

CLEARANCE

SALE

steel

Broken sizes and colors

Brown

and

Houndstooth

rayon

acetate

check

Surcoat

with

outer shell with

eae

Sizes 8 to 12
14 to 20

fur

quilted

collar

wool
Was

DYNEL

lining.

$ 9.99

18.75

11.99

eto.

ment.

Now

$15.95

steel files

Surcoat in Brown and Blue Checks with all wool quilted lining—fur collar.
Outer shell of nylon and rayon acetate.
Was
Now

Sizes 8 to 12
14 to 18

Da, fe
Bd ce ae

Waist length jacket in nylon
Shirred waist band—2 button
lining.

Brown

or

$16.50

Now

Our White
items

on

Polo shirts—short
ends.
JANUARY

AND

Big,

$11.99
13.99

acetate

gab.

Wernicke,

shell.

collar—quilted

white
cotton

wool

$11.99

FEBRUARY

elephant

inventory

bargain

table—

shirts—sweaters—odds

STORE

HOURS—9:30

and

to

[ts Comilt

5:30

daily — Closed all day Wednesday.

672 Central Ave., Highland
624

Davis
The

Only

oy,

Stores

on

the

North

(ils,

ERIDA

Park

HI 2-6240
UNiversity 4-6240

St., Evanston
Shore

Exclusively

for

sling

CLEARANCE

ANS

Boys

Soe tae
ed

ne.

WM. RUEHL
&amp; CO.

SALE

Closed for Inventory January 5th &amp; 6th
N.

Western

Lake

Forest

500

2168
oo

650

Thursday, January 1, 1953
ce.
ee ¥
i

i

sek

husky

files
come

of top-quality
in 2, 3, 4-drawer

steel

are

by

Globe-

sizes for legal and

letter filing. The wrap-around construction gives years
of trouble-free and dependable service.

Elephant Sale

our

sleeve

rayon

cuff—fur

Navy.

Was

Many

and

$16.75
19.95

;

Superbly designed Globe-Wernicke desks offer efficient working areas, lasting construction and a wide
range of styles to perfectly suit every business require-

JACKETS

WINTER

desks

HI

Park Ave.
2-4240

forms

Chandler’s own inventory form has been tested for
years, found to be the finest! In pads of 100 sheets
of 914” x 12” size punched with five holes. There is
space for 28 listings on the front and 33 on the back.

other needs for your
new business year
Letter-size transfer files of corrugated
board store all inactive records.
Account books in many styles.
Columnar

pads

fibre
ES

(2 to 18 column).

Columnar books, wide range.
Fine-quality file folders, letter &amp; legal size.
Sturdy post binders.
1952 Desk Calendars.
Letter size box file of heavy binders’ board,
indexed A-Z for quick reference.
|

—

2-7118 |

~“—7

City, Mo.

as

Party

Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Nathan
of
DeTamble
avenue
celebrated
their 13th wedding anniversary at
a Christmas Eve party. The Nathans served a buffet supper for their
friends.

Harris

Millett, his aunt, Miss Eleanor McKeown, who have been visiting over
the holidays.
They will leave Sat-

urday

Nowinson

had

Give Anniversary

James, 20 months.
Mr. and Mrs. George Murphy of
Waukegan are the paternal grandparents and the Ernest Wests of
St. Petersburg, Fla., are the maternal grandparents.

Dr. and Mrs. Henry S. Millett of
Central
avenue
have
as
their

houseguests

Richard

road

Mr. and Mrs. Peter Murphy of
2669 Waukegan
avenue announce
the birth of their first daughter,
Peggy Ann, Saturday at Highland
Park hospital. They have two sons,

Washing-

university.

Mrs.

Bay

Murphy

John
Cleary,
son
of Mrs.
M.
Ralph Cleary of Sheridan road
is
president of the Chicago Club
of
Georgetown university, which
gave
a Christmas dance Monday night

in the Pearson

and

Green

guests during the Christmas holidays,
Mrs.
Nowinson’s . mother.
Mrs.
M.
E. Louisell
of
Duluth
Minn., and her brother, Dr. Charles
Louisell of the U. S. Naval academy at Annapolis, Md.
On
Saturday
another
of
her
family, David Louisell of Minneapolis, arrived in town to attend the
annual law school professors’ con
vention
at the
Edgewater
Beach
hotel.

College Club Gives Dance

Cleary

Robert Clarks Here
As Guests Of McClures

ee The Richard Nowinsons
Have Christmas Guests

Capt.
Stanley
W.
Carr,
USN,
returned recently from the Korean
area to Long Beach, Calif., where
he was met
by
Mrs.
Carr.
The
Carrs, who were married in Washington, D.C., last spring, will have
six ‘weeks
in California
together
before Capt. Carr sails for Hawaii.
He
is skipper of the “Bellatrix”
and
has
served
two
and a half
years in the navy since being recalled to active duty. He is the son
of Mrs. Albert J. Carr of Lincoln
avenue.

�Dr. Percy Julian
To Be Speaker At
Hadassah Tithe Dance

icals, soya products division, of The

Speaker at North Shore Hadassah’s annual Tithe Dinner dance
January 11 in Allgauer’s Fireside
Restaurant,
Lincolnwood,
will be

Park,
many

versary

of

the

sending

sah’s first medical
Today
Hadassah’s

stands
three

on

Mt.

of

team to
medical

Scopus,

physicians

anni-

HadasIsrael.
center

and

were

sixty-

graduated

To you... . beautifully
groomed.
And you can be

WE WISH YOU
A HAPPY,

— every day in the year —

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Program chairman of the event
is Mrs. Henry Bogoff of Ivy lane.
Mrs. David L. Shapiro of Broadview avenue is president of North
Shore Hadassah. Chairman of the
dinner
dance
is Mrs.
Alexander
Siegel of Glencoe.

birth

scount
SeasonbyalAmerica’s Di
Leading
... Duracleaning

sity. The

Mrs. Daniel A. Weiss of
avenue
announce
the

of a daughter

Highland

MUTUAL GOAL

No matter what you want to buy
or sell you'll find the Want-Ad section your best market place.

New

Mr. and
175 Cary

ed

e g's

the

Sciences.
He
holds
a Phi
Beta
Kappa key from DePauw univer-

Weiss

hist as
;

with beautifully fresh, spotfree clothes . . . the way we
send them back whenever
you have us clean them.
Thoughtful handling, inexpensive rates.
Inquire this
week,

and

Park

last Friday

at

hospital.

Now

That

Are

Forty

You

Of course you don’t feel any
different than you did at thirty-eight or even thirty. Maybe you don’t really, but your
bodily processes are changing
or

Mrs. Henry Bogoff of Ivy lane, left, and Mrs. David L.
Shapiro of Broadview avenue, North Shore Hadassah president, are assisting with plans for Hadassah’s annual Tithe
dinner dance January 11 at Allgauer’s Fireside restaurant,
of the
Mrs. Bogoff is program chairman
Lincolnwood.
L.
Percy
Dr.
scientist,
the
by
talk
a
event which will feature

shortly.

be

will

From forty on yearly health
examinations will materially
aid your health for the years
ahead.
Regular
professional
advice
for
both
men
and
women
means
help over
a
difficult period of life.

Julian.
Milwaukee

There are many fine drug
products your doctor can prescribe should medicine be required.

Selmer

NG.

*

taken

By selecting a pharmacist
of proven ability you assure
oo
of expert
medicaion.

SEE
Our full column
ad in January
HOUSE BEAUTIFUL

—

|

Gsell

Billingsley,

Highland

Saturday

Park

morning

1206

Wis.,

after

was

hospital
he

was

in-

jured when his car rolled over him

Adolph Frankel
Recognized For
Service Record
Highland
Parker Adolph
Frankel, northwestern district manager
of the Westinghouse Electric corporation lamp division, has been pre-

he \sented with a 35-year service pin by

as

road

Bay

at 1843 Green

Earl W.

Is

Milwaukee,

to

been: Fred T. Whiting, vice president of
visiting here over Christmas.
It the organization. He has served in
various capacities during his career
was known
he received leg cuts,
with Westinghouse, and was honand as of Monday was still hospiored during World War II for his
talized.
work with uranium in the developloaded

pe 8

aaetieaien

department stores.

L.

Chandler,

W orld-wide
Service

Visitor

Injured In Mishap

&amp; Co.

Pharmacists—

the car trunk.

He

had

ment of the atom bomb.
Mr. and Mrs. Frankel reside at
260 Lakeside place with their two
children, Jane and Dick. He is a
vice president and member of the
board
of trustees
of the
North
Shore Methodist church in Glencoe,

Do you know
the inside story

The finest upholstery, orientals, carpeting, twists . . . and
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even

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@

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@

Duracleaning IS CONVENIENT: Furnishings
cleaned by professional Duracleaners in your
home. Use again same day.

@

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Highwood, Ill.

humps,
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the

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to

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shoe
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JOHN B. NASH CO.
1891 Sheridan, Highland Park
Thursday,

January

1, 1953

PS

distinguished service awards,
The dance marks the 35th

Glidden company, is a member of
American Chemical society, American Association for the Advancement of Science, Beta Kappa Chi,

Bennet

Dr. Percy L. Julian of Oak
scientist, who has received

Aid Hadassah Tithe Dance Plans

this year from the school there, the
first in
Jewish history.
Dr. Julian, who is director of research and manager of fine chem-

�Ee

PET
Ta
Prey ee Ms

Se ge
Og sm

a er
OR o a

ee
renee

ROR TS TT ee
Me PATER Mala

Re

eee

ee

reo

AES

Students At Western School
Are Home For The Holidays

West

Pointer

Cadet

Highland
Parkers
Annabeth
Sears and Nancy Kelly, students at
Loretto
Heights
college,
Denver,
Colo., are spending the Christmas
holidays with their parents. Miss
Sears, who is in her third year, is
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Weyland D. Sears of Central avenue.
A sophomore student, Miss Kelly
is the daughter of the
John
C.
Kellys of Roslyn circle. They will
return to school Monday.

Mr.
of

Fred

and
Gray

from

ERR

PRGAT AD GE OREN Cee
n (ELT
aa Rae owePES

West Point, N. Y., where he is.a

Is Home
M.

Mrs.

Schweiger,

Fred

avenue,

West

al Vargo or here Sart
LO nae A
PRT
eg
SET

Point

is

H.
home

Military

son

of

Schweiger
on

leave

academy,

third year
the honor

man and a member
committee. Cadet Sch-

weiger will return

to his studies to-

day (Thursday) after his two weeks’
holiday.

‘

Se:

Pfc. and Mrs. James Nardini, pictured at their wedding breakfast in the Alexander Young hotel at Pear! Harbor,
T. H.
They were married in the Naval Base chapel there
November 21.
Mrs. Nardini, the former Mary Bonamarte, is
the daughter of the Michael Bonamartes of Beverly place. The
bridegroom

is the son of Mrs.

dini, both of Highwood.
while Pfc. Nardini

The

is stationed

Guido Corsini

admission

at

Providence,

Highland

Walker,

Jr.

Brown
R.I.,

Park

of

University,

plans

High

dean
to

School

with

college

students

in

service

at

values

and

Eddy’s,
standards

Baracani

Office

247 Waukegan
HI

2-0967

happiness,

of good

and _ prosperity

for you and for your whole family.
$
8

Service

Ave., Highwood

it record a full year

health,

are

EDDY’S

preparation.

May

where

SPECIAL THIS WEEK
J. W. Dant and
Jessie Moore
2 for

Janu-

interested

...and enjoyed the friendly

always high.

visit

ary 9 as part of his current itinerary of visits to secondary schools
in the Chicago area. Dean Walker
will hold
consultations
with
Edward
Burwell,
senior
counselor,

and

Nar-

S
a
OO
o
OOS
ES Oe
oe

R.

Lucien

there.

Brown U. Representative
To Have Conferences at HPHS
Emery

and

couple will reside in Honolulu

Member

of Federal Deposit

Insurance

BUN

310 GreenBay Rd.» Hi.2:1323

Corporation

eT
of HIGHLAND

PARK

Minbidiateeaig

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HI2-2042
Thursday,

January

BE SOLD

&amp; APPL.
HIGHLAND

CO.
PARK

1, 1953
Page

11

�fee

Tri-Club Gathers
January 8 In
Rectory Club Rooms

3

Ke

crcl ton

Conia

Sos

Members
of the Tri-club will
hold their next regular meeting at
8 p.m. January 8 in the rectory club
rooms
of Immaculate
Conception
church.

December

21

the

club

members

went to Mary Haven, home for convalescents
in
Wilmette,
to
give

their annual Christmas party. Nick
Tomei and his magic were part of
the featured entertainment.

Move

Here

From

Alabama

New residents in Highland Park
from the Southland are Mr. and

Mrs.

L.

David

Crockett

Old Briar road who

moved

of

1766

to High-

land Park from Mobile, Ala. The
Crocketts have four children, Patricia,

and

9,

Catherine,

Wayne,

8,

David,

7,

22.

A high school junior, Miss Juergensen leads the group in
During the two-week school holiday, the Highland Park
decorations,
Recreation center is almost as busy as on a summer day, with such activities as skating, making Christmas
batch of
Another
gym.
the
in
basketball
playing
and
the
use
cooking
to
and
another,
one
greet
to
boys and girls piling in
members
Club
Fun
by
up
whipped
oven
the
into
equipment the city provides for their vacation pleasure. Fun cookies goes
Hanck, seated
club members, Gail Walsh and Barbara Heinz, left and right Judy Winthrop, rear, and Cynthia Listek. Star
when they will
above, make cookies in the cheerful kitchen with their leader, at right, is more interested in the moment
be taken out, brown and crisp.
Ruth Juergensen, at rear.

Using the drill press and other equipment donated to the
center’s workshop by the Rotary club, Jerry Loesch and Spike
Jackson drill holes for the bird feeders they are making.
Magazine racks, wagons and bread-cutting boards are turned
out in the class taught by Frank Sordyl.

Wallpaper
Shown In HPHS Art Show

Printed Fabrics,

The current art show at Highland Park High school by
Ben Rose, 411 Pleasant avenue, features samples of wall paper
with
The

Toye
fare

WM. RUEHL
&amp; CO.
500
HI

Park Ave.
2-4240

ws |

matching
public

is

printed

invited

to

drapery
see

fabrics.

the

designing place mats for friends at
show, which is hung in the corriChristmas in his free time, while
dor outside the English club room
in Deerfield-Shields building. Wall- waiting to return to art school afpaper and drapery fabrics either ter the war. With his wife, Frances,
match exactly or are done in re- Mr. Rose worked far into the night
lated colors, since the Ben Rose
on his first orders and then waited
view of fabrics and papers is to |a few days so that he would not
use them as a building material, 'seem too anxious when
he delivMost
functional as brick or stone.
Today
ered his first custom job.
of them are done in Mr. Rose’s fav- | his business occupies a studio and
orite color, earth tones in grays and work space in Chicago.
terra
and
browns, yellows
warm
A Tinker Toy Print
cottas.
In
the
display at the school are
by
career
his
began
artist

The

Down in the ping pong room, Barbara Andrews and
Charles Dixon, pitted against two unphotographed opponents,

are

tice

among

young

people.

designs

inspired

by a toy stick man;

and

by trees, called ‘Tall Timber;”
one called ‘“Foliation,”
veination of leaves in

showing
earth

The artist won the highest award
in
the

the
1951

wall-covering
Home

category
in
Furnishing Design

competition,
sponsored
by
the
American
Institute of Decorators,
besides taking two other awards in
the show, the greatest number received by any decorator in a single
year.
Scheduled for future exhibit at

the high school, under the art committee of the PTA, are the portraits of William Savin of Lakeside
place.
The exhibit will take place
from January 5 to January 17.

The

public

is invited

to

James Kirkgasser Is
Member of College ROTC

the

tones.

university,
he

ROTC

The

son

James

is

of

active

Mr.
of

a

12

N.Y.

and

graduate

He

college

is
of

preparing

now

G,. J.
road,

of

and

the

enrolled

applied
for the

Mrs.

Highland
he was
where

in athletics

club.

where

company.

Sheridan

school

High

Park

at Syracuse

Syracuse,

is in headquarters

Kirkgasser

mem-

a

is

Kirkgasser

P.

James

ber of the Army

radio
in

science

the

and

advertising

is

field,

His college activities include the
ROTC,
Rifle
team
and
Amateur
Radio club.

attend

any of the shows. Hours are 8 a.m.
until 5 p.m. daily except the Fri-

day after New Year’s Day and from

7:30 until
nings.

9:30

Thursday,
Page

for

available

activities

recreation

other

the

prac-

Checkers and cards, basketball

sharpen up their game.

on

Monday

January

eve-

1, 1953

�| Ws

Homma

Lt

Roger

s

Morgan

Wharried Tle

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Isaiah

Santi

of

Deerfield road announce the marriage of their daughter, Norma, to
Lt. Roger
Morgan
of Glenview
Naval Air station, son of Mr. and
Mrs.. Kern Morgan of Unionville,
Mo.
The

ceremony

took

place

at

4

p.m. last Saturday in Immaculate
Conception church, with a reception at the Woman’s club from
5 to

9 p.m.

Miss Santi chose a traditional
ivory satin wedding dress, fashioned with a full skirt ending in a
train.
She
wore
a
satin
cap
trimmed in seed pearls and carried

a

bouquet

formed

of

white

orchids and stephanotis.
The maid of honor, Miss Louise
Santi, sister of the bride, was
gowned
in _ floor-length
green
faille

made

with

a

fitted

jacket.

She. wore a matching green cap
and
carried
a cascade
of red
Christmas roses. Best man for Lt.
Morgan was Lt. (j.g.) Frank Soberski of Glenview.
The young people are on a wedding trip to Palm Beach, Fla. When
they return a month from now,
they will live on Deerfield road.

Returns

From

the

"Engagement Told OF

DAR’s Seml-onnual
Meeting Scheduled
For Next Thursday

Soak

East

Miss Joyce Lynch, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Lynch of
Prospect
avenue,
returned
last
week from Richmond, Va., where
she was maid of honor in the wedding party of her Northwestern
classmate, Miss Jean Hartman.
Miss Hartman, a Delta Gamma
sorority sister of Miss Lynch’s,
was married to William Culp II
December 17 in. Richmond.

Miss Lynn

325

Central

avenue

at

1:30

p.m.

meeting

will

Thursday.

The

theme

of

the

be “What the Daughters Do.” Assisting Mrs. William Jacob, hostess
chairman, will be Mrs. Kirkpatrick
Dilling,

Mrs.

William

Einbecker,

Mrs. Edwin Gilroy, and, from Lake
Bluff, Mrs. Albert Linenthal.
Five speakers will outline five
phases of activity carried on by
the DAR.
Mrs. John Wilbor will discuss
two schools.owned and operated by
the

organization

leged

for

children—Tamaesee

display

and

The

engagement

of

Miss

Lynn

Erdman to Antonio Jacques de Almeida
Santos,
son of Mrs.
Paul
Warburg
of New
York City, has
been
announced
by her parents,
The Rev. and Mrs. Calvin Pardee

in

the

correct

usage

of the American flag will be discussed by Mrs. Erastus Phelps. The
DAR magazine will be the subject

only

Gerald

Miners

of

Glencoe,

Mr. and Mrs. John H. Warton | ty jy Miners and the Richard }
of Oak street and their son, John|ers of
Jr., left yesterday noon to spend | them.

Evanston

$

$

$

$

$

will

accon

$

Erdman of Pasadena. The bride-tobe is a granddaughter of the late
Mr. and Mrs. Reuben H. Donnelley
of

Chicago,

and

a _ great-grand-

daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs.
George R. Thorne.
A grandson of the late William
R. Tappers of Park avenue, Mr. de
Almeida

Santos

is

the

son

of

the

late Baron de Almeida Santos of
Portugal.
The couple will marry in the
spring.
of Mrs. John
Beck will tell

of

the

Mrs.

Dolan. Mrs. Harris
about the Children

American

Lewis

Revolution

Sinclair’s

topic

and

will

be

the tower and
bells at Valley
Forge, which are expected to be
completed

next

spring.

ABBOTT HOUSE
is the

nocqua, Wis., as the guests of

underprivi-

mountains of Tennessee and Kate
Duncan Smith school in Alabama.

The

to

Mr. de Almeida Santos

The semi-annual business meeting, program and tea of the North
Shore chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution, will be held
at the home of Mrs. Henry Millett,
next

Erdman

the New Year's weekend in

Spend New Year’s In
Minocqua, Wis.

licensed

home

for

the

aging

Health Officials have complimented
qualified operating personnel” at Abbott

in Highland
us on the
House.

Park.
“highly

Centrally located—east of Sheridan Road, it is less than
two blocks from the North Western Railroad and North Shore
Line Stations, shops, motion picture theater.
We are proud of the fine food we serve, our cheerful
rooms, the homelike
atmosphere,
our scrupulously clean
kitchen and our round-the-clock nursing service under graduate nurse supervision.
If you have the responsibility for an aging person and
' seek the best possible solution for that person—call on us
and see Abbott House for yourself.
Ask your family physician about us. Tell us your problem.

ABBOTT

HOUSE

405 Central Avenue
Highland
Highland Park, Dlinois

Park 2-6080

o

ans

Vb

ibe:

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»

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Other Makes

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NORTH

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$

NIGHTS

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IREDA

&amp;

MOVING

AND

PACKING

AGENT

6

OF

HOUSEHOLD

ALLIED VAN

"The Friendly People”

Thursday,

January

$

1, 1953
1d

~ acta x Rid $a accONE &lt;

odin
A :

Rat iAe Bi
Sia:
CL

oe
CEE

‘
TENath TS a

Weiegou
wR
eK ys Ay
ne
ish

ki bg

ak es
fe
7 Rise ere

Sais= ah

hight
eae
a

LINES

GOOD

,

the

�December

Bride

Dorothy
Aud

a

Proohdich

Viotondis

Bashir

Miss Parliament’s
Troth Revealed At

Post-Yule
Mr.

| Exchange

hous

has

Miss Dorothy Joan Froehlich became
the
bride
of
Norman
K.
Barker, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
C. Barker
of Lockport, Ill., in a
ceremony
last
Saturday
at 4:30
p.m. The
daughter of the Robert
S. Froehlichs of Ravine drive and
Mr. Barker exchanged vows before
Dr.
William
Atkinson
Young
in
The
Highland
Park Presbyterian
church.
A reception
followed
in
The Deerpath Inn, Lake Forest.
The bride’s white satin wedding
gown was styled with lace sleeves
which matched the front panel insert in the full skirt. She wore a
lace Juliet cap beneath a
fingertip length illusion veil and carried

a bridal

bouquet

of white

avenue, Miss Jean Howard of Lakeside
place,
and
Miss
Marlene
Pierce of Oak Park.

Harold

Guthman

photo

Best man
for Mr. Barker was
Russell Wheeler of LaGrange.
Both
mothers
chose
iridescent
taffeta dresses, Mrs. Froehlich’s in

(Continued

Mrs. William H. Barnes

J. Franklin Olsens
Are In Ohio For

Miss

Son’s Marriage

Escomes

The James Franklin Olsens of
Maple avenue are in Newark, O.,
for
the marriage of their son,
Gerry Chandler, to Barbara Smyth,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elbert
D.

Smyth

of that

city.

Miss

of

Gulf

March and will soon be graduated

cathedral
at

William
and

extended

Mrs.

2

p.m.

Henry

Her

fingertip
in pearls

U.

cially for her

schools
and

at.

King’s

Pass

Christian,

Point,

Miss.,

L. I.

Dit Petrothal Of
hana
John

ie

A

The

and

Mrs.

Frederick

Tower

of Huntington,

Ind.,

W.

have

announced the engagement of their
daughter, Barbara, to John Alfred

Churchill, son of Dr. and Mrs. Jack
Kelvin Churchill of Braeside. The
betrothal was told at a family
party in Huntington the day after

Thanksgiving.

| Miss Tower and Mr. Churchill
are both studying at Northwestern

university,

where

he

is a junior

fin the school of engineering. They
have tentatively set their wedding
date for September.
Page 14

mar-

Saturday
son

O. Barnes

of

to
Mr.

of Win-

length

lace
were

by

silk net veil

crown

embroid-

designed

Lily

espe-

Dache.

bridesmaids’

jackets,

were

veteen,

set

She
Bible
hand-

dresses

and

honor’s gown, styled
full skirts and tiny
of

off

dark

by

green

ermine

vel-

muffs

and headbands. Corsages of
fashioned
green
leaf roses
fastened to their muffs.

Clontilt

‘/Mr.

last

her

carried a white satin-bound
to which
was
attached
a
fashioned Duchess rose.

matron
of
alike with

he

for

of

netka.

ered

Cadet

length

Barnes,

Harold

from the Navy’s FTA school in
Washington, D. C. He attended the
Marine

the

train,

Alencon

Merchant

chose

at

the

Union

returning
American

handwere

Dr. William Atkinson Young performed the ceremony in The High-

land
Park
Presbyterian
church
where the green and white theme
of
the
attendants’
dresses
and
muffs was carried out in a setting
of
formal
Christmas
trees
gar-

landed in white, placed at the altar
steps. They were alternated with
spiralled white candelabra. A tall
hedge
of white branches flecked
with silver formed
a background

for

the

League

club

club,

receiving
in

the

line

at

Michigan

the

re-

Shores

son

of

Mrs.

Albert

Miss

Parliament

is a graduate

Hall in Kenosha

of

and Con-

necticut College for Women in New
London,
Conn.
Mr.
Hawkes
received his degree at the Illinois
Institute of Technology and did additional
study
in
the
graduate
school
of
electrical
engineering
there.
A June wedding is planned.

F. S. Springs Return
From Visit In East
Mr.

and

Mrs.

Sf;

F. S. Spring

At

of S.

Deere Park drive arrived home by
plane
Sunday
from
a Christmas
visit with their daughter and sonin-law, Mr. and Mrs. William M.

Mr.

Grimm

Hugh

Cheol

C.

Hawkes of Chicago, and the late
Mr. Hawkes, at a small gathering
of friends last Saturday.
Kemper

Kokerts

a

family

and

Mrs.

Christmas
Charles

dinner,

S.

Roberts

of Ridge road announced the engagement of their daughter, Jane,
to

Charles

Hugh

Grimm,

son

Richard Grimm of Chicago
Mrs.
Ruth I. Grimm.
of
Lake,

N.

of

and of
Spring

J.

Mr.
Grimm,
who
is
stationed
with the army at Fort Monmouth,
N.J., is here as a houseguest
of
the Roberts family and will return

east

on

Friday.

A debutante of 1950, Miss Roberts is presently in her senior year
of study at Smith college, where
she
will return
to
classes
next
Tuesday. Her fiance is a graduate
of Nichols college.
The couple
next summer.

is planning

to

marry

Bertles Jr. of Bronxville, and their
young
old.

grandchild,

Helen,

1%

years

Entertain At Cocktail Party
of

Mr. and
Linden

Mrs. S. Henry Foreman
avenue gave a cocktail

party Friday for friends
ily members
in honor

and famof their

daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs.
Thomas
Tullis of McAllen,
Tex., who are their guests during
the holidays.

Entertains

Former

Resident

Mr. and Mrs. Julius Pearson of
1229 Berkeley road, had as their
houseguest Mrs. John Anderson of

Lomita,
on

Calif., formerly-a neighbor

Berkeley

week

of

week

stay

bride,

road.

Mrs.

her son,

the

During

the

Anderson’s

former

first

three-

Stanley, and

Miss

his

Elizabeth

Schamp of Long Beach, were here
on their wedding trip as guests of
Otto Lawrentz of Green Bay road,

In Presbyterian Church

after

them

on

the

trip,

and

son,

Charles, home from his studies at
Ripon college, Ripon, Wis.
Mr. and Mrs. Byron C. Karzas of
Chicago
(Diane
Stathas)
home
from their Jamaican wedding trip,
joined
the
family
circle.
The
Stathas home is on Ravine terrace.

Two Hotchkiss Sons
Visit Parents Here
Mr.

and

Mrs.

Eugene

Hotchkiss

of Baldwin road entertained two of
their three sons over the holidays.

Frank,

the

eldest,

who

makes

his

home
in
Chicago,
came
out
to
spend Christmas day with his family and Eugene, a Navy lieutenant,

junior grade, was here for a week
from Little Creek, Va., where he
is stationed.
Lt. (j.g.) and Mrs. James Hotchkiss, unable to be here for the holidays,
spent
their Christmas
in
Charleston, S. C., where he is stationed.

John F. Dilles Arrive
To Visit Friends Here
The John F. Dilles, who recently
moved to Elkhart, Ind., arrived last
Friday for a week’s
stay at Exmoor, visiting friends in Highland
Park. Among those who have en-

tertained for them are Mr. and
given by Mr. and Mrs. Har- Mrs. L. J. Stirling of Roger Williams who gave a dinner on Friday.
(Continued on page 16)

ception

Hawkes,

Miss

Armour

from a five-week South
tour.
With
them
are

their daughter, Thalia, who accom-

that

and

S.

Sherbano

Of

Clarence

The Christmas and New Year’s
reunion of the Pericles P. Stathas
family was staged in Chicago where
Mr. and Mrs. Stathas are stopping

panied

riage

a graduate

Pinas

Mae

Mrs.

Betrothal

a

lace

*

Smyth,

Ae

Doris

Of |

Party

Wed

a candlelight satin wedding dress,
covered
with
imported
Alencon
the

Miss

Bride

16)

Stathas Family Is
United For Holidays

Shes

a

Weam

The ceremony took place on Sunday.
Park
Junior
college,
Gulfport,
Miss., is studying at Northwestern
wniversity’s school of music. Her
fiance enlisted in the Navy in

Fe)

on page

. Migoines

Parliament of North Sheridan road
announced the engagement of their
daughter, Nancy, to Albert Kilgour

roses.

The maid of honor and bridesmaids wore floor-length dresses of
green velvet fashioned with cape
sleeves with matching velvet Juliet
caps. They carried silver-sprinkled
white carnations.
Miss Roberta Froehlich was her
sister’s
maid
of
honor.
Bridesmaids were Miss Doris Dittrick of
Chicago,
a former
roommate
of
the
bride
at Monmouth
college;
Miss Patricia D’Sinter of Marion

and

Ct

WL

Esc

sf WOMEN

ostly

Laurence

photo

Mr. and Mrs. Philip J. Kennedy Jr., (Mirth Durbahn)
who were married last Saturday afternoon in The Highland
Park Presbyterian church, will make their home in St. Paul
when they return from a wedding trip.
The Walter E. Durbahns of Beverly place gave the reception for their daughter
and son-in-law in the Woman’s club.
The bridegroom is the
son of the senior Mrs. Kennedy of Cleveland.
Thursday,

January

1, 1953

�Reveal Betrothal Of
Fsiichobs

hb

co

&lt;P

toon

untiors

_Anlicipate

Sweeping

iclory

co

e

cores

Wham.

Winters

At a New Year’s Eve party, Mr.
and Mrs. Edmund
Robert Razner
of Stevens Point, Wis., announced
the engagement of their daughter,
Barbara
Anne,
to William
Lewis
Winters Jr., son of Dr. and Mrs
William L. Winters of Middleville
Farm,
Trappe,
Md.. The
Winters
family formerly
lived
on Laurel
avenue.
The bride-to-be is a graduate of
Northwestern
university
and _ is
affiliated with Pi Beta Phi sorority.
At present she is pursuing a career
in
speech
therapy
in
Stevens
Point.
Mr. Winters took his undergraduate work at Princeton university
and is a member of Tiger Inn. He
will receive
his doctor of medicine
degree
from
Northwestern
University
Medical
school
this
spring and is affiliated with Phi
Rho Sigma, Pi Kappa Epsilon, and
Alpha Omega
Alpha fraternities.

Tell Engagement Of
Miss Phyllis Mason

To David J. Nutting
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Arnold
D.
K.
Mason of Winnetka have announced
the engagement of their daughter,

Phyllis, to David Judd Nutting of
the same city. Mr. Nutting, a grad-

While their elders
of Florida, the Exmoor
long as it’s below 32
releases the 44 pounds
the icy rink.

look forward to the sun-soaked breezes
junior curlers welcome any weather as
degrees.
Above, eager Prudy Keogh
of granite that is a curling stone down

By their smiles the game must be going their way.

Polly

Husting, center, skips as Gay Sterling and Mead Montgomery,
with their stones safely in the “house,” watch
what will be the final.score of the end (inning).

Prudy throw

uate of Culver Military academy
and a former student at Denison
university, is studying at Pratt Institute.
;

His

fiance,

is

a

great-grand-

daughter of Col. Roswell B. Mason,
mayor of Chicago during the 1870’s,
and a granddaughter of the late
Mr. and Mrs. Henry E. Mason of
Central avenue.

A senior at Wheaton
college,
Norton, Mass., she was graduated
from

St.

Mary’s

in

the

Mountains,

Littleton, N. H.

Nine Young Men From
Dartmouth Home On
Christmas Vacation
Among
the college students in
the Highland Park-Deerfield area
home for Christmas vacation are

nine

young

men

from

Dartmouth,

Hanover, N. H., one of the largest
groups
from
here
attending
an
Eastern college.
Seven of the group are Highland
Park High school graduates, one
prepped at Lake Forest academy
and one at Lawrenceville.
Richard
Loewenthal,
son
of

the Richard
J. Loewenthals
of
Waverly road, is a senior and this
year’s
nival

chairman of the Winter carat Dartmouth.
Paul
Aren-

berg, son of the Milton K. Arenbergs of Wildwood lane, also a
senior, is business manager of the
college
paper,
the
Daily
Dartmouth.
On the freshman football team
this year are Tony Newey, son of

Mrs.

Graham

avenue,

the

and

Newey
Douglas

Spencer

R.

of
Keare,

Keares

road,

has

ming

and

of

the

also

gone

Martin

Samuel

son

of

of Linden

avenue. Mr. Keare is also
swimming
team.
Another

man, John Goodman,
Jerome Goodmans of

Central

on the
fresh-

son of the
Green Bay

out

for

swim-

Rosenthal,

Rosenthals

son

played

baseball with the Dartmouth freshmen.
Skiing and golf are the sports
activities followed by Jack Frable,
son of the Frank
L. Frables
of

Deerfield. Douglas Glasgow,
the Robert Glasgows
burn, a junior, who
Lawrenceville, is out

is Warren

Peterson,

Thursday,

January

son of

of Bannockprepared
at
for track as

a sophomore,
1, 1953

From left to right, Betty Wetzel, ‘’“Muffy’’ Redfern, Marilou Wetzel and Ann Tighe demonstrate their sweeping ability
as they

smooth

mate’s stone.
ers while

the

the

ice to make a

Sojourn In Arizona
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Christopher Jr. of Melody lane and their

son,

Robert
Tucson,

rink

for their team-

rinks are set up.

R. J. Christophers To

for

slick

The season is short but the girls are avid play-

II, will leave
Ariz.,

where

Monday
Bob

the

Buckles’

Before

California

returning

to

Christmas holiday.
The Christophers will then
north to Wickenburg where

@

CANDID

turn
they

wenoen
eo
a,
.

COMMERCIAL

PERCY

9

710n Ot

H. PRIOR, JR.
PHOTOGRAPHY

Forest

academy

gradu-

ESTHER

599 ROGER WILLIAMS
PHONE HI 2-3199

PERKINS

yw

w

and

:

Her

Entire Staff of

Hair

w

Wish

-p
rr
“
4
&amp;
=

WEDDINGS
@

af

Highland

will

PORTRAITS

Lake

home.

Park,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Christopher
will visit Los Angeles, Chandler, |
Ariz., and Tucson where they will
see their son.

@

and
ate.

Montgomery, left, and Mike Tighe want that stone
the center of the house, so they sweep, too.
There
question as to whether the vacuum created by the
or the resulting glassiness of the ice keeps the stone
What ever it is, it works.

RAALMARAARAMAADBAGAAAADMARALD
AALRDARRA DD ADAM
MAR
for

resume his freshman studies at the||
University
of Arizona
after his

will join
Mr.
and
Mrs.
R. H.
Buckles of San Francisco, formerly of Glencoe, as guests on the
Remuda ranch. After their Arizona
stay, the two couples will leave

Pat
right in
is some
sweeping
moving.

You

HAPPY

Dressers

All A Very

NEW

YEAR

ér

:

Thi
1815

Classique

St. Johns

Beauty

Salas
Highland

Ave.
HI

Park

2-1603

DEDUDUDE DUD BI DUB BIiDe Bi Sie Bee Ba Bee ae ea Ba Be

ee

ee
Page

15

�RADIO

SERVICE

ALSO
BENDIX
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

The Highland Park Northwestern
Settlement
group
will
meet
on
Wednesday at 1 p.m. at Mrs. Bernard
E.
Newman’s
house,
1990:
Sheridan road.
Co-hostess
with
Mrs.
Newman
will be Mrs.
Earl
E. Sproul
of
Green Bay road. Plans will be made
on Wednesday for the coming year
of activity of Northwestern Settlement.

January 15 where they will stay
at the Glades until the first of
April.

Phone

HI

Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Canmann
of Kincaid avenue celebrated their
40th
wedding
anniversary
Friday
at an open house for friends and
members of the family. They will
leave for Reddington
Beach, Fla.,

2-0609

Spend Christmas in lowa
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Caris of
Valley road and their sons, Barry
and
Crane,
spent
Christmas
in
Mount
Pleasant,
Ia.,
with
Mrs.
Caris’ mother, Mrs. George Crane.

The Want-Ad section is filled with
interesting facts and golden opportunities. Don’t miss it!

DX

We

Will Finance

YOUR

Daughter, Jo, Are On’
A West

parents

Mr:
and
Mrs.
Alex
Maple
of
Ridge road and their son, Bruce,
spent the holidays in Ottawa, Ont..
Canada.
They
visited
their families, the senior Alex Maples and
the Charles Storeys.

day.

Mrs.

Golden

and

the

1 ete phone

Park

2-3100

4
S AF
a2
aT

bride.
Goodrich

of Evans-

Miss
Julieanne
Christopher
of
Melody
lane, Miss
Mary
Jardine
of N. Ridge road, Mrs. Charles O.

Barnes

of

Glencoe,

sister-in-law

of the bridegroom, and
Tresch of Woodstock.
*

Miss

*

Susan

*

Mrs. Sherbano wore a Dior-blue
silk brocade costume with accessories of crushed velvet and white
gloves. Mrs.
Barnes
was clad in
Dior blue moire with matching hat
and navy accessories. Their blue
costumes
were
accented
by corsages of garnet roses.

three

Charles
O. Barnes
of Glencoe
was his brother’s best man. Ushers
were John Straub and Robert Vali-

quet, both

O.

of Lakeside’ place, Rob-

Law

III

of

Winnetka,

Thomas Parsons of Evanston, David
MeNally of Kenilworth and Arthur

Typewriter Repairs
Finest work by our expert

Highland

14)

Miss Diane Forsythe of Elder lane,
Miss Judy Bickmore of Beech lane,

ert

Gimble of Lincoln, Ill. William H,
Barnes of Evanston, an uncle of
the bridegroom, served as organ-

fully

. . . and

the

Andrew

page

of Lakeside place,

ton, sister of the bridegroom, was
matron of honor. Bridesmaids were

children, Barry, Gail and Brenda,
traveled
to Miami
more
than
a
Marshall Golden of Linden ave- week ago to spend Christmas. The
nue will join his family in Miami,
family
will return
home
in two
Fla., today for a two-week
holi-| | weeks.

repairmen

of

Mrs.

They sailed December 22 on the
New Amsterdam of the Holland line
to visit many ports and places in
South America, the Dutch West Indies and the British West Indies.
spending New Year’s Day .n Havana, Cuba. Stopofis inciude Nassau.
Barbados,
Curacoa
and
ports
in
Venezuela and the Virgin Islands
Before
returning
to
Highland
Park,
they will visit various
art
and design centers in the East.

Visit In Canada

from

old A. Sherbano

Mrs. Melvin B. Todes of Sheridan road and the Todes’ daughter
Jo, a student at Highland
Park
High school, are expected back in
the United States on Monday from
a cruise to the West Indies.

Marshall Goldens Spend
Christmas in The South

HOME

(Continued

Indies Cruise

guaranteed!

ist at the
=|

ceremony.

The young people will
Skokie when they return
wedding trip to Florida.

live in
from a

Barker-Froelich
(Continued

If you’re
first!

buying

We

can

or building
lend

you

a home,

most

of

see

the

us

funds

you'll need on a 10 to 15 year mortgage that
you pay off, interest and principal, like rent in
easy monthly

installments, insurance

Typewriter Sales
Office machines, portables, adding
machines. Some excellent
buys in reconditioned
machines!

645
Ave.

Central

blue, and
and both
When

Mrs.
wore
the

wedding

from

14)

Barker’s in purple,
orchid corsages.

couple

trip

page

in

returns

the

from

south,

will live on the University of Iowa
campus, where Mr. Barker is completing graduate work in geology,

included.

Stop in and see us today. You'll be glad you did.

@

$1 or More
Account.

Starts

Your

@

Liberal Earnings Paid
Every Six Months

@

Savings Insured Safe Up
to $10,000.

SALE!

Sait
a

NGs

Established

| sEcuRITY
1811

Ave.

I 0 inch up to
12 inch up to

1888

16 or 17 in. up to $] 2500
SATISFACTION

SERVICE
St. Johns

TRADE!

We Will Give the following
Trade-In on 2linch Consoles

HIGHLAND a
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN ASS’N.

We Have Some Real Cash Bargains on the Following:

HI 2-0361

Reg.

The Barrington

Rest Home

Table

Model

a $23900

20 inch TV

Table

Model

$27950

$16900
$22900

---. $34950

' $30950

Enjoy 1953’s Exciting Events

An exclusive licensed home for convalescents, chronics,
cardiacs, diabetic, senile and the aged.
Enjoy home like
surroundings and efficient nursing care.
Excellent meals
served in rooms under the supervision of a dietician.
Private and semi-private rooms and small wards.
Excellent Transportation

One block west of the Northwestern Station
Two blocks west of the Northwest Highway Route (14)
We welcome a visit and inspection
| For rates and other information call or write to the
| superintendent.
BARRINGTON
1410

Sale

20 inch TV

20 inch TV Console Model

145 WEST MAIN STREET
BARRINGTON, ILLINOIS

on These New

GRANT
252

E. Deerpath

a

they

Save

$7900

$5000
$4000

,

Sets

« GRANT,

INc.

Lake Forest 658
Thursday,

January as 1953

ig

AND

Sherbano-Barnes

Mrs. Melvin Todes And

anti

TELEVISION

Settlement

Will Meet On Wednesday

ee

Cronbhits ‘

Northwestern

Celebrate

Anniversary

WOM

Canmanns

�WELCOME 10 CHURCH:

class.

God should have priority on your time.

10:10 a.m. to 10:45 a.m. Froshsoph and varsity groups for high

BETHANY CHURCH
(Evangelical United Brethren)

FIRST

1704 McGovern Street
Rev. A. P. Johnson, Minister
The Rev. Dale Zimdars,
Assistant Minister

WEDNESDAY,

SUNDAY, January 4
9:30
am.
Church
school
with
classes for all age groups.
11 a.m.
Mission band for boys
and girls.
10:45
am.
Organ
meditations
with F. B. Schlung at the console.
11 a.m. New Year’s message by
the minister, the Rev. A. J. Johnson, followed by the observance of
the holy communion.
WEDNESDAY, January 7
3:45 p.m. Bethany choristers

re-

hearsal.
THURSDAY, January 8
8 p.m.
Chancel choir

rehearsal.

{MMACULATE CONCEPTION
CHURCH
Deerfield and Green Bay Roads
Rt. Rev. Msgr. Joseph P. Morrison
Pastor
Rev. Donald B. Runkle
Rev. Bernard E. Burns .
HI 2-0202
Confessions

Saturdays, eves. of First Fridays
and Holy Days 4 and 7:30 p.m.
Masses

January

at

6:15,

1

7:30,

9,

10,

8

Lord.”

SUNDAY,
d

January

and

WESLEY

8:30,

9:30,

9:30,

METHODIST

CHURCH

“The Temptation To Be

EVANGELICAL

CHURCH

Green Bay Road at Laurel Ave.
A.

G.

Masser,

8 p.m.

December

Midweek

10 p.m.
which

Minister

HI 2-1731

WEDNESDAY,

Watch

the

sound

the

31

prayer

Night

service.

service

motion

because there
587, 330).

service.

Junior Christian endeav-

7:45 p.m.
mon by the

WEDNESDAY,
8 p.m.

People’s

Evening
pastor.

January

Midweek

good

is one

God.”

and

(pp.

CHURCH

425 Laure] Avenue
Very Rev. Charles U.
Rector

The

Harris

FRIDAY, January 2
7:30 a.m. Holy communion.
SUNDAY, January 4

7:30

fellow-

service,

ser-

7
service.

Thursday, January 1, 1953

Holy

communion.

Boy

Scouts.

8 p.m. St. Martha’s guild.
WEDNESDAY,
January 7
7:30 a.m. Holy communion.
9:30 a.m. Holy communion.
THURSDAY, January 8
8 p.m.
Parish choir practice.
FRIDAY, January 9
7:30 a.m. Holy communion.
4.30 p.m. Girls choir practice.

7:15 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Choir rerehearsal.
THURSDAY, January 8
10
a.m.
Woman’s
association
board meeting.
8 p.m. Teacher’s meeting, Junior
high department, in the home of
Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Pepe, 127 Summit avenue, Highwood.

“What

Is

Man’s

SATURDAY,
9:30
7:15

THURSDAY,

5 to 8
to 6 p.m.

MONDAY

Quality?”

Morning Worship.
Daily Minyan
meets.

through

January
4 p.m.
January
9 a.m.

Noblest

January 3

a.m.
a.m.

MONDAY

2

Light Candles.
Late Service. Sermon:

Hebrew

through

school.

5 to 9
to 12 noon.

The

GAN.

Central Court
HI 2-2101
Rev. Robert Clingman, Minister
SUNDAY, January 4
1 p.m.
Special baptismal
services.
8 p.m.
Regular communion.

EV.

LUTHERAN

High

Street

CHURCH

and Oakridge Avenue
Highwood
Rev.
Herbert
W.
Linden,
Pastor
SUNDAY, January 4
9:30 a.m. Church school.
10:45 a.m.’ Communion
service.
THURSDAY, January 8
2 p.m.
Ladies’ Aid meeting in
the church.
Mrs. Bertha Hansen,
hostess.

REDEEMER EV. LUTHERAN
CHURCH
741
Rev.

Yhe

Central Avenue
William
H.
Remmert,
pastor

Tel. HI 2-6848
Res. 1817 Green Bay’
SUNDAY,
January 4

9:30

am.

Sunday

Junior Bible class.
10:45 a.m. Worship

following

completed
ments

SECOND
BAPTIST CHURCH
OF HIGHLAND
PARK
The Rev. William Giles Glover
Highwood
Community
Center
428 North Green Bay Road
Highwood
Tel. HI 2-8145
SUNDAY, January 4
11 a.m.
Sunday worship.

To Make Home

486

ZION

By Mrs. O. L. Dodge

FRIDAY,

of

road

school

Bay

road

for

he is serving with the army
in
Korea. However, in February Mrs.
Tenerowicz
and Gitta will travel
to Japan
where
they will make
their home
for an indefinite period.
Mr.
Tenerowicz
expects
to
be transferred to Japan shortly.
A native of Frankfurt, Germany,
this
was
Mrs.
Tenerowicz’
first
Christmas as an American citizen.
She
received
her
final
citizenship papers December 4.
Gross
Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Gross of
.753 Berkeley announce the birth
of a son December 20 in Highland
Park hospital. The baby has two
brothers, Kenneth, 6%, and John,
5’. The Morris Isensteins and Mrs.
Ella
Gross
of Chicago
are
the
grandparents.

and

service.

Green Bay Road and
5
Homewood Avenue
THURSDAY, January 1
10 a.m.
Traditional New Year’s
Day service.
January will be ob-

served as a month
evangelism.

of visitation and

Consistory

and

pastor

10:45

a.m.

Celebration

of

holy

Place:

NORTH

SHORE METHODIST
CHURCH
Hazel and Greenleaf Avenues
Glencoe
Rev. Russell W. Lambert, Minister
Edwin Kemp, Director of Music
Glencoe 1227
SUNDAY, January 4
9:30 a.m. and 11 a.m.
Worship
services.
Sermon
topic:
“Why
Bother to Worship.”

NORTH SHORE
CONGREGATION ISRAEL

HIGHLAND PARK
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Laurel, Linden and Prospect
Avenues
Church
Telephone
HI 2-1695
Dr. William
Atkinson Young,

_

Minister

SUNDAY, January 4
11 am.
to
12 noon.
Morning
worship service, Dr. Young preach-

The

sacrament

of the

Lord’s

Supper.

9:30 a.m. to 10:05
choir rehearsal.
a.m.

department
grades) and

to

10:35

a.m.
am.

Chancel
Junior

(4th,
5th
and
6th
Junior high depart-

Dr.

and Vernon Avenues
Glencoe
Edgar Siskin, Rabbi
Glencoe
725

FRIDAY,
7:45

January

p.m.

ice.
TUESDAY,
Adult

2

Family

January

education

worship

serv-

6
classes

at

NORTH SUBURBAN
SYNAGOGUE BETH.EL
1175 Sheridan Road
Highland Park

HI 2-5787
Philip L. Lipis, Rabbi
Stanley Martin, Cantor
Conservative

Ruth

Marcie

Allen,

RALPH L. STEMPLE
Fuller

P.O.

Box

Brush

Dealer

285—Waukegan,

Ann

Peterson;

a

Tippey,

Greta

Strenger,

Joy

Goldt,

Mary

Marcus.

:

Four
other
requirements
necessary
for completion
of
th
badge and these will be finishe
within the troop meeting.

A second opportunity to pass th :
test at the high school will be
fered
soon.
Girls
from _ si
hrough
eighth
they can pass

juirements
iames

in

grade
wo
think
the swimming
re-

should
the

register

Scout

their

II.

DElta 6-4056

BEAUTIFUL

Delegates from the Lake
livision to the 99th annual
ing

of

the

Illinois

Shore
meet

Education

asso-

ciation, held Monday in the Hotel
Sherman
included a number of
Highland

Park

teachers.

Yas

Miss Isabel Anderson, 916 Baldwin road; Miss Doreen Donaldson, —
1905 Elmwood drive and Welling
ton B. Gray, 1900 Sunnyside, are

the representatives

from

Park

what

has beer

E.

Pease,

as-

of

the

who

attended
by

James

president,

Highland -

“One

eid
long

exai

lic relations, improving the quality
ind numbers of teachers, and ways
and
means
of
obtaining
bet
schools for ali of the children |
Illinois.

If You

Have

GARDEN

Not Visited

CEMETERY

Very Reason able Prices

Green Bay Rd. &amp; 18th St.

Phone Maj. 1067

NORTH SHORE FURTH SERVICE
Funeral
All Phones

ESTABLISHED
1890

Directors

KEnwood

6-0700

936 East 47th Se.
Chicago

night.

IMPORTANT

ve

List Delegates Who
Attended IEA
Meeting On Monday

NORTHSHORE GARDEN OF MEMORIES
THIS

~

office.

The
program
was centered
around problems of legislation, pub-

A Surprise Awaits You

communion.

badge

ssot Important meeting,
he association during its
istence.”

will visit homes of members and
prospective members this month.
SUNDAY, January 4
9:30 a.m. Sunday school.

swimmer

Bock,

termed

ST. JOHN’S
EVANGELICAL
AND REFORMED CHURCH
The Rev. Harold Harris, Pastor

have

require-

Troop 38, Elm Place: Carol Lipman,
Jane

Christmas

the

23, Elm
Louise

In Japan

at

Girl Scouts
swimming

Troop 51, Braeside: Carol Beck,
Lynne Ewing, Kathy Harris; Troop
38, Braeside: Jill Murphy; Tro

Frank
Tenerowicz
was
unable
to join Mrs. Tenerowicz and their
daughter,
Gitta,
15
months, , of

Green

the

Highland Park High school pool.

Susan

HIGHLAND PARK
BAPTIST CHURCH

Lincoln

9:30.

prayer

a.m.

9:15 am. Family
service and
church school.
11 a.m. Holy prayer and sermon.
7:30 p.m.
Canterbury club.
MONDAY, January 5
7:30 p.m. Sea Scouts, ship 43.
TUESDAY, January 6
Feast of the Epiphany.
7:30 and 9:30 a.m. Holy communion.
7 p.m.
Cub Scouts.

ing.
Yofing

both

TRINITY EPISCOPAL

picture

or.
7 p.m.
ship.

is not

at

SUNDAY, January 4
9:30 a.m. Sunday school session.
10:45
am.
© Morning
.worship
service, sermon by. the , pastor,
3 p.m. Service in Railroad home.

7 p.m.

the

bad, for God is Mind; therefore
there is in reality one Mind only,

“Queen
Esther”
will be shown.
Fellowship and a devotional period
will close

Mind

7:15 p.m.

TUESDAY, January 6
8 p.m. Trustees meeting.

FIRST UNITED

I AM;

HI 2-6653

Highwood Avenue and Everts Place
The Rev. Donald Woods, pastor
FRIDAY, January 2
7:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
SUNDAY, January 4
9:30
a.m.
Church
school
will
meet under the direction of Mrs.
Ruben Olson.
10:45
a.m.
Fifteen minutes. of
chimes.
11 arm.
Morning worship.
Ser-

mon topic:
Good.”

great

school students.
10:10 a.m. to 10:45 a.m. Quartet
rehearsal at the manse.
TUESDAY,
January 6
7:30 p.m.
Boy Scout Troop 324
meeting.
WEDNESDAY, January 7
9 am.
to 9:30 am.
Sanctuary

January

4:20 p.m.
8:30 p.m.

sociation

4

Masses at 6:30, 7:30,
10:30 and 11:30 a.m.

12: 28, 29).

The

‘FRIDAY,

Adult

open for prayer and meditation.

all-knowing, all-seeing, all-acting,
all-wise, all-loving, and eternal;
Principle;
Mind;
Soul;
Spirit;
Life Truth;. Love; all substance;
intelligence. . . . God is what the
Scriptures declare Him to be,—
Life, Truth, Love.
Spirit is divine Principle, and divine Principle is Love, and Love is Mind,

9.

THURSDAY, January 1
Masses at 6:30, 7:30, 8:30,
10:30 and 11:30 a.m.

(Mark

“GOD.

11

CHURCH

6. 7, 8 and

7
meeting.

Correlative passages from “Science and Health with Key to the
Scriptures” by Mary Baker Eddy,
include:

HI 2-0427
First Fridays and Week Days —
Masses at 7 and 8 a.m. Holy Days
at

January

Testimonial

Lesson-Sermon
passages
from
the
Bible
(King
James
Version)
include:
“And one of the scribes came,
and having heard them reasoning together, and perceiving that
he
had
answered
them.
well,
asked
him,
Which
is the first
commandment of all? And Jesus
answered him, The first of all the
commandments
is, Hear,
O Israel:
The Lord our God is one

146 North Ave., Highwood
Rev. James D. Gleeson, Pastor
Rev. Arthur E. Douaire, Ass’t.

—Masses

p.m.

That we can better understand
God as we look to Him
and acknowledge
His
omnipotence
and
omnipresence will be explained in
all Churches of Christ, Scientist, on
Sunday, January 4. The subject of
the Lesson-Sermon will be GOD.
The Golden Text is from Isaiah
(45:22) “Look unto me, and be ye
saved, all the ends of the earth:
for I am God, and there is none
else.”

a.m. and 12 noon.
SUNDAY, January 4
Masses at 6:15, 7:30, 9, 10, 11 a.m.
and 12 noon.

ST. JAMES

CHURCH OF CHRIST
SCIENTIST
493 Hazel Avenue

SUNDAY, January 4
9:30 a.m. Sunday school.
11 a.m. Church service.

HI 2-3522

THURSDAY,

Spend some hours in church.

ment (7th and 8th grades).
9:30 a.m. to 10:30 am.

ANNOUNCEMENT

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

AN OUTSTANDING PROFESSIONAL RECORD OF
€2 SUCCESSFUL YEARS SERVING CHICAGOLAND

Pagem

|

�P, atients’

P bho

P, arly

CTetibinds

Mrs. Daniel Gutmann of 246 Beech street was|
Mrs. Ward Gauntlett of Deerfield attends
Members of several Girl Scout troops made
one of the members of the Highland Park Hospital stockings for the party.
the 22 small polio patients at the party.
of
Cyn-|one
Here, left to right, are
auxiliary who volunteered to assist at the annual
Potter of Grayslake. Next to him is
Kent
is
of Troop 32, Daryl Lazarus, standing,|He
Christmas party for the hospital’s polio patients. thia Barbee
;
The physical therapy
of Antioch.
Johnson
All three] Billy
She is shown with Mrs. Robert Bartz of Lake Villa,|and Louise Rosenthal, both of Troop 16.
planned the event.
hospital
the
of
department
a patient.
girls attend Ravinia school.
Sheridan

Rebekah

Hall

Will

Meet Next Monday

Night

In Vicksburg, Miss.

Sheridan Rebekah lodge will hold
its regular business meeting Monday
at
8
p.m.
in
the
Masonic
temple, Lauretta place-and Temple
avenue. Noble grand of the lodge
is Mrs. Fred E. Roscher of Deerfield road.

Returns

from

Service

Tony Bitetti, 24, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Bitetti of 770 Llewellyn.avenue, was released from the
army
recently
after serving
two
years. He was a mess sergeant at
Fort Leonard Woods, Mo.

Hollywood's

Biggest

Ferris,

—

Continuous

Maple

lane

spent

Christmas vacation
Miss., as the house-

guests of their grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. E. B. Ferris. J. Parker Jr.
recently pledged Delta Upsilon fraternity
at
Swarthmore
college,
Swarthmore, Pa., where
he
is
a
sophomore student. He transferred
to Swarthmore at the end of his
freshman year at the University of
Chicago. Ferris is a senior at Highland Park High school.
They will
return to Highland Park this week.

H.

Davis

has

left

for

No

matter

what

you

want

to

Bruce

12

weeks of basic training at Park Air
Force base, Pleasantville, Calif. He
has enlisted in the Air Force for a
period of four years. He was one
of eight men
to enlist
in Lake
county in December
through the
Lake county recruiting officer, Sfc.
H. D. Kirkpatrick of Central aveDavis
resides at 1838
nue.
Mrs.
First street.

Thomson

avenue and
of Diamond
ed

in

Ill,

from

Year’s

Eve

4 Complete
6-8-10

p.m.

&amp;

Dean

elder

the

guests

brother

and

sister-

in their

The

‘“‘New

Featuring

“'Hard-to-find” items there at moneysaving prices!

(10%
@

@

@

Sales &amp; Service”

Offers

Fri.

Sat.

Jan.

You

“Million
Sun.

Dollar

IRON
in

Starts

Jan.

4-7

MISTRESS”

Jan.

Bing Crosby, Bob Hope
Dorothy Lamour
in their latest feature

“ROAD
filmed

Page 18

TO

BALI”

in Technicolor

Brake

Service

@®

®@ Motor Work

8

Towing

FRIDAY,

NEW

All Service Completely Guaranteed

of

Elm

place.

in the basket

TO TAKE

OUT

®©

@

@

Highwood,

Ill.

ORDERS

HI

2-1870

Shore’s

Lake

Forest

Beautiful

Most

2106

Theatre

January

2 thru

CARS
Phonee 1041

THURSDAY,

One Week

January

8

—

Miracle

| of Our Lady of
|

*

| Fatima
|

Mechanics

USED

The

Service

Free Pickup &amp; Delivery Service

LIKE

Ponte

DEERPATH

Auto Service

Factory Trained

Technicolor

Thurs.

Complete
Body Shop

®

Alan Ladd
Virginia Mayo

“THE

@

Dal

ORDERS

Illinois —

Forest,

—

Mermaid’

thru Wed.

Guaranteed

1-2-3

Esther Williams
Victor
Mature
Technicolor Musical

in

®

of

Ave.

423 Waukegan

““"THE STOOGE”
Thurs.,

Mariano

12:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.

Phone

Lake
hit

Eugene,

LIQUORS

every day

North

fun

Mrs.

off for 10 or more orders)

PACKAGE

Lewis

new

Broadview

McDaniels
avenue,
and _ their
daughter, Susan; and the Frank
Tagliapietras
and
their
son,

OUT

(Across from National Food Store)

Martin
and

of

Per Order

FOOD

641 DEERFIELD ROAD

Show

and

Chicken
$] 35.

Deerfield

Rizzolos

THE HIDEOUT

buy

NOTICE!!

Only

Don

avenue were hosts Christmas to Mr.

in-law,
the James
E. Thomsons.
The James Thomsons have a son,
John Andrew, 3.

TAKE

Shows

The

Pleasant

1:30

Midnight

Jerry

875

as

Open
New

of

his brother, Richard,
Lake recently visit-

Alton,.

of their

Rizzolos Have Dinner Party

In Alton

Shows

WAUKEGAN
Daily

of

their. school
in Vicksburg,

Visit Brother

In Air Corps

William

J. Parker Hall Jr. and his brother,

GENESEE
THEATRE

Enlists

Brothers Visit

in

color

“See it! It lights up the screen like a ray of sunshine.
A good picture in the highest meaning of the word!”’’
N. Y. Journal-American
Profoundly stirring.”’
“A rare emotional treat!
N. Y. Daily Mirror
Next Week—-The Road To Bali—Crosby and Hope
Next

Week

Following—-April

Jan. 23 thru Jan. 30—The

In

Paris

Savage with Charlton Heston
and Joan Taylor
Thursday,

January 1, 1953

�with

nard

her

Naths

the

holi-

parents,

the

Ber-

of Hazel

a sophomore
ampton,

spending

avenue.

She

is

school.

"By JOHN REYNOLDS
As one of the greatest years

in

television
comes
to a close we
can look to the past, present and
future with pleasure, mulling over
the ‘‘firsts’’ which have been recorded
during
1952
and_
the

“firsts’’

which

await

along

HIGHLAND

and

so

in

many

Held

other

and

industry,

things

are frequently

that

called

At

far

but

no.

Our

Through

Jan.

8th

GLENCOE
Highland
Open

Dan

Sat.,
Sun.
LAST

Go

Coming

“Lure

Friday,

of

Coming—

“Miracle
Fatima”

Comin

“Plymouth

Jan.

the
of

9—

Wilderness”

Our

Lady

YEAR'S EVE!
Reserve now and come with your
friends to our gala New Year's Eve
Party.
Favors

thru

TUES.

Jan.

Loretta

THURS.,

Young,

friends

simple

the

the

lives

the

few,

Book

of most

and

life

they

are

are

of us.

about

She

was

born in St. Louis in 1905; she
educated
in Milwaukee;
she

was
was

married 28 years
two sons, Charles
she moved
years ago;

to
she

ago; she bore
II and Walter;

Highland
Park 27
was active in the

Red Cross, the Family Service, and
various

charitable

organizations:

she was for two years (1936-8) president of the
League
of Women
Voters of
Highland
Park;
five
years ago she opened, with Katherine Hirsh,
Edna
Schram,
and

Ruth

Nath,

the

Chestnut

Court

Book Shop of Highland Park; her
husband died September 22, 1952;
and she died December 7, 1952.
who

best

knew

because

League

her

of

of Women

remember

her

work

Voters;

in
and

YOU’RE
OF

Toots

as

bookshop

few

Rubens,

called her, ran
shop indeed.
*

HIGHWOOD
THEATRE
Sunday

from

2:30

2-6228

WED.,

1-5

THU., FRI., SAT.,
Dec. 31, Jan. 1-2-3

“THE
Betty

GREATEST SHOW
ON EARTH”
Hutton,
Dorothy

Cornel Wilde,
Lamour

&amp; MON.

“JACK

6-8

Jan,

AND

4-5

THE

Smith

MINE”

ZENDA”

In Color
Abbott, Lou

Bud

WED.,

THU.,

“MARA
Errol Flynn,

Costello

Jan.

stores

as

her

a very
*

Ruth

Roman

good

did

not

merely

inhabit

this earth,

she dwelt in it. It was characteristic of her, for example, that when

her husband entered the army and
she went with
him
to the
city
where

he

was

to work

stationed,

for

the

Red

she

She

was

“doing
Did

the one

that always

something”

a friend

for

need’

GARAGE
HI 2-6861

OFFICE
HI 2-4662

was

somebody.

some

one

to

Toots was

somehow,
who
always
the need and performed

the task. People confided in her.
Did a friend have some bad news
to impart to her friends?
Toots
did it. Did someone need to bor| row courage in a time of trouble?
She had enough of courage to lend.
Did a young writer need help or
advice? She gave it. People — I
was one — liked to go into her
bookstore not chiefly, I think, because it was a good bookstore but
because she always greeted you as

though
day

she

just

had

been

for you

waiting

to come

all of us im the

all

in.

world,

need.

people like her.
There
are
not
many like her, not nearly enough.
That is why her death diminished
us all, and her community. That is
why all of us, and her community,
are the better for her having
passed our way.

John Bartlow Martin
No

matter

or sell

what

you'll

find

you
the

want

to buy

Want-Ad

sec-

tion your best market place.

“THE COUNTRY

Fire Place Wood—Any Size
Louie Tazioli Excavating

there.

She could not leave any place as
she found it but must become a
part of its life, must work to bet-—
ter it.

EHR NEN

a

price on snowplowing

chose

Cross

: TICKETS

Call us about ou r season contract

book-

*

gS HOIRHBNONRNADENSHRERIAU

SNOW PLOWING

can;

friends

she possessed that is not so com-—
mon as one might think: the quality of being a human being.
She

6-7-8

MARU”

has

But those who knew her best so
deeply miss her not only because
of her civic consciousness and her
intellectual attainments
but,
I think, because of another quality

We,

Jan.

a good

community

and

the one,
knew of

BEANSTALK”

Kent

certainly

to be more than a store, a good
bookshop proprietor has to know
what is inside a book’s cover as
well as its pricetag, and a good
bookshop does enrich the life of
a

poorer.

her

as

of

proprie-

Court

about

and

ago

community

much

facts

TUE.,

“PRISONER

this

Continuous ne

Coming:
“BECAUSE

Rubens,
Chestnut

made

The

weeks

Cast

“PAULA”

WASHINGTON GARDENS
HI 2-9787

her

few

Kramer’s

Star

thru

Fine Italian Foods
PIZZA
@ STEAKS
@ RAVIOLI
@ SPAGHETTI

550 Green Bay Road, Highwood

Shop,

and

a

Walter

tor of the

SUN.

For All

(Scornavacco’s)

Jan. 1

MON.

All

Mrs.

Editor:
death

take her to the doctor?

"O. HENRY’S FULL
HOUSE”

Confetti
Fun

@

Stanley

of

Adventure”

6

“EIGHT IRON MEN”
FRI.

further.

THURS.

The
The

it is true that she exercised leadership in awakening people to the
problems
of
local
government,

1:30 to 6—40c
&amp; Holidays, 60c

DAY

To

the

New Year’s Day Matinee

Dailey

Also Our Gang Comedy
Plus Color Cartoons

at

Others feel that her proprietorship of the bookshop was her greatest contribution to the community;

her

Park 2-0605

Mon.-Fri.

An Appreciation Of
Mrs. Walter Rubens

Many

40c to 6:30

Color by Technicolor
Regular Admission Prices

With

Your TV set is expensive and complex .. . so don’t play ‘Mr, Fixit’’
. it will be much wiser to let
our expert technicians repair your
set . . . they will do it quickly and
efficiently. 20th CENTURY TELEVISION &amp; RADIO, 1858 First St.
Phone: Highland Park 2-0341.

NEW

Over

“WHEN WILLIE COMES
MARCHING HOME”

to put an electric plug in its socket!
Many
set owners
who find
their receivers not working quickly
call
the
serviceman
without
checking the obvious. It is a good
idea to check these small things
this

PARK

Special Children’s Matinee,
Sat., Jan. 3 at 2:00 P.M.

out

before calling your serviceman.

Turn to the Want-ad section for
“‘Hard-to-find”’ items there at moneysaving prices!

with Gregory Peck, Susan
Hayward, Ava Gardner

we’re mighty glad to be seated
ringside . . . and to have you
along with us.
TV servicemen can sympathize
with firemen who go out on false
alarms.
Believe it or not, TV ser-

vicemen

Miss Monie May, daughter of Mr.

“THE SNOWS OF
KILIMANJARO”

world-wide teleexpansion of vid-

business

Bene-

Dial Hi 2-2400

viewing more and
more a pleasure.
Ahead are such
great
things
as

use

Leslie

THEATRE

which have made

eo’s

and

ALCYON

the

path of video’s development.
We've
had
our first national
election on television, great news
scoops and electronic innovations

3
vision networks,

Dramatics In London

from page 8)

Ranch,

dict, his Virginia wife, and is set and Mrs. Ray May, 1475 St. Johns
against a Texas background.
avenue, will sail for London next
Miss Schmal, a graduate of De
Paul university, who has previous- Monday.
ly given several book reviews for
Winner of an American National
the
club,
completed
her
speech Theatre
association
scholarship,
work
at Northwestern university
*|Miss May will study at the Royal
She gives a humorous as well as
an
informative
lecture,
and her Academy of Dramatic Art. She authe
scholarship
in
book and play reviews adhere as ditioned for
closely as possible to the author’s New York last May.
purpose,
according
to those who
The young actress expects to be
have heard her, as she attempts a
in London for at least a year.
She
true
interpretation
of the
charis a graduate
of
Highland
Park
acters.
High school and of Sullins Junior
Tea will be served after the procollege, Bristol, Va.
She has apgram.
peared with the Threshold Players
Tenthouse
theatre,
The
Barter
theatre, and most recently, with an
actors’ Equity company in a tour
through the East.

student at the North-

Mass.,

Reata

"GIGI’

—

“STALAG
other

IST

e

GIRL”

“TOP

BANANA”

17”

theater

and

on

Evanston

sporting

sale

events,

at

Ticket Service

North Shore Hotel Lobby, DAvis 8-8282
9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mon. thru Sat.
Closed Sundays

UU

Vitta Moperne
GALA
ant Decor
e New Brilli
e
® Unexcelled

COMPLETE

Servic

ng Rooms
e Private Dini
ies
Part
for Eve

Fireside

ALLLLGAUER'¢ STouhy)

'os a

tee

oln(atee
Li!nc
7200Oper
Every D

eon Fasukis 1,i 1953

PARTY

Where society’s
best dressed men
rent
theirs—
Cutaways - Strollers
Single and
Double
Breasted
Tuxedos
All Accessories

Prime Ribs of Beef

4

DGE—BR
6666 N. RI

RENT YOUR
FORMAL

New Year’s Eve

T
RESTAURAN -6666

MUSIC
FAVORS
FUN MAKERS

DINNER

$575 PER PERSON
Plus Fed.

and

Amuse

Tax

(41)

at County Line

ee

EVANSTON
1718
(Next

Parking

Skokie

UE

INCORPORATED

Orchestra For Dancing

JU rr

B ee r

days

after

of

con-

ERE

Monday

(Continued

re-

small

R RUE

to

college

no

ERE

expects

is ears

tribution.

M SU R RRR

Nath

which

MUGS

Laurie

Letters To Editor

ecnin

Miss

turn to her studies at Smith

Monie.May To Study

Woman's Club

Returns To Smith

eg

Miss Nath

HI 2-4283

STORE

SHERMAN

to Varsity

7 Wa a)

Theat.)

Other

Stores

® OAK

PARK

in

© THE
®

SOUTH

LOOP
SIDE

Page 19

�iants ‘Down Shabbona,
ankmen Hold To Record

76-43,

een

in Tourney

rar ; AeNeneee

Qualifyfy For

Flight a

Second Round
In DeKalb

By Art Weinstein

Play January 8
‘or City Title
The two undefeated teams in
Highland Park Recreation

league,

Class A basketball

Highwood

VFW

and

aven Inn, will meet each othnext

Thursday

at 7:15

in what will probably
championship game

be
of

p.m.

the
the

gue.
_ Both teams are strong offensively and
S

a

defensively

and

the victory

toss-up.

Probable

lineup will include Bob

oor and Jack Rasmussen, forwards
for Haven Inn; Gene Orvis at cenand
Ed
Williams
and
Frank

Fiore, guards.
Highwood
VFW’s
starters will probably be Aldo Caband Norm
Erickson,
orm Gesle, center; and

forwards;
Bruno So-

enzi and Nemo Zanotti, guards.
Next Wednesday’s games will pit
son
Clothiers
mouth at 7:15

Gardens

against
DeSotop.m., Washington

versus

pot at 8:15 p.m.

Kennedy

Garden

and Moose

against

loroney insurance.
Following the Moose
ay, Ravinia
‘meets Beth El

Craftsman

won

in the

and

Suburban

By Pierre Martineau

game,

Standard
YMG.

next
serv-

The
only defeat that the Mermen suffered was at the hands of
a very strong Maine team in the
first meet of the season. Maine defeated the Giants, 51-24, in the latter’s pool. The local tanksters took
only three firsts in this meet.
In their second meet of the year
and the first league meet, the Giants soundly defeated Morton 6015 at Morton.
The Mermen
won
eight out of the nine events.
The Niles meet was the second
straight
Suburban
league victory
for the Mermen.
The local boys
won
this
encounter,
40-35.
The
meet wasn’t decided until the last
event, the 200-yard freestyle relay,
when the Little Giants won.
The local tankers won their third
straight meet in the first home engagement of the season by dumping Harrison Technical High school
of Chicago by the amazing score of
68-6.
The Mermen won first and
second in every individual event.
Highlighting this meet was Al Rubenstein who set a new team and
pool
record
in the 120-yard
individual medley.
He also tied his
old record in the 100-yard breaststroke.
four straight triumphs.
They have
defeated Maine, 45-21, and Morton,
41-25.
They outswam Niles 44-22
by taking first in all six individual

events.

The

baby tankers

Harrison,
66-4.
in this meet was

yard:

whipped

Showing
up
Pete Goelzer

well
who

team ‘pool ‘records: in ‘the
breaststroke and the 60-

individual

medley.

school last Friday night, the
Little Giants downed Shabbona, 76-43. By scoring 76 points,
the Giants

The
following
day,
however,
Evanston shattered both marks by
scoring 92 points in another round.
Because
they
were
successful,
the Giants played a second round
Monday at 3:30 p.m. against Kirkland. They won 69 to 51.
The Parkers never lost their lead
after George
Burmeister’s lay up
shot in the opening minutes of the
game.
‘The
six foot
seven
Burmeister was altogether too much
for the smaller Shabbona Indians.
Blue

Cadet

Team

605
oi, ial acsiece

21%

DeSoto-Plymouth ............ 2444 2614
_Larsons Stationery ........ M27
Anchor
peer
*

Ins. Agency .... 23
Furs SIRE SRE CESS, aa
High Series, Team

Lick

James

die

28
29

772-853-789—2414

&amp;

ae

784-775-775—2334

Series,

. Patrick
- Zenko
High

Individual

186-206-196—588
190-152-214—556
Game, Team

Siljestrom Coal Co. .................... 853

Kleeburg Buick Ine. ................ 830
High

Game,

Individual

Hardware

Ariano

Construction

C.
M.

i

Rs

Fabbri ee
351%
Eddy’s Liquors ................ 2914

12%
18%

My Favorite Inn. ............ 27%
Silver Dollar Tavern .... 23

201%
25

Lenzi

25144

Bros.

Groce. ........ 22%

lighwood Radio ............ 22
‘okie Valley Laundry ..18
lighwood Ice Cream ....14
High Series, Team
dbri Tavern

26
30
34

161%
22
2214
2314
2514

...... 21%

261%

aay
19144 28%

686-695-575—1956

Series,

Individual

Catchpole
. 147-158-217—522
Somenzi
187-126-148—461
High Game, Team

Bill-Bob
Sherony

Inn
Hardware

789-750-761—2300
684-769-711—2164

High Series, Individual
Gore oo
146-164-174—484
Benson
.:..:.:. 156-160-146—462

High Game, Team
POCKOCL 8 ee
a Se
WUSOM 6 ors
a

High Game,

794
789

Individual

A). Stein mets
190
To We
tg
a7: 1t1
Novella Calbri was the winner of
a pair of bowling shoes, awarded by
the
proprietors
of the Highland

Ten

Pin,

including

for

bowling

handicap

Highland

high

series,

of 559.

Park

1514
4.49

Donald E. Nash Returns To
Texas Air Force Base Today

Meativial Coal ie hei
TOW
E1000 ce
My. Favorite’ Inn :..00..4)
McDonald Plumbing ...

20
25
28
35

Airman 3rd class Donald E. Nash,
son of Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Nash
of 1674 Green Bay road, returns
today (Thursday) to Connally Air

High Series, Team
Moran Plbg. .... 849-757-817—2423
Acme Liquors .... 764-836-789—2389

a

base,

Waco,

draftsman

and

Tex.,

where

he

illustrator

in

the Training Aids department.

Mr.

Boulder. He has served in the
force for more than a year.

air

Plumbing

20.4;
au"
14
10

High Series, Individual
H. Mitchell
241-156-169—566
J. Carani
158-211-187—556

High Game,
Moran

POMe

Prine

MMGUOrS

of

Team

oe

849

fy?

836

High Game, Individual
TT OR
ce cee es
Ps RRO
es en
ge
yo

241
214

Mrs.

Llewellyn
station,

Paul

avenue,

ed to the U.

Drack

of

recently

S. Naval

Cabaniss

Christi,

Auxiliary
Field,

Tex.,

for

Cadet

Drack

1233

reportAir

Corpus

advanced

flight

training.
Naval

was

graduat-

ed from St. George high
school,
Evanston, and attended St. Mary’s
college, Winona, Minn. He entered
the navy in 1951 at Glenview and
received
his
primary
and_
basic
flight training at Pensacola, Fla. He
completed
carrier
pilot qualifications on board the attack carrier
USS
Monterey
in
the
Gulf
of
Mexico before reporting to Cabaniss Field.
This field is one of the navy’s
two
Advanced
Flight
Training
bases for student carrier pilots. At
Cabaniss
they
are
taught
to fly

carrier-type

aircraft

Skyraider

pilots

Elks League
Team
Moran

son

AD

Singer Printing oie ks.: 26%
Aeme: Liduors : ...-cccc 26

217
187

Nash, who came home December
24 for the holidays, is a graduate
of Highland Park High school and
of the University of Colorado at
wnne nce werencenacecne

IN
H,

Team

131%

is

Saree ne ce damm ec cee

Series,

Wi
............ 31%

High Game, Individual
OC. Ostennuie se
IM Bowers
ie ee

Force
De new ce wwe wce ee cen cece wwcewceeceeens

das

High Series, Team
Bill-Bob Inn .... 704-633-638—1975
Hdwre.

AS
20
221%
2314
2312
24
28
324%

cae
............

Wilson’s
Robert’s

26
2514
24144
22%

Bill-Bob Tn Asics.
Grand? Bros. 4.20520...

High

_ December 23 Standings

........ 31%

Louise Beauty Salon ....
Manhattan Shoes ............
Esther's Tavern: &lt;..2..2%..
Service Market ................

Sherony

- Marconi Bowling

High

Ws.

Sherony

Naval Cadet Paul E. Drack, USN,

Bus
20°
25144
2414
241%

Rosby’s Wearing Appar’] 1514

Dec. 26 Standings
Team

Thomson
High

Senior Prosperity
Bowling League

Paul E. Drack, USN

es

Dol Ro: 4.
Leeds Jewelers

.... 29%

unde-

USN

Trains To Be Carrier
|Pilot At Texas Base

December 22 Standings

2214

NR

Ince.

three

Paul E. Drack,

Women Of Moose
Bowling Scores

24
2514

Buick

have

and

White

Scoring

Highland Park scoring ran: Burmeister,
14;
Gino
DalPonte
13;
Harold
Freberg,
12; Ed Capitani,
10; Howard Russell and Bill MacLean, 4; Tom
Phillips, 3; Rollin
Benson, 2; and Bob Troy, 1.

2814

Ws

eburg

tankmen

feated boys, including Pete Goelzer, crawlstroker Robert Engdahl
and diver Roger Sheahen.

broke the old record

of 73 points by West Aurora.

ames Thomson &amp; Sons 27
siljestrom Coal Co. ........ 2514

The

26 Standings

High

DeKalb

at

tournament

The frosh-soph boast a record of

set new
40 yard

League

In the opening game of the
25th annual holiday basketball

Robert’s Dry Goods ........
Biagis Cloming 65
Puckett’s Boosters ........
Toby’s Cocktail Lounge
Wilson’s Appliances

December

_

a three

meets

a defeat.

Haven Inn, VFW

_ department

two

ete

are sporting
won

PRS

have

I

league without

varsity

of the

such

(currently

Seventh

Fleet

as

the

used

by

in the

Korean conflict) and the F6F Helleat, navy fighter planes.
Carrier
based aviation is credited by the
navy with 75 per cent of all close
air support for ground troops in
the Korean theater.

Seaman
On LST

Mullins Stationed
in the Atlantic

Seaman Loy A. Mullins Jr., son
of
the
senior
Loy
Mullins’
of
Pleasant avenue, is serving aboard
the USS LST 519. The 519, according to the navy, is unique among
Atlantic
Fleet ships. She
spends

her

time

at

various

ammunition

depots along the east coast of the
United States where she loads condemned
ammunition for dumping
far at sea.
On
her last cruise,
the
519
traveled to Argentina, Newfound-

One
man _ sneaking
down
the
floor for a long pass was the technique the Giants used to score repeatedly.
The DeKalb tournament is testing the proposed
“no limit” foul
rule, under which a player fouled
by an opponent who has more than
five personal fouls, is given the
usual number of free throws and
also takes the ball out of bounds.
Gino DalPonte topped the other
by receiving 8 fouls.
The
Parkers
were
13
points
ahead at the end of the first quarter, 19-6; at the half the game had
reached the rout stage, with the
Giants ahead 40-14.
The third quarter ended with the
score at 59-22. The Blue and white
scored
17
points
in
the
fourth

period

to

make

the

final

score,

76-43.

VFEW Post 4741
Bowling League
Team
E. Fi*

Ww.
30

bo
15

My Place oo
Pa a
ek 28
Fred's Clothing
i ..2353 24
Moraine Service Station .. 24
Shoreline Roofers ............ 23
Oak Terrace Beverage .... 21
ParaGant: Ins, ee | 20
Fanpri &amp; Sons ie
19

17
21
21
22
24
25
26

G &amp; L Bump

26

Motor: Sales:

Golden

Dome.

..&lt;.....

Shop ............ 19
oc.

y by ¢

28

High Series, Team
Oak

Terrace

Beverage ........ 918-837-859—2614
L. F. Motor
GRIOB ocsistchints 897-832-864—2593
B.
D.

High Series, Individual
Milani
201-179-178—558
Paganelli
.... 201-159-193—553

High Game,
Oak

Terrace

Lake
N.

Team

Beverage

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

918

Forest Motor Sales ........ 897
High Game, Individual

BRehrwald

20.38
3 ta
ee

228

E

Paperh co
ae eee 223
O. Mazzetta was the winner of
the turkey.
land, Davisville, R. I., and Mayport
and Key West, Fla., for cargo lifts
and ammunition hauls.

_ Thursday, January 1, 1953
Lien

ha

ak

teh

Oe

Wits che

at

a

They

ie

Giant

record.

ala

Little

lost

asi

The

Game

�REAL

WANT AD RATES
20 words
(For

This

additional

55

Words

cost

1896

the

insertion in all 4 papers.

S.

Want Ads will be accepted up te
In

for Publication in the Current
Week’s Issue

HI

red

&amp;

brick

Robert

Sefath

A

livable

acre.

Ad

m.

home

Lge.
4

bath

bdrms.,

on

667

Lake Forest 2300
DEERFIELD
615 Waukegan Road
HIGHLAND PARK
1775 St. Johns Ave.
LAKE FOREST

bath

Close
gas

on

to

ht.

2

school

and

Country)
Ranch
brick, acre lot.

home;

ESTATE
FOR
(Highland

SALE
Park)

(Improved)

HOME
AND
INCOME
3 apt. buildings in good location;
income, $415 per month. $30,000;
terms. For info. call

ANCHOR
HI

REAL

2-0093.,

res.

gross
good

ESTATE

HI

2-0037

SUNSET
SUBDIVISION
For sale—by
owner.
5 room,
2 story
brick; large screened porch, knotty pine
rec. room, carpeted; attached garage. 6
years old. $25,500. Phone HI 2-0717.

FRENCH
Brick

with

DEERFIELD
and 2 bdrm.

living room
ing

room,

brary,

roof.

Magnificent

w/beamed

ceiling, din-

screen

powder

porch,

room,

paneled

kitchen

H. AND

R. ANSPACH,

Central

Avenue

HI

INC.
2-1212

ONCE AGAIN IT’S NEW YEAR
May the Joy of the Season,
Blessings great and true,
Love and Peace of mind
Bring Happiness to you.

RINGER
457

REALTY

COMPANY

Central

HI

2-6600

;
LOW
MAINTENANCE
is only one of the fine features of this
clean,
comfortable,
nice
located
home.

Lge.

liv. rm. with frpl., din. rm., ceramic

tile bath, 2 bdrms., kit. with
full bsmt.;
2 car gar. A
$16,500.
To see call Mrs.
2-5842

584

or

HI

eating space;
real buy
at
Graham,
HI

2-7278.

BENJ. PIERSEN
REALTY CO.

Central

Ave.,

Thursday,

HI

2-7278,

January

1, 1953

1573

SHAW

&amp;

COMPANY

260 EAST DEERPATH
LAKE FOREST
616

ESTATE

WANTED

PRIVATE
party
desires
to buy
direct
from owner, 3 or 4 bedroom home; 2
baths, 2 car garage, large lot. For cash.
A. V. Noren,
Waukegan, Ill.

REALTY
Rd.,

FIRST MORTGAGE

984

BENJ. PIERSEN
REALTY CO.
813

Waukegan

Deerfield

REAL

ESTATE

1573

FOR

(LAKE

or

SALE.

FOREST)

(Improved)

A BIT OF MONTEREY
This fine southern colonial home was designed by Jerome Cerny and has been given much publicity by national magazines.
It is a 2 story white painted brick. There
is a living room, study, full bath, dining
roum, kitchen, 2 maids rooms and bath on
1st floor. Upstairs are 3 family: bedrooms
and 2 baths. Large screened porch. 2 car
attached garage.
There is a brand new
8 box stall clapboard stable and lot enclosed with rustic corral fence.
Priced to sell quickly
ferred
to
California.

as owner

is trans-

6 ROOM BRICK RANCH
LAKE FOREST COUNTRYSIDE
On over an acre of nicely landscaped
and wooded property. There are 3 bedrooms,
2 baths.
Beautiful
large
living
room and adjoining all-purpose room with
fireplace wall. Gas heat. Thermopane windows. Cork floors. 2 car attached garage.
Low taxes. Priced to sell now.

SHAW
260

EAST

LAKE

&amp;

COMPANY

DEERPATH

FOREST

616

Park)

month.

Inc.

&amp; APARTMENTS
or

WANTED

Unfurnished)

UNFURNISHED
2 bedroom apt. wanted
by financially responsible young Highland Park couple with one 3%
yr. old
daughter; garage apartment preferred.
If you have one available or coming up
within a few months, please call us;
excellent references. HI 2-4105.

FAMILY
of 4 need home; 2 year
agreeable.
Please call Highland
Chamber of Commerce.

TO RENT (Unfurnished)
( LAKE FOREST)
for rent in Lake
very
comfortable.

Forest,
Phone

2-1643.

VET, wife
stationed
as

and
Ft.

milkman,

Carl

3

or

4

Batts,

ROOMS

PLEASANT
portation.

lease
Park

FOR

room

HI

ONE

large
all

APARTMENTS
TO
RENT
(Highland Park)

(Furnished)

busi-

THREE
room
furnished
apartment;
couple, but no children. Call HI 2-2613.
FOR
rent, three room
furnished
apartment. Apply
Highland
Park
Chamber
of Commerce.

APARTMENTS
TO RENT
(Furnished)
(LAKE FOREST)

38

ROOM and bath, furnished apartment;
close
to transportation.
Adults
only.
Telephone Lake Forest 2722.
ROOM
furnished apartment; gas heat
and utilities furnished, $135 per month.
Telephone
Lake
Forest 911.
HOUSES

TO RENT
(Unfurnished)
(Highland Park)

FIVE
room
unfurnished
house;
2 bedrooms. Highland Park Woodlands, near
transportation
and
schools,
$125
per
month.
Call HI 2-2095.
YEAR
round 3 room cottage; oil heat,
screen porch. Immediate occupancy; no
children. HI 2-7174.

HOUSES

TO

RENT

(Unfurnished)

(Deerfield)
NEW
3 bedroom
Ranch
house;
heat,
garage
attached.
$125.

Deerfield

207W2.

room

times;

HI

2-6682.
pleasant

near

room;

LIFE

near

rent,

hot

water
gen-

hot

water

conditions.

plenty

transportation.

$8

hot

a

radiant
Phone

HELP
5

HI

WANTED—FEMALE

or

6

days

experience

is

not

necessary.

at

406

pay.
Apply
Highwood.

a

week,
Green

Reasonable

Bay

STENOGRA?PHER
dictation,
genera!
office
duties,
interesting
work.

General

office

Call

Florence

details.

THAT.

Rd.,

details.

Experience

Northbrook

YOUR

CO.
. . FULL

TIME

COMMUNITY.

CHIEF

With

OPERATOR

AT

1866 N. 2ND
E. DEERPATH

|

or Without

Experience

_

paying half. Also other benefits.
Located in business section within ©
block

of H.P.

SECRETARY
needed
for _. beautifully
equipped
office; 25 to 85 years
old.
Must be good in shorthand and letter
writing. Will need transportation. Top
wages. Call Mrs. Shutler at Lake Forest 3650 during the day o~ Lake Bluff
2333 evenings.

stop.

Apply

Mr.

now.

CO.

Tennis

DEERFIELD
HOTEL

444

MAID

APPLY

TO HOUSEKEEPER ~
DEERPATH INN
LAKE FOREST 2280

=

Permanent
position
open
for an Sa
perienced stenographer; some knowled:
of bookkeeping desirable. 40 hour wi
pension
plan,
sick
leave
and
vacation ”
privileges. Good starting salary.
ent,

FICE,

WINNETKA

2nd

floor,

Illinois.
Across.
long walk.

PARK

Village
street

a

TRICE

Hall,
from

OF-

Winnetka,

trains—no

cation, North Shore Temple. Excellen
opportunity;
challenging,
interestin
work. Typing, shorthand required; ea}
ary open. Glencoe 725.

un-

1200.

bus

DURACLEAN

STENOGRAPHERS

°

Rhodes,

—

Permanent positions with friendly
working conditions. Full time, 5
day week with 15 minute breaks

:

Woman
wanted
to
train
for
fountain
manager.
No
experience
necessary.
F. W. WOOLWORTH
CO.
600 CENTRAL AVE.

necessary.

THE ©

GENERAL
OFFICE WORK
SOME TYPING REQUIRED

permanent;

REGISTERED
nurses
needed
at H.P.
hospital.
Starting
salary,
$255,
with
afternoon bonus, $30, and night bonus,
$20. See Miss Beard, HI 2-8000

Light
Varied

WHERE

at

Call

water;

week.

OF

SEE

CORNER
bedroom in fine home
in exchange
for
1 day’s work
per
week.
White,, middle aged, permanent,
male
preferred.
Car
necessary.
References
required. Call Mr. Hamilton
evenings
or Saturday and Sunday, Lake Forest
3596.
ONE room, kitchen privileges; 1 block to
transportation.
Tel. HI 2-3769
LARGE
room
with
private
bath;
near
transportation. Tel. Lake Forest 1429.
NICELY
furnished
room
for rent, near
transportation.
Lake Forest
2267.

COOK,

JUST

HIGHLAND PARK:
LAKE FOREST: 255

trans-

2-1014.

living

rooms,

JOB

TELEPHONE
OFFERS

east side,
shopping.

transportation;

HI

for

nice

A

ext.

ROOM
for rent, near transportation and
village.
Telephone
Lake
Forest
1213.
BEDROOM
for rent; plenty of heat and
hot water.
Market Square. Telephone
Lake Forest 1409.
all

FOR

ILLINOIS BELL

2-1877.

TWO
room
apt.
and
bath,
everything
furnished;
utilities
furnished.
Furnished
sleeping
room
with
kitchen
privileges;
%
block
to
town.
HI

3

Near

Ine.
2-5180

HI

RENT

comfortable
preferred.

PRODUCTS,
AVE.

PAY IS GOOD ... EVEN THOUGH
YOU DON’T HAVE EXPERIENCE?

room, suitable for couple;
and private entrance. HI

times.

tleman

NICE

2-0085.

PARK

apart-

2-5000

room, twin beds;
Tel. HI 2-5117.

LARGE studio
private bath
2-5410.

FOR rent: modern
apartment, $160
STate

W.

HOUSEWIVES

NICELY furnished home-like double bedroom; ample drawer and closet space,
hot water. Close to Vine Ave. station.
Phone HI 2-0405.

SLEEPING

rooms, 2 bedroom
month. Call Miss

LIGHTING
1548

LOOKING

baby, discharged March,
Sheridan, resuming work
needs

Call

APARTMENTS TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(Miscellaneous)
4%
per

3MALL
OFFICE,
PLEASANT
WORK-{NG CONDITIONS.
SHORTHAND
AND —
r'YPING EXPERIENCE NECESSARY. 6
DAY
WEEK,
PAID
HOLIDAYS
VACATIONS;
FREE
INSURANCE.

DEEPFREEZE
executive, wife and little
boy desire rental of house or apartment, unfurnished. Call Mr. Bauer at
DExter 6-3400, North Chicago.

at

HOUSES

2-4067.

1572

per

LAKE BLUFF 816

485

(Furnished

LOANS

FIVE room heated apartment, near
ness district. Tel. HI 2-1636.

Rd.

FOREST

ment.
5202.

985

1116R

$160

LARGE
room,
spacious
closet,
kitchen
privileges; home atmosphere. Telephone
Lake Forest 3210 days or Lake Forest
1634 evenings.

APARTMENT
near
town;

WELL
BUILT
A home to be proud of attractive cheerful brk. and frame Ranch in good neighborhood. Liv. rm.-din. rm. comb., cabinet
kit., 2 twin size bdrms. and bath. Outstanding, $16,750. Call Mrs. Busse, Deer-

1,

APARTMENTS TO RENT (Unfurnished)

HI

or

Feb.

NICE large sleeping room on
close to transportation and
HI 2-1229.

(Highland

STENOGRAPHER
PERMANENT POSITION

frame

Ample
funds available at low rates on
well located residential properties. Long
terms—prepayment
privileges.
FIRST
FEDERAL
SAVINGS
‘AND
LOAN
ASSOCIATION
216 Madison Street
Waukegan
°
MA
38-0084

acre

CO.

Deerfield

Available

JOHN GRIFFITH,

MORTGAGES

Wilson,

HART,
Dfld.

%

ATTRACTIVE
Cape
Cod;
2 bedrooms,
screened porch, living-dining combination, tiled kitchen and bath; unfinished
second
floor; garage.
Deerfield
1290.

li-

and

breakfast nook.
Second floor has
five bedrooms and 4 baths. Choicest east Ravinia location, convenient for schools and transportation.
Owner
transferred
to
California.
Wants offer.
463

Waukegan

Cod,

AND NORTHBROOK
unfurnished apts.

CARR

701

Cape

and

WANTED:
1 or 2 bedroom
apartment,
furnished; for wife, 3 children. Husband going overseas; desperate. Phone
HI 2-5000
ext. 4267.

NEW
four rooms, private basement, and
garage, $160 a month, available Feb. 1
HI 2-4193.

bdrm.

brick

house;
living room,
dining
kitchen,
2
bedrooms,
1%

Desirable east side property on Lake
Road
with lake view. Approx.
160x160.
Heavily wooded. All utilities in.

1°

(Improved)

story

WANTED—FEMALE

SALESLADIES
AND
WAITRESSES
Part
time
or full
time.
F. W.
WOOLWORTH
CO.

on 1
heat,
Tele-

WANTED: 8 room ranch home by private
party;
will buy
or rent.
Write
Box
E-5 c/o Highland
Park News.

COUNTRY, FOR SALE OR RENT
att.
2 bdrm.
Ranch.
house,
breezeway,
gar., Ige. lot. Price, $13,250.

field

PROVENCIAL

slate

Ridge. Road
Reasonably

GARAGE apartment in exchange for part
time household service; man to be employed elsewhere. Own car necessary.
HI
2-6148.

8

baths.

2

HELP

Bay
loca-

HART,

350

garage,

new

unfurnished
room,
den,

(Vacant)

Cherokee
Road,
west
of
Green
Road, approx. 83x260. Very choice
tion and wooded. Price, $3,000.

REAL

Ranch
home;
very
attractive.
R. K. EBERSOLE
Woodward Ave.
Deerfield 1049

Almost new
lot. $13,500.

ROOM
brick, unfurnished house
acre; near Skokie
Railroad.
Oil
full
basement,
$150
a month.
phone Lake Forest 3280-Y-4.

LAKE

VACANT

on South
section.

TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(LAKE FOREST)

2-0037

‘BRIERHILL
RD.
In Deerfield’s most
outstanding
section
of fine homes. 4 bdrms., 2% baths, lib.,
lge. liv. rm.; all in beautiful condition.
On
%
acre and offered at $47,500.
ROBERT
L. JOHNSON,
REALTY
CO.
1608 Berkeley
HI 2-6200
Deerfield
308
Winnetka
6-3809

1

Unusually good
1 story home
in
especially convenient location and
in excellent condition. Living room,
separate
dining
room,
modern
kitchen with breakfast space and
dishwasher. Three
bedrooms,
tile
bath, full basement with attractive
recreation
room.
Gas
forced air
heat. 2 car garage. 80x130 foot lot.
Priced for quick sale
$21,500

FOREST

About 2 2/3 acres.
in
choice
estate
priced.

1

Country
830

HI

Mrs.

or

attached

ESTATE
Res.,

LAKE

Deerfield—beautifully modern brick home
located on Rosemary Terrace. Six rooms
and bath, full basement and attached garage.

Deerpath

REAL

ESTATE
FOR SALE
(LAKE
FOREST)

transp.

305

FOR
SALE
(Deerfield)

6

HOUSES

Realtor

Glencoe

RENT

2-0093

REAL

pwd.

bdrms.,

$28,500.

MORELAND,

ESTATE

on

kit.,

2nd;

HOUSES

payment.

ANCHOR
HI

Fine

family

mod.

Price,

Vernon

REAL

large

panelled

1

8rd.

ANN

Park 2-4500

for

pine

2 car gar.,
Andruss.

Deerfield 485

REAL

down

CO.

home.

LIKE

Fine 7 rm. brick home in Lake Forest,
$23,000.
Wonderful
terms,
very
low

OPEN
SUN.,
2-5
1089 RIDGEWOOD
DR.

Call any of these numbers
for a Want
Taker

L. GOODFRIEND

(Improved)

Attractive

PAY

2-1834

family neighborhood, convenient to everything; 4 bdrms., 2 baths; lovely scr. por.,
2 car gar. $83,500. Mrs. Kebbon.

TELEPHONE
WANT AD SERVICE

287

&amp; MAXON

1429 LINDEN AVE.
OPEN
SUNDAY
2 TO
5
HOLIDAYS
ARE
HAPPY
DAYS
a home of your own. See this good

Tuesday 4:30 p.m.

Highland

ADLER

ESTATE
FOR SALE
(LAKE
FOREST)

Lake
Bluff—being
completed,
good
location; spacious 3 bdrm. brk. Ranch.
tile baths, 2 car gar., full bsmt. $37,000.
R. K. EBERSOLE
830
Woodward
Ave.
Deerfield
1049

634 Vernon Ave.
Glencoe Theater Bldg.
Glencoe
236
or
WI 6-5152

© The Lake Forester

ask

REAL

May
the
New
Year
bring
you
happiness and prosperity in a world
at peace.

® Deerfield Review
® Highland Park News
® Highwoed News

and

(Improved)

Park)

Sheridan

Less)

will cover

SALE

SEASON
GREETINGS
To our friends we served in the
past and to those friends we hope
to make and serve in the future.

word

or

FOR

(Highland

50

for oniy a. +]
5¢ each

ESTATE

A real opportunity in our expanding
‘|and

organization.
opportunity

Attractive
for

rate

advancement.

DEEPFREEZE APPLIANCE
DIVISION
NORTH

2301

DAVIS

CHICAGO

STRE

DEXTER. 6-340

~

�Reply

by phone as well as by letter

may be made to any Want Ad with
a box number as an address. Call
HI 2-4500 or Lake Forest 2300
Your name,
address and phone
number will be placed at once in
the box of the advertiser.
—————————
HELP

3

TIME

MEN

of 3 years experience;
graduate preferred.

DEEPFREEZE

engineering

APPLIANCE

DIVISION
2301 DAVIS STREET
NORTH CHICAGO, DExter 6-3400

WANTED—FEMALE

BELLBOY

STENOGRAPHER,
experienced,
full
or
part time; modern
new office, salary
open. North Shore Temple, Glencoe 725.
EXPERIENCED _ stenographer-receptionist, general office work; 5% day week.
References. Apply R. S. Hambly &amp; Co.,
Realtors,
723
St.
Johns
Ave.,
H.P.
HI 2-1484.
‘
WOMAN
for light office work; no experience
necessary.
Telephone
Lake
Forest 447.
KITCHEN
helper; also experienced
ress. Good salary. Steele’s. Tel.

STUDY

HOUSEHOLD

Between 25 and 40 years; minimum

DEERPATH INN
LAKE FOREST 2280

WANTED,
companion
to accompany
elderly woman
to California for winter
months;
do
light
housekeeping.
HI
2-3144,

waitLake

2484,

SECRETARY

2-3040.

GENERAL
housework, all modern appliances; stay, nice room. References. HI

HELP

WANTED—MALE

If you are a plumbing, heating, building
materials salesman we have an excellent
job for you. Come in and talk it over.
SEARS
ROEBUCK
&amp; CO.
601 Central Ave.
Highland
Park

RELIABLE
woman
for
general
housework; 6 room house. 2 adults, year old
baby;
no
laundry.
Recent
references
required;
current
wages.
Call collect
HI

GENERAL
housework,
stay,
5 days,
3
nights or steady; must like children.
Pleasant
surroundings.
Neat,
reliable
person. HI 2-6059.

COOK,
white, permanent position; some
downstairs work. Current wages. Telephone Lake Forest 484.
WILL
iease
1 bay
“Standard”
Service COOK,
white.
experienced;
near
transStation to responsible party. Lessee to
portation.
Top
pay,
own room. Tele_ purchase low inventory only. Telephone
phone Lake Forest 2398.
ONtario
2-2370.
PERMANENT
position
for
experienced
general maid; housekeeping and simple
JANITOR
and
maintenance man,
hours
cooking.
Small
family,
small
home;
3 p.m. to 11 p.m. See Mr. Frantonius,
own room, bath. Current wages. RefHighland Park Hospital, HI 2-8000.
erences required. HI 2-0674.
COUPLE
to manage and care for a former residence now used as the headquarters for a nationally known business organization,
Pleasant surroundFOR GROUP OF NORTH SHORE
ings in northern suburb. Live on premises.
Hospital
and
medical
insurance
WEEKLIES
at no cost plus other benefits; good
salary to start. Call BRiargate 4-7500
The man we’re looking for will sell adfrom
Chicago
or Libertyville
2-4080
_ vertising to North Shore retailers. He’ll
from suburbs between 9 and 4:30, exbe a North Shore resident who wants a
cept Sunday.
position
that promises
an excellent fu- A HIGHWOOD woman, walking distance,
153 Michigan’
Ave. Capable laundress
ture, plenty of work, and a good starting
and cleaner, 4 half days weekly. $1.00
salary plus commissions. He'll be a selfper hour. Phone HI 2-2475.
starter. When he comes to us, he’ll know
DOWNSTAIRS
maid, white, experienced;
something.
about
advertising,
but more
near
transportation.
Top
pay;
own
room. Telephone Lake Forest 2398.
important, he’ll know how to sell. He’ll|
own

@

(Our
Box

SALESMAN

car.

If you’re
yourself.

the man we want, tell us about
We'll
schedule
an_
interview.

employees
A-15

c/o

GET

know
H.P.

of this ad).

Write

News.

INTO RAILROAD
WORK!

| TRAINMEN
SHOP WORKERS
TICKET AGENTS
CLERKS

SHORE LINE

Students
with
mathematics,
accounting or legal education or aptitudes are invited to phone for interview regarding possible employment with progressive actuarial firm
located near Lake
Forest. Firm
persons.

If

you

are home for the holidays we would
like to talk with you about your
plans after graduation.
Summer
work is available for a few excep-tional

people.

Telephone

Lake

Bluff 3400 during the day
Glencoe 1485 in the evening.

‘

and

WANTED,
man
for our window
shade
department; experience not necessary.
Brand Bros., 638 Central Ave., High-

land

Park.

Page 22

BABY

SITTING

COMPETENT
woman
to care for baby
mornings, 8:30 to 12:30, while mother
works. Tel. Northbrook
425M.
WILL baby sit or do housework evenings,
wekends or holidays. Book me now for
New Year’s eve; will stay over night
and all day New Year’s day. Telephone
Lake Forest 2882.

CLOTHING

COLLEGE STUDENTS

50

Hayrides

1951-Chevrolet, Deluxe 2 door sedan
1949 Buick, Super 2-door Streamliner
1948 Chevrolet,
Fleetmaster,
4-door sedan, R &amp; H.

McCALLUM

CHEVROLET

INC.

FOR

SALE

MEN’S
Viking
hockey
skates,
$5; size
11, practically new; outgrown. Phelps,
303 Prospect, H.P., HI 2-0262.
TUXEDO, very good condition; pure silk
facing, imported goods, size 38, height
5 ft. 8 in., very reasonable. HI 2-4946.

CLOTHING

FOR

2-7149.

only.

BEDSPREADS,
2 pr. curtains,
plain
Chinese
red,
lightweight,
$10;
9x10
wool rug, grey string, $80 with pad;
automobile seat couch with red cover,
$10.
Saturday
only,
Lake
Forest
2991-Y-4,

MISCELLANEOUS

FOR

SALE

580 LINCOLN
AVE.
WINNETKA
6-3738

HOLIDAY

SALE

595

PETERSON

ROGER
HI

&amp;

2-2041

HI

TWO 17.10x15 low pressure tires for sale,
new;
will fit any
Pontiac
or Dodge.
Reduced price. HI 2-2182.
MAN’S
heavy winter overcoat, size 44;
lady’s fur coat, size 16; Duncan Phyfe
dining table; No. 145 G.E. electric portable radio. Very reasonable. HI 2-1014.

FOR

ANCHOR

LOST: Small reptile purse; contains dog
tags, charge plates, ring and money.
Reward for return of same. HI 2-3738.
LOST:
Circular handbraided
rug, about
2 yards
in diameter, Dec. 23rd. Call
HI

2-4832.

WE lost our Basset hound last May; recently he has been seen in Highland
Park. He is brown with white chest.
We will pay $50 reward for his return.
Call Kenilworth
3202.
DALMATIAN,
female, 1 year old; lost
Sunday,
vicinity
of Washington
and
College roads. Name tag “Frolic.” Reward. Telephone Lake Forest 2706.

USED
tires,

VISIT YOUR
OWN
HIGHLAND
PARK
’ Trading Post. We sell furniture, brica-brac
&amp;
clothing.
1813
St.
Johns.
Tel. HI 2-2744.
FULL.
size
Westinghouse
stove
with
double oven, in excellent condition; a
bargain at $100. Phone HI 2-0291.

AUTOMOBILES
1949

new

convertible,
top,

new

maroon;

seat

covers,

new battery, heater, radio. Only 26,000
miles; excellent
condition.
Tel. Lake
Forest 2620.

WE PAY TOP PRICES
FOR YOUR OLD CAR
REGARDLESS OF AGE
ALL

$5 DOWN
PRE-WAR

CARS

PLENTY OF LATE MODELS
TO CHOOSE FROM

HALE MOTOR SALES
18TH AND SHERIDAN
NORTH CHICAGO
DEXTER 6-2358

hanging.
or

and

Res.

BUSINESS

FAST —

—_—

PIANO

TUNING

PLANTS

HAVE

BULBS
Reliable

plants

for

169 Wash.
516.

a

wood

shingle

roof?

Cal)

your
“Roof
Treating
for
its
proper
treat.

Free

inspection

and

SEWING MACHINES

for

RECONDITIONED
Singer
portable,
$39.50; $5
down. Reconditioned cabjnet
HI

machine,
2-3811.

SEWING

$39.50.

614

Central

MACHINE

Ave.,

SERVICE

Necchi
Domestic
repair
on
ANY
MAKE
Work
Guaranteed
Arends
Sewing
Machine Co,
Central Ave.
Hl 2-5200

Expert
to

NIGHT
9 p.m.

662

TREE SURGERY

CLOGGED SEWERS
electric rod ¢ut out the obno digging, no lawn mess.
SEPTIC TANKS
and grease traps cleaned, repaired, built.
COMPLETE
SEWER SERVICE
Jeep trench digger, water lines, electric
cable,
foundations.
WOODALL'S
Phone Wheeling 232

“DONALD

LAKE FOREST SCRAP

SASL

SNH I

ARBORIST

RES

I

ERENCE

STR a

A

SR

Charles

ETL

OTE

IE

ARS Te

Nelson

Mrs. Mary Weis Nelson, 72, of
138 High
street, Highwood,
died

LAUNDRY

We
welcome
all strangers
on
3
service.
1875 ST. JOHNS AVE.
HIGHLAND
PARK,
ILL.

WORRALL,

Obituaries
SS

Mrs.

- METAL
44

G.

Expert tree work, shrub and evergreen
care.
Tree
remoyal,
power
—
work.
Low cost, efficient service, C
Wheeling 237.

BEN

day

STOCKS
Investor’s Service of America invites you
stocka.
listed
in
service
our
try
to
Nielsen,
Ole
Adviser,
Broker,
Dealer,
Circle,
Washington
North
Proprietor, 104
Lake
Telephone
Illinois.
Forest,
Lake
TRUST.
WE
2191. IN GOD
Forest

HARRETT

All

work
done
with
back
hoe.
Fast—Simple—Economical
Septic Systems
Driveways
Water
Mains
_ Trenching
Sewer Systems
Basements
SNOW
PLOWING
1397
McDaniels
Ave.
HI 2-71386
Highland Park, Il.
SEPTIC
SYSTEMS.
COMPLETE
SEPTIC
SYSTEM
INSTALLATION
TRENCHING
water,
drain,
All
sorts:
foundation,
tiling, etc.
- Free estimates, no obligation to have
our representative call.
EDWARD’S
P
&amp;
W
CONSTRUCTION
CONTRACTING
ENGINEERS
WINNETKA
6-3971

BUSINESS

you

ment and care.
consultation.

2-0087

Have
the
struction;

MELVIN

&amp;

VIOLETS.

Wilmette
377,
Headquarters”

EXPERT

- RAGS
FOREST

REPAIRING

ROOFING

TV

IRON
LAKE

&amp;

PIANO tuning and reconditioning. Mem.
ber of American Society of Piano Technicians. E. Zaboth, formerly of Lyon
and Healy, member of N.A.P.T. Lake
Zurich, 5341.

SERVICE

SERVICE
and
INSTALLATION
and
Sat.
.8 a.m.
Phone
HI. 2-0530

W.

Foregt

YOUR-DOG-&amp;-MINE
Kennels
(dog edit.
or, Better Homes
&amp; Gardens)
for best
care, feeding,
heating.
Skokie
Highway
(U.S. 41), 5%
miles north of state line,
Phone Bristol
(Wis.) 86-F-5.
COLLIE, female, 6 months old, champion
sired;
granddaughter
of
Silver
Ho
Parader. Full pedigree papers. Best of.
fer. Fox Lake 7-3987.

particular people. Gillette,
ington Circle, Lake Forest

HI

Call

Lake

PETS

one owncondition.

SITTING
and
employment
service
sale. For infor. call HI 2-4467.

SCRAP

2-6980

BOARD
YOUR
DOG
AT LOWRY’S

REAL ESTATE

2-0093

thru

HI

REDECORATING_

paper

EXTERIOR
and
interior
painting
and
decorating. Hubert Johnson, HI 2-1770,

December 24 in the Highwood
pital where
she had been
fined

a

SERVICE

CHRISTO-CRAFT CABINET CO.
1930 Maple Ave., Evanston
For custom
made
cabinets and general
carpentry work, call GReenleaf 5-7686 or
HI 2-7238.
MASON
repair, stone work, chimney and
fireplace building.
40 years
in same
trade. William Otten, Tel. Northbrook
597J.

MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS FOR SALE
FIVE
reconditioned
Grands, all in mahogany, $525 and up. For appt. day or
eve., Phone R. J. Cook, Evanston,
4-1561 or GReenleaf 5-6020.

since

heart

held

FOUND

LOST: boy’s watch, just south of Jewel
Tea in Highland Park, Dec. 17th. Reward.
Call
Rick
Lloyd,
Glencoe
746
collect

new

SALE

AND

Varney,

&amp;

and

6.

OPPORTUNITY

SAM WOO
WANTED

WANTED
to buy, good used spinet or
spinet console piano. Deerfield 854W.
LOST

e

4146.

1—Old
established tavern in Highwood.
Owner must sell.
2—Long
established
restaurant.
Good
bargain.
8—Fine dry cleaning and pressing usiness.

single tube
Phone
HI

INSTRUMENTS

or

LOANS

BUSINESS

DAY
Mon.

THE GIFT OF A LIFETIME
FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY
MRS. LURA SENTMAN
(LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE)
LAKE FOREST 3604

ON
GOODS

INSTRUCTION

2-4742.

AUTO

CO.

2-5561

inch
$35.

2220

Finance
your:
car
the bank
way
save money.
FIRST NATIONAL
BANK
of Highland Park

1953
WORLD
BOOK
ENCYCLOPEDIA

MUSICAL

or

WILLIAMS ©

RECESSED
7%x73%
fluorescent
fixture,
2-4999.

ext.

CADILLAC
1948 4-door sedan,
er;
32,000
miles,
excellent
$1,800. Call HI 2-2431.

HI

30 gal. automatic gas water heater $74.50
Medicine . cabinet) .....-ccciscccoccccssonccconss $10.6
10.65
POF
AO
ccphifcnsdahockadtndpudseonestesuusadenstpae 6%e
RE
REL:
hess nidinobninpisbacessasiben 42c
sq.
ft.
Gun type oi] burner ...................-.- $112.50
564
inch
Sink
and
Cabinet
........ $94.95

ARNOLD

2-2500

sleigh rides” for rent.
Forest
2151
for ap.

GUITAR lessons in your home. Spanish
guitar,
Hawaiian
guitar,
uke,
banjo,
mandolin.
Instrument
furnished
while
learning.
JACK
MOORE,
HI
2-6284,

AFRICAN

CASHMERE SWEATER SALE
IMPORTED, HANDCRAFTED,
FULL FASHIONED SWEATERS
S.S. PULLOVER NOW $13.95
L.S. CARDIGANS NOW $16.95
ALSO MANY FANCY SWEATERS
MINNA HART

CHEVROLET

SALE

DINNER JACKET and trousers, like new,
size 40, $20; black top coat, size 40,
cost originally $150, sell for $30; black
wolf
bolero
lady’s
jacket,
like
new,
$15; man’s horsehide jacket, size 44,
$15; man’s
fleece lined flying boots,
like new, size 11, $10; 15 Oxford cloth
button
down
shirts,
164-35,
cost
$75,
used,
$10.
Phone
Lake
Forest
2991-Y-4
Saturday
only.

HOUSEHOLD

HAY
RACKS
and
Telephone Lake
pointment.

CHEVROLET
1950 2-door, light green;
radio, heater, white sidewall tires. Call
HI

Sleighrides

HI 2-8858

PAINTING

FORD 1949 8-cylinder 2-door with 18,000
miles; good condition.
$1050
or best
offer. Call HI 2-7092.
PLYMOUTH
1941
coupe, black;
54,000
original miles, garage kept, in excellent
condition. One of three cars in family;
going to Florida. Saturday only. West
on Old Mill road,°9/10 mile north on
Estate
Lane to 1411; first drive on
richt. R. E. Minter.
STUDEBAKER
1952 2-door deluxe, O.D.;
900 miles, new car guarantee. Bargain;
must sell. Call Deerfield 991.
STUDEBAKER
1951
4-door V-8; radio,
heater,
12,500
miles. $1,275. Call HI

or

2-5592

191 E. DEERPATH
LAKE FOREST 3200

2-2268.

EMPLOYMENT
OFFICE
HIGHWOOD

about

WANTED—DOMESTIC

COUPLE
and 2 children desire separate
living quarters in exchange for full or
part time services for wife. Husband
employed
elsewhere.
Write
Box F-45
c/o Lake Forester.

Pensions, insurance and free transportation. No experience is. necessary.
rn
while you learn.
APPLY TO

employs

fake

SITUATIONS

LET’S HAVE SOME FUN!
HI

PAINTING

XMAS
man’s
wrist
watch,
$65;
gold
band, $20; portable sun lamp, $10; new
GE travel
iron, $6; LP auto. record
player, $10; lady’s wrist watch,. $25.
Telephone Lake Forest 2991-Y-4, Saturday only.

WANTED—FEMALE _

ALL types of beauty work done in
ke
own
home.
Tel. HI
2-4743
or
Forest
2998Y1.
NURSE, practical, available for post hospital cases and new born infants. Also
parent substituting. Telephone GReenleaf 5-0409.

COUPLE
desires
position
doing housework, chauffeur, etc. North Shore references. Tel. NOrman 17-0219.
WOMAN
desires
day
work
or general
housework 5 days, $1.25 an hour; best
North
Shore.
references.
ONtario

PERMANENT JOBS
ARE NOW
OPEN
FOR

NORTH

“SITUATIONS

ENTERTAINMENT

AUTOMOBILES

USED CAR
Sr ECIALS
GUARANTEED OK

vacuum,
with
$385. Call HI

TELEVISION set, 16 in., black, modern.
Table
to match.
Emerson,
purchased
new. May be seen operating in living
room.
(Bought larger set for Xmas).
dad
Lake Forest 2991-Y-4, Saturday

2-0825.

COUPLE:
woman,
cooking, light housework; man, some driving and outside
work.
Current
references
required.
2
room apartment with garage space for
car. Telephone
Libertyville
2-3040.

:

ADVERTISING

tank-type
like new,

LEAVING
city, all househould
furnishings for sale. Duncan Phyfe mahogany
dining room suite, twin bedroom suite,
tables, chairs, rugs, baby playpen, maroon
leatherette
bar, backbar
and
2
stools. 3311 Brook Rd., HI 2-6569.

HI

2-7432.

Responsible position in unusually attractive north
suburban
general
offices
of
nationally known
firm of business consultants; good salary to start, plus other
benefits. Convenient
transportation.
Call
BRiargate 4-7500 from Chicago or LIbertyville 2-4080 from suburbs.

USED

LOVELY
old Chippendale hall furniture,
serpentine side table, 2 chairs, mirror;
light
antique
finish;
walnut
leather
bridge set. Phone HI 2-1711.

ALMOST new Artloom, 2 tone blue, 9x12
Wilminster and Wilton wool rug. Call

WANTED—DOMESTIC

Libertyville

SALE

2-7179.

TOP wages*to experienced general maid,
for cooking and downstairs; excellent
working conditions. Current references
required. Permanent or temporary. Telenhore

FOR

TELEVISION
set, 17 inch table model,
1%
years old, recently rebuilt; want
offers. Tel. HI 2-4198.

ELECTROLUX
attachments;

BOOKKEEPER,
experienced;
man _. or
woman. Accuracy and neatness essential. 5 day week for firm located in
Lake
Bluff.
For information
and interview call Lake Bluff 3400.

HELP

GOODS

DESK, for office or study, beautiful black
oak, custom built, unusual. design with
glass top, 3 combination file cabinets
for 5x8 cards, with letter file or storage space; grey broadloom carpet with
foam rubber pad, approximately 12x12
in size, excellent condition. Phone Dr.
Slepyan, HI 2-4650.

tn

iBluff

WANTED—MALE

Thanksgiving

ailment.

Saturday

Day

Services

afternoon

in

hos¢conwith

were
Zion

Evangelical Lutheran church, with
burial in Memorial Park cemetery,
Evanston.
Born in Germany, February 28,
1880, she came to the United States
as an infant with her family. She
was a resident of Wilmette before

moving
Mrs.

ee

HELP

Box Number Ads

to Highwood 25 years ago.
Nelson is survived by a

daughter, Mrs. Robert Henderson
of Miami Beach, Fla.; two sisters.
Mrs. Terrence Brady of Winnetka,

and Mrs. Richard Chester of Wilmette; two brothers, John of Wilmette, and Nicholas of Milwaukee;
and two grandchildren. Her husband
July,

preceded
1949.

her

in

death

In Memoriam
In loving memory of Mrs.
Selma
Peterson who passed
away December 27, 1949.
Three years have passed since
that sad day,
When one we loved was called
away,
ee
her home, it was his
wll,

But in our hearts she liveth
still.
Loving daughters and sons.

Thursday, January1, 1953

in

j
—

�Where it can be done
=.

LINOLEUM

FLOOR
@

Chrysler-Plymouth

COVERING

Linoleum and
Linoleum Tile

@

Koroseal

@

Asphalt

@

Rubber

@

Plastic
For

Wall

free

GO

Tile

call

the

Call

TO

Road,

Highland

HIRE

a New

All arrangements
phone.

INC.

HEATING

can

A. E. Savage, Owner

be made

Furnace and

Cleaning

Agency

Park

2-5545

1740

&amp;

Service

First

Evanston

GR.

HI 2-2500

Bring

Phone

Your Rings
We Check

Service

Across

JEWELERS

—

WEP

AUTO RADIOS
Custom

and

Universal

1864

SHERIDAN

TELEPHONE

20th Century
FIRST ST.
HIGHLAND

HI

HI

PARK,

Packard-North Shore

ILL.

Inc.

2-2028
A safe

Leading Watch Repair Craftsmen
and Jewelry Designers

TELEVISION-RADIO
1858

Sales and Service

HIGHLAND

ROAD

- Philco - Zenith

| PACKARD |

ee

Repairs &amp; Sales
Motorola

REPAIR

Official

Watch

Inspector

for

DEERFIELD

the

North

WALL

TRUCKING

Western

AND

562 Lincoln

R.R.

FLOOR

Ave.
Highwood

We

Pick-up

and

Deliver

Satisfaction

A

General
Black

Pickup

SERS See eee
VENETIAN BLINDS

VENETIAN
BLINDS

Dirt

and

and

Moving

Fill

Hauled

and Delivery on
same day.
967 OSTERMAN

Deerfield

the

877

\

On

Ave.
HI 2-7211

Linens, Blouses, Sweaters,
°
Towels, Shirts,
etc.
Pleating — Belts
Button

HEATING

’

Ye

Holes

.

Main

dain

clothes.

Evanston

DEERFIELD

UNiversity 4-3034
ii

Tiff

|

det

lil iiiiiiiitiii

Phone HI 2-3804

r

Central

BROS. OIL CO.
Highland

46

Park

ASPHALT

GULISTAN

CARPETS

TILE

&amp; RUGS

LINOLEUM &amp; LINOLEUM TILE
Install it yourself or make use of our expert mechanics.
HI 2-0566
459 Roger Williams Ave.

N G
ON
SHORT IN COST

Phone H12-4500

FOR SALE
We

have available from private parties
who want to dispose of
FINE PIECES OF JEWELRY
AND DIAMONDS
1. Lady’s diamond engagement ring,
1 carat, value $1100.00 for $750.00
2. Lady’s 18-diamond wrist watch, solid
gold, value,
$300.00
for
$185.00
3 . Lady’s
Yo - carat
diamond
eRe
ment ring for
;
-. $225.00
4. Man’ s 3 diamond ring
. $200.00
Can be bought on payment plan.
Call

or

See

|. H. NEMEROFF
JEWELERS
Highland Park 2-0630
Across from bank for 35 Years

BEBE

Sae aoe
BUICK SERVICE
SALES SERVICE

BUICK
Factory Authorized
Sales and Service

Auto Body
Painting &amp; Repairing

HI 2-4860

Registered Optometrist
Repair

e Whee!
Alignment

@

ine

Radiator Repair

:

Cee

on

broken

lenses

frames

Tested
from

Pa

HI 2-0077

CRPSSRCRRRARERESS

service

LaVZens
ra gest)

nttoner

350 || 2058 Ist St.

Excellent

Pe

JEWELERS

by
the

Appointment
Bank,

35

Venetian
Columbia

—

G&amp;G

OPTICIANS

SUPPLIES

Blinds
Lattishades

Bamboo

Blinds—Draperies

Window

Shades

668

Fine
Watch
Repairing
A.
MORDINI
HI 2-3905
Highland Park, Ill.

CENTRAL AVE.
HI 2-2350
Highland

Park

Pe

sua

years

a ela

ewe

RESULTS

kor Advertising Space On This Page

setting.
moders

arranged.

SHADES

PLASTIC

Years

ae

COVERING

RUBBER

35

TTT TTT TTT TTT
JEWELERS - OPTICIANS

Fender

om

iii

for

1732 First

DOWNING’S || 402" 520s
FLOOR SHOP

HEATING EQUIPMENT
GAS AND OIL BURNERS
SALES AND SERVICE

444

St.

24 HOUR

pe! ~ oe

SO

bank

KLEEBURG BUICK
INC.

_-towine SERVICE

PAINTS

BRAUN

Center

@

CLEANERS

B10 wasginad aes

FLOOR

616

cee oe te
he

Vogue Fabric Shop
733

Doors

FREE ESTIMATES
LAKE BLUFF 2575

SHEER
MAGIC

So

Titi

SURE

iS

for

TOWING

ies
=
=—

Buttons — Hand Bound
&amp; Machine

a/

Ne

line

in—

OPTICIANS
Park 2-0630

Payments

BUICK

SILJESTROM

complete

DRY CLEANING

MONOGRAMMING

Highwood Glass
&amp; Paint Co.

6-3070

Double Hung Windows - Casement Windows - Picture Windows
- Porch
Enclosures
-

GENUINE
TILE
INTERIORS
Bathrooms, Kitchens &amp; Powder Rooms
Modernized
with
Real
Ceramic Tile,
Miraplastic Tile, Rubber,
Vinyl,
Cork
&amp; Asphalt Tile Floors. ‘Complete Tile
vervice. Free Estimates. Phone Evenings.
TILE-CRAFT
830 Woodward Ave.
Deerfield 1049

DRESSMAKERS SERVICE

WINDOW SHADES
MIRRORS - GLASS TOPS
WALLPAPER
ENTERPRISE
GUARANTEED
PAINTS

All

Hauling

Guaranteed

963 Waukegan
Phones

car.

RUSCO COMBINATION
METAL STORM WINDOWS
SCREENS and DOORS

CLEANERS
Waukegan

WInnetka

BEN

Darnell

WAYNE
454

a used

MURR SRR
STORM WINDOWS &amp; DOORS

TILE

EXPRESS

Owner—W.

QUALITY CLEANING AT
REASONABLE PRICES

2-0455

to buy

All makes and models.

2-0341

PARK

BEES See
CLEANERS

HI

place

Jewelry
FREE

We do our own diamond
Have your diamonds set in

602

settings.

WATCH

YOUR

NEMEROFF

from

RES SCORRARERAE
SE HSARR KES

AUTO RADIOS

and
Them

JEWELERS
Tei. Highland

Boiler

Deerfield

LOSE

Il. H.

1010 Hazel Ave., Deerfield

5-9583

- OPTICIANS

DIAMONDS

Installation

Convertibles, Tudors,

Grove

DON’T

All Types of Heating

by

Fordors
617

JEWELERS

Community Gas Heating
SERVICE

Car

Authorized

Lencioni

HI

FOR

U-DRIVE-IT

MESIROW MOTORS

Estimate

Deerfield

Rent

USED CARS

Town Floor Company
1379.

CARS

FOR THE BEST

Tile

Daniel

Service

an}

�on nationally famous

Everhot Electric Blankets!
Prices slashed just in time
for you to enjoy
electric blanket

comfort during &amp;
winter’s worst %
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(Generous double bed size—72” x 84”)

Choose yours in your favorite color...
Rose Petal, Dusty Blue, April Green

ore’s

your chance

comior'!

Take

'o discover rec! sleeping

cdvantage

enjoy the rest and

of this bargain,and

relaxation

atures...

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never

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up for more covers. One

or have

lightweight

to get

Everhot

an electric blanket

Electric Blanket is all you need for complete com-

gives you for , ears to come! The Everhot Comfortrol automat'cally adjusts to changing temper-

fort. Luxuriously soft, the Everhot is easily laundered. Get yours today!

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PUBLIC

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�</text>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="25572">
                    <text>Thursday,

diet

CCl; Held

January

8,

Keview

1953

�STATEMENT

OF

THE

CONDITION

OF

THE FIRST NATIONAL

BANK

OF HIGHLAND PARK
At the Close of Business,

December

31,

1952.

Resources

Ae BG tue tre BAe ee
U. S. Government Investments
Mea
ota
OPEN SU
Pee

ee,

tae ee a PVG

ee anG weeone
IN
I
So

a

re

se

Ti

a

ee

ARES

Bee

ee

SS

$ 3,347,503.98
11,171,205.18
1,017,565.15
27,000.00

rh a
ee
eo

Furniture and Fixtures
CeCe

ee
ee

coe k a

6,100,119.06
FY

59,500.00

te

1.00

Bee
a ee ee

5,435.64
$21 ,728,419.96

Liabilities
eer

COC

I

lo
ck

= nk.

Sic

ae

Bree

ee anemone

Slant

Undivided
Me

Profits
a

gi ee
Bes

SRT

OU,

ee

ne
A

ai a

rr

IER

Seat

e ee

IAEE IE?!

eee

800,000.00

os

101,942.05

ee

RUE, PETES ue

epee
US cok

ay Was

var

a

ees

Pe eek
ig eam

312,875.80
56,900.38

10,000.00
20,246,701.73

$21 728,419.96
2

OVER A HALF

CENTURY OF SERVICE
Member

THE

of:

THE

FEDERAL

RESERVE

SYSTEM

FEDERAL

DEPOSIT

INSURANCE

CORPORATION

�Vol. 27, No. 42

Thursday, January 8, 1953

State’s Attorney To Address
Citizens’ Committee ‘Tuesday
The
Citizens’ Committee
for a
Better Deerfield will hold its annual meeting on January 13 at 8
p.m.
at the Wilmot
school.
The

featured speaker will be Robert
Nelson, State’s attorney of Lake
county, who will report on the progress of the various legal actions
pending against the brickyards.
Other

Prominent

Speakers

R. M.
Baxter
of the
Sanitary
Engineering
firm
of Baxter
and
Woodman will talk on the vitally

important

$600,000

Sewage

Dis-

posal plant which is proposed for
the Village of Deerfield. Taxpayers who will be assessed for this

improvement

will

want

to

this meeting to learn the
tails.
Gayle Martin, the new

manager,

will speak

problems,

and

attend
full

de-

Village

on the duties,

plans

of this

office.

Irl Marshall, President of the
Highland Park High school board
will be present to discuss the question of whether or
needs a high school.

Chairman
chairman

Dan

not

Dunne

Lewis

Walton

Deerfield

and

vice-

of

the

Village Plan commission will give
a ‘resume of the progress of the
Village
Plan.
They
will
show
colored
planned

slides
of
communities.

Directors

To

Be

successfully
Elected

Members
of the Citizens’ committee
will
nominate
and
elect
seven directors from their membership to maintain a full Board
of directors according to the Bylaws
of the
Citizens’
committee.
Grand Prize
The annual

contest

To Be Presented
Christmas Lighting

sponsored

committee

will

be

by the

Citizens’

culminated

by

Plans for Maplewood
School in More Detail
The

Welcome to Deerfield
Within the past few weeks three
families
have
moved
into
their
new homes on Hermitage drive.
Mr. and Mrs. G. Douglas Culp
live at 654 Hermitage drive.
The
Culps, former
Chicago
residents,
were both reared in small towns.
He is employed by the Consolidated Stamp company.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sparks and

their daughter Linda Joy, 2%
old,
their

moved
from
new home at

drive.

Mr.

Sparks

new Maplewood

school, now

being built in the western portion
of District 109, will be an even
larger and more complete building

years

Evanston
into
642 Hermitage

is in the adver-

than the primary school erected in
1948.
The architectural firm of Perkins
and Will have designed a school in
which
each
classroom
will
have
light from both the north and south
by use of clerestory windows.
A
large amount of tack surface both
of burlap cloth and natural redwood will be used throughout the
classrooms, corridors and the kin-

dergarten.
The
have individual
the

larger

the west

lower grades
toilet rooms

toilet

end

rooms

will
and

located

of the present

at

build-

tising business
and
is associated
with the firm of Parker-Allen Industries in Chicago.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Schramm

ing will
become
a central
core
when more classrooms are added to
the west.

live at 520 Hermitage drive. The
Schramms have two children, Harold Jr., 4 years old and Susie, who

be located to the north of the pres-

is 1. The Schramms
moved from
Chicago to Deerfield. Mr. Schramm
is employed by the A. B. Dick Co.
in Skokie.

Annual Parish Meeting
At St. Gregory’s Church

Mrs.

presentation
grand prize

John

of the trophy to
winner, Mr. and

Robertson,

704 Orchard

lane.

eects

second

kindergarten

will

later

ent one.
Each of these will have
windows
reaching
almost
to the
floor
on
two
exposures.
There
will be many built-in features such
as storage seats in the playroom
and
kindergarten,
work
counters
and cabinets in the classrooms and

kindergarten

The annual parish meeting of St.
Gregory’s Episcopal church will be
held Sunday at Wilmot school following church services. The election of new members to the Chapel
committee will be held. The Reverend Charles U. Harris of Trinity
Episcopal church, Highland Park,
will be guest preacher at this service preceding the meeting.
the
the

A

and a

full kitchen off

the playroom for P.T.A. and other
community
functions.
The
playroom (39 ft. x 54 ft.) will be much
larger
than
that
at the present
school.
The plan includes a larger teachers’ room, a book storage library
and facilities for school nurse and
speech correctionist.

The Executive board of the Deerfield grammar
school P.T.A. will
meet tonight at 8 p.m. in the pri-

building

of the

isis ial of waciancncene vee

school.

For Qualified Candidates
Questionnaires seeking suggestions for qualified candidates :

for both village and township offices in the local spring elec- _
tions were circulated by Deerfield’s new committee for political —
unity this week.

Sent

Deerfield, Northbrook
Skating Meet Soon
The
tary

Deerfield-Northbrook
club

skating

is

sponsoring

meet

which

its

pits

Roannual

the

fered

by the local service

club. The

odds are in favor of the Northbrook
contestants inasmuch as. they have
walked off with the prizes the last
two

tionnaires
some

are

also

Deerfield

obtained

from.

available

stores,

or

may

either

of

the

at ~
be
co- —

chairmen of the committee, Charles
A.

Piper

or Wesley

Alabeck.:

Public Opinion
“We

want

the

Sought

widest

Nim

possible

—

expression of public opinion and
ideas,” Mr. Piper explained. “While

~

this is not a public popularity poll,
we also want to determine whether a
there is any pattern of repeated
names
which
would
indicate a ~
widely
accepted
public
prefer-—

ence.”

years.
Art

to the 30 citizens already ©

serving on the committee, the ques- —

boys

and girls of each town in competition for the prizes and glory of-

Wolters

"iad

“Our

Chairman

nominating

eager

Art Wolters is chairman of the
committee arranging for the meet,
which will be held at the Jewett

to

get

possible,”

said

for obvious

naires

all

committee
the

Mr.
by

a

suggestions

x

Alabeck,

reasons

signed

te

those

“but

question-

qualified

will be given

field contestants.
Serving on the
committee with Art are Askel Peterson and Bob Folger. There will
be many other “Old Skates’ who
will assist in the running of races.

Expansion
beyond
the village
limits, in order to include repre-_
sentation from the township at_
large, will be discussed at a meet-_

All boys and girls are urged to
train for this event to be held in
the
near
future.
Next
week’s
the exact
meet.

REVIEW

date

and

will

time

Anyone may enter and
to be at Jewett Park on
announced.

of

give
the

is asked
the date

most

serious

con-

sideration.”

Township Included

:

ing of the committee tonight.
“Elective
township
offices

too

often

discounted

or

are

entirely_

overlooked by the public,” claims
Mr. Alabeck. “We believe the right
—
men in these offices are of ex- —
treme importance, and we want to 4
add
representation
from
other
areas of the township in the hope

of naming
sible

not —rnoel

the

voters

Park skating pond. Some experts
believe the friendly home crowd
will top the scales in favor of Deer-

DEERFIELD

P.T.A. Board Meets Tonight

mary

Questionnaire Circulated by _
Committee for Political Unity

a slate of the best Pos-

3

candidates.”

an

“

'‘

Deerfi eld Library

4

i

©

Reopens with Changes

After having been closed for two |
weeks during the holiday period, —
the West Deerfield Township library re-opened on Monday with
major changes made in the children’s

ance

room

and

a

clean

appear-

throughout.

Following

the

ie
suggestions

made _

by Mrs. Laura Langston, ‘chief of
Extension service of the Illinois

State library during her three-day

_

visit to the library last week, all —
books in the children’s room have ~
been

placed

on

was a weeding

the

shelves.

There

_

out of worn and ob-

solete volumes.
Tables and chairs

i
have

been

pro-

vided for both the younger and
the older children, thereby giving
more space.

©
—

Progress also was made in discarding
obsolete
books
in the
adult’s

room,

but

time

did

not per-

mit completion of this work. This
will be finished as soon as possible.

Hearing on Re-Zoning
A

meeting

for

the

continuation

of the
Public
Hearings
on
ReZoning the Village of Deerfield will
be held Tuesday,
January 15 at

Architect's S drawing sof how the new Macias
_ New

SCnoOol

TOOK

pidgce

er)

sisi

will jak abel

completed.

Geciiiiacbabing

ceremony

for the

the

Deerfield

the

main

grammar

building

Sines, in

at

8.

school in
Mr.

Evert

Dlanner will be pres-

ae
—

�Deerfield

Forum

-&lt;...

|

Parties Planned
By Club for School

|. Officers for the Year 1953

January has been set aside by
the Deerfield Woman’s club as the

Opinions
expressed
in these
columns
do
not
necessarily
constitute
the opinions
of the paper.
Letters
should
be brief and should
contain
the name and address of the writer,

whose

quested.

name

will

be

withheld

if

re-

A: G. Bradt, Village

President

and

Board

of Trustees

Deerfield, Illinois
Gentlemen:
In accordance with your request
Engineer H. A. Spafford and Scientist William B. Jackson, of the
Illinois
Department
of
Publi:

Spafford

and

with

Mr.-

officially

“Gayle

Jackson

the following

concerned

tary
conditions:
Brick Company:

T.

- field

at

with

the

Martin;

sani-

National

Deerfiéld

Vil-

Twp.

Health

Board

‘Harry J. Carlson, Building Officer, Laké county Building &amp;
-« Zoning commission.
William T. Hooper, Jr., Engineer*’ ing Consultant,
Lake
county
*’ Building
&amp; Zoning
Commis-

sion
A: J, Fox, Sanitary Engineering
**° Consultant, Lake county Build“dng: &amp; Zoning Commission
Gebert,

Assistant

Superin-

tendent, Deerfield Plant,
-»tional Brick company

Na-

Mr. Spafford
and
Mr. Jackson
were informed that during the past
summer and early fall, garbage had

dumped

Sanitary

in the

Fill,

tion with
plaints

clay

Limited,

pits

a

were

received

from

by

several

by

corpora-

offices in Chicago.

partment

Com-

this

sources

De-

in

recent months, alleging that piles
of garbage were permitted to remain improperly covered for sev-

eral days at the clay pit dump, promoting: fly-breeding, and tnat inSanitary

conditions

prevailed

at

the adjacent trailer camp, used to
house
migrant
brick
workers.
Mr.
Spafford

company
and
Mr.

Jackson also were informed
that
several arrests. have been made by
the township board of health, and
the
Lake
County
Building
and
Zoning Commission have a court
case
pending.
The
Sanitary
Fill

Limited
the

discontinued

National

pit several

Brick

weeks

ently

a

few

have

occasionally

amount

of

dumping

Company

ago,

but

independent

in
clay

appar-

truckers

dumped

garbage

mission, since major
terminated.

a small

without

per-

dumping

was

At the time Mr. Spafford and
Mr.
Jackson visited the National
Brick
Company
clay-pit
dumping
area, it was observed that attempts
have been made to provide earth
covering over previously dumped
refuse;
however,
it was
evident
that an insufficient depth of earth

covering
many

was

places,

placed

because,

particles

of

in

refuse

protruded above the surface of the
earth cover. Evidence of active rat
colonies were observed within the

brick

factory

building

and

in

the

trailer camp, adjacent to the clay
put. One dead rat was found be-

‘tween the factory building and the
clay

pit.

One

live

the trailer camp.
“as food
Page

school

the

Park

the

While

is a state

insti-

to support
4

rat

was

Garbage
rat

chairman.
Further
information
may be obtained by calling 224J.

Stagers Meet Jan. 8
The

seen

A

J; La Chat..
observed in many
places on the
ground
in the trailer camp
and
vicinity. This food refuse was evidently a result. of unsanitary garbage-handling practice by dwellers
in the trailer camp,
rather than
from the major
garbage-dumping
operation
at the
clay
pits. The

trailer-camp
to

be

very

quite.wheels

flush

The
are

facilities

were

found

unsanitary

and

inade-

trailer bodies without
dilapidated, the water-

toilets

poor

state

were

filthy

of repair.

It was

in

a

evident

that the existing facilities were inadequate and could not be maintained in ‘sanitary condition without material alteration and repair.
In order to be of assistance to all
persons ¢oncerned in the garbagedumping and trailer-camp
prob-

lems

at

pany
make
tions:

clay
the

1.

the

If

National
pit near
following

garbage

Brick

Com-

Deerfield, we
recommenda-

dumping

in

the

clay pit is to be permitted to continue in the future, there are certain basic principles which should
be employed in the operations to
assure satisfactory disposal of garbage and refuse
by the sanitary
land-fill method, which
are herewith outlined. A.
Some: responsible person
should be present at all times when
dumping
and covering operations
are in progress, in order to supervise all dumping and covering operations.
B.
Garbage and refuse deposited each day shall be compacted
and completely covered at the end
of each day
with
a clean earth
covering having a thickness of not
less than ‘¢ight inches. The sloping
faces of the advancing
fill shall
be sealed with. earth at the end of
each day as well as the top, includ-

ing

any

fill

placed

in

water.

A

final top covering having a depth
of not less than two feet should be

placed

aS a permanent

completely

C.

filled

cover

over

areas.

No refuse

shall

be

burned

dump,

any

fires

started

at the

accidentally

and

shall

be

extinguished.

If garbage- and refuse-dump-

ing is not to be resumed at the
clay pit, the
following
measures
should
be employed
to properly
close the previously deposited refuse.
A.
Cover
all old
dump
areas
including
top
and
sloping
faces
with at least two feet of clean earth
covering.
B.
Kill, by appropriate extermination
methods,
all rats
in the
area.
3.
The trailer camp, providing
housing for migrant
workers,
in
its present condition is unsatisfactory and should be abandoned. If
housing facilities must be provided,
appropriate
-cottages
or
cabins
should be built and equipped with
proper water supply, toilets, shower-bath and laundry facilities, including
covered
garbage
cans.
Close supervision, policing and education of residents of the migrant
type is necessary, if sanitary living is obtained, even when proper
facilities are provided.
A properly
conducted
land-fill
operation can be an asset to a community.
Every
community
needs
some satisfactory means of refuseand garbage-disposal. In the opinion of the engineers of this Department,
a_ satisfactory
land-fill
operation can be performed at the
National Brick Company clay pit.
If properly conducted,
it would
have
the
additional
value
of at
least partially filling the unsightly
depression
resulting
from
many
years
of clay
mining
operation.
Sanitary land fill is the only prac-

tical means now available by which
such

man-made

scape

may

scars

areas

began
next

all

rat colonies

should be

Future

ducted

as

prevent

development

dump

in D.

operations,

outlined

above,

(above),

killed.
if

con-

should

of rat infesta-

the

land-

elimin-

ated, without creating a nuisance.
Proper operation, however, is essential.
Very truly yours,
Roland R. Cross
To the Editor
and
Citizens of Deerfield:

as stipulated

on

be economically

D.
All of the old dump
areas
now
inadequately
covered
with
earth shall be re-covered with at
least two feet of new clean earth
covering.
EK.
After
covering
old
dump

in
was

and

tion: however, continual ‘vigilance
will be necessary and appropriate
extermination
methods
should be
employed to kill any rats that may
appear.

2.

Several months ago a number of
different
civic-conscious indi-

viduals

and

groups

thinking
Spring’s

groups

included

tive

the

name

in

of

last

the

will

meeting

be

held

in

Deerfield

and talking
elections.

some
election

about
These

persons

ac-

under

the

Progressive

party,

some the Better Government party,
and some who were onlookers and
not affiliated with either.
It happened:
that
members:
of
previously opposing groups talked
together and found the same motive and the same fear was common to all the groups:
All

were

motivated

candidates
Deerfield,”
had

no

-who
and

other

by

finding

were
“best for
all claimed they

axes

popular, would be bad for the town,
scare off qualified candi-

dates.
It was agreed
tickets were put

old

party

that if opposing
up, following the

lines,

such

a

would be inevitable.
It was agreed further
though there might not

animity

the

evening

as previous-

ly scheduled in the hope that more
members will be able to attend.
The

guest

Joan

speaker

Rodbro,

will

be

executive

Mrs.

secretary

of the Lake County Polio Foundation.
The meeting hopes to formulate
plans for a benefit show for the
polio fund.

The meeting will be followed by
refreshments.
Stationed

Cpl.

Japan

James

wife

Ann

avenue,
the

in

is

First

P.

lives

Duncan,

at

1024

serving
Cavalry

in

whose

Osterman

Japan

with

division.

to grind.

All groups were fearful of another bitter fight which split Deerfield two years ago and felt that
a recurrence would be publicly unand would

of

this

instead of last Tuesday

New officers of the Deerfield Lodge No. 1110 A. F. and A. M. who were installed Tuesday, December 30 at the Masonic Temple are, front row: Carter Christiensen, Earl F. Paul,
Preston C. Root, Kenneth Knackstadt, George L. Lutz. Second row: Robert N. McGuire,
Edward J. Stuart; Walter S. Page, Elmer A. Krase. Third row, Howard A. Rosley, Nicholas

to serve

colonies

January

Stagers

con-

-persons,

lage’ manager
Esther
Giss,
Deerfield
Village
- Health officer
‘Dr. Frank
Brooks, West
Deer-’ field Twp. Health officer
Benjamin J. Piersen, West Deer-

been

for

girls.

parties. The parties are being arranged by Mrs. Earl T. Anderson,

Health, visited
Deerfield
on
De
cember 22, 1952, for the purposc
of investigating sanitary cuadition:
of a garbage dump
and a
trailer
camp at the National Brick Com
Pany clay pit near Deerfield.
In
addition to visiting
the
garbage
dump
and the trailer camp,
Mr.

_

Ridge

funds

for

tution, the 10th district of the Ili-

Honorable

W.

raise

nois Federation of Women’s clubs
has included in its obligations to
the school the maintenance of the
girls,
the
where
cottage
Illinois
victims of broken homes, live with
their housemother.
To provide them with home atsprea ds,
draperies,
mosphere,
throw rugs, as well as personal effects, the Deerfield Woman’s club
is planning a series of home games

Pany )

all

to

school

Park

DEERFIELD—Garbage dump and
trailer camp (National Brick Com

ferred

month

Ridge

of ideas

struggle

the

ae

that even
be a un-

or selections

be-

tween all groups, it was preferable
and less bitterness would ensue if
these things were argued out in
advance of slate selections. It was
agreed that the voters of Deerfield
generally
would
concur
in
this
view.

Little by little,
that followed, the

(Sr

St. Paul’s
Evangelical
church is shown decorated
for the candlelight ceremony. The Reverend Willman and the St. Paul’s choir
are in the background.

made available, make out your own
slate and submit it to us. If you
are interested in further participation and work, join with us in our
discussions.

Call

either

Wesley

will

of

our

co-chairmen,

Alabeck or Ned

give

you

time

Piper. They

and

place

of

in the months
various groups

our next meeting, and answer
questions you might have.

any

were drawn together into one everenlarging group.
Up to this time, most meetings
have been spent in mutually allay-

Deerfield Committee
Political Unity

for

ing suspicion and in establishing
mutual respect for the good faith
of each other. So far no selections

The Public Press, no less
Iffice, is a public trust.

the time has come

to get

down
to cases and to determine
whether candidates can be selected
who will be agreable to all groups.

In

all

“Power

probability
Politics”

the

cry

of

Thursday,

and in fact has been raised . . . in
some quarters. This is both ineviwas
sus-

picion between previously opposing
groups that has taken almost all
our time to this point.
Our answer to anyone beset by
this suspicion is: our aim is the
unification of factions and groups
in order to prevent power
or any individual group,

politics
and to

Jan. 8, 1953

Published

will be raised...

table and understandable. It
the overcoming of this same

Public

DEERFIELD
REVIEW

for the slate have been made, nor
names discussed. It is felt that now,

however,

than

1775

Weekly

Vol.

every

27, No. 42

Thursday

PUBLICATION
OFFICE
832 Todd Ct.
Deerfield,
Illinois
Telephone Deerfield 485
HIGHLAND PARK OFFICE
St. Johns Ave., Highland Park,
Telephone HI 2-4500

III,

MEMBER
we
National Editorial Associction
Illinois Press Association

Heather Hartwig
Phyllis Russell
V. E. Deckert
Local

Subscription

ieee

cg ibanaee

Editor

Managing Editor
Business Manager
Rates—$2.75

per

year

Domestic Rate—$4.00 per year
promote unity, not discord.
Single Copies—10c
‘
And our answer is this: if you are | Foreign Rates on Application
“Entered as second-class marter Novema voter of good will, and have no
1944, at the post office at Deerinterest other than to get into of- Reid, 27, Illinois,
under the Act of March 8,
'679.”
fice the best possible candidates
Copyright,
1952,
By
that Deerfield has to offer, obtain

one of the questionnaires we have

The

Highland Park Company
All Rights Reserved

Thursday, January 8, 1953

�J. E. Robertson's, Orchard Lane,
Win Cup for Decor

ieee

Phan

fOr Completed

Sanctuary of Presbyterian

Church...)

There were many displays and decorations around town
entered in the Christmas lighting contest sponsored by the Citizen’s committee. Decisions were based on proportion, suitability, originality and distinction. When the decorations were too
elaborate for this scale they were classified as displays and
were considered for special awards.
Some’ homes which might
have received awards, were not lighted when the judges went
around so could not be properly appreciated.
Those
asked
on

receiving
to

awards

leave

their

if

possible,

display

were

decorations
until

this

Join

Decrfre Ld girl

rib-

P cote Teas lo | hone

weekend.

church

for

2. Mr.

and

Mrs.

Donald
the

Kempf,
animated

3. To the well-lighted
the business district.
W.
C.
Alabeck,
schutz, A. S. Krisor

tree

Frost’s,
Jr. and

in

LiebVon’s.

The cup was awarded to the best
of the blue ribbon winners, (to keep
it one must win three times). Mr.
and Mrs. John E..Robertson, 704
Orchard lane.
The winners
follows:

District

1,

of each

north

district

of

Greenwood

District 2, south of Greenwood
and north of Deerfield roads, west
and

Milwaukee

Mrs.

Ray

tracks,

first,

Sanders,

Mrs.

Lake,

Paul

Kress

former

residents, announce the
ing
marriage
of their
Paula
Jean
to Donald
Long Lake. The wedding
place
in a candlelight
January 31 at St. Pauls

cal

church

of

Deerfield
approachdaughter,
Adler
of
will take
ceremony
Evangeli-

in Deerfield,

witi

the

Reverend Willman officiating. Miss
Kress is a graduate of Northbrook
High school. Mr. Adler served in

the army for two years as a photographer and
Fox Lake.

is

now

in

business

in

are

and west of Waukegan road, first,
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Schuessler,
1045 Linden avenue; second, Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas Evans Jr., 1510
Crabtree lane; third, Mr. and Mrs.
Sewell Bartlett, 1410 Berkley road;
honorable mention, Mr. and Mrs.
William C. Hensel, 1334 Woodland
road.

of the

and

Round

820
Beverly,
for
Santa’s workshop.

as

Mr.

their

Mr.

925

For-

Newcomer Club
Meets January 14
The

Newcomer

January

14

at

club

the

will

home

of

meet

Mrs.

George
Richards,
850
Westcliff.
Mrs. Harold Murtfeldt will present
two
monologues
and
Mrs.
Fred
Ritter will give readings
accom-

chairman

of

the

hostess

commit-

tee. She is. assisted by Mrs. William Siler, Mrs. George Miller and
Mrs.

nue;

field in the last two years is invited to attend. For baby sitting
service contact Mrs. Worth, Deer-

third,

able

Mr.

1330

mention,

Lutz, 1356
and
Mrs.

and

Mrs.

Cedar

Mr.

John

street,

and

E.

honor-

Mrs. R.

Hazel avenue, and
Martin
Norgaard,

E.
Mr.
840

Woodward.
District 3, east of the Milwaukee
tracks to an including Rosemary
terrace, north of Deerfield road,

first, Mr. and Mrs. John A. Robertson, 704 Orchard lane; second, no
award;

third,

Mr.

M..Anderson,
nue;

and

858

honorable

Mrs.

Fair

mention,

Frank

Oaks
no

ave-

award.

District 4, east of Rosemary terrace and north of Deerfield road,
including
Westgate
and
Northwoods, first, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
McGuire, 822 Warrington road; second, Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Barrett,

1131

Warrington

road;

third,

Dr.

and Mrs. Albert Mickow, 539 Margate terrace;
honorable
mention,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gougler, 1009
Warrington road, and Mr. and Mrs.

Arthur Kaatz, 920 Warrington road.
District
5, south
of Deerfield
road and east of Waukegan road,
first, Mr. and
Mrs. Harold
Sud-

brink, 705 Hermitage; second, Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Frable, 407 Brierhill road; third, Mr.
Schultz, 635 Byron

and Mrs. John
court; honor-

able mention, Mr. and Mrs. W. J.
Means, 629 Byron court.
District 6, west of Waukegan
road, first,
F. Weigle,

Mr.
1001

and Mrs. Edwin
Deerfield
road;

second, Mr. and Mrs. Morgan King,
676

Deerpath

road;

third,

Mr:

and

Mrs. T. C. Hammer, 713 Deerpath
road; honorable mention, Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Graw, 725 Deerpath
road.
The

judges

Sparker,

Mrs.

were:

Henry

Mrs.

Kenneth

Fisher,

Mrs.

Carl Reeb, Mrs. John Ploehn, Mrs.
Wendell Goodpasture, Mrs. Frank

Zartler,
Frank

Mrs.
Zellett,

Mrs. Maurice
Robert Clark.

James
Mrs.

Kraft,
Robert

Petesch,

Mrs.
Gordt,

and

Thursday, January 8, 1953

Mrs.

|,

panied by Mrs. Ross Finney on the
piano. Mrs. Darwin
Rummel
is

est avenue; second, Mr. and Mrs.
Elmer Freedlund, 1107 Forest aveSullivan,

oa

1. Bethlehem
nativity scene.

NA

green

PINS

of the

See
ATE Reema

Special awards
bon went to:

Ray

Larson.

Anyone

who

has moved

to Deer-

field 438.

A view of how the sanctuary
at the Presbyterian chu rch will appear after the réfurnishpossible by the anon ymous Christmas giftof $20,000 for the purpose. Plans
by Ossit Furniture Company.
ing

made.

| Garden Club Meets Today

White
Mr.

and

Garden Club to Hear

Telegraph

Mrs.

parents

Downes

Speak

January 15.

After

the

busi-

ness
meeting,
which
will
begin
promptly at 9:30 the club will hear
Mrs. Bertha Downes
of Downers
Grove,
speak.
on the
culture
of

house

Marshall

White,

Bannockburn,

of a second

December

The
January
meeting
of
the
Garden club of Deerfield will be
held at the home of Mrs. John G.
Ploem, County line road, on Thurs-

day,

Mrs.
road,
30

at

daughter,
Highland

are

is

2.

Mrs.

of

Louis,

Mo.

St.

grandmother

Frank
is

the

and

White of Chicago
grandmother.

Park

| The BANKER’S

STORY

Bennett
maternal

Mrs.

Elinor

the

paternal

is

today at the home of

born

hospital. They have named her Elinor Maureen. Her sister, Marsha:
Susan

will be held

The monthly executive meeting | Mrs. Robert O. Clark, 418 Brierhill
of the Garden club of Deerfield | road.

plants.

FREEDOM
“ (BSVOLVES

a
4

Thullen
Has

Eighth

Birthday

e

Mr. and Mrs. Henry Thullen, 166

Carol Finney, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Ross Finney, Oxford road,

Deerfield road,
a son, William

celebrated her eighth birthday with
friends at her home on January 2.
The guests included Dana Jensen,

The

Linda
Norgaard,
Midgie
Wolff,
Jackie
O’Brien,
Ellen
Petersen,
Marilyn Schmidt-and Laurie Holman.

nal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
F. W. Chapman of La Jolla, California. The paternal grandparents

Stationed

in

Day

road,

is

stationed

at

Fort Richardson, Alaska. A former
student at Carthage college, he
entered the army in December
1951. His wife, Carolyn, resides in
Highland
Guests

Park.

for

the

garet,

has

6 and

Park

two

hospital.

sisters,

Katherine,

are Mr. and Mrs. A.
of Youngstown, Ohio.

Mar-

2. Mater-

W.

Thullen

Weir,

Family
Mr.

1040

Mrs.

Waukegan

945

Rosemary

ter-

Harry

road,

Johnson,

entertained

Mr. Johnson’s sister and Mrs. Johnson’s brother, Mr. and Mrs. Ben

G. Yenerich and their daughter
Mrs. Clyde KokAlbis of Zion on
New
Year’s day.

race, has returned to his studies
at thie Washburn university in Tc
peka, Kan. During the holidays he

Returns

to

Adin

806

Hazel

ave-

Ullen of Grayslake and Miss Christine

mas at home.

as

his

Lord

house
of

guests,

Minnesota.

Robert
-

SYSTEM CAN BE
PRESERVED ONLY
BY ETERNAL
VIGILANCE /

i
=~

=
ese %

\

~~

oe

A GREAT HERITAGE INVOLVES

es

GREAT RESPONSIBILITY AND DEDICATION
(ON THE PART OF EVERY CITIZEN.
part of the enterprise system.

Our responsi-

bility is to give you the best possible

service

time and effort can develop.

Open A Savings Account at the

Finley, son of Mr. and
Finley,

nue, has returned to classes at the
college of Emporia where he is a
sophomore, after spending Christ-

had

THE AMERICAN

Deerfield State Bank

Kansas

Laurence
Mrs.

allo

America’s free, competitive banks are a basic

Gathering
and

Holidays

Keith Weir, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth

Highland

infant

parents of
December

Alaska

Pfe. James D. McDermott, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence McDermott,
Half

30 in the

became
Henry,

|

..1¥%%

Interest Paid on Savings

Deposits Insured Up to $10,000.00

!

Page5.

:

�=

Issue

Fluoridation

posed

DEERFIELD MOTHERS SPEAK

ing
lved Until FebruaryAt theMeet
last city council

an

of Highland

. and Mrs. Donald Ozmun,
teliff,

are

parents

of

911

a daugh-

born December 28 at the High| Park hospital. She has been
ed

Beverly

Louise.

Maternal

andparents
are Mr. and Mrs.
Carl
D. Berry of Winnetka and
paternal grandparents are Mr.
1 Mrs. D. C. Ozmun of Mt. Pros-

that fluorides be added to the water.
This proposal has started a
debate in Highland Park as to the

advisability
posal

Mr. and

Mrs. Warren

Flint be-

parents of their second child

and

first

daughter

with

the

ar-

rival
of Holly Lynn on December
31, at Highland Park hospital. The
infant has
a brother,
John,
5.
‘Grandparents are Mrs..Anna Flint

of Chicago and Mr. Chris Willman,
1218

Greenwood.

lake it a habit to read the Want
Is every week before laying your
aside!
KNAAK’S

_

PHARMACY

Pharmacist

Established
one

in

1

1884

Deerfield,

carrying

through.

the

Inasmuch

pro-

as Deer-

Village

of

Deerfield.

Any action has been temporarily
shelved until the meeting of Feb9.

The purpose of adding fluorides
to the city water is to help prevent

caries (dental decay), a spokesman
advised. The action was first considered

but

more

was

than

three

rejected

as

years

ago

new

an

too

experiment.
agree that the
in the amount
lion gallons of

ventive
Opposing

1.

groups

however

beled the proposed
“unconstitutional,”
medicine.”

have

la-

fluoridation as
and “socialized

water or the health of the
have been discerned and

people
in all

three

is sub-

towns

the

caries rate

stantially lower than in non-fluoridated

Established

.

1925

REALTORS

Insurance —
_ 735

Real

Deerfield

Estate —

Road,

Tel.

Loans

Deerfield,

Edward H. Selig

III.

Harold R. Vant
Deerfield

surrounding

According
steps which
fluoridation

VANT &amp; SELIG

155

cal dentists;

The

Refrigerators - Ranges - Radios
ing Machines - Vacuums

3

‘We Repair All Makes of Appliances
30 Waukegan Rd. - Tel. Deerfield 122

Established

Inc.

1885

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

Expert

Jewelry
for the

Watch

Entire
635

Repairing

Family

Deerfield

Phone

_ DEERFIELD

met

(3) the

Rd.

action

must

steps

be

authori-

action must
city council.

first three

thus

be

have

ap-

been

far.

Carr

Texaco

Realtyo

Midge's:

=...

w+

Ww.
at

ais
18

26

19

Féxateo:

20

2733

High Game, Individual—Men

DR. G. C. PARKNEN
OPTOMETRIST
Complete Optical Service
ablished in Deerfield Since 1942
| Deerfield 674 for Appointment
857 Rosemary Terr., Deerfield

Ernie Ori
231
High Series, Individual—Men
Ed Kirar
596
High
Game,
Individual—Ladies
Elbia Guerri
200
High Series, Individual—Ladies
Gerre Jones
499

Stanwood
Mrs.
Sunset

George
H.
Stanwood
of
lane,
Bannockburn,
died

January

1, in Highland

Park

hos-

pital. Services were held January
3 at Trinity Episcopal church with
the Reverend Parker of: St. Gregory’s
officiating.
Mrs.
Stanwood,

the former Margaretta Love, was
born December 20, 1903 in Brooklyn, N. Y. She was the daughter
you

you

4

may

bring

rest

your

car

assured

we

to

us,

check

everything from bumperto bump‘ ver for your

added

safety.

Midge’s Texaco

of Mabel
Love.

R. and the late Samuel

D.

include
her husband
sons, Robert Bannon

and

Ruxton,

Edward

Spooner

and

a sister, Mrs.
two

Samuel L. and Edward
A Margaret Stanwood

fund

and

for all!
Recommend

is being

Let’s

Let’s
once

Ask Mr. Nelson
mothers ask why there

We
not
any

is

an injunction
issued
to stop
further dumping.
An earlier

petition,

filed

by

State’s

Attorney

the

National

Brick

and

The

Sanitary

Landfill

filed

petition

other

Ltd.

An-

this month

by

quesbeing
now
Nelson is
Mr.
tioned. A motion by Atty. Ralph J.
emergency
argues that no
Dady
of
means
other
that
and
exists
utilized.
been
not
have
remedy
Arrests for dumping that have already been made prove that some-

thing can and will be done. Surely,

we mothers think that Mr. Nelson
can present his petition in such a
way as to make these facts clear
tion

to

it possible for an injunc-

be

Isaac Stern To Appear Here
In Concert Tomorrow Night
Isaac Stern, acknowledged by the music critics as one of
the greatest violinists of our time, will appear tomorrow at
8:15 p.m. at the Highland Park Hieh school auditorium in the

the

Dancers

October

concert

singers.
ances in

British
the

established

from
by

the

The
next
the series

pianist,

Bali,

and

Leslie

Bell

two
performwill be by the

Solomon,

Metropolitan

the

and

contralto,

by

Elena

Nikolaidi.
Now
29, Isaac Stern has been
called ‘fone of the world’s master
violinists” by Virgil Thompson
of
the New York Herald Tribune. He
first came to the attention of the
general public by his playing on
the sound track of the movie “Humoresque,” in which he ghosted the
violin score for John Garfield. His
best-selling
albums
of
Columbia
records have impressed his name
on millions of music lovers.
Exclusively
A

San

American

Franciscan

since

he

was

one year old, Stern is the only major violinist whose training is exclusively, American. He began his
studies
at six with
the
piano,
turned to the violin at eight and
made his Golden Gate debut at
11.

After

his

New

York

bow

which finally burst into a blaze of
recognition upon his Carnegie hall

recital in 1943.
Since then, Isaac Stern has performed in Europe, Australia, New
Zealand, South America and Israel.
He

is

nual

currently

concert

phony

on

tour
with

12

orchestras.

strument

his

eighth.

which
Mr.

is a priceless

an-

includes

major

Stern’s

sym-

in-

250 year-old

To Present Film On
Children’s Emotions
“Meeting the Emotional
Childhood” is the title of
to be presented at the
Park library next Tuesday
by

the

North

Shore

Needs of
the film
Highland
at 8 p.m.

Mental

Health

Miss
tive

Mildred

director

Mental
this

Tate,

of

Health

film,

the

administraNorth

Shore

will

follow

clinic,

which

the Vassar

with

Child

was

prepared

by

Study

association,

a brief talk and

a question

and answer period.
This meeting is a part of the ed-

ucational

series

sponsored

. The Reverend and Mrs. Jack D.
vide
a ‘suitablé ‘memorial
in St. Parker,
1111 Deerfield road, beGregory’s church when the church came parents of a’ son on December
is completed.
;
30 at Lake Forest hospital. ‘The
‘

£

3

a.m.

Saturday:

members.

McKillip
Mrs.

former

Mae

Elizabeth

resident

MckKillip,

of Deerfield,

died

January 5 in Florida in an automobile accident. Wife of Monroe H.
McKillip, she was born, Mae Elizabeth Walton.
:
Services will be held January 9
at 3 p.m. Shepherd Funeral home,
Hendersonville, N. C.

and

been
has

named
an

John

older

and

7:30

p.m.

Con-

NORTHFIELD
COMMUNITY
Sanders at Dundee
P.O. Deerfield,
Ill.
James Burford, Pastor
Telephone
Northbrook
935R2 .
SUNDAY
SERVICES
9:45 a.m. Sunday
school.
11 a.m. Morning
worship.
7:30 p.m. Eveninz services (monthly).
First and third Sundays: Evangelistic
services.
Youth
Second
and
fourth
Sundays:
fellowship
services.
:
service,
evening
no
If your church has
us in the
we invite you to join with
do not attend
If you
service.
evening
to
welcome
warm
a
you
give
we
church,
visit our services.

EVANGELICAL
ST. PAUL
CHURCH
REFORMED
AND
Road
638 Waukegan
Rev. H. 0. Willman. Pastor
Deerfield 858
8
January
THURSDAY,
of the
meeting
Monthly
p.m.
1:30
Women’s guild at the home of Mrs. John
640 Central.
Anfruns,
FRIDAY, January 9
St. Paul’s bowling league.
7 p.m.
A
SATURDAY, January 10
Confirmation instruction in
9:30 a.m.
t.
:
the church basemen
Evening vesper chimes.
6 p.m.
:
11
January
SUNDAY,
Sunday school worship and
9:30 a.m.
:
classes.
Chime call to worship.
10:30 a.m.
church worship.
Morning
11 a.m.
The members of the Youth
6:30 p.m.
in a
the church
will leave
Fellowship
at St. Steto attend a meeting
group
d
ical
church
Reforme
and
phan’s Evangel
P. Davis,
Dr. M.
in Chicago at which
retired missionary from India will speak
and show slides of his work in India.
MONDAY, January 12
Girl Scout meeting in the
3:30 p.m.
church basement.
Church council meeting in
7:30 p.m.
the church basement.
January 14
WEDNESDAY.
7:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal in the church
THURSDAY, January 15
Annual meeting of the con7:30 p.m.
Re.
gregation in the church basement.
freshments and fellowship period will follow the meeting.
FIRST

Peel

brother,

Kenneth
Paul, 3. The maternal
grandparent is H. H. McCallister
of Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. James
H. Parker of Michigan are the
paternal grandparents.
—

PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
824 Waukegan
Road
Phone

Deerfield

Dr. Paul J.
SUNDAY,
January
a.m.

775

Keller,
11

Church

Pastor

school

for

all

gradeg

through high school.
9:45 a.m. Adult Bible class under the
leadership of C. E. Piper.
11 a.m.»
Morning worship.
11 a.m.
Nursery
school
for children
B

to’6.

7 p.m.
Tuxis society.
MONDAY,
January
12
3 p.m.
Girl Scovt meeting.
7:30 vm.
Boy
Scout meeting.
WEDNESDAY,
January
14
7 p.m. Junior choir rehearsal.
8 p.m.
Church choir rehearsal.

THE

BETHLEHEM

(Evangelical

United

CHURCH
Brethren)

Francis
Geo.
Guither,
Ministe
815 Rosemarv Terrace
“Church Going Families Are Happy
:

Families”

THURSDAY,
January 8
3:45 p.m. Junior choir rehearsal.
6:45 p.m. Bethlehem bowling league.
8 p.m.
Junior guild.
FRIDAY,
January
9
6:30 p.m.
Potluck.supper, in Fellowship hall.
Annual
congregational
meeting.
SATURDAY,

January

10

7:30 to 11:30 p.m.
Teen-Town in Fellowship
hall.
SUNDAY, January 11
9:45 a.m.
Church school for all ages,
10:55
a.m.
Divine worship.
TUESDAY, January 13
8

p.m.

Fireside.

WEDNESDAY,
January 14
4 p.m.
Confirmation class.
7:30 p.m.
Senior choir.

Returns

has

p.m.

NORTH

for guests only. There is no charge
for

4

fessions.

by the

association. All members are urged
to attend and bring guests. A small
fee of admission will be charged

Parker

to pro-

CROSS CATHOLIC CHURCH
North
Waukegan
Road
pastor
Rev. John O’Mara,
Rectory. 724 Elder Lane
Deerfield 430
11:88.
10,
8:30,
7,
Masses:
Sunday
Weekday
Masses:
7:30 a.m.
at
Mass
month,
each
of
First Friday
HOLY

9:45

association.

child
Parker

GREGORY’S
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
Wilmot
and
Deerfield
Roads
(Wilmot
School)
The Rev. J. D. Parker Vicar
SUNDAY, January 11
KindergarFamily service.
9:30 a.m.
ten and
church
school
classes
for the
communion
holy
and
Sermon
children.
for adults.

sanctuary.

Guarnerius.

brothers,

W. Love.
memorial

Mental Health Group

in

1937, his steady climb upward was
accompanied
by glowing notices

CHURCHES

Company

for

%

ST.

Robert C. Nelson, was withdrawn
after it was opposed by attorneys

and make

Trailers

use, not as a residen-

granted.
Be Abandoned
More Garbage
Concerning the trailer camp. the
Information has come to us that
State Engineers said, “The trailerdump
camp
facilities were found to be Deerfield has a new garbage
Wilmot
and
Line
County
—at
very
unsanitary
and
inadequate
Their
recommendation
is as fol- roads. The report is that garbage
lows: ‘The trailer camp, providing has been dumped there, on private
scavengers.
private
by
housing for migrant
workers,
in property,
its present condition is unsatisfac- for a period of two weeks. Surely
actions
with
the
National
tory and should be abandoned. If our
housing facilities must be provid- Brick Company indicate our disaped, appropriate cottages or cabins proval of illegal garbage disposal.
wise will
should be built and equipped with | Perhaps a word to the
toilets. | be sufficient!
a
proper
water
supply,

appearances

Survivors
George, two
Mabel

reculations
and
continual
supervicion. Our Village Attorney. Mr.
Matthews. however. says the dumping should be ahandoned. and that
we should continue to enforce the
state law which prohibits dumping
in such locations.
This law
was
upheld
by the Cirevit
Court
of
Cock county when Glenview was
fichting its garbage battle, and arrests have alreadv been made here

of

High Series, Team

JEWELERS

if garbage
is to be
be done under strict

This important concert by Mr.
Stern follows the appearance here

Lauterberg &amp; Oehler’.... 25
20
PREIS
RS” 18 San aes eel ee
25
20
Lindermann
Drugs ..._... 20
22
Ben Franklin’
7
2a
23
Village Hardware ........... 20
25
ANCE,
Ch
es 19
26
COURS Pare
6 yk
19
26
H. P. Service Station .... 19
26
High Game, Team
Lauterberg &amp; Oehler ................ 989

1048

mend that
dumped. it

for industrial
tial area!

third concert of a series sponsored by the Community Concert
association.
Admission will be by membership card only.

Holy Cross
Bowling News
Team
Migwe’s

F. D. CLAVEY
\VINIA NURSERIES,

law the four
taken before
started
are’

by local medical

ties; (4) the
proved by the

FROST’S

areas.

to state
must be
can
be

(1) plans and specifications for the
installation must be prepared: (2)
the action must be approved by 1loapproved

RADIO AND ELECTRIC APPLIANCES

On
January
2, engineer H. A.
Svafford
and
scientist
Wm.
B.
Tackson of the Illincis Denartment
of Public Health made their revort
on their insvection of the garbage
dumnv end trailer camv at the National Brick Company. They recom-

Medical
authorities
addition of fluorides
of one part per mil- jon
the hacis of that law.
water is a good pre- |have no half way measures!
medicine and not harmful. have the dumping stopped

In the local area, Zion and Lake
Bluff
have
natural
fluoridation
while Evanston has added fluorides
mechanically to its water.. Reports
showed that no ill effects on the

BRUCE H. FORD

Registered

of

field gets its water from Highland
Park this issue also concerns the

ruary

came

meeting
it was proposed

Park

| State Engineers Issue
Report on Garbage Dump

DEERFIELD

shower-bath and laundry facilities,
including covered garbage cans.”
We say, if housing is to be provided, a better location can be found
as well!
This property is zoned

to Purdue

_ Greg Newell, son of Mr. and
rs. Robert Newell, 1321 Elmwood,
left Sunday to return to his studies
at Purdue university, after spending the holidays at home. Greg is
a sophomore this year and is ma| joring in speech pathology.
.

ini

;

oo

iF
:

r

apna

ys

es

is
nuar’
ER
OY

s

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AMEE

William

EER OO CE

REET

TRY OD

D. Free

William Douglas Free, 59, of 725
St. Johns avenue died Friday night
in Highland Park hospital. following a heart attack that day. Serv-

ices were held Monday

at 2 p.m. in

Kelley and Spalding chapel with
Dr. William Atkinson Young, minister of The Highland Park Pres-

byterian church,

was in
Skokie.
Mr.

the

officiating. Burial

Memorial
Free

had

Chicago

Park

been

and

cemetery,

employed

North

by

Western

Railway system for 34 years.
He
was born May 8, 1893, in Chicago
and
came
to Highland
Park
in
1917.
He was a member of The
Highland
Park Presbyterian
church.
Mrs. Free, who was the former
Olga Brown of Highwood, preceded
her husband in death last November 10. Survivors are a daughter,
Mrs. Billy R. Mince
of
the
St.
address; a son,
avenue
Johns
Thomas C. Free of San Diego, Calif.; a sister, Mrs. Jennifer Church

of Toronto, Ont.; and a grandchild,
Joan

Mince.

Mrs. Maurice K. Hodges
Mrs. Maurice K. Hodges, 90, a
resident of Highland Park for more
than 45 years died December 27 in
Racine, Wis., where she had been

Born in Chicago April 23, 1899,
Mr. Leonardi had resided in Highland Park since 1944. He was a
floral designer by profession.
Survivors are two brothers, Ernest
of Chicago
and
Louis
witk
whom he lived; and three sisters
Mrs. Domenic Cortesi of Deerfield
road, Mrs. Virgil Piacenza and Miss
Edith
Leonardi,
both of ‘the Me
Daniels avenue address.
Requiem mass was sung in In:
maculate Conception church Mon
day morning at 9:30 with burial in
Mt.
Carmel
cemetery,
Chicago.
Seguin Funeral home was in charge
of arrangements.
(Continued on page 38)

visiting her sister, Mrs. Franklin A.
Botsford. Mrs. Hodges’ health had
become progressively
worse
over
the past year. Services and burial
were held December 30 in Racine.
Born November 9, 1862 in Porsgrund, Norway,
she came
to the
United States as a small child with
her family and settled first in Racine. She was a member of Trin-

ity Episcopal church of Highland
Park.
Survivors are her
sister,
Mrs.
Botsford, and several nieces and
nephews.

Hypnosis Program
Slated for B’nai
B’rith Wednesday

Now on display in our
Central

Ave.

window

Suburban B’nai B’rith Men and
Women
will
present
Edwin
L.
Baron, master hypnotist, next Wednesday
netka

night

at

8:15

Community

in

the

Win-

Waa

House.

Mr. Baron’s theme will be “Hypnotism Puts a Hex on Excess Fat,”
using as his subjects members of
the audience. Members and guests

are invited. There

will be refresh-

presents

ments.

Lt. Charney Spends
Christmas Leave Here
Lt. George L. Charney,
son of
the
senior
George
Charneys
of
Valley road, spent Christmas here
with his family. He has now re
turned
to the
air force
base at
Omaha,
Neb.
Lt.
Charney
has
served a total of three and a half
years, two in England and France
He is a graduate
of Highland
Park
High
school
and
attended
Chicago
Technical
college
where
he studied architecture and design
before entering the air force.

Only the Want
values
able

and

replicas

of

THE 15 MOST
FABULOUS
DIAMONDS
IN THE WORLD

|

Ads offer amazing

opportunities

elsewhere.

aes
eee

EARN

Leonardi

Peter
Leonardi,
53,
died
last
Thursday in his home at 1500 McDaniels avenue following a heart
attack.

a

Peter

Obituari
ituaries

Read

them

not

avail-||

now!

Outstanding

SAVINGS
in the

MEN'S
WOOL

Shown

SLACKS

Grey flannels, gabardines.
Reguior 13.95, now ..............

279

SHIRTS

in Queen of

. Grand Mogul

carats

D ON’T miss this amazing collection
of replicas of the world’s largest, most
diamonds.

See

them

now

'

at

2.89

WINTER

collar,

Open

Central

8, 1953

Ave

Boa

Friday nights until 9

Garnett &lt; Co.
January

[ eT per

JACKETS

With quilted wool linings.
Regular 12.50. Now

Thursday,

.

-

ZIP JACKETS
Wool lined with mouton
Regular 32.95. Now

BOY’S

18.95

famous
Leeds.

Not all sizes and sleeve lengths
Regular 3.95. Now

MEN’S

106 carats

England’s Crown

SURCOATS
Quilted wool lining, double
pockets.
Regular 25.00. Now

WHITE

10.50

-

SIZE:

Lp

MEN’S

Koh-I-Noor

Above—ACTUAL

wr,

100%

STORE

HIGHLAND
PARK

JEWELERS

HI 2-2028

CORNER CENTRAL &amp; SHERIDAN
Page

7

�r re
j

Mr. and Mrs. Leonard J. Riccio
‘of 852 Burton avenue are the par-

ents

of their

first

child,

David

‘Mark, born December 21 in Highand Park hospital. Mrs. Riccio is
ithe former Charlotte
Lemme,
‘daughter

of

; Lemme

Mr.

and

Mrs.

of the Burton

ee

Chthes

AFTER

Walter

avenue

Prospect,

slide

At West Coast Port

Wie

Ens. Dean M. Olson, USNR, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Roy H. Olson of
South Deere Park drive, reported
back for duty December 29 aboard
the
-USS
Logan
at
Bremerton,
Wash. The Logan is participating

INVENTORY

SALE

ad-

‘dress. The paternal grandparents
|are Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Riccio of
‘Mt.

Ill.

f
*

in various naval operations off the
West

Coast.

arriving

SHIP

N’

@

BELTS

WE RANG OUT THE OLD
WE RANG IN THE NEW

for the morale

@

‘Shore folk for 19 years. Open for
‘Lunch and Dinner the year ’round.
_ Dancing

Sat.

nites.

' GRACE HERBST ANNOUNCES
ANNUAL JANUARY SALE
This
Sale is worth
' vevery year. Nowhere

@

NECK

SKATING

FORMALS

SWEATERS

spent

N. Western

Bh

Lake

at

Forest 2168

in

Highland

Park

early

A

graduate

High
from
Ind.,
also.

of

Highland

Park

school, he received a degree
Purdue university, Lafayette,
last August. At that time he
in
his commission
received

the navy since he had
the university’s NROTC

trained in
unit. Dur-

ing his: vacation, Ens. Olson ushered at two Chicago area weddings
of his Sigma Chi fraternity broth-

ers.

Gwen-

daughter,

Olsons’

dolyn; left Sunday for Ames, Iowa,
(Continued on page. 9)

ae

_ SUNSET FOOD MART

waiting for
is there’ 2

_ ‘Shades,
tery

Silver,

and

Glass,

China,

is

unusual

oe

any

home.

in

| |
| |

Pot-

and

out-

ALL POPULAR Me ANS

LAND

CIGARETTES

MAKE 1953
A BANNER YEAR

0’ LAKES

ee “BUTTER

Carton $] 89

PURE

SHUREFRESH

OLEO

in

your

life

so

far.

Begin

‘the year
‘beautiful

with a new Buick;
car which will take

iand

family

your

to far away

the
you

places

ifor a good many years to come. The
utmost in comfort, performance,
jand
dependability.
North
Shore
‘people buy at Kleeburg Buick, that
‘old established firm at’1732 First
‘St. Call HI 2-4800 for demonstraition.

JANUARY

SALE

' . CONTINUES
You will still find many marvelous
‘buys at this Sale which is featured
‘by Edith Saletra. 729 St. Johns Ave.
on
Reductions
interesting
‘Most
Lamps,
Glass,
Pottery,
‘China,
‘Clocks, and Occasional Furniture.
oppora splendid
presents
IThis
jtunity to buy a few new worthwhile

or as an im-

home

for your

litems

1-Lb. Quarters 77°

THOSE WHO
PIZZA AND

;

The

North

crowd

of

splendid

‘Food

stop

at

who

Skokie

Sko-

1-Lb.

Ctn.

21 Cc

Kennels
gone.

to

Best

century

Board
of

while

everything.

of experience.

they’re
Half

Daily

a

Rath

Wh hefiold
Adv.

Page

8

POTATOES
ase
16-tioel

10

SYRUP --.------- 12-oz. BH. P5¢

CABBAGE ..

NOODLES

Pierre

last May.

ae

rs, 69¢
on LOC

1-bb. Cello Bag

25 ¢

Suns 13¢
Zucns,

19¢

recently
of Miss

Edna E. Carlson of Evanston whose
marriage to Eugene P. Ellenberger
of Linden avenue will be solemnized Saturday at 4:30 p.m. in The
Highland Park Presbyterian
church.
The
women
members
of
Elm
Place school’s faculty, of which the

bride-to-be

is also

a member,

feted

Miss Carlson at a recipe shower
ond tea in the home of Mrs. Stanley Slusarezyk of Elmwvcd
drive,
Friday
afternccn
Miss
Nané¢y
Jennings of. Evanston was hostess
at a linen shower for Miss Carlson.
who
was
also
the
honored
guest
at a recent
miscellaneous
shower given in La Grange, IIl., by
Miss Margaret Halstead.

ea

BABY FOODS -------- G Jers Strained 5Qc¢ | GaMices ... poz. 39°

CENTRELLAY
“GRAPE

JAM

et

19

FAVORITES
BAGS

HYDROX

Basic Steps
in Diagnosis
CELLO

COOKIES

VIENNA FINGERS
KREEMLINED WAFER

Ail 3 Only 69c
PARD

DOG
Cans

FOOD
29¢

BLEACH

Quart

] 5c

SUNSET
FRIDAY

SWIFT’S

PREMIUM

RROWN

’N SFRVE

SLICED BACON !-Ib. Cello ...... 5Jec
CHOICE

ROUND
SWIFT’S

NIGHT

A

757 Central
IS FAMILY

(CELLO)

SAUSAGE-. - Ya-lb. Pkg. AOc

PORK

or SWISS STEAK- Lb. 8Qc

—

BETTER

FOOD
Avenue
NIGHT

When you consult a doctor
about a serious condition he
usually advises a blood test,
urine
analysis,
X-rays
or
fluoroscopes of the area in
which pain is felt.
It may
even be necessary to take one
or more tests that will show
if certain

PREMIUM

WIENERS -.------------------------ I-Ib. Cello AQ¢
CHOICE GRADE BEEF
POT ROAST Blade Cut .................... Lb. 59c

Y2 Gal. 29¢

8-7,

Sun. 2-5 by appt. Closed holidays.
2810 Park Ave. HI 2-1352.

aT

ene 20-05. Pha: 2c | Eames

LINCO

best people
Butterworth

TPT

Florida

;

sunny climes,

and happy.
The
their
Dogs
to

) Ist Qs

I

-... 2 8-oz. Pkgs. 25 | v.s. No. 1 Selected

LIBBY

LAUNDRY

and be an escapist. But

Pkgs.

WAFFLES

MANSE

CENTRELLA

3

2
----------------------12-oz. Can A5¢

PREM

GOLDEN: MIX
OLD

19-02. $1 OO

ss. sco

MACARONI

2

be sure your Dog is safe, well cared
or,
take

COOL

OR

are

SEMMS EVERYBODY’S
GOING SOUTH
While you're enjoying

X

SWIFT’S'

Gardens

for this cold snappy weather.
Kie and County Line.

M

FOULD’S

Italian

where
Rosie
Fantozzi
makes
the
imost delicious of these you’ve ever
eaten.
Eat at the place or take
along with you. Wonderful dishes

Go ahead

CAKE

SUNSHINE

APPRECIATE
SPAGHETTI

Shore

‘connoisseurs

‘DUNCAN HINES
1X White, Yellow or

Ra-

opposite

‘portant gift. Located
Vinia Station.

York

Several
friends
have
given
parties in honor

‘Resolve to make this New Year the
'greatest

in New’

Prenuptial Parties
Honor Miss Carlson

Furniture.

Everything

sailed
Miss
Monie
May
Monday for London where she
will’ enroll in the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art.
The
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray
May of. 1475 St. Johns avenue, she was. awarded a scholarship to study in England by
the American National Theatre association after an audi-

tion

perfectly deare
Lamps,

Occasional

|.

Miss May has appeared with
the Threshold Players, Tenthouse theatre and an eastern
theatrical company.

Shop
showing
more
beautiful
‘things for the home than this newfly enlarged place at 563 Lincoln
; ‘Ave.
Winnetka.
At
_ lightful
reductions

|

the

month.

The

t

650

Olson

&amp;

comes
in.
The
spot
for
North

DRESSES

@ TURTLE

to dine

upon wonderful food served in a
‘delightful atmosphere. That’s where
; Villa
Moderne
' favorite
dining

BLOUSES

er

*Now we’re through with old 1952,
; what are’ we going to do? Let’s re/solve to go out to dinner and a
_8ala evening quite often this year.
“It’s splendid

SHORE

eee eeeeee

@

Eee

}

last

ae

Ens.

Christmas holidays with his family, |

}
}

,ey,

To Study Abroad

a|Ens. Dean M. Olson
Reports For Duty

MEAT

ALWAYS

—

MART

— A Central Food Store
AT SUNSET — STORE OPEN

ee

‘TILL 9 P.M.

areas

or

organs

are

affected.
While
this involves
more
expense and time in the beeinning it means surer and
swifter control of the illness.
In the long run it is less costly

in time

and

health

than

the

methods doctors had to follow
before
the
development
of
these valuable aids.

Earl W.
—

Gsell &amp; Co.

Pharmacists—

Thursday,

January

8,

1953

�| The William Ernsts
To Mark 60 Years
Together Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. William Ernst of
1496 Ridge road will celebrate their
60th

wedding

anniversary

on

Sun-

Bible interpretation
Talks To Be Given By
Rev. R. G. Bealer

Ensign Olson
man

studies

The Rev. Ralph G. Bealer will
present his program of Bible interpretation at the First United Evangelical church tomorrow, Saturday

Also

a graduate

(Continued
where

day at a small gathering of relatives at their home.
and Sunday at 8 p.m. Mr. Bealer
Long-time residents
here,
the will emphasize how the Bible readcouple was married
in
1893
in er can obtain the most spiritual
Highland Park by the Rev. Sch- benefits from this text. An opporwartz,

at

that

Bethany church.
Mr.

years
Park.
Sack,

Ernst

came

time

minister

of

Born in Germany,
to

this

country

65

ago and settled in Highland
His wife, the former Laura
whose

native

field, has lived
of five.

city

here

is

since

Deer-

the age

tunity

1. ‘Church

in 1922 at the
age
of 23. Mrs.
Charles Sharpe (Mabel Ann Ernst)
of the same address is their daughter.
Next summer, when friends and

easily

far

away

can

more

given

during

one

of

. The general topic chosen by Mr
Bealer is “Where
Is The Church
Jesus
Founded?”
The
following
titles will be presented at the 8 o’clock services:
Your

from

be

the services for a question and answer period.

Four children were born to Mr.
and Mrs. Ernst, two of them died
in infancy, and a third, a son, died

relatives

will

Member,

What

Are

Assets?”

2. “One Plus One Equals
3. “Falling Into Line.”

One.”

from

page 8)

she has resumed
at Iowa

her fresh-

State

college.

of Highland

Park

High school, Miss Olson has pledged

Chi

Omega

sorority.

She

and

literature

lege,

at Huntington

Huntington,

was

Ind.

pastor

Until

he

near Huntington,
but
rehis pastorate to devote more

time to lecturing

and

Highland

anniversary

$199.50 to $595.00
COME

promoting

the name of Huntington college.
A graduate of Moravian College
and Seminary for Men located in
Bethleham, Pa., he has done grad-

Religion, Butler university in Indi(Continued on page 38)

to

ut pies

She

Ger.
Shy

OF

IN AND LET US KNOW
YOU HAVE!

252 E. Deerpath

The

WHAT

Lake Forest et

Future

c

lark

q

In this corsair of the highway you live a motoring life like nothing you ever
feel joyously free as the winged creature that gave its name to this Buick.

knew

before

—

The Skylark is styled for those whose motoring tastes call for extra flair, whose choice
runs to slick beauty and rakish lines. See this car of the future tomorrow at Kleeburg Buick.

On Display At Our Showroom Starting Friday, Jan. 9

Kleeburg
1732
{ |

Thursday,

January

&gt;

Magnavox.
Prices range from

of a congre-

ning to celebrate their
at an open house.

trip

Phono Combination and the new 27 inch

re-

cently

SETS

We have a few 20 and 21 inch table models
|
—also 21 inch Console—21 inch TV Radio —

col-

gation
signed

TELEVISION

TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE UP TO $150.00
ON YOUR PRESENT SET!

4. “Buy Up Your Opportunities.”
An Ordained Minister
Mr. Bealer is an ordained minister and teacher of Bible languages

uate work at Capital university, Columbus, Ohio, and at the School of

the

15 USED

returned

to Ames with three fellow students
who had been her houseguests during the New Year holiday.

Park, Mr. and Mrs. Ernst are plan-

make

WANTED:

Buick,

Ine

HI 24800.

First Street
8, 1953
a

ee

Tee a

MONT.

he,

:

i

�Susan Rich, Diane Kahn

||

Two Highland Park High school
freshmen
returned
home
New
‘Year’s
Day
after a vacation at
Miami Beach. Mrs. A. A. Rich of
Dell lane accompanied her daughr, Susan, and Miss Diane Kahn,

daughter
of the Saul Kahns
of
Lincolnwood road, when they flew

. | to

Florida

stayed
Shore

at

December

the

hotel

King

where

16.

Mr.

and

Joseph,

Mrs.

David

daughter

of

Joseph

of

Lakeside place, was hostess at an
open house recently for her Highland Park High school friends.
Miss Joseph, who spent the holidays with her family, is a freshman
at the University of Indiana.

They

.Cole
they

Miss Maxine

North

met

sev-|

eral other Highland
their stay.

Parkers during

Minutes

After

The

in

most

risk

Installation
“risk

conspicuously

capital”

was

demonstrated

to builder Robert Jensen, 654 Kincaid street, last Friday, when a $40
window in a new house he is constructing

was

broken

by

a

prank-

ster with a half brick 15 minutes
after it was installed. The building
is located at Comstock avenue near
St.
Johns avenue.

TOP QUALITY BEEF SPECIALS
POT ROAST
lb. 59
STEAK
lb. 85c¢
EGGS. Soc cces « OOZ. O9E
Swiss or Round

Country

FOOD

Shown at their wedding reception in the Woman’s club
are Lt. Roger Morgan, USN, and Mrs. Morgan whose marriage
was

DAY

AND EVENING CLASSES IN ART
FOR ADULTS AND CHILDREN

REGISTER NOW
FOR SECOND TERM

$] 00
$100
$100
$100

Studio open daily from 9 to 5
Schedule of classes mailed on request.
CALL OR WRITE FOR FURTHER INFORMATION

4 0z. 5 for $100
for $100

Greenleaf

new, FANCY CATSUP
14-o0z. Btl. @ for $] 00
SWEETHEART CREAM STYLE CORN No. 303 Tin 6 for $100
SWEETHEART WHOLE KERNEL CORN Vac Pac _.. 6 for $] 00

SUPER MART
1848 First st.
PICCHIETTI

&amp; ORI

is
i

ei

a

a

i

i

i

i a

i

?

,
,

nee

for $100

PARADISO TOMATO PASTE ...................... 6 oz. 12 for $100
MORTHERN TOILET TISSUE ..............00000 0000000052. 12 Rolls $] 00

Evanston

We are pleased to announce the appointment of

&gt;

;
;

4

:

on

JELLO, All Flavors, Your Choice ......................... 12

$] 00
$100
$100
$100
$100
$100

Sherman

DEAN A. = BUCKMASTER

»4
S
2

;:
&gt;

tp, i

for
for
for
for
for
for

1515

Drive Carefully — The Life You Save
May Be Your Own!

Fancy New York ___. 303 Tin ‘7 for $100

pana. GREENIE PEAS 2
No. 303 Tin ‘J
1.G.A. CREAM STYLE CORN ............... No. 303 Tin 7
1.G.A. WHOLE KERNEL CORN ___.___. No. 303 Tin 7
MOURA SUPERS PEAS 80
No. 303 &amp;
MOLE PINEAPPLE JUICE .......:....:.....: 12-oz. Tin ]Q
CAMPBELL’S TOMATO SOUP ............................ 10

5-1035

as our

North

Shore

representative.

H. F. PHILIPSBORN &amp; CO.

iti

SAUCE,

Conception

mm

Cavern Pieces &amp; Stems MUSHROOMS .._s
Club House SARDINES in Olive Oil 14's

Immaculate

KATHERINE LORD'S STUDIO

VALUES
for
for
for
for

in

89e

2 forfor 25c
$1 00
4.
4
4
5

27

Fla.

z. Jar 3 for $700

1.G.A. FRUIT COCKTAIL in Heavy Syrup Tall! Tin __.
LIBBY’S TWICE RICH TOMATO JUICE ._____. 46 oz.
RIPE ‘N RAGGED SLICED PEACHES ___. Tall Tin
MARLENE MARGARINE
1-Ib. Pkg.

1.G.A. APPLE

December

i

Pkg.

solemnized

church.
The bride is the former Norma Santi, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Issiah Santi of Deerfield road.
Lt. Morgan,
who is stationed at Glenview Naval Air station, is the son of
the Kern Morgans of Unionville, Mo.
The couple will be at
home on Deerfield road after their return from Palm Beach,

for $100

2-lb.

Photo

i

DOLLAR

Bett’s

4 for $100

12-0

SPECIAL

$100
$] 00
$100
$]00
$100

ti ti ti ty tie te the tie th, tp tp tp

EYE French Style GREEN BEANS
EYE CUT GREEN BEANS
EYE CUT WAX BEANS
EYE CAULIFLOWER
ETE SUCCOTASH 2.
VELVEETA CHEESE
DINNER

for
for
for
for
for

Real Estate First Mortgages

10 S. La Salle St.

Chicago 3, III.

FRanklin

2-1660

UNiversity 4-6369

iLiad

BIRDS
BIRDS
BIRDS
BIRDS
memes
KRAFT
KRAFT

8
4.
5
5

i

FROZEN

TREESWEET ORANGE JUICE 6 oz...
SLICED STRAWBERRIES in Sugar, 101/2 oz.
BIRDS EYE PEAS

i

Fresh

»_e2 i

Large

=

|

$40 Window Broken By Brick

Miss Joseph Gives Party

_ Fly Back From Florida

Thursday,

January

8,

1953

�: Local Woman Goes Beserk In
A Strangely Shambled Room
By Evelyn

latched
banged

on
and
the
into place we

having traveled
airline.

back
door
scurried up

Mr.

before lunch time.

But underneath

our early morning
an uneasy feeling,

vigor there was
kind of like we

were

about

to break

This

Once

O -RE

Mrs.

Sam

O EREE 0 ew

Giallanza

of

Mrs. JoseGreen Bay’

100,000 miles on an

one

during

and

ternal grandmother is
phine Giallanza of 1811
road.

now

held

McDonald

two

Joan

a seige

of

flu

Frances

McDonald,

Mrs.

we

William

E.

McDonald

Sr.

453 Laurel avenue. Joan’s
and
sisters
are
William

to make

tailored

suits and

of chain for turning out bracelets
and necklaces
which
she _ never
would find an opportunity to wear.

coats for

her dolls. In the same box there
was a chain of paper clips which
could have reached twice around
the house.

We

wasted

The
desk
drawer, designed to
hold her coloring
books,
crayons
and pencil work, yielded the following:
a piece of wood, 14 torn
rubber bands, six popped balloons,
a half-gone Japanese fan, an empty spool, two chewed up erasers
and 12 Valentines.

half an hour

disassembling these for the box on

the desk downstairs

from

whence

they were snitched.
There were three hideous
red and tan
purses
which
“Phoenix,
Arizona’
on the
flap. These were the separate
of two grandmothers and an
As far as we know our child

little
said
front
gifts
aunt.
had

Sequin

In the shag

where or even carry one outside of
the room.
Another box housed a collection
of acorns
gathered
up from
the

front

lawn

and

for which

job

We

she

an

was paid a nickel per pail.
These
we felt were expendable and we
reached in to scoop them up when
suddenly
one
moved.
Another
rolled over on its side and then a

come

ar

to

over

abandon

us

and

the

we

were

whole

ready

project

mid-course, but instead
our eyes and stuffed the

| acorns, box and all, into
_ tom of the trash basket.

in

we _ shut
animated

the

bot-

ak Rage

—

eee

asi

The next find was equally repugnant and it’s a happy thing its contents were
immobile.
A _ life-size
_ tarantula nestled at the bottom of
the box with three lizards, a cater_ pillar and two snakes with a very
_Yeal rubber texture. This was labelled “Keep Out.”
There was a peculiar love note
along with every drawing she had
_ @ver made since nursery school. It
read, “To Henry.
P.-U.
To
you.
Brat Rat.’’ This we could not bring
ourself to dissipate, remembering
Similiar missives we had saved.
Trading
Trading

cards

Card
filled

up

another

_ shoebox, labeled, ‘““How Many Cards
et! Have.”
The inventory included

| “7 people, 47 horses,
| cats, 19 botes.”

outsize

19 dogs,

14

There was a tiny box which used
contain a pin her father won for

January 8, 1953 _
wit

y

ib

little

box

next

of

door

sea

shells

brought

the

back

from Florida some
12 years ago,
but not until their child went off
to college last fall were they able

our

house

and

it

we'll

have

to wait

palm

them

off on

looks

just

as

though

as long

to

someone

else.
Well, we were sitting there with
one of the larger shells to our ear
— just to see if that old gag about

hearing the ocean really was true
— when the sound of small voices
swirled up the stairs and then we
knew

that

we

were

trapped.

The new stuff never got put away
and the old stuff never got thinned out and our only hope is that

the men in the white coats get here
before next Christmas.

Willard Hadlock

Studies At Brown University
to

Hadlock

his

returned

freshman

Satur-

studies

at

Brown university, Providence, R.I.,
after spending the Christmas holidays
with
his parents,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
George
Hadlock
of
Havenwood.
Willard
attended Highland
Park High school before transferring to Lake Forest academy from
which he was graduated.
WM: i
Ree

ok

-

Rag

IRPORTE? i

erAN
ak ter © hic

£e

CRANBERRY

ORANGE

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Roger

Fresh-Frozer

T. Vignoc-

chi Jr. of 2725 St. Johns avenue are
the parents of their first daughter,
Antonia
Ammazzalorso,
born

&gt;

$

$

RELISH

and Ready to Serve
OT

$

§

$

* Wehes Shoe Stas
w

After

Christmas

Clearance

» SALE

f+

&gt;

all of Chicago.

of their first son, James

bern

December

22

Henry

in

ey amous

Wakes

Jr.,

Highland

Park
hospital.
James’
sister
is
Cathy, 24%, and his grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Harold H. Hines
and Mrs. Adolph Drey, all of Chi-

tt}

WOMEN'S—
RED CROSS

Pathman

9

890

O

Mr. and Mrs. William J. Pathman

of 378 Delta road are announcing | § (&gt;
the birth of a son December 24 in
Highland Park hospital. They are
also the parents of twins, Richard
and Laurel, 342. The grandparents
are Mrs. Esther Pathman and Mr.

and Mrs. James

Morganroth,

Other Makes

Chicago.
Gritton

730

&gt;

Pleasant avenue are the parents of
a daughter, Pamela Marsha, born
December 17 in Highland Park hospital. They have two sons, Stephen,
5, and Lawrence, 2.
Mr. and Mrs. Julian Lentin of
Chicago
are the maternal
grandparents and Mrs. Samuel Gritton
of Westfield, Mass., is the paternal
grandmother.

ee

The

Herbert

Grittons

of

Brown

Christopher is the name chosen
by Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Brown
(Margaret McClure) of Stamford,
for their first son,

born

De-

Mrs. L. F. McClure of Woodland
road are the maternal grandparents
and Mrs. George Brown of Glen-

coe

road

is

the

paternal

ME N'S—
FREEMEN
790
1090
ALL ODD

Mr.
of

216

Mrs.

Green

Bay

Carl
road

W.

AND

grand-

3 Doors

East

Highland

Central

of Bank

Park

Konsler
OPEN

announced

the birth of their second child and
first son, David Allen, on Christmas Day in Highland Park hospital.

SIZES

&gt;

“499
and

LOTS

“LIMITED TIME ONLY!!”
Pe, Suc SG

mother.
Konsler

590

e

all of

cember 21. The Browns have a
daughter, Carol, aged 2. Mr. and

Returns to

For color, taste
and sparkle

Vignocchi

Mr. and Mrs. James H. Hines
of 642 Gray avenue are the parents

Conn.,

Willard

Tony
Ammazzalorso
of
Ont:
Calif., formerly of Highwood, |
Joseph Vignocchi of Lake For
a former resident of Highwood.

Hines

to sneak the shells out of their
house and find a place for them in

day

Box

underfoot,

got lost for a little while in

people

skinny worm skittered out of it.
By now a cold, sick feeling had
|

Stars

rug

nicks,

e

CPO
Friday in Lake Forest
Their son, Roger Jr., is 3 years
The grandparents are Mr. and N

Mr. and Mrs. George J. O’Connell of 261 Laurel avenue announce
the birth of their fifth child, Scott
John,
at Highland
Park
hospital
December 17. Scott has two brothers, George,
10 and Jerry, 8, as
well
Nancy, as 12two sisters, Jean, 15, and

cago.

sparkly stars shone up here and
there, result of holiday decorationmaking, and we wasted a good half
hour picking these
Ra
of
their
hairy bed.

never been known to wear one any-

21

4

O’Connell

of

brothers
Jr.,
14,

Child Happy In Bed.”
It was de- Mary Helen, 12, Kathleen Grace,
else’s house.
Dennis Charles, 3. Mrs.
signed to keep the little one busy 7, and
In
the
seven-year-old’s
room while her mother went about the Henry Busch of Lignite, N. D., is
there was a chaotic combination of business of the house, confident the maternal grandmother.
_ this year’s haul and last year’s rem- that her child was putting in good,
nants which we had felt could be constructive hours despite the as- Peskin
neatly switched, but it didn’t take pirin and the nose drops.
In order
Lawrence
Fredric is the name
long to learn that this was but a to execute the book’s ideas, how‘given by Mr. and Mrs. Jerome
dream.
ever, the patient had to be provided
After a very few minutes it be- with bits and scraps of things pre- Peskin of 332 Hedge Run to their
came evident that last year’s stuff sumably found in every well run second child, born December 24 in
Highland Park hospital. Lawrence’s
had been disposed of by the inhome. So, there was this box hung
cumbent in some deft way and what over from that era — three corks, sister, Marcie, is 444. The Robert
Peskins of Hartford, Conn., are the
remained
were
niggling little
chips of charcoal, large and small paternal grandparents and Mr. and
things in boxes which could not be
buttons,
odd
lengths
of wire, Mrs. Philip Jacobson of Cleveland,
categorized but which must have
Scotch tape (for which we turned Ohio,
are
the
maternal
grandmeant something to her — someour own desk inside out last week)
parents.
what like the things which wind up
and two
tired
birthday
candles.
in the bottom of a sewing box and
What this was supposed to result in Altman
are
saved
for some
never-to-mawe have long since forgotten.
terialize need.
Their second child, a son, was
Then there were
charms
from
December
25
in
Highland
The Swatches
the gum ball machine.
At least a born
million. These
we were
happily Park hospital to Dr. and Mrs. Alvin
There was, for example, a shoeable to combine
with this year’s S. Altman of 1486 Oakwood avenue.
box full
of
swatches
scrounged
Their eldest son is Jeffrey Paul,
gift from an aunt — a box of charm
from her father’s factory — hun‘4. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
craft
jewelry
which
held
a
million
dreds of squares with neat pinked
more charms and various lengths Abe Altman and the Isador Plot-

edges in the fabrics of the hour,
_ from which she some day planned

Lynn,

i

nse

born

December 24 in Highland Park hospital, is the fifth child of Mr. and

had brought
her
a_ book
titled
something like ‘““How To Keep Your

into someone

O &lt;E

Lake Forest announce the birth of
a daughter, Eleanor, on December
27 at Lake Forest hospital.
Ma-

soiled chiclets.
Right next to this
another little box held two old navy
beans.

the stairs somewhat surreptitiously
to make use of the three full hours

OE

sister is Carole

months, and his grandparents are
Mr. arid Mrs. Morris Konsler of
Henderson,
Ky., and the Silvio
Pasquesis of Fort Sheridan avenue.

Giallanza

Lauter

file away the new toys and weed out some of the old ones and
now we are waiting for the men in the white coats to take us
quietly away.
way
was

David's

Hello World
CR

While the walking doll was still able to walk and the new
puzzles still boasted all their parts we attempted this week to

School was mercifully under
again and when the last boot

4

Mey

wy

$

$

FRIDAY

NIGHTS

$$

HI

2-0172

&amp;

&amp;

�er

MRS

Me

New Year's Eve Supper
2
__

__

Mr. and Mrs. Donald
of Laurel avenue, were

Joan Chester Is Four

Christmas|
The Leonard Chesters’ daughter,
hosts at a|Joan, celebrated her fouth birth-

New Year’s Eve supper party for day Tuesday afternoon at a party
for 12 friends in her home at 820
nine couples.
Marion

SAVINGS
UP TO

Highland

avenue.

20-30%

Exceptional

3

dates

Park’s newly organized

for tonight

and

January

22,

Mrs. B. W. Fairbanks, 1730 Ridglee, will succeed Miss Helen Taylor
as accompanist
for
the
chorus,
sponsors revealed.
“Additional singers will be welcome,” Mr. Millard said, “and we
will fit them in as quickly as good
musical balance will permit.”
Choristers who joined the new
community
singing
project
last
month include James Allen, Lloyd
Bergquist, Mr. and Mrs. John Eisendrath, Mrs. Edward Kramp, Miss
Kathie Laing, Walter Lillie, Mrs.
Tracy Rodgers and Mrs. Reino Takala, all of Highland Park.
The group’s 1953 meetings will
begin work for a possible spring
concert, the bulletin noted.

Values

e
yy

Fy
fe a |

.

Bike Reported Stolen
21
of
Shlopack
recently reported

Mrs. Wallace
Lakeside place

HI

2-0010

|:

at 8 p.m. in the “Log House” of
Director Everett L. Millard, Sycamore place.

All Sales Final

a
ae

F

“We have limited our places to
10 sopranos, altos, tenors and basses,” said a bulletin which went to
nearly 40 singers of the community.
The bulletin
announced
meeting

WINTER COATS
SNOW SUITS
DRESSES
SKIRTS - BLOUSES

:
Ff
|
|

wae

Community Chorus
Singers Name Two
As Section Heads
community
chorus
this week
announced appointment of two members as “‘captains” of sections. Mrs.
Graham Newey, 60 Central avenue,
bh} soprano, and Mariedythe Ward, 909
will
take
Half Day
road,
alto,
charge
of roster
and
attendance
records of their groups.

;

ay

eee

1927 Sheridan Road
Highland

Park

the theft of her daughter’s green,
Braeside
24-inch bicycle from
school.

The engagement of Miss Lois Ehrenreich, daughter of
Mrs. Evelyn Ehrenreich of Hubbard Woods and Louis Ehren- —
reich of Glencoe, to Alvin Mecklenburger of Lincoln avenue —
was announced

at a New Year's eve party in Mrs.

home.

No date has been set for the wedding.

burger,

was graduated

LARGE

WOMAN'S

SELECTIONS

OF

from

University of Michigan.

the

His —

fiancee is a graduate of the University of Wisconsin.
Brothers

Dobeus

and his guests are sopho- |

Michael Mead and Robert Jewel Eee
Ae ae
ee
of Indianapolis,
Ind.,
were
the fayette,
Ind.,
and
members,
of
houseguests of William Dobeus of | Sigma Chi fraternity. He is the
South
days

Deere Park
during
the

drive for a few|son of Mrs. V. M. Dobeus and
holidays.
Mr.! mechanical engineering student.

— MISSES — JUNIORS

es
no
REE
Petre

e

east

a

SALE!

Brake
aie
We

ie.

4

‘ cae

,

® DRESSES
© SKIRTS

® PAJAMAS
® GOWNS

© SWEATERS

© BLOUSES

a

® STOCKINGS

:

¥%, to 2 OFF

.

CHILDREN’S TO SIZE 16
SNOW

a

4

3

b

7"
:

SUITS

SKI

DRESSES

SLACKS

PANTS

POLO

REDUCED
Every

Open

Evening

SHIRTS

FLANNEL

%%

Yes,

SHIRTS

251 Waukegan Ave.

Infants’, Children’s Wear

Highwood, III.

person

who

regularly

sets

aside even a small part of his or her income in a
A growing bank balance is a protective shield
against many unexpected blows of ill-fortune.

Start saving next payday — with us, we suggest.

ROSBY’S
Women’s,

the

savings account is playing the part of prudence.

Until 9 P.M.

Member

HI 2-0976

—

burger, who is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert F. Mecklen- —

Host To Fraternity

CLEARANCE

—

Ehrenreich’s

Mr. Mecklen-

of Federal

Deposit

Insurance

BS

Corporation

RTL ¢
of HIGHLAND

PARK

a

�‘

Ballroom Dancing
Class To Resume
January 19 at ‘Y’
The

winter

Education

series

classes

of

at

Church Groups Plan
Week’s Activities
For Varied Ages

the

the

Adult

YWCA

will begin on the evening of Monday, January 19, with the ballroom
dancing class taught by Mrs. Lucy
Smith. The fall classes were completed early in December.

Next

Sunday

lowship

group

Methodist
meet

the high
of

the

church

in

at 5 p.m.

in the

school

North

On Monday the Men’s Work com-

January
work

Shore

with

the

more

will

church.

further
tration

information
at HI

and

and

High

will meet

in

School|the

the

the

to

Men’s_

analyze
club

the

in

On

Thursday

at

7:30

Senior choir, rehearsing in

tl

parish|Parish house at 8 p.m.

p.m.,

the

the/high school basketball team will}
meet at the Central school gym for
practice.
Also meeting that evening

The

Young

planned

an

the

Aragon

jnext

of

ballroom

has —

Group

Marrieds
evening

dancing

in

Chica

Friday.

Turn to the Want-ad section for
“Hard-to-find”’ items there at money~ _—
t
saving prices!

will be

200 CARLOAD SALE |
HOME APPLIANCES |
$50 OFF!

intricate

dances such as the rumba and the
tango.
While the group is chiefly composed
of
couples,
arrangements
may be made for individuals who
wish to take advantage of the opportunity for instruction. Persons
interested may call the YMCA for

of

meetings

church.
The meeting will convene
at 8 p.m. and adjourn at 10 p.m. in
the church dining room.

This new class will continue for
10 weeks, every Monday night. Mrs.
Smith
will
start with
the
basic
steps in the fox trot and waltz con-

tinuing

Youth

of Highland Park, will meet for|house for rehearsals at 7 and 8 p.m.
the second time in a series of four|respectively next Wednesday.

Fel-

Glencoe

The

mittee, chaired by Adolph Frankel|choirs

ROEBUCK AND CO.

for regis-

2-0675,

ee

&amp;
oe

When

hs

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»

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dials do all your work...
clothes in, set the dial and

does the rest! Completely
7 complete rinses!

Kenmore

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soon?

90

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automatic

with

Automatic

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Regularly $259.95

Kenmore Automatic Dryer
Regularly $199.95
right
clothes
Just flip the.

dries
operated,
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from washer... in minutes!

switch, it’s completely
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automatic

from start

Here’s advice that’s

opportune!

11 Ft. Coldspot
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width

defrosting!
freezer,

Servi-Shelf

Regularly

mod-

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size,

tation

2”

Safer,

wringers.
easier.

‘

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Semi-automatic,

safety

.

wringers.

Washer

agi-

3-vane

action.

Electric

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balloon
better,

139

lroner

Chair

included!

blouses,
Deluxe.

shirts.

irons

everything . . . pleats,
Kenmore

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at

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t

Silvertone Table TV

The Know-It-Owl says:

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| YELLOW

$5 Down ; i
$8 Month {*

—the CLASSIFIED section
of your telephone directory—
model

with

4

e DOORS

thermo disc burners... spa-

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e PLYWOOD &amp; VENEERS
e WINDOWS—METAL

cious oven
broiler!

Saiiaitliciiaiasapermeeete
eT
Trp

a ‘Thursday,

January 8, 1953

Regularly
$119.95

.

.

.

slide

$ 89

out

4 burner,

Gas

divided

Range
top,

grid-

die converts

to 5th

burner.

Waist
high
20” oven.

broiler.

Large

= ‘Regularly
$230

=$9Q9
2

GIANT

14-FT.

Coldspot—America’s

freezer!
stores

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more,

490-Ib.

yet

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freezes

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FREEZER

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Delivers any home
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appliance

SEARS, 601 Central, Highland Park 2-4600—Open Friday Nights

2

for e BUILDING MATERIALS

Dual-knob

;

�‘Membership In
Bloodbank Open

Membership in the Jacob BlumThe
Off-campus ‘Fiction
Workberg Blood bank of the Lake Counshop starts its second - eight-week
ty Medical society is open without term this morning at the Womcharge to residents of Highland an’s
Library
Club
of
Glencoe.
Park, Highwood,
and Deerfield, Women who. are interested may
and is a simple, effective way of phone Mrs. Roland G. Maus at HI
Other
Highland
Parkers
solving the problem of paying for 2-4575.
attending the classes are Mrs. Wilblood transfusions when needed or liam Bresnehan, 418 Arbor avenue
of finding blood donors, a spokes- and Mrs. Mare Goldsmitn, 177 S.
man for the group said Tuesday.
Deere Park drive.
Begun

in

1951

through

a

grant

from
the Blumberg
family, the
Blood Bank has located at 32 North
Utica street, Waukegan, has a reported

enrollment

of 6,219

persons

for 1951 plus 1,489 persons for the
| first 10 months of 1952.
Of 2,365
transfusions performed, 967 took
place last year and 1,398 this year,
the Lake County Medical society
reports.
Members
are
not charged
for
blood and are not required to replace it.
The $10 cost of a transfusion covers administration costs.

Non-members
'

must

pay

$25

or

more for each pint of blood re_ ceived in a hospital or must replace

two

pints

bank,

$10

in

in

the

hospital

addition

to

administrative

Members

must

blood

paying

to

the

Lawrence

A.

Keating

of

Milwau-

kee. There will be a vacation during February and on March 5 Adelaide Gerstley of Chicago will take

March,

finishing the second

and continue as
third eight-week
April 2.

a pint

of

bloodbank

is

re-

freshman

ceived.

at Indiana

OPENING JANUARY

is

ship

committee.

Beauty
“Excellent

Care

For

a

university.

12

course

beautiful permanent waving.
Deerfield

1525

World

an

lems in world affairs” will meet
two hours a week for 10 weeks on
Tuesdays at Highland Park Public
library, beginning January 15.
Offered
by the University college of the University of Chicago
and the Chicago Council on Foreign

the
leadership
of
Stuart Bernstein.

Claude

Wells,

Mr.

and

director

Mrs.

of

the

Chicago area program at University college, said this week that the

community program is built around
discussions of such questions as “Is
war inevitable?”, ‘Can democracy
and communism
exist peaceably
side by side?”, “Would the follow-

balance

Politics

his

library

peace . . . domiworld
govern-

of power?”

own

No

judgments

or write

program,

lege, 19 South
cago 3.

EVER

Politics,

ligent, mature examination of prob-

Public

Proprietor

é HAVE YOU

in

pre-

and

The discussion group was formed
in the belief that “intelligent support for the foreign policy of a
new president calls for greater understanding of the basic problems
of foreign affairs.”
Those interested in joining may
make inquiries at Highland Park

experience in hair shaping, styling and

Clara A. Fisher,

were

adult education activity whose only
objective
is “to encourage
intel-

to form
answers.

Hair’

Road

scholar

awards

tence is made of offering any final
answers
to- them,
however, since
the participant himself is expected

You will profit by our many years of

666 Waukegan

the

The

ing policies bring
nation,
isolation,

Coe
Your

forty students
by

made
on the basis of the interviews, impromptu
essay, need
of
the
student,
scholastic
achievement,
general
promise
of
good
work and personal characteristics.

ment,

Nee

and

Miss

relations, the discussion group of
30 participants is to meet under

Miss Maxine Joseph, daughter of
the
David
Josephs
of
Lakeside
place, was hostess at a recent open
house for her Highland Park High

Joseph

hundred

interviewed

A

Miss Joseph Holds Open House

Miss

One
were

HP Public Library

instructor for the
term which starts

friends.

of Mrs. Irving J. Schwarz of Beech
street,
was
recently
awarded
a
scholarship
at the
University
of
Colorado. It is a full tuition scholarship effective this spring semester.

Resume Classes At

term.

The workshop, sponsored by the
literature
departments
of
the
Woman’s Library Club of Glencoe
and the Woman’s Club of Wilmette,
meets
every Thursday from
9:30
am. to 12:30 p.m. at the Library
club.
'

school

In Los Angeles Ceremony

World Politics To

over the direction of the group.
She will conduct classes through

the

blood when called upon, probably
once every four years.
As much
blood as is needed will be given
to members and their families within 10 days after application for admittance

The workshop continues, through
January,
under
the direction
of

charge.
donate

To Wed

Off-campus. Workshop Caroline Schwarz Is
Awarded Scholarship
Opens 2nd Session
in Glencoe Today
Miss Caroline Schwarz, daughter

the

University

LaSalle

World
col-

street, Chi-

Katherine

Awarded B. A. From Chicago

Ko

Mrs. George E. Backus, the former Meera
McCuaig
of 184 Maple
avenue, was awarded a B. A. degree in the humanities
from the
University
of Chicago
December
19. Mrs. Backus, who is the daughter of Mrs. William Klevs of the
Maple
avenue
address,
and
her
husband make their home near the
campus
of the wniversity
where
she will continue her studies in the
field of advanced mathematics. Mr.
Backus is presently working for a
Ph.D.
degree
in mathematics
at

Chicago,

club

met

party

December

in

29 for a

the

Ye Vichols

Wo Whd © askorne a
Coremony

Saturday

Miss
Katherine
McNichols
of
Los
Angeles,
formerly
of Green
Bay road, will become the bride of
Stanley
G. Keltz Saturday
at 10
a.m. in the Precious Blood church
of Los
Angeles.
The _ bride-to-be
is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Thomas

MeNichols

nia

and

city

the

of the

niece

Califor-

of

the

home

of

Mrs. Earl P. Fritsch of
lane to exchange
gifts
carols.

Old Briar
and
sing

Returns To Michigan

State

SEEN THIS?

(Continued

on page

23)

Senior James N. Faucetts
Return From West Indies
Mr. and Mrs. James N. Faucett
Sr. of St. Johns avenue, formerly
of Glencoe, recently returned from
a six weeks’ trip to Aruba, in the
Netherlands
West
Indies,
where

they

visited

their

ter-in-law,

the

cetts.

Faucett

Mr.

son

junior

and

by Lago Oil and
Ltd., in Aruba.

to East Lansing, Mich., where she
has resumed her studies at Michigan State college. Miss Howard, a

mile round
trip to Aruba
on an
oil tanker.
Included in their itinerary was
a
visit
with
Mrs.
Faucett
Jr’s.
mother, Mrs. R. N. Cubberley, in
Westfield, N. J.

Alfor

The

Faucetts

Transport

traveled

Highland
Park 2-3100

Delightful brick Ranch in unique one acre
beautifully landscaped, in West Lake Forest.
construction and design. Custom built in
prominent architect.
Designed for flexible
spacious bright rooms. Two car attached
For

further

BAIRD
576 Lincoln Ave.
Winnetka 6-2700
Page

14

setting,
Quality
1950 by
living;
garage;
details

THE

Cheery

‘ basement;
‘living

room

wide

picture

breezeway

call, MR.

with

birch

panelled

kitchen.

the 4,000-

fireplace;

dining

“L”

with

windows.

Enclosed

brick

and

pine

CHANNER

INC.
Winnetka, Ill.
BRiargate 4-9001

Ry,

tee

na

Large

stone

patio.

&amp; WARNER,

Qa
Fxg wy
Den

WEEK

Co.,

Typewriter Repairs
Finest work by our expert
repairmen . . . and fully
guaranteed!

Telephone

OF

Fau-

Jr. is employed

|SR
RI
LAE

HOME

daugh-

James

Miss Jean Howard, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Carl G. Howard of
Lakeside place, returned Monday

senior and a member of Kappa
pha Theta sorority, is studying
a degree in home economics.

FEATURE

Em-

Mass.

The
Musart
club
of Highland
Park, a small singing group which
Mrs.
Lisle
Hawley
directs,
will
sing for the Golden circle at its
February meeting.
The

thanine

mett Moroneys of Green Bay road,
Mr. Keltz is the son of Mr. and
Mrs.
Max
Keltz of Springfield,

Musart Club Will
Sing for Golden Circle

Christmas

McNichols

Typewriter Sales
Office machines, portables, adding
machines. Some excellent
buys in reconditioned
machines!

645

DR
FEES
AE
EAE
Thursday,

January

8,

1953

�‘Tell Betrothal of
Caroline Schwarz
And Donald Lenef
Miss

Caroline

last Tuesday

daugh-

ter of Mrs. Irving J. Schwarz of
Beech
street and the late Mr.
Schwarz, is engaged to wed Donald Lenef, son of the Louis Lenefs
of Colorado
Springs, Colo. The
news was told at a family brunch
in the Schwarz’ home during the
Miss

Schwarz

Highland

Park

is

a

and

graduate

High

Miss Patricia Murphey,
Mr. and Mrs. Elmore
Pierce road,
gave
a

of
of

Schwarz,

holidays while Mrs. Lenef
son were houseguests.

Troth Of Miss Thom
Is Told By Parents
On New Year's Day

Miss Murphey Has Holiday
Luncheon For Friends .

school

who

were

daughter
Murphey
luncheon

At a family dinner party New
Year’s Day, Mr. and Mrs. L. A,
Thom of Central avenue announced
the engagement of their daughter,
Louise, to George C. Herrmann
Jr., son of the senior George Herrmanns of Deerfield.
Both Miss Thom and her fiance |
are graduates of Highland Park
High school. Mr. Herrmann holds,
the rating of petty officer, 3rd:

for
16 of her friends

also

home

from

college

for the holidays. She is a freshman
at the University of Arizona.
mores at the University of Colorado in Boulder. They plan to
finish their college educations after
their wedding this summer.
The Lenefs and Miss Schwarz
left Monday for Colorado, where
the young people will resume their

her

of
and

both she and her fiance are sopho-

class,

in

the

naval

reserve.

As yet, no date has been
the wedding.

classes.

:

set for.

er
EVANSTON HIGHLAND PARK

Percy

Prior

Jr.

Photo

Caroline Schwarz

Centenary
Are

Home

Students

day

on Vacation

William

ward

Loewenthals

her

parents,

Ledbetters

of

the

Linden

the annual Christmas dance, ‘“Win-

of the Ed-

of Moraine

with

E.

Park place.
Miss Loewenthal was a member
of the committee which arranged

Centenary
Junior
college
students home on vacation in Highland Park are Miss Peggy Loewen-

thal, a senior, daughter

season

ter Fantasy,’
senior
class
young women
this week.

road;

and
Miss
Etienne
Ledbetter,
a
junior, who is spending the holi-

for members. of the
at Centenary.
Both
will return to classes

“...and to think,
just last week

hidden

I was a
Washwoman!”

by Peter Pan

No one will ever know
what a blessed relief it is
to get rid of that big family wash for good and all.
Now | have time for my
friends, my children, myself, on washdays because
| send all of my laundry—

Peter Pan,

Hidden Treasure

Skokie

Sizes

Your

Dry Cleaning
Laundry.

for Over

With

Your

a Quarter

of a

Peter Pan, Tripl-Treasure, does what nature didn’t with permanent inner-pad construction. Natural-contour pads can’t
slip out of place—create YOUR shape, retain THEIR
shape through countless wearings and washings.
Sizes 30-36AAA. Plunging white nylon 5.00
» Strapless white nylon 5.95

Century.

rus Sear in
SERVICE

Skokie Valley
LAUNDRY
“Where

&amp;

DRY

Your
Main

CLEANERS,

Clothes
Office

Stay

and

INC.

Young”

’

Plant

Highland Park 2-3310 — Deerfield Call Enterprise 1616
512-518
Thursday,

January

Waukegan
8, 1953

32-38B

32-36A;

Peter Pan, Hidden Treasure Plunging, for fuller measure in a
plunging neckline bra. The added bustline flattery of
Hidden Treasure, in a neckline beautifully adapted to
fashionable decolletes and plunging necklines. Elastic contour band keeps plunge perfectly centered.
Sizes 32-36A;
32-38B.
White broadcloth, 3.95
White nylon 5.00

3/4 Family Finish Specialists

CAUMDRY

bust or in-between

Regular, white broadcloth, 3.95
Strapless, white or black ny!on, 5.00

Valley

Send

for the small

size. Adds glamorous fullness without pads, puffs, or devices!
The contour’s built right into the patented
MAGICUP—and can’t wash out.
Plunge separation.

shirts, flatwork and every-

thing to
Laundry.

treasures

Ave.,

Highwood

EDGAR

A. STEVENS,

Evanston

store

hours,

Highland

Park

store

EVANSTON

Inc.
9

to

5:30

hours,

9

—-

to

Mondays

5:30

HIGHLAND PARK
and Thursdays,

Monday

through

9

to

9

Saturday
Page

15

�Be, Chandler Olen
Weds

Wiss

Wewark,
Miss

Sinyth

O

W

for-

s t | 7

O

M

Engagements

n

eC

Mm

Betrothal Announced Christmas Night

Announce

Wiss Hoan

Ohio Kites

Barbara

Lynne

Smyth,

ler Olsen December 28 in the Newark Presbyterian church.
Mr. Olsen is the son of the senior James
Franklin Olsens of Maple avenue.

The double ring ceremony was performed by the Rev. James S. Bolen
before an altar setting of Christmas greens, white
chrysanthemums, and white candelabra.
The bride’s blush pink wedding
gown was designed with a fitted

and

long pointed

sleeves

illusion

fell

from a

tiara

Barger

Mr. Aubrey, who was graduated
‘rom
Lake
Forest
academy
and
Princeton university, is in business

of

Chantilly lace. The full skirt of net
fell over satin, and was finished
with a long pointed peplum of net
outlined with
medallions
of
the
lace.
Her finger tip veil of blush

pink

ae

The engagement of their daughter, Joan Lee, to David Aubrey of
Hazel avenue has been announced
by
her
parents,
Mrs.
Morris
R.
Liles of Detroit and H. Hardesty
Barger of Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
Miss Barger, who attended Bradford Junior college and Michigan
State
college,
was introduced
to
some of her fiance’s Highland Park
‘riends at a party during the. holidays given
in
the
home
of his
oarents, the James T. Aubreys.

daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elbert
Duane
Smyth
of Newark,
Ohio,
became the bride of Gerry Chand-

bodice

Fly To Sarasota For
Two Months’ Holiday

Betrothal

Of Dravid Aubrey

S

Tews

Chas

i

Weddings

aed

Two Highland Parkers who are
enjoying an extended vacation in
the South are Miss Jeanne Tupper,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd A.

Tupper of Lakeside
and Miss
Marjorie

Manor road,
Whitman,

daughter of the John R. Whitmans
of Oakland drive.
The young women flew to Sara-

sota, Fla.,

the

where they
ment at the
two months.

Miss
turned

first

of

the

year

have taken an apartFlorasota Gardens for

Tupper’s sister, Janice, reSunday at the end of the

Christmas vacation to her classes
at Michigan State college in East

Lansing

where

she

is a freshman

student.
in Detroit. No date has
set for the wedding.

as yet

been

Her Engagement To Easterner Told

of

seed pearls, and she carried a bouquet of white
mums,
stephanotis
and white poinsettia.
Miss Sherry Dee Smyth, sister of
the bride, was maid of honor in a
gown of silver
and
green
paper

taffeta with a dusty pink headdress.
As

bridesmaid,

Miss

Carolyn

Chandler Olsen} sister of the bridegroom, wore a dress of blue nylon
net over dusty pink taffeta with a
headband of dusty pink.
Both attendants carried colonial bouquets
of pink and white carnations and
garnet rosebuds.
Mr. Olsen
asked
his father to
serve as best man and the ushers
were Richard Beebe and Kenneth
McCreary of Newark, Ohio.

The

bride’s mother,

Mrs.

Smyth,

was attired in a starlight blue faille
dress with navy
blue accessories
and wore a corsage of pink camel-

lias.

Mrs.

Olsen

wore

a navy

blue

taffeta gown with a mauve flower
hat and matching corsage.
The
bride was graduated
from

(Continued on page 23)

Dll BetrothalOf
Charlotte
David
Mrs.

Yo

to

Ralph

Cleary

of

road has announced the
of her daughter, CharDavid

Yoe

Williams,

son

of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Yoe Wil:
liams of Wincanton lane. The announcement was made at a cocktail
party Saturday in the Cleary home.
Both young people are graduates
of Highland Park High school. A
sophomore at Marymount college in
Tarrytown, N. Y., the bride-to-be
is the daughter
of the late Mr.

Cleary.

Her

fiance

is a senior

at

Georgetown
university,
Washingfon, D: C.
No date has been decided upon
as yet for the wedding.

Gardner

Grants Visit

Mr., Mrs.
Mr.

and

(Ellen
have
visit
Mrs.

Hyman
Mrs.

Pierce)

Pierce

Gardner

of Providence,

Grant

R.I.,

returned East after a holiday
with
her parents,
Mr.
and
Hyman A. Pierce of Sheridan

road.

Mrs.

Grant

left

yesterday

Wiss

en

Bonspiel Next Week

ed

WCE

Twenty-four
rinks
are
entered
in
the
International
Invitational]
Bonspiel
which
Heathers
of the
Chicago Curling club are sponsoring next week,
Monday
through
Wednesday. The Chicago-area rinks

be joined

by

rinks

from

Mil-

waukee and the provinces of Quebec and Ontario, Can. Finals will be
played
off
next
Wednesday
night. The event will find indian
Hill club defending a trophy won
last year.
Chairman
of a _ buffet
supper that the Heathers will give
for
out-of-town
guests
is
Mrs.
Ralph A.‘ Treischmann of Central
avenue.
Some of the other Heather mem(Continued

on page

23)

Lt. (jg) James B. Smalley
Reports to Virginia Base
Lt.
USNR,

Va.,

(j.g.)
has

where

James
B.
returned
to

he

is stationed

Smalley,
Norfolk,

aboard

the destroyer USS Haynsworth. Lt.
Smalley spent his two weeks’ leave

with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Burton M. Smalley of Fairview avenue.
Lt.
Frank
Theinpong
Moline,
Ill., who. also serves
board
the
Haynsworth,
was

of
on
Lt.

Smalley’s

the

houseguest

through

holidays.
The
Smalleys’
daughters
were
also home for the season’s festivities and
have
returned
to California. Miss Nancy Smalley came

and her husband returned a few from
Palo Alto where she is a
days earlier.
freshman
at Stanford
university.
The Pierces’ son, Daniel, a lieu- Mr.
and
Mrs.
Howard
Stafford
tenant in the air force, left Mon(Janet Smalley) of San Francisco
day for his air base at Foster field|and their two-year-old
son, Rob-

in Victoria, Tex.
Page

16

Chase

Heathers Are Hosts
For Invitational!

will

me

Wihams

Mansfield

Sheridan
betrothal
lotte,

Chary

Merrill

Photo

Miss Beata Swanson

ert, completed

the family

circle.

Mansfield

P Li, Spring

Wedding

Mr. and Mrs. Daniel C. Swanson
of Pine Point drive announced the
engagement
of
their
daughter.
Beata, to Welton C. Mansfield, son
of Dr. and Mrs. Charles W. Mansfield
of Pleasant
avenue,
at an
open
house
on
Christmas night.
The
young
couple is planning
a
spring wedding.
Miss
Swanson
was
graduated
from
Roycemore
school in Evanston and her fiance is a graduate of
Highland Park High school. Both
young people spent two years at
the College of William and Mary
in Williamsburg, Va.

Wiss

Conde

olynn

Plans To Wed Ratgors
Sa

Do une

Kbos

The Eugene Kileys Visit
Here During Holidays

Miss Lynn,
who was graduated
from Highland Park High school
is a senior
at the University
of
Colorado in Boulder. She is a member of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority
and will receive her degree in the
field of elementary education.
Mr. Hargreaves will be graduated in June from Rutgers university, New Brunswick, N. J., with a
bachelor of science degree in mechanical engineering.
A member of
the university’s ROTC unit, he will
be commissioned a second lieutenant in the U. S. Air Force at graduation.

on page

23)

Spend

Holidays

Here As

Guests Of Clarence
Mrs.

visit

Robert

and

her
Mrs.

is

W.

Clarence

Walsh

to

her

return

to

at

Miami

She

and

Christmas
were
has

New
here

of

next

Entertain

FebruOxford,

by

and

Mrs.

Mac-

O.,

who

home.

Jr., is with the
aboard ship for

several

months.

New

Year’s

at an open

over

Year’s

Day

Mr. and Mrs. W. Alcock
ston
of
Marion
avenue

tained

came

Va.,

Canfield,

returned

Mr. MacDonald
navy and will be
the

in

MacDonald

and

Sr.

since

classes

Portsmouth,

joined

Donald

preparatory

university,

Mr.

from

a

father,

avenue,

home

Jr.
for

and

Northland

O.

here

mother

of
ary

Walshes

MacDonald

Walsh)

with

Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. C. O. Frisbie Jr. of
Pierce road announce the engage:
ment and forthcoming marriage of
her
daughter,
Constance
Lynn
to Robert Mark Hargreaves, son of
the
Mellor
Hargreaves
of
Narberth, Pa., formerly of Winnetka
They are planning to be married
in June.

(Continued

Junior Robert MacDonalds

(Geraldine

Miss
Swanson finished her college
education
at
Northwestern
university and Mr. Mansfield will
be graduated from Lake Forest college in February. He is a member
of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity
and Miss Swanson is affiliated with
Pi Beta Phi sorority.

Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Kiley have
returned to their home in Colorado
after
visiting
in
Highland
Park
since December 19. They were the
suests of Mrs. Kiley’s parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Edwin M. Hadley Jr. of
Kimball road.
The
former
Jessie Hadley
and
her husband, who is the son of the
Timothy
S. Kileys
of Woodland
road, are making
their home
in
Boulder
while
he
continues
his

Lynn

Miss Constance

house

Johnenter-

Thursday

night in honor of Mrs. Johnston’s
brother, Walter W. Wood of Rumson, N.J., a former Highland Park-

er.
day

Mr. Wood

was

here

for a

five-

visit.

Thursday,

January

8,

1953

�:

ome

Siew

ey

Wks

ete

mi AZ

Jor

Wee

Holidays pee

4

Geraldine Bailey and Ellen Whitney (| kneeling), both
Wellesley college students, give the feminine touch toa tree
at Exmoor, prior to taking breakfast there on December 3
as guests of Mrs.

Howell

W.

At

Murray of Linden avenue.

right are Ann Lawton and Diane Weeks, also of Wellesley.

Highland
Park
High
school student Julie Whitney, arriving, is greeted cordially by Nan
Hutchison and Suzy Stunkel.
Above,

This foursome from Highland Park may meet next year
on the eastern college’s campus. Left to right, Miss Hutchison, Sue Jacob, Mary Biggert and, at top, Lynn Elliott. Wel-

GOING

Mothers attending
the
breakfast included Mrs. A. J.
Bailey, at left, rear who is
Geraldine’s mother;

Mrs. Fran-

cis D. Weeks, mother of Diane,

GOING....
O01... cae

and Mrs. Frank Wales and her
daughter, Connie. Seated are
Gail Porges of the senior class
at Highland Park High school;

Mrs. Murray, and Gay Stirlina
and Mary Driscoll, also HPHS
seniors.

The breakfast was one

of the highlights of the young
women’s Christmas vacation.

.

. . Whoa!

left,

things

like

Officers Of

To Assume

which

cording secretary; Mrs. Kenneth

CANDID

bration.

BOYS’

GIRLS’

Dress Coats

Flannelette

Dress Coats
Storm Coats
Snow Suits
Ski Pants
Dresses
Flannelette Gowns

Pajamas

and Pajamas

Storm
Snow
|}

Coats
Suits

Ski Pants

Sizes:

Girls

infant

infant

thru

thru

But

very

the

so

proved

have

MERICA-SU

|

PRIOR,

Of

JR

stock—and

there’s not

left.

1/3

to

%

8, 1953

502 Central Ave.

All

OFF

Dresses
Sportswear
Coats

Millinery
Robes
Handbags

Suits

Belts

AoE

AS

Od

by 3 Pale
Ti, a
$

10.

4

Meas hitel

CHILDREN

Friday Evenings ‘Til 9 P.M.

And

PHOTOGRAPHY

January

Cpen

tags,

Remember,

The Style Shop
FOR

So

season.
price

low

to hurry!

pre-teen

size

in order

Year wardrobe cele-

private New
you'll

items,

ridiculously

few

past

in the

these

tiny

fabrics

and

for the new

clean’’

them

very

picked-over

not

popular

in

apparently

the

styles

same

to move

want

this is all top-premium
much

¢

710N

599 ROGER WILLIAMS
PHONE HI 2-3199
Thursday,

given

we've

REDUCED 25%

H.

ai

H.

We

for your own

OGR,

COMMERCIAL

PERCY

have

And

represents

ends.”

‘n’

MEMBER

WEDDINGS

@

but

hand

FEW

successful

folks

(you

a:

precious!

“odds

most

the

history

have

mighty

. . . no

we show!)

to be “spanking

Boys

@®

still’.on

weeks.

,_

secretary;
Farris,
corresponding
Mrs. B. V. Reaney, treasurer; Mrs.
Roger McManus, member at large;
Mrs. Percy H. Prior Jr., who was
re-elected, publicity chairm n° i
Robert Hollis, representative to the
(Continued on page 24)

PORTRAITS

things

leavings,

Duties

Incoming
and
outgoing
board
members of Infant Welfare Wings
will hold a joint board meeting at
the home of Mrs. Robert F. Walker
Jr., 273 Briar lane, next Monday.
At that time the calendar for the
coming year will be discussed.
New officers, who will take over
their duties at the conclusion of
the January 19 business meeting to
be held in the home of Mrs. Robert
Moon,
161 Laurel avenue, are as
follows:
Mrs. Winfield Fisher, president,
Mrs. Darwin M. Rummel, vice president; Mrs. Joseph W. Brown, re-

@

stock

Sivle Shop

Inf. Welfare Wings

the

do

are

few

been

has

20-year

our

We

on!

those

but

1952

Y’see,
all

Hold

““left-overs’”

just

Not

New

prospective students

and

lesley girls, some of their mothers,
were feted at the breakfast.

Day

Why
North

Wednesdays
have

HI 2-6944
DISTINCTIVE

FASHIONS

FOR

MORE

chosen

THAN

do

you

Shore

think

women

Hilborn’s

70

for

YEARS
Page

17

�Annual Holl,

IMMACULATE
CONCEPTION CHURCH
Deerfield

and Green Bay Roads
HI 2-0202
Rt. Rev. Msgr. Joseph P. Morrison
Pastor
Rev. Donald B. Runkle
Rev. Bernard
£. Burns
MASSES
Sundays—6:15, 7:30, 9:00, 10:00,
11:00 and 12 noon
Holy Days—6:00, 7:00, 8:00, 9:00,

op——— 52

Uissicn

Weekdays—6:15, 8:15
CONFESSIONS
Saturdays,
Eves. of First Fridays and
Holy Days 4:00 and 7:30 p.m.

‘

Things
By

I Remember

Harry

Levinson

Everytime I hear the expression about a cat having nine
lives, I’m tempted to ask. “How
many
‘lives’ does a diamond
have?” Seriously, the question
really does come up.
Several weeks before Christmas, for example, a well-known
Chicago
broker
came
to me
with what, to him, was a di-

lemma. He had a ring that had
been in his family for many
years but was rarely worn. I
saw the diamond to be of excellent cut and clarity. But he
felt the ring to be too “old
fashioned” to be of any value.
Well, it’s true that there are
“styles”
in
diamond settings
just as there are in any material things. That’s why a diamond
merchant
may
sometimes suggest resetting to you.
But a fascinating thing about
the diamond itself is that the
gem
can
remain
untouched

through

many

mount

Ravinia village house was, as usual, the setting for the
The three smiling young women above are Miss Beverly
traditional Holly Hop given by the Ravinia Woman’s club. Hutchins, Miss Sally Quigg and Miss Barbara Simon. Beverly
Photographed as they came in were Louise Roberts, Highland and Barbara, home on vacation from freshman studies
at the
Park High school senior and Jack Riggio, sophomore at Lake University of Miami in Florida exchanged Highland
Park High
Forest college.
s€hool reminiscences with Sally, a high school senior.

changes.

Actually
no item of apparel
you
own
can
be remade
so
many times and still look as
smart as diamond jewelry.
The
well-known
“brilliant”
cut of 58 facets, for example,
Was developed by a Venetian
cutter
many
years
ago. The

fabulous

Hope

Diamond,

recut

down to 67% carats from its
original 112 carat size by King

Louis

XIV

of France,

has

re-

mained
virtually
unchanged
since then.
And the famous Inquisition
Necklace of 336 diamonds and
15
rare
barrel-cut
emeralds
needed only a setting of platinum
baguettes
and brilliants
to make it “modern.” Actually
you can say that styles in actual diamond
cuts change so
gradually
that in a lifetime

the same
excitingly

was

stone will still be as
new

as

when

it

first mounted.

There is an inherent dignity
and beauty in a well-cut diamond.
Many
of
Chicago’s
smartest
women
wear
gems
that have been in their families for generations adding fine
tradition to beauty.

8

In between dances, our photographer snapped this four
some standing against the pine branches decked with sparkling

for the college and

a senior at HPHS.

Jr.

The

dress-up

party
high

is always

a holiday

school-age

crowd.

gathering-spot

Pouring

punch

for

white snowballs which provided decor for the party.
Left to two college sophomores is Mrs. Car! King, Ravinia Woman’‘s
right, Diane Christiansen, and Terry Loevenhart, HPHS seniors; club member and one of the chaperones.
Miss Margaret NieLarry Brown, a freshman at Cornell, and Robert Irons, also ter is a student at Bradford Junior college and Harold Schick
studies

at Amherst.

So there’s no need to worry
about a diamond
going “out
of style.” Your gem
has far
more than just nine lives; it’s
almost unchanged by time.

..

Your house of jewels
Jewelry from $50 to $150,000

739-43

Page

North

18

Clark Street, Chicago

Katharine

thb 3

SECRETARIAL

MOVING

AND

PACKING

OF

HOUSEHOLD

GOODS

@

AGENT

ALLIED

VAN

LINES

STORAGE
474 Central Ave.,

Highland

Park

HI 2-0181

@

ever

Never

cnoush

enough

Gibbs-trainedtraine
Gibbs

Courses for high school and
private
school
graduates
and
college women.
Five-school personal placement service.

Catalog:

Executive Dean

51 E. Superior St., Chicago
DE

11

7-3306

Other Gibbs Schools: New York
Boston
Montclair, N.J.
Providence

| Flies

To

Florida

Miss Peggy Phillips, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Stanton V. Phillips of
Roslyn
circle,
left December
26
for St. Petersberg, Fla., to spend
two weeks visiting her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Louis A. Phillips. Miss Phillips is a junior at
Highland Park High school.

No

matter

what

you

want

to buy

or sell you'll find the Want-Ad
tion

your

best

Thursday,

market

sec-

place.

January

8,

1953

�who include the boy’s uncle and
aunt, the Harry Waldmans of Boston, and Mrs. Waldman’s uncle and

Out-of-Town Guests
Arrive For Bar Mitzvah
Of Ronald Waldman
P. Wald-

aunt,

the

man of Wade street are entertaining several out-of-town guests who
are here to attend the Bar Mitzvah

geles

will

Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin

of the

Waldmans’

son,

Ronald,

on

Ridgeview

Mr.

and

A.

C.

Slavins

gather

for

of Los
lunch

hotel

in

Mrs.

Waldman

An-

at the

Evanston.

Saturday morning at North Subur- hosts to the congregation
El Friday night, the eve
ban Synagogue Beth EI.
At noon, the family and friends,|son’s Bar Mitzvah.

will

be

at

Beth

of

their

Gives Farewell Party

Celebrates 21st Birthday

Mrs. Vera Cox of 622 Onwentsia
avenue

gave

a farewell

urday

night

thony

Tricarico.

ed

into the

for her son,
Carlo

army

Sheridan.

He

Park

school

High

party
Carlo
was

Tuesday

attended
and

SatAn-

induct-

at Fort
Highland

finished

his

Thomas Weil was feted recently
by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward S. Weil Sr. of Cedar avenue
at the Wing and Fin club in Volo.
A few of Thomas’ close friends attended the party which was given
to celebrate his 21st birthday. Mr.
Weil returned to his senior class

education at the Williamsburg High

studies

school

Carolina,
Chapel
Hill,
Tuesday
ais
:
where he is majoring in journalism.

in Williamsburg,

Ky.

at the University of North

H™

you see pictured the Golden Anniversary
ROADMASTER — engineered, styled, powered and
bodied to be fully worthy of its paragon role in this
fiftieth year of Buick building.
A quick listing of simple facts will reveal just cause for
celebration.
Doris

The

Jean

"It has the world’s newest V8 engine.

Lawson

engagement

of

Vertical

valves; 12-volt electrical system; 180 pounds lighter;

entire engine is so compact, a new, more maneuver-

Miss

Doris Jean Lawson to Roy L.
Richardson
was
announced
during the holiday season by
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.

able chassis has been built around it.

%

Ill. Both young people attend
Arizona
State college.
Mr.

It has 188 Fireball horsepower. A new Buick
record; engine horsepower per pound increased 40%,
*% It has a compression ratio of 8.5 to 1. Highest
compression on the American scene today; bettered
fuel economy.

Richardson,

%

Samuel

A.

Lawson
who

of Ashton,

is the

son

GREATEST

CARS

of

Mrs.
Grace
Richardson
of
Michigan avenue, is a junior
and a member of Sigma Pi
fraternity.
His
fiancee,
a
senior student and an Alpha
Delta Pi, will receive her degree in elementary education.
An August wedding is planned.

thas a dynamic-flow muffler. For the first time in

automotive history, a muffler with zero power loss.

it has a new Twin-Turbine Dynaflow Drive.
Now
adds far swifter, quieter, more efficient getaway to

%

ns cy,
tice

Pianist, Composer
To Entertain Club

infinite smoothness at all speed ranges.
thas new braking power. Most powerful braking
action of any Buick in fifty years; plus the new ease
of Power Brakes, optional at extra cost.
* It has a still finer ride. The softest,
steadiest, most buoyantly level ride that
Buick’s advanced engineering has
yet produced.

Women Wednesday
Orchestra leader
Otto will entertain
guests of the Ravinia
next Wednesday at
Ravinia

village

William (Bill)
members and
Woman’s club
2 p.m. in the

house.

A pianist and composer,

will play original music

Mr. Otto

as well as

works of others. Among the dance
dates his orchestra has played are
the
1948
and
1951
Cotillions,

Bachelor and Benedict’s ball, and
many debutante parties at Exmoor
Country
club, Onwentsia,
Shore
Acres, Saddle and Cycle and the
Racquet club. He has also appeared
on numerous radio and television
shows.
Mrs. Robert Churchill of Forest
avenue is program chairman. After
the entertainment Mrs. E. E. Dier-

king, house chairman, and her committee

will

serve

tea.

It has, also, wondrous handling ease, with Power Steere

ing
has
are
the

WE'LL WARM IT
UP FoR YOU

as standard equipment, It has superb comfort. It
sumptuous fabrics and tailoring. And its acoustics
so thoroughly mastered that it may well be one of
world’s most quiet cars.

But no listing of facts can do true justice to this phenomenal
Television treat—the BUICK

CIRCUS

HOUR—every

fourth Tuesday,

WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT
BUICK WILL BUILD THEM

automobile,

or to its brilliant brothers,

the

1953 SUPERS and SPECIALS.
And no words can really tell you the beauty you see,
the comfort you feel, the excitement you experience—
when you look at and drive any one of these big, beautiful, bounteous Buicks for 1953.

Will you come in and see for yourself that these are,
in simple truth, Buick’s greatest cars in five brilliant
.
decades?
Equipment, accessories, trim and models are subject to change
without notice.

eet

Kleeburg
499 VINE AVE.°4. HI 2:0027
Thursday,

January

8, 1953

1732 First Street

Buick,

Ine.
HI 2-4800
Page

19

�Richard
OL

Colony

Was

Bells Tell

Engagement Of Their
Mr.

and

Mrs.

Richmond

T.

Bell,

of Grayslake, formerly of Highland
Park, announce the engagement of
their daughter, Francenia, to Jack
L. Gibbs, of Canton, Ill.
Miss
Bell
attended
Highland
Park High school for three years
before moving
to Grayslake,
and
is now a graduate
nurse at The
Garfield Park Community hospital,
Chicago.
Mr. Gibbs will be graduated in
June from the University of IIlinois medical school, Chicago.
The
young
people
plan to be
married in late spring.

by Linnie M. McComas
Fine New

Decorative

Fabrics

For
@

@ Draperies
Bedspreads
By the Yard or

§0 Shoy Say
THEY WENT NEW YEAR CALLING

@

Slipcovers
@ Upholstery
Custom Made

CLEARANCE

SALE

STARTING JAN. 8th
VALUES
to 50% off
119-21
Wilmette

.

Green Bay Rd.
Wilmette 6006
2

34 Main St., Park Ridge
TAlcott 3-4357
, HOll
Ollycourt

CHICAGO
Use Our

No

matter

5

@

telling all about their
after year satisfaction
Eddy’s. Come in and
see why.

SPECIAL THIS WEEK
Sweet &amp; Dry Vermouth

@ Straight Bourbon

2 Blends
-7071 || @o taste
Rum

Free

Parking

Lot

what

you

to buy

want

. . «
year
with
you'll

“Hard-to-find” items there at moneysaving prices!

Whites

Happy

Celebrate Their

EDDY’'S
Bd

ew

CAM
.« « «

Mr.
and
Mrs.
Paul
White
of
Homewood avenue entertained 100
guests at an open house tea December 27 in observance of their Silver
Wedding anniversary. In the evening they were hosts at a family
dinner party at the Orrington hotel
in Evanston.
The
Whites
received
greetings
from
friends
in
16
states
and
Canada, including a message from
the Rev.
F. R. Cardwell,
former
pastor
of
the
First
Evangelical
church of Highland Park, who officiated at their wedding, and Mrs.
W. A. Sunday, widow of the late
evangelist, Billy Sunday, long time
friend of the family.
Also
a pleasant
touch
to
the
happy
occasion was a
visit from
Mrs. White’s maid of honor, Mrs.
Matilde Johnson of Highland Park
and a telephone message from Mr.
White’s best man, Lloyd Hoover of
Toronto, Ont., Canada.
Mrs. White, the former Frances
Tillman, daughter of the late Richard J. Tillmans of Highland Park
had as assistant
hostesses,
Miss
Helen
Emerson
and
Miss
Mae
Baldwin, both of Chicago.
The Whites, who have one daughter,
Priscilla
Jane,
returned
to
Highland Park last year following
residence in Philidelphia and Buffalo. Mr. White
is now
engaged
as minister of music at the Moody
Memorial church, Chicago.

At the stroke of midnight, Mrs. Coit Spalding and Mr.
and Mrs. James Siljestrom do their bit to give the New Year
The Ravinia Village house was transformed
a noisy welcome.
into the “Club Caprice’ for the holiday dance.

Hold Family Reunion
The Robert A. Borinsteins of 324
Brownville
reunion at

cently.
Winks

TTT

Paul

25th Anniversary

Daughter, Francenia

Fashions

The

The

avenue
held
the Moraine

occasion

a family
hotel re-

marked

the

71st birthday of Mr. Borinstein’s
father, Louis J. Borinstein. He and
his daughter,
Mrs.
Alvin
Cohen
and
her
family
were
here from
Indianapolis, Ind. Another daughter,
Mrs.
Emmanuel
Meyer,
Mr.
Meyer and their four children of
Melrose Park completed the family
group.

Mrs.

spirit

New low prices on the

given

Walker

in the above
December

31

Wynkoop typifies the New Year's Eve
photo taken at the buffet supper dance
for members

of the

Weatheral

club

and

their guests.

Delco-Heat Conversion

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fe pay for your new Delco-Heat
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Here is real General Motors value!
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Delco-Heat Conversion Oil Burner
—with the exclusive Rotopower unit
that combines all moving parts in
one assembly —the simplest burner

Converts your
present heating
system to automatic
Delco Heat!

mechanism of all !
You can be sure your DelcoHeat Burner will be installed right.
too — we've been factory trained
by Delco-Heat experts! Phone
or come in right away!

BISHOP HEATING &amp; SUPPLY
1543 Deerfield Road

Highland Park, Ill.

Call HI 2-0407

FV FOCAL

20

:

Ine

Why do some men get ALL
THE RAISES? Because they
make a swell impression—
by keeping both their business in order
and their
clothes neat, well-pressed.
Start now — with our regular dry cleaning and pressing service. Quick. Reliable.
Economical.

AL PHA

CLEANERSA4
TAILOR

Pe
Page

TRADERARWS

a

Mr. and Mrs. William Hutchings raise their glasses in q
toast to 1953. The highlight of the party was the floor show
presented by members of the club.
Thursday,

January

8,

1953

�SO

MusierClub Slates ”

“Elizabeth Cumming,
John

Doherty

shire, Scotland,
riage

of Renfrew-

announces

the mar-

of

her

daughter,

Elizabeth

Cumming

of

Deerfield

place,

A/38e Alfred

Anderson,

son

to

of Mr.

and Mrs. Alfred H. Anderson
of
Deerfield.
The
ceremony
took
place at 8 p.m. December 27 in St.
Paul
Evangelical
and
Reformed

ehurch,
man

with

the

Rev.

H.

O. Will-

officiating.

A small
reception
followed
at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew
Murray, 1426 Deerfield place, aunt
and uncle of the bride. The couple
motored south on a wedding trip

and

will

be

at

home

in

Rantoul,

lil., near Chanute field, where
bridegroom is stationed with
air force.

the
the

He enlisted Mareh 4 and reported
March
12 to Lackland Air Force
Base in Texas.

IT

IS

A program
arranged
Seelig, chairman of the

semble,

will offer

Mr.
of

a var-

iety of piano music and vocal selections
when
the
Highland
Park
Music club meets at 2 p.m. next
Tuesday in the home of Mrs. Al-

bert Pick Jr., 106 Vine
Frederick

Smetana’s

avenue.
Sonata

for

Eight Hands will be played by Mrs.
Wilfred
Johnson,
Mrs.
Henry
Hawes, Mrs. Edward Sherry and
Mrs.
B. W. Fairbanks.
The
four
artists are well known
for their
previous performances before the

Music

club.

Mildred Schneider, lyric soprano
who has sung before the club on
other occasions, will- present the
following group
of songs accompanied at the piano by Dorys Seelig:
“O, Del Mio Dolce Ardor,” by
Gluck;
“Quel
Ruscelletto,”
Para-

MORE

CAR

THAN

YOU

few

In

and

4

Mrs.

ee

flew

they

before

Miss Nanni To Be

Bahamas

Edward

road

where

days

re

The

Oakmont

Tuesday

by Dorys
piano en-

members

:

Sojourn

Piano, Vocal Program
For Jan. 13 Meeting

Alfred Anderson
Wed in Deerfield
Mrs.

ey

ey

D. Porges
to

will

going

Florida

spend

to

a

Nassau.

Miss

The Porges’ will stay at the British
Colonial hotel in the
til February 1 when
home.

Bahamas unthey will fly

dies, “L’Invitation au Voyage,” Dupare; “Clair de Lune,” Faure; the
aria, ‘‘Depuis Le Jour,’ from Charpentier’s
opera,
‘“Louise;’”
“Pastorale,” by Carey.
The program will close with the
two-piano
arrangement
of
Saint
Saens’ “Carnival of the Animals,”
played
by
Virginia
Schur
(Mrs.
Irving
Schur)
and
Dorys
Seelig
(Mrs. Arthur Seelig). Mrs. George
M.
Webster
will
do
the
Ogden
Nash narration of the work. Both
Mrs.
Seelig and
Mrs.
Schur
are
well know in this area for their
capabilities as pianists, and members and guests of the Music club
are looking forward to hearing the
performance.

BELIEVED

COULD

g

Wed February 14
In Mid-Day Rites
Mildred

rence

H.

Nanni

Sorenson

Jr.

Villa,

Ill., are

completing

their

wedding

February

noon

in

St.

wood.

Miss

of Mr.

and

wentsia

James
Nanni
Mrs.

avenue

Kichasdt Samus

and

Law-

of

Lake

plans
14

at

church,
is the

for
12

High-

daughter

Emil

Nanni

and

her fiance

the son of the senior
Sorensons of Lake Villa.

of On-

Miss Marie Evangelista of Highwood will be maid of honor and
bridesmaids
include the bride-tobe’s sister, Mrs. Harold Montecchi
of Onwentsia
avenue;
Miss Joan
Martin of Vine avenue; and Miss

Mary

Pasquesi

year-old

Miss

of Highwood.

Donna

Nanni’s

Lynn

Six-

Montecchi,

exquisite beyond

compare
— with

fabrics and

Mr. Sorenson has
Swarthout of Lake

asked
Forest

James
to be

EXIST...

is not just surpassingly powerful,
Brakes, full-time Power Steering and
. . . but a new kind of control, a new
. . splendidly right. Interiors are

appointments

that are the final word

in

luxury . Except for Chrysler's own Imperial, here is a car which is unequalled,
and is unlikely to be equalled for years to come. Your Chrysler dealer
cordially invites you to drive it at your convenience.

ONE

OF

AMERICA’S

MESIROW
1740 FIRST ST.
, January

8, 1953

FIRST

FAMILY

OF

Announcement is made by
and Mrs. Eugene T. Spiller of
vey, Ill., of the marriage of
daughter,

uelson
ber

23.

formed

Esther,

of

to

Deerfield
The

by

Richard

road,

ceremony
Samuel

S.

FINE

CARS

MOTORS,

Inc.
HI 2-2500

Mr

§

Decer
was

Smith,

tice of the peace, in his Highla
Park home.
Mr. Samuelson, who is the
of Elof Samuelson of San

their return from a wedding
to Stevens Point, Wis.

niece, will be flower

Yorker before you decide. In this car are values you won't

find elsewhere at any price today. Its great engine
but new in performance and ruggedness. Its Power
Oriflow ride give you not just better control
sense of safety. Its beauty is splendidly its own.

Wiss Cather Spiller :

girl.

If youre buying a car in the better ranges, there’s a special reason this year
to drive a Chrysler New

is

Lawrence

:

Libertyville, Edward and
Burns of Lake Forest to usher

�Miss Cederborg Visits

Christmas

Parents On Vacation

George

coe

avenue,

was

among

the

college

stu-

during

Now attending the University of
Indiana, Miss Cederborg is a freshman
and
coordinating
corridor
chairman of Linden hall.

She was

awarded

an HGA

son

of Mr.

Shedens

oe ake

art

a,

chrinity

ervices

and Mrs. George Chapman of Central avenue, celebrated his Christmas vacation from Purdue university
at
home
with
his
parents.
George is a freshman
pledged to
Alpha Sigma
Phi fraternity.

Joan Cederborg, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. E. W. Cederborg of Glendents home from
the holiday season.

Vacation
R. Chapman,

arship last year
letic association
High school.

schol-

ARE
PAYING

by the Girls Athof Highland Park

YOU
MORE?
e

TELEVISION
®

HOUSE CALLS

$4.50
NOW

Including

first

half

hour’s

labor.

SUBURBAN

Acolytes Bruce Patterson, left, and Bill Temple light the candles before the annual
College day services at Trinity Episcopal church. Many young people in the parish, home
oo college for the holidays, took part in the rites and several of the young men acted as
ushers.

Appliance &amp; Music Co.

PHONE WILMETTE

6760

G

Be

ot of service

...and with a
friendly

2 smile
Your milkmaa, like
your mailman, is a
pretty dependable citizen. He'll
carry your milk home for you
im any kiad of weather. He will
gladly pick up your empty milk
bettles. He will see that your
family is constantly supplied
with pure, fresh milk and other
dairy products...chocolate
milk for the youngsters, cottage
cheese for tempting salads, anytime you want them... just
leave a note for your milkman.
Call us today for courteous, dependable “Home Delivery’’...
it's so convenient.

Barney

the Milkman

Says-

Have Your Milk Delivered In

Sterile Glass Bottles!

ca

a
by
At left is a portion of the
choir which was made up mostly of college girls. In front are
Joanne Holden, left, and Thayer Ricker.
Ann Curtis, Ellen
Whitney and Cynthia Sinclair
are in the second row, left to

For Better Quality Dairy Products
For

Home

Delivery

COOPERATIVE
Lake

Page

22

County’s

Service

TRADING,

Call

Jack Harris, above, reads @
passage from the Bible. He is
the son of the Very Rev. and
Mrs. Charles Harris and a postulate for Holy Orders at the
Virginia Seminary.
The Rev.
Mr. Harris is rector of Trinity
church. Holly Stair, also shown
above, a student at Smith college, gave an address in place
of the sermon.

ONtario

right.

2-8860

Inc., Waukegan,

Only Consumer-Owned
Controlled Dairy.

and

Collect

Illinois

Consumer-

Thursday,

January

8,

1958

�Highland Parker Is
Hostess At Friends
Of Drama Gathering

Mrs. Youngs, Mrs. Johnson
Will

Mrs. Harold C. Youngs of Sheridan road and Mrs. Antone E. John-

Friends
of
Drama _ celebrated
their 30th birthday on Wednesday
of last week at the LaSalle hotel,
Chicago,
in
the
Century
room.
Among
the Chicago
women
who
served as hostesses was Mrs. Paul
B. Ross of Princeton road.
The program
began at 10 a.m.

with

a talk

by

Lois

Etzold

Fete Bride-to-be

son of
tertain

DeTamble avenue will ennext Monday at a shower

for Miss Nancy Cahill of Deerfield,

guests at a pantry shower given for
her December 28 by
Miss
Joyce
Pope of Deerfield road, daughter
of Dr. and Mrs. Charles Pope
The

Fred

Cahills

of

Deerfield

are the prospective bride’s parents
and Mr. and Mrs. John G. Gallagher
of Deerfield,
formerly
of
Highland Park,
are
her fiance’s

whose marriage to Patrick Gallagher will take place January 17 in
Holy Cross church.

parents.

Highland
friends
of

The Want-Ad section is filled with
interesting facts and golden opportunities. Don’t miss it!

Park
and
Deerfield
the
bride-to-be were

which

McNichols-Keltz
(Continued

from

page

Heathers’ Bonspiel —
14)

(Continued from page 16)

Miss
MeNichols
attended
Immaculate Conception
academy
in
Davenport,
Iowa, and was graduated
from
Highland
Park
High
school. She also studied at Lake
Forest college.
Mr.
Keltz and
his ‘bride
will
motor to Palm Springs, Calif., on
their wedding trip. They will make
their home in Los Angeles.

bers

whose

home

is

in

Highland

Park are Mrs. Thomas E. Keogh,
John F. Morrissy, James A. Davis,
Horace A. Vaile, L. J. Stirling, Ted
Connolly, Burt M. Smalley, Warren
Peterson,
Robert C. Wilson, J. J.
Stefan Jr., Mrs. Myron F. Ratcliffe,
and
R. C. Brown
Jr., several of
whom will be entered in the competition on local rinks.

covered such subjects as “The Art
of Graceful
Living,”
figure
control, grooming and fashion.
During

served

breakfast,

at

noon,

which

was

from

four

actors

theaters were introduced and gave
talks regarding their work. Among
them were Katherine Cornell, Phil
Silvers, Doris Patson and Robert
Young.

Olsen-Smyth
(Continued

—ie oe

Dr. Preston Bradley, pastor of
Peoples
Church
of Chicago
and
author
of “Courage
For
Today”
and
“Mastering
Fear,’
lectured
after ‘the breakfast and Florence
Bourke Ellis gave a book review
to end the day’s festivities.

Rites

from

page

16)

Gulf Park college, Gulfport, Miss.
She attended Northwestern university and
is now enrolled
at the
Juilliard School of Music
in
New

York

City where

her studies
sea duty.

she will continue

while

Mr.

Olsen

is

on

The
bridegroom
attended
the
U. S. Merchant Marine academy,
Kings Point, N.Y., and the University of Chicago. He enlisted in the
U.S. Navy in March, 1951 and was
graduated from the FTA school in
Washington, D.C., last May.
He is
now serving on board the destroyer
USS Dashiell as firing technician,
8rd class. The Dashiell recently returned from participation in ‘‘Operation Mainbrace” and will leave
soon for Pacific waters.

tease acs

Kileys Visit Here
(Continued
studies
rado.

at

the

from

page

University

16)
of

Colo-

Sa

Car

Ninety-Eight

The Hadleys gave their 20th annual New Year’s Eve party in their
home where their guests appeared
in the
costumes
of mythological
characters at the request of their
hosts.

Returns

To

Purdue

a sophomore,

is

a member

of Sigma Chi fraternity and a student in the university’s school of
|
engineering.

RENT YOUR
FORMAL
Where
society’s
best dressed men
rent

theirs—

Cutaways - Strollers
Single
and
Double
Breasted
Tuxedos
All

EVANSTON STORE

1718 SHERMAN”

ye

eat)

i

Other Stores in © THE LOOP

® OAK PARK
Thursday,

eo)
January

Hold fast! Hold tight! Hold the presses! Hold everything until you see the
headline car for ’53! It’s Oldsmobile’s all-new Super “88” with an exciting new line-up of “power” features! A magnificent new “Rocket” Engine
- + - a higher-powered, higher-compression, higher-voltage “Rocket”
Engine! New Pedal-Ease Power Brakes*
- with a low, light-pressure
pedal for safer, faster, 40% easier stops! New Power Styling for brilliant
new beauty! GM Power Steering* to help you park, turn and maneuver
with 80% less effort! New Power-Ride Chassis for new smoothness and
roadability! Hydra-Matic Super Drive*! Frigidaire Car Conditioning*!
Autronic-Eye*! Luxurious new interiors! New instrument panel! Plus
the widest selection of colors, inside and out, in Oldsmobile history!
All in all, it’s the “BIG FEATURE” car of the year ... Super
“88” Oldsmobile for 1953! It’s on display . . . in our showroom today!

now

“88”

on

display.

de]+)

ee

AND

4-Door

i

Sedan,

A General

New

Classic

Motors

Value.

1953

OLDSMOBILES

NOW

NELSON
1420 DEERFIELD ROAD

ON

DISPLAY

A NEW

1953

ROCKET |
Horsepower has been boosted to 165
: + + Compression ratio raised to 8
to 1... ignition capacity increased
by a new 12-volt electrical system.

at extra cost.

NEW

CLUE

(Next to Varsity Theat.)

also

Super

»..WITH A
THRILLING

*Optional

Accessories

aT

above:

U.

John Hansmann, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Elwood Hansmann of Lincoln
avenue south, returned Sunday to
his studies at Purdue
university,
Lafayette,
Ind., after joining his
Parents for the holidays. Mr. Hans-

mann,

illustrated

AT

YOUR

OLDSMOBILE

DEALER’S

MOTORS
Hi 2-5400

8, 1953
Page

23

�4

Jr., recording secretary; Mrs. Rob-

Wings

Welfare

nf.

ert

(Continued from page 15)

S.

Earhart,

retary;

Mrs.

corresponding

Frank

J. Sorg,

sec-

treas-

nior board: and
Mrs.
Robert|UTer; Mrs. Charles F. Rietz, memnders, provisional chairman.
ber at large; Mrs. Robert K. MaseRetiring officers are Mrs. Rob- ley, Provisional chairman; and Mrs.
F. Walker,

president;

Th

K.

penah,

:

Mrs.

Rob-

cet

i

7

Oiret

vice

president,

Robert Jarchow, representative
the Junior board.
The new slate of officers was

to

of-

_ Mrs. George S. Flagler, second vice | fered in November and was offipresident; Mrs. George W. Kellner! cially approved in December. ,

| Seasonal Discount
Your Rugs and Upholstery

S

aM

4 es

SEE

F

Our

|a |
a
ee

Duracleaned
“in

your

own

Full

home”

Cleaned

Column
ad &amp;©
ie Januory
HOUSE
§

Lustre Restored
Color Revived

|} BEAUTIFUL&gt;

Pile Raised
Wool Fibers
Re-enlivened

world-wide
is an inexpensive
DURACLEANING
No
home.
service tendered right in your own
Furnishings may be
soaking and no shrinkage.
is
DURACLEANING
used again the same day.

.
;
|.

recommended
furniture and

Pat,
ce’

4

Have

he

your

America’s

nationally by
dept. stores.

BE Peep

sie

upholstery,

foremost

eT

rugs,

ee

With

;
oe

ee

=e

the closing

Se

season

of the Christmas

packed

road has

clothing, blankets, furs, pianos,

Mrs. Lawrence F. McClure of Woodland

i!

Duraproofed

most unique collections of Nativity figurines in this area.

4-yr.

Money-back

Guarantee

* Costs less than applying some
less effective moth solution
yourself.

$ $ SAVINGS

$

p,
a

@ OIL HEATERS...

et

@

Universal

@

_
@

of the

holding one of two

Cleaners

as

models

some

high

Refrigerators, reg. up to $359.95
(as high as $100.00 off)

SPECIAL

as

ALL RADIOS 20%

|

off.

|

OFF

ON

DISHWASHERS

BLANKETS

$2495

Roper Gas Ranges
en weeny
So
Mangles at Reduced Prices.

now $259.95

THIS WEEK ONLY

ROOM

EQUIPMENT

ELECTRIC

Steel Wall and Base Cabinets as high as 50%

NEED

WE

—

TOYS... 20 to 50% OFF

|

314 Green Bay Road

She is shown

one

SALE

All oil heaters at 30% reduction

Vacuum

is probably

what

Holy

OVERSTOCKED

EASY IRONERS were $189.95 ........ Now $] 2995
BENDIX AUTOMATIC WASHERS ........ $18995
ek $9995
i
ik
RRA
MAYTAG WASHER ...... $10995 (inc. trade-in)

4

the

— APPLIANCES — FIREPLACE

emai

&amp;

Toward

above.

YOU

TO

HOUSEWARES

F

F

the tree.

INVENTORY

|

:

of this week),

Family, extreme lower left, marches a procession of
giftshepherds and their sheep, dogs and animals of the field, Kings of the Orient, with their
laden horses and camels. Angels point the way to the stable from the blue sky background
estals before

Phone Deerfield 444
Chicago Phone AM 2-3222
C
Duracl
&amp;O,
u ne ean

SLOW SE4S°ON
DISCOUNT
January - 10%
6%
February -

away

(Tuesday

red wax angels which guard the entrance to the living-room alcove where the collection
c
is displayed annually. She purchased the collection of two and three hundred-year-old fig;
Cherubim can be seen on the pedurines, gathered in Europe, from the late Arthur Heun.

* Mothproofed
* Carpet beetle proofed
* Deep-suctioned
¢

Night

on Twelfth

PA)
a

oy

s

Oe

4

a

@
®
@
©

‘

|

JOHNSON ICE SKATES ... All On Sale
REVERE WARE... CORY COFFEE MAKERS
LIONEL TRAINS AND EQUIPMENT
POP CORN POPPERS... MOE LIGHTING FIXTURES

© BUTCHERS (Self-Polishing, Liquid) WAX .... gal. $225

® ANLAID. CINGLEUM 3

HI 2-2041
OPEN EVERY FRIDAY UNTIL 9 P.M.

2 ee,

_... $129

Highwood,|

Thursday,

January
\

8,

1953

i

�Cfls Joust $953 At Supper Dances. .

Miss Leslie Paradise
Is Home From Visit

With

Fiance’s Family

Miss Leslie Paradise of Linden
avenue, who
spent the Christmas
holidays in New York as the houseguest of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ross,
flew home
December
31, accompanied by their son, William, who
is her fiance.
Their
engagement
was.
announced in September by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Paradise of Linden avenue. The brideto-be
attended
the
University of
Visconsin. Her fiance, a Wisconsin
graduate, is studying at Northwestern university’s medical school in
Chicago. The couple will be married in June.
No

matter

what

or sell you'll
tion

your

you

want

to

buy

find the Want-Ad

best

market

sec-

place.

a

;

TELEVISION
AND
RADIO SERVICE
Highland

Park

Elks and

their guests welcomed

with noisemakers, serpentine and confetti.
makers who gathered in the lodge hall

Among
for the

in 1953

the merrytraditional

supper dance were Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hall (couple at left),
of Green Bay road, and Mrs. E. E. DeFord of Highwood.
Assists With
Wisconsin’s
Miss

75

Mary

students

Plans For
Junior

Andrews

of

the

Benefit March

is among

the

University

of

Union building on the campus,

Jack

at their table between

Weiterman

Feb-

13.

Miss Andrews, who is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edmund
L.
Andrews Jr. of Linden avenue,. is
a member of Kappa Delta sorority.
The Junior Prom, a social highlight of the school year on the Wisconsin campus, is completely planned under university regulation by

of Dimes

Evanston,

dances were
and

Mr.

(from

and

ALSO BENDIX
APPLIANCE SERVICE

Mrs.

Phone

Hi 2-0609

Te Swings

Drive

70 FORD S

Four Sherwood Forest grammar
school boys will present a puppet
show Saturday at 3 p.m. Admission
is 10 cents and the proceeds will
go to the March
of Dimes
fund
drive.
Raymond and James Nord, Timothy Bresnehan and Glen’
Becker
have written an original script and

will give the show

of

Lloyd Bergquist of 1013 Central avenue.
Mrs. Weiterman
attended the New Year’s Eve party with Mr. and Mrs. Charles
D. Vaughan: of 1859 Green Bay road.

Children’s Puppet Show To

Prom

Wisconsin at Madison who are now
serving on student committees making plans for the annual
Junior
Prom to be held in the Memorial
ruary

Photographed
left). Mrs.

at Glen’s home,

1667 Northland avenue. They have
announced that cocoa and cake wi!l
be served to the audience after the
program.
committees
dent body.

chosen

from

the

LOOP
STORE

stu-

SEE (T..:
VALUE CHECK IT..+

TEST DRIVE IT!

Equipment, accessories and trim subject to change without notice.

worth more’
car tor $3
With 41 "“Woxth More” features, it’s worth more
when you buy it... worth more when you sell it!

SS

You get your choice of league-leading “Go” in Ford’s V-8
and Six power plants. Yet it’s economical “Go” with Ford’s
Automatic Power Pilot watching every drop of gas. In Ford’s

Crestmark Body you get “living” room that’s the finest and

Ride to the Doorof your favorite LOOP store |
Frequent

January

8, 1953

PATHLINESHOR

comfortable

in

the

low- price

field.

And

Ford’s

new

Miracle Ride will give you a new slant on how a car should ride.

Test Drive the'53 FORD
The

F.D.A.F.

new

Standard

of the American

‘

Road

PURNELL &amp; WILSON, INC.

trains direct to the loop

You’re on the right track!
Thursday,

most

1909 ST. JOHNS

AVE.

Authorized Ford Dealer
HIGHLAND PARK

PHONE

HI 2-0710
Page

25

�{ SNOW PLOWING
Call us about our season contract

price on snowplowing
Fire Place Wood—Any Size
Louie Tazioli Excavating

Bl oorFice
“HI 2-4662

GARAGE

HI 2-6861

R. E. Hutchins’ Grandchild
Baptized
Mr.
of

In Trinity Church

and

Pleasant

a dinner

Mrs.

Ralph

avenue

party

E.

were

Hutchins
hosts

at

for friends and rela-

tives following the baptism of their
granddaughter,
Lynn
Anne
Le
Goff, December 28. The Very Rev.
Charles U, Harris officiated at the
ceremony
in
Trinity
Episcopal
church.
Lynn

old,

is

Anne,

the

who

is four

daughter

of

months

Mr.

and

Mrs.
Montgomery
Le
Goff
Jr.
(Elaine Hutchins) and the grandchild also of the senior Mr. and
Mrs. Le Goff of Lake Forest. Mr.
Le

Goff Jr. is presently

studying

at

Michigan State college in East Lansing and

he, Mrs.

daughter

are

Le Goff

making

and their

their

home

there.
The Hutchins’ younger daughter,
Beverly, returned
Sunday
to her
freshman studies at the University
of Miami, Coral Gables.

Hermine Stellar’s
Work

To Be Shown

At HP Woman’s Club
A

portrait

by

Hermine

Stellar,.

which has been a general favorite:
ever since it was first exhibited
years ago at the Art Institute, will
be shown again this month at the
Highland Park Woman's club. The:
painting of the artist’s mother, the:

late Mrs. Steller, was unanimously
picked by the 21 members of the:
Chicago

Society

of

Artists,

who

served in those days as jurors of
paintings to be exhibited at the
Institute. A graduate
of the Art
Institute of Chicago and a student

of several of the great masters, including George Bellows and Sorolla
of Madrid,
Miss Stellar has had
studios in Italy and Austria, and
now maintains her studio on Chicago’s South Shore.
several flower _

She will exhibit
paintings, a number

of

and

and

figures,

drawings,

portraits
several

landscapes painted in Europe. Most
of them have been previously exhibited at the Institute
Arts club in Chicago.

on nationally famous

Everhot Electric Blankets!

or

at

the

Mrs. Walter Lillie of St. Johns
avenue, chairman of the art department
made

of the Woman’s
arrangements for

club, has —
the show.

Presbyterian Church

Group To Meet Early
For Annual

Business

The schedule of events of the all
day meeting of the Woman’s asso-

ciation of The Highland Park Presbyterian church to be held January

Prices slashed just in time
for you to enjoy

15,
in
church,

the
will

parish
house
of the
be advanced one half

hour to allow sufficient time
the annual business meeting.

at

The
Chancel
service,
a.m. will be led by Mrs.

for

11:30

—

Bernard

—

electric blanket

Newman,

comfort during &amp;

group. During the business meet- —
ing following the luncheon the of- —
ficers for the ensuing year will be ©
elected and installed.

winter’s worst
weather!

a past president of the —
association.
Luncheon,
at noon,

will be served by Mrs. Karl King’s _

=

Between

2

and

choral ensemble

2:45

p.m.

the

of the Music club,

under the direction of Muriel Hen.
schen, will sing a group of songs,
The church will be open as usual
at 10 a.m. for the members to sew

and

make

surgical

Aaron Bauer’s
the bake sale.
On January

gele’s

group

Fellowship

dressings.

group
20,

will

will

Mrs.

serve

Mrs.

conduct

Ray

the

Nae-

daughter

of |

Mr. and Mrs. Milton J. Hirsch of
Waverly road, was among the students at Smith college, Northamp-

Choose yours in your favorite color...
Rose Petal, Dusty Blue, April Green

}

Men’s

dinner.

Exhibits Art Work
Miss Edith Hirsch,

(Generous double bed size—72” x 84”)

©

ton, Mass., whose

work

was

4
|

re-

cently included in a photographic —
exhibit. The photographs featured a
studies
in’
design
and
texture.
Miss Hirsch is a junior at Smith.

pital Sealed

Return

From

oe)

Stamford

The Charles J. Haynes’ of Indian |

Tree

Here’s your chance to discover real sleeping

comfort! Take advantage of this bargain, and
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drive

arrived

home

recently |

from a Christmas visit in the East. |
They
were
houseguests of their |
daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and |

Mrs.
Robert
J. Wallace
(Ann ~
Haynes) of Stamford, Conn. The —
Wallaces’

son,

Richard,

HI

2.3500

is

34:

:

As little as $3.00 down... balance in convenient monthly payments
See the Everhot Electric Blankets at our nearest store or at your dealer's

PUBLIC

COMPANY OF NORTHERN ILLINOIS

JOHN B. NASH CO.
1891 Sheridan, Highland Park

|

�—imeratreciincnays

“ANEW

INSPIRA
AUTOMOTIVE WOR
ENGINE !

\/\

THE

OF

A great new inspiration for the automotive
world is now on display in our showroom. It’s
the 1953 Cadillac—the latest triumph of Cadillac’s engineering and styling genius. (J Its beauty
alone would place this new motoring creation
among Cadillac’s all-time “greats’’—for its innumerable exterior changes have made it simply
breath-taking to behold. ( Its interiors, too, are
dramatically new—offering the most beautiful
fabrics and appointments ever available in a
motor car. (f And for those who desire the ultimate in comfort, a wonderful new Cadillac Air
Conditioner* is now available. ({ But the heart
of this new Cadillac’s greatness lies in its performance—so extraordinary that it transcends
any previous concept of how a motor car should
act and handle. (J This magnificent performance

IMPROVEMENT HIGHLIGHTS
DYNAMIC
VASTLY

NEW

210

IMPROVED

ADVANCED

H.P. ENGINE _

HYDRA-MATIC
POWER

BREATH-TAKING

NEW

INTERIORS

CADILLAC

AIR

MORE

BEAUTIFUL

EXTERIOR

GREATER

DRIVE

STEERING*

NEW

EVEN

BUILDER

PREMIER

THE

BY

CONDITIONER*
STYLING

OPERATING

ECONOMY
*Optional at extra cost.

CADILLAC

MOTOR

CAR

comes

from

many

sources.

comes from Cadillac’s advanced Power Steering*
—so marvelous that turning and parking and
steering become almost a response to your wish.
(f And it comes—in even greater measure—from

Cadillac’s great new 210 h.p. engine . . . the
dramatic climax of almost 40 years of unduplicated experience in the design and construction of
V-8 engines. (J We sincerely urge you to see and
drive this great motor car. ( It is offered in three
new series—the beautiful ‘“Sixty-Two,” the
luxurious “Sixty Special’’ and the distinguished
“Seventy-Five.” There is also Cadillac’s new
sports convertible, the Eldorado—the most
glamorous and exciting creation in the whole
of Cadillac history. G’ Why not come in today?

DIVISION
Highland Park, Ill.

2050 First Street
aursday,

Janu
Se a

ary
*s

j

nase

8,
¢

from

(J It comes

Cadillac’s improved Hydra-Matic Drive. ( It

1953
Ath

‘

‘

:
,

%y

4

‘

Ly
y

€;
fie

.

ar

Le
;
Sah

FPhi

¢
i

wt

x

$
HAD

4

i ae

et
DS:

‘
pit

4

Ale

f

E

Sif

�Lynn

Rafferty,

aas and
crowned

the

Arnold

Got-

Park

during the Christmas vacation
Semi-finals were reached in the
girls’
intermediate
division
and

und Bonnie

hamp,

Simons,

defending

against Pat Hall in the up-

per bracket
d Georgia

with
Nancy
Carlson
Ohlwein paired in the

ower bracket.
- In the boys 11 years and under
tournament, Sam Zell and Dickie
Carr will battle to oppose the John

‘Levison-Soren Leahy winner for
the championship in their division.
- In winning from a tough field in
- /the 17 and under class, Arnold Gotaas had to go all out to beat Al
Simon in a fast, well played championship match.
_ Lyn Simon’s style of play was
too much for the other boys in the
12, 13 and 14 age division and al_ though his opponent in the finals,

Billy

Meierhoff,

game,

he

all

could

around
Lynn

played

a good

match

Simon’s

not

ability.

Rafferty

was

By Pierre Martineau

Recreation

nter as tournament play in
ree divisions was completed
_

Tomorrow

Lyn Simon
were
table tennis champs at

Highland

too steady

for

Jerry Anderson and won the championship in the girls’ 11 and under
division.

The

Little

December
Team

_ Robert’s

Dry

Biagi’s

Goods

Clothing

Wie

ae

.... 33

18

............ 30.21

_ Puckett’s

Boosters

EN

ye

........ 2642 23%
26

25

Wilson’s Appliances .... 25144
Toby’s Cocktail Lounge 24%

_ Leed’s

Jewelers

23

2514
2612
28

Wearing App’l. 151% 3514
High Series, Team
Del Rio
767-762-704—2233
Biagi’s
751-769-691—2211
i
High Series, Individual
173-140-142—455
. Meckley
152-150-147—449
High Game, Team
ci
tincyiidh abbas itis atanrwieconend 769

Be
Be

Rosby’s

RE
es

High

me
t

occas,
ccsarthe elena bckians 767
Game,

Individual

Pognarelli ......,...............-.-.-...-. 176

iH. gad
Pd
gn

173

the
in

game
the

was

final

The

19

points

quarter.

jumped

off

to

a

one point lead in the first quarter, which they still held at the end
of the first half, 24-23.

Despite a seesaw third quarter,
Leyden came out in front, 37-36.
The

Highland

Park

defense

col-

lapsed in the fourth period, which
resulted in a 56-45 victory by Leyden who continued on to the finals
to defeat DeKalb, 51-50, in a terrific

game.

High
Harold

scorer for the Parkers was
Freberg
with
14
points,

while

Ed

with

Miller

led

the

Indians

18 tallies.

Eddie
ace for

Capitani,
ball handling
the Parkers, suffered an

injury
of

during

was
the

the

forced

second

pe-

to sit out the

game.

been

recalled

Dr. Roning was
the navy in 1946

to

active

duty

discharged from
after serving at

Parris Island, S. C., and Sampson
base, Geneva, N. Y. He also taught
at Northwestern university. A resident of Highland Park for the past
five years, Dr. Roning
has been

dentistry

here

for

two

and a half years.
Mrs. Roning and their children,
Diane, 5, David, 4, and Karen, 5

are

hoping

after

to be

the

able

to

indoctrination

With 24th Division
Cpl.
of Mr.
:

1683
rived

the

Edward J. McCraren, son
and Mrs. James McCraren,
Deerfield road, recently
arin Japan and is serving with

24th

Infantry

division.

- Now
receiving
training, the 24th

intensive
field
is part of the

security forces in Japan. Before
being rotated out of the line early
1952, it spent
19 months in
The

24th

Guinea

division fought

and throughout

on

New

the libera-

tion of the Philippine Islands in
World War II. It suffered minor
casualities from strafing during the
infamous Pearl Harbor bombing on
“December 7, 1941.
_ Corporal McCraren, who entered
_ the Army last February, is a member of the 24th division’s replacement company.
—
.

2

SSeS

Li

aidike o

RR

ee

eit

wee

;

Burt Wells Is
Commissioned
In The Marines
Burt Wells received his commission as second lieutenant in the
U. S. Marine corps on December
13 at Quantico, Va. Dr. and Mrs.
Paul H. Wells of Lincolnwood avenue
attended
their
son’s
graduation after visiting their elder son,
}
Lt. Cmdr. Paul H. Wells Jr. and
his family in Norfolk, Va. Cmdr.

Wells is stationed
Tidewater.
Lt. and Mrs.

ner

aboard

Wells

of Winnetka)

the USS

(Patricia

left recently

Ber-

for

Quantico after visiting their parents
over the holidays. They will make
their home in Quantico for the next
five months after which Lt. Wells

expects

a

new

leathercraft on Thursdays at 7:30
p.m., and in woodshop at 7:30 p.m.
on

Mondays.

The popular workshop classes for
boys
will
have
another
10-week
session.
As
the class
is limited

early

registration

is advised.

Painting and sketching for boys
and girls will convene
again
on

Wednesdays
The

to

at 3:30

Girls

.meet

Fun

p.m.

club

will continue

on Saturdays

at 10 a.m.

with a supervised program that includes cooking,
dramatics,
games
and outdoor sports.

Renewed

Open

At Center

badminton

women

from

on

7 until

session,

both

men

evenings

10 o’clock is again

as is the

day morning

for

Tuesday
women’s

group.

assignment.

Pfe.

in

Wednes-

Also resuming
1 to 3 p.m.
group.

McDermott

Is In Alaska

—

Pfe. James
D. McDermott,
son
of the
Lawrence
McDermotts
of
Half Day road, is now serving at
Fort Richardson, the largest army
installation
in
Alaska.
Troops
based there are part of the security
force along the northern frontier.
Although the climate of southern
Alaska
is
relatively
mild,
Fort
Richardson units receive thorough
winter training.
Pfe.
McDermott,
who
entered
the army December
1, 1951, is a
former
student
of Carthage
college, Carthage, Ill. He was in business in Chicago prior to his army
enlistment.
Mrs.
McDermott,
the
former
Carolyn Kerrihard, is now making
her home
with her parents,
Mr.
and Mrs. M. L. Kerrihard of 1620
Grove avenue. She is hoping that
army conditions will make it possible to join her husband in Alaska
this spring. He expects to be there
until late fall.

Richard

Nugent

Graduates

From Air Corps School

at

Grosse

Isle,

Mich.,

by

Dick Wilde Jr. defeated Exmoor
junior boys skipped by Mike Tighe.

Jack Tyson’s rink lost a close hardfought match
to Skip
nington’s team in the

Dick
tenth

Pen
end.

Return

matches

will

be

Exmoor

Country

club

January

Marconi

held

at
18.

Bowling
De
14%

Eddy’s Liquors ......:.::: 30%
My’ Favorite: Inn: ...:2.&lt;.., 29%

201%
211%

Silver

25

Tavern

Dollar

and

spent the holidays here with his
parents. His training prepared him
to assume the duties of an ensign
when he is recalled.
His brother, Jerry Nugent, was
also home for the holidays. Jerry is
a sophomore at the University of
Illinois.
i

casio

Tavern

....26

Lenzi Bros. Grocery .... 2442
Highwood Radio ............ 24°
Skokie Valley Laundry 18

261%
27
33

Highwood Ice Cream ....15
High Series, Team

36

FADD
Lenzi:

TAVGriia
Bros,

vinistertosss ase 2613

Grocery.

&lt;.:62.4..0.

2593

High Series, Individual
Ds PaSsIDi 2s SAW was
A.

642

Co OPURROTAIG Sue
et oe ecg
High Game, Team
BPaDDIi 2 Pevern. oa
eda
Fighwood'Radio .....0.266000.
High Game, Individual
PORN OTIAT is
oa
Passi
Co
Ae oe
i
ee

624
952
935
244
243

Tom Trolle To Be
Commissioned In
Air Force March 20

of

Sigma

Chi

her

husband

fraternity.

in

San

An-

Braeside School PTA
To Sponsor An Ice
Carnival Saturday
sor an ice carnival
p.m. at the school.

The local tanksters will be gunning for their fourth win and their

prove exciting.

meet should

The

frosh-soph
be

wins

without

a

PTA

will

straight

defeat.

A

strong
com-

the

petition in the Giants’ second home
encounter of the season on January
15,
On Saturday, the Sivan team
Invita-

Niles

the

in

compete

tional
Teams

Freshmen
Meet
at Niles.
from all over the Chicago
in this meet.

entries

area will have

at

The preliminaries will be held
2 p.m. and the finals at 8 p.m.

Joseph

Silverman

Graduated From

Officer’s School
son

Silverman,

Joseph

Mr,

of

824

recently |

was

avenue,

Broadview

of

Silverman

J.

R.

Mrs.

and

graduated from Officer’s Candidate
school, Fort Knox, Ky., with the

rank of second lieutenant.
He has been assigned to the 194th
tank battalion of the 47th “Viking”
Ala.
Rucker,
at Campdivision
Originally a Minnesota-North Dakota National Guard division, the

academy,

4
|

“s

summer

Michigan

State

school,

and

at

East

college

entering

Mich., before

Lansing,

Military

Culver

academy

service in October 1951.
the
Silverman,
Mrs.
Hyneman

Elizabeth

the

spon-

;

former
Chatham,

of

and their infant daughter,
Ellen, will leave for Camp

N. J.,
Maura

Maura _ Ellen

tomorrow.

Rucker

was born Decémber 13 in Highland
Park hospital. She and Mrs. Silverman have been making their

grandparents

maternal

J.

Mr. ‘and Mrs.
Chatham.

Silvermans.

senior

the

with

home

The

are

—

of

©
4

Hyneman

R.

High School Names
Mechanical

New

Francis

over

Instructor

W.

the

resigned

Saturday at 3
There will be

prizes will be given.

Mermen

five

will provide

team

Proviso

baby

for

going

will

—

the

swimmers,

good

several

has

—

triumph fy
league
Since Waukegan -~

Suburban
third
without a loss.

Anderson

has

mechanical

taken

drawing

classes
at
Highland
Park
High
school in place of Harry Pertz who

races for children from kindergarten through eighth grade, a figure
skating exhibition and lessons in
square
dancing
on
ice given
to
members of the sixth and seventh
grades by Andrew Voissard.
Albert
Kurtzon,
Eugene
Goodman
and
Harry
Birkenstein
will
act as judges. A trophy will be
awarded to the class with the greatest number of participants. No in-

dividual

Waukegan
the
meeting
Sy
tankers in the Bulldog’s pool.

Drawing

tonio.

school

at 4 o’clock

today

‘heir season

Forest

He was assigned to O’Hare base as
a
budget
and
accounting
clerk
prior to entering
OCS
last September. As adjutant he will hold
the rank of officer candidate major,
Mrs. Trolle, the former Loretta
Keeler of Bronxville,
N. Y., has

joined

Mermen
Giant
Little
The
‘vill launch the second half of

47th is now composed of men from
all 48 states and three territories.
Lake
attended
Silverman
Lt.

Tom Trolle, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Thordld Trolle of Vero Beach, Fla.,
formerly
of Highland
Park, is a
new
student
adjutant
at Officer
Candidate
school,
Lackland
Air
Force base, San Antonio, Tex. He
will receive his commission March
20.
Mr. Trolle, who enlisted in the
air force from Highland
Park in
1951,
was
graduated
from
Dart.
mouth
college
where
he
was
a

member

By Art Weinstein

will

Woe
361%

Braeside

Richard Nugent, son of the John
W. Chaffees of Green Bay road,
was recently
graduated from
the
Naval
Air
corps
cadet
training

school

moor team in a close match.
Chicago’s ace rink skipped

Team
Fabbri

Gym activities
that
were
bypassed during the Christmas vacation period have now resumed their
regular place on the schedule of
the Highland Park Recreation center.
and

Chicago junior curlers defeated
Exmoor Juniors by winning three
out of four matches in the first of
a three event inter-club bonspiel at
the Chicagoan’s home club at Dundee Road and Skokie Valley road.
The
Exmoor
junior
girls’ rink
skipped by Julie Patten won the
only event for Exmoor by defea’
ing the Chicago girls’ rink, skipped
by Sue Glen. Skip Betsy Brown’s
team defeated Gay Stirling’s Ex-

December 30 Standings

List Gym Activities

Basketball league
on
Wednesday
and Thursday nights is also back
to its five game weekly routine.

with
the
navy
as a_ lieutenant
junior grade, and is being “loaned”
to the army.

practicing

offered in
on Thursa.m.;
in

Play in the 10-team Class A City

Dr. John A. Roning, 1365 Oakwood avenue, left Tuesday for San
Antonio, Tex., where he will report
to Fort Sam Houston for a twomonth
indoctrination
course.
He

has

Adult classes will be
painting and sketching
day mornings
at
9:30

play on Tuesdays from
is the ladies volleyball

Dr. John Roning
Called Back To
Active Service

join him
period.

Serves In Japan

Leyden’s

Indians

months,

Edward McCraren

night to face

The Giants made a gallant try in
their class with a strong Leyden
team in the tournament semi-finals
at DeKalb
on December
30, but
were not successful as the Indians
won, 56-45. The big difference in

rest

29 Standings

travel

a strong Waukegan team with
Epperson, Cloud, Ivy and Jim
Martinez leading the way.

riod and

Bowling League

Giants

north tomorrow

ankle

- Women Of Moose

Registrations are being accepted
for classes and activities in the late
winter session
at
the
Highland
Park Recreation center.

Seek Third
Sub. League
Victory

pat ante a

For Winter Session
At Recreation Center

Waukegan
ry

Chicago Hosts Beat
Exmoor Jrs. In 3
Curling Matches

Registration Is Open

Giants Play

Today

Straight Win

Try For 4th

recently

after

&gt;
©

teaching

—

for

39 years at the school.
Mr. Anderson, 30, was graduated
from Iowa State college last De-

—

cember. He had studied at the college prior to military service in

—

the armed forces. He also worked
as a cabinet maker before com-

|

pleting his degree in industrial ed-

|

ucation.
Mr.
Anderson,

|

new
find

who

began

his

duties Monday, is hoping to —
a permanent home here by |

the end of the month so that Mrs wi
Anderson, who resides in Ames &gt; 9
tay

can

‘aoe

.

; Bats

join

him.

Thursday, ,

nary
January

8.
dus

es

195:
es ree

�Business Women To
Attend First Meeting

FREE LECTURE ON
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE

Of Season Tonight

of music

and dance has been

By

planned.

Member

Featured
on the program
is a
selection of songs
by the Great
Lakes chorus of 24 voices, young
men
from
Great
Lakes
Naval
Training
center
who
frequently
have
been heard
over the radio
and have
appeared
before
many
audiences in this area.

The

J. P. Morrison

was

present when

doctorates

Conception

church,

whom

he

congratulates

above.

its native

Cardinal

Cosmetic Party For
Emblem

club

members

a cosmetic party
ing,

Wednesday

Elks

clubrooms.

will

hold

at their next meetat

8

p.m.

in

the

Mrs. Nicholas Miller will preside
over

the

business

members

are urged

to the

party,

ranged

by

meeting.
to bring

which

Mrs.

has

Jack

All
guests

been

ar-

Moran.

The
refreshment
committee includes Mrs. Richard Gibson, chairman; Mrs. Raymond Sheahen, Mrs.
Forrest Rose Jr., Mrs. Walter Meierhoff, Mrs. William Russell, Mrs.
James
Meehan
and
Mrs.
Stanley
Knoch.
A board meeting for all officers
will be held at the clubrooms Monday at 8 p.m.

The

auxiliary

of

THIS

Very

|

MONDAY,
WAUKEGAN
Glen

are
diet

en.

Anyone

with

time

may

get

further

information

by

call-

ing Mrs.

John

free

Have

GARDEN

Reasonable

Rock

TWP.
Ave.

HIGH

|
i %,

SCHOOL—Little

Jackson

Street,

Waukegan,

Theatre

—

Illinois

by

of Christ, Scientist

Waukegan,

Illinois

: ;

ALL ARE CORDIALLY INVITED

Drive Carefully — The Life YouSave

is to be shown

4

May Be Your Own!

ts
I

=

NEW! More Powerful Engines! seven

sti

on

brawny engines with high horsepower and
high compression ratios, three of them
brand-new. Greater cooling capacity, increased
displacement,
twin
carburetion
available on larger trucks. PLUS proved
features like 4-ring pistons with chromeplated top ring, exhaust valve seat inserts.

Fe
es
®
a
s
Ry
iea

at

now
kitch-

4

NEW! Extra-Powerful Brakes! stop
easily

Bigler, HI 2-0346.

on steepest

grades!

a

Super-safe

sd
a
3

brakes give smooth stops, reduced driver
fatigue, greater load protection . . . new
increased stopping power on 1- through

2%-ton trucks! PLUS

a

oversized braking

surface with rivet-free Cyclebond
on all hydraulic brakes.

lnings

Not Visited

‘NEW! Truck-o-matic Transmission!

Prices

New

Phone Maj. 1067
6

NORTH SHORE FURTH SERVICE

WOR

Truck-o-matic

%-

and

%-ton

6-0700

transmission available

Dodge

oy

‘‘Job-Rated’”’

ie

trucks... saves shifting, cuts driver fatigue,
lets you rock out of snow, mud, sand. Only

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* Dodge offers shift-free Truck-o-matic!
‘| PLUS gyrol Fluid Drive, famous power

es

ton tees 7
fed TRUCK

2
OM is

cushion that prolongs truck life.

Over 50 Features! 50 ways new! Reinforced
NEW!
cab construction, larger exhaust system, extra-capacity
radiators. Tinted glass, heaters with stepped-up heat output

Directors

KEnwood

P.M. —

CEMETERY

Green Bay Rd. &amp; 18th St.

All Phones

and

First Church

on

Funeral

12, at 8:00

Presented

Volunteer
aids
have
recently
been placed in the pharmacy and
in the laboratory. They do clerical work, count the pills and distribute medicine to the floor stations
thus
relieving
the
trained
nurses for less routine duties.
Volunteer
workers
needed for work in the

JANUARY
In

regular
monthly
meeting
in the
board room next Wednesday. Making of surgical dressings will begin at 9:30 a.m. Luncheon will be
served at 12:30 following the business meeting.

If You

BEAUTIFUL

— j

should be seen by every truck owner

the

Park hospital will hold its

NORTHSHORE GARDEN OF MEMORIES
A Surprise Awaits You

of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church,

Ww DODGE«ee TRUCKS

Auxiliary

Woman’s

Highland

S., of Chicago

3 of the many reasons why these

To Hold Meeting
Next Wednesday

Members, Guests

C.

First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts

by Miss Dorothy
Berndt of Wilmette, owner of the collection.

Stritch conferred the degrees last month at St. Mary of the
Priest in the background §is
Lake seminary in Mundelein.
unidentified.

Emblem Club To Hold | Hospital

costume,

NAY,

Serre

Rev.

GEORGE

&gt;
Saas

Rt.

Science

of Pure

and Pure Religion”

A collection of dolls from various
parts of the world, each wearing

The

Coincidence

The

Miss
Joyce
Godie
of Lambert
Tree
road.
who
presented
an
original
dance
to the
music
of
“Shrimp Boats” at a program last
year, will give a dance tonight to
the composition, “Jealousy.” |

of sacred theology were conferred by Samuel Cardinal Stritch
upon’ the Rev. Philip T. Wild, far right, his nephew, and the
Rev. John P. O’Connell, his former assistant at Immaculate

|

“Christian Science”

The North Shore Business and
Professional
Women’s
club
will
hold its first meeting of the new
year tonight at 6:15 o’clock in the
Winnetka
Community
house. Under the direction
of Miss
Musa
DeMouth of Laurel avenue, international relations chairman, a pro-

gram

on
|

Fro
4-ton,

a

available. PLUS
moistureproof ignition, high-torque capacity
starting motors, other dependability features. See the new

936 East 47th St.

1890

Chicago

IMPORTANT

ANNOUNCEMENT

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

AN OUTSTANDING PROFESSIONAL RECORD OF
62 SUCCESSFUL YEARS SERVING CHICAGOLAND
ursday,

January

8,

1953

Dodge trucks at your dealer’s!

sire

ESTABLISHED

DODGE ‘Jeb-Ratod’ TRUCKS
- VAN GUILDER MOTORS
4
1943

St. Johns

Ave.

HI 2-2770
‘Page 29

�ELCOME 10 CHU RCH
i

&lt;

(10:45.

should have priority on your time. Spend some hours in church.
UNITED EVANGELICAL
CHURCH
Bay Road at Laurel Ave.

Pee

A. G. Masser,

Minister

HI 2-1731
AY, January 11
a.m. Sunday school session.
45 a.m. Morning worship servermon by the Rev. Ralph G.

SATURDAY, January 10
10 a.m. Confirmation class.
SUNDAY,

People’s

p.m.

The

Ladies

ION

EV.

igh

LUTHERAN

CHURCH

FRIDAY,

8:30

Services.

W.

Linden,

Pastor

:

EV.

LUTHERAN

CHURCH
Central Avenue
William H. Remmert,

741
Rev.

pastor

a.m.

9:40

January

a.m.

p.m.

HI 2-0427
First
of

and

Seminar

every

TRINITY EPISCOPAL

NORTH
SUBURBAN
AGOGUE
BETH
EL

Road

Rev.

CHURCH

Avenue

Charles

U. Harris,

Rector

HI 2-5787
Phillip L. Lipis, Rabbi
_ Stanley Martin, Cantor

9:15 a.m. Family
service
and
church school.
10:30 a.m. St. Gregory’s Annual

Conservative

meeting.

Y, January 9
11 a.m. Morning prayer and serr Mitzvah of Ronald Waldman,
mon.
of Mr.
and Mrs. Benjamin|.
7:30 p.m. Canterbury club.
of Wade street.
MONDAY, January 12
26 p.m.
Light candles.
7:30 p.m. Sea Scouts, Ship 43.
p.m. Late service. Sermon:
7:30 p.m. Vestry Finance com1 a Modern Jew Believe in
mittee meeting.
tion?”
8 p.m. Vestry meeting.
RDAY, January 10
0 a.m.

Morning

DAY, January 11

TUESDAY,
January 13
7 p.m. Cub Scouts.

worship.

5 a.m. Tephilin club meets.
10:30 a.m. “Great Jewish Books”

urse

resumes.

Subject, “Graetz’s

a.m. Daily Minyan meeting.
AY through THURSDAY,
12 to 15
m. to 6 p.m. Hebrew school.
INDAY
through FRIDAY,
ry 12 to 16
. to 12 noon. GAN.

8 p.m.

January

7:30

Holy

4:30 p.m.

practice.

16
communion.

choir

practice.

1704

McGovern

Street

Rev. A. P. Johnson, Minister

Russell W. Lambert, Minister
Kemp, Director of Music

The

Rev. Dale Zimdars,
Assistant Minister

candal in Christianity.”

THURSDAY,

EVANGELICAL

rehearsal.
f

hostesses

are

Mesdames

Edith

Drake, Clem Guyot, Salome Roeber
and Anne Wessling. They will entertain husbands

8:30,

9:30,

-

Hazel

CHRIST

Avenue

January

11

9:30 a.m. Sunday school.
11 a.m. Church service.
WEDNESDAY, January 14
8

p.m.

Testimonial

That a more

meeting.

spiritual concept of

will be explained in all Churches
of Christ, Scientist, on Sunday,
January 11. The title of the Lesson-Sermon will be SACRAMENT.
The Golden Text is from I Corinthians (10:16) “The cup of blessing which we bless, is it not the
communion of the blood of Christ?
The bread which we break, is it not
the
communion
of the body
of
Christ?”

Bible

selections

Version)
clude:

in

the

(King

in-

down

life

from

unto

heaven,

the

wine

in

memory

of Jesus

willing truly to drink his cup,
take his cross, and leave all for
the Christ-principle? Then why
ascribe

this inspiration

to a dead

at a 6 o’clock din-

‘holy, acceptable

unto God,’

that Truth has come to the understanding? .. . If all who seek
his commemoration
through
material symbols will take up the
cross, heal the sick, cast out evils,
_and preach Christ, or Truth, to
the
poor, — the
receptive
thought,—they will bring in the
millennium.” (pp. 33, 34).

ner.
8 p.m. Chancel choir rehearsal.
FRIDAY, January 9
8 p.m. Bethany guild will meet WESLEY METHODIST CHURCH
Highwood Avenue and Everts Place
in the Dubs room of the church.
The Rev. Donald Woods, pastor
SUNDAY, January 11
9:30 a.m. Church school under THURSDAY, January 8
the direction of Dr. E. D. Fritsch,
7:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
with classes arranged for all age FRIDAY, January 9
groups.

7:30
tied ine

p.m.

Teacher's
a

a

meeting

Talk Will Spark
ORT Meeting
Highland
Women’s

Park

chapter

American

mences

ORT

of
com-

the new year’s

activi-

ties with
a departure
from
precedent.
On
Tuesday
at
12:30 p.m. at Beth El syna-

gogue, 1175 Sheridan road, new
and re-enrolled members and
sponsored prospective members

as hostess.
The program will be introduced
with a premiere showing of the

More

voices,

ORT

film,

“Aniere

Institute,”

which depicts life on the campus
of ORT’s teacher training college
near

Geneva,

hundred

Switzerland.

students

are

One

enrolled

there. Upon graduation they will
be distributed in ORT’s secondary
schools

in

Europe,

North

Africa,

Israel, Iran and South America,
Spotlight of the afternoon is focussed

on Dr. Bernice

Rosen,

noted

gynecologist, obstetrician and lecturer, who will set forth the scientific approach to marital techniques.

Member of the boards of Planned
Parenthood

and

Cancer

Prevention

clinic, and graduate of the Univer.
sity of Illinois Medical college, she
interned both at Cook County hospital and the Chicago Maternity
center. Dr. Rosen is a teacher at
the latter clinic and a lecturer in
Chicago Hospital Teaching schools.
She is also a member of the American Board of Obstetrics and Gynecology, and is one of the youngest
specialists in the field.
Mrs. Sol Gerstel announces that
members

who

have

rolled may do so
Receiving with
Mrs. Lytton will
Max
Auerbach,
Harry A. Epstein,
Paul

uel

Lasman,

not

Lionel

re-en-

London,

Pearl and Arthur
Mrs. Samuel Cohn

gram

yet

that day.
Mrs. Gerstel and
be the Mesdames
Leonard
Cohen,
I. M. Greenberg,
Sam-

Wollner.
is the pro-

chairman.

are needed and everyone is invited
to participate.
North Shore Congregation Israel
is located at Lincoln and Vernon
avenues
in Glencoe.
Visitors are
always cordially invited. Worship
services
are held
on
Friday
at
8:30 p.m., with the exception of the
first Friday of each month when
the service begins at 7:45.

Catholic Woman’s
League Meeting To
Be Held In Winnetka

Bethany Guild

Cawley,
Walter

and

world...

shall live forever.” (John 6: 33,
58).
Selections
from
“Science
and
Health with Key to the Scriptures”
by Mary Baker Eddy, include:
“Are all who eat bread and
drink

Landsman.

Film, Doctors

will be given a luncheonette
with Mrs. William H. Lytton

Dr. Edgar E. Siskin will devote
his sermons at the 8:30 p.m. services at North Shore Congregation
Israel tomorrow and
on January
16 to a discussion of Reform Judaism, its nature and
content.
Dr.
Siskin will attempt to clarify the
present status of Reform Judaism
in the light of its historic background as well as of its future challenge.
The title of the sermon tomorrow
night
will be, “Has Reform
Judaism Changed?” On January 16
Dr. Siskin will speak on, ‘‘What Is
the Real Challenge to Reform?”
The winter
term
of the adult
education program of the congregation has been resumed, and Tuesday
nights
find
an
enthusiastic
group studying “The Place of American Jewry in American Civilization”
and
“Understanding
Ourselves as Jews: Understanding our
Practices.”
Rabbi Philip L. Lipis of Beth El
congregation,
Highland
Park,
is
the guest lecturer at the Glencoe
temple for the winter term, while
Rabbi Edgar E. Siskin is conducting a course at the Highland Park
synagogue.
The Adult chorus is seeking new
recruits
for
participation
in
its
singing program. The group meets
at the temple on Thursdays at 8:15
p.m. under the direction of Cantor

Benjamin

James

Lesson-Sermon

This is that bread which came
down from heaven; not as your
fathers did eat manna, and are
dead; he that eateth of this bread

body

8

3 p.m. Women’s Society of World
Service at the home of Mrs. E. D.
Fritsch, 428 Orchard lane. Assisting

D REFORMED CHURCH
Rev. Harold Harris, Pastor
Green Bay Road and
- Homewood Avenue
Bs
HI 2-1599
SDAY, January 8
P.m. Women’s guild meeting
ne
of Mrs. Frank Zimmer,

January

7:30,

am.

rite, instead of showing, by casting out error and making the

HI 2-3522

am. and 11 a.m. Morning
&gt; services.
Sermon
topic:

JOHN’S

Girls

the

BETHANY CHURCH
(Evangelical United Brethren)

Glencoe

0

a.m.

11

CHURCH OF
SCIENTIST
493

giveth

15

choir

FRIDAY,

a SHORE METHODIST
CHURCH
and Greenleaf Avenues

Glencoe 1227
INDAY, January 11

January

Parish

FIRST

cometh

.

7:30 a.m. Holy communion.
9:30 a.m. Holy communion.
3 p.m.
Annual
meeting of

Altar guild.
THURSDAY,

9.

“The bread of God is he which

7:15 p.m. Boy Scouts.
8 p.m. St. Martha’s guild
WEDNESDAY, January 14

ry of the Jews.”

—

Days

communion results in a purification
of the affections and a deeper consecration to God and His Christ,

HI 2-6653
SUNDAY, January 11
7:30 a.m. Holy communion.

Park

6:30,

11:30

Days

Holy

6, 7, 8 and

at

and

Week

8 a.m.

January

SUNDAY,

at 4 p.m.

Very

at

Masses

10:30

and

at 7 and

SUNDAY,

8:15 p.m. Adult chorus.
Hebrew classes are held

The

Masses

15

Glencoe

Laurel

Fridays

—Masses

Scout

425

Sheridan

school.

Girl

afternoon

CHURCH

146 North Ave., Highwood
Rev. James D. Gleeson, Pastor
Rev. Arthur E. Douaire, Ass’t.

11

Religious

noon.

ST. JAMES

school.

of Jewish Studies.
THURSDAY, January

2:45

12

10

Religious

TUESDAY, January 13
8:15 p.m. North Shore

road

DAY, January 11
9:30
a.m. Sunday school
unior Bible class.
:45 a.m. Worship service.

Highland

January

Masses at 6:15, 7:30, 9, 10, 11 a.m.
and

Troop.

Tel. HI 2-6848
1817 Green Bay

1175

Saturdays, eves. of First Fridays
and Holy Days 4 and 7:30 p.m.
SUNDAY, January 11

3:20 p.m. High school.
MONDAY,
January 12
7:30
p.m.
Temple
Board
Trustees.

JNDAY, January 11
9:30 a.m. Church school.
5 a.m. Morning worship.
(DEEMER

9:40

SUNDAY,

Highwood

ev. Herbert

p.m.

SATURDAY,

Street and Oakridge Avenue

Bax

HI 2-0202
Confessions

Siskin, Rabbi

Glencoe
1725
January 9

the church,
SATURDAY, January 10
8 p.m. Couples club meeting at
the church.
SUNDAY, January 11
9:30 a.m. Church school for ali
ages.
10:45 am.
Fifteen minutes of
chimes.
11 a.m. Morning worship. Sermon
topic:
“The People We
Know.”
TUESDAY, January 13
8 p.m. Official board meeting at
the church.

Reform Judaism
Is Subject Of
Rabbi’s Sermon

Deerfield and Green Bay Roads
Rt. Rev. Msgr. Joseph P. Morrison
Pastor
Rev. Donald B. Runkle
Rev. Bernard E. Burns

Glencoe

Dr. Edgar

Organ meditations

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
CHURCH

NORTH SHORE
CONGREGATION ISRAEL
Lincoln and Vernon Avenues

Mission-

iety of the church will hold
ncheon meeting in the church.
ial speaker is to be present.
m. Choir rehearsal.

CHURCH
PARK

Tel. HI 2-8145
January 11
Sunday worship.

SUNDAY,
11 a.m.

NESDAY, January 14
p.m. Midweek prayer service.
RSDAY, January 15

:30

Morning worship, Paspreaching.

The Rev. William Giles Glover
Highwood Community
Center
428 North Green Bay Road
Highwood

Fellow-

p.m. Evening gospel service,
on by the Rev. Ralph G. Beal-

Harris

SECOND BAPTIST
OF HIGHLAND

m. Junior Christian EndeavYoung

11

Sunday school.

10:45 a.m.
tor

-*

p.m.

January

9:30 a.m.

am.

with F. B. Schlung at the organ
console.
11 a.m. Mission band for boys
and girls. *
11 a.m. Worship service with the
minister, the Rev. A. P. Johnson
preaching on the subject “The Vine
and the Trellis.”
7 p.m. Youth fellowship. Devotions and social hour for young
people of the church.
WEDNESDAY, January 14
3:45 p.m. Bethany choristers.

.

Meets

Tomorrow

The next meeting of the Bethany
guild will take place at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the church. Items left
from

offered
New

the

Christmas

for

sale

will

be

been

formed

sale.

circles

have

for 1953, which will be headed by
the following chairmen: Mrs. Gay-

lord

Kalseim,

Mrs.

Margaret

Thomas, Mrs. Kenneth Kightly and
Mrs. E. H. Amick.

The

Highland. Park Camp of the Royal Neighbors will meet at the home
of Mrs. Florence
A. Yager, 667
Glenview avenue, Wednesday at 8
p.m.
This particular meeting will
take place in a private home rather

than at the usual meeting place,
the VFW hall.
During the business session plans
will be formulated for the installation of officers which will be held
at the VFW hall Wednesday, January 28.
Following
the
business
meeting there will be a social hour
at and refreshments will be served.

board meet-

584 Hyacinth place; Mrs.
E.
Parker,
595
Braeside

road and Mrs. I. H. Hartman Jr.,
175 Indian Tree drive.
A luncheon and social hour will
follow the business meetings. At
2:30 p.m. members will be entertained by Marie Doyle Fox who
will

give

a musical

of “The King

WSCS
Home
The
ciety

Royal Neighbors To Plan
Installation Ceremonies

regular monthly

ing of the North Shore Catholic
Woman’s league will be held at
noon next Tuesday at the Winnetka Community house.
Highland Park members of the
board
include
Mrs.
William
P,

theatre

review

and I.”

To Meet In
Of President
cabinet of the Women’s
of

Christian

Service

of

SoWes-

ley Methodist church will meet in
the home of the society’s president,
Mrs. Floyd Patrick, Friday, January 16 at 8 p.m. The cabinet members consist of all WSCS officers,
who are urged by Mrs. Patrick to
attend the meeting.

Takes Part In Cornell
College Production
Miss Nancy Antes, daughter of
Mrs. Stanley Antes of St. Johns
avenue, recently participated as an
alto in Cornell college’s 48th presentation of Handel’s ‘‘Messiah.”

Over 200 students of the college
in Mount

Vernon,

in the performance.
diate
hie tiles

Iowa,

took

part

�INS aay)
RY

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Also Came'Home'
ThForey Holiday
Season

Ubtary Lists
Some Of Newest
Books On Japan

tt ti ti ti

Relatives

and

friends

ers

of

Happy days are here again! And

young

t it “great” to be back at school.

armed forces in Korea have oft-

general

description

&gt; HPHS

student,

en expressed interest
Highland Park Public

of

the

aver-

the week

after

ristmas vacation: huge bags unthe eyes, unchanging
expresof gloom, and attitude of “I
shta’ be home in bed.”

*Most everyone followed a pretty
isy schedule during vacation. It
s wonderful
to see how many
ople took their turn being host
d hostess. It’s interesting to see
paper
just how many
parties
e actually were:

men

serving

with

mas
vacation
were the following
young people:
Barnes,
Barnard
Phil
Schwimmer, Ted Pincus, Cyril Silverman,
Robert
Postels,
Barbara
Stupple.
Judy Kaplan, Michael
Bass, Paul
Klein, and Larry Feldman, all of
Indiana
university;
Carol
Chase
and Fred Livingston, Colorado college;
James
Anderson,
Western
Vilitary academy;
Daniel
Cohen
Stanford university; Judy Cohen
‘Iniversity of Oregon; and Drane
Harris, Smith college.

the

at the
library

in current informational material relating to Japan where
our armies are based.
The year 1952 has seen the publication of various books by and
about the Japanese people. An unusually good account of post-war

life

in

Japan,

“Windows

for

the

Crown Prince,” was written by the
American
Quakeress, Elizabeth
Vining, who was invited to tutor
young Akihito.
Interesting in the light it sheds

have trickled out of Japan in postwar
years
‘include the recently

twins.
ght

Eve:

Helen

Levi, mid-

services.

Christmas

night: Elin Ladany.

December
26:
Exmoor’ Dance,
Jim Goldsmith (dinner) Toni Murey (dinner), Sarah Frelinger.
Dec. 27: John
Goodman
(dixie
and dinner), Sue D’Sinter.
December
28:
Diane
Singer,

‘Dick

and

Val

5 December
Betsy

Sally

Bloomstein.
29: Holly Hop, Kenny
Kraft,
Pat
Neuman,

Fearing,

December

Carol Walker.

30:

Swing

Club,

Cathy

air and Woody Hansmann
(dinr), Bob Hinchsliff.
New Year’s Eve: Ann Ferguson
(dinner),
Jack
Tyson
(dinner),
ndy

Klee

gie
sin,

(dinner),

and

Howard

Mike

Field,

Dave

Baum,

Ellman,
John

Bob

Gould,

ol Kluss, Marcia Harrison, Sally
eigerich

(breakfast),

Tony

Newey

(breakfast).
New Year’s Night: Recuperating,
oanne Cimbalo.
While everyone else was partyz, the HPHS Cagers traveled to
Kalb for the annual Christmas
rnament.
Winning
their
first
oO games, they played their third
h Leyden in the semi-finals, but
re defeated.
Have
you
noticed an
unhappy
faraway look in the eyes of many
the Highland Park girls? Could

have anything to do with the
ack-to-college” and “‘back-to-servce” boy friends?
The latest craze that is sweeping

in the West and can look back in
retrospect at the Japan of the years
immediately
following
1941
is
“Daughter
of
the
Pacific,”
by
American-educated
Yoko
Matsuoka.
By way of comparison, one might
read Joseph C. Grew’s ‘Ten Years

in Japan”

40 years, 1904-1945.”
“China, Japan and

New
by

voice
the

talent: is disminute,
huh

_ Famous

New

Year’s

Resolutions:

n

Elliott

and

Bill

Davidow—to

learn how to Charleston.
=bby Keogh—to grow for Tom.

tanglement

4l Rubenstein—to
Dorothy

marks.
Murray
to lose 20

Bill

dat

Schaffnerto

be in Hall-

and Mimi
Angster—
pounds—quick!

Russell—to

shave

every

now

of

OL

ee

é

the

tory of the

Far

summary
pan.

States.
general

and

Oe

Interesting

literary

other

theater

and

on

3

Evanston

sale

sporting

HIGHLAND PARK
Dial H! 2-2400

440 Green

FRI.,

SAT.,

SUN.

&amp;

MON.,
Jan. 9, 10,

11,

hospital.

Day

“THE
Our

Matin-e, Sat.,
at 2:00 P.M.

Bay

CARIBOO
Color
Gang

name

was

The other Corwith children are
Diane, 6; Van, 4, and Debra, who
is 2. Mr. Corwith Sr. and Mr. and
LaMar
Brace
of
Pontiac,
Mrs.
Mich., are the other grandparents.

Coming,

!ei-h. C-rleton
Keenan Wynn

Jan.

Coming

OF

OUR

2-0440

1716

Central St., Evanston
DAvis 8-7440
“Professional Polish”—Harris, News

Cartoons

“The Curious Savage”
—

Endearing

Wacky
with

Carpenter,

Comedy

for the

Heawk

—

me

OUT

off for

Ida

Lupino

ORDERS
orde rs)

10 or more

LIQUORS TO TAKE
FOOD ORDERS

PACKAGE

@

@

FRIDAY,

OUT

@

HI

Mat.

Highwood, III.

9 thru

from

THURSDAY,

2

to

January

15

Week
4 —

TO

Sun.

Cont.

from

2

to

BALI

with Bing Crosby and Bob Hope
GIRLS — SONGS — LAUGHTER
Next Week—APRIL
Jan.

23

for

One

THE

SAVAGE

IN PARIS—Ray

Bolger, Doris Day

Week—
with Charlton

Heston

Alligaueds
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Saturday Nights

MEET YOUR

13-14-15

SIERRA”

Family

Curtain: 8:30 Sey at
Sat. Mat. 2:30,
Eves. (Exec. Sat.)
$1.50, $1: Sat. Eve.
$2.50, $2, $1.50. ee Mat. $1.50. $1. No.
performance Mondays.
MAIL ORDERS ACCEPTED.
Box Office open daily, 10 a.m.9 p.m.

3 Piece Combo

f

in the basket

Chicken

Coming: “MY SISTER EILEEN”
Jen. 13 thee Jen. 25

OF

ADVENTURE”

events,

fun

Directed by Hugh Rennie
Hope Summers, Vera Ward
aad

Soon—

at

Reagan,

Jan.

THURS.,

“HIGH

Humphrey

THROUGH JANUARY {1
LADY

&amp;

WED.

TUES.,

Ronald
Nelson

DEERPATH

10

16—

“THE oe
FATIM

rye.
Gene

in technicolor

“FEARLESS FAGAN”
Janet

Color by Technicolor

Virginia

Presby.

THE

TUES., WED. &amp; THURS., Jan. 13, 14, 15°

With

Jan. 11-12
Mrs. || SUN. &amp; MON.
“She's Working Her Way
Through College”

Marcia H. Corwith; and her grandof
Corwith
Nathan
Mrs.
mother,
maiden
Kimblewood
lane, whose

One

TRAIL”

by ‘Cinecolor
Comedy and

In Color
Cochran
and Wildfire,
The Wonder Horse

Steve

Lake Forest, Illinois — Lake Forest 2106
North Shore’s Most Beautiful Theatre

Road
HI

Roman

HORSE”

born

great-grandmother,

Sat.

Jan.

was

ior Nathan Corwiths of 1243 Linden avenue, she is named after her

423 Waukegan

with
Peters, Jeffrev Hunter,
Constance Smith
Color by Technicolor

Children’s

she

Phone

“TUPE OF THE
WILDERNESS”
Jean

since

25 in Highland Park
The daughter of the jun-

12

—

Ticket Service

CE

Christmas
December

FINEST

Highwood

Flynn , Ruth

Jan. 9-10
FRI. &amp; SAT.
“THE LiO N AND THE

Marcia Presby Corwith will celebrate
her
future
birthdays
on

Saratoga

THEATRE

8

MARU”

THE HIDEOUT

AGED
STEAKS

ALCYON

—

North Shore Hotel Lobby, DAvis 8-8282 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mon. thru Sat.
°
Closed Sundays
Eee

Errol

Open

which

2:30 |

Corwith

@

THE

from

Jan.

“MARA

(10%

FOR

ease

Johns

$] 35

a

Continuous ea

THURSDAY

Featuring

of Ja-

works

="THE COUNTRY GIRL”
"GIGI" — “TOP BANANA”
TALAG 17”
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_

includes

of the Occupation

St.

TAKE

the _

East

1265

Powers,”

United

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di-

ENTERTAINMENT

-

TICKETS

Cumming

reader, it brings up-to-date the his-

“PLYMOUTH

:

the

Recommended

Also

only when spoken to.
aul Day—to be a “meHow-cat”’.
rol Kluss and George
Tyson—
to remain “Carol and George”.

from

H.

f oga

by M. Cameron, Thomas Mahoney,
and
G. McReynolds,
surveys
the
history of China
and Japan
and
points up directly the phases
of
their history which concern the en-

senior class is the game
of
ategories”. The
punishment
ems to make the game—standing
the middle of the crowd to sing

solo.
_«eovered

written

hee

Taand

HIGHWOOD”
THEATRE.

avenue.

aries and private papers kept during the 10 years he was American
ambassador
to
Japan,
1932-1942.
His
current
memoir,
“Turbulent
Era,” is “a diplomatic
record
of

e

i

(1944),

translated novels of Hanama
saki, ‘‘Long the Imperial Way,”
“The Mountains Remain.”

|

To Deerfield -

Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Will are
planning to move into their new
home at 749 Deerpath drive in
Deerfield this week.
They have
been making their home with Mrs.
Will’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. George

paternal

Decembér '22: Kenny Kraft, TerLoevenhart, Sybil Kramer.
_ December 23: Nancy and Steve from the point of view of a liberal
ehr, Pat Newman, Doug Keare, ‘Japanese who has traveled much
Christmas

Among the many Highland Parkhome from college for Christ-

enue

reside
ju 8-8600
Parking

Every

-——onen

ne

and

Joan Taylor

�7

Mrs. J. Ring, 1211 Green Bay road.

Bible

i
S$

From

!

’

°

53 Buicks

Her €

:

Now

On Display

and

ae

ae

Evangelical’

federation

Showroom

of the

into

Congres

church

confer-

of

Sunday

made h im: dimy, end:
him with a broom.

the

expositions

the

Ring

and

Shen

ence. At present he is the author

of

the

Sunday

am.

9:40

wouldn’t leave. Two resourceful officers chased him into a spin dryer,

‘tional church, Mr. Bealer was conference secretary, a member of the
board of
examiners
for
junior
preachers and president of the Sunday school and Christian Endeavor

There

At Kleeburg

The ‘squirrel..got

home at

(Continued from page 8)

|

Shire

Voth

Talks

Aeaee

.

|

|

School lessons used in the senior

Highland Park 2-608

quarterly of the temple

Open

series.

Mon.-Fri.

at

|
6

40c to 6:30

Squirrel Gets Taken
For Ride By Police
Most

land

recent

Park

Sat., 1:30: to 6—40e
Sun. &amp; Holidays, 60c

assignment

police,

who

of High-

have

,

been

LAST

asked by residents to catch deer,
raceoons, flamingos and-other animals and birds, was to pursue and||
eject

a°’squirrél from

the

home

DAY

THURS.,

Jan.

“PAULA”
Loretta Young,

8

:
vis ¢
Smith |

Kent

of
t

FRI. thru MON.

Jan. 9-12)

“BECAUSE YOU’RE MINE”:
Color by Technicolor
Mario

Lanza, Doretta

TUE.

thru

By JOHN REYNOLDS
been
a

Soe
:

a

as

‘ Buick introduces for 1953 a Golden Anniversary line of cars with outstanding engineering
‘developments which include the world’s newest V-8 engine and an advanced Dvnaflow transmic&lt;‘sion. Pictured above is the two-door, six-passenger Riviera in the Super Series, most popular
-hard-topin the Buick line. Its new engine, lead&gt;r of all V-8s, turns up to 170 horsepower w:th a
compression ratio of 8.5 to 1. The new Twin Turbine Dynaflow gives it vastly improved pera

re-styled

front

arrangement.

and

end

A

horizontal

incorporating

new

a

alligator-type

rear

fenders

with

sturdier

hood,

Motors

two-piece

long-flowing

bullet-shaped

‘appearance. The interior features fresh
‘at Kleeburg Buick, 1732 First Street.

Nelson

grille,

new

tail

body

colors and

Displays

bumper,

lines,

lights,

give

and

new

the

a

futuristic

moldings

car

tasteful trim,

New

It hac

smooth acceleration.

completely

and greater economy with no sacrifice of Buick’s

formance

an

The

seeing

screen.

and

headlight

ventiports,

ultra-modern,

new

cars may

on

Here

your

are

|j[

of_

the

Re

sleek

Re
ALL

FLAGS

or

Superimposition
. . . two

be seen

Color by Technicolor
Stewart Granger,
Deboraly Herr

Coming:
‘a
AGAINST

ener tate eT

ent

-

-

{|}

vases satin ica arebitiaeLe
:
papult ar
ah nite a or ae
Pig t
sien
on, ih 4
b
ao aoe i
th
nam fr
-

res , ee

13-15.

Television

some.

na

ans

Jan.

=

Hollywood’s Choice Films

cameras

j

get
a_
different
picture and electronics — enables

j

ond of the pic- |i] THEATRE — WAUKEGAN |
tures to be put

Oldsmobiles.

atop the other to
,
Ghosts

made

{

Continuous

get the effect of
#8
q sinale picture.
that walk through walls are

STARTS

this way.

Negative

picture

from. positive
change white
versa,

. . . a

can
vice

TODAY

for 7 Days

in their

packed

pavonepe sess belne eea

)

from

1:30

(Thurs.)

BING CROSBY, BOB HOPE,
DOROTHY LAMOUR
;
,
:

Electronic hole . . . this is where

|

Daily

switch

to negative
to black and

one
picture
seems
to
come
through a hole in the‘ middle of

with

new

laff hit

songs,
girls

dances,

all in Technicolor

large picture by using a stronger
camera,
Upside down . . . wherein a person may be made to appear to be

“ROAD
TO

BALI”

nt

walking on the ceiling.
Mechanical

effects

.

.

.

various

Starts

et

eee citig nei

devices are placed in front of the
camera to give the iit ag
of
looking through a keyhole, a pair
of binoculars,
or even
parts of

2
“

rence niente
Alitt
ah

chrome

with

trim

8 to

on

Super
the

“88”

rear

1 compression

four-door

quarter

ratio.

panels

Interior

sedan
and

for

fenders

beauty

Packard North Shore
Hold

On

Open

A.

Wait,

of Packard-North
nounced
that his

open

House
°

Day

general

manager!

Inauguration

Vann

house

Shore, has anfirm will hold

all day Tuesday,

Janu-|

|New
Now

a more

powerful

front

and

165-h.p.

Highland

Park

Inaugural

in

he
the

Christmas

Highland

i
Highland

season

“Rocket”

with Charlton Heston

Gifts at 454 Green

Highwood

and

Underwood
Flower

are

Fashions

William

partners

in

enterprise.

area

limited North Shore trade for several years. Mr. Underwood was for-

merly associated with Anna,

Bay|sive

Flower)

Chicago

Berthe

K.

florist.

Strubel

January

8, 1953

“HURRICANE
ue
SMITH

&amp;

Yvonne

Phone:

De

James

Carlo,

Craig

2-0341.

SH
or

ay
e

S
inest

® Steaks
®

°
in

&amp;Y

[
ta

Oniginal isa

PIZZA

Chops

e
Spaghetti

i

—Scornavacco’s —
of Lake

Ys
ooas
”?

ies

@ Ravioli
°

&amp;
tan

bé

exclu-

of

6-Piece Band
Friday Nights
Timer Inman,
Master of

Ceremonies

For-

John/|est and Agnes Donini Alverson of
St.
1821
Inc. at
Starting at 10:30 a.m., the Pack-| Fashions,
ard Motor Car Company will sponHighwood are the co-proprietors of
Elena Flowers and gifts. The new
sor the broadcasts of the Inaugurto the Capitol| store features a fine selection of
House
White
ation ceremonies over the CBS net-|the
work. The program will take listen-/| steps through to midnight with the | china, glass and gift items in addiers from the morning drive from' Inaugural Ball.
tion to the flowers.

Thursday,

co

the
Mrs.

Kramer, a Highland Park resident,||

‘Wo new flower shops; Elena Flow-

and

plus

engine

brought | as done flower arrangements for a

th
Park-Highwood

St.

!
SAVAGE’

rear end, new

0Mrs. Julian
cents
Fare
Kramer and

|Park and Highwood

road,

Party.

Flower SOQU
Open

TELEVISION
First

15th

‘
Features

by a choice of three color combinations

*

ary 20, as part of Packard’s nation-|ers

wide

and

a restyled

1858

a handsome
new instrument panel.
GM power steering, Frigidaire car conditioning,
power
brakes
and
the Autronic-Eye
are among
the optional accessories available
cost. ’The ’53 Oldsmobile may be seen at Nelson Motors, 1420 Deerfield Road.

extra

To

features

is enhanced

and there is
“Pedal-Ease”
at

1953

CENTURY

RADIO,

Jan

Technicolor
THE

scenery . . .’With a new year in

20th

THURS

ss

sight,
.we
want
to express
our
gratitude to all our friends and
customers of ‘52 for their patronage and: loyalty . . . and we in
turn pledge to serve you honestly
and diliaently in ‘53 as always.

Oldsmobile’s

|

“PRISONER OF ZENDA“

Electronics plays a willing and
.important role .in producing some
of the tricks in pictures ‘you've
PES

THU.,

Marrow

WASHINGTON

550

;
Green

Bay

Road

HI

GARD

2-9787

ENS

Highwood

Page

33

�“a

Donald Ray Attends
Funeral

Rites For

Mother

In Indiana

Donald

Ray

of 1060

court.

and

Gary,

returned

from

his

Centerfield

sons,

Donald

home

Marion,

Ind.,

and

January

where
he

1

at-

tended funeral services the day before for his mother, Mrs. Chester
Householder,
57,
who
died of a
heart attack December 28.

Mrs.

Householder

in death

TOWELS

Select

Made expressly for us by Martex.
White and white with
colored border.

item

your

linen

is well

and

known

bedding

quality

from

Bath size, 22 x 44 ........ 89c
Face Size, 16 x 28 ........ 48c
Wash

Bath Size, 22 x 44 .... $1.00

Face size, 16 x 28 ........ 59c
5 6 mRtara ee 26c

All

towels

other

the

reduced

January

our Annual

January White

Sale.

Every

regular stock and priced at a worth-while saving.

Fine

Combed

Percale

WAMSUTTA

for

SHEETS,

Exquisitely soft.

Sale

MOHAWK

Queen

Sheets

of All

72 x 108 $4.95

band, Chester.
Memorial

survived

i|Park
wersen

Mi tie

90%

new

wool

woven

Donald,

her

per

overing.

For

Full $4.39.

one

Householder’

brother,

of Oakland,

mattress

or

box

Down
&lt;4

Blankets $15.95

Calif.;

SHEETS

springs.

Twin

Filled

—

12

—

STATION

Your Headquarters for
Goodyear “Suburbanite”
' Snow Tires

$3.39,

Comforters $32.95

POINT COMFORT
SERVICE

quality and high style.

Waukegan
—Bedspreads by Morgan-Jones.
Famous Radiant Heiress
Hobnail Spreads in super size and covered with thousands
hobnail

STATION

&amp; Telegraph

Dfld.

779

Dfld.

ee

New Light
ou Prayer

$2.95
$3.25

Most people would pray more

Sheet Blankets of heavy weight. Full bleached
$3.95, sash
bed size. Regularly ine
u
or double
fleece. ¥ Twini

—Cotton

Feather Pil lows

$5.69

—Utility Blankets, 70%
Size

62

x 84.

Green,

Navy,

Flour sack tea towels hemmed,

Approximate size 18 x 33.

All other feather and down
pillows specially priced for
January Sale.

—Martex

Dry-Me-Dry

Checked

Regular size Latex Pillow with
zipper closing and corded
edge, $5.29

Down Proof Pillow
Tick with Zipper 98c
White Pillow Protectors
with zippers 79c

pattern.

ready for use.

—Linen Huck Towels.
18 x 32 size 98c.

January

Sale

Irish Table

Damask

Towels.

39c

Irish

napkins $27.50
—Rolled
$18.95.
—Richly

Double

Damask

Linen.

72

with

Slightly

15 x 22 with

colored

x 90

border.

imperfect.

damask

border

cloth

Hand
with

hemmed,
eight

22

72 x 108 with twelve napkins $36.50

Hem Double Damask Linen. 66 x 84 cloth and eight 22” napkins,
66 x 102 cloth with twelve 22” napkins $24.95.
loomed rayon Damask Sets. Sale priced from $5.29 to $10.95.

Garnett 2 Co.

69c

They see that somehow the answer to life’s perplexing problems must be sought where
power and intelligence have
their limitless, beneficent
source — the realm of God.
Todav a remarkable book, the
Christian Science textbook

SCIENCE and HEALTH
WITH KEY TO THE SCRIPTURES
by Mary. Baker Eddy

Sets |

The best linen values we have seen for a long, long time.
beautiful,

Linen

each.

Size

lives, and

the world at large, sorely need
help that human effort has not
brought.

Six in package. $1.09

—Gloss Towels made of Irish
17 x 32, 6 for $4.30.

Rubber Pillows

Super size Latex Pillow
Regular $8.95 value, $7.95

feel that their own

$6.79.

Wine,

Flour Sack Kitchen Towels

Soft goose feather pillows by
Burton-Dixie.
20 x 26 size.
Featherproof tick covered.

Pillows
value $7.95

if they felt they knew how, —
and knew how prayer could
really be effective. Many today

New Wool, 30% Reprocessed Wool.
Red,

578

tufts, $8.95.

-....----------------------- NOW

Full size, regularly $3.98

Rds,

Deerfield

|

of rayon

Twin size, regularly $3.69 .......----.-.----------++++ NOW

34

and

Offers You
Complete Bumper to
Bumper Service.
@ Grease Jobs
@ Wash Jobs
@ Accessories
@ Batteries

Of fine combed yarn percale and sanforized for permanent fit. Top and bottom contours easy to put on.

Page

of

Ing-

COMFORT
SERVICE

Luxurious, colorful rayon satin, down filled comforters in
™ beautiful Trapunto patterns. Combining warmth with lasting

All wool. Regular $18.95 value.
Wide binding. Deep soft nap.
72 x 90.

“

Ralph

with

Kenwood

Koolfoam
Regular $8.95

is

Mrs.

—Mattress Covers of 80 square sanforized muslin, with zip-

_ 10% nylon for added strength.
Wide
rayon-satin
border
72 x 90.

Foam

she

daughter,

Vernon

POINT

—Seamless full-bleached pad with double box stitching and
double-row stitch on binding. Twin $4.19
Full $5.49.

Sorinatield
Blankets $12.80

hus-

grandchildren.

size $4.39
SETS
%.S

her

Marion.
son,

by

and

Full

$3.39.

preceded

by

Percales

Hemstitched $5.35

SNOW WHITE UTILITY MUSLIN
72x 108
$2.49
Cases 65c

size

Twin

cotton.

full-bleached

her

Algonquin;

- Our famous “Snow White” pad with close 5/6” stitching and
with

was
ago

Burial was in Grant

Park,

Besides

Sturdy Mattress Pads
filled

years

Paul Simmons,
with
whom
she
made her home; and two stepchildren, Mrs.
Elaine
Olson
of Oak

&gt; Gleaming white, all combed yarn percale sheets with 186
4 threads to square inch. Smooth and soft to the touch.
72x108
$2.99
81x108
$3.29

COLORS

Eo

our

during

Mohawk

Cloth

IN PASTEL

needs

two

is reverently revealing a wholly
new understanding of prayer,
and meeting humanity’s need.
This great book may be read,
borrowed or bought at
Christian

Science

Reading

Room

1935 Sheridan Road
Highland Park
Information
Sunday

concerning

School

and

church

free

services,

public

lectures

also available.

Thursday,

January
fea

rye
ae

IY

8,
deel

1953

dhe
Wee
:
Niel hee oa ee
ef ol

q

�PHONE

YOUR

—

WANT ADS

—

Deerfield

_4

485

and Charge It!
REAL

WANT AD RATES

ANCHOR

5¢ each additional word
55

Words

or

(Improved)
‘

PAY
LIKE
RENT
Fine 7 rm. brick home in Lake Forest,
$23,000.
Wonderful
terms,
very
low
down payment.

20 words
for only
(For

ESTATE
FOR SALE
(LAKE
FOREST)

Less)

HI

REAL

2-0093

ESTATE
Res.,

HI

2-0037

This cost will cover the
insertion in all 4 papers.

LUXURY STYLE RANCH HOUSE
just 1 year old. There are five big bedrooms, three baths, library, living room

® Deerfield Review

kitchen, utility room and basement.
On
Same property a 4 year old 8 car garage

® Highland Park News
® Highwood News

and

20*30,

dining

guest

or

room

1318,

servant

beautiful

house,

tennis

tile

court,

® The Lake Forester

tractor shed, sheep shed, chicken house.
20 acres
of secluded
property,
in fine
country:
area.
If you
are
seeking
the
best,
call
today
for
more
information.
Mr. Rumsfeld.

Want Ads will be accepted up to

576

Tuesday

REAL

4:30

BAIRD

p.m.

HT

Park 2-4500

DEERFIELD
615 Waukegan Road
HIGHLAND PARK
St. Johns

LAKE

Ave.

Deerpath

a

REAL

ESTATE
FOR
SALE
FOREST)
(LAKE

SOMETHING

(Improved)

DIFFERENT

This Early American
stone. and clapboard home has many unusual features.
There is a 4 room apartment over the
attached 2 car garage. There are 2 bedrooms, sitting room and bath on Ist floor,
also large living room, dining room with
bay, kitchen with
breakfast
space.
Upstairs are 2 bedrooms
and bath. There
are 2 finished
rooms
in the basement.
Nicely landscaped lot, 105x190, in choice
location. Price, $49,500.

A BLEND OF MONTEREY
AND THE OLD SOUTH
This charming 9 room brick residence
designed by Jerome
Cerny
for his own
home is just what so many people have
always wanted. On the 1st floor are living room, dining room, both with beautiful bow windows;
study, bath, kitchen,
breakfast
room,
maids
room
and
bath,
screened porch and 2 car attached garage.
Upstairs are 3 bedrooms,
2 baths. Recreation room in basement. There is also
a 3 box stall stable (brand new), small
Pasture encircled by post and rail fence.
Owner
transferred
and must sell.

6 ROOM

BRICK

RANCH

HART, SHAW &amp; COMPANY
260 EAST DEERPATH
LAKE
FOREST
616

LET'S BEAT HOME
PRICES DOWN
DIRECT

CHOICE

FROM

LOCATION

w

Thursday, Januz

1953

%

ESTATE
FOR
(Highland

RAVINIA

LANG REAL ESTATE

Glencoe

Rd.

Glencoe

1971

Open Sunday 1 to 4:30
1345
Forest
Ave.,
N.E. Corner
Linden
Red pressed brick, 15x24 ft. living room,
dn. rm., lg. kit., powder room, 13x24 ft.
glazed and heated porch; 2nd flr., 4 bdrms.,
2
tile baths,—2
bedrooms
have
separate sitting rms.; full bsmt., gas ht.;
attached
garage,
beautiful
corner
lot.
Only $87,000.

DONALD
697

Vernon

A NEW

N. ANDERSON,
REALTOR

Ave.

Glencoe

YEAR

- NEW

PRICES

Here’s a house that would

you

over

$30,000

you

can now

last

have

year

cost

and

buy for $25,000,

plus the fact that we

may

be able

to help you on financing beyond
the usual lst mortgage.
Four lge. bdrms., tile bath, lge.
liv. rm.-den
with frpl., din. rm.,
pwd. rm., spacious kit. with dishwasher-sink
comb.
Lge.
closets
throughout. This house, on almost
an acre of ground in a beautiful secluded location, is in excellent condition and ready for immediate oc-

a number

of other

PAUL
497

Central

PHELPS,:
Ave.

Inc...
HI

2-4580

OWNER
offers 6 room white brick, 1%
baths, heated garage, screened porch,
basement, rec. room, beamed
ceilings,
generous wood panelling; picture window overlooks woods and ravine, near
lake. Architect’s home of superior construction. $26,500 or offer. HI 2-4998.
BRAESIDE. 4 bedrooms, 2% baths, white
brick colonial; 16x20 screen porch, rec.
room. Gas ht., wooded lot. Near transportation and school, excellent condibytes Telephone
for appointment,
HI
-0420.

REAL

ESTATE

COMPANY
HI 2-6600

closet space. Low taxes and heating costs;
conv. to everything.
Special, $17,000.
Beautiful year old Brick Ranch, Sherwood
Forest area. Lge.
liv. rm.-diuette
comb.,
frpl., orchard
stone
panelled,
3
lge. bdrms., roomy closet space; darling
steel
cab.
kit., ceramic
tile bath
with
shower, utility rm. in attached oversize
gar.,
radiant
oil
heating;
landscaped
grounds,
centrally
located.
Exceptional
buy, under $23,000.
723 St. Johns
2-1484

Williams
Eve. HI

Ave.
2-1485

BUDGET
PRICED
If you are house
hunting
on a budget
we have just the right home for you!
A nice 2 bdrm. bungalow! Lge. liv. rm.
with frpl., sep. din. rm., lge. kit., full
bsmt.,
screened pch.,
2 car gar. What
more can you ask for this surprisingly
low
price
of
$16,500.
Call
today
for
appt.
Mrs.
McClure,
HI
2-5821
or HI
2-7278.

PIERSEN

REALTY CO.
584

Central

Ave.,

HI

2-7278,

Dfld.

1578

Open
Sunday
2-4
208
Beech
Street
A
charming
well
located
home
containing
4
bedrooms,
8.
baths,
small
den. Immediate possession. Considerately
at

HIGHLAND

Bldg.

Glencoe

236

162
Laurel
Ave.
DO YOU NEED
4 GOOD
BDRMS.?
See this convenient family home, % blk.
from the lake. Liv. rm. with frpl., din.
rm., lib., kit., screen pch. on lst. 4 bdrms., 2 baths on 2nd. Plenty of storage
space, 2 car att. gar. $34,500.

ANN

MORELAND,

Vernon

°

Glencoe

REALTOR
805

or

350

Convenient Ravinia location. Excellent 6 rm. brick home. Lge. liv.
rm.
with bay
window,
charming
den-din. comb., mod. kit., brkfst.
rm., pwd. rm. on Ist. 3 bdrms., tile
bath, screened pch. on 2nd. All furnishings
and carpet
available
to
purchaser. Priced to sell, $29,500.

ADLER
1896

Sheridan

&amp; MAXON
Rd.

HI

2-1834

10
room
frame
residence
in excellent
residential
section.
Lge.
liv.
rm.
with
open frpl., heated sun pch., panelled den
with open frpl., din. rm., butler’s pantry, kit., pwd. rm. on Ist flr. On 2nd flr.
master bdrm. and bath, 4 other bdrms.
and 3 baths. 8rd flr. 2 maids rms. and
bath; full bsmt., recr. rm., oil ht. 2 car
gar. All improvements
in and paid for.
Price,
$45,000.
Call
Mrs.
Smith,
HI
2-0247.

SAMUEL

McNAB
CAMPBELL,
Northbrook 170

FOR THE

Mrs.

Realtor

DISCRIMINATING
BUYER

Here is a home you’ll be proud to own.
Move in without spending one cent. Beautifully
decorated,
modern
birch
kitchen
with eating area, built-in G.E. dishwasher; lge. liv. rm. with frpl.; din. rm.; den,
and powder rm; mst. bdrm. has its own
bath with stall shower and dressing rm.;
2 other
bdrms.
and bath, lge. closets,
bsmt.
with
rec. rm.;
gas
heat.
Beaut.
landscaped
grounds,
2 car
gar.
Price,
$33,500.
Call
Mrs.
Graham,
HI. 2-5842
or HI 2-7278.

BENJ. PIERSEN
REALTY: CO: =:

584 Central Ave., HI 2-1215 or HI 2-7278

&amp; WARNER,

Lincoln

Ave.,

REAL

Winnetka,

ESTATE

Realtors

Rd.

HI

MORTGAGES

2

spic-n-span.

bedroom
Price

to transportation;
rage. 2
see call
5-8278.

J. CLARKE
30

North

ranch,

2-0880
yrs.

OFFICES,
.

Salle

REALTOR

St.

Chicago,

8-0084

:

old;

convenient

large lot, attached gaMrs. Burns, GReenleaf

BAKER,

La

4

reduced;

LOANS

Ample
funds available at low rates on
well located residential properties. Long
terms—prepayment
privileges.
FIRST
FEDERAL
SAVINGS
AND
LOAN
ASSOCIATION
,
216 Madison Street
Waukegan |
MA

Clapboard

6-2700°

WANTED—four,
five or six room house #8
in Lake Forest. Must be in good con- —
dition. 1/3 down. Write Box E-50 c/o \
Lake Forester.

Redlich

1899

Inc.

WI

WANTED

FIRST MORTGAGE

&amp; LLOYD,

Sheridan

576

bath;
lot,
rm. comb.,

EARHART

Ms

_

WINNETKA

BAIRD

ONLY
$17,500
Call

Park)

(COUNTRYSIDE)

fine building site in North East section —
near the lake. 50x205 with 8 car brick.
garage included. More space available if
required. $6,500. Owner wants immediate
sale. Mr. Rumsfeld.
i

NEW
f
RANCH HOUSE
$1,750
down.
2 bdrms.,
tile
118x125. Spacious liv. rm.-din.
mod. kit.

PARK

yet
inside
city
limits.
24/10th
acres,
partially wooded, suitable for one or more —
homes.
%
mile to Highmoor Station, in
area of fine homes. If you want conveni-—
ent country living see this property now.
$5,000.
Mr.
Rumsfeld.

PARK

IDEAL HOME for large family in central
east location. 5 bdrms., 3 baths on second
floor, with extra maid’s room and bath on
third
which
may
be closed
off if not
needed. Large liv. rm., din. rm., brkfst.
rm.,
lib., and mod.
kit.
Lot,
150x200.
$31,500.

OFFICE

STORES &amp; STUDIOS
TO RENT

or shop

space

for rent

ness district on Green
tails, HI
2-6363.

Il.

Bay

Rd.

in busi- |
For

de-_
;
——

APARTMENTS TO RENT (Unfurnished)

1 STORY HOUSE

(Highland

Unusually good 1 story home

in es-

pecially convenient location and in
excellent condition.
Living room,
separate
dining
room,
modern
kitchen with disher. 3 bedrooms, 1
bath, full basement with attractive
recreation
room.
Gas
forced
air

heat.

2

Priced

car

garage.

for

quick

FRENCH

S. L. GOODFRIEND &amp; CO.
Theater

(Highland

HIGHLAND

True English
architecture.
5 bdrms.,
8
tiled baths, nice liv. rm. with frpl., din.
rm.,
tiled
kit., powder
rm.,
scr.
por.,
rec. in bsmt.; with beamed
ceiling, hot
water oil heat, 2 car gar.
Realistically
priced at $39,500. Please call Mrs. Lloyd
for further
details.

$388,500.

Brick and clapboard just 10 years old.
4 bedrooms, 2 baths, screened porch; attached
garage.
Rec.
room.
Double
lot
with
play
house.
An
excellent
buy
at
$34,500

Glencoe

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE. (Vacant)

(Improved)

Park)

&amp; CO., Realtors

at.Roger

BENJ.

SALE

FIRST TIME OFFERED
HUBBARD WOODS

size bdrms.,
tile bath
and
shower
comb,
Upstairs expandable for 2 rms.; abundant

R. S. HAMBLY

FOR

(Highland

FRAME
RANCH
built by contractorowner, like new. Liv. rm.-dinette comb.,
frpl., modern cab. kit., utility rm., oversize heating unit, oil forced air: 2 twin

667
2113

(Improved)

EAST

RINGER REALTY
457 Central

priced

712

SALE
Park)

Well constructed OWNER
BUILT
brick home;
liv. rm., SEPARATE
din. rm., scr. pceh.; cabinet kit., 2
bdrms.,
2%
baths; room for expansion on 2nd fl. Pecky cypress
rec.
rm.
Immediate
occupancy;
house is in excellent condition. For
appt. to see, call:

HI

Call for particulars.

(TAKE GREEN BAY ROAD NORTH
_FROM LAKE FOREST TO TEMPORARI-

LAKE BLUFF 1771
LAKE BLUFF 3632

bedgas

homes
in this
bracket
that
are
realistically
priced.
These
prices
will not wait.

BUILDER

BRIDGE, THEN
FIELD OFFICE.)

9.nne

YOUR
OPPORTUNITY
TO
PURCHASE
this home advantageously. Heirs anxious
to settle estate. 2 acres, 6 bedrooms, 3
baths, powder rm.; guest house; greenhouse; oil ht.; 2 car

cupancy.
We also have

Beautiful
Lake
Bluff
Terrace
subdivision. Deluxe
ranch
type
homes are now on display. Good
transportation,
fine
schools
and
churches.
Builder
residing
on
premises.
LY BARRICADED
BLOCK EAST TO

ESTATE

AT

rac

8 bedroom
brick
French
Provincial
in
convenient
location.
Gas
heat,
study,
basement. Built in 1950. Offered in middle 20's.
ROBERT
L.
JOHNSON
REALTY
CO.
1608
Berkelev
Road
HI
2-6200
Winnetka
6-3809
Deerfield 308

which

On over an acre of nicely landscaped
and wooded property. There are 3 bedrooms,
2 baths.
Beautiful
large
living
room and adjoining all-purpose room with
fireplace
wall.
Gas
heat.
Thermopane
windows. Cork floors. 2 car attached garage. Low
taxes.
Price, $37,000.

BUY

REAL

9.nnag

gross
good

7
DEERFIELD
Fine brick
home
on
beautiful
Brierhill
Road. First floor has large living room
with
fireplace,
attractive
dining
room,
step saving
kitchen,
bright
study,
and
powder
room.
Second
floor has 4 bedrooms
and 2 ceramic
tile baths.
2 car
varage
attached,
and
wooded
property
100x300.
Tip top condition and reasonably priced,

FOREST

287

(Improved)

Park)

IF YOU PLAN TO BUILD
see Sherwood
Forest, a new
and
fast
growing
area. Large lots, many
beautifully wooded,
with all improvements: in
and paid for. Reasonably priced.

Lake Forest 2300

1775

6-2700

HIGHLAND
PARK
$18,500
Cute brick Ranch with basement, 2
rooms,
living-dining
combination,
heat, 1%4 car garage.

Ad

Deerfield 485
Highland

Inc.
WI

FOR SALE

ANCHOR

Call any of these numbers
for a Want
Taker

ESTATE

Winnetka,

HOME
AND
INCOME
3 apt. buildings in good location:
income, $415 per month. $30,000;
‘erms. For info. cal)

TELEPHONE
WANT AD SERVICE
ask

Ave.,

(Highland

for Publication in the Current
Week’s Issue

and

&amp; WARNER,

Lincoln

REAL

80

sale

foot
....

lot.

$21,500

PROVINCIAL

Secluded
ravine
lot.
Fine
brick
house with slate roof. Large living
room, dining room, screen porch,
paneled
library,
powder
room,
kitchen and breakfast nook. Second floor has five bedrooms and 4
baths.
Unusual
charm
and
convenient for schools and transportation. Owner moving to California

and

wants

H.

ANDi

463

Central

REAL

offer.

R.

ESTATE

Asking

$47,500.

ANSPACH,
Avenue

FOR

HI

SALE

INC.
2-1212

(Improved)

(Deerfield)

3 yr. old brk. Ranch. Liv.-din. rm. comb.,
2 bdrms.,
bath,
cab.
kit.
with
eating
space,
bsmt.,
oil forced
air ht., 2 car
gar.;
nicely
landscaped
lot, ideal
location. 1 blk. to schools. Priced below cost
at $16,250
and
will still consider
any
reasonable
offer.
Immediate
occupancy.
This frame Cape Cod was built in 19389.
Has 4 bdrms. plus liv. rm., kit., dinette,
bath; gas ht., gar.; fenced
yard, Close
to
all
conveniences.
See
and compare.
$18,500.

CARR
701

Waukegan

REALTY
Rd.,

CO.

Deerfield

984

or

985

NEW
LISTING
One of our most attractive offerings. 6
rm.,
1%
bath brk. home
in Briarwood
Estate section. 3 twin size bdrms.,
1%
baths,
spacious
liv. rm., sep. din. rm.,
kit.; full bsmt. Most conv. location and
amongst
other
fine
homes.
Priced
to
sell at $26,500.
PRICE REDUCTION
This frame bungalow is in excellent condition and will make a most happy home
for family with small children. Lge. ‘liv.
rm. with frpl., mod. kit. with dinette, 3
bdrms. ,11%4 baths; full bsmt., gar. Lot,
60x300. Owner transferred and must sell.
Price, $17,500.

BENJ. PIERSEN
REALTY CO.
813 Waukegan
Rd.
Deerfield 1573 or 1572

REAL

ESTATE
TO EXCHANGE

WOULD someone with a large older home
in good condition, in North Highland
Park, like to trade us for our smaller
modernized home, also in North Highland Park? ? Write Box F-5 c/o Highland Park News.

Park)

FOUR
room
unfurnished
apartment
in
Highwood;
living room,
2 bedrooms,
kitchen
and
bath.
Newly
decorated. —
Phone HI 2-6587.

NEW. 2 bdrms., liv. rm.-din. rm.
comb., tiled bath; 1.car garage.
$160.00

per

RINGER
457

month.

REALTY

COMPANY

Central

HI

NaseI¥

$8
A

xi

2-6600

LARGE
4 room apartment, second floor, —
with heated sun porch. Choice location,
east side. $125
rental includes automatic oil heat, light, gas, hot water,
electric refrigerator,
gas
stove.
Nice
yard
and
drive-in.
Immediate
oceupancy. Call D. Cobb, HI 2-1367, eve-—
ning HI 2-3707.
‘nae
co
/

APARTMENTS TO RENT (Unfurnished)

_

(Deerfield)
THREE
room
apartment
in Deerfield. ‘Sen
Heat, light, gas, water. $65. HI 2-4476
between
10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
APARTMENTS
TO
RENT
(Highland Park

(Furnished).

)

0

TWO room apartment, furnished; 1 block
to North Shore station, close to Fort
Sheridan. Call after 5:30, HI 2.8971,
TWO
room heated apartment, clean and
suitable for employed
well furnished;
couple. Can be seen after 7 p.m. 722
Homewood
Ave., Highland Park.

hae
—
;

eect

APARTMENTS

TO

(LAKE

RENT

FOREST)

(Furnished)

38 ROOM
and bath, furnished apartment;
close to transportation.
Adults
only.
Telephone Lake Forest 2722.
2 ROOM
suite (including sitting room),
twin beds; kitchen and
light laundry
privileges. Prefer working couple. References.
Telephone
Lake
Bluff
18565.

APARTMENTS

TO

RENT (Furnished)

(Miscellaneous)
2%

:

:

ROOM
furnished kitchenette apartment with heat and utilities; 2nd floor,
private entrance. Long Lake area. $6
a month. Telephone Fox Lake 7-33814,.

HOUSES

&amp; APARTMENTS

(Furnished

or

°

——

WANTED ~

Unfurnished)

WANTED: 8 room ranch home by private
party;
will buy
or rent.
Write
Box
E-5 c/o Highland
Park News.

WANTED:
house
near
Braeside
~
School. Will buy or rent; prefer —
one story. Give full particulars |
by writing Box F-45 c/o Highland ©
Park

News.

YOUNG
architect and wife desire small
apt. in Deerfield or nearby. Excellent
references.
Call SHeldrake
3-8396.
garage apartment or small oa
Lincoln school distriet if possible. ‘
2-3504. .
TWO
brothers
and
sister
need fee
furnished
apartment,
Please
2-2954.
ve
uh.

-

kage

30

:
;

�HOUSES
&amp; APARTMENTS
WANTED
( Furnished or Unfurnished)
RESPONSIBLE young man with national
firm desires 14% room or garage apartment on or before February 1st; furnished- or unfurnished. Permanent. Best
References. Call HI 2-3850 after 5 p.m.

SCHOOL

TEACHER

needs

nishéd”' apartment.

Park

Chamber

APARTMENTS

small,

Contact

HOUSES

TO

NICE
large sleeping room on
close to transportation and
HI 2-1229.
BEDROOM
for rent;
hot water.
Market
Lake Forest 1409.

east. side.
shopping.

plenty of heat and
Square. Telephone

3MALL
OFFICE,
PLEASANT
(NG
CONDITIONS.
SHORTHAND
AND
[TYPING
EXPERIENCE
NECESSARY.
5
DAY
WEEK,
PAID.
HOLIDAYS
AND
VACATIONS;
FREE
INSURANCE.

1548

W.

room

with

transportation.

private

Tel.

Lake

bath;

near

Forest

1429.

St.

Johns

Ave.,

Highland

Park.

ROOM

AND

BOARD

PRIVATE
room
in exchange
for baby
sitting;
employed
person
preferred.
Near transportation.
HI 2-7406.

GARAGE.

TO

RENT

GARAGE for rent at 648 Oakwood.
phone Lake Forest 1213.
—
—

HELP

LOOKING
FOR
A JOB
WHERE
THE
PAY
IS GOOD
...
EVEN
THOUGH
YOU
DON’T
HAVE
EXPERIENCE?

ILLINOIS BELL
TELEPHONE

CO.

Light
Varied

STENOGRAPHER
dictation,
general
office
duties,
interesting
work.

General
office
necessary.
Call

Florence

details.

Rhodes,

details.

Experience

Northbrook

un-

1200.

SECRETARY
needed
for
beautifully
equipped
office; 25 to 85 years old.
Must be good in shorthand and letter
writing. Will need transportation. Top
wages. Call Mrs. Shutler at Lake Forest 3650 during the day o~ Lake Bluff
22323

evenings.

WOMEN
for telephone sales work from
own
home;
must
live in
Winnetka,
Glencoe,
Northfield,
Highland
Park,
Lake
Forest, Highwood
or Deerfield.
Be able to spend 4 hours a day calling.
Commission
and
telephone
bill paid.
Write
Box
F-15 c/o
Highland
Park
News.
WANiKW:
2 bakery
salesgirls,
18-35;
must
be neat,
pleasant,
reliable.
To
start Jan. 12 at 8 a.m. Good pay, 2
blocks
west. of Ravinia North Shore
rere Call Alva’s
Pastry
Shop,
HI

of

PERMANENT

this

ARE

Bank.

Business experience and a high de-

save

time

THAT...

FULL

TIME

WE’LL TRAIN
YOU, AND
YOU’LL
BE.
PAID
WHILE
YOU
LEARN
TO PLAY
AN EVER IMPORTANT
PART IN THE
LIFE OF YOUR COMMUNITY.

SEE CHIEF OPERATOR AT
HIGHLAND PARK: 1866 N. 2ND
LAKE FOREST: 255 E. DEERPATH

GENERAL
OFFICE WORK
SOME TYPING REQUIRED
With or Without
Permanent

Experience

positions

with

friendly

working
conditions.
Full time,
5
day week with 15 minute
breaks
morning and afternoon. Paid vaca-

tions and holidays. Blue
Blue
Shield
available,
paying

half.

Also

Cross and
employer

other

benefits.

Located in business section within
block of H.P. bus stop. Apply now.

DURACLEAN
|

Mr.

CO.

Tennis

DEERFIELD

Mt

444

Permanent
position
open
for an experienced stenographer; some knowledge
of bookkeeping desirable. 40 hour week,
pension
plan,
sick
leave
and
vacation
privileges. Good starting salary.
Apply George B. Caskey, Superintendent, WINNETKA
PARK
DISTRICT OFFICE, 2nd floor, Village Hall, Winnetka,
Illinois.
Across
street
from
trains—no
long walk.

POSITION in office of plant in Highland
Park-Deerfield area available for Burroughs bookkeeping machine operator;
will train. 5 day week, hours 8 a.m. to
4:30 p.m., Blue Cross plan, group insurance, paid holidays, 2 week vacation,
pleasant
surroundings,
convenient
to
transportation.
Submit
qualifications,
experience and desired salary in application. Write Box F-85 c/o Highland
Park News.
STEADY,
reliable
girls, age
18 to 85,
for light order packing plastic housewares; permanent,
full time, 40 hour
week.
$1 per hour start, raise in 6
weeks to $1.10. Paid vacation; convenient
to transportation
and
shopping.
Apply in person to Jim McGhee, J. T.
Ross and Co., 472 Park Ave., Highland
Park.
WANTED:
all around beauty operators
and manicurist for high class shop, HI
2-6210.
PART TIME and full time girls for local
dry cleaning stores; pleasant working
conditions. Apply in person to Vogue
Cleaners, 2055
Green Bay Rd., Highland Park, HI 2-3900.
WANTED:
piano
Tel. HI 2-8164.

teacher

and

tion.
Lake

Apply
Forest

cost

or.

SHOP

for

a

child.

WORK
in cleaning shop in Ft. Sheridan.
Combine silk finish and counter girl.
For
further
information
call
Main
Cleaners, HI 2-5000 Ext. 2266.
SECOND cook and 1 kitchen maid. Apply
to Highwood
Hospital, Highwood,
Ill.
SECRETARY to director, religious education North Shore Temple, Glencoe. Excellent opportunity; typing and shortoars
required.
open.
Glencoe

organization.

rates and
ment.

opportunity

Attractive
for

advance-

2301 DAVIS
CHICAGO

NORTH

STREET
DEXTER

6-3400

SALESGIRL
Full
time,
5 day,
40
hour week;
day
shift,
no
Sundays.
Paid
vacation,
employee discount and other employee benefits. Apply
to Mr.
Saunders,
Walgreen
A eg Store, 296 Deerpath, Lake Forest

WANTED STENOGRAPHER
WANTED TELLER-TYPIST
This is the opportunity you have waited
for. New
modern
air-conditioned
office,
pleasant working
conditions, paid vacations,
health
and accident
protections;
chance for advancement. If you want to
work
close to home under ideal conditions and save time and travel expense.
Salary
commensurate
with
ability.
Call
in person or phone Mr. Edw. H. Selig.

DEERFIELD SAVINGS AND
LOAN - ASSOCIATION

735

Deerfield

Rd.

_ Deerfield

165

DO

telephone
soliciting
for
Chicago’s
oldest
, photographer.
,Koehne’s Studio,
telephone DEarborn
2-2780.
OP#RATING
room
nurse,
good
salary.
Apply
to
Highwood
Hospital,
Highwood, Ill.
COMPANION
to stay at our home: January 25th to March
10th; preferably:
person
able
to drive
Cadillac.
Must
furnish
references;
excellent
salary.
Call HT 2-2148 between 6-7 p.m.
HOUSEKEEPER to care for 8 school age
children and take my place for 6 weeks
starting April 7; responsible, dependable woman.
Please write stating experience and references to Box F-8
c/o H.P. News.
-

HELP

WANTED—MALE

If you are a plumbing, heating, building
materials salesman we have an excellent
job for you. Come in and talk it over.
SEARS
ROEBUCK
&amp; CO.
601 Central Ave.
Highland
Park
WILL
iease
1 bay
“Standard”
Service
Station to responsible party. Lessee to
purchase low inventory only. Telephone
ONtario
2-2370.
9

ADVERTISING
FOR

SALESMAN

GROUP OF NORTH
WEEKLIES

SHORE

The man we’re looking for will sell advertising to North Shore retailers. He’ll
be a North Shore resident who wants a
position
that promises
an excellent future, plenty of work, and a good starting
salary plus commissions. He’ll be a selfstarter. When he comes to us, he’ll know
something
about
advertising,
but more
important, he’ll know how to sell. He'll
own a car.
If you’re the man we want, tell us about
yourself.
We'll
schedule
an _ interview.
(Our employees know of this ad). Write
Box A-15 c/o H.P. News.
reer eee,

2 TIME
Between

STUDY

25 and

MEN

40 years; minimum

of 2 years experience;
graduate preferred.

DEEPFREEZE

engineering

APPLIANCE

DIVISION
2301

NORTH

DAVIS

CHICAGO,

STREET

DExter

6-3400

EXPERIENCED driver for cleaning plant.
Call
Roessler’s
Cleaners,
HI
2-0352.
EXPERIENCED
handyman and gardener,
1 day a week or to work in spare time.

Must

have

phone

Lake

own transportation.

Forest ‘1349. |

free transportanecessary.
Earn

TO

BOOKKEEPER,
experienced;
man.
or
woman. Accuracy and neatness essential. 5 day week
for firm located in
Lake
Bluff.
For information
and interview call Lake Bluff 3400.
MAN
to keep records for local organization.
Part time evenings
and Sundays,
15 to 20 hours a week.
Write
Box F-55 c/o H.P. News.

Tele-

WANTED:
Young
of printing. Tel.

man with knowledge
HI 2-0558.

GENERAL SHOPW°ORK
OLDER MEN CONSIDERED
Inside,
interesting,
varied
and_
steady
year round
employment
with
employee
benefits. Good working conditions. Duraclean Co, (center of Deerfield). Contact
Mr. Tennis, Deerfield 444.
TELEVISION
and radio serviceman; experienced
only,
inside
and
out.
Top
wages,
pleasant
working
conditions,
free insvrance. 20th Century Television
and Radio, 1858 First St. Hl 2-0341,
NEW
car salesman; must be. extra-ambitious.
Experience preferred
but not
necessary. Call Mr. Dean at HI 2-4800,
KLEEBURG
BUICK
INC., 17382 First
St., Highland Park.
:
SALESMEN—like
luxuries?
But
your
$100 per week won’t do it? Then ‘call
Waukegan,
ONtario
2-8995,
for
appointment, after 6.
DAY
drivers needed, best
men preferred. Telephone
1200, Community Cab.

deal;
Lake

elderly
Forest
ag

EXPERIENCED
mechanic wanted; modern shop, good working conditions, top
pay, paid vacation, hospital insurance,
etc. Chrysler,
Plymouth dealer. Telephone Lake Forest 2800.

HELP

WANTED—DOMESTIC

room

car.

apartment

Telephone

with

garage

COOK,
white,
experienced;
portation.
Top
pay,
own
phone Lake Forest 2398.
DOWNSTAIRS
maid, white,
near

light houseand outside
required.
2

LIbertyville

transportation.

Top

space

for

2-3040.

HI

help,

cleaning,

HI

a

week,

$10

white,
to
take
ful)
home; top salary, other
HI 2-5322.

GENERAL
housework;
all modern
ap. pliances.
Stay, nice room. References.
HI 2-6976.
WOMAN
for cooking and assisting with
small children; no heavy
cleaning or
laundry.
Monday
thru
Friday,
8:30
am. thru dinner. References
required.
HI 2-5816.

EXPERIENCED

cleaning woman

or maid,

2 or 3 days a week; handy location.
' May stay if desired as room and private bath are available. HI 2-3607,
EXPERIENCED
second
maid, _ white;
downstairs work only. Telephone Lake
Forest 149.
WHITE,
general
housework;
family of
4. Current wages. References required,
Telephone Lake Forest 2110.
EXPERIENCED
cleaning
woman, white,
1 day a week; current wages. Prefer
Tuesday or Wednesday. References re.
quired.
Telephone
Lake
Forest
38432,
GENERAL housework; family of 3. Tele.
phone Lake Forest 2124.
PLEASANT
cleaning
woman
wanted,
2
days a week;
close to transportation,
HI 2-3516.
*
GENERAL
housework,
temporary
posi.
tion, January 21st to February
18th;

stay

or

go.

Must

like

children.

Top

salary. References required. HI 2-5019,
COOKING,
general . housework;
experienced,
references.
Top
wages;
adult
family. Call HI 2-0579.
GARAGE
apartment available’ to couple
for limited services; references. Glencoe 2515.

SITUATIONS

WANTED—FEMALE

ALL types of beauty work done in
our
own
‘home.
Tel.
HI
2-4743
or
ke
Forest
2998Y1.
COMPANION,
housekeeper
and
cook;
competent.
Can
assume
responsibility
in
managing
a
pleasant
household

where extra help does the menial work:

experienced, free to travel. Can drive
a car. Telephone WInnetka 6-2283,
NURSE, practical, for post hospital cases

in-

born

new

with

mother

assist

fants; also parent substituting. Telephone GReenleaf 5-0409.
BRITISH teacher as tutor or companion;

would like to travel to California. Write

Wil}
Mrs,

experienced;

COMPANION-HOUSEKEEPER

cook,

pay;

own

2-2146.

white;

week.

Box F-55 c/o Lake Forester.
dressmaking.
and
ALTERATIONS
deliver. Telephone
call for and
Anderson, ONtario 2-0706.

for
woman
capable
EXPERIENCED,
thorough cleaning, 1 or 2 days a week.
HI 2-3111.
EXPERIENCED
cleaning
woman,
Mondays and Fridays, 9 to 5 p.m. Small
home.
Must
like children; references
required. HI 2-4636.
MAID—general
housework,
assist
in
cooking; 5 day week, $30. References.
Near transportation.
HI 2-7453.
PERMANENT
position for woman
with
references to do light housework and
assist
with
2 young
children.
Own
room. $40. HI 2-6775.
GENERAL housework in new ‘home, near
transportation.
All
appliances. . Stay,
own room. Call HI 2-7244.
CLEANING
woman;
small
house,
2
adults. HI 2-4471.
2 half
days
a
WOMAN
for
cleaning,
will pay
week
for small
apartment;
transportation. HI 2-5792.

DAY

a

near
transroom. Tele-

room. Telephone Lake Forest 2398.
EXCELLENT job available in small, completely
modern
home.
We
are young
couple with 2 small children. You will
receive best pay, own room, bath, TN,
plenty of free time. No laundry, heavy
cleaning, ete. HI 2-3663.
COUPLE
for country house, near Bannockburn; woman to be cook &amp; housekeeper, man to have job elsewhere and
help in free time. Must have car; references required. Family of two adults
in residence, weekends only. Own private furnished apt. Please phone Deerfield 881-R Saturday.
5 days a week;
housework,
GENERAL
no Saturdays
or Sundays.
References
required.

days

lady, one day
Deerfield 1440.

HOUSEKEEPER,
charge of small
help employed.

and

COUPLE:
woman, cooking,
work; man, some driving
work.
Current
references

3

PERMANENT
position for woman under
fifty for general housework
and help
with
children.
Other
help for heavy
cleaning. Own
room, bath and television. Off Saturday afternoons and Sunday.
$40
per
week.
Telephone
Lake
Forest 2716 between 1 and 8 p.m.
CLEANING
day. Call

A-1
TAXI
needs
drivers, full or part
time; military personnel
used if able
to qualify
for local permit.
Call
HI
2-5555. or stop at 580 Central
Ave.,
Highland Park.

. DEEPFREEZE APPLIANCE
DIVISION

woman,

COOK, plain; housework. 2 children. Own
room,
bath;
other
help.
Best
refer.
ences. $40. Call HI
2-5381.

CLERKS

APPLY

Wednesday, Satur.
$15. HI 2-5312.

2-4057.

NORTH SHORE LINE
EMPLOYMENT OFFICE
HIGH WOOD

2 Typists
in
service
and
engineering department. 1 stenographer in production office.
A real opportunity
in our ex-

panding

CLEANING

AGENTS

Pensions, insurance and
tion.
No experience
is
while you learn.

WANTED—DOMESTIC

CLEANING—Monday,
day, 8 to 12 noon.

WORKERS

TICKET

phone

FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF LAKE FOREST

JOBS

OPEN

TRAINMEN

of transporta-

in person
900.

NOW
FOR

HELP

PLAIN
cooking,
.-general’
housework;
white: New home, every modern convenience
including
dishwasher;
no
small children. Top salary, fine living
quarters; can have employed
husband
who will give some time in exchange
for room and board. Must have good
references.
HI. 2-4952
collect.

laundry,

or

both; North Shore references required.
HI. 2-4952.
GENERAL maid who knows how to cook;
go. New small ranch house, 2 adults.
Phone
HI
2-8040
between.
8-11 a.m.
WOMAN,
white,
upstairs
and
serving;
experience not necessary. Adult family. HI 2-1862.
WANTED:
girl for general housework,
white or colored; live in. Own
room
and bath; 2 in family. Central location.
Call HI 2-2461,
é
aie
ae

competent;

household

a _ pleasant

managing

in

and

responsibility

assume

can

where extra help does the menial work,
Experienced, free to travel; can drive
a car. Write Box F-75 c/o H.P. News.

NURSE
in

own

will

give

home.

room,
Tel.

_SITUATIONS
WALLS

pert;

board

HI

and

care

2-5123.

WANTED—MALE

washed

furniture

and

painted

washed

by

;

an

and

ex-

waxed.

References.
Telephone
DExter
6-4648
between 8 a.m. and 12.
JAMAICAN houseman, butler, assist with
cooking. Call HI 2-8503 after 6 p.m.
TWO college students seeking part time
employment, afternoons and Saturdays.
Excellent
references
available.
Cal}
Lake Forest 2449 between
7 and 10
p.m. Ask for Mr. Walsh.

SITUATIONS

WANTED—DOMESTIC

SWEDISH
couple; finest cook and butler, immaculate and reliable. Extensive

experience

in foreign

and

U.S. service;

prefer adult home. On West Coast and
returning March 1st. Best of local references. HI 2-4249.

WOULD

like to do laundry on Saturdays,

DExter 6-3603.
WOULD
like to do
laundry at home;
wash and iron. Experienced. HI 2-1579,
EXPERIENCED woman will do day work
Monday
through Fridey; best of ref.
erences. ONtario
2-6744, ask for Es.
ther.
WILL
do washing
and
ironing
in my
home; no pickup or delivery. Experienced. HI 2-3320.
LAUNDRY
to take home, by experienced
laundress;
will call for and
deliver,
Tel. HI 2-0824.

WOMAN

will do cooking

only for family

of adults; permanent. Telephone Lake
Forest 1213.
LIVING quarters desired in exchange for
part
time
work;
husband
employed
elsewhere. References. Write Box F-60
c/o Lake Forester.

WAITRESS,
private

Please

experienced,
parties,

by

telephone Lake

available

day

or

Forest

by

for
hour,

2308,

Thursday, January 8, 1953

Page 36—
ie

JUST

SALESGIRL
wanted,
steady.
Apply
at
Town Shop, 582 Central Ave., Highland
Park.

COOK, 5 or 6 days a week, permanent;
experience is not necessary. Reasonable
pay.
Apply
at
406
Green
Bay
Rd.,
Highwood.
REGISTERED
nurses
needed
at
H.P
hospital.
Starting
salary,
$255,
with
afternoon bonus, $30, and night bonus,
ft $20. See Miss Beard, HI 2-8000.
Woman
wanted
to
train
for
fountain
manager.
No
experience
necessary.
F. W. WOOLWORTH
CO.
600 CENTRAL AVE.

Officer

TYPISTS:STENOGRAPHER

Tele-

WANTED—FEMALE

senior

r

WANTED—MALE

GET INTO RAILROAD.
WORK!

2-5180

JOBS FOR WOMEN UP TO 43 YEARS
OLD AS TELEPHONE UPERATORS.

1875

gh

HI

LARGE
room, suitable for 1 or 2;
transportation. Call: HI 2-3527.

DOUBLE
room; twin beds, private bath.
Close
to transportation,
garage.
Employed
people
preferred.
Telephone
Lake Forest 2046.
COMBINATION
sitting
room
and
bedroom; semi private bath. Cooking and
laundry
privileges.
Telephone
Lake
Bluff 1640 after 7 p.m.
PLEASANT
southeast room; twin beds,
large
closet, private bath. Telephone
Lake Forest 653.
DOUBLE room, near transportation; hot
water at all times. Call HI° 2-6586.

ais

AVE.

OFFERS

ROOM
for couple; cooking and laundry
privileges.
HI
2-3761
or HI
2-4189.
NICELY
furnished, well heated sleeping
or housekeeping rooms; kitchen, bath
convenient. Hot water always; near all
transportation.
Single,
double.
HI
2-1749.
NICE
room
for employed
person,
near
transportation
and
walking
distance
from town. HI 2-0376.
PLEASANT
single room;
hot water at
all times. Tel. HI 2-3694.
NICE big room, close to Vine Ave. station. Tel. HI 2-1556.
SLEEPING
room for rent; hot water at
all times,
kitchen
privileges
if preferred, near transportation. HI 2-4763.
ROOM for rent; double bed, semi-private
bath, breakfast if desired. 3 blocks to
trains
in
West
Ravinia.
Write
Box
F-25 c/o Highland Park News.
‘
ROOM
for employed couple; twin beds,
closet and
dresser
space.
Hot water
at all times. HI 2-3441.
EAST PARK AVE. Well furnished front
room,
very
central,
for
1 employed
woman; no transient. Full kitchen and
laundry- privileges. Tel. HI 2-1138.
_ NICE double room
for rent, close to
town
and
transportation.
Inquire
at

se

PARK

NICELY
furnished
room
for rent, near
transportation.
Lake
Forest
2267.
near

HELP

|

SECRETARY
To

HOUSEWIVES

596.

LARGE

WANTED—FEMALE

YOUNG woman for cleaning plant; must
have experience in checking and sewing. Call Roessler’s Cleaners. HI 2-0352.

LIGHTING PRODUCTS, Inc.

SLEEPING
room for: rent, hot water at
all times; nice living conditions. Cal]
HI
2-6682.
CORNER
bedroom
in fine home
in exchange
for
1 day’s work
per
week.
White,
middle
aged, permanent,
male
preferred.
Car
necessary.
References
required. Call Mr. Hamilton
evenings
e es
and Sunday, Lake Forest

HELP

gree of accuracy essential. Excel4lent opportunity
for woman
age
WORK22 to 40 to work close to home and

SHARE

FOR RENT

WANTED—FEMALE

STENOGRAPHER
PERMANENT POSITION

fur-

WOMAN
living alone will share apartment
or
rent. double
bedroom
with
kitchen privileges; near transportation
and shopping. Call HI 2-2563.

ROOMS

HELP

SALESLADIES AND WAITRESSES |
‘
Part
time
or full
time.
F. W. WOOLWORTH CO.

Highland

of Commerce,

&amp;

°

.

~

�HOUSEHOLD

Box Number Ads
Reply by phone as well as by letter
may be made to any Want Ad with
a box number as an address. Call
HI 2-4500 or Lake Forest 2300
Your

name,

address

and

phone

number will be placed at once
the box of the advertiser.
——————Se
SITUATIONS

in

WANTED—DOMESTIC |

FRIENDS
desire position together; cook
and second maid or waitress and chamSeren
Call WHitehall 4-9709, room

BABY SITTING
WANTED:

mature

woman'to

sit with

2

good
children,
6 and
4, as needed;
preferably in vicinity of Lincoln
and
Forest Ave., HI 2-6473.
WOMAN,
sitting

SITTER
aoe
-

employed
evenines.

days, will
Phone
HI

wanted

for child

and

Johns

St.

4%,

avenues.

do baby
2-5665.

vicinity
Call

HI

3.

~CLOTHING

FOR SALE

LADIES’
coats,
size 12-14;
black
sian lamb, $50; blue tweed with
in lining, $20; black cloth coat,
HI

MAN’S
dark
blue winter suit, size 42,
$25; 4 imported tweed sport coats, size
42, $10 each; boy’s size 12 blue tweed
topcoat,
$10;
wool
sport
coat,
$5;
3 pair trousers, $10; Western fringed
leather jacket, $8; also shirts and pr.
rubber
boots
(outgrown).
Saturday
only, Lake Forest 2690.
HOUSEHOLD

GOODS

FOR

SALE

VISIT
YUUR
OWN
HIGHLAND
PARK
Trading Post. We sell furniture, brica-brac
&amp;
clothing.
1813
St.
Johns.
Tel. HI 2-2744.
TELEVISION
set, 17 inch table model,
1%
years old, recently rebuilt; want
offers. Tel. HI 2-4193.
DESK for office or study, beautiful black
oak, custom built, unusual design with
glass top, matching black oak double
tier corner table 32 in. sq., 3 combination file cabinets for 5x8 cards, with
letter file or storage space; grey broadloom
carpet
with
foam
rubber’
pad,
approximately
12x12 in size, excellent
condition.
Phone
Dr.
Slepyan,
HI
2-4650.
TURQUOISE
Cockcrost plates, each of
4 with flower center. Sutiable accomPaniments
available for 20 piece set;
half price. HI 2-6342.
MAHOGANY
marble
topped
teakwood
table; Italian carved high back chair;
duo-therm oil stove; walnut bedroom
furniture—bed,
4 drawer
bureau,
6
drawer dressing table and bench. 364
Roger Williams, H.P. HI 2-0765.
RUGS:
shag,
HI

9x15
blue broadloom,
8x10
red
oriental throw rugs, reasonable.

2-6886.

STUDIO COUCH for sale, good condition,
$10. Call HI 2-6009.
FIVE PIECE mahogany bedroom set, including spring and mattress. Wonderful
condition.
HI 2-1692.
DELUXE 6
yr. crib, birch finish, practically new mattress; also carbed and
carseat. HI 2-6618.
MAGIC
CHEF automatic oven, excellent
condition, $20. Tel. Northbrook 905.
CUSTOM
MADE
davenport, $60;;leather
top end
table,
$15;
tier table,
$25;
lamps; miscellaneous, pair of oval floral
pictures from home of Sidney Smith;
decorator’s screen. HI 2-1179.
SIMMONS
_hide-a-bed,
large,
hunters
green,
1 yr. old, good condition. HI
2-6696.

TELEVISION, 12% inch console, General
Electric,
perfect
condition,
Best
offer. Phone HI 2-59465.
14
INCH
console
Phileco TV
set, good
“or nant like new. $60. Call. Deerfield
DELUXE
Simmons
hide-a-bed, full size,
green, one year old, original cost $334,

sell for $200.

Large solid

copper piece,

approximately
19 in, diameter and 10
in. deep, $20. Call Deerfield 712,
6 BURNER,
2 oven, table top stove, in
good condition, $35. HI 2-3305.
CHERRY secretary-desk in excellent condition.
Telephone
Lake
Forest
2189
after 6 p.m.
- ELECTRIC
stove, $10; electric refrigerator, $10; 82x80 inch French door, $5;
cabinet ironing board, $5; will trade
for bedding. Call Deerfield 678,
ENGLISH
period
furnishing;
decorator
items;
breakfront,
dining
room
table
and
6 chairs, 2 piece sectional sofa,
wing chair, tables, lamps and bric-a-brac, 2 twin size Hollywood beds. HI
2-6976.
ELECTROLUX
tank-type
vacuum
with
attachments,
$25; Hoover hand vacuum, new, $20. Call HI 2-7179. |
DOUBLE BED, box spring and mattress;
like brand new, very: SaPon are, Tele-

Phone .Lake

Forest

1082.

Thursday, January 8, 1953
a”

SALE

USED

WE PAY TOP PRICES
FOR YOUR OLD CAR
REGARDLESS OF AGE
$5 DOWN
ON ALL PRE-WAR CARS
PLENTY OF LATE MODELS
TO CHOOSE FROM
HALE MOTOR SALES

ARMY
transfer. For sale: Bendix automatic washer, Monarch electric range,
Servel refrigerator, smal] dining room
set, kitchen table and benches. Priced
a
sale. Telephone Lake Forest
CUUCH,

905;

2

living

room

and $130; all slipcovered.
1 tilt table. HI 2-2047.

chairs,

2 end

MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE
CASHMERE

SWEATER

SALE

IMPORTED.
HANDCRAFTED,
FULL
FASHIONED
SWEATERS
S.S. PULLOVER
NOW
$13.95
L.S. CARDIGANS
NOW
$16.95
ALSO
MANY
FANCY
SWEATERS

MINNA

1948

1949

McCALLUM

HART

1953 WORLD BOOK
ENCYCLOPEDIA

PLYMOUTH
HI

THE GIFT OF A LIFETIME
FOR THE
ENTIRE
FAMILY
MRS.
LURA
SENTMAN
(LOCAL
REPRESENTATIVE)
LAKE
FOREST
3604
SPANISH
GUITAR,
new;
mahogany
dresser and single bed frame; laundry
tub, new. Deerfield 1269J._
STOKER, all controls, $50; 60 inch single
bow] sink, needs new top, $25; buggy
and stroller, both for, $15; violin and
ease, $20. HI 2-3503.
PRACTICALLY
new: Boy’s shoe skates,
size 11, Johnson’s High Speed, $14.50.
252 Ravine Forest Drive, Lake Bluff.
MOTOROLA
20 inch TV, FM-AM
radio,
8 speed victrola combination; mahogany cabinet, practically new, cost $725,
asking
$350;
man’s
navy
overcoat,
worn twice, size 42, long, $80; 30 vol.
were
Americana.
Call
Hl
THAYER
baby buggy and stroller; both
collapsible.
Teeter
babe,
Taylor
Tot.
All
like new,
all
for
$50.
Call
HI
2-5945,

OIL
STOVE,
good
condition,
$35. Call
HI 2-5354, 5 to 7.
VICE PRES. of 100 million dollar firm
will
sell
complete
executive
office
(furniture).
Includes
2 large mahogany desks, glassed top, full back leather exec. chair, 4 pull up chairs in pigskin, lamps, telephone table, decanter
set, floor fan, file cabinets, paintings &amp;
cuspidor,
$800.
Excellent
quality
&amp;
condition. Write Box 952, Lake Forest.

VENETIAN

blinds; assortment

of double

and
single window
widths,
6 in all,
$15; mahogany office desk, file drawer, plate glass top, with swivel] chair,
$40; maple chair, chintz covered seat
and back cushions, $35. Saturday only.
Lake Forest 2690.
PHONOGRAPH-RADIO

combination,

Phil-

co table model; automatic changer, Excellent condition. Telephone Lake Forest 934 after 6 p.m.
ANTIQUE
English
Peterborough, barometer, perfect working condition; chests,
Chelsea and Dresden china, snuff boxes,
etc. Telephone HI 2-3061.

“MUSICAL

INSTRUMENTS

FOR

SALE

FOR something distinctive both in tone
and
finish in a fine spinet
console,
see my long-string Sohmer in figured
walnut.
Or a Regency
model
in mahogany. Also right here in Evanston
a reconditioned 5 ft. 8 in. Mason and
Hamlin Grand, $1,185; a Knabe, $985;
and a Weber Baby Grand at $725. For
appt. day or eve. phone R. J. Cook,
Evanston,
UN
4-1561
or GR
5-6020.

MUSICAL

INSTRUMENTS

WANTED:
organ
HI 2-1179.

LOST

in

good

WANTED

condition.

R.

AUTO

radio,

1950

AUTOMOBILES

INC.

heater,

2-door,

white

light

sidewall

tires.

Packard ultramatic, heater, back-up
lights,
undercoated.
Packard sedan, seat covers, ultramatic, heater, car like new.
1948 Packard sedan, overdrive, heater.
1947 Packard
sedan
Clipper,
overdrive,
electromatic,
radio,
heater.
1952
1950

UNDER

MOM

PACKARD
662

Lincoln

COVER

ES “es

THURSDAYS

NORTH

Ave.

SHORE

Winnetka

6-3070

CADILLAC
FLEETWOOD
SEDAN
1951
MODEL,
EXCELLENT
CONDITION,
CHAUFFEUR
DRIVEN. HI 2-7326.
CHEVROLET,
1949 convertible, maroon;
new tires, new top, new battery, heater,
radio. Only 26,000 miles; excellent condition, $1,000. Telephone Lake Forest
2620.
PURCHASED new for trip in 1950, used
locally since, late °49 Ford Station wagon,
garage
kept;
excellent
ocndition,
special
paint,
U.S.
Royal
whitewalls,
radio, heater; driving, backup and spotlight lights. Private party. Price $1100.
Sunday, Lake Forest 2991-Y-4.

WINTER
CHOOSE

PRICED

1778

First

St.
Phone

62

late

sedan, cadet blue,
mileage. Original
Deerfield 883.

1951

model

1951
1951
1949

1948

4-door

fully equipped; low
owner.
Best
offer.

DAY
Mon,

ped,

new

top

the

date

sai@

of

this

publication,

said

YOUR-DOG-&amp;-MINE
Kennels
(dog edit—
&amp; Gardens)
for beet
or, Better Homes
eare,
feeding,
heating.
Skokie
Highway
(U.S. 41), 5%
miles north of state line.
Phone
Bristol
(Wis.) 36-F-5.
PEDIGREED Poodle
puppies
(standard
size), black or brown. House raised so
that they are friendly and full of fun.
Mrs. Franklin
R. Pope,
Bradley
Rd.,.
Lake Forest 1262.
CANARIES
for sale, home raised; fine
singers in good health. Single or pairs
for breeding.
For
appointment
telephone Highland Park 2-3116.
WE give personal care and loving attention to your birds, in our home, while
you are vacationing. HI 2-3116,
CHAMPION
stock
seal
point
Siamese
kittens
for sale; 3 mos. old, housebroken, papers included. Call Wilmette
43938.

PLANTS
AFRICAN

INSTALLATION
and
Sat.
8 a.m.
Phone
HI
2-0530

thru

PETS

EXPERT

CLOGGED

PIANO

out
lawn

the obmess.

IRON
LAKE

232

-

for

Wash-

REPAIRING

ROOFING

SEWING MACHINES

METAL
44

RECONDITIONED
Singer
portable,
$39.50; $5
down. Reconditioned cabinet machine, $39.50. 614 Central Ave.,

LAUNDRY

HI

day

2-3811.

SEWING

MACHINE

SERVICE

Necchi
Domestic
repair
on
ANY
MAKE
Work
Guaranteed
Arends
Sewing
Machine Co.
Central Ave.
Hi 2- 5200

Expert

STOCKS
Investor’s Service of America invites you
to
try
our
service
in
listed
stocks.
Dealer,
Broker,
Adviser,
Ole
Niel
Proprietor, 104 North Washington Circle,
Lake
Forest,
Illinois.
Telephone
Lake
Forest
2191. IN GOD
WE
TRUST.

SYSTEMS.

&amp;

plants
169
516.

HAVE
you
a wood
shingle
roof? Call
Wilmette
377,
your
“Roof
Treating
Headquarters”
for
its
proper
treat
ment
and
care.
Free
inspection
and
consultation.

We
welcome
all strangers
on
8
service.
1875 ST. JOHNS AVE.
HIGHLAND
PARK,
ILL.

SEPTIC

TUNING

repaired, built
SERVICE
lines, electric

- RAGS
FOREST

BULBS
Reliable

PIANO tuning and reconditioning. Member of American Society of Piano Technicians. E. Zaboth, formerly
of Lyon
and Healy, member of N.A.P.T. Lake
Zurich, 6341.

LAKE FOREST SCRAP
SCRAP

&amp;

VIOLETS.

particular people. Gillette,
ington Circle, Lake Forest

NIGHT
9 p.m.

to

SEWERS

electric rod cut
no digging, no
SEPTIC TANKS
and grease traps cleaned,
COMPLETE
SEWER
Jeep trench digger, water
eable,
foundations.
WOODALL’S
Phone Wheeling

662

TREE E SURGERY
DONALD
G.
WORRALL,
ARBORIST i
Expert tree work, shrub and evergreen .
care,
-Tree
removal,
power -saw
work.
Low cost, efficient service. Call Wheeling 237.

COMPLETE

SYSTEM
INSTALLATION
TRENCHING
All
sorts:
foundation,
water,
drain,
tiling, ete.
Free estimates, no obligation to have
our representative call.
EDWARD’S
&amp;
W
CONSTRUCTION
CONTRACTING
ENGINEERS
WINNETKA
6-3971

TUTORING

SEPTIC

WANTED:

French

lessons.

Phone

HI.

2-8256.

a

WwooD
WOOD
for the fireplace, split
livered. Call Deerfield
17W
in the evening.

and debefore €
‘

CHRISTO-CRAFT CABINET CO.
1930 Maple Ave., Evanston
For custom
made
cabinets and
general
carpentry work, call GReenleaf 5-7686 or
HI 2-7238.
repair,

stone

work,

chimney

and

ESTHER

PERKINS

|

LET’S HAVE SOME
Hayrides

or

350

FUN!

Sleighrides

2-5592

HI

HORSES

AND

2-3853

Highwood
9 p.m.

HEAVY
‘cross
jumper, good
netka 6-4313
1022.

PAINTING

country
gelding;
nonmouth, sound. Call Winor Krueger, Winnetka 6-

&amp;

REDECORATING

PAINTING
and paper hanging. Call W.
br Pherae
HI. 2-6980 or Lake Forest

EXTERIOR
decorating.

and

interior

Hubert

1000

PONIES

ATTENTION HORSE OWNERS
Qualified
thoroughbred
race _ horse
trainer available for coming Chicago racing season.
18 years experience. Excellent references. Will handle entire stable
or individual horses for various owners.
For appointment
telephone Lake Forest
773.

$

Cold Permanent
Waves

ENTERTAINMENT

Il.

HIGHLAND PARK
LINCOLN-MERCURY, INC.

USED CAR DEPT:
386 Waukegan Ave.
Open Weekdays 9 a.m. to
HI 2-6300 .

for

SERVICE

Have
the
struction;

HI

Ford
Victoria,
Fordomatic,
rad., ht. many extras, would
pass [OF ROW Liiidis.asen
Mercury
Tudor,
overdrive,
rad., ht., very clean ..............-Hudson Cl.
cpe.,
overdrive,
rad., ht. A real bargain
Pontiac Cl. cpe., hydra., rad.,
ht.. like new, low mileage
Buick Super conv., fully equip-

service
2-4467.

and

INC.

SAFE BUY
USED CARS
1951

unless

Specializing in

MOTORS
Park,

that

screens will be sold for storage and
other charges and delivered to the new
purchaser.
Paul W. Barker, 225 Oak
Terrace, Lake Bluff, Il.

WINTER! Time to fix those inside sticking
doors,
locks,
hinges, add
closet
space, extra shelves, improve attic or
basement room. HI 2-1636.

FROM

Highland
2-1854

2-0037

597J.

TO: SELL

HI

HI

fireplace
building.
40 years
in same
trade. William Otten, Tel. Northbrook

OLDSMOBILE,
1951 Deluxe “98”? 4-door 1947 Merc., conv., new tires, runs
sedan; used one year as second car.
perfect,
Low
mileage,
non-skid
road. sanders, 1947 Olds
98, 4 dr., hydra., rad.,
radio,
air
conditioned.
heater,
clock,
ht., a perfect family car
95
turn
signals,
spotlight,
windshield
MANY
OTHERS
TO “Lek ag FROM
washers, back up lights, air foam nylon
SOME
PRE-W
seats, hydramatic, etc. If you want a
beautiful car from original owner for
$2,350 call MAjestic 3-1459.
;

CADILLAC

TV

MASON

CLEARANCE
GUARANTEED
USED CARS
MANY MAKES AND MODELS
TO

Res.

SAM WOO

PACKARD

SHOWN

REAL ESTATE

2-0093

FAST —

CADILLAC
coupe
de’Ville,
ua
1950.
French gray, excellent condition; private owner. Low mileage. $3,200. Phone
HI 2-5158.

OPEN

__

BUSINESS SERVICE

Call

‘undérsigned,

screens are. removed
from the under-.
signed premises within ten days from

BOARD
YOUR
DOG
AT LOWRY’S

green;

__HI 2-5000,
Ext. 2220 or 4146

FOUND

LOST—lady’s eye glasses in gray snakeskin case, in Deerfield school gymnasium on Dec.
19; owner’s name and
old address
listed as Chicago inside.
Urgently
needed. Please phone
Deerfield
1554-R.
LOST—one
strand of cultured pearls in
Braeside vicinity; approximately
3 to
4 weeks ago. Liberal reward. HI 2-3428.

ANCHOR

a

WRECKERS,

the

and

1—Old
established
tavern in Highwood
Owner must sell.
2—Long
established
restaurant.
Good
bargain.
3—-Fine dry cleaning and pressing busi.
ness.
HI

HI 2-2017
LIBERTYVILLE 2-4377
DODGE
1949 business coupe, like new;
less than 11,00 miles. Perfect condition.
Must be sold to settle estate. Phone HI
2-1178.

CHEVROLET

OPPORTUNITY

SITTING
and
employment
sale. For information,
HI

ae

WHOM
it may
concern: Notice ie
hereby given to the person, or see
(their heirs, agents, or assignees),W
on or about June, 1952 purchased a set
of ‘five Rusco steel porch sereens from

4 door s8eand _ heater.
Forest 1300

full size; good
condiLake Forest 1102.

BUSINESS

JUNK ears and trucks, any condition, any
__age. HI
2-2017.
Libertyville
2-4377.
STUDEBAKER,
1951
4-door
Champ;
heater, turn signals. 6,000 miles. One
owner car. 22 miles per gallon. Call HI
Fo sg, asian MULE IE PEL BT DU
DROIT
MUM
SBE
CHEVROLET 1950 one family 4-door sedan; driven only 26,000 miles; with 2
new tires, radio, heater and seat cov__ers. HI 2-1034. ae
hee
iN
HIGHEST
PRICES
PAID
FOR
JUNK
CARS
AND
TRUCKS,
RUNNING
OR
NOT, REGARDLESS
OF CONDITION.

Tel.

LOST: boy’s watch, just south of Jewel
Tea in Highland Park, Dec. 17th. Reward.
Call
Rick
Lloyd,
Glencoe
746
collect

USED

PAGE

RAVINIA
AND

BICYCLE,
man’s
tion. Telephone

CHEVROLET

TO

AUTO LOANS

1937 4-door sedan, $50. Tel.

_2-1662.

J. G.

radio
good
2868.

BICYCLES

INC.
191 E. DEERPATH
LAKE FOREST 3200

580 LINCOLN
AVE.
WINNETKA
6-3738

CHEVROLET,
1939,
2 dr. sedan,
and heater, clean in
and
out,
transportation. Call Lake Forest

si

Chevrolet, Fleetmaster, 4 door sedan—clean.
Chevrolet
Styleline
deluxe
4-door
sedan—sharp.
Hudson
4-door sedan—bargain.

1950

overMust

the bank
way
Finance
your
car
save money
FIRST
NATIONAL
BANK
of Highland Park

USED CAR
SPECIALS
GUARANTEED OK

$125

STUDEBAKER,
1952,
900
miles,
drive and heater. Can be financed.
sell $1750. Deerfield 991.

CHRYSLER,
1951, Windsor,
dan.
Low
mileage;
radio
One owner. Telephone Lake
or Lake Forest 1323.

13TH
AND
SHERIDAN
NORTH
CHICAGO
DEXTER
6-2353

tables,

PERSONAL

USED: AUTOMOBILES

AUTOMOBILES

CHEVROLET
1941 4-door; radio, heater,
new tires. Call after 6 p.m. HI 2-3646.
BUICKK Super Riviera 1952; low mileage,
6 months old. $2500 cash. Can be seen
at 552 Waukegan Ave., Highwood.

NEW
ORLEANS antique mahogany dining table, $250; 8 fiddle back chairs,
$150; marble top sideboard, $250; 18th
Century portrait; complete set Edward
VII sterling flatwear; other silver and
antiques.
194 Illinois, Lake Forest.

2-0441.

LADIES’ size 12 suits: tweed, gabardine,
plaid, $10 each. 8 silk print blouses,
$3 each; Western boots, size 8A, $10;
wool
gabardine
Frontier
pants,
$8;
gold wool shortie coat, $10; Japanese
mink cape collar and hat, $15; party
dresses,
accessories.
Saturday
only,
Lake Forest 2690.

FOR

FRIGIDAIRE stove, only five years old;
two. oven,
deepwell,
clock, automatic
timer,
etc.
Westinghouse
automatic
dryer, two years old. Bendix automatic
washer, 5 years old. All in fine workne
condition.
Reasonable.
Deerfield

Perzip$15.

WE rent beautiful fur coats, capes, jackets for special occasions at attractive
rates. Miller’s, 166 N. Michigan
Ave.
ANdover 8-5512.

GOODS

BED,
% size, spring and mattress; also
day bed. Telephone Lake Forest 2210
mornings:
:

painting

Johnson,

HI

and

Machineless

Waves
23

Years

1250

|

1500 up

|

Permanent

$10.

up

a

of Experience

CLASSIQUE
BEAUTY SALON
1815 St. Johns

Ave.

HI

2-1603

We Specialize in Hair Dyes .
and

Permanent

Waves

2-1770.

Page

37

�Human Relations VFW Post 4741

Bowling League

Parley Planned
For Wednesday

@by
et, ,

ty

7

Dr. Henry

x

,

lecturer

January 2 Standings
Team

E. Kagan, author,

in psychology

at Co-

N.Y.,

will

groups

Institute

next
netka

P

projects

include volun-

teer work at Highland Park hospital.
RIGHT, Susan Mason
{at left) and Denise Ledbetter,

*

i
ABOVE:
Stretching gauze
| which will later be made into
_ bandages for use of patients is
a favorite

task

of members

hospital

since

October.~

frames.
NRO

NEE LA RRR

ERR

ST

OS

Obituaries
Charles

services

road,

18

Standings

WwW.
|Liebschutz Liquors
.... 34
Mrs. George
avenue, have | |Larson Bros. Garage .. 31
for Saturday |Photography by Jay .. 26
PAT iperiay 4h SR eared
25%
Charles

Ritter, 76, father of
_ Bock Jr., 733 Laurel
| been set tentatively
_ afternoon at Scott’s Funeral
Waukegan

F. |

home,

Glenview.

Burial

|Cortesi

Plastering

...... 25

ce
2444
will be in Ridgewood cemetery, on POCAPIOUS: cee
Milwaukee avenue west of Glen- Anchor Insurance ...... 24
|

|Sunset

view.

Food

Mart

......

23

.

Record
Mr. Ritter had been a resident Hi - Neighbor
BRON
oo
ce
214%
of Wilmette for the past six years. |
|My
Favorite
Inn
........
21
He
retired
eight years
ago
as

i

superintendent

Brick company

of

Baracani
L.

IMSi
Oe

Sta.

27

24

26

25

Bev.

............ 26

25

............ 26

25

2a

28

DOUG | ic isccetn ws 22

29

Bump:

Golden.

.-......

&lt;:..0cs.ccc..

Roofers

Terrace

Papprs,
G:

21

eee

sci.
Shop.

«:..+.....:. 21

Dome | i......2...4

30

20

31

High Series, Team
Oak Ter. Bev. .. 904-829-879—2612
L.. F. Motor
SALES scsi 829-822-782—2433
High Series, Individual
N. Fabbri
195-169-216—580

H.

Montecchi

..... 220-181-148—549

High Game, Team
Oak Terrace: Bev. die
Moraine Serv: Stai cece.
High Game, Individual
H. Montecchi
| N. Fabbri

| lations”

will

be

discussed

904
878

by

Rey.

Do

Change’

'will address teachers, PTA mem|bers and religious
educators
on
\*Changing Attitudes Through Ed| ucation.”
Edward 'G. Olsen, Chi|eago education director of the Na| tional Conference, will moderate a

panel

discussion

{Kenneth

Behne,

leation at
\nois; John

by

Miss

professor

Boyce,
of

edu-

the University of IlliW. McCracken, director

lof Christian Education of the Presbytery of Chicago; Charles W. B.
Hanson, of the Glencoe PTA; and
Matthew Gaffney, principal of New
Trier High school.

Ladies’ League
December

for

Relations

the

House.

30

Serv.

Shoreline

Win-

17

as

Braeside Exehanié Teacher On Radio

|| Highland Ten Pin

F. Ritter

Funeral

Community

in

34

Clothes

Oak

Club,
community
organizations
and
religious
group
representatives will meet from 2 to 4 p.m. to
hear Dr. Kagan speak on the theme
“Attitudes Do Change.”
Miss Alice V.
Myers,
Chicago
program director of
the
National
Conference of Christians and Jews,
and Mrs. Robert Maynard, executive director of the United Nations
association, will lead a discussion
on “Good
Programming
Builds
Good Human
Relations.”
“Children’s Adjustments in Human Re-

Mary Loevenhart, Susan Wolff,
_ Aviva
Holland and Susan
| Straight are pictured placing
the
gauze
on
sstretching

é-Be

Human

Wednesday

‘Attitudes

of

| Girl Scout Troop 57
(fifth
_ grade, Ravinia school). Scouts
of the fifth through seventh
| grades in Highland Park, Deerfield and Highwood, have given 231 hours of this service to

_ the

in-

T

Salesicc cc.

|Lambert,
Miss
Dorothy
Dodd
of
ithe
Glencoe
Public
schools,
and
| Miss Edith Edmonds
of the Winnetka schools.
Methodist church, who is general |
Leading a discussion on the “Inchairman of the Institute, will moddividual in Human Relations” will
erate the discussion.
be Miss Elizabeth Davis, executive
High school and youth counsel\director of the Evanston YWCA;
ors will hear Dr. Kagan
discuss
}and Meyer Singerman, a member
“Personal
Adjustment
In Human
|of the staff of the B’nai B’rith AnRelations”
at a luncheon
session | ti-Defamation league
from 11:45 a.m. to 2 p.m.
| At the final session Dr. Kagan

members of Brownie Troop 74
{third grade,
Elm
Place
_ school), present scrapbooks for
__ the hospital's out-patient wait_ ing room to Miss Marion Euler,
RN, director of nurses.

|

on

various

Moraine
Freds

at a community

The Institute, given in cooperation with the National Conference
of Christians and Jews, will run
from 9:30 a.m. through 9:30 p.m.
Participants
from
Highland
Park
will include Miss Helen Boyce. Lincoln school teacher; Rabbi
Philip
Lipis of
North
Suburban
Synagogue Beth El; and Rabbi Edgar E.
Siskin of North Shore
Congregation Israel.
Discussion participants
will
be
the Very Rev. Charles U. Harris,
rector of Trinity Episcopal church;
E. A. Schweichel, Scout executive
here; and Bernard Scotch of North
Shore Congregation Israel.
At the 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. session
Dr. Kagan will address clergymen
on the subject “Preaching Is Not
Enough.”
The
Rev.
Russell
W.
Lambert, minister of North Shore

DEVELOPING GOOD CITIZENSHIP habits at an early
age are members of the Girl
Scout organization, whose community

address

Motor

BGP INOe

‘umbia university, and rabbi of
Sinai temple in Mt. Vernon,
terest

Ww.

L.. Fs

the _

Villa

Illinois

in Northbrook

after |iPgati’s

Moderne

Juke

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

Boxes

19

.. 1814

|

L. .

11
14
19
19%

|

20
20%
21
22
23%

24
26
2614
27
27
29
29

Heating
........... 18
40 years’
service
with
the
com- |Bishop
pany. His wife, Anne, died in April, |The Style Shop ............ 18
|The Fell Company ...... 16
— 1952.
| Somenzi and Sons ........ 16
Besides his daughter, Mrs. Bock,
High Series, Team
he leaves two sons, August and
Heating
2576—811-833-932
| Bishop
_ Carl of Chicago; three daughters,
2550—809-887-854
| Searlett’s
_ Miss Ruth Ritter of Wilmette; Mrs. |
High Series, Individual
_ Harold Smith of Long Grove, IIL.
Mary Crovetti .... 539—136-188-215
and
Mrs.
Benjamin
Schnadt
of
|Edith Mansfield
524—173-185-166
Northbrook; and 13 grandchildren.

Bs

507—144-195-168 |
|Irene Plant
| Rose Bairstow .. .. 508—168-144-196 |
High Game, Team

Piacenti

Dominic

Requiem mass for Dominic Pia-| Bishop Heating 5
go
centi of 2631
Waukegan
avenue,
| cearletts
SETI:
epee
who died Tuesday night after an|
High Game,
Individual

932 |

887 |

_ illness of several months, was ten-| Wary Crovetti ie ia aoe a
215
_ tatively scheduled for 9:30 a.m. to- | Edythe Schotanus .................... 197
morrow

will

be

in St. James

in

church.

Ascension

Burial |

'
§

cemetery,
| ——

in Libertyville.
Seguin’s
Funeral | years. Survivors include a daughhome is in charge of arrangements. | ter,
Mrs. John Bosselli, also of
Waukegan
avenue;
three _ sons,
Mr. Piacenti, who was 72, came
to
this country from Italy ‘at the James and Timothy of Detroit and

| age of 17, and settled in Ladd, Ill.

Arthur of:Cherry,

_

ter, Mrs. Steve

He had

lived in this area for 15

rage

st

Ill.; and one sis-

Zrabel of Detroit.

tai

“Talking
were

Martha

it over’
Crane,

before appearing
conductor

of

the

on a
program;

recent
Darrell

WLS

Feature

Beam,

Foods

principal

radio

program

of Braeside

school,

and Mrs. Kikui Takaki of Hawaii, exchange teacher at Braeside.
Martha Crane, in private
life, is Mrs. Raymond Caris of 48 Valley road.
Mrs. Takaki and other exchange teachers
described their teaching experiences and the philosophy of the exchange program in the radio
discussion.
“nwrsad

tnuary

:

4

�Where it can be done
Chrysler-Plymouth

FLOOR

COVERING

@

Linoleum
Linoleum

and
Tile

@

Asphalt

@

Plastic
For

Wall

free

@

Koroseal

@

Rubber
call

|

USED CARS
GO TO
MESIROW MOTORS

Tile

the

CARS

|

FOR THE BEST

Tile

Estimate

Service

Rent

All

Deerfield

Road,

1740 First

1864

SHERIDAN

ROAD

Leading

TELEVISION-RADIO
2-0341

PARK

Official

1010

Hazel

Phone

Watch

HI

Inspector

TRUCKING
DEERFIELD

PARK,

ILL.

North

WALL

A safe
All

Western

RR.

AND

562

eee

FLOOR

TILE

Chicago

CLEANERS
We

Pick-up

and

Deliver

Satisfaction

Pickup

and

and

Fill

Deerfield

Moving
Hauled

GENUINE TILE INTERIORS
Bathrooms,
Kitchens &amp; Powder Rooms
Modernized
with
Real
Ceramic
Tile,
Miraplastic
Tile,
Rubber,
Vinyl,
Cork
&amp; Asphalt Tile Floors.
Complete Tile
Service. Free Estimates. Phone Evenings.
TILE-CRAFT
830 Woodward Ave.
Deerfield 1049

the

877

SR RGRSReS eases,
DRY CLEANING

LETTE
TTL
DRESSMAKERS SERVICE

VENETIAN
BLINDS

MONOGRAMMING

WINDOW SHADES
MIRRORS - GLASS TOPS
WALLPAPER
ENTERPRISE
GUARANTEED
PAINTS

On

Ave.
HI 2-7211

eRe eee

HEATING

Linens, Blouses,
Towels, Shirts,

Sweaters,
etc.

Lincoln

It
a

Main

j

8000888

more than
‘’magic
to

get

some

ugly stains out of
clothes. Let us work
miracles
on
your
clothes.

DEERFIELD

Evanston

UNiversity

takes
few

words’’

ment
dows

—TAILORS—

4-3034

810

Waukegan

Rd.

Deerfield

350

SERVICE

SALES SERVICE

BUICK
Auto Body

Painting &amp; Repairing

KLEEBURG

6-3070

SERRE Seo eee
STORM WINDOWS &amp; DOORS

complete

Highland Park.
HI 2-0630

RRS RSS

BUICK

RHO

line

BUICK

INC.

1732 First

HI 2-4800

Ieee
SRE OROESeReeee

Watch

for

- Case-

Fine
Repairing

A. MORDINI

Windows - Picture WinPorch
Enclosures
Doors

HI 2-3905

Highland

Park,

Iil.

616

BLUFF

2575

Center

St.

BEER ESSEC LERRk. Ueeeeeer
TOWING

SHADES

LANDI BROS.
PAINTS—SUPPLIES

Repair

Painting

@

Venetian

Wheel

@

Columbia

Alignment

®

Bamboo

Blinds—Draperies

@

Window

Shades

Radiator Repair

668

AUTO RECONST.
2058 Ist St.
HI 2-0077

Blinds
Lattishades

CENTRAL AVE.
HI 2-2350
Highland

Park

S000

FLOOR COVERING

FLOOR
HEATING EQUIPMENT
GAS AND OIL BURNERS
SALES AND SERVICE

Phone HI 2-3804
BRAUN BROS. OIL CO.
Highland

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Install it yourself or make
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Phone HIT 2-4500
FOR ADVERTISING SPACE
ON THIS PAGE

Roger Williams Ave.

ON

RESULTS

Yet

SHORT

wn cost

kor Advertising Space On This Page

Phone HI 2-4500

,'

FREE ESTIMATES

LAKE

DAHL’S

CLEANERS

DOWNING’S

444 Central

Winnetka

Fender

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733

e de

BUICK

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Pleating — Belts
Buttons —- Hand Bound
&amp; Machine Button Holes

Highwood Glass
&amp; Paint Co.
963 Waukegan
All Phones

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and Delivery on
same day.
967 OSTERMAN

Guaranteed

ARE RSRO eee
VENETIAN BLINDS

220

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a

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Double Hung Windows

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ata Ce

place to buy a used car
makes and models.

A

Highwood

Teh

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RUSCO COMBINATION
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SCREENS and DOORS

Darnell

Te

2-0455

602

Inc.

Craftsmen

the

|. H.

Deerfield

Packard-North Shore

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EXPRESS

Owner—W.

WAYNE
HI

Ave.,

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Sales and Service

Designers

for

for Glasses

Service

| PACKARD ©

evs

Repair

Jewelry

Complete Optical Se-vice

Boiler

Across from the Bank
Open Fri. 9 p.m.

SERRE SSSR

QUALITY CLEANING AT
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454 Waukegan

and

Cleaning

5-9583

HIGHLAND

Watch

and

aweaeagueaes
CLEANERS

ee

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TELEPHONE

20th Century

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Installation
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HI

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by

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FIRST ST.
HIGHLAND

EXPERT WATCH
and
JEWELRY
REPAIRING

A

Repairs &amp; Sales

1858

Community Gas Heating
SERVICE

Tudors,

Grove

HI 2-2500

AUTO RADIOS
and

JEWELERS

A. E.

made

SORES SRR
JEWELERS — WATCH REPAIR

TTT
TTT TTT TTT
AUTO RADIOS

Custom

be

Convertibles,

Park

Call HI 2-£645

can

HEATING

Fordors
617

Highland

a New Car

arrangements
phone.

Daniel Lencioni
1379

HIRE

U-DRIVE-IT

INC.

Town Floor Company

FOR

te

aE

8

fe

Coes ADVERTISING

—

LINOLEUM

�ere ey
Bd
i

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‘

Tomorrow

3

"

aw

ie

ee

ne

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lame 1 |
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rie” St
%
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Ee

Is CHEVROLET

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tomorrow

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CHEVROLET.

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Be

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you more car at less cost than any other automobile.
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�</text>
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                    <text>ty

ae

10 Cents

Thursday,

January

15,

1953

�See why its

speaks

louder than
our words |

We just can’t describe the new
liveliness

in

the

RUE ee ws
Standard equipment, accessories, and trim

best-performing

Don’t miss the big television hit, “TOAST OF THE TOWN”
with Ed Sullivan.
Sunday evening, 7:00 to 8:00, Station
WBKB, Channel 4.

Mercury V-8 in our history. You’ve
got to try It yourself.
So come in and do just that!
Get the facts and you'll go for the new

©

1953

Il a

ii

HIGHLAND PARK LINCOLN-MERCURY, INC.
1890 First Street

HI 2-6300

�Toe

KS

}

MJCOCHE
Vol. 27, No.

AKE

43

Thursday,

eals Hears
Petition of Briarwoods ©

Mrs. Justin Weinshenk, 1254 Woodland road. chairman of
Deerfield fund drive for the National Foundation for In-

fantile Paralysis, has issued an urgent call for volunteer*block-+
workers.
With

seven

stricken

Hearing On
Re-zoning

more
the

field

will

be

held

tonight

town

planner

will

were

residents

last

summer,

expended

than

were

here

the

175

polio

last year,

pletely,
ment

victims

50 suffered

or

muscle

present.

comhave

P*

Edward G. Hildebrandt, 737
Deerpath drive, chairman of
the Deerfield committee for
the 1953 Heart Fund drive of
the Chicago Heart association.

Lake County Hard Hit
Lake

Summons On
Delinquent Taxes
To Be Served
The
begun
by

personal

issuing

120

was

so hard

hit by

the disease in 1952 that the national office had to advance $5,000 to
the county chapter to pay the as-

State’s attorney’s office has
action on the collection of

delinquent

county

property

summons

tax

tronomical fees -which this long
and serious illness entails for doctors, hospitals and equipment.
No
polio

questions
are asked. When
hits, the foundation steps in

immediately. Whatever the patient
be) needs he gets and he is not ex-

to

current

“pected to mortgage
his home
in
the process. Mrs. Weinshenk urges

taxes. Collections are being made
on taxes which are now current

all to give to help their neighbors
and help themselves. Foundation-

and

sponsored research in vaccines and
preventatives appears to be on the
brink of concrete results. Through
the generous help of all, the work
and the aid can be carried on.

served

on West

residents

leaving

collected
will
be

Deerfield

who

owe
the

township

on the

back

taxes

at a later date.
issued
weekly

to

be

Summons
until
all

the taxes are collected.
The drive is fostered by the Lake
County
Civic
League
and
the
Lake

County

Farm

Bureau,

who

The

latest

Deerfield

and

Mesdames

the

ward
Kirar, W. J. Brown,
Stillson, John Derby, J. W.

matter

needed
taxing

of

these

taxes

that

are

for the various schools and
bodies

throughout

the

coun-

ty. The collection of these taxes
will result in a lower tax rate for
the whole of Lake county.

Earl

Raymond

Anderson,

Mosely,

Officers

Elected
At the Annual meeting held
Bethlehem
Church,
following

at
a

potluck supper, the following officers were elected: Church treasurer, John Carlson, Church trustees,
(term of 3 years) Charles Hansen
and
Arthur
Pagel;
Class
leader,
Mrs. Chester Wessling;
Secretary
of Council of Administration, Mrs.

Russell

Walther;

Youth

Director,

Gaylon Thomas; Superintendent of
Church school, Mrs. Chas. Hansen;

Assistant,

Harry

Johnson;

Church

school
secretary,
Mrs.
Gaylon
Thomas; Corresponding Secretary,
Mrs. John Carlson; Church school
treasurer, Mrs. Alice Kolbach; Librarian, Mrs. Arthur Pagel.

A food sale of casserole dishes
and bake goods will be sponsored
by the Woman’s association of the

Bea
tails.

at

Deerfield

349.

Luncheon Meeting of
Girl Scout Districts
The
the

annual luncheon

Highland

Park

and
Scout

Bannockburn,

Girl

will

be

January

p.m.

at

held
the

This
ing
as

for

Moraine
be

Girl

Scouting

mark

council
in

a

Deerfielddistricts

21,

at

in

A

great

deal

has

gone

and

Park,

of

thought
these

evidence

constitution

to

Waukegan
road,
4 p.m. Members

from
10
may call

sented

for

adoption

this

992,

for

de-

and
plans,

of which

new

Deerfield

the
High-

Bannockburn.

be the

Cox,

of an

for

into

the tangible

area

adoption

Highland

effort

meet-

this

organization

Deerfield

1:00

milestone

the

of

Hotel.

will

it will

area

meeting

Saturday

church

Don
Homer

on

Presbyterian
at 762
a.m. to

Reeb,

Weinert,

Nomination

Petitions

To Be Filed After

January 12
Announcement
has
been
made
by
Irene
A.
Rockenbach,
Town
Clerk,
West
Deerfield Township,
that the first day for the filing of
nomination petitions for township
offices was January 12th, and tne
last date for the
filing
of such
petitions is February 16th, according to State statutes.
The date for the township election is April 7, and the following
officers are to be elected: Supervisor, Town Clerk, Assessor, Collector, three Justices of the Peace,
three
Constables, and
two
township Library directors.
Petitions may be filed with the
Town Clerk, whose office is in the

Town

Hall,

602

Deerfield

road,

Deerfield. The office is open from
9 a.m. to 12 noon every week day
except Saturday.

at

be

will
premeet-

ing.
A
complete
slate of board
members will alsu be presented for

election.

waged

Tuesday

night

before

the

Board

Deerfield.

field

Dr.

of

the

Theo.

Lake

Mr. Hildebrandt,
an
insurance
broker, has already had experience
in fund raising, having been active
in the
work
of the
Community
Chest. He says his aim is to bring
the need
and
importance of the
Heart Fund
campaign to the attention of each individual in the
community,
giving
all an oppor-

tunity to participate in the “wonderful job the Chicago Heart Association is doing in helping to stamp
out the nation’s number one killer

—heart

disease.”

Chairman Hildebrandt: is recruiting a committee of workers to collect
contributions
for the
$600,000 quota set for the Chicago area.

‘New

hope for hearts” is the slo-

gan,of the Chicago Heart Association drive which reaches its peak
in February, and which is carried
on in conjunction with the 10 mil-

lion dollar campaign

of the Ameri-

can Heart Association on a nationwide basis. Contributions are used
in support of a three-point program
of education, service, and medical
research in heart problems.

will

S. Proxmire,

County

President

Tuberculosis

association,

today

announced

that

the children

of the schools in Deer-

field and vicinity will receive the
tuberculin test next Monday. This
test is given each year to the pupils
of the first, sixth and eighth grades
and high
school
sophomores,
by
the tuberculosis association in its
search for unknown cases of tuberculosis.
Schools to be tested on Monday
are Deerfield, Wilmot, Holy Cross,
Bannockburn, Half Day, Aptakisic,
and Tripp.
The
tuberculin
test,
a simple
skin test, indicates whether or not
a child has ever been exposed to
tuberculosis.
A
positive
reaction
does
not
necessarily
mean
the
child has the disease, but that he
has come in contact with the germs
of the disease and should have-a
chest X-ray
to see if the germs
have done any harm. The associa-

be

held

tonight,

in the playroom
of the
building.
Dr.
Charles-

primary
Wilson,

superintendent

District

of

school

108, Highland
Park, will be the
guest speaker and his subject will
be “Parents Can Promote Better
Schools.”
Mrs.
Fred
Heintz
and

her fifth grade

mothers

will serve

refreshments.

Services for Albert Dean

Moen

Funeral services for Albert Dean
Moen,
killed in action in Korea,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Moen,
300 Fairview avenue, will be held
today at 2 p.m. at the Chapel, 825
Waukegan road.
Burial will be in
dens, in Arlington
Reverend Harry O.
officiate.

Memory
Heights.
Willman

GarThe
will

the

Deer-

south,

War-

Testifying on behalf of the Association
were
Raymond
Fidler,
Chairman
of the Executive com-

mittee;

George

Richards,

secre-

tary-treasurer; Robert Ramsay; Ben
Pierson,
assessor
of West
Deer-

field

Township,

former

and

building

Walter

Krol,

commissioner

for

the Village of Deerfield. The petitioner was represented by their
attorney, Harold Wynkoop.
Amendment South to Maintain
Property Rights
Mr. Wynkoop
stated that the
passage
of the
amendment
was
sought to maintain the character

of

homes

district

now
and

established

to

protect

in. the

the

prop-

erty rights of the individual home
owners. He maintained that building now in this district which did
not meet
the
minimum
requirements would destroy the character

of

homes

property

and

would

values

and

lower

thereby

the
have

a detrimental effect upon assessed
values throughout the village and
consequently would affect the public welfare.

Survey Conducted in District
A survey was conducted by the
organization which showed that in
the district encompassed by the
petition
the
average
minimum

square

foot

dwellings
more

at 8 o’clock

embraces

on

AAA.

square

The
regular
meeting
of
the
Deerfield
grammar
school
PTA

petition

avenue

rington on the west, Cumner court
on the north and Meadow Brook
lane on the east. It seeks to raise
the
minimum
requirements
for
floor areas some 200 feet and to reclassify the property from AA to

Edward
G. Hildebrandt
of 737
Deerpath
Drive, has been named
chairman of the Deerfield committee for the 1953 Heart Fund drive
of the Chicago Heart association
by Arthur C. Rooney, Lake Forest, chairman of the Lake County
Area.

PTA Meets Tonight

Tuberculin Test to be
Given School Children

wood,

Sale Saturday

EdC. E.
Zally,

Marxer, and Joseph Kramer. Anyone who wishes to join the volunteers to fight polio may call Mrs.

scouts

Food

Fidler,

Carl

Peter

Weinshenk

Church

Ban-

nockburn
residents
to add
their
names to the volunteer list are the

are co-operating with the delinquent tax committee to clean up

fight

Their

serious
involvement
or complete
paralysis, and nine died.
One of
the fatalities was a young Deerfield girl.

be

was

A

Edward G. Hildebrandt
Chairman of Deerfield
1953 Heart Fund Drive

partial involve22

.

of

in Lake

weakness,

Owners Association

by

collected

90 recovered

Home

of Appeals by Briarwoods Home Owners Association Inc. on
their petition to amend the zoning ordinance of the Village

1952 drive.

Of

at

polio

foundation

county

the Deerfield grammar school,
in the main building at 8. Evert

Kincaid,

funds

in the

A meeting
for the continuation of the Public hearings on
Re-zoning the Village of Deer-

Deerfield

with

15, 1953

Board of App

Mrs. Weinshenk Calls For |
Volunteers in Polio Drive
the

January

area

was

feet,

for single

story

approximately

and

than one

for

1800

dwellings

of

story approximately

2175 square feet, which exceeds
by 30 percent the size of homes

required under the ordinance, and
that the average value of the homes
in the district would range from

35 to 40 thousand dollars. The
witnesses testified that it was the
policy of the Tackett Corporation
to build homes which far exceeded
the minimum requirements under
the

code

character

and

thereby

of home

was

in the district. Under

a

high

established

the minimum

requirements
specified
by
the
ordinance, it was pointed out that
homes could be built that would
sell for 18 thousand dollars, or less
than half the price of the average
home in the district.
Robert Bartlett Corporation
Objects to Petition

The witnesses all testified that
in their opinion the request for
the higher minimums was entirely reasonable and fair and that
the amendment should be adopted
by

the

village.

The Robert Bartlett Corporation,
which
tion’s Christmas Seal Mobile Chest
X-ray Unit will visit the schools
at a later date to X-ray the chests
of all children who react positively
to the test, Dr. Proxmire said.

recently

purchased

the

Tackett interests in the subdivision,
were present and objected to the
petition.

The

Briarwoods

Home

Owners

(Continued on page: 4)

�DEBATE NEW OIL
STATION AT
BOARD MEETING

Nominating Committee Names
George Haggar d Chairman

At the Monday meeting of the
Deerfield
village
board,
several
matters were brought to the attention
of the board.
The
Hovland
subdivision presented a petition to
ask the board to investigate the
new
garbage
dumping’
ground
south of County Line road, east of
Wilmot. The individual who owns
the property is a Glenview scav.
enger
and
when
the
scavengers
were no longer allowed to dump
at the brick yards, allowed the. use
of this property instead. According
to the petition there are four loads
dumped daily and burned, causing
smoke and stench that is highly ob-

jectionable

and

believed

to

be

Holy Cross
Mother’s Club
The

plans

a

the

Rev.

Harry

Willman’

Woman's

in

such

a

removal
hydrant

way

as

of snow
shall be

to

impede

or too
towed

Have

The Book club will hold its January luncheon meeting on Tuesday
at the
Thorngate
Country
club.
Mrs. Laurene
Hoppe
will review
a current book. The meeting will
start promptly
at 11 a.m. Those
unable to attend are asked to conor
1134
Mintz
Mrs.
either
tact
Mrs. Bryant 1538R to cancel their

Newcomers

Dressing

Group

The
the

home

Santa’’ workshop

animated
of the

Donald

Kemps,

display on the

Beverly

piace.

The

lawn

of

display

won a special award.

Meets

The cancer dressing group will
meet January 22 at 9:30 a.m. at
the Deerfield Presbyterian church.
Volunteers are welcome.

Mrs.

Kelley

Public

Jan.

Published

15,

1953.

Weekly

Vol.

every

27, No.

Hartwig
Russell

V. E. Deckert

bide
ge
Managing

Editor
Editor

Business Manager

Local Subscription Rates—$2.75
per year
Domestic Rate—$4.00 per year
Singte Copies—10c
Foreign Rates on Application
“Entered as second-class matter November 27, 1944, at the post office at Deerfteid, IHinois, under the Act of March 8,
1879.”
Copyright,
1952,
By
The Highland Park Company
All Rights
Reserved

Page

4

Alan

G.

Williams,

at

for-

purhave
and expect
on Febru-

Breakfast

Mrs. Robert Greenslade and Mrs.
Alex Willman will be co-hostesses
at a breakfast at the Greenslade
home on Saturday morning following the 7:30 mass at Holy Cross
church,
in honor of Miss
Nancy
Cahill and her bridal party preceding
the
wedding
which
will
take place in the afternoon.

III.

MEMBER
Heather

Mrs.

Entertain

National
Editorial Association
Illinois Press Association

Phyllis

Geneva

Jersey
of New
merly
chased the Cline home
residence
up
to take
ary = 1.

43

Thursday

PUBLICATION
OFFICE
832 Todd Ct.
Deerfield,
Illinois
Telephone Deerfield 485
HIGHLAND
PARK OFFICE
St. Johns Ave., Highland Park,
Telephone HI 2-4500

1775

and

Mothers

which
test.

The Nativity scene on the lawn of the Bethlehem church
was one of the winners in the Christmas lighting ccn-

Club

wider

base

of

a

general

for reasons of health, though he
stated he will continue to serve on
the council.
At Mr. Alabeck’s suggestion, he
will be
replaced
as co-chairman
by
Harold
Peterson.
Charles
E.
Piper will continue as the other
chairman of the council.
Nominating Committee Selected

The

nominating

to Meet

The Bannockburn Mothers club
will have its regular monthly meeting January 21 at 2 p.m. at the
home
of
Mrs.
Wallace
Carroll,
Duffy Lane.

committee,

by the
meeting
at the
selected
council as a whole, will work out
a proposed slate for next spring’s
village
elections.
The
committee
will report to the council, which
in the
the final word
will have
selections.
Serving on the committee with
Mr. Haggard are Mrs. Henning S.

Hermanson,
Mrs.
Robert
Clark,
Earl Hurt, Raymond Eiden, Hubert Kelley, Harold Peterson, Donald

Kempf

and

Charles

E.

Piper.

Township
Members
Added
The same nominating committee
will serve
also for the selection
of a slate of township offices, also

the

with

this spring,

to be elected

addition
of
five
non-Deerfield
members.
The
additional
members
from
the township are Donald T. Sheri-

dan (western section), Mrs. Henry
Gabrielson (Delmar Woods), Herbert A. Alexander (Sherwood Forsec(north
Green
Earl
est) and
will also be a Bantion). There
nockburn member, not yet named.
Members
Deerfield
Other
Other
members
of the council

Wesley

Alls-

Harry

Alabeck,

Dr.

Ramsay,,

Robert

brow,

S. Cline
Mrs. Arthur
Mr. and
have sold their home on Deerfield
Lake
to
moving
are
and
road
Geneva Manor, Lake Geneva. Mr.

DEERFIELD
REVIEW
Thursday,

to Lake

a

civic-conscious
other
as
council
citizens have joined in the movement.
Peterson Named Co-Chairman

are

Entertains

Mrs. Hubert Kelley entertained
a group of French-speaking friends
of Mme.
Lucas-Kepperling,
Wednesday of last week. The guest of
honor
was
Mlle.
Jeanette
Lucas
who recently arrived from Paris.
As it was the week of Twelfth
Night, some of the French customs
obwere
Rois
des
Fete
of the
served.
Moving

The Public Press, no less than
Office, is a public trust.

Officers

Elect New

New officers for the Newcomers
club were elected at the last board
meeting. They will take office after
the
next
Wednesday’
meeting
Those elected were the Mesdames
Jack Dowdall, president, Fred Wilson,
vice-president,
LeRoy
Le.
Grand, treasurer, Richard Wagner
secretary,
George
Kuhlmey,
publicity, William Siler, historian and
Norbert
Dompke,
corresponding
secretary.
°

Party

Cancer

Luncheon

reservations.

a

The Order of the Eastern Star
Guild met at the home of the president,
Mrs. Kenneth
Knaackstadt.
1057
Central,
on
Monday.
Plans
were
made
for a public
games
party to be held February 12 at
the Masonic Temple at 8 p.m. Mrs.
Paul Shipley and Mrs. Paul Herte
were appointed co-chairmen. There
will be a donation of seventy-five
cents, door prizes, table prizes and
refreshments. No reservations are
necessary.

Parties

contest.
a

into

At last week’s meeting, Wesley
Alabeck resigned as co-chairman,

Club

Book Club

O. E. S. Plans

Card

club

Feb-

The home of Mr. and Mrs. John Robertson, Orchard
lane, which took first place in the Deerfield Christmas lighting

the

close to
away.

Mother’s

on Friday,

Mrs. Stuart Hamilton, Mrs. Martin Vose, Mrs. Edward Wood, and
Mrs. Leon Sherman are just a few
of the members of the Deerfield
Woman’s
club
who
will
have
parties this week to augment the
Park Ridge School for Girls fund.
The
school provides
a home
for
adolescent
girls
from _ broken
homes.

and

members
of the
Evangelical
and
Reformed
church.
The_
building
permit
for the
station
has been
refused
because
of its proximity
to the property limes of the chtrch.
However,
the Shell
Oil company
has the right to appeal if it sees
fit:
There was an ordinance passed,
which shall be published shortly,
to the effect that any automobile
or vehicle parked for 48 consecutive hours in the same spot shall
be considered abandoned and action taken, and that any car parked

Cross

ruary
13 are
now
definite.
The
dance, which is informal, is to be
held at the Highland Park Legion
Memorial Building.
The
committee
in charge
is busily completing arrangements to make this
another full evening of fun—as is
usual with
all Mother’s
club affairs.

health hazard. The board will ask
the co-operation of the state’s attorney in Cook county, as the property is part of Cook county, and
ask him to take the necessary steps.
The question of a new Shell oil
station to be built on the northeast
corner
of
Waukegan
road
and
Longfellow, was argued by representatives of the oil company and

by

Holy

for a dance

George Haggard was this week
named chairman of the nominating
of the group recently
committee
organized to attempt to bring political unity to Deerfield.
Deerfield
Nominating
council
has
been
chosen
as the
official
was
which
group,
of the
name
formed as a coalition to avoid the
bitter contest that marked the last
village election. The original plan
of a coalition party has broadened

Doro-

thy
Hunter,
Clifford
Johnson,
Raymond Meyer, Maurice Petesch,
Mrs. L. L. PeterCarlson,
John
son, Joseph W. Koss, Gerhart von

der

Linden,

Marxer,
Robert

Hawes,

Harold

Giss,

Homer

Earl
Paul,
Alexander,

Max
Mrs.

Eberli,
H.
C.

James

Mitchell,

C.

W.

D.

George,
Arthur
C. Ullman,
Mrs.
Frank Zellet.
Blank forms for the submission
of suggested
slates or names
of
possible candidates have been distributed to members of the coun-

cil and to other Deerfield citizens
who
have indicated an _ interest.
Suggestions Solicited
The council has stressed the fact
that
suggestions
of good
candidate
material
are welcome
from
any interested voter in the township, and that forms for submitting names
may
be obtained
by
telephoning
or writing
either of
the co-chairmen. Mr. Piper or Mr.
Peterson.
January
31 has been
set as a
deadline for return of the individual preference slates.

Briarwoods
(Continued
Association,

filed

Petition
from

Inc.,

a petition

page
has _

before

the

3)
likewise

Zoning

commission seeking to change the
proposed
comprehensive
amendment to the zoning ordinance which
is being proposed under the vil-

lage

plan.
Thursday,

January

15, 1953

�yi

~ CUB‘S CORNER.

Girl Scout News

Scout News

Kroll

according to latest reports everyone of you had a fine time. Jack
Marxer, Den 5 got an air-rifle and
his
friend
Don
Zellet
has
real
telephones to use in their hide-out
come Spring. Richard Ulrich, Den
12 received a set of “The
Book
of Knowledge
and
Popular
Science”—lucky
boy.

Council’

the

treats: We

made

pine cones.
Brownie

Troop

14:

Francine

Zellet,

re-

ed the following officers: president,

11:

Donna

Sedgwick,

re-|

8 Rtn

nice

a

Susan Whitehead served hot chocolate afterwards.
We
had
lots of
fun.
Troop 5: Janet Vieregg, reporter.

We

had

an ice skating

Martin,

i

7:80 p.m.

Con

NORTH

NORTHFIELD
COMMUNITY
Sanders at Dundee
P.O. Deerfield,
Ill.
James Burford, Pastor
Telephone
Northbrook
935R2
SUNDAY
SERVICES
9:45 a.m. Sunday
school.’
11 a.m. Morning
worship.
7:30 p.m, Evening services (monthly).
First and third Sundays: Evangelistic

party from

7 to 8:15 p.m. Then we
Vieregg’s for hot cocoa
business meeting.

De

BNA

went to
and our

services.

Mrs.

Second
and
fourth
Sundays:
Youth
fellowship
services.
If your church has no evening service,
we invite you
to join with
us in the
evening service.
If you
do not attend
church, we give you a warm welcome to

Julius Johnson

a

lot

of

subjects,

reporting,
making
comic - strips,
making papier mache articles and
jig-saw puzzles out of old newspapers and on and on. Even I had
an idea! How
about some enterprising young Cub ‘reporter taking
over this column for a couple of
weeks?
I’m sorry you Cubs
good enough to report

Bruce

Kroll,

Fred

who
this

were
week,

Rahn,

John

Fisher—just to name a few,
see your news in print this
Please, don’t stop calling in
news. We'll have the column
next week—and all you other
—call your news in directly
the meeting. The phone is

Promoted

to

can’t
week.
your
again
Dens
after
248R.

Corporal

Brandwein

Merner,

and

Mrs.

all of Deerfield;

Henry,

Edward

Deerfield,

and

Charles

Milton |
five

Arthur
of

FIRST

sons. |

of.

ei

Highland

Park

and

Alfred

ville;

four

brothers, Henry of JoOs- |
.
|
Calif.,
Otto
of
New-|

of St. Louis;

PRESBYTERIAN
824

al,

Waukegan

sone .

THURSDAY,

1 p.m.

VIEW,

Announce

Mr.
of

grandchildren

and

:

one

great-| 3 “9 6.

grandchild.

wes

p.m.

Tuxis

hill

country

the

Chicago

He

is
:

and
nieces.

club

at

the

time

of

fire.

survived

sisters
Louise

by

and

half-brothers
d

nephews

Huhn,

and

Deerfield,

John Schwingle, of Highland

Park,

Mrs. Agnes Clavey of Waukegan,
Mrs. Frances Russell of Highwood,
Mrs.
Gussie
Graft
of Glenview,
Jake Schwingle of Palatine, Hugo
Huhn
of Wilmette
and
Amanda
Eckert of Florida.
Services will be held Friday at
the funeral
home
on Waukegan
road,
Dr.
Paul
Keller
will officiate.

977.
meeting
by
the

of the Corporation

of
the
annual

of the

church.

THE BETHLEHEM
CHURCH
(Evangelical United Brethren)
Francis Geo. Guither, Minister
Clair Marvel, Assistant Minister
815 Rosemary
lerrace
“Church Going Families Are Happy
Families”

THURSDAY,
3:34
6:45

January

p.m.
p.m.

9:45

a.m.

January
January

Established

In

1885

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

Expert

RE-

i
—

Jewelry

for the

Watch

aren’t go-

Grover

oe

Repairing

Phone

DEERFIELD

“1088

On

JEWELERS

DR. G. C. PARKNEN
OPTOMETRIST
+

omplete

Optical

Service

4

Established in Deerfield Since 1942
Call

Deerfield

857

674

Rosemary

for

Appointment

Terr., Deerfield |

a

ite

“

Woodard

announce

the

H. FORD

Registered

Pharmacist

Phone

er for

PHARMACY

BRUCE

Established
1

in

your

added

safety.

Midge’s Texaco

1884

650 Waukegan Road

Deerfield, Tl.

(Official Publication)
Report
of
Condition
of
DEERFIELD
STATE
BANK
Deerfield,
Illinois
transmitted in response to call o f the Auditor of Public
Accounts,
and showing condition at the close of business
on the 31st day of
RESOURCES
- Cash and due from banks

Church

Teen-town
for

all

Mothers
club.
WEDNESDAY,
January 21
‘4 p.m.
Junior confirmation class.
7:30 p.m.
Senior choir rehearsal.

-

in

and

25.

4

Tel. 580

Total

Undivided

profits

accounts
deposits

Demand

Other

direct

and/or

fully

!
Z
pursuant to
Dec ember, 195:
i

guaranteed

$34,556.26

Resources

stock
(Net)

deposits
Total of deposits:
(1) Secured by
Total

pledge

of assets

75,000.00
2,096,377.91

deposits

liabilities
Grand

Caiee

fixtures

real estate
resources

- Reserve

ages,

obligations,

discounts

-

- Time

26.

the

- Other
- Other

18

school

Government

Overdrafts
Furniture
and

. Capital
- Surplus

17

p.m.

U.S.

Loans
.
-

Grand

;

10:55
a.m.
Divine
worship.
TUESDAY,
January
20

jx

Mrs.

California,

'

15

7:30 p.m. to 11:30
Fellowship
hall.
SUNDAY,

_

NURSERIES,

Waukegan
road.
The _ infant’s
mother is the former Shirley Mar-

Junior
choir
rehearsal.
Bethlehem
bowling
league.

| SATURDAY,

of Appliances

na

society.

Mrs.
Harold
Murtfeldt,
8 p.m.
The
annual
Congregation,
followed

meeting

and

-KKNAAK’S

3 p.m. Girl Scout meeting.
|
7:30 p.m.
Boy Scout meeting,
| WEDNESDAY,
January 21
|
6:30 p.m.
Potluck supper.
For reservations, call Mrs. John Silence, 735, or

Fred Huhn, uncle of Louise Huhn,
660 Chestnut street, who had made
his home with her at 1111 Deerfield
road
until
5 months
ago
died January 11. Born in Chicago,
April 27, 1865, the family moved
to what is now the site of Thorn-

Makes

F.D. CLAVEY
RAVINIA

Manager’s

We

All

Birth

Pico,

regular

| MONDAY, January 19

Hwehn

Repair

730 Waukegan Rd. - Tel. Deerfield

birth of a daughter on January 5.
The
maternal
grandparents
are
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Marshall, 1422

Les ae eee
oe eee
for all grades
through
high
school.
hua
Tree,
9:45 a.m.
Adult bible class under the
burg,
Mo.,
Edward
of Highland | leadership of C. E. Piper.
a.m.
Morning worship.
Park, and Peter
of Lynwood, Calif.; || 11
;
11 a.m.
Nursery
school
for children

11

Martin?

Refrigerators - Ranges - Radios
Washing
Machines - Vacuums

We

eee

association

sister, Mrs. Albert Hagi of Liberty-| SGNDa¥, January 18

Mr.

FROST’S
RADIO AND ELECTRIC APPLIANCES |

ing to have our feelings hurt if
you tell us some of our impediments to efficient government. You
are an expert in this field. Let’s
hear from you.
Perhaps you could tell us why
we should favor such a large expenditure as $600,000
for a new
sewage disposal system for a village
with a population
of 4300.
Suspicion and questions are flying
about town. Why don’t we connect
with the North Shore Sanitary District? Why should we provide such
an elaborate sewage system?

15

Women’s

“meetingest”

a Village

Loans

735 Deerfield Road, Deerfield, Hl.
Edward H. Selig
Harold R.
Tel. Deerfield 155

shall.

Road

toe

January

CHUREb

about

4

Total

Liabilities

Assets pledged:
(a) U.S.
Government
anteed

obligations

direct

and/or

fully

guar-

Total Amount of Assets Pledged (excluding rediscounts) $
82,500.
Carol Holt and Gregory
King, representing the chil- Purpose and Amount of Pledge:
dren across the nation in the
(b) Against funds of State of Illinois
National Safety Council
drivers.
drive for careful
Members of the Deerfield |
I, Chester I. Wessling, Cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly swea1
Safety council are Maurice
3:
that the above statement is true to t he best of my knowledge and belief, and that.
.
Petesch, chairman, Catherthe items and amounts shown above agree with the items and amounts shown
in
the report made to the Auditor of Public Accounts,
State of Illinois, pursuant
ine Price, Harriet King, Dr.
to law.
Paul Keller, Harold L. PeterCHESTER I. WESSLING, Cashie
STATE OF ILLINOIS) ,..
Correct, Attest:
a
son, Homer Marxer, Warren
COUNTY OF LAKE
)
ROBERT S. RAMSAY
—
Darling, W. G. Marshall and
F. KOTTRASCH
.
tw
~]

John P. Gryniewski, son of Mrs.
Mary
H. Gryniewski,
955
Osterman
avenue,
recently
was
promoted
to corporal
while
serving
in Korea with the 40th Infantry
Division.
Cpl. Gryniewski,
a supply sergeant
in Tank
Company
of the
223rd Infantry Regiment,
arrived
in Korea last July. He holds the
Combat
Infantryman
Badge,
UN
and
Korean
Service
Ribbons.
“Cpl. Gryniewski, a 1951 graduate
of
Wisconsin
State
college,
Stevens Point, entered the Army
in August 1951 and was formerly
stationed at Fort Benning, Ga.

J.

is the

diary for our DEERFIELD

_
OO
SIS CT Co

covers

this

How

Mrs. Lena Juhrend Johnson, 79,
visit our services.
Pack 150 has an interesting (for a resident of Deerfield for more
ST. PAUL ‘EVANGELICAL
the
grown-ups
too)
program than 50 years, died Saturday folAND
REFORMED
CHURCH
a heart
attack.
planned for the next meeting. A lowing
Services |
638 Waukegan
Road
Rev.
H.
O.
Willman,
Pastor
held Tuesday
afternoon
Tribune man is coming out to show were
in
Deerfield 858
Evangelical
and
a 45 minute movie—something like the
Reformed
THURSDAY, January: 15
8 p.m.
Annual
meeting
of St. Paul
“Trees to Newspaper.” How many church with the minister, the Rev.
Evangelical
and Reformed
Church congreO.
Willman,
of us think
of a newspaper
as Harry
officiating. gation in the church basement. Refreshhaving once grown as a tree? Well, Burial was in North Shore Garden
ments
will be served
following
the meeting.
not quite that, I guess. This movie of Memories,
North Chicago.
FRIDAY,
January
16
She was born March 16, 1873 in
is going to show us just how man
7 p.m.
St. Paul
bowling
league.
can make a newspaper—from start Germany and came to this country SATURDAY, January 17
9:30 a.m.
Confirmation instruction in
to finish. All this is going to be | as an infant with her family. Mrs.
the church basement.
6 p.m.
Evening vesper chimes.
very
interesting
to
see.
There’s Johnson
resided
in
Davenport,
SUNDAY,
January:
18
only
one
thing
that’s
going
to Iowa, before making her home in
9:30
a.m.
Sunday
school
worship
and
classes.
continue to puzzle me, unless I’m Deerfield where she was a mem10:30 a.m.
Chime call to worship.
put straight by the movie—Who
ber
of the
Evangelical
and
11 a.m.
Morning church worship.
Re.
MONDAY, January 19
,
was the first man to think of mak- formed
church.
She
married
Mr. |
3:30 p.m.
Girl Scout meeting in the
ing paper out of wood? Must have Johnson in November of 1895. Oh
Pe
oe
been very long ago! In connection preceded
her
in death
in Decem- |
8 p.m. Men's Davtball league will meet |
with this next Pack meeting the ber, 1941.
|in the church basement.
Dens in Pack 150 are sticking to
Survivors
are
three
daughters, | VEE
te
Cae
in the church
the newspaper theme and that cer- Mrs. Frank C. Jacobs, Mrs. Fred |
sanctuary.

tainly

REALTORS
Insurance — Real Estate —

town in the Midwest
Not long ago, one of the Deerfield mothers had to use the village adding machine. It was more
antiquated than the one she had
used in her high school days in
the ’20s. Guess Mr. Martin is finding many
more
antique
customs
in our government because he re-||
marked that it will take Deerfield
several years to overcome and correct some of the practices it has
been using for the last 30 years.
He
says
that.
Mrs.
Wessling
spends
two
weeks
writing water
bills which could be “knocked out”
on a good machine in a matter of
hours.
He is finding that he could use
his time more efficiently if he had
stenographic help.

CROSS CATHOLIC CHURCH
North
Waukegan
Road
Rev. John O’Mara, pastor
Rectory, 724 Elder Lane
Deerfield 430
Sunday
Masses:
7, 8:30,
10,
11:36
Weekday
Masses:
7:30 a.m.
First Friday of each month, Mass at

porter. We had a skating party and | resciong

Established 1925

busy man. He wants to get acquainted with us, so he is attending all the meetings in town. Mr.

HOLY

Jeanie Johnson;
treasurer,
Gwen
Lockwood and secretary, Francine
Zellet. We
played two games
of
dodgeball before being dismissed.

VANTG&amp;SELIG

Martin is

a

GREGORY’S
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
Wilmot
and
Deerfield
Roads
(Wilmot
School)
The Rev. J. D. Parker Vicar
SUNDAY, January 11
:
9:30 a.m.
Family service.
Kindergarten and
church
school
classes
for ‘the
children.
Sermon
and
holy
communion
for adults.

porter.
We
picked
out what
we
would work on for our Curved Bar
award. Refreshments were cookies
brought by Gwen Graef. We elect-

Troop

Village Manager Gayle

ST.

“Squeeze.”

and

there’s no doubt that all you fellows
had
super
ideas
to
offer,
After
televiewing
Space
Cadet,
Captain
Video,
Tales
of Tomorrow
(and let’s not forget Superman!)
you
probably
know
more
about
all that “atmosphere”
out
there in the wild blue yonder than
we could imagine. Roger?

brought

bird feeders out of
Then
we
did
the

Well, I really think 1953 is here
to stay, so let’s get down to “brass
tacks” and think of the wonderful
year ahead for the Cub Scouts in
Deerfield. The Dens are busy getting set for the next Pack meetings—Pack
50 is planning something “out of this world’”—and
I
mean that literally! The theme is

“Interplanetary

CHURCHES

Troop
77:
Cammy
Ryan,
reporter. We played games and Gail

Christmas 1952 is in the past and

4

i

David Taylor
Day Parade

Cadet

David

in

Presbyterian

Inaugural

The
Taylor,

son

of Mr.

and Mrs. Ralph Taylor, has been
chosen as one of the 220 cadets

from

St.

John

Delafield

Wis.

military
to

academy,

compose

the

honor guard for the governor of
Wisconsin, Walter Kohler, in the
inaugural day parade in Washington, D. C. on the 20.
Thursday,

January

15,

1953

First
field

Women’s

Women

to Meet

Association

Presbyterian
will
have

church
their

of the

of Deerregular

monthly meeting today. Luncheon
will be served at 1 p.m. by circle
5 in the church basement. The program will feature a talk by Mrs.
Burton
Hales,
president
of the
Women’s board of the Presbyterian |
hospital in Chicago.

Robert Gougler.

Subscribed and sworn to before me this 12th day of January, 1953. Direc
ea
LORRAINE T. BERNING, Notary. Publi

(SEAL)

Page 5

sy

~

�E
L
A
D
E
R
I
AND

PACKING

OF

HOUSEHOLD

Public To Art
Contest, Talk

GOODS

od

AGENT

ALLIED

VAN

LINES

Mrs. Elias Perlman, program
chairman of the North Shore

STORAGE
Central

474

Ave.,

HI

Park

Highland

Art League,

has

invited

the

public to attend an open meet-

ing of the North Shore Art
League at 8:15 tonight in the

2-0181

Winnetka Community house to
hear a talk by John McNee and}

Drive Carefully — The Life You Save
May Be Your Own!

to

see

the

art

work

of

North

Shore residents now on exhibit]
at the League. Mr. McNee is|
assistant

professor

of

art

at

the

University of Illinois’ Navy branch.
NORE AS

| Chandler's

RE

wD

Typewriter Repairs
Finest work by our expert
repairmen . . . and fully
guaranteed!

3 1 etephone
_ Highland
Park

PR

|

2-3100

Frank Holland, head of the art
department at New Trier and art
critic of the Chicago
Sun-Times,
will judge the paintings and sculptures of the North Shore residents.
Prizes
will
be
awarded
in each
branch of art work.
Mr. McNee’s address is on “‘Chi-

League.

Art

Shore

North

the

She will give out information
on the new classes to anyone
who will call her.

Typewriter Sales
Office machines, portables, adding
machines. Some excellent
buys in reconditioned
machines!

Central

in California, he
art department
has also studied at the Beaux Arts
in Paris as well as at the Academie

SPECIALIZE

IN CUSTOM

MADE

de

la

Chaumiere,

Grande

also

in

e
9
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—

SUITS
DRESSES
COATS
EVENING WEAR
ALTERATIONS —

HI

Sheridan

Colony

present

2-7118

‘Monts

on

Saturday

af-

ternoons. All classes meet at
league’s second floor studio of
Winnetka
Community
house
three hours. Morning classes
gin at 9:30 a.m., afternoon at

the
the
for
be1:30

and

evening

at 7:30

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good
Rose,

looks,

sleeping

Hunter,

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Reschke,

HI

Registration

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takes place at the class meeting.

p.m.

McComas

take

me

to

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This

will

Wednes-

Saturday mornings and afterncons

by

In the new schedule Harry Mintz
will teach painting Monday mornings and evenings; Abbott
Patti-

Sesh tons

class

will teach painting and Thursday
nights Michael and Frances Higgins will instruct in ceramics. Chiltaught
be
dren’s art classes will

schedule.

will
conduct
his
design on Wednes-

teen-agers

and

Rocheleau

painting

nights.
Thursday

day nights, and Maxine Reum will
teach art to advanced young peo-

p.m.,

Ol

the

Guido V. Chigi
course on basic

Siher Vecdle
1866

to

class

George
a

morn-

Wednesday

sculpture

day afternoons while Guido Chigi
will teach basic design Wednesday

The new term of the North Shore
Art League opens
next
Monday
when
two new
classes are to be

added

painting and sculpmornings and eveHahn will conduct

ings and
conduct

France.

645
Ave.

ple

comfort

son will teach
ture Tuesday
nings; Nancy

Artist.”
American
cago and the
Former head of the Chaffey college

WE

An

Elias Perlman,
Mrs.
vice
president and program chairman of the North Shore Art
League, stands back: from her
easel a bit to survey her work.
She is in charge of tonight’s
open meeting of the league.

Mrs. Robert Reschke of
Briar lane, is head monitor of

/i\

| MOVING

League Invites

Use

Our

Free

Main

3-4357

HOllycourt
Parking

INC.
LAUNDRY &amp; DRY CLEANERS,
“Where Your Clothes Stay Young”
Office

5-7071

Highland Park 2-3310 —

Lot

512-518

and

Plant

Deerfield Call Enterprise 1616

Waukegan

Ave.,

Highwood

Thursday, January

15, 1953

�ee

Show Oil Work

Center To 8 ponsor.

Schmidt

Dance, Open House

Of HP Artist
At High School

After Friday Game

Mr, and Mrs. John I. Schmidt of
Farnsworth are the parents of a
son, James Alvar, who was born
January 4 in St. Francis hospital,

An exhibition of oil paintings

by William
Lakeside

Highland

H. Savin of 135
place, opened at

Park

High

last week and will
through January 19.

school

continue

Of special interest locally, all of
the landscapes were painted within

half an hour’s ride from

Highland

Park, and all of the portraits in
the
show
are
of persons
living
here.
Of
particular
interest are
scenes of Waukegan
harbor
and
of Larson’s boatyard. One of the
portraits is of Wendy Savin, daugh.
ter of the artist and a former Highland Park High school student.
Mr. Savin, who is art director
of a Chicago advertising company
feels there is a definite purpose
in

showing

the

local

A dance and open house for high
school students will be held at the
Highland
Park
Recreation
center
tomorrow night after the Evanston
basketball game.
Dancing will be
in the gymnasium from 10 to 12
p.m. Tom Harter and his orchestra
will furnish the music.

There

on

Only the Want
values

and

tennis

Mr.

and

Mrs.

of Chicago

birth

of their

Stanford

first

Mr.

Helen

and

Caro,

Mrs.

H.

Bob O’ Link road. Paternal
parents are Mr. and Mrs.
Reinisch of Chicago.

craftsmen

not

them

of
of

by HANES!

and
HI
Msgr.

20% savings on each bo:

Weekdays—6:15, 8:15

grandPhilip

CONFESSIONS
Saturdays,
Eves. of First Fridays and
Holy Days 4:00 and 7:30 p.m.

All purpose sheer, reg. 1.50 —

3 prs. 3.60
Dullace, run resist texture, reg. 1.50 —

d prs. 3.60

and precious jewels

Sandalfoot, sheer heel, demi-toe, reg. 1:65 —

d prs. 3.90

The Diamond

avail-

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All are 15 denier nylon, sizes 82

treasured throughout the
world, speaks a message of luxury
like no other fine jewel.
Superior craftsmanship produced
the fabulously beautiful diamonds
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Your
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JEWEL

CORNER CENTRAL &amp;

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HI 2-2028
SHERIDAN

Lovely

lacy

crepes,

also

nylon

gowns

is the

only

licensed

home

for

the

aging

Health Officials have complimented
qualified operating personnel” at Abbott

in

style.

Park.
“highly

Centrally located—east of Sheridan Road, it is less than
two blocks from the North Western Railroad and North Shore
Line Stations, shops, motion picture theater.

|
|

We are proud of the fine food we serve, our cheerful
rooms, the homelike
atmosphere,
our scrupulously
clean
kitchen and our round-the-clock nursing service under graduate nurse supervision.
SECRETARIAL

If you have the responsibility for an aging person and
seek the best possible solution for that person—call on us
and see Abbott House for yourself.

Four Months (Day)
INTENSIVE COURSE
begins
month.

Bulletin
57

East

Jackson

Thursday,

on

the

first

ABBOTT

Mon-

T free

Blvd., WAbash
hicago

January

15,

Open

2-7377

HOUSE

|

405 Central Avenue
Highland

Park, Illinois

Highland Park 2-6080

|

1953
5
ik
Sica Bp
a
vara: as
2 tae
a
Ae

*Y

pte

i

he

Fone ae dat
Nir ke aad

ate

Sd

py

i haltid

yaa

SY

RAG

Yea

ii

ae

Friday nights until 9

— Garnett ¢ Co.

Ask your family physician about us. Tell us your problem.

for college women
class
each

a

Not all sizes in.

Highland

us on the
House.

ra
f

slips, and half sli

ABBOTT HOUSE

Waukegan
&amp;
Telegraph Rds.
Deerfield
Dfid.
779
or
Dfid. 578

A new
day in

a warm

beige, and shell.

Fabulous

In The

a

long.

Colors: south pacific,

Now on display in our
Central Ave. window
replicas of

Offers You
Complete
Bumper
to Bumper Service
@ Grease Jobs
@ Wash Jobs
@ Accessories
@ Batteries

SALE!

seamless hosiery

in diamonds

Ads offer amazing
Read

are the maternal

Lond wd

29)

opportunities

elsewhere.

Lyingis the
Caro

today Mr
“confident

page

the

daughter

Joseph

annual

Green Bay Roads
2-0202
Rt. Rev.
Joseph P. Morrison
Pastor
Rev. Donald
B.. Runkle
Rev. Bernard
E. Burns
MASSES
Sundays—6:15, 7:30, 9:00, 10:00,
11:00 and 12 noon
Holy Days—6 oa
8:00, 9:00,

child; Deborah

B., born Monday in Chicago
In hospital.
Mrs. Reinisch

Garnett Co.

IMMACULATE
CONCEPTION CHURCH

J. Rein-

are announcing

|

also have a daugh-

sons of Highwood
grandparents.

Deerfield

isch

former

They

ieee

ter, Linda, 18 months.
Mrs. Florence Schmidt of Homewood
avenue, who now has 13
grandchildren, is the
paternal
grandmother, and the Alvar Ander-

Reinisch

pictures—that

of
is

and

who
do not
refreshments

art. In encouraging

art students
declared he

(Continued

able

table

Evanston.

will be available at the soda bar.

Studied Abroad
After
having
been
graduated
from the Art Institute the artist
studied in Europe for two
and a
half years, traveling between
Paris
and Munich. Afterwards he
turned

to commercial

be

television for those
want to dance, and

they might prove encouraging
to
local young artists. He pointed out.
Prt: isn't necessary
to take
long
trips or do long planning. All that
is needed is a paint box, a hop
into the car and maybe 15 minutes
of riding and you have any numbe
r
of good
subjects or good, scenic
spots.”

young
Savin

will

ae

EN
caeBS

SaRy

LS LON,
eae
aun
he gat aaa
%

a

rs

k

ai

�ait

own alk

WALTER
The

HERE WE ARE
KNEE DEEP IN JANUARY
e as pleasant as knee deep
es,

if

we

go

the

right

TAILOR

in

places

di do the right things. Years

ago

@

1814

been doin’ it ever since. We go to

SALE
Sale

which

winter
reduced

ese

Lamps

and

Shades,

ex-

onal

Furniture.

563-565

Street

have

sons

to

eighth

grade

annual

Father-Son

Sport

night
7:15

The

and

their

ing

at

fathers

next
in the

fathers

and

wear

sport

shoes.

Tickets

Thursday

start-

Elm

gym.

sons

are asked

clothes
will

Place
and_

be

Mr.
and
Mrs.
Richard
Fechheimer, co-chairmen of the event,
have planned a varied evening of
games and fun for both fathers and
sons. Refreshments will be hearty

to suit an
prizes will

to

sale

acted as adviser
in planning the

Al
Danakas
will
conduct
the
games,
assisted
by Burt Wallenstein, Richard Drake, and Chester
decorations will be
Carlson. The
done by Mrs. Wallenstein and Mrs.
Robert Koretz. The Mesdames Bennett Goodman, William Cohn, BenLandau
Howard
Piersen,
jamin

at

Gump’s Executive To
Address NS Temple
Sisterhood Monday
Richard
Gump,
president
of
Gump’s, the well known store loeated in San Francisco, comes to
the
North
Shore
Congregation
Israel temple Monday at 1:30 p.m.
to
speak
before
members
and
friends
of
the
Sisterhood.
The
meeting is open to the public. A
dessert luncheon will immediately
precede the program.
Merchant,
composer,
artist, de-

and Robert Wilson will be in charge

contract

of ticket,

sales.
being
are
Refreshments
ished by Mesdames Marshall

|

Fire Place Wood—Any Size

Hiram

Drake,

Richard

Louie Tazioli Excavating
OFFICE
HI 2-4662

athletic evening and
be awarded.
Edward

Oppenheimer has
to the chairmen
evening.

tennis

on

price on snowplowing

by
Grace
Herbst.
prices make it pos-

e to buy so many lovely things
the home. In this beautiful
op of Interior Furnishings are
inctive

fourth

will

PARK

school

Call us about our season

is featured

lsite Silver, lovely Glass, China,
pottery and very worth while Oc-

their

Place

the door and admission will be 50
cents per person, or $1 a family.

ONOW PLOWING

CONTINUES

AT GRACE HERBST’S
people look forward to this

duction

Second

HIGHLAND

the Villa several days each week
or lunch and always for dinner on
eek ends. Food is wonderful, atmi phere is gay and makes for
hi ppiness. Dancing Sat. nites.

_JANUARY

Elm

ALTERATIONS
@ CLEANING
@ PRESSING

accepted Frank Hutchins’ sugtion “make Villa Moderne your
wir
er country club,’’ and
we’ve

_
Many

|Elm Place Fathers
And Sons Plan Sport
Night Next Thursday

4

furnLevy,

Kennicott,

Julian,
Don
Bernstein,
Seymour
Lawrence
Rubenstein,
Sidney
Schnadig, Peter Prato, Harry TemParker
J.
Griswold,
ple, James
Hall and Julian Hirsch.

GARAGE
HI 2-6861

Lin-

In Ave. Winnetka.

NEW

BUICKS

_ THEY
ie

ARE

COMING

NOW ARE IN SIGHT

new

Buicks

can

see

are

them

, hurry
1732 First

coming

to-nite.

CAMPBELL’S

and

Hurry,

us 1953 Models. There will be
more
handsome,
impressive
s on the roads this year. Prices
amazingly low. If you can afford to own a car you can afford

'a

Buick. Ask
T 2-4800.

for

done

and

Richard

TOMATO

s expert

interior

Jones’,

new

y and where

decorator

en
»

to use them.

h

charming

harm
ll

Lin-

furnishings,
the

Shop

Copper

big

or

make

of

Edith

Ave.

Color-

Chafing

individual

serving
Sale.

ecorating

of,

rooms.

Dishes

Casseroles

simple

Generous

anuary

and _ in-

discount

Experts

in

entire
(Opp.

during
Interior

homes
Ravinia

or
Sta

lon).
:

California

Size 176
Zipper-Skin

;
the

PIZZA
ROSIE

to order.

YOUR DOG
KNOWS BEST
best Dogs on the

S.

No.

1

LUX
FLAKES

and

the

Dogs

50 years

appre-

hs
%

Page 8

69c

Lge.
Pkgs.

POT

Wakefield

PET

CHICKEN

No. 5 Tin

BROTH

59c

3 3c

SHURE FINE
Libby
PUMPKIN

23¢

Z

23¢

size

5 9 Cc

Giant

Bag

41

For

71

c

Whiter,

Brighter Washes
10-0z. ie

50-Ib.

4c

1 0°

SUNSET
NIGHT

be-

Founded in 1865, Gump’s
first
dealt in ornamental bric-a-brac for
early day homes. Later it ventured
into objects of art and today “its
jade
collection
is unequaled
by
any museum
in the world,” says
Mr. Gump.
In 1943, Richard Gump
opened
his
“Discovery Shop”
to display
and sell the creative work of artists

and

craftsmen

of

this

country,

realizing,
after
traveling
around
the world many times, that American artisans have much to offer.

Living From
Day to Day

a

ROAST

BEEF

Cut—Boston

Round

Bone

Sliced

MAYER’S

Bacon

Fresh All Beef Ground
U. S. CHOICE

2-lb.,

c

No. 2%
c
Tins 3 3

Fryers - Broilers Fresh Drawn
OSCAR

Size

eye-opening,

purchase is—‘“Is it good looking?”

Z cans 29¢

MILK

Centrella

5-lb.

CLL
Blade

BOUQUET SOAP
th

FRIDAY

15-oz. Can
Evaporated

an

U. S. CHOICE

aoe

North

ciate it. 2810 Park Ave. HI 2-1352.

Rah

1 i

Drum

always
Board
at ButterKennels, there must be a
son. Every
comfort known
to
sdom is offered at these kens.
And
the
thoughtful
care

experience

| AO

ae

Cashmere

Chunk
7-02.
Cans

HASH

29¢

Selected

ne ivaee

Eat

Shore

en them comes from

D

Florida
TT.

Light

Can

Habitant
ONION SOUP

Pkg. 9 9C

AQc

TANGERINES

there or take with you. Do drop in.

“If

Stark‘st
TUNA

2 Heads 25¢

FAB or VEL

a good many years our Rosie
been famous for making the
st
Pizza and Spaghetti in the
hole wide world.
She is now
scated at her family’s place “‘Skotie Gardens”
on
County
Line.

thing cooked

Bch. &gt;

NAVEL ORANGES

eee
THE BEST
MADE
BY

Every

HEAD
Sweet

twear.

ngle

RADISHES

see

300-Ct.

Centrella Grape, Plum, Crab
Apple or Cherry 12-07. 21 Cc

Crisp

California Iceberg

Pottery and China to make
e dining table attractive, as well
the
popular
Stainless
Steel

viting.

TOMATOES

I 9c

Super

TISSUE

FLORIDA

LETTUCE

at

2 Pkgs.

CLEANSING

FRESH

give

Cross

Soflin

and comfort to your home,

etra at 729 St. Johns

and

Red

MACARONI

Fancy

YOU LOVE
HOME

BEEF

16-oz.

Made

tinctive new Lamps. 912
Ave. Hubbard Woods.

THOSE
THINGS
FOR YOUR

CORNED

gives

hind-the-scenes account of the activities of “the trade,’ and reminds
his reader that the one question
to be asked
before
making
any

BROADCAST

as to

® your order or buy by the yard.
ry stunning
French
Provincial
niture and a nice selection of

PASTE

3 Cans 29¢

aperies, Slip Covers, and Bed
2ads. You'll be glad you had
house ready for nice weather
hen it arrives. At the Studio
Henry L. Barnitz you'll find
ie
most delightful new Spring
brics and the expert advice of

Gump

signer, architect, Mr. Gump is also
the author of “Good
Taste Costs
No
More,”
topping
off his other
accomplishments.
He will discuss
his book in which he speaks from
behind the counter to the American purchaser. He exposes the folly
of
trying
to keep
up
with
the

CONTADINA

COME
SPRING
drab weeks,
having up-

ordering

SOUP

3 Cans 31c¢

demonstration.

- THE TIME HAS
GET READY FOR
ng these next few
the ideal time for
stering

TOMATO

=

to Kleeburg Buick
St. and see the gor-

Swiss or Round Steak
MEATS FOR FREEZERS ARE GIVEN SPECIAL
ATTENTION.
ASK US FOR PRICES.

FOOD

757 Central Avenue
IS FAMILY NIGHT

MART

— A Central Food Store
AT SUNSET — STORE OPEN

ee

‘TILL 9 P.M.

Many ambitious persons
tend to live too much in the
future missing many
pleasures of each day. Most regrettable however is that with
. thoughts centered on tomorrow these persons often neglect their health.
If there is someone in your
family like this help them to
realize
the importance of
proper medical and dental
care now ... how necessary it
is to future success.
When your doctor gives you
a prescription to be filled, select a pharmacy that reflects
a real interest in prescription
work.

Earl W. Gsell &amp; Co.
—Pharmacists—

Thursday, January

15, 1953

�George Martin To Talk To

Rectenwald

The

Church Men On ‘World Bank’
George

L.

Martin

of New

York

City,

formerly

Raymond
hen

sons

of Mr.

Rectenwald,

court,

Wendy

of Beech

| Highland

four

now

Hope,

have

born

and

brothers

Mrs.

1853

Shea-

a

sister,

Thursday

in

hospital.

Richard,

9,

Wendy’s
Lloyd,

Only

6,

the

Want

and

opportunities

Dean, 4, and Mark, 2. William Rectenwald
Sr. of Ridge road and

values

Max

obte elsewhere.

are

lane, who was appointed marketing director of the International Bank in 1950, will discuss “The World Bank” next Wednes-

Park
are

Wagner
the

of Marshfield,

Wis.,|

grandparents.

Ads

Read

offer amazi

cy

not avail-—

them

now!

day when he appears as guest speaker before the Men’s Fellowship club of The Highland Park Presbyterian church.

His travels for the World Bank
have
recently
taken
him
to the
Philippines, and he is presently in
South America,
from
which continent
he
will
come
directly
to

Celebrates First Birthday
Charles
Baldi
Jr., son
of the
senior Charles Baldis of Highmoor

road,

was

feted

on

his first birth-

day yesterday at a family supper
in his home.
Guests included Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph Ariano of Walker

avenue

and

their children,

and Donald;
Mr. and
Baldi of Highwood with
Candy and Sandy; and
Santis of Highwood with
Ernest and Dennis.

Marian

Mrs. John
their twins,
the Ernest
their sons,

Tale O The Fos

in the United States and abroad,
he has had vast experience in the
field.
He entered the
investment
business
in
1916 with
the
Mississippi Valley Trust company
of St. Louis and was successively
associated with the firms of National
City
company
in Atlanta;
Caldwell and Company, Nashville,
Tenn.; and the Municipal Guaranty
Co. of New York in Chicago. He
served the latter firm as manager,

from
Highland
Park for the 6:30 p.m.
dinner
meeting
in
the
parish
house.
A
successor
to
Norman
M.
Tucker as director of marketing,
Mr.
Martin
was
special
Midwest
representative
of
the
Marketing
department of the bank with headquarters
in Chicago,
from
January to July, 1950. Now in charge
of the
International
Bank’s
bor-

rowing

and

marketing

operations

1928

to

1934,

and

Helene

Curtis

Permanent

Wave

With Styling To Fit Your Personality
°

We have all the new styles
6

served

three years as governor of the Investment
Banking
Association
of
America.
In Chicago he was president of
the
investment
firm
of
Martin,
Burns and Corbett, Inc., until his
resignation
in
1950,
when
he
moved to New York to accept the
World Bank post.
John Haugan, president of the
Men’s Fellowship club, and Conrad
R. Dreiske, vice president, are in
charge
of arrangements
for the

Permanent

Wave

- Cut

- Styling

LIMITED TIME
BUY OF THE YEAR!

PHONE HI 2-4768
1884

Sheridan

Road

Highland

Park

talk.

INVENTORY

SALE

STILL ON
HOT POINT DISHWASHERS
CROSLEY DISHWASHERS...
SELF

$22995
$22995

DEFROSTING

G.E. REFRIGERATOR,

Double

Door, 8 Ft...

$3 3995

DEEPFREEZE REFRIGERATOR Was $359.95 Now $26995
G.E. REFRIGERATOR,
Was $309.95 Now $2 3995
Was $219.95 Now $16 995
MAYTAG GAS RANGES
ROMPEGAS RANGE
EASY SPINDRIER (Model 19SA)
G.E. WASHER Was $139.95 Now
MAYTAG WASHER with Trade-in
BENDIX AUTOMATIC WASHER
G.E. AUTOMATIC WASHER Was $349.95 Now
MANY

ITEMS

$15995
$1995
$10995
$18995
$27995
ON

15,

1953

EVERY

FRIDAY

USED

WASHERS

$]Q00

and

IN

STOCK

up

BRASS

FIREPLACE EQUIPMENT
Less 40%
from List
ALL TOYS 20 to 40%
Off
JOHNSON
ICE SKATES
LIONEL TRAINS &amp; EQUIPMENT LESS 20%
ARMSTRONG INLAID LINOLEUM
$] 29 Sq. Yd.

OIL HEATERS—AII Oil Heaters
30% Reduction
ELECTRIC BLANKETS - RADIOS &amp; LIGHT FIXTURES
20% Off
BUTCHERS SELF-POLISHING WAX
$225 Gal. Free Applicator
VACUUM CLEANERS AS HIGH AS 30% Off
Floor Samples—Hoover - G.E.s - Universals

HI 2-2041
OPEN

January

MANY

SALE THAT DO
THIS AD

314 Green Bay Road
Thursday,

WE NEED ROOM

OVERSTOCKED

ian

YOU

a
dss

TO

sh

SAVINGS

ofa 4

$ $$

NOT

APPEAR

|

UNTIL 9 P.M.

ON

Highwood, III.
ee.

�Marjorie Brown Is Engaged

Thomas

amous

_ Speedwriting

Jses ABCs.

Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Robert
Thomas Sr. of De Pere, Wis., are
the parents of their fourth child
and second son,
William
Harry,

Shorthand—

No Symbols, no machines.

Jsed
in
leading
offices
and
Civil
Service.
First TWO
lessons FREE.
Day and
Evening
ai
deck classes
‘Gunite. begin first and third Mondays

‘ —~

mpecdwriliig
=

ry

"EVANSTON
1718 SHERMAN

me)

UN

HIGH

6 in Green Bay,
after his uncle,

liam H. Thomas
The

other

Corinne

of Green Bay road.

Thomas’

Claire,

4-3004

7;

children

Clifford

» Butter 69c

SCORE

Flour

4. 5&lt;

wen Coffee 85c

HILLS BROS.

Frozen

Food

Specials

12 oz. 29¢

Sliced in Sugar STRAWBERRIES
Treesweet ORANGE

JUICE 6 oz. _............._....

wah tte: 2 for 29c

Birds Eye PEAS and CARROTS

12 Oz.

19c

Birds Eye BROCCOLI, Cut or Chopped

The betrothal of Miss Marjorie May Brown to Richard
V. Bradley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Bradley of South
Bend, Ind., was announced recently by her parents, the Walter

Birds Eye SPINACH, Chopped or Leaf

L.

Special Canned Goods Sale
TOMATO

Dearborn
BLAIR

RETAINING

Greenies SWEET
1.G.A. FANCY

PEAS

APPLE

SAUCE

FLAVOR

&amp;

COLOR

No. 303 Tin 19¢

No. 303 Tin

CANE

Every $5.00 Purchase 51-15

Buy a Pair of NYLONS

First Quality Full Fashioned

Only

Popular Shades ........

NEW YORK FRESH DRESSED
FRYING CHICKENS

45¢

Sno Kreem VEGETABLE SHORTENING
Marlene OLEOMARGARINE Colored 14's

3-Ib. Tin 7Qe

i,

14-oz. Btl. 15¢

2 for Alc

hs

Sweetheart Extra Fancy CHILI SAUCE

avenue.

birth

of

o'

SMORS

Mrs. Russell Heck
of
street
announce
the

Miss

Brown

is a

senior

at

their

second

child,

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph D. Rafferty
of 211
Morgan
place, Highwood,
are
the
parents
of a girl born
January 6 in Highland Park hos-

Rus-

sell
Thomas
Jr., last Friday
in
Lake Forest hospital. Their daughter, Judy Ann, is five years old.
The grandparents
are Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Bruno of Pleasant avenue
and
Frank
Heck
of Aroma
Park, Kankakee, Il.

5.

Lb.

6225

Johns

No.

pital.

They

Jean

Louise,

parents

have

are

one

who

Mr.

other
is

5.

and

child,
Grand-

Mrs.

Tony

Casorio
of
Highwood
and
Alex
Rafferty Sr. of 111 South Green
Bay road.

14890

Reserve

District

No.

7

Report of Condition of the
FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF HIGHLAND PARK
in the State of Illinois, at the Close of Business on December 31, 1952, Published
in Response to Call Made by Comptroller of the Currency, under Section 5211, U.S,
Revised Statutes.
ASSETS
1. Cash, balances with other banks, including reserve balance, and
cash items in process of collection ..... Tiassa, tage hilt Suhel ck as $ 3,347,503.98
2 . United States Government oblications, direct and guaranteed ........ 11,171,295.138
of States
States and political
political subdivisions .........................----3. . Obligations
Obligations of
991,068.15
bonds,
notes,
and
debentures | «.....--.... 2... sce ican ceneodebecoreotonese
4. . Other
Other bonds,
notes,
Gebentures
26,497.00

BE SURE OF QUALITY WITH THIS FINEST BEEF
STANDING RIB ROAST |... 2...

PANG T RIAU BU

St.

Rafferty

Mr. and
1694
First

Charter

With

of

Heck

No. 2 Tin

NATURAL

Browns

Highland Park High school.
Mr. Bradley is in his third year
at Lake Forest College where he is taking a pre-medical course.
No wedding date has been set.

JUICE 46-0z. Can

Club TOMATOES

PROCESS,

DOMINO

are

Jr., 4;

Week At I. G. A.

Ceresota, Gold Medal or Pillsbury5 LB. BAG

1.G.A.

Wis.
Wil-

and Blanche Margaret, 2%. Grandparents
are
Mrs.
William H.
Thomas
of Green
Bay road
and
Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Hutto of Green
Bay.

BUSINESS COLLEGE

AVENUE

Its Arthur Godfrey
1.G.A.

born January
He is named

FREE Employment
Service to Graduates.
Schools
in
over
350
Cities.
100-120
WPM.—
One Low Fee. NO
EXTRA
TUITION.

Oe

23¢

Corporate

stocks

(including

DOU}
Wace
6. Loans
and discourts
7. Bank premises owned
assets
1 - Other
12:

Total

Assets

$27,000.00

stock

of

Federal

Reserve

esdphastonisashbsnsuuaddavboredy
$890.70
overdrafts)
.................furniture and fixtures $1.00 -...
odecescecccnsecscsnscccnensereensencs

(including
$59,500.00,

27,000.0
5,869,259 '8¢
59,501.00
5,435.64
ST

....

$21,497,560.28
SC

18.
144
15.
16.
18.
19.
23.

LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corporations ....
Time deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corporations ........
Deposits of United States Government
(including postal savings)
Deposits of States and political subdivisions -...........22....0...cceeeeeeeeee
Other deposits
(certified and cashier’s checks, etc.) .........-......-.-Pi since Sides MA ap otha ancien geectadhatwaonsnak $20,246,701.78
Total
Deposits
Other
liabilities
LBS dikihak pobaambtebboebukotideckaetebsoobueksakesuh uimepuah helbiesoettliiden anes

24,

OCR]

SS

9,577,963.45
7,913,055.94
247,323.76
1,998,091.29
510,267.29
148,916.50
ST

Dita DURE

OA io sho dics actvote penned ic ebseusynetpnadnbbelued oy kaukes &lt;pauiginvedapuas $20,395,618.28
__—

1.G.A. Cane and Maple SYRUP
1.G.A. BARTLETT

PEARS

12-oz.

No. 22

Btl. 23¢

Tins 39¢

—_—

25.
26.

Capital Stock:
Surplus

SF

TIRSIVIGOT.

29.

Total

(c)

Common

DPORIUB

CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
stock, total par $200,000.00

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

200,000.00
800,000.00
101,942.05

iicckicidodalancganeceiceeees

LL

Capital

1,101,942.05

Accounts

ey

1.G.A.
Page

16

$0.

Super Mart
1848 FIRST St.
Picchietti

&amp;

Ori

‘Total:

Liabilities:

and

Capitals

SS

Accounts «&lt;x. sf

cll cceaawllkes $21,497,560.28
LL
cnt

MEMORANDA
31.

Assets

82.

purposes
(a) Loans

State

pledged

as

or

assigned

shown

above

to

are

of Illinois, County
of Lake,
I, M. C. Hart,
cashier of the

above

statement

Sworn
this
9th
(SEAL)

is

true

to

the

secure

after

liabilities

deduction

ss:
above-named

best

to and subscribed before me
day
of January,
1953.
KAY COLE, Notary Public

of

my

of

bank,

knowledge

and

for

reserves
do

other

of

solemnly

480,000.00
230,859.68

....
swear

that

the

and

belief.
M. C. HART, Cashier
Correct—Attest:
J. B. GARNETT
VALLEE O. APPEL
Cc. R. TORRENCE
Directors

Thursday, January

15, 1953

�Hat Fashion Study At YWCA

What is supreme
in your
affections?
Hear

A

Free Lecture Entitled,

Christian Science:

The Supremacy

of Spirit
by

structor for the course which will
begin January 28 at the “Y”’ from

YWCA

It is planned that each student
complete
three
hats
during
the
lessons, two of which will be devoted to the mastery of the technique
of using
various types
of
fabrics. The range of the program
will include
hats of straw cloth,
fabrics matching suits and dresses,

Hat

Classes

Highland Parkers will be given
an opportunity to make their own
Easter
bonnets
at a six weeks’
course of hat fashions
sponsored
by the YWCA.
Mrs. Emily Faulkner of Evanston will be the in-

1:30 to 4 p.m.

straw braid and
leaf chapeaux.

spring

flower

matter

what

you

want

C.S.,

of

London,

30th at 8:00

England

P.M.

First Church of Christ, Scientist
493

Hozel

Avenue,

Highland

Park,

Illinois

be
of-

*Member
The

First

of

the

Board

of

Church

of

Christ,

Lectureship
Scientist,

of
in

The

Mother

Boston,

Church,

Massachusetts.

to buy

or sell you'll find the Want-Ad
tion your best market

Lee,

and

Additional
information
may
obtained by calling the YWCA
fice at HI 2-0675.

No

Knox

Friday, January

A course in millinery art will be offered at the YWCA beginning January 28 to prospective Lily Daches or Mr. Johns.
The instructor is Mrs. Emily Faulkner of Evanston, right, who
adjusts Mrs, George S. Lyman Sr’s. hat, while Mrs. Harold V. Snyder gives her approval of the
chapeau.
Mrs. Faulkner will give a free, public demonstration of her work at the “Y” on
Wednesday at 1:30 p.m.

Straw And Needles
Will Be Used At

*Richard

|

place.

|

S
a
,
NG
qe UPEITOPA40% OFF le

__» GET LOCAL SERVICE
LOCALLY &lt;
Famous Makes Of Television &amp; Radios

BUY

Table Models — Combinations
Open Face Consoles
Half Door Consoles
Matching Bases

+

|

|

YOU
CAN’T
BUY
FOR
LESS

LIMED OAKS
BLEACHED MAHOGANY
HONEY MAPLES
WALNUTS
MAHOGANY

__ A hew Example

17° TABLE MODEL
Was $229.95
17” CONSOLE (With Phono &amp; A.M.) SEEN aeons let pene me ah Was $527.95
ran cialoe Wea leable tay Was $286.95
TABLE MODEL
sy
nein
dtbeitade,
WePaE
Weel
2c:
tak
mena
sl esas ee weak ale Was $575.95
COMBINATION
Was $449.95
COMBINATION

20”

21

]

a1

-

20th
Thursday,

First
January

Street
15,

Now $19995
Now $2 9995
Now

$22995

Now

$49995

Now $39995

Century Television &amp; Radio
OPEN

1858

»&gt;

1953

FRIDAYS ‘TIL 9

Highland

Park 2-0341
Page

11

�House Guests
| Mr.

and

Brother and Sister Return

Mrs.

James

J.

Cuniffe

To Eastern Colleges Recently

of
Sunset
road
had
as
recent
Miss Charlotte Cleary, daughter
guests Mrs. Cuniffe’s parents, the|of Mrs. Mansfield Ralph Cleary of
Martin J. Duffys of Louisville, Ky.|Sheridan
road,
recently returned

Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Prill

Alpha Omicron Pi
Alumnae Hold Meeting
A co-hostess at Tuesday
dinner
meeting
of North
alumnae of Alpha Omicron

ority

was

Mrs.

Henry

night’s
Shore
Pi sor-

H.

Erskine

of Sherwood Forest.
The
took place in the home

meeting
of Mrs.

Lyndale

Stephenson

Program
“walking

for the evening
rehearsal’’ of the

satire

“The

of

Flattering

George Kelly,
members.

enacted

Evanston.
was
a
one-act

Word,”
by

by

alumnae

to
N.

Marymount college, Tarrytown,
Y., where she is a sophomore.
Her brother, John, returned to
Georgetown
University
in Washington, D.C., where he is a fourth
year student. Both young
people
had been home for the Christmas
holidays.

§0 Shoy Say
HE BUTTED IN

Wiklox
INC.
9

FOOTWEAR,

Bett’s

335

Park Avenue

@

Glencoe,

@ GLENCOE

Illinois

2308

.

.

»

because

LOCAL TRADEMARKS, Inc.

he

couldn't

resist talking about the
friendly service at Eddie’s.
May we serve you?
SPECIAL THIS WEEK
Sweet &amp; Dry Vermouth
Straight Bourbon
Blends

Looking for Income?

Rum

Tasty

If you are one of the many investors for whom
income is an important consideration, along with
security, you will be interested in four common
stocks on which we have just prepared a special
memorandum.
These are all listed stocks, issues of long-established
businesses with good records as to earnings and
dividends and, in our judgment, with favorable
prospects for the future. Length of operations, and
current indicated yields on the individual stocks
are as follows:

i
|

Years in
Business

Discount
Seasonbyal
America’s Leading

Wines

EDDY'S
NT

Upholstery &amp; Rug Cleaners

SDBde

... Duracleaning
is recommended

8.00%

52
OE

7.50
8.75
7.50

*
7°

aie

Telephone: FRanklin 2-6100
Members
NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE
AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE
MIDWEST STOCK EXCHANGE
A. G. Becker &amp; Co.
120 South LaSalle Street, Chicago 3, Illinois

Name___
Address.

me, without

obligation

on my

part, a copy

by America’s

ad in January

120 South LaSalle Street, Chicago 3

send

HOUSE

of your

BEAUTIFUL

The finest upholstery, orientals, carpeting, twists . .. and
even antiques can now be SAFELY cleaned and revived.

Want to cut a smarter figure
in
the_
fashion
parade
EVERY day? Keep gala holiday dresses looking fresher
and precious woolens looking newer with our inexpensive dry cleaning.
Saves
your clothes,
saves your
clothes-budget.
We do a
thorough, CAREFUL job.

ALPHA

ETT Ayia

TAILOR
ee
TE

@

Duracleaning IS SAFE: No scrubbing . . No
shrinkage . . Rug sizing not disturbed.

@

Duracleaning REVIVES: Resilience is restored
to wool fibres. Pile unmats . . rises.
Color
tones

SLOW

12

reappear

(except

fabrics).

Duracleaning IS CONVENIENT: Furnishings
cleaned by professional Duracleaners in your
home. Use again same day.

@

MOTHPROOFED

SEASON

DISCOUNT

Phone

also, if desired.
... January 10%

DEERFIELD

Direct Chicago Phone

ed

faded

@

(no toll)

DURACLEAN
International

Page

W orld-wide
Service

SEE
Our full column

Com 00. a Oe

Please

oS
=

department stores.

We think these situations attractive. For details
use the coupon below, telephone or come in for a
copy of our Report
HN-31.

Report HN-31.

A

1 Se

foremost furniture and

Indicated Yield
in Excess of

45 years

Photo

Charles F. Prill and his bride, the former Caroline Stroud,
are at home on Burton avenue after a Wisconsin wedding trip.
Mrs. Prill is the daughter of Frederick F. Stroud and the late
Her marriage to the son of the
Mrs. Stroud of Burton avenue.
Carl Prills of New Lisbon, Wis., took place December 30 in
The Highland Park Presbyterian church.

Offices

.. . February 6%

444

..

. Ambassador 2-3222

GOMPANY
.

.

.

.

Deerfield,

Thursday, January

Illinois
15, 1953

�Diane Weeks Is
Named To College
Board of Magazine

‘Coordinated Interiors’
ls Topic of Talk

John V. Spachners Honor
Performing Artists of
Community Concert

Before Kappa Kappa

The

Miss
Diane
Langdon
Weeks,
“Coordinated
Interiors,” is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Francis topic of a talk to be given
by Mrs,
D. Weeks of 1919 Dale avenue, has Ralph Roscher next Thursday bebeen chosen to be a member of fore members of the North Shore
college Alumnae
national
Mademoiselle’s
association
of
Kappa
board. A freshman at Wellesley col- Kappa
will
group
The
Gamma.
lege, Wellesley, Mass., Miss Weeks
meet at 1 p.m. for a dessert lunchcompeted with 700 students from
John
of Mrs.
home
eon in the
colleges all over the country to Corley, 627
road, WinSheridan
netka. Mrs. Roscher will illustrate
win a place on the board.
As a college board member, she her talk with pieces of brass and
will represent Wellesley and report pewter, with fabrics, wallpaper and
to the magazine on college life and paint.
the college scene. She will comAmong Highland Park memplete three assignments that will bers of the organization are Meshelp her explore her interests and dames Albert J. Kurtzon of Delta
abilities in writing, editing, fash- road, Paul Phelps of Orchard lane,
ion, advertising or art in competi- George
of Pleasant
Harrison
D.
guest avenue, Norman Vance Jr. of Haw20
the
of
one
for
tion
editorships to be awarded by the
thorne lane; Robert F. Walker Jr.
magazine in May.
of Briar lane, Austin L. Wyman Jr.
The guest editors will be brought
to New York for four weeks next
June to help write, edit and illus1953 August
trate Mademoiselle’s
College issue. In addition to their
on the magazine they will
work
and
men
outstanding
interview
fields to
in their chosen
women
help clarify their career aims, will
visit fashion showrooms, publishing
agencies
advertising
and
houses
and will be the magazine’s guests
in a round of party and theatregoing.
Here’s new freedom

John

V.

Spachners

of Oak-

mont road and their son Warren,
a student at the University of Chicago,
are home
from a
trip to
Louisville,
Ky.
They
arrived
in
time to help her parents, the Her-

man Tellers of Chicago, celebrate
their 54th wedding
anniversary
the weekend of January 10.
The Spachners were hosts at a
party for Isaac Stern, violinist, and
his accompanist, Alexander Zakin,
following their performance for the
Community
Concert
association
last Friday night.
In
December,
the
Spachners
(Continued

on page

18)

of Lincoln avenue, Edwin M. Hadley of Kimball road, Clair Freeman
of St. Johns avenue and Richard
Campbell of Arbor avenue.

YOU’VE

GOT

TO

FEEL

The Clyde Van Heckes Have
Visitors From Mississippi
Mr.

and

Mrs.

of Jackson,
guests

of

Bayard

Van

Miss., were
his

uncle

for

Janis To Sgt. Dever

the house-

and

San

Betrothal Of Daughter

Hecke

aunt,

Mr.

and Mrs. Clyde Van Hecke of 411
Laurel avenue over the weekend.
Mrs. Thomas L. Mabry Jr. (Fay
Van Hecke) of Laurel avenue, and
her daughter, Melinda, 5, left last
Thursday

Orville Wesslings Tell

Juan,

Puerto

Rico, for a six-week visit with Mr.
Mabry’s mother, Mrs. Thomas L.
Mabry Sr.
Mr. Mabry will fly to
San Juan in three weeks to join

Mr. and Mrs. Orville K. Wessling of Glencoe dvenue have announced the engagement of their
daughter, Janis, to Sgt. 1/e Douglas
L. Dever. He is the son of Mrs.
Walter Marks of Grange avenue
and of Harry Dever of Waukegan.
Both
young
people
attended

Highland
Dever,
Percy

Park

High

school.

presently stationed
Jones hospital in

them for a three-week vacation before they return to Highland Park.

creek, Mich., was home during the

To Address

was

Mothers’

Guild

when

the

announcement

made.

i

A June wedding is planned.

The
Rev.
Joseph
G.
Phoenix,
C. M., will speak on the subject of
sex education tonight at 8 o’clock
when the Mothers’ guild of Immaculate Conception church holds its
Parents’ Night meeting. The guild

IT ...TO

holidays

hopes that all parents of the parish
will

attend,

especially

those

Mrs.
Howard
French
(Sally
Young) of Laurel avenue completed work
this month
at National
College
of
Education,
Evanston,
for a bachelor
of education
degree.
Mrs. French will be one of 24
graduating students honored at a
special
assembly
program
next
Thursday at the college, the oldest
private school in the nation devoted to training elementary
school
teachers. Dr. K. Richard Johnson,
president of the teachers’ college,
will address the graduates.

entirely

of riding

new

Mrs.

BELIEVE

Adam

C.

Bernardi.

IT

from

OTT

standard

lt

RR TRINT.
ATTNTN

Loa tiga tea tey Sate Mat AE

OY TA ‘4Ae

Ley Dye

Oyo
aie Ee

a

ei

*,

SSS

comfort!

If you’ve thought it takes gas-eating weight and
hard-to-park length to give real riding comfort
you ought to try this °53 Ford. For Ford’s new
Miracle Ride actually seems to lay a carpet of
smoothness even over the roughest roads. There’s

no bounce, pitch and sway to bother you, no uncomfortable roll on curves. Ford’s new Miracle Ride
marks a new era of riding comfort and quiet.
It’s another big reason why Ford is worth more
when you buy it . . . worth more when you sell it!

HI 2-3500
JOHN B. NASH CO.
1891

Sheridan,

Highland

Park
White sidewall tires optional at extra
accessories

Ste

Tha

84

Venue

and

trim

subject

to

cost. Equipment,

change

without

The New

notice.

Standard of the American

_

Road

.

awaboe

You’ve got to Value Check this new Ford’s 41
“Worth More” features to know why Ford is worth
more when you buy it...worth more when you sellit!

BETTER
COAL
MAKES A

80% less road shock! By increasing front wheel travel
and redesigning the rubber
compression bumpers, front
end road shock is reduced as
much as 80%. Springs are
tailored-to-weight of each
model, forbest riding comfort,
whichever model you buy.

Automatic Ride Control! Ford’s
Variable-Rate rear spring
suspension actually makes
the effective spring “‘stiffness” vary automatically as
road and load conditions
change. You get a smooth,
comfortable ride on boulevard or roughest back road.

In this new ’53 Ford you'll find not only a new concept of riding and driving comfort. . . you’ll find more
of the things you want and need than in any other
car in the low-price field.
You'll find the “Go” you need, in Ford’s high-compression V-8 and Six engines (both thrive on regular
gas). You'll find the all-round visibility . . . the easy
handling, braking and parking for today’s traffic. And
you'll appreciate beauty that “belongs,” wherever
you may drive. No wonder Ford is the New Standard
of the American Road.

All day comfort! Scientifically
designed contour seats, both
front and rear, have thick
foam rubber cushions. Nonsag spring construction is
firm yet resilient. Automatic
Posture Control provides the
most convenient seating position for all drivers.

9
rca.

499 VINE AVE.°*%. HI 20027

GREAT TV!
FORD THEATRE
Station WNBQ
8:30

Thursday,

January

15,

1953

Seeit... Walue Check it... Test Drive it

P.M., Thursday

1909

ST. JOHNS

‘

4

FORD

PURNELL
&amp; WILSON, INC.
Authorized Ford Dealer
AVE.

HIGHLAND

PARK

who

have teen-age children. Hostesses
will be Mrs. Renato Carani and

bounce, pitch and sway...
an

Sgt.

at the
Battle-

ew Lord Miracle Ride

Completes Work For
Degree At National
College Of Education

—

PHONE HI 2-0710
Page 13

�fet Dinner Will
=cede Fortnightly

Delta Zetas To: Meet

Highland Park alumnae chapter
members of Delta Zeta will meet
in the home of Mrs. Sidney Frisch.
256 Ivy lane, tomorrow from 3 to
5 p.m. The group will formulate
plans
for
the February
evening
party at the meeting.

rty On Saturday

s is the custom, a buffet dinner
precede the third in a series of

ive dances of

the

North

Shore

‘ertnightly, scheduled for Saturnight at Michigan Shores club,
nette. .

he executive

committee

of the

ror nightly will entertain members

and their guests at a cocktail party
prior

to the dinner

dance.

Strolling

nusicians have been engaged to
to the festivity of the occasion.
o-chairmen are Mr. and Mrs.
neis B. Stine of Wilmette, who
be in the receiving line SaturJohn

road,

the

perry

lane,

Griffiths

John
Mr.

of

Balsam

Delaneys

of Bar-

and

Francis

Mrs.

J. Nosek of Sunset road and the J.
9rdon

Smiths

of

Sheridan

road

Highland Park members of the
nightly, which has been sponng

subscription

dances

3

At Home: of Mes. Frisch

on

the

4

Give Joint Open

House

Cadet William Chaffee
Marches In Inaugural
Parade Next Tuesday
Marching in the Inaugural Parade Tuesday in Washington will
be Cadet William Chaffee, son of
the Franklyn W. Chaffees of Egandale

road.

man,

was

Cadet

Chaffee,

selected

John’s

North
Shore
for
more than 20
years.
The club has set February 21 as
the date for its next event, the Carration Ball, given to honor
past

convention of his fraternity, Delta
Kappa Epsilon. He is president of
De Pauw university’s chapter. Mr.
Chaffee
is a senior, majoring in
liberal arts
at
the
Greencastle,
Ind., school.

chairmen

to

academy,

St.

Miss Odette Seelig and Miss Sue
Rickles; both seniors at Highland
Park High school, entertained during the holidays at a joint open
house for over 100 guests at the
home of Miss Seelig’s parents, the
Arthur
Seeligs
of
Linden
Park
place. Miss Rickles is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. David Rickles of
Glencoe avenue.

Wis.,

Military

a fresh-

by his school,

march

representative
young

men

honor

guard

ernor,

Walter

in

Delevan,

the

academy’s

contingent.

will

be

part

The

of

the

of the Wisconsin

gov-

J. Kohler.

The Chaffees’ eldest son, Walter,
recently
where

of the Fortnightly.

returned
he

from

attended

the

the

Lake Forest College
Evening Session

capitol
national

Mr. and Mrs. William Prignano of Chicago have made
known the engagement of th eir daughter, Anna, to Joseph
Miss
Onesti, son of the John Onestis of Mulberry place.
Prignano

attended

in

schools

Chicago,

and

her

fiance

is a

He is in business
graduate of Highland Park High school.
The young people have not as yet set
here with his father.
a date for their wedding.

Like To
HERE

Women
SAVE

SECOND SEMESTER REGISTRATION:
FEBRUARY 2 AND 3
are open
In addition to many courses continuing from the first semester the following
to students registering for the first time:

of our regular savers are women

38%

ART: Ceramics, Drawing and Painting.

_°.

BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION: Beginning Accounting, Business
Organization.

women,

. business

students,

house-

They like to save here because
they enjoy our convenient location, our
wives.

EDUCATION: The American Public School.

GEOGRAPHY: World Regional Geography.

courteous

HISTORY: Europe Since 1939, American Diplomatic History
Since 1900.

treatment

than-average

MUSIC: Teaching of Elementary School Music.

each account.

NATURAL SCIENCE: Introduction to Biological Science.

your account.

and

the

better-

earnings

that we add to
Stop in today and open

PHILOSOPHY: Methods and Problems of Philosophy.
POLITICAL SCIENCE: American Foreign Relations.

@

$1 or More
Account.

@

Liberal Earnings Paid
Every Six Months

@

Savings Insured Safe Up
to $10,000.

PSYCHOLOGY: Industrial Psychology.
RELIGION: New Testament Life and Literature.
SECRETARIAL TRAINING: Business Communications.

SPEECH: Introduction to Speech.

ae
be
ea

For the advanced student the following courses are available:

Marketing
Advanced Accounting, C.P.A. Review, Problems of American Labor,
Theory,
Social
Novel,
rary
Contempo
Literature,
World
Principles and Problems,
Spanish Reading Course, Spanish Conversation and Composition.

Your

HIGHLAND PARK
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN ASS’N.

For Bulletin describing these courses in detail and full registration
particulars, write:

Dr. E. C. Reichert, Director of the Evening Session, Lake Forest College,
or phone Lake Forest 3100, Extension 23.

Starts

Established 1888
SECURITY
1811

SATISFACTION

SERVICE

HI 2-0361

St. Johns Ave.
Open

Fridays

’Till

9 P.M.

Thursday, January

15, 1953

�ee:

Wis

Coeoan

| Kappa Alpha Theta To

Wd

Hear Talk On

Holland

Reis

At Monthly Meeting

Ciloaha
x,

CVanbarger

Saturday

North
Alpha

Kibes

Wearing
a
costume
suit
of
heavenly blue satin brocade, Miss
Edna Elizabeth Carlson of Evans-

ton

became

the

bride

of

Eugene

Philip Ellenberger of Linden avenue Saturday at 4:30 p.m. in The
Highland
Park
Presbyterian
church. Her accessories were of a
matching
hue and she carried a
colonial bouquet. Dr. William At-

kinson

Young,

minister

of

the

church, officiated at the ceremony
which was performed in a setting
of white candelabra and mums.

Harold

King,

professor

of violin

at Southern Missouri State Teachers
college
in
Springfield,
sang
two selections and played a violin
solo before the service.
E. B. Naselius of Washburn, Wis.,

gave

brother-in-law,

bride’s

the

marriage.

her

in

the

daughter

is

Carlson

Miss

late

of the

Mr.

and

Mrs. Albert C. Carlson of Washburn
and
is a teacher
at Elm
Place school.
of
Anderson
J.
William
Mrs.
of
matron
was
avenue
Glencoe
honor in a costume suit of royal
with pearls
blue taffeta trimmed
and rhinestones. With it she wore

navy

blue

accessories

and

Shore

alumnae

Theta

and

bers’

husbands

home

of Mrs.

of

Kappa

alumnae

mem-

will
Sam

gather

at

the
their

Mrs.
John Kuiper
of Lambert
Tree road is assisting on the committee arranging for a talk on “‘Holland
and
Hollanders’” which will
describe customs and points of interest
in
that
country.
Robert
Hechtermans,
trade commissioner
for the Netherlands,
will deliver
‘he informal
telk
»nd will
also

a film on Holland.

There

the

will

be

refreshments

after

meeting.

Logan street; the bridegroom’s son,
Frederick,
a junior
at Highland
Park High school, William Hazlett
of Evanston, William J. Anderson
of Glencoe avenue, and Miss Carl-

son’s nephew,
Chicago.

Of Wadia
oh ohn

(eevee | For Southern

Botrothal

Mr.

Glenn

Naselius

of

eens
Wasinells

and

Following
a reception
in
the
Highland Park Woman’s club, the
couple flew to Delray Beach, Fla.,
for a two
weeks’
wedding trip.
They
will
make
their home
on
Linden avenue.

Mr. and Mrs. Vito Leone of Ottawa, Ill., have announced the engagement of their daughter, Therese Ann, to A 3/ec John Masinelli,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Masinelli
of Michigan avenue.
Their betrothal was revealed at
a gathering in the Leone home on
Christmas Day. The bride-to-be received her education at St. Columbus’ parochial school and was graduated from Marquette High school
in Ottawa.
Her fiance, a graduate of Highland Park High school, is presently stationed at Limestone, Maine,
with the air force.
No wedding date has been
decided upon as yet.

Entertain

and

Mrs.

Cruise

Alfred

A. Rich of

Dell lane will leave tomorrow for
New Orleans where they will sail
Saturday on the South American
liner Italia for the West
Indies

Parnell in Evan-

ston
next
Wednesday
for
regular monthly meeting.

show

iia

South

America.

The: James

will

join

the

two

Mr.

and

weeks’

Mrs.

Rich

holiday.

No matter what you want to |
“Hard-to-find” items there at
saving prices!

J.

FOR YOUR
CONVENIENCE . ; ;
THE

EVANSTON
~
AIRLINES
~~
TICKET
$
OFFICE
|
OFFERS
YOU

TICKETING TO ANY
DESTINATION * WAITING ROOM © LIMOUSINE~
SERVICE TO THE AIRPORT
a
SCHEDULE

Houseguests

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Clarkson of
Hazel avenue
have
had
as their
houseguest, Mr. Clarkson’s brother,
Harold,
of Grover
City,
Pa.
He
spent
the
holidays here and
attended the furniture convention in
Chicago last week.

INFORMATION

°

AMERICAN AIRLINES, INC. * BRANIFF INTERNATIONAL AIRWAYS, INC,
CAPITAL AIRLINES © DELTA AIR LINES, INC. © EASTERN AIR LINES, INC.
,
UNITED AIR LINES
4
Corner Church Street.and Orrington Avenue. Hours: 8:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. athe

carried

a hand bouquet of pink camellias.
Ernest Ellenberger of Brookville,
Ohio, was his brother’s best man.
Ushers
were
Lester
Laegeler
of

DO YOU KNOW
That we prepare in our
own kitchen just wonderful
food to take home.
Roast
Chicken

Beef,
Pies,

Baked
Chop

Ham,
Suey,

Turkey, Shrimp Salad,
Creamed Chicken and _ assorted salads daily?
We will prepare any casserole to your order.
Join the crowd and take
advantaae of these TV takeouts, you will come back
again and again.
NORTH

SHORE

CATERING

co.
Division of
Community Service Liquors
Illinois Rd. &amp; Western
Telephone L. F. 174 or 175
Free Phone: Enterprise 1155
DAILY

DELIVERY

Katharine

bb -

SECRETARIAL
@ Never enough Gibbs-trained
secretaries to meet the demand.
Courses for high school and
private
school
graduates
and
college women.
Five-school personal placement service.

DE

our annual

cotton

dress
sale
three days only—today, friday and
Q95

Catalog: Executive Dean
51 E. Superior St., Chicago

hold your resort packing till you see

11

T1985

13”

7-3306

Other Gibbs Schools: New York
Boston
Montclair, N. J,
Providence

Ce

designs

nr

hie ;

TELEVISION
AND
RADIO SERVICE

saturday

crisp

EVANSTON: HIGHLAND PARK

for resorting

chambrays,

in

misses’,

$1

off

on

and

a fashionable

broadcloths,

women’s
all higher

and

Evanston

store

hours,

9 to 5:30

=

Mondays and

Phone

Highland

Park

store

hours,’9

to

5:30

Thursday,

January

= |
15,

sizes

cottons

summer!

ginghams

(come

during

early

this

gdh

ALSO BENDIX
APPLIANCE SERVICE

HI 20609

‘shirtings,

junior

priced

next

1953

;
ae

197s

Thursdays,

Monday:.through
CEPT

FET

‘
CS

9 to

9

Saturday
rg

sale

and

piques!

for

yours)!

—
4

�Mostly

for WOMEN

Maternity

Cui

WH

Open

olment

shin

At

Annual

Caais

ah inthein

Maternity Center workers will officially open their annual
enrollment drive with a kick-off luncheon January 29 in the
Casino. Mrs. John Andrews King is to be hostess of the annual luncheon.

Culake Woleben And
hn

WY

Sullccn

et

Cel. 14 Wedding Date
Miss

Eulalie

Woleben,

of the

Stanley

Allan

Wolebens

John

Wallace

Winnetka,
livan

of

cided

and

Brittany

upon

date

daughter

road

February

Sul-

have

de-

as

the

14

for their marriage.

of

Their

en-

Twenty-two
women
from
the
North Shore met yesterday at the
home
of
Mrs.
William
Stebler,
Hazel
avenue,
to
organize
two
local teams for the 1953 drive.
One team is to be headed jointly by Mrs. Stebler and Mrs. Adolph

Frankel of Lakeside place. Mrs.
Robert L. Johnson of Deerfield,
will be chairman of the second
group.
.
During the February campaign,
some 400 volunteer workers will
seek to enroll 1,000 new contributors to the center, a unique social
service
organization
which
delivers babies in the homes of needy

December at a party in her parents’

Chicago. mothers, trains doctors
and medical students
in obste-

home.

trics,

gagement

was

The

announced

bridegroom-elect,

lives with six other
a house on Brittany
son

of

early

Dr.

and

in
who

bachelors in
road, is the

Mrs.

M.

Wallace

Sullivan of Marcellus, N. Y.
The Rev. Thomas J.
perform the ceremony

in Faith, Hope
‘Winnetka.

Burke
at 11

will
a.m.

and Charity church,

Miss Woleben has asked her sister, Mary, to be maid of honor.
Bridesmaids
are Miss Jean Armstrong of Winnetka, Mrs. Thomas
A. Reynolds Jr. of Northfield, and
Miss
Quinn
Ellis of Kenilworth.
Dr.

Edward

brooke,

Me.,

Sullivan

will be

of

best

West-

man

for

his brother, and Robert Feeney, a
cousin from Syracuse, N. Y., is to
be one of the ushers.
Paul Armstrong of Winnetka, John Munson

of the Brittany road address, and
Stacy Hill of Libertyville, formerly

of

Highland

Park,

will

also

usher.
After

a

wedding

trip

to

Mexico

City, Mexico, the couple will make
their

home

temporarily

in Winnet-

ka.

Q ndidly

and

search,

engages

Last

.year,

in

medical

the

center

livered
about
3,500
babies
trained more than 300 medical
and women.
Mrs.
J.
Bernard
Mullen,

chairman,

and

Mrs.

re-

deand
men
Jr.,

Vernon

Ar-

mour, co-chairman of the enrollment drive, attended the meeting at
Mrs. Stebler’s home.
Serving on Mrs. Johnson’s team

will

be

women,

three
Mrs.

Ward

other

Deerfield

Gauntlett,

Thomas C. Rogan and Mrs.
ard R. Wolfe.
;
The team headed by Mrs.

Mrs.

K.

Hardacre,

Mrs.

Mrs.

Edward

Annual Meeting

Maa Chuster , oheey

Mrs.

place,

L.

L.

J.

Howe

president

of

of

Ashland

the

Arden

Shore association, will preside at
the
organization’s
54th
annual
meeting Wednesday in the Woman’s Athletic club.
Jim
Hurlbut,
news
commentator, will give
the
running
com-

mentary

for

the

new

color

“The
Story of Arden
be shown for the first
sociation members.

film,

Shore,”
time to

The
group
will
elect
and hear annual reports.

to
as-

officers

Other Highland
Park members
of the association are Mrs. Harry
A. Sellery of Bronson lane, honorary
member
of the
board;
and
Mrs. Charles Bates and Mrs, Henry
Schroeder, co-chairmen of the Ravinia committee. Mrs. Herbst heads
the
Highland
Park
auxiliary
of
Arden Shore.

Albert Picks Jr. To Be
In Washington Tuesday
For The Inauguration
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Albert
Pick Jr.
of Vine
avenue
are
among
the
North
Shore
residents who
have
made plans to be in Washington,
D. C. on Tuesday for the inauguration
of
President-Elect
Eisenhower.
During
their
stay,
the

Fran-

Ball as the guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Brownell Jr.
Among the parties they will go
to while in the capital is a banquet
at the Chevy Chase club honoring
political leaders of Ohio, including
Senator Robert Taft, who will attend, as will Mrs. Taft.

Robert

J.

Wiss

Picks will
and
will

R.

Harring, Jr., Mrs. Henry H. Hixson, Mrs. S. Parker Johnston, Jr.,
Bunny
Miss
Kerber,
Betty
Miss

Knox,

Mrs. Howe To Preside
At Arden Shore’s 4th

Rich-

kel and Mrs. Stebler will include
Mrs.
George
O.
Strecker,
Lake
Forest, and the following Highland
Park women: Mrs. Albert Y. Bingham, Mrs. Frank Driggs, Mrs. Gil-

bert

Luyogemats — Weddings — Cab Ne

Lauesen,

Mrs.
V. Edward
Lawrence,
Mrs.
Robert F. Maher, Mrs. J. M. Maxwell, Mrs. Joseph E. Reeves, Mrs.
Karl
Mrs.
and
D. Stodder
John
H. Velde.

Attend

stop at the Lee House
attend
the
Inaugural

Rose

Bow!

To Wed Here une 13
Mr. and Mrs. Lester G. Britton
of Sheridan
road
announced
the
engagement of their daughter, Barbara, to Chester K. Lacy, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Chester C. Lacy of

Harrison, Neb., at a New Year’s
Eve party in their home.
The
Very Rev. Charles U. Harris will
perform
the
June
13
in
church.

wedding
Trinity

ceremony
Episcopal

Miss Britton, a graduate of Highland Park High
school, met Mr.
Lacy when they were students at
Grinnell college, Grinnell, Ia.
Mr.
Lacy was graduated from Grinnell
and
Miss
Britton completed
two
years there before going to California for a year’s study of modern
dance at the Harriett Ann
Gray
school.
They were dancing partners at Grinnell.
The
young
people
are now
at
school at the University of Nebraska in Lincoln where Miss Britton
is a member of the junior class.
Her fiance is studying law and will
be graduated in 1954.
They will
both return to college after their
marriage in June.

Richard Harza Plans
Ski Jaunt Next Month
Richard Harza, just back from
a week’s skiing at Arapahoe basin,
Colorado, will leave next month to
follow the sport at European re-

sorts.

He

and

a friend, Jack

Sny-

der of Evanston, will fly to Switzerland.
They are also planning to
visit ski resorts in Austria during
a month’s stay abroad.

Game

Mrs.
Willard
Ewing
of
Lakeside place and her son, Scott, recently
returned
from
the
West
where they stopped at the Grand
Canyon
and at Pasadena for the

Mrs. Morrison Beers, co-chairman of the
evening, and George Maaske dance to the
an’s club annual holiday dinner dance which was music of Billy Roberts and his orchestra.
neld recently in the Ravinia Village house. Mrs, W. The club also sponsored the Holly Ho p for
Nicock Johnston of Marion avenue was chairman of teen-agers December 29 at the Vi lage
and Mrs. Gordon Leonard of Pleasant
venue were among the diners at the Ravinia’s Wo-

Page 16

Britton

Rose

Bowl

game.

On

home

they

toured

Santa

and
San
sophomore
school.

their

way

Barbara

Francisco.
Scott
at Highland Park

is
a
High

Color Slides Of
Famous Gardens To
Be Shown At Guild
Mrs. M. Ralph Cleary’s home on
Sheridan road will be the setting
for a meeting of the Garden Guild
of Highland Park on Monday when
three Lake Forest women will show
color slides of gardens in France
and England.
Members

attend

may

the

invite

1 p.m.

guests

luncheon

to

meet-

ing.
The

beautiful

Chateau

gardens

Villandry

in France,

which

near

were

of

the

the

Loire

begun

in the

14th century, will be shown in
color slides by Mrs. Thomas A. ©
Connors, who took her photographs
in

early

summer

Botsford

of

Young’s

late summer

1952.

Mrs.

slides

are

tour

she

garden

the same year in France.
of the
British

gardens
estates,

Charles

plete

the program.

Mrs.

E.

Garden

Mrs.

S. DeLong,

Worthington

avenue

a

made

Showing

of several famous
photographed
by

Mrs.

Glencoe

B.

of

will comWalters

of

is president of the

guild.

Robert

Farrell

Will

Attend Inauguration With
The George Streckers
Mrs. Robert O. Farrell of North
Deere
Park
drive
will travel to
Washington,
D. C., tomorrow
to
attend the presidential inauguration on Tuesday and the Inauguration ball that night.
She will

accompany

the

George

O.

Streck-

ers of Lake Forest, who formerly
lived
in
Highland
Park.
Mrs.
Strecker and Mrs. Eisenhower grew
up together in Denver and have
corresponded and visited one another through the years.
When
the festivities
in Washington are over, Mrs. Farrell will
go on to Philadelphia to spend a
day with friends and then up to

New

York

before
Park.

she

for

several

returns

to

days’

stay

Highland

Speaking—

Mr.

e party.

Wathavi

M. Warner Turriff and Mrs. Robert Clarkson chat at the
Snowmen and glittery Christmas ornaments
dinner table.
Committee members included Mrs.
decorated the room.
James Snow, Mrs. Richard Henschen, Mrs. Robert P. Palmer,
Mrs. Frank Andrews and Mrs. John Armstrong.

house.
Thursday, January

15, 1953

�Annaince Baath
Of hss Couan Ta
Raymond

hi

thony

Of North Shore

Wiss Rosemary

The annual Delta Gamma Night
club will be given Saturday eve-

oh

ning,
Mr.

and

Mrs.

Jesse

Cowan

of

Glencoe announce the engagement
of their daughter, Joellyn Sue, to
Raymond
J. Anthony, son of the
Raymond B. Anthonys of Kimballwood lane.
Miss Cowan was graduated from
the University of Missouri at Columbia where she was a member of
Alpha
Epsilon
Phi
sorority.
She
has been pursuing a career in personnel work
with a Chicago
department store.
Her fiance attended Purdue university, Lafayette,
Ind., and was
graduated
from Lake
Forest college. He was recently placed on
inactive duty
after two years
of
service with the rank of lieutenant
in the naval air corps.
Mr.
Anthony is presently engaged in busi-

ness With his twin brother,
R.

of

Orchard

Joseph

Carlos

h
The

i
senior

Prospect

h
Thomas

avenue

have

Vik i

f |i
of|ings,

as ue,

CA

CANDID
WEDDINGS

Neb., ee for

several

28,

in

the

oO

grand

/
eanen
He Be

ballroom of the Sheraton hotel by|

Mr. and Mrs. Peter N. Jans

the active chapter at Northwestern | Evanston have made known the

Ros

to

ies

and the North Shore juniors.
field Sheahen,
An invitation is being extended | Mrs. Lloyd W.
all

Delta

Gammas

in

the

Chi-|

son of Mr. _
Sheahen of B

Pall road.

cago area to attend the dance, the}
A graduate of Immaculate C
proceeds of which will be used to| ception academy in Davenport,
further the Delta Gamma National| Miss
Jans
attended
Marqu
project which is sight conservation | university in Milwaukee
and
and aiding the blind.
Miss Eliza-|now a student nurse at St.
beth Rademacher of Sheridan road|cis hospital in Evanston.
is on the entertainment commitMr. Sheahen is a HighlandP;
tee.
High school graduate. He recei
Among the beneficiaries of the| his degree in sociology from
sorority are the Hadley School of|quette and is presently statio

Correspondence
Sight Saving room

in

Winnetka,
at Haven

the|at

Fort

school,|He

Evanston, which is attended by}
children from
the whole
North|
(Continued on page 22)

Sill, Okla., with the ar

entered

the

army

last

ember.
A wedding date has not yet
decided upon.

b

COMMERCIAL

se
Fe
&gt;

o
v
s

3

=

eo

section is filled

The Want-Ad
being

made | interesting facts and golden
tunities. Don’t miss it!

eh.

so Pg
T0GR,.

RE

Shreveport, La
Tentative plans are
for a spring wedding.

INE

beees

4Fon OF Yr

PERCY

H. PRIOR,
Diskin stvteratie
hid

JR.

599PHONE
ROGER HI WILLIAMS
2-3199

days’ SEstay

last week.

SUNLAND
On

Pp Lawiil

to

iteints

that

you’d

deck
know

chair or on tropic
her at a glance,

sa

tho

e"

far, far from home.

Mh. Michacl

SuburbaGal

KNOWS

right, so—comfortably,

her

wardrob

smugly conscic

of it—she enjoys her trip to the utmost.
She wears

formerly with

Talk:

of

the

Saks

Fifth

crisp cottons for a morning

stroll

for after-dark

part

Prints,

Town

shantungs,

casual

silks

more

serve

dressy

her

occasio

And she’s extra proud of her ultra-glamo
formals. Just the right bathing

&amp;

Avenue

flatters

her

figure

by

day,

and

snug topper protects her against chill evening:
is now

associated

Yes,

with

SuburbaGal’s winter vacation
reflects her distinctive tastes.

tell she’s chosen

She

See

of

wardre
You

wisely, and that she’s

expert fashion counsel. You might
that both the counsel and the clo’

Canton:

came from Hilborn’:
HOSIERY

aka

Eero
wet
SQ

me
7

G4

af

en-

university assisted by the Evanston | gagement of their daughter,
North Shore alumnae association|mary
Loretto,
to Gordon

iene
ts

ans

pe

Photo

houseguest, Mrs. Thomas Creigh
Jr., who traveled here from Hast-

igh
Creighs
had

@

@

Joellyn Sue Cowan
Thomas Creighs Sr. Are
Hosts To Daughter-in-Law

PORTRAITS

February

as
oraon

lane.

Miss Cowan is also a twin. Her
sister, Mrs. Samuel Freund Loeb,
the former Joanne Cowan, lives in

@

DM ts.

Club To Aid Blind

Koad

at

Pik

B

Moahis

for an appointment
Call

ho - 3335
have

DISTINCTIVE

FASHIONS

FOR

MORE

chosen

THAN

Hilborn’s:

20

YEAI

c

�WOMAN’S CLUB PROGRAM INCLUDES
FILM, RECITAL, TALK BY REPORTER
Jerry Joswick will present a new motion picture, “A Land-

lubber Goes to Sea,” when the Highland
convenes

at 2 p.m. on Tuesday.

This

picture is based upon

Park Woman’s

his action packed

club

experiences

with Col. John Craig in and around lower California during
the past summer.
As a motion picture photographer, Mr Joswick spent two
and
II

one-half
as

combat

years

in

World

cameraman

Eu-

the
her

E. S. Beck
series
of

quack

award in 1947 for
articles
exposing

doctors.

She

and

her

hus-

band, Russel Ogg, a photographer.
are graduates of the University of
Missouri. They spent one and one
half
years
on
magazine
assignments such as Readers Digest and
Country
Gentlemen,
doing
free
lance writing and picture taking.
*

Miss

The Barrington

*

Browning

a

handles

special

Rest Home

145 WEST MAIN STREET
BARRINGTON, ILLINOIS
exclusive

licensed

ternal

E.

grandparent

Benson

of

St.

is

Mrs.

Johns

K. Barker

Norman

boy and girl, were
in Highland Park hosand Mrs. James W.
1544 McCraren road.
been
named
James
Judith Ann. The maAstor

avenue.|

Paternal
grandparents
are
Mrs.
Ruth S. Bowles of Central avenue
and J. H. Bowles of Chicago.

War

in

rope and Africa. He was a color
motion
picture
camera
operator
with the U. S. Air Force at the
Bikini atom bomb tests in 1946.
At 10:30 a.m. Mrs. Roy H. Olson.
chairman of home and education,
has procured
Norma Lee
Browning, reporter for a Chicago newspaper, who will tell some of her
experiences.
Miss
Browning
was
winner
of

An

Bowles
Twins,
a
born Friday
pital to Mr.
Bowles of
They
have
Lyman and

home

for convalescents,

chronics,

cardiacs, diabetic, senile and the aged.
Enjoy home like
Excellent meals
surroundings and efficient nursing care.
served in rooms under the supervision of a dietician.
Private and semi-private rooms and small wards.
Excellent Transportation
One block west of the Northwestern Station
Two blocks west of the Northwest Highway Route (14)
We welcome a visit and inspection
For rates and other information call or write to the
superintendent.
BARRINGTON 1410

news
assignments,
writes feature
stories, covering everything
from
murder trials to fashion shows. In
1951 her reports included her experiences
at U. N. Headquarters
and the visit of Queen Elizabeth
II, then Princess of England, and
her husband to Washington, D.C.
The Collector’s Study group is
serving luncheon at noon. Reservations must be made by tomorrow
evening with Mrs. David Sanders,
chairman, at HI 2-0008; Mrs. Clayburn
Jones,
HI
2-6884,
or
Mrs.
Charles Mason, HI 2-2398.
At
12:45 Miss Mitzi Kinnucan
pianist, will give a recital. A Chicagoan, Miss Kinnucan has recently returned from an eastern tour
and will leave again in February
for additional concerts in Washington; . D.C.
Tea will be served following the
afternoon’s progrem.

J. V. Spachner
(Continued

from

page

13)

with their daughter, Carole, who
studies
at
Sarah
Lawrence,
traveled to New York for a scholarship benefit program given by the
artists who have appeared in the
Aspen
(Colo.) festival during the
summers since 1949.

Percy

H.

Prior

Jr.

Photo

Norman K. Barker and his bride, the former Dorothy J.
Froelich, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Froelich of
Ravine drive, are at home in lowa City, lowa, after a wedding
trip

to

New

Orleans.

Their

marriage

was

solemnized

De-

cember 27 in The Highland Park Presbyterian church.
Mr.
Barker is the son of the Ernest C. Barkers of Lockport, III.
|

/child is Susan, 7. Mrs. Aubrey is

Aubrey
Mr.

a step in the

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right direction

and

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wonderful

milk and many more.
Change to Wanzer and you'll stay with Wanzer. Everybody
does! Try Wanzer’s home delivery service for just 10 days
and see for yourself.

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Delco-Heat
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Delco Heat!

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Here is real General Motors value !
The dependable, economical
Delco-Heat Conversion Oil Burner
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Thaxter

Delco-Heat Conversion

No milk can match that fine Wanzer flavor, that

In his green truck
handy, spacesaving Wanzer square bottles—but a great store of other
fresh dairy foods: cream, butter, cottage cheese, eggs, butter-

Calif.,

Phyllis

Hazel
avenue
and
St. Felix Thaxter and
of Portland, Me.

Wanzer richness.

will be at your doorstep tomorrow.

Aubrey

chosen
the
name
James
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of
for their second child born Janu-| Judge Sidney
ary 5 in Van
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he’ll have not only famous Wanzer Milk—in

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Yes, changing to Wanzer Milk is a big step in the right
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2B Gi

Mo OU Se

Zt

Thursday, January

15,1953

�a

+

Next Wednesday Is
Clean-up Day At
The Thrift Shop
The

Thrift

avenue

will

Wednesday

shop
be
for

clean-up.

Mrs.

Kimball

road,

at

675

closed
the
F.

Plans Potluck

all day

next

winter

Carpenter

president

of

of

the

Thrift Shop board, and her officers
will spend the day cleaning house,
sorting merchandise and bringing
out a new assortment of clothes.
When
the shop reopens Thursday
morning,
the
shelves’
will
be
stocked with new merchandise.
Last week the board sent letters
to all persons whose donations to
the shop during the year amounted
to more than $10, stating the total
of
their
donations
and_
which
amount is an allowable deduction
in computing their income tax for
1952. “It is understood by donors
that they must accept the shop’s
valuations of things brought to be
sold at the shop and not the value

which

they

themselves

might

Luncheon

Mrs. Samuel Martin of Green
Bay road is a member of the Moth-

Central

annual
B.

St. George Mothers’ Club

put

ers’ club
in

of St. George

Evanston,

luncheon

Monday

presidents

of the

and

Martin’s

Mrs.

is a senior

High

planning

at St.

to

a_

HP Woran’s Club
Plans Fashion

Plan Buffet Supper

Show January 27

school
potluck

honor

organization.
son,

Chicago-North Shore
Chi Omega Alumnae

past
Mr.

Richard,

George.

Mrs.

Robert

avenue

(HI

and

honor

to

be

uled to take
the
school.

in

the

members

are to be hostesses of the

ton

hotel,

Dr.

on

it,” says Mrs. Carpenter.
It is through the generosity of
its donors
that
the Thrift Shop
has had such a successful. year. All
profits of the shop go to charity
and the shop is managed by three
supporting
groups:
Northwestern
University Settlement, Infant Welfare
and
the
Woman’s
auxiliary
of Highland Park hospital.

husbands
at

Crest
G.

Chi

is

who

is

Omega

spring
Stevens

attendance
Helsinki.

of

of

will

Ev-

physical
North-

speak
and.

Mrs.

member

of

alumnae

group,

tours

at the

to Europe

culminated

1952

the

Olympics

annual

given

has

fashions
in

Louise
of the

club
with

own

Mrs.
of

the

charge

the

assisted
ner.

Table

in

may

be

Edgar
Park

will

show

the

of

the

some

party.
Mrs.
with

is

in

will

be

Walter

Alfred

reservations,

made

chairman

She

Mrs.

any

at $5 each,
of the

se

INCORPORATED

EVANSTON
PL
(Next to Varsity Theat.)
Other Stores in.
name OPN

NL

STORE
Mere at
© THE

com-

Make
Ads

@

No

... it gives you the feeling all Chrysler
owners feel: that of complete car control!

wonder!

paper

week

before

aside!

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@ ...

it gives you the option of Full-time Power
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The beautiful

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CHRYSLER

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MESIROW
1740 FIRST ST.
Thursday,

January

15, 1953

MOTORS,

SIDE

it a habit to read the Wa

every

ono

@ No wonder! . . . it’s a perfect sanctuary of steel.
Big. Sturdy. Safe.

LOOP

® SOUTH

A.

B. Gard-

mittee.

The MAN-SIZED car that
WOMEN

UE

charge.

committee,

by

and

in

in

Simpler,

finance

Schwalm

the

models.

Charles
of

finance

a showing

Pirie

along

Where society's
best dressed men
rent theirs—
Cutaways - Strollers
Single and
Double
Breasted
Tuxedos
All Accessories

1 p.m.

Mghland

Members
store’s

the

from

store

Mrs.

by

at

planned

RENT YOUR
FORMAL

club

dessert-

show

fashions

on

a

which

committee,
of

senior

summer

27.
event,

A.

also

its

The

Orring-

Woman’s

fashion

January

the

He

student

and

Sunday

the

Park

‘present

with
of

1952.”

will

bridge

planned
guests,

Kranze,

university,

supervised
last

of

sup-

Highland

that

department

“Olympics
Kranze,

and

chairman

education
western

junior

buffet

7 p.m.

room

of

Evanston.

Leon

anston,

alumnae

25. The event,

given

Forest

Chicago-North

members’

per January

of

is in charge

the

Omega

senior

to

day.

for

Chi

Each mother will bring her favorite dish to the luncheon, ‘schedplace at 1:30 p.m. at
Officers
and
board

2-4203),

reservations
Shore

Churchill

Inc.
HI 2-2500

laying

�DalPonte House Guest

Raa

Mr. and Mrs. Lewis P. DalPonte
of Onwentsia avenue, have as their
Suest Mrs. DalPonte’s mother, Mrs.

Madeline
Mo., who
months.

cn

Of

oe: fure

repare

Sos

Show

Guiliano of St. Louis,
will visit here for two

.

Things
By

I Remember

Harry

Levinson

On
a
program

television
detective
not long ago, the ob-

ject

the

of

hero’s

exciting

chase was a scientist, reputed
to have found a formula for
synthetic
diamonds.
In
the

end,

however,

the

man

of sci-

ence turned to double-dealing
with’ the “bad guys.” He was
done away with (in approved
TV
fashion)
and
his
secret
formula died on his lips.
As an avid TV fan, I must
confess that I predicted this
outcome.
The
script
writers
had
no alternative,
you
see,
since there really never has

been found a source of synthetic

diamonds!

This may seem strange in
view of the other tremendous
strides
made
by
science
in
juggling the building blocks of
nature. Yet diamonds remain
unchallenged
as the
hardest
and most imperishable of all]
minerals.
What’s more, their production is a real “exclusive” of
Mother Nature. We don’t even

Know

how

diamonds

While

most

horsemen

are

sighing

for

the

gay

spring

weather when they can ride again, a group of Highland Park
youngsters, keeping in trim at the Royal Oak Stables on County

Line

road, plans to give two horse shows this winter.

“‘naelman

with

Midnight,

two of the young
naoor track.

and

Lisa

Spertus

with

John

Chester,

are

riders who enjoy working out on the heated

John’s brother, Steve, holds Venus’ lead in picture above.
The

two

boys,

six years

old,

are

among

the

boys

and

girls,

from beginners to advanced riders, planning the winter shows.
They and other juniors of the Highland Park area will be on
a committee which will sponsor a large outdoor show in the
spring.

are

formed. Chemists tell us that
a diamond is pure carbon, completely crystallized. We know,
too, that the creation of a diamond possibly took millions of
years during which time tremendous
heat
and
pressure
were exerted far underground.
But we can’t go much beyond
this
basic
explanation.
The fact that miners in South
Africa today must crush and
sort about 35 tons of rock to
find as much as % earat of
diamonds suitable for jewelry
proves that nature wasn’t extravagant in her production.
Actually it was the charac-

teristic of hardness,

not beau-

ty, that first attracted men to
diamonds.
Ancients
believed
that
a diamond
worn
as
a
talisman could not only pro-

tect them
could
bring

in battle, but that it

cure diseases
longer life.

Then

the hidden

monds
was
their
mining

dustry

and

even

fire of dia-

discovered
and
became
an in-

in India

some

time

be-

tween 800 and 600 B. C. The
fabulous
stones
became
the
basis
of
national
treasures.
Rulers of India raised armies
and launched wars of conquest
based
on
chests
filled
with
diamonds.
The gem you wear today has

indeed
a heritage
old and a story to
thing of fiction.

centuries
rival any-

Under the
the youngsters
them many an
is shown astride

Sgt. George Weil Jr. To
Return From Germany Soon
Sgt.
return

George

Weil

the

of this

craft
ary.

howse

4

of jewels

Jewelry from $50 te $150,000

789-43 North Clark Street, Chicage
Page

20

March
Mrs.

with
from

He

Jr.

Germany,
the

Artillery,

charged

Your

end

Weisbaden,
stationed

+

guidance of Robert Breen, owner and manager,
now go through the paces they hope will win
honor in horse shows to come.
Jean Gillispie
Shelby.

entered

to

month

from

where

he

5th
army
the

David

expects

and
the

Returns To Air Base

is

Anti-Air-

to

be _
in

dis-

Febru-

service

in

1951.
Weil

their son,
their home

(Margaret

Rouse)

and

George Thomas,
make
with the senior George

Weils at 659 West Park avenue.

M.

Coxes

T.

Cox,

of

son

Glencoe

of

his parents.

the

Park

In the navy

High

willingly

is a pat from

resix

school

Named

Mr.
of

and

2005

St.

Mrs.

Patrick

Johns

E. Moroney

avenue

are

an-

nouncing the birth of a son Friday
in Highland Park hospital. They
have a daughter, Patricia, who is
5.

Former

City

Commissioner

Ed-

ward J. Moroney and Mrs. Moroney
of
Glenview
avenue
and
Mrs.
Nellie Neumeyer of Boston, Mass.,
are

the

grandparents.

last

June.

Bill Cox, his brother, returned
to Todd school for Boys last week

enough
young

for the

Susan

cameraman

Spertus.

Others

in the 6 to 15 age group of riders not pictured here are Jean
and Dan Pollack and Donald Hecht.

David

avenue,

months, David has completed basic
training at San Diego, Calif., and
now
is in Pre-flight
Air
Force
Training
school
in
Oklahoma,
where he will train for three more
months.
He was graduated from

Highland

poses

his reward

Moroney

turned to Norman, Okla., last week
after spending a seven-day leave

with

Remember
when

after the holiday vacation.
a high
school
freshman
school in Woodstock.

He
at

is
the

To Student Committee

James W. Shorr of Montgomery
avenue is among 54 student leaders at the University of Wisconsin who were recently recommend.

ed as individuals who can make
an important contribution to the
campus community as members of
the university’s committee
dent life and interests.

on

stu-

The student leaders were
mended to the committee

recomby the

student board, the student governing body on the Wisconsin campus,
Mr.

Shorr

is

a

junior

in

the

school of commerce.
f Thursday, January

15, 1953

�‘Civil Liberties’ To
Be Subject Of Women
Voters’ Meeting
“The

Real

erties”

is

cussed

by

Meaning

the

to

of

be

three

dis-

speak-

ers Wednesday, at 1:30 p.m. before
members and guests of the League
of

Women

Park.

Voters

The

of

meeting

will be held at

facets of this broad

With Korean Advisory Group

‘Antique Tea’ For
Charity Benefit

Cpl. Raymond
E. Gardner, of
1408 Lincoln place, is serving with
the
Korean
Military
Advisory
group, in a unit that is supervising

Irving
Shepard,
1220
Sheridan
road, in the interests of charity.
This was the first of a series

Highland

the Recreation center.
In its desire to present all aspects of a question the league recognizes that there are differences
of opinion as to how our liberties
can best be safeguarded
in line
with
precautions
against
those
who
would
willfully
misuse
our
democratic freedom.
But because

the many

Sisterhood To Give

The sisterhood of North Suburban Synagogue Beth-El, 1175 Sheridan road, gave an “Antique Tea”
| yesterday at the home
of Mrs,

of Civil Lib-

subject

a panel

Mrs. Ernest L. Oest

of

teas

to

promote

for the “Selling
March
1 and 2

Park

Recreation

merchandise

Bee” to be held
in the Highland

center.

tance to this affair will
tique of any kind.
The program for the

featured

sub-

and

Jack

comedian,

Shore,

Admitbe

an

dealer

brother of comedian

training

and

revitalization

pro-

gram for the entire Republic of
Korea army. Cpl. Gardner, a clerk
typist

in the

tion,

arrived

personnel-supply

with

the

sec-

unit

last

November.
His wife, Mrs. Gardner, lives at the Lincoln avenue address.

Willie Shore, who gave amusing
sketches on his experiences in dealing

an-

afternoon

art

a

with people.
Chairman of the

“Selling

Bee”

is Mrs. Harold Goldman, 358 Flora
place.
Chairman of the pick-up
squad is Mrs.
Glencoe 2361.

B.

J.

Loewenstein,

ject cannot be covered adequately
in one meeting, three aspects will

be

discussed

ing

a

phases

in the

clearer

hope

insight

of gain-

into

Lilley’

some

of civil liberties.

List

Discussion

Robert
torney

S.

and

Cushman,
civic

land Park,
process of

Speakers

will
law

tax

leader

in

deal with
in regard

at-

JANUARY

High-

the due
to civil

25% T0 50% OFF

liberties.
Vice chairman
of the Chicago
division of the American Civil Lib-

erties Union, Robert T. Drake, also
an attorney, will discuss how civil
liberties
are
involved
in
books,
movies
and
the
field
of entertainment.
Dr. Ernest Johnson, president of
Lake Forest college will speak on
education and civil liberties. The

4

Percy

church.

Mrs. Lena Brown of Lake Forest
will be installed as noble grand at
a regular meeting Monday night of
Sheridan Rebekah lodge No. 801,

in the Mason’s

August
Park,

Jr.

Mr.

Oest

is the son of the

Ernest

H. Oests

Ill. He and his bride are making their home
where they are students at Illinois Wesleyan

ONLY

Friday, Jan.

16th

Thru Tuesday, Jan. 20th

Photo

1872 SHERIDAN

of Bath,

ROAD
HIGHLAND

in Bloomington
university.

HI 2-7377
PARK

hall, Lauretta place

and Temple avenue.
Mrs. Mildred Black
of
Ravinia
will be the installing noble grand.
Other new officers are Mrs. Joseph
Coke of Highland Park, vice grand;

Mrs.
land

Prior

The former Miss Joan Delhaye, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Leslie Delhaye of St. Johns avenue, whose marriage to
Ernest L. Oest took place December 20 in Trinity Episcopal

New Noble Grand Of
Sheridan Rebekah

DAYS

Beginning

meeting is open to the public.

Mrs. Lena Brown Is

SALE

Bleich, also of Highrecording
secretary;

A Handy

Flame

Special

on SERVEL

Mrs. Frank Schor of Deerfield, financial secretary; and Mrs. Phillip
Cole of Highland Park, treasurer.
Elected trustees will include Mrs.
Edwin Beckman of Deerfield; Mrs.

Glen
Watkins,
Waukegan;
Mrs.
James Nolan and Mrs. Albert Lyle,
Highwood;
and Mrs. Ernest

Gas Refrigerators

Kuehne, Highland Park.
Officers to be installed are expected to meet Sunday at 2 p.m.
for a practice session.

Our entire stock of America’s most outstanding
refrigerator .. . the SERVEL Gas Refrigerator
is being made available to you . . . at prices the

Martha Winch To
Speak At Green
Bay Road School

family budget can well afford. You can take
your pick of any model or size. Here’s your
chance to get the finest in modern refrigerators

_.. and realize substantial savings at the same

Mrs. Martha Winch of the Highland
Park
Family
Service
will

speak

on

“Family

Problems,

time!

What

Can Be Done About Them” at the
Green Bay Road school PTA meet-

ing Tuesday at 8:15 p.m. in the
school auditorium.
Mrs. Winch will place the emphasis

of

her

talk

on

children

COME IN NOW

MAKE YOUR SELECTION

AND SAVE

in

the family relationship. Refreshments will be
served
after
the
meeting by the first grade mothers, with Mrs. Allen Doner and
Mrs. Paul Wilson in charge.
Plans for the PTA meeting to. be
held February 17 are also under-

way, with the PTA fathers arranging the entire program. Husbands
of the women PTA officers are assuming their wives’. official duties
for the evening.

COMPANY
“The Friendly People”

Only the Want Ads offer amazing
values and opportunities not available elsewhere.
Read them now!

Thursday,

January

15, 1953

Page

21

�Engagement

Planned Parenthood
Begins Fund Raising

Told

ES

Campaign January 26
The Highland
Park
chapter
of
the
Planned
Parenthood
association will begin
its fund
raising
campaign the week beginning January 26. The volunteers attended a
tea Monday given by Mrs. Edward
Goodkind in her Carol court home
at which Mrs. Edna McKinnon of
Chicago was asked to describe her
recent
experiences
at a Planned
Parenthood convention in Bombay,
India.
The workers who
attended the
kick-off tea
were
the
Mesdames
Samuel Rosenthal, Albert Y. Bingham, Harold E. Foreman Jr., Spencer
R.
Keare,
Robert
I. Logan,
Hugh Riddle, Herbert L. Stern Jr..
John S. Wineman,
A. Hart Wurzbaugh, Arthur Adler Jr.

You may not be able to discover a new source
of power, or invent a new machine — but
there’s one way you can be like Benjamin
Franklin. Be THRIFTY! He proved that it pays.
You can, too, with regular deposits in your
bank

account

Member

here.

of Federal

It's wise

Deposit

UNO

to be

Insurance

Also the Mesdames Harold Florsheim, Gustav Freund, Harold Gidwitz, Norman Joffee, Samuel Lawton, Theodore Loeb, Edward Loeb.
Joseph
Weil,
Myron Hexter
and
Mrs. Goodkind.

thrifty!

Corporation

aE

ADJUDICATION
AND CLAIM DAY
NOTICE
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
tto all
persons
that the first Monday
of February, 1953, is the claim date in the estate of PAULINE VERA STITZELL, 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

withont

issuance

of

summons.
All claims filed against said
estate on or before
said date and not
contested, will be adjudicated on the first
Tuesday after the first Monday
of the
next succeeding month at 10 A.M.
ELMER
G. SCHLUNG,
Executor
Tilley, Humphrey, Teidemann &amp; Goetz,
Attorneys

Don

Now you get fast warm-ups from...

bride-to-be

is following

a

speech

Delta

Gamma

(Continued

saved in
weather,

Shore

area,

Pfc. Walter

To Army

from

and

page

the

Clinic and Sight room
ton hospital.

these highly volatile molecules are added
to Winter Red Crown in just the right
amount to get you started fast, warm
up your engine in seconds.

17)

Orthopedic
at the Evans-

Mrs. Arthur Russo of Winnetka
is Night Club chairman and assisting her are Mrs. Horace Moderwell
and Mrs. John Chadwell of Evans-

ton,

and

Mrs.

Richard

M.

Landon

of Winnetka.
The
Night
Club
entertainment
will be furnished
by the
active
chapter and pledges at Northwestern.
Highland
clude:

Smt Le WA

ae

Proved at 30° below zero! Winter Red Crown
Gasoline is charged to capacity with fastfiring molecules to give you one-second
starts, fast winter warm-ups! You get these
premium winter advantages at regular price.

led Crown KING-SIZE GAS BUY!
Page

22

STANDARD

career

in

Stevens

avenue.

winter-ready cars start like a flash!
Captured under carefully controlled

CUR LUD
Re OLD

therapy

Her fiance, a Princeton graduate, will receive his M.D.
in the spring from Northwestern university's school of medicine.
Until recently, the Winters family lived on Laurel
Point.

Faster starts from fast-firing molecules! When the spark hits the fastfiring molecules of Winter Red Crown,

Maa

Studio

The engagement of Miss Barbara Anne Razner to William L. Winters Jr., son of Dr. and Mrs. Winters of Middleville Farm, Trappe, Md., was announced on New Year's Eve
by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Robert Razner of Steyens Point, Wis.
A graduate of Northwestern university, the

OPERATION ICEBOX!
pressures and temperatures,
refrigerated tanks in warm

Warner

Park Delta Gammas

Fred

avenue.
Mrs. Paul

A.

Cuscaden,
Date,

Clarence Goelzer,
Mrs.
William
L.

794

685 Vine
Rice;

Returns

Pfe. Walter
Clarke returned
to
Ashland, Ky., recently after spending an eight day leave during the
holidays with his parents, Mr. and

Mrs.

Harold

G.

Clarke

of

Yale

lane.

‘

Pfe. Clarke, who is a graduate
of the
University
of
Illinois
at
Champaign, has spent 15 months in
the army and is now assigned to
the examination and reception center at Ashland.
Koch

in-

Mrs. Cyrus M. Avery, 1563 Eastview; Mrs. Robert D. Baird, 1864
Linden; Mrs. John N. Barbee Jr.,
1424
Sheridan
road;
Mrs.
Baker
Brownell,
677
Old
Trail;
Mrs.
Woodward
Burgert,
365
Oakland
drive;
Mrs.
T. H. Buenger,
1800
Balsam
road; Mrs. Edgar Carter,
375
Central
avenue;
Mrs. W. R.
Ceperly,
436 Orchard
lane;
Mrs.
Franklin
Chaffee,
2385
Egandale
road;
Mrs.
Stanley
Clague,
300
Woodland
road; Miss Joan Clemence, 2788 Pt. Clinton road; Miss
Muriel
Craig,
1471
Ridge
road;

Mrs.

Clarke

Base in Kentucky

Mrs.

969 St. Johns;
Goodman,
153

Mr. and
1825 Green

ents

of

Mrs.
Melvin
Koch
of
Bay road are the par-

a

daughter

January

Carl H. Linhoff, 1010 Wade; Miss
Virginia Loeb, 1427 Waverly; Mrs.
A. F, Marquette, 109 Lakeview ter-

race;

Mrs.

D.

Dean

McCormack,

1441 Linden.
Miss Mary McCormack, 1441 Linden; Mrs. Karl A. Meyer, 215 Prospect;
Miss
Mildred
Patton,
453
Sheridan
road;
Miss
Renee
Ra-

mond,

1881

Elizabeth
dan road;

Old

Brier

Radmacher,
Mrs. Thayer

Blackhawk; Mrs. John Harmon Jr.,
798 Judson;
Mrs. Eugene
Hotchkiss, 901 Baldwin road; Mrs. Frank
G. Hough, 1412 Waverly road; Miss
Jeanne Herbst, 604 Melody lane;
Miss Gloria Jenson, 746 Braeside;
Miss Frances Kelly, 366 Hazel; Mrs.

Greenwood;

Mrs.

Cedar;

John

Mrs.

Paul

Walter C. Kohn,

wood

road.

1200 Linden; Mrs.

born

2 in Highland Park hospital. Their
eldest
child
is Dwight
Delbert,
2. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Louis
Almendinger
of Faribault
Minn.

Mrs.

Patl
D.

road;

Miss

2129 SheriRicker, 2864

Smith,

379

Stodder,

326

Central; Mrs. Walter S. Vose, 1424
Sheridan road; Mrs. R. F. Walker,
152 Cary avenue; Mrs. Harold A.
Wampler,

367

Central

H.

Wells,

avenue;

335

and

Lincoln-

53
Thursday, January15, 19

�rs
YOU’RE

ALWAYS

WELCOME

OU

Ue

AT

with

Your Choice of Colors

TIE

15° X
oti WAX

SHOE
SHOE

is oe

A REPUTATION

Cotton-Tip
Applicators

&amp;

Pack 100 (Limit 2)

2: 21°

ii

(Limit 2)

Strained

THURSDAY,

FRIDAY,

Right Reserved to
Limit Quantities

SATURDAY

579 CENTRAL AVE.

a

@

sl

on
? ofesi
PATIENCE

‘Ic DISH
oad

. . . he

takes

the

time and care to check and re-check each
. . . he

instruction

performs each step

with precision and utmost care. Patience
is a part of the personal responsibility he
takes to insure that your prescription is
filled—exactly

x |
|)

as

doctor

your

ordered.

x

Biy

Save!

) Med. Size
IVORY Soap)

NORTHERN

32 20,
F

ae

3)a

oe

(Limit 6)

Johnson’s

e 18°

Baby Powde

oe
(Limit

—

MILK
Tall Cans
(Limit

4)

Borated,

c

|

26°
3: as
Save
Here!

(Limit

650 Sheet
(Limit 3)

Fragrant

33c¢

of 5

-

TISSUE

Varieties

| =i if

3:10:

LARGE RINSO

YOU
CAN ALWAYS
RELY ON
YOUR
WALGREEN
PHARMACIST

ccc

Tae PVE
CLIPPER

aT" TISSUES
CARNATION

Your Walgreen Pharmacist is a man with
Patience

Candy Bars, (acre
ee
| cn
Mints and
Fruit Drops
\Wwny

‘Miniclip’

ab ah
size.

Nuteeeeen,

Professional

perry

steel Shaft

Pane

GERBER’S
Baby Foods

SALE

:

Glycerin
uppositorie
Infant,

Adult—12s

° 19

er
two)..

2)

Pint

SQUIBB
Mineral
Liquid

Oil

Petrolatum

Plaids

10° WASH
CLOTHS

ae

3

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BLEACH j 2

for

18°

Finer at |,
Any Price! §:

(Limit 6)

Med.

70° SAL
HEPATICA

49¢ ASPIRIN

Saline

Laxative

Bottles 5S
Letters Random

@se
RUBBER
GLOVES
Test-Rite

33° Box Of
Stationery
30 sheets, 1 y
envelopes

(Limit

neThs=|
ID

bottle.

Top Is a Cup!

Handy Pint

50cc
SIZ@ 26

$2.50

AG D!

Barbara Goul
Special!

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a

1) ¢

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Reg.
69c

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$3.98 AYTINAL
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&amp; Minerals

2 aie5

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Hand Cream

\\ Normal or Extra- Dry,

|

10- ba

jar for.

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SAVE 49c!

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Large

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&amp; Rosewater}
4-ounce

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ANTISEPTIC

of 100
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$4.89 Olatsen
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: 6

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39.

�7

ost Evanst
Haven Scores 60-54 Over
VEF'W In Basketball Opener

Little
Giants
meet ina
row

won
and

League

their
their

handicapped

Standing

Only

Haven Inn
Highwood
VFW
DeSoto-Plymouth

1 Suburban league victory last
TSGa
by downing the WaukeBulldogs, 46-28. The tankers Kennedy Garden Spot
five out of the nine events.
Moroney Insurance
were led by Al Rubenstein Ravinia Standard Service 2
took two firsts, the 200 yard Olson Clothiers
Style and the 150 yard individ- Washington Gardens ........ 1
medley. Bill Davidow copped Moose Lodge
second position in the 200 and Beth El YMG
| Ellenberger came in second
Leading Scorers
the individual.
~
Take

Two

Bob Joor (Haven)
Renzo Marchetti (DeSotoPlymouth)
Art Weiner (Kennedy
Gardens)

Firsts

&gt; mermen took the first two
in the 100 yard backstroke.
Jim Barton just nosed out team-

ate

B FT Tot.
91

71
67

Bob Stanwood by .2 of a sec- Jerry Fell (Beth

for first place. Pete Wulfsohn
the second spot and Woody
mann the third position in the
yard breaststroke. Danny Seitz
the only local diver to compete.
Petersen
the
number
two

(Continued on page 25)

El
YMG)
Don Geske (VFW) ........ in 0
Vince Cimbalo (Moroney

By

Robertson

Last

In P Club Jrs’.
Bowling
January

League
8

Week’s

48
40

18

Scores

ard, 56. DeSoto-Plymouth, 45; Ol-

Standings

son

Clothiers,

32.

High score—one
Kennedy’s Garden

game
Spot.

High score—one
ual) Bob Joor, 31.

Gar-

Gardens,
(team)

62;

game,

(individ-

Most Free Throws—one

game, G.

Games

Today

8:15 p.m.
Ravinia
Standard
Kennedy’s Gardens

vs.

9:15 p.m. Moose Lodge vs. Haven

High

Game,

Individual

801

HP Elks League
Bowling Scores

wiing League
Fabbri

Ww.
Tavern

Eddy’s Liquors
fy Favorite Inn
lver Dollar Tavern ...: 27
Bros. Grocery .... 261%
00d Radio
25
Valley Laundry 19
yood Ice Cream .... 17
_
High Series, Team

ri Tavern
ge
eTie ee
High Series, Individual

seven

points to pace Kennedy Gardens to

close
quick

Gar-

contest
throughout.
baskets by Art Weiner

Two
with

to go
Gene

iced the final
Tagliapictria

scored 18 points for the losers.

The final game of the evening
saw Moroney
Insurance
beating
Moose Lodge, 40-31. This game was
Moroney’s
win No. 2, as against
two defeats in league play.
Rich
Martini scored
14 points for the
victors. Bob Taggert scored 11 for
the Moose.

Park

vancing

partment in cooperation with
the Highland Park Park board
and the school boards will be
held on Saturday at Sunset
park, at 10 a.m.

to

first

place

to second
in

the

winners,

and
meet

and

third
are

inch

there

were

two

each. One
the other

both guards.

in the scoring

column,

fol-

The third quarter found the Pup-

to

a

three

point

visitors,

into

period

the

with

....

and

the

game

fourth

and

final

Waukegan

leading,

Team

Craftsmen League
Bowling Scores
January

9

Standings
Ww.

Kleeburg Buick
Nutri-Soil
James Thomson

Inc.

.... 334%

Stationery

Carani

28
28

....

Insurance

Co.

Kleeburg Buick
i

.... 2614

Mixed doubles will
be
January 31 at 7:30 p.m.
eid
|

yards

100 yards

710-853-830—2393

Kleeburg

Buick

Ince.

High Game,
Roland Caulkins
Carl Roscher

................ 853

Individual

played

Martineau

night

the

High-

and

of Moose

Bowling

League
5

....

Wilson’s

..

Appliances

34

Toby’s Cocktail Lounge

251%

Leeds

24

100 yards
100 yards

Jewelers

App’l.

Series,

M.

Game,

High Game,
Crovetti

VanPelt,

junior

sparkplug

©

and pace-setter.
ay.
In last Friday’s contest at Wau- |
kegan,
the
Little
Giants
were
—
beaten, 59-49.
j
The Giants entered
the
game _
with a handicap; both Eddie Capi- —
tani and Harold Freberg being unable

to

At

play

of

Quarter

end

of

the

quarter

because

First
the

a

illness.

seesaw

Parkers

were

first
out

in

front, 13-10.
The second period, however, was
the heartbreaker
for
Blue
and
White

fans, as the

in 21 points.

Bulldogs

John

Koziol

poured

was

the

villain, hitting for eight tallies. The

first half ended with the Parkers
on the short end of a 31-22 score.
The
Bulldogs
increased
their
lead to 46-31 with 15 points in the
third quarter.
With the Waukegan coach substituting freely in the fourth quar(Continued on page 25)

Pentagons, Still

it

On Top, Defeat

|

Cannibals, 41-15 ©
The

Pentagons

went

un-

defeated in the first round of
play in the Highland Park Rec-

reation

department’s

class

B

basketball
league
as they
downed the Cannibals by a

score of 41 to 15. Leading
scorer for the winners was Jim
Carlsen who
points.

hit the net for 17

The great defensive work of the
Pentagons limited the Cannibals to
only six field goals.

The

Hep-Cats

game

of

over

the

round

Ball

50-16.

“Big

in

points

31

by

won
1

as

Hogs

by a

Steve”

for

their
they

Sidari

the

all

score

of

pumped

victors

Marshall

first

ran

Strauss’s

fol14

The final game saw the Bananas
winning over the Romans by q
score of 28 to 12. Jim Jacobsen was
high* point man for the winners
with 18 points. Romano Ori led the

Standings

Roberts Dry Goods
Biagi’s Clothing
Puckett’s Boosters

High

Jim

|

points. Leading scorer for the losers was Ron Peddle with 4 points,

1614

L.
20
22
2514
26
2614
2814
30
3714

losers

with 6 points.
Team Standings

Pentagons
Bananas
Cannibals
Ball

Hogs

Leading Scorers

Team

729-732-807—2268
672-740-730—2142
High Series, Individual
Mary Crovetti .... 145-204-188—537
Helen Meckley .... 190-133-156—479

7 years old
8 years old
9 years old
10 years old

©

Zier, at forward, Dave Norris
at center and, in the back court,
George Hitt, a defensive specialist,

lowed

Women

Rosby’s Wearing

6 years old

years old
years old
&amp; 16 years
and over

30
30%
31
31%

High Series, Individual
Roland
Caulkins
147-233-158—538
Nafe Larson
162-167-196—525
High Game, Team
James Thomson &amp; Sons

High

13
14
15
17

L.
2314
25%

DeSoto-Plymouth
High Series, Team
Larson’s Sta. .... 765-826-818—2409

11 years old
12 years old

Individual

33

The lead exchanged hands several times toward the end of the
game, until Steve Drew’s Waukegan five caught fire as Petruska,
(Continued on page 25)

January

100

margin

30.

old
old

years
years old
years
years
years
years
&amp; 16
and over

Pierre

Tomorrow

22

place
as

By

to 20.

Siljestrom Coal
Humer Furs

de-

1%

Willy Thompson,

Anchor

Recreation

The

The Giants led at the end of the
first period, 16 to 10.
Waukegan
scored 12 points in the next quarter, to four for Highland Park, ad-

Larson’s

| Slate Annual
City-wide Ice
Meet Saturday

each.

Ww.

H. Mitchell
J.

Washington

winners,

179-183-177—539

Game,

over

two minutes
outcome.

Individual

High Game,
Singer Printing
Mitchell Builders
High

win

ribbons

204-177-164—545

G. Greiner

was

the

scored

Marchetti

bas-

6 foot

Waukegan,

over

the

13 points

cagers scoring 12 points
was Ray Castello, and

the Ol-

overcome

Li’l Giant

Swan.

For

went

6 years
7 years

Series,

John

18

pressure.

Coal

High

the

points for the winners and Jack Tyson scored 11 for the losers.
Center Art
Weiner
scored
26

couldn’t

the

center,

with

team

given

Plumbing

Mitchell

and

scored

freshman

Olson’s

baskets

Walton

highest scorer for the HighPark
frosh-soph
team
was

pies

son

High Series, Team
Mitchell B’ldrs .. 734-826-732—2292
Singer Printing 722-844-723—2289
H.

straight

Events
lows:

: Mitchell Builders
Town Floor
My Favorite Inn
McDonald Plumbing

Downs

Harry

Friday,

Gold,
next
land

The DeSoto-Plymouth
remained
one game out of first place as they
downed
Olson’s
Clothiers
45-32.
The game was tied for three quarters. Then Renzo Marchetti hit for

Singer Printing
Acme Liquors

Mutual

January 6 Standings
;

Moran

for

If there is no ice, the races will
be postponed one week to Saturday, January 24. Medals will be

January 9 Standings

Highwood Marconi

DeSoto

Handicapped
Parkers Lose
To Waukegan

land Park Little Giants will
host a tough Evanston basketball quintet.
Wildkit
coach
White, and Ray Petruska, 6 foot 1 Jack Burmaster will probably
inch
center
for the
Purple
and
start Bob Bennett and Ron Mc-

the victors.

Highland

vs. Olson Clothiers.

Miotti
High Game, Team
hing
oe
ee

dressed

The
annual
city-wide
ice
skating races sponsored by the

11.

7:15 p.m. VFW
2186

Kennedy’s

den Spot, 52; Washington
46.

Melchiorre,

High Series, Team
NR
CM goons ae
High Series, Individual

(Wash-

VFW, 53; Haven, 60. Moroney
Insurance, 40; Moose Lodge, 31.
Beth El YMG, 35; Ravinia Stand-

We.
ae
27% 17%
g Scott Co. ........27
18
:
18
21

dys

Last

game as against 13 men for Ravinia
E1
Beth
Jerry Fell of
Standard.
took scoring honors with 18 points
while Bob Hinchsliff scored 14 for

a 52-46

51

ington Gardens
Bob Hinchcliff (Ravinia)

men

s
&lt;2)
:

ketball
team
of
Highland
Park
High school bowed to the Waukegan Puppies, who just barely swept
by in the last few minutes of play
to win, 47 to 42.
Playing on the
Waukegan
floor,
George
Moran,
freshman guard for the Blue and

El was
players.

59 dens in the second game on
Wed57 nesday night’s card. It was a very

Insurance)

Roger

five

:

Team

Individual

Jacobsen
Carlson

(Bananas)
J.

(Pentagons)

Bernardi (Pentagons)
Sidari (Hep Cats)
Strauss (Hep Cats)
Parks

B FT
.... 34
24

.. 26

(Romans)

Fiegura

(Romans)

Steiver

(Cannibals)

....

Berges (Cannibals)
Wiberg (Bananas)
Bailleus (Ball Hogs)

....

_,

Fhureday, Jan

.... 12

—

he
‘th

Again Beth
for lack of

He
*

A

Quintet, 47-42

Ad

close meet.

7 yy

LX

KFOWwoouUr
PR WOC

Ks

i uy
eh
7

Waukegan Pups Beat
Frosh-Soph Parker

Bob Joor and Harold Orvis scored 20 and 18 points respectively over the VFW to place Haven in undisputed first place
By Art Weinstein
last Tuesday night in the Highland Park Recreation departhe Proviso Pirates will be ment’s Class A City Basketball league. Haven went far out in
hosts of the Little Giant front during the early stages of the game, but the VFW crew,
n today at 4 in May- with the help of sharpshooting Norm Geske, narrowed the mard. Proviso has a strong ex- gin to six points with five minutes to go. Final score Haven, 60;
ienced team that will give VFW, 54.
nty of opposition for the
Ravinia Standard won its second
league game over Beth El 56-36 in
rs. The Pirates beat the HP Recreation Department
the second game on Thursda y
tanksters last year in a Class A Basketball League
night’s card.
PwWWWNNHEEHEol™

A

ee

Tot.
76
58

55

40
37
33
32
29
28
2

Bh
-_

�(Continued from page 24)
diver was hurt in practice and will
be out for several weeks. Danny
gave
year

his best performance of the
by scoring his highest point

total this season.
In the 50 and 100 yard freestyle
events the Parkers lost to a fine
Waukegan

swimmer,

Bob

Zavasky,

who triumphed in both of these
races. Fred Harris was just nosed
out by Zavasky in the 50 with Brit
Davis,

third.

Pete

Hughes

got

the

second position and John Gould
came in third in the 100. The 200
yard freestyle relay triumphed for
the mermen but the 150 yard medley lost in a close race.
Frosh-Soph

Cop

Fifth

Win

The frosh-soph
swimmers
won
their fifth straight encounter and
their third Suburban league victory without a defeat by trouncing
Waukegan, 49-17.
The local boys

seven times out of

took first place
the

eight

events.

Pete Goelzer who triumphed in
the 75 yard individual medley and
the 50 yard breaststroke to remain
baby

mermen

places

with

Van Velzer came
breaststroke. The

Herm
in the

unbeaten.
in second
in

won

the

Marty

50

the

yard

first

two

backstroke

Granholm

getting first

and Peter Onderdonk coming close
behind for second. Robert Engdahl
won the 100 yard freestyle after a

close race with a Waukegan
mer.

Engdahl

pulled

away

swimon

the

last length to remain undefeated.
Roger Sheahen triumphed in the
diving after a close battle with McDonna of Waukegan. He still is unbeaten.

George

nosed out by

Puestow

was

just

Waukegan’s

star

freshman,
Gus
Kloni, in the
50
yard freestyle. Both Parker relays
won easily.

Last Saturday the freshman team
competed

in

the

Invitational
Niles.
seven

Niles

swimming

The

frosh

January

9

mn

Standings
Ww.

Sherony Hardware
Louise

Beauty

Salon

19%

.... 28

Manhattan Shoes ..........
Esther’s Tavern ............
Service Market ............
Ariano Construction ..
Belebod ANNs

meet

finished

From

26

274%
27%
264%
244%
24

261%
2614
27%
291%
30

with a total of only three points.
The frosh have a more balanced
team with no individual stars. New
Trier won the meet with 42 points
to 34 for Oak Park, and
26
for
Waukegan.
The freshmen qualified in three
events—Pete Riddle in the 50 yard
breaststroke, Tom Harris in the 75

yard individual medley, and a med-

Buick Shows

Surprise

THIS

Awaits

You

BEAUTIFUL

Elsie

Fini

Mee

I

sha

a

173

Legion Post 145
Bowling

League

January

7

Standings
ses

Team
Mary Jane Lanes ........-...Anchor Insurance ..........-J; Ones’
&amp;. Sone»:.2:-J.‘ Thomson. é Son: ....33:

Ww.
oi
27
26
25

L.
14
24
25
26

CG: Garant 8 . SONG ‘assess
Officer's Club keke

25
23

26
28

Lineoln

vA

30

iuc55d2.cscksss 20

31

Beverage

DUEL BS LAVENE

........

1732

The

255
597

and
from

Thompson,

relay

page

team

GARDEN

meet-

and

Tom

made

up

of

Not

the

Au-

bank’s

1909

Bill

and

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

AN OUTSTANDING PROFESSIONAL RECORD OF
@ SUCCESSFUL YEARS SERVING CHICAGOLAND

five

addi-

has

operated

the

estab-

den,

pany

kins.

F.

of Chicago
field.

He

in the

is

ad-

currently

Chairman of the Board of his firm,
Henri, Hurst and McDonald, an
‘|

advertising agency located at 121
West Wacker Drive. He has held
important
posts
in the
Chicago
Athletic Association and other or-

:

ganizations

ness
tion

of which

resides

he is

at 611

J. Sheridan

a mem-

County

Line

started

his busi-

career in the trade
field. Subsequently

publicahe was

Joseph

Grant,

Morton

the

Highland

the Community
at 85 Oakmont

for the construc-

tion of a forty-one
story
office
building.
Mr.
Sheridan
is a director of various corporations, including
the
Chicago
Title
and
Trust Company. He is past president of the National Association of
Building Owners and Managers, a

B.

Garnett,

Herbert

R:.

M.

Mavor,

Charles

Lautmann,

Harold.O. Me-

Officers

named

at

the

an-

of

the

nual organization meeting
Directors are as follows:
Vallee

O.

Cale

R.

Appel,

President

Torrence,

Executive

Vice

President

Raymond
dent

N

L.

Erskine,

&amp;

Trust

Vice

Presi-

Officer

director of the Civic Federation of
Chicago, Catholic Charities of Chi-

Martin C. Hart, Vice President and
Cashier
;

cago,
Board

Ernest

A.

Harold

F. Glandt, Auditor

cago,

a
of

member
of the
the University

a trustee

of DePaul

Citizens
of Chi-

Univer-

Secretary

Harold H. Herbert, Manager, Special

sity and a member of the Advisory
Board of Lay Trustees of Loyola
University. As a resident of High-

Belmont,

Loan

Dept.

Ethel E. Larson,

Manager,

Savings

Department.

land Park, he has served as a City
Commissioner,
a member
of the
Zoning Committee and is currently
a member of the Board of Trustees
of the Highland Park Hospital. He
has resided for twenty four years at
833 Dean Avenue.

offices. In recent years, Mr.

Stone’s

been

pursuit

interrupted

of

by

business

service

has

as

Mary Jane Ladies
Bowling

;

L.

Moley T.V. &amp; Appl’nc’s 35
Highwood Launderettes 324%
Tower

Casino

314%

.22%

24%
26%
2814

Highland

«..2.23...5

19
214%

Natta Shoe Repairing .. 29%
Freddie’s Tavern ....:... 274%
SEBS
DY Brio ishcshneseSaastaoe 2544
Oil

a Highwood

Lieut.
Commander
in the
Navy,
having served during World War
II and again for two years in the
Korean conflict. He has been active in various civic organizations
and is a past president of the Highland Park Chamber of Commerce
and Rotary
Club.
He
resides
at
512 Sunrise Avenue,
Lake Bluff.
Richard
F. Uhlmann
has been
a resident of Highland Park since

League

January 6 Standings

....3...s04:

Hospital

Del Rio. ec

244%

29%

...... 23

31%,

atl 22%

31%

A. W. Zengler Cleaners 18%
354%
High Series, Team
4
Tower Casino .... 786-716-744—2246
High

Series, Individual

V. Morelli ............ 157-149-211—517
High Game,
Casino

Tower

Host

Team

Evanston

(Continued from page 24)

1927. For the most part, his years
in business have been devoted to

ter

the grain business, he now being
President of the Uhlmann
Grain
Company with offices in the Board
of Trade Building in Chicago. He
is a past president of the Chicago

18 markers to make the final score,
59-49.
George Burmeister was the high
points,

high man

the field of real estate, real estate

Board
during

finance and property management,
having handled many of the cities
larger real estate transactions, an
outstanding one of importance to

again in 1949. He is a member of
the Executives
Club
of Chicago.
In Highland
Park
Mr.
Uhlmann
has continuously
been
interested

associated

with

ficer

director

and

and

became

an

of-

of a nationally

known company engaged in financing real estate properties. In 1929

Mr. Sheridan organized his own
firm, of which he is Chairman of

the Board. L. J. Sheridan and Com-’
pany

is

one

of

Chicago’s

firms

in

5

Lain, Theodore L. Osborn, Cale
R. Torrence and Frederick A. Wat-

Shore

City

been

of

Other directors re-elected are
Vallee O. Appel, Frank A, Cusca-

Chicago
and
our
mid-American
area being the acquisition of the
fee holdings and air rights over the
Illinois
Central
Railroad
tracks
by the Prudential Insurance Com-

of America

progress

Road.

in the

has

the

Park Hospital and
Chest. He resides

a resident of Highland
Park for
approximately thirty years. His active business life has been centered
vertising

‘|

in

George
R. Stone
has lived on
the North
Shore
his entire life.
He is a partner in the firm of Hill
and Stone, a real estate and insurance business with various North

ber. He
Road.

Chicago

affairs,

direction

at 1537 Sheridan Road.
William D. McDonald

Phone Maj. 1067

1890

the

lishment since that date. He and
his
partner,
Oscar
Lundgren,
opened the Ravinia Drug Store in
1923. Mr. Gsell is a charter member of the Highland Park Chamber
of Commerce
and Rotary club, a
member of the first Highland Park
Hospital Board and the first Highland Park
Social
Service
Board,
and served as a member
of ‘the
Highland Park Civil Service commission for nine years, being its
chairman from 1947-49. He resides

CEMETERY

936 East 47th S&amp;.

in

Earl W. Gsell acquired the drug
business of George Cummings
in

Visited

ESTABLISHED

men

particcitizens

tional directors were named. They
are Earl W. Gsell, William D. McDonald, Leo J. Sheridan, George
R. Stone and Robert F. Uhlmann.

vidual, and the relay team was disqualified after coming in third.

Have

shareholders

business

of

24)

Powell, Pete Riddle, and John Eisendrath. Riddle finished fourth in
the breaststroke
after
qualifying
third. Harris was fifth in the indi-

If You

annual

order to obtain broader
ipation by Highland Park

gust connected with a total of 14
points, to 12 made by the defeated
Parkeys.
ley

street.

ing of The First National Bank of
Highland Park was held January
13th and by unanimous action, in

Frosh-Soph
Castello,

First

First National Bank
Elects New Directors

High Game, Individual

(Continued

ve

aaa

‘
High Game, Team
J Thomson. &amp; SOns: eck
aiis 922
High Series, Team
Jc Onestl : 6c? Sona saw cis 2677
SS HORINE BBE clack
bate skenabetae
High Series, Individual
ee PO TOTIEN foe oi
ces apseseerees

ee

THE beauty and elegance of sports car styling are combined witn big car comfort and roominess im
Buick’s beautiful Skylark sports car for 1953. Powered by Buick’s 188 horsepower valve-in-head V-8 engine hooked up to the new Twin Turbine Dynaflow, the Skylark is equipped with power steering, power brakes,
wire wheels, whitewall tires, Easy-Eye glass and selectronic radio as standard equipment. It is available
_, .o.ers and four interior trim options. The Skylark is now on display at Kleeburg Buick, |

Leo

15, 1953

Skylark

705:
680

All Phones KEnwood 6-0700

January

1953

172

FURTH SERVICE
NORTH SHORE
Funeral Directors

Thursday,

There

172-162-118—452

High Game, Team
Sarvine: Market i315 cial.
BinsBow. ton 335. io wae
High Game, Individual
Rona ANOrinl 3s e.ch ek ees

Very Reasonable Prices
Green Bay Rd. &amp; 18th St.

and

Bros.\:22 sci 23%
3014
High Series, Team
Service Market .. 705-627-641—1973
Sherony H’dw’re 672-638-600—1910
High Series, Individual
Rena Andrini .... 173-162-121—456

NORTHSHORE GARDEN OF MEMORIES
A

Here

Grandi’

at

last

North Shor
SIDELIGHTS

y

L.

........ 344%

Freshman

They competed against the
other Suburban
league

schools.

IWP Sr’s. League
Bowling Scores

ree

Beat Bulldogs

off Trade, having
served
its centennial year and

the

scorer

Giants

for

were

both

Bob

Troy

able

teams

was

to

score

with

the

17

second

for the Parkers with nine

tallies,

Gino

Rollin

Benson,

Dalponte

had

eight,

seven;

Jim

Troy,

four; Tom Phillips, two and Bill
MacLean and Howard Russell each ©
scored

one.

Page

25

—

�k

3

ence

and

‘

Scriptures”

1 should have priority on your time.
NORTH
i
_

SHORE

HIGHLAND PARK
BAPTIST CHURCH
Central Court
HI 2-2101
Rev. Robert Clingman, Minister
SUNDAY, January 18

Glencoe

725

DAY, January 16
p.m. Hebrew classes.
:30 p.m. Services.
URDAY, January 17
:40 a.m. Religious school
to

grade

9:30 a.m.

11 a.m.
Sunday
7:45 p.m. Sunday

4.

Alumni.

NDAY,

January

19

p.m. Sisterhood open meeting.
p.m. Hebrew classes.
ESDAY, January 20
p.m. Hebrew classes.
p.m.

Experimental

8:15 p.m.

North

Jewish Studies.
IDNESDAY,

4 p.m.

theater.

Shore

January

Hebrew

Seminar

classes.

p.m. Hadassah luncheon.
315 p.m. North Shore forum.
HURSDAY, January 22
p.m. Hebrew classes.
45 p.m. Glencoe Girl Scouts,
8:15 p.m.

Adult

A.

NORTH
SUBURBAN
SYNAGOGUE BETH EL
1175 Sheridan Road

Sermon:

“God and Social Evil.”
TURDAY, January 17
30 a.m. Morning worship.
DAY, January 18
:30 a.m. “Great Jewish Books”
se

continued.

Subject—Theo-

dore Herzl’s “Juden Staat.”
_ 97:15 a.m. Daily Minyan.
MONDAY

a

through

HI

19 to 22
p.m. to 6 p.m.
YDAY through

Hebrew school.
FRIDAY,

lary 19 to 23
a.m. to 12 noon.

W.

9:30 a.m.

Church

:45 a.m.

school.

Morning

worship.

Ob-

rvance of Centennial of Illinois
onference
.m.

of Augustana

church.

Annual

business

meeting

ongregation.

Annual

reports,

election of officers, and transaction

the

8p.m.

Meeting of YWMS
120

undying.”

January

BETHANY

8:30,

9:30,

CHURCH

(Evangelical United Brethren)
1704 McGovern Street

Assistant

8

p.m.

Chancel

in the Dubs

43.

FRIDAY,

rehearsal

room.

January

16

8 p.m. The postponed meeting of
the Bethany guild will be held in
the church parlors with a January
“clearance
sale”
of
zaar goods.
Officers
will be hostesses.

Holy communion.
dinner.
Trinity

church

THURSDAY, January 22
8 p.m. Parish choir practice.
FRIDAY, January 23
7:30

a.m.

Holy

4:30

p.m.

Girls choir practice.

FIRST

11 a.m.
in

communion.

11
the
son

CHURCH OF CHRIST
SCIENTIST
493 Hazel Avenue

SUNDAY, January 18
9:30 a.m. Sunday school.
11 a.m. Church service.

and

of God, he is nevconsciousness
of

That

an understand-

destroys

quickens
will

the

fear

man’s

sense

be

a.m.

explained

of

of
in

Prosocial

Morning

worship

with

minister, the Rev. A. P. Johnpreaching on the subject “Be-

at the
High

Avenue

"
HI 2-1599
SUNDAY, January 18
9:30 a.m. Church school under
direction of Dr. E. D. Fritsch,
h classes arranged for all age

and

worshipped

him,

saying,

My

Sunday

school
service.

NORTH
Hazel

Gardens

film will give you a “Winter Vaca-

8

January

p.m.

Philathea

at the home

of Mrs.

20
class

meeting

Bessie Rhine-

629

Homewood

avenue,

with

3:45 p.m.
hearsal.

Bethany

chorister

re-

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
CHURCH
;
Deerfield and Green Bay Roads
Rt. Rev. Msgr. Joseph P. Morrison
Pastor
Donald B. Runkle
Bernard E. Burns

daughter is even now dead: but
Rev.
come and lay thy hand upon her,
Rev.
and she shall live. And Jesus
HI 2-0202
arose, and followed him, and so
Confessions
did his disciples. . . . But when
Saturdays, eves. of First Fridays
the people were put forth, he
and Holy Days 4 and 7:30 p.m.
went in, and took her by the
hand, and the maid arose.” (Matt. SUNDAY, January 18
9: 18, 19, 25).
Masses at 6:15, 7:30, 9, 10, 11 a.m.
on
Correlative passages from
‘“Sci- and 12 noon.

service

The

at 8:30 p.m.
Congregation

Is

the

to

Reform?”

begins

promptly

at North Shore
Israel, Glencoe.

This is the second of two sermons which Dr. Siskin has devoted
to a consideration of Reform Judaism,
attempting
to
clarify
the
present
status
of reform
in the
light of its historic background as
well as its future challenge.
On January 23, the congregation
will honor its Men’s club at a special service
to be conducted
by
lay members of the temple. Sharing the pulpit with Rabbi Siskin
on this occasion will be Dr. Jack
Weinberg of Glencoe, psychiatrist.
“Fathers
and Sons” will
be the
subject of their talks.
The Youth group of the congregation
will
be
entertained
next
Sunday night at their social program
by
Harry
Belmar,
master
hypnotist.
On
Thursday,
January
29,
at 4 p.m.,
Mrs.
Morton
L.
Abram
will present a story hour
for youngsters
of pre-school
age
through grade 6. The story corner

Hillel Plotkin

library

will be the scene of this program.
North Shore Congregation Israel

is located

at Lincoln

and Vernon

avenues
in Glencoe. Visitors
always cordially welcome.

are

The Rev. Michael Faraon, Thomist lecturer in Milwaukee and philosophy teacher at the Dominican
House of Studies, River Forest, will
discuss

Rev.

“The

R.

L.

Golden

Goat,”

Bruckberger,

by the

Domini-

um.
The review, which will be held in
the Highland Park Recreation center,

18
am.

“What

can, next Thursday night at the
Immaculate
Conception Book for-

Morning

is

p.m.

scheduled

and

will

to

start

carry

an

at

8:30

admission

fee of $1.

Father Bruckberger, a fighter in
the French Commandos, was chaplain general
group.
He

Peter

of Mo-

tion by Film.” A free-will offering
will be received and the public is
cordially invited.

TUESDAY,

and

Rev. Russell W. Lambert, Minister
Edwin Kemp, Director of Music
Glencoe 1227

January

of

Challenge

‘The Golden Goat’

SHORE METHODIST
CHURCH
and Greenleaf Avenues
Glencoe

9:30 a.m. and 11
worship services.

discussion

Real

Hear Review Of

road

Junior Bible class.
10:45 a.m. Worship

SUNDAY,

ter Meierhoff as assisting hostesses.
WEDNESDAY, January 21

is the portion

a.m.

a

on Reform
night with

Catholic Forum To

Avenue

7:30 p.m. The Youth Fellowship
will present a sound motion picture

the Lesson-Sermon will be LIFE.
The Golden Text is from Psalms
Lord

9:30

Dr. Edgar E. Siskin will conclude his sermons
Judaism tomorrow

of the Oscar

William H. Remmert,
pastor
Tel. HI 2-6848

tween the Alpha and the Omega.”

hart,

(16: 5, 11) “The

Central

Rev.

Res. 1817 Green Bay
SUNDAY, January 18

will meet

all Churches of Christ, Scientist, on

of mine inheritance and of my cup:
thou maintainest my lot... . Thou
wilt show me’ the path of Life.”
Lesson-Sermon
passages
from
the Bible (King James Version) include:
“There came a certain ruler,

The

room.

bile, Ala. These gardens are known
as the “Charm
Spot of the Deep
South,”
and are visited annually
by tourists.
This 70 minute color

Since man is never outside of the

of

Little Heralds

Dubs

of the Bellingrath

WEDNESDAY, January 21
8 p.m. Testimonial meeting.
infinite presence
er without
the

the

CHURCH
PARK

REDEEMER EV. LUTHERAN
CHURCH
741

classes arranged for all age groups.
10:45
am.
Organ
meditations
with F. B. Schlung at the organ
console.

Junior

Tel. HI 2-8145
January 18
Sunday worship.

SUNDAY,
11 a.m.

left-over baof the guild

bobsled ride, depending on weather.
SUNDAY, January 18
9:30 a.m.
Church school with

a.m.

a.m.

The Rev. William Giles Glover
Highwood Community
Center
428 North Green Bay Road
Highwood

15

choir

Chancel

(4th,
5th
and
6th
Junior high depart-

SECOND BAPTIST
OF HIGHLAND

HI 2-3522
January

a.m.

ment (7th and 8th grades).
9:30
a.m.
to 10:30 am.
Adult
class.
10:10 a.m. to 10:45 a.m.
Froshsoph and varsity groups for high
school students.
10:10 a.m. to 10:45 a.m. Quartet
rehearsal at the Manse.
_.”
3:30 p.m. Dr. Young to preach at
Presbyterian
home,
3200
Grant
street, Evanston, III.
TUESDAY, January 20
7:30 p.m.
Boy Scout Troop 324
meeting.
WEDNESDAY,
January 21
9 am.
to 9:30 a.m.
Sanctuary
open for prayer and meditation.
6:30 p.m.
Men’s fellowship dinner meeting.
7:15 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.

Minister

WEDNESDAY, January 21
7:30 a.m. Holy communion.

9:30

department
grades) and

Rev. A. P. Johnson, Minister
The Rev. Dale Zimdars,

Harris.

Ship

18

Masses at 6:30, 7:30,
10:30 and 11:30 a.m.

1540 Sunday, January 18. The subject of Miss Olive Haefele and Mrs. Wal-

. JOHN’S EVANGELICAL
AND REFORMED CHURCH
_
Green Bay Road and
Homewood

Life, Truth,

man

SATURDAY,
January
17
7:30 p.m. Charisma club meeting
at the church prior to a hayride or

death

January 28

n Carlson home,
, Highwood.

. God,

make

new-

TUESDAY, January 20
7 p.m.
Cub Scouts.
7:15 p.m.
Boy Scouts.

immortality,

kwoods place, Deerfield.
m,
planning of projects,

428, 426, 427).

THURSDAY,

MONDAY, January 19
7:30 p.m. Sea Scouts,

after meeting.
‘RIDAY, January 16
p.m. Brotherhood

at

(pp.

CHURCH

425 Laurel Avenue
Very Rev. Charles U.
Rector

this

WEDNESDAY,

pastor.

EPISCOPAL

Life.

meeting

of life...
Love

into

18

THURSDAY, January 22
12:30 p.m.
The Ladies Missionary society of the church will meet.
8 p.m. Choir rehearsal.

ing

home,

ness
and

SUNDAY, January 18
11 a.m. to 12 noon. Morning worship service, Dr. Young preaching.

sin

SUNDAY,

by

eternal

Schilling

this

Ends Tomorrow

. Minister

9:30 a.m. to 10:05
ichoir rehearsal.
under9:30 am. to 10:35

from

sermon

of other business. All voting members should attend. Supper served

» Lennart

death,

Sermon Series

Avenues

. . -|Church school classes for children
three years old up through third
that grade also meet at this hour.

and

quicken

j

Church Telephone HI 2-1695
Dr. William Atkinson Young,

disease

7 p.m.
Young People’s Fellowship.
7:45 p.m. Evening gospel service,

Pastor

18

by

that

2-1731

or.

GAN.

Linden,

January

saved

will

is

ST. JAMES CHURCH
146 North Ave., Highwood
Rev. James D. Gleeson, Pastor
Rev. Arthur E. Douaire, Ass’t.
HI 2-0427
First Fridays and Week Days —
Masses at 7 and 8 a.m. Holy Days
—Masses at 6, 7, 8 and 9.

Highwood
YDAY,

life,

are

9:30 a.m. Sunday school session.
10:45 a.m. Morning worship service, sermon by the pastor.
7 p.m. Junior Christian Endeav-

EV. LUTHERAN CHURCH
Street and Oakridge Avenue

ev. Herbert

learned
not

there

Reform Judaism

HIGHLAND PARK
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Laurel, Linden and Prospect

Eddy,

fruits.

destroy

Minister

January

6:45 p.m. Parish
8 p.m. Annual _
parish meeting.

THURSDAY,

is

its

cannot

and
9:15 a.m. Family
service
church school.
11 a.m. Morning prayer and sermon.
7:30 p.m. Canterbury club.

Conservative

it

by

mortals

SUNDAY, January 18
7:30 a.m. Holy communion.

,
HI 2-5787
Philip L. Lipis, Rabbi
Stanley Martin, Cantor

known

worship.
worship.

Masser,

y

tothe

be a ‘tree of

school.

HI 2-6653

Park

8:30 p.m. Late service.

G.

SUNDAY,

The

(LDDAY, January 16
1 p.m. Light candles.

life,’

UNITED EVANGELICAL
CHURCH
Bay Road at Laurel Ave.

TRINITY

chorus.

Highland

no death, this would

standing
Green

that

When

WEDNESDAY,
January
21
8 p.m.
Midweek prayer service.

21

obtained

or sickness
FIRST

’

Key

by Mary Baker

standing

kin-

:15 a.m. Confirmation class.
NDAY, January 18
40 a.m. Religious school: grades
» 8.
:20 p.m.
High school depart:30 p.m.

Sunday

Po

with

include:
“Life is real and death is the
illusion. .. . If the belief in death
were obliterated, and the under-

486

Glencoe
Dr. Edgar Siskin, Rabbi

en

Spend some hours in church.

0

Health

of the Resistance
is
presently
at
St.

Martyr

priory

in

Winona,

Minn.

WESLEY METHODIST CHURCH
Highwood Avenue and Everts Place
The

Rev.

Donald

Woods,

pastor

THURSDAY, January 15
7:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
FRIDAY,

January

7:30 p.m.

WSCS

The

16

Cabinet meeting

at the home of Mrs. Patrick.
SUNDAY, January 17
9:30 a.m.
Church school for

topic:

“The

Forgiveness

Rev.

all

We

Herbert

W.

ficiated at the baptism
in

Zion

wood,

ages.
-10:45 a.m.
Fifteen minutes of
chimes.
11 a.m. Morning worship. Sermon

Ronald Albert Newton Is
Baptised by Rev. Linden

Lutheran

of

Ronald

Linden

of-

January

11

church,

Albert

High-

Newton,

five months’ old son of Mr. and
Mrs.
Milton
A. Newton
of 1314Blackwood avenue.
Mrs. Paul Bul-

ler of Ridge
Francoeur
of

road
and
St. Johns

were

sponsors.

Ronald’s

Robert
avenue
He

has

a sister, Patricia, aged 18 months.

Need.”
TUESDAY, January 20
8 p.m. Women’s Society of Christian Service monthly meeting in
Fredrickson hall at the church.

tons gave a dinner party for several friends and relatives.
Present
were
Ronald’s
grandparents,
Mr.

Church

ton of Blackwood

The

church
invited
on

School Meeting

parents

of Wesley

Methodist

school children have been
to, meet with the teachers

January

23

at

8

p.m.

the work

in

the

church

to discuss

of the

school.
porary

Mrs. Ruben
Olson, temsuperintendent, anticipates

an exchange
of experience
between the teachers and parents on
the subject of work being done in
the

church

school.

Following

the

service,

the

New-

and Mrs. William Chalmers of Mul.
berry place and Mrs. Mildred Newuncle, Fred

avenue;

Kortbiem

his great-

of Vine

ave-

nue; his uncle, Gordon Chalmers
of Mulberry
place; and Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Geisser of Evanston.

Second

Birthday

Marcia Vaughn, daughter of the
Charles Vaughns
of Green Bay
road, celebrated her second birthday

last

friends

Thursday

and

at

a

party

for

family.

Thursday, January

15, 1953

»

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This Question

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Brand Frozen

tunities.

Orange Juice
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Sugared

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HIGHLAND

PARK

Dial HI 2-2400
FRI,
A

SAT.,

SUN. &amp; MON.,
Jan. 16-17-18-19

story that moved millions
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every heart

“THE MIRACLE OF OUR
LADY OF FATIMA”

$89

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Special
Jan.

Color

Kiddie Show Sat.,
17 at 2:00 P.M.
Rogers

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12

Freezer Meat

TUES.,

Bring

WED.

.&amp; THURS.,
Jan. 20-21-22

12 TOP STARS...
you the best stories
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Daily

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Savage”

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“Hurricane Smith”
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DeCarlo,

John

James

Ireland

SUN. thru WED., Jan. 18-21
Day,

Ray

Bolger

Musicale

“April in Paris”
Starts

THURSDAY,

Robert
Susan

17th.

from

SATURDAY

blazing

Technicolor

y

Se

WAUKEGAN

THRU

Two

Doris

Full Rib Half ........... Lb. 43c
Full Loin Half... Lb. 51c

Lb. 7c
WHOLE PORK LOINS
WHOLE LAMB or Sides... Lb. 49c

28

in

ROUND

THE BEND”
Plus—Our Gang &amp; Cartoons

Continuous

Page

oppor-

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12. ws. $219

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is filled with
gulden

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torn

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24 “=: $589

Downey Flake

of closeness,

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Will

Sliced and

each

selfishness
may
be

“STEAMBOAT

B &amp; W

know

section

facts

In

10-0z.

we

that
barriers
of
misunderstandings
down.”

you

Lima

486

other and
have
some
knowledge
of our
working
abilities
in the
field of religious education.
This
special service is to create in the

lag sfebinati
1
i.
"in
DOII
cas
desire
e Baby

church,

Rev. Clingman explains: “We are
inviting our friends regardless of
race
or
religious
affiliations
to
come and join us in this day of

The

e
e
e
e

Baptist

Central court, will sponsor a Fellowship
service
on Sunday
at 3
p.m.
The Rev. Robert Clingman,
minister, will bring the meditations
and sister churches of the Baptist
faith in Chicago and vicinity are
expected to participate.

Jan.

22

Mitchum,
Hayward

“The Lusty Men”
Thursday, January

15, 1953

�oeeeiiianieieeiaeiina iain,
PP tek TEE: DN Pelee
ead

to Live

New

Park

cational
use.
Already
there are
pre-school
programs.
for
small
children,
and even some of the
major universities are conducting
television classes.
We learn a lot, of course, from
our television
screens
without
being
directly
taught.
For one
thing,
we're
all
weather
men
these days . .

know

other

selection

of

TV

one.

20th

CENTURY

theater

and

sporting

sale

events,

at

Ticket Service

Closed

Sundays

=
ee

Show

H!

ie

Sunday

from

which 60 have
to gardens.
The

film

TEL-

redbud

the

beauty

of

and

CITY

are

is

commercial

not

very

opinion

that

examples
lovely

Leather Class At
Center Is Set

7)

of

big.”
many

of

Richard

to

hang

Bannockburn
the

show

High

will

be

Thompson

is

art

school.

chairman
Mr.

followed

Jr.

by

Savin’s
a display

of the work of elementary school
children in districts 106, 107 and
108.

Laurie,

Don

leathercraft

ation

commer-

enough

H.

A

|.

center

starting
The

There will be no admission
charge Sunday evening but a freewill offering will be received. The
public is cordially invited to attend
the showing.

ALL
CAN

given

in carving
of

with LEORA
HUBER * COLIN
PATRICIA

DANA
* FRANK CONROY
KEITH-JOHNSTON © ROBERT
SMITH * PHIL ARTHUR

Please enclose self-Feiddredsad stamped envelope and give alternate dates.
Eves. (exc. Sunday)—Orch. $5; Balc. $4.40, $3.80, $3.10; 2nd Bale. $2.50,
Matinees
Wednesday
and
Saturday—Orch.
$4.40;
Bale.
$3.80;)/)$3.10;.
2nd Balc. $1.85, $1.25. All prices incl. tax.

at the

Fine

Any
You

Purchase
to

Green

Bay

Road

HI

@

e@

@

GRAND

Open

Beautiful

2-9787

and

HI 2-2426

FREE COKES

Instructor

320 Green Bay Road, Highwood
Thursday,

January

15,

1953

available
the

at

course,

Harry

studied leathercraft
Kubalek,
der F. O. Baird in Colorado.
The

leathercraft

beginners

as

_

cost.

un- — ty

class is open to

well

as

those

who

have
had
experience
in
leather
carving. For registration or further
information,
call
the
Recreation
office, HI 2-2442.

aA

STEAKS
Saratoga

in the basket

10 or more

orders)

440 Green

OUT

@

e@

e@

12:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.
HI

2-1870

January

16

thru

THURSDAY,

ONE
Sat.

Mat.

2 to 4.

“APRIL

IN

Sun.

Cont.

January

Doris Day —
and

Highland

Park

Mon.-Fri.
40c to 6:30

Sat.,
Sun.

1:30
to
6—40¢
&amp; Holidays, 60c

LAST

22

at

6

DAY
January

15

“PRISONER OF
ZENDA”
Color by Technicolor
Stewart Granger
Debra Kerr
Louis Calhern

WEEK
2 to 12

PARIS”

2-0605

Open

Thursday

Starting Fri. to Thurs., Jan. 16
to 22 for one full week, direct
from

the

Loop.

“AGAINST ALL
FLAGS”

Ray Bolger

Color

introducing

by

Technicolor

Maureen

O’Hara

Erroll Flynn
Anthony Quinn

Claude Dauphin
NEXT WEEK—Our

HI 2-0440

GLENCOE

Lake Forest, Illinois — Lake Forest 2106
North Shore’s Most Beautiful Theatre

DEERPATH

Bay Road

Highwood

Highwood, III.

Ave.

FINEST

AGED

with

Free Delivery

is
of

designs.

tools are supplied

FOR THE

in technicolor

FREE SAMPLES

own

handbags,

or their own

leather

HIGHWOOD

LIQUORS TO TAKE
FOOD ORDERS

every day

423 Waukegan

FRIDAY,

CLOCK-Radio

|
|

DINNER—*]00

OUT ORDERS

Phone

Prices:
$1.85.
.$2:50;

PRIZE

their

arato

Per Order

off for

PACKAGE

ROSS

for Our

Mem-

HOURS

Chicken

TAKE
(10%

Enables

Register

wallets,

be

Liquor

Featuring

Foods

choose

as

Saratog

THE HIDEOUT

GIANGIORGI’S MARKET

tooling.

class

such

center,

Nia

GRAND OPENING
JANUARY 17th

and

10

will

picture frames, belts, waste baskets, etc., and use patterns available ©

A New Play by PAUL OSBORN
Based on the Novel by JOHN P. MARQUAND
PAUL

the

projects

include

will

instruction

and

nights,

22.

WASHINGTON GARDENS

550

Point
of Noketun’

of-

Package

MOSTACCIOLI

YOU
EAT

DeFore

HENRY FONDA

be

Thursday

course

lessons
bers

on

January

All the necessary
iden in April, the colorful hydrangea, and fragrant gardenia of May,
followed in the summer months by
crepe myrtle,
oleander,
hibiscus,
allamanda and fancy-leaved calad‘ium.

will

SPECIAL—Wednesday, January 14

Cabot

presents

class

fered at the Highland Park Recre- Aa

SUNDAY AFTERNOON
12:00 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Draught Beer 10c — Bottle Beer 25c
Shots 25c — Mixed Drinks 40c

Box Office Opens Jan. 19th
HAYWARD

cial

art

art

the

day

COCKTAIL

BEG. MON., JAN. 26th
4 WEEKS ONLY ! !
LELAND

of

present

for

double flowered

$] 35.

Bae

is

between

fine

Take Out
Orders

16-17

aa

Coming—
Martin and Lewis in
“JUMPING JACKS”

ERLANGER

He

gap

page

WASHINGTON GARDENS

Drive Carefully — The Life You Save
May Be Your Own!

Mail Orders Now!

in-

and

from

VISIT

15

Lupino,

Color by Technicolor
Lund, Jeff Chandler, Susan

Piper

landscaped

starting with the camellias which
begin to open in September
and
last until
April.
Azaleas,
which
start blooming in February are followed by
mountain
laurel,
dog-

(In Color)
Scott, Lucille Norman,
Raymond Massey

Tony Curtis,
Coming:

EVISION &amp; RADIO, 1858 First St.
Phone Highland Park 2-0341.

of

the

art

Mrs.

white spirea in the early spring.
Revealed in color are the rose gar-

TUES., WED. &amp; THURS. Jan. 20-21-22
“NO ROOM FOR THE
GROOM”

sets

acres

the garden at all times of the year,

SUN. &amp; MON.
Jan. 18-19
“THE BATTLE OF APACHE
PASS”
John

been

es

2:30

Jan.

“CARSON

100

depicts

SIERRA”

FRI. &amp; SAT.

a

than

re

in any home.

Deep South” and attract thousands
of tourists annually.
The grounds

more

ta

For the finest in Italian foods

Humphrey
Bogart,
Ida
Arthur Kennedy

Randolph

that

The Bellingrath Gardens, located
20 miles from
Mobile,
Ala., are
known as the “Charm Spot of the

wood,

Jan.

“HIGH

(Continued

The Youth Fellowship of Bethany church, Laurel and McGovern
streets, will present a 70 minute
color-sound film of the Bellingrath
Gardens at 7:30 p.m. Sunday as a
part of their ‘‘Winter Vacation by
Film” program.

include

4

Show Oil Work

Bethany Youth
Group Presents
Color Film Sunday

2-6228

THURSDAY

and find out how easy it is for you
to own

te

Continuous

a doubt, 1953 will be a great year
in television . . . and by all means
don’t miss any of it. Come in and
fine

BANANA”

HIGHWOOD
THEATRE

better understanding
of some of
the
problems
and
advances _ in
modern medicine.
So it looks as
if there are going to be more’ of
these special
programs.
Without

our

“TOP

Evanston

physicians asked felt that the experiment was very worthwhile in

see

—

kay

GIRL”

OPE

Most

at large

BSE
e eee

on

all

the. birth of a baby.

TICKETS

eee
TOUetge

Siimiigie

“GIGIY

such as the experiment-

public

Neumans

. North Shore Hotel Lobby, DAvis 8--82829 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mon. thru Sat.
*

al
telecasts
from
Denver
last
month
showing,
among
other

to the

Highland

bins himhet CCE

“"STALAG

about
high
and
low pressure areas, and what have you. And isn’t
your geography a lot better than it
used to be?
Perhaps,
most
interesting
and
valuable, however, are the special

bringing

of

Henry

iat eudtiSvgneHeNEnsHeUENeieNRNANENEHeIE

far off. All over the country channels are being set aside for edu-

things,

the

“THE COUNTRY

OBE w

looking
at a_ television
screen?
Pretty soft, eh?
Well, that kind
of education may not be so very

ee eee

sume

How would you like to have
gotten your three R’s at home,

programs,

be

of 918 Linden avenue, Winnetka,
who are planning to occupy their
new home at 450 Broadview avenue early in February.
The Neumans have an
eight
months’
old
son, Richard.

REYNOLDS

we

residents

will

SCOURS

By JOHN

Here

.

Own Joan Taylor and Charlton Heston in
THE

SAVAGE

Coming—

APRIL

IN

PARIS”
Page

29

ayis

ae

he
Pe

za

Neumans

Fs

�NMERICANAN FAMILY

shes
whiter Wa
Flakes for
wash
hat ” Soot Kind

DREFT SUDSER

For White Laun
dry Suds

Four
ye

—washias Me
yeed

4 Fvelous

, 100-

results

or

Kitchen Suds
For White
glassware

ethos,

2
|

torn aie
ig

wa

dishes ot“brand ne
‘ ti
easy
clean the
ae vind

S

Ivory SOAP
White Fiat;
eg

a

&amp; Sean

_ dishee Athing7 oer * $04P. Use
So kind to baaby's Sake Your bon”

'

Mad.
Bars
For
and

Silks

or

LUX

Sude

Soap

Fabulous

The

Sudser ,9,t¢ BRe

Woolens

nes 2° 59
B igigy FuAPTHA
.28% 59°
C FELS WAP
white

Tough. “Sob

Washin

9 Results

Breeze

with

ew Suds Wonder
YDOL

Drie, 55:
Gets Clothes Cieon we
ER.

Mn SUDS

Fiakes

Dk 95°

BR

eek:

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55°
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r
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Through Yo

Dishwashing

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Soap of
Beautityy

CAMAY SOAP
All Pur"Pose

Bui

le

GiReg,

4 5c

Bar Scop

SWAN
Specias

Women

SOAP. ,

Sate

on

bare$s 4c

a oe

47

Ty

gay
&lt;4

Medal,

Ceresota

or

~ all your cooking, baking and
frying needs, All purpose flour.

! 9 i, Ib. bag

Pure Vegetable Shortening

G-W BEET
SUGAR

eeeeeeoeeeoeeoeceeeee

PiLLSBURY'S
BEST FLOUR
Gold

Pure, Fine Granulated

Crystal clear,
fable use.

For

cooking

CRISCO
or SPRY
8

and

3

10g;

Pure

Pillsbury FLOUR 9 é: 47° CANE SUGAR .. 9 2 49°
Medal,

Duncan

Ceresota

Hines

Mix

or

Pure

-

for

Swansdown—Easv

to

Watermaid

Grain

Short

FANCY
Cooks

in

McKenzie

{-Lb
*

Min

.

5-02.

MINUTE RICE ..

13

Cookin

Popeye

White

Regular

or

orte

1-Lb.

Buttermilk

Free

Running

Arm

and

or

from

ee

enriched.

Use

in

2 29°|

Shortening

Advertised Perishable
Food
Prices
subject
to change
with the
markets,

26-02.

Vitamin

cereals or coffee. Safe for one
too.

-ib. can

Pig CRUST ik .2 32: 35°

17°

20-07.

lodized

Made

aid:

Evaporated

NATCO MILK...

Sunsiime

4

Krispy

CRACKERS....

lttus Fen:

c

MINUTE TAPIOCA . $2: 19°
POPCORN..... 99
QUAKER OATS...
30°
Quick

Han

words PANCAKE MIX . «+ Puc. 19°
we 15° MORTON’S SALT
=: 11°

use

RICE cy:

a

ashburn's

Vegetable

digestible.

Natco Shortening 3 tk 79°

Granulated

NAVY BEANS .,

re Oz,
02, BH

WHITE CAKE
CAKE FLOUR...

Highly

high quality vegetable oils.

-lb. bag

Kitchex ee

Gold

B

CARNATION
_ PET MILK

Homogenized and Evaporated

Quick

48-02.

Box

Hammer

Brand

BAKING SODA..
COCOANUT....
PIE CRUST....
PANCAKE MIX. .
Durkee’s

Pkg.

Shredded

Py-O-My

Mix

Pillsbury's

8-02,

Pkg.

for

or

Aunt

g°

{-Lb.

8-0z,

Pkg.

29°

19°

Jemima

20-0 zZ

Pkg.

18°

L

U. S. Government Graded and Stamped Chottée LAMB
Notional’s

Value

Way

Square

Neck

Remove

Trimmed.

Shin

and

Tail

Bone

OU:

Removed

LEG of LAMB
Cut

LAMB SHOULDER ROAST.

Fancy

Top

Quality—Ready

to

Cook

STEWING CHICKENS .
PORK SAUSAGE .
FRANKFURTS. .. .
Mickelberry's

Marhoefer's

U.S.

Old

Just-Rite—Skinless

Graded

and

Somerset—Extra

y's

Lb. Abe

Stamped

Fishermen—Just rea

and

Eat

COOKED PERCH. . .
DATED OYSTERS
LONGHORN CHEESE.

0 35°

Form—Roll

Government

Four

Lb. 53°

“Choice”

Standard

Wisconsin

Blode

Moriarty's

Cuts

BEEF POT ROAST

Lb. 55°
Advertised

Meat

Prices

Lb. 63°
ishable
change

Beef

Wiss OR ROUND STEAKS.
Best

mee. 49°
can §9°

*10-0z,

Lb.
Shamrock

CORNED
effective

thru

Boneless

BEEF
Sat., Jan.

ov

Brisket
eee

ee

©

@

17

SHOP WITH YOUR FAMILY FRIDAY (FAMILY) NITE ’TIL 9

578 Central Ave., Highland Park
636 Deerfield Road, Deerfield

Food
Price
owe ect
with the mar rhets.

o~
te

�PHONE YOUR

FOR

each

din.

additional

55

Words

or

word
Less)

® Highland Park News
® Highwood News

TELEPHONE
WANT AD SERVICE

Vernon

Glencoe

flr. has

2nd

The

(I
ees
gross
good

2-0037

master

lge.

a very

flr.

Ist

on

BENJ. PIERSEN
REALTY CO.

or

350

SOLID
BRICK
Full Iv. and
dn. rm., 2 bedrooms,
tile
bath, attached garage with storage above,
fenced
in yard,
low cost
maintenance,
gas
ht. $90
a year,
taxes
$158.
Will
take a good mortgage.

PRICED $17,000
ADLER AND MAXON

FAMILY

GOOD

2%4

bedrooms,

Four

Highland

Northeast

$25,000.

home

on

in

large

home.

and

clap-

beautifully

land-

brick

ft. frontage.
scaped grounds—125
Charming reception hall, large livlibrary,
dining room,
room,
ing

breakfast room, streamlined elecand
room
powder
tric kitchen,
large screen porch. Attached two
TO settle estate. 9-room
house with
2 car
garage. Deluxe master suite
baths and sun porch. Recently remod- | |
room and ceramic tile
eled. 75 ft. lot. East side, 2 blocks to w/dressing
business,
2 blocks
to lake. Call
HI | bath. Two
other large family bed2-3707 after 6 evenings.
rooms and ceramic tile bath plus
OWNER
offers 5 room frame house; 2
bedrooms, full basement, deep lot, ga- maids room and bath. Luxuriously
rage. Near schools and transportation.
‘panelled recreation room and bar.
$16,500. Shown by appointment; phone
throughout.
construction
evenings only, HI 2-1259.
Quality
Automatic gas heat.
Highland Park
Exclusive Agents
A charming well-located Colonial home
containing
4 bedrooms,
8 baths,
small
HI 2-1212
Central Avenue
den. Immediate possession. Considerately 463
1896

Sheridan

Rd.

HI

2-1834

INC.

4H. AND R. ANSPACH,

priced

at

$38,500.

Brick and clapboard just 10 years old.
4 bedrooms, 2 baths, screened porch; attached
garage.
Rec.
room,
Double
lot
with
play house.
An
excellent
buy
at
$34,500.

S. L. GOODFRIEND
Glencoe

Theater

Bldg.

&amp; CO.
Glencoe

286

HIGH ST.
2 bdrm.
home and income from 8 rm.
cottage.
House
has full bsmt., oil ht.;
near schools and churches.
Attractively
priced at $15,250.
VIKING
REALTY
CO.
685 Waukegan Rd.
Deerfield 161

Thursday,

January

15,

1953

PRICED RIGHT
If you are looking for a home plan for
living you must see this
family
happy
4 yr. old home. Besides the liv. rm. and
kit. on the 1st flr. this brk. and frame
home has a lge. panelled TV or recr. rm.,
2nd flr. are
&amp; bath. On
master bdrm.

the

2 children’s

roomg

and

%

bath

with

space
for shower
or tub.
There
is a
lovely screen pch., partial bsmt., gas ht.,
att. gar., ge. lot; bus to school. All this
for $24,000. For appt. call Mrs. McClure,
HI 2-5821
or HI 2-7278.

BENJ. PIERSEN
REALTY CO.

584

Central

TIRED
OF
CITY
LIFE?
Buy this beautiful mod. country frame
shingle home and add years to your life.
Lge. liv. rm., lannon stone frpl., din. rm.,
mod. cab. kit., 3 lge. bdrms., 1% baths,
2 glazed
porches,
lots of closet space;
oil hot water ht., 2 car gar., lge. 2 box
stall barn.
Good
condition.
Also
guest
house, beautiful grounds; close in. Asking $82,500.

R. S. HAMBLY &amp; CO.,
REALTORS

HI

723
St.
Johns
Ave.
at Roger Williams Ave.
2-1484
Eve., HI

2-1485

|REAL

ESTATE

Ave.,

HI

2-7278

or HI

2-1215

FOR

SALE

(LAKE FOREST)

ENGLAND

APARTMENTS TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(Highland Park)

(Improved)

HIGHLAND PARK
APARTMENT

COLONIAL

A

BLEND OF
AND NEW

100

ft. wooded

McCORTENY-NELLEN

STate

Ravine

proper-

ty, this 7 rm. brk. Colonial home is
an excellent buy. Lge. liv. rm. with
frpl., eating kitch., din. rm., en-

69

2-3875

Washington

W.

St.

rooms
4 new
apartments;
house
TWO
with combination kitchen, new full bath
Heat,
apt.
each
in
and entrance porch
water, yard and gar. space included.
Bur83
Open for inspection every day.
tis Place, Highwood. HI 2-1732 before
8 a.m. and after 7 p.m.

MONTEREY
ORLEANS

APARTMENTS

TO RENT
(Deerfield)

(Unfurnished)

This charming brick residence with its
hand-split cedar shake roof and its lace- THREE room unfurnished garage apartlike ornamental
iron-work
balcony
was
ment, heat and utilities furnished; lodesigned by an eminent architect for his
cated on County Line between Skokie
own home. There are 4 bedrooms and 4
Rds. Deerfield 184.
and Waukegan
baths,
large living room,
dining
room,
both
with bow windows,
study, kitchen &gt;
(Unfurnished)
APARTMENTS TO RENT
and breakfast room. 2 car attached gaLAKE
FOREST
rage. Screened porch. Also brand new 8
stall stable
with
post
and
rail
fence NEWLY
bed2
apartment.
decorated
large
around a small pasture. This is the ultiroom,
living
spacious
rooms,
furAlso
‘mate in architectural perfection,
pantry.
butler’s
kitchen and
nish heat, water, refrigerator, electric
February
e
stove and garage. Availabl
1st. Call Lake Forest 1177 after 6 p.m.

6 ROOM BRICK RANCH
LAKE FOREST COUNTRYSIDE

(Furnished)
TO RENT
APARTMENTS
(Highland Park)

On over an aere of nicely landscaped
and wooded property. There are 3 bedrooms,
2 baths.
Beautiful
large
living
room and adjoining all-purpose room with
fireplace wall. Gas heat. Thermopane windows. Cork floors. 2 car attached garage,
Low taxes. Price, $37,000.

HART,

EAST
on

autoModern 5 rms. with bath; individual
matic gas ht. Convenient to transportation and schools.

SHAW

&amp;

TWO five room furnished apartments for
call HI 2-5399
rent. For information
ane
18 ROM
2 Rte
and bath. Tel. HI 2-3597.
rooms
TWO
SIX room furnished apartment, includes
hot water. Call HI 2-6373.
heat and
hear
apartment,
furnished
room
TWO
single pertransportation, suitable for
per
$75
only,
couple
son or employed
month. Phone HI 2-4515.
private
apt. in Highwood;
ROOM
1%
bath and entrance, partly furnished. No
or couple
Single person
refrigerator.
only. No children. HI 2-3573.

COMPANY

260 EAST DEERPATH
LAKE FOREST 616

REAL ESTATE

FOR SALE (Improved)

(Miscellaneous)

NEW
3 room
completely modern house
and attached carport, carpenter built;
good deep well, big lot. 8 blocks from
Sheridan Rd., 2 blocks south of Zion.
Full price, $6,250. TRinity 2-8795.

(Furnished)
TO RENT
APARTMENTS
(LAKE FOREST)

suite (including sitting room),
2 ROOM
A distinguished dwelling of 8 spacious
twin beds; kitchen and light laundry
rooms with an atmosphere of social eleprivileges. Prefer working couple, Refgance for the discriminating buyer, this
1855.
Bluff
Lake
Telephone
erences.
lannon stone Colonial has a gracious liv.
LARGE, clean 1 and 2 room furnished
rm. with a stone frpl., dn..rm., TV rm.,
and $20
$15
apartments,
497 Central Ave.
HI 2-4580 twin size bedroom, cab. kit., ceramic tile
kitchenette
314
basis.
or on monthly
per week
bath with glass shower doors, glazed and,
4, Lake
nt
Apartme
Avenue,
n
Wisconsi
screened porch on the Ist floor.
Forest.
There
are three
spacious
twin
size
BRAESIDE—11 YEARS OLD bedrooms,
apartment,
furnished
partly
ROOM
4
sundeck, ceramic tile bath on
Located
on a large, beautifully 2nd floor.
adults only; no pets. Close to transrent. Telephone
Reasonable
.
portation
Exceptional
closet
space
throughout,
landscaped lot, this 4 bdrm., 2 bath
Lake Forest 1135.
full basement which has separate rooms
home
is perfect for the growing | for gas fired forced air furnace, laundry,
HOUSES
&amp; APARTMENTS
WANTED
family. Add’l features are the large | workroom and storage plus large paneled
(Furnished or Unfurnished)
|recrea.
rm.
with
equipped
bar, ceramic
screen porch, efficient nat. wood
tiled powder
rm.
kitchen with dishwasher &amp; tiled
2 car attached garage, large landscaped WANTED: 8 room ranch home by private
Box
Write
or rent.
will buy
party;
breakfast area, panld. den or 5th 115x255 lot; % block to transportation.
Park News.
E-5 c/o Highland
Carpeting, storms and screens included
screened
sleeping
porch,
'bdrm.,
in below reproduction cost, $87,500. Only
MARRIED couple desire 4 or 5 room unfurnished apartment, near transportapanld.
recreation
rm.,
att.
gar., small down payment required.
tion; good references. Call EDgewater

PAUL PHELPS, INC.

|

economical GAS heat. Owner moving, price reduced for quick sale to

location.

Ravinia

East

traditional

Fine

board

home
All

Park.

OFFERED

TIME

FIRST
Exclusive

HOUSE
bath
family

Wonderful

rooms.

2-7278

or HI

2-1215

HI

Ave.,

Central

SHERWOOD
FOREST
Under $23,000 wil buy the best 3 bdrm.
brk. Ranch, like new
house
with every
mod. conv. Beautiful
liv.-dinette comb.,
gorgeous
frpl., orchard
stone panelled;
U.S. radiant heating system
in flr. and
ceiling, yearly cost under $100. Yes, 7
closets
and
a dream
modern
Kkit., att.
oversize gar.; landscaped, close to shopping, transp., etc. Very low taxes. Under
$23,000.

trance hall, pwdr. rm., lge. screen
peh., 4 bdrms., 2 baths.
Freshly decorated; carpeting and
2-4580
‘new drapes included. $29,500.

JUST RIGHT
couple
For a young married couple or a
Two
up.
grown
have
children
whose
bdrms., liv. rm., din. rm., kit., ceramic}
2
bsmt.,
por.,
scr.
tile bath with shower,
Call Mrs.
car gar.; near transportation.
Graham, HI 2-6842 or HI 2-7278.

REALTOR
805

HI

Ave.

Central

584

(Improved)

Park)

NEW

kit.,

rm.,

din.

bath

PAUL PHELPS, INC.

497

SALE

and Charge It!

JUST
LISTED
2 bdrm.
gray
clapboard
Colonial.
Liv.This handsome clapboard 11 room residin.
rm.,comb.,
cab.
kit., nook
space, ‘dence with lannon stone trim is located
bath with shower, full bsmt.; hot air oil on a nicely wooded lot on a quiet deadht.; low taxes and heating costs. Reuson- end road and is only 2 miles from Lake
able down payment. Handy to everything.
Forest trains and shops.
A steal,
$15,000.
On the 1st floor are living room, dining room with bay, kitchen with breakSUNSET
TERRACE,
OWNER
built, like fast space, 2 bedrooms, bath and sitting
new, frame Ranch. Lge. liv. rm-din. rm. room, upstairs is a study or TV room,
comb.,
brk.
frpl.,
cab.
kit.,
2
lovely
bedroom. and bath. Over the attached 2
bdrms., tile bath &amp; shower, lge. utility car garage is modern 4 room apartment
rm., expandable upstairs, plastered walls. with inside and outside entrance. There
Forced air oil ht., 75 ft. lot landscaped,
are 2 finished
rooms,in
the basement.
oversize gar. Around $17,000.
Price just reduced to $49,500.

new

fine

by

suite with its own bath; 2 additional generous bedrms. and tile bath.
$42,500
An excellent buy at

162
Laurel
Ave,
DO YOU NEED
4 GOOD
BDRMS.?
See this convenient family home, % blk.
from the lake. Liv. rm. with frpl., din.
rm., lib., kit., screen pch. on lst. 4 bdrms., 2 baths on 2nd. Plenty of storage
Space, 2 car att. gar. $34,600.
667

Sher-

LAKE
beautiful seRavinia, this

rm.,

and

rm.

maid’s

ESTATE

MORELAND,

see

FOR

|

485

ADS

an exquisitely planned

pwd.

garden,

ESTATE

(Highland

are spacious, the

rms.

The

‘overlooking

OWNER
offers 6 room white brick,
1
baths, heated garage, screened
Sake
basement,
rec. room, beamed
ceilings,
generous wood panelling; picture window overlooks woods and ravine, near
lake. Architect’s home of superior construction. $26,500 or offer. H] 2-4993,

ANN

build

the
and
good
unusually
closets
decorating in excellent taste. Lge.
| liv. rm. with frpl., den, screen pch.,

HOME
AND
INCOME
8 apt. buildings in good location;
income,
$415 per month. $30,000;
terms. For info. ca
HI

to

surrounded

is

home

houses.

HIGHLAND PARK
1775 St. Johns Ave.
DEERFIELD
615 Waukegan Road
LAKE FOREST
287
Deerpath

res.

plan

1 BLK. FROM
On one of the most
cluded streets in NE

Deerfield 485
Highland Park 2-4500
Lake Forest 2300

2-0098..

brkfst.

RAVINIA

Call any of these numbers
and ask for a Want Ad
Taker

HI

kit.,

paid for, reasonably priced.
ROBERT L. JOHNSON
REALTY
CoO.
HI 2-6200
1608 Berkeley Rd.
Deerfield 308
Winnetka 6-3809

for Publication in the Current
Week's Issue

ANCHOR

mod.

in and

Tuesday 4:30 p.m.

1
REAL

bdrm.,

If you

Ads will be accepted up te

SALE
Park)

rm.,

REAL

:

wood Forest, a new and fast growing area. Lge. lots, many beautifully wooded with all improvements

® The Lake Forester

ESTATE
FOR
(Highland

(Improved)

Park)

Cute brick Ranch with bsmt., 2
_bdrms.,
liv.-din.
comb.;
gas
Htii
oversize gar. Under $20,000. —

® Deerfield Review

REAL

SALE

|nook, bath and screen pch. on Ist
flr.
2 more bdrms. and tile bath
on 2nd fir. Gas ht. and lge. wooded
lot. A real buy at $30,000.

This cost will cover the
insertion in all 4 papers.

Want

FOR

(Highland

Picture book Williamsburg Colonial in Sherwood Forest. Liv. rm.,

for only
(For

ESTATE

ADS

Deerfield

use WANT

REAL

20 words
5¢

Kosutts

Cia

WANT AD RATES

WANT

$34,500.

RINGER REALTY
457 Central
REAL

ESTATE

COMPANY
HI 2-6600

FOR
SALE
(Deerfield)

(Improved)

Older
frame
residence
on
638x300
ft.
ec rner lot, 1 block
from
bus;
lv. rm.,
dinette, kit., bedroom
and bath on Ist
floor; 2 additional bedrooms on 2nd floor,
screened and glazed breezeway, attached
2 car garage,
automatic
oil forced air
heat. Price, $15,750.

CARR
701

Waukegan

REALTY
Rd.,

Two
flat building
rm.
apts.;
closed
2 car gar. 2nd flr.
occupancy.
$5,000

VIKING
685

REAL

Waukegan

CO.

Deerfield

984

REALTY

985

CO.
Deerfield

161

ESTATE FOR SALE. (Improved)
(LAKE FOREST)

Lake Forest: Attractive 2-story house in
excellent condition on 75 foot lot, near
station and school. 5 rooms and bath on
Ist floor, 2 extra bedrooms on 2nd floor,
Hot air heat with oil furnace. Combination screen and storm windows. Two-car
garage. From a purchaser willing to wait
for possession until lease expires September 1, 1953, owner will accept the bargain
price of $16,500.00.

GILBERT RAYNER
LAKE FOREST 382

701

Waukegan

~ REAL

REALTY

Rd.,

ESTATE

Deerfield

CO.
984

or

985

ARE you living in a smal] house in Highland Park or Deerfield and need more
bedrooms
for your family?
J’ll trade

with you for my

‘

4-1908.

TO EXCHANGE _

low cost maintenance,

4 bedroom,
2 tile bath home
in Ravinia, 2 car garage, hot water, gas ht.
Priced
under
$25,000. No
headaches;
you
move
in my
house,
I move
in
yours. Write c/o Box C-45, Highland
Park News, giving your name and address and telling about your property.

MORTGAGES

FIRST MORTGAGE
or

consisting of two
5
porches,
full bsmt.,
pays for bldg. 1st flr.
cash
will handle.

Rd.

CARR

LOANS

Ample
funds available at low rates on
well located residential properties. Long
terms—prepayment
privileges.
FIRST
FEDERAL
SAVINGS
AND
LOAN
ASSOCIATION
216 Madison Street
Waukegan
MA
8-0084
APARTMENTS TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(Highland Park)
NEW modern 2 bedroom apartment available February 1st, $150 monthly, including heat. Adults. HI 2-0098. Must
see to appreciate.
MODERN 4% rooms, 2 bedroom apt., new
building on Park Ave., $160 per month.
Draper
&amp;
Kramer,
Inc.;
call
Mrs.
Wilson, STate 2-0085.
LARGE 4 room apartment, second floor,
with heated sun porch; choice location,
east
side.
Newly
redecorated.
$125
rental
includes
automatic
oil
heat,
light, gas, hot water, electric refrigerator,
gas stove, laundry privileges.
Nice
yard,
protected
drive-in. Immediate
occupancy.
Call
Mr. Cobb,
HI
2-1867; evening
HI
2-3707.

SIX or seven room house wanted to rent;
one year lease. Responsible family of
3. Will pay $200 to $300 per month.
HI 2-6877.
couple and 11 mos. son desire
YOUNG
2 bedroom apt., Deerfield or Highland
Park. Will pay to $150 a month. Call
1162.
Deerfield
and _ wife,
foreman
SHERIDAN
FORT
fursmall
Want
elderly; permanent.
nished or unfurnished apartment. Man
can devote a day to chores; wife also
habits;
give part time. No obnoxious
c/o
C-55
Write Box
best references.
H.P. News.
unfurnished
room
8-3%
like
WOULD
son.
adult
and
mother
apartment;
889-J.
Deerfield
Phone
of 4 need 2 bedroom house or
FAMILY
apartment. Call HI 2-4880.
will share bungalow home with
WIDOW
heat; couple. For information call HI
2-5458.
6 ROOM unfurnished house in Lake ForPark or Lake Bluff to
est, Highland
family of 8 adults. Excellent care of
property. References. Write Box F-80
c/o Lake Forester.

ROOMS

FOR

RENT

BEDROOM
for rent; plenty of heat and
hot water.
Market
Square. Telephone
Lake Forest 1409.
NICE big room, close to Vine Ave. station. Tel. HI 2-1556.
EAST PARK AVE. Well furnished front
room,
very
central,.
for
1 employed
woman; no transient. Full kitchen and
laundry privileges. Tel. HI 2-1138.
DOUBLE room; twin beds, private bath.
Close
to transportation,
garage.
Employed
people
preferred.
Telephone
_ Lake Forest 2046.
NICE room for rent to employed person,
close to town and transportation, Tel.
HI 2-0376.

Page

31

�HELP W
EASANT

room, twin beds;
near trans-

portation. Tel, HI 2-5117.
RGE
front room, twin
privileges.
HI 2-0199.

beds;

SALESLADIES

AND

Part

or

F.

kitchen

LARGE,
pleasant sleeping room, semi_ private bath; near transportation and
_

shopping

district.

_est 927.

_

Telephone

Lake

ROOM, suitable for employed man; nicely
__. furnished. Use of kitchen; near trans-

woe
Call HI 2-6359.
E, large, homey, clean bedroom; twin
. closet and dresser. Hot water at
all times; 12 minute walk to station.
HI
2-8441.
IMFORTABLE
double
room;
near
transportation. Telephone Lake Forest

bath,

kitchen

privileges

2-6769.
OUBLE
room
for
all times.
Near
2-6586.

LARGE

room,

rent; hot water
transportation.

at
HI

near

transportation

ROOM

=

AND

Call

HI

W.

ROOM

WANTED

OUNG Italian lady would like room and
board in exchange for light household
duties
in the evening
and
Saturday.
I 2-6032.

HELP
COOK,

5 or

6 days
is

Apply
hwood.

a week,

600

senior

known
located

necessary.

at

406

Bay

SEE

CENTRAL

as
of

assistant
a

to

nationally

_ suburbs.
CK

GIRL

wanted.

Murrie
Bluff.

Apply

109 Scranton, Lake
Lake Bluff 41.

EXPERIENCED in general office work; 5
_ day week, good future. Call HI 2-3231.

/ENERAL

office

work,

subscription

working

day

Located

ELECTRICAL
WORK

time,

in

minute

5

breaks

business

section

nings

1488

4:45

p.m.

to 11:15

DURACLEAN
Mr.

HI

Tennis

444

SALES CLERK

2-6548

necessary.

Call
1201.

Florence

to assemble

iet kit.
See Miss

:

WAITRESs

and

serve

at Highland
Park
Beard, HI 2-8000.

wanted;

hours,

11

Rhodes,

trays
to

Day,

XPERIENCED

check

out

girl

or

Paid

experienced,

full

or

part

News.

CELLENT
opportunity
for a mature
woman, between approximate ages
85 to 45 yrs., selling home appliances; should have a car and some selling experience.
Apply
Sears
Roebuck
and
Co., 601 Central
Ave., Highland

» Park.

STENO-CLERK,
splendid
working
conditions;
convenient
location.
5
day
week;
good
salary
for
right
party.
_ Apply thru Highland Park Chamber of
Commerce.
XPERIENCED girl for statistical typing
own home. Telephone HI 2-1788.

Plus

Vacations

and

Work

Rhodes

WALGREEN
784

Elm

Commissions
Hospitalization

DRUG

St.

Plan

CO.
Winnetka

STENOGRAPHER

Northbrook

1200

GET INTO RAILROAD
WORK!

WORKERS
AGENTS

DEEPFREEZE APPLIANCE
DIVISION
2301 DAVIS STREET
NORTH CHICAGO
DEXTER 6-3400
room
nurse,
good
Highwood
Hospital,

salary.
High-

SHORE LINE

EMPLOYMENT
OFFICE
HIGHWOOD
A-1
TAXI
needs
drivers, full or part
time; military personnel used if able
to qualify
for local permit.
Cal] HI
2-5555 or stop at 580 Central
Ave.,
Highland Park.

GENERAL SHOPWORK
OLDER MEN CONSIDERED
Inside,
interesting,
varied
and
steady
year round
employment
with
employee
benefits. Good working conditions. Duraclean Co. (center of Deerfield). Contact
Mr. Tennis, Deerfield 444,
/

WANTED—DOMESTIC

COOK,
white,
experienced;
portation.
Top
pay, own
phone Lake Forest 2398.

near

room.

trans-

Tele-

DOWNSTAIRS
maid, white, experienced;
near
transportation.
Top
pay;
own
room. Telephone Lake Forest 2398.
COOK,
white,
experienced,
recent
references.
Own
room,
top
pay.
Near
transportation.
Telephone
Lake
Forest
550.
GENERAL housework, plain cooking, assist care 8 year old boy. Stay, own
room
and
bath;
top
wages.
Glencoe
1552.

HOUSEWORK

for

2

adults, new Ranch home East Wilmette,
near Linden station; no laundry. Private
room
and
bath,
top
salary
to
pleasant, capable woman under 45, with
good
recent
references,
BUckingham
1-9785.

WOMAN
from
38 to 8 p.m., 8 days a
week,
for cleaning
and
cooking;
10
minute walk from Ravinia North Shore
station.
No
children.
Call
evenings
only. HI 2-5176.
WOMAN
for
cleaning
and
ironing,
3
days a week; prefer 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Phone HI 2-2525.
COOKING
and downstairs work, current
wages;
2 teen-age
sons.
Own
room

and bath.

Personal laundry,

week;
Write

refBox

COOK,
serve,
light housework;
experienced. Small adult family. Private room
and’ bath.
$45. HI 2-0554.

top salary.

Other

GENERAL
maid and housekeeper, white;
good cook. No laundry;
2 in family,
small modern house, electric appliances,
pleasant environment. 2 miles west of
Highland
Park
station.
Phone
HI
2-0116 evenings or Saturday and Sunday, collect.
COUPLE,
experienced;
man cleaning, serving
wages. HI 2-2713.

Lake

woman
cooking,
and driving. Top

Forest

2684.

COOKING
and
downstairs
work;
1 in
family. References required; top wages.
Telephone
Mrs.
F. A. Preston,
Lake
Forest 1516.
COUPLE
for country place; wife, cook,
general
housework;
husband,
care of
horses,
drive,
general
maintenance.
Must
like country,
children, animals;
have
character
references.
Telephone
collect Libertyville 2-1495.
GENERAL
housework,
in. Telephone
Lake

3 in family; stay
Forest
2124.

COUPLE:
woman,
cooking, light housework; man, some driving and outside
work.
References
required.
2
room
apartment with garage space for car.
Telephone
Libertyville 2-3040.
COOK,
white; permanent position. Some
downstairs work. Current wages. References required. Telephone Lake Forest 484.
‘
RELIABLE
white woman for housework
5 mornings weekly from 9 to 12; 1%
blocks
to
Beech
St.
station.
Mrs.
Lloyd, HI 2-0880.
EXPERIENCED
white woman for cooking and general housework; no heavy
cleaning or laundry. Stay; own room
and bath. Near transportation; current
wages. Telephone Lake Forest 2110.

SITUATIONS

Pensions, insurance and free transportation. No experience
is necessary.
Earn
while you learn.
APPLY
TO

NORTH

GIRL
for cleaning 1 day .a
erences required. Good pay.
C-5,
Highland
Park News.

WANTED—FEMALE

NURSE
will give room,
in own home. Tel. HI

TRAINMEN
SHOP

2-0215.

SECOND maid; one in family. Permanent
position, current wages; references required. Telephone
Mrs.
Donald
Ryerson, Lake Forest 970.

PERMANENT JOBS
ARE NOW OPEN
FOR

COOK-GENERAL

to work in our production office. A real
opportunity
in our expanding
organization.
Attractive
rates
and
opportunity
for advancement.

OPERATING
Apply
to
wood,
Ill.

matter

BOYS
wanted,
temporary
work.
Apply:
Western
Union
Telegraph,
Highland
Park.

HELP

Week

Apply

girl

‘time; bakeries and candy dept. Park
Ave.
Foods,
321
Park Ave., Glencoe.
Phone Glencoe 8.
MAN
to do monogramming
and, or
made to order children’s dresses; work
in your home. Write Box C-25 c/o H.P.

_

COSMETICS

7

willing to learn; top salary, group insurance
plan
available.
Sunset
Food
Mart, 757 Central Ave., HI 2-5500.

ALESGIRL,

40-hr.

Salary

in

Hospital.

a.m.

5

p-m.,
6
days
a
week;
no Sundays.
$47.50 per week. Call Glencoe 1813.

,

AND

interesting work; experience un-

Northbrook

NOMAN

DRUGS

experience

CLERKS

SECOND cook and 1 kitchen maid. Apply
to Highwood
Hospital, Highwood, IIl.

SELLING
YPIST,

Bill

TICKET

p.m.

Blvd.

Call

HI

RESPONSIBLE woman to keep house for
business couple, 1 high school boy, 1
boy away at college; 5 day week, no
heavy: cleaning. Call Evenings after 7,
HI 2-2212.

Telephone

MULTILITH
OPERATORS
Will
train. eno? . Wages.

CO.

DEERFIELD

CHERRY-CHANNER
CORPORATION
Skokie

to

Call

PRACTICAL nurse, over 30, for care of
mother; night or day duty. References.

truck

SHIPPING
CLERK
handle packaging punted

within

perience

Week

not necessary but desirable.
Free Transportation.
Blue
Cross.
Music while you work.
days 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., or eve-

WILL
iease
1 bay
“Standard”
Service
Station to responsible party. Lessee to
purchase low inventory only. Telephone
ONtario
2-2370.

PHOTOGRAPHER
offset
printing
plant

References.

COOKING and Ist floor;
help. Call HI 2-3424.

WANTED—MALE

DRIVER
small
delivery

one day a week, |BOY’S suits (2), size 12, excellent con.
Tuesday; current
dition. Both for $25. Phone HI 2-6235,

COOK,
light
housework,
assist with
4
year girl; near train and church. Own
room;
outside
help. References.
$45.
HI 2-13858.

If you are a plumbing, heating, building
materials salesman we have an excellent
job for you. Come in and talk it over.
SEARS
ROEBUCK
&amp; CO.
601 Central Ave.
Highland
Park

available,
employer
Also other benefits.

Permanent
position
open
for an
experienced’ stenographer; some knowledge
of bookkeeping desirable. 40 hour week,
pension
plan,
sick
leave
and
vacation
privileges. Good starting salary.
Apply George B. Caskey, Superintendent, WINNETKA
PARK
DISTRICT
OFFICE, 2nd floor, Village Hall, Winnetka,
Illinois.
Across
street
from
trains—no
long walk.

ASSEMBLY

HELP

block of H.P. bus stop. Apply now.

de-

IMMEDIATE OPENINGS
AVAILABLE
WOMEN
LIGHT

friendly

morning and afternoon. Paid vacations and holidays. Blue Cross and

_ partment of National Magazine; some
typing. No experience necessary. Call
:
nee Rhodes, Northbrook
1201.
UNTER girl, good salary: plus commission
on
sales;
good
opportunity
for
local
girl. Hours,
8:30
a.m. to 5:00
-; Wednesday, 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m,
ly in person,
Deerfield
Cleaners,
810
Deerfield Road, Deerfield.

OR

Experience
Full

Blue
Shield
paying half.

FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF LAKE FOREST

WANTED:
Capable
man
as
assistant
building
custodian;
good
references
necessary. Replies
confidential.
Write
Box F70 c/o Lake Forester.

conditions.

15

900.

RELIABLE man for general office work
in
old
established
lumber
firm
on
North
Shore.
Steady
employment;
' chance for advancement. No experience
necessary but helpful. State age, qualifications
and
salary
expected.
Write
Box F85 c/o Lake Forester.

with

with

Forest

GARDENER
for country estate, Central
Illinois; one helper. New modern cottage. Write giving references and experience,
T. A. Scully,
Lincoln,
Illinois.

AT

positions

week

Lake

with

OPERATOR

With or Without
Permanent

of accuracy essential. Excelopportunity for woman
age
40 to work close to home and
time and cost of transportaApply in person or phone

*

GENERAL
OFFICE WORK
SOME TYPING REQUIRED

AVE.

position

executive

CHIEF

gree
lent
22 to
save
tion.

for

HIGHLAND
PARK:
1866 N. 2ND
LAKE FOREST: 255 E. DEERPATH

Rd.,

firm of business consultants
in North Shore area. Ability

Cleaners,
Telephone

2-5180

HI

WE’LL TRAIN YOU, AND YOU’LL BE
PAID WHILE YOU LEARN TO PLAY
AN EVER IMPORTANT PART IN THE
LIFE OF YOUR COMMUNITY.

Reasonable

Green

to work with figures desired. Unusually
attractive working environment.
Good
ry
to start
plus
other
benefits.
nvenient
transportation
arrangements.
Call
BRiargate
4-7500
from
Chicago
or Libertyville
2-4080
from
‘

AVE.

OFFERS JUST THAT... FULL TIME
JOBS FOR WOMEN UP TO 43 YEARS
OLD AS TELEPHONE OPERATORS.

permanent;

not

RESPONSIBLE
a

Inc.

ILLINOIS BELL
TELEPHONE CO.

ISTERED
nurses
needed
at
H.P
hospital.
Starting
salary,
$255,
with
afternoon bonus, $30, and night bonus,
$20. See Miss Beard, HI 2-8000.
Oman
wanted
to
train
for
fountain
anager.
No
experience
necessary.
F. W. WOOLWORTH
CO.
:

PRODUCTS,

wages.

To senior Officer of this Bank.
Business experience and a high de-

:

WANTED—FEMALE

experience

Bi

POSITION

LOOKING
FOR A JOB WHERE
THE
PAY IS GOOD
. .e EVEN THOUGH
YOU DON’T HAVE EXPERIENCE?

BOARD

LAUNDRESS wanted
prefer Monday
or

SECRETARY

CO.

HOUSEWIVES

and

ELIABLE,
pleasant
person
to
stay
nights with children
in exchange
for
room
and
board
in
lovely
Ravinia
home; near transportation. HI 2-3912.

AND

PARK

2-8638

M and board to employed woman in
exchange for sitting and light duties;
garage available for person with own
car. HI 2-6059.

~ BOARD

time.

SMALL
OFFICE,
PLEASANT
WORKING CONDITIONS. SHORTHAND
AND
TYPING EXPERIENCE NECESSARY. 5
DAY WEEK,
PAID
HOLIDAYS
AND
VACATIONS;
FREE
INSURANCE.

1548

HI

town; private entrance.
after 3:30 p.m.

PERMANENT

LIGHTING

if desired.

full

WOOLWORTH

STENOGRAPHER |

For-

FURNISHED
room for rent with kitchen
privileges; prefer employed couple. HI
--2-6716.
;
E
to
transportation;
semi-private

time

W.

WAITRESSES

HI 2-6726.

board and
2-51238.

care

WILL
do ironing
in my
home,
Phone
Libertyville 2-2600.
’
REFINED
middle aged woman
as companion
or
social
secretary
or
both;
drive
car.
Excllent
references. Write
__ Box C-35
c/o H.P. News.
WOULD
like to do typing at home for
small business concern. HI 2-0609.
PARENTS!
Do
you
want
a competent
mother for your children while you are
away’? Capable driver; excellent North
Shore
references.
Phone
HI
2-2024
after 6 p.m.
WILL do typing in my home. HI 2-6363.
WILL do sewing in my home; draperies,
curtains,
spreads, necessary patching,
any type knitting and crocheting. Telephone Lake Forest 3555.
we

SITUATIONS

WANTED—MALE

EXPERIENCED man desires work; painting, carpentry,
electrical repair, yard
work, windows and screens. Telephone
Lake Forest 810.
WANTED: 1 or 2 more residences, checking oil burner and premises while you
are away.
Write Box C-75 c/o H.P.
News
HOUSEWORK
and outside work; living
quarters
desired.
Some _ experience;
character references.
Write
Post
Office Box 21, Zion, Il.
EXPERIENCED man for work, houseman
or driver. North Shore references. Call
Tom,
GReenleaf 5-6325.
YOUNG
colored man will clean by day,
serve parties. Tel. PLaza 2-4618.

SITUATIONS

WANTED—DOMESTIC

WAITRESS,
experienced,
available
for
private parties,
by day or by
hour.
Please telephone Lake Forest 2308.
TWO
reliable, experienced
colored girls
‘would like cooking and general housework
in. same
household.
References.
Call Aurora 5389.
HOUSEKEEPER,
388, white, stay in; experienced. $50 a week. Write Box C-15
c/o Highland Park News.
WILL do general housework any day of
the week, except Sundays; clean, plain
cooking. Likes children. Phone ONtario
2-7786.
WOMAN
desires laundry or day
work,
$1.25 per hour. References, Call ONtario 2-2268.
WHAT
family would appreciate a very
competent
woman
to
help
them
in
Florida
for
a month
in
or
around
March?
Excellent
references.
Write
Box F-90 c/o Lake Forester.
WOMAN
desires
day work,
from
7:30
to 8, or 8:00 to 4:00;
experienced.
Any day except Saturday and Sunday.
Call DExter 6-9658.

fy

NAVY
officer’s overcoat, size 42, excel.
lent condition,
$25; tuxedo, size 44,
$10; white sport coat, size 42, $10,
Telephone Lake Forest 954.
CANADIAN sheared beaver coat, size 12;
gray winter coat, size 14; man’s gab.
ardine
zip-out
lining
coat,
size
38,
Best offer. HI 2-6869.
ICE
SKATES,
racers;
size
8, Nestor
Johnson,
15
inch
blades.
Originally.
bought from V.L. &amp; A.; look like new,
$138.50. HI 2-2572.
TAILORED natural mink coat, reasonably
priced. HI 2-0549.
BEAUTIFUL,
brand new, full skin (not
pieced)
Mouton
Lamb
coats, original
price $125; slashed to $57 in our great

January

Fur

Clearance

Sale.

oe

7

Miller’s,

166 N. Michigan Ave.
LADY’S
evening
slippers,
four
pairs,
size 6%A,
$4 pair; black wool suit,
size 32, $10; silk blouses, size 32, $38
each; girl’s navy checked spring suit,
size 10, $10; girl’s velvet skating cos.
tume,
size
8, $10.
Telephone
Lake
Forest 954.
HOUSEHOLD
VISIT

YOUR

GOODS

OWN

FOR

SALE.

HIGHLAND

PARK

Trading Post. We sell furniture, bric.
a-brac
&amp;
clothing.
1813
St.
Johns.
Tel.

HI

2-2744.

TURQUOISE
Cockcroft
plates,
each
of
4 with flower center. Suitable accom.
paniments available for 20 piece set;
half price. HI 2-6342.
NEW
International Sterling 5 piece cof.
fee service in Prelude pattern plus silver tray; very reasonable. HI 2-1968,
DUNCAN PHYFE dining room suite; ta.
ble, 6 chairs, credenza, china cabinet.
Like new. Call between 5 and 9 p.m.,
HI 2-8698.
THREE domestic rugs; 9x12, 9x13, 8x10
rugs, in good condition. Tel. HI 2-1040,
COMBINATION
RCA
radio and 3 speed
record
changer
phonograph,
cabinet
model; good condition. $75. Phone HJ
2-2202.
$50 WILL buy a used 9x12 rug &amp; mat,
like new; copy of hand hooked floral
pattern.
Phone
Deerfield 770,
GAS
STOVE
for sale,
good condition,
Call Deerfield 1505R.
APARTMENT
4 burner
gas
stove.
H]
2-2522.

MOVING:
must sell this week.
Dining
room
set,
Hotpoint
electric
stove,
Bendix
washer, end tables
and rummage. Best offer takes. 587 Pleasant
Ave., H.P.
54 INCH single well Elgin cabinet sink;
good condition. $50. Northbrook 1148.
232 DEERFIELD
ROAD, DEERFIELD
(just north and east of Briargate C.C.)
starting Friday, January
16th, 10 A.M.
thru Saturday and Sunday,
furnishings of
MR.
AND
MRS.
ARTHUR
CLINE
Capehart combination with 3-speed player; collection
of recent
hit records
in
45’s and
78’s; Havell prints; etchings;
down filled divan; lounge chrs.; antique
brass wood box; limed oak modern twin
bed
set,
beautiful
inlaid
walnut
and
satinwood twin bed set by Robert Irwin,

both

complete

with

good _ bedding,

bleached
mahogany
kneehole
desk; mahogany kneehole desk; lamps; silver tea
sets and odd silver pcs.; complete set
stemware;
pr. Sevres urns; fine winter
scene in oil by N. Briganti; service for
14 in pink and white English china; meta]

bridge

sets;

ping-pong

table;

floor

pol-

isher; hooked rugs;
GE
electric stove;
twin Kenmore automatic washer and dry.
er; 18-ft. extension ladder and a 2-car
garage filled with misc. yard tools, toys,
books, etc. Deerfield 1044.
Sale Conducted by
HAZEL ANN STUPPLE
SIMMONS
all steel High-Rise sleeper, 2
twin mattresses; also Tomlinson blue
velvet
barrel
chairs,
down
cushions,
Best
offer
for each.
One
pair milk
glass tall lamps, $25. HI 2-6405,
ELECTRIC apartment range and Frigid.
aire, both for $50. Call anytime after
6 p.m.
HI 2-5893.
COUCH
and 2 chairs, all slip covered.
__ HI
2-2047.
3 WHITE wool shag rugs, approximately
3 ft. x 6 ft. Call HI 2-44381.
CARD TABLE, exquisite English mahogany with leather tooled top; flips open
to seat 6. Perfect condition. HI 2-1045,
TRAVELER
television
console,
19 inch
screen; good working
condition.
Best
offer over $60. HI 2-3330.
SILVERTONE
17 inch TV, antenna in.
cluded;
good
condition.
Service
man
leaving town,
must
sell. 2041
Green
Bay,
Highland
Park.
MAHOGANY
twin beds,
dresser,
chest,
night stand. HI 2-5207.
KENMORE
automatic washer with suds
saver; in very good
condition.
$100.
Telephone Lake Bluff 3334.
DAVENPORT and chair for sale, in good
condition
and
reasonable.
Telephone
Lake Forest 2647.
AVAILABLE
after
January
29,
State
stove, $25; Sears semi-automatic washer, used 4 months, $80. Telephone Lake
Bluff 3455.
THOR
washer,
excellent condition, rea.
sonably
priced.
Phone
Lake
Forest
2180.

TWO full size maple beds, with springs,
$10 each
complete;
one blond
maple
hall table, 2 pair white floral gabardine
drapes. Call HI 2-0085.

SENTINEL TV, 17 inch, console; mahogany cabinet, like new. Equipped with
roll
easy
coasters;
has
very
sharp picture. Will sacrifice. Call
field

USED

\

clear,
Deer-

1149.

washer,

$25;

used

television

$50. Call Mr. Gatz, HI 2-4600.
Thursday, January

15, 1953

set,

a

-

�ne

Aas

aie

Box

Num

MUSICAL INSTRUN

her Ads

TWO very small new Uprights, 5%

Reply by phone as well as by letter
may be made to any Want Ad with
a box number as an address. Call
HI 2-4500 or Lake Forest 2300.
Your
name,
address
and phone
number will be placed at once in
the box of the. advertiser.

HOUSEHOLD

GOODS FOR SALE

SIMMONS
hide-a-bed,
full
size,
good
condition, $100; Arkay vacuum cleaner,
almost
new,
all attachments,
2
eae, Seen
$68. Telephone DElta
-1152.

DOUBLE
bed, box spring and mattress;
matching
book case and
coffee table
in beautiful
blonde
mahogany.
Telephone Lake Forest 1082.
RCA
CONSOLE
1940 radio and
player; highest bidder. Call HI

MISCELLANEOUS

FOR

record
2-6377.

SALE

580 LINCOLN
AVE.
WINNETKA
6-3738

STOKER,

WURLITZER
apartment
grand
piano;
French
Provincial styling; price new,
$1,717; sacrifice for $350 or best offer.
1945 Castlewood
Rd., HI 2-4960.

WANTED
TO BUY
WANTED:
apartment
2-4976.

all controls, $50; 60 inch single

bowl] sink, needs new top, $25; buggy
and stroller, both for $15; violin and
case, $20. HI 2-35038.
BEAUTIFUL
hand
braided,
all
wool,
oval shaped rug, 10x12 in size; many
colors. $400 or best offer over a minimum. REpublic 7-8841 before 2 p.m.

LOST

2-4218.

°

OFFICE
typewriter,
2-4718.

Lawson

chair.

HI

LAKE FOREST resident, corporation official, selling complete executive office
furniture,
highest
quality,
latest
design,
for
conservative
taste.
$800.
Displayed
in
Lake
Forest.
Call
for
appointment, Lake Forest 2991-Y-4.

new,
practically
heater,
garage
Telephone
Lake
Forest
8038.
CHILD’S maple crib and matching chest
lamb
Persian
like new;
of drawers,
aeroplane,
child’s
coat, size 14, $25;
$8; girl’s 26 inch bike, $8. HI 2-4640.
CURTAINS, pair of storm doors, painted
tea cart, high chair, vanity table, maternity slack suit, down comforter. HI
2-7238.
SEARS
$25.

THE

CASUAL

four

clasp

spring

mattress,

vanity

dresser

and

night table, $75; single roll-away bed,
innerspring mattress, $10; kitchenette
red
with
white
chairs,
and 4
table
Kenmore
$12.50;
seats,
leatherette
with
type
wringer
machine,
washing
automatic timer, practically new, $50;
small mahogany sideboard, $10; green
woolen rug, 8x10, $12.50. Call Deerfield
1525.
Frigidaire electric
IN perfect condition,
Electric clothes
General
$125;
stove,
dryer, $100; Nesco roaster and stand,
$50; custom made twin bedspreads and
3 pr. draw drapes to match, green floral
print on beige background, worth $500,
will sacrifice for $100; single stroller,
$75;
rug,
green
medium
9x12
$10;
lady’s size 10 grey winter coat, never
been worn, will sacrifice at less than
half. HI 2-6215.
PRICED FOR IMMEDIATE SALE
Four pair custom made gray draw draperies and valances. One for 12 ft, win2 pair 4 ft. wide, one pair 8 ft.
dow;
cleaner,
Electrolux
complete.
$65
wide,
$12: set of World books, $7; many insilver;
pieces; old china and
teresting
rummage.

HI

MUSICAL

INSTRUMENTS

FOR

SALE

stones.

HI

owner can
HI 2-4826,

bracelet

LOST:
Tuesday,
January
6, gold
link
bracelet, 2 inches wide; liberal reward.
Write
Box
F-75
c/o
Lake
Forester.

USED AUTOMOBILES
PACKARD
1952
1951

Dodge, fluid dr.; heater, radio.
Packard
sedan,
ultramatic; radio,
heater.
1950 Packard sedan, seat covers, ultramatic, heater, car like new.
1948 Packard sedan, overdrive, heater.
1947 Packard
sedan
Clipper,
overdrive,
electromatic,
radio,
heater.

SHOWN UNDER
OPEN MONDAYS AND
Ave.

one family 4-door se26,000 miles; with 2
heater and seat cov-

2-1034.

WINTER

CLEARANCE
GUARANTEED USED CARS
PRICED

1778

First

St.
Phone

TO

SELL

MOTORS
INC.
HI

Highland
2-1854

Park,

Ill.

CHEVROLET
1951 club coupe, blue
with
white
wall tires, radio,
heater;
16,000 miles. Phone HI 2-3191 after
6

p.m.

1947,

late improved

motor;

good tires, heater, radio. Excellent operating condition. $300. Telephone Lake
Forest 1736.
CROSLEY
convertible,
good
condition;
low mileage. Phone HI 2-1707.

PIANO,
Baldwin
Acrosonic
spinet, ma- DE SOTO, late 1947, $845. 4 dr. custom,
fine
condition;
medium
mileage.
1
hogany
finish;
3 years
old,
perfect
owner who gave it excellent care. Fully
condition. Or exchange for small grand
|
equipped.
HI
2-6964.
of similar quality.
HI
2-4573.

Thursday,

January

15,

1953

STUDEBAKER
deluxe;
heater.

1952

low
Will

Champion,

mileage.
sacrifice.

AUTO

and
991.

LOANS

BUSINESS

and

ANCHOR
HI

physicist, will be heard in a talk on “Arms, Atoms and An-_
swers.” Assisting him in the question period will be Mrs. Joh :
Alschuler, daughter-in-law of Mrs. Alfred Alschuler of Sher
dan road. Armin Elmendorf of Winnetka will also assist with
questions.
Known

ENTERTAINMENT

LET’S HAVE

Res.

HORSES

AND

ESTABLISHED
mail order business, includes equipment for office and shipping; addressograph machine, approximately 25,000 names, never used elsewhere, of mail order buyers. Complete
knowledge of mail order business, how
to get free publicity, etc. Source of
supply on tested exclusive item. Small
inventory.
Attractive proposition;
$5,000
full price. Terms:
Write
Box
C-65 c/o H.P. News.

TV SERVICE
and
INSTALLATION
and
Sat.
8 a.m.
Phone
HI
2-0530

thru

MASSAGE

PAINTING

PAINTING
and paper hanging. Call W.
C. Varney, HI 2-6980 or Lake Forest
156.
EXTERIOR
and
interior
painting
and
decorating. Hubert Johnson. HI 2-1770

estimates,

no

obligation

to have

our representative call.
EDWARD’S
&amp;
W
CONSTRUCTION
CONTRACTING
ENGINEERS
WINNETKA
6-3971
CHRISTO-CRAFT CABINET CO.
1930 Maple Ave., Evanston
For custom
made
cabinets and
general
carpentry work, call GReenleaf 5-7686 or
HI 2-7238.
MASON
repair, stone work, chimney and
fireplace
building.
40 years
in same
por
William Otten, Tel. Northbrook
597J.

INTERIOR
Drapes,

Slip

DECORATING

Covers,
Rod
Upholstering

“CONVENIENT

HOME

2-3853

VIOLA

HEAP

&amp;

Established

in

2-3452

DECORATING

AT

ONCE:

SAVE

SERVICE”

HI

INSTANT

SERVICE
for

HI

12

yrs.

2-3053

YOUR-DOG-&amp;-MINE
Kennels
(dog editor, Better Homes
&amp; Gardens)
for best
care,
feeding,
heating.
Skokie
Highway
(U.S. 41), 5% miles north of state line.
Phone Bristol
(Wis.) 36-F-5.
CANARIES
for sale, home raised; fine
singers in good health. Single or pairs
for breeding.
For
appointment
telephone Highland Park 2-3116.
282 DEERFIELD
ROAD, Deerfield, 3-yr.
old thoroughbred registered Champion
spayed German
Shepherd
Dog.
Deerfield 1044.
‘
THOROUGHBRED
collie, house trained,
9 months old; wonderful with children,
Call HI 2-6313.
MUST
sacrifice
AKC
registered
wirehaired terrier to good home; affectionate, 1%
year
old female. Telephone
DElta 6-1152.
FOR sale: 1 silver gray French poodle,
‘4 months old; excellent health and pedigree. Write Box F-65 c/o Lake Forester.
BOXER
pups,
6 months;
top breeding.
Flashy red fawn male at stud. Southwest
corner of
Deerfield
Road
and
Desplaines River, Deerfield.

PLANTS

&amp;

TUNING

youngest

MONEY!

MONEY-SAVERS!

Weatherstrip your doors. 1 door, $14.25;
including threshold strip. At once your
kitchen is clean—odorless; exhaust fan
installation,
$54
complete.
Telephone
MAjestic
3-1302.

man

to

receive

cago

of

Section

Chemical

the

society
men

American

and

among

to

receive

ever

th

Nobel Prize in science. The lat
two honors came to him in 1934
when

he

was

41.

being

a

of research,

distinguishe

Dr. Urey is th

author
(with
A.
E. Ruark)
oa
“Atoms,
Molecules
and Quanta”
and

is

a

frequent

contributor

scientific journals. He edited th
Journal of Chemical Physicsf

seven years and has taught at thi
Universities

of

Montana,

Johns

Hopkins and Columbia. He came to
the University of Chicago in 1945.
Always an active citizen of
community, Dr. Urey “has nev
in his efforts to widen the boui
daries of knowledge, lost sight
the
humans
whose
domain
h
3

to increase.”

sought

John Boylston of Northfield
president
of
the
North
Shore

Chapter of United World Federalists which
has members
fro!
Evanston,
Winnetka,

Wilmette,
Kenilwo
Glencoe, Glenview

Highland
Park.
board members

son and Dr. Nathaniel
TREE

anc

Highland
Par
are John Levin-

Zeitlin. —

SURGERY

DONALD
G. WORRALL,
ARBORIST
Expert tree work, shrub and everg
care.
Tree
removal,
power
saw
0

Low
ing

cost,

efficient

ser~iee.

Call

Wheel

2387.

wooD
WOOD
$15

a

for

fireplace—split;

ton.

Call

ESTHER

Deerfield

delivered,
17W.

:

PERKINS |

Specializing in

REPAIRING

PIANO tuning and reconditioning. Member of American Society of Piano Technicians. E. Zaboth, formerly of Lyon
and Healy, member of N.A.P.T. Lake
Zurich, 5841.

ROOFING
HAVE
you
a wood
shingle roof?
Cal)
Wilmette
377,
your
‘Roof
Treating
Headquarters”
for
its
proper
treatment
and
care.
Free
inspection
and
consultation.

Machineless Permanent
Waves $10. up

MACHINES

23

RECONDITIONED
Singer
portable,
$39.50; $5
down. Reconditioned cabinet machine, $39.50. 614 Central Ave.,
HI
2-8811.

SEWING
Expert
662

Arends

Central

MACHINE

Sewing

Ave.

Years

of Experience

CLASSIQUE

SERVICE

Necchi
Domestic
repair
on
ANY
Work
Guaranteed

Machine

MAKE

Co,

Hi

2-5200

;

has

Medal of the Chi

BULBS

&amp;

work

Willard Gibbs

AFRICAN
VIOLETS. Reliable plants for
particular people. Gillette, 169 Washington Circle, Lake Forest 516.
PIANO

His

®

2-6668

Discounts
on
550
gal. fuel
oil tanks.
Fabricated in basement. Tony’s Welding,
telephone DElta 6-3195 or DElta 6-0809.

NEW,

Park

PETS

SEWING
ACT

BROS.

Highland

Installations

PAINTING
- FURNITURE
AND
CARPETING
- CLEANING
REPAIRING
- REWEAVING
MOTH
PROOFING

HI

PAINTING

work

brought him international honors:
including the Davey Medal of the
Royal Society of London in 19
the Distinguished Service award of
Phi Beta Kappa in 1950. He

man

REDECORATING

BOARD
YOUR
DOG
AT LOWRY’S

SEPTIC
SYSTEMS,
COMPLETE
SEPTIC
SYSTEM
INSTALLATION
TRENCHING
All
sorts:
foundation,
water,
drain,
tiling, etc.

Free

&amp;

NIGHT
to 9 p.m.

day

sulphur.

Besides

HI

LAUNDRY

and

youngest

SCIENTIFIC
Swedish
massage,
and
reducing, vapor cabinet bath. Telephone
HI
2-5116
for
appointment.
Lottie
Marsh, 1866 Sheridan Rd., H.P.

CONGER

EXPERT

bon

the

GUITAR lessons in your home. Spanish
guitar,
Hawaiian
guitar,
uke,
banjo,
mandolin. Instrument
furnished
while
learning. JACK MOORE, HI 2-6284.

BUSINESS SERVICE
FAST —

PONIES

ATTENTION HORSE
OWNERS
Qualified
thoroughbred
race _ horse
trainer available for coming Chicago racing season.
18 years experience.
Excellent references. Will handle entire stable
or individual horses for various owners.
For appointment
telephone Lake Forest
778.

2-0037

his

coverer of deuterium, the he
hydrogen
atom
and
the _ heat
istopes of oxygen, nitrogen, car~

INSTRUCTION

HI

for

FUN!

or Sleighrides
2-5592

REAL ESTATE

2-0093

SOME

chiefly

connection with the original ato

Hayrides
HI

OPPORTUNITY

1—Old established tavern in Highwood.
Owner
must
sell.
restaurant.
2—Long
established
Good
bargain.

;

The North Shore chapter of the United World Federali:
is sponsoring a meeting in the Winnetka Community hous
January 28, when Dr. Harold Urey, distinguished nuclear

2-door

Overdrive
Deerfield

Finance
your
car
the bank
way
save money.
FIRST NATIONAL
BANK
of Highland Park

e

CHEVROLET
1952
4-dr.
Power
Glide,
heater; 3,200 miles. Must sell; cash or
payments,
$2,000; may be seen after
5 p.m.
689 Homewood
St., Highland
Park.

CROSLEY

con$75.

WINTER! Time to fix those inside sticking
doors,
locks,
hinges, add
closet
space, extra shelves, improve attic or
basement room. HI 2-1636.
DRESSMAKING
and
alterations;
quick
service,
reasonable
rates.
Call
Mrs.
Alexander, HI 2-6469.

MAKES
AND
MODELS
CHOOSE FROM

RAVINIA

PONTIAC, 1937 2-door sedan; good
dition. Radio,
heater, fine tires.
__ Phone HI 2-2202.

STOCKS

191 E. DEERPATH
LAKE FOREST 3200

TO

conp.m.

as

Before Federalists In Winnetk

2-4444.

‘Investor’s Service of America invites you
to
try
our
service
in
listed
stocks.
Dealer,
Broker,
Adviser,
Ole
Nielsen,
Proprietor, 104 North Washington Circle,
Lake
Forest,
Illinois.
Telephone
Lake
Forest
2191. IN GOD
WE
TRUST.

McCALLUM CHEVROLET
INC.

MANY

HI

SAM WOO

Chevrolet, Fleetmaster, 4 door sedan—clean.
Chevrolet
Styleline
deluxe °4-door
sedan—sharp.
Hudson
4-door sedan—bargain.

HI

Skinkle,

PLYMOUTH,
1946 sedan; excellent
dition. $575. HI 2-1123 after 6
or Saturday, Sunday.

We
welcome
all strangers
on
8
service.
1875 ST. JOHNS AVE.
HIGHLAND
PARK,
ILL.

~ GUARANTEED OK

ers.

Mr.

DAY
Mon.

USED CAR
SPECIALS

CHEVROLET
1950
dan; driven only
new tires, radio,

sedanette ;
very clean

SPECIAL
OFFER
I have a 1952 Packard 200 club sedan,
not yet broken in. A rare buy: for the
right
person.
New
car
warranty.
Call

6-3070

18TH
AND
SHERIDAN
NORTH
CHICAGO
DEXTER
6-2353

1949

4-dr. sedan, new paint
all accessories. Phone

OLDSMOBILE, 1947 Series 76
chrome removed and leaded,
$600. Call ONtario
2-6159.

SHORE

Winnetka

WE PAY TOP PRICES
FOR YOUR OLD CAR
REGARDLESS OF AGE
$5 DOWN
ON ALL PRE-WAR CARS
PLENTY OF LATE MODELS
TO CHOOSE FROM
HALE MOTOR SALES

1950

MERCURY,
1940
job; new tires,
HI 2-4006.

COVER
THURSDAYS

TILL 9 P.M.
PACKARD NORTH

1948

antiLake

FORD
station
wagon,
1949;
beautiful.
$1,100, or will trade car and money
for 1950 Ford convertible. Lake Forest
2991-Y-4.

Sentimental

REWARD
for information leading to repossession of lost trained hawk; large
size, brown back, white underside, leash
|.
on leg. F. N. Childs, Telephone Lake
Forest 50.

Lincoln

Radio, heater, seat covers,
Telephone
Lt.
Clarke,
390.

2-6353.

LOST:
black male Labrador, left home
last Thursday; has city tag and name
plate. Family pet; reward.
Phone
HI
2-3506.

562

dition.
freeze.
Forest

with

51 pen, tan with silver
2-2750, ask for Mrs. Car-

2-5252.

WONDERFUL
large Magic
Chef stove,
suitable for small restaurant, 2 ovens,
warming oven; 2 pair Spaulding skis,
70x76
in.; English
baby
carriage;
9
porch storm windows,
30x65; dresser
and
mirror;
rugs; one
12x12;
maple
bunk
beds;
draw
drapes
for
large
glassed
in porch;
very
large
refrigerator; Hollywood double bed, dressing
tables. HI 2-0679.
HOMART
30 gal. hot water tank, zinc
lined, 5 yrs. old. HI 2-2849.
CARPET,
gray
broadloom,
12x12
and
foam rubber pad; handsome black oak
desk, glass top, for office or den; 3
file cabinets for 5x8 cards and letter
drawers.
Moving,
Reasonable.
HI
2-4650.

FOUND

pearl

colored

Reward.

LOST:
Parker
top. Call HI
rington.

be sold
mirrors,
For in-

TWO blond baby beds, size 22x38, with
Hazel
1010
springs.
and
mattresses
(upstairs), Deerfield.
avenue
WHITE table top gas stove, perfect condition, $75; 8 pe. walnut bedroom set,
modern double bed complete with inner-

strand

of

value.

SHOP

must
fixtures
and
Furnishings
Thursday, January: 15th. Rugs,
original wrought iron furniture.
formation call HI 2-6820.

AND

FOUND—2
pieces of silver;
have same by identifying.

TWO
fine mahogany
French doors, 30x
80 inches each; Storkline deluxe twin
stroller, excellent condition. Also car
bed.
HI
2-5784.
LARGE
Simplex
ironer;
Johnson
ice
jskates;
asphalt shingles;
dog
crate;
1/10
h.p, motor;
small
gas
heating
stoves;
laboratory
balances,
weights;
raccoon
coat;
woman’s
wool
slacks;
mahogany
boards,
miscellaneous.
HI

apartment
gas
stove
and
electric refrigerator. Tel. HI

SMALL
home
freezer, approximately
7
cubic
feet;
portable
sewing
machine.
Telephone
DElta
6-1152.

LOST:

CASHMERE SWEATER SALE
IMPORTED, HANDCRAFTED,
FULL FASHIONED SWEATERS
S.8. PULLOVER NOW $13.95
L.S. CARDIGANS NOW $16.95
ALSO MANY FANCY SWEATERS
MINNA HART

and DODGE 1946 2-door sedan; excellent con-

6 octaves, for rent or sale. One Mason
and Hamlin 5 ft. 8 in. Grand, carefully recond., $1,185. Three full sized
Uprights,
$95,
$150
and
$2385.
And
very
many
new
moderate-priced
and
choice
spinets
for
your
inspection.
For appt. day or eve. phone Evanston,
UN 4-1561 or GR. 5-6020.

We

Specialize in Hair Dyes ©
and Permanent Waves |

�HP Film Society Announces

4 New Classes
In '53 Season

Series

With

Western,

Obituaries

Garbo

Mrs. George Perry

Highland Park Film society announces its second movie
The YWCA educational pro. series to be shown at the Highland Park Recreation center.
gram for the winter season of
The program will include on January 23, “M;” February 20,
1953 gets under way next week
“The Covered Wagon” and “Last Card;” March 13, “The Story
with

the

first sessions

of four

of Gosta Berling;” April

10, Painter and Poet Series; and May

new classes assembling at the 8, “The River” and “Rien que les Heures.”
Young
Women’s
Christian
The Recreation center, in ac-

home.

cord with its purposes and policy
of being a center for community

Bridge players will learn the
rules of the game and improve
their skill under the leadership
of Mrs.

Irving

Schur

in two

activities,
provides
use
of
its
facilities
and
sponsors
the
film
society. The film group, originated
last October, was underwritten by
60 residents.
Purpose Of Group
The purpose of the film group
is to make available for non-profit,
but public showings, films which
have been recognized as outstanding in their class and time from
all countries and in all categories
—documentary,
fiction,
experimental or avant-gard. The 16mm

series

of lessons: The first class will begin Monday at 1:30 p.m. The second,

January

22

at

Courses consist
and are open to
women.

While

8 p.m.

of 10 lessons,
both men and
the

classes

are

primarily designed for those who
wish to refresh and improve their

techniques in the play of bridge
under the Goren system, a sufficiently
adequate
review
of
the

basic rules will be given so that
beginners could enter the course.
Further information may be obtained by calling HI 2-0675.
The classes in ballroom dancing
conducted

by Mrs.

Lucy

Smith

film, silent and sound,

persons interested in subscribing
to Series II (no individual admis-

sions

may

be

sold)

the Recreation
2-2442,
or the

will

film

tango

country.

Aside

reasons

for

in

background

rumba,

may

inquire

Dances

It

classes,

for

Taught

taught

by

is

the

rights,

is

an

up-

of 16mm

throughout

from

the

the

ordinary

movie-going,

interest

of

as well

of

the

as

of the more
celluloid type
other reasons

the

best

film,

original

the

development

permanent
acetate
film are but a few
behind this trend.

Study Of Criminal Mind
Series II will begin on January
23
with
a German
sound
film

Mrs.

directed
ring
film

by

Fritz

Lang

Peter Lorre.
for its well

study

and

star-

This is a notable
directed psycho-

of

a

criminal

On

will

be

February

provided
westerns
Covered

20,

a

film

which

the
pattern
of
“epic”
to
come,
viz.
“The
Wagon”
(1923)
directed

reviewed by its author, Robert J.
Casey, at the Couples club meet.
ing at 8:15 p.m., January
25, in
North Shore Congregation Israel,

by James Cruze is the main feature in a triple program.
To the post war audience of the
twenties it was a welcome relief to

Mr. Casey’s new book
on his recollections, plus

melodrama

Glencoe.

of the

the reality, racketeerism,

Chicago

is based
research.

youth.

of his

The meeting will be preceded by
a box supper
starting at 7 p.m.
Members are directed to enter by
the north entrance.
The meeting
will be held in the kindergarten

room. Coffee will
the Couples club.

be

provided

by
5

The annual election of officers
will take
place
followed
by
the
installation of the new officers.
WilCasey, a resident of
Mr.
reChicago
is a famous
mette,
porter and author and is known as
an exceptionally entertaining
}
speaker.
Author of some 30 odd books.

his

writings

include

“Torpedo

Junction,”
‘Battle
Below,”
“This Is Where I Came In,”

and
and

“Such Inieresting People.”

Poetry of HP
Students Included
In Annual Anthology
Gay
liams
Clavey

Stirling, 270
avenue,
Lorie
road,

Susan

Roger
Selz,

Wil1261

Pierce,

2176

Sheridan road and Ellen Reeves,
176 Roger Williams avenue were
among
15 North Shore Country
Day school students whose poems
were selected for inclusion in the
annual “Anthology of High School
Poetry.”
Page

34

so

themes;

it was

pioneer

story

Last

Card”

ous

Bill

Train

and crime

prevalent
the

of the

Hart

movie

first full length

(1915)

movies.

“The

featuring

fam-

and

Robbery”

in

“The

(1905)

first

Great
one-

reel narrative silent films are also
on

this

program.
Garbo’s First

Lead

“The Story of Gosta Berling’’
(1924) is a Swedish silent film with
synchronized musical background.

VFW Post 4741
Mary Jane Lanes
January

director,

the

her

first

feeling

of

Mauritz

called the “Painter and Poet.” It
is described as a series of experiments
in
words,
painting
and
music featuring works of English
artists
and
poets
like
Henry

Moore,

John

Minton

and

Michael

Warre.

The final program of Series II,
May 8, features the now great and
classic Pare Lorentz documentary
film
work

“The
River”
(1937). It is a
of poetry-rhetoric-and music

Shoreline

25

Fred’s Dept. Store ........ 2814

25%

Moraine Serv. Station 27
Oak Terrace Bev. ........ 26

27
28

Beracent Insi soos
26
Fabbri-ae SONS’ i....06cck 25
G &amp; L Bump Shop ........ 21

28
29
33

Golden

34

On

this

same

program

is a film

thought to be the only documentary to come from France, ‘Rien
que les Heures” (1926) directed
by Cavalcanti. This is an impressionistic

study

of

commonplace

events in Paris during the course
of a day.
Membership in the series, $2.25
per person, is obtainable at the
Recreation center office.

Robert Vanderpoel,
Thomas Colgan Will
Speak at Sheil School
Residents of seven North Shore
communities
and Chicago
proper
will be on hand at New Trier High
school, next
Wednesday
when financial writer Robert P. Vanderpoel
and _ personnel _ specialist
Thomas
Colgan
appear
as_ guest

speakers under the auspices of the
Sheil
School
of
Social
Studies.
tuition-free adult education project
of the Catholic Youth organization.
Mr. Vanderpoel, financial columnist of a Chicago newspaper, will
discuss “Foreign Trade vs. Foreign
Aid” at a 9 p.m. session of the
Sheil School
Forum,
weekly
lecture-discussion
series
on
current
topics. A veteran of 30 years in
newspaper work, including financial editorships
of three Chicago
dailies, Mr. Vanderpoel served as
a World War II consultant to the
U. S. Treasury department.
Mr.
Colgan,
job
opportunities
program director of the American
Friends
Service
committee,
will
conduct a forum on “Labor Prob-

of

Minorities”

at 8 p.m.

He

program,

requested

by

a

hiring among retail stores, manufacturers and insurance companies.
Newly-registered
students
include Miss Jean
Vogel, 909 Half
Day road.
Remaining lectures in the cur-

rent term will be given by Edward
Marciniak,

Jeremiah

editor

of

L. O’Sullivan,

Work,

and

Marquette

Trier Wednesday.

Cervi

at

being

rushed

for

3

p.m.

Mrs.

to

treatment

cumbed.

Services

Saturday

at

2

Perry

Highwood
when

were

p.m.

in

was

hospi-

she

suc-

conducted
Kelley

Spalding chapel with
Mooney’s
cemetery,

and

burial in
Highland

Park.

She

was

born

June

2,

1896

in

Chestertown,
Md., and had been
a resident of Highwood since 1925.
Survivors
besides
her husband
are

a daughter,

Mrs.

William

Ross

of Half Day; a son, Charles Barnes
of

Farnsworth;

two

sisters,

Mrs.

Ray Nizer and. Mrs. Grace Burhurst, both of Baltimore, Md.; a

Just think, only 70 more days until spring vacation, so all you kids
better start packing
ning to leave this

836-917-911—2654
Individual

204-189-205—598

EMRE vtec. cccachicucaes
stil i eslaca tl, oak 232

if you’re planfair town—as

Miss Joiner and Miss Anderson
would say, “tempus fugit!”
Thursday
morning
started off
with

a bang

for Tom

overestimated

the

petrol

route

tank

en

Swidler

as he

capacity

of

his

to HPHS.

Not

only did he stall his own limousine,
but all the drivers who had the
misfortune to be in back of him.
Thursday afternoon found our
mermen up at Waukegan where
they chalked up another victory
for HP.
Good going boys!!!
Friday morning the sophomores
displayed

their

talént

in

an

as-

brother, Walter Fletcher of Middlebury, Vt.; and four grandchildren.

sembly. Among those who appeared
in the show, was Judee Smith who
ran around spreading joy through-

Nicholas Weis

Judee, they have names for people

out

Tuesday afternoon in Kelley and
Spalding chapel with the Rev. Herbert W. Linden officiating.
Mr. Weis was born March 6, 1889
in Wilmette.
A veteran of World
War I, he came to Highwood 25

years ago where he made his home
with a sister, Mrs. Charles Nelson who preceded him in death December 24,
He was a member of
the Highland
Park post of the
American Legion.
Survivors are two sisters, Mrs.
Terrence Brady of Winnetka and
Mrs. Richard Chester of Wilmette,
and a brother, John, of Wilmette.

departure

in its program

to establish sound racial relations
and religious understanding on the

North Shore will be launched this
month by the North Shore Citizens’ committee, Sidney J. Lewis
of Winnetka, committee chairman,
has announced. The committee will
sponsor

two

discussion

groups,

to

be led by Northwestern university
faculty members, Franklyn Haiman
and Dean Barnlund, in which a serious study of prejudice in all of its
many aspects will be undertaken,
along with
learning
the
actual

techniques
of group
leadership.
Mrs. Bernard Joseph of Belle avenue is Highland Park Community
chairman.
The
Discussion
groups, which
will meet twice a month in the
Winnetka Community House, and
will be entitled, “Attitudes in Human Relations,” will serve as “pilot projects” to train participants
to take over leadership of similar
groups planned
for
the
future.
Each group,
limited
to approximately 15 people, will informally
discuss their personal outlooks on
racial problems in an effort to ex-

amine their own attitudes and to
achieve a working knowledge about
the

basic

facts

of group

prejudice.

Mr. Haiman recently told the executive committee of the organization

that

traditional

approaches

in attempts to, change attitudes —
lectures, sermons, pictures, posters, etc.,— are accomplishing “very
little

in terms

of getting

people

to

modify their views.”
H. J. McMullen of Deerfield and
John Bartlow Martin of Maple avenue,

are

on

the

you

know,

Ann

committee’s

Haney,

we

shark

and

you

play

solitaire

classes???!
Friday night
a few
people

know

all that

you're

but

during

Bill

board.

a

must

—

your

©

Schwartz

had

people
over.
Among
the
who dropped in were Nettie

Stupple, Marvin Cox, Sandra Goldboss, Robbie Stupple, John Wolters, Mimi Angster and Lee Strauss,
Saturday night many students
drifted out west to Fred Harris’,
Some of those there were John
Whitney,
Peggy
Lennox,
McDavitt, Woody Hansmann,

Barby
Kathy

Stair, Chris Phelps, Nadine Brown,
and Don Simms.
We tried to decide on the ideal
senior boy and have come up with
this:
Legs—Hal Freberg.
Physique—Jack
Tyson.
Eyes—‘‘Toe” Signorio.

Eyebrow—Peter Husting.
Nose—Danny Seitz.
Tooth—Bob Stanwood.
Personality—Bob Hinchsliff.

Launches Study of
Racial Relations
new

stage

card

Citizens’ Committee

A

the

©
©

like you.

Wis.,
near
Milwaukee
where
he
had been confined since last August.
Services
were
conducted

Ra

Gus

Series,

230
died

River with music by Virgil Thomson
and
commentary
by
Pare
Lorentz.

High Game, Team
Shoreline Roofers ...................-.. 917
High Game, Individual

High

of

interwoven into the background of
the
history. of
the
Mississippi

university
journalism
dean,
on
January
28;
the
Rev.
Theodore
Purcell,
S. J., Loyola
university
professor, and Dr. L. J. Meduna,
originator of shock therapy, February 4; and John Cogley, editor
of
Commonweal,
February
11.
Registrations
for
individual
lectures or for all remaining classes
will be accepted at 8 p.m. in New

ei shd pikes “leads ibe

56,

Highwood,

Nicholas Weis, 63, of 138 High
street, Highwood, died Friday in
the Veteran’s hospital in Woods,

Illinois businessmen, to reduce racial and religious discrimination in

L
19%
21

Dome ................ 20
High Series, Team
Shoreline Roofers ....

Perry,

avenue,

home

Stiller.

On April 10, part of the program will be a new series issued
by the British information services

directs

L. F. Motor Sales ........ 344%
WS BNO siti sdindissscrinses 33
........ 29

It has

in

peace, atmosphere and character
development that is typical of the

lems

9 Standings

Roofers

role.

Garbo

Hope

Thursday following a stroke in her

tal

Greta

leading

Mrs.

Highwood

mind.

The Berlin, 1931 background is reproduced in excellent camera detail.

Author Bob Casey
To Review Own Book
For Couples Club
Rare”

HI
HI

techniques of the early film makers, desire for better story content, expiration of original license

logical

Medium

there

societies

recognition

Emily Faulkner, will start on January 28, with a course consisting
of six lessons.

“Chicago

claimed

ward trend in the growth

Square dancing groups open to
both men and women will hold
their meetings on the first and
third
Friday
evenings
of
the
month throughout the year. Beginners, as well as advanced students, will find fun and exercise
in this increasingly popular form
of the dance. Enrollment may be
arranged for by calling HI 2-0675.
Millinery

contact

2-2391.

further details at the YWCA.
Square

may

center office,
Film
society,

open the first of a series of 10
lessons at 8 p.m. on January 19.
Those interested in mastering the
basic steps in the fox trot, waltz,
and

is used. All

It stars

HALLMARKS

RESELL
ETRE IE ME LE TM SIE

Most congenial—Paul Day.
Smile—Ivan Kushen.
There
is going
to be another
Moose dance January 24, so why
don’t you boys start getting your

dates

right now!!

HPHS Frosh Cage
Team Drops 4th

Straight Game
The

game

with

failed

to

Friday

Waukegan
bring

the

last
HPHS

freshman basketball squad out of
its slump, as it lost to Waukegan by
16

points.

This

game

marked

first time that the two teams
met

this

the

have

year.

The Waukegan boys edged out in
front right away and at the end of
the first quarter were leading by a
score of 10-6. Waukegan managed
to keep the lead over the Parkers
and at the half were still out in
front, 19-11.
The second half produced
no
signs of victory for the Parkers,
At the end of the third quarter the
scoreboard showed the baby Little
Giants with a little over half as
many points as Waukegan.
Waukegan clinched the game in
the last period of play, and the fijnal score was 41-25.
This game
marks
the
fourth
straight game Highland Park has
lost, and the
absence
of center
John Swan didn’t help the situation
too much.
Leading the scoring for the Parkers was forward Don Carlson who
made five points; next in line were
John Guentz
and
Bod
Stackler,
with four points each. Waukegan’s
Pattillo led his team with 13 points.
Thursday, January

15, 1953

Ce
es Sa

To Begin

7th we

YWCA

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down—

reductions

on

—table lamps
—floor lamps
—pin-up

lamps

—boudoir
—novelty

lamps

lamps
and

See them

now

others!

at our 609

Central

Avenue

store

PUBLIC Garp COMPANY OF NORTHERN ILLUINO

�</text>
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                    <text>LZ

10 Cents

Thursday, January 22,

Bocrliceld keriew

JOIN

THE

MARCH

of DIMES

1953

�he

hea

Se

z

ce Se

Ko

Wear
is

Few,

5

ee

alee

Our stocks are complete with a large selection
of smart resort clothes including every type
from the classic golfer to glamorous cocktail
linens and evening chiffons.
Sizes 8 to 18
7 to 15.
Left:

Beautiful

two piece

white

linen

with

neckline,

pockets, and sleeves trimmed with beading.
Below

.........

left: Pink or lemon color linen designed
with matching knit yoke and pockets. -.........2..........

--- 98.95
- 69.95

Below

center: Blue or ‘‘white caviar’ linen sheath
coat-dress with knit collar and pockets. ...................... 69.95

Below

right: Stitched and tucked pima cotton dress
with its own tight fitting jacket in cobalt blue, .......... - 89.95

JOHN STEVENS,
1869 SHERIDAN ROAD

INC.
HIGHLAND PARK

�Vol. 27, No. 44

January 31 Deadline For
Submitting Questionaires
To Nominating Committee

far

received

from

individuals

chairman

of the

not

nominating

viously gone into the preparation
of the questionnaires, Mr. Haggard
stated, but hopes for more widespread village response before the
January 31 deadline.
Blanks for personal recommendations have been placed in many

Deerfield
tained

stores,

from

or

may

Wesley

you

believe

that

names

you

would
select
have
already
been
submitted, send them in anyway,

the

committee

not

to

be

contest,

asks.

While

considered

the council

a

this

is

popularity

cannot

but

be

impressed when the same name is
submitted, in obvious good faith,
by may persons.
More Weight if Signed
It
is
not
required
that
the

blanks

be

signed,

but

those

bear-

ing signatures are given somewhat
more weight, it was explained.
This is particularly true in cases
of name repetitions. If many un-

signed

blanks

bear

identical

or

near-identical slates, they may be
discounted as organized pressure,
but signed
blanks
could
not
be
so considered.
“Whether
on a signed
or unsigned
blank,
every
name _ submitted
is
given
thorough
and
lengthy
consideration,’
Mr. Haggard stated. “Any name not well
known
to the
committee
is assigned to a member
for further
investigation.”

Full

Council

+

for

1200

been

Red

Cross

Deerfield

nockburn.

As

tive Mrs.

Wood
the

chapter

Elmrepre-

and

Ban-

representa:

.will act as liaison

community

and

the

Chicago chapter of the Red Cross.
Any needs or problems that arise
in the Deerfield-Bannockburn area
pertaining to the Red Cross should
be referred to Mrs. Wood. She will
be kept informed of programs and
policies of the Red Cross.
Community

Will Be Kept

Posted

Through
the
columns
of the
DEERFIELD REVIEW the community
and

will be alerted to the services
needs of the organization.

Mrs. Wood has been active in the
Gray ladies for more
full co-operation of his. Red Cross
all the people of Lake than 12 years and has assisted in
and urged the presenting several Red Cross drives.

county
of any problems that need
attention of his office to him.
Proposed

Richard

M.

Sewage

Baxter

the

desiring

of the

sani-

He explained Deerfield’s system
that is now so inadequate
and
explained
how
the new
system
work.

He

estimated

the

cost

at $600,000.
Discussion of the possibility of a
new high school in Deerfield followed a short talk on the subject

by

Irl

Marshall,

president

of

Highland Park High school
board
of education.
Gayle Martin,
ager,
addressed

largest

problem,

the

district

the Village manthe
group.
His

he

stated,

get the proper equipment
ganize his office.

is

and

to
or-

The election of the new officers
to serve on the board of the Citizens committee took place during
the meeting and results were announced before the adjournment.

Robert

Wood

stated

that men

and

women volunteers are always needed for Red Cross services. Anyone

Plan

tary engineering
firm
of Baxter
and
Woodman
presented
a proposed sewage plan for Deerfield.

would

Mrs.

her

to

assist

at Deerfield

A majority

appointed

promised
office to

or

of the counand Charles

Piper.

If

well under
control and though
three of the convictions for dumping at the brick yards have been
appealed, he does not expect the
action to be pressed. Mr. Nelson

ob-

Alabeck

from the co-chairman
cil, Harold Peterson
E.

be

the situation at the brick yards was

E. Wood,
has

chapter

between

Mr. Nelson said that he felt that

31 is Deadline

The
committee
has been impressed by the caliber of the material
suggested,
and
by
the
amount of thought that has ob-

Edward
avenue,

sentative

The
Citizens
Committee
for a
Better Deerfield meeting got off
to a flying start Tuesday, January
13 with a brief speech by State’s
attorney
Robert
Nelson
on
the
garbage situation at the National
Brick yards.

committee.
January

Mrs.
wood

State’s Attorney
Addresses Citizens
Committee Group

on the council about 150 names for
the 19 offices to be filled in the
spring election,” said George Hag-

gard,

Red Cross Chapter
Chicago

Three
four-hour
sessions
have
so far been held by the nominating
committee of the Deerfield Nominating council in sifting and discussing names submitted to it, was
the report this week.
“In addition
to suggestions
of
members of the council, we have so

Incumbents File Nominations .
For Reelection On April 7

Mrs. Edward Woods
Heads Local

may

telephone

852.

as

ning

of the West

for reelection April

Deerfield

group,

independent

an

Action Regarding

Non-Resident Users
Non-resident borrowers from the
Deerfield

Township

library

will be charged $2 per year for
a library card, and limited to three
books

in

their

possession

at

any

one time, as a result of recent action by the Library board. Children
who are non-residents but who attend the schools in West Deerfield
Township are to be exempt from
these charges.
This new ruling is comparable
to those used
for borrowers

within
brary

the

by other libraries
who do not reside

legal

limits

of

the

li-

concerned.

Recent donations to the library
include
$25
from
the
Amvets
auxiliary, $5 from the Girl Scouts
and a gift of three copies of the
latest Rand McNally atlas by an
anonymous donor.
Continuing the exhibits held dur-

ing the past
efforts of Mrs.

West Deerfield
Reassessment

new

Roll Is Published
The
reassessment
roll for the
Town of West Deerfield as fixed
by the assessor, appears on pages
20 to 23 of today’s issue. Every
resident
of
the
Town
of
West

Deerfield, which includes the village of Bannockburn,
Deerfield,
and part of the cities of Lake Forest

make

and

Highland

Park

should

it a point to check up on the

amount

of

his

assessment.

Any property owner who objects
to the
amount of his
valuation
should file a formal complaint with
the
Board
of Review
within
10
days from the date of publication

of this assessment

roll.

pictures

in the

Westview

Property

Owners

composed

Pro-

of all

Guest speaker will be Homer
Marxer who will discuss the drainditch and
subject.

answer

questions

on

Nelson Speaks at Citizeris Committee

to

and in some
eral names

The

full

the

will

the

that in trying

not

understand

dents

of

the

All three

community.

present justices of the

peace, who also serve as members
of the

town

election.
Frost,
erates

730

board,

The

justices

of

will

tikree

the

seek

Waukegan

Seyl,

1385

are:

road;

W.

Old

|

re- —

incumbent

peace

local businessman
Frost’s Appliance

Bruce

Eugene

Mill

~

who op- —
Store at —

rved,

H.

~

Lake

Forest, and who 1s connected with
the Lake Forest Public Schools;
and Michael J. George, who is with ©
the
Chicago
Park
District, and
lives at 1142 Deerfield road.
Benjamin G. Piersen, 1951 Berk—
ley, Highland Park, who is current- —
ly township

assessor,

has

indicated

he does not want to be considered

local

businessman,

sides at 216 Waukegan
who has filed for the

—

who

re--

road, and
assessor’s —

post.

ah!

nut, who has indicated he does not |
want

to

run

for

Fred

Grabo,

member

of the

re-election.

1113

oe

Osterman,

Deerfield-Bannock- —

burn
Fire
election as

department,
a constable

dependent

slate.

Two

will seek
on the in- mi

others

who

have filed to run for constable with —A.
the independent group are Adolph ee
Bertucci of the Lake Shore Coun- —
try Club, Glencoe, residing at 1825
Telegraph road, Lake Forest. and om

Erwin

Moeller,

already

active

in —

civic affairs through his connection —
the

Glencoe

Police

depart-

Mr.
Moeller
lives
avenue, Deerfield.

Since
blanks

they have

at

1055
‘

not yet indicat-_

the

individual

for

next

by

the

preference —

spring’s

elections —

this

is not a closed club. We would
be glad to have them join us, observe procedure, and participate.
“Our aim is to render public
service by presenting a well-quali-

fied slate forythe good of Deerfield.
We started as a
ticket
to
avoid

the

party label and is seeking reelection on the basis of past perform- —
ance.
oa

to do this thing, we
should be
suspected
by
some
of ulterior
motives
and_
self-seeking,’
Mr.
Piper
said.
“Those
making
the
do

on

for the incumbents who seek re- —
election that the slate carries no

tee recommendations.

criticisms

reelection

It is pointed out by a spokesman _ oa

final slate, not necessarily limiting itself to nominating
commit-

“It is inevitable

inde- —

seek

ed their intentions, all three mem- AS
bers
of
the
incumbent
library
board
are expected to file their |
nominations
for reelection
along
with the independent group.
a

council,

select

will

pendent slate. All three are from ~
Deerfield and are long-time resi-

While

cases will submit sevfor the same
office.

council

West
who

with

Decides
larger

_

head the group of incumbent
Deerfield
Township
officers

ment.
Forest

The nominating committee will
submit
information
and
recom-

mendations

Irene

Two of the three incumbent con- ©
stables are not filing for reelection.
They
are Henry.
C. Kofsky,
821.
Rosemary, who is now out- -of-town, |
and Percy McLaughlin, 1050 Chest-

residents of Deerpath
drive will
meet Friday evening at 8 o’clock
at the Wilmot school to install new
officers for 1953.
%

age
the

supervisor;

mann,

all from

Property Owners

association

town

Rochenbach, 550 Elm street, town —
clerk; and George A. Sticken, 1034 _
Somerset. avenue, town collector, —

are

Association to Meet
At Wilmot School
tective

street,

Sag
Pine ~

on exhibition

These

the collection owned by the Highland Park High
school, and will
be on display for several weeks.

Westview

nominations og

a candidate
for reelection. His —
place on the independent
slate
will be taken by Arthur C. Ul

year through
the
H. W. Norman, 11

are now

library.

officers, run-

their

filed

7 on the basis of their past records.
Edward A. Reagan, 827

Library Board Takes

West

Township

have

te

4

simple coalition
another
major

fight, but have
constantly
_
(Continued on page 6)

public

ting

council

Deerfield

in

many

Nomina-

stores

4

and |

public
places this week, it was &lt;a—
learned that the township is en- a
titled to more justices of the peace — 7

At the last meeting of the Citizens Committee for a Better Deerfield Robert Nelson
addressed the organization. Seated on the platform are Walter Ullich, who accompanied Mr.
Nelson, State’s attorney Nelson, Gayle Martin, our Village manager, Robert Newell, president
of the committee and Harold Tasker.

and

constables

than

shown.

ae

The sheet lists three JP’s and —
three constables. This is the pres- _

ent number. But because of popu(Continued on page 6)

�snsiilonsisceiateaiiiae

‘Of

eeatticlé Farum

Ice Skating Carnival
To Be Held January 25

Things To Come...’

The
Deerfield-Northbrook
Rotary club will hold their annual
ice
skating
carnival
Sunday
at

Opinions
expressed
in these
columns
do not
necessarily
constitute
the opinions
of the
paper.
Letters
should
be brief
and
should
contain
the name and address of ‘the writer,
whose
name
will be withheld if requested.

2:30 p.m. at Jewett Park. Competition will be between the skaters
of the two villages. The last two

years

To the People. of Deerfield:
_At the annual membership

meet-

ine of -the- Citizens’. Committee for
a Better Deerfield, held on January
13 the announcement was made
that Robert Newell would not ‘accept

a

third

term

as

president

of

this civic body (that has accomplished great good for this community during a period
vigorous leadership was

needed
- Thus
tion

through

mate
which

seas

to

ulti-

citizens

against organized interests.
It is
this leadership that Mr. Newell has
taken and given to the people of
Deerfield.
Can Deerfield afford to lose him

from the public
cial time?
‘Robert

scene
;

Newell’s

at this cru-

particular

he

has

been

If

retirement

at
Highland
Park
High
Frank Zipoy, director of the commerce
department
school, gives four of his bookkeeping students a prevue of the income tax form that will be
used for class study when they return to school Monday after ‘‘exam’’ week. The forms
were sent to all. secondary schools in the country by the Internal Revenue service to help
teach

junior

and

senior

high

ready

to serve and give their time.so unand

successfully

as he

has

_Many expressed this opinion

_ after the meeting last week.
It would be interesting to hear
comments from the rank and file
_ of the populace for whose benefit

Mr. Newell
so long.

has

been

working

A
Has

Twenty

Day

for

Bysiander

Leave

Dan Newcomb,
son of Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Newcomb, Wilmot road,
- who was inducted into the service

' August

14,

arrived

home

14 for a 20 day leave.

January

He

has

been

stationed at Camp Roberts, Cali' fornia, and is to report to Granite
City, Illinois, on February 3.
The

Public

Office,

Press,

no

is a public

tess

than

Public

trust.

Jan.

Published

who

will

serve

22,

1953

Weekly

Vol. 27, No. 44

every

Thursday

during

III.

ber 27,

1944,

at the

under

Managing Editor
Business Manager

post

office

Act

of

at Deer-

March

Copyright,
1952,
By
The Highland Park Company

_

All Rights

‘Rage 4

Reserved.

for

Plans will be made at this meeting for enrollment of new members
to help support the work of the
Morristown,
New
Jersey,
school
that trains guide
dogs for blind
men and women. Since its founding. in 1929, The Seeing Eye has
provided over 2,000 dog guides for
blind men and women located in
every state of the union, The District of Columbia, Canada, Puerto
Rico and Hawaii: Graduates of The
Seeing
Eye are enabled, through
the use of dog guides, to live independent lives, and they are to be
found in over a hundred different
occupations. The goal set for the
enrollment is 1,000 new members.

and Hunting-

ton
B. Henry, chairman
of The
Chicago Seeing Eve executive committee, and Mrs. Loyal Davis, also
a member of the executive committee, will speak to the chairmen.

The
Editor

the

chairman

8,

Zoning

Commission

of

Christmas

Seal

looked
among
other
Christmas
mail, reminder cards will be mailed
out next week to Lake county

letters

residents

edge

may

who

the

been

over-

yet to acknowl-

the letters, Arne

W.

Makela,

county seal sale chairman for the
Lake
county
Tuberculosis
Association, said today.
This year’s Christmas Seal sale,
conducted
by
the
Lake
county
Tuberculosis
association,
opened
November
17 and closed official-

ly on Christmas Day, but Makela
stressed that it is not too late to
make
returns
as they
will be
counted on this year’s sale until
the close of the association’s fiscal
year on March 31.
Makela also made public a letter
received
by
the
association
which said, “I wish to express my

most

sincere

thanks

for

the

won-

derful work you people are doing.
Most
especially
for
the _ service
which
helped
me
to receive the

proper

care, and

for which I

forever be grateful. From

on

the

mobile

unit,

shall

the X-ray

it was

found

that I needed to have an operation
right away. This was done and I
am now back to work, thanks to
you wonderful people.”
This letter was accompanied by
a contribution to the association
which boosted the seal sale total
to $43,178.70.

Anguili

6

under

and

7,

is

as

6.

boys

aged

12 and

13, boys aged

14

15,

and

boys

aged

of

Highwood,

and

Jack

Scouts of Troop
their Christmas

France

and

52 wish to thank
tree and wreath

customers
for their
patronage
which made the recent scouting
fund

drive

successful.

All

funds

hear further petitions presented to raised will be used to buy needed
it in regard to changes sought in scouting equipment for the year’s
the
proposed
amendment to the
ordinance.

One
was

of

on

the

behalf

comprehensive
Village Zoning

petitions
of

the

presented

Landis

Sub-

division, which was represented by
Mark Baubien, attorney at Waukegan,

Illinois.

Several

other

scouting

activities.

tions were presented, setting forth
certain recommendations
by the
people in their particular location.
Further

hearings

to January.
peti- school.

22

at

were

continued

the

grammar

event.

held

that

the

weather

co-operate,

the

on

February.

Sunday,

Legion Guests
The

American

Legion

as its guests for dinner

but because
plete
some
been missed.

Assigned Those
March
Many
Highland

will have
on Monday,

students

will

senior
school

assume

anew

rapport with their fathers when

they begin struggling with insome

tax

The

forms

students

partment

next
in

Monday.

commerce

director,

Frank

de-

asked to arrive a few minutes before that. The 10th district Legion
officers will also be guests. Russell

Anderson

to file a return in order to obtain a
refund of the taxes withheld.
The instruction materials are designed to help these students learn
of filing tax
the correct method
In
returns to obtain the refunds.
some cases.
the
studcnts
receive
enough income to incur tax liability, and the instruction materials
will help these students learn how
to correctly discharge their tax ob-

the law.
University

Among
the 5,373 students attending the day divisions of Washington university, St. Louis, which
is

celebrating

centennial

this

Charles

Bar-

rette, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Barrette of 1131 Warrington

Cecil
road.

year,

is

its

William

A graduate of Highland Park
High school, he is a graduate student in the School of Medicine.
He

sity

previously

of

attended

Chicago.

a member

ternity and
fraternity.

Mr.

of Sigma

Phi

Chi

Beta

the Univer-

Barrette

is

social fra-

Pi

is in charge

of arrange-

ments.
Robert

Guests are asked to contact
Short,
Deerfield
312J
or

Albert

Bennett

fore Monday
attend.

Deerfield
if

they

787

are

be-

able

to

Boy Scout Paper Drive

To Be Held Next Sat.
Here’s

medical

another

opportunity

to

get rid of that stack of newspapers
that has piled up during the holi-

day season.

Scouts of Troop 52 will

be around next Saturday morning
to help clear up your old newspa-

pers,

magazines

though many of these students earn
less than $600 a year and incur no
tax liability, it is to their advantage

Attending Washington

the list is not comveterans
may
have
All veterans are in-

Zipoy’s

bookkeeping class
have
received
the forms
which
have
been
distributed by the Internal Revenue
Service to every secondary school
in the United States.
Must File For Refund
Thousands of teen-age
students
in the State of Illinois hold afterschool and summertime
jobs, the
earnings from which are frequently
subject to the withholding tax on
wages, E. J. Sauber, director of Internal Revenue, Chicago, said. Al-

under

Deerfield
sent out,

vited to attend. Dinner will be
served at 7:30 and the guests are

15 Blues
junior
and_
Park
High

races

‘Vets To Be

all the veterans of the
area. Letters have been

ligations

Drive a Success

Scoutmaster

Village
of Deerfield met
at the
grammar school on January 15 to

have

have

Scout Fund

Meets

Local Subscription Rates—$2.75
per year
Domestic Rate—$4.00 per year
Singte Copies—10c
Foreign Rates on Application
“Entered as second-class matter Novem-

—.

team

some

the

Zoning Commission

MEMBER
National
Editorial Association
Illinois Press Association

Heather Hartwig
Phyllis Russell
V. E. Deckert

as

speak at the meeting

PUBLICATION
OFFICE
832 Todd Ct.
Deerfield,
Illinois
Telephone Deerfield 485
HIGHLAND
PARK OFFICE
St. Johns Ave., Highland Park,
Telephone HI 2-4500

1775

Bee

ford,

Because

George
Werntz,
Jr.,
secretary
and vice president of The Seeing
Eye, is coming from Morristown to

DEERFIELD
REVIEW
- Thursday,

with

HPHS Students

sale

Deerfield,
expecis
to attend
the
team chairman’s meeting tomorrow
at
the
home
of Mrs.
Silas
H.
Strawn
in Chicago.
Mrs.
Julian
Armstrong
Jr..
Lake
Forest
is
chairman of the enrollment.

done.

Shown

how to file an income tax return.

Ox-

rollment

selfishly

students

Reminder Cards Sent Out
To Acknowledge Seals

a distinct loss to the people of this
not

school

Mr. Zipoy are (left to right) Robert Frost of Deerfield, Carmen
Patty Larson and Virginia Mecham of Highland Park.

village,

are

the

6, boys

event

doesn’t

will be
iO

from village affairs, then it means
men

the

man

1953 Chicago Area Seeing: Eye en-

because

under

In

tal-

asked.

complete

races

of

enter this open

Local Woman Serves As
Team Chairman in Seeing
| _ whether he would further serve in Eye Enrollment
the public interest. It is not known
Mrs. Harger
Rollo, of 931
whether

The schedule
follows:

be

well as
the re-

Girls 16 and over, boys 16 and
over.
Any boy or girls who wishes may

ents: and generous giving of his
time make him admirably suited
for public: office. It is not known

_this..means

will
as
in

and
13.
Girls aged
14 and 15.

against any and all degrading influences cast at and upon the Village, and its ever-ready attitude
the

ribbons

a

white

awarded in each race
to the winning teams
lays.

Girls aged

many
years
of equivocation
and
making
possible a comprehensive
village plan; the successful defense

protect

by

and

12

food of the citizens of Deerfield.
Notable
examples
of its accomplishments include the ending of

and

embossed

won

red

Girls aged 8 and 9, boys aged 8
and 9, boys aged 8 and 9.
Girls aged 10 and 11, boys aged
10 and 11,

success
in
every
endeavor
it undertook for the common

to’ help

gold

has

Blue,

Girls aged
6) -and::'T,

so surely and
this organiza-

stormy

margin.

Girl

when his
so badly

and unselfishly given).
passes from the helm the

guiding hand
that
confidently steered

Northbrook

large

ih

Local

and

the

old

books,

Paice

women

who

are

working on the March
of
Dimes in Deerfield,
Bannockburn and Vernon Town-

ship.
their

All are chairman
district. Mrs. Earl

Anderson

who

of
T.

is chairman

of Bannockburn - Vernon
Township section was unable
to be present at the time the

picture was taken. Pictured
are Mrs. J. Derby, Mrs. J.
Weinshenk and Mrs. A. R.
Scheskie.
Standing
are
Mrs. M. Diamond, Mrs. R.
Fidler, Mrs. P. C. Weinert,
Mrs. L. Rudolph, Mrs. S. J.
Fosdick, Mrs. J. Kramar.
Also unable to be present at
the

time

the

picture

was

taken were the Mesdames:
E. Kirar, W. Brown, Edna
Stillson, J. Zally,*E. Siffert,
H.

Coleman, Carl Reeb, Don |

Moseley and Homer Marxer, |
Thursday, January

22, 1953

�Robert Pottis to Whd

Vacation

Carthage

The

Girl

marriage

Hansen

of

Se

of Miss Joan Ruth

Carthage,

Ill., and

Rob-

ert Langdon Pettis of Deerfield’
will be solemnized on January 31
at 4:30 p.m. in the Trinity Luth+
eran church of Carthage. The Rev,
Paul T. Hersch will officiate.

The bride is the daughter of
Professor and Mrs. Ralph Hansen
of Carthage college, and the groom
is the son of Mrs. Robert E. Pet-

tis and the late Mr. Pettis of 745,
Chestnut

street.

Miss Marlys Dokmo of Pare
Ridge will be maid of honor and
the

bridesmaids

Karriker
Edward
son) of

mates

will

be

Miss

Ruth

and

Mrs,

of.. Rockford

Anderson (Barbara PeterPark Ridge. All are class-

of

the

bride-to-be

bridegroom
at.
Neil Sheehan

and

her —

Carthage _ college.
of Osterman. ave-

nue, will fly home from Middlebury college,-in Vermont to be
best man. The ushers will be WilA.

senior

Allen

of

at Lake

John

Hazel

Forest

Thompson

Pvt.

Pettis

of

training

Ark.,

on’

complete

at

a

Carthage.

will

basic

avenue,

college, and, *
te eer

lard

Champ

Sunday,

and

his}

Chaffee,’
will.be

at;

home in Deerfield with his mother”
for several days. A reception in
the church will follow the wedding

Recalls the northern winter weather in a sunny clime
Enjoying the sun, sie sea dea Vedat at Seen t are
are Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Eiden, 1251 Woodland drive, who Mr. Gnd Mrs. Walter H. Davies, Sunset Lane, Bannockburn.
spent ‘several days at Tower Isle, Jamaica.
Both couples were there in the early part of January.

Matemity
2

cae

itinant
Maternity

officially
drive

Dee

Center

open

with

a_

WH
at

workers

their.

January
29 in the
John Andrews King

annually

Mrs.

Robert

Casino.
of Lake

is hostess
L.

of

the

at this
624

Deer-

field-Bannockburn team. Members
of her team
include
Mrs.
Ward
Gauntlett, Mrs. Richard R. Wolfe,

Mrs.

Robert

E.

Wolff,

Mrs.

Wd

Mrs.
For-

Johnson,

is captain

Marie ek

to

luncheon

luncheon to launch the drive.
Brierhill,

kano keva

hee

J.

J.

re

Miss
from

Arentz,

who

Highland

and

attended

Des

Moines,

was

Park

High

Drake
Iowa,

graduated
school

university

in

a member

of

is

sorority.

a

Actuarial

During the February campaign,
some 400 volunteer workers will
seek to enroll 1,000 new contributors to the center, a unique social
service organization which delivers
babies in the homes of needy Chicago mothers, trains
doctors
and
medical students in obstetrics and
engages in medical research. Last

Omega fraternity, is presently employed in Fort Wayne, Ind.
As yet, no date has been set for
the wedding.

Center

3,500 babies
300 medical

delivered

and trained
students.

more

Mrs. J. Bernard Mullen Jr., and
Mrs. Vernon Armour are co-chairmen of the drive.

Mothers

Hear

Talk

writing
speaker

guest speaker. and told how the
Class is organized. Mrs. G. E. Holmquist of Deerfieldis a member of
the Creative writers group.
Preceding

a

the

business

speech

Science

at

of Alpha Tau

by

Mrs.

meeting

was

held. At the close of the afternoon
refreshments were served by the
mothers of the second graders.

Thursday, January 22, 1953

television,

to

play

record

or

table
for

player,

Amateur Gardeners
Volunteer Services
The

regular

meeting

teur Garden

club of Deerfield

held

home

at

the

of

Mrs.

was

Joseph

Zalley, with Mrs. Earl Schwerdt as
co-hostess. Jane L. Hayes, acting
director
Downey

of the
hospital,

V.A.
spoke

service
at
on the var-

with.

Garden

club

services

twice

the

the

to

. Bannockburn

volunteer

a month

greenhouse

with

their

working

in

the

flower

arrangements..
Mrs.
John.
is chairman of the project.

Miller

a

shuffle

board,

ping
pong,
carrom,
and
group
games. The youngsters are invited
to select any activity they prefer.
There are no rules other than good
manners and proper behavior. Refreshments are available.

Members

Alabeck,

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Louis

Wilson

Frigid

Junior Guild of Bethlehem
and Frank Brach.

Dance To Be Held By
Holy Cross Mothers
Mrs.

Paul

the Holy
that all

made

Riordan,

president

of

Cross Mother’s club, says
arrangements
have been

and

plans

completed
for
tine’s dance to
gion Memorial

are

now

the annual Valenbe held at the Lebuilding in High-

land Park on Friday, February 13.
Holy Cross dances have been so
successful that those who enjoy a
good evening of fun, dancing and
meeting new and old friends, look

on

various

Tuesday,

Games
other’

January

and

ternal

C.

grandparent

Westwood,

is

“The

28

at

on

Suburbanites,”

hand

to

furnish

Refreshments

will

a band

dance

be

sold

fa-

Troy,

Lewis

Mo.

Bishop

Park

Fuel

Heating

Deerfield

...... 32

28

................ 29

= 3

Clothing

.......... 28

32

Co. .... 27

33

Sutiset Foods’ /........:.2..4.4. 26
Alpha Cleaners ............... 21

34
33.

Deerfield Lumber
Mary

Spannraft

had

high

game

for the night of 201, with high 66s
ries

of

509.

[The BANKER’S STORY
INVESTED THEIR MONEY
IN THE YANKEE CLIPPER
SHIPS OR THE WHALING
EXPEDITIONS.
HENCE THE PHRASE

at

dance.

entertainment

has

er’s
club
will
receive
‘tickets
thtough the -mail.
Admission: to
the dance will be $1.75 per ticket.

members

of

the

=e
— ff Ae
aN

INS

Ae

=S—

“WHEN MY SHIP COMES IN/” ( SS 4
\\ fi:
}

SOME OF THE FIRST
AMERICAN BANKS
WERE ESTABLISHED
TO GUARD THE SAVINGS
OF SEA-FARING MEN /

fj aa

.

vy)

or g
a

af 4

"is
i K fp ae KC
WORD

Y

DICATT

You

can

make

sure

your ship will come

starting to deal with thi s bank.

in by

Will a savings

account or a loan to take advantage of an opi portunity be of help?
See us for loans of all types

Deerfield State Bank

the

and

All

pp

ase |

music.

cards

been planned after a business meeting. Refreshments will be served.

Highland

Gardner,

Mrs.

2

A. Willi, Plasterer .......... 3525)

921 Fair Oaks avenue, are parents
of their second child and first
daughter, Suellyn Westwood Gardner, born December 31. The ma-

forward to these parties with great

miliar to the North Shore, will be

p.m.

Gilbert

Ww.
39°

232205.

being

The regular monthly meeting of
the Holy Cross Mother’s club will
held

Mrs.

Foods.

B.

Walton,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Norbert
Dompke, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Sanders, T. Grimes and company, wood-

Holy. Cross Mother’s Club

8:30

Central

of the community have

enthusiasm.

be

and

- January 19, 1953

contributed
games
and
time
to
make
Teen-Town
as pleasant
as
possible
for the youngsters
who
take advantage of the facilities offered. Among the many who have
contributed are Mr. and Mrs. W. C.

Freeze,
church

of the Ama-

soccer,

community

Mr.

Bowling League
:

Are Parents of Daughter
Born December 31

held in Bethlehem
Saturday night from
features many things
the teen-ager. There

shop, L. H. Benston,

junction

was the subat the Wilmot

Mothers club meeting on January
20. Mrs.
Frank
Payne,
president
of the Creative writers group was

Payne

of

Mr. Dvorak,

ious
volunteer
services
of the
women.
Plans were made to work in con-

On Creative Writing
Creative
ject of the

student

Drake and a member

about
than

21”

sing,
Mr. and Mrs. Albert S. Areniz,
855 Fair Oaks, announce the engagement of their daughter, Alice
Marie, to Warren Lee Dvorak, son
of Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Dvorak of
Evanston,

Delta Gamma

the

a

piano

Clancy,
Mrs.
James
R.
Thomas,
Mrs. Frank Conley and Mrs. W. H.
Davies Jr.

year,

Teen-Town
church every
7:30 to 11:30
of interest for
is

Vie

Features

Vickery Rollers

ed

Mr., Mrs. Gilbert Gardner

Fun for Teen-Agers

will

est, chairman of the board of directors of the Chicago Maternity
Center,

Teen, Town

‘buat

Gai

enrollment

kick-off.

Open

|

arn...

ee

service.

Moth-

_1%%

interest

paid

on

savings

Deposits insured up to $10,000.00
Page

5

�ae

(Continued

from page 3)

increase,
West
Deerfield
hip is entitled to elect five

Wi!

=h in the next election.
Here is a list of the offices to
elected, and the present inbents whose terms expire this
Village of Deerfield
ident—Andrew Bradt.

es

(3)—William

ernon

Meintzer,

Clarence

Wil-

to

be

yl,

(3 at present,

elected)—

Bruce

Frost,

(3

present,

Eugene

Michael

2-orge

ables

at

5

to

be

elected)—Karl
Berning,
Percy
McLaughlin, Henry Kofsky.
While neither the JP’s nor conste bles

have

very

heavy

duties

in

his ; township, they are of great
importance, especially as the JP’s
as members of the township

PHARMACY

a

H. FORD

BRUCE
Registered

in

Ross will play the part of

president, and various Township officers.
Let’s give a little thought
to this local election—it’s intelligent voting that gives us good gov-

mance with Smith is in sharp fo- ernment! Let’s ask the candidates,
cus against the backdrop of a gen- as they are named, to publicly express their views on all current
eration-old murder mystery.
Mary Vassel, who gave a fine issues.
performance in the Stagers’ first 1. Do they intend to push the
Brickyard fight to a conclusion?
offering of this season, will play
the part of Goudie’ McIntyre, a 2. Will they work for the abolition

1884

&amp; SELIG

735

Real

Deerfield

Estate —

Road,

ee.

Loans

Deerfield,

Edward H. Selig

HI.

Harold R. Vant

Tel. Deerfield

155

We

AND

ELECTRIC

APPLIANCES

Refrigerators - Ranges - Radios
Washing Machines
- Vacuums

Repair

All

Makes

of Appliances

730 Waukegan Rd. - Tel. Deerfield 122

:
F. D. CLAVEY
RAVINIA NURSERIES,
i

Established

Inc.

3.

Const

and

DEERFIELD JEWELERS
DR. G. C. PARKNEN

Have

posed

his lady will

Dance Saturday
Teen-agers of Highland Park
are looking forward to their
first “post-exam” dance on Saturday night, when the Moose
Lodge will sponsor another of
its parties.
will

to

be

12:30

dancing

a.m.

in

from

the

drums,

and

Stan

Ricker

9

Moose

home, 1799 Green Bay road, to
music of the Highland Park’s
chestra of former professional
sicians.
Dr. Samuel Binder is
clarinetist; Paul Leeds will be

on

the
ormuthe
on

bass.

The orchestra will be augmented
by Denny Zeitlin on piano.
As is the
custom,
a_ teen-aged
committee will be in charge of arrangements for the party. The 60cents-per-couple
admission
price
includes sandwiches
and soft

All teen-agers of this area

are welcome to attend.
A surprise feature of the dance
will be the audience participation

act put on by two North Shore stu-

(Continued
of

whom

either

DEADLINE

everything
‘er

for your

from

we

check

did

side

not

safety.

participate

previously,
May

joined

on

us.”

File

There is nothing to prevent anyone disagreeing with the council
from filing separately for office,
he points out.

bumper to bump-

added

system?

discussion

don’t

but really a hard job if we
have news from you fellows.
Pack

giving

direc-

on our headgear

worked

and

re-

Armstrong

practiced

We

porting.

tions

50

2—Phillip

Den

My mother

for the Pack meeting.

served ice cream cones and wafers.
We sang the Star Spangled Banner.

Den

reporting.

Fisher

7—John

first.
refreshments
our
had
We
Then we gave the Pledge of Allegiance to the flag. Then we started on our belts for our space suits.
the belts with
covered
we
Then
foil and we closed the meeting.
Pack
8—Bruce

at the

“At

the

thing
will

of

is
be

bottom

the

simple

impossible

candidates

of

whole

fact

to

you

the
get

want

that

it

the

kind

to

serve

as unpaid, unthanked village officials
if he
knows
he
must
go

through
all the
two

the same public
candidates went

years

ago.”.

.

*
*
*
There was also definite interest
in the discussion of a possible future
high school
for Deerfield.
Perhaps this could be explored further at a future date.
When Can You Come,

Mr.

Nelson?

Through the cooperation of the
Village
Attorney,
Mr.
Matthews,

the

mothers

fight

are

active

trying

in the

garbage

to arrange

a meet-

ing with Robert Nelson, State’s Attorney.
His expressed willingness
to meet with those interested in
the
problem
was
greatly
appreciated, and we are hoping that Mr.
Matthews will soon be able to get
in touch with him.

150
Kroll

reporting.

wringer
through

Dairies in
deliveries on
inate Sunday home
February
1.
Both
local
dairies,
are included
Santi and Bowman,
in the plan which has been used
successfully all over the country,

according

dairy
will
maintain
two
routes. One will be serviced Monday, Wednesday
and
Friday;
the
other, Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday.
Housewives
are asked
to
anticipate their weekend needs for

their last of the week

an
“In
customers

Donald Burson,assistant

Highland
during the

A graduate
versity,

Mr.

of Northwestern
Burson

has

uni-

a master’s

degree in education, was captain of
the
and

Northwestern
was a member

baseball
team
of the football

and baseball coaching staffs at the
university during 1950-51. He assumed his duties at Highland Park
High school last September, which

include

coaching

ball team
team.

as

well

the
as

varsity
the

base-

football
‘

J. D. Floyd, a member of the
coaching staff since 1930 and head
football coach for the past 16 years
will now assume a full teaching
load in the science department.
The
board
of
education
ex-

milk

in the

for 50 years

times

Grid Coach

delivery.

Bruno Bertucci, general manager
of the
Santi
Dairy,
Inc.,
stated
“This means the end of frozen milk
on Sunday mornings and a day of
rest for the
drivers
each
week,
something they have been denied

for

those

over-the-

for

will maintain a
service
at
all

sales and
delivery

who

them-

find

selves short of dairy products. It
may take a few weeks to get used
to no-Sunday service but we feel
that the over-all service will be as
good as it was before and there is
some talk that it will mean a drop
in the price of milk,” he added.
Bowman Dairy division manager,
H. A. Kaage said, “This innovation
will
definitely
raise the
drivers’

standard

of

living.

They

will

be

able
to
attend
Sunday.
church
services with the families regularly
and they will see more of their
children.”

Mr. and Mrs. Robert
To Entertain

O. Clark

Mr. and Mrs. Robert O. Clark,
418 Brierhill will entertain on Sunday for Mr.
Clark’s cousins
Mr.
and Mrs. Stephen Ober who have
moved to Sherwood
Forest from
St. Paul.

pressed appreciation of Mr. Floyd’s
long service
ment.

to the

3

a.m.

Saturday:

4

p.m.

,

and

7:30

p.m.

Con-

fessions.

NORTH

NORTHFIELD
COMMUNITY
Sanders at Dundee
P.O. Deerfield,
James Burford, Pastor
Telephone
Northbrook
935R2
SUNDAY
SERVICES
9:45 a.m, Sunday
school.
11 a.m. Morning
worship.
7:30 p.m. Evening services (monthly).
First and third Sundays: Evangelistic

services.

*

Second
and
fourth
Sundays:
Youth
fellowship
services.
If your church has no evening service,
we
invite you
to join
with
us in the
evening
service.
If you
do not attend
church, we give you a warm welcome to
visit our services.
ST. PAUL
EVANGELICAL
AND
REFORMED
CHURCH
638
Waukegan
Road
Rev. H. 0. Willman, Pastor
Deerfield 858
SUNDAY,
January 25
7 p.m.
St. Paul
bowling
league.
SATURDAY, January 24
9:30 a.m.
Confirmation class instruction in the church basement.
6 p.m.
Evening vesper chimes.
SUNDAY, January 25
9:30 a.m.
Sunday school worship and
classes.
;
10:30 a.m.
Chime call to worship.
11 a.m. Morning church worship.
MONDAY,
January 26
3:30 p.m.
Girl Scout meeting in the
church basement.
TUESDAY,
January 27
8 p.m.
Monthly meeting of the Evening guild.
WEDNESDAY,
January 28
7:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal in the church
sanctuary.

FIRST

PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
824
Waukegan
Road
Phone

Dr.

Paul

Deerfield

J.

775

Keller,

Pastor

SUNDAY, January 25
9:45 a.m. Church school for all gradeg
through
high school.
9:45 a.m.
Adult bible class under the
leadership of C. E. Piper.
1 a.m.
Morning worship.
11 a.m.
Nursery school for children 3
to 6.
MONDAY,
January 26
3 p.m. Girl Scout meeting.
7:30 p.m.
Boy Scout meeting.
TUESDAY, January 27
7 p.m.
Couples
club
dinner—a
“Get
Acquainted evening.
All married couples
in the church cordially invited, but reservations are necessary. Telephone Mrs.
Robert
David,
557.
WEDNESDAY, January 28
7 p.m.
Junior
choir
rehearsal. Last
tryout for new singers
until next fall,
8 p.m.
Church choir rehearsal.

industry.

all our
effort to keep
satisfied, we will remain

Sundays

on

counter
special

Don Burson
Named Head

to their officials.

Each

open

past season, has been appointed
aead coach for 1953-54.

from page 3)

Anyone

assured

pro-

Needed

football coach at
Park High school

broadened our base as others, many

rest

and

Vil-

They could explain plans for the
enlargement of their system
and
whether or not it would be feasible
to include Deerfield.

Will

QUESTIONNAIRE

may

disposal

Discussions

Attendance

dents.

you

think of the

sewage

More

Post-Exam

drinks.

OPTOMETRIST
Complete Optical Service
tablished in Deerfield Since 1942
ll Deerfield 674 for Appointment
857 Rosemary Terr., Deerfield

do they

the

Please, you Cubs who
Den meetings at your
call 248R and give us
some of the news of your meetings.
It’s fun to get this column ready,

Dairy Companies
Eliminate Sunday
Stops February |

There

Phone 1048

of the trailer camp?
How do they feel about
lage plan?

4. What

‘

CROSS CATHOLIC CHURCH
North
Waukegan
Road
Rev. John
O’Mara,
pastor
Rectory, 724 Elder Lane
Deerfield 430
11:30.
Sunday
Masses:
i, 8:30,
10,
Weekday
Masses:
7:30 a.m.
First Friday of each month, Mass at

you all to do one thing

Den
January meeting of the Citizens
we had refreshments and then
First
Committee for a Better Deertield
made puzzles. After we played
we
that these were
truly
Following
the
regular
Stagers’ indicated
some games we closed the meeting.
rehearsal schedule,
the cast will issues. Each subject warranted more
practice three nights a week until discussion than time permitted. We
the Sunday immediately preceding would like to urge the Citizens
the opening, on which day an all- Committee for a Better Deerfield
Perhaps
day and all-evening rehearsal is to hold more meetings.
held. Then practice goes on every someone
from the North Shore
night until the opening.
Sanitary district could speak on
the subject of sewage, for example.
Lake county will elim-

p.m.

Jewelry
for the
Entire Family
635 Deerfield Rd.

Repairing

of Janet,

be played by Robert Folger and
Geneva Ritter. The part of the
Rev. Alfred Combermere has been
taken by William C. Olendorf.

1885

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

a

father

Teen-agers

FROST’S
RADIO

Randle,

Sir Hugo

Established 1925
REALTORS

Insurance —

Dr.

group.

Deerfield, 1.

VANT

the polls this spring to elect three
Village
board trustees,
a Village

will be played by Les Gage, another veteran actor of the Stagers’

Pharmacist

Established

Percy

Mrs.
Smith, mother
of the male
lead.
Frances
Lansing takes the
role of Janet Randle, whose
ro-

Helen

4

HOLY

from the government in Washington to a Cub Scout paper drive—

athletic

depart-

THE BETHLEHEM
CHURCH
(Evangelical United Brethren)
Francis Geo. Guither, Minister
Clair Marvel, Assistant Minister
815

“Church

Rosemary

Going

lerrace

Families

Are

Happy

Families”

THURSDAY,
January 22
8:45 p.m.
Junior choir rehearsal.
6:45 p.m.
Bethlehem
bowling league,
SATURDAY, January 24
7:30 p.m. to 11:30 p.m.
Teen-town in
Fellowship hall.
SUNDAY, January 25
9:45 a.m.
Church school for all ages.
10:45 a.m.
Divine worship.
TUESDAY,
January
27
8 p.m. Auxiliary at Mrs. Chester Wessling.
WEDNESDAY,
January 28
4 p.m. Junior confirmation class.
7:30
p.m.
Senior choir rehearsal,

Holy

Cross

Bowling

News

Country Fare
Carr Realty
Lauterburg &amp; Oehler
Midge’s Texaco
J. J. Miller
Village
Hardware
Liebschutz
H.P. Service Station
Lindemann
Drugs
Ben
Franklin
Individual Leaders—Men

High Game—Ray

Frost

High Series—Ed
Kirar
Individual Leaders—Ladies
High Game—Elvia Guerri
High Series—Gerre Jones

Thursday, January 22,1953
+

ly

ve

|

Q

GREGORY’S
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
Wilmot
and
Deerfield
Roads
(Wilmot
School)
The Rev. J. D. Parker Vicar
SUNDAY, January 25
9:30 a.m.
Family service.
Kindergarten
and
church
school
classes
for the
children.
Sermon
and
holy
communion
for adults.

the “job”—that goes for everything

Deerfield Mothers Speak
To the People of Deerfield:

Glencoe. All other members of the
cast are Deerfield residents.

maid.

-KNAAK’S

has di-

rected or appeared in many of the
Stagers’ offerings, will direct ‘‘Sus-

things
wonderful
the
of
One
about this country is that most everyone is willing to do his share of

Just
because
we
have
a new so may I ask
president
of the United
States, this week?
The part of Robert Smith, the don’t think the elections are over! | are having
male lead, goes to Robert Wyler of Veerfield citizens will be going to homes now,

ssor—Benjamin G. Piersen.
or—George
Sticken.

es of the peace

auditorium.

Gage, who

pect,”
written
by Edward
and Reginald Denham.

se clerk—Chester Wessling.
West Deerfield Township
rvisor—Edward Reagan.

five

school

Elizabeth

7

ST.

their newly selected cast for “Suspect,” the group’s midwinter
drama, scheduled for February 26, 27 and 28 in the Deerfield
Mrs.

i4

CHURCHES

With less than six weeks remaining before opening night
curtain, the Stagers of Deerfield have begun rehearsals with)
Grammar

Hinchsliff,

DEERFIELD

Cast of “Suspect” Complete,
Rehearsals Underway

wwowwreroooo™

cumbents File

i
i*,
Kae

A

ir

�es

rs eee

y

7,

January

13

Standings

Team
Moley

TV

&amp;

Highwood
Tower:

Natta

Appl.

Shoe

Highland:

January

WwW.

L

........ Bau:

ot

Launderettes

35%

21%

20.50

32%

241%

Rebuilding

3214

251%

............ 29%

2714

Casino!

Freddies

Women Of Moose
Bowling League

Tavern

Oe

26%

30%

BOB
BU
Bc
elie ta 25%
Highwood
Hospital
.... 25

31%
32

TIL TAO sci scskiclatha uence ee 2344
Zengeler Cleaners ........ 19%

33%
37%

High Series, Team
Freddies Tav. .... 731-734-746—2211
Highwood
Launderettes
655-673-765—2093
High Series, Individual
T. Voli
179-173-199—551
C. Catchpole .... 175-188-166—529
High Game, Team
Highwood
Launderettes
........
Preddies Tavern ..25055.50- cca 746

Ty
A
5

High Game, Individual
MOEA. din bch stebsuinipiletachadelaneabaomocs
RCCEIOID. icnitidcditambieitiacasiic,
iu Pe

199
188
188

Sr. Prosperity
Bowling League
January,

16

Biagi’s

Dry

Goods

Clothing

364%
30144
29%
29%
28

201%
2614
27144
27%
29

lM

264%

30%

.... 25%

31%

Ariano
Granda:

so

Construction
Bross:

iil.

High

Series,

234%

331%

Team

Mary

Ww.

k

Jane. Lanes

PRE
C.

86.

WOK IOs ees
tate
OO:
Wilson’s Appliances ........ 2914
Puckett’s Boosters
2914

«522

OF
27%
2714

2614 30%
20:02
16%4 401%

............ po:

INES COR i:

Carani

&amp;

oh

cmt
26

J. Onesti &amp; Son ............ 26
Officer's Clad i006 cs: 25

«28
29

Lincoln

Beverage

#30

Duly’ s

‘Tavern.

&amp;

........

SS

........ 26

J. Thomson

Sons

I

20.

Sons

............ 24
ai

2:

High Series, Individual
Millie Sherony .... 142-188-142—472
Rena Andrini .... 161-143-162—466

High Series, Team
Anchor
Insurance
Co. ........
J. Thomson &amp; ‘Sons: 2525003.

2850
2635

High Game, Team
MStNer se TAVEIN lic
680
POPE EP
Tessas
cade dovoign ot hceacakeasay 664

es ROAURAOM et eh cdc oa ea eas
Dy Caster:
ob se

238
236

High Series, Individual
OBUCTLATE,
\ocunceek
it ihe
SPPARINO thls aber cer cubated

627
624

High Game, Individual
DHTUIE SNETODY 3c.
a ek
BAGRY “DORCAS
Bi

188
167

Camille Catchpole

167

High Game,

Oy
Bs

Larsons
Anchor

Stationery ........ 30
Ins. Agency .... 28

241%
2614
29
30
‘32

Siljestrom Coal Co. .... 27%
DeSoto-Plymouth
........ 27142

3214
32%

Huimer

Oe

ge

ai.

craftsmen in diamonds
and precious jewels
4

"

SPECIALLY
DIAMOND

PRICED
RINGS

Wide,

2-row,

9 diamond

wedding

ring...

contains almost 2.50 carats . . - set in
platinum.
$1000
value
from
a_ private
estate.
Specially priced at only -...............

Individual

$500°

Beautifully styled .25 carat
ring with four side diamonds
platinum.

1.53

TELEVISION
AND
RADIO SERVICE

$250

engagement
. set in

..

$110°

value.

brilliant.

diamond

four side diamonds
$1250 value.

.35
carat diamond
solitaire
yellow gold. $200 value.

.

. set

in

$750°
set

Specially priced at only -...........
* Plus

in

14k

$100°

Fax

2-0609

|

engagement
.

Specially priced at only ......... a

Phone

Garnett ¢ Co.

carat

ring with
platinum.

ALSO BENDIX
APPLIANCE SERVICE

HI

|

Breathtaking Values in
Outstanding Diamonds

Cronkite 3

Weis

Pare

q

Specially priced at only ............

Scores

Kleeburg Buick Ince. .... 35%
PURE GL hak
33144
James Thomson &amp; Sons 31

=

9 aes
1014
951

‘| Team

Aewelers

tL.

High Game, Team
Anchor Insurance Co. ............
C): Carant 3&amp; ‘Some cs:

January 16 Standings
21

ae

Standings

Team

Esther’s Tavern 650-680-669—1999
Service Market .. 638-651-644—1933

Bowling
W..

Toby’s Cocktail Lounge
Leed’s Jewelers ............
Rosby’s Wearing Appar’]

TH

14

L

Craftsman League

.... 36

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

January

Standings

Sherony Hardware ........
Esther’s Tavern ............
Service Market ............
Manhattan Shoes ........
Louise Beauty Salon ....
BOD

Legion

Post No. 145

Ww.

Standings

Team

Robert’s

16

American

LS

Mary Jane Ladies
Bowling League

HIGHLAND

RS

ay ELE

PARK

HI 2-2028

CORNER CENTRAL &amp; SHERIDAN

SALE
Clearance

on

all winter

DRESSES
25%
or more

reductions

Wools and rayons included

Clearance on all winter

BLOUSES
25%
or more

reductions

VALENTINE

This year, be sure to remember someone too nice
to forget. Shop early at Chandler’s for that “just

right” Valentine Card with the exact message you
wish to convey. There are cards for every taste
. . . for every purse. Choose from our complete
selection

SKIRTS
Reg. 10.95 ------ cae NOW 795
NOW 595
Reg. 8.95
Also Suits Reduced
Wools

and

rayons suitable for spring wear

of nostalgic,

‘Thursday, January 22, 1953

Friday nights until 9

sentimental,

gay,

humorous

or witty cards. For the personal touch, choose
card kits that you make yourself. Visit and browse
at Chandler’s. Valentines from lc up.

Gandler’s
645

Open

CARDS

Central

Highland

Avenue

Park

|

�le're Offering

Values

During

Fashioned

—

Unbelievable
Old

These

Storewide

WHITE ELEPHANT DAYS
‘

~ FRIDAY—SATURDAY— MONDAY
JANUARY 23, 24 ano 26
These

White

Elephants Go On Sale Friday Morning

January 23 at 9: 00 O’clock
28

MEN’S

SUITS—Regularly

valued

to

$75.00

$)

goo

Wonderful quality suits we had left over from last season.

$1

00:
1 Full Length Officers O’Coat—Sold in 1944 at $100.
Can be dyed for use now. ...........--.--.-ceceeececeeeeeeeeeeeeseenetseerenesesettenenenes

1

White

These

)|

Elephants

Go On Sale

_[ rripay EVENING, JANUARY 23 At 7:00 O'CLOCK

T

SHIRTS

A

nylon,

- rayon,

SHIRTS

SPORT

white

val. to 7.95 - $4

velives t0 1:25

- 6 for $5

| 4 ROBES Values to $8.95
1 limit

Heo NECKTIES Values to $2.50... 25e

21.50 values-afew

- $5

JAC KETS - warm, winter, values to 22.95

- $1 0

LOAFER

-

COATS

2 Limit

)

:

A Limited Assortment of
| EINE
SLACKS

Values to $20

res SS

|

JACKETS-med. and lightweig- htval. to 15.94-94
SOX

poe

te

Welles

to. 1.22

These White Elephants Go On Sale

oT
ey

ee

1] All Wool Shaker Knit Sweaters $7.95 value .... $9
DRESS SHORTS $3.65 Value

3 for $2

SHIRTS ..... . valuesto495...... $2
BOYS’

|

6s.

DEPT.

|
BOYS

SPORT

JACKETS

SNOW
KNIT

Good

SHIRTS

Values to $2.95

Assortment,

while they last

SUITS Our complete stock
SHIRTS Values to $1.25

Values to $3.95

TACKLE TWILL WINDBREAKER Value $10.95 $3

FLANNEL

SHIRTS

ONE SUIT, Size 18 $29.50 value

FLANNEL

PAJAMAS

ANKLETS

50c Value

Values

to $3.95

�Storewide |
se
The
ing
Dur
ues
Val
ble
eva
eli
Unb
ng
eri
Off
re
We'
|

Old Fashioned

ON

Purses veuestoass 50ce $1

Gloves . : vausw250...75¢
Dresses........... of

Pajamas . . 3.95 vaue...$2
Hosiery ... 195 vate... 75¢
Slips .. . . valuesto 3.95 .... $2.
Children’s

&amp;

T

SHIRTS

Values to $2.95 ......-.--2-22020000- oe)

a
RSS

[mr umon so
re

|

ven

50¢
ae

|. or

pig COATS 7-14
—F

$37.50 Value
ie

eo

Children’s

-

PANTIES &amp; SLIPS Values to $1.95 -........... 25¢

CHILDREN’S
SWEATERS

Dept.

:

7

.

Friday Morning, January 23 at 9:00 o’clock

e

\

\

\

SALE

ae
WO};

Dept.

Rubber Pants Values to $1 -........... 10c
Corduroy Overalls Values to $4.95 .. $2

$]

SHIRTS Small Sizes, Values to $1.95 2.2.2.2...

$]

Sleepers fi .0&gt; Votue c..5 0

SLEEP OUTFITS Values to $2.95 ......-.ccccccssccscseesseeeeeeee te

$]

Snow Suits, 2-3x, Val. to 12.95 ........ $6

BOYS’

GIRLS

BLOUSES

$]
.
ee enececeeccececeeeeeeteees
Values to $2.95 2..

—
: Thursday,

THE
January

22,

1953

Toddler Dresses

Values to $4.95 .... $]

Plastic Aprons Values to $1.00 .... 25¢

eo

FELL

We
ee

GO

ELEPHANTS

WHITE

THESE

tas

WHITE ELEPHANT DAYS
_gy
- FRIDAY—SATURDAY—MONDAY
JANUARY 23, 24 0 26 eo &gt;)

Oe

|

COMPANY

�Julian Kramers Leaving For |
Trip to California, Hawaii
Mr.

and Mrs. Julian Kramer

of

neridan
road leave Wednesday
br Los Angeles, Calif., where they
v
stay at the Beverly
Hills
| hotel. February 1 they fly to Honou, Hawaii for a month’s visit
the Royal Hawaiian *hotel. Be-

Wisconsin Rinks
Curl At Exmoor
Rinks

Wis.

trade.

to
on.
to our

at

Country

club in a Guest day event

this afternoon.
The Exmoor Highlanders, recent
runners-up
in
the _ International
Bonspiel
sponsored
by
the
Chicago Curling club, will travel to
returning home they will
in Palm Springs, Calif.

For

that

a young
shop the

reason,

coronation

of

Queen

Have been an essential part of the

coronation
ceremony
for
more
an 1.000 years.
Most of the ancient jewels were destroyed under
romwell and a new Regalia was

for the crowning

in

Probably

of Charles

the

item

most

of

all

celebrated

these

is

the

Crown of England. It is the one
with which the Archbishop of Canterburv will actually crown
the
Queen.

It is a fabulous

Ont.,

Canada,

the

Abbey.

Immediatelv

after-

ward, it is exchanged for the less
cumbersome Imperial State Crown.
Since
the
Crown
of
England)
weighs nearly seven pounds, this
not a surprising concession to
val comfort.
The State Crown will be worn by
Queen
when
she leaves the

Abbey

and

from

te occasions

then

such

on

at other

as the opening

of Parliament.
It “onlv” wei¢hs:
about 40 ounces and contains such |
famous gems as the two-inch Black |
_ Prince’s ruby. the Second Star of |
Africa and four pear-shaped pearls, :
said to have been worn as earrings
by Elizabeth I.
In all there are_
783 diamonds and 277 pearls in
the Tmneri&gt;] Crown!
_ There will be other almost priceless objects in the coronation rereny,

of

course.

ll be the Roval
Cross

which

Monarch’s

point

will

right

onation.

In

her

of the

Among

these

Scepter with the
be

placed

hand

at

left

hand

service,

in

the

the

cor-

at

one

too. will

don Ellis, Mrs. John Holloway
Mrs. Hamilton McComb.

ss

color

and

hold forth

|

certainly

will

be

pageantrv

that

envy.

themselves.

those

hand

to

friends

see

|

Your

howse

Ss

maxillofacial

1923, is associate

Page

professor
surgery

of oral
and

di-

rector of minor, oral surgery at
the University of Illinois college of
dentistry.

1848 FIRST
STREET

FIESTA

STEAK

Top Quality
ROUND or SIRLOIN

Marry

Ss

Deerfield

The marriage of Miss Nancy Cahill of Deerfield to Patrick J. Gallagher, son of Mr. and Mrs. John
G. Gallagher of Deerfield, formerly

of Highland

Park,

was

solemnized

at 3 p.m. in Holy
The Rev. John O’-

last Saturday
Cross church.

-89&lt;LB

sleeves, Peter Pan collar and full
skirt.
A shoulder-length veil covered her lace Juliet cap and she

carried white gladioli centered with
white

gardenias.

All of the attendants were gowned alike in purple taffeta dresses
made

with

skirts

and

fitted

bodices

and

elbow-length

over-

jackets

matching tulle. They
wore
and taffeta caps in the same

and

carried

cascade

yellow carnations.
Miss Mary Jane

bouquets

Cahill,

of

sister

Frozen Food Department

of

10V2-0z. 25¢

Cold King Sliced STRAWBERRIES
Treesweet ORANGE

JUICE

6 oz. 2 for 29c

-19¢

Birdseye BROCCOLI, Cut or Chopped
Birdseye

19¢
19¢

PEAS

Birdseye PEAS AND CARROTS
Birdseye SPINACH,

-19¢
19¢
-39¢

Leaf or Chopped

Birdseye SQUASH

Town Square Deep Dish APPLE PIE
Canned
CALIFORNIA

road and Miss Loraine Hatch
Deerfield were bridesmaids.

of

Mr. and Mrs.
Fred
Cahill
Deerfield gave the reception

of
for

their daughter'and

Mrs. Cahill wore a navy blue crepe:
dress with a lace jacket for the
wedding and reception.
Her flow-

ers were pink camellias and her
hat a pale pink straw with matching flowers. Mrs.
Gallagher
was
costumed
in gray and blue.
She
wore a corsage of garnet roses.
Best man for Mr. Gallagher was
his brother, James.
Ushers were

Gilbert
Jack

Baruffi

Cahill,

of

Blenheim

Ripe ‘n Ragged

PEACHES

APRICOTS

YOUR CHOICE
No. 2% Tin

39¢

of the

and

bride.

When they return from a wedding trip to Florida, the couple will
live

in

Deerfield.

Chosen

As College Guide

of Barberry road.

As a guide, Miss Avery will conduct visitors on tours of the college
yard
and
dormitory
quadrangle.

§0 Shey Say

1.G.A: FRUIT COCKTAIL
1.G.A. PEACHES,

Highwood

brother

rus Minor Avery

Ripe ‘n Ragged

at

Miss
Joan
Avery,
a junior at
Radcliffe college, has been chosen
as a guide for the college. She is
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cy-

Goods

I.G.A.

son-in-law

6 p.m. in the American Legion Memorial building on Sheridan road.

Elberta Tall Tin

HE LIKEDTO SHOW OFF
Sweetheart PEACH
Sweetheart

PEAR

NECTAR
NECTAR

College Inn TOMATO
LARGE

JUICE COCKTAIL

COUNTRY
FRESH

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CANE

5-lb. Bag

SUGAR 49°

ROYAL

GUEST

COFFEE 79°

PINEAPPLE

Sweetheart GOLDEN YAMS

of jewels

1.G.A. TUNA FISH 12 Tin

JUICE

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knew she had _ introduced
him to Eddy’s. You'll be
pleased, too.
SPECIAL
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Asti Wines

Sweetheart CHILI SAUCE

EDDY’S

Miracle Whip SALAD

DRESSING

LIQUORS

YI sc ee

North Clark Street, Chicage
10

of

tulle
color

the bride, was maid of honor and
Miss Eileen Moroney of Green Bay

who

Jewelry from $50 40 $150,000

99-43

I

it all for

72507038
|

and

California

Dole or Del Monte

will

this year in England.

on

week.

Mara, pastor, officiated at the ceremony.
The bride wore a ballerina-length
gown of white lace, styled with cap

etails reflect some of the breath-

_

this

tor

first

and

announced

Olech, who received his docin
degree
surgery
of dental

Gallagher

be

placed the Scepter with the Dove,
a gold rod 41 inches long.
_ Even in the simple telling. these
?

the

Dr.

thing

ade of gold. set with diamonds.
rubies,
emeralds,
sapphires
and
pearls.
_ However, the Sovereign wears
this story-book crown only once in
a lifetime—for those few minutes
in

Sarnia,

the University of
Alumni
Associa-

as secretary of
Illinois
Dental

1661,

single

new

Pp “abvtcle

Eli Olech, 334 Roger Wilavenue, has been installed

Eliza-

eet co their questions and thought
that you. too, might be interested in
bit of its romantic background.
The Regalia, or Crown Jewels,

ade

was

Dr.
liams

couple stopped
other afternoon

ing the
collection
in London
veral years ago. So I was able to

_

at a party

weekend in February to represent
the club at a bonspiel.
The
rink is composed
of Mrs
John Montgomery, skip; Mrs. Gray-

I

I
II. Since the Crown Jewels
will play such an important role
in this historic event, they wanted
know something about them.
Well, I did have the privilege of

P

members

Miss

tion, it was

also

with a request.
They plan a trip to Europe this
ring and intend to be in London
the

family

for their daughter, Laura, who
celebrating her first birthday.

Exmoor

Chicag-

ns as a jewelry
importer,
my
sociates and myself naturally beome rather familiar with some of
exciting international aspects

the

curl

tained

Wau-

Cahill

Nancy

Of Dental Association

Levinson

: In the course of serving

F

will

and

IGA

I Remember

By Harry

Madison

Mr. and Mrs. John E. Dreyfus of
Park avenue west recently enter-

watosa,

fore
stop

Things

from

Name Dr. Olech Secretary

Celebrates First Birthday

Thursday,

January

22, 1953
fae

�HP Hospital Has New

Dietitian

ee

Show

Miss Stellar’s

Painting at Club

ores

Featured
open

at

house

Sunday

from

afternoon’s

3 to 6 o’clock

in

the Highland Park Woman’s club
will be an exhibition of painting
by Hermine Stellar, and a concert
by Mitzi Kinnucan, young Chicago
pianist.
Among the paintings are several
of Miss Kinnucan—one, an oi] por.
trait of her at the piano, recently
exhibited
at the Arts Club
of
Chicago.
In the exhibition, also,
is the well known portrait of the
artist’s mother.
Besides the group
of portraits in oil are pastels and
water

colors

scape

subjects

Sicily,
Venice.
Miss

of

interesting

painted

Tyrol,

a

her

Chicago

Kinnucan,

studio,

who

is

her

where
niece,

often a modél
and showed
grea
promise herself in drawing ©
painting.
ve
Miss Stellar is now a resident
of Highland Park and maintains

Miss|a
was

studio

here

as well

as in Chi-

cago.

Get a FAST START this year

land-

abroad—in

Dinkelsbuehl

Stellar,

a studio with her friend, the late;
Mrs. George Blow, in Florence and|
Fiesole.
Most of the portraits in this}
exhibit, however, were painted in|

graduate

and
of

the

Art Institute of Chicago, continued
her studies in Europe—at first, in
Madrid

with

the

Spanish

master,

Sorolla y Bastida.
Subsequently
she lived and painted and exhibited

a great

deal

abroad,

keeping

in

touch with the modern movements,
as well as benefitting from the
study’ of the
old masters.
In
Vienna she met Oskar Kokoschka,
one of the great expressionists. At
another time, her interest in Ro-

—

Mrs. Thama Cook, Highland Park hospital’s new dietitian, looks over an array of desserts ready for delivery to
patients. Besides planning regular and special patient diets,
Mrs. Cook

must see that food is well prepared and appetizing.

An aid in this effort are the electrically heated food carts in
diet kitchens on each floor which keep food warm for patients.
A native of Texas, Mrs. Cook received her degrees in home
and

dietetics

from

Baylor

university,

Waco,

and

lowa State College, Ames, lowa. She comes to Highland Park
hospital from the Veterans’ Administration hospital at Downey,
where she was staff dietitian.

Back

From

Get an early start this year. Start sav-

5

ing mow in an account here at our bank.

she maintained

School

Marshall E. Domash of Pleasant
avenue,
an_
assistant
insurance
agency manager, returned recently
from a two week advanced underwriting school session at the Broadmoor
hotel in Colorado
Springs,
Colo.

SUL
of HIGHLAND
Member

of Federal

Deposit

eT
PARK
Insurance

Corporation

Co

|

We

time in Italy, where

today than you had this time a year ago?

is

Pp leccsited

to

puns

that
V1}.

Whchacl

PopP¥ Le

Vovth

Shae

Shy list
(Refer

ie

ease
Shands

Road.

‘

of
at

an

on

page

34)

Conbaaee

Park

Mibnies
is now

for

to story

associated

with

appointment '

Cll
Sk. 2 {3335

a

1929

feue

“of Contoure 1929)

AZ
a

‘\A
‘\

economics

manesque and early Gothic architecture took her to the cathedral
cities on the Baltic where she had
seen the great modern sculptor,
Barlach, and his works
in his
studio at Rostock.
She established herself for a longer period of

Do you have more money set aside

M\t/
7

i,

—

�a

Honor Mrs. Knight As Outstanding

Highland

Parker

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ILLHNOLS

Madison

Street

Her work for Elm Place and Highland Park High school PTAs
at Highland Park hospital where she directs nurses’ aid classes and
more than 10 years, has brought Mrs. Francis M. Knight of 1707
four, the honor of being named ‘Outstanding Highland-Parker of
its president,

Through

ber of Commerce.

Fenner Spalding,

and her volunteer service
has served as an aide for
Lake avenue, mother of
the Month” by the Champresents

left above, the Chamber

At right is Robert
her with a scroll confirming the honor at the January dinner meeting.
Denzel, vice president and program chairman. Mrs. Knight also serves as board member for
She and Mr. Knight have been resithe Northwestern Settlement among other activities.
dents here since 1930.

‘Winter Carnival,’
Woman’s Club Dance

Thomas

To Be January 31
Another

a
lot of service

...and with a

Highland

Fling,

the

third in a series of four formal

sup-

per dances sponsored by the Highland Park Woman’s
club will be
given January 31 in the Woman’s
club building.
Mrs. Mark
Brown
of Oak
Knoll
terrace
is general
chairman of the dances.
Mrs. Edward M. Knox of Lakeside place is chairman of the dance,
and Mrs. John Armstrong of Vine
avenue, Mrs. Albert J. Bushey of
Carol court, Mrs. Willard Ewing of

friendly
Your milkman, like
your mailman, is a
pretty dependable citizen. He'll
carry your milk home for you
in any kind of weather. He will
gladly pick up your empty milk
bottles. He will see that your
family is constantly supplied
with pure, fresh milk and other
dairy products... chocolate
milk for the youngsters, cottage
cheese for tempting salads, anytime you want them...just
leave a note for your milkman.

Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ira
Thomas
of
Luray, Mo., formerly of Oakwood
avenue, are announcing the birth
of their first son and fourth child,
John Glenn, December 30 in Graham hospital, Keokuk,
Iowa. The
Thomas’ daughters are Donna, 11,
Sharon,
8,
and
Lindy
Lou,
.28
months.
Lakeside place, and
Frisch of Ivy
lane
with arrangements.

The

decor

will

Mrs.
Sidney
are _ assisting

carry

out

the

“Winter
Carnival’
theme
George Burnett and his band
again furnish the music.

and
will

Edward McCraren
Serving in Japan
Cpl.

James

Edward

B.

McCraren,

McCraren of

son

field road, has recently arrived in
Japan and is serving with the 24th
Infantry division.

Now
receiving
intensive
field
training, the 24th is part of the
Before
in Japan.
forces
security
being rotated out of line early in
1952, it spent 19 months in Korea.
Cpl.

entered

McCraren
at

stationed

the

army

1952 and was formerly

in February

Calif.

Cooke,

Camp

IMMACULATE
CONCEPTION CHURCH
Deerfield

Rt.

ARE
PAYING

YOU
MORE?

te
TELEVISION

Rev.

and

Green Bay Roads
2-0202
Joseph P. Morrison

Msgr.

Pastor

Rev.
Rev.

Donald
B. Runkle
Bernard
E. Burns
MASSES
Sundays—6:15, 7:30, 9:00, 10:00,
11:00 and 12 noon
Holy ee
eae :00, 8:00, 9:00,
10:00

Weekdays—6:15, 8:15

mae
peeeee ee
aturdays,
Eves. of
First Frida
Holy Days 4:00 and 7:30 ore

Call us today for courteous, de-

pendable ‘Home Delivery’’...
it’s so convenient.

HOUSE

CALLS

NOW

Barney the Milkman SaysHave Your Milk Delivered In
Sterile Glass Bottles!
Including

Delivery

COOPERATIVE
Lake

County’s

Service

TRADING,

Call

PHONE

labor.

Where society’s
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rent theirs—
Cutaways - Strollers
Single and
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TTT ey

Other Stores
ba Oy-\ ae yh

in

© THE
© SOUTH

8-6100

LOOP
SIDE

�NAB

List Delegates To
Annual Meetings

HP Families Named To
Committee At Carleton

Of Infant Welfare

President

Mrs. Herbert F. D’Sinter, Mrs.
Jackson Smart, Mrs. Woodward W.
Burgert and Mrs. Robert F. Walker
will represent
the four Highland
Park-Ravinia centers of the Infant
Welfare society at the annual meet-

ing of the Woman’s auxiliary to be
held next Wednesday at 10:30 in
the Boulevard
ton hotel.
In

1952

room

the

vinia centers

of

the

Highland

Shera-

Park-Ra-

contributed

$10,337

for the society’s health work among
underprivileged children. They
gave 810 hours of volunteer service
at Alice H. Wood and Seward Park
stations, weighing babies and helping with clerical work, and made
1,131 articles of clothing for the
babies.
The Infant Welfare society maintains 21 stations in the poorest dis-

tricts

of

Chicago,

with

a

staff

of

97 doctors, nurses and nutritionists,
a mental hygiene consultant and a
consulting psychologist.
Expectant

mothers

and

children

up

to.

six

years of age receive health supervision by doctors and nurses in the
stations, followed by home visits by
nurses and nutritionists
to
teach
the mothers how
to
keep
their
children
physically and
mentally
well. Last year 13,184 babies, pre
school
children
and expectant
mothers received this comprehensive health service.
*
*
*

The work is supported

Mrs. A. King McCord

college

this week

to attend

M.

was

Gould

in

and

to

of

Chicago
address

meetings of the Carleton parents’
committee of Illinois and the Carle
ton Alumni Club of Illinois.
Named to the former committee
were Mr. and Mrs. Walter L. Gottschall of Lakewood place and Mr.
and
Mrs.
Howell
M.
Murray
of
Linden avenue. The annual meeting of the parents’ committee took
place at 6:30 p.m. Monday in the
University
club.
The
Carleton
Alumni club held its annual dinner
meeting Tuesday in the Normandy
house, Chicago, where Dr. Gould
was also the speaker.

will conduct

the afternoon

The

Mrs. Richard

regular

Ravinia

meeting

auxiliary

to

of

the

the

Chicago

attractively

DEER RENT EE

"ACTS

wrapped

ment house in Chicago.
bs
Mrs. Glen Lawrence of Chicago,
chairman of the parent organiza-—
tion’s Get Together club of oldsters —
and head of the adult work of the |
Chicago Commons, will give a report on the club’s Christmas party,

articles

to the meeting which will be sold
at the annual bazaar in Chicago
next month.
The proceeds from
this bazaar will be used to materially assist persons living in the

vicinity

of

the

Common’s

SHOES

Settle-

-

SHOES

RED

ngs
Jackson

790

J. Bushey, Mrs. A. C. Heimerdinger, and Mrs. Leo D. Jensen.

Chicago

Salon...

to
Fit

Walter's

second

Shoe

But Not In
Every Style

Store

“Serving 8

SEE

THIS

MOTORS

O

the

Family”

SAYS

Weds Siees

en-

4

IN AND

GENERAL

in-

brass

or black curtains. Visit our
new
Fireplace
tire
floor.

Difficult

1 090
Were $9.95
to $13.95

made

stalled—

J. Dolan, Mrs. Albert

‘°°

speci-

fications —

+ Wahash

Me

SHOES|

Were $9.95
to $12.95

your

SALE

MEN’S

CROSS,

FOOT REST
And Others.

to

SHOES

CLEARANCE
WOMEN’S SHOES
690
890

R Screens

-

WALTER’SSemi-Annual

meeting.

COME

=
ERE Poe ese

1

.| small

Commons
will be held tomorrow
at 1:30 p.m. in the home of Mrs.
Dudley Hall, 1206 St. Johns avenue, with Mrs. Edwin P. Hart as
assisting hostess.
A dessert-luncheon will precede the business session.
Members
are
asked
to.
bring

New members of the Highland
Park-Ravinia
Infant
Welfare
society who will attend this meeting
are Mrs. Ormas G. Smith, Mrs. Edwin E. Hansbrough,
Mrs.
C.
S.
Stunker, Mrs. R. C. Vinnedge, Mrs.
Frank Trangmar, Mrs. George
G.
Postels, Mrs. Richard Rademacher,
Mrs. Adolphe Lundin, Mrs. Charles
E. Bletsch, Mrs. William H. Elston,

by volun-

tary contributions, more than half
raised by 38 centers of the Woman’s auxiliary in
the
residential
areas of Chicago and suburbs. The
Highland Park-Ravinia centers receive a portion of their contribution from
the
local
Community
Chest.

Laurence

Carleton

Mrs. Dudley Hall Is
Host to Local Group
Of Chicago Commons

pe PRE Cr

- WALTERS

F

pen

3

Friday

499

Nights

Doors

Central

HI

East

of

a

2-0172

GREAT NEW

MASTERPIECE?

of Beverly

Hills, president
of
the
Woman’s
auxiliary, will conduct the morning session, which will be followed
at 12:30 p.m. with a luncheon meeting of the Infant Welfare society,
in the Grand Ball
room
of
the
Sheraton.
Gaylord A. Freeman Jr.

.
?
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For performance, economy and deep-down
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am
3
q
eG aes

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natty

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:

�Dean

Maj.
of

and

Mrs.

Warren

Hyattsville,

Md.

C.

Dean

announce

the

birth of a third son on January 12.
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At a small

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spent

engaged
Eve.

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at

family dinner

during

the recent holidays Mrs. Everette
Bebee
of Division
street, announced the
engagement
of
her
daughter, Miss
Carole
Risdon
to
Thomas Delacy Scott of Maywood.
Mr. and Mrs. T. W. A. Scott, the
prospective bridegroom’s
parents

friends of

the

newly

pair at a party New

Year’s

Miss Risdon is a graduate of Mallinckrodt High school and now is a
freshman at Northern Illinois State
Teachers’ college.
Mr. Scott is a
junior at the college and a gradu-

ate of
school.

Proviso
He is a

United

States

Township
High
member
of the

Marine

has

been

Corps

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for

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Mrs.
street,

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the

grandmother.

Dean,
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493

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YELLOW PAGES

Highland

Park,

*Member

of

Church

First

the

Board
of

of

Christ,

Park

2-3100

Illinois

for e CHIROPRACTORS

The

Highland

—the CLASSIFIED section
of your telephone directory—

of Christ, Scientist

Avenue,

Telephone

Lectureship
Scientist,

of
in

The
Boston,

Mother

Church,

Massachusetts.

DRUG STORES
« FOODS—HEALTH

Typewriter Sales
Office machines, portables, adding ma-

acre

chines.

e SCALP TREATMENT

buys

in

Some

machines!
=

excellent

reconditioned

Central

645
Ave.

�Trxvinic

Winans

CLibs

Je

Dessert-DBridge

Plans for the Ravinia Woman’s
club’s
annual
Valentine
benefit
dessert-bridge and fashion show on
February 9 in the Ravinia village
house are being made by Mrs. H.
L. Nelson of Elmwood drive, general chairman of the club’s philanthropy
committee,
and
her
cochairman, Mrs. Grant H. Brown of
St. Johns place.

The

fashion

show

will be staged

in a Valentine setting by a Chicago
department
store,
using
1ts own
models. Dessert at 1:15 p.m. will
precede the showing, and members
and their guests will play bridge
during the afternoon.

The

event

is the

With

9

W. E. McDonalds Hold
Reception After Baptism
Of Their Youngest Child
A
at

baptismal
the

home

reception
of

Mr.

liam E. McDonald

January

11, after

daughter
Frances

in

church.

The

was

and

held
Wil-

of Laurel

their

avenue

youngest

christened

Immaculate

Rev.

was
Mrs.

Joan

Conception

Donald

B. Run-

kle officiated at the 1:30 p.m. baptismal ceremony.. Godparents were
the Joseph B. Busches of Columbus, N. Dak.

fund-

Among the neighbors and friends

raising party of the philanthrophy
committee.
Organizations
benefiting last year were Chicago Commons, Arden Shore, Highland Park
Girl Scouts, American Red Cross
Family
Service,
Highland
Park
hospital, The Highland Park Public
library and the Community
Concert association.

who gathered
at
the
McDonald
house afterward were the Raymond
Mays, Mrs. Cloy Berube and her
daughter, Dorothy,
and
Mr.
and

Committee

by

Mrs.
Mrs.

chairmen

Nelson
E.

annual

Groups Meet Monday

hs.

73. Mell

E.

announced

are:

Dierking

J. Ryan of Clifton

and

Mrs.

avenue,

R.

tickets:

Mrs. Howard Boysen of St. Johns
avenue,
reservations;
Mrs.
Ralph
Duncan of Central avenue, fashion
show;
Mrs.
Frank
Irons, Clifton
avenue
and
Mrs. Harold
Clarke
Yale lane, refreshments; Mrs. William H. Bartel of Clifton avenue
table decorations; Mrs. C. E. Park:
er and Mrs. Thomas H. Compere.

{

WALTER
The

TAILOR
@

ALTERATIONS
@ CLEANING
@ PRESSING
1814

Second

HIGHLAND

Street

PARK

Mrs.

Robert

Green

Joan

Bay

Jeremiah

O’Leary

of

was

a Christ-

of

Group I will meet
Mrs. Theodore L.

Nicketh of Forest avenue, tables.

Jan. 28, 3:30 to |

to be held at YWCA

Dance

classes

semester

second

for

registration

announces

'in’Modern

%

(

5:30.

—

Special exercise class Wednesday evening for adults.
Private lessons in ballroom dancing available to
teen agers and adults.
For

in the home
Rehn at 175

information

Call

HI

2-5901

—

HI

2-5103

Belle avenue with the new president of the groups, Mrs. J. William
Gooch,

Mrs.

presiding.

In

the

G. A. Shallberg

morning

Jr. and

Mrs.

Thomas
H. Compere
will be cohostesses
while Mrs. Rehn will
serve as hostess in the afternoon.
Mrs. Pierre Martineau, first vice
president, will
preside
over
the

meeting of Group II in the home of
Mrs. Adolph E. Lundin, 1305 Lincoln avenue south. Morning hostesses

will

emacher

be

Mrs.

Richard

L. Rad-

store for boys

and Mrs. Elzie C. Partlow

the afternoon

Mrs.

Julien

Frank
yoth
of Clifton
avenue,
tickets:
Mrs. Carl’ E. Herbst, Melody lane
and Mrs. Alfred W. Hoelsner, Yale
lane,
decorations;
Mrs.
Fred
R.

New Officers

The Junior groups of the Highland Park-Ravinia Infant Welfare
society will hold their sewing and
business meetings Monday. Sewing
is scheduled to begin at 10:30 a.m.
with luncheon following at 12:30
p.m.

and

road.

Frances, who

~~ Phylls Saboll

Infant Welfare Jr.

Manual

H.

hostesses

Jordan

will be

and

Mrs.

Evanston

Trangmar.

FAMOUS

FOR

BEAUTIFUL

FINAL

mas

Eve

child, has

and

two

sisters,

two
Bill,

WEEK

SHIRTS

OF

JANUARY CLEARANCE

brothers
14,

|
Highland Par

Mary

672 Central Ave. at Green

Helen, 12, Kathleen, 7, and Dennis,
3.

Bay

The Only Stores on the North Shore Exclusively for Boys

e
o
i
h
S
e
k
a
Y
Marshall
Feld ¢ brnpn.
Store Hours, 9:15 to 5:45

January Selling of Linens and Beddin;
means big savings tor you

$1950.

Linens—First Floor

Handsome Fieldcrest (R) Nobility (R) Blankets

1. Feel this beautiful Nobility blanket . . . it's woven from fine foreign and domestic wools, soft
and gentle to your touch, yet warm on cold winter nights. Richly bound in acetate satin and

The Door to

light green, chartreuse, hunter

available in striking colors of blue mist, rosedust, buttercup,
green, pink, Pompeii red or white. In size 72x90 inches

Health and Freedom
The promise that still stirs the
world is this: “ye shall know
the truth, and the truth shall
make you free.”
Today the door to this mighty
promise is open wide. Many
have found it and entered the
realm of God-given freedom.
You at this moment are on the
threshold. A great book, the
Christian Science textbook

SCIENCE
KEY

WITH

and HEALTH
TO

THE

SCRIPTURES

by Mary Baker Eddy
has opened the way.
Through thoughtful study of
this book the actual Science of
— Jesus’
Christ is made plain
promises are understood and

bécome practical and provable
in daily life. This door of freedom from all manner of human
fear, want and trouble is open
for all.

The textbook may be read,
borrowed or bought at
Christian Science
Reading Room

Lovely Fieldcrest (R) Luster Towels
Sparkle your bathrooms with these colorful Luster towels at January sale prices. They're
made for long wear and are known for their sturdiness and absorbency. Get yours in
cinnamon, blue, lemon, raspberry, maroon, dark green, gray or white

2. Fieldcres* (R) Luster bath towel, 25 x 48 inch, $1.75 each; $21 dozen.
3. Fieldcrest (R) Luster bath towel, 22 x 44 inch, $1.50 each; $18 dozen.

Luxurious

Wamsutta

Supercale

Sheets and

Here's the January sale you've been waiting for! Wamsutta
smoothness and durability . . . woven in premium
and bleached a beautiful white. See them today.

4.
§.
6.
7.

72 x
81 x
90 x
108

108 inch
108 inch
108 inch x 1222 inch

plain
hem

hem
stitched

$ 4.95
5.85
6.45

$ 5.35
6.25
6.85

13.95

14.55

Cases

sheets and cases made

long staple cotton,

luxury thread

for

count

é

plain
hem

8. case, 45 x 40%
9. case, 42 x 40
10. case, 42 x 48

inch
inch
inch

1.50
1.45
1.65

hem
stitched

1.75
1.70
190s

Fieldcrest (R) Duracale (R) Sheets are Wonderful Values
These sheets are waven in our mills from selected cotton. Over 180 threads per square inch.
White, and a special value now, during our January sale of linens.

11. 72x 108 inch,

$3.15

14.81 x 117 inch,

$385

17. case, 45x 38/2 inch,

117 inch,

$3.45

$3.85

18. case,.42 x 38%

inch,

80¢

13. 81 x 108 inch,

$3.45

15.90% 108 inch,
_ 16, 90 x 117 inch,

$4.25

- 19. case, 42 x 48 —

inch,

95¢

If you can't come

in, phone

Lake Forest 2340

due
|
additional expense,
to cover
a
to the quoted prices of all merchandise.
:
dali
jistob made in Illinois,

to the:

12.72x

85¢

1935 Sheridan Road
Highland

Park

Information concerning church services,
Sunday School and free public lectures

2%
if
illinois Retailer's Occupation Tax

Add

Sy i ani

ih

Met ee te

=

eT

dais ayy 2s

—

�aeTotase

ta,
gil

id

;

Se

£2tg
ea

ry

CX

Br

e

mM

O

W

n

Pie

ee

RR

Cee

Veis

Chi

—

Weddings

~

Engagements

NEE
ag

6

=e

i or

BRE

Shey

Mid-Winter
Shard

WL

Bride

HAP

or.

a8

b Wed Sebruary 21
e
senior
Welches
annockburn,
will be married

A

° eception

will

follow

Country club.
Miss Marguerite
sister’s

maid

degroom’s

at

Annual

of

will

honor

sister,

by
A

and

Mrs.

be
the

Michael

ampler of Bannockburn will be
bridesmaid.
Other
bridesmaids

w

Mrs.

n

road,

Mrs.

ginia
‘ton,

0

Mrs.

Arnold

Husted

Vanderbie),
and

Mrs.

Robert

both

John

Chicago.

Nash,

brother

wv

from

come

be best man.

(Vir-

of

J.

Evans-

McAllister

Beta

fraternity
|to

Meyer

Theta

of

Mr.

The

Pi

Welch,

Chappaqua,

N.

Y.,

list of ushers

Mrs.

‘the flower girl. Francie and her

Linden

nts,

Mr.

‘come

and

Mrs.

(Barbara

from

their

Gordon

Os-

Welch)
home

will

in

ee.
O. for the wedding.
_ Although pre-nuptial entertain(Continued on page 18)

James Franklin Olsens of Maple avenue
28 in the Newark Presbyterian church.

The

its

president,

asurer

and

| Of Deerfield

Mrs.

Charles

is in residence

serving aboard the USS
being graduated

Mrs.

at the

Parnassus

club

in New

Mrs.

‘man Barr on
the
board.
me mbers present were Mrs.

V1; iss

from

is on sea duty with the Navy.

Dashiell
the

FTA

Ld

iy

Ly-|

Other
Stew-|

V/

York

Mrs.

Jess

and

Mrs.

cf TAvindin

pune

Irving

.evende

school

in

Washington,

E.

*

E. Schumacher,

avenue,

has

been

2290

elected

David

J. Harris,

correspondRobert

S.

Mrs. Schumacher has appointed
the following to head the standing committees ‘and complete the
board:

He is

after
D.C.

Mr. and Mrs. Car! Distelhorst of
Sherwood road and their children,
Craig and Lynn, returned recently
(Continued on page 18)

As

Marr y Se

Mr.

| Hote

de

as a firing technician

*

Bowen

ing secretary, and Mrs.
Cushman, treasurer.

| The Carl Distelhorsts
Return From Florida

Meyerhoff

F. |

E. Piper|

will replace

bride

of Music while her husband

_ Mrs. Richard Allenby was elected |
she president to succeed Mrs. F.|
O. Dicus at the annual meeting last
week of the Thrift Shop board in|
of

Mrs.

City, where she is continuing her studies at the Juilliard School

ice President Of
Thrift Shop Board

home

took place December
Her parents, Mr. and

Mrs. Elbert Duane Smith, gave the wedding reception at home.

Elect Mrs. Allenby

the

Davis,

|
|
|

Model

Woman’s

club’s year

to be held this year

annually
the

by

the

party

finance

will

be

of Mrs.

un-

Charles

A.
Simpler
of
Lincoln
avenue,
chairman, and Mrs. Alfred B. Gardner of Braeside and Mrs. Walter

president
for
the
coming
year.
Mrs. Thomas E. Keogh will serve
as vice president; Mrs. Donald B.
Robinson,
recording
secretary;

Mrs. Gerry Chandler Olsen, the former Barbara Lynne
Smith of Newark, Ohio, whose marriage to the son of the senior

Cleve-

B. Carpenter
on
Kimball
oat
‘Luncheon followed the meeting.
Mrs. Jay Glidden was re-elected |

Park

der the supervision

Mrs.
Kenneth
H. Kraft
Burton M. Smalley.

ok

ane
incomplete.
Mr..
Welch’s
, Francie Osterstrom, 5, will

srstrom

A.

OS

Tresday

committee,

This will be the annual meeting, marking the end of an active
year for the Senior group. Annual
reports of the officers and committee
chairmen
reviewing
the
work of the past year will be presented. Installation of the new officers, who
were
elected
at the
last regular meeting will also take
place at this time.

Sutherland

M.

Highland

Meeting

James

Halsted,
and Mrs.

lude Miss Kerber’s cousin, Mrs.
illiam H. Sihler of Deerfield,
y
Grace Williams of Wincand

of the

The senior group of the Highland
Park-Ravinia
Board
of Infant
Welfare
society
will
meet
Monday at 11 a.m. in the home of
Mrs. Elwood Hansmann, 1290 Lincoln avenue south. Assisting Mrs.
Hansmann
as_
hostesses
will
be

Exmoor |

Kerber

Benefit Shor

Infant Welfare
Seniors To Hold

of
at

church
Young.

highlight

Members

Given

4 730 p.m. February 21 in The HighA nd Park Presbyterian
‘Dr.
William
Atkinson

Gantt:

Chl

is the dessert-bridge-canasta fashion show
at 1 p.m. next Tuesday in the clubhouse.

Miss Elizabeth Kerber, daughter
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Edmond
|Kerber
of Linden
avenue,
and
Richard Enlow Welch Jr., son of
E

Wootan's

Mrs. Albert Y. Bingham
chairman of the sewing committee, with
Mrs. John D. Stodder as co-chairman:&gt;.Mrs:
Lloyd,
A.
T.upper
will
head
the
luncheon
committee
and
Mrs.
Robert
O. Farrell
will assist her. Community
Chest
representative will be Mrs. Gerald
(Continued on page 18)

A.

Schwalm

of

Green

Bay

road,

showing

of

Edgar

co-chairmen.

The

fashion

A. Stevens Inc. clothes will be directed by Mrs. Louise Pirie of that
company.
The
Coiffure
shop of
Highland
Park will do the hairstyling for the models, all of whom
are club members.
Models
include Mesdames
Herbert
A.
Alexander,
George
A.
Bruegger, Mark G. Brown, Edwin
J. Bradbury, J. William Gooch, J.
Maybra Kilpatrick, John M. Mannings, James E. Meehan, Edward
Olson,
C. V. Nichols,
Walter
A,
Schwalm, Edward G. Stupple, H. C,
Sonderman, Frederick Olsted Toof,
Milton E. Sauther, Eben W. Erikson, J. Gordon Smith, Charles L.
Puckett and E. A. Van Ells. Mrs.
C. F. Cronemiller of the Stevens’
staff is to be the commentator and
Mrs. Lisle Hawley will provide a

piano

accompaniment

for the mod-

els.
Tables

with

may

Mrs.

be

reserved

Simpler

at

at

HI

Mrs. Gardner, HI 2-4483,
Schwalm, HI 2-7054.

$5

2-6121,
or

Mrs.

D.
Stone; © legislative
chairman,
Mrs. Spencer R. Keare; publicity

chairman,

Mrs.

Graydon

H.

Ellis;

telephone chairman, Mrs. Lee H.
Ostrander;
representative
to the
junior board, Mrs. Louis J. Stirling;
and
member-at-large,
Mrs.
R. R. Wible.

There
of
at

will

the new
10 a.m.

be
and

a

joint

outgoing

meeting
boards

Hear Plans For Fund Campaign

Meyer-

announce

of their daughart Johnston, Mrs. Mead Montgom-| ithe engagement
of
Mrs. Harry Van Ornum, Mrs. | ter, Jeanne, to Harry W. Strauss,
| son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Harry
ussell
Vinnedge, Mrs. Nathan
| Strauss of Chicago. They are planorwith, Mrs. H. F. D’Sinter, Mrs.
[eormi Clark, Mrs. Norman Vance | ning a June wedding.
Miss
Meyerhoff
was graduated
|Jr., Mrs. John A. Bigler and Mrs.
| from Northwestern university. Mr.
Harold D’Ancona.
|Strauss attended Purdue university
o*
*
*
airs. Glidden reported sales for| | LaFayette, Ind., and the University
| the year of $12,591.63. This is only | of Illinois in Champaign. He is
for the period from May of last |now in business in Chicago.
| year

&amp;

to January

(Continued

1953,

as

the

fiscai |

| Thomas

on page 25)

| Talk On ‘Monstrous
Regiment Of Women’
Slated By Jr. League
_

The
Junior League
of Chicago
has
invited
members,
husbands

-and

guests

-Evans

of

to

hear

Northwestern

Dr.

Bergen
university

| talk on “The Monstrous Regiment
of Women,” at 8 p.m. next Wednes-

day.
The meeting will take place in
League headquarters at The Fort-

| nightly.
| Highland Park
League
include
| Johnston

members
Mrs. S.

Jr. of Roslyn

of the
Parker

circle, Miss

Jean Butz of Hazel avenue, Mrs.
Buckingham Gunn of Gray avenue,
and Mrs. Theodore H. Buenger of
Balsam road. The latter is a Provisional

member.

E. Dingle Visits

Here From Atlantic City
Thomas
E.
Dingle
of
Atlantic
City, N. J. spent, the holidays here
visiting his mother,
Mrs. Thomas
Dingle of Sheridan road.
On New Year’s ‘Day they talked
by phone to Mr. and Mrs. Benno
F.
Nell
WI
(Anne
Dingle)
in
Manilla, P. I. where they have been
living for the past year. The Nells,
former
residents
of
Deerfield,
have two children, Benno IV, 314,
and Barbara 1%.

Unexpected

Holiday

Miss Patricia D’Sinter, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Harold F. D’Sinter
of Marion avenue, visited in Highland Park for a week recently when
De Pauw university was closed due

to

an

influenza

epidemic.

D’Sinter is a senior
castle, Ind., school.

at the

Miss
Green-

Plans for the fund raising drive of Highland Park chapter of Planned Parenthood association, opening Monday, were outlined by the chairman, Mrs. Edward Goodkind, at a tea she
gave in her home January 12 for members of her committee.
Photographed at the meeting
(in front, left to right) Mrs. A. Y. ee
Mrs. Goodkind, and Mrs. Robert Logan; (back

row)

Ly

Mrs.

N. R. Joffee, Mrs. SamuelR

Rosenthal, and Mrs.

Edward Loeb.

sday, January 22, 1953

�Former Highland Parker
Attends Inauguration

es

Tucson,

Whess

Mrs.

othbaicm,

Parker

on ; William eae
Miss
Judy

Sherlin
Milier

shower

tomorrow

Rothbaum,
Mrs.

Jack

who

will

and

of Chicago

miscellaneous
home

Kowitt

for

daughter
Rothbaum
wed

Dr.

will

ral

Miss
give

a

Concert association

series, pho-

tographed backstage in Highland Park High school auditorium
with his wife, at left, and Mrs. John V. Spachner, association
president,

shortly before

the concert

began.

was

executive

Miss

Roberta

of

Mr.

of

Chicago,

Jeffries

ing

and

of

the

of

the

Republican
visited

this

where

reception
state,

Among
the other
parties
held
recently in Miss Rothbaum’s honor
was a gadget shower and luncheon
given
by Dr.
Firestone’s
sisters,
Mrs.
Korshak
of Linden
avenue
and
Mrs.
Samuel
Baskin
of the
Moraine road address in the Korshak home.
.
Three of Miss Rothbaum’s aunts
were
hostesses at a luncheon
in
the
Belmont
hotel
in Chicago—
Mrs. Pau! Summer, Mrs. Sam Newman
and Mrs.
David
Siegel,
all
Chicagoans.
The
bride-to-be
was
also feted at a luncheon-shower in
Chicago by several of her cousins.

for

the

Howard

delegates
convention.

Fred

To Give

At Mothers’
The

ers’

nue.

destination.

area

was
of

that

for

Re-

during

the

Re-

association

hold

have

is their ©

the

been

the
ave-

young

invited

are

Toni Murphey,
Jack Tyson, all
and

Bill Winters

tomorrow,
the party will have
a
three-day holiday at the Wisconsin
ski resort.

its

next)
|

at

Mrs. Fred L. Faulkner of Deer- |
field,
a member of the group, will

@ PORTRAITS

give a book

@ CANDID
WEDDINGS

review followed

by af-

ternoon tea.
Mrs. Hayden Glatte,
of Evanston, president of the Mothers’ association,
has
invited
the
presidents of the Mothers clubs of
all the sororities on the Northwestern campus to be her special guests
Thursday.

@

OR WE

SOC,

MEMBER

&amp;

COMMERCIAL

PERCY

on

%,

ot

H. PRIOR, JR.
PHOTOGRAPHY

Mrs. Jackson Smart of Sycamore
place is a member of the Kappa
Mothers’ association.

IN...

Wis.,

Among

of Highland Park,
of Deerfield.

Moth-|

meeting at 2 p.m. next Thursday
the chapter house in Evanston.

BRING

Vine

Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Tasker of
Deerfield and their two sons, Robert and John, will accompany the
group.
Because there will be no school

Gamma

will

who

with

of

Telemark,

Marjorie Ellman,
Mary Farrell and

Review

Kappa

weekend

a
a

Sue D’Sinter, Barbara and Diane
Wing, Helen Levi, Nancy Lelewer,
Thomas Van Stratton, Gail Porges,

a |

and

Mt.

people

dur-

Meeting

Kappa

this

Blumenthals

Women,

Faulkner

Book

trip

Harold

in Chicago” |

Pyle,

publican

skiing

the

National

governor

publican

Mrs.

of

she

guest at the “Arizona

Fire-

Their
daughter
Sheila,
and
group of her friends, will go on

inaugu-

A member

summer,

of

Highland

thosein Wash-

board

Mrs.

William

Jeffries

former

among

ceremonies.

Federation

Miss
Kowitt
will
be
maid
of
honor for Miss Rothbaum and Miss
Miller will be a bridesmaid as will
the bride-to-be’s
sister, Lois. Dr.
Firestone’s
two
nieces,
Deborah
Firestone, daughter of the Sol-F.
Firestones
of Braeside
road, and
Shelley Korshak, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Korshak of Linden avenue, will be flower girls.

cert in the current Community

a

in the Kowitt

1. The double ring ceremony will
take place in the French room of
the Georgian
hotel
in Evanston,
with a dinner and small reception
afterwards.

Isaac Stern, performing artist at the third con-

Geddis

Ariz.,

ington, D. C., for Tuesday’s

stone of 368 Moraine road, February.

Violinist

Ruth

Blumenthals To Take |

Group Of Young
People On Ski Trip

HERICNSB

Pre-niiplinl P artics

599 ROGER WILLIAMS
PHONE HI 2-3199

WILL

PICK

UP

your old plant containers
We have a wide selection of beautiful
plants for you to choose from.
—No extra charge for replanting—
Rely on us to serve you with the best in
flowers for every occasion.

A bachelor dinner for Dr. Firestone was given Friday by his three
brothers, Sol F. Firestone, in whose
home the party was held; Nathan
Firestone of Chicago, and H. Bernard
Firestone
of
368
Moraine
road; and his two brothers-in-law.
Donald Korshak of Linden avenue
and
Samuel
Baskin,
also
of the
Moraine road address.

FLOWERS
Berthe

K.

Bay

AND

Rd., Highwood,

Ill.

GIFTS.
Donini Alverson

Agnes

Phone

HI 2-4534

+

Sain

&gt;

454 Green

Strubel

ena

|
Ruth Sloan, left, above,

The concert crowd included Mrs.

her son, David, Miss Helen West, and her mother, Mrs. Ernest
E. West. Mr. and Mrs. Stern and Alexander Zakin, accomp-

anist, were

honored

at a post-concert

party

in the Spachner

home.

Helene

Curtis

Permanent

Wave

With Styling To Fit Your Personality
We have all the new styles
Permanent

Wave

- Cut
LIMITED

- Styling
TIME

BUY OF THE YEAR!
Anticipating

the Beethoven

and

about to hear as he scans a program

Prokofiev sonatas

given him by Miss Carole

Meehan, one of the young women ushers, is Chester Kyle of
Highland Park High school’s music department, with Mrs. Kyle.
__

‘PRrhursday

Anuar

y

PHONE HI 2-4768

he is
1884

Sheridan

Road

“Highland
my

Park

�a

|

Kerber-Welch

a tea given by Mrs. Kellogg M.
Patterson of Woodland road and
Mrs. George O. Strecker in Mrs.
Strecker’s Lake Forest home Feb-

(Continued from page 16)

WIE

PREOFA

EUs

® For Construction
© For Refinancing
@ In Connection
with Sales

and

in

the

home

of

tain at a gadget shower and buffet supper in their honor.
Next on the list is an open
house to be given by Mr. and

Jones, Miss Kerber’s aunt, and her
daughter,
Mrs.
Sihler, will entertain at tea February 17 in Mrs.
Jones’ Linden avenue home.

circle

home

S. Parker

and

Mrs.

February
Johnston

4,

Sheridan

road will have

Mr.

Williams.

Following

and

of Roslyn

Horton

parents,

Yoe

Johnson

of Hazel avenue will have a tea
and
kitchen
shower
February
6.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Buck of
Long Grove are planning a game
shower and buffet supper February 7, and the Ellsworth Mills of

33 W. Washington STate 2-0085

shower

her

Mrs.

1893

closet

Saturday when the Amos Watts and
the Dey Watts of Glencoe enter-

Glencoe

INCORPORATED

11.

On Valentine’s day Miss Williams will have a dessert luncheon

Mrs. Michael Wampler on February
1. Mrs.
Austin
Wyman
will
have
a personal
shower
in her

© FHA Mortgages

Established

ruary

and

Mrs.

Mrs.

the

Robert

William

wedding

T.

rehear-

Miss Kay Dodge, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. O. L. Dodge of Green Bay

Set For January 31
Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Pleasant

avenue

gagement
riage
Eitner

the

approaching

their

daughter,

Garrington,

Cameron.

The

place

the

Patrick’s

to

afternoon

enmar-

Margaret
Joseph

ceremony

in

St.

announce

and

of

road,

C. Eitner of

W.

will

take

of January

church,

West

returned

to Dennison

sity in Granville,
day

vacation

of

her

at home.

sorority,

Gamma,

Miss

univer-

O., after her holiAs

president

Kappa

Dodge

is

Kappa

planning

the sorority’s formal pledge
to be given February 1.

dance

31

Lake

igan

avenue.

Forest, with
the
McCarthy, pastor,

her home on the grounds of Indian
Hill Country
club in Winnetka. The bridal dinner will be
given the next night by Mr. and
Mrs. Welch at their home.
Some of those who had planned

Capt. James F. Garrington, USAF.
The
bridegroom-elect’s
brother

couple will leave on a wedding trip.

Donald, who recently moved to California, will return to serve as best

When they
their home

for

the

young

couple

but canceled their parties because
of Mrs.
Kerber’s
illness include
Miss Kerber’s aunts, Mrs. Lewis D.
Suhr and Mrs. William C. West,
both
of
Evanston;
Mrs.
Edwin
O’Mara of River Forest, Mrs. Gor-

a Sunday

Wedding Date Is

sal February 19, Mrs. Albert H.
Tippens will give a dinner for
members of the bridal party at

to entertain

brunch the next day. Mrs. McAllister is giving a luncheon in Miss
Kerber’s honor February 10.
The parties will continue with

Plans Pledge Dance

. ©

Lake Forest College
Kvening Session

Rev.
Raymond
officiating.
The

bride-to-be is the widow of the late

man.

They.

Mrs.

Joseph

are

H.

sons

of

Cameron

Mr.

Miss

Mary

Brogan

return they will make
in Highland Park.

Florida Vacation
(Continued

uncle, who will entertain when the
Welches

three-week

return

wedding

from

trip

waii.

Atlanta,

and

of Mich-

don Holland of Delta lane and the
Francis
W.
Holbrooks
of Ridgewood drive, Mr. Welch’s aunt and
junior

of

Ga., will be maid of honor.
After a reception in the American Legion Memorial building, the

their

in- Ha-

from

a three

Driftwood

from

week

Inn

page

16)

vacation

at the

Vero

Beach,

on

Fla.
They were accompanied by Mrs.
Distelhorst’s brother, Claud Smith
Jr. of Chattanooga, Tenn.

KATHERINE LORD'S STUDIO
DAY AND EVENING CLASSES IN ART
FOR ADULTS AND CHILDREN
REGISTER NOW
FOR SECOND TERM
Studio open daily from 9 to 5
Schedule of classes mailed on request.
CALL OR WRITE FOR FURTHER INFORMATION

Greenleaf

53-1035

1515

Sherman

Evanston

Help Yourtell,—

SECOND SEMESTER REGISTRATION:
FEBRUARY 2 AND 3

In addition to many courses continuing from the first semester the following are open
to students registering for the first time:
ART: Ceramics, Drawing

and Painting.

BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION: Beginning Accounting, Business
Organization.
EDUCATION: The American Public School.

GEOGRAPHY:

World Regional Geography.

HISTORY: Europe Since 1939, American Diplomatic History
Since 1900.
MUSIC: Teaching of Elementary School Music.
NATURAL SCIENCE: Introduction to Biological Science.

PHILOSOPHY: Methods and Problems of Philosophy.
POLITICAL SCIENCE: American Foreign Relations.
Industrial Psychology.

RELIGION: New Testament Life and Literature.
SECRETARIAL TRAINING:

“to Guwuine, iportod

Business Communications.

SPEECH: Introduction to Speech.

Advanced

SWITZERLAND
SWISS

For the advanced student the following courses are available:
Accounting, C:P.A. Review, Problems of American Labor, Marketing

Principles and Problems, World Literature, Contemporary Novel, Social Theory,
Spanish Reading Course, Spanish Conversation and Composition.

LOOK FOR THE NAME “SWITZERLAND” °
ON THE RIND—YOUR ASSURANCE OF PERFECTION IN FLAVOR, TEXTURE AND AROMA

For Bulletin describing these courses in detail and full registration
particulars, write:

Dr. E. C. Reichert, Director of the Evening Session, Lake Forest College, .
or phone Lake Forest 3100, Extension 23.
arSON 1 ANBik

fy

eae

ean
ase

eTPea
ee +) eA

Ae oh Cay
BY gh SegPi
ad

tent ats te date lar

¥
oF aieWhereis Gib
REO
2 mete Cote ena

_ SWITZERLAND CH)
?

tees

PSYCHOLOGY:

ag ertitie

Ae

ing has been curtailed by Mrs.
Kerber’s illness, a dozen parties
have been planned for the young
couple. The first will take place

Garrington-Cameron

�Reprinted by permission of
Advertising Age, Feb. 11, 1952

Here's an Object
of Phony Bargain Sales
D.

A PIGGY-BACK

WooLr

We

In
retail
advertising
that
announces reductions it is standard
practice to tell the reader why the
dealer is taking it on the chin. A
of the reason
logical explanation
the merchant is applying the ax to
his prices presumably begets the
confidence in the auconsumer’s
thenticity of the bargains.

couldn’t

sensible
in our

reason

Chicago

us

little

have

silver,

our
95%

few

of

mer-

crystal,

and

table

in

orating

magazines

the

More

or

currently

top

than

past
of

the

English
Tapio

created

what

year—
magnifi- |

pattern

of |

dinnerware

crystals

porary

our

in national

this coming

‘“Fresian’”

signed

dec-

this
half

time-honored

the

flight

of

to

contem-

Wirkaala,
House

who

calls the most beautiful object |
of 1951. Accessories of this cal-|
iber need
than

never

the

be sold for less |

established

retail

price.

But for ONE WEEK STARTING
WEDNESDAY,
JANUARY
16TH TO WEDNESDAY, JANU- |
ARY
23RD,
WHILE
WE’RE
IN THE CHAOS OF TAKING,
OUR
ANNUAL
INVENTORY |
AND
REORGANIZING
DISPLAYS,
WE’LL
SELL
ANYTHING
IN
OUR
ESPALIER
TREE STOCK AT A 30% DISCOUNT with a big catch to it;
the
following
unprecedented
conditions of sale:
1. Nothing will be
everything you

charged.
buy.

Cash

2. Nothing can be returned
change or credit at any
8.

Nothing
at the
ordered

or credited.-

5. Nothing will be wrapped or whiteboxed. We’ll be glad to furnish
you with any brown cartons we
have while they last.
‘6. And lastly: NOTHING WILL BE
DELIVERED
ANYWHERE.
IF
YOU
CAN’T HAVE
IT PICKED

UP OR CARRY IT OUT PIGGYBACK, YOU CAN'T BUY IT.

These

conditions

rough

but

saving
you'll

on
find

serving

30%

are
is

the

your

needs.

;

SPALIER

and

fabulous

many

for

rN cata from
|!

rigid
a

things

dining

and

the
TREE

|,

|)
without a |:

ie a ae,
896

Linden

Ave,

Hubbard

| ae
‘

Woods

}

GREATER’

If we have the strength, we’ll do
it twice

a vear —

our one week

‘‘Piggy-Back”’ sale.
It

was

with

a

tremendous

a hundred

laughs

success

and

SELECTION

ae. by

;

MORE MERCHANDISE
THAN LAST YEAR
BbeFs iis

30%

discount.

We

laughed

when customers roamed around
the store for an hour, holding up
different
things
and
asking
three or four times ‘‘Is this on
sale too?’’ We laughed when a
decorating
client,
instead
of
walking into our business offices
in
the
court,
came
through The Espalier Tree, and
finding about 25 pneovle piling up
little groups of things spied me
and asked what this was
all
about. She left thirtv minutes
later furious at having spent
123.00 when all she stopped in
for was to ask when her draveries would be installed!
We
learned that neople do read and
respect’ conditions of sale and
found only one customer in the
throngs of peonle who whined
that we couldn’t gift-wrap and
deliver her sale purchase. We
were amused to see so many
women resisting a bargain to
buy a gift at the regular price
just to have it gift-wrapped. deof credit

or

exchange.

We were thrilled to sell you the
3 and
4 dollar
items
which

meant

more

profit to us at 30%

discount than it would selling §
to you at full price with our
usual
services.
If you’re not
business minded, ask your husband to explain that one. We
lost shamefully on other things,
but
we’re
convinced
of
one
thing—a sale worth having is
worth making a good one. It
seems no one had ever seen
anything quite like it.

“Rigid and Rough”

ee

Conditions of Sale

NO PREVIOUS
ANNOUNCEMENT
BEEN

a

few good pointers for us who
have never run a real sale. We
laughed at the stacks of plates
and
torn
cartons
of glasses
leaving the shop, looking so unLubliner and Himmel-ish. We
laughed when a customer told
us we were losing money on her
purchases
because
she
was
going to buy them anyway. And
at the very next customer who
was displeased with her savings of 11.20 because she hadn’t
intended to buy a thing. We
learned that if you’re too honest
people are suspicious—no one
quite believed
that even
the
newest items were subject to

livered and subiect to our policy

jal. Jan. 31st
9:00 A.M.-5:30 P.M.

10 (RY

roy ae
|!

Fri. Jan. 23rd

for extime.

4. Any gifts which must be delivered that week will be handled
with our usual services but with
no discount whatsoever.

Ta AT
ANNUAL
LED einoe
era
tH ree
30% discount —
|) een Pee
merchandise.

Bao

OF |

AMS

Brother and sister team
cop national applause
from Advertising Age for
|
fresh, unusual "PiggyBack Sale’ —a sale with
condi-

unprecedented

tions for buying.
that a small
It’s not everyday
commugift shop in a suburban
nity snatches national recognition
for its advertising. But that’s exactly what the brother and sister
team of Lubliner and Himmel did
recently. Mrs. Muriel Lubliner and
found
Himmel
Richard
brother
that their accessory annex of crystal and gifts was becoming a fullSo they gave the
time business.
and set out to buy
shop a name
contemporand
transitional
only
gift
and
accessories
table
ary
items.
A few months ago, they started
US~
programs,
advertising
their
ually a chatty column in the local
newspaper. Then came a bouquet,
sent across. the nation by James
Woolf in the pages of Advertising
Age.
Mr.
Woolf
says
he’s been
looking for a truly good sale ad,
one that does not mention
fires,
leases or admits to poor merchandising. Then
Mr. Woolf
saw the
Lubliner and Himmel ad from little
old Winnetka
and he was happy.
He was so enthusiastic, he reprinted
the
complete
“Piggy
Back
Sale’?
ad
and
incidentally
mentions: it is the work of a non-professional,
written
by
Mrs.
Lubliner. We’re
no less
enthusiastic
about the L &amp; H sale ad, so if
you’ll
look
to
the
left
of
this
page, you’ll find the Piggy Back
Sale ad in its entirety. Read it and
see why
it deserved
rave notice
from Advertising Age. It’s a mat-

ter

of

clear,

honest,

hokum-less

advertising.
Real.
proof
of
the
merit of the ad: customers poured
in, merchandise poured out. (See
ad following the Piggy Back Sale.)
Congratulations to the ‘‘Bull in the
China Shop.”’
L &amp; H carry only a small selection of silver since, as Mrs. Lubliner puts it, silver is an almost
neglected item on brides’ preference
lists—with
brass,
copper,
ceramic,
crystal
and
plastic
far
surpassing silver in demand, even
in well-heeled communities.

Hold fashion foremost
Keeping
up with the trend towards casual entertaining,
L &amp; H
show many styles of chafing dishes,
from $8.95 to $180. Contrary to usual gift shop policy, they buy and
sell extremes of price: denim place
mats
at
$1.25
each;
Dorothy
Thorpe’s linen and lace imports at
$488 the dozen mats and napkins.
French service plates at $300 the
dozen
and
unbreakable
Russell
Wright designs at $10.95 a starter
set. They hold fashion and quality
foremost,
and
price
secondary,
which is as it should be with a
shop devoted only to style in table
accessories, as L &amp; H
is.
Now they’re considering a tablesetting plan for North Shore hostesses. Using only the client’s flat-

MADE

Please Take a eae
as You Enter
First Come, First Served

of GiftBrowder

Blow Your Own Horn —
L&amp;H Ad Shows How

the

_FOR 8 FULL DAYS.
STARTING,

for

can be specially ordered
sale
price
and
nothing
prior to the sale can be

exchanged

WERE
DOING
IT AGAIN!

Beautiful

yours.

L&amp;H
has
had
no fire, faced
no
bankruptcy,
teetered
not
on
the
brink of being evicted by the landlord. But let’s get to the advertisement,
“A Piggy-Back
Sale,’

herewith

offer

as

our

popular.

Booth’s

@L&amp;H, I gather from this remarkable
advertisement,
isn’t
giving
away something for nothing. It offers
the
reader
a_ bargain—providin’. You scratch our back, says

I quote

of

featured

cent

At last, thanks to Miss Virginia
Hackett,
of Chicago,
I have just
such an advertisement before me.
It was
published
by Lubliner
&amp;
Himmel,
a giftware shop in Winnetka, in the Jan. 17 issue of the
News, Highland Park, II.

deletion:

type

tionally

from

For a long time I have been looking for a retail bargain advertisement that (1) is not a confession
of the dealer’s incompetence;
(2)
is obviously sensible and credible;
(3) offers its bargains only to readers willing to help the retailer cut
his costs by sacrificing certain consumer comforts, conveniences, and
“‘pamperings”;
and
(4)
talks to
the
reader
with
restraint,
good
sense, and good taste.

which

suburbs

things will be shown

It
seems
to
me,
tco,
that
the
retailer
is not presenting
himself
in
his best light when he portrays himself as an inept and incompetent business man.
Foolishly he overbuys,
or
guesses
wrong
on style trends,
or is
so
unfit —that
he
faces
bankruptcy,
or is so lacking in fcresight that he
cannot
pay his taxes,
and then—alas
and
alack!—he
must,
forsooth,
cffer
his
wares
at
self-murderous
prices.
This procedure, I submit,
is short cn
dignity. A further indignity is the fact
that he is the sacr‘ficial goat. He burns
himself at the altar, whereas the consumer,
if I may
mix my
metaphors
rides the gravy train.
’

Single

saie

until now.

dinnerware

year.

I have long held to the belief that
completely
truthful
explanations
even
though
they
are
utterly
devoid
cf
drama,
crisis,
and
loud noise,
might
accomplish
wenders
once
the _ pnuiblic
got used to the idea. When I say tru‘hful
explanations,
I
mean _ obviously
truthful explanations, reasons that will
appeal to the reader’s common
sense
and
ordinary
business
judgment.

scratch

a

accessories is fresh stock, tradi-

The phonies are bad for advertising. Explanations
that are apparent fakes,
or reasons that at
the
very
least
put
the
reader’s
credulity
under
strain,
handicap
the honest retailer who occasionally offers bona fide bargains
in
his advertising.

we'll

shop

and

publications

and

really

competition

chandise.

@ There is no doubt whatever that
there are many
honest pricé reductions
in retail bargain
advertising. But there. are also many
outright
phonies,
and
there
are
even more semi-phonies that ballyhoo moderate price reductions as
being
sensational,
gigantic,
and
suicidal almost to the point of the
store’s bankruptcy.

L&amp;H,

a

sales in stores through-

out

shops

of

Reprinted by permission
wares, Oct. 1952—Walter

Reprinted from
North Shore Publications, 1952

(Continued )

SALE

to have

giftware

January

is, of
devices
oldest
the
of
One
sale of me chandise
the fire
course,
and
sm*ke
by
damaged
“slightly
is the, ‘‘Going-Out-ofwater.’’ Another
the
is
another
Still
sale.
Business”’’
“Clearance”?
or
‘“‘Close-Out’’
sale
cé€
nued’’
“Disconti
styles or models. There
is really no limit to the ingenuity d splayed by retailers in their pursuit of
explanations
they
hope
the
consumer
will believe. Some time ago I saw an
ad
by
a jeweler who
anncunced,
“I
am
slashing my
prices so I can pay
my income tax.”

think

Age

@ You have just read an admirable
advertisement of a price-cut sale.
I quote it in full because there is
no single word
that can
be deleted without hurt to the copy. (A
markedly excellent piece of copy
rarely
permits
deletions.)
Note the opening sentence: ‘“‘We
couldn’t think of a really sensible
reason to have a sale in our giftware shop until. now.’? Have you
ever read before anything so ingenuous in a bargain-sale ad? How
can
the
reader
fail
to
respond
pleasantly
to this
candid
admission? And note especially the six
solid reasons why L&amp;H_
can afford to sell its fresh stock at a 30%
discount. The customer,
in order
to quaiify for ‘‘a fabulous saving
on many
things,’’ must
agree to
conditions
that
are
“rigid
and
rough.’”’
Note,
finally, with what
restraint
and
decorum
the
copy
was written.
I am told by Lubliner &amp; Himmel
that
its
‘‘Piggy-Back
Sale’’
was a great success. Incidentally,
the ad is the work of a non-professional;
Mrs.
Lubliner,
one
of
the
store’s
partners,
wrote
the
copy. Let’s frame this fine advertisement
and
hang
it conspicuously on our office wall.

hound els
China Shop

Lesson for Advertisers
James

1952

Bull

Salesense in Advertising...

By

Reprint—Advertising

Reprinted from
North Shore Publications,

}| ware, the china, dishes and crystal
stemware

73 eee

Ave. ati

Me

will

be

rented.

Every-

(|thing for the dinner or luncheon,
: arranged by Lubliner and Himmel.
Should

be

perfect!

p
PALE

19

�LEGAL

following

is

a

correct

list

of

MOL to POB)
beg at a pt on
W In 1185.2 ft N of SW cor th
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N In 1192.1 ft to cen of Saunders Rd th S 4 deg 22 min W on
cen of sd Rd 847.15 ft th E parl
with N In to E In th § on E
In to pt 1185.2 ft N of SE cor
th W to POB
pt lot
2 NW%
Sec 31 45.80 Aes
Eugene Lang
S 182 ft N 456.06

all

onal
Property
and changes
in Real
jtate in
the Town
of West
Deerfield
th the assessed value thereon as extended
the
County
Treasurer
for
the
year
—
published
as required by law,

TOWN

OF WEST DEERFIELD

Constance Miller § 132 ft N 324.06
ft W 330 ft E 360 ft NW%

-TOWNSHIP
43—RANGE
12
Dawson
(Kk E 20.94 Acres)

sian Miller N 192.06 ft W 330 ft
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also (Ex W 198 ft S 660 ft) &amp;
(Ex E 165 ft lyg W of &amp; adj the
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20.94

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Pt

BE

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182 ft
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&amp;

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EC
ft

Ray

Adm

W

1348

her K Wyman
Beg on N In
1.8 ft E of NW
cor th § 16
20 min E in Saunders Rd

613.71

ft

to E In th N

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cor thof

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cor

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to

784.7

ft

of

s

: desed as beg at pt on N In 831.8
ft E of NW cor th S 16 deg 20
ed
Rd
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E

55
E

‘parl

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with

_ parl

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with

S

In 482.15

N

to POB
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:

ft th S 19 deg
Rd
193.2
ft th

W

ft

286.54

th
ft

N
th

82
N

79

46

deg

29

In

sd N

%

Floyd

_E

Peterson

200
ft) S
NEY
See

(Ex

_&amp;
100

(Ex

Mav Ann
ft N 360

200

1032
ACS

ft

209

ft

ft N

551.66

FE

RR

th

N

54030

1
4

deg

30

to

pt

ft

sd NW%
436.77
ft

th

S

W

In

SW%

E of

18325

W.

300

ft

ft

pt

Lot

ft

E

th

E

sd
ft

17260

ft

S

S

200

W

623.37

ft

34800 |

adj

Duis E 75 ft W
ft S%
SEY

..

717.09

parl

with

sd

In 156.68
ft th
to POB)
&amp;
(Ex

W
W

148
300

the

ft

lyg

E

of

&amp;

adj

ft

W

280

ft

E

of

Rd)

NEY
Sec 80 1 A. ......
Barrett (Ex N 831.86 ft of
523.66 ft) &amp; (Ex S 300 ft E
ft
W
1920
ft
of
SE%

S

200

ft

W

WY)
&amp; (Ex N 449 ft
444.34 ft Govt lot 1 NW%)

112.02

Ac.

NW%

Sec

30

W

280

ft

In

830

ft

to

POB

pt

Me re BO Biel ACB.
iam A Click N 440 ft

ft of

Govt

lot

1 NW%

SE%

ois
oe sce
W 444.34

Sec

30

EE
als COs, Sw wrk hak oo
rman W Peterson Beg at a
n cen of Wilmot Rd 729 ft S
N Im of sd % % Sec th Sly
een 100 ft th W Parl to
In 200 ft th Nlv parl to cen
ilmot Rd 100 ft th E 200

‘to POB Sec
J Peterson

Re
pt
of
alg
sd
of
ft

30 .46 Acs ........
829 ft S of N In of

¥% % See th Sly alg sd cen
ft th W Parl to sd N In 200
th Nlv parl to cen Wilmot Rd
100 ft th F 200 ft to POB Sec
30

isa
:

f

&amp;
:

46

FR

Acs

Miller

pnik

Sb 6 Op ee © 0 owed

(Ex

511.2

ft

W

of

151.2

N

th

ee W 3830 ft E 860 ft)
06 ft NW%
NE%
Sec

E

S

E

511.2

ft of

the

N

ft

th

ft)

a)

280

500.54

ft

th

W

ft

th

100 ft S
of &amp; adj

E

of

Rd

N

W

317.94

ft

9700
9100
8930
4800

10550

ft

to

th

SE%
6

Elmgren
deg

15

ft

800
650
4500

th

320.81

POB

S

NWY

V

800

pt

pt

9.47 Acs ....
N
99.40 ft S
on E In of th
In Telegraph Rd
7 1.14 Acs ....
Com at SE cor

Se

7

0

to

.796

Com
min

(Ex

of
In

th

pt

of the

of Sec 7 lyg

ov%

Nly

cen

In

Telegraph

Rd

M

680

pt

SW%
NE%
Sec 18 5.28 Acs ..
E Zack
E11 A.&amp;W9A.
NY
SE% NW%
Sec 18 20 Acs ...
A M Bridell (Ex th W 1 Rod) W
739.71

ft

lot

15

See

S 165

16

21.91

ft W%

13900
43570
37200

Acs

NW%4

he
A.

Silovsky
S .70 A. N 2.7
S 5.40 A. W 8.10 A, NE%

John
500
lyg

Klemp Jr S 206.03 ft of N
ft of
E % of S% of NEY
W of cen In Ridge Rd Sec

56100
2100

8340

Lewis J Simmonds E 548.87 ft S
1/3 of th pt taken as a tract
W%
NE%
(Ex §S 1% rds &amp; Ex
W 15 Acs)
pt W%
NE
Sec

17970
Amt.
a

sub

of

pt

N%
11650

SUBDN. UNIT

B

yee

e ere

NO

3
13300
4
1000

Acs

at

W

deg

3500

20

....

a pt

1025

ft

ei

443.29

ft

Wly

of

In

62.50

ft

to

POB

J Hamilton
Lot 2 i
Theo Robinson’s sub (Ex
th pt dese
as_ follows
beg at a pt on W In sd
62.55 ft to sd NWly cor
of Lot 2 th Ely alg th
Nly In of sd Lot 401.33
ft MOL to the angle pt
in the Nly limits of sd
Lot th NEly alg the Nly
In sd Lot 657.49 ft MOL
to the NEly cor of sd
Lot th SEly alg th Ely
In of sd Lot 188.69 ft

ast
Frank

657.09

ft

MOL

to

the

NEly cor sd Lot th SEly
alg the Ely In of sd Lot
2 188.69 ft and th Wly

ft MOL to POB &amp; all
Robinson’s sub
H O STONE &amp; CO’S LAKE
ADD
Walter C Thor
See

errveeese

ee

eee

VICTOR
Wassell

ewer

FOREST

eens

E THELIN
Thelin
.

WESTLEIGH

SUB

th

400

fr

cong eh

Do
Cc
ROBERT
BARTLETT'S
WHISPERING.
OAKS
SUB
UNIT
NO
Robert
Bartlett,
es
2500
2500
2500
2500
2500
2500
2500
2500
2500
2500
2500
2500
2500
2650
3000
2500
2500
2500
250%
2800
2550
CoP ee mw ere errr ence
2500
Cote rere eee ee serene
2500
Sette eee eee reer eens
200
Cee eee eer ee reeeesee
wd
Ce
Cc
200
CAMPBELL’S
LAKE
FOREST
ADDN
Frederick
P
Geyser
i
&amp;
2
21240
LAKE
FOREST iteIGHTS
Joseph
Verbeke
7350
Harold Henricksen
10600
J

&amp;

Mary

E

RA Se
a ako
8200
Russell J Pester S%
.
6900
Milton R Smith
8
6900
MC CORMICK’S Onwinters
ACRES
R H McCormick et al Trs 20
20900
PIONEER SUB
Edw E or Olga Glader ..
5500
Louisa
Williams
NE cor thof th S alg E
In 238.01 ft th N 88 deg
29 min 40 sec W to Wly
In sd lot th Nly alg Wly
In sd lot to NW cor thof
th Ely alg N In sd lot to
POB
ROBINSON'S
SUB
M J Hamilton
Lot 1 in
Theodore W_
Robinson’s
sub (Ex th pt daf Beg
at the angle pt in the

ft MOL

Wly

the NEly cor of sd
th SEly alg a str In
a pt on the Sly In of
lot 448.29 ft Wly of
SEly cor of sd lot
NEly alg the Sly In
sd lot 448.29 ft to

of
lot
to
sd
the
th
of
the

SUB

ey iy NO

Nly

In

sd

lot

490.45

Theodore W Robinson Jr
(Ex NW .2482 ae

6635

ee
Come
e ee we teem eee

Robinson’s sub desc as
follows beg at the angle
pt in the Nly limits of
sd Lot 490.45 ft MOL
-“Wly of the NEly cor of
sd Lot th SEly alg a str
In to a pt on the Sly In
of sd Lot 443.29 ft Wly
of th SEly cor of sd Lo

the NEly

alg

Sete

9760

10160
10550

Come

ewe

ww ee

eee

PERCY
me vad

Corp

ee

ewer

COUNTY
ee

9750

ewes

eeesense

eta
ae EVERETT
RO
SUB
of Chinas ;

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ee

Come
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mere

er enero

w eee

w weer

oe)
seens

eee

esee

ee

ay

ALLENS

ae

BRIARGATE
M Sinclair N¥%
H Bid
a

Daniel
Harry
George

VinLas,
..

sosotial
C
CLUB
ESTATES
Heller ..
L DEAN
ag

COUNTRY
Abraham &amp; Mae
JOHN
Prk,

L Johnson

(Ex

E

James eine
E 90 ft
J S HOVLAND’S HIGHLAND
PARK
ACRES
SUB
John E Ginnelly S%
2
J W Stentz N%
Robert M Moore Jr N% 32
Howard G Lonngren N% 37
Charles F Rietz W%
...
Axel O Akerman
(Except
Ww as
a,
Lot 49 &amp;
50
WwW
z" S$ HOVLAND’S
NORTH
SHORE
ACRES
.
MATHEW
H McKILI IP's SUB
Pascol A Scibetta
11
GEO F NIXON &amp; CO’S
H PK GARDENS
Harry C Funk
John

A

eee

ewer

Linden

emer

eeeee

Alfred W
Okey
Henry
T
Siljestrom
219 &amp; Sly 25 ft
Harold McCarthy

Lot

W Hall Th pt Lot
lyg
Sly
of
a
drawn from a pt in Ely
In sd Lot sd pt being
25 ft Sly of NEly cor sd
Lot to a pt in Wly In
Lot sd last pt being 25
ft Sly of NWly cor sd

2

-

SUB

William

ROBINSON
Sheahen .

AGH

Henry Schwennecker
MILLER W SCHREINERS RESUB
M W
Schreiner
1030
SHERWOOD
er
ae
Robert J Frey
Do

Lot

151

&amp;

th

pt

152
lyg
Nly
of a
drawn fr pt in Wly
sd Lot 152 36 ft Sly
NWly cor thof to pt

cane

In
In
of

7

E
}

;

'
‘

13170
:
9600
11200

........

° 7

13350

BANNOCKBURN
woops
=)
ist Nat’] Bk Tr Tr No.576.
3. ~-......10900.--Tey
Wee e. RL
Vues
w an eds 29
14750
Kirk E Sutherland Pt Lot
31 DAF Com at SW cor
Lot 31 th NWly alg Wly
In sd Lot 48.5 ft th E
Parl with N In sd Lot
to Ely In thof the SEly
alg sd Ely In to SE cor
th W alg S In'sd Lot a
POB ‘and’ all: Lot's...7,
10800
DEL
MAR
WOODS
§ B Todd NY
.s5 205-0.
8
500
L preeey S%
Lot 8 &amp;
IN 2D EP, ibe Wa ccs
ee top
9
6050
True. Sa of Chicago Tr

6268'S 76 ft ....s.c0s

9

5850

DO beip ooo’ 6.00.6 a0 10s + 00 o'5'9 13

7275

Leonard A Olsen N%&amp;% .. 25
MS
Aco Mas i ce eae 43
Jo-Al Enterprises N%
.. 57
ENGL didis Spee
Wee SDs iio
;
Doi. (ex
20° ft). 5
Se
Do E 20 ft Lot 68 &amp;
We
ove Lhe eee
a eee 64
Thomas
A ee
ae
Lot 66 &amp; W 25
cee
a, oe
(Ee WwW
Be

CU

Trust
WR

RUE
hie bree

oe of Chgo Tr 6268
PIN atic eters bas See

WO vsiis bh ol

pe

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R

BYERS

(FER

O

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Berger

$18.08.)

f£).65

(Ex

es8 cece

N

sss cee

Robt &amp; Frank Harris N
S1G,08
“fb.)".
Get is oe
R O Berger (Ex N 818.03
DE wid histko o/s Abbie Se
Robt &amp; Frank Harris N
$18.08
fb)
WN sou
Ube
R - Berger (Ex N 318.08
TOIT
bs 5 Cajy coke
dl e's
Robt &amp; Frank Harris N
BIB .08
ft
ae sce hah et
R . Berger (Ex N 318.03
4 hin bdo OLAS VIVES
Rott &amp; Frank Harris N
BEBO)
TENG
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R - Berger (Ex N 318. 02)
BUD os EA his ia leiela EcieWigte66
Robt &amp; Frank Harris N
BuO
TE
lca gd Celene
R - Berger (Ex N 318. 03
ne whe a Pe aieiene eed
Charles D McAleer (Ex N
15 ft) &amp; th N 25 ft of
Vacated
Hawthorne

Lane

Walter

Whitehead

S

25

ft of vacated Hawthorne
Lyg N &amp; Adj Lot

5850

6700
6700

15

ef)

HOME

040
gun

;

150
620

‘

750
f
7

620

9

150.

9

20

10

750

10

620

a1

150

3
¢

‘

f

11

620

12

150

12

620

13

750

13

620

14

750

14

620

15

150

15

670

16

150

16

900

i
;
i
|

lyg S &amp; adj Lot 19

N

6600
6350

67

ciel cua

Robt &amp; Frank
Harris N
BIBS
SE
ecke
R 2 Berger (Ex N 318.03
TUS
wie aih ws baie web ene
Robt &amp; Frank Harris N
BIB GOCLE Woes cineaates cid
R
O_
Berger
(Ex
N

3250
7100
5700
6950
6400

a

Jo-Al Enterprises ........
VERNON RIDGE CouNTRY
Robt &amp; Frank Harris N
OEO,05 Sh. Wed
on tebe
7
R : Berger (Ex N 3818. 03
WP Poy ay aR ee Se
7
Robt &amp; Frank Harris N
SISON
fio
ok aaa
8
R na Berger (Ex N 318.09
LEV inh ete
Rene eee
8
Robt &amp; Frank Harris N

S1S.69 28).

RO ae

4800

ft

CLERK’S PLAT OF
aera
OR
re

Joseph P Condon

ey

err

4

12050

Ly JORRGON sie: +908 239
Nugent Lots 248 &amp;

Nly of In drawn
from
pt in Ely In sd Lot 25
ft Sly of NE cor sd Lot
to a pt in Wly In sd Lot
th is 25 ft Sly of NWly
BOF Od: Trek
isc
se ee 250
16050
Donald E Allen Th pt Lot
262 lyg Nly of In drawn
fr Pt in Ely In sd Lot
30 ft Nly of SEly cor sd_
.Lot to a pt in Wly In sd
Lot th is 30 ft Nly of
SWly cor sd Lot &amp; all .263
10050
Mr
Russell
Tinkham
..281
9300
Anne A Juntunen Th pt
Lot 296 lyg Nly of In
- drawy from a pt in Ely
In sd Lot 25 ft Sly of
_ NEly cor sd Lot to Pt in
Wly In sd Lot th is 25
ft Sly of NWly cor sd
Lat Me BO Ob
is es 297
9550
Edwin
Lewis
Lot 312 art
MEE SIO kW hs ke Rehanbe
10708
SKOKIE BLVD &amp; OLD MILL ROAD SUB
A &amp; M Ballinger ........
5550
AGO
LMBION
eS osle
ee cs 10
1550
Mh ee peat
Rip oe AE
1550
Hansen &amp; Werhane tbe ee 12
15000
WOouls LAViGly wisoss
win oes 16
20300
RUDOLPH
W
TILLMANS
RESUB
Harry
Anderson
.......
1
6500

“ee

ry
wnre

ee

ft

\

12760

SEC
1st
mast
Bk
of
Lake
POPeGG
Ciy56
ss oii wees &gt;
* BANNOCKBUEN
PARK
PeelpR' hd. MRHOnY
Niousacss 16
Walter F Nessen ....... ‘ a

Joseph

NWly alg the Ely In of
sd lot to the NEly cor
thof
th SWly
alg
the

7300
14000

249 &amp; th pt Lot 250 lyg

ly

2

9500

ey 4 H Andersen Lots 221
ie ub haart erassin ood 222

In 1102.82
ft MOL
to
OS ed vl hws Kata ne hae
John R Madison Jr Th pt
Lot 2 dese as fol beg at
a pt on W In of sd Lot
62.55 ft S of the NWly
cor thof th N 62.55 ft to
sd NWly cor of Lot 2 th
Ely alg th Nly In of sd
Lot 401.33 ft MOL
to
the ang pt in the Nly
limits of sd Lot th NEly
alg th Nly In of sd Lot

Esther

490.45

nsd 4’ Y
POB pt

Paul D Shipley The N 152.16 f+ of
.

of

Edward

7

109.11 fttoS
E on sd S In

S

250

ft th N

1080.64

Rd
POB

10500

Int of cen In of Telegraph Rd
with N In sd NW%
SEY
th S
9 deg 12 min W 195 ft to POB
th E parl to N In sd 4% % See
219.74 ft MOL to a nt 317.94 ft
W of Elnsd
\%
deg 20 min E 109.11 ft to S In
sd % % Sec th W alge sd S In
288 ft MOL to cen In sd Hwy th
N 9 deg 12 min E alg cen In sd
Hwy 110.55 ft to POB pt NW

Non
W In sd lot 20 extd 24.20
ft th E par! with N In sd lot20
Wly In
alg Wly

ft W

sd
to

1950

NEY

min E
Sec th
is

‘Com at NW cor Lot 20 in Vernon Ridge Country Home sub th
ft MOT,
to
Rd th SWly

In

David

720.06

S Harris

200

Iet 2 SW%
Sec
Ravmond
Attridge
405.98 ft measd
pt lvg EF of cen
NW%
SEY Sec
David V Elmgren

(48 rds 16 Iks) of th NW%
meme O2 2.5 Ace ics 64 oo.

Bruce &amp; Frank

N%

E parl to S In 583

Emil
Rajamaki
&amp;
Marie
uise Rajamaki The W 151.2 ft
the

S

E

Core

of

Mrs
Esther Thelin
Ex
Victor E
Thelin Sub) Beg at a pt on W
In 1014.99 ft S of NW cor th S
on W In 630.81 ft th E parl to

ts

N
31

£%

In

a pt

SEly cor of sd Lot th
NEly
alg a In perpen
at last descr SEly course
58.38 ft th NWly along
a In perpen to last desc
course 173.94 ft to Nly
In Lot 1 th SWly
alg

Telegraph
ft

AR Gaby SUBDN UNIT
Friestedt
ARCADY
SUBDN
Maynard W Kennett ....

pt

S% N% NEY Sec 7 .459 Acs ..
Kuch
&amp; Watson
W of RR S%
N%
NE%
Sec 7 1 A.
Helmut Stein W 100 ft of the S
158 ft W of RR S%
N% NEY

ft of

720.06

*

Halmer Youngstrom
W
200 ft of th pt lye E

88.81

690 ft E of W In of SE% NW%
_parl with S In 380 ft th S Parl
8.

Rd

lyg

F

Lewi Gulbrandsen E 100 ft W 200
ft S 200 ft of th pt lvg E of &amp;
adj the S 200 ft W 280 ft E of

W
E

In

cen

567.11

10550

om
/

Cen

alg
W

ARCADY

RR

200

th

to

th

(Ex com at pt 297.1 ft E of W
In NE%
&amp; 283.388 ft N of S In
NW4% SW%
NE
th E 270 ft
to cen In sd Rd th SEly alg cen
sd Rd 143.8 ft MOL to a pt 93.38
ft N of S In th W to pt 297.1 ft
E of W In th N 140 ft to POB)
Sec 18 1.51 Aes
Harold Zeiss (Ex S 386 ft lye W
of E 50 ft) &amp; (Ex N 3897.94 ft
lyg W of E 265 ft) S 14.09 Chs

Knoll

th

S% N%
NEY
Sec 7 30.18 Acs
Julius Dhondt E 100 ft W 300 ft
S 200 ft of th pt lyg E of &amp;

ft pt

ft

ft

78580

In 156.68 ft th E 148 ft
to sd ROW In th SEly alg

ROW
MOL

to

E

Thos F Yore (Ex W 50 ft S 158
ft E 409 ft W of RR)
&amp; (Ex
1 A to Lancaster) &amp; (Ex S 200
ft W 280 ft E of Rd)
&amp; (Ex
3 Acs SE cor) &amp; (Ex 1A W of
RR) &amp; (Ex com at pt 231 ft N
Lancaster Rd &amp;
ft W of Wly ROW In CM&amp;STP
ROW
MOL

45655

1

pt
N

Westleigh
Rd)
NW%
SE%
Sec 6

NWly

619.22

Cc E Peterson

th
E

Sec 6 6.19 Acs

Rd

E

Ely In sd Lot 82.5 ft Sly
of NEly cor thof ...... 152
Scott Thomas
Lot 166 &amp;
Cx. NIG 3G) 4 visas
he ekOT
Archibald G Gates ...... 183
Harold W Tribolet Th pt
Lot 197 lyg Sly of In
drawn from a pt in Wly
In sd Lot 26.05 ft Sly
of NWly cor sd Lot to
Pt in Ely In sd Lot th
is 26 ft Sly of NEly cor
Od Tot.
&amp; All i 4 cay sec bee
Theodore E Cornell Jr Th
pt Lot 200 lyg Sly of a
In drawn fr a pt in Wly
In sd Lot 26.05 ft Sly
of NWly cor sd Lot to a
pt in Ely In sd Lot th
is 26 ft Sly of NEly cor
sd Lot/@ all Lot. ...... 201
Philip J Kuhn Jr Lot 202
&amp;
th pt Lot
203
lyg:
Nly of a In drawn fr a
pt in Wly
In sd Lot
26.05 ft Sly of NWly cor
sd Lot to pt in Ely In sd
Lot th is 26 ft Sly of
WHY COP; 84 LOG ose as 203
Wm R Luiders Lots 217 vv 218

Milton J Hemilion Th pt
Lot 1 beg at angle pt of
Nly limits Lot 1 490.458
ft Wly of NEly cor sd
Lot th SEly alg 196.25 ft

ft)

63.65

th

33150

S

&amp;

Sec

26

23.77
In
pt

97320

4

SE%

335.25

ft

of

all

ft SE%
ass se

626

Sec

of

Sec

835.25

S

Adolph Van
Tt “s 175

Herrmann
(Ex
ft E 200 ft) &amp;

S 426

S

ft

E%

W 209 ft E 627 Ft S 209
ft

&amp;

N parl to E In to POB pt S%
SW%
Sec 5 9.7 Acs
Emil F Cir Th pt lyg SWly of cen
In Conway
Rd pt S% Govt lot

bett) S 426 ft N 626 ft pt SE%
RM
Sec $012.81 Acs ......-.
n C Hertel W 209 ft E 627 ft

§

6500

186 ft th S Parl to W In 211.35
ft th SWly 357.58 ft to pt 808.37

1172 ft pt
Ay
ss iss

S

406 ft N
Se 4188

ft)

A
Wood Beg on N In at a
ft E of’ NW cor th E on

In

y phage

100 ft N
Bee 801

W

Zack Com at pt on W In NE
233.388 ft N of S In of NW%
th S 178.88 ft th
NWly

47415

5.46 Acs
....
Co
ft lyg Sly of

Swarthout

504.99

W VanKeuren Jr Beg on E
495.62 ft S of NE cor thof th
82 deg 48 min 30 sec W 324.45
t th S parl with E In sd Sec
14 ft to S In of
N%&amp; sd
NEY
th E alg S In sd N%&amp;
321.90 ft to E In sd See th N
on sd E Jn 328.45 ft to POB pt
N%
NE%
Sec 30 2.5/8 Acs ..
ymond H &amp; L M Baumann
E
ft S
NEM

660

E
%

181.95

E

S%N
woe

Rd

W

ft

E

Mary
185

m

5.61
SE%

S

Acs

ft

sec

504.99

th N on sd E In 3828.45 ft to
B)
Pt
N %&amp; NE%
Sec
30

ie CES

ft

ROW

814.02

40

821.90 ft to E In sd

EN

RR

400

bee

No.
&amp; (Ex

195450

19367

of Cen In Ridge Rd th S 335.25
ft to S In sd NW%
th E 504.99
ft on sd § In to POB pt Govt
(Ex W 300 ft E

min 30 sec W 834.55 ft th W
47 ft th N 337.07 ft to N In th
E on sd N In 1260.27 ft to POB)
(Ex beg on E In 495.62 ft S
of NE cor thof th N 82 deg 48
min 30 sec W 324.45 ft th S parl
with F In sd See 370.14 ft to S
of N % sd NE\% th Ealg S

of!

aoe

4700

N%

NW%)
p@§' N%

835.25 ft N of S
W
469.77
ft to

ft

deg

596.5

89.58

W

min

In

In sd lot 2 578.15

Rd

Westleigh

NW%

NW%
SW%
Sec 19
kl os kb oC 4 dpe ches bee «

483.91

min

ft to E

als

Melville C Lackie Com at pt on S
In SE%
NW
25 ft W of SE
cor thof th N 1 deg 3 min W
parl with &amp; 25 ft W of E In sd

sd SW%
th W
1143 ft to
B pt N% SW% Sec 19 4 Acs
‘ard J Jordan
Jr Th pt lot
ft
in

W

N

*

lyg

N

min E in Saunders Rd 290.91
to POB th S 16 deg 20 min E

Wun

Robt. Bartlett, Tr (Ex Unit No
Robert
_Bartlett’s
Oaks)
&amp; (Ex
N_ 89.58" ac)

146 ft
Saunsd Rd

S

ft

Oaks)

784.7 ft
S of NW

pt

«6

E
Skokie
Drainage
SW% SW%
Sec 4 9.57 Acs ....
Robert Bartlett, Tr (Ex Unit No 1
Robert
Bartletts
Whispering

at a pt on

W

of

SW%
Sec 4
Refrigerating
1235.24
ft E
580

16

L

S

w%

min W 170 ft th W
t to POB NW%
SW%
Sec
}

aie,

Robert. E Spiel (Ex N%
E%) S%
SE4% NW% Sec 4 15 Acs
eee
Refrigerating
Co
Th
pt S
235.24 ft lyg NEly of cen In of

ft to cen
alg cen of
is 639.8 ft
par! to sd
a pt whis

ft E of W In sd lot th §

6

(Ex S% SE%
&amp; 6.26 A SE

lot
th

745.8

ft

396

6

In 109.7 ft th E parl

to N

hee

Sec 4 8.96 Acs
G Redman
(Ex Unit
Westleigh)
(Ex Hwy)

T

E In 156.98 ft
alg N In 622

beg on N In
ft S fr NW

S alg
sd W

0 deg

ie

Edward H Horenberger E 435.6 ft
N 100 ft S 68 4/7 Rds pt SE%
SEY% Sec 81 1 A.
Howard B Peabody
E 265 ft Ww

S%
Lot
2 NW%
BRT
po meny or Ons

min 30 sec W alg
‘to NE cor th W

Oe

83000

LEGAL NOTICE

NOTICE

of sd Lot 443.29 ft to the
SEly cor thof th NWly
alg th Ely In sd Lot to
the NEly
cor thof th
SWly alg the Nly In of
sd Lot = 45 ft MOL

the Pub Hwy Nly &amp; Sly thr sd
W%
of sd S#%
of sd Sec (Ex
th E 410 ft thof) Sec 7 .535 Acs
Harry J Hemingway EK 66 ft NE%
NW\% &amp; th pt NW\% NEY
lyg
Wly of cen of Ridge Rd pt NE%
&amp; Pt NW%
Sec 8 23.09 Acs ..
T Philip Swift (Ex E 66 ft) N%
NW%
Sec 8 78 Acs
Joseph
Mendino
The
L
NW
Sec 8 10.14 Acs ..
John Coleman Jr S 10.5 A. N 21
A. pt
E Rd NEY NW%
Sec 18

Oe
3 lO

The

LEGAL

NOTICE

;
:
4

9815

f
if

�~

LEGAL

NOTICE

LEGAL

City of Lake Forest
Personal Property

Priestley, Wm T
Public Service Co of Northern Ill
School Dist No. 67
Shag Ps ¥ DCAeL Valentaens veh

BRohert

Bes

Redman, a G Suc Tr
etna Cheats . db aisiaetle aieials 00°F nine!
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Julius

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&amp;

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Bolton, George M eee cresecrerese
Bradbury,
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J
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Reginald

;

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POUIbs. VOR
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Ladys
Co

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sects
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Mr

ois

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Franklin
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Petersen, ORR is i ho tea ae Pas
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Schaubert, Everett ......++- ean

Schwalbach,
Edwin
Schwartz, Edward
.
Schweitzer, Pee
in aes ;

M

&amp; Fazioli Excavating
Mrs Marie
William Jr

Gray, Wellington
Grose: neat
Grossmann,

Co

SPs

Hansen &amp; Werhane
Hartman, John

Highland
Paper
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Stewart

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William

Jones,

sch cccahinon

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Kropp, Fred ..........++. SUEV ats
La Buda, Walter
Lamb, Elivabcth
Lambert, J-seph

rere

Paul M &amp;Lillian Trapani
Harold x Ca vere

Turnbull, Darl B .ise bbls Mea ree
Ullmann,
Gunther
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Ef&gt;somen,
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ee

Walter
Robert

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tae

Pei

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ee

Willard
Ray D

Koepke,

R

Avery

Richard

King, G
Kinkaid,

Daniel

Smoot,
William
Sommerfield,
Wm
Stancliff, Mrs Elizabeth

§

Mr

Mr

Kaiser,

Sinclair,

Co
L

Inland, SHAW

Johns‘on,

Station

Skidmore, Harry E
Smith, Esther H &amp;

Heinz, Frank M sere er reese eeee
Heinzelmann, Charles
Walter &amp; Others Trs
U/W of Ivan Grunafeld
Walter
&amp; Others Trs
..
U/W
of Hannah
N Grunafeld
Heller, Florence G &amp; Others Trs
U/A.
dated
Dec
29
1988
....
Walter
E &amp; Florence
G

Irvine,
Jacob,

...

Service

pe Cee

ee
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Valada ...
Heath, Richard N
Hedberg, Richard H

‘) Hook,

Murray

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Henry

nts cae beeee

Ward, Raymond &gt; Oi vaste
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WW QRSC
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Parish,

........ceeee,

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National Brick Co ...-..eeeeeeee
Noble, William
.....0ecccevcseres
Webi: Veo
kak kk Wh wtb dd ope ee
North Shore Gas Co School Dist
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Olsen,’ Leonards
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PAPER

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arnokt

Pedersen,

D

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Thorngate Country Club
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2... ccc
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Allen, Charles B ee
....:.
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Anderson, Patricia

H

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Charles
D
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John

Ed

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Carl

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ak i
Albert

83 civave

Robert .......sseeecees
Oj Gh
el os Pew cess

Horenberger,

Henry
G

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EA bs eo 4h wR

Harmening,
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Carl
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City of Highland Park

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Inc
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Personal Property

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cas ieee ba wha ea ees
Cavenaugh,
Courtney
..........SER, ROONOB Cs eye
Fh bbs viene
mrietensen,
Alfred.
ccs. oav.se's
Gnristensen, Chris P36
s.4 eek
Medi Teas Use Wale 4 wi ola Vue pep aiwteles
Saree. / DACATIIBUEY 5555.05
sa be ees
Slow,

as

LEGAL

NOTICE

SOUMPIEhe. ECR
6a 6 8:84 bole Ces REE LD
Byrnes, Thomas E ......... Sake
COMPO, | FIBPOIR Ss is es VE 5 Osa RVR ES
COOLER SMITO Shi cisice cee ol oaitte, b8
EPRORVERY. VV EMR. Bid
bins cide by 450 bb ee
COTES MO ae
h ciple kin bh ociela tee ite
PERSSON CHUOW 0 sida cds de Veind cs eee

ee

Pe,
“ODP TIC,
vv vals Raiaig caie'ee
moems, CYrUus (PE QA sie
s:be stines
PER. SFLATOIN IG wks siecb sb og kPa 2
eee
Ones GMS
otic ieee sw ee &lt;a
MAT
COMMS
Wom
hs 6k oa webu
Anderson, William: 0.3 scis 6 ioe &lt;-s:0i00
Atteridge,
Raymond
*...4....'55.
Avery, Edwin Si i.-.ie&gt; jE
PGT ROO? Ave
soc kk ceneweee
maker, Peter @) Sons. ii
vs exp
MOPETOL DO WIGKS {Ee astce
kis \aee e's
Barker, Wallace N ....g.s.sseee.
TOR
OTD) no ssid ek eek vo ee ee
TS
OARS Py
cde ap aie eee wie
RC
KEATON
6s 9 wlan ob wine ec ops bis
IGP, | LiBROY 5's» 9,40 0oe bre bse
Bertucci, Ado. «i's i sic's:e sbitisio
eae
Pevtias,®

LEGAL

NOTICE

:

ee

Wecker,
98

OVE?

|

Walter

WEICN, Richard
DICNAPGA
Welch,

ee

A
wesc
eee

ccsecscescsace
meee

White,
Marshall
Cee
Wright, Mrs Harry
Zetnick, Paul F eee
Bauman, Raymond

eee

tem
we

ee

reer er ene
wer

meee

eeeee
e ee

eee

TIOSSON | COSTER, 56.05 bese 'a's siniwle 8S. bs

Bloundt, Claire P &amp; FayeM....
Brooks,
Buhrow

Gertrude
Hans R

W Cae

eet

Alexander, . Herbert:
... 34%...05
Aldvitives:
WORM
sdec eV dae e iy eae
ARermeny
A1ES
ese sce
as as
Allen. DoOnaid: Be ids das pia
we
Anderson;: Chester
ecccewssecc
eee
Andersons.
HAITH.:
eiennsns
sie pee
Auderson, Oy: Ge as tye
ddwa een
Armold,
Kenneth » sess
ge 0s Vd'vies
Arnolt, Arthur Kenneth
.......
Bahres:
(PiOviIsb):
AN
bs bas iets
Bap? | Wart Pes ceases acces tack :
THA,
COB RO. cay. gictans Pensa eee ene
Ballard. BoB.
kc its ave
pb eee
Bandemer'.
Arthur Ks...
5 )0ace
vee
Barrow, David si'..' wales baiareinaie
Bartns
FR Ps esc pec ve Kees
5 6 ee
Bepaek, 08: Co cece
sevn ty cs
Beckman:
Gane
oil F ss sc%ss aes
Bendinetiy Walter &lt;2. s vives vos’
Benedek, George
sa ce veiss ce} cose
Bene. DON. Pb 6 ik e\.6656.045
os
ree
were,
Willem @ Eve
cvasitee nd Be
TROBE IGN,
TOOW. © oca'n
ns 0's had arn
Beuttas,
Joseph
..... ctaiw eee
Bevan, Bernard Foo ss. cvs
co cy ney
PAvOte, | MUR,
hiv alee ee ewe dee vate
Bienes SS
ceheintes
dasa
tie.
Biter, Zachary A. 06h vinass ceva es
PIOGNING AS Al once wade
ed ba Ce Gea.
BOVIGN: SOME.
ils Ccdk aed ee kek
Bresler, Thomas W ..... Seeiveey
rei
te Ee i
etwas pestis
Brackett, Kenneth Y ccoupeetian
BOOKS s BODE NG: vk cutiesOC Veda
oa bs
Brough,
Mira: J ames:
coda
ch eiee ee
Brown; Atlee oA ies cece UE
6 Spe

Brown,

Mrs
‘

»

George W

........++

Lockett,

David

Lorimer,

James

Malmquist,
ie

Western
G

were

Elmer

ree

Union

eeerrcere

VILLAGE

J

peat

P

Good

wa

Martwick,

Do

Walter

w

McCarty, Howard T
McClure, Harry T
McFarland,
Kenneth
McFarland, Philip E

Mecham, ' Albert
Moore,

Robt

Murphy,
roe
North
DER

Do
Do

Jr

Allen
a

Shove

Robt
Gas

ft)

eer

eee

Tr

EB

248

ft

80.
W

NW%

SW%

Ace

7230
SE%

....

(Ex

S

668.23

ft

Sec

28

Wirt E
ft W
SE%
George
ft of
of S

“Ramsiill S 185 ft E 248
668.33 ft S%4 NW%
NW%
Sec 28 1. Acs
Miller W 105 ft of E 205
E 313.3875 ft of N 330 ft
660 ft of NW%

Darwin

M

Rummel

E 100 ft ‘NEY

William V Schmur w 108.375
E 813.75 ft of N 830 ft
a

Co,

Schl Dist No 107 .
Schl Dist No 108

28

&amp;

eeeeeee

S

ice ahs be ek be Ki's Kibin Wa

Sec

Bk

Pest

Dives’: \satces Meee
were

SE%

Natl

185

E

DEERFIELD

100 ft E 450 ft N%

NWY%,

Amer

a

OF

W 110 ft E 360 ft
NW%
SE%
Sec 28

ee

Ohiala:: Ateneo
ss o6 ohb ctdincaieke
Okey Alired: Win | occ ase cas

ft

NW%

SE%

Sec

ft of
of S

28

1.32

itounten Sells (Ex N 102 ft) N
202 ft S 770.21 ft lye W of cen
In of pub hwy Pt SE%
NE%
Sec 29 1.20 Acs
...
Joseph H Abel S 100 ft N 202 ft

S 770.21

ft lyg

W of cen In

of

�LEGAL
157.6 ft E 367.6
's 4.49 chs lyg Ely of cen In
pub hwy Pt N%
SEX
NEY
¢ 29 1.07 Acs
Olson (Ex N 33 4 N 256

208.56 ft W 15

bert

E

75

Sec 29 1.07
Pettis (Ex
ft

95

of

ft)

E

&amp;

tins
N 65 ft of

147.95

ft

(Ex

§

20

ft W

of

NE

$

of

W

ft N

178

cor

Sec

Ww Sng 95 ft) &amp; (Ex N 158 ft)
5.5

BE

Ieh

1 ft
“gr ft

th
th

Oe

es

W 288.01 ft th
E 188.92 ft Sec

N
82

N 65 ft S 89.75
E 147.95 it of W 180.95 ft of
lowing cescd ppty th pt of

NE% NE% Sec 32 com at pt in
N In si see sd pt being 665.5: ft
of NE cor thof th § 158 ft
pob th E 55 ft th §
th W parl to N In sd see
-95 ft to cen In Chestnut St
N
alg cen In sd st to pt 178
S of N In sd sec th E alg a
178 ft S of &amp; parl to N In
sec 180.95 ft th N. 20 ft to
Sec 32
Grimes Com at intersn of
In of Osterman Ave with E
of Depot Grounds th Nly alg
In sd depot grounds 226.59 ft
pob th contg alg E In sd
pot Grounds 84.81 ft th N 79
35 min E 150.70 ft th § 15
22 min E 25 ft th S 12 deg
min E 75.29 ft th W on a In
to N In sd Osterman Ave
~ aa to POB pt SE% Sec 32

ob
;
NY

deg
8

eet (Ex E 107 ft) &amp; (Ex
s -61 A W sice) W 303.425 ft E
mt N 693 ft NE% Sec 32
Ot (Ex 1.61 A W side) E
ft W £03.425 ft a 2325.5 ft
693 ft NE%
Sec 8
ley E Bye E 230 7 S 170 ft
% NW%
SW%
Sec 82 .89

Arthur’?
Martin &amp;

FIaR 4. sctevecs 38
B Tausz
31
H
M CORNELL
COS
ADD TO BRIARWOODS
Paul J Keller Jr Lots 7
&amp; 8 &amp; N 28 ft
Am Nat’! Bk Tr 7986 (Ex
N 28 ft) Lot 9 Lot 10 &amp;
N
24 ft
Ferdinand
A
Neumann
Lot 11 (Ex N 24 ft) all
Lot 12 &amp; N 20 ft
Am Nat’l Bk Tr 7986 (Ex
N

20

Herbert
net

1800
1800

25

ag Flager (Ex W
ft) Lot 28 &amp; all Lot
&amp; W 582 ft

Eliz

2280

8 ft
&amp; 23

Robert Manat
(Ex
a ft) os 24 all Lot
8

15500
148.0

ft)

H Somer §
a Sc 22

56
29
"

Tackett

t) &amp; all
we br oa
oe
4 and all

1

6

R Duane Cope
Robert F Goodspeed
&amp; N

20
Lot 26
20
S%

Lot

‘
‘

Norbert F Dompke (Ex N
20:40): Let 18 @ all .::.-.
W C Tackett Inc N 20 ft.
Edward Buker Jr S% .
Bernard
Collins N% “Lot
15 all Lot 16 &amp; S 20 ft.
—
C Hollmann Lots 4
5&amp;N %
David M Parry S% Lot 6
all Lots 7 &amp;
Archie
an
Lot
15 &amp;
(Ex N 19 ft)
wc ye
Inc N 19 ft.
Do § 19
Richard thie Wagner (Ex
S 19 ft) Lot 18 &amp; all . 19
W C Tackett Inc Lots 21 &amp; 22
DEERFIELD ACRES
Leonard
Siffert
.....
3
Wm E Arns

25
28
28

28
28
28
28
29
29
29
29
29
29
29

yarl io cen In Waukegan

Rd

Pt

EY, SW'% Sec 33 1.186 Acs.
einschmidt Lab Ine Com at pt
476.18 ft W &amp; 198 ft N of SE
NE% SWY sd secth S on a
n that is parl to &amp; 476.18 ft W

of E In of sd SW%

729.72 ft to

pt 788.62

In sd

ft N

of S

SW%

th E 276.18 ft th S to pt 435 ft
N of S In s1 SW% th E 200 ft
In sd SW%
th N onsd E
-03 ft th NEly 440.2 ft mol

on a In that

would

inters a pt

66
68
9
34
36
41
82
34

L Ward
(Ex N 85
waithanes
R
700
OWNERS
SUB.
Edward A Kussler E 70 ft 23
8460
REPLAT
OF
LOTS
13 TO
19 INC
&amp;
LOTS
26 TO 56 INC
BLK
10 &amp; LOTS
z7 TO 40 INC BLK 11 DEERFIELD PARK
LAND
&amp;
IMP
ASSN
SUB
R C Klavohn S 62.8 ft ..
4
10
6975
Earl C Varner (Ex-S 62.
ftt)
10
6975
REPLAT
OF LOTS 67 To. 74 INC BLK
6 &amp; LOTS 1 TO 10 INC BLK 7 &amp; LOTS
1 TO 12 INC BLK 10 &amp; LOTS 11 TO 20
INC BLK
14 &amp; LOTS
1 TO 10 BLK
15
IN
DEERFIELD
PARK
LAND
&amp;
IMPROVEMENT
ASSN
ute
A G LeFeuvre E% °
2
7600
THEO
SCHUERMAN
ADD
Robert W Hyde All § of
canal (Ex S 238 ft)
8725
H O STONE &amp; CO’S ADD v0 DEERFIELD
W C Tackett Inc Lots 6 &amp;
7
6&amp;0
14800
O A Zinke
1 &amp; th pt
Lot 2 lyg E of In drawn
from pt on S In sd Lot
211 ft W of SE cor thof
to pt on Nly In sd sd
Lot 2 11.09 ft (as measd
alg sd Nly In) Wly of
NE cor thof
R J Lascelles Lot 2 (Ex
th pt Lot 2 lyg E of
In drawn from pt on S
In sd Lot 2 11 ft
W of
SE cor thof to pt on Nly
In sd Lot
2
11.09
ft
(as measd
alg sd Nly
In) Wly of NE cor thof)
&amp; (Ex W 21 ft)
Norman
Bronson
Th
pt
Lot 3 lyg W
of a In
drawn from pt on S In
sd Lot 3 21 ft E of SW
cor thof to pt on Nly In
sd Lot 8 20.91 ft (as
measd alg Nly In) Ely
kt oe
cor thof &amp; all
4 81
13400

148

P

A . Adalbon Lots 422 &amp;.
Wendell J Phillips Lots 5
65 &amp; (Ex. N. 10 ft) ..
France Hempstead N 10 ft
Lot 66 all Lots 67 &amp; ..
Mrs S S Love
Frank
Backer Lots 33 &amp;
Wesley R Marks Lots 85 &amp;
Carl C Ferman Lots 40 &amp;
John Altmeyer Lots 30 &amp;
31 &amp; (Ex N%)
Carl J Jaeger 7
Lot 382
all Lots 33
Earl R ease

PPO

DEERFIELD
PARK
LAND
&amp; IMP ASSN
SUB
. Helen Kassner Lots

AANA

ard J Leider (Ex N 877.6 ft)
(Ex S 198 ft) the E 430.56 ft
measd alg N &amp; S Ins of th
N% ie
lyg E of CM &amp; St
RR row &amp; W of cen In Wauan Rd Pt N% SW%
Sec 33
276 Acs
Edisto Tr Pt lyg NEly of a
that is 250 ft SWly of &amp;

~~

—

te
% SWY, lyg E of CM St
R row &amp; W of cen In Wauay theRd Pt N%
SW%
Sec 33

©

877.6 ft)
E 430.56

alg N &amp; § Ins thof)

ft)

2

gg

rang

gad

J
ADD

Edna

Mae
Seid
Sa
OB
VON LINDES SUB
Kenneth
J Weir N%
....
6
JM
Street (Ex N%)....
6
JD
&amp; RH
Harvey .... 11
Gerhard Vonder Linden . 47
WESTVIEW
Edward
Morley
4
Edward G Hildebrandt ..
Deerfield Constr Co
a
D

EVERGREEN
or,
Robert A Edenberg
Anthony S Pepping
.... a
5
Geo
Bockman
GOLDMANS
NORTH ° SHORE
GOLF
LINKS
SUB
ae
Wilson Mtg &amp; Fi
%

in| cen In Waukegan
Rd sd pt
being 750 ft
Wly from intersn
cen In sd Waukegan Rd with

as sd sec) th NWly

alg cen sd

faukegan Rd 153.21 ft th SWly
at RA to cen In sd Waukegan
d 250 ft th NWly on a In parl
to &amp; 250 ft Wly of cen In sd
aukegan Rd toN In of § 12
of NE4% SW¥% sd sec th W

03

aw

ft

to

pob

%

pt

E%

SW%

SE% See 83 8.85 Acs..
nidt Lab Inc W 276.18 ft
: 476. 18 {t S 788.62 ft S% SW%
83 5 Acs
_ Agassim Tr (Ex pt lyg SWly
a In that is parl to &amp; 250 ft
from cen In of Waukegan
) 2
ft of S 12 rds Pt
¥%S
Sec 33 1.40 Acs ...
(Es Skis 903.21 ft as measd
cen In sd Waukegan Rd) pt
SWly of cen In Waukegan
&amp; NEly of a In rung parl
&amp;
250 ft SWly
of cen
In
rd ‘-. lyg SWly SE%
Sec 33
oe
nee OF DEERFIELD
ae une E ™ ft Lot
1

1
Woe
} ft N
124 ft
fo

1

of
th

SE cor th
N to N In
ees

" BLEIMEHLS SUB
We =
8 &amp; E
BRANIGAR BROS
WOODLAND dongs SUB

N

Thompson
rand

....

th Armstrong
Swanson ..........

CWDBNAIAARVQWMATRRWNNH HE

:

Ww
Donald Larson W%4
A W Nelson E 3/4 ....
Robert D Smith W%
.... 4
Percy Wilson Mtg &amp;
SEly%
Do NWly%
58
Blair K Klos E 25 ft Lot
66 &amp; (Ex E 5 ft) W%
67
ED&amp;ME
Wolf W%
. a
Verne Peterson W%
GREENWOOD
PARK GNIT
Roy H Davis (Ex E 40 ft)
5
Do E 40 ft Lot 5 &amp; (Ex
E 30 ft)

ohn

oO

al

P Kroegel

Pe

OW

(ExE

&amp; all .

........ 29

5. Len bar et

300
1050

6450
6850
6400
6975
6275
6200

HALL
&amp; ‘ositthatAN ae
Earl
R Frost
4900
BURR
H
KRESS ‘coNsoumanion
J K Willman W 50 f
050
McGUIRE
&amp; “ORR'S
DEERFIELD
een
Peter J Karris
McGUIRE
&amp; ORR’S
NORTHWOODS
Joseph G Pfister (Ex th
pt Lot 3 lyg SWly of
fol desed st In beg at
SE for sd Lot 3 th NWly
in st In to pt midway
in are of circle forming
NWly
In sd Lot
Howard F Schmidt all th
pt Let 3 ly SWly of foll
descd st In beg at SE
cor sd Lot 3 th NWly
in st In to pt midway
in are of circle forming

° EDWIN
P OSTERMANS
Alfred A Bonczkiewicz E
80 ft Lot 54 &amp; W 380 ft 55
ag te Pehrson (Ex W 30
t )
Carl
Johannsen
W
ft

ane

NO

1050

Theo

:G

Personal Property
6

Lot 7 &amp; (Ex E 10 ft).
Bruno sae
E
Lot 8 &amp; all
wy H Davis ..

Lots

J

67

&amp;

E

40

ft

..

.

Knaak
OWNER’S bivIsIoN
Walter Thayer
Fred A Burke § 75 ft N
130 ft W 412 ft Lot P
together with all th pt
ahi
eli Ste
E es ‘ oshise
Nil 1m ft

Vi ot

(Ex S$
W
2

ee

SUB

8300

George Drucker S 148 ft
1
2
900
Russell A Perry (Ex E 24
ft) Lot 10 &amp; all
8870
THORN
HILL
RANCH 1 ESTATES
ee
A Drucker (Ex S
ries

Pero

tomotive Corp oo N
(Ex S 198 ft) &amp; (Ex

Hiley
40).

6 $1
16400
S HOVLANDS
FIRST ADD TO wen
er
Jack
Lanning
6100
Walter
H
eee
e
a
E%
1
Jesse R Swan Jr W%
.
eek
George
Horenberger
.
THORN
HILL
FARM ESTATES
Edgar
Fields
.
8950
Oliver
Schommer
(Ex
S

=

zt as one

LEGAL NOTICE

LEGAL NOTICE

NOTICE

Abernathy, George ....-.ccccedes
Abrahamson,
Harry
Acerra,
Vinceno
Acox,
Leslie H
Adams,
Rodney
James
Adamson,
Carl
Addison,
A_ Linn
Alabeck,
Robert
C
Alabeck,
W
Alexander,
Allen,
Willard
B
Allsbrow,
Harry
Alonzi, Carlo B
Alonzi, Carlo P
Altman,
Frank
Altmeyer,
American
Evatype
Corp
Andersen, Arthur O
Anderson, Alfred H
Anderson,
Anderson,
Anderson,
Anderson,
Anderson,
Anderson,
Anderson,
Anderson,
Anfruns,
John
Antes,
Archie
Antes,
Richard
....
Anthony,
George
Arentz,
Albert
.
Arms‘rong,
Hugh
W., Jr
Armstrong.
John
Arns,
William
E
Ashman, Lewis E
Atkinson,
Jay
B
Austin, John D
Austin, Robert .
PABOCRIGE GOP
bes lect si ewes
Batley:
UR
e.
Baker, Basil V ........ este eewe
Baker, Robert F
Banfield, Eric
Barnes,
Barrett, Wm
H
Barrett, Wm
H Plumbing
Barrette,
Cecil
Barth,
Fred
,%
Bartlett, Sewell
Basche, Robert F
Batt, Russell
C
Baughman, Richard R

2

weet

Dexter,

Co

....

Blixt,
Blow, J
Bock,
George
Bodmer,
Erwin
E Jr
Bole, Charles
Bole, Robert E
Bonczkiewiez, Alfred
Boone, Fred
Boartgn, Eugene
Bowman,
Edward
C
Boyle,
C W
Bradt, A G
Permeith,:) Teen Ae cc isc
oven ewe
Brandweir,
Fred
J
.....
Brienza,
Barney
Briergate Gouatte
Club
Broderick Heating Serv ..........
Broege,
Robt
Bronson, Norman M
Brooks,
Frank
MD
Browman, Carl P
Brown,
B
Brown,
Brown,
Brown,
Brown,
Brown,
W
Brownies
Togs
Bruce, Robt &amp; Eliz
Bruggman,
Frank
Bubert,
Edward
Buker,
Edward
Jr
Bulger,
Jas
Burghart,
R E
Burns, Robert
..
Burt,
F M
.
Busscher,
Bernard
Busse, Walter
Bye,
Stanley
Cahill, Fred W
Calvin, Guthrie .C
Camp, Robert C
Campbell, Lloyd H
Canon, H B

Cardinal, Marl. V -v5ss
ss wten ee sed
Carlson,
Carlson,
Carr,
Donald
600 Carr, Larry K .
600 Carr Realty Co...
10109
Carroll, Robert E
6200
Carson, John
B
Carter, John
C
6900
Cassady, .
6900
Casselman, Wm E
6600 Cassidy, Clayton G
6900 Cederberg,
C L
7°00
Central
Food
Store
6900
Chapman,
George H
7400
Cheal,
R
6900
Christensen,
C M
7400
Churchill, W
L
Clampiit,
G H
Clancy, J J
Clark, Mrs Alice B
Clark,
Donald
Brand
Clark,
Robert
Clayton,
Wendell
I
Clayton &amp; Alice Conf
Clifford, Dr Chas R
Cli‘ford, Walter L
Cline, Arthur §S
Clyne,
WwW
Colby,
Lawrence
E
Cold, AHeBN DB iii. oes bd pena eees
Cole, John W
Collins, Bernard H
Compton, Raymond .
Conner, Donald J
Conner,
Lorin
W
Connolly,
Harold
Cook, Mrs Clara
Cooksey, Eugene
A
Cooper, Clara C
Cope, R Duane
Corbeth, William
Corrigan, John E
Cottrell,
Robert
B
Sr
Couch, ‘William A
Couris,
Alexander
Cox, Ambrose
Cox, Arthur M Jr
Cozocar, Lazarus
Cramer, Jack R
Crosburg, William
......... cece.
Culver,
Gerald
Culver, Nelson
CUPmnenem, PON
6.6 i beoe
is ccs
Curto, Frank T
Daemicke, Irwin P
Dahl, Clarence C
Dahlgren, Raymond
C
Dalee, John
Daniels, Robert P
Danner, Allen M
Danner,
Melvin
I
Darling, W
C
Dasso,
Irwin
DAVES) S08 TIT
5 145s wae igiecch
David, Robert C
Davidson, Wm J
DBA
Pro‘ucts
Neal, Dewey
Decker,
Martin
Deckert, Mrs Wm
Deerfield Bake Shop
‘
Deerfield Bowling ae
é
Deerfield
Cab
Co
Deerfield
Deerfield
Construction
Co
....
Deerfield
Express
Co
....
Deerfield
Garage
Deerfield Greenhouse

Deer‘ield

|

Deerfield
Deerfield
Meerfield
Deerfield
Deerfield
Deerfield
Deerfield

Deerfield

Hardware

&amp;

Paint

Jewelers
Launderette
...
Kiktite
Lumber
&amp; Fuel ahi
News
Agency
....
Oil
Co
Record Shop .
eevinas. &amp; Loan

Shoe

Re

Ta’ is3 vy tadx o's
L Jr ..... aes ea
sere

Denley, Reginald
Derby, John
Ww
Desmond,
Dewar, M G

8140

eeeresaeee

ey

DeFreitns,: Wr
DeFreetas, Wm
Rd
Demgen,

A

Bellamy, J Ross
Bendinelli, Walter DDS .
Bennett,
bert
Benston, Lido CH
ei.
Benthaus,
A
H
,
Berg, Reynold F
Berkley, Mrs Frances
Bernard,
Henry
M
Berner,
Carl
A
Berning, Karl I
Bess,
Arthur
Bettys Beau‘y Shop
Bianchini,
Chas
Binard &amp; Bonnett Realty
Binard,
William
Biikemeier, W
H
Bjork,
Fred
H
Blacker,
Frank
Blaine,
R_
Bruce
Blair,
Orla

10075

7

2k

Beckman, Richard
Behnke, Cl

LEGAL NOTICE

R

eereeeree

G

G

Dewitz,
Louis j
Diamond, Marvith bases vee
es ves ke
Dieter, Cornelius .2sikcccdeccesss
Dietsche, Robert
Laura
Dietz,
Jas
DiPietro,
a ‘
Donohoe, ae
Dowdall, Jack D
Doyle, John.T. ..csecevceess VEE oy
Drake,
Carl
Wewekeen senies seeee
John
P
Draney,
Driscoll, Edna §S ...
H
F
Driscoll,
Ducker, Mabel L
Dugo, Vincent
Dunham, Gladys E
Dunne, Dan
Duraclean
Co
Durava, Ernest F
Durland, EN
Dwyer, ‘Charles L
Early, R ussell
Donald
Easton,
Edw
P
Easton,
Eberli, Max
....
Ralph
K
Ebersole,
Service Heating
Economy

Edenberg, Robert A

Chas
Edholm,
Edwards, Wmi!I.
Raymond
A
Eiden,
Emery, E R
ot
Ender, Clara L ee
eek Ate tle 8 ee wie
Engdahl, Ss W
Engelhard,
Eugene
Geo
Engle,
Engstrom,
Charles
Enstrom,
Erwin, F B Animal Hospital ..
Gordon
Evans,
Evans, Richard Jr .
Evans, Thomas W Jr
Warren
P
Everote,
Fahey, J Gregory ..
Fargo,
Charles
Farley, J ba
Farmer,
E
Faulkner, Fed
L
Fee,
M
Feeley,
Feicht, Arthur
Fel,
Leonard
Feil, Wi lard B ..
Ferguson, Osborn .......... ba tae
Fetscher, Albert V ..
Fidler, Raymond E .
Fields, Jas E
Fink, Arthur P
Adin W
Findley,
Finney, H Ross
Fischer, Henry C ..
Fisher, Jas R
Fisher, Woodrow
W
.....
Fishleight, Clarence T
James
Fitger,
A
Fladeland,
Obert B
Flagler,
Geo L
Flanagan, Howard H
Flint, Warren
Flynn, Edgar A
Folger,
Robert
G
Foote, Robert J
Ford, Bruce H ..
Fordham, Lyle D
POCGDSM, TOM 6, VICES
ES
Fosdick, SJ
Foster, Ecson E
Frank
L
Frable,
Jack
France,
Frank, Albert J
Frank
T he Tailor
Franke, Allyn J .
Franken Bros Ine
Frantz, C Peter .
Frantz,
Milton
A
Frederick,
Alex
W
Emil
Fredricks,
Fredrickson, Raymond H
Friedlund,
Elmer P
Freeman, J K
Pvendans OAT Ad isis vecccieccas
David
Freiman,
Fremling , Carl H
Freund, Chas A
Freund, George ..
Frost, =
H
Frost,
Frost,

Frost,
Frost,
Frosts Bedi &amp; Appliance ..
Fry,
Lawrence
Fuller, Joe C
Gale, Raymond .
Galloway, Kathleen ...... hued ob eels
Garcia,
Mrs John
Sr
Gardner,
DAVIE
vcossvies ees
Gardner, William C
Garrison,
Cc
Garrity, F W
Garrity, John
Gast field,
Gountlett,
Gauntlett,
Gauwitz, Paul
Geist,
Henry
Gelderma nn, Roger F fay
Gersch, Patricia
George,
Michael
George, William D Beh ay
Georgian
Shop
Gescheidle,
BR.
Gibbs,
Herbert
J
Gibson,
Ralph
A
Gieske, Otto
Gildon, Leonard
Gilezmer,
John
Gille,
Charles
Gillen,
Edwin
M
Gillette, Jes
H
Glass, Harold A
Gooder, Seth M
Goodman,
Geo
Goodman, Raymond G ....
Goodpasture, Raymond
..
Goo¢pasture,
W
W
...
Gougler,
Robert
L
Gruabo,
Grant,

ve

�LEGAL NOTICE
bran OD Bbéctric Co. bcc iidasecctccce
eee, MOWRPA Sas
des oie cs ce nk
PERERICN Ge IO OG
be ive veeces
Peewee
INS: Ba
Gds. ss cieeenece
BERMOROOR, PNIB ese ches cles Munees
wangward, GeorgeTy oo. cies
eco ses
MAURIE
PRO
iis wa ccn ek cucbanen
Margie,” William Ao iiisisdecies
css
PERI? MONROE
Ch edaeCacseeeeedc
Halvorsen,
Marshall
............
WIMMER
sce clay abe CacKens
mremniiton, : Derey.
0: io as ire sas
REMI AUON
AR RR iss ks oaks GW
wale
wremilioon,; © Beare
a eas bia cee
Hamlett, Capt Lamar
..........
Hammer,
Clifford
...
gon
wmammers TO
isivcetietixs
oe
EBROG, 900 Wa
ibe eecka ceed
Pans, Malooim
Fs. i isis dks vee es
Hangen,
Chas
HH
vi... cise Saabs
Hanson, Bert
Rive
vals testa veces
Franson,
Donald
A
ie csr vases.
Sentnon,: Vistoe’ Shi iid 5es ves oes
BM
SOR,
ius i debe a oe 4¥e kaahes e
Harden, George C ......eceeees ;
MTN: ODES FP. awh peesesbeoaeas

or eae

Harrison,
Everett
HH
....:sccee
Hardt,
Harry
Seed
eN ea be owns
ES
MEMECIR
Co puss Vudu
bie 0 bd oe ‘
IM
Tr SM Wee baarscew cde s
MEE:
SEE IOW
ack even kbuea Cae
memuwur,
Ceo
8 foi iices
es ete
Greaervey,
Richard
M
......ecsece
MmtTOD,
TtavOld. Ko Gdii veces scene
mente: tela
a sie ipiaee
ss haws
mamwen, Henry Osea ki Gee ccc eae
Penwe, award:
M4 ies sve vee ce i
TERWO:
“GOOTEE © ico eceki
es fa5h 00
Haws, Henry U....
wayner;
Li Uy. wes
eae
paenly,. Chae Ts ccdssss&lt;
we
eaiaten, \ Oarh:
coc cckes
vende bene
Henderson,
Harold
G
........e.
Hendersen,
Harry
A
&amp;
Eva
L.
Henninger,
Ormond
.........e0.
Henrich, William M ............
PICTSRL)
WoO
Cua ainda tees’ o%
Herchenroder,
Henry
H Vetere a
Herman, Charlies BE ...ccs0...5.00.
erermants) Kenneth
1:04.66
so cbse 0%
Hermanson, Henning S ..........
Herrmann, Joseph N ........00..
mervel,: “esr FS iistokssie ce cesKe
PIOPCOE
RUE 6G Ai hin Wie PRR TAS oH
Hertel, William E ......... ey
Hertel, Williem R ........ + ala wree
Herts, Ingwald: 000s &lt;vitcun ce Greian
Hesler, WENO
ioe oa bes Mate hes 64 ‘
Hildebrandt, Edw Gc" eeawaid RY ors
Hinchsliff, Me
ON cca eee Stak
Hoffer, Meme
is Seva sve sda ve hare
PAG OGh,* CORR AY Mab ac oinasace i
moffman,
“Richard io 6isi se ceoss
Hoffman,
Walter
......
;
Hoffmann,
Mathias
..........Holdren,
Peal
Wo
see
ccc cceks
Hollenback, Genevieve L .......
Holmquist, Gwynne E ......... Sai
SEOINTORM
SWVC ON
Ss Sebg Ces Soars
Tey
CRO
8G S55,
Sa te tae es wlkese'e
Home
Store
Paint
.........008
Peeves, “AVNOI 2 vivo ako Cc ewes
Horney, Everett: ..0s.csccees as
Bee
AF Ga Cas
ee RS Re ON eho eee
PUG)
WY Re See keas cuenves ans Sater ee
POWOrdS SAE.
a hieN
oe iawowea ves
PORN, | POU ARE 5 20190
Sows fb Ole ee
Huffmann,
Stewart E ..........
ugh, i Joep i A
sive teen ead
waumhes;: Geo DD iseiss
Ceca teesas
Hugh,
Clarence: oo ies ecicens cece
Hull, Clayton cic cccccscccsvsivecs
Hume, Chas ..... Tepe
did cealew ee
Hund, Paul Darrel ......-+cceee.
Ant,
DA sc sdiesades
He os
Hunter,
Kenneth
P
....ececsues
PAUNLOP))
PRG:
nica bora cewdwesss&lt;
Hurt, Hark De \scvsitcctisewcsesys
Hussong, Ralph Vio .ccecesceccces
Hyde,
Robert
7
Pohick
ob seks
Hyink,
D W &amp; K HE occccccece yes
eayink,
Willie’
ss csc ccs sds s end
Hyland, - Lyle Voces cteccsiestccvs
AGA,
Market:
sce dae so biech sen
eed)
Battery
06 sie Fee Ces
somnen:: DAVIE
cei tas teehee
eke
Intranuovo, Donato ......-+..++0.
TVOTSON
TC SE wisi
bs Ve abt v eee
wncohe, George Ai ial) Fic dsievedes
WOOID, -ICHAKG 6 0.60h5
pile ne Se ces
wacobs, Fran
evets oiiivei sees
mOeeen:
GAPE
CEG eae ter icekelkeees
FRRNES,
TLOTWRD
igs be ca cs Cees
PUNOME:
TOS TL Siak vieacas
sv atnees
Jennings, Sidney
C .......seeeees
Jbhanesen,
Carl
........ veweue
Johanesen,
Henry
.
:
Johanson, CarlE .......-is
Jobhs,
Charles
wiccscsccceccces
PONDS,
STORM
Te: cavbotvwdetedees
Johnsen, Lowell ......-+--eseees
E@ONNGON, (Bio
sve cenveterses ab es
Johnson,
Arthur
P_ .....--seees
Johnson,
Burton
O
......-- owes
_ Johnson,
OUMAE
iis coh i oseers
' Johnson, Edwin H Sr ....... ee
Johnson, Edwin H Jr ......... 5
Johnson,
BOS
De idsedcs feeune
sonnson; Hole. Vi cesses cesee tes
gohnzon, Harty Assi sscccce sees
Johnson, Raymond
........e..e6aonnson, “Ronettes Lis ii 00s sain
ses
Johnson, Robert Louis ..........
Johnson, Ronald L ......eeeee- 4%
Johnson, Theodore J ........055s
Johnson, Theo Li .cccosesccscees °
Johnston, Wart? Wi cscscickeerewt
Johnston,
Wed 25 Kore AS
Johnston, Wik Fe
bs ae tae oe
Jonas, Frank H ....
Jones,
Frank
..ccccorcessscecs
Jones,
Joseph
Hl
\....ceeesereee
Jones, Mrs Paul H 2....---eeeees
Jones, Raymond R ...--e-seeeeee
Jordan,
Robert EB ..sececseecees
Jordt,
Robert
©
~c..cssescavece
SUR],
(UATthUe
os ce dis cee scien s
Juhl, Gordon A ..cccccecsccectees
Julcher, Charles
.......eseeeeeeJuhrend, Gerald
.......0--eseees
Kaatz, Arthur -Foicecscsecccsisees
Kaltenbach, G L .....ceeeeeeeees
Karris, Peter: J ovevasecccsscscve
Karsten, Erwin: GO cise essedes vt
Kagsner, Geo .iccccccscccsessccss
‘WA Kates Co ..dacccscees

Eo

ec bas sani aeed

Keller,

fopald

Kelley,

Bnbort

Kelley,
Kellogg,
Kelly,
Kemr

We

Sie

ea

Nowe

veal

ONAL Cee

Breadon ee
MrsB Fra

‘

RNAS

Kent,
Wm
H
Kerr, Mrs Estelle
Kessling,
E C &amp;

LEGAL NOTICE

eoereeseeerreces

K ..........-Beatrice ......

Miller,

Jolin

Miller,

Robert

M.raglia,

Wee

issue eeave

R

.

Frank

T

.

Kieser, Sherman Seat
tee ; iS
Kilcoyne, BOR Wiia
ei sh keke se
Moeller, Erwin

Kleinschmidt Cobian

Moseley,

Inc ..

Peareaos

Bros

......-+--+- awas

Krol], Herman C Jr ...cscsceetss
Krucks, Wm &amp; oe
R
Krumbach, KarlT
Kuhlmey, Geo A &amp; Dorothy - .

Lanhers,
Lanning,
Lensiug;:

Peter «cccecivcevievvede’
Jack .
2R0s BR. .is Vaan aie bine

Larson,
TMAMOR

Nolde,

Oehler

Pied

Willard a

PRE

pile

W

D

...

Page, Richard M .
Page, Robert ..cceccesccavvar
Page, Walter S ....-.-se0e
Pagel, Arthur W .
Palmer, Michael S
Palmer, W M Reay .
ae
LI OMOAA id
hs woh 6s Rie’

ae D: iccsegecy
cep esoas

McGuire.
McGuire,

Peters,

T

I.

gs Here sel
ous wd Bede es
Petesch, Maurice C .........
Petranek, Ralph E .....
Pettis, Charles G

eek

McMullen,
HG
....... Veen
eR ees
MeNall, Quinlan Wace
need
ib
Mehan,
Meitzer,

Perry

L

Pettis, Warren
Pfister, Jos G

......

Christoph o ‘ fy Weak

Gwiae

Willard
(hase ae Se ces:
op Aedes Gk aie as
Mennenok,
John
Mentzer, Arthur K
eee

Eb

| Plazge,

ecereesesseee

#O0U

|] TFIABESC,

Meyers, Ray F .....
Meyer, Raymond T ............ oa
:

Meyers,

LeRoy

.

Mid-Continent Petroleum “Corp
Mielenz, Emden O
oy
Miles, Donald. S26 sss005
Miller, Chester ....+eseeseesecees

se acne
ctak Wels es

Harold
WLALEALCE

Mercuric, Anthony Ji oii .i'.5...046
Merilahti, Donald ......
Merner, Arthur
Merner, Milton ....
Bruno C .
Delbert
ei ccieewevsiccevvce

Oc Voss

Phelps, Laurence ...... Hi
Phillips Petroleum
Co
i
Piper, Charles E ..

Meitzer,

Meyer,
Meyer,

eeseeveses

May aoe

Hubert
Robert N

McKay, Neil S
McKelvy, C T
McLaughlin, PCy

aceon

sseeseesece

ed

)(

A

......+-.00-

‘Sp riggs

Harold B
"TROS ies’

sere

McCrae, Robert J
McDanald, Frank M
McGarvie, James .

Lubbert

Rankin,.-C

Patterson,
Patterson,

.

.

Pemtaion, “Wi Wh cave densi
er wh 4
Pepping,
Anthony
Perey, Rusell vicki ieee cosets

wesc ecercseccore

C N ...
Lawrence

Jr

Douglas

Pehrson, Harry .........+.-.

cevcsbevcccvecnees

Schuetz,

Price, Trenton O .
Putnam, Alice W
Public Service Co Dist "109
Do. Dist 110: vic
tp swine
Quirk, Wellington ........
RG KB: Coal Goo sr evictian.
Ramsay, Robert S

F

Patterson,

Paulsen, Mrs Mary §S .........
Pearson, Josephine C
Pearson, Robert N .......+
alent
pesca
ven earee

Irl H aebid
ctu eon tener
Lester E ...-.-++-eee-s

Raredon,
Lawrence
......++-+++.
Rave; B.'C aide cite liebencs
Raughley, R F Jr ..csccccccevccs
RAY,
PredgriGk a. i'6:od0te's
onc anes ‘
Reagan, Edward
..cesvecesesenss
Rechtoris,
Samuel
......cceeeees
Red Horse Serv Sta ....... Pansee
ROOD: SOOM
Neds
sie de kes 6 ¥ds dee “5
Reed, Charice 8 Jr ove sicisccdess
Reed, RODE GE josie
a 8s os 0&lt;e)oi 9 ae
BRATION, ZeOOIE 5 55.0 his cos 68. sles
Reinhard, John M ......... cues
Reliable, Laundey oii ss st biesiss uses :
RiOnarany Gh: Ba
inca hs Coa ee veekss
Richards,
Nathaniel
........ Guida
Ried, Fred: Bice
eis ce Vedoivceusucce
Riedemang i ds) Gas ev Ce ak bee
Rioeh, Grane: Oo aiises ecto cess ies
Riordat. POU
W550
4
wev awh uee
Ritter, Frederick C .......... ott
Bade, ELA)
ae ids éaiecy
un oe eee
Robertson, David H
......c.se0%
Robertson, John A .i.cwdecccsces
Robinson, Margaret G ..........
Rockenbach, Irene A ......... wes
Rockenbach,
Samuel
...... Kenees
Roessler, Carl W ......-.- 4 sb eG ike
Rogan, Thomas C ......eeceeeeee
Rogers, W Locke .:...0-cccvseses
Roggow, ABHNG 666i csveedcccnene
Rowman, Peerl\iss.¢ sects cc od s00%6
Rogman,
Mrs Rose Sse bea 4 ine
Rohan, Lawrence &amp; Dorothy es
ROU:
HOVSOr hiker
eta ree oub eens
Romagano, Frank X ....... Page
Root, MACHA
Pevs hovered
es ee as
OGty MMe
ahd Pita an bee ekeaes
Root, Harold A Jr .......... ey
ROM CBT. J) ous k ets coke ok ees be
Roik: Tonn Wi ice yews ee le ge ae
Ro th, Ric 4
ih Bed Wea dab bale he
Rothschild, Robert
..........--..
Royal Blue Stove) ass vee
be eds ea
Rudolph, Lioyd A ..ccccccccccces
Rugen,: Ernest:F isc ics cee sae “4
Ruggaber, William ..........4.0.
Runnfeldt,, Paul. Av vseveviseccoce
Running, Carl A ........
Rastew, CHAS Pik. deen steeds
Russell, James
G ........
‘
Ryan; Joseph Gv sccponndasdebe
Sabato, Anthony G ....ncsceseses
BOCK WS
oisds
edb sap
aR re
8 Or
SOnlins
OV cca es debe
eee ela ae ae
Sallach; Do)
03830 ives sine
Sallach, Ferdinand A .....+++.+&gt;
Salyards, Henry G ......--eeeeee
Sandberg, George
......+++-eee- .
Sandberg, William E ........-++Sapdieres) Tay hit sicics
d's aaecsic cane
Sandvold, WC
sicvciccacsvcccces
Sandy, RObSrt)
oicci.c
o's cies 60's sie
Savage, Andrew
be
Savage, Robert M
dak
Savre, Robert EB ..cccccceee
Schaid, Marvin A ........
BONGO
MOWEE uns bode we ve.od o:05.00 4m
SeRempis TEGO css seivicg
ss oe
Scheskie, “Arthur j..s.cccsecvscess
Scheskie,; Henry 2 cscccciesctvvecs
Schiffer, John. Bei ccviavacesie
sess
Schilling,
Lennart
......scceeree
Schleifer, Fred A ...ccccccecccves
Schlesinger, Richard B ..........
Schmid, George P ...c.ccecsesees
Schmidt,
Oscar
..ccccccccccscece
Schneider, John D ......ceeseeee
Schnordt,. Chester:A: os.e.eeeeee
Schoeffmann, Lawrence
.......-.
Schoenfeld, George E ......-+eee
Schommer, Oliver John ........-.
Schroeder, Alvin .....cceccceses
Schuessler, Joseph A .......-. ie
Schuetz, Emma
......seseeseeees
Schulz, Charles G ....ccccecceee
Schulz,
John
G .ccccccsvcnsess
Schulze, Robert E ...-..ee-eeeee
Schwab, Oscar ..cccccrccccccscens
Schwartz,
Frank ......ccseseeees
Schwerds, WIM cb veins vedevss seus
Scott, Mrs Geo T .....ceecesssece
Scott, Mrs Geo T .....-sseeeeeees
Seaver, LB
.ccccscvcceccccscons
Sebben, Angelo A ...eseeeeeeees
Sebold, Cecil C ....ccecececeseees
Segert, Edw F ..cccccccceccsvcce
Segert, Gordon E ......-eseeeeee
Seibert, Francis ......-sseeeeeees
Sider, LWuis sas sescees Si pitnsithh
Seiler, Harold W ....cccccccsoess
Seiler, Leo
........ CN eee eh
Seiler, Wm Ho. oscccisescccevoces
Seite, TOO 65 Nehivcdbed
vivbie dc citeae
Selig, Edward H ......--cceseses
Sener, Percy ..s.ccsvicvvccaccspegs
Selle, Martha. iicsis
sik c sisaisc ses
Senf, Richard A ....
Setzter, Walter R .........
Severin, George H ..
wate
BUM W, LOG 6b oo ki ecelPee
ba
wes
Sheehan, Wm E
.......--. ep eaes
Sherman, Rogs R .cescccssccese
Sherwell, Harry N .....cceseeee
Shore Line Blue Print Co ........
Short, Robert E ...c.eseceeeeces
Shuck, O Marie
........ dk cia aed
Shugrove,
A H ..ccccccvecsceee
Siensa, OD
Wiss dedscvaveccaes
Sievert, FA
ine beeches
epee cles
Siffert, August ...ccccscccesseecs
Siffert, Chris ..ccsccccccceeesses
Siffert, Eri€ ..ccccecscecicessese
Biffert.. Fi: Boos Wew vic eoecstaaes
Sigmund, Beatrice S ......+-.e0.
Silénce, JOHN i. vcweneshe
seme cess
Silvey, W Newell ......cccccseees
Simon,
Dr: Paw
es visi, See Reem
Simpson, Thos. A csccecececcccess
Sinclair
Station:
oh dss sale dieses
ess
Skinner; Foun : Ts .os pc ease cahs a’
Skokie Valley Music Co. PMG sks 5
Slagle; Lowell, Bo vis iw:ct Sve ces on
BIGGS: PROWRES isco suid oo VkS eep ae ene ;
Wid Wath.) WOUl, 5.508 vets cccds pues
SlOW SORIA
shineCia celkNceaes
Smart, POUT Ss baw ioe Coad Memes
Smetters:: Warren
is Sere
thi eens
Bit) CORR iv isis
66 oe od Ka eens ‘
Bitty OURES, Lao
hehe OCU T eswe
Smith, Wm
..... CesEOV
GE
eee so
Shelton: Ward “sis (edenetecs cas
Soefker, George ..... PNW Kav nieke
Boerker,. Heney ar seiau tcl deeb ee xe
Boetkex, Logie Fe was aki coer ckes
Sore, Temmet Oc iis doa Cones oes
Sore; James: Ho vss
ess Caersd sew
Southerton:. Ralph (Ri.
s decdse
2 ses
Spannraft, Frank).
06 adsi'esee&gt;de
Sparrow, Sent as 4 save wana oki
Spnonbers; Birger ioc \iviene
Vb a 4-ca2

Parsons, Charles
Pasley, Forrest
eeaimee, cae
‘
Mandel, Stan’ sce vicisadnsie
ses o ws sine
@eeereeersereseese
Mandler, James
Mann, ‘James: A ioc ie hc desivevesis
Manh: FidgdTeds cbo0d
topes vies
Mansfield, Vaughn
........

CO

sen

Osterman, Keith c ee
Ott, George A .....-

Barbara

McChesney,
McChesney,

eerseeeeee

J

Lutz, Reinhard E
Lyons, Lawrence ......
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Lindemann,
John
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Linnig, Roy J

Lockwood,

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Howard

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Kolb, George ..cccccccccecvvcces e
Koller, John E

Kottrasch

vo ee

Muhike, | Farry: scons bad
Mullins Sales Co
Murrie, Charles R
..........
Murtfeldt, F H &amp; Betty J
National Tea Co ....
Neilsen, Walter B -.0: 00. siens pace

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Charles B Jr ......+.+.+
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Rankin, Williem

LEGAL NOTICE

LEGAL NOTICE

0003 seseesi de

Svrietsma

Richard C

Vaugh

st teereeees

Stanger, George
...-s.eseeeeeees
Starr, Melvin A &amp; Annette A ....
Staton, Wm I
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Steinhaus, Wm
........-.- Face hecho ‘
Stephens, Ivan .......eceeeeeces ‘
Sternberg, Harry .....-.--cceesees f
Stewart, Paul &lt;6. 0c... rs a ‘
Sticken, George A .....-+++--+s
Sticken, George W .......+..es. ‘
Sticken, Theodore R ...... aca
Sticken, Walter V ......--.+++- ‘
Stillson, C Enid
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Stirsman, Tom ......++.ee- pes
Stokes, Mrs Anna W ....«.-eeeeee
Stole, Bjarne ......csseseeees
Stolle, Aw. ves ss cscs tees coubden
Strader, Vo Wi sevdeses
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Streck, ArthurE ......---.-0% yaa
Street, James M Jr ......seeeceee
Stryker, Fred W ..cccceccceceees
Stryker, Howard
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Stryker, Lewis C .....ccererevees
Stryker, Wesley A .....cceeesses
Stuart, Edw J. ceccacccccctececcs
Stupple, Frank ......+ee. a ote Sea
Stuypple,. Harry o's ssc se oss octelee
Sturm, Albert
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Harold
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Sugden, Mrs Charles E. é pete Cade
Sullivan, John E .....cccccccves
Sunaner;. Fe
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Sundberg, Earl W
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Sundvahi, Gunnar ‘0.6 ic odisje ce oes
Swanson,
Arvid
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Swanson; John Ay is ocut coh vance
Swanson. Vi Be A055 ihc sk vce dete ae
Sweeney Dry Goods Co...... ay ee
Sweeney, J&amp;ck .sccccccnccsachene
Swigart, Wilson C .......e.-eeee
Tackett, Eliz ....cccecscescessces
Tackett, WC
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Tanielian, Azard ..cc.cccsccvcecs
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Tasker, Harold T ......cciseres te
Tausz, Martin ci.cccocecccvces
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Taylor, Harry W cvcsesccscvecsse
Taylor, Ralph. ..00 cee ccs slesew eh
Tennermann, Agnés Bo vers kaween
THK.
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The Texas Company
Pee ey: steele
Thayer, Wallace
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Theroux, Richard W ...... Mie eee
Thiel, Gilbert C ..ccsec cn ies
Thomas,’ IR
vis ibe ts sees eee
Thompson, Anthony ........--++%
Thompson,
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Thompson, Robert N ......--+e+Thullen, Henry M
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Tibbetts, James M-......c-ceeees
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Tractomotive Corp ....eeeseeeeee
Tracy, Florence ......--.+. owas
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Tranter, Gordon
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Turley, Mrs Evangeline M ......
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Next

DeSoto-Plymouth

On

HP

Cagers’

Schedule

Aberdeen Angus Wins Honors For Owner

Defeats Beth El
YMG, 62-24

Giants Seek
Another Win

oe

Tomcrrow Night

DeScto-Plymouth won game
No. 4 as against one defeat in
the Highland Park Recreation
department Class A basketball

league

by

defeating

YMG,

60-24,

night.

The

last

Beth

By Pierre Martineau
Tomorrow night the Little
Giants
basketball
team
will
travel to Maywood to face Proviso in the first meeting of the
two cage teams. The Pirates
have been having a rough time

E!

Wednesday

victory

kept

De-

Soto-Plymouth
in
a_ second
place tie with VFW and Kennedy’s Garden Spot.

of

Renzo Marchetti scored 15 field
goals and five free throws for a total of 35 points before being taken
out with four minutes remaining in
the
game.
Jerry
Fell
scored
18
points for the losers.
Moroney
Insurance
scored
its
third
league
game
by
downing
Washington
Gardens
in the final
game of the evening by a score of
61-26. Dick Martin led the victors
with 23 points while Gene
Tagliapietra scored 17 for the losers.
Geske Scores 17 Points
In the first game
of Thursday

night’s

card,

Highwood

on page

captured
points.
The

was

Ken

Hirsch,

a junior,

son

of

Mr. and Mrs. Harry J. Hirsch, 165
Lakeside place.
He is a member of the year-old
Stanford Acro-troup, a group of 30
men and women who present gymnastic,
tumbling,
balancing,
comedy,
acrobatic,
dancing
and
other circus type of acts in the
San Francisco Bay area.
Acro-troupe members were also
featured
as
entertainers
at
the
“Winter Whirl,” all-campus dance
Mr.
held January 10 at Stanford.
Hirsch was featured in a special
called
act
tumbling
trampoline
the
On
Different
“Something
Trampoline.”

HP City-Wide Ice
Skating Races Are
Slated For Sunday
The city-wide ice skating races
sponsored annually by the Highland Park Recreation center in
cooperation with the Highland
Park Recreation board and the
local scheol boards will be held

Saturday at Sunset park at 10
a.m. In case of poor ice, the
races will be held the following Saturday.
There will be events for boys
and girls of all ages beginning
with the 50-yard straight away
for those six years old and end-

ing with

the three

lap race for

boys 17 years and over.
Medals will be awarded

first

place

will

winners

and

ribbons

be given to the second and third
place winners.
Participants in the races must

be residents of Highland

Park.

scoring

game

was

baskets to add
ant total.

but

it

game.

honors

with

marked

by

22
the

The

rest

10 points

of the

to the

Highland

Gi-

Park

scoring ran: Bob Troy—9, Howard
Russell—8, Harold Freberg—7, and
Tom Phillips—2.
Lead Early in Game
The Little Giants, playing their
best game since the New Trier contest, jumped off to a 14-7 lead at
the end of the first quarter.

The Vine Street Five then added
another 22 points
in
the
second
quarter to make the score at the
end of the first 36-14.
Little Giant
fans
received
the

surprise of their lives when Capitani made a basket in the last sec-

27)

Taking part in trampoline and
Symnastic
exhibitions
given
by
Stanford
university
students
between .halves of the recent Stanford - California basketball game

season

return to the Highland Park lineup
of Eddie Capitani, who hit for five

VFW

H. Parker Stars In
Tumbling Act For
Troupe at Stanford

this

be a good

In last Friday’s encounter with
Evanston,
the
Giants
tamed
the
Wildkits 58-48. George Burmeister

routed
Olson’s
Clothiers
by
a
score of 51-33. The very fine shooting of Norm Geske and the clever
passing of Gene Melchiorre highlighted
the
game.
Geske
scored
18 points for VFW.
Buddy Bock
hit the hoops for 14 points for the
losers.
Bob Joor paced Haven Inn to a
(Continued

things

should

James G. Nicol, right, and Thomas R. Chalmers of 750 Broadview, are shown with Mr.
Chalmers’ prize Aberdeen Angus heifer at a stock show in Scotland where it took top honors.

Local

HP Mermen, After 5th Win,

Brings Trophies

Will Face Terriers Today
By

Art

Home

Weinstein

The New Trier Terriers will oppose the Little Giant tanksters today at 4 p.m. in the local pool. New Trier boys, the
defending state champions, have their usual strong, experienced
outfit. They have breaststroker John Lechner who was second
to Al Rubenstein of Highland Park in the state meet last year.
Also returning to bolster the Terriers’ attack will be crawlstroker Dave Sterret and medley man Ken Hirsh.
The

HP Frosh-Soph
Lose To Evanston
In Close Game Here

varsity

tankers

fourth

straight

victory

by

35,

Thursday

last

meet

at

won

their

Suburban

trouncing
in

Maywood.

league

Proviso,
a

very

The

40close

Mermen

were behind, 33-35, with one more
By Harry Halton
event left, the 160-yard freestyle
Relay swimmers Fred HarTwenty-three points in the sec- relay.
ond half helped Evanston’s frosh- ris, Pete Husting, Pete Hughes, and
soph basketball
team
quash
the John Gould then triumphed in a
Highland
Park quintet, 48 to 39, very close race.
Al Rubenstein sparked the Little
last Friday night at the local high
Giants to victory by winning two
school gym.
events and breaking two team recThe game was very close in the ords and one pool record.
Al won
first half, with the Lil’ Little
Gi- the 120-yard individual medley and
ants leading at the end of the first set a new team and pool record. He
quarter, 10 to 9, and the Wildkits broke
the record he had estabout in front at the end of the first lished in the Harrison meet and
half, 25 to 24.
also
triumphed
in
the
100-yard
By the end of the third canto, the
visitors from Evanston were ahead
by six points and went on to win.
The

two

high

point

men

in

the

contest were Blue and White guard
George Moran and another guard,
Venice Deese, of the Wildkits, both
contributing 17
points
to
their
teams’ total. Wildkit
Joe
Brooks
added 15 markers to the Evanston

cause.
Tomorrow night
Park five travels to
to avenge this loss
rates, who also lost

the
Highland
Proviso to try
against the Pilast week.

breaststroke,

setting:

a new

team

record.

The local tanksters easily won
the 40-yard freestyle with Fred
Harris getting first and Bob Stanwood

taking

the

second

position.

John Gould won a first place in the
100-yard
freestyle.
Danny
Seitz
gave

his

year

in the

place

total
In
Little
fine

and

best

performance

diving

getting

by
his

of

taking
highest

the

first
point

of the season.
the 100-yard backstroke the
Giant Mermen lost to a very
Proviso swimmer, Bob Elk(Continued

on page

27)

Cattleman
From

ton

using

an

all

court

press,

Blue and White could only
points while the Wildkits

Abroad

Thomas R. Chalmers of Broadview returned home recently from
England
and
Scotland
where
his
heifer, Euroma
IV of Clashfarquhar, won top honors in stock shows
in London and Edinburgh.
First animal to win trophies in
both the
Scottish
National
Fat
Stock show, held in Edinburgh, and
the Smithfield
Club
Fat
Stock
show, London, Mr.
Chalmers’
17
month
old Aberdeen Angus
won
several cups in each exhibit.
At
the Scottish National
the
awards
included:
Silver cup for
best
heifer
in
show; King George
V
Challenge
cup; City of Edinburgh Challenge
trophy; Thorley
Gold
Challenge
cup; Webb and Sons Challenge cup;
Cumming Challenge cup; R. B. Meiklejohn Challenge trophy; D. M.
Brown Challenge trophy, and the
Reserve Overall Championship.
At the Smithfield club the hei-

fer won best in AA class, AA

onds of the first half. After taking
the ball out of bounds,
Capitani
dribbled almost to the center line
and shot. The ball went in, hardly
touching the rim.
Sixty per cent of the Highland
Park
shots
went in in the first
quarter.
In the third quarter, with Evans-

breed

champion; was
named
the _ best
heifer in show; the best heifer over
15 months and under 24 months,
and the King’s
Perpetual
Challenge cup for best beast in show
bred by
exhibitor.
The
awards

the’

sink 11
hit for

15.
In the

last period

ers again

under

an

the

Park-

all court

with

press

they again turned in 11 points.
Wildkits’
19 points
were
enough to top the Giants’ 58.

Highwood
Bowling
January

The
not

Marconi
League
13

Standings

Team
Wiese
Fabbri Tavern: 2.22...:...... 3914 171%
Eddy’s Liquors ................ 34144 2216
My Favorite Inn ............ 324% 241%
Silver Dollar Tavern ....28
29
|
Lenzi Bros. Grocery .... 27144 2914
Highwood Radio ............ 245/30
Highwood Ice Cream ....20
30
Skokie Valley Laundry 19
38
High Series, Team
PaWbrt: TAGGTIE viii | 2673
High Series, Individual
POM
(sov
aca
isrc
Hee
cn
642

High
Fabbri:

Tavern

Game,

Team

-coiéccb/
i

2613

Name Stephen Zeff Sports
Editor of U of C Newspaper

Stephen Zeff, son of the Roy D,
Zeffs of Oak Knoll terrace, has
were presented by the
Duke
of been appointed sports editor of the
Gloucester.
Colorado Daily, student newspaper
A testimonial dinner was given at the University of Colorado
in
in Mr. Chalmers’ honor December Boulder.
A
sophomore,
Stephen
27 at which he was represented by worked on the
sports
staff
for
his breeder, James G. Nichol, from three semesters, when the paper
whom he purchased the heifer at was known as the Silver and Gold.
the age of five months.
He is the first sports chief of the
Mr. Chalmers came to the United paper under its new name.
States from Edinburgh in 1919 and
He is Zeta Beta Tau fraternity’s
has lived in Highland Park for 22 assistant treasurer and chairman of
years. He is associated with S. C. intramurals, and is also a member
and L. M. Pirie
at the ° Topsalo of Phi
Epsilon
Phi,
sophomore
farms in Spring Grove, Ill.
men’s service honorary on campus.

�Elect Mrs. Allenby
(Continued
year

of

changed
May

from

page

the

shop

was_

to

January

1

16)
recently

instead

of

1 as formerly.

During
porting

this period

the three

organizations,

Northwest-

ern

Settlement,

Infant

and

the

Auxiliary

Woman’s

sup-

Welfare,
of

the

Highland
Park hospital, each received $1,718 and donations were
made to the following charities:

NOTICE
Sealed bids will be received by the City
Council, City of Highland Park, Illinois,
at its office in the City Hall, until 8:00
P.M., Monday, February 9, 1958, for the
furnishing of:
One three-quarter ton Pick-Up Truck,
equipped

with

heater-defroster
heavy duty rear
ance
1986

air

cleaner,

to be given
in bid price
one-half
ton
Chevrolet

Center, North

Shore

Mental
Health
association,
Park
Ridge School
for
Girls,
Peacock
Camp, Ridge Farm, Veteran’s Hospital at Downey
and the Visiting
Nurse
Association
of
Deerfield
Townships.
The board of the shop wishes to
thank all the generous friends of
the Thrift shop, who by their donation of goods to be sold, have made
ali this possible.

BETTER
COAL
MAKES

A

DEFENSE

CLASSES

will make your son strong. Wonderful results, body building
exercises, scientific boxing, defensive jiujitsu, championship

filter,

combination,
six-ply
tires. Trade-in allow-

wrestling,

for one
Pick-Up

23 years

Truck.
Bidder must submit complete specifications on the truck he proposes to furnish.
The Council reserves the right to reject |
any and all bids if it deems it best for
the public
good.
By order of the Council of the City
of Highland Park, January 12, 1953.
EDW. P. OHLWEIN, Acting City Clerk |

of developing

CALL COACH

WILLIAM

Winnetka
High

School

Director

boys

HI

BERN

JOHN B. NASH CO. | |

6-3851
Day

Camp

2-3500

Director

1891 Sheridan, Highland Park

| —

'

American
Red Cross, Arden
Shore
Association,
Crippled Children’s Association of Lake County,
Herrick House, Boy
Scouts,
Girl
Scouts,
Family
Service,
High
School Scholarship Fund, National
Foundation for Infantile Paralysis,
Lake County T. B. association, Lake
County T. B. Sanitorium auxiliary,

Service Men’s

oil

SELF

Electric Rang

BARGAI
1495

Kechrunator
aCe iar Cnet BY

ene ds ey

é

4

With minute minder

clock and lamp, JUST $7 5950
With Automatic Oven Control

Timer and lamp, ONLY

Point

$7 645°

Comfort
SERVICE
STATION
Offers You
Complete
Bumper
to Bumper Service
@ Grease Jobs
@ Wash Jobs
@ Accessories *
@ Batteries
Complete
Stock of
Good Year
Suburbanite

Here

they

Ale... all the features you've been looking for!

"xtra-large oven...big enough to bake six loaves of bread at once.
Quick-heating surface units... two 6-inch and two 8-inch.

Speedy, clean broiler unit.

Roomy utensil storage drawer.

Snow
Tires

White porcelain finish.

POINT
COMFORT

LOW

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SERVICE
STATION
Waukegan
&amp;
Telegraph Rds.
Deerfield
Dfld.
779
or
Dfid. 578
Free Pickup
and
Delivery

Appliance outlet on backguard.

or your dealer's today!

PUBLIC

COMPANY OF NORTHERN

ILLINOIS

i
ve

�ELCOME TO CHURCH

{
SUNDAY, January 25
9:40 a.m. Religious school, grades
five to eight.

d should have priority on your time. Spend some hours in church.
HIGHLAND

PARK

FIRST

January

25

9:30 a.m. Sunday school.
11 a.m. Church service.

UNDAY, January 25
11 a.m. to 12 noon. Morning worservice. Church school classes

WEDNESDAY,
8

p.m.

January

Testimonial

3:20
ment.

p.m.

High

school

depart-

28
meeting.

Presbyterians
List Delegates
|
To Annual Meet

Tel. HI 2-6848
Res. 1817 Green Bay road
SUNDAY, January 25
9:30 a.m. Sunday
school and
Junior

Bible

class.

10:45 a.m.
NORTH

Worship

Tim.

2-6653

DAY, January 25
Paul’s Day and Seminary
day.
30 a.m. Holy communion.

St.

9:15 am.
Church school and
mily service, preacher Dr. Fehl.

11 a.m. Morning prayer and serpreacher Joseph Howell, stuon,
nt of Seabury-Western Theologseminary.

:30 p.m.

Canterbury club.

NDAY, January 26
:30 p.m. Sea Scouts,-Ship 43.
ESDAY, January 27

7 p.m.

Cub Scouts.

715 p.m. Boy Scouts.
p.m. St. Martha’s meeting.
DNESDAY, January 28
:30 a.m. Holy communion.
30 a.m. Holy communion.
RSDAY, January 29
p.m. Parish choir practice.
8
RIDAY, January 30
7:30 a.m. Holy communion.
4:30 p.m. Girls choir practice.

3:14;

Correlative

them understood spiritually, for
only by this understanding can
truth be gained

am.

146

service.

gates to the fifth annual meet-

SHORE METHODIST
CHURCH

North

meditations

_ Miss Judith Siljestrom presenting

e lesson.
Class in “The Chrisn Way” at the same hour. Social
r and refreshments follow.
SDAY, January 27

_8p.m.

Bethany Brotherhood will

meet

the

at

home

of

Robert

Ave.,

Senior

B.

johnson, 604 Broadview avenue.
VEDNESDAY, January 28
‘45 p.m. Bethany choristers

8:30,

9:30,

and

Green

Rt. Rev. Msgr.

Joseph

and

Bay

Roads

P. Morrison

Pastor
Donald B. Runkle
Bernard
E. Burns
HI 2-0202

Saturdays,
Holy

Confessions
eves. of First Fridays
Days

4 and

7:30

p.m.

SUNDAY, January 25
Masses at 6:15, 7:30, 9, 10, 11 a.m.
and 12 noon.

NORTH SHORE
CONGREGATION
ISRAEL
Lincoln

and Vernon
Glencoe

Dr. Edgar
FRIDAY,
4 p.m.
8:30

Avenues

Siskin, Rabbi

Glencoe

725

January 23
Hebrew classes.

p.m.

Services.

p.m.

ST.

JOHN’S

a.m.

January

25

Sunday

worship.

|

Bay

Herbert

SUNDAY,

W.

January

25

groups.
10:45

26

Division street.
WEDNESDAY, January 28
8 p.m. YWMS
at home of Mrs.
Ossian
Carlson,
120 High
street,
Highwood.
METHODIST
CHURCH
Avenue and Everts Place

Rev.

Donald

Woods,

pastor

THURSDAY, January 22.
7:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
FRIDAY, January 23
7:45 p.m. Parent-teacher’s meeting.
SUNDAY, January 25
9:30 a.m.
Church school for all

ages.
10:45
chimes.

am.

Fifteen

minutes

11 a.m. Morning worship.
mon topic, “This I Believe.”
Russell
Lambert
preaching.

of

a.m.

Pastor

Morning

of

SerRev.

Glencoe

worship.

SUBURBAN

SYNAGOGUE BETH EL
1175 Sheridan Road
Highland Park
HI 2-5787
Philip L. Lipis, Rabbi
Stanley Martin, Canter

Pastor

—

8 p.m.
Dorcas society at the
home of Mrs. Harold Dahl, 1332

The

Harris,

9:30 a.m.
Church
school under
the direction of Dr. E. D. Fritsch,
with classes arranged for all age

9:30 a.m. Church school.
10:45
am.
Morning
worship.
Topic, “Faith.”
7 p.m. Luther league at Lennart
Schilling
home,
1540
Oakwood

WESLEY
Highwood

and

Avenue

HI 2-1599
January 25

NORTH

Linden,

CHURCH

Road

Harold

SUNDAY,

Highwood

Rev.

Rev.

Conservative

FRIDAY, January 23
4:41 p.m. Light candles.
8:30 p.m. Late service. Sermon
“The Conquest of Fear.’’ Cantor
Ivan Perlman of the Beth Emunah
Congregation of Tulsa, Okla., will
be guest cantor at the Sabbath
services Friday evening and Saturday morning.
SATURDAY, January 24
9:30 a.m. Tephiiln club meets.
7:15 a.m. Daily Minyan meeting.
SUNDAY, January 25
‘
7:15

a.m.

Daily

Minyan

meeting.

8:15 a.m. Tephilin club meets.
MONDAY through THURSDAY
January

26 to 29

4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Hebrew school.
MONDAY through FRIDAY,
January

9

am.

26 to 30

to

12

noon.

GAN.

CAP Cadets To Meet At
Palwaukee Airport Sunday
Any boy or girl from 15 to 18
years of age is invited to join the
Civil Air Patrol cadets. The cadets
meet at Palwaukee
airport
every
Sunday at 2 p.m. Those over 18
may join the CAP Seniors.

The CAP has been organized to
aid the air force and help in civil-

SATURDAY, January 24
ian emergencies also. For further
9:15 a.m. Confirmation class.
WEDNESDAY, January 28
information
interested
persons
9:40 a.m. Religious school, kin6 p.m. Monthly family night pot- may contact CAP Cadet Sgt.
f
de arten to gr
ae

ael Pe

Speakers

cas

during

the

three-day

session will include Gov. Arthur B.
Langlie of the state of Washington,
Frank M. Totton, vice president of \s
the Chase National bank of New y
York, and James H. Robinson, Ne- ©
gro

pastor.

Thirteen other religious and lay |

leaders will address the gathering,
which

time

is expected

to

reach

high

of more

than

istrations.

Heading

the

gation will be Edwin
Park,
president
of
Council

of

an

—

all-

3,000 reglocal

—

dele-

T. Naff, Oak
the Chicago

Presbyterian

In addition to those

©

Men.

officially —

designated, many other
Presbyterian churchmen from the Chicago
area are planning to attend all or
some of the sessions.
Mr.

Naff

stated

that the

registra-

tion fee for the three days, beginning with Friday morning sessions
January 30 would be $25, including luncheons, dinners, and Sunday
breakfast. For Chicago area men
wishing

to attend

the

fee

‘|}luncheon

and

Saturday

is

$12.50,

|

sessions

including

dinner,

Wisconsin Weekends

EVANGELICAL

Homewood
SECOND
BAPTIST CHURCH
OF HIGHLAND
PARK
The Rev. William Giles Glover
Highwood
Community
Center
42% North Green Bay Road
Highwood
Tel. HI 2-8145

worship.

REFORMED

Green
The

worship.

Sunday

ing of the National Council of
Presbyterian Men at the Palmer House January 30 through
ah)

/|only,

school.

Sunday

7:45
AND

25

Sunday

a.m.

choir rehearsal.

place, Deerfield.
MONDAY,
January

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
CHURCH

Rev.
Rev.

service

11

ZION EV. LUTHERAN CHURCH
High Street and Oakridge Avenue

Ass’t.

25

Masses at 6:30, 7:30,
10:30 and 11:30 a.m.

Deerfield

meet-

Highwood

First Fridays and Week Days —
Masses at 7 and 8 a.m. Holy Days
—Masses at 6, 7, 8 and 9.

h F, B. Schlung at the console.
11 am.
Morning worship with
2 minister, the Rev. A. P. Johnn preaching.
7 p.m.
Youth Fellowship with

;

8 p.m. Midweek prayer
THURSDAY, January 29

8 p.m.

January

9:30 a.m.

27

8 p.m. Ladies Fellowship
ing.
3
WEDNESDAY, January 28

11

CHURCH

January

SUNDAY,

South America.
TUESDAY, January

It is this spir-

Rev. Arthur E. Douaire,
HI 2-0427

for all age groups.

Organ

...

itual
perception
of Scripture,
which lifts humanity out of dissease and death and _ inspires
faith . . . The spiritual sense of
truth
must
be gained
before
Truth can be understood” (pp.
547, 272).

Dubs room.

arranged

“Sci-

Rev. James D. Gleeson, Pastor

"RIDAY, January 23
1 p.m. Thomas-Willison circle at
e home of Mrs. Paul Willison,
20 Broadview avenue.
NDAY, January 25
_ 9:30 a.m.
Church school with

10:45

from

“The
Scriptures are very sacred. Our aim must be to have

ST. JAMES

BETHANY CHURCH
(Evangelical United Brethren)
_ 1704 McGovern Street
Rev. A. P. Johnson, Minister
The Rev. Dale Zimdars,
Assistant Minister
HI 2-3522
mo,
Tr
is
RSDAY, January 22
8
p.m. Chancel choir rehearsal

classes

passages

ence and Health with Key to the
Scriptures” by Mary Baker Eddy,
include:

SUNDAY,

the

17).

SUNDAY,

%

in

16;

a
oo

Paul Date of Rice street and
Aaron S. Bauer of Central avenue are among 22 men named
by the Presbytery of Chicago
as principal or alternate dele-

error of every name and tryouts.
é
Hazel and Greenleaf Avenues
disappears before the dochildren three years old up
8:15 p.m. Adult education, North
Glencoe
and power of right think- Shore Seminar of Jewish Studies.
yu
third grade also meet at
Rev. Russel] W. Lambert, Minister
ing, which has its source in the di- WEDNESDAY, January 28
hour.
Edwin Kemp, Director of Music
:30 a.m. to 10:35 a.m. Junior vine mind will be explained in all
4 p.m. Hebrew classes.
Glencoe 1227
rtment
(4th,
5th
and
6th Churches of Christ, Scientist, on
8:15 p.m. Men’s club smoker in SUNDAY, January 25
rades) and Junior high depart- Sunday, January 25. The subject Highland Park Recreation center.
9:30 a.m. and 11 a.m.
Morning
of
the
Lesson-Sermon
will
be THURSDAY, January 29
ent (7th and 8th grades).
worship
services.
Sermon
topic:
730 a.m. to 10:30 am.
Adult TRUTH.
4 p.m. Hebrew classes.
“When Christ Enters Life.”
The Golden Text is from Psalms
MONDAY, January 26
710 a.m. to 10:45 a.m. Frosh- (89:8, 14) “O Lord God of hosts,
5 p.m. High school Fellowship
h and varsity groups for high who is a strong Lord like unto
FIRST UNITED EVANGELICAL
group meeting.
001 students.
thee? or to thy faithfulness round
CHURCH
8 p.m. Men’s committee meeting
0:10 a.m. to 10:45 am. Quartet about thee? ... Justice and judgGreen Bay Road at Laurel Ave.
with
Adolph Frankel as chairman.
earsal at the Manse.
ment
are
the
habitation
of thy
A. G. Masser, Minister
WEDNESDAY, January 28
throne: mercy and truth shall go
ESDAY, January 27
HI 2-1731
7 p.m. Youth choir rehearsal in
:30 p.m. Tuesday Evening group before thy face.”
parish
house.
SUNDAY,
January
25
sting.
Lesson-Sermon
passages
from
8 p.m. High school choir rehears9:30 a.m. Sunday school session.
:30 p.m. Boy Scout Troop 324 the Bible (King James Version) in10:40
am.
Organ
interlude— al in parish house.
ting.
clude:
THURSDAY, January 29
Mrs. Lisle Hawley, organist.
DNESDAY, January 28
“Continue thou in the things
7:30 p.m. High school basketball
10:45
a.m.
Morning’
worship
Sanctuary
a.m. to 9:30 a.m.
which thou hast learned and hast service, sermon by the pastor.
practice
in Central
school
gym,
for prayer and meditation.
1]
been
assured
of, knowing
of
7 p.m. Junior Christian Endeav- Glencoe.
7:15 a.m. to 8:30 a.m. Choir rewhom
thou hast, learned them or.
8 p.m. Senior choir rehearsal in
. . All scripture is given by inhouse.
7 p.m. Young People’s Fellow- parish
spiration of God, and is profit- ship.
able for doctrine, for reproof, for
HIGHLAND
PARK
7:45 p.m. Evening gospel servTRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH
correction,
for
instruction
in ice. The Missionary society of the
BAPTIST
CHURCH
;
425 Laurel Avenue
righteousness: That man of God church wil sponsor a showing of
486 Central Court
Very Rev. Charles U. Harris
may be perfect, thoroughly fur- the picture ‘“‘South to the Harvest,”
HI 2-2101
nished unto all good works” (11 1a picture of missionary work in
Rector
Rev. Robert Clingman, Minister
HI

That
nature
minion

REDEEMER EV. LUTHERAN
CHURCH
741 Central Avenue
The Rev. William H. Remmert,
pastor

10:30 a.m. Finance committee.
7 p.m. Couples club.
MONDAY, January 26
10 a.m. Confirmation class mothers.
4 p.m. Hebrew classes.
TUESDAY, January 27
4 p.m. Hebrew classes.
8 p.m.
Experimental
Theater

CHURCH
OF CHRIST
SCIENTIST
493 Hazel Avenue

SUNDAY,

ed

Three teachers in Highland Park
were in Wisconsin last weekend
a visit with their families. Mrs.

on
W.

C. Drager of Judson avenue, a
teacher at Lincoln school, was with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. C, |

Filter

of

Anderson,

and

Miss

Janesville.
a

high

Miss

school

Isabelle

Alice |
teacher,

Anderson,

a

speech
correctionist for District
108, spent the week end at Madison with their sister and family,
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Jack.

LEGAL
(Continued

NOTICE
from

page

23)

Winters, Herbert W
Wisconsin Dairy Mart
Witle. Alice &amp; Reta
Wol’, Chester
Wolff, Fred

Wood, Edward E Jr
Wood, Lucile A
Woods, William A
Woolley,
Jimmie V
Worth, Ernest

Yegge,

York, J Robert
Yott, Paul
D
Younglove,
Yous, Charles
.
Zalnle, Thomas
Zally, Joseph W
Zangs, Grace L
Zapf, Joseph F
Zellet, Frank A
Zenko, Louis
Zeutschel,
Zykaski, Stanley
Vant and Selig, Agent
Automobile Ins Co of Hartford
Commercial Union Assur Co Ltd
Commonwealth
Ins Co
Fire Assoc
of Philadelphia
.,
Home
Insurance
Co
Travelers
Fire
Ins
Westchester
Fire
Ins
Co
...,
P Meling, Agent
First Nat’l Ins Co of America
General Ins Co of America ...,
Hartford Fire Ins Co
Ins Co of North America
,..
Northwestern Nat’l] Ins Co ,.
Arthur J Ender, Agent
Hanover Fire Ins Co
W R
Mitchell,
Agent
Patriotic Ins Co
John A Benz, Agent
Sun Insurance Co Ltd
Larry Carr, Agent
Travelers Fire Ins Co
Stockholders
State Bank of Deerfield
Illinois: Bell Telephone Co Dist 109
Do
Do
109
coer ‘ ennee eee
H

_
|
©

|

�PE ee

ty

ala SCL

Mermen

SMT

eeae

M PY MUO Re Oe

from

page

Ei

cms

oe ae ae ne
aT AP DaagSP
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1

ah,
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—

—
-

7
nee

(Continued

spot.

from

page

24)

rolling along by winning their sixth
meet in a row without a loss. The
frosh-soph whipped Proviso, 44-22,

by taking

per cent of his shots. Andy

Ahead

The frosh-soph baby tankers kept

five firsts and

four sec-

son and Bill Bush led the losers
with 18 and 17 points respectively.

the. Little Giants.
The baby Mermen

Ravinia
Standard
was
dealt :a
52-25 setback by Kennedy’s Garden Spot in the third and final
game of the evening. The victory
enabled Kennedy’s to remain in a

were

led

by

undefeated Pete Goelzer who set a
new team and pool record in the
40-yard breaststroke.
Goelzer also
won the 60-yard individual medley
followed by Peter Onderdonk who
came
in second.
Robert Engdahl
remained undefeated by winning a

close race with teammate
wood.

on
and
‘tthe

Engdahl

pulled

the last length.

Ed

away

Roger

Stanto win

Sheahen

Giles Gunn placed one-two in
diving.
Sheahen
still is un-

beaten.
The local boys finished second
and third in both the 40-yard free-

a

URN

See

:

ae

i

sd

x

ro

‘iiabeas,

oe

rae

aN

Pees

B’rith
a

s

9 Standings
WwW
20
20
19

L
16
16
uf

18%
18
17

17%
18
19

...d.........2. 16%

19%

Ee
ep wie? Cos ike.
Highland Ten Pin ..........
Leonard Brown Plumb.
Weathermaster
alousios ke
Mistang Seas. Salt ..........
Ruby Delicatessen ........

Ander-

onds.
The New Trier underclassmen will provide the real test for

*

January

59-48 victory over Moose lodge by
scoring 42 points, high for the
season, in the second game of the
evening. The victory was the fifth
straight for Haven and kept them
in undisputed
first place
in the
league. Joor hit approximately 70

Still

RTS

Highland Park
B‘nai
a

24)

hardt. Bob Stanwood came in second and Jim Barton took the third
Frosh-Soph

Be ROR

DeSoto-Plymouth

vs. Terriers

(Continued

eee

Platt

Luggage

Call us about our season contract
price on snowplowing

Fire Place Wood—Any Size
Louie Tazioli Excavating

OFFICE
HI 2-4662

Richter King Kole
SMUSABO io cha
15
21
High Series, Team
Mistang Seasoning
PreT ie osccs npcaneses 638 673 636—1947
High Series, Individual
Eileen Lewis
91 148 202—441
High Game, Team
Be, Lit Wis OO ines
ties apnea 718

style and the 40-yard backstroke.
Mike Tighe lost a close race with
a Proviso swimmer for first place,
with Kirk Emmert getting the third
spot. Marty Granholm got the second position and Pete Onderdonk
took third in the backstroke.
The
160-yard freestyle relay triumphed
for the
Little
Giants while
the
medley relay lost in a close race.

High Game,
Eileen

Lewis

¥
i

Lr

Individual

sag aetake Mhukses eon bies

GARAGE
Hi 2-6861

VW,

amous — Speedwriting
Shorthand—
Jses ABCs. No Symbols, no machines.
Jsed
in
leading
offices
and
Civil
Service.
First TWO
lessons FREE.
Day and
Evening classes begin first and third Mondays
of each month.

if, e

202

tie for second place. George Kennedy
and Art Weiner
scored
13
points each for the winners while
Richie Baldwin scored 14 for the
losers.

£

EVANSTON
1718

SHERMAN

ke

§

ig

BUSINESS

FREE Employment
Service to Graduates.
Schools
in
over
350
Cities.
100-120
WPM.—
One Low Fee. NO
EXTRA
TUITION.

COLLEGE

AVENUE

UN

4-3004

IMNCUNCUWLE,....

SARA

LE TOOT

T TESS

Os

IGOR

oe meoooeee

CHRYSLER'S
DE LUXE
YORKER

NEW

(Mie Coupe
A great many of you have been waiting for this . . . a swank, sporty Two-Door
Club Coupe with the special flair of the Chrysler New Yorker line.
You'll like its looks. It’s a true Chrysler and acts like one
... Safe, solid, comfortable.

It’s powered by the only new-type engine in any American car. All the
power you can use. More real control and security than you’ve ever felt before,
uptown, downtown, and out-of-town.
Power Steering . . . Power Brakes . . . Fluid-Matic Transmission . . .
they’re here, too. And so are those double-strength Oriflow shock absorbers
that make a road feel as smooth as a dance floor. You know this car will do

what you want it to... . without coaxing.

Stop in soon at your Chrysler dealer’s and discover what the
world’s finest engineering looks like and feels like...
right in your hands!
.ONE

AMERICA’S

OF

FIRST

FAMILY

OF

FINE

CARS

MESIROW
1749
Thursday,

January

22,

1953

FIRST

MOTORS

Inc.
HI 2-2500
Page

27

�S

|

CORE r

See the January Issue of aaa

ae

,

Magazine for 11 Colorful Pages ©

| Fi

MONEY SAVING DISHES WITH BEEF,

&lt;

es
[ase
Oem rm ae
LAO eRe

L, LAMB, PORK AND POULTRY

*

up

warms

day

wintry

cold

Pi

v2.
meot— smartly
nourishing
ae
better, on
e
tast
cuts
best
make the

omy

cuts

more tempting.

aad ee

T

v

¢

:

al ahd

*

BAB

_ARAR

*&amp; AR

WC

oo

|

U.S.

| |

AP re

A

GOVERNMENT

PROTECT

YOUR

Bcag Sold at Malionatssta

GRADED

DPdh,

TO

[-U. S$. GOVERNMENT

Ve

ly TO PROTECT

ROUND or SWISS

Giarerwutt
A
"
STEAKS
u
HAVEL Oreos 19° SIRLOIN STEAKS...
tor 5

S

MARSH SEEDLES

California L

S

G

ri

C

iw

Advertised

Meat Prices
effective
thre
Sef?.,

Fancy—

s

8

hL ere

a

ala

ete

STEAKS
JU
st thru 5th Rib—7" Cut

STEAKS

BEEF POT ROAST. 50°

Fresh,

GA

Fresh,

Lean,

24

ae,

teases’
sy tee

2

7 Re

Oe

rr, 49°

uw. 49°
?
OX TAILS ..... ur, 3d ° PERCH FILLETS sas! the

Cuts

Blade

Cubed

Well

Meaty

Trimmed

Short

Goede
for

Mag

Cut

to Cook

Ready

Four Fishermen

Disjoiated

Wisconsin—Sliced

or

Piece

SWISS CHEESE..... 1, 69°

BEEF TONGUES .u. 49°

J BEEF STEW ...... 69°

a ecoaue, Pree see

Se

—
aau-........
BOLOGNA
STANDING RIB ROAST. 75° si
Best

Silk. 19°

daa,

.u-8Q* ceseamnes *

go 29° PORTERHOUSE QQ: CUBE ~,, 9° eee
it 19°

iS

Lolth

U. S. Government Graded and Stamped “Choice™ Beef

Seater
Florida Grow

CARROT

INSPECTED

OUR

Advertised Staple Grocery Prices
1
a
effective thru Wed.,Jan, 28, while) Tiniyerns
sole supplies last.

DOLLAR BUYS
AT NATIONAL

YOUR
Drip

or

Regular

Grind

Drip

or

Regular

Coffee

MORE

|}: Your’.
od TTT

59

Campbell's

I-Lb

Natco Coffee.

.2 ca; |

a

othe
Mix 'em or
Match 'em | Choice

400

Cans
Te

1

Tomato Juice .10

Bole

12-02

Mix rT -y
barbtod eT)

Gans 400
7

Mix ‘em or § Your
Match 'em §- Choice

Kernel

Whole

Seiden

00

1315-02

Delicious |

WV

Hawalion

)

P

:

Crushed

“cas

Niblets Corn... G cans (°° Pineapple . «24 cans 1%
Chase &amp; Sanborn 2 2° 1° | Pineapple Juice 10 ¢.:5 19°} Golden Corn... .6 “cars 1°°} Tomato Juice . .4 ‘a: 1°
While

Offer

Borden's—Special

Instant Coffee...

Oscor

Raisin

Mayer—with

Sale

_,

Fancy

Dole

és

00

(2-02

a

Brand

Buddies

Lasts

“eee

Hawaiin

No.

303

16

bz

Key—In

Rei

1

Tomato

Sauce

Chopped Ham. . "soc 1°° | Pork &amp; Beans . .10¢:.;'1°°|
CornedBeefHash 4't°1°° | Tomato Soup ..10%%, 1° |
“LD.

Silver

ELEY
Le

1

AMERICAN
FAMILY SOAP
All

°

Heinz

16-0

Skillet

Your
ed TT

.

purpose

bar

Stem.
Sor euhes er

Biease:

ny

[|

| BATH

SOAP

PERSONAL
IVORY

So mild and refresh-

Dig veu® Ghe- WE

For

See

baby's

tender

1°°

white

yom veer Me fo sccm, We

herr

Fancy

Quality

§

For

Fee,

Garden

Early

No.

303

College

No.

303

Stokely’s

46-0

Inn Cocktail |

303

Ho.

Whole

y

5

sj

303

Ho.

Fancy

Monte

Del

Del Monte Spinach 6::.; (°° | Limia Beans . . «4 "cans 1°°
Fancy Soups.. 6 ‘i; 1° Sweel Potatoes .4 {307 (°° |
Heinz

00

or

washing

Q,

LAVA
HAND

your § ¢.,

those

SPIC &amp; SPAN

SOAP

CN ft clean bends.

POWDER

hard-to-feFfor

washing

Syrup

§— Your .
§ Choice

NIGHT AT NATIONAL—STAY ’TIL 9 P. M. EVERY FRIDAY

18-02.

Pack

| hehe

PEL
ale

Be

Mix 'em-or
Chit mee-y |

[7,,_,
Se

your

walls &amp; woodwork.

we 25e | 2se. 59° | 3% 2g | ie 25s.

e

Dulaney's

Mix'emor
Match 'em

HE TT | bebe
ah

.

i

oaks

Campbell's

jf Your
| Choice

SUDSER
flocting

Quality

JOY—LIQUID

SOAP
§ Pure

Fancy

Style

Cream

°

Mix ‘emor
Match ‘em

[| LARGE IVORY]

SOAP

bp ict 2s. | 4 in 23°

SHOP LATE FAMILY

HEE
ty

00

.

rae

Campbell's

bcs
eh TT

Mix ‘em or
Match ‘em

~CAMAY

or

Giant

Del Monte Peas 6*:.:;' 1°° | Green Beans. . .4 ‘cars 1°°

°°" 1° | Sweet Peas ..10't.:° 1°°|

Lb.

Green

e's a National Nea
rve

You

Better

oS Central Ave,

&amp;

Hi —

r

You

f UN Deertioit Road porate
Advervised Perishable
subject te change with

Food Prices
the markets,

to

You More

�OWN’

MiGor

31
31°)
31.

its

Ue: PAVORTG
TH
ccc,
cDonald Plumbing -....
High

Series,

26
126
26

29

+28

18
14

36

B’rith: members

Team

Singer
oran

Prtg. .... 895-815-846—2556
Plbg. ......783-840-814—2437
High Series, Individual
. Labuda
224-153-187—564
Hoffman
197-156-195—548
High

Binger

Game,

to dis-

play their hidden abilities in the
fields. of acting, dancing, singing,
stage assistance and specialties.
John Alexander and Miss Madelyn Wallace again will be director

and choreographer,
the show.

Further

be obtained
man

by

at. HI

other

theater

and

on

sporting

sale

Evanston

North Shore Hotel Lobby, DAvis 8-8282
9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mon. thru Sat.
Closed Sundays

CUCU

SN CURIE

EN EOE

eeae

calling
or

Mrs.

Mrs.

doubles

will

be

in

Street,

“Very

Evanston
SUN

REYNOLDS

later on.
It’s the first inaugural
ever telecast nationally, and the
first big news event for which all

TIMES

‘MY SISTER EILEEN”’
Thomas

networks
have
been able to set
up
independent

coverage

Poston

AGED

Piper

Laurie,

John

Bay Road
HI

2-0440

Payne,

GENESEE

Ann

from

Martin

Don

circuit,

or

Sir

CARTOON

TUES., WED.

°|

60c

THURS.

Jan. 22

“AGAINST ALL FLAGS”
Color

by

Maureen

|

Technicolor

With;

O Hara,

Quinn,

Errol

Anthony

Flynn

SHOW”
FRI. thru WED.

Jan. 27-28-29

“APRIL

“BECAUSE YOU’RE
MINE”
Mario

Lanza,
Doretta
James Whitmore
Color by Technicolor

Starting

Fri.,

“RUBY

Jan. 23-28] —

IN PARIS”

Color by Technicolor
Doris

Morrow,

Day,

Ray

Claude

Jan.

Bolger,

Dauphin

30—

GENTRY”

Coming:

“ROAD

Coming:

TO

BALI”

“PONY

SOLDIER”

|

|

|

THE HIDEOUT

the

Featuring

Chicken
$135

With televi-

TAKE
(10%
@

@

Big

not

brass

open

@

to the

attended

in the basket

Per Order

OUT

off for

PACKAGE

came
dog

of

Lassie,

star?.

Well,

Hollywood

our

Open

from

ORDERS

10 or more

orders)

LIQUORS TO TAKE
FOOD ORDERS

every day

OUT

@

@

@

Highwood,

Ill.

12:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.

Phone
423 Waukegan

HI

2-1870

Ave.

movie

pipeline

from

the movie capital informed us that
he

Cedric

(1

mean

getting

she

she’s

a

. ..

male

| keep

showed up on a local TV program
there the other day. Of course, it

was a dog

food

show...

ERLANGER
SEATS

Every-

the top technicians available.

John

EVISION
Phone

EVE”

&amp; RADIO,

Highland

Park

1858

NOW!

Through

_—

Feb. 21st.
HAYWARD

presents

Pinto(Noketun™

local!
TEL-

First St.

A New Play by PAUL OSBORN

2-0341.

with LEORA

Lake Forest, Illinois — Lake Forest 2106
North Shore’s Most Beautiful Theatre

PAUL HUBER * COLIN
PATRICIA

DEERPATH

!

HENRY FONDA.

Buy

in Highland
Park and get
service at 2OTH CENTURY

4 WEEKS ONLY

LELAND

body’s joining the switch to television. . . so many that service
after the sale is a vital factor to
every buyer. That’s why we maintain our own completely equipped
“service department,
staffed
with

Lewis

BEG. MON., JAN. 26th

for-

impersonator)

Prices:
Eves. (exc. Sunday) —Orch.
Matinees
tse
a3
and
2nd Balc. $1.85, $1.25. All

$5; Balc. $4.40,
Saturday—Orch.
prices incl. tax.

P. MARQUAND

DANA* FRANK CONROY
KEITH-JOHNSTON © ROBERT
SMITH * PHIL ARTHUR |

ROSS

$3.80, $3.10; 2nd Balc. $2.50,
Balc.
$3.80,
$3.10,
$4. 40;

1.85.
2.50;

For the finest in Italian foods
VISIT

FRIDAY,

January

23 thru THURSDAY,

Jan.

WASHINGTON GARDENS

29

ONE WEEK
SUN. thru WED.
Jan. 25-28
Stewart Granger, James
Mason, Deborah Kerr

Romantic Adventure

“THE PRISONER
OF ZENDA”

Sat.

Mat

2 to

4 —

Sun.

Cont.

2 to

TAKE

12

THE SAVAGE
Charlton

Heston

with Susan
29

in

| |. “SUDDEN FEAR”
‘Thursday, January’22, 1953°

When
and

Next

the
the

and

Morrow,
mighty

bravest

of

Our

Own

the

Week—BREAKING

nation
braves

THE

ORDERS

12:00 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Draught Beer 10c, Bottle
Beer 25c, Shots 25c, Mixed
Drinks 40c

Joan

Taylor

:

Peter Hanson

Sioux

OUT

ruled
was

the

great

a white

man.

SOUND

BARRIER

Package

COCKTAIL HOURS
SUNDAY AFTERNOON

in Technicolor

in Technicolor
Jan,

DAY

Based on the Novel by JOHN

“THE
LUSTY MEN”

Joan: Crawford

LAST

1:30

Love and adventure
the Bigtime Rodeo

| Starts THURS.

&amp; THURS.,

more

on

the major auto, electric and beverage companies, and they were
very interested.
Did you ever wonder what be-

Jon. 25-26
JACKS”
Jerry

of course,

public.

DeFore

Blyth, Edmund Gwenn,
Mcintire, Pauline. Lee

NOW thru SATURDAY
Susan Hayward, Robert
Mitchum, Arthur Kennedy
in

Curtis,

and

6—40e,

around the country. It was a closed

Arlene Dahl,
Hardwicke

Coming Soon:
“BECAUSE OF

WAUKEGAN
Daily

2:30

TUES., WED. &amp; THURS. Jan. 27-28-29
“SALLY AND SAINT
ANNE”

Hollywood’s Choice Films

Continuous

Tony

teen

sion, you sit right in on history in
the making.
Another use for television was
demonstrated
nationally
a
few
weeks ago by a carpet manufacturing company.
They hired the
nation’s theater television circuit
and held a sales meeting of their
men
in seventeen
show
palaces

2-6228

SUN. and MON.
“JUMPING
Dean

i}.

from

each
nethaving fif-

owner's point of view.

FRI. and SAT.
Jan. 23-24
“CARIBBEAN”

Saratoga
Highwood

Sunday

to

Holidays,

23-26

Children’s
Matinee,
Saturday,
Jan. 24 at 2:00 P.M.

big .
. and expensive operation,
but ‘well worth it, from this set

THURSDAY
Jan. 22
“NO ROOM FOR THE
GROOM”

STEAKS

—

Show

Jan.

Spencer Tracy, Gene Tierney,
Van
Johnson,
Leo
Genn
Color by Technicolor

aa
scene .
. and
crews numbering hundreds of the
top TV men in the land. A really

HIGHWOOD
THEATRE
HI

:

with
work

cameras

Curtain: 8:30 (Sun. 7:30), Sat. Mat. 2:30,
Eve.
Eves. (Exe. Sat.) $2, $1.50, ve Ts
$2.50, $2, $1.50. Sat. Mat. $1.5 0, $1. No
performance Mondays.
MAIL ORDERS ACCEPTED.
Box Office open daily, 10 a.m.9 p.m.

Continuous

1:30
&amp;

6

of the four major

JAN. 27 THRU FEB. 8
Make Reservations Now!

FINEST

MON.,

FIFTEEN COLOR CARTOONS
All Your Favorite Comics

of the U. S. will probably go down
as the No. 1 television story of
1953—no matter what is in store

8-7440

funny’’——Kogan,

Sat.,

at

’

the

DAvis

SUN.,

2-0605

“PLYMOUTH

Special

The coverage of Dwight Eisenhower’s inauguration as President

with

‘THEATRE

SAT.,

Hoff-

Herbert

THROUGH JANUARY 25
Coming “Good Housekeeping”

440 Green

FRI.,

Park

Mon.-Fri.
40c to 6:30

Sun.

“ALL

Central

PARK

e

Adams .at HI 2-2736.

1716

Open

Dial HI 2-2400

With

played

7:30 p.m.
Ten Pin.

THE

HIGHLAND

may

Uproarious Comedy STARRING
Patsy Kelly and Kay Westfall

| .

PESOS

Highland

ADVENTURE”

213

“Sinatagia:

1

at

Ticket Service

By JOHN

FOR

events,

ALCYON |) GLENCOE|

Individual

(80k leslie,

Fanuary
31 at
Highland Park

avsiiees

BANANA”

respectively, of
information

2-2364

GIRL”

"GIGI" — “TOP
“STALAG 17”

895—846

Game,

. Labuda
MOIMOR SOY.

- Mixed.

are invited

“THE COUNTRY

Team

Printing
High

Auditions for the Suburban B’nai
B’rith’s annual musical comedy are
scheduled for Sunday at 4 p.m. in
the home of Mrs. Raphel Hoffman,
All.
B’nai
124 Green Bay
road.

e Rae
REE
B REESE

MOUS
EAGUOLS: fi.5..
8 cous
itchell Builders ........
Ute Coal iis

L
19%
2014

i alipueiievenenenaiar

SSCS

eam
Ww.
oran Plumbing ............ 3744
Binger Printing ................ 33%

RRR

January 12 Standings

TICKETS

EEE

|

P cereneueiven i

SSSR

Bowling Scores

et

Hold Liditinns For
B’nai B’rith Show
Sunday Afternoon

eueeie

HP Elks League

plains

.

Liquors

PIZZA
LAZAGNA
pee

i
mappa

Full Dinners or Carry
Orders

9
Out

SPECIAL—Every Wednesday

ALL YOU MOSTACCIOLI DINNER—*]00°
CAN

550

WASHINGTON GARDENS |

EAT

Green

Bay

Road

HI 2-9787

HIGHWOOD

�oF Se
Date

Neee eet
a
Bae

WN

Pe

AR
ey

GO ee te
biasLSpee

eee,

A

APES

4

1

Exercise Your
Tired Feet

Book Group To Meet Monday

Ropiequet

Mrs.
Marshall
Paskind,
473
Broadview avenue, will be hostess
to the ORT book group next Janu-

Thomas
Edward
is
child of Mr. and Mrs.

ary 26th

at 12:30.

George

Muscles and nerves in the
feet become just as tense as
they do in other parts of the
body,
special
foot
exercises
will

often

them.

nd

Be,

Almost

exercises

tl
syoo,
s

relieve

cellent

will

and

any

book

on

afford

some

ex-

in

Mrs.

Richard

Paskind.

et

Shaw’s

will
R.

be

Seeger

Inquiries

“Don

analyzed
and

relative

by
Mrs.

to

be made of Mrs.
HI 2-5446.

the

was

land

are

Park

W.

Ill.,
of

1807

born

Thursday

5, and

and

Mrs.

His

Percy

High-

brothers

of East

Skokie

place

in

Charles,

Ropiequet

603

Beverly

hospital.

John,

R.

I. M.

of

3.

St.

H.

Mrs.
Louis,

Prior

Sr.

are

the

avenue

grandparents.

ones.

flower Buy of the Week

Doctors
recommend
other
ways of relieving tired feet
such as changing shoes more
often, going barefoot around
the house, and taking foot
baths.

fee

Hell’

group may
Greenberg,

relax

who

Bernard

Juan

Ropiequet

the third
Arthur C.

Continual

Archdiocesan

Council

Women

Wednesday

next

Mary’s

hall,

Large

woe. 85¢

Philodendron

|!

Regular

a doctor.
If he
prescribes
medicinal products purchase
them from a responsible druggist.

$1.25

Lake

vention

Catholic

in

St.

projects,

civic

endeavors.

will hear
a
talk
on
of the National Con-

in Seattle,”

Desch of
president.

Value

of

Forest.

charitable

community

Members
“Highlights

Only

Lemuel

District Lake of the Council will
hold its regular meeting of the winter series at 2 p.m. at the Church of
St. Mary diocese.
Mrs. Rafferty is
one of several
district
chairmen
who will give reports. Others will
cover spiritual works,
intellectual
and

SPECIAL
This Week
Size

Obituaries

Mrs. Alex Rafferty Jr.
of
628
Laurel avenue will give a report
on study clubs at a meeting of the

pursuits,

trouble with your

feet should prompt you to see

Mrs. Rafferty Jr.
To Give Report To
Archdiocesan Group

by Mrs.

Evanston,

A. G.

archdiocesan

Highland

CHASE

&amp;

SANBORN
Reg.

—Pharmacists—

moving

able

and

opportunities

HI 2-3420

Park

653 Laurel Ave.

matter

what

you

want

to

buy

“Hard-to-find”’ items there at moneyprices!

elsewhere.

Read

them

GOLD

Drip

HILL

| SUNSET’S

Grind

ELBERTA

active

which

time

Park.
Mr.

away

as

places.

$1.25
a

well

PURE,

and

la

Dinner

carte.

MANY
AT

Service

Lunch

from

$2.50.

Sat.

MARVELOUS
GRACE

far
Also

HERBST

furnishforward

to this annual January Sale. Even
though
the
month
is half gone,
there are still many, many splen-

did

values

in

Lamps,

Shades,

Sil-

ver, Glass, China, Pottery, Occasional Furniture. (I bought such a
gorgeous Photograph Frame). 563

Lincoln,

Tin

a.

8 5c

_

than

the

“low

price”

cars.

Just ask Fido where he wants to
stay while you go away on your
winter vacation. Suggest a lot of
ideas and you’ll get no response.

But

when

Kennels”

ecstacy

you
he

of

say
will

barking,

“Butterworth
go

into

tail

wagging

and
pawing
you, while
his
speak volumes. Butterworth
nels is every Dog’s
choice.

an
eyes
KenBest

Boarding facilities. 2810 Park Ave.
(West of Skokie). HI 2-1352.

Ruth Webeficld

Adv.

ie Y

sé

Page 30
Boalt4:

of the

Lodge

of Chi-

of the Ancient Fre
Masons;
a member

NO.

1 Selected

POTATOES
Fancy

10 ips. 09°

Florida
Doz.

4. 9

SOUTHERN

STAR

DEL
3

FRESH
TOMATOES

a

for 25¢

MONTE

LIPTON’S

Tube 2 3 c

2

JUICE

TOMATO

VEGETABLE

NOODLE

SOUP

CENTRELLA

COLOSSAL

SUGAR

Green

PASCAL
CELERY ....

RICE

14-oz. Pkg.

19¢

46-oz. Can

29¢

BONITA

PINEAPPLE

Ripe

Criso

BEN’S

1-Ib. tall can 69c

C

Juice

FLORIDA
GRAPEFRUIT
Red

UNCLE
SOLID

Ee 4 AEA

OR

MIX

PEAS

Stalks 29¢

2

Pkg. of 3 35 ¢
No. 303 Tins

LIPTON’S

ORANGE

PEKOE
Pkg.

AGED

AGED

STEAKS

SIRLOIN

or PIN

Frozen
s

FRESH

N. Y. DRESSED

STEWING

Pure Fresh GROUND
MORRELL

VEAL

ROAST.

Fresh Drawn

Boned, Tied

FRIDAY

7Q¢

757 Central
NIGHT IS FAMILY

FOR
SUNSHINE

Devils Cake

Broilers

SUNSET

PKG. 39¢

Lb. 49c

Lb.

Food Specials

Chopped
12-oz. PEAS
10-oz. CORN

BEEF -.. Lb. 49¢
1-Ib. Cello,

FOOD
Avenue
NIGHT

Eye

14-oz. FROZEN
SPINACH
12-oz. MIXED VEGETABLES
10-oz. BROCCOLI, Cuts or

YORKSHIRE

BACON
LEG

Lb. A5¢

HENS

TEA

33c

2le

Birds

BONE

35¢

PEKOE TEA BAGS
16’s_

U. S. CHOICE

besides

Chi

his wi-

brother,
John
Portor
Libertyville, Ind.; and

Raymond

Mott

Kathleen

Lake

Bradley

avenue

Forest

Col.)

Calkins
Calkins

died Sunday

hospital.

William

Chaplain

B. Sharp,

USA.

chapel

of

Trinity

Burial was

Episcopal

in Rosetill

mau-

Born in Port Huron, Mich., Mrs.
Calkins was the daughter
of the
late James
Bradley,
who
was
a

RED ALASKA SALMON ---

FRUITS AND VEGETABLES |
U.S.

survivors

of the

CENTRELLA

ORANGE

YOUR DOG WILL GIVE
AN INTELLIGENT ANSWER

a member

Masonic

LIPTON’S

%4-lb.

More

a

soleum, Chicago. Kelley and Spalding were in charge of funeral arrangements.
;

Winnetka.

power,
more
luxurious
interiors,
a finer ride. Better go and see the
new
models
at
Kleeburg
Buick
where they will give you a mighty
good trade-in on your present car.
1732 First St. HI 2-4800.

ago

to Highland

grandchildren.

the

DID YOU HEAR
ABOUT 1953 BUICK?
You'll
hardly
believe
your
eves
when you see the price tags on the
beautiful
new
Buicks.
Do
you
realize
that
it costs
only
$2248
to have the new Buick “Special”
delivered; just a few dollars more

He retired
years

was a veteran member
cago Rotary club.

church.

“Nea,

Oj

Sweet

SALE

Those who love beautiful
ings for their home look

was

of Fort Sheridan officiated at private services Tuesday afternoon in

VEGETABLE

ONION SOUP MIX.

ORANGES

VALUES

two

was

he

ley of Chicago; and of the Noble
of the Mystic Shrine, Chicago.
He

Mrs.

TEMPLE

nites.

View

of 382 Central

CRISCO

from

from

Dancing

ALL

3-lb.

people

Mon

for a Toledo,

he moved

cago, No. 774
and Accepted

(Lt.

IT’S JUNE
IN JANUARY

as

work

Smock

Lake

in

folk

where

Ohio, firm for 42 years.
from

Mrs.

No. 212 Tin 29¢

now!

Ah yes, it might as well be Spring!
Perfectly
delightful
weather
for
driving out to Villa Moderne
by
day or by nite. For nineteen years
the Villa has been the favorite dining place for fastidious North Shore

Chicago

Detroit; a
Smock of

PEACHES

avail-

oun Tall

said

dow, Betty, are a daughter, Mrs,
Gertrude Esdale of the same ad:
dress; two
sisters,
Mrs.
Edwaré
Behringer and Mrs. Edna Mace of

save at

COFFEE

or

2-Ib. Tin $1 69

not

to

district representative

two

values

were

550 Green Bay road, who died Sun
day night in Lake County sanitor.
ium, Waukegan.
Burial
was
private.: He had been confined to the
sanitorium
for the past five
months.
Mr. Smock was
born
April
1,
1886 in
Famersburg,
Ind.,
late

Other

Earl W. Gsell &amp; Co.

Ads offer amazing

services

day afternoon in Seguin funeral
home for Lemuel H. Smock, 66, of

also of the Chicago Consistory, ValNo
saving

Only the Want

H. Smock

Masonic

su? 35¢
&lt;

president of the Chicago Board
Trade.
She
.was a member

of
of

Trinity

Episcopal church and Knoll
wood
club
of Lake
Forest.
Her
husband, a Chicago executive, preceded
her in death in 1938. Mr.
Calkins’
father,
the late Ransom
Calkins,
was
a president of th
Milwaukee railroad.
Survivors
are
two
daughters,
Mrs. Charles E. Ware of Mundelein
and Mrs. William C. Egan of Lake
Bluff; and six grandchildren.

Mrs.

Rude

E. Kozak

Mrs. Rude E. Kozak, 60, of 471
Comstock place died Tuesday night
in Lake County General hospital,
Waukegan,

ness.

after

Funeral

will

take

Ala.

Final

made

a

prolonged

services

place

in

and

Birmingham,

arrangements

upon

the

ill-

burial |
will

be

of

the

arrival

Kozaks’ daughter, Mrs. A. D. Roper,

j

Birmingham.

from

Mrs.
1892,

Kozak was born May 4,
in
Milwaukee,
attended

Northwestern

graduated
Alabama.
Highland

university

from
The
Park

the

and

was

University

Kozaks
in 1927,

came

of
to

Survivors besides her husband
and daughter are Mrs. Christopher
Reimer, her mother, Mrs. Edward
McQueen, a sister, both of Milwaukee;

and

two

grandchildren.

Manhart

MART

— A Central Food Store
AT SUNSET — STORE OPEN

‘TILL 9 P.M.

PLENTY OF PARKING SPACE

Mr. and Mrs. Steven Manhart Jr.
of 2449

Highmoor

road

ents of a daughter,
who

was

born

are the par-

Kathleen

Friday

in

Lake

Vida,
For-

est hospital.
The Manharts have
two other children, Steven II, 10,
and Linda Marie, 6. Mr. and Mrs.
Steven Manhart Sr.
of
Clinton,
Ind., and Mr. and Mrs. John Berg-

horst of Pipestone,
grandparents.

Minn.,

are the

‘Thursday, January 22,1953

�PHONE YOUR
WANT ADS
Deerfield

485
and Charge It!
REAL

WANT AD RATES
20 words
$350
for only ...... I
5¢ each additional word
‘(For

This

55

Words

or

New spacious 3 bdrm. brk. Ranch; 2 tile
baths, 2 car garage, full bsmt. Good location.
R. K. EBERSOLE REALTY
830 Woodward
Deerfield 1049
REAL

the

insertion in all 4 papers.
® Deerfield Review
® Highland Park News

® Highwood

(Improved)

REAL

ESTATE
FOR SALE
Highland Park)

FIRST
THREE

ESTATE
FOR
(Highland

SALE
Park)

(Improved)

HOME
AND
INCOME
$ apt. buildings in good location;
necome, $415
per month. $30,000;
-erms. For info. call

ANCHOR
HI

REAL

2-0093.,

res.

grossa
good

ESTATE

H1

TIME

OFFERED

BEDROOM

Bungalow,

kitchen,

1

bedroom

EARHART

AND

REALTORS
Sheridan Rd.

spic
well

UNDER

LLOYD
HI

ESTATE
FOR
(Highland

SALE
Park)

White
wooded

2-11880 | 1%

shingle

baths,

Three

excellent

in

nicely

bedrooms,

closet

space.

WHAT MORE COULD ONE ASK?
OWNER
offers 5 room
frame house; 2
Two houses for the price of one. Liv. rm.,
bedrooms, full basement, deep lot, gadin. rm., kit., scr. por., on first; 3 bdrms., Inexpensive maintenance.
rage. Near schools and transportation,
one
bath
on
second;
automatic
heat;
$16,500. Shown by appointment; phone
AND R. ANSPACH,
INC.
bsmt., 3 car gar., AND
there is a nice H.
Want Ads will be accepted up to
evenines only, HI 2-1259.
four
room
gas
heated
cottage
on
the 463 Central Avenue.
HI 2-1212
TO
settle estate.
Recently
re-modeled
grounds which will bring income to help
8-rm. house. 2 baths and sun porch, 75 pay for your home. Both houses in good
ft. front; east side, near both lake and
condition; convenient
to schools, trans- LIKE new Ranch style home; living-dinfor Publication in the Current
business.
Call
owner
evening
HI
ing room
combination, brk. fireplace,
portation
and
shopping.
Price,
$22,00.
2-3707.
birch
kitchen,
8 larve bedrooms,
tile
Week’s Issue
,/Call
Mrs.
Graham,
HI
2-5842
or
HI
bath
and
shower,
full basement,
at2-7278.
BY owner. 2 bedrooms, 13x20 living room
tached
breezeway
and
2 car garage.
with
fireplace, dining
room,
kitchen,
By owner, HI 2-5994.
ceramic tile bath, screened porch, baseREALTY CO.
ment,
2 car garagé.
Price,
$15,500.
Call HI 2-2514.
584 Central Ave., HI 2-5842 or HI 2-7278 REAL
ESTATE FOR SALE (Improved)
Call any of these numbers
REDUCED
FOR
QUICK
SALE
(Deerfield)
6
room
Colonial,
12
yrs:
old;
Sherwood
and ask for a Want Ad
Forest. Listed at $28,500; will accept
FIRST TIME OFFERED
HIGHLAND
PARK
Taker
2 bdrm. frame home in excellent condi$24,500. Shown
by appt. 1775 SouthThinking
of building?
Well,
you
will tion. Large liv..rm., kit., and bath; full
land Ave., HI 2-5224,
Deerfield 485
change your mind when you see this year bsmt. with recr. rm.; oi] ht., gar., screen
old 3 bdrm. brk. Ranch home with every
peh.
Owner
moving:
priced
for
quick
Highland Park 2-4500
modern convenience. Orchard stone pan- sale, $14,500. Easy financing.
HIGHLAND
PARK
Jelled
frpl. in a beautiful lge. liv.-dinette
SKOKIE
HWY.
FRONTAGE
RD.
Lake Forest 2300
tile bath. lots 2 story frame home, close to all conveniConcrete
block
Ranch
home.
Office
in comb., cab. kit., ceramic
basement. Zoned business. F.A. oil heat; of closet space. U.S. radiant oi] ht. in ences. Ist flr., liv, rm.-din. rm. comb., kit.
floors
and
ceiling.
Heating
costs under and pch. 2nd
flr., 2 bdrms.
and
bath;
| 5 rooms, 1 bath, Low 20’s. MRS, CREN$100: low taxes. Att. oversize gar. Lan- bsmt.,
SHAW.
oil
ht., gar.
$13,750.
scaped;
exclusive
neighborhood.
Under
615 Waukegan Road
$23,000. Call us for an appt.
576 Lincoln Ave.
Winnetka, III.
HIGHLAND PARK
701 Waukegan. Rd., Deerfield 984 or 985
NEW
LISTING
Winnetka
6-2700
BRiargate
4-9001
1775 St. Johns Ave.
WHITE
BRK.
RANCH
just
completed.
Liv.-din. rm. comb., knotty pine panelled
LAKE FOREST
SHERWOOD FOREST
frpl., picturesque
mod.
kit., 2 bdrms.;
New
brick
and
frame
Ranch
home
on one can be partitioned to make 38rd.: tile
287
Deerpath
landscaped
lot. Living room
with
fire- bath with shower. Att. oversize gar., oi] 2 flat building, 5-5. Live rent free: tenant
place, full size dining room, cabinet kitch- F.A.
ht.; white
fence
with
lamp
post. pays housing expenses. $5,000 cash will
en, 3 bedrooms, tile bath and basement.
Convenient shopping, transp. and schools. handle.
in midd'e 20’s.
$24,500.
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE (Improved) Real value
TREMENDOUS OFFER
;
IF YOU PLAN TO BUILD
(LAKE FOREST)
&amp; CO., Realtors |; Only $14,500 for lovely 4 rm. brick home
see
Sherwood
Forest,
a new
and
fast R.S. HAMBLY
with
natural
fireplace.
It’s
vacant
now,
growing area. Large lots, many beautiful723
St. Johns
Ave.
at Roger Williams
NEW brick ranch home; three bedrooms,
come
in
and
get
nosey.
ly wooded, with all improvements in and HI
2-1484
Eves.
HI
2-1485
fireplace, full basement. Good location
paid for. Reasonably priced.
in Lake Forest; immediate possession. | :
DEERFIELD
635 Waukegan
Rd.
Deerfield
161
grt
Thomas Pester, Lake Forest Fine
brick
home
in estate
area.
First
DO YOU WANT A
floor has large living room with fireplace,
RANCH HOUSE?
attractive dining room, step saving kitchHOME
OF
BEAUTY
en, bright study, and powder room. Sec- We have one to meet your requireond floor has 4 bedrooms and 2 ceramic
One
of
North
Shore’s
most
beautiful
This
lannon
stone
and
clapboard
10 en oe cee
property 100x300. Tip- ments.
Ranch
houses.
Spacious.
liv.-din.
rm.
room
residence
has all the charm
and
op con
on and
very
reasona
comb.
with picture
window
overlooking
BRICK &amp; LANNON STONE: Liv. lge. yd., 2 twin size bdrms., 2 baths, pansimplicity of the Early American design. at $44,500.
x
eo
ROBERT
L.
JOHNSON
Located
on a large
wooded
and _ landREALTY
CO. rm.
din. rms kits, 32) barms.;: 134 elled den, most mod. utility rm. off kit.,
1608
Berkeley
Road
scaped lot on a short street in a choice
bsmt.;
Briarwoods area. $39,500.
HI
2-6200
baths; room for expansion of 2 or
6-3809
residential district insures peace and pri- Winnetka
Deerfield
308
vacy.
NEW
OFFERING
3 rms.; screened
pch., pnid. rec.
} Well built 3 yr. old brk. Ranch. Comb.
_On the 1st floor are large living room,
rm. ALL FOR $29,500.
liv.-din.
rm.
with
frpl.,
2 bdrms., cab. kit.;
dining room with bay, kitchen with dinEXCLUSIVE DEER PARK
full
bsmt.,
gas
ht.,
gar.
Corner
lot.
ing area, 2 bedrooms, sitting room and
White brick tri-level Overlooking lake. 3 MODERN
DELUXE
RANCH
—
Price, $19,500.
bath. On 2nd floor are 4 bedrooms, TV
bdrms.,
2 baths, Ige. family
rm., 2 car Owner built. Loads of custom made
room, snack bar and 2 baths. 2 car atattached garage. In the early 40's.
tached garage. Property in excellent rebuilt-ins; large rooms; easy housepair. Price just reduced to $49,500.
keeping;
low
maintenance
near
712
Glencoe
Rd.
Glencoe
1971
813
Waukegan
Rd.
trans.
OWNER
MUST
SELL.
Deerfield 1573 or 1572
Here is a blend of Monterey and Old
$35,000.
NEW 3 BDRM. RANCH
New
Orleans
with a dash of Absinthe.
and cedar shingle, att. gar., IN BEAUTIFUL BRAESIDE: Brick For countryside living. 2 new 8 bedroom
This lovely brick residence with its lace Stone
like iron-work balcony, a replica of The panelled
liv. rm. with stone frpl. &amp; Redwood construction; 30 ft. liv. Ranch homes, reasonable. By appt. only.
ine lovely larger home; other homes and
Old Absinthe House offers a warmth of
Lge.
wood
panelled kit., 1% baths, | rm., large din. rm., BIRCH
real southern comfort. On the lst floor |
kit., ots.
are living room
and dining
room, both pull-down
stairway to attic; dec- | bkfst. rm., 3 bdrms., den or 4th
R. K. EBERSOLE REALTY
with
beautiful
bow
windows,
study
Deerfield
1049
orated. $22,500: Call Mrs. Fagen, bdrm., rec. rm., with fireplace; 2 830 Woodward
and
bath,
kitchen,
bright
breakfast
room, maids room and bath. Upstairs are HI 2-6229.
car garage.. $54,500.
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE (Improved)
3 bedrooms, dressing room and 2 baths.
(Miscellaneous)
Recreation room in basement; 2 car atFor appointment to see these and
tached
garage. New
3 stall stable with
others
we
have
for
sale,
call:
emall
pasture
in Kentucky
Blue
Grass
HIGHLAND
PARK
enclosed by post and rail fence. Call us
RINGER REALTY COMPANY
for an appointment to see this most atHIGHLAND
PARK
457
Central
HI
2-6600
tractive property.
A charming well located Colonia] home
containing
4 bedrooms,8 baths,
small
den. Immediate possession. Considerately
MOVE
RIGHT
IN
On over an acre of nicely landscaped
Brick, 18x24 liv. rm., large din. rm., mod.
priced
at $388,500.
This lovely home was built 10 yrs. ago kit., breakfast rm., sun porch, screened
and wooded property. There are 3 bedBrick and clapboard just 10 years old. when the best of materials and workmanrooms,
2 baths.
Beautiful
large
living
porch, unusual powder rm.; 2nd floor has
4 bedrooms, 2 baths, screened porch; at- ship were available. There’s a bdrm. and 4 bdrms., 8 baths and maids
room and adjoining all-purpose room with
rm.; full
tached
garage.
Rec. room.
Double
lot bath on the lst floor and 2 bdrms. and basement, 2 car attached heated garage,
fireplace wall. Gas heat. Thermopane winwith
play
house.
An
excellent
buy
at bath on the 2nd floor. All the extras are circle driveway. Lot has 150 ft. frontage;
dows. Cork floors. 2 car attached garage.
$34,500.
present, such as separate din. rm., breakLow taxes. Priced to sell now.
many
more extras you should see.
fast nook in kitchen, screened porch, atGLENCOE
DONALD N. ANDERSEN, REALTOR
tached garage and basement; large woodA handsome red brick home on a large ed
697
Vernon
Ave.
Glencoe
2113
lot in very
desirable
neighborhood.
lot in a prestige
location, Large living Priced right, $30,000. Call Mrs. McClure,
260 EAST
DEERPATH
room,
dining
room,
sun
room,
breakfast
LAKE
FOREST 616
HI 2-5821
or HI 2-7278.
“REAL ESTATE FOR SALE (Vacant)
room, modern kitchen, powder room. 2nd
(Highland Park)
floor:
4 family
bedrooms
and 2
tiled
baths, plus maids room and bath; 2 car
THE BEAUTIFUL
FOR
sale
by
owner: two 80 foot wooded
attached garage. Priced in low 50’s.
LAKE BLUFF TERRACE
lots in choice location. Will sacrifice at
584 Central Ave., Hi 2-7278—-HI 2-1215
$30
per
foot.
Telephone Highland Park
IS NOW MOVING
2-3051.
We are building homes to order
WHITE brick on wooded lot, near lake;
Glencoe 286
8 twin bedrooms,
1%
baths,
beamed
and have choice lots 65 ft., 70 ft. Glencoe Theater Bldg.
ceilings, wood paneling, screen porch, FOR quick sale by owner, beautiful deep
&amp; 75 ft. by 160 ft.
wooded lot; east side location. $50 per
attached
garage,
basement
recreation
HIGHWOOD
foot front. HI 2-2462.
(Take Green Bay road north from
room.
$15,000;
mortgage
available.
TWO HOMES FOR PRICE OF ONE
Mortgage
investigator
says,
“Big
barLake Forest, ignoring detour, to 2 bdrm. house with full basement; lovely
gain for someone.”
$26,500
or offer.
REAL
ESTATE
FOR SALE
(Vacant)
N. Sheridan Place, then 2 blocks 3 rm. cottage in rear. Immediate possesCall owner, HI 2-4993.
(Deerfield)
sion of both buildings, priced for quick
east to model home.)
VERY
livable 5 room
frame house offered by owner, near school and trans- FOR sale on Grand Avenue in Deerfield,
PHONE
Lot 63x142;
price, $1,250.
Telephone
portation; ideal for couple with 1 or 2
Thomas
Pester, Lake Forest
503.
LAKE BLUFF 1771 &amp; 3632
.emall children. HI 2-4778,
635 Waukegan Rd,
Deerfield 161

® The Lake Forester

SnA

a

en

Tuesday 4:30 p.m.

PR

PRE

NR

SSSA

DEERFIELD

BAIRD

&amp; WARNER,

INC.

CARR

|

REALTY CO.

HOME WITH INCOME

VIKING

REALTY

CO.

“CONNECTICUT COLONIAL

LANG

OLD

ABSINTHE

REAL

BENJ. PIERSEN
REALTY CO.

ESTATE

HOUSE

ADLER &amp; MAXON
1896 Sheridan Rd.
HI 2-1834

6 ROOM

HART,

BRICK

SHAW

&amp;

GLENCOE—SKOKIE HEIGHTS
YOU HAVEN'T SEEN THIS
ONE!
’ NEW OFFERING

RANCH

COMPANY

BENJ. PIERSEN
REALTY CO.

S. L. GOODFRIEND AND
REALTOR

Me KING REALTY CO.

Thursday,
t
j

;

k

January

22, 1953

CO.

LOANS

—

8-084

STORES
&amp; STUDIOS
TO RENT

THREE large rooms with north light on
ground floor of RK Building, Deerfield; _
can be divided. Rent, $50. Call BRunswick
2-1296
or UNderhill
7-8126.
For rent, immediate possession, heated
store, approximately 17%4x55. 1925 Sheridan Road.
Also nice light space suitable for pro432 East
fessional
or business
office.
Park
Ave. Inquire HI 2-0338.
oeanata

ee

APARTMENTS TO RENT
(Unfurnished)
(Highland Park)
LARGE,

attractive

ond

BENJ. PIERSEN

TELEPHONE
WANT AD SERVICE

THE

MA

OFFICES,

All first class condition. Oil heat. 1
car attached garage. Full basement.

News

FIRST MORTGAGE

rates
on
Ample
funds available at low
a
Long
well
located residential properties.
terms—prepayment
privileges.
FIRST
FEDERAL
SAVINGS
AND
LOAN
ASSOCIATION
216 Madison Street
Waukegan

$20,000
colonial

section.

MORTGAGES

(Improved)

$17,000 OR BEST OFFER
Buys year old Cape Cod frame dwelling
at 997
Harvard
Ct.
Full
basement,
5
rooms and bath on Ist floor; plus stairway to large unfinished 2nd floor. Beautiful neighborhood.
Shown
by appt.
JOHN LEONARDI, REALTOR
PHONE
HI
2-2468
OR 2-0596

located for den, full basement, 2
car garage. A good buy, $16,800.
Contact Bob Earhart.

1899

2-0037

REAL

(Improved)

and span in every detail. Ravinia
location; large living-dining comb.,

spacious

Less)

cost will cover

ESTATE
FOR
SALE
(LAKE
FOREST)

floor,

4-rm.

with

apartment,

heated

~

sec-

sun-porch.

Choice
location,
close-in,
east
side.
Newly
re-decorated.
Rental
includes
automatic oil heat, light, gas, hot water, electric
refrigerator,
gas
stove,
laundry privileges. Protected yard and
drive. Call owner, HI 2-3707 evenings.
THREE
ment,
ping.

room modern unfurnished apartclose to transportation and shop.
Call HI 2-1764 after 6 p.m.

—

TWO
house apartments.
4 new
rooms;
combination kitchen. new full bath and
entrance porch in each apartment ; kitchen
and bath
decorated;
heat, water,
yard
space
and
full
bsmt.
included.
$130.
Open
for
inspection
daily,
383
Burtis Place, Highwood. HI 2-1732 before 8 a.m. and after 6 p.m.
THREE
room
unfurnished
kitchenette
apartment, 2nd floor. $125. Heat and
hot water furnished. 442 Central Ave.,
H.P., HI 2-1842.
SIX rooms;
3 bedroom
Ist floor apartment and garage; oil ht. Good location.
Available
February
1st.
$100.
Call
agent, HI 2-0474.

APARTMENTS TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(Deerfield)
THREE
room
apartment
in
Deerfield.
Heat, light, gas, water. $65. HI 2-4476 _
between 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.

APARTMENTS

TO

(Highland

RENT

Park)

(Furnished
s

NICELY
furnished
6 room
apartment,
near transportation and stores; adults
preferred. HI _2-6373.
TWO
AND
ONE-HALF
room
furnished
apartment,
1st floor, for couple only.
Call before 1 p.m., HI .2-4716.
TWO
room
apartment
for
rent,
close
to transportation.
Call at 4 p.m., HI
_ 2-5965.
rm.
furnished
apartment,
FOUR
near
transportation
and
shopping
district.
HI 2-3203.
room furnished apt. close to town, |
TWO
suitable for single person or employed
couple. $16 per week. Phone HI 2-4515. —
APARTMENTS
TO
RENT.
(Furnished)
(LAKE
FOREST)
2

suite (including sitting room),
ROOM
twin beds; kitchen and
light laundry
privileges. Prefer working couple. Ref1855.
Bluff
Lake
Telephone
erences.

LARGE,

clean

1 and

2

room

furnished

kitchenette
apartments,
$15
and $20
per
week
or on
monthly
basis.
314
Wisconsin Avenue, Apartment 4, Lake
Forest.

—
—
—
}

enemas

HOUSES

TO
RENT
(Furnished)
(Highland Park)

BUNGALOW,
2 bdrms.,
large
garage;
2 or 3 yr. lease, $125 monthly. June
ist occupancy. Selling custom furniture,
$950, including
carpeting and drapes.
HI

2-6784.
aS

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

WANTED:

8 room ranch home by private

party;
will buy
or rent.
Write
Box
E-5 c/o Highland
Park News.
bamonth
5
and
OFFICER, wife
ARMY

by

want

to

rent

modern

unfurnished

2 bedroom house or apartment within
commuting
distance Ft. Sheridan; no
pets, excellent care of property. Write
Box D-5 c/o H.P. News.

FURNISHED

ex-

in

wanted

apartment

change for one day’s duties and baby
sitting for couple
with
child.
Write
Box D-15 c/o H.P. News.

PRODUCT

engineer, wife,

like 2 bedroom
Will pay up to
mette 5808.

COUPLE
or

5

with ® month

room

references.

unfurnished

HI

1 child would

house
or apartment.
$100. Telephone Wil-

2-5481

old child need 4
apt.

except

or

house;

Fridays.

Page

31

—

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

HELP

NAVAL
captain, and wife (no children),
on permanent duty, desire 2 bedroom
apartment or house, unfurnished. DEIta 6-3500, extension 830.
COUPLE
with
small
baby
desire 3 or
4
room
unfurnished
apartment.
Call
HI 2-4572.

ROOMS

private

hot

water,

modern

PRIVATE

entrance;

bedroom

with

kitchen

SEE

CHIEF

OFFICE WORK
SOME TYPING REQUIRED

2-7258.

.

LARGE room and ‘kitchenette, near transportation and Highland’ Park» hospital.
__HI 2-6385.
:
ROOM. for rent, kitchen. privileges; near
: transportation., Tel. HI 2-3591.
FURNISHED
room, suitable for couple;
with
or
without.
‘kitchen’
privileges.
__ Call HI 2-0185.
A, WELL
heated, large, pleasant
room
with private glass door shower stall;
hot water at all times. 1645 Second St.,
HI 2-0201.
ee

AT

1866
N.
2ND
E. DEERPATH

GENERAL -

LARGE,
attractive
room,
private
bath;
-¢lose to business
district, transportation.
Willing
discuss
cooking
privileges
with
suitable party.
Phone
HI
LARGE
room
with
private
bath;
near
transportation. Telephone. Lake Forest
1429.
CONVENIENTLY
located room, % block
from
town,
$8.50
per
week.
Inquire
Mrs.
Duranso,
1848
Green
Bay
Rd.,
Highland
Park.
DOUBLE
room for rent, % block from
' Bghopping
and transportation.
Tel. HI

OPERATOR

HIGHLAND
PARK:
LAKE FOREST: 255

2-0405.

tion.
Lake

WANTED—FEMALE

REGISTERED
nurses
needed
at
H.P
hospital.
Starting
salary,
$255,
with
afternoon bonus, $30, and night bonus.
$20. See Miss Beard. HI 2-8000.
RESPONSIBLE
position as assistant to
a
senior
executive
of
a
nationally
known
firm
of
business
consultants
located
in North
Shore
area.
Ability
to work with figures desired, Unusually
attractive working environment.
Good
salary
to start
plus
other
benefits.
Convenient
transportation
arrangements.
Call
BRiargate
4-7500
from
Chicago
or Libertyville
2-4080
from
suburbs.
GENERAL
office work, subscription department of National Magazine; some
typing.
No
experience necessary. Call
Florence Rhodes, Northbrook
1201.
WOMAN
to assemble and serve trays in
diet kit. at Highland
Park
Hospital.
See Miss Beard, HI 2-8000.

SECRETARY-RECEPTIONIST
IN
OLD
ESTABLISHED
WINNETKA
real estate office. We need a rapid, accurate typist and prefer one who takes
shorthand.
Our
office is located
across
the street from
North Shore and North
Western
transportation. If you prefer a
small office with plenty of activity and
wish to avoid the wear and tear of Chicago’s Loop, this position will appeal to
you. Call Mrs. Collins or Miss Cook.

BAUMANN-COOK

With

or Without

for

high

class

shop.

Call

tions and
Blue

holidays.

Shield

paying

Blue.

Cross and

available,

half.

Located

vassing.

Car

necessary.

Phone

cosmetics

ONtario

by
Avon
advertised

manufacturer,to act as rep-

resentatives in Highland
Park; Write
Box G-10 c/o Lake Forester.
—

Page 32

or

phone

Also

AVON: COSMETICS.
Pleasant, profitable
work
as neighborhood
representatives
in Deerfield. Write Box G-10 c/o Lake
Forester.

employer

other

benefits.

SECRETARY
Typing
and
shorthand
necessary.
A real opportunity in our expanding organization.
Attractive rates

and

opportunity

DURACLEAN CO.

-,. DEERFIELD

444

an

opening

junior

We
some
junior
For
Okey

for

FOR

2500 COMMONWEALTH

a young

lady

stenographer.

number.

LIGHT

ELECTRICAL
WORK

4:45

PM.

GET

to

WANTED,

11:15

Blvd.

dental

HI

assistant

for

office,
experience
preferred
__required. Phone HI 2-31338.

PERMANENT JOBS
ARE NOW OPEN
FOR

TRAINMEN
SHOP

P.M.

Telephone

Lake

AGENTS

CLERKS

2-6548

Pensions, insurance and
tion. No experience
is
while you learn.

free transportanecessary.
Earn

APPLY TO
NORTH SHORE LINE

Ravinia
but

WORKERS

TICKET

not

EMPLOYMENT
OFFICE
HIGHWOOD

to do filing part time, after school

ce

INTO RAILROAD
WORK!

ASSEMBLY

CHERRY-CHANNER
CORPORATION
Skokie

Park,

f

SHIPPING
CLERK
to handle packaging printed
*

o

MULTILITH
Call

Bill

matter

Rhodes

1200

THE
PUBLIC SERVICECO.
NORTHERN
ILLINOIS

your

job

will

be

available

to you after you have completed
your tour of duty.
For further information call Mr.

Okey at your local Public
Telephone Number.

WOMAN to keep research project records
on animals and feed. Typing and general
office
experience
helpful;
good
_ salary. Telephone Libertyville 2-1334,
AVON
COSMETICS
has openings for 8
women
to act
as
representatives . in
Highwood. ‘Write Box G-10 c/o Lake
Forester.

GENERAL SHOPWORK
OLDER MEN CONSIDERED
Inside,

interesting,

varied

and | steady

year round employment with employee
benefits. Good working conditions. Duraclean Co. (center of Deerfield). Contact
Mr.

Tennis,

Deerfield

444,

ROOM
and
board
in éxchange for sit
ting in evenings; own room &amp; pleasan
surroundings. Near transportation. Te
2-3428.

WOMAN
for. cooking and assisting with
small children; no heavy
cleaning of
laundry.
Monday
thru
Friday,
8:30
a.m. thru dinner. References required
HI 2-5816.
WOMAN,
light housework; 5 day wee
stay some nights. Near transportation
References. HI 2-7453.
CHAMBERMAID,
white,
experienced
references
required.
Permanent
pos
tion; current wages. Reply to Box F-96
c/o Laké Forester.

NURSE
will give room,
in own home. Tel. HI
WILL
do ironing
in
Libertyville 2-2600.

board and
2-5128.
my

home,

ca
Phon

PARENTS!
Do
you
want
a competent
mother for your children while you a
away? Capable driver; excellent North
Shore
references.
Phone
HI
2-2024
after 6 p.m.

WILL

do typing in my

home.

HI 2-6363.

Service

WILL do sewing in my home; draperies,
curtains,
spreads,
necessary
patching,
any type knitting and crocheting. Tele
phone Lake Forest 3555,
3

ONE
clerk for steady employment;
one
for part time.
Thayers,
835
Céntral
Ave., H.P. :

EXPERIENCED
typist would like to dé
typing in her home.
For informatior
call Mrs. Glick, HI 2-7107.

DELIVERY
driver wanted,
18 or over;
8:30 to 5:30, half day Wednesday off.
Apply
in person,
Evans
Feed
Store,
794
Central
Ave., H.P.

RELIABLE
person,
German
(29),
wi
take care of your children while you
are vacationing. Phone DIckens 2-8158

TELEVISION ‘and radio serviceman; experienced
only,
inside
and
out.
Top
wages,
pleasant
working
conditions,
free insurance, 20th Century Television
and Radio, 1858 First St. HI 2-0341.

COOK,
white,
experienced,
erences.
Own
room,
top
transportation.
Telephone
est
6550.
GENERAL
housework,
in. Telephone
Lake

recent
pay.
Lake

refNear
For-

3 in family; stay
Forest
2124,

COOK, white; permanent position. Some
downstairs work. Current wages. References, required. Telephone Lake Forest 484.
PRIVATE
room
and
bath
for working
couple or single general maid. Woman
to do cooking
and light
housework;
man
to live in, work
elsewhere, give
day
cleaning
in exchange
for room,
board. References, experience required.
HI 2-0297.
SECOND

DRESSMAKING and alterations; will call
and deliver or bring my portable ma
chine
to your
home. Telephone
Mr
Anderson, ONtario 2-0706.
‘
INFANT
NURSE,
Scotch,
available
fo
permanent
case;
excellent references
FAirfax
4-0235.

WANTED—DOMESTIC

DOWNSTAIRS
maid, white, experienced:
near
transportation.
Top
pay;
own
room. Telephone Lake Forest 2398.

MAID,

Permanent

white;

position,

one

in

family.

current

wages;

references
required.
Telephone
Mrs.
Donald Ryerson, Lake Forest 970.
MAID,
cooking
and
downstairs
work;
three in family. Near
transportation.
References
required.
Telephone
Lake
Forest 1005 after 5 p.m.
COOK, white, experienced; no laundry or
heavy
cleaning.
References
required.
eee
wages. Telephone Lake Forest

SITUATIONS

WANTED—MALE

EXPERIENCED
colored
work. HI 2-3536.

man

will

do

da
a

HOSPITAL
AIDE
would
like part time
work from 4-9 two full days per week.
Will do in and and outside work. N
gro.
Telephone
William
McKinney,
ONtario
2-1900,
extension 366.
NORTHWESTERN
UNIVERSITY . stue
dent needs
part time work;
will try
anything. HI 2-8255 evenings.

SITUATIONS

WANTED—DOMESTIC

WANTS to do laundry or cleaning 8 or 4
days a week. Telephone DExter 6-4129;

WILL

do housework

go

or

WILL
own

stay.

5 days a week;-will

Phone

DExter

6-3041,

do
washing
and ironing
in
home. Tel. HI 2-6728.
-

EXPERIENCED

white

woman

}
mg

wil]

do

general housework; desires living quare
ters
(room
or
apartment).
Husband
employed elsewhere. Write Anna Raim,
2032 Grove avenue, North Chicago,
COOKING,
housecleaning,
baby
sitting;
evenings and weekends. Telephone Lake
Forest 2882.
COOK, thoroughly experienced; good
erences. Willing to go temporary.
ephone
Lake
Forest
1839.

refTel-

GENERAL housework in new home, near
transportation;
all
appliances,
Stay; DAY WORK four days per week; experienced.
Telephone
ONtario
2-2795,
Own room. HI 2-7244.
CONSIDERATE family wants responsible EXPERIENCED chef, houseman and good
chauffeur.
Good
North
general houseworker; compact, modern
Shore
references. Call HI 2-0491.
equipped home, near transportation. 2
school age girls. No heavy laundry or WILL
do washing
and
ironing
in m
cleaning; excellent second floor quarhome; will pick up and deliver, Call
ters. References. Current wages; husHI
2-4598.
band may stay. Glencoe 2424.
DAY WORK (general cleaning) on Thurs
GENERAL
housework,
small home;
asday. White. Write Box G-15 c/o Lake
sist with
1 child. Stay, 5 day week;
Forester.
y
must
be
pleasant
and _ experienced.
IRONING to do in my own home; first
References.
Best
salary.
Northbrook
class
work,
best
references. HI 2-37251340 collect.
HOUSEKEEPER
for cooking
and
light
BABY SITTING
housework; one school age child. Own
room and bath; top salary and bonus.
TWO
experienced
baby
sitters wil] sit
aearee
references
required.
Glencoe

evenings. Call HI 2-0657

RESPONSIBLE

work,

cooking;

woman,

no

small

general

children.

house-

Own

room;
near
transportation.
$40.
HI
2-4431.
GIRL wanted for part time work 8, 4 or
5 days a week. HI 2-5945,
WOMAN
for general housework,
white;
references. Stay at night. House near
Ravinia station; 2 teen age children, 1
adult. Call HI 2-2816 after 6 p.m.
HOUSEKEEPER for family of 4; modern

home,

all conveniences.

5 day

week,

to 5.30; $385 to $40 a week. Live out;8
white only. Call Glencoe
1348.
COOK and general housework; own room
and bath. Other help. HI 2-6023.
SECOND
MAID,
white,
upstairs
and
serving;
experience
not
necessary.
Adult family. Phone HI 2-1862.
WANTED,
white woman
to do general
housework ; 2 adults.
References
required. No objection to employed husband. HI 2-0433,
CLEANING woman wanted for day work;
experienced, white girl 2 to 3
days a

week.

Forest

WANTED—DOMESTIC

“SITUATIONS WANTED—FEMALE _

is looking for young -high school
graduates to start as melvr readers
or clerks in the clerical group.
If you are called into the Armed

Forces

“HELP

EXPERIENCED
maid, full or part time
widow alone. 2%
room apartment; 1
block station. References required, H
2-6620
between
10 a.m. and
8 p.m

HI

OPERATORS
.
Northbrook

66.

not
Free

Evenings,

GIRL

WANTED—MALE

WILL
iease
1 bay
“Standard”
Service
Station to responsible party. Lessee to
purchase low inventory only. Telephone
ONtario
2-2870.
RELIABLE man for general office work
in
old
established
lumber
firm
on
North
Shore.
Steady
employment;
chance for advancement. No experience
necessary but helpful. State age, qualifications
and
salary
expected.
Write
Box F85 c/o Lake Forester.

necessary but desirable.
Transportation.
Blue
Cross,
Music while you work.
Week Days 8 A.M. to 4:30 P.M.

1488

6-3400

CHICAGO
HARDWARE
FOUNDRY

IMMEDIATE OPENINGS
AVAILABLE
WOMEN
Experience

DEXTER

PHONE
MR. METZLER
DEXTER 6-5770
FOR
INTERVIEW APPOINTMENT

HELP

also need a young lady, with
typing ability, to start as a
clerk.
further information call Mr.
at your local Public Service

telephone

CHICAGO

NORTH CHICAGO, ILL.
(BLOCK WEST CNS &amp;M RR Station)

NORTHERN
ILLINOIS
a

STREET

PERSONNEL DEPT.

THE
PUBLIC SERVICE CO.

as

DAVIS

FOR

SECOND cook and 1 kitchen maid. Apply
to Highwood
Hospital, Highwood,
Ill.
OPERATING
room
nurse,
good
salary.
Apply
to
Highwood
Hospital,
Highwood,
Ill.

OF

land

advancement.

CLERK TYPIST

Permanent
position
open for
an experienced stenographer; some knowledge
of bookkeeping desirable. 40 hour week,
pension
plan,
sick
leave
and
vacation
privileges. Good starting salary,
Apply George B. Caskey, Superintendent, WINNETKA
PARK
DISTRICT
OFFICE, 2nd floor, Village Hall, Winnetka,
Illinois.
Across
street
from
trains—no
long walk.

has

2301

NORTH

Tennis

for

DEEPFREEZE APPLIANCE
DIVISION

bus stop. Apply: now.

Mr.

liam Ruehl &amp; Co., 500 Park Ave., High-

HELP

in business section within

block of H.P.

HI

2-6210.
STENOGRAPHER.
Must be able to take
shorthand,
do typing: some
bookeeping.
McCallum
Chevrolet,
Inc.
Telephone Lake Forest 3200.
CHECK GIRL wanted, experienced. Apply
Murrie
Cleaners,
109 Scranton,
Lake
Bluff.
Telephone
Lake
Bluff
41.
TYPIST.
(shorthand
if possible)
needed
for ful] time position. See Miss Beard,
Highland
Park
Hospital.
Tel.
HI
2-8000.
THREE
alert
women.to
show
sterling
silver
and
imported
china;
no
can2-23384 or DElta 6-4937.
QUALIFIED
.women
wanted
Products,
Inc.,
nationally

in person
900.

Experience

Permanent positions with friendly
working
conditions:
Full ‘time,
5
day week with 15 minute
breaks
morning and afternoon. Paid vaca-

Winnetka,
Il.
AMbassador 2-2798

PART
time,
experienced,
checker _ for
afternoon work. Janowitz Foods, Lake
Forest 2700.
EXPERIENCED
bookkeeper
wanted
for
local business; pleasant working conditions, 5 day week. Salary commensurate with experience. For interview,
HI 2-2030.
WANTED,
experienced all-round beauty
operators and manicurist, full or part

time,

Apply
Forest

*

OF

BOARD

ROOM and
board in exchange for evening
sitting
and
light
duties;
own
_rpom
and
bath.
Near transportation.
I 2-7868.

551
Lincoln
Ave.
Winnetka 6-5000 or

Bank.

WANTED,
reliable conscientious girl for
work,
recording
and
filing
typing,
__part time.’Phone HI 2-4172 evenings.
stenographer
and
typist
COMPETENT
for
small
manufacturing
company;
steady work, good salary. I.B.M. typewriter. Phone Deerfield 365.
AVON PRODUCTS need 4 representatives
to service Lake Forest. Will thoroughly
train
each
woman
immediately.
Write Box G-10 c/o Lake Forester.
HIGHLAND
PARK
Hich School needs a
stenographer; aptitude for figures desirable.
Pleasant
working
conditions,
39 hour week, no Saturdays: two weeks
vacation, Blue Cross and Blue Shields
membership offered. Salary in keeping
with prevailing rates and qualifications.
Phone
Highland
Park 2-6510,
Extension 26.

—

HELP

of this

FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF LAKE FOREST

WE’LL TRAIN
YOU, AND
YOU'LL
BE
PAID
WHILE
YOU
LEARN
TO PLAY
AN EVER
IMPORTANT
PART IN THE
LIFE OF YOUR COMMUNITY.

2-6359.

AND

Officer

WANTED—MALE

EXPERIENCED
car washer and Simonizer; good salary, best equipment. Warm,
clean shop. Ask for Lynn Bonnem, Wil-

22 to 40 to work close to-home and
save time and cost of transporta-

CO.

OFFERS JUST THAT...
FULL TIME
JOBS FOR
WOMEN
UP TO 43 YEARS
OLD AS TELEPHONE
OPERATORS.

NICELY
furnished
large bedroom,
suitable for 2: ample drawer
and
closet
Space.
Near
Vine
Ave.
station.
HI

ROOM

senior

privi-

leges; close to transportation. Cal] HI
2-8457 after 12 noon.
ROOMS to rent, close to town and transportation;
kitchen
privileges.
Inquire
1875 St. Johns, Highland Park.
LARGE
front room, twin beds; kitchen
privileges. $60 a month. Tel. HI 2-0199.
NICE
room,
private
bath;
hot
water,
private entrance. Vicinity of Highland
Park Hospital. Tel. HI 2-2610.
ROOM suitable for one or two, employed:
young man
preferred. Use of kitchen
if
desired;
near
transportation.
HI

__2-7215.

HELP

SECRETARY
To

ILLINOIS BELL
TELEPHONE

WANTED—FEMALE

Business experience and a high degree of accuracy essential. Excellent opportunity
for woman
age

LOOKING
FOR A JOB WHERE
THE
PAY IS GOOD
...
EVEN THOUGH
YOU DON’T HAVE EXPERIENCE?

BEDROOM
for rent; plenty of heat and
hot water.
Market
Square.
Telephone
Lake Forest 1409.
NEW
and
completely.
furnished
double
room,

HELP

HOUSEWIVES

FOR RENT

laundry privileges, semi-private
kitchen. HI 2-1959.

WANTED—FEMALE

SALESLADIES
AND
WAITRESSES
Part.
time or full
time.
F. W.
WOOLWORTH
CO.

Home

2%

blocks

from

Ravinia

station. HI 2-2816,
:
PERMANENT
position for woman to do
light
housework.
and
assist
with: 2
young children; no heavy cleaning or
laundry. HI 2-4057.
housework, day help or perGENERAL
manent; assist two children, Own. room
house. ‘ReferRanch
bath. New
and
ences. Top salary. Glencoe 1462.

CLOTHING

FOR

or HI 2-4598.

SALE

BEAUTIFUL,
brand new, full skin (not
coats, original
Lamb
Mouton
pieced)
price $125; slashed to $57 in our great
January
Fur Clearance
Sale, Miller’s,
:
166 N. Michigan Ave.
BEAUTIFUL genuine mink coats (slight$250,
Dept.)
in our Rental
ly used
$350, $450. Miller’s, 166 N. Michigan
Chicago.
Ave.,
fox coat, size 16-18; about 28
SILVER
in. long. In good
condition; may
be
seen by telephoning Lake Forest 3649.

LET

OUT

muskrat

coat,

%

length,

ex-

cellent
condition,
reasonably
priced;
navy blue wool coat, 3/4 length, good
condition. Call HI 2-6551,

HOUSEHOLD
VISIT

YOUR

GOODS

OWN

FOR

SALE

HIGHLAND

PARK

Trading Post. We sell furniture, brica-brac
&amp;
clothing.
18183
St.
Johns.
Tel. HI 2-2744.

9
1949,
FRIGIDAIRE,
excellent
condition.
Lake
Bluff 357.

MOVING,

must

G.E.
electric
place
screen
2-7229.
_

sell! G.E,

cubic
$80.

foot; \in
Telephone

electric

range,

refrigerator,
also,. Fires
and
andirons.
Call
HI
cri
De eT,

DAVENPORT, good
fer. HI 2-4105,

condition: best
sli ge

of-—
2

Thursday, January 22, 1953
‘a

�es
USED AUTOMOBILES _

i

*

Reply by phone as well as by letter
may be made to any Want Ad with
a box number as an address. Call
2-4500 or Lake Forest 2300
Your name,
address
and phone
number will be placed at once in
the box of the advertiser.
——————————————————
HOUSEHOLD

GOODS

FOR

SALE

LAKE
FOREST
RESIDENT,
corporation
official,
moving
to
Fla.,
new
of
furnishings
complete
selling
applimajor
inc.
rooms
(all
house
ranch
ances &amp; power lawn mowers).
Large,
custom, green,
modern
couch,
$400; Kittinver pine breakfront, $350 &amp;
cocktail table, $125; 2 end tables, $175;
2 end table lamns, $100; 2 custom Ivg.
console
RCA
$125; blonde
chairs,
arm
16 in. TV. $225: Mae-avox Cosmopolitan,
changer, $350; Grand piano by
AM-FM
Kimball, $400; Danbury by Charak, mah.
dropleaf din. table, $150; 4 Dunhar din.
each;
$75
&amp; brass,
legs
chairs, ebony
blonde credenza, $125; 2 Herman M'ller
chairs, $50; twin beds, twin nicht tables,
twin chests, modern by Kittinger, $650;
blonde corner table, $20; man’s red leathchair, $40; red leather hassock,
er den
$20; 5 pe. rattan porch set, $200: pink
Woodward,
by
4 chairs,
&amp;
table
| iron
$175; also porch rugs. outdoor aluminum
furn., inc. table, chaise, chairs
&amp; umbrella, $200. Other tables, lamps &amp; pictures. Standard fireplace ‘Flex Screen,”
modern
andirons, $20 ea.

GE freezer, 4 cu. ft., $275; Servel refrig., $175; Grand stove, $100; Carrier de$50;
mangle,
Maytag
humidifier, $100;
work
$75;
washer,
automatic
Jacobs
power
Estate
Coldwell
in.
28
bench, $80:
mower with sulky, $275; garden hose &amp;
sprinklers.
Lake Forest 1890—former A. D. Lasker estate. West on Old Mill Rd., 9/10
on
Rd., north
mile west of Waukegan
Estate Lane, 1,000 ft. Grover C. Minter.
11 cubic ft.,
deepfreeze,
FRESH
condition.
Phone HI 2-6290.
dishCrosley
dishwasher,
HOTPOINT
washer, Crosley
deepfreeze,
G.E. disposal
for sale. HI 2-4742.
electric stove, $50; G.E. reHOTPOINT
$25;
washer,
Bendix
$25;
frigerator,
draperies,
shelves,
book
pine
natural
odds and ends. Phone HI 2-2068._
reasonable.
range,
Kenmore
size
APT.
864 after 5 p.m.
Call Northbrook
innerspring matMAPLE double bed with
tress and springs, matching dresser and
HI 2-5744
chest; excellent condition.
after 6 p.m.
Oriental
made
Belgian
9x12
new
TWO
wearing
long
9x15
each;
$40
rugs,
Wilton rug, $70. Call HI 2-3288._
% ton air-conditioner; black conYORK
blonde
radio-victrola;
Magnavox
sole
French Provincial card table; mirrored
console, Tratt sleeper twin spring and
mattress: bolsters and cover; 7 inch
television; picture. HI 2-5664, 70 Oakvale Rd., H.P
EVER
good

watch

Movado self-winding

SMALL

in

leather case; 17-pewel movement, ideal
Will sacrifice. Call HI
for traveling.
2-47381.
dresser, 2 night
PROVINCIAL
FRENCH
stands, white; Dunbar coffee table, excellent condition. Cal] HI 2-5645.
items
household
city—some
LEAVING
2 pr. drapes,
1 bedspread;
for sale.
drapes,
kitchen
pair
two
plain rose;
yellow print; Kenmore wringer washer.
‘All excellent condition. Call Deerfield
62331.
KITCHEN SET, 5 piece chrome and for2-8219.
HI
mica; excellent condition.
FOLDING bed, 3/4 size; coil spring and
innerspring mattress. Almost new, $32.
Telephone Lake Bluff 694-Y-2.
machine
washing
automatic
KENMORE
with suds saver, 4 months old, $150.
Call Capt. Voss, HI 2-5000 ext. 4241.
perfect
refrigerator, like new;
PHILCO
condition, 7 cu. ft. Only 5 years old.
f
Best offer. HI 2-5905.
Ten inch TV combination, 2 speed phono,

F.M.,

A.M.

$79.95.

condition,

excellent

CENTURY
20TH
TELEVISION &amp; RADIO
Open Friday evenings till 9 p.m._
Ward
Montgomery
FRIGIDAIRE,
G.E.
stove, very reasonable; must be seen
to appreciate. Call HI 2-5339.
high _ chair,
typewriter,
PORTABLE
child’s work bench, boy’s clothing, size
trench
imported
coat,
suits,
2
16;
coat, and navy jacket; girl’s 24 inch
Forest 3129.
Lake
Telephone
bicycle.
DINING table, 54 inch diameter, 2 leaves,
6 very comfortable chairs, buffet 21%x
hand
beautifully
oak;
solid
all
60,
painted. $66 complete. 375 Park Ave.,
HI 2-4875.
GAS STOVE, apartment size, good condition; G.E. refrigerator; davenport and
HI
Phone
furniture.
miscellaneous
'
2-5956.

a

:

FT. kitchen base cabinet, formica
double sink, hardware included;

top,
like

for

$75.

new. Original
2-5048.
HI

cost,

sell

$175;

MISCELLANEOUS

FOR

SALE

NEW
pecky
cypress
wood;
hall
chair;
1 pair green
faille draw drapes; antique bronze mantle clock; oval dressing mirror; men’s suitcases. HI 2-1562.

| PHOTO
ing

develop

enlarger,

Gateleg
25.i

and

$50;

print

outfit

excellent

includ-

condition.

table, $12.50;
lounge chair,)
between a 7 p.m.-9:00 p.m.
ees

SWEATER

SALE

IMPORTED,
HANDCRAFTED,
FULL
FASHIONED
SWEATERS

SS PULLOVER NOW

L.S.
ALSO

$18.95

USED CAR
SPECIALS
GUARANTEED OK

CARDIGANS
NOW
$16.95
MANY
FANCY
SWEATERS

MINNA

HART

580 LINCOLN
AVE.
WINNETKA
6-3738
COMPLETE
set of 22 storm
windows,
cheap; must sell immediately. 1773 S.
Second
St., HI 2-4407
or HI 2-8848.
DELUXE 6
yr. crib, wax birch finish in
excellent condition; also brand new baby mattress and car bed. Very reasonable. HI 2-6618.
16

IN.

blond

$125.

Call

TV

set

HI

and

2-5563

rotating

after

6

table,

p.m.

1950

1988

dan,

HI

gas
30 gallon
lined,
5
yrs.

Wet

2

yrs.
times.

old;
Call

like
HI

|

E.

1948

Deerfield

WANTED

Rd.

HIGHEST

PRICES

PAID

TO

1947

BUY

WANTED
Furniture,
antiques,
glassware,
china,
bric-a-brac,
silver,
cutglass
glass
and
copperware,
guns,
fishing outfits, toys,
books, garden
tools, washing
machines,
sewing machines, golf sets, used doors,
storm
windows,
plumbing;
radiators,
sinks, bathtubs.
E
BUY,
SELL
AND
TRADE
STOCKADE
TRADING
POST
Milwaukee Ave.
Wheeling, Il.
ss
Wheeling 247
WANTED,
floor polisher. HI 2-8164.
WANTED:
Pool
table
and
equipment;
must be standard size in good condition. Telephone
Lake Forest
555.

LOST

AND

FOR

JUNK

Lake

Forest

48,

al

LOST:
three month
old collie pup.
He
is brown with white feet and neck; he
was wearing a red collar; his name is
“Rex.””
If you
have
him
please call
HI 2-23651.

USED

AUTOMOBILES

WINTER

CLEARANCE
GUARANTEED
USED CARS
MANY MAKES AND MODELS
TO

CHOOSE

PRICED:

pee
1778

First

St.
Phone

owner,

HI

2-2462.

First

Park,

St.

HI

II.

;

CHEVROLET
1949 deluxe 4-door Fleetline with radio and heater, seat covers;
oo
lene
$1100 or best offer. HI

4-dr.;

trans.
De Soto
trans.

conv.;

clb.

R

oo
BOYS’ CAMP
LIBERTYVILLE 2-3128 4 :

48
48

cpe.;

R

H,

PACKARDS
1948
1948
1947

to

PACKARDS
all models, fully

1952,

HOWN
OPEN

UNDER

MONDAYS
TILL

&amp;

H,

auto.

PACKARD

47 BUICK conv.; R &amp; H, W.W. tires
47 PLYMOUTH
4-dr.;
H,
W.W.
tires

47

CHRYSLER

4-dr.; R_ &amp; H, fl. dr.

46

FORD;

price

full

37 FORD;

BUY
FROM

48 Merc.

$350

i

INE,

Chrysler-Plymouth
1740

HI
Highland

Open

Sat.
~~

USED.

562

Lincoln

Ave.

SAFE

Winnetka

6-3070

Stude.
Land
Cruiser;
fully
equipped,
like new
............... $1695
1951 Merc. cl. cpe.; overdrive, raGid,.: Bt;
very, Clean; 22.0005), $1795
1951 Ford 4-dr.; low mileage .......... $1345
1950 Buick Roadmaster 4-dr.; must
WR MOOR
fictetcc ge suedsainthobcopeuiiat $1595
1950 Chev. Tudor; Powerglide, rad.,
Ba: STOW TAVAABO’
Conic
a
95
1949 Ford
Tudor;
overdrive,
rad.,
She,
METY | RIORN
cate hs $1095
1949. ‘Mere,
4-dr.:
'rad., ht. secc...0.. $1295
1949 Pont. cl. cpe.; loaded ............ $1295
fice ad
Sin
hi bec)
Bs ee S595
illys sta. wagon; overdriv
695
BET OTORS OO BeOS ecikeiachideddiccoated r my
CuONs

TORT

Bere:

TS:

TUCO

Conv.)

oe

ONO:

HIGHLAND

ok

5

AUTO

6300—Open

DEPT.

9 a.m.

to

Highwood
9 p.m.

CHEVROLET
late
1951
model,
canary
curr
pore ian
excellent
condiion, only
8,
miles. Original
,
Call HI 2-1543.
er

CHEVROLET

1939 coupe, good running

condition,
$125.
Ave., Highwood

FORD

1941

Super

See at 33 Highwood
or call HI 2-6009.

Deluxe

convertible

Cabriolet, with overdrive, radio, heater,
seat covers ; 5,000 miles on ’49 motor;
new paint job, brake system, king pins,
shock absorbers, front and rear springs.
2 new tires. Telephone
Lake
Forest
2787.

LASALLE
1940 club coupe, very
_reasonable.
Radio and
heater.
HI

clean,
Phone

2-4694.

MERCURY

1947

eedan

coupe; radio,

heater, seat covers; excellent
* operating
condition.
$800.
Telephone
Mr.
Thorne, Lake Forest 189.
MERCURY
1989
convertible
for
sale.
Telephone Deerfield 939J.
}
OLDSMOBILE
1947, fully equipped; like
new. Will trade or finance. HI 2-1871
or see at 1782 Green Bay Rd., H.P.
OLDSMOBILE
19389
Model
70;
radio,
~heater; good “condition.” $125.
Tele-

phone

Lake

Forest 3251.

a

TAX

income tax return expertly
YOUR
pared at your home or mine. HI 2-6

3:

“ducing, vapor cabinet bath. Telephe
2-5116
for
appointment,
HI
Marsh, 1866 Sheridan Rd., H.P.

Lottie |

PAINTING

&amp;

Nee

REDECORATING

‘PETS
and

HI

all

strangers

ST.

JOHNS

service.

1875

HIGHLAND

to

on

8

day

DECORATING

Covers,
Rod
Upholstering

“CONVENIENT

HOME

Installations

SERVICE”

PAINTING
- FURNITURE
AND
CARPETING
- CLEANING
Re
Se
- REWEAVING

roof?

shingle

SEWING MACHINES.

ITLL.

CHRISTO-CRAFT CABINET CO.
1930 Maple Ave., Evanston
For custom
made
cabinets and
general
carpentry work, call GReenleaf 5-7686 or
HI 2-7238.

Slip

REPAIRING

Treati
your
“Roof
377,
Wilmette
for
its
proper
Headquarters”
Free
inspection
ment
and
care.
» consultation.

AVE.

SEPTIC
SYSTEMS.
COMPLETE
SEPTIC
SYSTEM
INSTALLATION
TRENCHING
water,
drain,
All
sorts:
foundation,
tiling, etc.
Free estimates, no obligation to have
our representative call.
EDWARD’S
P
&amp;
W
CONSTRUCTION
CONTRACTING
ENGINEERS
WINNETKA
6-3971
;

INTERIOR

W

ROOFING
wood

a

you

HAVE

_ STOCKS
Investor’s Service of America invites you
to
try
our
service
in
listed
stocks.
Dealer,
Broker,
Adviser,
Ole
Nielsen,
Proprietor, 104 North Washington Circle,
Lake
Forest,
Illinois,
Telephone
Lake
Forest
2191. IN GOD
WE
TRUST.

Drapes,

BULBS

&amp;

TUNING

NIGHT
9 p.m.

LAUNDRY
PARK,

&amp;

Reliable plan
VIOLETS.
AFRICAN
particular people. Gillette, 169
ington Circle, Lake Forest 516.

M
PIANO tuning and
ber of American Society of Piano T
L
of
formerly
icians. E. Zaboth,
ona Healy, member of N.A.P.T.
Zurich, 5341.

EXPERT

WOO

PLANTS

W

8

pointers,

German

reconditioning.

SERVICE
‘and
INSTALLATION
and
Sat.
8 a.m.
Phone
HI
2-0530

SAM

16
months
old
GREAT
DANE,
obedience trained. HI 2-3203. —

PIANO

TV

welcome

atte
WE give personal care and loving
wh
i
tion to your birds, in our home,
|
you are vacationing. HI 2-3116.

2-0037

BUSINESS SERVICE

We

AKC_ regis
Deerfield 626W

hair
old, $5 a piece. HI 2-4666, F

REAL ESTATE
Res.

weeks,

Cockers,

SHORT

1—Old established tavern in Highwood.
Owner
must
sell.
2—Long
established
restaurant.
Good
bargain.

thru

10

Clarkdale

Pp

cocker-spa

white

&amp;

red

puppies ;

OPPORTUNITY

fine

for sale, home raised;
CANARIES
singers in good health. Single or
appointment
For
for breeding.
phone Highland Park 2-3116.

LOVELY

FOR
sale:
antique
rosewood
melodeon
with music rack; bench
with needlepoint cover. Deerfield 1176J.
ANTIQUE
Tiger Maple bed, good condition;
includes
spring
and
mattress.
Also Victorian
lady’s secretary. Both
for $140. Call HI 2-4288.

DAY
Mon.

156

LOANS

FAST —

‘

and

Swedish massage,

SCIENTIFIC

9-9

TRUCKS

2-0093

4

MASSAGE

2-2500

Finance
your
car
the
bank
way
save money.
FIRST NATIONAL
BANK
of Highland Park

es $695

Inc.

INCOME

Frene!
conve

2-1776.

painting
interior
and
EXTERIOR
decorating. Hubert Johnson, HI 2-177

ey, $845

PARK

Call

in

lessons

Bauer, HI

tion, practically
new tires. Telephone
Lake Forest 568.
TWO
snow tires. Fit Cadillac or Buick;
used only one season. Tel. HI 2-5577.

1951

POSS:

Mrs.

|
PAINTING and paper hanging. Call
Varney, HI 2-6980 or Lake Fore
C.

HI

SPECIALS

give

will

summer?

this

France

to

GOING

truck, 1936, % ton; good condi-

DODGE

ANCHOR

BUY USED CARS

PONIES

INSTRUCTION

9-6

MOTOR

AND

lessons in your home. Spe
GUITAR
Hawaiian
guitar,
uke,
guitar,
Instrument furnished | hil
mandolin.
learning. JACK MOORE, HI 2-6284.

Park

Weekdays

BUSINESS

SHORE

HORSES

tion.

Agency

First

“e

2-5592

ATTENTION
HORSE OWNERS
thoroughbred2
race
Qualified
trainer available for coming Chicago
Excel
ce.
experien
years
18
ing
season.
lent references. W ill handle ‘entire st
0
various
for
or individual horses
Lake
telephone
For appointment
773.

motor, clean

MOTORS

FU

SOME

or Sleighrides

HI

native

WITH CONFIDENCE
A NEW CAR DEALER

MESIROW

COVER

NORTH

Hayrides

BUICK conv.; R &amp; H, Dyna.
DE SOTO conv.; R &amp; H, fl. dr.

equipped.

San
THURSDAYS
P.M.

LET’S HAVE

auto.

ANTIQUES
Dodge; fluid dr., heater, radio.
Chevrolet
station
wagon;
radio,
heater.
Studebaker Champion sedan.
Chrysler
Windsor
sedan.

ENTERTAINMENT

R &amp; H,

&amp;

©

FOR UNDERPRIVILEGED —

48 CHRYSLER 4-dr.; R &amp; H, fl. dr.
48 CHEV. Aero; R &amp; H
48 PLYMOUTH 2-dr.; R &amp; H

2-0580

OLDS
1951
Super
88
four-door,
fully
equipped,
one owner.
Actua]
mileage,
12,000.
$1950
or best
offer.
See
at
Quarters 184C Ft. Sheridan, or call HI
2-5000
Ext. 4241.

HI

CHRYSLER
1951 Imperial; power steering
and
brakes,
electric
windows,
torque drive, radio, heater, ete. Very
low mileage. Original cost over $4600.
Bought in November 1951. Reasonabl
priced.
Telephone
Highland
Park
2-7178.
NASH
1951 Ambassador custom 4-door,
light
green;
the
Big
Nash.
12,500
miles, garage kept. The cost is low.
Reclining
seat,
Weather
Eye
heater,
Hydramatic, fog lights, spotlights with
mirror, sun visor, seat covers, windshield washer, overhead oiler, Windsor
Kromvents, rear windshield wiper and
many more accessories. Just for Thurs.
call WA 4-7980, Chicago. After Thurs.
call HI 2-0549. Leave name and Tel.
number.
CADILLAC
1951.
4-door
sedan;
dark
green, low mileage. Excellent condition.

Tel.

1914

.

auto. trans., low miles
HENRY J; heater, overdrive

ccicldante $895

. P. MOTOR SALES
DE SOTO-PLYMOUTH

USED CAR
336 Waukegan Ave.

MOTORS
INC.
Highland
2-1854

20:8 Kec

LINCOLN-MERCURY,

FROM

FO" SELL

HI

Tudor.

1946 Four Door DeSoto
$695
T9980 “Dotae conpe) oa
$195
This is the finest selection of good used
cars we have ever offered for sale. Come
in. now and take your pick. No reasonable offer refused.

1952
1948

FOUND

LOST
about mid
December,
large dark
liver and
gray
German
short haired
pointer.
Answers
to “Wimpy.”
Telephone Lake Forest 853.
LOST: Beaver fur hat with brown leather crown. Reward. Telephone Mrs. Edward Hasler, Lake Forest 269.
GERMAN
SHEPHERD,
cream and black,
lost Sunday; has red leash and 2 collars. Reward.
Please call Orphans
of
the Storm or HI 2-7287.
HAS anybody seen an old black leather
address
book
lost
Christmas
week?
Reward. Please telephone Mrs. Julian
Armstrong, Lake Bluff 116.
LOST:
Tuesday,
January
6, gold
link
bracelet, 2 inches wide. Liheral reward.

Telephone

Ghrysier.

51

49

DEERPATH

RUNNING
OR
‘CARS
-AND_
TRICKS,
TRACING
TABLE;
two
24 inch
fluor- | NOT, REGARDLESS OF CONDITION.
escent tubes, tracing
glass, 22 in. x J. G. R. AUTO
WRECKERS, INC.
82 in. 2 desk lamps (clamp type) with
HI 2-2017
LIBERTYVILLE 2-4377
20 in. tubes. Telephone Highland Park
2-2690.
BUYING
A USED
CAR?
TWENTY
cu.
ft.
Seeger
refriverator;
BUY
W'TH
NFW
CAR
CONFIDENCE
5 yrs. old, $125. Call HI 2-2720.
FROM
A NEW
CAR
DEALER
1952 DeSoto
Firedome
8; auto.
trans.,
500 GAL. propane tank, $175. Call Deerpower steering, rad., ht. $800 Disc.
field
879.
AMERICAN
Standard
Oil Burner
and 1952 Chevr. sedan, light blue ....... $1795
1951 DeSoto, beautiful green sedan;
storage tank, used 6 weeks. Call Deerrad., ht,’ Suto. trans. socnsiks..: $1995
field 9389J.
.
.
1951 Plymonth
Belvidere,
yellow
Shi
(Bleck
jhe
ea, as $1475
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
FOR SALE
1951 Plymouth sedan, light gray ..$1475
1950 Plymouth sedan, light green ..$1295
SEVERAL small pianos, new. Three used
1949 DeSoto: Carry-All ice
$1295
pianos,
large:
includes
reconditioned
1949 DeSoto club coupe, maroon ....$1295
Grands. Also many: choice new Spinets
1949. Dodge: weedeat: so
S eGR. $1275
with
factory
5-year
guarantee,
$495
1949 Red Plymouth
conv. ............ CEVeTe
and up. Appt. day or eve. in my Ev1948 Chrysler Windsor conv. ........ $1195
anston
Warerooms.
Ph.
R. J. Cook,
1948 Merctry
conv.
SA kla $795
UN
4-1561
or GR
5-6020.
1948 Stude. tudor champ. ...
we S895
2-0676,

DOUS

hardtop

50 DODGE

LAKE FOREST 3200

2-2849.

HAMILTON
gas dryer,
new.
used
about
40

Powerglide

see

191

hot
old.

coupe,

BOATS

WANTED—OLD BOATS
ANY KIND

CLEAN, LATE MODEL
USED CARS

clean.

Chevrolet Reluire
transmission.

1950

40 years in same
building.
fireplace
trade. William Otten, Tel. Northb
597d.

of

52 DODGE

v3

repair, stone work, chimn

MASON

ES

CLEARANCE

Studebaker Commander 4-dr. sedan,
clean.
Chevrolet
Styline deluxe 4-dr. se-

1951

2300

of
extras
overdrive.

OR

REIT

TREMEN

transportation.

1951

miles.
Over
$400
worth
including radio, heater and
$2200. HI 2-0547.

Set

Chevrolet
4-dr.
Styline deluxe sedan; exceptionally sharp.
Chevrolet Fleetmaster 4-dr. sedan;
low mileage, excellent condition.
Buick
special
2-dr.
good
sedan;

1948

ABOUT
75 lbs. Sunflower
Seed
at 16
cents, 75 lbs. Wild
Bird
Seed at 10
cents. Fresh stock. Also several bird
feeders,used.
Phone
HI 2-4914.
HOMART
automatic
witer
tank;
zine

2-door
Champion,
1952
mileage.
and
Overdrive
sacrifice.
Deerfield
991.

STUDEBAKER
low
deluxe;
Will
heater.

SEWING MACHINE SERVICE
Necchi
Domestic
MAKE
repair
on
ANY
Work
Guaranteed
Arends
Sewing
Machine
Co.
A) 2-5
Central Ave.

Expert

662

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE.
FOR ONE WEEK ONLY
STARTING JAN. 24

Floor sample and new 3 drawer
ing cabinets, regular price, $29.50
duced to $14.95 and $19.95.

ae

CASHMERE

en

MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE

- Box Number Ads

-- \USED AUTOMOF {LES
PLYMOUTH new 1953 4-door;

*

Treadle

machines,

$5

and

up

—

Electric portables, $14.95
and up
80 per cent off display notions
attachm 1
25 per cent off various
and sewing aids.
$2.98 mannikin doll sets ‘reduced to

SINGER SEWING MACHINE
614

Central

HI

Ave.

TREE

CO

2-381

SURGERY

RBORIS
DONALD
G. WORRALL,
evergree:
Expert tree work, shrub an
Tree removal, power saw_
WO
care,
Low cost, efficient service. Call W
ing 287.
TRAVEL

YOUNG
any “to

man

Florida.

28746.

desires

companion on

Expense.

os:

free.

Phone:

nePea

eae

a

t:
;

�j

the

Jack

chiatrist,

tram

Weinberg,

and

Rabbi

noted

Edgar

E.

Sis-

row
night for the annual
Men’s
Club service.
Each year ‘the congregation honors its Men’s Club by inviting them

conduct the worship
service.
thus bringing before the congregation some of the lay leaders and
focusing

attention

committee.

upon

the

B. Moss,

Herbert

Portes

who

will sing the traditional Kiddush.
and
past presidents,
Samuel
A
Sakol, Harry R. Schultz, Lester R.
Winternitz, and Jack Weiller.
The
Sabbath
candles
will
be
blessed by Mrs. Max Dressler and
she and Mrs. Edward Pinsof will
be hostesses
at
the
social
hour
following the services.
The Men’s Club will use this occasion to express to Chaplain and
Mrs. Irwin M. Blank the affectionate regard and appreciation of the
congregation
as they
prepare
to
leave the post at Great Lakes and

psy-

kin will share the pulpit at North
Shore Congregation Israel tomor.

to

activities

Participants include Max Dressler,
president of the Men’s Club, Ber-

Be Honored At
Temple Friday
Dr.

religious

pro-

-8ram of this arm of the temple.
The service has been planned by

return

to their home

life

New

in

that he

has

Lakes

ty Lives He

tA Smart Jami

closely

with

mittee

of

On

the

tor
choir

will

a Quarter

ot a

Skokie Valley
LAUNDRY
&amp; DRY
CLEANERS,
INC.
“Where Your Clothes Stay Young”
and

Plant

Highland Park 2-3310 — Deerfield Call Enterprise 1616
312-518 Waukegan Ave., Highwood

NORTHSHORE GARDEN OF MEMORIES
THIS

BEAUTIFUL

If You

Have

GARDEN

Not Visited

CEMETERY

Siskin,

and

the

present

their

observance

of Jewish

Music

Sears

Contest

Winner

Announced

national
month.

Plan Sleigh Ride
The

Young

Married

Suburban

El will meet
p.m.

ride.

for

Members

will

dancing

ments

in

later

the

York

the

refresh-

America

Louis

road will

New

sleigh

to

—

evening.

For South
Mrs.

at 8:30

return

and

of
Beth

its annual

temple for

and

group

Synagogue

at the temple

Saturday

i

R. Duman

sail

of

tomorrow

City

aboard

the

CLAIM

DAY

NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
tto all
persons
that the first Monday
of February, 1953, is the claim date in the estate of PAULINE VERA STITZELL, Deceased, pending in the Probate Court of
Lake
County,
Illinois, and
that
claims
may be filed against the said estate on
or before said date without issuance of
summons.
All claims
filed against said
estate on or before said
date and
not
contested, will be adjudicated on the first
Tuesday
after the first Monday
of the
next succeeding month at 10 A.M.
ELMER
G. SCHLUNG,
Executor
Tilley, Humphrey, Teidemann &amp; Goetz,
Attorneys

NOTICE
OF
PUBLIC
HEARING
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, February

10,

hearing
signed,
City

of

1953,

will
the

at

8:00

P.M.

Said

pmblic

be conducted by the underZoning
Committee
for the

Highland

Park,

desi:nated

Phone Maj. 1067

PERKINS

Cold Permanent
Waves

350

Directors

KEnwood

1990

6-0700

1500 up

936 East 47th St.
Chicago

Machineless

0

23

ANNOUNCEMENT

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

AN OUTSTANDING PROFESSIONAL RECORD OF
€2 SUCCESSFUL YEARS SERVING CHICAGOLAND

and

appointed by the City Council of the City
of Highland
Park
for that purpose,
to
consider the application of Mrs.
Ruben
Olson
dated
November
19,
1952
for a
special permit pursuant to the provisions
of Section 14 of the Zoning Ordinance of
194% of the City of Highland
Park, as
amerded,
to occupy
and
use as a play
schoo] the property at 1831 Spruce Avenue, Highland Park, Illinois.
At the said public hearing an opportunity
will
be afforded
to all persons
interested in the matter above mentioned
to be heard in relation to said matter.
Karl H. Velde
Edmund
L. Andrews, Jr.
Keith
W.
Burge
Earl
D.
Fritsch
Cyrus
Mead
III
ZONING
COMMITTEE
OF
HIGHLAND
PARK
1/22-1/29

Waves

a

Here and There

annual

1250

IMPORTANT

From

service

the

NORTH SHORE FURTH SERVICE
ESTABLISHED
1890

SIDELIGHTS

Can

Specializing in
Green Bay Rd. &amp; 18th St.

All Phones

Shore

Temple

Sabbath

ESTHER

Very Reasonable Prices

Funeral

\V/

com-

club.

Dr.

ADJUDICATION AND
NOTICE

Century.

You

30

North

&amp; Co.'s Chicago area appliance
and Mrs. Carlton C. Cummins,

451 Hazel avenue. They received a $300 Coldspot 9 cu. ft.
refrigerator with automatic defrost. Dean Swift, manager of

%4 Family Finish Specialists

A Surprise Awaits

Men’s

&amp;

worked

Santa Rosa, bound for South Amer-|
ica. They will be accompanied by
Mr. and Mrs. F. R. Schwartz of ChiWinners of Sears Roebuck
cago, on the two week cruise to
demonstration contest are Mr.
Venezuela and Colombian ports.

you rate?

Office

has

introduce

Waverly

How do

Main

time

at Great

will

from

satisfied with halfway old-fashioned

for Over

civilian
the

Servicemen’s

Music

which

Mr.

methods.

Blank

Landsman,

Jewish

and

During
stationed

the

January

Sailing

He knows who has
the cleanest
freshest wash in
town... who is

been

Chaplain

North
9?

York.

Years

Permanent

$10.

up

of Experience

CLASSIQUE
BEAUTY SALON
1815 St. Johns Ave. HI 2-1603
We

Specialize in Hair Dyes
and Permanent Waves

the Highland Park store (extre me left) and Bill Erdmann, ap- .
pliance salesman
(extreme right) presented the Cummins’ ©

prize this week. Mr. and Mrs. Cummins’ winning entry was |
selected from thousands received throughout Chicagoland.

Highwood Radio Lends ‘Mr. Michael Moves To |
House of Contoure
TV Sets To Schools
For Ike Inauguration

ee

4

en’s Club To

Feeling
that
President
Eisenhower’s inauguration was an event
that would be of intense interest
to school children, John Bosselli
proprietor of Highwood
Radio &amp;
Appliance Co., and LaVerne Cioni
store manager, made TV sets available to four schools Tuesday.
Sets
were
installed . without
charge.
at
Oak
Terrace
School,

Elm

Place

School,

St.

James

School
and
at
Immaculate
Conception
School.
Hundreds
of
children and their teachers watched
the
inaugural
ceremonies
during
school hours.
In addition, Highwood Radio installed a TV set at the Highland
Park City Hall for the benefit of
residents who do not own sets and
city employees.
R.

New Bookkeeping
Firm Opens

in Highland
The

Van-Lin

Robert

Park

Bookkeeping

Serv-

ice opened for business yesterday
at 1820 Second street. Leo Lenzini
and Richard Vancil are partners in
the new venture. Both Mr. Lenzini
and Mr. Vancil are in their final

year

at

Northwestern’

university

and will temporarily operate their
bookkeeping
office
on
an_
evening and Saturday basis.
Both partners
are members
of
the honorary Beta Alpha Phi fraternity at Northwestern.
Mr. Van-

cil is the fraternity’s president, and
Mr.. Lenzini is its secretary-treasurer.
Gressens
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Gressens
of 684 Park avenue west are the
parents of their first child, Sally
Jeanne, born January 13 in Highland Park hospital. Mrs. Gressens
is
the
former
Jeanne
Sullivan,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James V.
Sullivan of Chicago. Otto Gressens
of Evanston is the paternal grandparent.

Michael

Contoure,

;

proprietor

of

The
House
Of
Contoure
beauty
salon has announced that R. Michael, well known local hair stylist,
is now associated with the House
Of Contoure’s staff. Both men have
worked together in previous years

at Charles

of the Saxony,

Reno

of

Hollywood, Antoine’s White House
in San Francisco, Sak’s Fifth Avenue, M. Lewis and Enrico Caruso
of New York.

The

two

laborated

hair
on

stylists

a new

trend.

have

col-

It is the

“Sunshine Cut”, a New York style
designed especially for hair that
has

a tendency

to curl.

Thomson
Mr. and Mrs. James E. Thomson
(Betty Ledderboge)
of Alton announce the birth of their. second
child,
Craig
William,
in
Alton
January
16. Their
other
son
is
John
Andrew,
3.
The
maternal

grandmother is Mrs. Cliff Ledderboge of Champaign, who formerly
lived in Highland
grandparents
are
James

A.

Park. Paternal
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Thomson,
875 Pleasant

avenue.

es

Thursday, January 22, 1953
ST
34 dy .t8 aes
he

�Where
LINOLEUM

Chrysler-Plymouth

FLOOR COVERING
Linol

@
@

Asphalt
Plastic Wall

For

free

K

@

Finolaiin ¥ited

®

eet

USED

call

the

Call HI

2-5645

1

Park

©

1740

Universal

- Philco - Zenith

&amp;

gency

Servi

H!

HI

2-2500

—

Convertibles,

Grove

ab:

|

by

SHERIDAN

Evanston

sees

ROAD

Leading

Watch

and

Watch

Jewelry

Inspector

ERS

the

PARK,

ILL.

Western

R.R.

454 Waukegan Ave.
2-0455

Highwood
‘

|

Satisfaction

VENETIAN

and

‘CS

Dirt

Fill

eat ae

Moving
Hauled

967

Bathrooms,

Kitchens

- GLASS

Deerfield

On

TOPS

Linens,

877

Blouses,

Pleating

Buttons —:
&amp; Machine

See.

Woodward

Ave.

&amp; Paint Co.
Waukegan

Ave.

ies pee.

1049

DRY

:
IT’S

site

Fabric Shop

oe

It

a

vanston

takes

few
‘’magic
to get some
aly, stains out of
rics.

et

eee

us

Phone

HI

2-3804

444 Central

Highland Park

1732

First

BESS

HI 2-4800

SERS eee ee.

JEWELERS

ce.

DEERFIELD CLEANERS
aT

AON

Deerfield 350
Tri yr

Install it yourself or make
HI 2-0566

use of our expert mechanics.
459

L—-O—N-—G

for

Excellent

on broken lenses and
frames
Eyes Tested by Appointment
Across from the Bank, 35 Years

- Case-

Center

y

service

I. H. NEMEROFF
JEWELERS

St.

@

Fender

@

Painting

@

Wheel

@

Radiator Repair

OPTICIANS

SERRE 2S SS eee
SHADES

LANDI BROS.
PAINTS—SUPPLIES

Repair

Alignment

&amp;

@
e
@

Venetian Blinds
Columbia Lattishades
Bamboo Blinds—Draperies

@

Window

668

DAHL’S
AUTO RECONST.
2058 Ist St.
HI 2-0077

Shades

CENTRAL AVE.
HI 2-2350
Highland

Park

COVERING

FLOOR SHOP
ASPHALT — RUBBER — PLASTIC TILE
GULISTAN CARPETS &amp; RUGS
LINOLEUM &amp; LINOLEUM TILE

Phone HI 2-4500
FOR ADVERTISING SPACE
ON

THIS

PAGE

Roger Williams Ave.

ON

RESULTS

Yet

SHORT

- OPTICIANS

Registered
Optometrist

FREE ESTIMATES
LAKE BLUFF 2575

wor

DOWNING’'S
BRAUN BROS. OIL CO.

BUICK

INC.

Windows - Picture Win- Porch
Enclosures
Doors

than

words”

810 Waukegan Rd.

FLOOR

HEATING EQUIPMENT
GAS AND OIL BURNERS
SALES AND SERVICE

KLEEBURG

24 HOUR
TOWING SERVICE

more

enti
iTTi Tir i TTT TTT
HEATING

ment
dows

MAGIC

Belts

line

SERRE Ree
TOWING

CLEANING

Hand Bound
Button Holes

UNiversity 4-3034

complete

616

SERRE RRR

Sweaters,

al

ay STE

Rooms

Deerfield

ai

Vogue

Auto Body
Painting &amp; Repairing

6-3070

SEaUR0 S22 R Rees ee
STORM WINDOWS &amp; DOORS

Double Hung Windows

TILE-CRAFT
830

+

Highwood Glass
963

Powder

Towels, Shirts, etc.

WALLPAPER

ENTERPRISE
GUARANTEED
PAINTS

All Phones

&amp;

MONOGRAMMING

SHADES

Winnetka

See

A

GENUINE TILE INTERIORS
&amp; Asphalt Tile Floors.
Complete Tile
Service. Free Estimates. Phone Evenings.

OSTERMAN

TT rT
DRESSMAKERS SERVICE

BLINDS

BLINDS

MIRRORS

=
Hauling

Guaranteed

Factory Authorized
Sales &amp; Service

BEN SILJESTROM
RUSCO COMBINATION
METAL STORM WINDOWS
SCREENS and DOORS

Pickup andsameDelivery
on the ||| Modernized with Reol, Ceramic’ Tile
day.

VENETIAN
WINDOW

a4

and

BUICK

Darnell

General
Black

oor
and Deliver

Lincoln

SERVICE

BUICK SALES SERVICE

Packard-North Shore

562

TL

HI

BUICK

A safe place to buy a used car
All makes and models.

EXPRESS

Owner—W.

Highland Park
HI 2-0630

R eRe eA.

Inc.

Craftsmen
North

Nemeroff

Jewelers - Opticians

Sales and Service

10290
TRUCKING
| WALL AND FLOOR TILE
DEERFIELD

1. H.

| PACKARD ©

Designers

for

for Glasses

Service

1010 Hazel Ave., Deerfield
Phone Deerfield 602

2-2028

Repair

Complete Optical Se-vice

Boiler

Across from the Bank
Open Fri. 9 p.m.

REPAIR

HIGHLAND
HI

JEWELRY
Ha
LL

Owner

and

Cleaning

7 Pee

TELEPHONE

QUALITY CLEANING AT
REASONABLE PRICES

Furnace

|
ELT

Installation

Tudors,

i

WATCH

eee

Official

made

ee

2-0341

mn
SSSRe Pease
SMNEBECLEANERS

617

ee

JEWELERS

PARK

be

eee

Soo See

1864

can

StS

All Types of Heating

Ford

First

20992

TELEVISION-RADIO
FIRST ST.
HIGHLAND

arrangements

phone.

20th Century
1858

All

Authietian

Repairs &amp; Sales
Motorola

RS

JEWELERS

Community Gas Heating
SERVICE
A. E. Savage,

MOTO

AUTO RADIOS
and

HEATING

U-DRIVE-IT

;

PE ET PETE LET TT TTT TTT TTD
AUTO RADIOS

Custom

HIRE

Rent a New Car

INC

Lencioni

1379 Deerfield Road, Highland

FOR

GO TO

Tile

Town Floor Company
Daniel

CARS

CARS

MESIROW

Estimate

Service

snc glial

I

Rubber

@
Tile

it can be done

n cost

kor Advertising Space On This Page

Phone HI 2-4500

«
aia ss
fo!

oe’,

( NEWSPAPER CEG

ws

�World's newest

E

with a million miles ema
behind if
ERE,

in literal

fact,

is the

re

most

advanced V8 engine ever placed
in a standard-production American
automobile.

lion miles of driving through

It is the first such V8 to reach an
8.5 to 1 compression ratio, and the first
with a dynamic flow muffler that cuts
power loss to zero.

desert, mountains, cities and
plains. Only then did Buick
engineers mark it: Released
Production.

It is the first V8 to utilize vertical
valves together with a 12-volt electrical system instead of the usual 6. It is
also the first designed with new “T”
type intake manifold to replace the

“Y” type conventionally used in V8s.
I is, quite simply, the first V8 Fireball
Engine —the

engine that brings electri-

fying performance to the greatest
Buicks in fifty great years—the
engine that powers the 1953 Buick
ROADMASTER with 188 hp., and the
1953 Buick SUPER with up to 170.
Naturally, this spectacular new V8 has
been proved — by eight years of devel-

oping, testing, improving, perfecting—

»

But

these

gave

these

hard-to-please

First

Street

Golden

Buicks far more

MY

~

oh

il LU

coal

4
Television treat—
the BUICK CIRCUS
—every

for

engineers

Anniversary

than new power.

They gave them, too, a still finer ride,

Nothing, we believe, will do more
justice to your automobile dollars
— or
to your love of magnificent motoring—
than a visit to us right now.
*Standard on Roadmaster, optional at extra cost
on other Series.

WHEN

Buick,

BETTER
BUICK

AUTOMOBILES
WILL

BUILD

ARE

HOUR

fourth Tuesday

more superb comfort, new braking
power and handling ease —and a sensational new Twin-Turbine Dynaflow
Drive* that adds new quiet and whipfast getaway to absolute smoothness.

Kleeburg
1732

y We,
May

and by more than a mil-

BUILT

THEM

Ine.
HI 2-4800

�</text>
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10 Cents

Thursday,

January

werd Keview

29,

1953

�!
‘

|

|

read |ightly-Proud Hoot |
That’s a mighty proud foot you see there.
It’s resting on the accelerator of a gorgeous
1953 Cadillac.
But we have a serious and timely warning
for that proud and happy foot: Tread lightly!
Down under that accelerator is a dynamic
210-horsepower engine—coupled with the
smoothest, quickest-acting Hydra-Matic
Drive in history.
That great power was put there for the
driver’s safety in an emergency—and to
provide that smooth, effortless, steady ride
which is the essence of luxurious motoring.
It was not put there to enable a Cadillac
to dominate the highway—or to dash out

CADILLAC
2050

First St.

into the lead when the traffic light turns
green—or to out-maneuver the other motor
cars on the road.
So don’t ever exhaust that accelerator—
unless you’re in an emergency, and must do
so for reasons of safety.
If other drivers covet the honors at the
stop light—just let them go. They are first
away by your courtesy—and that should
be satisfaction enough for anybody.
Just be happy and satisfied with the
great luxury this powerful engine brings
you—the infinitely smooth, quiet performance... the quick “lift” that comes when
you nudge the accelerator . . . the great

MOTOR

CAR

reserve for a burst ahead in case of necessity
And be happy, as you can’t he/p being,
with the scores of other wonderful things
about this magnificent car—its easy, relaxing ride, for instance .. . its distinguished
and inspiring beauty .. . its rich, luxurious
interiors . . . its honored and respected
name... and its truly amazing economy.
Yes—there is so much about a Cadillac
to inspire and delight its owner that he
doesn’t need the additional thrill of unleashing its spectacular performance when
it isn’t necessary.
That’s why we know he'll “Tread lightly!”
He isn’t in competition with anyone.

DIVISION
Highland

Park, Ill.

�a

«

Vol. 27, No. 45

Final Hearing on Zoning Held
At Deerfield Grammar School
s

PTA

amendment to the zoning ordinance of the Village of Deerfield,
held its final hearing on Thursday, January 22, 1953, at the
Approximately two hundred
grammar school in Deerfield.
interested citizens were in attendance to listen to the proposed

changes being offered in their behalf.

A petition was presented on behalf of the Brierhill Road Improve-

Allan Adelman Elected
President of Chamber
the

Thursday

meeting

of

ment
S.

the

Chamber of Commerce, new officers were elected for 1953. Allan
Adelman was elected to serve as
president; Robert Folger as vice
president;
tary, and

Edna
Seider
Earl Paul, as

Raymond

T.

Meyer,

as secretreasurer.

Wesley

Installation

will

be

held

at

the

next meeting of the Chamber.
It was voted at the meeting that
the dues of the members
be increased from $12 a year to $20, to
give
the
organization
additional

working

Jacob.

capital.

The

Petition

Another

will

be

feature

a musical

of

the

program

presentation

by

the
girls
ensemble
of
Highland
Park High school—12 singers and
a pianist— directed
by
Chester
Kyle, director of vocal music at the
high
school
and
director
of the
choir at the Deerfield Presbyterian
church.
The dinner will be served
women of the church.

by the

Woman’s

club

luncheon
February

Deerfield

to be held
10 at 1 p.m.

grammar

Tuesin the

school

audi-

torium. Mrs. Albert R. Hanson
in charge of the luncheon.

is

A skit will be presented at the
luncheon by the students of the
Northwestern drama department,
under the arrangement by Mrs.

Henry Fisher.

«..

ee

sought

to

land

old:

W.

also

uses

seek

changes

proposed.

Wynkoop,

Mr.

in

the

the

testi-

mony of Mr. Ray Fidler, chairman
of the association, and Mr. George

Richards,
Mr.

secretary-treasurer;

Robert

Ramsey,

also

president

the Deerfield State
Pierson, Township

bank, Mr.
assessor,

of

Ben
and

Mr. Walter Krol, former building
commissioner. Mr. Victor Hedberg,
representing
the George
Bartlett
corporation,
which
have
recently
purchased the Tackett interests, introduced certain figures that were

prepared

an, engineering

com-

pany which they employed
the size of houses
in this
These figures were objected

as to
area.
to by

Mr.

by

Wynkoop

on

the

ground

Winters

and

Robt.

Mrs.

James

C.

Mitchell,

who

was

appointed to the school board last
fall due to a resignation, is the
third candidate and will run for
election to her unexpired two year

term.

Candidates

were

selected

Selections
ballot out
submitted
School

were
of a

by interested
Board
Board

qualifications

high

Camp

material

is

based

both

legal

being

built

by

the

and

school

and

college

has

been

a Deerfield

Board

Members

Mrs. Mitchell has already
contributed much effort and energy to
the workings of the present school
board. She received her schooling
in Washington, D. C., is a house-

that

The

(Continued

Skating

Carnival,

spon-

sored
by
the
Deerfield
and
Northbrook Rotary clubs, will
be held at Jewett park, Sunday,
February

1, weather

permitting.

on page

permit.

“The
starting

was

also

spring.

cae

There will also be smaller

Deerfield
Stagers”
are | sites selected for additional park
a precedent with a bene-,| areas in various sections of town
fit performance of the “Suspect” however these areas are not to be
on March 1 at the Deerfield gram- developed in the immediate future.
mar school. Proceeds from the per-

The

formance
will be turned over to
the March of Dimes to aid in the
fight against polio. It will be a
2:30
matinee.
Tickets
will
be
priced at $2.50.

Park

commission

New Officers To Be

Mrs. C. E. Piper,
William
Gilmour,
Raredon.

consists

Installed At St. Paul

the

members

are
the

Polio

Foundation,

collections

good and are running ahead
same period last year.

of

Newly

elected
of

St.

0!

Milton Frantz
and Lawrence
res

There
have
been
no complete
returns in Lake county as yet, but
according to reports received by

officers

Paul

|

—

and

church

coun

cil will be installed next Sunday
during the regular 11 a.m. worship
service.

All council members are elected

Ronald Ritter ls Named
To Office in Fraternity

by

Ritter, son of Mr. and
Ronald
Mrs. Fred C. Ritter of 946 Clay
correelected
been
has
street,
sponding secretary of the Bowling

Green

State
Tau

university

Delta

chapter

fraternity.

St. Paul

congregation;

the coun-

cil then in turn elects its respectiv
officers.
The officers

for

1953

are

as fol-—

lows:

:

Norval

Rather,

president;

Walter Bendinelli, vice presiden
of Mrs. Leonard Rectenwald, recording secretary; Harold Henderson,
financial
secretary;
Meyer,
treasurer.
Other
coun
members
include
Mrs.
Antes, Floyd Bock, Carl Freima

Bartlett

Lubbert

Schuetz,

and

Anth

members

who

were

Thompson.

Council

re-

tired after serving regular terms
of office were Karl Berning, Mrs.
John Coleman, and Arthur’ John-

petition.

petition

this

The completion of Jewett park
will progress as rapidly as fund:

terested citizens spoke in behalf of
A

she

ter house and the ice skating area.
The first step in fulfilling
plans has already been complete
with the grading of the prope!

field

corporation, which are smaller than
the minimum size houses sought by
the petitioners. Various other inthe

diamonds, tennis courts, new

the “Little League” baseball clul
which is to be organized in Deer-

Benefit Performance
For Deerfield Polio
Fund By “Stagers”

Delta

6)

The plan indicates the loca
of walks, parking areas, children
play areas, picnic grounds, b

The area will be seeded so that
a
ball diamond can be provided fo:

resident for four years. He is a
patent attorney, a graduate of Pur
due and George Washington universities,
and
has also taken
an
active part in both school and civic
affairs. He has three children, two
of whom are now in the grammar
school, and lives at 537 Hermitage.
Retiring

Deerfield.

Qualifications

and for many years has participated in PTA and school affairs. Mrs.
Winters has two children in gram
mar school and resides at 938 Rose
mary terrace.

Mr.

balance of the property “fronting
owned by the Village of Deerfielc
Park board has been actively enJewett park. The plan is now av
able for-all to see and will be displayed at the. post office in|
The
now
the
for

association property.
on Waukegan road” is
During the past year
gaged in making plans

citizens.

civic.
Mrs.
Winters
has
been
a
member of the Deerfield community for 11 years. She is a nousewife
a-graduate«of
the University
of
Iowa and holds a master’s degree
in education from Iowa State. She
has had teaching experience in ele-

mentary,

19, 1952, the Deerfield Park district
As of December
3/4 acres of the original Jewett Park
11
of
p
ownershi
assumed

made
by secret,
list of 35 names |

they covered houses outside of the
district represented
by the petition and
also
houses
which
are

[now

at

a joint
meeting
of
the
School
Board and PTA
Executive Board
and
room
mothers,
representing
the PTA body, and was held in accordance with the procedure written into the PTA minutes in 1950.

on

Har-

representing

introduced

Herbert

School

Standards

by the amend-

to

Mrs.

C. Camp were nominated as can
didates to fill the two school board
vacancies at the April 11 election.

presented

by Mr. Irl Marshall and supported
by representatives of the American
Legion and other interested parties,

son.

:

seeking to extend the business disbeyond
by the

the boundaries speciKincaid organization.

Eighth grade students of the local schools will hold a dance
to
morrow evening at the Deerfie
grammar

Serve

on

Miss Mary

College

Ann

Mr.

Ithaca, N. Y. She was

selected
and

7:30.

Chaperones

for

the

evenin

for

knowl-

and

Mrs.

Harold

Wynkooy

Mr. and Mrs. John Robertson and

daughter

of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Meyer,
755
Waukegan
road,
has’
been
selected to serve a year on the
college board for ‘‘Madamoiselle”’
magazine
at
Cornell
university,
her journalistic ability
edge of fashions.

at

will be Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Mann,

Board

Meyer,

school

This dance is one of a se
sponsored by the Deerfield school
PTA.

Will

Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Heninger.

%

Vis

At a recent meeting of the Mother’s club at Wilmot
school, Mrs. Frank Payne, president of the North Shore CreaPictured are Mrs.
tive Writers group addressed the mothers.
Donald. Hyink, program chairman for the club; Mrs. Frank
Payne, guest speaker; and Mrs. Eldon Holmquist, who is one
of the students of the group.
x§

hake §

—

Jewett Park on View At
|
Deerfield Post Office

will

hold its annual fun day with a pot
luck
day,

Ns

a

Pictorial Plans of

Members of the Zoning commission present at the hearing were
Mr. Lewis Walton, acting chairman,
Mr. Binnard, Mr. Ray Goodpasture,
Mr. Newell and Mr. Root.

Luncheon
Deerfield

Raise

proposed

and

the

trict
fied

Club to Hold Fun Day’
With Pot Luck
The

to

petitioner,

Mr. Haney will be the principal
speaker
at
a
6:45
p.m.
dinner
meeting of the Men’s club of the
church. A former partner of the
late Leonard Keeler, Mr. Haney is
a personnel consultant and specialist in the use of the lie detector
for business and industrial applications. A resident of Deerfield and
member
of
the
Presbyterian
church, Mr. Haney maintains offices
at 30
North
LaSalle
street,
Chicago.

petition

William

Board of Appeals, seeking to amend
the present zoning ordinance, also
presented their petition for hearing
before
the
Zoning
commission to raise the present minimum
ment,

George W. Haney, 1027 Deerfield
road, lie detector expert, will give
a talk and demonstrate
on “The
Lie Detector in Business” Tuesday
night,
February 10, at the
First
Presbyterian Church in Deerfield.

Attorney

The Briarwood
Home
Owners
Association, Inc., which had previously filed its petition and held
an extensive” hearing’ before the

standards

Noted Expert Speaks
To Presbyterian Club

by

change
certain
land
uses, which
under the proposed comprehensive
amendment
permitted the raising
of farm products as well as chickens and swine, and to raise the
minimum square foot requirements
for the building of homes.

Ala-

beck and Armin Von der Linden
were elected to serve onthe board
of directors.

Trust

School Board

Nominate Candidates
To Fill Vacancies

The Zoning Commission of the Village of Deerfield, which
is empowered to hold open hearings and make recommendations to the Board of Trustees on the proposed comprehensive

At

ca

Thursday, January 29, 1953

Stationed
Frank

in

New

Stillson,

York
son

of

Mr.

and

Mrs. C. Enid Stillson, 1103 Park
avenue; who recently joined th
air forces, is now
stationed
Sampson field, Geneva, N.Y..

:

�thousands

more

the of conflict lies in personalities and

opportunity to walk again?
This
Opinions
expressed
in
umns
do
now
necessarily

because

these
colconstitute

e

name

will

be

withheld

if

re-

On’

Wants Writer of
Mothers

Column

the

Me

and

other

have
.
_

I am

wondering

presumptuous

as

to

mothers

who

is

speak

with

for

whom

been in contact, who

have

‘October

about

ters in general
community.

of interest

_ The

situation

garbage

never
_ anything
in this
week

mat-

in

our

was

al-

the praise—of anyone or
(isn’t there anything good
town of ours)—and now
the inception of the final

blow, POLITICS,

at this time, has

made
me
want
to know—who
speaks
for me
and
the
other
mothers? Is it one person writing
this column—who or whom does he
‘ she represent—are the opinions
pressed
his or hers—or
those
a very small group of citizens—
what?

I think the author should be
made public and what organization
group

is represented,

other

of

express

ticism,

I, as

a

would

want

my

rather

than

people

who

to

all

the

to make this

_ have done so much
community

a better place in which

I, as a mother, know that time
and patience are necessary, and
that sugar catches more flies than
vinegar, so please do not include
me
in
this
column
“Deerfield
others Speak” anymore, just because

I

am

him
inions
fied.

a

Deerfield

Mother—

or her or them
are expressed be

‘A

Deerfield

the People

Could

you

of your

whose
identi-

Mother

spend

Speaks

a few

to learn

minutes

a few

facts

bout a great organization, an ornization

-which

is ready

and

dren, should the emergency
of your
backing
the
with
and
country,
your
munity,

arise,
comyour

willing to help you and your chil-

An organization through
of
thousands
generosity

nation?
whose

have
once

children
and
women
en,
een given the chance to live

‘The

Public

Office,

Press,

no

is a public

iess

Jan.

Published

than

Public

trust.

29,

1953

Weekly

Vol.

27,

every

No.45

Thursday

PUBLICATION
OFFICE
832 Todd Ct.
Deerfield,
Illinois
Telephone Deerfield 485
HIGHLAND PARK OFFICE
HI

%

2-4500

MEMBER
National Editorial Association
INinois Press Association

Heather Hartwig
Phyllis Russell
E. Deckert

“Entered

: ert

Editor

inois,

The

at the post

under

Highland

All

per

year

as second-class matter Novem-

1879.”
«Copyright,

Rights

the

office

Act

1952,

Park

of

By

at Deer-

March

Company

Reserved.

Going

8,

in
of

through

an iron lung
a nightmare.

my

mind

were

wife, my two little
in Deerfield still
Would
I have to
pay the doctor and
Then the National
Infantile Paralysis
and put my mind

at rest. They assured me all doctor bills and. hospital expenses
which
I could
not take care of
would be paid by them. Needless to
say, without this assurance that I
would have my home to return to
when
I recovered, I would probably have spent many more weeks
in the hospital.

been

made

that

thus

situation

far

the simple expedient of becoming
better acquainted in an atmosphere
of frank discussion.
The makeup of the council followed no particular pattern. Additional pefsons invited were selected
by general concurrence.
On

the

subject

of

how

candi-

be selected, the ques-

time because

of the

belief

disthis

that

it

would
only provide
a forum for
the reopening of old and irrelevant
controversies.
For myself,
I look

upon the method

adopted as strict-

ly a temporary
expedient, useful
only for the present situation. I
am in favor of establishing a care-

fully

worked

out

caucus

system

for the village, at least, before the
next election two years hence.
It has been suggested that more
than one candidate should be pre-

sented

for

each

office.

It

is

my

belief that such a procedure would
inevitably lead to the selection of

one

candidate

from

each

of

the

1951
factions,
and
the
chance
would be great that we would have
1951 all over again.
The

ideal

in

candidates,

of

course,

is

that

person

in

the

fitted

to do

the

costly

a credit to the community. We believe you will support such a slate.

disease,

with

your

help

be conquered. That
again,
support
the

Foundation

for Infantile

it

is why I
National

Paralysis.

I know from experience that this
is a very worthy organization.
Arthur G: LeFeuvre

Favors Caucus System
Selection of Candidates
To

the

the

It is entirely a personal letter,
but
I feel qualified
to write
it,
first, because
I have
been
associated with the idea since its inception;
second,
expressly
and

definitely,

council

to

was

work

born

primarily

together

for

the

benefit of the community.
In the beginning
four persons
representing
each faction in the
1951 election met under the guidance of Mr. Alabeck and Mr. Piper

the

be

the

job

best

for which

he

purpose

of

ascertaining

the areas and extent of their disagreement
on
basic
community
policies. Many more meetings were
held thereafter, and in each were
included additional persons drawn
from
both
factions.
Surprisingly

enough, at no time in these talks
was any serious disagreement disclosed
munity

relating
policies,

to
general
and
I am

vinced

that

only

the

real

comcon-

source

A

I

4

write a Village Manager’s “Diary” discussing some of the problems
with which the Village is faced and some of the plans in the making
I am happy to have that suggestion as
‘o deal with these problems.
‘'t has long been my feeling, approved by all members of the Village

|

Board

recent

to

whom

‘Diary’
It

column

T. MARTIN
Manager

GAYLE
Village

I have

would
is

a

in

be

the

DEERFIELD

mentioned

the

REVIEW

subject,

suggested

that

such

that

comments

or

desirable.

generally

accepted

fact

that

good

public

relations

exist

when the public attitude toward the local government is one of confidence, respect, and approval.
A column
such as this could go a
long way toward the attainment of these attitudes.
Even the wisest

policies

and

citizens

are

You

most
not

will

efficient

administration

adequately

find

that

will

draw

informed.

in most

criticism

if

the

:

cities with

the

council-manager

of government, the city manager is the chief public
of the city. As the officer responsible for formulating

plan

relations officer
broad municipal

policies and programs for the approval of the council, or Board of
Trustees as in the case of Deerfield, the manager is the logical source
of

information

and

should

recognize

his

responsibility

community informed on municipal affairs.
Naturally the manager must realize the delicate
occupies when
a controversial

he discusses
issue.
First

partial

by

to

keep

ss
position

that

he

any issue publicly particularly if it is
of all he is not only responible to the
public at large for his actions, but he is directly responsible to the
council or Board
of Trustees and serves as their agent.
For this
reason, the manager must be particularly careful to maintain an im-

attitude

the question
at
partisan political

analyzing

the

facts

and

presenting

issue, otherwise
he may
issues.
The manager may

to himself and to the Board

of Trustees

find
also

both

sides

of

himself
involved
in
find it embarrassing

to discuss a topic prematurely

without having had an expression of policy by the Board of Trustees.
In spite of the situations that are likely to occur as a result of
misinterpretations
and misunderstandings,
most
city managers find

they are to hold and which

citizens to take an active part in the administrative

affairs of the city,

promoting

and

will be

We make
no claim as political
oracles. We
know
our candidates
will not please everyone. If they
are not pleasing enough for election it will not be for lack of conscientious and exacting effort on
the part of those on the council
and my committee. I ask you only

believe

that

utter

good

lieve

to be,

we

faith

for

at this

are

acting

what

time,

we

the

in
be-

best

interests of the community. There
will be time enough to argue about
our good
sense after the candidates are selected. Meanwhile we
will strive—even
as did Caesar’s
wife.
George L. Haggard
To

the

Editor:

The Westview Property Owners
Protective.
association
met
last
Friday
at
Wilmot
school
and

elected

E.

Hildebrandt,

president.

R.
Dahlgren,
vice
president,
G.
Schmid,
secretary,
and
H.
Bell,
treasurer.
A
very
informative
discussion
was given by Mr. Homer Marxer
on the subject of the Union Drainage Ditch.
It is the opinion of this group
that with the large contemplative
expenditures the town has under
consideration; namely, the sewage
disposal plant, etc., that the utmost
vigilance he exercised that these
expenditures are fully justified. If
justified,
that
all alternate
proposals (such as inclusion of Deerfield into the North Shore Sanitary district vs. the new
sewage
disposal plant) be thoroughly explored so that the community gets
the best equipment
and installation at the least overall cost.
G. Schmid

To

the Editor:
It is gratifying to note in
columns of the REVIEW that

majority

of

the

incumbent

ship officers have signified
willingness to serve again.

I and a group

a weekly

column

answering

forming
In
terms,

public

of

in

of the

weeks

few

regarding

interest

public

the
a

in their local newspapers

questions

the

that
the

prospective

activities

their

of friends here in

projects,

of the

excellent

services,

city

method

encouraging
generally

in-

government.

follow I will attempt to
accomplishments,
problems

discuss,
and

in

general

needs

Girl Scout Units Merge In
New Moraine Council, Inc.
After working together for several years as separate units,

the Girl Scouts of Highland Park, Highwood, Deerfield, Bannockburn and Fort Seridan have voted to become one council.
The
merged
groups
will
be
known as the Moraine Girl Scout
Council, Inc.
The
area has been
divided into three neighborhoods

the

northern

part

field Township
records of the

and

found

of

West

Deer-

have checked the
incumbent officers

they

have

been

a cap-

able, efficient
ministration.

and

economic

Indicative

the

last

of

ad-

qualifica-

tion—an important one—the independent slate has gone on record
to state that in all likelihood it
will probably not be necessary to
levy additional township taxes in
the year ahead.

They
an

have,

program
so
in

furthermore,

outstanding

job

in which

on

the

done
safety

they cooperated

well with county
posting roads.

safety

groups

We, in the northern end of West
Deerfield
Township,
feel we
are
getting
more
than
our
money’s
worth in township government.
We
would
like to call the attention of the citizens to the fact
that the incumbents “went through

wringer,”

as this year’s

‘| nominating committee stated in the
REVIEW of January 22, and have
already proved themselves in that
the respect.
the
Let us hope that the good gov-

town-

to be an

municipal

of the
of necessity defer discussion on some
topics until
thoroughly investigated and, in some cases, until a
the Board of Trustees.

Village.
I must
they have been
policy is set by

the public

Praises Present
Township Officers

|
—

the

of

I am not a candidate for

any
office
in the
coming
April
elections;
and,
third,
my
own
thoughts
and
impressions
might
be of some public interest in view
of my position as chairman of the
Nominating committee.

The

will

community

By

is selected. It should be clear that
such a result is much simpler to
ask than to deliver. We are seeking to select a slate of candidates
we believe competent for the jobs

to

Editor:

each

PROBLEMS

in

through

I am home now and working once
again, but I cannot forget all my
little friends back at the hospital,
stricken with polio and hoping and
praying they will walk again. And
they will walk again if you will
give them the chance by lending
your
support
to
the
March
of
Dimes. Even though polio is a very

with

Managing Editor
Business Manager

Subscription Rates—$2.75
tic Rate—$4.00 per year
le Copies—10c
oreign Rates on Application

first days
something

tion,

1775 St. Johns Ave., Highland Park, III.
Telephone

was

of the desire to avoid the extreme
public acrimony attendant upon the
local election two years ago. It is
believed that such experiences impair the unity of the community,
so badly needed in external questions,
and
reduce
almost
to extinction the willingness
of many
competent
people
to
stand
for
election to local public offices. It
is not the intention to thwart the
vigorous presentation of ‘issues and
views but rather to encourage that
reasonable restraint which will allow neighbors, the day after elec-

_ DEERFIELD
REVIEW

(Thareday,

I

This letter has to do with
Deerfield
nominating
council.

Of Deerfield

time

1951,

has

alleviating

tion of a caucus was much
cussed but was discarded at

can
say

children.

my

raise

as

Deerfield,
thanks,

gress

By

place. Why, polio was a children’s
disease! It couldn’t happen to me.
But it did—polio knows no age. It
strikes hard and fast.

thoughts of my
girls, our home
to be paid for.
sell my home to
hospital bills?
Foundation for
came to my aid

feel

it.

dates should

Deerfield

we

of

the hurts of the 1951 election. I
feel that much—very much—pro-

difficult to realize what was taking

My
were

how

part

\12,°

not been consulted, yet under the
weekly column “Deerfield Mothers
ak” have told the people of

ight—certainly many of us felt the
me—but from that to the faults

:

are

to you

stricken
with
polio
and
in two
days I was placed in an iron lung
in the Evanston
hospital. It was

Identified

Editor:

Finally
so

you

belongs

helping to keep it functioning, you
help yourself and your children.
Yes, this great organization is the
National Foundation for Infantile
Paralysis.

_ the opinions of the paper.
Letters
_ should be brief and should contain
the name and address of the writer,
quested.

organization

ernment

we have

four years may

is no substitute

enjoyed

the past

be continued.

There

for experience.
Harry Wittbrod

with

an

elected

chairman

troops

in

sible for
location.
Mrs.
avenue

Frank
is in

neighborhood,

her

respon-

geographic

Dubach of St.
charge of the

Mrs.

P.

Johns
north

N.,

Gould,

of Sumac rvad, the south portion
and Mrs. Hubert Kelley, the west
section.
By
pooling
their
resources,
leaders,
skills, programs
and finances, they hope to make

improved

Scouting

possible

more than 1,000 Brownies,
mediates and Senior Scouts.

Mrs.

Lennox

.
—
|
—
—

for

Inter-

PERO

——|| more, and

President

Mrs. Frank Lennox of Elm Place —
is president of the new council. |
Mrs. Lewis Stryker of Deerfield is.
first vice president; Mrs. Leonard
Davidow,

and

second

Mrs.

vice

C. V. Stewart,

president.

Mrs.

R. V. Hussong

is secretary

E. P. Barnes

of the

president;

third vice

of Deerfield

group

of Lincoln

and

Mrs.

avenue

is

are
Members-at-large
treasurer.
Mrs. Thomas Garrity of Highwood

avenue and Mrs. William
sliff of Deerfield.

Hinch-

Mrs. Theodore Stuve of Ridgewood drive is in charge of troop
organization; Mrs. Russell Whit
ney, of Ridge road, training; Mrs.
Isadore

Zimmerman

of

Park

ave-

nue, program; Mrs. Robert Fischel
of Pine Point drive, finance; Mrs.
Charles Walker of Meadow lane,

camp;

Mrs.

Rupert

Chutkow

(Continued on page 38)

Thursday, January 29, 1953

of —

�Amvet Auxiliary Officers

New Commander Takes Over

john

Men

Whavvried
John
and

nesday

Meyer,

Raymond

Waukegan

,

Wednesday

Allen

Mrs.

Meyer

son

T.

of

Mr,

Meyer,

755

road, was married

evening

to

Miss

Wed-

Barbara

Kain of Newburgh, New York. The
wedding
took place
at the Bryn
Mawr Community
church in Chicago. The couple left immediately
for Boston, Mass. where they have
an apartment
waiting them.
Mr.

Meyer was released
duty after sustaining

from active
a serious ac-

cident in Korea. He will enroll at
M.I.T.
while
recuperating
and
study for his advanced degree in
engineering.

The

Gail Mentzer and past commander Nat Richards with
Elmer Krase, who was installed as the new commander of the
Amvets at their installation dinner at Wheeling.

Mrs. Trevlyn Pottenger, retiring president; Mrs. Paul Sedsenior vice president; Mrs. Mary Alice Murtagh, presi-

nak,
dent;

and

Mrs.

Ricardo

Suess,

junior

vice

bride

is a graduate

mons Girls college
has made her home
the last year.

of Sim,

in Boston and
in Chicago for

Mrs.

president.

Sedlak and Mrs. Suess were installed. at the: dinner.

Bannockburn Garden Club
To Hold Luncheon Wednesday

At Installation Party for New Amvet Officers

Bannockburn
Garden
club will
meet February 4 for a 12:30 lunch-

eon at the home of Mrs. W. H.
Davies Jr., Sunset lane, Bannock-

Sco

burn.
Mrs. Richard
Thompson
is:
eo-hostess. Guest speaker will be
Ralph Synnesvedt who will discuss
“Flowering
Shrubs
and
Planting
to Attract Birds.”

Africa

Lectures

Continue

The
second
installment
of the
lectures by Mrs. Louis Zenko on
Africa
for
the
benefit
of
the
Women’s society of World Service
of the Bethlehem church will be
given Tuesday, at the home of Mrs.

Harry

On

Enjoying

the

party

dinner

and

that

accompanied

installation of the new officers of the Amvets and
iary are Harold Peterson, Mr. and Mrs. Richard

and

Mrs.

Ricardo

Suess,

one of the newly

the

the auxilHoffman,

Johnson

Vacation

at

in

1:30

p.m..

California

Mr. and Mrs. Milton Frantz and
their daughter
Olive
are leaving
shortly for a vacation in California. They will visit Pasadena, San

Another group attending the installation dinner includes
Mrs. Charles Rogers Jr., John Phelan, newly installed adjutant, and Harold Pottenger.

Francisco

installed officers.

terest

and

before

other

points

of

in-

returning.

L

WOMEN TO
L! INCHEON
CENTER DRIVE

\nnual

unchesan

cf

Mrs.

the

Chienog

Rohert

L.

Maternity

Tohneon,

A24

Canter

Rrierhill.

enraliment

is chairman

drive

of one

of the volunteer teams which will tate nart in the campaign to
enroll 1,000 new members for the Maternity Center.
The
opening
luncheon
at
the
Casino is being given by Mrs. John
Andrews
King,
chairman
of the
Center’s board of directors. Some
400 volunteer workers. memhers of
36 enrollment teams from Chicago
and the suburbs, will attend.
Each
of those present will be
dubbed an “ambassador at large’
for the Maternity Center and given
a “diplomatic passport” authorizing

him or her to make friends and accept

gifts

Dr.

for

Karl

the

Center.

Meyer,

medical

super-

Mather’s

Have

Cluh

Pot

There
per

at the

on
be
ents

of

medical
Daggett

director
Harvey,

of the
Center;
CMC
president;

Howard

Gillette,

CMC

Mrs.
man

her co-chairman,
mour.
Members

in

treasurer;

J. Bernard Mullen, Jr., chairof the enrollment drive; and

of

addition
Mrs.

J.

to
J.

Mrs.

the

Vernon

Deerfield

Mrs.

Johnson,

Clancy;

Mrs.

Ar-

Mrs. Ward
R. Thomas;

Gauntlett; Mrs. James
Mrs. Richard R. Wolfe;

29,

luck
supper

will

for

all

the

par-

and

teachers,

and

a final

vote

P.T.A.

The

sup-

together

the

question

will

be

The suvper is being given
Mother’s club and the price

of the dinner

will be $1

Sixth

[The BANKER’S STORY|
—_—- —
=

Ee

HOw

a person.

Interviewed

for

Eagle

Scout

GCREATE

Birthday

Eleanor Robertson, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. John Robertson. 704
Orchard.
recently celebrated
her
sixth
birthday
with
a group
of
friends in her home.
Among the
guests were Cathy Riordon, Susy
and Cathy Otter, Stephanie Howard, Karen Flvnne, Louisa Winters
and Dede Hartwig.

in

New

C. E. Morgan, 937 Forest avenue,
toured
the
Michoud
Ordnance
Plant in New Orleans with mem-

bers

of the

work

equipment

DJICREATE ADDITIONany
AL DEPOSITS.
|
THIS IS THE
PRINCIPLE
OF THE

ron
HO

“FRACTIONAL

")\ RESERVE” SYSTEM, BY WHICH
“\ THE BANKING SYSTEM AS A
UNIT “CREATES”
MONE Y—
THE BASIC INGREDIENT
OF OUR

OWORLD. SYNDICATE Wen

ECONOMY /

\

We are ready and anxious to loan money
with

our

officers

com-

mittee
of the American
Railway
Engineering Association, who have
been meeting in New Orleans.

OF

DEPOS/TORS’ [”'\MONEY, BANKS

any good purpose.

Orleans

MONEY

By LENDING OUT A SAFE PORTION

Rank

Among the 60 Scouts, Explorers
and leaders who were interviewed
for Eagle Scout rank during December
and
January
were
three
Deerfield
boys.
They
included
Sam Bradt of Troop 51, and Gregory Armstrong
and Russell Zartler of Troop 52.

£

BANKS

at 7 p.m.

get

taken.
bv the

3.

pot
school

are:
Frank

Mrs. W. H. Davies, Jr.;

January

a

Sunday,
February
1 following
‘he 7 o’clock mass, the ladies of the
Altar and
Rosary
society of the
Holy Cross church will hold their
annual
breakfast
in
the
parish
dining
room.
The
Holy
Name
society will prepare and serve the
breakfast.
All
the ladies
of the
parish are invited to attend. After
the breakfast the society will hold
a brief business meeting at which
time there will be an election of
officers.
Mrs.
Charles
Wilson,
is
chairman of the nominating committee.

Come
.

.

for

in and talk it over

.

See us for loans of all types

Es

Deerfield

State

Bank

team,

M. Conley;

Thursday,

Supper

be

Wilmot

February
a

intendent of Cook county institutions,
will
be one
of the
main
speakers at the kick-off luncheon, ‘Celebrates

Others who will speak are Mrs. |
King;
Dr.
Beatrice
E.
Tucker,

ta_

Luck

will

7

of Altar

\nd Rosary Society Sunday

Nine Deerfield women will be amoane thece oatherinea a’
Casino in Chicaco Thurstav, Tanvarv 29, for the ovenine

the

Breakfast

a

NINE DEERFIELD
ATTEND CASINO
FOR MATERNITY

1953

and Mrs. Robert E. Wolff.
Mrs. Bruce Brown, Deerfield, is
a member of another team of suburban women.

-|Away for the Weekend
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Carl
Johanson,
Oxford
road, spent last weekend

in Benton
friends.

Harbor

visiting

with

1%2%

interest

paid

on

savings

Deposits insured up to $10,000.00
Page

5

�| Deerfield Mothers:

va,

Speak
Ww.
sé aaibice- Osler ischiviies 5
Co
try BONO 5c.
esas 4
........2.......

4

Village Hardware ............
| sbschutz ee Naa eae
Se a
ie
aici
eit ae
RCA RE Cn op A
pe
eM

fidge’s

Texaco

4
3
3
2
2
2
1

Individual

L.
1
2
2

High
i

Leaders

Series,
a

Men

596

High Game, Women

ee

UE

i ae

High
men

mee

200
499

Leaders

4
High Game, Team
pemmawe @ TEX8CO nin.

:

999

High Series, Team
sei

KNAAK’S

cue dnete 2762

H. FORD

Registered

Pharmacist

Established

Phone

in

1

1884

&amp; SELIG

We

ELECTRIC

Repair

Rd.

Deerfield

F. D. CLAVEY
RAVINIA NURSERIES,
Established
Office

and

Deerfield
West

122

Inc.

Nursery

36

Road,

middle

of

be

delayed

March!

Flies

Full
and
complete
reports , . by
Lake County and State of Illinois
sanitation experts from Springfield
were made available to Mr. Nelson
on January 2, and were subsequent-

but

the

State’s

Attorney

enforce,

Empty
trailers
troyed NOW!

should

be

des-

NOW!

facilities

Colonies of rats living and breeding at the dump site should be exterminated NOW!

Sanitation

experts recommended

that a two foot covering of soil
should be placed on the dump if it

the

Village

forcement
hibiting

1885

35 and

Deerfield

not

start breeding in March,: and ‘mi:
grant workers. will start ..coming
back to inhabit the trailers!

that

of Appliances

- Tel.

Nelson’s

is not to be used again. Mr. Matthews,
village
attorney,
advises

APPLIANCES

All Makes

should

the

batting

Refrigerators - Ranges - Radios
ashing Machines - Vacuums

730 Waukegan

Attorney

Deerfield

of
the

will

the

insist

state

dumping

on

law
of

en

pro-

garbage

within a mile of a village.
Adequate fill should be hauled
in NOW!
Once again we would like to
urge anyone interested in joining
the crusade to clean up the brick
yards to call Jane Nielsen, Deerfield 154, or Lucile Loarie, Deerfield 853, or Jane Deiter, Deerfield
So
or Katherine Price, Deerfield
3%.

Troop

77:

Cammy

Ryan,

re-

porter. We played a game. Then
we did some charades. Nancy Merner brought
the treats. We
then
did the Brownie
“Squeeze.” Last
week Gail Kroll brought the treat

and we played games
too. We
made
bird feeders out of pine
cones.
Troop 14: Francine Zellett, reporter.
We
worked
with
water
colors and different kinds of paints
the same as last week. We had
refreshments

before

we

dismissed.

Troop 3: Sheila Robertson, reporter. Today we worked on our
Child Care and Hostess badges.
We

played

“Concentration.”

Linda

Meyer was chosen our Juliette Low
girl.
Troop

4:

Jean

Yous,

reporter.

We had our meeting and worked on
our Community badge. Delicious
cup cakes were served by Mrs.
Cassady.
Afterwards
we
played
Chinese puzzle game and dismissed
with

“Taps.”

Seriously Injured
After 15 Foot Drop
In serious condition after a 15
foot fall January 15 from the wing
of a B-36 plane is Airman 3/C
F.

Kightly,

son

of

Mr.

and

Mrs. Kenneth W. Kightly of 1910
Spruce street.
Mr. Kightly, an 18
year old airplane mechanic, is confined to his base hospital with head
injuries.

He

is stationed

at

Cars-

well Air Force base, Fort Worth,
Tex.
The Kightlys returned January 21 from a visit with their
son.
Mr. Kightly was working on the
plane when he fell to the concrete
ramp on which the bomber was
parked.
A member of the 435th
Bomber
base.

Squadron,

he

lives

on

the

eA

Watch
;

Victory Rollers

Jewelry
for the

Entire

A

Repairing
DEERFIELD

635

Family

Deerfield

Phone 1048
JEWELERS

January
Central

A.
OPTOMETRIST
Call

te

in

Optical

Deerfield

Foods

Willi,

Ww.

L.

41

22

38

25

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

Plasterer

Service

Since

1942

Deerfield 674 for Appointment
857 Rosemary Terr., Deerfield

29
33
35

Sunset Foods’... 00.......... 26
Alpha Cleaners ............... 24
High

Violet’

Series

Capitanl } ojo
High

Bevery:

Davie

37
39
489

Game

ed

181

On

the

ae

women

who

ee

are on

the team for the Chicago
Maternity Center enrollment
drive, include Mrs. Robert
L. Johnson, chairman of the
‘When

you

bring

your

car

to

us,

you may rest assured we check
everything from bumper to bumper for your added safety.

Midge’s Texaco
650, Waukegan

Road

eer.

‘Tel. 580
&lt;eeenereeereneneeeecemecee {|

Deerfield area and two of
the members of her team,
Mrs. Richard R. Wolfe and
Mrs. Ward Gauntlett. Kickoff luncheon for the drive
was held at the Casino club
in Chicago on Wednesday.

|signed

after a three

Petitions

year term.

will be circulated

short-

ly for the new candidates. The election

takes

place

on

Abril

11,

1953.

Of A Fire Drill And
A Red-Faced Boy
Ravinia school was emptied last
week in a fire drill which broke
all records for speed and surprises
and left an eighth grade boy somewhat red-faced in the background.
During a hot game of bombardment
Alfred
Alschuler
III. class
of ’53, threw his ball ostensibly at
another fellow standing
in front
of the fire alarm box.
The other
fellow ducked
and the Alschuler
‘
ball crashed
into the fire alarm

box, breaking the glass and hitting
less than one minute.
The
incident,
which
occurred
shortly after three o’clock, caught
the kindergartners in their cloakroom,
stuffing
themselves
into
snow pants and scarves.
The day
was a watery one, highly unsuitable for the occasion.
Dudley Dewey, gym teacher in
charge of the game, could only
stand back and watch the kids go
by.

City Still Awaits
Word

From

Canitol

To Lift Rent Lids
Although a teletyped query as
to the rental status of Highland
Park was sent to the Washington,
D. C., headquarters of the office
of rent stabilization by the Chicago
area office, no reply had been re-

about head

lifted in Highland
Park, controls
will continue.
Officials in the Chicago rent office claim that, with

injuries to service per-

to

Pure Christianity as the only unassailable basis for world peace,
as well as for healing and salvation, is the core of a lecture on
to

be

given

by

Richard Knox Lee of London, Eng; land, in the First Church of Christ,
| Scientist, tomorrow at 8 p.m.
Members

of the congregation

We
Wilmot

at thane
tt cee
and
Deerfield
Roads
:
(Wilmot
School)
The Rev. J. D. Parker Vicar
SUNDAY,
February 1
4.0.0 am.
Paawuy
service.
Kindergaren and
church
school
classes
for the
snildren.
Sermon
and
holy
communion
for adults.

HOLY

CROSS CATHOLIC CHURCH
North
Waukegan
Road
Rev. John
O’Mara,
pastor
Rectory, 724 Elder Lane
Deerfield 430
:
Sunday
Masses.
.«
11:88.
Weekday
Masses:
First Friday of each month,
Mass at
a.m.
‘aturday: 4 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Cone
easions.

NORTH

or

disapproves

office
the

ST. PAUL EVANGELICAL
AND
REFORMED
CHURCH
638
Waukegan
Road
Rev.
H 9 ‘Willma
Pastor
Deerfield 858
FRIDAY,
Janvary
30
7 p.m. St. Paul bowling league.
SATURDAY,
January
31
9:30 a.m.
Confirmation instruction in
the church
basement.
6 p.m. Evening
vesper
chives,
d
7 p.m. Paula Kress and Donald Ad
wedd'~=* ceremony.
SUNDAY, February 1
9:30 a.m.
Sunday school worship and
classes.
10°39 a.m.
Chime eall to worship,
11 am.
Morning chyrch worship.
Th
newly
elected
members
of
the
churct
council will be installed -t this service
7 p.m.
Youth
Fe'lowship meeting if
the
church
basement.
MONDAY,
Februarv
2
'
3:30 p.m.
Girl Seout meeting in th
church
basement.
7°30
p.m.
Monthly
meeting
of th
Sundav school teachers.
WEDNESDAY,
February 4
7:30
p.m.
Choir
rehearsal
in thé
church sanctuary.
THURSDAY,
February 5
‘
1:30
p.m.
Morthlvy
meetirg
of
thé
Women’s
guild
at
the home
of
Mrgl
John
Ott, 1060 Oakley,
Deerfield.

FIRST

ap-

are

sponsoring the lecture and have invited; the public to attend without
charge.
The subject of Mr. Lee’s
talk will: be “Christian Science:
The Supremacy of Spirit.”

Gen. Wilbur to
Speak on Lincoln

PRESBYTERIAN

824

Gen.

William

avenue,

H.

Waukegan

Phone

Dr.

Paul

J.

7:30

p.m.

aoe

new

Pastor

The

Sess‘on

February

will

into

the

meet

¢

congreg!

2

;

8 p.m.
Girl Scout meeting.
7:30
pm.
Bov
Scout
meeting.

i

7
8

:

p.m.
p.m.

February

Junior
Church

THE

371

choir
choir

4

rehenrrsal.
rehearsal.

BETHLEHEM

t(Pvaneelical

holder of the Con-

sressional
Medal
of Honor.
wil’
address the next Chamber of Commerce
dinner meeting on “Abra‘am
Lincoln, A True American.”
The meeting will be held at the
Recreation center February 10 at
6:30 p.m.

775

Keller.

members

WEDNESDAY,

Wilbur,

CHURCH

Road

Deerfield

pene
February 1
j
:45 a.m. Church school for all grade
ee
high
school.
9:45 a.m.
Adult Bible class under th
leadership of C. E. Piper.
11 a.m.
Morning
worship.
11 a.m.
Nursery
schoo] for childret
8 to 6.
7 p.m.
Tuxis society.

At Chamber Dinner
Central

j

SUNDAY SERVICES
9:45 a.m. Sunday
school.
11 a.m. Morning
worship.
i
7 30 p.m. Evenin:: services (monthly).
First and third Sundays: Evangelistic
servi'es.
Second
and
fourth
Sundays:
Yout
fellowship
services.
If vour church has no evening servic
we invite you
to join
with
us in th
If you
do not atten
|evening
service.
church, we give you a warm welcome
visit our services.

recom-

rent advisory boards
by the national of-

COMMUNITY

Sanders at Durdee
P.O. Deerfield,
Il.
James Burford, Pastor
»
Telephone
Northbrook
935R2

yesterday.

Washington

NORTHFIELD

MONDAY,

Hear Talk By Englishman

Science

proves

to

the

tions of local
are approved
fice.

of the Sloot auto, but neither the
driver nor his two passengers, Jack
Cahill and Carl Drake, also of
Deerfield, was injured, police said.

Christian

up

Until

a few exceptions, the recommenda-

Highland
Park police report a
hit and run accident last Friday at
10:50 p.m. on Skokie highway, just
south of Route 22. A sedan driven
south on Skokie
by
Thomas
K.
Sloot of Deerfield was struck by
a Tudor
black
Ford,
bearing
a
1952 Arkansas
license, 364959,
which left the scene.
There was
damage to the left front and side

Scientists

CHURCHES
ST;

hammer
which
sent the enschool out of the building in

mendation of the Lake county rent
advisory board that rent lids be

Christian
Local

?

Department of Defense regulation
prohibiting release of information

On Skokie Highway

Stand‘ngs

Highland Park Fuel ........ 34
Bishop Heating ............... 30
Deerfield Lumber
.......... 28

DR. G. C. PARKNEN
Estobiichen

26

children.

ceived

Hit And Run Driver
Sought In Accident

Bowling League

Rd.

four

A Carswell base spokesman said
that details of the injury would
not be divulged because of a new

sonnel.
Expert

of

ve&gt;rs and as lore interested 2nd
active in school affairs. She resides
at 1036 Ookley.
The retiring school board members are Mrs. James Tibbetts. whe
hee cerved
six and
a half vears.
and Mr. Gordon
Segert, who re-

the
tire

Airman Kightly Is

Walter

mother

member of the community for eis*t

Thess

action to clean
before spring.

Families living on the brickyard
premises should have toilet and

FROST'S
AND

brickyards

mend,

Established 1925
REALTORS
Insurance — Real Estate — Loans
_ 735 Deerfield Road, Deerfield, I.
Edward H. Selig
Harold R. Vant
Tel. Deerfield 155

RADIO

State’s

(Continued from page 3)

wife.

been

—after March
15. When Mr. Nel3on
comes
is not
the important
point. But action to clean up the

must

Deerfield. 1.

VANT

accepted

have

ly published in the DEERFIELD
REVIEW. These experts told our
Village
authorities
and
health
authorities that they could recom-

PHARMACY

BRUCE

who

pushing for speedy
up the brickyards

until

Series, Women
2027560)
oS ae es

Team

mothers

2 generous offer to come down and
3 talk it over, which he made when
3 he addressed the Citizens Commit4 tee for a Better Deerfield recently.
4 Mr. Thomas Matthews, Village at4 torney, who promised to be. on
5 hand for such a meeting, extended
the invitation because the mothers
have found that Mr. Nelson is hard
to reach. Mr. Nelson’s reply to Mr.
242 Matthews indicates that he is still
willing to come down to Deerfield

High Game, Men
Rr MONS: Sac
Bala
IN

wan ey

Deerfield

CHURCH

Miritnd

R

athean)

Francis Geo. Guither, Minister
Clair Marvel, Assistant Minister
;

415

“Church

Rosemar

Going

Pervacs

Families

\Are

Repay

Families’

THURSDAY,
January 29
3:45 p.m. Junior
choir
rehearsal.
6:45
p.m.
Bethlehem
bowling
leagud
SATURDAY,
January
31
7:30
p.m.
to
11:30
p.m. Teen-tow
in Fellowshin
hall.
Gen. Wilbur, a graduate of West SUNDAY, February 1
9:45
a.m.
Church
school for all aged
Point and active member
of the
10:55
a.m.
Divine
worship—Brother
regular
army
for
more
than
40 hood Sunday.
World
Service
day.
years, will be introduced by Mayor TUESDAY,
February
3
A. Gordon Humphrey.
1:30 p.m.
Women’s Society for Worl
Service
at
the
home
of
Mrs.
Harr
Johnson.
7:30
p.m.
Council
of administration
| WEDNESDAY,
February
4
4 p.m.
Junior confirmation
class.
7:30 p.m.
Senior choir rehearsal.

PIANO

NEEDED

A piano is urgently needed by
the Highland Park Armed Ser-

vices
the

club,

which

American

is located

Legion

in

Returns

to

Colorado

Memorial

building on Sheridan road. Anyone wishing to contribute an instrument to the club may con-

tact. Miss Musa DeMouth
YWCA,HI 2-0675.

at the

Mr.

and

Buena

Mrs.

Vista,

last

Friday

with

Mrs.

Charles

Andersor

Colo., left Deerfiel
after

a

month’s

Anderson’s

sister

her husband, Mr. and Mrs.
Johnson, Deerfield road.

vis
afr

A. &lt;¢

�rea,

co

HP Lions To —
Give All-Star
Revue March 5

Jerry

Highland
Park Lions club
has announce‘ plans for an AllStar Radio and TV Revue, to
be given at 8 p.m. Thursday,
March 5, in Elm Place school
auditorium.
The revue will be given for the
scholarship and children’s benefits. Annually, Highland Park Lions award a $300 scholarship to a
ighland

Park

Gordon

C.

he club,
hairmen

High

school

Fowler,

will be decided
a special

club

senior.

president

has announced
of the
March

upon

of

that. the
5 event

next week

Leaming,

vresident
Highland
names of
teemen as

newly

installed

of the Kiwanis Club of
Park, has announced the
the club’s 1953 commitfollows:

Dudley Dewey, boys’ and girls’
work;
J.
Carl
Arens,
underpri
vileged
children:
Albert
Larson
and
F. J. Spalding,
public
and
hyusiness affairs; Edgar Carter and
Aaron Bauer. support of churches:
William
McCulloch,
achievement
reports; Joseph
Nelson,
member.
shiv; Ruel Baughman, finance; Dr
Moershall Blume, house and recep
| tion.

at

meeting.

aHighland Fling And
Haggis Add Color to
Robert Burns

crimes

Kiwanis
President _
Kiw
Names Committeemen
For Coming Year

North

Dinner

heir 32nd
birth,

Joseph

Shore

of the poet’s

of

Lake

VALENTINE

Walter

Lillie, public

arrangements

William

at aH.
party

were

Chalmers.

PARTY

it a really good

Choose
favors.

from
Each

one.

choosing of “Milady’s
central theme of their

entry, Read hall dancers pondered
the selection of hats with a Latin
touch, frills, or a sophisticated
flair.
Miss Pritchard, a senior at Grinnell and a graduate of Highland
Park High school, is a member of

Caps,

swimming

campus

synchronized

club.

Se

@
@
©@
@
®

pe aeaattites

Re

FINE WATCH REPAIRING
EXPERT JEWELRY REPAIRING
PEARLS RESTRUNG
SILVER REPLATED
DIAMONDS RE-MOUNTED

_ Karen Anne is the name of the
first child born to Mr.
and
Mrs.

\

Paul Buller, 1434 Ridge road, January 19 in Highland Park hospital.
Mrs. Buller is the former Dorothy
Schwennecker, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Schwennecker of 1420
Ridge road. Paternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Otto Buller of

Corner
Central

and

Sheridan

HI 2-2028

1295 Glencoe avenue.
No matter what you want to buy
‘Hard-to-find”’ items there at moneysaving prices!

It doesn’t

cost

This
much

Chandler’s

complete

selection

a real

Valentine

Day

has

With the
Hat’? as the

FAVORS

What’s February 14th without a Valentine Party?
year, make

the women’s cottages participated
in the contest this year.

Buller

Kitchen

Forest

tramural was originated at Grinnell in 1943 to promote interest in
interpretive dance.
All seven of

Bauer, music;

handled by a committee under Mrs.
McCall

Evelyn Pritchard of 82 S. Deere
Park drive took part in Read hall’s
first place trophy-winning entry
in the annual women’s intramural
dance competition at Grinnell college this week.
Sponsored by the Women’s Recreation association, the dance in-

White

British-Amer-

celebration

Winning Dance Tea

Sutton Laing, interclub and sorial events;
DeWitt Manasse,
Ki
wanis education; Newman Sheehan
and Edgar Carter, laws and regulations; Jay Word. John Walker, Mr
Laing and A. G. Humphrey, pro
grams;
Dudley
Dewey
and
Mr

jrelations and publicity; Harold Se
crest
and
William
Wurm,
sports
ican Social club celebrated the and games; and Mr. Nelson, fund
birthday
of
Robert
Burns
last raising.
Saturday
night
at the Winnetka
Community
House.
in the
Haggis
which
was
The Rev. Herbert Linden, minis- piped
er of Zion Lutheran church, High- borne by Miss Sheila Wallace of
who
later
performed
ood, was guest speaker, and Wil- Evanston,
iam Chalmers of Mulberry place, some Scottish dances. Peter Walker
Park
sang.
several
president of the club, was chair- of Highland
an
of
the
meeting
which
at- Burns songs, accompanied by Miss
racted 300 North Shore Scots for Lois Baum.
The

| Miss Pritchard

of

flavor.

Visit Chandler’s, today.

@

Napkins

@

TE

@®

Nut Cups

@®

Plates

®

Snappers

®

Cups

niyo

your

FIRST
P.S.—And

for

the

ever sent, be sure

ler’s.

Cards from

most
to make

delightful
your

Valentines

selection

from

le up.

Chandle rs
645

Central

January 29, 1953

you’ve

has arrived

Chand-

4.95 to 9.95
1.

The
with

2.

Top-of-the-head
in

important
profile
bead
trim.
8.95.
basket

Breton

weave.

4.95.

3.

Faille weave scoop
pink rose.
5.95.

4.

Gray straw sailor with
beautiful silk rose. 9.95.

Avenue

Highland Park

STRAW

Open

Friday

with

nights until 9

&gt;

�UA
wore

Nr

4|

;

LAND O’ LAKES

1 tb. in Qtrs.

BUTTER

|

Country-Fresh, Grade A

DOZ.

77c |} LarGe Eces

|

=) Ist Qua

59c | fi

b

:i

———
BROADCAST
CORNED BEEF HASH
1».

Can

;

?

ps
Pe

OLD MONK

E

Mayonnaise

oy

Coca Cola —-- 6

oe

j
J

ON

EACH

Usa

PKG.

Borden’s Cream

. SOC

FREE!

—

|i]

FRIDAY

U. S. No. 1 Selected

¢

IDAHO

—

Sweet,

2 1. $149

2 Reg.

|

a\

TIN

9c

Zz

ai
Va

Ibs

as

ceca.

Pkgs.

4

x

12-LB.

;

2

|-lb. Cans Oc
Smooth

or Creamy

MAYER HAMS ------ Lb. 59c
GRADED

8x

WILSON’S CERTIFIED — ARMOUR’S STAR

5 9c

I-lb. Celllo .............-----------e-ee-eeeeeeeees Lb. 55¢

U. S. CHOICE—BLADE CUT
POT

ae

PEAS

savctenscersestcesneeseenesceenanotesenesseaeenssesenceeeseess

RIRPS FYE FROZEN
French

Fried

Potatoes

--- 2

Pkgs. 4 3¢

NEW I LB. 4 OZ. | Go ligiower

i---0-------+-----

|

CT 0 4 DS

2 B A K a 4 )
FRIDAY

55¢

Lb.

,

;

Pigs, 9 9C

BIRDS FYE FROZEN

BEER

Pkgs

rsie &gt; ae
9-oz.

OF

12 02. 39¢

Omar

bie ae

ROAST

pha. 59ti
ROSTEES, oonER
MARHOEP

29¢

=
DOG FOOD

OOS Lb.

AVERAGE

ce nN REAN

White
Banded

19¢

Re nha

RIB_ROAST
OFiatBEEFRib
6th-7th
ae Lb.

5 Rib
First ad

BACON

Blue

2

SIRLOIN OR CLUB STEAKS ~~ Lb. 9 8c

2

a

Calif.

2s

U. S. CHOICE GRADED

U. S. CHOICE

WNIS&amp;’] ~— ALLSWEET OLEO

4

Tender

Cc

tae Oh

OSCAR

Ci

10-0z.

Trimmed

Pkqs. 25c¢

FREE!

LB.

69¢

Ubs.

“

10 TO

3

&amp;

PAWMNTE

GROCERIES GIVEN
AWAY
|.
Play Bingo While You Shop — Free Balloons for the Children
CRISCO

2IC

FRESH SP'NACH |... pee, 19

Washed

CHEESE ice. ruc. 3DC
ONLY

10...

...........

POTATOFS

Reg. Price 24¢ ... [Qe

f

2 Ige. Cans

19

25 c

+

.......------------- poz.

TANGERINES

tar Z ror JE

2 62-02. cans 6 3c HIXSON’S COFFEE

JUICE.

4

SAVE

CORN-FETTI

Snow Crop Orange

:

°
5c

Btl.

Btl.

4

Florida

Easy-to-Peel

33¢

-ib.

armalade

ranae

29 plus dep.

oz.

re.

&amp; Se

oe

-------------------- Pt. Jar 3Q¢

14-oz.

_..

Catsup

|b.

Y2

---------------

Cheese

Seaee

swee. wlorida (80 Size)
&gt;
Seedless Grapefruit

SHARP

BORDEN’S
Wedge

Centrella

UNA ~~

s

95¢

—

CHICKEN OF THE SEA

‘Gis wo,

BORDEN’S SLICED PIMENTO, BRICK OR
AMERICAN CHEESE o-lb. Pkg.
2 9C

1-Ib. Can 49c

COCOA

NESTLE’S

a

California’s Finest Avocado

&amp; SATURDAY

10-0z. Pkg. 9 3¢

Butterscotch Coffee Cake --------------- ea. B5¢
SWIFT'S OZ
VALLEY FROST FROZEN
BS” Pumpkin Pie sins
c
4%, PEANUT BUTTER | Meion Balls ---------------------------- I6-oz. Pkg. 35¢ |
3
:
22
Y
SWIFT'S STRAINED OR CHOPPED
7” Lemon Surprise Cake ~~~ ie ae
of 314-07.
ith Purchase
5 5 ( peey TO0GG!
‘Gan; 65¢ | tance FoNDANT ICED
FOR DOGS OR CATS
tn
;
ANGEL FOOD CAKE
orse
Meat wi

;
;

= 4

:

.

-lb.

Real

‘

Cans

2

“Liver Added

Treet

Case

of 24

98¢

3 3¢

$3.75

wai

QUALITY] SUNSET FOOD MART
|a

Page

8

1

757

CENTRAL

WZ.

Friday Night

AVENUE

Is Family

—

A

CENTRAL

Night at Sunset —

FOOD

Store Open

STORE

‘Til 9 p.m.

Thursday,

January

29, 1953

�¥i

Car

Is Recovered

A car belonging
gaard

of 2100

to Andrew

West-

St. Johns avenue

was

recovered by Highwood
police in
the Labor temple driveway Saturday night. Mr. Westgaard had reported that his car had been stolen
from
326 Green
Bay road, High
wood between 4:30 p.m. and 5:30
p.m. Friday. Police said that the
car showed no evidence of having
been tampered with.

Return

From

returned

St. Petersburg

from

a

two

John

P. Schaefer Jr., chairman

of the program

to be pre-

next Tuesday night,
is pictured above with some of the entertainers.
At the piano
is Miss

Joann

Johnson,

PTA

who

meeting

will

sing

a duet

with

Miss

Mrs.
and
Day

David

Mrs.
road

Perioni

of

Glencoe

Donald Darby
were
initiated

of
as

Half
new

members at the last meeting held
January 21. Guest speaker at this
meeting

was

Mrs.

Inge

Boye,

chil-

Highland
discussed

the lives of various authors of children’s books with special emphasis

on the development of book titles.
Birthday

Hits

Public

Service

LEGAL

$200

damage

NOTICE

law,

to

a

NOTICE

IS HEREBY

given that the

wit:

ae

Po'e

to

were pre-. _

preamble of the West
Deerfeld
Township
Assessment
Roll
published
in the —
January 22nd issue should have read and —
is hereby
corrected to read as follows:
—
ASSESSMENT
ROLL
é
Town
of
West
Deerfield
The following is a correct list of all
Personal
Property
and changes in Real
Deerfield
Estate in the Town
of West
with the assessed
value thereon
as extended by the County Treasurer for the
year 1952 and published as required by ©

William
E. Wren
of 505 Clay
street, Highwood,
caused approxi

mately

presents

sented
to
three
members—Mrs.
Charles
Herbert
Coleman,
Mrs.
Pantle and Mrs. Perioni.

weeks’

holiday
to
St.
Petersburg,
Fla.,
where they visited Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Campbell.
Mrs. Campbell
is the former Mary Adele Clark
of Deerfield.
On
their way
to
Florida, the Williams
stopped
in
New Orleans where they were the
guests
of Lt.
Harry
Swinburne,
USN,
and
Mrs.
Swinburne,
the
former Ruth Jacobsen of County
Line road.

sented at the Oak Terrace

Highland Park members of the
Women
of the Moose will gather
Wednesday in Moose hall at 8 p.m.
for their regular meeting.

dren’s librarian at the
Park Public library, who

Mr.
and
Mrs.
Charles
J. Williams of Southland avenue recent-

ly

Women of Moose
Will Initiate Two Members

SECRETARIAL

Four Months (Day)
INTENSIVE COURSE

Public

Service
company
pole
Saturday
when his car skidded on the ice
at Green Bay road and Ridgewood
drive crashing into the pole. Mr.
Wren
reported
the
accident
to
Highland Park police.

for college women
A new
day in

class
each

begins
month.

Bulletin
57

East

Jackson

on

the

T

free

first

Blvd., WAbash
Ch icago

Aibink:

2-7377
——

at Ricchure.

Now

a

Stolen

Ann

Murfey (standing, right) . Mrs. Philip Pasquesi, seated next
to Miss Johnson, will sing several Italian songs, and Mrs.
Rcbert Bunn (standing, left) will play a trumpet solo, accompanied by Miss Johnson.
Miss Murfey, Mrs. Bunn and
Miss Johnson are members of Oak Terrace faculty.

PTA Meeting Tuesday
A program of music and dancing will be presented for the Oak
Terrace PTA meeting Tuesday evening in the school auditorium. John

P.

Schaefer

Jr.,

event, will
monies.

act

chairman
as

master

of
of

the
cere-

The_three act program will feature songs by the Highland Park
High
school chorus,
piano selections
by
Miss
Sue
Thomas,
tap
dancing
numbers
by Miss Yones
Rabbattini
and
Miss
Carol
Ronchetto,
trumpet
solo
by
faculty

member,

Mrs.

Robert

Bunn

and

duets by two other faculty members, Miss Ann Murfey and Miss
Jo
Ann
Johnson.
Mrs.
Philip
Pasquesi will sing several Italian
selections.

Mrs.

J.

R.

Haugan,

LEGAL

PTA

presi-

NOTICE!
by

the

Board
of Appeals
of
the
City
of Highland
Park,
that a public
hearing
will be
held by said Board, in the Council Chambers
of
the
City
Hall,
in
the
City
of

Highland
Park, at 7:30
P.M., Tuesday,
February
17,
1953,
to hear
an appeal
from
the decision of the
Building
Inspector
for
the
City
of
regarding
variance
from

dinance,

as

No. 208
839
Bob

Highland
Park,
the
Zoning
Or-

follows:
on behalf of Simuel
J.
O’Link
Road,
Highland

Illinois,
for a variance
Ordinance to permit the
a

single

family

Subdivision,
required by

dwelling

Rubin,
Park,

of the
Zoning
construction of

on

Lot

5,

Carr’s

closer to the lot line
the Ordinance.
APPEAL
BOARD
Thomas
Lester

R.

W.

Warren

John

H.

The school Cub Scout pack, under the direction of Mr. and Mrs.

Frederick

Wendling,

than

Creigh,
Chairman
G.
Britton

Flinn

will

have

Tomorrow
night at 7:30 a program of song stories will be given
by the second, third, fourth and
fifth graders
in the
auditorium.
Mrs. Robert Bunn will direct the
program. The children have made
all the scenery for the event under
the
supervision
of Mrs.
William
Kolbe. All parents and friends are
invited to attend.

Increase
Are
well

Your

Days”

the days you
rare

feel really

occasions?

Do

feel fatigued, listless most of
the time? This is a condition
from wh'ch many persons suffer, yet feel there is little they
can do about it.
On the contrary, your doctor can help restore your energy and of course improve
vour health and increase your
zest for work and play.

Thomson

Buy pure, fresh drugs
a trusted pharmacist.

HI

from

2-3500

JOHN B. NASH CO
1891 Sheridan, Highland
Thursday,

you

The average person would
be amazed at the number of
carefully developed drug products
that
are
available
to
counter-act mineral deficiencies in the body. Let your doctor determine your needs bj
a physical examination.

Peterson

January

29,

Park
1953

a

cake booth and offer home made
cakes for sale during the evening.
They will also have candy for sale
during
the intermission.

“Good

LEGAL
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN

NOTICE

dent,
will
conduct
the
business
meeting at which time the appointments to the caucus committee will
be announced.
Refreshments
will
be
served
to
the
kindergarten
mothers.

Earl W. Gsell &amp; Co.

Buy
With

from
New

®

Guaranteed

@

Lowest

Kleeburg
Car

Prices

Buick

Confidence

It always pays to do business locally . . . . particu'arly when it’s time
to buy a used car. And for the best deal in town, a Kleeburg-Guaranteed
uzed car can’t be beat!
Our reputation speaks for itself — it is your additional guarantee that the used car you buy from us will be the sweetest
car you've ever owned.

COMPLETE

FACILITIES —

Always At Your Disposal
Cay
Kleeburg’s Body Shop...

Cae

CAN

TURN

THIS
INTO

/

//

-

Accidents

able,
your

but
car

are

high
aren't.

often

costs
For

THIS

unavoid-

of

fixing

excellent

body work, painting and reconditioning, bring your car to:

3 Kleeburg

Buick,

1732 First St.

Highland

Inc.
Park

Hi 2-4800

—Pharmacists—

4

oieGa.)

ee

Entertainers to Present
Program of Music At

�Camera Club Invites
Public To Lecture
HOG!

Members

Feb. 2—Let the day be cloudy and
the little animal will not see his
shadow, meaning Spring will be
here any minute. No matter what
the weather, good people always
get

together

at

Villa

Moderne.

Nineteen years of serving super
food has given the Villa an enviable reputation
near and far.
Lunch

from

$1.25.

$2.50.

Dancing

on

Dinner

Sat.

from

nites.

continue

through

next

month.

there has been

Al-

tremendous

response
in buying
during these
tempting
discounts, there is still
a large stock from which to make

selections. Lamps
unusual

China,

and

distinction.

Pottery,

Shades

Glass,

Occasional]

Furni-

ture and endless unusual

563

Linden

of

Silver,

Ave.,

will

Park

meeting

February

5,

in

the American
Legion
hall when
their guest speaker will be Miss
Constance’
Bannister,
nationally
known photographer of babies. Her
talk is called “How To Take Pictures of Your Baby.”
There will
be no admittance fee to the meeting which is set for 8:15 p.m.

were

The annual mid-winter Sale at the
smart Shop of Grace Herbst will

Highland

club are inviting the public

their

Arrangements
ter’s appearance

JANUARY SALE
CONTINUES

though

Camera

to

of the

made

for Miss Bannisbefore the club

Freund

of

Cedar street, William Salyards
McDaniels avenue, Dr. Ernest

of
G.

Wright

by

Gustav

of Priscilla lane, and other

members of the program committee.
Miss Bannister’s career includes
work
with
several
notable
mag-

azines

and

newspapers;

a

Meets

Pupils At Lincoln, Braeside

Tomorrow;

Schedules Next Gathering
The Tri-club of Highland Park

By Miss Bannister

GOT A DATE
THE GROUND

WITH

Tri-Club

movie

short entitled “Babies By Bannister;” a color movie called “Bannister’s Babies;’’ and a film made

hold

8:30 p.m.
rooms

its

at

church.

regular

tomorrow

meeting

Immaculate

New

and

Sehools Give Amateur Hours

at

in the rectory

Pupils of Lincoln and Braeside schools recently partici-

Conception

prospective

mem-

pated in student amateur hours

bers are particularly invited to attend.
The next scheduled meeting of the club will be at 8:30 p.m.,
February 13, at the same location.

during

which

they

acts of their own
developed through

ent and interest.
by

Bannister

Bros.

a

Studios

‘“‘Baby Banters

photographic

syndicated
newspapers

In the

for

in
for

Warner

strip,

field,

“A

dents

Baby.”

and

Schuster

Listed

in

book,

constructive

criti-

Students who participated in the
Lincoln school amateur hours held

“The

‘“Who’s

offered

cism after the acts, thus increasing
their appreciation for the talents
of others.

Child’s

Grace,” published by E. P. Dutton,
was a success as is the current

Simon

The perform-

consultant, and the
classroom
teachers.
Non-performing stu-

was

several
hundred
three years.

literary

creation — son, Margaret Vance, Joan Bishop,
natural tal- Kathy Levin, Karen Morris, Linda

ances were under the direction
of Miss
Anne
Phelps,
music

by Bannister,”

comic

presented

Who”

last Thursday and
today at 1:15 p.m.

for 1951-52, Miss Bannister is presently doing TV and radio work as
well as camera assignments, which
include
20
cover
pictures
each

to be
are:

repeated

Bob
Hunt,
Dick
Hopp,
Nancy
Phillips, Judy Weaver, Jill Churchill, Marna Keogh, Patricia Mil-

year for a leading Chicago daily.

gift items.

Winnetka.

LET THEM MAKE
_THEIR VALENTINES
Children

adore

tines to send

making

the Valen-

to family

and

friends.

ence

Nook,

1860

First

St.

A

Box”
them

get

You’ll

the

January

feel

Buick,

1732

comfort, and greater
them
at
Kleeburg

First

St. HI

are

many

Valentine’s

Saturday is the last day of our January White

Mohawk Combed

2-4800.

gift

Day.

ness
paper
younger
set.

ideas

"Smooth
ia

on

be

Valentines
for
Many
perfectly

a

thrill

Valentine’s

day.

729

Ravinia

St.

for

Day

any

or

Johns

the
de-

any

about

Fido?

safe,

mortals.

Bed

other

Your

Dog

and

happy

will

be

worth Kennels while you go South
chasing
sunshine.
Backed
by
50
years experience. 2810 Park Ave. |

(West of Skokie). Daily
2-5 by appt. HI 2-1352.

8-7,

Sun.

Rath Wabapell
Page

10

Hand

AIll-Wool

Solid

Blankets—*] 295

Damask.

72x90

beautiful

Irish

White

on white

klar
utara tasadbnsate 89c

Color

Bath

Towels

By Martex

Damask Table Linens
hemmed,

a few

Pace sive: tM
ip
ce al
48c
Wash Cloth ose: By
bd cece deeiens 25¢

kept

at Butter-

Only

Towels

for us by Martex.

EMUETY SIRO AIOE cohen nc sae rec deeiguetcg $1.00
PCN BENE) Ch
oi 055 &lt;i ee ates cucu daa ee 59c
WEGSIE RM
ic teiikias! cus oscenese stacks eta 26c

Sturdy
Irish

needs.

BOI: SIZ, Zz

72 x 90 size.
is sound

linen

with colored border.

(Opp.

But what

Sale and your last opportunity

Martex
Made

’

Rayon satin bound. Choice of several colors.

up your overcoat”

warm,

408

Kenwood

woman

Ave.

Cholewa,

Kathy

Frosty

Puestow,

Nancy

Johnson,

Spertus,

Roger

Levin,

Annabet

Jacobsen,

Elizabeth

Hall,
Wash-

Schneider,
Vollertsen,

Wendy Vollertsen,
Steve Rose, Dave

who

Amateur
took

Hours

part

in

the

tran, Jim Gray, Jim Gottlieb, Rich-

At A Saving

percale.
$2.99

$3.29

BABY IT’S COLD
OUTSIDE!
“Button

white combed

for

Station).

advice for mere

x

Percale Sheets

Honest-to-good-

lightful things for the home, which
would

White Sale

to effect substantial savings in your household
of the many savings are mentioned here.

VALENTINE GIFTS FOR “HER”
At the interesting Shop of Edith
Saletra

got Frank, Wendy Robinson, April
Clements, Sue Reick, Sue Johnson,
Kathy Maxwell,
Bob
Lustbader,
Bob Adler, Judy Williams, Nancy
Wertheimer,
Bonnie
Friedman,
Betsy Kahn, Ann
Simon,
Nancy
Lawrence,
Gwen
Stern,
Harold
Fell, Tommy
Mueller,
Cynthia
Cushner,
Janet Kaplan, James
Souby, Terry Philips, Kathy Stine,
George Mendelson,
Aimee
Morner, Susan Johnson.

Morton,
Steve
Engelmann,
Jim
Heisler, Linda Weiner, Carol Balkin,
Carol
Hammerman,
Janet
Feis, Bryan Auerbach, Ricky Carlin, Jean Gillispie,
Nancy
Ford-

LAST DAYS OF OUR

mighty proud of yourself if you
shove off in a brand new Buick.
These
1953
models
give
more
room, more
power.
See

Sally Racine,
Kent
Thomas,
Terry Thomas, Virginia Griffith,
Lynn Burton, Nikki Keogh, Mar-

Pupils

you go for your
it’s more fun if

there.

NeuLaw-

Braeside school acts January 21
and again yesterday were Richard
Joseph,
Joel
Goldstein,
Steve

you drive. Enjoy the scenery along
the way and you'll need your car
you

Dick
Marlyn

rentz.

Braeside

GOING ‘SOUTH?
MORE FUN TO DRIVE

when

Duffy,
Parks,

Zuppann.

country, will assist you in making
your selection. 914 Linden Ave.
Winnetka.

No matter where
Winter vacation,

Jim

Cynthia

Seltzer, Steve Wessling, Ken Waltzek, Caroline Zuppann, Jeannine

Barnitz, who has done many of
the loveliest homes on the North
of

navacco,
mann,

Martha Holden,
Janet Cushman,

done. At the studio of Henry L.
Barnitz
you’ll
find
unusual
and
outstanding fabrics; a splendid collection from which to choose. Mr.

parts

Cush-

man, John Adair,
Steve
Corman,
Jean Duffy, Jan Slater, John Scor-

Fred
Glazier,
Dick
Ronnie Waldman, John

THE
QUIET TIME .
OF THE YEAR
This is the most opportune time in
which to have Slip Covers and
Draperies made and upholstering

other

Jane

Dick

Fred Rickles,
Bud
Schultz,
Bill
Churchill, Ken Smith, Linda Wanger, Debby Herman, Virginia Waltzek, Barbara Kahn,
Terry Oggel,

IT’S

and

Griffith,

Frank,

burn, Jo
Ann
Jefferson,
Mary
Brace, Karen Jacobsen, Patsy Witten, Laura Herman, Dick Nathan,

wide

NOW.
Many
attractive
decorations for Valentine Parties.

Shore,

Susan
Mary

Phyllis

Valentines

including the popular ‘Music
styles. Time to start making

Kaufman,
Griffith,

Ellen

It keeps them busy and contented
for hours. Mighty fine results can
be accomplished with the Packaged
Valentines shown at Correspondselection of ready made

ler, Suzy Gmeiner,
Mike
Smith,
Dean Sordyll, Dave Wilson, Douglas Cushman, Paul Slater, Carol
Stark, Nancy Major, Drue Clark-

Double

cloth with eight 22-inch

Mattress

Pads

“Snow white’’ pad with close stitching. Full
cover.
Twin size—$3.39

bleached

Seamless

full

bleached

Full size—$4.39
double box stitch.
Twin size—$4.19

Full size—$5.49

napkins

Garnett = Co.

ard Ratner, Roberta
Pollock, Jamie
Snow,
Kay
Herzog,
Susie
Grais,
Cindy
Barnard,
Barbara
Hammerman,
Judy Lewis,
Lillian
Bierfeld, Barbara Kriser, Barbara
Slepyan.
Barbara Partlow, Barbara Kurtzon, Diane Siegman,
Sandra
Pollack, Barbara Pincus, Carol Johnson, Jackie Orner, Ila Garfinkel,
Ann
Feuchtwanger,
Beryl Baizer,
Lucia Murphy,
Ned
Rosenbaum,
Mike Garfinkel,
Roy Price, John

Engelmann,

Pam

Krueger,

Wendy

Krueger,
Jillian
Krueger,
Karen
Sachs, Ann Gumbiner, Judy Bornsteid, Christy Teece, Stuart Rosenberg, Jim Rheinish, Douglas Tau-

ber, Mark Gumbiner, Dan Kriser,
Joel Glass, Lois Schlopack, Sherry
Kromer,
cabee. .

Joy

Reznick,

Helene

Mac-

Allen Luskin, Gene Adler, Bonnie Glazier, Linda Benjamin, Sandra Looney, Kathy
Harris,
Susie
Firestone, Sandra Grabell, Jeanne
Kurtzon,
Rebecca
Kahn,
Barbara

Rady,

Jeril

Schwab,

Sam

Zell,

Frances Kahn, Ronald
Provus,
Linda Provus, Dave Slepyan, Shel-

do.1 Lytton, Barbara Weigle, Barbara Johnston, Carol
Beck,
Geri
Schinder,
Ronnie
Johnson,
Pete
Eisendrath,

Joan

Cantin,

and

the

seventh and eighth grade mixed
chorus, composed of 45 students.
Mrs. Seymour Orner assisted by
coaching one of the dance numbers.

Thursday, January 29, 1953.

.

�pi ot

Elected To Clase

Mental

Takes Part in College Play

Free Anthropological

Health

Offices At Lake
Forest Academy

Movies To Be Shown
Play to Be Given
At Temple Wednesday At Northwestern U.

Mr
and Mrs. Ralph Dunkin of
Etna, Pa., are announcing the birth

Two Highland Park students at
Lake Forest academy were elected

“And You Never Know”
Stirling,
an
American

in Etna.
William.

to
in

high offices
junior class

Donald

C.

earlier this
elections.

by Nora
Theatre

month

Trieschmann,

son

of| |

guard

The Highland Park Credit Woman’s club is planning a February
Valentine
party
for its monthly
dinner meeting. Members will ga-

ther

at 6:30

p.m.

on

February

11

at a meeting place not yet decided
upon.
Miss Carolyn Frey will be
in charge of party arrangements.
At the club’s recent dinner meet-

ing, plans were made to give $10
to a needy family next Christmas.
Members voted to
Community Chest

give
and

$10
the

to the
March

of Dimes fund from the $188.66 in
the treasury. Miss
Martha
Bock
and Miss Dorothy O’Shea, the latter treasurer

of the

group,

named

were

Christmas

The
en’s

Highland

to

Park

head

the

committee.

convention
clubs

will

of Credit

be

held

Wom-

February

22, 23 and 24 in Evansville, Ind.

March

of

Pa.,

are

1546

Oakwood

Andersons

the

avenue

and

of Glenshaw,

grandparents.

duction
Taming

of

the

of the

Shakespeare.

comedy,

Shrew”

“The

by William

Richard

of Mr. and Mrs. G.
82 Green Bay road.

—

is the
C.

son

Hesler

of

|

13.

world.
The
‘The Loon’s

_| Necklace,” featuring masks of the
_| Northwest coast Indians, ‘“Latuko,”
&gt;| controversial film on East African

|;

-| hunting

people

government
-|

and

‘The

Navajo,”

movie about Indians of

our own southwest.
Any Highland Parkers

interested

in attending may call Mrs. Watrous
-|

at HI 2-4826 for further information. Mrs. Watrous taught a course
in anthropology entitled, “Races of
Man” at the YWCA last fall.

&amp;
Mrs.

Wing
by

Herbert

Lapine

community
the

play

National

Mental

|

through

different parts of the
series
will
include

Tom, during his first year at the
academy, was a regular left half

To Meet Feb. 11

the Harry

at North-

Richard Hesler, a senior at the
Florida State university, had a part
in the speech department’s Pro-

Shown in room 309, Lacy Hall,
on the Evanston campus, these doc'| umentary films tell of native life in

years winning all conference honors this past season
and
having
been
elected
co-captain
for next
year. He is at present a member of
the hockey squad and in the spring
will again report for track where
he is one of the team’s mainstays
in the field events.

HP Credit Women

kin

noon

on the football team for two | |

back on the varsity football team
last fall and is at present
a member of the hockey squad.

He has a brother, Ralph
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Dun-

of anthropological

western university which will be
shown at 2:30 each Friday after-

Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
A.
Trieschmann of Central avenue, was elec-| |
ted president of the class. Thomas | |
C. Compere, who is the son of the} '
Thomas H. Comperes
of
Clifton]
avenue,
was
named sceretary by
his classmates.
Don has been a class officer and
student
council
member
for two
years. He has also been a regular

of a son, Keith Howard, January 10

Mrs. Robert Watrous
of Ridge
road is among the Highland Parkers who will attend the free series
movies

on

Health,

be

for

presented

by the joint program
committee
of the North Shore Congregation
Israel at 8:15 p.m. Wednesday at
the temple in Glencoe.

The

play

is being

produced

by

the Men’s club experimental theater group.
The cast includes Mrs.
Herbert Lapine of Woodland road

in

the

role

of

Eleanor

Hollis,

a

mother
who
constantly
aims
for
perfection; her husband, portrayed
by Harry
Passman, who
finds it
difficult to understand
his wife;
and
adolescent
Margaret,
played
by Ruth Fell, who craves more love
and attention and who finally has
the
courage
to reveal
her
true
feelings to her parents.

This is one of a series of adult
education programs
designed to
provide an opportunity for parents
to express themselves and to hear

the

opinions

terested
tend.

of

parent

others.
is

Any

in-

to

at-

invited

3

SERVICE

|

Spend Christmas In Paris

published

Association

will

You'll Like Our

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Herman

F.

Ans-

pach of Bloom street and their
two
children,
Edgar
and
Carol
Louise, recently returned from a
21-day

tour

of

France

and

.

Italy

during the December holidays. The
Anspachs
mas
and

flew to Paris for Christthen traveled to Rome

-

All Shirts Are Professionally lroned.
We Guarantee All Colors.
Our Promptness and Courteous Service.
The Best Dry Cleaning In Town.

where they attended a papal audience. They returned on the HMS
Queen Mary.
Edgar is a senior
at Highland Park High school and
his

sister

34 Family Finish Specialists

is a freshman.

for Over a Quarter
Our
thanks

deepest
to friends,

appreciation

and

neighbors,

Sun-

fe

of a

Century.

Skokie

nyside Tavern and members of
Sunnyside
Sportsmen
Club
and
their wives for the help given us
since the iHness of our baby,
Jimmy.

LAUNDRY
“Where

BOB and CHARMAINE
POLDERDYKE.

&amp;

A

ed

;

2

fos
ae

vs

Gi

DRY

CLEANERS,

ey

a: ig

INC.

Your Clothes Stay Young”
Main Office and Plant

Highland Park 2-3310 — Deerfield Call Enterprise 1616
512-518 Waukegan Ave., Highwood

Tred Tivo
store for boys

Highland Park

Evanston
FAMOUS

TO OUR

FOR

BEAUTIFUL

SHIRTS

I have always taken my vacation in July
did this year, and Mr. and Mrs. Teverbaugh
always taken their vacation in February. Last
due to the opening of our Highland Park store,
and Mrs. T. had to forego their vacation.
We
the

run

away.

feel they should have a vacation,
Evanston store for them while

This means

as I
have
year,
Mr.

We

know

Evanston

you

for

understand
these

three

and

Loren

672 Central Ave. at Green
624

Davis

St.,

come

to

our

weeks.

Tucker,

Bay

Evanston—East

January

29,

1953

Wave

- Cut - Styling
LIMITED

Mgr.

TIME

BUY OF THE YEAR!

PHONE HI 2-4768

4

Fountain

The Only Stores on the North Shore Exclusively for Boys
Thursday,

Permanent

HI 2-6240
of

|

We have all the new styles

we will have to close the High-

will

store

a

Helene Curtis Permanent Wave
With Styling To Fit Your Personality

so I will
they are

land Park store for three weeks from Jan. 27 to Feb.
18. We will open in time to bring you the greatest
values you have ever seen on Dollar Value Days.

q

Talk OF The Town

CUSTOMERS—

1884

Sheridan

Road

Highland

Park

�HPHS

To Present

ide

‘Alo-Hop’ Feb. 7
The
senior class of Highland
Park High school will present the
“Alo-Hop” on February 7.
Palmers and his band will

Optometric association, will take
part in the 45th annual convention

the music.

of the association in the Sheraton
1 this weekend.
More
than
1,000
optometrists
1 Illinois and the midwest will
nd the 1953 convention, which
al problems and the promotion
better care of the visual needs
the general public.

of

Gail
the

son

WE SPECIALIZE

is

Mark

a

who

in

Sitting in Mr. Wolters’ office after hours one afternoon in

of

next

Eiker

program.

Don’t

worry

Next Tuesday, Walt’s. Workshop,
a show that has won three awards
and numerous citations, will enter
its fifth year.
Deke Wolters stopped worrying some time ago and

Only
values

the

decorations.

week.

Is Six

and

Want

offer

opportunities

able elsewhere.

How

Ads

the

Read them

SHOULD

Walter

E.

Durbahn

Walter E. Durbahn, head of the vocational education department at

of the show.
Householders—half a million of
them
within a 50-mile radius of
Chicago who are able to see the
show—have
a standing date with
Walt on Friday nights at 7:30. One
third of his audience is comprised
of women who
are interested in

YOU SAVE?

carpentry

themselves

think of
husbands

enough things for their
to make.
The
rest
is

made

up

of

or who

business

can’t

men,

who,

over
the
four-year period,
have
learned to build bird houses and
terraces, barbecue
pits and cabinets through watching the work-

shop
of

One

answer

is; as much

as you

can.

But

in

practice you should save and invest AT LEAST 10%
of your income after taxes. You should save with
a goal

in mind

.

.

.

a

home,

retirement,

travel,

And you
children’s education, buying a business.
should save REGULARLY.
The better-than-average
earnings we add to your account will help you to

So open

realize your goal earlier.
NOW.
$1 or More
Account.

Starts

your account

Your

with

the

HIGHLAND PARK
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN ASS’N.
1888

Open

is

program Walt gave a demonstration of how to fit and hang storm

windows

and

added

that the print-

ed material on
the
subject
was
available at the lumber yard. This
brought
the
frustrated
window

hangers down
droves

that

to the yards in such
a

numbering

system

had to be installed. When today’s
weekend carpenter goes down for
a bag of nails or a panel of plywood he stands around clutching a
number card just like his wife does
at the meat market.
It Was No
there was

a

check

’Till

~

Then

for

Bargain
the time

Walt

located—east

nurse

to

days ahead.

an

“idiot board’

—teleprompter
to
Waring and Tommy

us—like Fred
Bartlett and

plenty
log.is
tural,
doing

Park,

Central

use

of other
easy and
because
and he’s

doing

it behind

him.

magazine.

He

umn

on

to

Highland Park High school. What
do you think of the idea, Dad?”
Walt, of
course,
protested
all
over the place—he wasn’t any ac-

home.

was

a natural—made

script was

up of the kinds of

things a fellow might want to build
at a given season of the year. Barbecue pits for summer time—the

storm window routine for October
et al. Then Walt went home and
designed

and

built

a

stage

setting

which is the basement workshop familiar

to all viewers

now.

That first rehearsal was all sweat
and tears as he recalls it now. Back
in those days it was necessary to
use from 600 to 1,000 foot candles
of light on the talent. In fact during a demonstration of how to ease
sticking drawers with paraffin, the
wax
melted
away
and
the going was rough. Today’s improved
equipment and the use of vacuum
tubes

has

reduced

the

heat

to

125

foot candles.
Pancake

Makeup

During one of those early shows
Mirth made him up with number
six pancake

makeup

from

the brow

down and every time he bent over
his workbench his bald head glared
forth like a headlight. Today he

in Highland Park.
us on the “highly
House.
Road,

it is less

He’s

a

a

col-

for

the

book

called

the

best

called

1949

“How

Do

It” show—this

To

and

the

on write-ins. The Chicago
tion of Advertisers
gave

Oscar

for

the

came
show

educational

of

best

best

based
Federahim
an

instructional

show.
More

Awards

Last April the Illinois Industrial
Education

association

presented

him with the
Award
of Distinguished Achievement, “In appreciation for his outstanding scholarship, leadership
and _ professional]
contributions.”
There were others—from a magazine and from Epsilon Tau Pi, the
international honorary society in
Industrial Arts and Industrial-Vocational Education.
Modestly,
of
course, the 59-year-old teacher who
has been at Highland Park High
school for 28 years now, adds that
there were others who entered into his success story. His wife, Ruth,
he explains, remains on the sidelines but
contributes
invaluable
suggestions for the show as only a
woman of the house could do.
Today he is a master at improvi- _
sation—with most of the butterflies
gone by show-time and four years _
safely behind him.
Perhaps
the —
best example of this occurred one ©
night when he was demonstrating ~
how to refinish and polish furniture
to give it a fine, old patina, His
polishing cloth somehow got caught —
in the adjacent lathe, whipped
round and round and finally came
out in ribbons. Walt never batted
an eye.

Instead

he said:

“This friends, is what might happen if one is not careful with power
(Continued

on page

23)

than

North Shore

HOUSE

WALTER
The

TAILOR
@

ALTERATIONS
@ CLEANING
@ PRESSING
1814

Avenue

Highland

done

writes
make

program

Werrenrath

The

things

he was
Home-

“Walt’s
Workshop”
which
out in November, 1951.
His

Jr., producer of the show, who lives
on Skokie.

~

big names. His diaunrehearsed and nahe knows what he’s
had lots of years of

As a result of the show
made
associate
editor
of

If you have the responsibility for an aging person and
seek the best possible solution for that person—call on us
and see Abbott House for yourself.

Highland

doesn’t

craft

out here

—
|

show.

supervision.

405
Illinois

Not only must he dem-

of what he does would take much
more than 30 minutes to prepare,
he itinishes the thing ahead of time
and brings it ready-made to the
He

year’s script to Reinald

John
Forest

onstrate how to make a thing—he
must also show how it is supposed
to look when finished. Since most

$4.75,

tor and how would he know what
to do in front of a television camera. Mirth convinced
him,
after
some six days of salesmanship, that
it would be just like talking to the
boys at high school and finally
Walt gave
in.
He
submitted
a

chief

Lake

program, and I told them my Dad’s
been doing that for years over at

of Sheridan

ABBOTT

sales
of

only
the
end
result
of days
of
preparation
for
the
30-minute
stint.
He arrives at the studio at
3 o’clock
in
the
afternoon
and
unloads a station
wagon
full of
material
he
has
prepared
for

We are proud of the fine food we serve, our cheerful
rooms, the homelike
atmosphere,
our scrupulously
clean
kitchen and our round-the-clock nursing service under graduate

NBC-TV

MecPartlin

stepped in with the lumber sponsor and the latter has hung on with
both fists ever since. Although it
looks easy, Walt’s
Workshop
is

Ask your family physician about us. Tell us your problem.

9 P.M.

|

J.

says.

two blocks from the North Western Railroad and
Line Stations, shops, motion picture theater.

Hi 2-0361

Ave.
Fridays

aid

which

available at Hines Lumber company yards, sponsors of the show.
During the second year of the

SATISFACTION

SERVICE
St. Johns

additional

material

Centrally

| security

audience

ABBOTT HOUSE

Insured Safe Up

Established

and

is the only licensed home for the aging
Health Officials have complimented
qualified operating personnel” at Abbott

to $10,000,

1811

and

instruction

Then

Liberal Earnings Paid Every Six Months.
Savings

the

Durbahns’
daughter
Mirth
(now
Mrs. Philip J. Kennedy Jr.) came
home from her job as script girl
at NBC one night and said at dinner, “They
were
talking
at the
studio today
about finding some
old fellow who knows how to handle tools for a kind of workshop

Highland Park High school, can’t
find enough hours in any day to
take care of all the ramifications

Mueh

though.

This is the way it all began. The

avail-

now!

invited

book

Walt

amazing

not

much,

offered the booklet, “101 Ways To
Increase
The
Value of Your
Home,” which sold regularly for $1
but was available to viewers for
25 cents.
Norm
Barry,
his
an-

nouncer,

Mark Clark who was six last week.

2-7118

it too

backed

Walt would not devote his 30 minutes exclusively to the demonstration of the machine.

write in. Four days later the studio hands were staggering in under
bags of mail and the bookkeeping
and handling
which
ensued
resulted in a thumbs down policy on
any future
brainstorms
of
this
kind.
One fellow wrote in to say
he had no change but was enclosing a $5 bill because he was desperate for the book. They sent him

Six of Mark’s friends helped him
celebrate at a luncheon party and
family
members
and _ neighbors
were entertained in his sonor at
a dinner party.

Viewh £

about

I’m sure it won't last long.”

Mr. and Mrs. Curtis C. Eiker of
Bloom
street, were
hosts at two
birthday
parties
for
their
son,

@ EVENING WEAR
— ALTERATIONS —

him for one program

and then withdrew, injured because

I’d better warn you, Deke, I’m going on television with a little
workshop

charge

Lauter

1949 Walt Durbahn said to the high school principal, “I thought

at $1.50 per couple will be
in the main hall of Shields

building

e SUITS
®@ DRESSES
e COATS

HI

9 p.m.

9

Porges
is social chairman
senior class and Anne Nel-

Tickets
on sale

IN CUSTOM MADE

1866 Sheridan

from

dance is open to
to alumni of the

°

By Evelyn

Johnny
furnish

“Toe”
Signorio
will
play
the
accordion, and Mary Reading will
perform
at the piano. Ann
Cunnyngham,
Sheila Blumenthal,
“Shinney” Vallaly, Lucy Anderson
and Lloyd Owens
will present a
skit.

place special emphasis on basic

S: hes

Continuous

to midnight, the
all students and
high school.

Walt went five shows without a ©
sponsor until he picked up a manu- ©
facturer of a multiple use machine —

Friday Night’s TV Favorite
e

Park 2-6080
Thursday,

Second

HIGHLAND

January

29,

1953

Street
PARK

¥

�Keep

the Home

Fire Burning

Fireplace

Fuel

@

Bitternut Hickory

@

Oak

@®

Maple

Fuel Co.

Borchardt
Eben

Park Men’s Garden club started the new year with its traditional ‘“Meet
to hear Peter J. Cascio (center) president of the American NurseryAmong those at the helm of the club this year are (from left) Edward
vice president; A. J. Wilson, secretary; Robert Leopold, president; and |

2020

St. Johns
HI

Length

per ton

$23.00

The Highland
the Growers Night,’’
men’s association.
Engelbrecht, second

24”

Dry —

Well Seasoned —

Ave.

.
1

2-0067

Erikson, director.

Clark
The senior George B. Clarks of
1213 Arbor avenue have chosen the
name John
Alexander
for
their
third child born January 15 in Highland Park hospital.
John’s brothers are George Jr., 3, and Brian, 2.
His grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
George B. O’Connell of Linden avenue and the H. Grant Clarks of
Dell lane.

sllFl Grp YANG Sif ~

Lacy
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
M. Lacy
of Deerfield announce the birth of

their first child, Kathleen

Annette,

January 19 in Highland Park hospital.
The
grandparents
are Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth B. Lacy of Dato
avenue
and Mr. and Mrs.
C. R.
Staples
of
Calgary,
Alberta,
Canada.

_WITE

HARDEN’SFIRMO-

LIFT FORMULA

AND

__

BASIC SHEEN

You'll find new loveliness with fresh, radiant

beauty in these Elizabeth Arden cosmetics.

a

Firmo-lift formula helps to revive. The

a

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AS

It consists of two bottles... the lotion

|

and the treatment oil. Basic Sheen is
the new flowing foundation...

:

a

the

moist, dew-pearled sheen that is
pure shining loveliness. Choose yours from
@

LOCAL

TRADEMARKS,

Here’s a MAN’S service, especially designed for the busy
man who’s particular about
his appearance.
Fast, efficient, thorough dry cleaning
—by
experienced
operators,
at
budget-saving
prices.
Round up those suits, slacks,
coats, jackets NOW—we’ll do
the rest.

CLEANERSA-4
TAILOR

Thursday,
BAe na

ne
January

rose rachel, and rosetta bronze. Come

FIRMDLIFT,
TREAT MeUT

1953

~

COSMETICS—First Floor

4;
o

1. Basic Sheen, $6.50*

\

in

a

LOTION

i rol

4

today, see them now in our

:

Me:

3
:

3. Special salon treatment oil, $3.75*

Arpe&gt;

te

a

x

*plus federal excise tax

et
29,

rosetta, medium rosetta, rachel, deep

2. Firmo-Lift lotion, $5*

ALPHA

Ed

these thrilling shades: rose rachel, light

Inc

y

�Celebrates

Birthday

P. uppet

Steven Tippey, son of the Marvin Tippeys of Egandale road, celebrated his sixth birthday last week
at a luncheon party where
10 of
his friends were invited to watch
“Uncle Johnny Coons.”

Shoe

lene

its

Wharch

of Eines
Glenn Becker, 8 year old
West Ridge student who
was stricken with polio last
August,
and
two of his

friends,
Raymond
Nord,
10, and John Lindquist, 10,
gave a puppet show to

Cconkhile 4

TELEVISION
AND
RADIO SERVICE

aid

March

10.

Ray and

Glenn

with

the

original

plays.

eye

\

t
\

with the

yr

Louvers

.

--- the Door

at

the

Lower

left,

Darry and

Bruce

Miller and Donna Becker
a close view of one of the

puppets.

-. the Window

left,

take a bow

puppets

or, gives

2-0609

Wi

Dimes

the

John, who acted as narrat-

Phone

look for

of

At

finale of one of their three

ALSO BENDIX
APPLIANCE SERVICE

Hi

the

January

A

E

\\

]

At right Bill Lind-

quist,
Ann
and
Carolyn
Bresler help themselves to
the cup cakes which were
served after the show at
the Becker home on Northland avenue. The boys collected $4.85 which they

have turned over to High-

land Park fund drive for
the
National
Foundation
for Infantile Paralysis.

) |

NG

with the
full-length
piano hinge

mu\\*
\ \

® no weather-staining
® tough plastic glazing
© reinforced screen corners

The.
Pioneer
;
Manufacturer of
Aluminum Storm-Screen Windows
brings you features not found in
any other make. “Slim-line” beauty
that accents the design of your
home . . . ventilating louvres for
your comfort . . . full length door
hinges for permanent protection.
Check the KEYSTONE Features-Get
the
KEYSTONE Story!

PHONE

TODAY!

Admiral
Home

Improvements,

Inc.

HI 2-8156

$0 Shey Say
BENT HIS
HI HEAD
HE E BENT

*

Friendship Club To

Willmer

Meet Tomorrow

Mr. and Mrs. John A. Willner
of 1357 Oakwood
avenue are the
parents
of their first child, De-

The

Friendship

club

of

Re-

deemer Lutheran church will meet
tomorrow at 8 p.m. in the church
hall. Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Juul
and Mr. and Mrs. Marcus Hagen
will serve on the refreshment and
entertainment committee.
At Sunday morning services the
newly
organized
nursery
department
will
care
for
infants
and

borah

Ann,

born

January

21

in

Highland Park hospital. Mrs. Willner is the former Janet Pogatetz,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Anton
Pogatetz of Medford, Wis. Alfred

Willner

of Laona,

ternal

Wis.,

is the pa-

grandparent.

children
hall.

under

four

The

next

Jongg
will

church

place,

Monday

who

TRADPMARPKS, Ine.

. he didn’t want to miss
one word of her praises for
EDDY’S.
Stop
in and
get
acquainted.
SPECIAL THIS WEEK
Sweet &amp; Dry Vermouth
Straight Bourbon
Blends
Rum
Asti Wines

EDDY’'S
ROR)
Page

14

0,&lt;- ea

well

known

North

Shore

Paul
and

of

Lakeside

1 p.m.

Members

program
Irwin

Lasman,
B.

Nat

in-

that

Jack

N.

J.

Rez-

sponsor

another

uses the utmost

HI

Will Be Held Next
Thursday Afternoon
Highland Park High school PTA
will meet next Thursday
at 2:30

p.m.

of

Mah

2-3902.

for

tea

in

with a business
at 3:30.

Ben-

Shlopack.

Yellen,

says

Mrs.

85

Benjamin,

George

group

of ORT

home

the

Wallace

Mah

group

Mesdames

Robert

the

Jongg
group
is
being
formed.
Further
information
may
be obtained by calling Mrs. Yellen at

Mishap

beautician

at

attend

the

Katz,

the

of

Paradise,

will

clude

Mrs.

© Loca

in

R.

the

Od

held

Paul

nick

Ula

meeting

Guardianship
be

jamin,

at the

HPHS PTA Meeting

Mrs. Paul R. Paradise to
Be Hostess to ORT Group

Dr.

the

cafeteria,

meeting

Paulette

following

Hartrich,

a

staff

member
of the
Association
For
Family Living, will speak on “The
Adolescents’ World.”
Mrs. Harold Newman is in charge
of tea arrangements.
She will be
assisted
by Mrs.
Willard
Ewing,
Mrs. Anthony Mordini, Mrs. John

Zenko,

Mrs.

Norman

Schreiber,

and Mrs. H. H. Helding,
of boys in the sophomore

mothers
session.

care in selecting materials used for the
care of your hair at

BRING

IN...OR

WE

WILL

PICK

your old plant containers

Mee

Beauty

UP

We have a wide selection of beautiful
plants for you to choose from.
—No extra charge for replanting—
Rely on us to serve you with the best in
flowers for every occasion.

Ci

You will profit by her many years of

experience

YX

in shaping,

666 Waukegan

Rd.

styling

and

Deerfield

permanent
—

waving.

Deerfield

1525

FLOWERS
Berthe

K.

454 Green

Strubel

Bay

ena

AND

Rd., Highwood,

III.

GIFTS
Agnes

Donini

Phone

Thursday,

HI

January

Alverson

2-4534
29, 1953

�1 WEEK

ONLY

SALE

of

The Style Sh

SENSATIONA
GIRLS’

&amp;G

PRAM SUITS

BOYS’

COATS
GIRLS’

&amp;

BOYS’

CRAWLER

STORM COATS
GIRLS’

&amp;

“o

ya

SETS

COAT

BAGS

PRAM

GIRLS’ &amp; BOYS’

SETS

.

BOYS’

V3 OFF
ON

ON

Rayon &amp;

SKIRTS

Nylon

Yq OFF

PLASTIC
LINED
PANTS

1,

OFF

SELLING

STARTS

9A.M.

PAJAMAS

on First Item

GOWNS

1/3 OFF

FRIDAY,

SIZES
GIRLS:

Infant

thru

pre-teen.

BOYS:

Infant

thru

Size

10

She Style S
FOR
Open

CHILDREN

Friday Evenings ‘Til 9 P.M.
And All Day Wednesdays

502 Central Ave.

H|

|
|

MITTENS _
SCARVES |

on Second Item

BLOUSES

‘

2-6944

Vike

�\

ostly

# Wom OM

lewly-Organized

id

-Drama-Readers

Plans June Wedding

ee

to

ather ‘komorrow

A drama-reading group of young |

seals

married couples will gather at the
home of the Leslie G. Brands on

Pleasant

avenue

orrow

part

on” of “Room

in

a “produc-

Service.”

his comedy and others such as
ree
Men
on
a
Horse”
and
ughgirls,” are among the plays

William

Sihler of Deer-

There are eight Highland Park
nuples, three from Chicago, and
each from Evanston, Deerfield,

p.

ae

netka,

Glencoe,

For February 9

Pn.

Chand

Bright red hearts
and
flowers
will provide the Valentine decorations
for the
Ravinia
Woman’s

hn

Miss Patton was graduated from
Highland
Park
High school.
Mr.
Tilden attended Lake Forest academy
and
was
graduated
from
Princeton university. During World
War II he served with the Navy.
He is in business in Cincinnati.
The
couple
is planning
to be
married in late February.

hosen
by the club, which was ornized in September, 1951 by Mr. |

and Mrs.

al

Ravinia Woman’‘s
Club Benefit Set

Of

Mrs. Knox Patton of Vine avenue
has
announced
the
engagement
of
her
daughter,
Suzanne
Elizabeth, to Louis Edward Tilden
of Evanston.

at 8:15 p.m. to-

to take

Engagement

Suedund

a

(

— Wee. Ce

fas

|

Bannockburn

id

Glenview, who gather the last
day of each month at different |
- members’ homes. The host couple
cks

a

play

after

‘minutes

‘ered

chooses

membership.

the

from

and

the

play

the

goes

15,

Within

gath-

has

group

the

on,

The Frederick Hechts
To Spend Three Weeks
Hunting In Virginia

cast

with

the

ast of the membership as an audnce. An occasional prop is used

Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Hecht of
Pine Point drive
and Dr. Ralph
Logan of Lake Forest, formerly of
Highland Park, left last Thursday
for Virginia where they will spend
the
next
two
weeks
hunting
at
Caswick, Orange county, Deep Run,
Warrenton and Farmington.

but the actors wear ordinary dress,
nd
ize

no attempt
lines.

Those

are

from

is made

to

Highland

members

of

the

memo-

Park

who

group,

be-

_ sides the Brands are the Joseph
_ Anthonys, Mr. and Mrs. Calvin
uer,

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Robert

Jor-

dan, the Robert McArdles Jr., Mr.

Stuart-Rodgers

(Continued on page 22)

~

Jeannette

Studio

Photo

The Hechts and Dr. Logan also
plan
to buy
some
brood
mares
while
in Virginia to add to the

Kenbrook

V. Lansing

on

Farm

Waukegan

When

Wh

Opens

rive

Highland

of the

in the campaign

be among those
for the opening

to enroll

1,000

which

team

Park

will

take

the

Ma-

for

members

new

drive.

enrollment

center

Maternity

Chicago

of the

are members

te

| ternity center.

Mrs. Adolph Frankel of Lakeside place and Mrs. William

Weatheral

Club

Sport-O-Roo

Is

Next on Calendar
After a formal New Year’s Eve
rty
the
Weatheral
club
has
lanned an informal Sport-O-Roo
for Valentine’s night at the Rec-reation

center.

Members

and

their

guests will have their choice of
badminton, volleyball, ping-pong,
dge and, weather permitting, ice

skating at adjacent Sunset Park.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Hensley of
Old Barn road are co-chairmen of
the event. They will be assisted
by Mr. and Mrs. Albert D. Degen
f Lake

street,

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Roger

McManus of Dale avenue, and the
John Foresters of Laurel avenue,
The Weatheral board met last
eek to plan ahead for the coming

J. Stebler, Hazel avenue, are Cochairmen of the team.
The opening luncheon at the Casino is being given by Mrs. John
Andrews
King,
chairman
of the
center’s board of directors.
Some
400
volunteer.
workers,
members
of 36 enrollment teams from Chicago and the suburbs, will attend.

- Each

of

those

present

will

be

dubbed an “ambassador at large”
for the Maternity center and given
a “diplomatic
passport’
authorizing him
or her to make friends
and accept gifts for the center.

*

*

*

Dr. Karl Meyer, medical superintendent of Cook county institutions,
will
be
one
of the main
speakers at the kick-off luncheon.
Others who will speak are Mrs.
King; Dr. Beatrice E. Tucker and
Dr. Harry B. Benaron, medical directors of the center; Daggett Har-

vey, CMC president; Howard Gillette, CMC treasurer; Mrs. J. Berin March,
a _ bowling
party
is nard Mullen Jr., chairman of the
‘planned for the early part of May. enrollment
drive,
and
her
co-

months.

After

June

has

been

a

(Continued

an

informal

left open

, -arents’ Golden

on page

dance

for the

22)

Wedding

Mrs.
Roy H. Olson of South
Deere Park drive returned Saturday from Marietta, Minn., where
e attended the 50th wedding anMiversary celebration of her parnts, Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Som-

mermeyer.

Mrs.

Olson’s

brothers,

Irving of Denver, Colo., and Karl

Wf Elgin, were also present for
their parents’ anniversary party,
Held January 21.

16

chairman,

Mrs.

Vernon

a

Armour.

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Ross Lansing of Deerfield, formerly of Highland Park, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Jeannette Vittrice, to John Henderson
Lochridge,
son
of
Mrs.
Willard
Fiske Lochridge of Evanston and
the late Mr. Lochridge.
Miss Lansing attended Highland
Park High school, All Saints Episcopal school in Vicksburg, Miss.,
and Northwestern university where
she was a member of Chi Omega
sorority. She is a junior member of
the
Illinois
Opera
Guild
and
a
member of the junior auailiary of
the Cancer Researecn foundation.
Mr. Lochridge attended The Hill
school,
Pottstown,
Pa.,
and
was
graduated from Northwestern university where he was a member of
Phi Gamma
Delta fraternity. Before entering the armed services,
he attended Northwestern’s school
of law. He is stationed with the
army at Fort Riley, Kans.
A June wedding is planned.

Dr. Allen Stockdale, staff speaker for the National Association of
Manufacturers,

has

topic ‘“‘Let’s Build

and Mrs. Stebler,
Mrs. Albert
Y.

the

Mrs.

Frank
Driggs,
Mrs.
Gilbert
K.
Hardacre, Mrs. Robert R. Harring
Jr., Mrs. Henry H. Hixson, Mrs.
S. Parker Johnston Jr., Miss Betty
Kerber,

Miss

Bunny

Knox,

Mrs.

Edward J. Lauesen, Mrs. V. Edward Lawrence, Mrs. Robert F.
Maher,

Mrs.

J.

M. Maxwell,

Mrs.

Joseph E. Reeves, Mrs. John D.
Stodder, Mrs. Karl H. Velde, and
Mrs. George O. Strecker of Lake
Forest, formerly of Highland Park.

ica”

for

his

Highland

at 8 p.m.
meeting.
During

chosen

Park

talk

before

Woman’s

Tuesday,

a

the

12

past

the

A Better Amer-

second

guest
years

road

the

club
night
Dr.

Stockdale
has made
more
than
3,000 talks in all 48 states and in
Canada.
“One
of the best informed
and dynamic
spokesmen
for industry in the United States
today, Dr. Stockdale’s reputation
is based upon his ability to portray the human side of business
(Continued on page 23)

they

Virginia they
a three-week

share

in Lake

Hechts

Forest.

return

from

will fly to Cuba for
vacation with their

annual benefit
fashion show

the philanthropy

p.m.

dessert-bridge
sponsored by

committee

February

9

in

at 1:15

the

Village

house.

Mrs.

H.

L.

Nelson

drive, chairman;
H. Brown of St.

chairman,

have

of

Elmwood

and Mrs. Grant
Johns place, co-

announced

that

a

Chicago department store will present the fashion show. A garden
setting is planned
for the stage
and Mrs. George Straub of Lakeside place will furnish music during the style show.
Members are asked to make res-

ervations

with

Mrs.

Howard

sen, HI 2-5059, no
Wednesday.
The

limited

to 100 tables.
*
*

Other

members

thropy

party are
George

Barnes,

Wesley

E.

Bletsch,

*

of

committee

with the
Andrew,

Boy-

later than next
party
will
be

the

who

philan-

will

assist

Mesdames E. L.
Bagley,
E.
P.

Becker,

Kenneth

Charles

Berry,

Robert

Churchill, Nathan’ Corwith, D. L.
Dewey,
Henry
Erskine,
Homer
Druley

and

Robert

Mesdames

Farrell.

Sidney Frisch, Adolph

Frankel, Gilbert Hardacre, George
Hartman, L. L. J. Howe, E. P. Hart,
George Harrison, Anne Hoyer, A.

G. Humphrey, W. A. Johnston, Paul
Lally, E. G. Loeb, A. E. Lundin,
C. L. Makelim and John Martineau.

sons, Fred Jr., David and Donald.
Their neighbor, Robert Engleman

Mesdames
ton, Edward

Jr.,

Percy Prior Sr., William Riddle,
I. S. Riggs, Donald Robinson, Edward Rowe, A. R. Schramm, Henry
Schroeder, James E. Seguin, R. J.
Seitz,
Harold
Sherbano,
Robert

son

of

the

senior

also of Pine Point
company them on

Englemans

drive, will
the trip.

ac-

Rename Mrs. Burgert
Infant Welfare Head
Mrs.

Woodward

Burgert

of Oak-

land drive, was named
president
of the intermediate group of Highland Park-Ravinia Infant Welfare
for a second term
at a meeting

Monday
vin

in the home

Anthony

of

of Mrs.

Mar-

Lakewood

place.

Mrs. Charles Bates was elected
vice president; Mrs. Clarence Goel-

zer,

secretary;

and

Mrs.

Anthony,

treasurer.
Committee
chairman
will be Mrs. Thomas McDavitt, station; Mrs. Charles Close and Mrs.
Gordon
Buchanan,
sewing;
Mrs.
H. F. Henrickson, luncheon; Mrs.
John
Martineau,
publicity;
Mrs.
Edward Loevenhart, telephone; and
Mrs. Paul Jester, representative to
the Junior board.

Mrs.

Burgert

entertained

new
board
and
members at a tea
cently.

Dr. Allen Stockdale
Returns to Address
HP Womans Club

Members of the Highland Park
team, in addition to Mrs. Frankel
are:
Bingham,

cLansings

Tall Daughters Sroth

Today

ck

Park women will
in Chicago today

Seventeen Highland
eked
at the Casino
; coe

ncheon

ee

gies

Cate

Maternity

which

club
and

Sine

outgoing
board
in her home re-

ie

Slayback, L. B. Smith, James C.
Snow,
Robert
Spahr
and
the
Misses Felippe and Frances Stellar.

Mesdames
Charles
Stunkel,
James Sumbler, Daniel Swanson,
R. V. Thomas,

Turner,
num,

E.

ner,

L.

D.

and

Lloyd

Tupper,

Erick Ulm, Henry
Vinyard,

C.

A.

E.

The

Louis

Watson,

A.

E.

Van OrWag-

John

Wilbor

Wolters.

social

committee

is

busy

with
plans
for a formal
Valentine’s dance and buffet supper to
be given February 14 from 9 p.m.
to 1 a.m. in the Village house. Billy

Roberts and his orchestra will play

for

dancing

Tables
couple

starting

may

or

at

10

p.m.

be reserved

more

by

calling

for one
Mrs.

W.

Alcock Johnston of Marion avenue,
social

chairman,

at

HI

2-4270.

her

Arden Shore Elects
Officers For 1953
Mrs. L. L. J. Howe of Ashland
place was re-elected president of
the Arden Shore association at the
January 21 meeting of the group
in the Woman’s Athletic club, Chi-

Resident

Engaged

Alfred J. L. MiddleMurray, J. A. Nelson,

Whd

cago.
Board

members

of

the

associa-

Announcement has been made tion named Mrs. Baldwin Newman
of the engagement of Lt. Ted Yea- of Hazel avenue, publicity chairger, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry M. man and Mrs. Jackson W. Smart of
Yeager of Glencoe, formerly of Sycamore place, village chairman
Highland Park,
and
Miss
Joyce for Highland Park.
Keely of Santa Barbara, Calif.
Lt.
army

Yeager,
in 1951

from

Highland

is

now

vision
is

who enlisted in the
after his graduation

Park

High

stationed

with

Camp

Irwin,

at

hoping

to

have

a

a

school,
tank

Calif.

leave

in

di-

He
May

when the young people will come
to the North Shore to be married.

Return
Mr.

berger
turned
10-day
Beach,
1194

From
and

Delray Beach

Mrs.

Eugene

P.

Ellen-

(Edna Carlson) recently reto Highland Park after a
wedding
trip to Delray
Fla. They are at home at
Linden

Thursday,

avenue.

January

29,1953

|

�te

f

*

RIT

RS

Whiss

bs

‘
i

‘

Malbrauis

Wd

on

ree Peterson’s)
ee
Patricia

iy)

Engagement Is Told

February 14

The engagement of Miss Patricia —
Peterson

53

hinity

Mrs. David F. Dean of Central
avenue, the former Nancy Turner,
will be matron of honor for Miss
Malmquist.
Bridesmaids
will
be
Miss
Marjorie
Dean
of
Walnut
street and Miss Jane Arenberg of
Green Bay road. Miss Jill Malmquist of Farnsworth will serve as
junior
bridesmaid.
She
is
the
daughter
of
the _ bride-to-be’s
brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs.
James Malmquist.
William Teeuws of Berwyn will
be best man for his brother. Ushers
will include another brother, John
of Chicago, Walter Elliott Jr. and
(Continued on page 22)

The

Park

her

the

be

played

off

to

from

as well

many

ticipate.
On the
Mrs.

states

as from
way

in the

Canada,
home

Peterson,

who

from

Ontario,

stop

with

Mrs.

of Glencoe, to
bonspiel there.

off

New officers of the Highland Park-Raviraia Infant Welfare Wing took over at the first
19 in the Laurel avenue home of Mrs. Robert Moon.
meeting
of the new year January
Seated,

left to

Fisher,

president;

right,

Mrs.

Robert

Hollis,

representative

to the

junior

board;

Mrs.

will leave

Quebec

Saturday

International

eer

|Arden Shore Auxiliary
To Meet Next Tuesday

ENTERED _

[2.7.08 NR

morn-

Bonspiel

Highland

Park

iary

will

be

day

in the

Arden

held

at

Shore

auxil-

p.m.

Tues-

2

home

of Mrs.

run

starts
three

February

9

president,

will

conduct

the

Plan Dinner Party

4

the Irving Valiners of Oak Park. |
Mr. and Mrs. Valiner were mar- —
ried

in December.

Mrs.

Robert

‘a
ay

on a 65-day Mediterranean cruise. —

3

.

44

FOUR
PAPER

ioe

WEEKS
BULBS

HI 2-3420
653 Laurel

Ave.

rs
:

4

Pollen

BABY

OIL

SKIN

a 4

and

BABY

to

SKIN

This is

will

OIL

a

SOAP

a beautiful way to

Mi

:

take care of a beautiful skin!

The oil is a precious blend
which disappears almost

as soon as you put iton...
but which leaves your skin

velvety for hours! The soap
is bland but rich, gentle

will

deter-

but so effective. Soap, 1.25
1.00*,

1.50*, 2.75*, 5.00*

|
,

a
a

3
a

oT 0G R4

Toiletries « First Floor

= “9,

NT.

H. PRIOR, JR.

Evanston

store hours,

9 to 5:30 —

Mondays

and Thursdays,

9 to 9

PHOTOGRAPHY

599 ROGER WILLIAMS
PHONE HI 2-3199
January

|.

ar lragine Staphd

other

WEDDINGS

Thursday,

|

WHITE

for clear, soft skin

CANDID

PERCY

of Ravine |

J. L. Tennant
of —
will sail Saturday

ing.

wewosee

&amp;

pee

ie

Herbst

drive and Mrs.
Central avenue

"Highland Park

meet-

par-

part in the play, which

@ COMMERCIAL

is

set for the

BAG OF 6 65¢

days.

PORTRAITS

min-—
i

Baby Skin Oil,
@

the

the championship

go on through February
mine the championship.

@

for

has been

NARCISSUS

Mills on Sheridan road. Co-hostesses will be Mrs. Byron Crane,
Mrs. Ellsworth Mills II and Mrs.
Roy Hannahs. Mrs. Jackson Smart
of Sycamore
lane, newly
elected

Mrs.
Trieschmann,
Mrs.
Peterson,
and
Mesdames
Thomas
E.
Keogh, John F. Morrisy, Burt M.
Smalley,
L.
J.
Stirling,
Horace
Vaile and
Robert
C. Wilson
are
the Highland Park skips for rinks
Playing
the
current
Heather
championship at the Chicago Curling club.
Twenty-seven rinks are

taking

himself

Mediterranean Cruise

OR

Ellsworth

at Sarnia two years ago and was
runner-up last year.
On the rink
will
be
Mrs. .F. C. Nichols
and
Mrs.
Perry
Pennington,
both of
the North Shore. The Sarnia bon-

spiel

Mrs. —

wedding.

they will grow

IN THRE

curl in a women’s
Mrs. Pollen, skip

of the rink, won

date

enna
Beautiful flowers...

Nlen aeeee

Sarnia, '

Frank

Mr, —

and

\

Winfield

Mrs. Darwin Rummell, vice president; and Mrs. Roger T. McManus,
Standing, from left, Mrs. Robert L. Sanders, provisional chairman; Mrs.
member-at-large.
Percy Prior, publicity; Mrs. Kenneth Farris, corresponding secretary; Mrs. B. V. Reaney,
treasurer, and Mrs. Joseph Brown, recording Secretary.

Canada,

at

Mr.

at a dinner party February 7 which |
they will give in honor’of Mr, —
Dembo’s sister and brother-in-law, —

Park party, curls with the Chicago
will

Minn.

of

Mr. and Mrs. Harold Dembo of |
Barberry road will fete 24 friends —

feminine members of the Highland
Heathers,

son

In September, he will en= |
Paul’s Lutheran seminary,

prepare

No

Union

the

at St. Olaf’s —

sev-

will

with

the

istry.

eral Canadian clubs. One hundred
twenty-five rinks, whose members
are

year

Northfield,

Olaf’s.
ter St.

’

at

Highland —

in his senior year of study at St.

Warren Petersons of Ridge Road and Mr. and Mrs.
Trieschmann of Central avenue, all members of the
Curling club, will be in the North Shore group trava private car provided for the curlers by a Canadian
They will stop at the Chateau Frontenac.
to

a

Jacob Skeie, also of New York, is |

The men in the group wiil take part in the week-long men’s
bonspiel,

sophomore

Skeie,

couples

ing for Canada to attend
which starts Monday. .

bride-to-be,

college,

3
IN CANADIAN
BONSPIELS NEXT WEEK

The
Ralph A.
Chicago
eling by
railway.

of New —

Park High school graduate, is in —

CURLERS

PARK

Highland

Skeie

her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Arnold —
Peterson of Broadview avenue.

Trinity Episcopal church will be
the setting for the marriage February
14
of
Miss
Jean
Elizabeth
Malmquist to Leonard Teeuws, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Lambert Teeuws
of
Oak
Park.
The
Very
Rev.
Charles U. Harris, rector of Trinity
church, will officiate at the 4:30
p.m.
ceremony.
A reception
will
follow in the Woman’s club. Miss
Malmquist is the daughter of the
Elmer J. Malmquists of Park avenue west.

Three

to Thoralf

York City has been announced by —

(Dine

HIGHLAND

|

nike

BT

29,

Highland

1953

Park

store

hours,

9

to

5:30

Monday

through

Soturdoy

5

�Exmoor Winter

Fearing as the Gold Queen and
Nicki Keogh as the Paymaster. Lyn
Jacobs, Mary Beth Ostrander, Susan Medway, Judith Kraft, Janet
Lennox, Marcia Dicus, Nancy On-

Club Presents
Ice Carnival

derdonk, Barbara
Reilly
and
Pat

with

Exmoor Winter club presented its annual Ice Carnival
January 11, entitled “Ice Adventures.”
Narrated by John E. Howe,
the program started with a
scene

in

the

featuring

Rainbow

Forest

Morine

as Hi-

Jean

awatha,

Janet

Cushman

as

Princess Zallo, and Ann Tighe,
Princess
John

Hola.
Harris,

chael McComb,

Peter

Bowes,

Herb Young,

Mi-

Dania

Hedberg,
Martha
Mance,
Debbie
Mead,
Betsy.
Wilson
and
Honey
Heck were cast as Hunters.
The second scene depicted
the

California

Gold

Rush,

with

Sally

Weekdoys—6:15, 8:15
CONFESSIONS
Saturdays,
Eves. of First Fridays and
Holy Days 4:00 and 7:30 p.m.

SECRETARIAL
@ Never enough Gibbs-trained
secretaries to meet the demand.
Courses for high school and
private
school
esac
and
eollege women.
Five-school personal placement service.

Catalog: Executive Dean
$1 E. Superior St., Chicago 11
DE 7-3306
Other Gibbs Schools: New York
Besten
Montclair, N, J,
Providesos

Store Hours:

10 to 5:30

as

“Mr.

Lila

and

Keogh

and Bill
Kid.

and

picks,

were

Mrs.
was

Jose

the

Weed

Cordova.”

Lady

played

of Spain,

the

Cisco

Senoritas included Nancy Weeks,
Carol Harris, Peggy Montgomery,
Micki
Innes,
Margaret
McComb,
and Louise Delafield.
Playing the
parts of children were Jane Rutherford, Pat Sloan, Mary McComb,
Andrea Bartholomay, Susan Runn-

feldt and Jane and Susan Griffith.
Mr. and Mrs. Dean, Mr. Duffy
and
Mrs.
Richard
Hedberg,
the
William
Jacobs, John
Rutherford
and Sue Runnfeldt,
and Thomas

To
age,”
Ruth
Helo
Jean

Green Bay Roads
2-0202
Rt. Rev.
Joseph P. Morrison
Pastor
Rey. Donald
B. Runkle
Rev. Bernard
E. Burns
MASSES
Sundays—6:15, 7:30, 9:00, 10:00,
11:00 and 12 noon
Holy eee
ees oe 8:00, 9:00,

bbs

hats

Spanish Theme
A South of the Border theme was
displayed
in a Hacienda
number
starring Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Dean

conclude

and
HI
Msgr.

fatharine(

mining

the

his daughter, Mary
a tango on ice to

represented
by Bob
Montgomery
as the Lone Ranger, and Bette Wetzel as Annie Oakley.
Following the act, “Cadets from
Mars,” featuring Jack Redfern, Ed

Weed, Hal and Tom Ross, Glenn
Harris,
Dick
Cushman,
Frank
Smith, Peter Davis and Bob Sanders,
a Broadway
review
was
staged. Ann Tighe and Janet Cushman represented the famous Dolly
sisters, and Barry Weed took the
part of Fred Astaire.
Courtney
Bowes was an Opera Star and Polly
Husting, a Jive Queen. Mr. Duffy
and

Mrs.

fers

RIGHT:

Miss

erform

OG

lvcntives

AT

Fearing

appeared

Sally
as

the

Gold Queen in the recent
Ice carnival at Exmoor
Country club.
Written
and directed by Douglas
Duffy, club skating instructor, Miss Fearing
starred in a 49er gold
mining skit.

CENTER: Also appearing
in the prospecting scene
were Barbara Connolly,
Kathy

Reilly,

Pat

White,

Susan
Medway,
Nancy
Onderdonk, and Lyn Jacobs who were cast as miners.

number.

portray the “motion picture
Julie Patton
appeared
as
Roland, Marcia McMillan, as
Hatti, and Sarah Frelinger as
Harlow. The Wild West was

Donohue

Sha

&gt;

Connolly, Kathy
White,
equipped

miners.

Strachan and
Jane, danced

IMMACULATE
CONCEPTION CHURCH
Deerfield

the

é

Jacob

appeared

as

BELOW:

Another

act

in

the adventure story presented the Cadets from
Mars, who
included Ed

Weed, as Captain Meteroum;

Jack

Redfearn,

as

Captain Video; and Cadets Bob Sanders, John
Medway (kneeling) and
Glenn Harris.

Jack

and Marilyn Miller, while

Janet
Cushman,
Lila and Prudy
Keogh, Betty and Marilou Wetzel,
Marcia McMillan
and Sarah Fre-

linger

danced

a Dude

Ranch

let. The entire cast appeared
the finale to the event.

Free

parking

directly

balfor

North!

CHAS.A.

|

STE

ENS
«&lt; co.
4 worda—

You’re invited!
Come

to our

INFORMAL
BRIDAL
SHOWING
Saturday, February 7th
2 to 3 p.m.

featuring wedding and
trousseau fashions,
bridesmaids’ and

mother-of-the-bride gowns.
CHAS,
Page

18

A. STEVENS

&amp;

CO., HUBBARD

WOODS
Thursday,

January

29, 1953

�Highland

Parkers

On

Benefit

Committee

OFFICIAL
PUBLICATION
Statement of Resources and Liabilities of
ya ds
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF HIGHLAND PARK
ge
located at Highland Park, State of Illinois, at the close of business on the 31st
day of December, 1952, as shown by the annual report made by the said corporation
as a trust company, to the Auditor of Public Accounts of the State of Illinois,
pursuant to law.
RESOURCES
Ts Cameh’ Ani) Gee: LHOms Dee 6 ooiclosk ois acs ab cabanich scence nc adsoenc ss hlncalged eee $ 8,343,597.02
2: Outside ehecks: and other. €aGh (teme 2.588 wlk ei eerie
8,906.96
8. U.S. Government obligations, direct and/or fully guaranteed ........ 11,171,295.18
4; Other) bonds, stocks. ond
GOGuritios: 2i.25....)oi ioccscAacuckesseoke beaters
1,044,665.15
Oi Bootie ei tid: tm E Ro csr ks ees itis ca cass cds -cut ves bodaguddvaconcces be okukvabaiee be ene
6,099,228.36
Si Cer aeRTte } Jc.. co ee
ee
ee
890.70
,

7. Banking

11.

Other

house

resources

Cretid

$59,500.00.

FOUR)

Furniture

ROR OUMCOE:

and

fixtures

$1.00

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

os ices .ccscnakscccsscdentbacgenvadonsusbhese

59,501.00
5,435.64

$21,728,419.96

LIABILITIES
RB SOTA
LOGI
hic
CR
a
aa
en
are
ee $
200,000.00
TUB
Lope tact rts ves hes ie Ode a Toe Saud cits ccc haart Genkaaies Naame ame
800,000.06
Es
DAL VIGO, ROTOR
CEE
cis cco cccccgnka kn cat iunadnan tented aeeaetiuees CuUC aaa
101,942.05
16. Reserve
accounts
812. 875.80
17. Demand
deposits
12,332,994.19
VE tae
BOO ORIE:
i
a
ce
SE
Fi se
A
ee
7,918,707.54
Total

of

deposits:

(1)
(2)

22.
25.

Assets
.

‘Total.

The committee planning the program book to be distributed at annual musical comedy
to be sponsored by Suburban B'nai B’rith on April 18 includes (left to right) Mrs. John
Schmidt, of Pleasant avenue, Highland Park chairman, and her co-chairmen, Mrs. E. G.
Gherman of Lake avenue, and Mrs. Tully Friedman of Ridgewood drive.

B’nai B’rith Launches
Fund Raising Drive
Suburban
launched
for this
gram

Brith
has
raising campaign
in the form of a pro-

year

and

ad

tributed
comedy

B’nai

its fund

at
to

book
the

be

which
annual

given

on

is

dis-

musical
April

18.

Proceeds
itable
and
Shore,

fund
Girl

will

benefit

which
Scouts

Highland

the

includes
on

Park

the

char-

the

Boy

North

hospital, Leo

avenue

is chairman

Co-chairmen

are

of the ad book.

Mrs,

E.

M.

Gher-

man of Lake avenue, and Mrs.
Tully
Friedman
of
Ridgewood

N. Levi hospital, National Jewish
hospital, Community Fund, North
Shore Mental Health clinic, High-

drive.

land Park USO,
For The Blind.

The Want-Ad section is filled with
interesting facts and golden oppor‘unities. Don’t miss it!

Mrs.

John

and Hadley School

Schmidt

of

Pleasant

Purpose
(a)
(c)
(f)

Joiabiittes (chen

eee

es

et

10,000.08
56,900.38
$21,728,419.96

MEMORANDUM:
Assets Pledged to Secure Liabilities
pledged:
;
a
5
a/
pa
Us.
G
t obligations,
direct
and/or
fully guaranteed Nate Se plates a oh
cas TAC: SUR Tis ie
ei
Total

27.

............ $
818,839.84
assets
19,927,861.89

(3):
Dotal
epottee
“iii
oe. $20,246,701.73
Dividends declared—not yet payable .................c.02.c0.cccseccseecsenceerene ee
Other liabilities ....
Grand:

26.

Secured by pledge of assets
Not secured
by pledve of

Amount

of Assets

Pledged

and Amount of Pledge:
Against U.S. Government
To own trust department
With

Auditor

of

Public

ercise

of fiduciary

Total
iteus

Amount
26)

of

(excluding

and Postal Savings
against uninvested
Accounts

to

qualify

PpOWerB
Assets

rediscounts)

480,000.00

:
deposits ....$
trust funds

250,000.08
100,000.00

for

the

ex-

. . . . - . -sc es nce se e ne s
Pledged

(must

480,000.00
$

agree

130,000.00
with
480,000.06

STATE
OF
ILLINOIS)
86.
COUNTY
OF LAKE
)
R. L. Erskine, one of the managing officers, and Vallee O. Appel and Cc. L.
Torrence, two of the directors of the First National Bank of Highland
Park, @
corporation
of the State of Illinois, being severally duly sworn, each upon his
oath states:
That he makes this affidavit for the purpose of complying with the
requirements of Sections 9 and 10 of an Act of the General Assembly of the State
of Illinois, entitled
“An
Aet to provide for and regulate the administration
of
trusts by trust companies.”
That the foregoing report of the said corporation on
the aforementioned
date, is true and correct in all respects to the best of his
knowledge and belief, and that he has examined the assets and books of the said
company for the purpose of making said statement.
Subscribed
and
sworn
to _ before
R.
L. ERSKIN®,
President
me this 17th day of January,
1953.
VALLEE O. APPEL
Cc. L. TORRFNCE
ERNEST A. BELMONT
Directors
Notary Public

(SEAL)

MILK on SUNDAYS
SANTI
5386 DEERFIELD

PICK

Ti)

Or

DAIRY,

RD.

INC.

HIGHLAND

(Just South of Hines Lumber

PICK

AT

PARK

Yard )

UP FRESHLY BOTTLED MILK ON SUNDAYS
ALSO AVAILABLE AT ALL TIMES!

ENZYLAC — SOFKURD — SKIM

MILK

AND

SWEET

BUTTER

NOTE!"

We make special deliveries to anyone who finds themselves short of dairy products — on any
day EXCEPT Sunday.

It Pays To Buy From Highland Park’s
Only Bottling Dairy.

Phone FAl-2.-15 81
Thursday,

January

29, 1953

Check Our Prices
and SAVE!
Page 19

�Wiss

Pei

he

Paul B Shor In
Coremony

‘Pianists, Soprano

Arlene Lenzini
Completes Nursing
Course at St. Luke’s

Wd

Present Program

For HP Music Club

Miss Arlene Lenzini, daughter of
Joseph
Lenzini
of 3305
Western
avenue, participated in “going out”

Aprit /1

Miss Joan Piazzi will have five
attendants when she weds Paul B.

Sheffer,

son

of

Mr.

and

Mrs.

of

St.

D. Gleeson,

James,

9:30

a.m.

tion

will

at the

will

nuptial
be

mass.

given

Highwood

in

A

the

Mr.

Sheffer’s

They

are

niece

and

cen- |

Jour,”

nephew,
Miss

Jack Heick, will serve
girl
and
ring
bearer.

the

children

of Mr.

Gagliardi

Photo

Following their marriage January 17 in Holy Cross church,
_ Deerfield, Patrick J. Gallagher and his bride, the former Nancy
Cahill, who is pictured above, left ona wedding trip to Florida.
They are expected to return to Deerfield Saturday where they
~ will

make

Mrs.

their

John

Mr.

home.

Gallagher

is the

son

of Mr.

and

G. Gallagher of Deerfield, formerly of St. Johns
The bride’s parents are the Fred W. Cahills of Deer-

- -avenue.

- field.

EName

HP

of Group

Direct Dartmouth
Winter Carnival

_ At Two Meetings
es
rN
a

Juniors

land

I of the High-

Park-Ravinia

_ Infant

Welfare

met Monday
- Gooch, the

center

society

with

of

Mrs.

newly

of the

Chicago

J. William

elected

presi-

dent, in the home of Mrs. Theodore
_.L.
Bere

Rehn,
Mrs.

Belle

avenue.

Pierre

a elected

first

Martineau,

vice

newly-

president,

took

_ over the duties as leader of Group
_ II which

met

_ Adolph
'

nue

E.

in the home

Lundin,

of Mrs.

Lincoln

ave-

south.

Other

new

officers

are:

pean
vice president, in charge
sewing, Mrs. John P. Andrews,
ENod
co-chairmen,
Mrs.
Loren
C.

‘“ Moore

and Mrs. Vernon S. Mortithird vice president,
Mrs.

mer;

Herbert

F.

; secretary,

D’Sinter;

Mrs.

co-chairman,

Mrs.

bruster;

recording

Julien

H.

corresponding
John
N.
Barbee

¥

_ Mrs.
chairman;

Mrs.

treasurer,

eer;

= co-chairman,

Wool,
+ Chairmen

Jordan;

Benjamin
John

Arm-

secretary,
Jr.;
co-

H.

Harmon

Mrs.

R. C. Vinnedge;

Mrs.

William

C.

M.

named were:

Publicity

advisor,

Mrs.

Ingram

C.
Rasmussen;
Chicago
papers,
_ Mrs. Mark G. Brown and Mrs. Har‘Tis G. Beck; local papers, Mrs.
Richard
Put

Mrs.
_. Mrs.

L.

Rademacher;

station,

Carl E. Parker; co-chairman,
E. Edwin Hansbrough; Thrift

_ shop,
‘man,

Mrs. Russell Clark;
Mrs.
Sydney
P.

co-chairGraham;

_ luncheon, Mrs. Harry R. Johnson;
co-chairman, Mrs. James F. Grism-wold Jr.; meetings, Mrs. Eugene
_.Mance; co-chairman, Mrs. Richard
_ F.

Drake;

membership,

Stefan Jr; telephone,
Aldridge;

BF Tart
‘ton

.J.

_,
Ee

of

H.

J.

J.

Mrs. John

A.

co-chairman,

Elston;

H. Hall;

points,

Mrs.
Mrs.

Wil-

Mrs.

Vin-

co-chairman,

Mrs.

Ray

Naegele.

Annual reports on the activities
the

last

year

included

the

re-

Student

to

the

young

man

is the

son of Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Loewenthal of 630 Waverly road.
He has
been active on past carnival committees and is also a member of
the Yacht club.

Friends of Drama

To Breakfast, See
‘Point Of No

Return’

Mrs. Glenn J. Chell of Cloverdale will be hostess at the next
breakfast of the Friends of Drama

Wednesday

at

the

LaSalle

hotel,

11:45 a.m.
Following
the breakfast
and a
program featuring the appearance
of actors and actresses currently
in plays in Chicago, the group will
see
“Point
Of No
Return”
starring Henry Fonda at the Erlanger
theater.
Enrico Clausi, tenor, will
sing
at the
breakfast.
Mrs.
F.

Patrick Machler, president, will introduce
port

by

the
Mrs.

actor

guests.

Norman

F.

Harvey,

sewing chairman,
that 579 garments were completed and turned
over to the Alice Wood
Park
Infant
Welfare
1952.

and Seward
stations
in

Luke’s hospital
in Chicago
re-

occasion commemorated

the

Miss Kelly Is Graduated

At Temple Tuesday

From

1175

Sheridan

road.

Miss

interior

decorator,

will

present

she

Miss

Walker

Kathryn

Kelly,

lives

with

her

Ethel V. Kelly.
A graduate of Elm

of

the

program

was

school

|

before

formerly

mother,
Place

of

the

opera

“Louise,”

tions written for two pianos, SaintSaens’

and

“Carnival

the

of

the

Animals,”

Scaramouche

Suite,

by.

Darius Milhaud, as played by Virginia
Schur
(Mrs.
Irving
Schur)
and Mrs. Seelig. Mrs. George Webster
narrated
the
Ogden
Nash
words for the “Carnival.”

Hostesses
sisting

pitality

Mrs.

for the
B.

W.

chairman,

afternoon,

as-

Fairbanks,

at the

tea

hos-

after

the
program
were
Mrs.
Lowell
Harter, Mrs. Marvin O. Lawrentz,
Mrs. Kenneth Lacy, Mrs. Guy B.
Finlay
and
Mrs.
David
Hanger.
Mrs. J. R. Henschen of Roger Wil-

avenue,

president

club, was in charge
business meeting.

of

of
the

the
brief

Sun-

Mrs.

school,

moving

Make

from

by Charpentier. Dorys Seelig (Mrs.
Arthur
Seelig)
was
her
accompanist.
The final portion of the afternoon program consisted of selec-

liams

Miss Kelly attended Highland Park

a Yigh

program
on “Interior Decorating
for
the
Amateur”
and
will
il-;
lustrate
her
talk
with
a
few
sketches to show the basic rules for
the artist. Mrs. Samuels is the arts
and crafts teacher at the Beth El}.
Sunday school.

College

day
from
the
Mercy
College
of
Nursing in San Diego, Calif., where

Des-

Mrs, Ethel Samuels of Winnetka,

Nurses’

330 Elm place, was graduated

sert-luncheon
will
be
served
at
12:30 p.m. with Mrs. Harold Goldstein, chairman, in charge.

As chief director of the annual
two day winter show he is responsible for planning and co-ordinating the activities of the 11 departments
and
hundreds
of students
and competitors who participate to
make this the most famous of college weekends.

senior,

Beth El Sisterhood
Plans Open Meeting

temple,

Richard
J. Loewenthal
Jr. has
recently
been
named
director
of
the 38th
annual Dartmouth
Winter carnival, which is scheduled to
be held in Hanover, N. H., February 6-7.

A

The

Lenzini

completion of the three-year nurs
ing course and consisted of serv
ices at Grace Episcopal church fol
lowed by a reception given by the
Highwood, and Mario Carani of nursing council of the hospital at
|; Schweppe
house.
Formal
graduaGlenview avenue, a cousin of the
tion exercises will take place in
bride-to-be.
May.
Miss
Lenzini is a graduate
of
Highland Park High school.

The North Suburban Synagogue
Beth El Sisterhood
will hold an
open meeting on Tuesday at the

Officers for ‘53

Arlene

ceremonies at St.
school of nursing
cently.

and

Mrs. John Heick of Highwood.
Miss Piazzi’s uncle, Remo Piazzi
of Highwood, will be best man for
Mr. Sheffer, and her brother, Gerald of Taylor avenue, will serve as
an
usher.
Other
ushers
will be
Arrigo Ugolini and Frank Ponsi of
Gene

club

In the piano
quartet performing a Sonata by Smetana and Zerembski’s
‘Polish
Dance’?
were
Mrs. Wilfred Johnson, Mrs. Henry
Hawes,
Mrs. Edward
Sherry
and
Mrs. B. W. Fairbanks.
Mildred Schneider sang Gluck’s
“OQ, Del Mio Dolce Ardor;” “Quel
Ruscelletto,” by Paradies, “L’ Invitation au Voyage,’
by Dupare;
Faure’s “Clair de Lune,’ an Old
English Pastorale, and ‘“‘Depuis le

evening

ter.
The.
bride-to-be,
who
is
the
daughter
of the
Corrado
Piazzis
of Taylor avenue, has asked Miss
Audrey Engels of Wilmette to be
maid of honor. Serving as bridesmaids will be Miss Mary Minorini
of
Fort
Sheridan
avenue,
Miss
Charlene Robinson of Central avenue,
and
Miss
Piazzi’s
cousins,
Miss
Madreen
Fiocchi
and
Miss
Yvonne
Leoni
of Highwood.
Peggy and
as flower

Music

ensemble,

the

recep-

Community

Park

Dorys Seelig, concert pianist, who
is also chairman of the club’s piano

pastor

celebrate

Highland

Chairman

Marion Smyres of Highwood, April
11 in St. James church, Highwood.

The Rev. James

The

heard a piano quartet, piano duo
and selections by Mildred Schneider, lyric soprano,
at its recent
meeting in the home of Mrs. Albert
Pick Jr. of Vine avenue.

west.

Home

She

completed

school edShe will
remain on duty at Mercy College
of Nursing
until August
of this

ucation

in

her

San

high

Diego.

year, at which time she expects to
be given a further assignment.

In The

East

E

Crowned

Queen Saturday At
Campion Military Ball
Miss
Alice
Catherine
Walker
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. W.
Walker
of
Meadow
lane,
was
crowned
queen
of the
Campion
military ball in Prairie du Chien
Wis.,
last
Saturday
night.
Her
escort was Cadet Ist Lt. James W
McClellan,
chosen
by
his fellow
senior cadets
at Campion
Jesuit
High school as king. Cadet McClel
lan played
guard
on the varsity
football
team last season
and
is
executive
officer of Company
A
in his ROTC
battalion. He is the
son
of the
J. E. McClellans
of
Cherokee road.
Miss Walker is a member of the
service marshals, honor group of
juniors
and
seniors
at Highland
Park High school and also belongs
to the senior choir.

Return
Mr.

From
and

Ridgewood

Florida

Mrs.

drive,

H.

W.

Elliot

returned

of

last

week from a month’s vacatien in
Florida. They visited Mr. Elliot’s
brother and family, the H. F. Elliots at Coral Gables.
They
also
visited the Fred Bremers of Sarasota
who
are
former
Highland
Parkers. Mrs. George Krumbach of
Deerfield
was
a _ guest
of
the
Bremers at the same time.

J.

Morris
at home

D.

Landfield

Photo

|. Cohn and his bride, the former Faire Levy, are

in Newton

Centre, Mass., after a wedding

trip to New

York City.
Mrs. Cohn is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Seymour B. Levy of Cherokee road.
Her marriage to the son of
the Irving Cohns of Chicago took place Saturday evening, January 3,.in the Pine Point drive home of her aunt and uncle,
Mr. and Mrs. Juel E. Soboroff.
Thursday,

January

29, 1953

�/
yy Gedaly
&amp;

sng

National’s Schedule of Outstanding Events for 1953!

Th

tou

he

a

@

f

ry

Libby
S
E
H
C
R
E
P
p
a
f
COCKTAIL r

|—

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pec

Os 8 ee ee
aria,

oe

:

Mey

|

Oe

pets pies 3

=

| COLORFUL FRUIT MIX
a

hs

a

pS

| Y ?: Cans
67°

| FRUIT SALAD 2 “=' 69°
Libby's

YELLOW CLING
alata Of
ic pelle WO
‘
:
i
;
bay ves, For desserts
sat gg

—/f ®, OP
cs
eee
2
:
J

with carefully seMade
lected, tree-ripened fruit,

|

.Fes~

ae

Libby’s Fancy

Colorful

e

Libby's

twice-rich kind. Made from the
the finest vine-ripened tomatoes.

Twice-Rich

TOMATO

no, 24

Halves

Bb =

P

Libby's Fancy Cream

hi

Style

Early

Libby's

Fancy

Cream

Style

golden

Delicious

pick-up

SWEET PEAS . .2"%.°° 33° WHITE CORN. . 2".%"
JUNE PEAS . . .2"%.° 33° GOLDEN CORN. . 2":.2"
Libby's

¢

| Cans

PINEAPPLE. .2 t= 59 c

Refreshing,

sugar

' Libby's Fancy

No. 2

al

Libby's Sliced

69°

Howaii.

ioe,

Cans

JUICE... "cc" 10°

§

3

46-02

CRUSHED PINES

&lt;a

CRUSHED

Fancy quality. From Hawaii's
sunny shores. Ready to use
for making tasty desserts.

jftéy~ PINEAPPLE JUICE

ge

juice

HAWAIIAN
ny - 4
# 4
#»
4
es aa Per ei |

C

Cans

Bartlett PEARS 2 ‘c=’

Bi filly TOMATO JUICE
of

in

Sellebration

Birthday

Important

Another

|

anytime.

juice from

at

the ‘shores

of

46-02,

mealtime—Refreshing

Naturally

sweet

with

¢

Cans

no

added.

33° SAUERKRAUT . . 2°:2"33
Libby's

Silver Shredded

No.

2!

Cc

33° FANCY PUMPKIN 2": 35°
ibby's Finest

TOMATOES . . .2 ‘x: 45° KERNEL CORN. . 2°." 93° Tomato CATCHUP 2: 33°
Libby's

Fancy

Libby's

= Silty

lane

BABY FOODS ;

Get beautiful

Plastic

no

extra

cost

with

jars of Libby's

the

purchase

at

of

6

wre a4

Tender

Peas ae

prepared

pete
ae
Se

| LUNCHEON MEAT . 3
Oscar Mayer Yellow Band

Swanson's

Drawe—Ready

and

|
|

GROUND BEEF

cooked

12-02, 1"
Tins

and Cheese

CO MILK... 220Cans 25°
PANCAKE

PILLSBURY

Ps ‘ nce

(

s

»s

8»

OYSTERS

Pt,

Kee

4

ea

Heat

ond

&lt;3

Special

‘a

Mix
Crust
Pie
with coupes gos
for
10c
O

et
a

ee

=

Vermont

Maid

of 2

TR

Prices

LL

effective

thre

¢

Bag 59

Top
Flaver—Geod
Eating
Dates':t*
Fresh

35°

Pascal
Celery

es,

10c

Pillsbury. Pie Crust

Off _on

Pudding

3

we @ Stik. 19°

is

Mew Green—Selld

Be

a

Cabbage « « is.

GET 27° WORTH of COUPONS
10c on Spry Shortening

SAVE 10c on Swanson’s Chicken

SAVE 7c on Hot Dawg Relish
Issue

of

Re
Advertised Staple Grocery
Prices effective thru
Wed.,
Feb. 5. while
sale supplies last

:

pkgs.

Mix and
of.

Jell-O

Puffs with

69° (60.0 FI QUp 5 2: 4g

Eat—Fillets

Enter
Meat

Florida Growa-Jumbe Sizo—Fresh

Pkgs.

COOKED PERCH. . . . = 49° WESSON QIL =. 69°
Advertised

;

Pkgs.

9-02.

pkgs. of Pillsbury

pkg

a

offer

Make Betty Crocker’s Golden

SWISS CHEESE...
Fishermen—Just

ka

of

FeeerpitspuRY PIE CRUST MIX

ae
% ie
;
te

Cc

purchase

Syrup.

M4

:

Sy

c

Kroft's—Sliced or Piece—Large Open Eye
Four

C

8

8

Standard

| the

Cae

SKINLESS FRANKS . . ™ 49°
Somerse t—Extra

Grapefruit

*

C

Cans

FLOUR

MEATY SPARE RIBS "39° | ae cre. eo ee 2S 2 20-0.

Ib.

at this

(4-02,

Buy the February
oes

FRANKFURTS

Beans

{-Lb, 1” SAVE

Cans

Small Size

Just-Rite—Skinless

sauce.

Advertised Produce Prices effective thru Sat., Jan. 31

Pkgs

PORK TENDERLOINS "98°

rich pork—

tomato

Pg.

99°

| KRAFT DINNER . . ayLiam
HIXS
ON’S COF
ce FEE . 2
tussons.
| NAT

99°
.~
.
PIES.
CHICKEN
ie nosh
FRYING
= RABBITS. .»-79°

Macaroni

with

Nutritiowe—Fieclda Grown
ow
es
Cc

6-02,

Kraft's Processed Cheese Spread

With

beans
luscious

Also Libby's Vegetarian
same low price.

FRYING CHICKENS » 53° | VELVEETA CHEESE 2

Marhoefer's

in

Everfresh

BONED CHICKEN. .

fer *he Pos

Finest

ibty-PORK &amp; BEANS

Baby- Foods,

Soria ere Age
Fancy Top Quality—Dressed

ibby's

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b 5 C

‘tne

Hanger for Baby's

clothes in Baby Blue or Pink—Yours

Fancy

Saf.,

Jan,

31

a

the
like

entry

Rater

big

$20,000

“Betty

blanks

contest

Crocker's

at

National.

Golden

eee

and

tell

why

Putfs—Get

subject
with

°

to change

the

markets

'*

�Miss Malmquist
(Continued

from

page

17)

Anthony Scrugli of Oak Park.
Among

honor
luncheon

nesday
Mrs.

be

the

of

parties

Miss
and

linen

in

is

shower

Joseph

A.

John

C.

Nelson

with

who

her

a

Other

Wed-

in the Flora place home

co-hostess

Mrs.

planned

Malmquist

of

Edwards

of

will

Seattle,

Mrs.
Bay

road will fete Miss Malmquist
at
a miscellaneous shower February

E

parties

which

have

|

taken

place
recently include
a kitchen
shower given by Miss Dean
and
Miss Arenberg in the latter’s home;
and a miscellaneous shower in the
home of Mrs. Jack C. Lazard of
Linden avenue for which Mrs. Michael
S. Gutman
of Beach
lane
served as co-hostess.

daughter,

the former Virginia Nelson.
Sigmund
Strobel of Green

“Walking My Baby Back Home’

6 with Mrs. Strobel’s mother, Mrs.
George D. Crittenton of Glencoe
as co-hostess. February 11 is the
date set for a luncheon to be given
by Mrs. Dean in her Central avenue home.

choose
IST

FEDERAL

FINANCING...

Linda Provus, equipped with bonnet and carriage,i s ‘‘My Baby” as pupils of Braeside
school perform the act, ‘’Walking My Baby Back Home” during amateur hours held last
Wednesday.
Linda’s brother, Ronald, pushes the buagy, while (left to right) Barbara

@ 34 years of specialization in
home financing means speed and
efficiency in serving your home
loan needs.
Minimum
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COST HOME

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Weatheral

AND

LOAN

A//OCIATION

In

SEE

will
ber

/AVING/

MANO)

Madison

from

page

University

August,

16)

attend
dance
as

the

Country

Weatheral
a

beach

is planned
last

Street

Phone MAJESTIC 3-0084

e

ae

for

official
out

Ten

club.

members

party,

before the board goes
che end of the month,

OF WAUKEGAN, ILLINOL’

216

Johnston

F. Vancil

and

a

Septemfunction
of office

Chosen For Beauty Contest
Miss

Barbara

Stupple,

daughter

of Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Stupple
of Park avenue, was chosen to represent her freshman dormitory at
the University of Indiana in the
annual
yearbook
beauty
contest
held recently.

and

Leo

VAN-LEN BOOKKEEPING
SPECIALIZING

Income

Lenzini

to

11

Every Night

Page

22

P.M.

1820

look on.

Tax

Second

Highland Park, III.

Highland

Park

High

Drama

school

10)

from

and

Mrs.

Ellsworth

and

Mrs.

Chase

page

16)

Mills

Smith

Jr.,

and

Mr.

the E,

girls, who will help select teen-age

Deerfield,

fashions for the coming season, include:
Colleen Koller, Beatrice Struve,
Mary
Anne
Trangmar,
Patricia
Larson, Mary Stuart, Marilyn Freberg,
Sue
Hayner,
De
Lessiline
Twitty, Dolores Anderson and Sue
Leonard.
Three
models
will
be
chosen
from the group to appear in the
store’s first three spring fashion
shows. The girls were selected for
the board by Miss Elsie Rinkenberger,
dean
of girls,
and
Miss
Dora
Bean,
head
of
the
high
school’s
home
economics
department.

John Zichtermans of Chicago, Mr.
and
Mrs. James
Collett of Winnetka, Mr. and Mrs. C. O. Frisbie
of Glenview, the’ James Harts of

From

Grinnell

Miss

Willison,

a first

day

at the

end

of semester

tion.

vaca-

Vinyards.

Complete
besides

Glencoe,

membership

the

William

the

the

Russell

William

includes,
Sihlers

of

Pfaffs

and

Maddens

Returns

for

Phone

(Before 5:30—HI

i we phone

Highland
Park 2-3100

HI

Oak Terrace PTA

To Give Party
A

ship

card

of

party,

Oak

under

Terrace

the

sponsor-

school

PTA,

is scheduled February 13 for members and their guests in the school
auditorium at 8 p.m.
Canasta,
bridge,
pinochle
and
other card games will be played,
with high and low prizes for each
game. Homemade cakes and coffee
will be served at the close of the
games.
Reservations are not
according
to the PTA

necessary,
ways and

means chairman, Mrs. Keith Burge,
as the admission of 50 cents may be
paid at the door the night of the
party.

Typewriter Repairs
Finest work by our expert
repairmen . . , and fully
guaranteed!

2-8686

2-4584)

of

Evanston and Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Wecker Jr. of Bannockburn.

SEELEY
I

IN

St.

page

L.

of St. Louis.

SERVICE

on

Readers

(Continued

vear student, is the daughter of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
L. P. Willison
of
Broadview
avenue.
The
young
women will return to school Sun-

Individuals and Small Businesses
Installing Accounting Systems
Bookkeeping Service and Advice
Preparing Government Regulatory Reports
5:30

Slepyan

Miss Zana Willison will arrive
home
today
from
Grinnell
college,
Grinnell,
Iowa,
with
her
roommate, Miss Erline Kallenbach

announce the opening of

Federal

Dave

students have been chosen to represent the school on the Wieboldt
Winter-Spring Fashion board. The

Home

Richard

and

HPHS Girls Win
Places on Store
Fashion Board

time being but a formal dance
will be held July 11 at the North-

barn

FEDERAL

Party

(Continued

‘

FIR/T

Barbara

(Story

western

FOR LOW

Lytton,

Typewriter Sales
Office machines, portables, adding
machines. Some excellent
buys in reconditioned
machines!

645

Thursday,

January

29, 1953

�«

_ Mr. and Mrs, JohnF. Miller

Walt’s Workshop
(Continued

from

page

12)

tools. Be sure, if you are wearing
a tie, that

—that
way.

it is safely

your

sleeves

It’s one

tucked

are

of the

How

will l fare?

inside |

out of the

cardinal

What

will

my

rules

of the workshop.”

FUTURE

be?

Fan mail overflows his files and ;
takes up a good portion of his pinepanelled study.
Each letter is answered personally.
The
one
we
liked best of all was from a Mrs.
M. S. Berry
of Western
Springs
who wrote:

MY PARENTS
CARE—THEY ARE
SAVING FOR ME!

“T have wanted to send a letter
of praise to NBC commending your
fine work but have been hesitant

since

it seems

that as soon as pro-

grams become widely popular and
fully appreciated they get the wellsharpened axe.
Should
such
an
event take place in the Workshop

I would

eo

When teddy bears and dolls are forgotten .. . when

sell the TV set and stay in

the basement full time.”

your youngster faces the serious business of life —
he will have

Dr. Stockdale
(Continued
and

industry,”

R.

Conley

Photo

At home in Morton Grove after a December wedding are
John F. Miller and his bride, the former Patricia Ann Morren,
daughter of the Thomas E. Morrens of Vine avenue.
He is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Miller of Wheeling.
Their
marriage was solemnized at a nuptial mass in Immaculate
Conception church.

page

states

the

16)

Discount

by America’s Leading

Upholstery &amp; Rug Cleaners
A
VW orld-wide
Service

... Duracleaning
e

is recommended

by America’s

joining

the

Association

account — and yours as well — here at our bank.

staff

of the||

of

Manu-

TAH

D. C., and

we

j

|

of

rn
ha

facturers, Dr. Stockdale held major
pastorates
in
Boston,
Chicago,
Washington,

Drive Carefully — The Life You Save
May Be Your Own!

easonal

Before

gratefully, one

helped to build for him. We'll welcome his savings

program

Born in Ohio, he was graduated
from Boston University of Theology, studying later at other universities,
including
Oxford,
England.
National

to remember,

gift: the fund for his future which you started and

from

committee of the Woman’s club.
James

reason

1

Member

of Federal

Deposit

fevetes

Insurance

Corporation

Toledo.

Please take an extra
look at your telephone
directory listing

foremost furniture and
department stores.

Name spelled OK? wy
Proper address?

ace
Our full column
$
ad in January
HOUSE BEAUTIFUL

Phone

number

x

correct?

wy

e

New
ready

directory
to

go

to

almost
printer

The finest upholstery, orientals, carpeting, twists . .. and
revived,

DISCOUNT

Phone

... January 10%

DEERFIELD
(no toll)

DURACLEAN
International Offices
Thursday, January 29, 1953

ness Office.
...

February

6%

444

. . . Ambassador 2-3222

COMPANY
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|

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Deerfield,

Illinois

ILLINOIS
TELEPHONE

AN EXTRA LISTING HELPS AVOID
LOST CALLS
For only 25¢ a month, you can have an
extra listing to:
1. Include
where you
rape your name if the telephone
:
live is listed under

someone

else’s name.

BELL
COMPANY

2. Show your name with your office telephone.
3. List the numbers where you can be called after
business hours. Or, if you’re away part of the time,
have listing with—“If no answer call... .” It'll
help you receive calls and messages.

To arrange for a helpful extra listing in the new
directory, call the Telephone Business Office.
te

SEASON

also, if desired.

es

j

MOTHPROOFED

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Duracleaning IS CONVENIENT: Furnishings
cleaned by professional Duracleaners in your
home. Use again same day.

want to be sure your name,
address and telephone number are printed correctly. If
you have any corrections to
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even

�Panel

Discussion to

| New

Be Given Thursday
By Tabernacle Guild
A

panel

discussion

experiences

of

of teen

will

age

and

dealing
with

take

and

with

children

place

Highland

Mrs.

Harold

their

son,

from

Chicago

at

510

Parkers
R.

Clifford,

Ravine

to

are

Mr. |

Burnstein

and |

44%,
make

who
their

moved
home

drive.

at the

regular
monthly
of the
meeting
Tabernacle
guild
of
Immaculate
Conception church next Thursday,

February

Residents

New

5.

Goeckner,
Wilma
Peddle,
John
Jacobsen, Charles A. O’Neill, and
Martin W. Tarpey.

Mrs. Goeckner and her commitMrs. W. Chandler
Forman
will tee will serve as hostesses at the
lead the discussion.
Panel
memmeeting which will be held in the
bers include the Mesdames
A. J.. rectory club room at 1 p.m.

John F. Bickmore Jr. Is
Awarded ROTC Promotion

| Doctor

Resumes

| After 2 Years

Practice

Plan

In Army

Free

Leader

Training Course

Dr. and Mrs. Harry Garber of
Bickmore
Jr., son of |
Bickmores
of
Beech
Chicago expect to move to Highstreet,
was
recently
promoted
to
land Park in the near future with
The Chicago Committee for The
the rank of cadet staff sergeant
their three children, Adrienne, 6, |Great
Books
will hold
a special
in
Grinnell
College’s
Air
Force
Elliott, 4, and
Darryl,
7 months| meeting February 6 at University
ROTC unit.
Dr. Garber
old.
has been re-| coljege 19 South LaSalle street
Mr.
Bickmore,
a junior at the leased
after
two
years
of army | to complete plans for a tuition-free
in Japan
where
he hel
Grinnell, Iowa, school and a grad- service
|leader training course soon to be
uate of Highland Park High school, the rank of captain.
A specialist | |offered
to the adult residents of
has been a staff member
of the in obstetrics and gynecology, Dr. | the Chicago area.
Interest in The
college radio station.
Garber has resumed
practice, M-/| Great Books program has grown to
He was expected home yesterday
terrupted by army duty, and has |such an extent that new leaders
opened
offices
at 1893
Sheridan | |must be trained that new groups
to spend
the mid-semester
weekend with his family.
road.
; may be formed.
John
F.
the
senior

In Great Books

SALE/

Lovely Hall China Table Lamps
13% Values
only '@2s

|

The

Chicago

Committee

for The

| Great Books, formed January 1952,
was established to further the development of The Great Books program
in Chicago
in cooperation
with The Great Books Foundation,
a non-profit educational organization whose headquarters are.at 59
East Monroe street.
John W. Kingston, Chicago industrial
engineer,
was
recently
elected chairman of the group for
the current year.
The committee
is made up of active Great Books
Discussion
group
leaders, including Dr. R. M. Watrous, 854 Ridge
road; Mrs. D. J. Harris, 142 Central
avenue; Julius E. Epstein, 980 Dean
avenue; Miss Alice Anderson, 916
Baldwin
road; Bernard
Chizewer,
490 Marshman
avenue,
and Miss
Elizabeth Bredin, 636 Burton avenue.

Methodist Women
Plan Bake Sale
In Church Hall
The Women’s Society of Christian Service of the Wesley Method-

complete with the
NEW R40 Bolite bulb

ist

church

bread,

Hand

decorated

Hand decorated with
gold and green leaves.
Height 2812”. Shade
15” diameter—white
Celanese with green and
gold braid trim top
and bottom. Bolite bulb
and harp.

with

gray flower spray, green

top

and

sponsor

a

bakery

coffee

donated by
Members
these items

at the

cake,

etc.,

will

church

by 9:30 so they can

be displayed and priced.
and cookies will be served

the sale.

The committee

includes

Al

Mrs.

Splett,

Mrs.

be

the members and sold.
who will give any of
are asked to have them

Ethel

Mrs.

Barber

Coffee
during

in charge

McIntosh,

Mrs.

Ira Breakwell,

and

Smith.

Men’s Club To Hear Talk
By Jesse Owens Tonight
The Men’s Club of North Suburban Synagogue Beth El will have
a Brotherhood meeting at 8:30 tonight at the synagogue. Guests are
cordially invited.
Jesse Owens, world famous athlete and boys leader, will be the
guest
speaker.
Rabbi
Philip
L.
Lipis
will
give
an
address
on
brotherhood. Refreshments will be
served after the program, according to Ephraim
Goldstein, chairman of the evening.

leaves. 27%” height.
Shade 15” diameter—
white Celanese with
white and green fold
trim

will

sale
in
Fredrickson
hall
at the
church this Saturday.
The sale will begin at 10 a.m.
and
such
items
as
homemade
cakes,
pies,
cookies,
doughnuts,

bottom.

Bolite bulb and harp.

RENT YOUR
FORMAL

Hand decorated with red rose, green leaves. Height
28”. Shade 15” diameter—white Celanese with
green fold top and bottom. Bolite bulb and harp.

Where
society's
best dressed men
rent

theirs—

Cutaways - Strollers
Single
and
Double
Breasted
Tuxedos
All

See these and many other outstanding lamp values today at our nearest store!

Accessories

GINGISS BROTHERS
INCORPORATED

EVANSTON
1718

PUBLIC

COMPANY OF NORTHERN

ILLINOIS

CSS

DA.

Other Stores in
® OAK

Page24

STORE

SHERMAN

ere CisitaeTy-1

PARK

Thursday,

© THE
®

LOOP

SOUTH

January

8-6100

SIDE

29, 1953

�Se

—_

myame

finds

the

Highland

Subject
interest
in
biography
ranged all the way from the saucy

“Tallulah”

Park

Public

library looking over its circulation statistics for the last eight
months of 1952, partly to assess how efficiently it is serving
as a communications center of the community, and partly to
see what Highland Parkers are reading.
672

May through December,

volumes

ults. Fifty-five per cent of the total
circulation were non-fiction books.
This is encouraging and it may be
in part a reflection of the coordinated adult education programs now
underway in this city and nearby
North
Shore
and _ metropolitan
areas.
Certainly,
the
number
of
meetings held in the library during the same period for the discussion of great books, of world
politics
and
foreign
affairs,
of

civic problems,

child training, etc.,

are a part of a program of adult
education, the fostering and pro-

motion of which, is among the foremost

goals

of

Strong

the

public

Interest

in

library.
Arts

An analysis of Highland Parkers’
taste in non-fiction shows an unusually strong interest in the arts.
Eighteen
per cent of non-fiction
loaned to adults were books classified under fine arts, e. g., painting,
music, photography, interior decorating,
etc.
This
field
led
every
other consistently over the eightmonth period. Typical titles called
for
were
Louis _ Slobodkin’s
“Sculpture,” “A Treasury of Early
American Homes,” “Saturday Re-

view

Home

Music,”

and

Book

of

Recorded

such

magazines

as

youthful

Anne

Frank
who
left a_ heart-rending
“Diary.” Elizabeth Vining’s popular
“Windows
for
the
Crown
Prince”
could
fall in both categories, biography and travel.
Popular

41,-

were loaned out to ad-

the

Such

were

Novels

the

types

of

non-

indications

build

African Violet Club,

of

the

read-

Camera Club Meet
With Library Group

ing habits of public library borrowers
show
a community
alert
to current events, appreciative of
the arts, inclined to more serious
reading over light fiction, and desirous of continuing their education through courses of study for
adults
and
through
self-guided

reading.

A

of

joint

the

meeting

Highland

of

the

Park

Friends

Public

‘ “a

Li-

—

brary and the North Shore African
Violet society
for 3:30 p.m.

has been plane
February 8 at the ©

| brary.

AJ

fiction most called
for
in
1952.
The library’s goal will be to con- |
James Gillette To Speak
Among
the many
popular novels
tinue to seek out and provide for |
There will be a display of var- ae
during the year were “The Silver the interests of the community and |
Chalice,” “Giant,” “The Old Man
a
the individual, and to foster and ious types of African violet plants
and the Sea,” “East of Eden,” and: stimulate
continuous — self-educa- and a talk on this subject by James
“The Houses in Between.”
tion,
that
our
citizens
may
be Gillette
of Lake Forest, grower
equipped
for
useful
occupations
A
striking
factor
in Highland
and
lecturer.
The public is cor-— 3
practical
affairs;
that
they
Parkers’ reading habits is the in- and
a4
will
improve
their
capacity
for dially invited to attend.
creased volume of books circulated
The Friends of the Library wilt Wp
during the summer months, usual- appreciation and production in cultural fields,
and
that
they
may
have a meeting with the Highland ioe
ly a time when circulation drops
make
such
use
of their
leisure Park
Camera
club, February
22.
—
off
somewhat.
This
year
more
as will promote personal The program will be announced at
books were loaned to adults dur- time
happiness and social well- being.
‘a later date.
Ae
ing
August
than
in
any
other

Aid

From

to

These

one

does

“

1953

shower?”

basement

ws

of

“How

a

ge

beginning

Maria?’ ” and

months.

le

The

reached its peak in the late summer

gee

Library Sums Up Reading
Tastes Of The HP Public

a

CDRA

es4 i
Ta ae Se

eR

“Antiques,”

and

“Hobbies.”

Next
most
popular
non-fiction
category was that of applied science, e. g. books on building, business, cooking, child training, technology.
Such
titles
as:
‘The
Metals Handbook,” ‘How to Build
Modern Furniture,” “Sailing Yacht
Design,”
“Soda
Fountain
and
Luncheonette
Management,’
and
“Complete
Home
Repair
Handbook” answered demands for practical
information.
About
12
per
cent of the total non-fiction books
circulated were of this classification.
Books of literature, plays, short
stories (science fiction anthologies,
especially) and essays represented
about 11 per cent of the total nonfiction.
Highland

Parkers’

social sciences—in

interest in the

economics,

gov-

ernment, political and social issues,
vied closely with the next most
popular
general
subjects,
biography and travel. Demand for the
latter is active throughout the year
in Highland
Park, although over
the last eight-months’
period
it

month

between

May

and

Decem-

SNOW PLOWING

ber.
Another point of note has been
the
increased
awareness
of
the
public
of the library’s reference
service. Telephone requests for information on a multitude of topics
have
increased
perhaps
because
the
library
has
been
able
to
answer such questions as: ‘What
is the scientific
name of the
American
crow?”
“Why
was

Charles

Gates

Dawes

called

Call us about our season

OFFICE

‘Hell,

contract

price on snowplowing
Fire Place Wood—Any Size
Louie Tazioli Excavating

HI 2-4662

GARAGE

HI 2-6861

| |

| —

No matter what you want to buy
or sell you'll find the Want-Ad section your best market place.

BUY AND SELL REAL ESTATE THE
SPEEDIER, SIMPLER, MORE
SUCCESSFUL WAY

Welome

Through the Multiple Listing Service of the
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always awails you

There are 100 Realtor offices in Highland Park and on the North Shore
with more than 3590 sales representative members of the Multiple Listing
Service who exchange listings and co-operate in the sale of the properties.

at

Here’s what

this Service

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ra

to you:

If You Are a Seller
When you list your property with the Realtor office of your choice,
a picture

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are

If You Are a Buyer
One visit to any Realtor office | is all that is necessary to review an
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It saves you countless
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real estate. The uniform commission paid your own broker covers all.
Look

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and

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oe eraae

a few

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You avail yourself of a
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ep

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Board of Realtors are “Realtors,” identified by this sign, and participate in the
Multiple Listing Service.

Evanston-North
1705
Thursday, January

Central Street
29, 1953

Shore

Board

of Realtors
Evanston,

Ill.

P rs

eaaeeek

6-1500

i

�The Want-Ad section is filled with
values and opportunities not availeble

elsewhere.

Read

them

now!

Books on Gardening
Circulating Early
At Public Library

FBI Agent to Address
Kiwanis Club Monday
“The

title

Work

of

of

a talk

to

the

FBI”

is

be

given

by

‘Oh, For The Life Of

A Cowboy’

Highland

Barry Weed,

the

O.

Arthur Gran, special agent of the
Highland
Park
gardeners
are
|Federal
Bureau
of
Investigation
getting an early start this year.
attached
to
its
Chicago
office, bejudging from the number
of refore
the
Kiwanis
club
Monday
quests being received at the public
night in the Recreation center.
A
library for “the gardening books.”
Amateurs,
specialists in

varied

professionals,
floriculture may

information

brary’s collection

cals,

pamphlets

catalogs

which

together

Things
By

I Remember

Harry

of

the

Mrs.

1931

for

at

be

even

seed)

Their

brought

in the

gon

was

to make

the

door

garden;

if you

plot,

or

most

of a small |

begin

an

raise

n

in- | Book”;

three bracelets.
the
of

flowers,

special
©S

special

books

Reference

have

been | Cynthia

now

offered

and

Gardens’

Garden

Glad

not

ended.

HOLLY

won

by

with

Flow-

“Our

Gar-

and

“Gardening

William

the

arrangements

for

all oc-

by

Ruth

Gannon

“Corsage

and

Craft.”

of Hazel

in

From your favorite
photograph | will reproduce
in any size
you wish, a full color,
lifelike
portrait
of
any member of your
family—something to
be enjoyed for many
years

to

From

$50.

for

father,

and

a
|

Red

a

Discharged

SERVICE
ST ATION

Sgt. William
Ruekberg,
son of
Mrs.
Nathan
Ruekberg
of
2789

@

Camp

Wash

Jobs

@ Accessories
@

Batteries

-

tig “wel shoes

a
Ei

STRAIGHT LAST
AVOIDS CROWDING
No pinching of little
toes in roomy Pied
Piper Lasts.

ONE-PIECE BACK
on oxfords improves
fit - prevents breaking
supports heel better.

SERVICE
STATION

£

eee
pag
Haariteid

&amp;
i
i
§

- and many budget conscious
mothers know that while each pair
of Pied Piper Shoes may cost
a trifle more your annual shoe bill may actually be less with
Pied Pipers.

POINT
COMFORT

i

i
a
i
i
i

PICKUP

abadd North Clark Street, Chicage
Page

26

Wikeox
335

Park Avenue

FOOTWEAR,
@

Glencoe,

i

INC.
Illinois

i

@ GLENCOE

2308
alt

of

school.
Far East’

ical school,

the army

was

that

sent

year,

to

fol-

Command

activated

Chem-

in May

1951,

has the mission of training officer
and
enlisted
personnel
of
all
branches of the service in defense

against

chemical,

radiological

biological

and

warfare.

In addition to his duties directly

connected with the operation of
the school, Sgt Ruekberg took

Dfid. 779 or
Dfld. 578

FREE

June

He

ly as chief clerk and administrative NCO in the operations section
of the
The

a

g

in

entered

1951.

kenridge,
Ky., and was
assigned
to the Far East Command
Chemical school. He served successive-

a
8

Colo.

lowing basic training at Camp Brec-

:
Tires

a

February,

Japan

il gp

8

Carson,

Sgt. Ruekberg

in

iain
Vou
Subustionie
Snow

E

a

pe50rt5

Colorado

Complete
Bumper
to Bumper Service
@ Grease Jobs

training
with
the
Southwestern
Command Public Information Of-

AND

fice

DELIVERY

a

at

Camp

reporter

Otsu

for

and

the

served

Camp

IREDALE
MOVING

AND

PACKING

OF

HOUSEHOLD

GOODS

&amp;

AGENT

ALLIED

VAN

474 Central Ave., Highland

Park

LINES

STORAGE
Thursday,

HI 2-0181
January

as

Gifu

Gazette.

§

Your house of jewels
Jewelry from $50 te $150,000

in

From

Army

Oak street, has recently returned
from an 18-month tour of duty in
Japan with the U. S. Army. Prior
to his return to Highland Park, he
was released from active duty at

a

that is really unique in

finally

They visitat Los Baballeros.
Dr. Joseph Biehn, formerly of
uncle, the Robert Biehns, formreside year round at the ranch.
Immaculate Conception school.

Comfort

Offers You

|

advantages to provide
children’s footwear

by one.

in front of a saguaro cactus,

and Joe pause

a

clusive foot- protecting

a col-

in Wicken-

a ranch-resort

Barry, who is the son of the Cornelius C. Weeds

avenue,

Point

Brown

$55,000.

Bay

of Green

Esdale

T.

Charles

de Los Caballeros,

left, and

a two weeks’

William Ruekberg

1

combine with ex-

a

are

by air recently from

come

ere

and practical fashion

cowboys

a towering desert giant growing
ed Joe’s maternal grandfather,
Ravine drive, and his aunt and
erly of Bannockburn, who now
The boys are sixth graders at

WATER
COLOR

MESSIER

eer

Joe’s

with

Park

returned

Esdale who

burg, Ariz.

Sparkling color

of

having

and

H.

Small

8

a to-

Already

many

“Wild

Garden,”

road, at Rancho

HI 2-6636

lector in Texas has asked to
buy my bracelet to match one
of the smaller ones that he has.
So
already
three
dealers
have been involved and. there
will undoubtedly be more. So
the lesson
to be learned
is
that gems
so magnificent
as
these lose none of their glory
and value through changes of
Ownership.
Rather
they
become something of prizes .. .

desired

BT

Hull’s

Westcott,

Reusch’s

MALETIR

But the trail that began when
Mrs. Ford bought the necklace
in New York many years ago

has

Park

vacation

total
weight
of about
17.50
carats.
The
mount
was
of
platinum.
This bracelet and a pair of
emerald and diamond earrings

are

in Highland

Two

diamond
with five

diamonds

Mr.

of 1842

Joseph

tal
weight
of
about
22.25
carats. In addition there were
11
emerald-cut
and
five

baguette

to

shelves include | casions,” “Decorating With House

the useful reference book, “Better | Plants,’

Homes

The

15E”—one

emeralds

second

16

owner a
matched

the
emerald
and
bracelets. It was set

cabochon

child and

January

Among
the
newest
flower
arrangement books are Marie Fort’s

Books

A cross section of 1952 additions | “Flower

to the gardening

It was my privilege to buy
several units to bring back to
Chicago. One was known sim-

“Section

court

for Your

written just for you, states Miss | Clark’s
Cora Hendee, librarian.
lace.’

aaa

as

born

flowers as a hobby; or if you want den Soils,”
by Charles Kellogg;
to know how to recognize wild) Anyone Can Grow Roses,” by

or

gems.

ply

second

Helen

The

separately

components gave
rare
collection

precede

main and Mrs. John Herdener
'Crescent

want

backyard:

together.
There were five parts to this
piece—a brooch, a pair of ear-

rings and

will

Henry

$800,000!

worn

p.m.

talk.

li-'

unique feature of the necklace
was that it was divisible into
a parure, a set of jewels which

could

6:30

Gran’s

periodi- | Herdener

been

exhibit

Mr.

plants or flowers in landscaping, or son is John Roy, 18 months. Grandspecial
problems
in
cultivating parents
are
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Roy
fruits and vegetables, the library’s Drew of Elcho, Wis.
garden books can help you. If you |

Ford. That purchase was mentioned
in an earlier column
but now I thought you might
like to learn some of the details about the fabulous pieces
procured at that time.
Major offering then was an
emerald and diamond necklace
which was made up by Cartier

in

and

have

‘dinner

Whether it is a question of soils | hospital. He has been named Ronand fertilizers, selection of shrubs,| ald Albert. The Herdeners’ eldest

Levinson

late

the

of books,

room of the library.

Many times when a customer
considers a piece of jewelry
for purchase
he
asks
something about its history. This
always
seems
to be
one
of
the exciting aspects of collecting gems. Often when known,
the story of a ring or brooch
adds
a
mysterious
aura
of
romance and adventure to the
purchase.
Such
a
“case
history”
is
part of some wonderful gems
now
offered
by
Levinson’s.
The pieces came into my possession
early
this winter
in
New
York
City where
I attended
a
series
of
special
auctions.
One was devoted to the es-

tate

on

from

and
cull

29, 1953

�YOURE ALWAYS WELCOME AT
we

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THURSDAY,
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now and regularly. Be sure that your Medicine Cabinet is stocked and ready for family
emergencies. Be sure you have adequate supplies of fresh everyday drugs and first-aid

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�ve

Face Huskies
Moroney

League

At Oak

Former HPHS Cage Star On Marine Team

last

_

Haven Inn lost its first
to Moroney
Insurance

Wednesday

night

The
the

Highland Park Recreation department
Class A_ basketball
league.
Haven was handicapped without the services of the
high-scoring Bob Joor who has
averaged 26 points per game
Dick Martini of Moroney led
the scorers with 23 points as
his team won 64 to 23. Robbie
Moroney added 20 points to
help in the victory.

Highwood VFW are deadlocked in
first place with 5 and 1 records.
With two of
these
outfits,
the,
Highwood
VFW
and
DeSoto-Plymouth, slated to pair off this week,
another
change
in the
standings
is inevitable.
In

the

second

game

of

the

to power

Washington

be

i

Standard

59-,

20

re-|

by

scoring

23

and

points

vinia

Standard’s

fourth

man

for

the

Walz

with

17

points.

Moose
Whip
Thursday night’s

was

Ron

Clothiers
first game

saw

the Moose Lodge win over Olson
Clothiers by a score of 45-39. The
contest was close throughout three
and one-half
quarters,
but
Bill
Bush hit for three quick baskets
which Olsons could not overcome.
The winners’ Dick Taggert led the
‘scoring with 13 points while Buddy
Bock’s 10 tallies and Ivan Kushin’s
nine paced the losers.
VFW

the

remained

league

in contention

championship

for

title

by

routing a very weak Beth El team
61 to 24 in the second game of the
night.
It was the fifth victory in
six
league games for VFW
to tie
them
for first place with Haven
Inn and Kennedy’s
Garden
Spot.
Norm Geske led his team in. scoring with 19 points.
Jim Sheppard

hit 10 for the losers.
(Continued

on

page

32)

trict

in

San

Diego,

Calif.,

Friday,

they

to 46.
forward

Sparking the
Ron Ruschke,

704

one

of the talented basketball players
currently sporting spangles of the
Devildog cage squad.
Cpl. Kelly, a former Beloit university all-conference
choice, has
seen
considerable
action,
as the
Marine Corps Recruit Depot quintet has registered 16 victories in
21 starts to rank as a top con-

lost

Pierre

to

Movies

To

Be

Shown At Tuxis Meeting
Movies of the 1952 Illinois state
basketball championship game between Hebron and Quincy will be
shown at the next Tuxis meeting
this Sunday
at 7 p.m.
Tuxis is
the youth group of The Highland
Park Presbyterian church.
Following the movie there will
be dancing
and
refreshments
in
the church basement.
All young
people of high school age are welcome,

Viking Games

the Giants, with
15, closely followed by John Swan, 10 points.
Proviso led at the end of the

of Vikings

first

nar Johnson, Mrs. Urban Kiehl and
Mrs. Anna Gunset. The floor committee includes Mrs. William Dil-

8

to

6,

but

they

stretched this lead of 2 points to
11, by the end of the game.
Other games coming up for the
cagers this season, are encounters
with
Morton,
Niles,
Waukegan,

Evanston,
Page

and
28

again,

Proviso.

Puao.o

the

11th

Naval

Dis-

son

Elm

four

years

ball

in

of

the

senior

place,

Cpl.

of

football

high

Kellys

Kelly

school,

and
four

of

played
basketyears

of

varsity
basketball
at Beloit,
and
competed in the 1951 National Invitational Tournament with Beloit.
He
played
last season
with
the
Marine Devildogs.

races

off
Sat-

boys

als
the

and ribbons
winners.

from

there
Park

will
girls

up.

Med-

six years
will

be

awarded

The

will

Little

Giant

journey

to

Mermen

Oak

Park

to-

day for a meet in the Huskies’
pool at 4 o’clock.

Oak

Park has

one of the strongest teams in
the
state.
Their
frosh-soph
team last year set five out of
seven pool records in the local
pool. They have Don Rogers
who won the 100-yard backstroke

year

in

the

state

meet

last

as a sophomore.

The New Trier Terriers swamped the Little Giants last Thursday
in the local pool by a score of 5916.
The local tankers
were at a
complete disadvantage, since seven
of the team were unable to swim

The

Party

Independent
will

give

Order
a games

Ladies
party

on February 6 at 8 p.m. Refreshments will be served by Mrs. Rag-

lard, Miss Ruth
Harry
Swanson,

Swanson,
Mrs.
Miss_
Barbara

Peterson

Ronald

son.

and

Mrs.

Ander-

freshman

because

of the flu.

Al Rubenstein,

basketball

Provisio
had
the game
in the
bag right from the first quarter
when its team led by a score of
19-5, just one point short of being three
times
the local score.
Proviso continued to jump ahead |
by leaps and bounds in the second
period of play and at the end of
that period
led with a score of |
34-11.
The second half failed to'
show
any
signs
of life for the
Parkers, with Proviso sinking shot
after shot.
They
clinched
it in
the final period of play by scoring
23 points against seven made by
the Baby Giants.

Highland

Park lost 26 points be-

cause of intensive fouling, out of
which
Proviso
got
16 points
on
free throws.
Out of 40 attempted
field goals, Proviso made good on
The
six-foot,
one-inch,
185- 25. Highland Park attempted only
pound,
guard
is
a_ sure-sighted ‘28 field goals and made
nine of
scorer on the Recruit Depot team them.
which is averaging 84.8 points per
The B team did no better than
game, and four times has exceeded the A, losing by a score of 40-9.
100 points in scoring displays.
Bob
Nachman _ scored _ three
points, the most in the B game.
Jack Stodder did the honors in the
A game
making
good
for seven
points.
The
squad
played
at Zion
on

New Trier Here Tomorrow
To Settle Scores With HPHS

who, with an even 20 points, was
the highest scorer in the game.
George Moran was high pointer for

quarter,

for

The

is

Corps

championship.

Martineau

The

By Harry Halton

last

tender

Marine
Cpl. William
M. Kelly
Jr.,
23,
a clerk
in the
Marine
Corps Recruit Depot disbursing of-

Basketball

Tomorrow
night the frosh-soph
basketball
quintet will play host
to the New Trier sophomore cagers.
In the two teams’ last encounter,
the Indians won after three overtime periods, 52 to 49.
This Saturday
night the Li’l Giants will
travel.
to
Oak
Park,
trying
to
avenge their previous 50 to 21 defeat at the hands of the Huskies.
In the Blue
and White’s final

game

HP Marine Sparks
Devildogs In Try
For Championship

fice

Marine

M. Kelly Jr.

Tomorrow night Highland Park’s Little Giants will entertain a New Trier’ team just fresh from handing Oak Park,
Suburban League leaders, their first defeat.

Be Hosts to New
Trier Tomorrow

Proviso, 57
Pirates was

U:ticiai

William

By

Frosh-Soph Cagers to

to run

squad | the double state champion was out,
and
Jim
of Highland Park High school’ as were Bob Stanwood,
Barton the two best backstrokers
dropped its seventh straight game
John
Gould,
who
last Friday, when it lost to Proviso, on the team.
66-27, the worst defeat of the sea-, swam in the meet, had been unable to practice all week.
son.

defeat.

losers

Weather
permitting,
races for Highland

The

spectively. The triumph was their)
second in league play. It was RaHigh

By Art Weinstein

By Jerry Heisler

Gardens

to a win over Ravinia

attempt

ice skating

and

Strong Team
Against Giants

Recreation

Frosh Drop 7th
Straight Game

|}

eve-

45,

will

city-wide

Park

|

urday
morning
at 10
o’clock
at
Sunset park.
Because of weather
conditions, the races have had to
be postponed for the past two Saturdays.

ning Roger Robertson anod Gene,
Tagliapietra
combined
their tal-|
ents

Highland

department

in the

With three games remaining on
the schedule,
three
teams,
the
Haven, De Soto-Plymouth
and!

Rogers Leads

ice Skating Races
To Be Saturday If
Weather Permits

Whips Haven In
Class A League
The
game

rk Today

Pa

Indians

venge

for

hands

of the

will

a 43-37

be

seeking

defeat

Parkers

on

at

rethe

December

In last Friday’s game
at Proviso, the Giants were downed
by
the Pirates 70-56.
Harold
Freberg
led the Highland Parkers
in scoring with
17
points;
George
Burmeister
was
close behind
him with
14 tallies
and
Howard
Russell
hit for
11
points.
Ed Capitani was next with seven
points, Tom
Phillips scored four
and Gino Dal Ponte had three.
At

the
the
ants

the

end

of

the

first

quarter,

Pirates were ahead, 19-14,
first half ended with the
only

35-32.
They

three

fell

points

behind

six

in

but
Gi-

arrears,

points

as

the 100-yard
breaststroke.
John
Lechner,
who
finished second to
Al Rubenstein
in the state, won

the race.
ond

in

ing

Fred Harris finished secthe

in

40-yard

a close

New Trier.
relays.

The

Baby

freestyle,

race

with

Mermen

Tanksters

los-

Lind
lost

of
both

Lose

The frosh-soph
baby
§tanksters
lost their first meet of the year to

New

Trier by a score of 40-26. The

underclassmen

were

like

hit very

the _

hard

by

varsity

the

flu.

Freestylers Ed Stanwood
and
defeated Robert Engdahl were

able

to

swim.

backstroker
also out.
in

Medley

Pete

unun-

man

and

Onderdonk

were

Pete Goelzer lost to Ken Hirsh
the 40-yard breaststroke and in

the

60-yard

Hirsh

ing

set

the

individual

medley.

two

pool

records

break-

marks

that

Goelzer

previ-

ously held.
He swam
the breastJanuary 19 and lost by a score of stroke in 23.6, breaking the old
record of 23.9, and broke the in49-39.
dividual
record
by
swimming
a
Next in line is the game with ,35.3, smashing the
old
mark
of
New
Trier
tomorrow
in
which 37.0. Roger Sheahen triumphed in
Highland
Park
will
be
seeking the diving and remains undefeated.
revenge
for the
terrific
beating Giles Gunn
tvok the third spot.
New
Trier gave them
earlier in George Puestow won a very close
the season.
race with a New Trier swimmer in

S.

Probable starting lineup for the
Indians
will
include
Jack
Stillwell,
and
Don
Davidson
at forwards; Don McNeill at center; and
Knight and Lindstrom at the guard
posts.

Danny Seitz, who took the only
first for the Giants—in the diving,
has improved tremendously since
the start of the year. Pete Wulfsohn finished second and Woody
Hansmann
got the third spot in

Cage

Dance

Tomorrow

A

basketball dance will be held
in the Highland
Park Recreation
center gym
for high school students
tomorrow
night
following
the New Trier game. Dancing will
be from 10 p.m. to midnight with
music by Tom Harter and his orchestra.
following

high

school basketball games, the
bar will be open for those

As

soda
who

want
and

is the

custom

refreshments, and
television
will
be

pingpong
available

for those who do not care to dance.
the third period
favor of Proviso.
The

fourth

downfall

for

ended,

the

thrilling race, while the medley relay

lost.

Kenneth Gaines Wins
Prize For Fish In
Miami Tournament
Kenneth

Blue
nine
Final

proved

and

R.

Gaines,

914

year-old

son of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore G
Gaines of 465 Oakland drive, wil
be

awarded

a

citation

and

an

at

tractive year book for his 15 pound

in

Bonito
which
he entered
in the
18th Metropolitan
Miami
Fishing
tournament this Christmas.

the

student at Braeside school, and his

Kenneth,

quarter

who
tallied
only
Proviso scored 17.
70-56.

53-47,

the 40-yard freestyle. ‘Marty Granholm got the second
position in
the 40-yard backstroke.
The freestyle relay triumphed
in a ve

White,

points
as
score was

parents

who

spent

is

the

a fourth

grade

Christmas

holi

days in Miami. Kenny made
catch while deep-sea fishing
Miami

Beach.

Thursday,

January
\

29, 1953

his
off

�Scouts Urged To
Attend Jamboree

Korea-Bound Marines Enjoy Scenic West

In California

Cub

Fifty-two Scouts and 11 leaders have already filed reservations for the National Jamboree
to be held in California in July
1953, said Charles Morrison,
Jamboree committee chairman
for the North Shore Area counThere
is still room
for many
more Scouts who would like to participate in this once in a lifetime
experience.
The
council goal
is
leaders.
March
for reservations.

1

is the deadline
Parents of Scouts

office as soon as possible. Full information
is available
upon
request.
In a release
to Scout
leaders
this week Mr. Morrison stated, “It
is our responsibility to tell the story of the Jamboree to every Scout

his parents

bers

today

have

just

that

in this

one
thrill-

ing experience.
To see America,
our country, to camp with 50,000
Scouts
and
leaders: from
every
state in the union and many foreign lands, to enjoy the thrill of
the big shows, parades, convocations, swapping,
visiting in the
camp area. Our tour will include
stops at Colorado
Springs,
Salt
Lake

City,

San

geles and

Francisco,

Grand
The

Los

An-

Requirements

experience.

received

All

on

recervations

a first come

addition 20 Explorer
small additional cost

12-day
plorer

stay
base

at
at

are

basis.

In

Scouts for
will enjoy

a
a

the National ExPhilmont in New

Mexico.
1953 will be a busy year in Boy
Scouting.
In addition to the National Jamboree
and the regular

camping season at Camp Ma-ka-jawan the Council will hold its first
Councilwide activity, the Scout-ORama at Lake Forest Field house
on April
17-18.
The First Aid
meets including troop, district and
council finals will wind
up on
March 27. The annual Camporee
will be held on May

nual

Scout

dinner

will

16-17.

Leaders
be

The An-

Appreciation

March

24.

HP Elks League
Bowling Scores
21%
221%

Mitchell

et

Builders

Liquors

........

So

............-.-- 3327

Biel Coa) 6
POW
FiOOt....cicce

So:
30:5

27
30

My Favorite Inn ......... 20°
«#37
McDonald Plumbing .... 15
45
High Series, Team
Moran Plbg. .... 835-850-792—2477
Mitchell Bldrs. .. 742-861-844—2447
ADJUDICATION

AND

CLAIM

NOTICE

NOTICE
persons

IS

that

HEREBY
the

first

DAY

GIVEN
Monday

to
of

all
Feb-

ruary, 1953, is the claim date in the estate of PAULINE VERA STITZELL, Deceased, pending in the Probate Court of
Lake
County,
Illinois, and
that
claims
may be filed against the said estate on
or before said date without issuance of
summons.
All claims
filed against said
estate on or before
said
date and not
contested,

will

be

adjudicated

on

the

first

Tuesday
after the first Monday
of the
next succeeding month at 10 A.M.
ELMER
G. SCHLUNG,
Executor
Tilley, Humphrey, Teidemann &amp; Goetz,
Attorneys

Thursday,

January

29,

Bowling

TV

&amp;

Appl.

....

W.
28

- L.
22

Highwood Launderettes 3614
Natta Shoe Rebldg. .... 3444
Freddies Tavern ........ 32%

23144
25%
27%

1953

Team
Kleeburg

Buick

Nutri Sob

EVANSTON
1718

Standings
Ine.

ios eee

Larsons Stationery
James Thomson &amp;

...

Wi
37

aks

se

32%

2714

Siljestrom Coal Co. ........ 2914

331%

32%
3214

PUMED

34

Highwood

33

Anchor

Tower

Casino

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

Hospital

....

27

D6): Fula cok ee
2314
Zengler Cleaners ............ 201%4

361%4
39%

PUI

DeSoto-Plymouth

Larsons

Series, Individual
149-176-174—499
152-183-158—493

High Game, Team
Freddies Tavern: ...6...2.a2c

816

Natta

783

Shoe Rebuilding ........
High Game, Individual

Re

ee

ee ci eS

Agency

....

3412

28

35

Sta.

High

763-828-836—2427
.. .. 839-726-772—2337

Series,

A. Bertacchini
Troe ee
High

SHERMAN

High Game, Team
Mitchell Builders .......................- 861
Moran Plumbing ..2222...02..2.0000.3.2: 850

High Game, Individual
BP; Carat eka ey 212—206....
NOTICE
Sealed bids will be received by the City
Council, City of Highland Park, Illinois,
at its office in the City Hall, until 8:00
P.M., Monday, February 9, 19538, for the
furnishing of:
One three-quarter ton Pick-Up Truck,
equipped
with
air cleaner,
oil filter,
heater-defroster
combination,
six-ply
heavy duty rear tires. Trade-in allowance to be given in bid price for one
1936
one-half ton Chevrolet
Pick-Up
Truck.
Bidder must submit complete specifications on the truck he proposes to furnish.
The Council reserves the right to reject
any and all bids if it deems it best for
the public
good.
‘
By order ofe the Council of the City
of Highland
Park,
January
12,
1953.
EDW.
P. OHLWEIN,
Acting City Clerk
1/22-1/29

Cpl. Carlson was graduated from
the University of Illinois as a landscape architect in June 1950. He
has accepted a position in Chicago
with an architectural firm.

award with a gold and two silver
arrows.
Others
to
receive
Bear
awards
were
Ken
Cousens,
Bill
Glickauf and Dean Swift Jr. Ronald
Axelrod
earned
three
silver
arrows. Bill Heck received one gold
and one silver arrow.
The next pack meeting will be
held
the end
of February
when
Cubs and their parents will meet
for a Blue and Gold banquet to
honor the Cub Scouts’ birthday.

BUSINESS

FREE Employment
Service to Graduates.
Schools
in
over
350
Cities.
100-120
WPM.—
One Low Fee. NO
EXTRA
TUITION,

COLLEGE
UN

4-3004

THIS AMAZING NEW DISCOVERY
ives quick relief from sinus headaches, pressure in forehead, soreness in eyes, aching cheek bones, brid e
of nose, top of head, back of head and
own neck, can’t think straighe
or see well at times even tho’ glasses have been recent]
fitted, nervousness, dizzyness. This new treatment relieves most sinus
eadaches in few
minutes and as —
rule soreness in head, face and neck is entirely
relieved in shor
time. No matter how long you have suffered or how
chronic your case may be or how many different treatments you have
tried or how much money Pac have spent without results, we believe
you will be amazed at the
ast relief this amazing new treatment
a
It has _—
gmesing fast relief to thousands. Write for FIVE
ost paid
E TRIAL,
© you, no cost or obligation except this: when
ou write for t, it is agreed that you will mail it back at the end of
ive days if not satisfie , since it is not a sample.
NATIONAL
LABORATORIES,
— LODI,
CALIFORNIA

Individual

.. 195-210-238—643
237-174-143—554
Game,

NORTHSHORE GARDEN OF MEMORIES

Team

Larsons Stationery .................... 839
James Thomson &amp; Sons ........ 838
High Game, Individual
A, Bertacchint: oc55
Gi
i OM vcices accede cer catebathckncae

238
237

A Surprise Awaits You
THIS

If You

BEAUTIFUL

Have

GARDEN

Not

Visited

CEMETERY

Very Reasonable Prices
The Want-Ad
interesting

High Series, Individual
P; -Carant-.3. Ge 169-206-212—587
0. Tomer
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Tex.

AVENUE

192

185

serving at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo.,
Fort Sam Houston and Fort Hood,

DAY

Coal

eppabuaeteds

Freddies Tav. .. 723-816-737—2276
Natta Shoe
Rebuilding .... 746-713-783—2242
High

.......... 2814

“

High Series, Team
Co.

Morelli
Carlson

Ins.

Siljestrom

High Series, Team

V.
E.

ocia es 29

to the 48th Engineers Topographic
Battalion-Photo Mapping company,

AMAZING NEW DISCOVERY — FREE TRIAL

30
31

POMIANG OMe
ic Sic 27144
POND BS er ets Re 2714

the past
assigned

SINUS SUFFERERS

26

........ oo:
Sons 32

home
last
discharged

from the army. During
two years, he has been

dwriling

Leacue

23

hawk
road,
returned
Saturday
after
being

Famous
Speedwriting
Shorthand—
Uses ABCs. No Symbols, no machines.
Used
in
leading
offices
and
Civil
First TWO
lessons FREE.
Day and
Service.
hird Mondays
Evening classes begin first and
of each month.

Scores

January

Be

Moran Plumbing ............ 38144
Singer Printing ............ 344%
Acme

Team
Moley

I

Woe

Craftsman

January 20 Standings

ti

January 23 Standings
Team

Mary Jane Ladies
Bowling Scores

Cpl. Hal Carlson, son of Mr. and
Mrs. H. A. Carlson of 171 Black-

SHORTHAND in

Marines John T. Rietz of Highland Park (right) and
Roland Draper of Watertown, N. Y., are shown above during
their stop-over in Tuscon, Ariz., while en route to a point of
embarkation in California, from which they were scheduled
In the above photo’s background can be
to sail for Korea.
seen San Xavier Mission, founded in 1692 and built in 1783.
The son of Elmer Rietz of 1812 Park avenue west and Mrs.
William Zaloschan of Hillcrest drive, Pfc. Rietz has been a
member of the U. S. Marine corps for more than a year.

Canyon.”

Any Scout may go-who meets
these requirements—12
years of
age on January 1, 1953, first class
rank by July 1, 14 days of camp

school,

Glenn Harris, Robert Armstrong,

and then let them

to participate

Place

Edwin Kemp, Carl Urist Jr., Roger
Wallenstein,
‘.awrence
Bernstein
and John Warton Jr. who attained
the rank of Wolf.
Lawrence
and
John also earned a gold arrow.
Larry
Fish
was
given
a bear

make the decision as to whether or
not the Scout can participate. National Jamborees are held only every four years. Boys who are memchance

30, Elm

Highlight
of the program
was
the presentation of awards earned
since the December pack meeting.
John Loose, 10 year old son of Mr.
and Mrs. Maxwell Loose of Edgecliff drive, received his graduation
certificate from the pack and was
welcomed into the Boy Scout troop
by
Scoutmaster
Robert
Pollack.
Others to receive awards were:

16

planning to attend are urged to
make reservations at the council

and

Pack

Discharged From
Active Army Duty

held its January meeting Monday
night
at
the
Moose
hall.
The
month’s
theme
of transportation
was borne out in various exhibits
made
by the
boys in their den
meetings
depicting
transportation
from the most primitive beast of
burden to super-speed space outfits. A color and sound movie of
the
Wheels-A-Rolling
pageant
at
the Chicago Railroad Fair added to
the evening’s entertainment.

cil.

four full troops of 140 boys and

Cpl. Hal Carlson

Cub Pack 30
Sees Movie On
Transportation

tunities.

facts

section is filled with
and

golden

oppor-

NOTICE
OF PUBLIC
HEARING
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, February 10, 1958, at 8:00 P.M.
Said public
hearing will be conducted by the undersigned,
the
Zoning
Committee
for the
City of Highland
Park, designated
and
appointed by the City Council of the City
of Highland
Park
for that purpose,
to
consider the application of Mrs. Ruben
Olson dated
November
19,
1952
for a
special permit pursuant to the provisions
of Section 14 of the Zoning Ordinance of
1947 of the City of Highland Park, as
amended, to occupy and use as a Dlay
school the property at 1831 Spruce Avenue, Highland Park, Illinois.
_At the said public hearing an opportunity
will
be afforded
to all persons
interested in the matter above mentioned
to be heard in relation to said matter.
Karl H. Velde
Edmund
L. Andrews, Jr.
Keith W. Burge
Earl
D. Fritsch
Cyrus Mead III
ZONING
COMMITTEE
OF
HIGHLAND
PARK

| 1/22-1/29

Phone Maj. 1067

Green Bay Rd. &amp; 18th St.

Don’t miss it!

NORTH SHORE FURTH SERVICE
Funeral
All Phones
(f

Directors

KEnwood
Oe

6-0700

DD
~

ESTABLISHED

936 East 47th Se.

1890

Chicago

IMPORTANT
We

offer

complete

near you on the North
staff of directors.

ANNOUNCEMENT
and
Shore

highly
using

adequate

the well

facilities

known

Furti

4N OUTSTANDING PROFESSIONAL RECORD OF
§2 SUCCESSFUL YEARS SERVING CHICAGOLAND
ere

Page

29

�ELCOME T0 CHURCH

d should have priority on your time.
REDEEMER EV. LUTHERAN
CHURCH
741 Central Avenue

Hee

Rev.

William

H.

Remmert,

pastor

Tel. HI 2-6848
Res.

1817

RIDAY,

7

Green

January

pm.

Bay

road

Conquest

8

p.m.

Fellowship

circle

will

meet in the assembly room.
r William H. Remmert will

Pascon-

duct one of
devotionals.

his

fireside

evening

UNDAY, February 1
9:30 am.
Sunday
school
and
nior Bible class.
3 p.m.
Sunday school convenn

at

Wilmette.

ONDAY,
7:30

February

p.m.

2

Church

council

meet-

DAY, February 3
7:30 p.m. Choir meeting.
WEDNESDAY,
February 4

-4p.m.

am.

mon.
7:30

Church

p.m.

school
prayer

THURSDAY,

February

club.

FRIDAY,

January

6 p.m.

Sabbath

43.

Opening
of
and exhibit.
p.m.

Jewish

Jewish

Music

Music

fair

Sabboth

old

for

and

children

three

years

through

third

grade

up

Junior

SATURDAY, January 31
9:15 a.m. Confirmation class
9:40 a.m. Religious school, kin-

department
(4th,
5th
and
6th
grades) and Junior high department (7th and 8th grades).

dergarten to grade 4.
SUNDAY, February 1

10:10 a.m.
tet rehearsal
10:10 a.m.

9:40 am.
Religious school,
grades 5 to 8.
3:20 p.m.
High school depart-

soph

and

school

' 8:15 p.m.

Adult education.

8:15 p.m. Parents’ program spon-

sored

by the

joint

program

com-

mittee.
Playlet presented by Exental theater, “And You NevKnow.”
THURSDAY,
February 5
8 p.m. Men’s Club Board of Di-

rectors.

HI

THURSDAY,

- 8 p.m.

Deerfield and Green Bay Roads
Rt. Rev. Msgr. Joseph P. Morrison
Pastor
Rev. Donald B. Runkle
Rev. Bernard E. Burns

and

and

Chancel choir rehearsal

will

meet

with

Mrs.

A.

O,

Christman and Mrs. Bob Halliquist.
11 am.
Morning worship with
the minister, the Rev. A. P. Johnson,
preaching.
Doors
of
the
church will be open for the recep-

tion of new members.
4%
pm.
Youth fellowship
class

in

“The

Christian

Way”

and
fol-

lowed by social hour and refreshents.
WEDNESDAY,
February 4
choristers
Bethany
p.m.
3:45
Page

30

Holy

Days

4 and

7:30 p.m.

SUNDAY, February 1
Masses at 6:15, 7:30, 9, 10, 11 a.m.

29

Christian Endeav-

7 p.m.
Young
People’s fellowship.
7:45 p.m.
Evening Gospel service, sermon by the pastor.

WEDNESDAY,
8

p.m.

February

Prayer

4

service.

THURSDAY, February 5
8 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
ST. JAMES CHURCH
146 North Ave., Highwood
Rev.
Rev.

12

p.m.

Trustees

10:30

and

FIRST

11:30

8:30,

9:30.

a.m.

February

CHRIST

493

Hazel Avenue
SUNDAY,
February 1
9:30 a.m. Sunday school
11 a.m. Church service
WEDNESDAY, February 4
8 p.m. Testimonial meeting
That a genuine and pure affection for God and all mankind ful-

noon.

NORTH
SUBURBAN
SYNAGOGUE BETH EL

1175 Sheridan Read
Highland Park
HI 2-5787
Philip L. Lipis, Rabbi
Stanley Martin, Canter
Conservative

FRIDAY, January 30
4:50 p.m. Light candles.
8:30 p.m. Late service. Sermon,
“Reflections on a Tree,” Chamisho
Oser (Jewish Arbor day) thought.
SATURDAY, January 31
Bar Mitzvah of Ralph Orlowsky,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Morris Orlowsky, 793 Rice street.
9:30 a.m. Morning worship.
7:15 a.m. Daily Minyan meets.
MONDAY through THURSDAY,

judgment,

and

righteousness,

in the earth.”
Bible
selections
(King
James
Version) in the Lesson-Sermon include:
old

“The
Lord hath appeared
of
unto me, saying, Yea, I have

loved

thee

with

an

everlasting

love: therefore with loving-kindness have I drawn thee .. . Beloved, let us love one another:

for love is of God: and every one
that loveth is born of God, and

knoweth God. He that loveth not
knoweth
not
God;
for God
is
love” (Jer. 31:3, 1 John 4:7,8).
Selections
from
“Science
and

Health with Key to the Scriptures”
by Mary Baker Eddy, include:
“The

starting-point

of

divine

Science is that God, Spirit, is
All-in-all, and that there is no
other might nor Mind, — that
God is Love, and therefore He is
divine Principle . .. All substance, intelligence, wisdom, being, immortality, cause, and effect belong to. God. These are
His attributes, the eternal manifestations of the infinite divine
Principle, Love” (p. 275).
WESLEY METHODIST CHURCH
Highwood Avenue and Everts Place
The

Rev.

Donald

THURSDAY,

Woods,

January

29

pastor

of

Jewish

conducted

music

at

North

Congregation

Glencoe,

Israel,

tomorrow

at

8:30

p.m. as an introduction to Jew-

3

ish Music

month

observed

nationally
to

which

March

will be

from

to-

1.

Rabbi Edgar E. Siskin, Cantor
Benjamin Landsman, and the temple choir
will present
an interpretation of the varieties of Jewish song in synagogue and home,
in different lands, and at different
periods.
Always
one
of the

1
school.
worship.
worship.

most

beautiful

of

the

congrega-

tion’s services, it has an additional
significance
this year for it will

mark the formal presentation and
dedication of the magnificent eleeST. JOHN’S
EVANGELICAL
AND REFORMED CHURCH
Green Bay Road and
Homewood Avenue
The Rev. Harold Harris, Pastor
HI 2-1599
SUNDAY,
February 1
9:30 a.m.
Church school under
the direction of Dr. E. D. Fritsch,
with classes arranged for all age
groups.
10:45 a.m. Morning worship.

NORTH
Hazel

and

Greenleaf

Avenues

Glencoe
Rev. Russell W. Lambert, Minister
Edwin Kemp, Director of Music
1227

Glencoe

1

February

9:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. Morning
worship
services.
Sermon
topic:
Fitness.”

“Spiritual

group meeting
Glenview.

at Glenview

church,

group

Marrieds

Young

p.m.

8

Interfaith

p.m.

9

to

p.m.

6:45

meeting in home of Mr. and Mrs.
Glenn E. Yaekley,
414
Washington, Glencoe.
TUESDAY, February 3
skating
All-church
p.m.
7:30

party at North school skating rink,
Glencoe.

WEDNESDAY,
7 p.m.

February

Youth

choir

4

rehearsal

tronic

organ

purchased

auditorium

by

Jack

of

Goode

ganist,

will

the _

for

Wilmette,

introduce

the

Sisterhood.
staff

the

or-

instru-

ment with the presentation of a
special
program
of organ
selections.
Plan Music Fair

As

part

of

the

observance

Jewish Music month, the
gation’s
music
committee,

operation with
Gift shop, is

of

congrein co-

the PTA Book
making plans

and
for

a Jewish
music
fair and exhibit
which will bring to the attention

SHORE METHODIST
CHURCH

SUNDAY,

CHURCH OF
SCIENTIST

be

Shore

meeting.

9:30 a.m. Sunday
11
a.m.
Sunday
7:45 p.m. Sunday

HI 2-0427

SUNDAY, February 1
Masses at 6:30, 7:30,

service

will

HIGHLAND
PARK
BAPTIST
CHURCH
486 Central Court
HI 2-2101
Robert Clingman, Minister

Rev.

James D. Gleeson, Pastor
Arthur E. Douaire, Ass’t.

First Fridays and Week Days —
Masses at 7 and 8 a.m. Holy Days
—Masses at 6, 7, 8 and 9.

ness,

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
CHURCH

Saturdays, eves. of First Fridays

the Dubs room.
SUNDAY, February 1
9:30 a.m.
Church school with
classes arranged for all age groups.
10:45 am.
Organ
meditations
th F. B. Schlung at the console.
11 am. Mission band boys and

girls

February 2
Woman’s

HI 2-0202

2-3522

January

high

Confessions

1704 McGovern Street
Rev. A. P. Johnson, Minister
The Rev. Dale Zimdars,
Assistant Minister

8

February

Men’s

meeting.

BETHANY
CHURCH
(Evangelical United Brethren)

:

for

THURSDAY,

SUNDAY

association fills the Commandments and es‘| tablishes the true incentive for
TUESDAY, February 3
living, will be explained in all
7:30 p.m. Boy Scout Troop 324 Churches of Christ, Scientist, on
meeting.
Sunday, February 1. The subject
WEDNESDAY, February 4
of
the
Lesson-Sermon
will
be
9 am.
to 9:30 am.
Sanctuary LOVE.
open for prayer and meditation.
The Golden Text is from Jere7:15 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Choir re- miah (9:24) “Let him that glorieth
hearsal.
glory in this, that he understandTHURSDAY, February 5
eth and knoweth Me, that I am the
10 a.m. Women’s Service board. Lord which exercise loving-kindwork

- WEDNESDAY, February 4

groups

students.

MONDAY,
10
am.

8 p.m. “PTA Board of Directors.
TUESDAY, February 3
8 p.m. Experimental theater.

to 10:45 am.
Quarat the manse.
to 10:45 a.m.
Frosh-

varsity

Junior

A

of

chimes.
11 a.m.
Morning worship.
Sermon topic: “The Eternal Is Rest.”

9:30 a.m. Sunday school session.
10:45
am.
Morning
worship
service.
Sermon by the pastor.

7 p.m.

5

meet also at this hour.
9:30 a.m. to 10:35 a.m.

all

morrow

HI 2-1731
February 1

or.

SUNDAY, February 1
11 am. to 12 noon.
Morning
worship
service.
Church
school
classes

church.

; SUNDAY, February 1
9:30 a.m. Church school for
ages.
10:45 a.m.
Fifteen minutes

Temple

Plan Jewish
Music Month

at

worship.

3 p.m. Service in Railroad

Minister

for class

sale

home.

Church Telephone HI 2-1695
Dr. William Atkinson. Young,

30
dinner

Sunday

SUNDAY,

Avenues

1725

a.m.

the

Glencoe

Choir rehearsal.

SATURDAY, January 31
10 a.m. WSCS bakery

1

Green Bay Road at Laurel Ave.
A. G. Masser, Minister

HIGHLAND PARK
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Laurel, Linden and Prospect

Siskin, Rabbi

Glencoe

February

ser-

8 p.m.
Parish choir practice.
FRIDAY, February 6
7:30 a.m. Holy communion.
4:30 p.m. Girls choir practice.

Glencoe

GAN.

and

and

Canterbury

noon.

FIRST UNITED EVANGELICAL
CHURCH

MONDAY, February 2
7:30 p.m.
Sea Scouts, Ship
TUESDAY,
February
3
7 p.m. Cub Scouts.
7:15 p.m.
Boy Scouts.
WEDNESDAY,
February 4
7:30 a.m. Holy communion.
9:30 a.m. Holy communion

NORTH SHORE
CONGREGATION
ISRAEL
Lincoln and Vernon Avenues

8:30

11

SUNDAY,
February 1
7:30 a.m. Holy: communion.

9:15

12

SUNDAY,

HI 2-6653

family service.
11 a.m. Morning

to

SECOND
BAPTIST CHURCH
OF HIGHLAND
PARK
The Rev. William Giles Glover
Highwood Community Center
428 North Green Bay Road
Highwood
Tel. HI 2-8145

Harris,

Confirmation class meet-

Dr. Edgar

9 a.m.

CHURCH

425 Laurel Avenue
Very Rev. Charles U.
Rector

for

Christ” action committee will meet
for the first time to get organized.

4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Hebrew school.
MONDAY through FRIDAY,
February 2 to 6

meet in Dubs “room for rehearsal.
8 p.m.
Meeting of the board of
trustees at the manse.

The

30

“The

Spend some hours in church.

TRINITY EPISCOPAL

| 7:30 p.m.

February 2 to 5

in

of the congregation the best available music of Jewish content in
recordings, collections, and sheet
music.
Arrangements
are being
made
to enable “listening before
choosing”
by the use of private
booths, record players and a piano,

The fair will be open to the public tomorrow night and next Friday immediately following services, Saturday and Sunday morning from 9 to 12 noon, Sunday afternoons from 3 to 5 o’clock.
An exhibit is also planned for
the central lobby of the temple
from

tomorrow

to

Sunday,

Febru-

ary 8.
Manuscripts,
old instruments, books and other items of
musical interest will be displayed.
Members
of the community are
very cordially invited to participate by showing some of their own
treasures

in

this

Exhibit.

parish house.
A telephone call to the temple
8 p.m.
725, will bring
High school choir re- office, Glencoe
someone to pick up the available
hearsal in parish house.
THURSDAY, February 5
item.
7 p.m.
High school boys basAt the family worship
service
ketball team practice in Central February 6, it is planned to Inschool gym.
clude selections of Jewish musie
8 p.m. Senior choir rehearsal in played by students in the religious
school.
parish house.
North Shore Congregation Israel
ZION EV. LUTHERAN CHURCH
High Street and Oakridge Avenue
Highwood
Herbert
W. Linden,

Rev.

SUNDAY,
9:30

February

a.m.

10:45
Topic:

“How

vealed.”

God

2 p.m.

of Mrs. John
Highwood.

worship.

Has

Been

always

February

Ladies’

aid

Bjork,

HP Baptist Church

school.

Morning

Visitors

THURSDAY,

come.
Paster

1

Church

am.

Re-

welcome.
5

at the

home

242 Sard

place,

Dr. Richard C. Hertz, formerly
an assistant rabbi at North Shore
Congregation Israel, will become
of

Temple

succeeding

Rabbi

Beth

El,

Detroit,

B. Benedict

Gl-

zer who died last May.
Dr. Hertz, who served in Glencoe under
Rabbi
Charles
Shulman, will assume the leadership
in April of one of the largest Reform
Jewish
congregations
in
America, with a membership of
more

than

oldest
State

of

1,500

Jewish

Schedules Special
Services For Feb.
The
church

Highland
Park
Baptist
at 486 Central court will

conduct

Dr. Hertz Named Rabbi
Of Temple In Detroit

rabbi

is located at the corner of Lincoln
and
Vernon
avenues
in Glencoe.
Visitors are always cordially wel-

families.

congregation

Michigan.

It is the

in the

an

evangelistic

campaign

beginning
Sunday,
February
8.
Services
will be held every evening from 8:30 to 10 o’clock over a
period of 16 days.
The Rev. Robert Clingman, minister of the church, will preach at

the services, with
a

few

isters
Crume

evenings

will

lead

Brothers

the exception
when

the

guest

services.

Quartette

of

of

min-

The
Chi-

cago will present special music.
“People in this community must
be saved by preaching the gospel,”
says the Rev. Mr. Clingman, who
urges an increase in church attend-

ance. He further states that each
person should give one hour to
church

devotion

pecially

on

every

week,

Sundays.

Thursday,

January

29, 1953

es-

�otary To Mark Silver Anniversary Mon.
| Memnbets

Will

Rededicate

To

Members

Charter

Honor

Ideals;

'Club’s

Themselves

Rededication of themselves to Rotary club’s ideals of service in business, in the comnunity and in their personal lives is to be pledged by some 70 Highland Park Rotarians when

The Silver Anniversary celebration is scheduled to take place at
3:30
p.m.
in the
Hotel
Moraine
dining
room,
where
the
charter
meeting was held in 1928.
There

Earl

W.

will be greetings from
ternational
President

Gsell

Rotary
Henry

mont,
are

InJ.

The
ally

Idea

idea

of

developed

Harris,
exchange

by

Shirley

Austin

of the

university

college

valuable
and

Old

at

Park
resi-

name.
Charter

Clark,

members

Joseph

are

B.

Thomas

Garnett,

P.

Lyle

“to

guests of honor are Lewis D. Sinclair, Fred Rice, Oscar Lundgren
and Marshall L. Johnson.
International President Brunnier, recent-

ly named

“The

Engineer,”

by

West’s
the

Outstanding

Building

try Conference Board, has
tarian
membership
which
back

to
An

A

a

Rodates

1908.
Engineer

specialist

difficult

Indus-

in

Specialist
earthquake

foundation

sk

problems,

and

he

believed

of

ideas

business,
lives.

Joseph B. Garnett

origin-

Chicagoan,

that

could

a
be

professional
He

put

his

promote

international

under- |

work

in

responsible

structures
Henry

on
M.

Highland

the

in

Pacific

Bernard,

Park

president

Rotary,

Lundgren,

general

the

anniversary

and

silver

of

Oscar

chairman

have

co-operated

rangements

of

the

history-making
land

Park

Edwin

Kyron

making

event

for the

Conarchy
List

a

High-

will

officiate

and

and

Fred

as

Clem

Gieser.

Officers

Other officers of the present organization, besides
Mr.
Bernard,
are Casper Dahle, vice president;
Raymond
W.
Flinn, _ secretary;
Phillip
Ewens,
treasurer;
Clem
Jones, assistant secretary
and
treasurer;
Leo E. Hart, sergeantat-arms, and Bruce Johnson, assistant sergeant-at-arms.
Nafe
Larson, Arthur Ropiequet, John Cortesi, James Garnett,
Ernest
Bel-

of service.’

the show and gave
ners for a number
land Park Rotarians
the first track meet
first social service
Park was organized
ministration of Dr.

r

ceremonies,

ideal

model boat show at Sunset Valley
Golf club, from
which
a Hobby
show was developed; it supported

ar-

celebration,

club.
Burwell

of

committee,

in

for

the

Besides giving an annual schol«
arship
to a Highland
Park
High
school graduating senior, the local
club
is active
in all community
charity drives. Rotary here organized the first model airplane and

coast.

Jones heads the welcoming
committee, assisted by Coit Spalding,

other

was

a

large

been

Twenty-five-year
members
who
will be among those welcoming the

and

by

his

has

master

president

Rotary

for the safe building of many

H. J. Brunnier

Gourley, Charles
F.
Grant,
the
club’s first
treasurer;
Earl
W.
Gsell, who
served as vice president of the early club; Walter E.
Meierhoff,
Edward
M. Knox,
Dr.
C. Vigo Nichols, J. P. Purnell, Dr.
Donald E. Rossiter and Edward C.
Schweitzer.

international

Rotary’

standing and good will and peace
through world fellowship of business and professional men, united

dents of this area, will be on hand
to reminisce
about
the old days
when
Sol St. Peter was installed
as the first
president,
and
the
weekly bulletin,
now
known
as
“The
Highlander,” ran without a

Dahle

club.

of

who

personal

Mr.

of

idea into practice by organizing a
group of men in various businesses
who met for lunch.
No two per| sons from
competitive
organizaitions belong to the
same
Rotary
club which
promotes
among
Rotarians,
a greater
knowledge
of
many types of business firms. The
Rotary charter asserts a devotion
to “high ethical standards in business and
professions,” and
seeks

Days’

Eleven of the
Highland
club’s charter members, still

in

and

the

‘The

| free

address

‘The

P. Clark

of

'Paul

an

Northwestern
since
1940,
will
speak
on
“Vocational
Guidance.”
The Abbott Singers and the Highland Park High school string quintet will supply the musical portion |
of the program.

Thomas

Bernard

and

rector

Gourley

Mr.

directors

Brunnier,
and from
Casper Apeland, district governor of Illinois.
Hamrin, professor of education at
Northwestern
university.
Mr.
Hamrin,
author
of several
books
on educational guidance, and a di-

Lyle

and review the aims

night to celebrate their c ub’s 25th anniversary

‘hey gather Monday
‘ounding members.

|

J. R. Purnell

;
—

=

prizes to winof years. Highalso organized
here, and the
of
Highland
under the adC. V. Nichols.

The Highland
Park club is an
active contributor to the Foundation Fellowship program of Rotary
International,
in
which
clubs
of
Rotary districts 213 and 214 participate.
Through the program
one-year scholarships in graduate
study at Northwestern
university
have
been provided
for students
from Argentina, Chile, Brazil, Uruguay, England, Peru, Colombia and

Ecuador,
American

that they might learn the,
way

of

life.

Dr. C. Vigo Nichols

ie

wee

Charles

Thursday,

F. Grant

January

29,

Edward

1953

M.

Knox

Walter

E. Meierhoff

Dr.

Donald

Rossiter

Edward

C. Schweitzer

Page

31

�Bill

Laing,

avenue,
car

Dairy
28,

of

crashed

driven

by

truck driven
1552

into

Mrs.

of 905

Central

Mrs.

Hamilton

by

McDaniels

the

rear

Paige

avenue,

of a

Hamilton

Saturday

slowed

as

down

to

a

right

road

into

gate

turn

off

3 of

There

was

no

damage

truck,

but

the

trunk,

bumper
car

guards

were

police

of

Sheridan

Fort

done

Mrs.

smashed,

to

the

bumper

anc

Hamilton’:

Highland

Park

in ‘‘|

Love

is tell-

ing a story? This subject has many
producers talking . . . and most
oe
new
shows
are
using
audiences.
We've learned
that some actors
and _
actresses
prefer to do the’r
ftwork without an
audience,
as_
is
done
in
the
movies.
Still
others who received their training
on stage or in radio wouldn't work
well in video without an aud’ence,
especially on variety or comedy
hows.
We've
become used to studio

laughter

in the

background

Alghland

Open
Sat.,
Sun.

.

the

which

laughter

is

having none at all.
mostly on those
grams where the

bed

in

after

| filmed.

as

has

set

like

benzedrine

can

keys

feel

an

up

the

to

Tues., Wed.,

pulse

Peter

See

FD

|

Ads

it a habit

every

paper

week

at

to read

the

Want

laying

your

GENESEE
—

Continuous

from

THRU

JOAN

te

Color

by

Jack
Gloria

DAY

Drake

SUNDAY

Feb.

Haven Inn
Highwood
VF W
Kennedy Garden Spot ..
DeSoto-Plymouth
Moroney Insurance
Moose Lodge
Washington
Gardens
....
Ravinia Standard
Olson Clothiers
Beth i YMG och oe a

1

“THE MODEL AND THE
MARRIAGE BROKER”
Jeanne

Crain,

Scott

Brady,

Thelma

MON.,

TUES.,

Feb.

WED.

2-3-4

Leading

Art

and

William

“HURRICANE
“Million

‘|

Mermaid”

FOREVER”

FEBRUARY

SUN., MON.,

ASTOUNDING FACTS OF THE
’ WORLD'S BEST KEPT SECRET!

2, 1953

o

RAY’S SHEET METAL

Moroney

532 Waukegan Ave.
HIGHWOOD, ILL.
HI 2-8568

7:15

HEATING — GUTTERS — FLASHINGS
FABRICATION — INSTALLATION
RAY

RECTENWALD

JOE

p.m.—Moose

ae

SUNDAYS,
PMA,

EARLY

8:30
CURTAIN

EVERY

TUFSDAY

6

6

GW

BOE

73

4

62

Scores

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

vs.

Bideei

bia MGB

ROD

Seevecevecguane,

_“POINT OF NO RETURN”
-“DIAL M FOR MURDER”
“PAINT YOUR WAGON”

MAT.

SAT.

ONLY,

2:30

AUDIENCES

Women Only 7 p.m.
Men Only 9 p.m.

|

|

High School Age and Over

Nurses

\

“CALL ME MADAM”
other

theater
on

Evanston

and
sale

sporting

events,

at

Ticket

Office:

in Attendance
All Shows

North Shore Hotel Lobby, DAvis 8-8282 =
9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mon. thru Sat.
Closed Sundays
COCO
N CE ENE
Eee 8 8 88 ee e wees

THE HIDEOUT
Featuring

Chicken
$135

TAKE
@

@

@

PACKAGE

Open
(Sun. thru thurs.) Orch., i 93.du; bGic., «$3.10, 2.75, 2,50, 2,00,
PRICES: EVES.
eNO.
&gt; ail oi aoe, 1.75. | MAT.
1.50; Fri. &amp; Sat., Orch., $4.40;
Balc., $3.80,
SAT. Orch., $3. 50; Balc., $3.00, 2.50, 2.00, 1.50 (Tax incl.). MAIL ORDERS
self-addressed
envelope
with
FILLED
PROMPTLY.Please
enclose
‘stamped

for

ORDERS

10 or

more

orders)

LIQUORS TO TAKE
FOOD ORDERS

every day
Phone

423 Waukegan

Per Order

OUT

off

in the bashes

12:00 a.m.
HI

to

OUT

©

@

e

12:00 p.m

2-1870

Ave.

Highwood,

III.

remittance.

Page

32

64

Ravinia

TICKETS

“1

COMMENTATOR

HYGIENE

SEO

=

LEEDS

ALEXANDER

SEGREGATED

4th

Technicolor

7

Score, Team

Insurance

ON STAGE IN PERSON
FAMED

SHOP

Incl.

6

Flynn, Maureen O’Hara
in pirate adventure

in beautiful

175

Ins.

MR.

UNION

COLLINS

NIGHTS
7

“AGAINST
ALL FLAGS”

19

8:15 p.m. Beth El vs. Haven Inn
9:15 p.m. Kennedy’s vs. Moroney

(10%

7

91

Standard

Feb. 1-2-3

Feb.

21

High Score, Individual
BOR JOOP: ics. Rae
ee
ee 42
Most Free Throws in One Game
Gene Melchiorre: .2....:.5 oie: 1l
Games for Tonight

“BECAUSE OF YOU”
Starts WED.,

Week’s

High
;|

JEFF
CHANDLER,
LORETTA YOUNG
in unusual romance

Errol

B49
96

| 43.
.

FEAR”

TUES.,

ccs Ol)
1
...... 43.10

Haven Inn, 23, Moroney Ins., 64;
Washington
Gardens,
59, Ravinia
Standard, 45; Moose Lodge, 45, Olson’s Cloth., 39; Highwood
VFW,
61, Beth
El YMG,
24;
Kennedy
“arden Spot, 52, DeSoto-Plymouth,

Thrilling Suspense
and
Excitement

“SUDDEN

FT Tota)
25:
..183

(Mor-

Last

| AN ALL STAR HOLLYWOOD
| CAST BRINGS YOU THE
OPEN

B
...... 54

Jerry Fell (Beth El) ..28

a

;

0

Roger Robertson
(Wash. Gardens) ....33
Gene Tagliapietria
(Wash. Gardens) ....29

Technicolor

Coming, Fri., Feb. 6—
“ROAD
TO BALI”
Coming
Soon—
“STARS AND
STRIPES

SMITH”

Dollar

by

2

(Kennedy) 35

Dick Martini
oney)

Dale Robertson, Anne Francis,
Korvin

Weiner

5

Scorers

Bob Joor (Haven)
Renzo Marchetti
KROSOLO)
ica
Don Geske (VFW)

Cartoons

TUE., WED., THU., Feb. 3-4-5
“LYDIA BAILEY”

Addams,

Color

SATURDAY
Palance,
Grahame

Charles

Standing

League

Adams,

Technicolor

Color

1:30

CRAWFORD,

ONE

Julia

Rooney,

r

NOW

Powell,

Taylor

a 5

%

Class ‘A’ Basketball League

VELVET”

Mickey

Plus

Coming—

WAUKEGAN
Daily

LOST

Marshall

2Nth

aside!

THEATRE

3-5

and

Hollywood's Choice Films

i

Malden

trouble-

it

before

Charlton

Karl

E'izabeth

Charles

NQA]

Make

Jones,

“NATIONAL

Culver

CENTHIDY TE! EVISION &amp; RADIO,
1858 Firet St.
Phone Highland
| Dat.

Feb.

Dawn

Roland

why we sell! ‘‘name”’ sets, nationally known for qualitv, such as the
TV.

Jennifer

1-2

Svecial Children’s Matinee,
Sat., Jan. 31 at 2:90 P.M.

Gomez

Thurs.

Lawford,

free servi-e for a long time. That's
Zenith

20-31-Feb.

GENTRY”

and

18

be ici on the bench. Leading scorer
for the losers was Ron Bartoli.
H. P. Recreation Department

30-31

Color by Technicolor

“RUBY
Heston

©

CANYON

thev
lines

funnier.
That’s why TV comedy
is funnier thon in movies.’ Sounds
logical. It’s logical, too, in buving a TV set to get a good one

new

with

“THE HOUR OF 13”

It’s

if the
people don’t
laugh
fight harder
to make
the

SAT

John

Jan.

THE TREASURE OF

SAT., SUN.. &amp; MON.,

with

Thev

. one that will give you

2

as

cast.

audience’s

30-Feb.

Tyrone Power, Thomas

been

them.

Jan.

o

‘

;

William

Color by Technicolor

The best answer we've
heard
to this question was by a cameraman
of the ‘Our Miss Brooks’’
show.
He said: ‘’An audience on

the

Mon.

Edmund Gwenn,
McIntire

Ritter

few filmed prolaughter is dub-

show

1:30
to
6—40c
&amp; Holidays, 60c

thru

se

PARK

Dial HI 2-2400

“PONY SOLDIER”

That happens

the

HIGHLAND

Jan.

Fri.

(not

bad

6

to 6:30

FRI,

is forced

almost

at

Blyth,

THEATRE

2-0605

Mon.-Fri.
40c

| that we want to be told when to
laugh!)
because
it fills in what
might otherwise be long and unBut some1 comfortable pauses.
times it is overdone, and we get

| the feeling

Park

Ann

ees

as

program

ee

the

mnpeeeevpees

where

suffered

eae

Lucy’’

ter for DeSoto-Plymouth,

3 bad ankle sprain in the
early
| part of the first quarter and had
jto sit the remaining part of the

sue

show,

SAINT

ee

of the

AND
ANN”

a

to spoil the con-

tinuity

“SALLY

ALCYON

GLENCOE

you?

eine

it seem

bother

Soe

shows

©

Or does

TV

and

#8

on

THURSDAY

applause

Sunday

Hi 2-6228

See

daughter

Show

(Continued from page 28)

Kennedy Gardens,
sparked
by
Bob Esp’s 19 points and terrific
floor plays beat out DeSoto-Plyfrom 2:30
mouth 52 to 43. This win enabled
the Garden Spot to also remain in
contention for the championship.
Jan. 29 |) Renzo Marchetti, high-scoring cen-

Sue

audience

Continuous

reported.

By JOHN REYNOLDS
Does

Basketball League

HIGHWOOD
THEATRE

Sheridan

QuhPPNNEREE

A Bowman

make

&gt;

Car HitBy Milk Truck

Thursday,

January

29, 1953

�mn

Thoth Shove

Announcing

a New Store for You!

SIDELIGHTS.

|

eaturing uy

From

Ravinia Motors

- infants’ wear
children’s clothes

Here

and

To Show

There

53 Studebaker

- ladies’ apparel
2

Gloria
41

Shop

5

Sas

Highwood Ave.
H| 2-8724

36
pres

but

decile

ts

Opening date February 12
For the finest in Italian foods
VISIT

H. S. Vance, chairman of the board and president of The Studebaker Corporation,
with the 1953 Studebaker Champion hardtop that is setting a new trend in American
automobile design. The low silhouette and sweeping lines of European styling are dis*
tinguishing features of both the Champion and Commander series of hardtops and
coupes, and are also reflected in the design trend of other Studebaker models. The
a

OUT

Package

ORDERS

Liquors

PIZZA

COCKTAIL
HOURS
SUNDAY AFTERNOON
12:00 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Draught
Beer 10c, Bottle
Beer 25c, Shots 25c, Mixed
Drinks 40c

new models
few days.

LAZAGNA
(Order in Advance)
French Fried Shrimp
Full Dinners or Carry Out
Orders

North

IOLI DINNER—*]00

MOSTACC

Are

WASHINGTON GARDENS

550

Green

Bay

Lake

HI

Road

Forest,

North

2-9787

Illinois —

Shore’s

Most

Forest

Beautiful

January

30 thru

THURSDAY,

ONE

Realtors

BREAKING

THE

Featuring

Richardson

(who

won

ance—for

Ralph
the New

BARRIER
sel

Critics Award—Best

York

5

Sun., Cont. 2 to 12

SOUND

perform-

1952.)

—Bill

FOR

THE

YEAR’S

Highland Ten Pin
Ladies’ League

The:

Somenzi
The Fell

Standings
Team
Wei
Liebschutz Liquors ........ 41
Larsons Bros. Garage ....36
Cortesi Plastering ........ $1.

ee
13
18
23

Photography-by-Jay ....
IOS
ON ee

31
28%

23
2514

IRORIOTL
Mii a
Anchor Insurance ........

28%
28

25%
26

Sunset Food Mart ........
Hi-Neighbor Records . .
Villa Moderne ................
My Favorite Inn ............

abies
264% 2714
26’:
28
26.
.28

Thursday,

22

January
29,

Style

1953

Shop:

.... 2344

.2....:,.;3- 22

Villa Moderne
Liebschutz

Series,

High

30%
33
«32

Team

782-831-902—2515
Individual

R.
Bairstow
186-173-188—547
MM; darsOn
168-158-180—506
V
GEARING 28
189-147-165—501
High Game, Team
Liebsehutz:
Liquors.
..z:............ 902

Larson

Brothers

Garage

......

moved

Board

of

the

method

leasing

real

most

of
es-

This co-operative listing
insures you of the very
coverage

buying,

of

the

market,

selling or leasing

estate.

listing your property you go
to the
board
member
office
of
your choosing. This office will explain the listing service
to you.
They will point out that naturallv,

Liquor
Series,

or

ica’s

the

you

efficient

889

in

selling

your

property

you

will

want as many bonafide prospective
buyers of your type of home
or
property to know that your prop-

erty is on the market,

The

of

name

Shore

that

offices

estate

the

give

fact

In

.. 855-853-837—2545

Service

selling

real

&amp;
Sons
......... 21.339
Company ......... 16
38
High

buying,
tate?

broadest

ON TREES”

Pigati’s Juke Boxes
Bishop Heating

and

whether

Leonard, C.B:S.
—N. Y. Times

PRIZE!”

OF YOU” — “IT GROWS

Next Week—“BECAUSE

January

BEST

who

prompt

service.
system

with Ann Todd — Nigel Patrick
Of the picture the critics say:
“BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR!”
—Jay Carmody, Washington Eve. Star
“THE BIGGEST ADVENTURE STORY OF OUR TIMES!”
“IN LINE

real

1778

showroom,

as it is only

through showing your real estate
to as wide a market as possible
that you can find the right buyer
quickly and efficiently. Thus when
you list your property with one
board
member
office,
and
enter
into this co-operative selling agree-

ment with them, you are automatically listing your property with 100
real estate offices with over 350
salespeople. There is no additional
cost to you.

Holmes
third

loop

oldest

its
location

Wilson

Motor

Co.,

Ford

operations
to

the

showrooms

in

has

from

a

Purnell

&amp;

Highland

Park. Clifton H. Stowers, president
of Holmes
Motor
Co. announced
that
with
the
change,
Holmes
Motor is observing the 50th year
of the Ford Motor company.
According to J. R. Purnell, proprietor of Purnell &amp; Wilson, the
outstanding
reputation
of
the
Holmes
Motor
company
was
the
major factor that was considered
in selling the Ford dealership. Mr.
Purnell said that he was sure the
new
proprietors
would
continue
the
high
standards
of operation
set by Purnell
&amp; Wilson.
“It is
with the deepest appreciation,” Mr.
Purnell
told the NEWS,
“that I
thank the staff of Purnell &amp; Wilson and the many Ford customers
for their continued
support during the years I have been active
in the automobile business.”

Mr.
clude

Purnell’s future plans inactively operating his Vir-

ginia farms and traveling. He will
move
in the near future to the
Homestead hotel in Evanston.

Leonard

M. Wilson

were

held

within

a

|

Tuesday, February 3 will maried
the first public showing of “Vi’s ra
paintings:
“Vi? “is Mrs; Charles _
D..

Altschul

fessional

of

Glencoe,

artist

considerable
work.

who

has

Monday

a

pro- |

acquired —

recognition

for

her

|
4

Mrs.

Altschul

is unique

in that |

although

she

had

formal |

art

has

instruction,

she

no

has

sold

many |

of her paintings.
Her works will |
be on exhibit at both the Highland —‘
Park Landi Paint
tral avenue,
and
store.

store, 668 CenLandi’s Glencoe |
ee
a
a

New Highweed Store

Features Women’s &amp;
Children’s Apparel | Ee

Gloria’s Shop is the name of the
new women’s and children’s apparel store located at 41 Highwood —
avenue, Highwood. Gloria
the store’s proprietor.

Lind

a

Miss Lind, daughter of Mr. ania
Mrs. Domenick Linari of 534 North —
Central,

Highwood,

will

feature |

many nationally known
lines of |
merchandise
including
Chippy |
Originals, Kickerknit, Wonderknit, —
Tommie

Pajamas,

Tiny

Town

Togs, |

Johnnie Juniors, Prim Hosiery and "
Little Lady Coats.
The
business
venture

Leonard
Michael
Wilson,
five
months’ old son of Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard
B. Wilson of 246 Green
Bay road, Highwood,
died Saturday morning in the Wilson home
from
bronchial
pneumonia
after
Highwood Fire department’s inhalator squad failed to revive him.
Services

street,

“VI's” Paintings —

Amer-

dealer,

First

Landi to Exhibit 4

Ford Auto Agency

According to Bob Earhart, Highland Park realtor, your only job
is to look for the display of the
oval Realtor emblem or otherwise
be sure that the office you deal
with is a member of the EvanstonNorth
Shore
Board
of Realtors.
You then can be confident of receiving the finest buying or selling service. The word
“Realtor,”
says Mr. Earhart, means integrity,
experience
in the field and sincere responsibility to do a good
job, thereby following their established rules of high ethical practice. The
Realtor furnished
with
the co-operative
listing and selling system, of which this Board is
so proud, gives you an exceptional

Theatre

WEEK

Sat. Mat. 2 to 4. —

100
under

Evanston-North

2106

February

are

of the

Motors’

Holmes Motor Buys
Purnell &amp; Wilson

Realtors

aware

associated

DEERPATH
FRIDAY,

you

there

HIGHWOOD

Lake

Shore

at Ravinia

Offer Co-operative
Listing System

SPECIAL—Every Wednesday

ALL
YOU
CAN EAT

will be shown

oss
ei
Sos 8S ios ee ee

WASHINGTON GARDENS
TAKE

will

not

4

interfere with Miss Lind’s singing |
career. She is scheduled now for
concerts

at

club,

Italian

the

Chicago,

and

the

H.

P.

Woman’ 83

Women’s

several

concerts with symphony

Club

of —

out-of-state
orchestras. a

Morrison

a

Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Morri- ©
son of Norfolk, Va., are announc- »

morning in Seguin funeral home
with burial in a local cemetery.

ing the birth

The only child of Mr. and Mrs.
Wilson, Leonard was born last August 28 in Highland Park hospital.
Maternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. William L.
Collins
of
376
Walker avenue.

Their

and
Mr.

first

son

of their second
Monday

daughter,

Morrison

in

Roberta,

serves

in the

child

Norfolk.

is

214.

regina

navy with the rating boatswain’s
mate,
first class.
Grandparents |
are Mr. and Mrs. Donald K. Mor- —
rison of 1379 Eastwood avenue.
“a

Page

33 q

�Gas Refrigerator
‘t makes

ice cubes

without

trays...

and puts ‘em in a basket - AUTOMATICALLY!

Just reach

handful

in!

Take

one

. . . the SERVEL

cube

ata

Automatic

places the cubes as you use them.

time...ora

Ice-Maker

re-

There’s always

plenty for everyday needs. Big, dry, super-cold IceCircles that won't

stick together

.. . even

during

automatic defrosting!

Just pick ‘em out!

The cubes are loose!

messy trays to fill or spill!

No more

No more trays to empty

—or forget to refill!

STARTS

ITSELF!

REFILLS

ITSELF!

STOPS

ITSELF!

all-automatically!

Outmodes Every Other Refrigerator on the Mark et Today!

"The Friendly People”
=

Thursday, January 29, 1953 _

�REAL

5¢ each additional word

This

Words

or

will

cover

cost

Less)

English-type

the

signed

insertion in all 4 papers.

® Highland Park News
® Highwood News

brick

around

home

a

lge.

let

fir,

ht.

and

laundry.

Offered

for

the

PAUL
497

Taker

PHELPS,

Central

Ave.

WHITE

CAPE

{

Park 2-4500

DEERFIELD
Road

HIGHLAND PARK

TRY

Ave,

FOREST
Deerpath

(Highland

(Improved)

Park)

HOME
AND
INCOME
8 apt. buildings in good location;
income,
$415 per month. $30,000;
terms. For info. call

ANCHOR
HI

REAL

2-0098.,

res.

gross
good

ESTATE
HI

2-0037

BY

owner. 2 bedrooms, 13x20 living room
with
fireplace, dining
room,
kitchen,
’ ceramic tile bath, screened porch, basement,
2 car garage.
Price,
$15,500.
Call HI 2-2514.

HIGHLAND
PARK
FIRST TIME
OFFERED.
Charming and
comfortable
home
with
a view
of the
lake.
Large
living
room,
solarium,
7
family
bedrooms,
maids’
quarters,
separate 3 car garage with 5 room apartment above. Offered at $75,000.
SHERWOOD
FOREST
Picture book Williamsburg Colonial. Living room, dining room, bedroom, modern
kitchen,
breakfast
nook,
bath = and
screened porch on first floor. Two more
bedrooms and tile bath on second floor.
Gas heat and large wooded
lot. A real
buy at $30,000.
IF YOU PLAN TO BUILD
see Sherwood
Forest,
a new
and
fast
growing area. Large lots, many
beautifully wooded, with all improvements
in
and paid for. Reasonably priced.
ROBERT
L.
JOHNSON
REALTY
CO.
1608
Berkeley
Road
HI.
2-6200
Winnetka
6-3809
Deerfield
308
FOR
sale
by
owner.
8 bedrooms,
tile
bath,
birch
kitchen,
full
basement,
panelled
breezeway,
attached
2
car
garage. $21,000.
HI 2-5994.

FIRST
Wonderful

TIME
family

offers

liv-

ing room, dining room, den, kitchen, pantry, living porch, powder
-room and attached garage on first.
Four
bedrooms,
two
baths
and
sleeping porch on second. Hot .water

oil

heat.

Full

basement.

Must

be seen to be appreciated. Fine
east side location
within
three
blocks of schools, shopping
and
transportation.

Rare

bargain

at

$32,500.

H.

AND

463

Central

R.

ANSPACH,

Avenue

HI

INC.
2-1212

RAVINIA—will sacrifice new 2 bedroom,
1 bath, Ranch house; combination living-dining
room,
13x20
kitchen
with
breakfast
nook, attached
garage,
enclosed
porch,
concrete
drive.
Occu“.'pancy
in» two
weeks.
$18,500.
HI
22-2495.
sey a

My January. 29,..1953
PF Age

AND

RANCH

DUPLICATE

Rarely do we have a beautiful home at
below building cost such as this modern
8 bdrm. brick ranch with stone firepiace,
Ig.
liv.-din.
combination,
exceptionally
Ige. kit., ceramic tile bath;
radiant oil
heating
in floors
and
ceiling, attached
oversized garage. Low taxes and heating
costs.
Landscaped:
exclusive
neighborhood, close-in. Don’t miss this one.

WHITE

BRICK

East
Very
home

the

large

living.

roomis

that

4,

i

R. S. HAMBLY &amp; CO., Realtors
728
HI

St. Johns
2-1484

Ave.,

at

S. L. GOODFRIEND
634

BRAND

NEW

2 TO 4:30
ROAD, H.
BRICK

BIRCH

kitchen,

bdrms.,
DEN
screened
porch,

near school and
THE 50’s.
457

&amp;

2

P.

2

rm.,

3/

4th
bdrm.,
car att. gar.;

trans. PRICED

REALTY’

NORTH

IN

COMPANY
HI

2-6600

EAST —- REDUCED
blks.

of

the

lake

on

a

good sized corner lot, this home is
exceptionally
‘well arranged
for
family with children. The center
entrance
hall
divides
the
first
floor, with a lge. liv. rm. and sun
rm.-den on one side and din. rm.

and kit. on the other. On the 2nd
flr. are 4 good size family bdrms.,
one

with

porch, and
oil

Just

and

year-round

2 baths. The

there

is a 2 car

reduced

PAUL
497

a

Central

for

PHELPS,
Ave.

236

584 Central Ave., HI 2-1215

or HI 2-7278

BEAUTIFUL GEORGIAN
BRICK
Almost an acre of property in East |
Ravinia; 4 bdrms., 2% baths, den,
recr. room; attractively decorated;
gas heat.
$42,500

ADLER
1896

AND

Sheridan

MAXON

Rd.

HI

2-1834

BRICK
HOME
If you are looking for a home planned for
happy family
living you
must
see this
4 yr. old home. Besides the liv. rm, and
kit.
on
1st
flr.
this
brk. and
frame
home has a lge. panelled TV or recr. rm.,
master bdrm.
&amp; bath. On
2nd
flr. are
the 2 children’s rooms and % bath with
space
for shower
or
tub.
There
is a
lovely screen pch., partial bsmt., vas ht.,
att. gar., Ilge. lot; bus to school. All this
for $24,000. For appt. call Mrs. McClure,
HI 2-5821 or HI 2-7278.

Central

REAL

Ave.,

ESTATE

HI

2-7278

FOR
SALE
(Deerfield)

or HI

2-1215

(Improved)

For countryside living. 2 new 8 bedroom
Ranch homes, reasonable. By appt. only.
Also lovely larger home; other homes and
lots.
R. K. EBERSOLE
REALTY
830
Woodward
Deerfield
1049

RED-

bkfst.

or

Central

Within

Glencoe

BENJ. PIERSEN
REALTY CO.

WOOD
Ranch in beautiful BRAESIDE. 30 ft. living rm., large din.

rm.,

&amp; CO.

Ave.

BENJ. PIERSEN
REALTY CO.

584

OPEN SUNDAY
406 SHERIDAN

Vernon

Roger Williams
Eves.
HI
2-1485

OWNER
offers 10 room solid brick insulated house;
8%
bedrooms
&amp; bath
upstairs;
L.R.,
D.R.,
one
bedroom,
kitchen &amp; bath downstairs; full basement,
garage;
lot size 50x185.
Convenient to shopping &amp; schools. Shown
by appointment, HI 2-3646.

sleeping

ht. is HW
gar.

quick _ sale.
,
$30,000

Inc.
HI 2-4580

FOR
SALE
(Deerfield)

(Improved)

desired

RANCH

On
landscaped
lot, 62x180.
This lovely
home just completed.
Liv.-din. combination, knotty pine panelled
fireplace, artistic
mod.
kit., 2 bdrms. One
can
be
partitioned to make 8rd with individual
doors; tile bath with shower, pull-down
stairs
to lIge. attic; attached oversized
garage;
oil
forced
air
heat.
Hunter’s
white
fence
with
lamp
post.
Walking
distance.
transportation,
shopping,
cea cay
Immediate
occupancy.
Special,

RINGER

OFFERED
home

COD

Think
of it, a like new 2 bdrm. home
for
$17,000.
Lg.
liv.-din.
combination,
brick
fireplace,
cozy
mod.
kit.
with
brkfst.
space,
tile
bath,
utility
rm.,
plastered
walls,
expandable’
upstairs,
workshop garage; oil ht. Landscaped, 75
by 100 ft.; 5 min. to all conveniences.

Lake Forest 2300

REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE

2-4580

ESTATE

NR. HOLY
CROSS SCHOOL
TWO
FOR
THE
PRICE
OF
ONE
Cor. 2 apt. bldg. with
1 car gar., $85
mo. inc. from 2nd apt. Ist apt. available
immed. Owner leaving city, wants offer.
Phone
Deerfield
200
for appt.
1 BLK.
DEERFIELD
GRADE
SCHOOL
New 3 bdrm. face brk. ranch home. Full
basement,
tile bath
&amp; kitchen.
Offered
below
cost
at
$18,500.
Call
owner
at
Deerfield
161.
HERMITAGF
DPR,
| DEERFIELD—437
FOR
THE
HARD
TO PLEASE
BUYER
New home o» golf course; 1%
baths, 2
bedrms.,
pecky
cypress
rumpus
room;
Ravinia
ht., garage. PRICED TO SELL.
attractive
8 rm.-3 bath, Colonial gas-HW
Inspect 1-5 Saturday or Sunday
in beautiful east side location. Off

NOTHING
COMPARES
See this beautiful gray shingle 3 bdrm.,
2
%
bath, Colonial
home; modern
kit.
with dishwasher, lge. liv. rm. with frpl.,
TV rm., din. rm. This home is perfect in
every
detail, well insulated: gas
ht., 2
car
gar.
A_
perfect
neighborhood
for
children.
$31,500.
Call
Mrs.
Graham.
HI. 2-5842 or HI 2-7278.

Inc.

REAL

Highland
Park
East
Just two years old, a charming, livable
brick
and
cedar
home
on
a_ beautiful
100x200
lot. The panelled
living
room
has a large picture window with a garden,
view—the
den
is lined with book
shelves—the kitchen has many cabinets
and a comfortable
breakfast nook. The
screened porch opens off the dining room
for summer
convenience.
Of course,
a
powder
room. :Upstairs
there
are
five
large
bedrooms
and
three
baths.
Gas.
Many
heat.
Two
car
attached
garage.
extras. Priced at $65,000.

time.

HI

Deerfield 485

227

first

$37,500

Call any of these numbers
and ask for a Want Ad

LAKE

the

generous closets. In the bsmt. is
rm. for recr. rm. with frpl. Gas

TELEPHONE
WANT AD SERVICE

St. Johns

liv|

(Improved)

TV room, a lovely dining room with coré
ner cupboards, butler’s pantry and kitchample closets and adjacent bath. ,en. Upstairs, the master suite consists |
There are 2 lge. additional bdrms. ‘of bedroom, sitting room and tile bath.
Then there are two other twin bedrooms
and a medium
size bdrm. and a with tile bath plus a maid’s room and
second bath. All the bdrms. have bath. Priced in 30’s.

for Publication in the Current
Week’s Issue

1775

studio

ESTATE
FOR SALE
(Highland Park)

master bdrm. with vaulted ceiling, |

Tuesday 4:30 p.m.

Waukegan

de-

On the 2nd flr. is an usually lge.

Ads will be accepted up to

615

is

der rm. and att. gar., complete

® The Lake Forester

Highland

EAST

rm.
with
frpl.,
built-in
book
shelves, etc. An attract. dining rm.
with southern exposure, kit., pow-

® Deerfield Review

Want

—

REAL

(Improved)

Located in the heart of the bcautiful Braeside section, 2 blks. from
school and the lake and 3 blks.
from
the
station,
this
charming

for only
55

SALE
Park)

BRAESIDE

20 words
(For

ESTATE
FOR
(Highland

THREE
BEDROOMS
Brand
new,
immediate
occupancy.
Lge.
liv. rm. with dining area, cab. kit., utility
rm. and
bath;
1953
mode]
washer and
drier; storm
and
screens
included, Ige.
lot. 1%
block to school. $17,250.
THREE
BEDROOMS
Now
being
built,
ready.
for occupancy
March
1. Liv.-din
rm. comb.,
kit., eating space, utility rm., bath. Good neighborhood.
$15,750.
‘
4 BDRMS.,
2 BATHS
4 yr. old. 2 story, immediate occupancy.
1st flr., liv. rm., 2 bdrms., kit. and bath,
2nd flr., 2 bdrms.
(one unfinished) and
bath. 2 car gar. $18,900.

CARR
701

Waukegan

REALTY
Rd.,

Deerfield

CO.
984

or

985

DEERFIELD
Fine brick
home
in estate area.
First
floor
has large
living room
with
fireplace, attractive dining room, step saving kitchen,
bright
study,
and
powder
room. Second floor has 4 bedrooms and
2 ceramic tile baths.
Wooded
property,
100x300. Tip top condition and very reasonably priced at $44,500.
8 bedroom
brick
French
Provincia)
in
convenient
location.
Gas
heat,
study,
basement. Built in 1950. Offered in middle 20's.
ROBERT
L.
JOHNSON
REALTY
CO.
1608
. Berkeley
-Road
HI
2-6200
Winnetka .6-3809°:. &gt;
Deerfield
308

DEERFIELD
TEA
FOR
TWO
Two
for Tea. Tops in a most excellent
deluxe home
for a couple or 3 peuple.
California styled brick ranch home that
was
featured in McCalls
Magazine.
For
beauty, style and quality these is nothing else like it in its price class. On
beautiful
% acre. Middle thirties. Make
an
offer.
Unusually
good
financing.
MR.
DEAKINS.
DEERFIELD
ENJOY
LIFE
at its best. Excellent home built by W.
C.
Tackett,
Inc.
Like
new _ condition
throughout. Brick &amp; clapboard with three
bedrooms,
1% _ baths.
In
wonderful
neighborhood.
Tops
for
a
commuting
executive.
Bargain
priced
in low
thirties. Make
offer. MR.
DEAKINS.
DEERFIELD
SECLUDED CHARM
It will capture your heart. Pretty colonial ranch with two nice bedrooms
expandable
to
three.
Everything
in
fine
condition. On
2/3 wooded
acre in nice
location only 1 mile from uptown, Price
only $23,750. MR. DEAKINS,

BAIRD

REAL

ESTATE FOR SALE (Im
(LAKE FOREST)

NEW

brick ranch

Telephone

Winnetka,
III.
BRiargate
4-9001

FOUR
rm. brick, fireplace, basement, oil
heat
&amp;
attached
garage;
fenced
in
yard,
too] shed. Near schools,
transportation.
Deerfield
1287
after
6 or
weekends.
OUT OF TOWN OWNER
WANTS DEAL
Lge.
2
bedrm.
brk.
ranch
home,
or.
Catholic,
Public
schools.
Bldg.
28x36.
Only
$14,950.
Call Deerfield
161.

three bedr

Thomas

Pester,

Lake

5038.

;

New spacious 3 bdrm. brk. Ranch
baths, 2 car garage, full bsmt. G
cation.

R. K. EBERSOLE

880

REAL

4

REALTY

Woodward

Deerfield

ESTATE

FOR

SALE

(Improve

(Miscellaneous)

toh,

NORTHFIELD—3
bedroom, 2% cera
tile baths,
living
room,
dining
roo!
and closed porch; attached garace
corner lot, 75x150;
brick and
st
marble
fireplace.
Will
sae
$26,500. HI 2-2495.

CHICAGO—NEAR

NORTH

Beaut. Lake Shore Dr. co-op; 4
m
bedrms.,
library.
High
floor.
G
Immed. poss. Priced to sell. Bd.
Mrs.
Paxton
W Hitehall
BROWNE
&amp; STORCH,
INC.

UNDER
The

stone

has

just

and

$60,000

shingle

come

on

the

Winnetka

market!

hi

Well |

cated on over a half acre of beauti!
landscaped
ground.
There are 4
n
bdrms. and 3 baths—2 servants qu
and bath—and
they are all on the
floor. Liv. rm. with random width
pegged
flooring—is
28
ft.
x
1
Screened porch and breakfast room
room
with
fireplace,

car attached garage.
diate possession.

PORTER
62

Green

G
Bay

Available

quick

Ir
6-

FOR SALE (Vacan
Park)

sale by owner,

;

beautiful |

wooded lot; east side location,
foot front. HI 2-2462.

REAL

i

Winnetka

(Highland

FOR

for

WEINRICH,
Rd.

“REAL ESTATE

&amp;G WARNER

576
Lincoln
Ave.
Winnetka
6-2700

home;

fireplace, full basement. Good
loc
in Lake Forest; immediate poss

ESTATE

FOR SALE

$50
ae

(V.

(Deerfield)

4

FOR sale on Grand Avenue in Dee
Lot 638x142; price, $1,250.
Te
Thomas
Pester, Lake
Forest 503.

REAL

ESTATE

TO

EXCHANG

REAL

ESTATE FOR SALE (Improved)
(LAKE FOREST)

OWNER
wants to exchange larger
for smaller house in Highland P
Highwood.
Write
giving
details,
E-15 c/o H.P. News.

THE

OLD

ARE
you
Highland

ABSINTHE

HOUSE

in New
Orleans
has the same
lace-like
wrought
iron
balcony
that graces
this
loveiy
white
brick
Monterey
residence.
The exterior is just as interesting and
unusual
with
its circular stairway,
its
imported hardware and its strong Greek
Revival
fteeling.
On
the
lst
tloor are
living room and dining room each with
lovely
bow
windows,
study
and_
bath,
kiicuen,
breakiast
room,
maids
rovom
and
bath.
Upstairs
are
8 family
bedrooms,

large

dressing

room

and

&lt;

YOU OUGHT TO SEE
arrangement

that

is

surely

ditferent. There are 2 bedrooms and bath
on
the
lst
floor and
nice size dining
room
with
bay
window,
kitchen
with
breakfast
space and cheery
fireplace in
living
room.
Large
screened
porch.
2
car attached
garage.
Little
less
than
half
acre
of
wooded
and _ landscaped
grounds.
Owner
is anxious
to
sell at
greatly
reduced
price.

HART,

SHAW

&amp;

COMPANY

260
EAST
DEERPATH
LAKE
FOREST
616

OPEN
FOR
INSPECTION
535
WAUKEGAN
ROAD
6 room ranch; 8 bedrooms, 2 tile baths,
ample
closet
space,
living
room-dining
room
combination,
ultra modern
maple
kitchen,
utility
room;
gas
heat.
Olson
Brothers,
Lake Bluff 2622.
5 year old 1 story home. Lge. liv. rm.din. rm. comb., 2 twin size bdrms., kit.
and bath, full bhmt., recr. rm.; hot water oil ht. Business zoning. $14,250.

2 story

LAKE

fr. home

only

BLUFF

\%: blk. from

lake;

large
nice landscaped
lot. 1st flr., liv.
rm. with frpl., kit., dinette, den and TV
rm., bath, 2nd flr., 4 bdrms. and bath.
Att..2 car gar., bsmt.; oi] ht. Fenced in
backyard.
$27,500.
Call
Mr.
‘Boerup,
Lake
Forest
1871.

~.., CARR. REALTY CO,
701

Waukegan.

Rd., Deerfield

984

in
or

for

a small
Deerfield

your

house
and

—

family?

trade with you for my low cost 1
tenance, 4 bedroom, 2 tile bath |
in Ravinia; 2 car garage,
hot wa
gas ht. Priced under $25,000. No h
aches; you move in my house, I n
in yours. Write c/o Box C-45,
Hi
land Park News, giving your name
address
and telling about your p.
erty.

For rent, immediate possession,
store, approximately 17 4exo5. 1925
idan Road.

Also

this attractive New England style frame
and stone colonial residence if you require 6 bedrooms and yet desire a modcompact

living
Park

bedrooms

bats,

Attractive game room in basement. Gas
heat. 2 car attached garage. New 3 box
stall
stable
and
small
corral
enclosed
with post and
rail fence. Owner
transferred. Priced to sell now,

ern

more

or 985

nice light space

fessional
or
business
Park Ave. Inquire HI

APARTMENTS

suitable

office.
2-u8388,

TO RENT

(Highland

3!

for pre

432

|
%

(Unfurt

Park)

TWO
house apartments.
4 new
combination kitchen, new full bath
entrance
en
and

porch
bath

in each apartment ;
decvurated;
heat,

yard
space
and
full
bsmt.
ineiuc
$130.
Open
for
inspection
daily,
Burtis Place, Highwood. Hi 22-1732

fore 8 a.m. and aiter 6 p,m.

a

FOR rent: unfurnished, nicely decor
3%
room
apartment
at
442
Cen
Ave.,
with
screened
and
g
:
porch, plenty closet space; conven
to transportation, shopping. Heat,

water,

kitchen

monthly.

HI

stove

turnished.,

2-1842.

ho!

$1

oe

ONE
large
4 room
apartment,
nished;
2
or 8 bedroom
apartm
unfurnished;
6
room
unfurn
apartment;
8 room _ furnished
ment;
8
room
furnished
apa
Apply
Highland
Park
Chamber
Commerce.
'
NEW
4
floor;

room apartment,
will decorate to

36x31 ft.,
suit. Own

2r

trance, 82 ft. closet space, large k

en,
2 large.
bedrooms,
lg.
liv. rm.
open sun deck, separate bsmt.; gas ht.,
garage if desired. Close to transport
tion and schools. Call HI 2-8346
5 p.m.
Ae

TWO

unfurnished.

apartments;

one {

rooms,
other
4%
rooms.
Green I
Rd... and., Burehell. Ave. in. High
Immediate occupancy. HI. 23717...

�ne
ROOMS FOR RENT

eciiad
(LAKE
TO

‘ROOM

RENT

modern

rnished;
t 912,

(Un

’

for

rent,

garage.
Telephone
617 Illinois Rd.

apartment

Lake

TMENTS TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(Miscellaneous)

ie

GE
apartment
available
for
part
services; beautiful surroundings,
-Mear
transportation.
Mature
couple
preferred.
Glencoe 2515.

SLEEPING
Nice

ess

(Highland

Y
ee
;

furnished

(Furnished)

Park)

6

room

transportation and
ferred. HI 2-6373.

VE

apartment,

stores;

adults

lovely rooms—apartment to share;
veniently
located,
near
station.
me HI 2-0303
after 6:00 p.m.

ene,
apartment;
ne
mat
Iman _ kitch
bedroom,
bath.
Priroe
ee.” ‘ictoeeuen: "Tel.
HI|
22-4178
after 5 p.m.

-ARTMENTS TO RENT (Furnished)
ss
(LAKE FOREST
IsHED
3 room
apartment;
large
hen and bedroom, living room with
-a-bed. Gas heat and utilities furiiake i
$135
per
month,
Telephone

as ~

Forest

911.

PARTMENTS | TO RENTT
dt
(Miscellaneous)
O

ly

8

room

apartments

furnished.
Station

Inquire

in

Half

(Furnished)

for

TO

ep.

part-

at Sonny’s

Day.

Call

ville 2-9879 or 2-4141.
_ HOUSES

rent,

RENT

Serv-

Liberty-

(Unfurnished)

(Highland

Park)

ALOW,
2 bdrms.,
large
garage;
2
or 8 yr. lease, $125 monthly. June
_ Ist occupancy. Selling custom furniture,
oa,
ae
carpeting and drapes.
-6784.
oe-

\

TED: 8 room ranch home by private
_
party;
will
buy
or rent.
Write
Box
_E-5
c/o Highland .Park News.

ANADIAN

or 4 room
baby. Tel.

business

apartment
HI 2-43894.

man

and

2.

bedroom

ROOM

house

near

890

See

MU

5-3523,

Don

Andersen.

REE
or 4 bedroom home wanted by
ner, ‘responsible party. Call Highland Park
Chamber
of
Commerce.
S ENGINEER,‘wife,
wi
2 children desire
2 bedroom
house or apartment.

rs
| Telephone

Chicago,

weekdays,

9

am.

DEarborn

to

Miss

5

Beard,

HI

2-8000

RESPONSIBLE
position as assistant
to
a
senior
executive
of
a
nationally
known
firm
of
business
consultants
located
in North
Shore
area.
Ability
to work with figures desired. Unusually
attractive working environment.
Good
salary
to start
plus
other
benefits.
Convenient
transportation
arrangements.
Call
BRiargate
4-7500
from
Chicago
or Libertyville
2-4080
from
suburbs.
GENERAL
office work, subscription department of National Magazine; some
typing. No experience necessary. Call
Florence Rhodes, Northbrook
1201.
EXFERIENCED
bookkeeper
wanted
for
local business; pleasant
working conditions, 5 day week. Salary
commensurate with experience. For interview,
HI 2-2080.
STENOGRAPHER.
Must be able to take
shorthand,
do typing: some
bookeeping.
McCallum
Chevrolet,
Ine.
Telephone Lake Forest 3200,

Bluff.
Telephone
Lake
Bluff
41.
SALESLAVDIES
AND
WAITRESSES
Part
time
or full
time.
F. W.
WOOLWORTH
CO.

HOUSEWIVES

gree

of

2-4834

p.m.,

collect.

TO

SHARE

accuracy

time

TELEPHONE

OFFERS JUST THAT... FULL TIME
JOBS FOR WOMEN UP TO 48 YEARS
OLD AS TELEPHONE OPERATORS.
WE’LL TRAIN YOU, AND YOU’LL BE
PAID WHILE YOU LEARN TO PLAY
AN EVER IMPORTANT PART IN THE
LIFE OF YOUR COMMUNITY.

SEE CHIEF OPERATOR AT
HIGHLAND PARK: 1866 N. 2ND
LAKE FOREST: 255 E. DEERPATH

of

this

essential.

cost

Apply

in

Lake

Forest

900.

Bank.
Excel-

of

age
and

transporta-

person

or

DRIVER

to
Il.

room

nurse,

Highwood

good

STENOGRAPHER

High-

Save
WOMAN
to serve food in diet kitchen
at Highland
Park
Hospital;
hours
6
a.m. to 2:30 p.m.; full time position.
See Miss
Baird, HI 2-8000.
OFFICE
MANAGER-STENOGRAPHER.
Ability to organize,
direct, and
work
with others required. Live in or out.
Good
personnel
policies.
Pleasant
working
conditions,
five
day
week;
hours may
be adjusted. Apply Methodist Children’s
Center,
Lake
Bluff,
Tllinois.
;
RELIABLE woman to stay with 2 small
children
while parents
vacation
from
March 27 to April 10. HI 2-7406. ,
WAITRESS
wanted;
hours 7 a.m. to 3
p.m.; no Sunday work. Forest Restaurant,
732
Western,
Telephone
Lake
Forest
1609.
PART
TIME—WORK
AT
HOME
Arranging
appointments
for our representatives from your own phone. $1 per
hour plus bonus.
Mr.
Moore,
Highland
Park 2-8156.

Typing
and shorthand
necessary.
A real opportunity in our expanding organization.
Attractive
rates

opportunity

for

advancement.

2 hours

a day

if you’re

com-

muting and get equal or better pay.

CONDITIONS.

WORKING

PLEASANT

POSITION,

PERMANENT

STREET
DEXTER

5 DAY WEEK.

LIGHTING
1549

West

PRODUCTS,

Park

Ave.

INC.

HI

2-5180

EXPERIENCED
waitress
wanted,
quire
at
Sheridan
Restaurant,
Waukegan
Ave.,
Highwood.

In333

DENTAL
perience

ex-

ASSISTANT
needed;
no
required. Call HI 2-0254.

HELP

WANTED—MALE

WILL
iease
1 bay
“Standard”
Service
Station to responsible party. Lessee to
purchase low inventory only. Telephone
ONtario
2-2370.

GET

INTO RAILROAD
WORK!

6-3400

PERMANENT JOBS
ARE NOW
OPEN
FOR
:

WAITRESS:
good
pay,
good
tips.
If
you
haven’t
transportation
we
will
furnish it from North Shore R.R. station in Lake Bluff. Telephone Steele’s,
Lake Bluff 2484; Waukegan road and
Route
176.
COOK’S helper needed at Highland Park
hospital; hours
10 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.
Full
time
-position.
See
Miss
Beard,
HI 2-8000.
JUNIOR
CLERK
Permanent
position;
advancement
opportunity,
40 hour week,
vacation with
pay,
sick
leave,
retirement
plan.
No
previous
experience
required;
work
involves
reception,
general
posting
and
filing. $175 per month to start. Apply to
Personnel
Officer,
VILLAGE
OF
WINNETKA,
Village
Hall,
or
phone
WI

TRAINMEN
SHOP WORKERS
TICKET AGENTS
CLERKS

ADY
Call

or
HI

&amp;

HOUSES

a couple to share apartment.
2-8393 after 5 p.m.
ROOMS

FOR

RENT

LARGE
front room, twin beds; kitchen
_ privileges. $60 a month. Tel. HI 2-199.
4CUKLY
turnished
large bedroom,
suit-

ey able

for

2;

ample

drawer

and

closet

_ space.
Near
Vine
Ave.
station.
HI
22-0405.
WELL
heated,
large, pleasant
room
wih
private glass door shower sta!];
hot water at all times. 1645 Second St.,
AI
2-0201.
AN, comfortable
room
suitable
for
ae
or two;
hot water at all times.
mtleman
or
couple
preferred.
HI
241449.
427 Funston Ave., Highwood.
E pleasant
room;
twin
beds.
Near
_ transportation. Tel. HI 2-5117.
M for working couple, with kitchen
i
Meaghed F sirbdeti
refrigerator.
Hot
er at
all
times;
can do personal
dry.

GE

HI

With

for

if

Permanent positions with friendly
working
conditions.
Full
time,
5
day week with 15 minute
breaks
morning and afternoon. Paid vaca-

tions and
Blue

and

f Shased.
i

closet

HI

1

desired.

plenty

space.

Hot

2-4009.

N,
comfortable
transportation.
HI

or

of

2;

at

all

close

to

HI

man.

_ Lake

Near

Forest

room

for

rent;

transportation.

1795...

FOR

gentleTelephone

LIGHT

Experience

ELD

GO;
444

ELECTRICAL
WORK

ASSEMBLY

not
Free

Evenings,

1488

4:45

PM.

to

11:15

CHERRY-CHANNER
CORPORATION

Skokie

IRONER needed to do uniforms at Highland Park Hospital Wednesday, Taursday, Friday, Saturday; 7:30 a.m. to 4
p.m.
See
Miss
Beard,
HI
2-8000.

Pensions, insurance and
tion. No
experience
is
while you learn.

free transportanecessary.
Earn

APPLY

NORTH

TO

SHORE LINE

EMPLOYMENT
OFFICE
HIGHWOOD

CLERK-TYPISTS
We
have
immediate
openings
for
experienced typists who are seeking steady
employment
in
this
area.
If you
are
interested
in
good
working
conditions
and

top

wages

please

contact

KLEINSCHMIDT
LABORATORIES

Deerfield and
Deerfield,
Ill.

County

Blvd.

HI

P.M.

us

at

Line Rds.
Deerfield
1000

YOUNG
woman
for
stenography,
typing and general office work: 39 hour,
5 day week. Good salary. HI 2-6510
ext. 26 or eve. HI
2-1128,
WANTED:
full and part time help for
launderette.
Apply
in person, Lloyd’s
Suds
Tub,
1797
St. Johns,
H.P.

ASSISTANT TO
PERSONNEL DIRECTOR
INTERESTING &amp; VARIED
DUTIES. SOME TYPING
PHONE
MR. METZLER
DEXTER 6-5770
FOR
INTERVIEW APPOINTMENT

CHICAGO
HARDWARE
FOUNDRY
2500 COMMONWEALTH

required.

Phone

HI

2-3133.

Inside,

NORTH CHICAGO, ILL.
(BLOCK WEST CNS &amp;M RR Station)

interesting,
round

varied

employment

and _ steady
with

employee

benefits. Good working conditions. Duraclean Co. (center of Deerfield). Contact
Mr. Tennis. Deerfield 444.
HELP WANTED—MALE
SHIPPING
CLERK
to handle packaging printed
*

once.

2-65438

WANTED,
dental assistant for Ravinia
office,
experience
preferred
but
not

GENERAL SHOPWORK
OLDER MEN CONSIDERED
year

employer

necessary but desirable.
Transportation.
Blue
Cross.
Music while you work.
Week Days 8 A.M. to 4:30 P.M.

2-6908.

vd
E,
homey
bedroom;
double
bed,
dresser
and
closet space;
hot
water
* at all times. HI 2-3441.

SHED

and

IMMEDIATE OPENINGS
AVAILABLE
WOMEN

Ladies,

LE
room,
newly
decorated;
laundry privileges, hot water at all times.

to hospital.

Cross

available,

DEERE!

drawer

water

room;
2-2759.

_ all transportation. Reasonable,
_ couple. HI 2-1749.

F

Shield

Blue

pi tetra

Near

WELL furnished sleeping or housekeep_ ing quarters; plenty heat, hot water.
i. Large closets, comfortable beds. Near

Close

holidays.

paying half. Also other benefits.
Located in business section within
block of H.P. bus stop. Apply now.

_ transportation.
HI
2-3527.
large sleeping room, close to transrtation and shopping. HI 2-1229.
E room
for rent,
1%
blocks
from

section;

Experience

Tennis

suitable

privileges

we_ business

or Without

2-4768.

room,

_ kitchen

GENERAL
OFFICE WORK
SOME TYPING REQUIRED

HI

2-2888.

GENERAL
housework,
in. Telephone
Lake

8 in family; stay
Forest
2124,

SECOND
MAID,
white;
one in family.
Permanent
position,
current
wares;
references
required.
Telephone
Mrs.
Donald Ryerson, Lake Forest 970.
WOMAN
for cooking and assisting with
small
children; no heavy
cleaning or
laundry.
Monday
thru
Friday,
8:30
a.m. thru dinner. References required.
HI 2-5816.

matter

MULTILITH , OPERATORS
*

Call

Bill

Northbrook

Rhodes

1200

DELIVERY
driver wanted,
18 or over;
8:30 to 5:30, half day Wednesday off.
Apply
in person,
Evans
Feed
Store,
794
Central
Ave., H.P.
TELEVISION and radio serviceman; experienced
only,
inside
and
out.
Top
wages,
pleasant
working
conditions,
free insurance, 20th Century Television
and Radio, 1858 First St. HI 2-0341.
SALESMAN,
preferably
experienced
in
floor covering,
for
Winnetka
store;
weekly
drawing
account
and _ profit
sharing.
Apply
1891
-Sheridan
Rd.,
Highland
Park; HI 2-3500.
WANTED:
hardware clerk, over 25; experience preferred.
Apply
Ace
Hardware,
1746
Second,
Highland
Park.
+

THE

VILLAGE

OF

WINNETKA

PATROLMEN

BENEFITS—Job security; permanent
sitions; ideal working conditions;

cations

with

pay;

sick

leave;

COOK-GENERAL
HOUSEWORK
for
2
adults;
new
Ranch
home,
east
Wilmette
near
Linden
elevated
station.
No
laundry.
Private room
and bath:
salary
$40-$50
to
pleasant,
capable
woman under 45, but must have good
recent
references.
Wilmette
7178.
HOUSEKEEPING
and
simple
cooking;
permanent position, small family, smal}
home. Current wages for capable, neat,
experienced
person.
Own
room,
bath.
References
required.
Cleaning
help,
Please call HI
2-0674.
SECOND
MAID
White, experienced and must have references;
current
wages,
own
room
and
bath. New ranch home; near transportation. 8 in family;
cook
and
laundress
also employed. Ca!l between 10 a.m. and
6 - p.m
Ae
21718,
MOTHER’s helper, 9 to 5, Monday thru
Friday. Tel. HI 2-24386.
PRIVATE
room, sitting room and bath.
Woman to do cooking and light housework. Man to live in, work elsewhere,
give
day
cleaning
in
exchange
for
room,
board. References
required. HI
2-1450.
GENERAL
housework, cooking, stay on
place; will consider person with husband
employed
elsewhere.
References
required. HI 2-2376.
GENERAL
maid, experienced, white; no
laundry or heavy cleaning. References.
Please
telephone
Mrs.
Barnes,
Lake
Forest
133.

Permanent position in ideal home. Wom-~an must be good cook; husband, houseman
inside
work.
only.
Fully
experienced
and excellent references
necessary. Have other inside help and !aundress;
new
home
entirely
air-conditioned, TV set. Salary, $400. Call collect,
DRexel
38-3836.
GENERAL
housework
for family
of 4;
current
wages.
Tel. HI 2-5351.
WOMAN,
age
50
to
55,
light
housework,
companion;
no
cooking.
Nice
country home; room and board, smal)
salary. Write Box E-5 c/o H.P. News.
GENERAL
houseworker;
friendly | home,
excellent
quarters,
wages,
working
conditions.
2 school
age girls. Want
responsible person with A-1 character
references;
husband
may
stay. Glencoe 2424.
:
MOTHERS
helper,
Wed.
thru
Friday;
stay Wed. &amp; Thurs. nights. No heavy
cleaning.
Woodridge
section.
Phone
collect HI 2-4699,
COUPLE,
white, experienced, references;
to cook and do downstairs. Also some
driving. Start Feb. 2nd. Permanent position available
but will accept
temporary
help.
Phone
Mrs.
Dickinson,
Lake
Forest 1985
(collect)
1-3 p.m.
or 6-9 p.m.
COUPLE or cook and second maid; four
in
family.
Must
like
children;
references required. Current wages. Telephone Lake Forest 1662.
GENERAL
housework,
white;
plain
cooking, no heavy cleaning. Own room
and bath; excellent wages. Telephone
Lake Forest 2769.
WOMAN,
experienced
general
housework; new home, all modern conveniences.
3
in
family.
Own
upstairs
room; 5 day week, best salary. Transportation
close. Must
have best references.
HI 2-1173.
RESPONSIBLE
woman;
general
hougework,
cooking. 3 adults.
Own
room,
current wages. Tel. HI 2-2263.
CLEANING, 1 day a week, $10; capable.
Tel.
HI
2-5819.

SITUATIONS

needs

POLICE

1 hour | plas’ fare. Ht Weert.

COUPLE

6-2500.

RTMENTS

truck.

CLEANING
woman,
general housework;
no laundry. Mondv or Friday. $1 per

DEEPFREEZE APPLIANCE
DIVISION
2301 DAVIS
CHICAGO

refuse

HELP WANTED—DOMESTIC

YOUNG
lady
for catalog
order
sales;
pleasant working conditions, good pay
and
good
employee
benefits.
Sears
Roebuck
&amp;
Co.,
601
Central
Ave.,
Highland Park.

SECRETARY
AND
STENOGRAPHER

for

6-2160.

salary.

Hospital,

self

THE
Winnetka
Park
District
has permanent position open for a park workman; good starting pay, pension plan,
sick
leave
and
vacation
privileges.
Apply
George
B.
Caskey,
Supt. Village
Hall,
Winnetka,
Ill.
WInnetka

OR
SECOND eook and 1 kitchen maid. Apply
to Highwood
Hospital, Highwood,
Ill.
Apply
wood,

for combination

If you are a plumbing, heating, building
materials salesman we have an excellent
job for you. Come in and talk it over.
SEARS
ROEBUCK
&amp; CO.
601 Central Ave.
Highland Park

TYPIST:

—

wanted

storing aluminum storm windows; low
price bracket,
proven
public
acceptance.
Exceptional
opportunity,
high
commissions.
107- Mariposa,
Waukevan. Ph. ONtario 2-1953.

EXPERIENCED

phone

FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF LAKE FOREST

5
NORTH

CO.

and

tion.

and

ILLINOIS BELL

Officer

‘lent opportunity for woman
22 to 40 to work close to home

LOOKING
FOR A JOB
WHERE
THE
PAY IS GOOD
...
EVEN THOUGH
YOU DON’T HAVE EXPERIENCE?

good

mces. Call EDgewater 4-1908.
IFESSIONAL
man and family: desire
‘to rent home on North Shore; long or
rt
term.
Prefer _ furnished.
Tel.
Ichigan 2-2382.
NG couple and infant urgently need
bedroom
house or apartment, up
$100,
utilities excluded.
Call
col-

fpr:

senior

OPERATING

apartment.

transportation;

To

SALESMEN

EXCEPTIONAL
OPPORTUNITY
IN HIGHLAND PARK

| Business experience and a high de-

save

BOARD

HELP
WANTED—FEMALE
ers
tEGISTHERED
nurses
needed
at
H.P
hospital.
Starting
salary,
$255,
with
afternoon bonus, $30, and night bonus,

avy couple and baby
from
Boston;
aoe furnish best references. Telephone
ke Forest 2769.
PLE desire 4 or 5 unfurnished apt.

or

AND

PRIVATE
room and meals in exchange
for sitting and light duties; employed
person preferred. Near town and stations.
HI
2-7406.
YOUNG
woman
wants
room and
board
in
nice
private
adult
home
near
Highland
Park
business
district
in
exchange
for
household
duties
evenings
and
Saturday.
Call after 5:30,
HI 2-6032,

family

-_

RNISHED

.

2-6682.

for

moving
to Chicago require 3 bedroom
: furnished home from March 1 to June
1
or unfurnished on longer lease. Up
» to $150 a month. T. K. McNair, Wood,
Gundy
&amp; Co., 105 W. Adams Telephone
- RAndolph 6-1418.
;

HI

CHECK GIRL wanted, experienced. Apply
Murrie Cleaners, 109 Scranton, Lake

SES &amp; APARTMENTS
WANTED
(Furnished or Unfurnished)

ANTED:
3
couple
with

SECRETARY

hot water at all times.

conditions.

ROOM
for
rent,
near
shopping
and
trains;
hot
water
at all
times.
HI
2-4585.
ROOM,
suitable for couple, with kitchen
privileges;
near
Ravinia
station,
Call after 6 p.m., HI 2-1469.

:

APARTMENTS TO RENT

room;

living

pova-

pension

plan; uniform allowance; accident insurance;
in-service training.
SALARY—$300
(starting)
$355
to
month.
REQUIREMENTS—High
school
education
or
equivalent;
21-30
years
of
age; minimum height, 5 ft. 9 in. with
proportionate
weight;
good
physical
condition.
APPLY—In
person to Personnel Officer,
Village
Hall,
Winnetka,
before
February
7, 19538.

WANTED—FEMALE

PARENTS!
Do
you
want
a competent
mother for your children while you are
away? Capable driver; excellent North
Shore
references.
Phone
HI
2-2024
after 6 p.m.
HOMEMAKER
for
a_
discriminating,
motherless family needing a thoughtful educated person genuinely fond of
children. Phone HIghland Park 2-2937,

SITUATIONS

WANTED—MALE

MAN
desires
doing
outside
or
inside
work year round, $1.50 per hour. Call
NOrman
7-2710, ask for Allan Oneal.

Thursday, January 29,1953
Patan

s

ROG

relat Sateen.

�Boe

v

HOUSEHOLD GOODS FOR SALE

Box Number Ads

G.E. WASHER,
HI 2-5538.

Reply by phone as well as by lette:
may be made to any Want Ad with
a box number as an address. Cal!
AI 2-4500 or Lake Forest 2300
Your name,
address
and
phone
number will be placed at onre in
the box of the advertiser.
——————

SITUATIONS WANTED—MAIE

work
9 to
MA-

full time work until end of
WANTED:
M.S.
have B.S, and
25.
I am
June.
to enter seminary
plan
and
degrees,
Willing to do anything,
this summer.
teacher,
as_
experienced
am
however
Can
tutor, counsellor, and companion.
you
help
me?
Write
Box
E-25
c/o
U.P
News.

SITITATIONS WANTED—DOMESTIC
Wiln
my

ing

ironing in
and/or
washing
home; experienced, specializ-

do
own

shirts.

in men’s

2-8489.

HI

child
woman,
white
EXPERIENCED
or
ni.hts
days,
sit
baby
or
nurse
y.
temporar
or
t
permanen
weekends;
Excellent references. Write Box G-20
Forester.
c/o Lake
work

or _ waitress
CHAMBERMAID
white,
competent,
references.
Box G-25 c/o Lake Forester.
BABY

Write

;

washer,

Chicago.

lamb
jack-

SPRING coats: lady’s size 12 gold wool,
3/4
size 14 forest green wool,
$15;
length, $10; red wool ski jacket, size
jackski
gabardine
wool
navy
$5;
12,
et, size 14, $10: grey wool suit dress,
Forest
Lake
Telephone
14, $5.
size
2690.
BEAUTIFUL
USED
CLOTHING
fur
gowns,
evening
dresses,
Ladies’
jackets, coats, etc. Apparel for men and
children.
:
;
Your
patronage
confidential.
"
SHOPPE
GIF
&amp;
BEAUTY
DIANA’'S
Highwood
Ave.
Waukegan
524
beautifully
coat,
woolen
red
LADY’S
lined;
brand
new,
size
16-18]
Telephone Lake Forest 3122.
BOY’S size 10: blue tweed top coat, $10;
$10;
jacket,
leather
fringed
brown
hiking boots, size 6C, $4; 3 plaid uinxSunday
and
Saturday
$3.
shirts,
ham
afternoons only. Telephone Lake Forest 2690.

Visil

LUUK

Trading
a-brac
Tel.
HI

UwWwN

FOR

SALE

HIGHLAND

PARK

We
sell furniture,
Post.
1813
St.
&amp;
clothing.
2-2744.

PHILCO
refrigerator, like
condition, 7 cu. ft. Only
Best o fer. HI 2-5905.

BLU.

HI

bric-

new;
perfect
5 years old.

2-4715.

THE
following
articles
are of highest
quality, from a retired couple’s home
(3
yrs.
old):
Poker
table,
seats
8,
folds in half, green felt, like new, $40;
2 tall modern end lamps, $100; 2 modern
wood
chairs,
$40;
2
pr.
(gold
with metallic thread) twin bedspreads,
2 pr. drapes with cornices, cost $300,
sell
$100;
2 mag.
end tables
(distressed),
$150;
long
modern
sofa,
$400; pine breakfront, 50 in. x 80 in.,

$700,

sell

$350;

MANY

6

pe.

modern

age
bedroom
set, ‘$700;
2 pr. lined
chartreuse drapes, $40; green, leather
topped pine cocktail table, $125; fireplace ‘“‘Flexscreen,” 28 in. high by 36
in. wide, $20; modern brass andirons,
$20,
never
used;
pink
iron table,
4
chairs
w/seat pads,
$150;
°52
alum.
lawn furniture, $200; blonde RCA
16
in. TV, cost $400, 1 yr. old, sell $225;
5 ft. blonde w/brass
legs, Magnavox
radio, AM-FM player, $350; Servel gas
refrig.,
$175;
2 porch,
green
grass
rugs, 12x15, $15 ea.; workbench, $30;
28 in. power mower, with built-in lawn
roller &amp; sulky, cost $545, sell $275;
lawn
sweeper,
$15;
Koroseal
hose,
etc. 4000 GPM suction, ejection pump,
$110;
4
U.S.
Royal,
black
670-15
tires, $28. West on Old Mill Rd., 9/10
mile
west
of
Waukegan
Rd.,
north
on Estate Lane, 1000 ft. G. C. Minter.
Saturday only.

_ Thursday, January 29, 1953

VALUES

Central

Ave.

HI

2-4600

HOTPOINT
electric
range,
$40;
G.E.
refrigerator, $25; Bendix washer, $20;
__draperies, $5 a pair. Phone Hi 2-2068.
COUCH,
down cushion; permanent
slipcover made by Marshall Field. Reason- avie. ‘Lei. HI 2-8774.
GAS SLtOVE, apartment size, good condition;

miscellaneous

fur-

Your
opportunity
for
these
new
Pilances
at
less
than
wholesale
we
must
make
room.
Youngstown e.ec. dishwasher
Youngstown 48 in. sink
Youngs.own 42 in. sink
Norge water
cooler
G.K, 11 cu. ft. treezer

apcost.

niture.

Norge

davenpurt

and

Phone

HI

automatic

2-5956.

Green

washer

Bay

Rd.

ALMOST
new GE stove, automatic oven
timer and dee» well, $100. Telephone
Lake Forest 3224.
LIKE new Crosley Shelvador refrigerator
and
Frigidaire
electric.
stove,
very
reasonable.
Telephone
Lake
Forest

MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE
CASHMERE SWEATER SALE
IMPORTED.
HANDCRAFTED,
FULL
FASHIONED
SWEATERS
S.S. PULLOVER
NOW
$13.95
L.S. CARDIGANS
NOW
$16.95
ALSO
MANY
FANCY
SWEATERS

Highwood,

III.

2-1455

PAIR of Hollywood box springs and mattresses with legs; pair of light wood
chests.
All
in
good
condition,
HI
2-0547,

LOVELY
compact
mahogany __ chest,
opens
out
into
a
portable’
kitchen
w/refrigerator, bread board, silverware
drawer, two open
shelves for glasses
or
dishes
and
electric
outlets
for
cooking.
Periect
for recreation
room,
small apartment or office. After 6:00
call HI 2-4862.
SINGER,
console
cabinet,
sewing
machine,
like
new
condition;
Kenmore
de luxe washer, insulated tub and timer, $60; Kenmore flat top mangle, $10;
antique
walnut
rose
carved _ rocker,
$40; beautiful antique rosewood
marble top sideboard,
$125. Phone
Mrs.
H. Peet, Deerfield 222.

ROOM

set, $66; small tambour

desk,
$40;
G.E.
monitor top
refrigerator, $35. HI 2-4875.
19 INCH
Trav-Ler
mahogany
TV
set,
console model; perfect condition. Best
offer. HI 2-1081.
SIX
YEAR
crib and chest, odd
chest;
bicycle
side
wheels
for beginner;
2
kitchen
chairs; boys’
jackets,
spring
coat, snow pants, 3 to 5; miscellaneous. HI 2-56387.

TWO

living

room

chairs,

couch,

twin

beds with mattresses; dresser, lamps,
tier table. HI 2-2047.
RADIO-PHONO
comb.,
Zenith,
$25;
mah. dropleaf tables, $8; mah. cocktail table, glass
top, $10; oval mah.
din.
table,
1 leaf, pad,
$40;
Smyth
mah.
credenza,
$60;
Simmons
sofa
bed, $10; dinette table, 4 chs., $20;
jug lamp, $4; girl’s dressing table, glass
top, mirror, bench and pr. lamps, $20;
curio
cabinet,
mirror
back,
glass
shelves, $20; 9 by 12 blue and pink

rug,

pad,

$80;

18

by

14

rose

cotton

shag rug, pad, $380; mah. dresser with
mirror, glass top, $20. HI 2-3125.
,

GASOLINE
or electric
small
size
log
saw;
inexpensive
drill press;
8 inch
or larger table top saw. HI 2-3441 af__ter 5 p.m.
WANTED
to buy, large dog
house
in
good condition, suitable for collie. Call
HI 2-7036.
Telephone
PIANO
in
good _ condition:
Lake Forest 2691.
MAPLE
kneehole
desk;
condition
not
__important.
Call
Deerfield
1158.
WANTED—work
bench; also grey car_ pet, at least 8x9. HI
2-0584.
PING-PONG
table, Mixmaster,
boy’s ice
skates, size 1 or 1%.
Call Deerfield
230.

LOST:

AND

German

FOUND

shepherd,

black

and

tan,

cS pe:

TREMENDOUS _

CLEARANCE
of

hy

CLEAN, LATE MODEL.

USED CARS | ag

52 DODGE hardtop
auto. trans., low
51

LOST

4

uSED. Adrosicnices

4

HENRY

J;

conv.;
miles

heater,

R &amp; H,
Ve

overdrive

51 PLYMOUTH

conv.; R&amp;H,

49

cpe.;

De

Soto

clb.

R &amp;

—

W.W. —

H,

auto,
‘ is

47 CHRYSLER 4-dr.; R &amp; H, fl. dr.

BUY WITH CONFIDENCE
FROM A NEW CAR DEALER
MESIROW MOTORS

WINTER

CLEARANCE
GUARANTEED USED CARS
TO

Open

SELL

Weekdays
Sat. 9-6

9-9

MOTORS
INC.

a

|

GUARANTEED OK

McCALLUM

HALE MOTOR

logs

A NEW
Craftsman
_ power. HI 2-3345
PHOTOGRAPHER’S'7
set,

complete

motor,
after 7
home

equipment;

__tion. $5. Telephone
CRIB and chifforobe,
ing; A-1 condition,
2-7292.

%
horsep.m.
developing
good

“MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS FOR SALE
25

OR
30 new Spinets
from
which
to
choose
right
here
in
Evanston,
Occasionally
one
easy-to-look-at
and
easy-to-listen-to
is
overlooked
until
I make it doubly easy-to-pay-for, Better investigate! For appointment
day
or eve.
phone
Evanston,
UN
4-1561
or GR 5-6020, R. J. Cook.

MUSICAL

INSTRUMENTS

WANTED

USED
Spinet
piano
in good
condition.
Deerfield
1124.
WANTED:
clarinet,
also
piano—small
upright
or spinet; good condition, private party. HI 2-7153.

WANTED

TO

We need
discount

room
or a

BUY

WANTED
Furniture,
antiques,
glassware,
china,
bric-a-brac,
silver,
cutglass
glass
and
copperware,
guns,
fishing outfits, toys,
books, garden
tools, washing
machines,
sewing machines, golf sets, used doors,
storm
windows,
plumbing,
radiators,
sinks, bathtubs.
WE
BUY,
SELL
AND
TRADE
STOCKADE
TRADING
POST
Milwaukee Ave.
Wheeling, Ill.
Wheeling 247

and offer these
long trade.

BUY

cars

at

a

INC.
First

1732

St.
Phone

HI

WINTERS

Highland
2-4800

Park

SPECIALS

1948
1948

Dodge;
fluid dr., heater, radio,
Chevrolet
station
wagon;
radio,
heater.
Studebaker Champion sedan.
Chrysler
Windsor
sedan,

1947

to

1952
1948

PACKARDS

1952,

all

SHOWN
OPEN

models,

UNDER

MONDAYS

AND

Lincoln

Ave.

equipped.

COVER

TILL 9 P.M.
PACKARD NORTH

5662

fully

CAR CONFIDENCB
CAR DEALER

DeSoto
Firedome
8; auto.
trans.,
power steering, rad., ht. $800 Dise.
Chevr. sedan, lighi blue ........ $1795
DeSoto, beautiful green sedan;
Pad.,: ht.; auto. STanBe Qc sacs $1995
1951 Plymouth’
Belvidere,
yellow
and
“blab
ia
sieA eae
1795
1951 Plymouth sedan, light gray ..$1475
1951 Chevrolet club epe.. -.............23 $1475
1950 Plymouth sedan, light green ..$1295
1949 DeSoto Carry-All
.................... $1296
1949 DeSoto club coupe, maroon ....$1295
1949 Red Plymouth conv. .............. $1275
1948 Chrysler Windsor conv.
$1195
1948 Mercury
conv.
...............$795
1948 Stude. tudor champ. ...
.-$895
1947 Chrysler
Todor:
iiccih.3:
$895
1947 Buick
Super
sedan
...
$850
1946 Four Door DeSoto .................... $695
This is the finest selection of good used
cars we have ever offered for sale. Come
in now and take your pick. No reasonable offer refused.

SHORE

—

1952
1951

—

. P. MOTOR SALES
DE SOTO-PLYMOUTH

THURSDAYS

Winnetka

WITH
NEW
FROM A NEW

1952

KLEEBURG BUICK

condi-

Lake Forest 1736.
maple and matchonly $39. Call HI

CHEVROLET
INC.
191 E. DEERPATH
LAKE FOREST 3200

SALES

WE HAVE FOUR
BRAND NEW
1952 BUICK SUPERS

for sale at tremendous

savings. Phone WInnetka 6-4319 after
7 p.m. please.
EGGS,
farm
fresh,
large
and
extra
large,
55c
per
doz.
Walter
Jahnke
at
Tower
Cottage
on
Bradley
road.
_ Telephone Libertyville
2-2398.
THOR
semi-automatic
washer,
hose attachment;
some
venetian
blinds.
HI
2-5269.
TIRES, 20 per cent off—3
new 6:70-15
Goodyear super cushion
four ply &amp; 3
new
Goodyear
heavy
duty’
deluxe
tubes. Call eves., Deerfield
795J1.
HOLLYWOOD
bed with headboard, $25;
form:ca
for
kitchen
sink,
$50.
HI
__2-5123.

DINING

BUY!)

trans.
}
2 collars. Reward. Call HI 2-7287.
.
4-dr.; R &amp; H, fl. dr.
BROWN
leather
wallet Jan.
26, High- 48 CHRYSLER
land Park; contaiied keys, checks and
48 CHEV. Aero; R &amp; H
ee
__eash.
Reward.
Call
Deerfield
1291.
MINNA HART
48 PLYMOUTH 2-dr.; R &amp; H
580 LINCOLN
AVE,
LOST:
Tuesday,
January
6, gold
link
48 BUICK conv.; R &amp; H, Dyna.
WINNETKA
6-878
bracelet,
2 inches
wide.
$50
reward.
__Telephone Lake Forest 43.
48 DE SOTO conv.; R &amp; H, fl. dr
Single.
strand
pearls,
Monday,
47 BUICK conv.; R&amp;H, W.W. tires
LEAVING for overseas—mahogany desk- LOST:
January
26;
valued
as
keepsake.
Redresser and matching mirror; armless
47 PLYMOUTH
4-dr.;
H,
W.W.
ward. Telephone Lake Forest
501.
green leather chair with blonde legs;
tires
car-jack;
mouton
frr
coat,
size 20;|LOST
in Lake Bluff or Lake Forest; 1
man’s
suit,
size
86;
miscellaneous.
red
snow
boot
with
zipper
closing,
2229
N.
St.
Johns,
H.P.
(upstairs,
size 7. Telephone Deerfield 818R col46 FORD; full price $350
ed
rear).
lect.
48 Merc. motor, clean
POTTERY,
glassware,
linens,
pictures,| LOST—Did
your dog take my new ga- 37 FORD;
mise.
White
Elephant,
private
sale.
losh?
Missing
from _ front
porch,
25e
to
$5.
Friday
afternoon
only.
Lakewood
and
Sheridan
Roads,
H.P.
West on Old Mill Rd., 9/10 mile west
HI
2-6688.
of
Waukegan
Rd..
north
on Estate
Lane 1,000 ft. G. C. Minter.
USED AUTOMOBILES
STRONG
sturdy Thayer high chair, very
good condition,
$8; maple
6 yr. crib
INC.
and
Kant-wet
mattress,
very
good
Chrysler-Plymouth Agency
tn
condition,
$25; child’s
matching
maple
chifforobe,
$24;
Westinghouse
1740
First
HI
2-2500
—
roaster ard stand equipped with elecHighland Park
tric
automatic
control
clock,
broiler
grid,
$48,
ideal
for
apartment.
HI
MANY
MAKES
AND
MODELS
2-5352.
TO CHOOSE
FROM
BRAND
new
exterior
door;
can’t
use.
Real bargain
for whoever
needs
size
2 ft. 10 in. x 7 ft. at $20. Below cost.
HI 2-6473.
FORD
1951 Country
Squire station wagon less than:15,000 miles, like new,
THREE gas space heaters, $3 each; one
completely
equipped,
original
owner. —
oil
circulating
space
heater,
$15;
1778 First St.
Highland Park, Ill.
Glencoe 1367.
:
Sh aie
Electromode
220
volt electric
fur-ed
Phone HI 2-1854
air
heater
with
fan,
$20;
11x12%
FORD
Station
wagon,
1947,
privately —
royal
blue
wilton
rug,
$25;
11xl1%
owned. Radio and heater. Can be seen
all wool beige and blue reversible rug, CADILLAC
1951
4-door
sedan;
dark
at
Wetzel
and
Turner
used
car lot
$25;
Voss
electric washing
machine,
green, low mileage. Excellent condition.
in Waukegan.
Telephone
Ontario 2
$15; Heath-Mor electric sweeper, needs
Tel. owner, HI 2-2462.
0350.
d
some repair, $10. HI 2-0951.
SIX
burner,
2
oven,
table
top stove;
HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR JUNK
good
condition,
$20.
Youths
maple
CARS AND TRUCKS, RUNNING OR
desk, drawer, space, $12.50. HI 2-3305.
NOT, REGARDLESS OF CONDITION.
2 PR. skis with
metal edges,
6-6 and
J. G. R. AUTO WRECKERS, INC,
6-9. Telephone
Lake
Forest
351.
HI 2-2017
LIBERTYVILLE 2-4377
1/5 H.P. DELCO horizontal shaft motor.
$5; % H.P. vertical shaft motor, $5; ladder-back maple lounge chair with seat
WE PAY TOP PRICES
and
back
cushions,
$25;
Venetian
’b1 Chevrolet
4-dr
Deluxe
sedan;
FOR YOUR OLD CAR
CIGRT:\: luzisessehcucestecsesnasspeeulssnenaaeeaae
895 blinds: three 74 in. x 54 in., $10; one
106 in. x 54 in., $5. Blue mirror, ocREGARDLESS OF AGE
°88 Buick Special 2-dr.; good trans:
DOstAtION: | icccncsssordecetieeae
es eee ae
1385
tagonal shape, 28 inches across, $15,
NO
MONEY
DOWN
Telephone Lake Forest 2690.
’51 Studebaker
Commander
........... 1275
ON ALL PRE-WAR CARS
49 Chevrolet Deluxe
4-dr.; sharp
FINE kit. base cabinet, 4 drawrs., 2 dr.
PLENTY OF LATE MODELS
cupboard
below,
$50,
$20
now.
Pair
sturdy
maple bed frames. Convertible
TO CHOOSE FROM
tube bunks,
$15.
4 oriental
rugs,
4
by 6, 8 by 9, $7. Antique cherry spool
bed
frame,
49 in. width, $20.
Man’s
13TH
AND
SHERIDAN
bike, $2.50. Fine lge. dresser, mirror,
NORTH
CHICAGO
$10. Oak
Windsor
chair,
$20,
Porch
DEXTER
6-2353
rug, $1. Lge.
din. rm.
table. Miscel.
Call
HI
2-0679
after
5:30
P.M.
or
BUYING
A USED CAR?
before 9 A.M.
FIREPLACE

SOMENZ!I AND &lt;SONS
FURNITURE
334

UNIVERSAL
wringer
type
washer, excelient condition. Telephone Lake Forest 3136.

To

USED CAR
SPECIALS

LEFT

SEARS ROEBUCK &amp; CO.
601

__ 2616 after 5 p.m.

Thor wringer
Lake
Forest

PRICED

- FRIDAY

STILL

DAVENPORT, blue frieze;
type
washer.
Telephone

WANTED

RAVINIA

SALE

OUTSTANDING

HI

SIX
cu.
ft. Westinghouse
refrigerator,
excellent
running
condition
and
appearance,
$60. HI
2-3089.
MUST
SACRIFICE
IMMEDIATELY
Beautiful mahogany
bed, dresser, chest,
spring
and
mattress,
mirrored
vanity;
lamps;
skates,
mirrored
cocktail
table;
miscellaneous.
HI
2-6991.

cost

Tel.

SATURDAY

Johns

BROWN
leather top mahogany drum table, 32 in. wide, 28 in. high; excellent
condition.
$45. HI
2-5159.
MAHOGANY
twin bed, spring and mattress;
Coleman
cabinet
type
heater,
55,000

$20.
:

THURSDAY

we

GOODS

old,

LAST 3 DAYS

SALE

buy on new Persian
WONDERFUL
coat, size 14-16; Persian fitted
et with
muff.
Call HI
2-8227.

HOUSFHOLD

years

200 CARLOAD

BEAUTIFUL genuine mink coats (slightDept.) 3250,
Rental
in our
ly used
$350, $450. Miller’s, 166 N. Michigan

Ave.,

7

2-3086.

in Woodlives
who
sitter
WANTED:
needed
Park
Area of Highland
ridge
for evenings and occasional] afternoons.
2-6582.
HI
FOR

Call

FOUR burner table top gas rage, white,
$20; kitchen sink with metal cabinet,
' $80 for both; oil garage heater, $10;
antique flat top desk, $10. Call Deerfield 254.
MATCHING
walnut
chest,
dresser
ard
mirror;
gray
fanback
chair,
round
ee. a
mirror, double bed maple
edstead,
man’s
green
loun
hair.
HI 2-8213.
Prone
DOUBLE
Hollywood
bed
for sale, bar_gain.
Folding chairs. HI 2-1170.
BEDROOM
set; double bed, box spring
and mattress, 2 night stands, chests,
dressing table with large mirror, Provincial skirt, spread, valances, 2 covered
chairs, 2 lamps and shades, all
matching material; 2 silver lamps and
shades, Reasonable. HI 2-4777.
HI

CLOTHING

$50.

MODERN
green
“Converta-sofa,”
86
inches long, $400 new, 18 months old,
converts to large double bed or twin
beds;
perfect
condition.
$150.
Call
Deerfield 946J.
PAIR fireside chairs upholstered in cranberry
red
textured
material,
down
cushions. HI 2-16538.
GAS
STOVE,
6 burner Universal, table
top,
good
condition,
$40;
vacuum
cleaner, tank type Hoover, almost new,
__ $20. HI_2-2791.
BEAUTIFUL
new,
hand
braided
wool
oval rug, from N. H. Many colors, 10x
12. $375 or best of"er over a minimum.
REpublic
7-8841
before 2 p.m.
MAGNAVOX
combination
radio,
16. in.
V,
phonograph;
modern,
lictht
mamares
$300.
Telephone
Lake
Bluff

USED

SITTING

old,

2-8023.

to spare. Will do genevenings
rep»xir
work,
screens,
painting,
Telephone
Lake
Forest 3309.

HAVE
eral
ete.

years

UNIVERSAL
gas
stove,
4
burner;
2
utility drawers and oven, good condition.
$45.
HI
2-8124;
50
Michigan
Ave., Highwood.
MAROON
Wilton American Oriental rug,
9x12,
good
condition,
reasonable.
HI

_

MAN
will
do
house
and
yard
Wednesdays, 8 to 4: Thursdays,
5. Experien¢ed,
permanent.
Call
jestic 38-3485.

2%

i

1914

First

St.

HI

2-0580

6-3070

MONTH
NASH,
1946 Ambassador, 4
door,
low
mileage,
fully equipped,
2 new
tires.
Good buy. Telephone Lake Forest 1525
between 5:30 and 7 p.m.
CADILLAC
49
convertible,.
by
owner;
A-1 shape, new top, radio, heater, hydramatic drive. HI 2-3770.
CADILLAC
Coupe
de Ville
1951,
fully
equip. w.w. premium tires, 2-tone grey.
Phone
STate
2-8200,
Original owner.
local 593.
CADILLAC
late 49, model
62, 5 pass.
coupe, with 20,000 miles, dark green,
$500 worth of
Vogue
white
walls,
chauffeur driven on
North
Shore
up
till Jan.
now
in Coral
Gables,
Florida. May be bought here and picked
up there. Full record
since purchase
from Cad. Motor Serv. $2,330. (We’re
driving
our
new
one
back
to Fla.)
Lake Forest 1890.
CADILLAC
47
Fleetwood,
black,
white
walls, Hydramatic,
radio, heater, etc.
Low
mileage, $995. Can finance, will
trade,
by
owner,’ Cunningham,
1732
First St., Highland Park 2-4800.
CHEVROLET
convertible, late 1951 model, canary
color;
Powerglide;
excellent condition, only 8,500 miles. Origjnal owner. Call HI 2-1543.

END

CLEARANCE

BARGAINS GALORE! ©
MUST BESOLD
~
STUDE.
4 dr.; A.T. Cream
Puff
MERC., 4 dr.; A.T., Priced to sell
*«
MERC. cl. cpe.; O.D.A., Real Jewel
CHEV.
4 dr.; Del. Few miles
OLDS. “88” 4 dr.; A.T. Nice
CHRYS. 4 dr.; Like new
MERC.
Sta. Wagon; -Bargain
;
OLDS. “98” 4 dr.; A.T. Very clean
DODGHS, 4: ORs ihaieciicee $595
TORD:
4)? 482525
ee $595
CHRYS.
4 dr.

|. 52
49
49
49
47
47:
47
47

SOME

PRE-WAR

CARS

HIGHLAND PARK
LINCOLN-MERCURY, INC. 886

Waukegan

Ave.
HI
2-6300

Highwood,

Ill. |

LINCOLN
1952
Cosmopolitan
hard top,
Hydramatic, heater,
and.
radio,
low
mileage, private owner; original cost,
se aee, sacrifice for $8,250. Deerfield
1593

Page
nie

37_

¥.

�AUTOMOFILES

1948, 4
dition,

dr.

1

car,

i

ex-

tl]

GM: » twen, ons act Wille walls.
__$900. Call after 4 p.m. HI_ 2-2569.

WANTED—OLD
-

USED

AUTO
Bina...
Save

BOYS’

yu

LOANS
the

car

bank

way

and

money.

HAVE

Hayrides
HI

appointment

1—Old established
tavern in Highwood.
Owner
must
sell.
2—Lonyz
established
restaurant.
Good
bargain.

REAL ESTATE

2-0093

Res.

HI

ce

DAY
Mon.

EXPERT

SAM

WOO

NIGHT
9 p.m.

LAUNDRY
day

(ecm:

INTERIOR DECORATING _
“CONVENIENT

Installations

HOME

SERVICE”

PAINTING
- FURNITURE
AND
CARPETING
- CLEANING
REPAIRING
- REWEAVING
MOTH
PROOFING

HI

VIOLA

2-8853

HEAP

HI

2-6668

STEPHENS
Having
recently
returned
from
Military Duty, I am again making the finest
in Ladies Custom-Made Apparel. For appointment call Irvin G. Stephens, at Dfd.
689.

WE

SELL

INCOME

609

GLASS

FAINT SPOT

Laurel

PAINTING

Ave.

WANTED:
Call
HI

BROS.

DECORATING
SERVICE
Highland Park for 12 yrs.
HI 2-3053

DOLL

&amp; SLIP

clothes.

FOR
sale—English
Pointer pups,
AKC
registered;
beautiful
markings.
‘ielephone
Barrington
187-M-2,
eves. and
Sundays.
RARE opportunity! Join the few instead
of the many. Choice Brussels Griffon
Puppies;
finest
of
small
housedogs,
sired
by
International
Champion.
HI
2-7114.

FIVE
month old registered female Labrador. Call
MUndelein
6-7362.
8 wks.
SHORT
haired pointers,
males,
_ old,$5 a piece. HI 2-4666.
ENGLISH
pointer
pups,
A.K.C.
registered, beautiful markings;
best huntstock.

MONOGRAMMING
MONOGRAMMING

and

Page

38

shower

‘

curtains—boucle
HI

parring.on

za7;

very

reasonably;

be seen at Shelternook Kennels,
field, lll.; phone Deerfield 32.
PLANTS

ber

Loy

Forest
@

and

Anierican

plants

Glieile,

Lake

IUNING

tuning
of

Reliable

peuple.

Circle,

Deer-

BULBS

VIOLETS.

PiANU

PIANO

&amp;

can

Wash

reconditioning.
of

you

a

3877,

Mem.

Piano

Tech.

Lyon
Lake

your

Koof

roof?

Cal)

Treatins

Headquarters”
for
its
proper
treat.
ment
and
care.
Free
inspection
and
consultation.

2-0668

SEWING
Expert

MACHINE
Necchi
repair
Work

Arends

662 Central Ave.
TREE

SERVICE

Domestic
on
ANY

MAKE

Guaralteed

Sewing

encouraged

him

to form

Machine

1815

new
organization, which
he
head.
life-long resident of Highland
Mr.

Johnston,

his

wife

Linden
and

avenue,

Mrs.

Green

Members
to

and

road,
of

with

chairmen,

include

pagni

of

Highwood

Victor

Hanson

Mrs.

John

The

Hess

council

Mrs.

Allen

of
of

Karl

I. Wolff,

Mrs.

co-

Nello

Cam-

avenue,

Mrs.

Deerfield

and

Highland

Park.

voted

to

consider

petitions from
Lake
Forest
and
Northbrook
Girl
Scout troops
to

new

Co
H) 2-5200

SURGERY

DONALD
G.
WORRALL,
ARBORIST
Expert t
k
shrub and evergreen
Saas Tree
ce removal, power saw work
Low cost, efficient service, Call Wheel/ing 237.

HI

2-1603

North

Shore

Don’t

miss

Co.

107 Mariposa
Waukegan, III.
ONtario 2-1953

The Want-Ad section is filled with
interesting facts and golden opporit!

Drive Carefully — The Life You Save
May Be Your Own!
OFFICIAL
PUBLICATION
Statement of Resources and Liabilities of
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF HIGHLAND
PARK
located at Hizhland Park, State of Illinois, at the close of business on the 31st
day of December, 1952, as shown by the annual report made by the said corporation
as a trust company, to the Auditor of Public Accounts of the State of Illinois,
pursuant to law.

RESOURCES

council.

Mrs. Erastus Phelps of Prospect
avenue presented three American
flags to the council on behalf of
the DAR.
Mesdames
Fred
Mudge,
John
Jacobsen,
C. V. Stewart,
Robert
Sullivan, Maurice
Allsbrew
and
Russell Whitney gave a report on
the regional Girl Scout conference
held recently in Indianapolis, Ind.,
to conclude the afternoon’s
business.
ORDINANCE
AMENDING
AN _ ORDINANCE
CREATING
A_ TRAFFIC
COMMISSION
AND _ ESTAB!ISHING
TRAFFIC
REGULATIONS
FOR
THE
CITY
OF
HIGHLAND
PARK,
LAKE
COUNTY, ILLINOIS, PASSED MARCH
10, 1941.
BE
IT
ORDAINED
BY
THE
CITY
COUNCIL
OF
THE
CITY
OF
HIGHLAND
PARK,
LAKE
COUNTY,
ILLINOIS:
Section 1, That Schedule I of an Ordinance
entitled,
“AN
ORDINANCE
CREATING
A
TRAFFIC
COMMISSION
AND
ESTABLISHING
TRAFFIC
REGULATIONS
FOR
THE
CITY OF HIGHLAND
PARK,
LAKE.
COUNTY,
ILLINOIS,”
passed March
10, 1941, be and
the same is hereby amended
by adding
to said Schedule I the following:
On
the south
side of Deerfield
Road
from
Green
Bay
Road
to McGovern
Street.
Section 2. This Ordinance shall be in
full force and effect from and after its
passage, approval,
recordation and publication, as required
by law.
A. GORDON HUMPHREY,
Mayor
ATTEST:
Edw.
P. Ohlwein, Acting City Clerk
Filed:
January
12,
1958
Passed:'' January
26,
19538
Approved:
January
27, 1953

$ 3,343,597.02

1. Cash and due from banks
2. Outside checks and other cash items
3. U.S. Government obligations, direct and/or fully guaranteed
4. Other bonds, stocks and securities
5. Loans and discounts
6. Overdrafts
7. Banking house $59,500.00.
Furniture and fixtures $1.00
il. Other
resources
Grand

join the group, according to Miss
Deane White, executive director of
the

Ave.

of

office.

the nominating com-

Mrs.

St. Johns

Easy To Operate
Raise for Summer — Lower for Winter
Saves Up to 35% of Total Heat Loss

Improvement

relations;
and

Experience

Specialize in Hair Dyes
and Permanent Waves

tunities.

Kneupfer
staff

work

We

page 4)

public

George

Bay

mittee

King

from

of

and

their two children live at 2608 Roslyn circle.

(Continued

Years

Construction
Permanent
Made To Order

CLASSIOUE
BEAUTY SALON

Total

3,906.96
11,171,295.13
1,044,565.15
6,099,228.36

Resources

$21,728,419.96
_—_
—_—_

LIABILITIES

12. Capital
14.
15.
16.
17.

22.
25.

stock

$

Surplus
Undivided
profits
(net)
Reserve
accounts
Demand
deposits
- Time
deposits
Total of deposits:
(1) Secured by pledge of assets
(2) Not secured
by pledge of

Total

assets

318,839.84
19,927,861.89

-

Purpose
(a)
(c)
(f)

Amount

$21,728,419.96
Assets

Pledged

obligations,

direct

to

Secure
and/or

Amount
=236) &gt; 3...

of

Liabilities
fully

guar480,000.00

of Assets

Pledged

(excluding

and Amount of Pledge:
Against U.S. Government and Postal Savings
To own trust department ayainst uninvested
With Auditor of Public Accounts to qualify
ercise of fiduciary powers
Total
item

10,000.00
56,900.38

Liabilities

MEMORANDUM:
Assets
pledged:
(a) U.S. Government
anteed
Total

27.

200,000.00
800,000.00
101,942.05
312,875.80
12,332,994.19
7,918,707.54

COP
TE OCAL “CODOMIOS (po Likdsnuthadeuadsndiesccipopaon $20,246,701.73
Dividends declared—not yet payable
Other liabilities
Grand

AN

formerly
of
of N.A.P.T.

shingle

wood

23

26.

ROOFING
HAVE

Machineless Permanent
Waves $10. up

benefit planning, coupled with Mr.
Johnston’s 14 years of counseling
the
will
A

Beautiful Slender Frames
Self-Storing, No Changin
New “Tension Sealed”

1500 up

counsel in the fields of financial
and estate planning and employee

5616.

KEPALRING

Society

nicians. E. Zaboth,
and Healy, member
Zurich, 5341.

fo:

SEWING MACHINES

Stephens at Dfd. 689.

Towels

Phone

eve. and Sundays, Barrington 137-M-2.
GERMAN
shepherd,
female,
spayed,
4
yrs., registered; privately owned, gentle
disposition.
Preter
buyer
to
be
family with children; good home most
Priced

Jr.

surance
counseling
organization
under the name of Johnston and
company,
Inc.,
at 135 South La
Salle street, Chicago.

male;

DACHSHUND
puppies,
registered,
five
months old; good blood line. For sale
at 1617
kmerson
Street, Beioi.,
Wisconsin.
Telephone
Grand
1582W.

ing

Johnston

Girl Scouts Merge

GREAT
DANE,
16
months
old
Obedience trained. HI 2-3203.

COVERS

STEPHENS
Having
recently
returned
from
Military Duty, I am again making the finest
in
Custom-Made
slipcovers
and _ draperies.
For
appointments
call
Irvin
G.

stitch.
Mrs. Hennig

REDECORATING

LOVELY
red
&amp;
white
cocker-spaniel
puppies;
10 weeks,
AKC _ registered.
Clarkdale Cockers, Deerfield 626W.

Wilmette

CLOTHES

Someone to sew doll
2-3672
evenings.

DRAPERIES

&amp;

CANARIES
for sale, home
raised;
fine
singers in good health. Single or paire
for breeding.
For
appointment
tele
phone Highland Park 2-3116.

particular

~ PAINTING
&amp; REDECORATING
&amp;
in

Parker

Check These Features

1250

The growing need for specialized

EXTERIOR
and
interior
painting
an
decorating. Hubert Johnson, HI 2-1770

AFRICAN

MASON
repair, stone work, chimney an:
fireplace
building.
40
years
in same
trade.
William Otten, Tel. Northbrook
597J.

PAINTING
Established
HI 2-8462

S.

Park,

ington

CONGER

TAX

YOUR
income tax return expertly
prepared at your home or mine. HI 2-6035

important.

Cut to size or pattern. Mirrors, glass
furniture
tops, shelves,
replace
cracked
or broken window glass. Come in and see
us or phone HI 2-0528.

INMAN’S

1000

this summer?
French
lessons and conversaBauer, HI 2-1776.

PETS

SEPTIC
SYSTEMS,
COMPLETE
SEPTIC
SYSTEM
INSTALLATION
TRENCHING
water,
drain,
foundation,
All
sorts:
tiling, etc.
Free estimates, no obligation to have
our representative call.
EDWARD’S
P
&amp;
W
CONSTRUCTION
CONTRACTING
ENGINEERS
WINNETKA
6-3971

Covers,
Rod
Upholstering

g50

TUTORING
GOING to France
native will give
tion. Call Mrs.

LIVING

WEATHER
} PRovecrion
AOFOR FAMILY
AND HOME

Waves

PIANO
and
Harmony
lessons, at your
home;
graduate
teacher. Call
collect,
Dorothy
Pulse, Libertyville 2-1923.

166.

STOCKS
Investor’s Service of America invites you
to
try
our
service
in
listed
stocks.
Dealer,
Broker,
Adviser,
Ole
Nielsen,
Proprietor, 104 North Washington Circle,
Lake
Forest,
Illinois.
Telephone
Lake
Forest
2191. IN GOD
WE
TRUST.

Slip

,

oY

PERKINS

Cold Permanent

PAINTING
and paper hanging. Call W
©. Varney, HI 2-6980 or Lake Fores:

We
welcome
all strangers
on
8
eervice.
1875 ST. JOHNS AVE.
HIGHLAND
PARK,
ILL.

Drapes,

(7 \ HEALTHFUL
ESTHER

experience
to

Highwood

GUITAR
lessons in your home, Spanish
guitar,
Hawaiian
guitar,
uke,
banjo
mandolin.
Instrument
furnished
while
learning. JACK
MOORE, HI 2-6284.

SCIENTIFIC
Swedish
massage,
and
reducing, vapor cabinet bath. Telephone
HI
2-5116
for
appointment,
Lottie
Marsh, 1866 Sheridan Rd., H.P.

SERVICE
and
INSTALLATION
and
Sat.
8 a.m.
Phone
HI
2-0530

thru

Fores:

MASSAGE

TV

WINDOWS
SCREENS

Specializing in

BUSINESS SERVICE
FAST —

Lake

Waukegan

773.

2-0037

DEALERS
wanted
for combination
self
storing aluminum storm windows. Low
price
bracket,
proven.
public
acceptance.
Exceptional
opportunity, attractive
deal;
rominal
investment.
107
Mariposa,
Waukegan.
Ph.
ONtario
2-1953.
‘USED
car lot, 2 gas pumps, and office
for rent. Location 5380 Waukegan Ave.,
Highwood.
By appt. only HI 2-1877.
te

419

"INSTRUCTION

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

HI

telephone

STORM
and

Freddie’s Tavern

PONIES

ATTENTION
HORSE OWNERS
Qualified
thoroughbred
race
horse
trainer available for coming Chicago rac
ing season.
18 years experience.
Excellent references. Wil] handle entire stable
or individual horses for various owners

For

ate
emt
COMBINATION

HI 2-9764
B. FIORE

FUN!

or Sleighrides
2-5592

HORSES AND

FIRST
NATIONAL
BANK
of Highland Park

ANCHOR

SOME

ITALIAN SANBOviCHES
Free Delivery

S. Parker Johnston Jr., formerly
of Marsh and McLennan, Chicago,
has opened his own independent in-

2-3128

ENTERTAINMENT
LET’S

CU Lae

PIZZA

Counseling Concern

CAMP

LIBERTYVILLE

MOTOR TRUCKS

INTERNATIONAL
truck, % ton pickup.
Telephone
Lake
Forest 703.
SAVE
$250
on a 1958
Dodge
%
ton
pickup. Save $300 on 1953 Willvs station wagon. Hale Motor Sales, 13th and
Sheridan.
“-~th
Chicago.
Telephone
DExter 6-2358.

BOATS

ANY KIND
FOR UNDERPRIVILEGED

OLDSMOBILE
‘41
club
sedan,
radio,
heater; 5 good tires. $175 or best offer. Call HI 2-1189 after 6 p.m.
WILLYS
Jeep,
1948,
4 wheel drive,
5
new
6 ply snow
tires. new
top, wi'l
eell under value, Telephone
Winnetka
6-0256
or
CHesapeake
38-7923.

=

Parker Johnston Jr.
Forms New Insurance

SOATS

family

a

USED
LINCOLN,
lent

Assets

Pledged

(must

rediscounts)

$

480,000.00

deposits ....$
trust funds
for the ex-

250,000.00
100,000.00
130,000.00

agree

with
-$

STATE

COUNTY

OF

OF

480,000.00

ILLINOIS

LAKE

)
) °°

R. L. Erskine, one of the managing officers, and Vallee O. Appel and Cc. L
Torrence, two of the directors of the First National Bank of Highland
Park,
corporation
of the State of Illinois, being
severally duly sworn, each upon hi
oath
states:
That he makes this affidavit for the purpose of complying with the
requirements of Sections 9 and 10 of an Act of the General Assembly of the Stat
of Illinois, entitled
“An
Act to provide for and
regulate
the administration
o
trusts by trust companies.”
That the foregoing report of the said corporation on
the aforementioned
date, is true and correct in all respects to the best of hi
knowledge and belief, and that he has examined the assets and books of the said
company for the purpose of making said statement.
Subscribed
and
sworn
to _ before
R. L. ERSKINE
me this 17th day of January,
19538.
VALLEE O. APPEL
ERNEST A. BELMONT
Cc. L. TORRENCE
Notary Public
Directors
(SEAL)

| “Thursday, January 29, 1953

�Where it can be done
LINOLEUM

Chrysler-Plymouth

FLOOR COVERING
@
@

Linoleum

and

Linoleum

Tile

e
@

Rubber

Plastic Wall Tile
For

free

USED

call

Road,

Call HI

the

Highland

SERVICE

TO

U-DRIVE-IT

MOTO

2-5645

RS

All arrangements
Phone.

A. E. Savage,

;

1740

&amp;

HI

2-2500

JEWELERS

—

wiles.

1864 SHERIDAN

WATCH

FIRST ST.
HIGHLAND

HI

Leading,

and

2-0341

Official

Watch

Watch

Inspector

To Chicago
ERS

Dally
PS

454 Waukegan Ave.

and

Deliver

Pi re

Guaranteed

VENET
IAN
BLINDS

Western

AND

R.R.

GUARANTEED

PAINTS

TILE

Doubl
ouple

a

Highwood Glass

Modernized

with | Real Ceramic Tile,

Service.

Estimates. Phone

830

Free

Wieleud

Ba

Skt

ery

Buttons

—-

.&amp; Paint Co.

Gusts

Sweaters,

Button

SEREERERRRRRRRRRRRERS

- Porch

penn

1049

Holes

Eva

Recleseu

Phone

|

BRAUN

444 Central

HI

BROS. OIL CO.

810 Welisnes Rd.

Deerfield 350

&amp;

Install it yourself or make

LINOLEUM

TILE

use of our expert mechanics.

me

setting.

set in moders
arranged.

Payments

IN YOUR. HOME

iid LZ

St.

Fender

LANDI
Repeir

@ Venetian Blinds

@ Columbia Lattishades

@ Radiator Repair

DAHL'S

e

Bamboo

Blinds—Draperies

@

Window

Shades

668 CENTRAL AVE.

AUTO RECONST.
St.

HI

vs eo
2-0077

| Pe

BUICK SERVICE

Phone

BUICK

Factory

for

Auto&amp; fod
Painting
Repaitien

Space
page

ictalgiatt

1732 First

ON RESULTS
Yet

wn cost

kor Advertising Space On This Page

Phone HI 2-4500

Authorized

Sales &amp; Service

Advertising
this

SALES SERVICE

BUICK

HI 2-4500
on

BROS.

PAINTS—SUPPLIES

Alignment

Ist

New

SHADES

sane

2058

Like

EARORESEG | PERRRE
ERE eee
RR

TOWING

©

HI 2-0676
Furniture
Cleaned

459 Roger Williams Ave.

SHORT

RC)
Years

RUG &amp; FURNITURE

-

Boa

| PORE

GULISTAN CARPETS &amp; RUGS

L—O—N—G

35

diamonc

diamonds

(45a

os. Pendle

c

see

Highland Park ||| HI 2-0566

own

fer

Rug &amp; Furniture Cleaniag

2575

om ane

FLOOR COVERING

LINOLEUM

bonk

from

our

your

le

OL

oy

al

alt

TTTTTTT
TTT TTT TTT ett tty

ANG son
SERVICE

ASPHALT — RUBBER — PLASTIC TILE

2-3804

|

TOWING

DEERFIELD CLEANERS
|

Enclosures

Center

ugly stains out oof

UNiversity 4-3034

SERVICE

do

(ola:

? afelatte

for

BLUFF

616

SS

DOWNING’S
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HI 2-7211

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All makes and models.

562 Lincoln

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